'VtV'V' -im final Euentng public ffie&ger I-. -HBBHVBH r it . . - tm m'.UBi '. ,.: S 'K,v fl FINAL '1 -;J " laaaaaia in nt , .i , IimM . ,. VOL. IV. NO. 128 E S. TO FIGHT FOR JUST TO ALL, SAYS WILSON president Replies to f .ling in Address to m i .. r Chancellor's Basis Unacceptable Nationalities Must Not Be credited Balance of Power U. S. Ready to Be Shown if Its Suggestions Are Not Best I WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. President Wilson today appeared before Congress in joint session find replied to the recent addresses of the Geimnn Foreign Minister, fConnt von Hcrtlinp;, and Count Czernin, the Austro-IIungnrinn Premier. ' The United States will not turn & rrinrinle." ho said, but will use its Yfpt the world from autocracy. The ' peace must be predicated upon justice to an peoples. Tho contrast in the attitude taken by Count Czernin, the Austrian Foreign Minister, and that of tho German Chancellor, Von llcrtling, was i pointed out, the President declaring ' . ... J .1!J i 4. Clements 01 peace uuu uiu jiul. UUVIIipi, IU UUALUIU 111U1U. imA .annnf furti Imrlr In Ihi. Iimiti iMcli fount. HcrHim nrnnnseu " . v .ouio.. . .. "- .- r ,....,....., 'he declared. "America is ready to be shown that the hcttlcmcnts she Ifhis suggested arc not the best. However, she cannot see her way to peace until the causes of this war are removed." THE PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS Tho President spoke as follows: Gentlemen of the Congress: On the eighth of January I had the honor of addressing you on the iMects of the war as our people of Great Britain had spoken in similar terms on the fifth of January. To these addresses the German Chancellor replied on the twenty-fourth ' and Count Zzernin for Austria on tho same day. It is gratifying to .hhave our desire so promptly realized that all exchanges of view on this great matter should bo made in the hearing of all the world. ' I Count Czcrmn's reply, wliicli is dt tnc eicnin oi January, ih uuura lav statement n sufficiently encouraging npproach to the views of his tiwn Government to justify him in believing that it furnishes a basis ifor a more detailed discussion of purposes by the two Governments. Ho v is represented to have intimated that the views he was expressing had , been communicated to mo before ot the time ho was uttering them; but in this, I am sure, he was misun derstood. I had received no intimation of what ho intended to say. There was, of course, no reason why .vith me. I am quite content to be iikiitijinc'h .Of course, Von ilertllng's reply fonfuslng. It. Is full of equivocal phrases and leads It Is not clear where. it is certainly In n very different I ilWlrent,' of n" onI'Ofclto purpose. It confirms, I ant mrry to say, rattier 1'JitWtfl removes, tho unfortunate impression mado by what wo had lcatncd of IClti'wnfercnccs at Urost-UtoVKk. 1IIh discussion and acceptance of our Ken .?' ral'tirnielntrs irjid blm to no nractlcal conclusions. Ho refuses to apply them OtHthelubstantlvo items which must ' .-2 V 1 i-l r l..lA.Hntlniinl ilo accepts, ho says, tho principle of public diplomacy, but he appear to iut that It bo confined, at uii.vnite In tills case, to generalities and that tho wreral particular questions of territory anil hotrrrignly, Iho several ipies. lins upon hoso hcttlemcnt must depend tho acceptance 'r peace by the twenty-three States nov engaged In lluv war, must bo discussed anil settled, 'not In Kencral counsel, but sirtrrally by tho nations most immediately con cerned by Interest or neighborhood, He nercca that the seas should bo free, but looks askance at any limita tion to that freedom by International action in tho Interest ot thu common U order. He Miould without lObervo bo between nation and nation, for that could In no way Iinpcdo tho ambitions of tho military party with whom ho seems It "Neither docs ho rnlso objection to a limitation of armaments. That mat t,...Ml 1m .tnttlflil it l4.nl tin .1.I..1.B 1,. Ilin r-mimt .m.ll,t,1U ntlll.l, .1,1,.., i.. uiu tn; ni'iuit ui iicmii iiu i.iiiiix, i-v uiu i.i.uiiuniii' luiiuiiiuin ii,iiv.i. .unci If follow the war. IJut tho Cermau colonies, ho demands, must bo returned without debate. Ho wilt dlhctiss with rtuanla what disposition shall bo made ot tho peoples and tho lands of tho f Ilaltlo prolnccs; with no ono but tho Government of Franco tho 'condltfons' under which French territory shall ho evacuated, and only with Austria ' what shall bo dono with Poland. In tho determination of all questions tiffect- i Ine tho Balkan States ho defers, as I .and with recard to tho airrcement to fTurkUU people of tho present Ottoman themselves. After a settlement all around effected In this fashion, by Indl. f.'dual barter and concession, ho would havo no objection, if I correctly in- terpret his statement, to a league of nations which would undertake to hold rjjlhe new balance of power steady against external disttnbapce. CHANCELLOR'S BASIS IMPOSSIIJLK f It must bo evident to every ono -' wrought In tho opinion and temper of j-peaco worth tho Inllnito acrlllces of theso years of lragir.il Minering, can . possibly bo arrlvcl at In any suili fashion. Tho method the Ucrman Chan ' rellor propoten Is tho method of tho Congress oC Vienna. V cannot and will not return to thai. What Is at Malio now Is tho pearo ot tho world. What wo are .striving for is a new International order based upon broad ami universal principles of right and Justice j "is it posslblo that (Jount'von llcrtling docs not sco mat, does not grasp ;'It, Is In fact living In his thought In a Tqrgotten tho Reichstag resolutions of .i&noro them? They apoko of tho conditions of a general peace, not of na. ttonal aggrandizement or ot arrangements between Stato and State IV 4V, PROBLEMS iti. Tli tiAnAA nriliA ii n.1,1 ?niiiifld ;tvi:rai prouicms 10 illicit 1 auvencu fc. . ... V . l-.l I'.', of course, do not mean that tho kj&CCeDLnnpA nf nnv vini-tlniil.ii- unt tf HUtrcrpstlnnM nM tn thn w.iv In whin, thnsn ''Problems aro to bo dealt with, 1 mean ,f'a.l'iaTect the whole world; that unless H;flsh and unbiased Justice, with a Icw to tho wishes, tho natural cornice. Qloas, the radical aspirations, tlio security and tho praco of mind of the ippeoples invohed, no permanent pcaco will havo been attained. They cannot ,.w discussed separately or in corners. Mparato interest from which tho opinion of tho world may bo shut out. IC Whatever affects tho peace affects mankind, and nothing settled by military I tore, If settled wrong, Is settled at all. ; "is Count von Hcrtllng not awaro that ho w speaking in mo court of 'mankind, that all tho awakened nations of tho woild now sit in Judgment l('on what every public jr.an, ot whatever ' H.fllA, .i i. . . . I, --wiiity wnicu uas sprcaa to every region ul uiu nuimi .iv,....,.,, uw gluttons of July themselves frankly accepted tho decisions of that court. Thero Rfcnall be no annexations, no contributions, no punltlvo damages. Peoples aro Bt to bo handed about front ono sovereignty to another by an International t,elerencc, or an understanding .between rivals anil antagonism. .-National IWirallons must be respected; peoples uwqr'Djr their own consent. 'Kclf-dctcrmlnatlou' Is not a mere pnrase. it Is fan Impcratlvo prlnclplo of action which statcsmen-w 111 henceforth ignore at ftnelr nArit " yis IVe cannot havo general peaco for WU8 or a peace conference. It cannot hp pieced togcllicr out of individual PnaerMandlnirK belwcon nnwnrfiii States. All tho narUrs to this War must y! In the settlement of ,eterj' Issue nuynhrro Involved In It; because, what ?,'nrd Htrrkliijr is n peace Ihut e can all pnlto to guaranleo and maintain. it ci'ti? Ittm.of It mutt bo Hiitimltlcd jyw .. ,. , ,. '.gf!v W i, , i Czernin and Hert- Congress-German Bartered to Bolster Up Dis back "from a course chosen upon entire strength for the emancipation President insisted that a permanent that the former saw tho fundamental 1. 1- -1 11 conceive them. The Prime Minister irth, directed ciueiiy to my own auure.ss j in u iuj umiuij mt. vi uwg m hand antl that 1 was aware ot tnem ho should communicate privately one of his public audience. Jiisfi.Y vAuuu i Is, I must say, very vague and very tone from that of Count Czernin, and consttluto tho body of any Dual fettle- nnllftn n t. rl nf 111 (ftl"ll II t Ifttl fl ! rmillkrt. clad to bco economic barriers removed constralnul to keep on terms. no ono but tho lenrcscnttitlvPH of understand him, to Austria and Turkey; bo entered Into concernlnc tho non- Kmplre, to tho Turkish authorities who" understands what this war has tho world that no general peace, no no incro.praco of shreds and patches. world dead and gone? Has ho utterly tho 10th of July, or does ho deliberately MUST 131! MUT linnil Mm liikf wnflllllnnt nf i.arll nf llm in mi- rcecia miurcss in uiu i-imgrcss. I.. . ...1.1 1 .,... 1 peace of tho wot Id depends upon tho only that thoso pioblcms, each and they aro dealt with in a. tplrlt of un. Noilo of them constitutes u private or It will presently havo tq bo reopened. nation, may bay on tho Issues of a .. ,1. n.1.1, n-lin Ifnl.iliu, rrr ..n..n may now bo dominated and governed tho asking or b"y tho mcro arrange. to the common Judgment, whether, i i ! (,"onltiiiiJ qi Vate it, t'olumii Tn PEACE President Lays Down Worlds Peace Jiasis 1 That rach part of the final settlement must be based upon the essential justice of that particular case and upon such ad justments as arc ino.st likely to bring a peace that will be per mancnt. O That peoples and provinces " arc not to be bartered about from sovereignty to Ri)creignty as If they were mere chattels and pawns' in a game, even the great game, now forever discredited, of the balance of power, but that O Every territorial settlement involved in this war must be made in the interest and for the benefit of the populations con cerned and not as a part of any mere adjustment or compromise of claims amongst rival States; and A That all well-defined national aspirations hhall be accorded the utmost satisfaction that can be accorded them without intro ducing new or perpetuating old elements of discord and antagon ism that would be likely in time to break the peace of Europe and consequently of the world. A general peace erected upon such foundations can be discussed. vyipt' (HTTP riTV'C VIPR ' "" vw x,.. w , , , IS ORDER TO U. S. JURY jiuge Thompson Tells New Panel to Go After Those Responsible WANT MEN "HIGHER UP" Tho Federal Ornnd Jury today was ordered to bring to Justice tho pen-ons responsible for tlio Mlo of lntnlcants to men iu national uniform and for tho malntenanco ot disorderly houses within a flvc-mllc radius of military and naval posts. Aroused by lc conditions existing dcsplto congressional legislation nnd presidential pioclaiiMtion, Federal of-flclals- here, to-operating with tlio police, hao decided-on arrest nnd prosecution of ilolatgrs nf tho Federal laws de signed to safeguard tho ilg'xtlng clTI clcney of tlio American forces. Judgo Thompson, In tho United States Dlstilct Court, today dlreeted tho In coming Crand Jury to m.iko exlinustlo InveHtlg.Uinii anil to fix reponslblllty for violation of Iho laws against selling liquor to nun Iu uidfntm and keeping disorderly resorts within tlio lhe-mllo zone. AFTER "JIIIN- llKIIIIIIl ur" At tlio hamo tlmo Fulled Mates Dis trict Attorney Kane, warning of drastic action, Indicated that ho Is aftor "men hlnIlPl till' than tlio "mluritvili!. ,.,.. tures" runners nnd solictors whn mvo liecn unostiil for lolatliic tho tur. Keilcral l.iwtf. Virtual elimination of Urn illcs 01 lco ami ivoc.itlon nf tho lloenscM oi offemlfriB f.iloons was threatened liy tlia federal inoe, Thiw Ian h were inactoil for tho pro tection f our hoys and youiiK mm who nr) In tho ppnlci'.'' h.ild Judt-o Thomp son, "nespllo ny i-arncst efforts, tho liovcrnmcnt iiRontH hao found It ex ceedingly dlfllcult to break up these ne- Continued on Tuen .-efn Column One SIR EVARISTE LE BLANC SERIOUSLY ILL HERE ! Lieutenant Governor of Quebec in University Hospital, Where- Opera tion Was I'erfoimetl It became Known today that Sir Hvar isto I.d nlanc, Lieutenant Coiernor of Quebec, la 111 In tho rnlverslly Hospital and his undcrgono an operation of u fcerlous nature, Tho distinguished patient arrived at tho hospital with I.ady l.o lilana on January 18 and tho operation was performed shortly afterward by Ur. Charles If. Frailer, of 1724 Spruce stiect. Tlio hospltnl authorities wcro retlclcnt concerning tho nature of .sir I'rncst's malady, hut Intimated that a second operation will shortly havo to be performed. Lady Ja Piano also rcfetrcd nil ipies tloiiM regarding her liuiband'B condition tn lloctor FrazUr. Tho latter could not ' bo scon, but It was ascertained that tho patient camo tn Philadelphia by appoint ment mado through inpdlc.it friends qf Doctor Frazier in Qiubeo, CHIEF M'CRTTDDEN QUITS SERVICE OP THE CITY Head ot Housing Division Resigns to Accept Private Em ployment James F. McCruddcn. Chief nf tho Division of Housing and .Sanitation, to. ! day tendered his resignation to take effect nt Iho end of tlio month'. BIr. McCruddcn leaves the city's employ to accept a position with tho Aberfojle Manufacturing Company, of Chester. Ills salary ns chief of tho dJUslon was '3100 a year. Mr. McCrudden entered Ihe city scr vlco In 1901 with Iho Bureau of Sur veys. In 1001 he was appointed a clerk In tho Bureau of Flltratlop, was trans ferred to tho Water Bureau In 1800, and appointed nuisance Inspector In 1,912 and to the position ho resigned today In 19IB. Now Orleans Results ' FirtHT HACK. 0 fur!onsi Kama. IIS. Connolly. ., 18 to S T to 3 3 too Dr. Capbell. 107, HodrfeufZ .,.. ' r... Slot TtoS Charles C.nnncll, 11:1, Mice .,...w.,....n. .,,.., ,.,, -no 1 Tlme 1H3 .'- ftTtttiJied Margery, Ji llcka, Purt. .Uwlii iluu. - t PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1918 mm wtmmmm 1 I mmW7 'llmTrnmR H .. ' " " JH ', Mi AsEmmmm taW x 4 VdasassrassssaSoaeaiassssssssssssssssssssssss' HOG ISLAND'S MENTOR Admiral U&wlcs, assistant gen eral manager of tho Emergency Fleet Corpointion. photographed in Philadelphia, where ho is mak ing his headquarters while speeding up the production of ships at the Hog Island ship yard. RUSSIANS OUT OF WAR; ARMY DEMOBILIZED (Trotsky Announces End of H o s t i 1 i t i e s Against leiUOllS FORMAL PEACE PACT HAS NOT BEEN SIGNED -i a i j n ti i. Germans Said to Be Plot - ting Early Overthrow Of Bolshevik Regime RUMANIA THREATENED AMSTERDAM. Feb. 11. mt - .11. 1 r i no nussian hoisiicvik uovern- mont has clclmitely withdrawn from the war, ordering complete de mobilization of Russian forces on all fronts, it was reported hero today. Dispatches received from IJrcst Litovsk declared that Leon Trotsky, Bolshevik Foreign Minister, while lef using to sign ii formal peace pact, asserted that "tho war with the Cen tral Powers is ended." Tho dispatch Is ns folk- The president of tlio nuw,l.m dnlcgn-1 lion at todays (Suiidaj-b) sitting stated that "Idle Russia was desisting from slL-nlnc u formal peaeo treaty it de- I'l.iied the stato of war to he rndtd with liermany, Austria-Hungary, Tut key and nuigaria, simultaneously giving orders for complete demobilization of I'.usslan foreen on all fronts. ' A dlp.itcli from Vienna bays Hut ne gotiations between Austro-Hungarlan and Russian commissions at Pctrograd resulted on January 31 111 nil agreement to tho effect that Austr-IIungarlan cl illlans detained In ltusili and nussian cl lll.iiis detained In Austria-Hungary of M-eHled categories shall, as far as they 1eMre, ho repatriated as speedily ns pos- hll.lo. Tho speellleil classes include girls, women and males under sixteen or en or forty-five, and males between tho ages of sKtcen and forty-lHn who aro unfit for inllllniy service j docjor.s and clergy men regardless of ngo also aro Included In the agreement. The icssatloii of hostilities now de ciared by Ilussla leaves lS.iJSr, squaro miles ot Itii'tiau territory In Teuton Contlnnd on Turf lour, ('nluniii Tho riNH MOTHER AND SON DEAD Scrnnton Police Think Them Victims of Suicldo Pact Pi'ftANTON, Feb. II, Mrs. I'rnncen Wllkens, sixty years old, and Frank Wll kens, thlrty-flvo jcars old, u linislcljiii, mother and son, were found dead today In their home nt G.1," Adams avenue, this city. A gas jet wns open nnd Iho police nro of tho belief that It wns a suicldo pact. Tho husband and father, a former brew master, died seeral years ngo, leaving n good-sized estate. Mis. IVilkeus uiiilj her son were both In poor health. I THIS LAST WORKLESS MONDAY, IS BELIEF RisitiR Tcmpertuics Confirm Ex pectation That Garfield Order . Will Do Rescinded WASHINGTON". 'Feb. 11 Today is probably tho last of tho w-orkless Mon days. Pouthern States, exempted by Doctor Oartleld last week, plunged Into wartime activities nt top speed. Trans portation and fuel shortages generally have been greatly Improved by warm weather. Illslng temperatures throughout; tho Ilist made It almost certain that the fuel administration's drastic order would bo rom-lnded tomorrow. This despite a reduction In bituminous coal output rei ported by the Oeologlcal purvey today. Anthracite, howeier, showed a gain rAKKKTK&r rKTrJR FI.1NT. n rowerful ..i "f sa(tsman.dp, apueaft today cu rage 11 ANGRY TEUTON PEOPLE INSIST WAR MUST END Ominous Unrest Grow ing Daily in Central Empires 1 MASSES BELIEVE WILSON SINCERE I Germany and Austria Must Yield to Popular Clamor, Says Observer ! PRIVATIONS AROUSE IRE Junkcrdom in Last Desperate Struggle for JInstcry of Internal Situation I WIIMnm ridllp FImm, United Trrtt MntT rnrrrapnndent, who liai been on thn Imtllr front In Kuropm nlncn the wt lircnn, nm rrrrutl.r nmlnnrd to mnki n iTnnnl Intevtlcattan of the nrtun.1 j tntr nr ntTalr In the Central Dmplrr. ttiroudi th lir.t ponnlhlo nonrcru of ne- , nirutr Information. Ilia rrport, ealilixl from 'urlrli, Sultirrlnnd, will nppr.r In Iho Iltrnlnsr Puhlle I.edirrr In fonr dl- patrhrn, of whlfli (he follnwlnB Is the I llrntl , By WILLIAM THILIP SIMMS , (Copyrloht. M(, fty tho United rrtis) ZURICH, Switzerland, Feb. 11. I An ominous unrest is growing tlnily throiiRhout the Central ! Empires. Germany anil Austria must havel pcaco or ro under. Tho people of both countries demand it. If the Allies stand pat on tho Wil Kouian program and make a stono wall of the westeni front the end of the war is in sight. This sums up the situation ns seen fron- Lc.ro nt this time. , II Jsn't mean that Germany i.i , ',, ..,.. . , ,. .' ' n the. brink of a revolution. But it jtloes mean the people arc tired of i wnl nmI OW050-1 t0 the I'an-Gcrman They arc angry over tlio privation ' nt homo and tho losses of men folk I nt tho front. At the sam tlmi. I they believe President Wilson Is sin- ; cere in his statement of war aims. i . . ' MASSES BEGIN TO SEE LIGHT Thero Is no doubt that the Ger man masses aro beginning to see the light. Only the diplomatic blunders of the Allies have kept them bound to the war paity this long. For instance, Philip Schcidemnnn eighteen months ago threatened fonttiitiFd on 1'ac l'lie, Column FItc - fflf f UATri I irK'NCI? lULlLl flUlLiU LILLdTdD, LIQUOR DEALERS URGE Association Asks Court to Re- voko Booze Permit of Continental SERVED MINORS, CHARGE Tho netail Liquor Dealers' Associa tion nnd tho Law and Order Society joined today In a flRht for revocation of tho liquor llcetiFo for the roof garden .1... ,....! n. 1f..Al VI. itli nnt ' 1,1 "" "u"1 """ "" "" , I delphla. New York. Boston and Chicago Cnostn.it streets, alleging the sale of I , e recomm,nn,d , Con(TW b. liquor to minors. I abIj. tomorrow by , Jolnt t.ongres. An agent ot tho 31-tnil Liquor Deal-, MonB, romm,ttce appo,ntC(, by congress raio'eoenVVr;'!"''-' Investigate tnor n visit to tho roof garden, during which, oughly th advantages of the system, ho said, ho saw liquor sold to many The committee has mado a thorough young men nnd women who apparently .Investigation of all phases of tho pneu oTor'tlio irrSf tube .ystern. It Is learned upon ted on the witness stand that ho was Indisputable mithorlty, nnd Is now ready only seventeen years old, and sum nis joung woman companion had told htm eho wiiH "Just past twenty n. Clarenr. Olbhoney. head of the t.., o r.,.r sinM-tv. snucht to show by cross-examination that Harry Kek- n n-, e ih license, was merely a ., .a wW..., , flaunt bead for tho hotel company, which flguro head for tho hotel company, really mado nil tho piotlts. FL'ItTHKIt LVQUinV ADVJSJCD Judges Martin and Fliilettcr, ot the License Couit, refused to pass upon th plea to revoko tho license, but ordered the testimony certified to thn new L. cense Court, which will sit March . Judges Martin and Flnletter thought th testimony given called for considerable further Inquiry Into tho conduct of th root garden. Harry M. Campbell, the retail liquor I f nntlnurd on I'nur Kour. Column feU ROOSEVELT'S SURGEONS PREDICT FULL RECOVERY Order Absolute Quiet for Colonel, Who Grits Teeth, but Bears Painful Convalescence NEW TOnif, Feb. 11. Colonel 'loose velt today faced the hardest part of his convalescence, The doctors have ordered "absolute quiet and rest" for tho strenuous one." Wlillo suffering acute pain, tho Colonel Is reported grit ting his teeth and bearing It. Surgeons predict full recovery. They say no further operation Is necessary, MrH.Stotesbury oh Navy Commission -WABHINftTON'. Feb. 11 Mrs. II T. Htotesbury. of Philadelphia, has been appointed a member of tho new pavy commission on tralnlnc samp activities bj- Secretary Daniels. . ComiKinT, 1D1, QUICK U. S. DIRECTOR OF HOUSING WORK TO BE NAMED WASHINGTON, Tcb. 11. To rush the output of war necessities tho appointment of n dlicctor of housing work, with extensive powers to co-ordinate ,the needs of manufacturing plan3 with Shipping Hoard, aimy and navy contincts, will he jnado soon by tho Labor Department. Secretnty of Labor Wilson has offeicd the appuintiucut to Otto M. lildlltz, a builder nud engineer, of New ork. f VARDAMAN ASSAILS HOG ISLAND C0NSTRUCTI01T WAS1IINOT0N, Feb. 11. Tho consructlon of the IIop; Island shipyards today was characterized by Senator Vardaman, of Mississippi, In the Senate as a "long fctory of malfeasance and infamy on the part of somebody." Tic suggested that "we should send a few plutocintlc patiiots to the penlenlary." ITALIANS FRUSTRATE VIOLENT ENEMY THRUSTS HOME, Feb.. 11. Violent enemy nitlllerylug nud Infantry thrusts which weie frustrated both eatt and west of Volfieuzela wag reported by; tho .War Office today. POOLROOM MAN ACCUSED OF ILLEGAL LIQUOR SELLING WEST CHESTER, Ta., Teh. 11. James Benyman, propile tor of n poohoom in tho basement of the postoffice nt West Downlngtown, is under heavy bail on tho charge of selling liquor without a license, nnd twenty-seven prominent young men of tho borough aro held as witnesses against him. FIRE IN CAMP SHERIDAN HOSPITAL; PATIENTS .FLfiE CABIP SHEIUDa!n, Montgomery, Ala., Feb. 11. Twenty patients were can led ,o safety today when a ward at tho base hospital hue was destroyed by fire. Destruction ofsovcral of the buildings was threatened, but soldiers confined the blaze to tho one ward. MAIL TUBE PURCHASE i I inn w"m "n rtiinnni'ianiTrwin 111 K KM UNMKN IIKII - w ..k T. "" Joint Congressional Commit- . ) , 2 r. 1 i T, iuu iiuuuy to ouomii. nc- , Ready to Submit port of I indings URGE U. S. OWNERSHIP llli i Staff Cormpandrnt WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. , Tho purchaso by the Government of , tho pneumatic mall tube system In Thlla- to inaKo its report reeommondlng the purc,A0 f th0 tube syste m. . . ' re. aDantionmeni or purclu The entire abandonment or purchase n ino itovemmeni oi me tuba systems l " i?"'? ,abn" " r"ur. ot"f M"0 c tlor? hV hwn "-subject of acute . Tlk QrlAlhh fl Onrt thraa n -vl cusloii In Congress for several jcars, For tho lafct three or four vem-M 1ia Postnfllce Department hna recommended to Congress tho abandonment of the tube systems and the substitution of automobile surface routes. The depart ment has held the system was too ex penslvo and that the work could bo per formed quicker by automobiles. Through the combined Influenco of the members In Congress from States In which the tubes are located, the efforts cf the Postofllce Department have been tfiwarted each time the subject has como up In Congress. Tiring of the annual wrangle over the tibe systems. Congress a year ago determined to have It settled oneo and for nil whether the tubes should be abandoned or purchased or tho present leases on them continued, nnd appointed a Joint committee of Congress to In vestigate nnd report. Their report has been finished, recom mending tlie purchase of the tube sys tems. It has been estimated that the Phila delphia tube system was worth about a million dollars. The citizens and buslne,ss men of Philadelphia have very heartily favored the retention of the tube system. Con- Continued on Tata Ihe. Column Ono Ship Mac Ashorej Crew Taken Off AN ATLANTIC POBT, Feb. I J The steamship Mae, carrying a cargo of cti Is ashore oft an Atlantic! port today, The master of .the vessel and twenty-seven crew members have been taken off by coast guards. m inB Pcsi.to Linxirn CoMriKi NEWS LARRY EYRE'S SPATS w. . - wk . . . i KAfKK) IN RTi AAli -LVJIJia"L MA 1 M. VT V J UtVl , - - - I DlSCUSSioil Of Scarlett's . I unester county luansuet-up Interrupted by Chief Justice AIRED IN LIBEL SUIT T. Lany Lyre's spats were dragged Into the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to- ,ay by no less distinguished and skill ful a dragger than James Scarlet, of Danville, prosecutor ot the famous liar. rlsburg Capitol graft cases. Scarlet was saying some delightfully different things about Eyre nnd was In a fair way to pro duce some rhetoric that would make bril liant nnd pungent pages In the annals of the august court. But fate and Chief Justice Brown's notions of what's proper to be said In ccurt stopped the classic oritlon Just as Scarlet was about to open Ills vocabulary or word tank even wider and, with his hand on the orator ical lover, wns preparing to "throw her Into high." Scarlet paid sonin considerable atten tion to tho sartorial aspect of the afore mentioned T. Larry Kyre and described Ilia Impeccable get-up It one will pardon tho word with a delicious free dom that made the gallery smack Its mental lips for more of tho same stuff. 1VHAT IT WAS ABOUT rerhaps, before proceeding with the narrative. It would bo ns well to tell now thoroughly Interested nnd passion ately eager render.what it was all about. In the Chester County political cam paign of November. 1916, William II, Berry, former State Treasurer, defeated randldato for Governor nnd now Col lector of the Port of Philadelphia, bit terly opposed T, Larry Lyre's election on the Bepubllean ticket to the State Senate from the Nineteenth senatorial district, which Is co-extenslve with Chester County. Berry In his speeches Intimated, at least, that Lyre was Im plicated In the celebrated Capitol graft. Lyre sued for 160,000 for libel. Tho Chester County Judges naturally Continued on Tate Hie, Column s)Trn FAVOR STOCK YARD CONTROL Bill, Approved by Senate Committee, Would Protect Army From Contagion WASHINGTON. Feb. II, The Senate Military Affairs Committee today favor ably reported the bill asked by Secretary Baker, giving control of all stockyards, corrals and other places where animals are kept, to the Secretary of Agricul ture. The purpose; the bill says, Is to pro tect animals for the army from cons Uftous diseases, PRICE TWO CENTS$j . rz iw EVEM SOLDIER ,1 nn . . ' .Vi , )5 fKUMHEKKWlLL'V, BEINBIGPARADEt All of Philadelphia's 9000 in Camp Meade to Come Home CITY WILL PAY EXPENSE Mayor Talks With Commander While Councilmcn Look Up' Cost and Funds CITY WIM.IXU TO J.T Til purado itliould b hflil and th city run rft the neremiary ripen money from the futiiln of th om intttre nit niutennnrn nnd rfllff. " .,.l".l".r?"" ""'I'll 1'. llBtTney, of Coob cll' l'lnanrr roinmltlrr. , "ly thou, ht It would he Una u. '".'5 I'ara.la In Philadel phia, but nt flrt feared (hat It would rln thn hrnrtn of tlirlr friend and relatHe,. I hellr If the narado la held It win )r r tu ,(( patrlotlr drmonatrntlont iter held here. Mayor Smith. AH of Philadelphia National Array men at Camp SIcade, Md., will bo brought hack for tho hlff parado and final dend-off hefora they nre taken oyaf aeas to the battlellno In France. nvery blessed ono of tho ("elected tol dler and not only two or three rtfl ments, as flrot planned will bo In th? Ion lino of ollve-drab fighters marchlnr down Broad street If the city, which to day officially Rot under the plan, finds It humanly possible to bring this about. Jlayor Smith talked over the lone distance telephone this morning with Brigadier General TV. J. Nicholson, com mander nt the Maryland cantonment, and told him that the city was doing Hn best with plans to bring the "boys" home and entertain them. At tho sanio tlmo Select Councilman Hetzell, of tho Eighteenth Ward, chalr. man of Councils' Committee on 3us tenance and Itcllef of Phlladelphlans In Federal service, was getting data from the Pennsylvania and the Baltimore and Ohio Xtallroads as to schedules and cost. CITV "VILIi PAY COST The city will put up tho money, ac cording to plans evolved today at a con ference called by the Jlayor. The Mayor called Into consulatlon Chairman Het zell and Charles B. Hall, secretary of the committee, and Joseph P. daffney, chairman of Councils' Finance Com mittee. Tho expense, estimated at about $10,000, Is to be paid for out of the '500,000 appropriation at tho disposal of the commlttco on sustenance and re lief. , "If any troops aro to be broujht'baok, all will be brought back." was the, e-. xlslon after the conference. Originally only the 312tli Field Artillery and Slttli Infantry were thought of because they are alIrPhlladelphta units; then the 304th Knglneers were added, becauscJSO per cent of the members are Phlladel phlans, and the other 10 per cent are residents of the Main l.lne. This plan would have brought home about 6000 troops. Xow the Invitation Is extended to nil the 8000 or 9000 selected men In camp, not only tho three regiments, but tho Phlladelphlans lettered among tho other thirty-nine units I". the rump. An nil-Philadelphia negro command Is In cluded. many iiKAUTa r;r.ADiu:xnD Tho decision to bring bark all the soldiers nt Cnnip Meado caused great rejoicing among boldlers' loxed ones, whr, felt disappointed that only tho men ot m thrco regiments should bo Invited. Hx. f .1.0 mvi.at.on to meiudo .1, (4 iiiinuricuiit r- uihiiki tutu IIIi)VTlI TIKI I - l nli In 'a ilmftArl man ln..nt...A (tiring i"i oniy ii voupio vi inousnnq tnoro men, hut It mado thousands nnrt thousands of additional hearts here glaa u,n4 lien ii I i'i, int.- nuiu oujjiui I ul inV fity to me plan. A meeting of Iho Committee on Sus tenance nnd Belief will bo called by Chairman Hetzell ns soon as data are gathered on Ihe project. " With unanimity of oplnlbn among city officials and camp authorities as to the' nhNolute dolrahlllty ot the parade, ten- . tntlve plans became rosier and rosier. MAYOR BEHIND PIAN Major .Smith, who at first declined to lend support to the scheme on th ground that It would wring the hearts of the fi lends of the boys nnd perhaps tip off Germany of the earlly sailing of the soldiers, declares that he Is nd longer opposed and that If it Is carried" out h believes It will result In one of the greatest patriotic demonstrations ever held in Philadelphia. Joseph r. Gaffncy, chairman of Coun cils' Finance Committee, this morning declared himself heart and soul in the, movement and expressc1 ths oplnlo'tlf that tho best way to at tho necessary expense money would be for It to come from the Sustenance and Belief Commlti tee. In discussing the scheme Chairman Gaffney, who Is the Slayor's" closest ad visor, said: "I believe all city officials now favor the plan and there should be no difficulty In getting the necessary money. Charles P, Hall, chief clerk of Select Council, could make the necessary arrangements to get the money, ana, ' there seems to be no good reason why the boys should not be brought home' for n final v lalt nnd parade before lenv Ing for the front. I for one am heartily in favor of the plan, which, now that 'It Is generally understood, will meet with ' i ! Continued on Pare Pour. 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