1 SPT-B. P?.,, Jp"CMt)r'A. 1'SJ! . " U 4 EYENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1, 1DW A -nvy I SENATE TURNING i TO WORLD LEAGUE Also Shows Marked Sympa thy for Freedom of Seas odURCHMENDROP WARONROBINSON ft MADE IN GERMANY'9 KULTUR RECEIVER IS NAMED WAS VISITED UPON ITALY FOR B. R. T. COMPANY .nterchurch Fcderaltion ' Calls It Useless to Oppose Return IN OLD JOB TOMORROW Former Police Head Will Take Charge Ministers to Watch Him Tlie Interchurch Federation ha drop Ped Its fight against James 11. Robinson as superintendent of police. Captain Robinson will return to active uty on Ills old Job tomorrow 'I he uperintendent wiih expected to rcvumo odaj-, but postponed his "comeback" be ausft of tho holiday. "It's useless," was tho comment of tho lev. Dr. IMvvin Hejl Dtlk, ch.ilrm.in of 16 wartime committee of the federation. rhen asked If further ptotcst would be lade to Director Wilson ngalnt the eturn of Superintendent Robinson to ctlvo duty In tho meantime, u eloe watch will be ept on the police department and any ttempt to remoM) Captain Mills from ontrol of the loo situation -will bo pposed. A lgllance campaign against bootleg Ing and ce affecting men In uniform r III bo waged If necessnrj', tho Fed ration will c ill on Secretary Daniels j make Kood his threat Mo nation narlnes nnd bluejackets at everj treet corner" to guard uniformed men The Federation haw Just completd I report on conditions In South Phllii- lelphla. This report will not bo made public present, but will he used In tho gen 1 clean-up campaign. According to Dr Dclk, the report "dc nds not less, but greater Algllonco I radical treatment In order to make it section of tho city safe anil res ctable. ' With Full Powers Director Wilson, nf thn Denartment f Public Safety, declared I.oblnson w 111 nlnlsters expressed todav "their dls.ip- h "comeback " tho return of a position of ," said Doctor polntment over Itoblnson "I profoundly regret Captain Hoblnson to tin Superintendent of Police," said Docto Delk. "Our dependence upon the ror rectlon of Ico conditions In Philadel phia has been upon Captain Mills" The Ilev William V Herg, decretory of the Interchurch Federation, expressed his reRret tit Captain lloblnson's return 'Hoblnson's record speaks for Itself," aid Mr Berg, who Is pastor of the Jentrat Congregational Church ' On he basis of his record, ho Is a dlscred- ted ofllclal Tho suppokltlon that thoin"" "' '"or' f10""' conir.it is Aienougn nen should bo reinstated, nominally. In admitting the mine libertv of the Peace rderthnt be might Ret his pension, with I t'onferenct tn deal with tin subject, wt he understanding tbat nn abler of-Conlder our rights art established fully leer will do his work. Is besldo the by our ngrtemtnt with Great Ilritaln nark. j nrenllgrlthfkak.i 1 1 nm not Interested In Captain Uoh-' son's pension If Captain Hoblnson falls In that dutj, ho deserves to lose i pension " ' Criticizes Our Democracy 1 "It seems that Philadelphia has I learned nothing from tho war," said the Rev. Dr Samuel Zane Batten, head of the Baptist Social Service. "The rest of the world Is stniRgllng toward better things, but Philadelphia clings to her 1 old ideals Wt tan only hope that when . trie boj i come back and spp how our I dcrnocracj' has been depraved thev will hojld some officials to prettj Miff u - count If Philadelphia Is an example ifjthe democracy we wished to make ale throughout the world, we wero jcls to spend our blood and treasuro 1 preserve It WAR WORK BODIES DISBAND efene Coiuirils, Public ,ifcty .uhI Other Orp.mizations Quit The I'ennsjlvann Council of National fense, committee of publlt safetj' and ny klntyretl organizations In tin .statt id dlbanded after serving the Uov menlf In Its war actlvltlts at home vas said the lustorli.il tomnils- .-'appointed bj tho council to pro e a Itten itln ctl lore .inns u..- . ., unto council grew out of the t ommlttee of olio safe! J, with which It merged when , State appropriated $.'.ono 000 to con. .11.1 Its lotlvltlet V good mti ,"" I ,?', ,,:,, " , f lis monej Has been e pt lltlt d 011 motor ransport service fir volutarv home tie- ense polite intdlclne anil linspit.il cx. rises. The officers if the iminrll are t,rorgs narton i-e'iper in.urmin i.ewis i, Itler, setntaev l.tiltighnni II Morris, nsurer, and I.ouls ! SaJ. r evcutive inager YIF.XIM TO REVOKE Oil. LAWS &xtra Seion to 15enic f.c-ti-la- -r f r lion injurious i0 i niioti ,-i.ue- hlstorv or I'.nnsjuania. to be ' ". '" ' '" " "' """ '"',,,..,,, w. "' ", organization at s.S South s. ,, n,i str.Vt bj Governor nrumb.iugh. will position as president of the Iniversltyi ,, ' ,,J1U , i In win. lj be hirangutd against the f,ov- ue Its work until all legal matters of North Cirollna. nt an aimi ll Hilary I ji. totli l)f Phihultli.hl ms L-lclnir iliolr 'r1,.n:n1'' '!"' ol",', '"V1 ,1"' 'burcli ng the action are settled f . .-lp . ,. ,,., v . tH .V, r L hk,. I ,,'B P 4,il. .V,.""lu ft"."1 !.T.: ,1.111 "ft ono nrom nent Pun,,., i ... - -.-rf, ...... ... ., .. ... .,,..- ,h nmuipi nmi,tt r iimif tutu man ."ii"ii prominent tennsjl- ,h .. ,,.,, ., .,,...-., , ,.. mrtastil twentv e.irs .it?,, iVim u. i.iiii vinnt. .. m.n.h. pu nt t ,. .....!, -"' ",'- ,,,,p,.. i, , ,.,-,, ,,,il- ,j... tuit , ,..-. . .' V " : '.. ". ...,- v New vtirk. Tan 1 'trr mz i vv ill t nil i,the Mexlcnn itniguss into extraordi- irCiiarv st'sion to eimt' oil I ind liws re- i -pealing the tlnrees dlst riinlnatorv ngalns' meilcin and British Interests Pr.i llieftn Pint under tpiiolntmeitt an ur.i Aiiiei-in I-nu unuer tppoinxnieitt up spel ml dli.lomatli teprtsentatlve of the Metbni. liovernmeiit at Pails, h iid to tin' bt for. sailing f i Ki.in.e J T ilie action averts a trists that him thr. atcnid uiilitarj in'erit ntion on the of the. Fnitttl s.t.n,s nnd Oreat iln autl whldi might have bee imfl ssue at the Paris iieat e table par Drl an lK 'IHKEE llio BA'ITLKs Youth, .Nineteen, I ouplit at v erilini, w . 4 pre. and ?nir,otw jA aeteran of the bailies tf ertlun -l)re and Solssous, nt the age of nine ty" jears Frant is Hlssnn passed fc?v!4UL tnis iiv toui in ti luriuugu Bfe-JH" " I HtsbiiiKh I enlisted at tin bt ginning of tlm 1inetl t Canto Dlx nnd sailed in vWa,t, tl,w l.nrt.K i nnit Dliltilnn 11 fJy the first b.itMes of th war and '".I, ,iiniillu f ii inost eontlntnl slx niontlu tf B(r sustained onlj one wound He K.'tv vallded home EIS AND SALVATION ARMY Winer Governor Tener I'rc-enls Clieik the noted troopships of tho war With for 6O000 special dtvicrR to prevent even the slight , ,' ..- n- i smoke from her oll-burnirig furnatts and Former t.overnor John k Tener hand- , d ,,r ,etter t,mn twentj- StloWn'n VM'SS,., knot's an hour she vias known to w' years gift to the Armv from i tho commindtrs tf the Oerm.in sub war relief tommlrslon of tho Or- marines sho eluded as "The (Ihost Mitp ' if Flks. The presentation took A F-boat would sight her, but not until jesterctay in New York 8no ,,s hull-up on tho horUon, unbe- , Tener who Is chalnnnn of the . trR. e(j beforehand by smoke Tho sub , KH ?nhlehn vv1orr'dnornor.lHe '"""' ,"e'1 01"'1 '"hnierge and set a ii STlW. ArKInyforUrts0hu1ntran!l!, -urse to Intercept C.n emerging to I work among the soldiers In torpedo the prospettive victim the U-boat e, I'nvariibly found the swift Northern Pa- - - , t iflt acaiit on the buiizon In another ll- eil KooJ Uotlv Goe It. Nieiuii tl1'!"" e "' "'.?"" 'iT.W ,..,'er?.''"e;!,V,.,"' in uiiir "t1; i",D ". iti"ii I fooel situation In cH-rman Austria I ttl hero fop Vienna ' m cluiiged with the Investigation ' ft ' WV ' Si 4St, ES ECC-SuC-X!31-wwXlnCXr J Mk &c UIKsriJK I'VNCOXhT a elected pre-iilent nf llio (liitKo-tGr ( ily (.ouneil tmljy i vv n oicririi prr-meni oi mc I .,. - .' . i FRANCE TO PROTECT ARMENIA AND SYRIA Picholi Aimoiiiices Intention to Guide Detinics of Tur- kej's Subjugated Ruce-j lh the iimnfi'i l'rri I'urli,, Jan 1 Kranu' intinds to ,13. X ZZ,'Z?d'i sume tlm RUldnno of the dchtlnlts of K.mi7e until the 1st of IMinnrj, ami Arimnla, sjrli ami l.ebiiion In the mw h" Hoard of Health next Mondaj Hoth older of world affairs In lonformitj "1u.'',,ii!Ji!r.I ,V.,lu1'""" , , .... ., , , ,, ,, . ,, , , Woodbury ( It v Council was organized, with triattts slgiad with Oreat UrltnltiU,ith sej.n Ilepubllcans and two Pro- nnd HussK In I'M 5. It the I'taie Con fcrence clots not rule otherwise, aii.ord- InR to nuthorltttljp souros Palestine, aeiordlng to the arangcnient under cnnvlder.itloti, with Its com.iloltj of n.iilon llities .111,1 r,.llirl,in villi i. I , d , International prntettlon 1-ngland would be responsible for tin 1 Ar.1bl.1n peninsula with the txe.ptlon of tll0 ,.,. ,, of 1I(d, ,,,. ultl ,',e "'o lunK"om or ilidjis. which woulrt be u , 1 fhtso fitts wire glvtn lis .111 ex planation nf a declii.itlim .Suuilaj by Stephen Pkhon, IVielgn Minister, In the Chamber of I)e)Utles Iteft rrlng to the manner In which France would ileal with sla Minor and nationalities once ruled by Turkev, JI Pit bun Mid "Our rights .in Ineontistlble In r- menla, hjrli, I.i h.itmn and l'.alfhtlne T,",y nrp 1,JM'(1 "" "I't""!'' conventions THINKS WILSON WON'T TARE UNIVERSITY POST Secretary Daniels lkliees President Will Decline North Carolina Offer Wiiohliigliin, Jan 1 f think It ratlii r Imprnbabl th it President Wil son will accept tho position said to have been offered hint as prtlde'it of the L'nlverMtr of Xorlh t-'arollna, when he get through as Piesldcnt of tlm Filled States" said Secret iry nf the .N'lvj Daniels totl.av ' I in Incline to belKVo Mr WIN011 villi bt content to take a long rest after his Sight jeirs nf Irenu ndouslv bird work and will glvo his tlmti to writing" Sfcretarj Daniels when n-ked ahout tho report tint before leaving lr Fuiiipe .... . """ougu n mimuer oi tne iioarn t,i in-, rectors of the Fnlversity ho had not' heard of it nearci or ii , 'Wtalnlj-, the offer if extended did . . .. . not ni, hrough me, said .Mr Daniels. I am gning to Rtlelgh In u few tlavs1 nnd will look into it It vvouid, of course. ' be a great grand tiling for North Caro-. una t nuersitj, nui i ininii time vvnen 'be President gtts through with this ' B""1 '''S 'ask he It is oti hand he will feel like tailing a K ng rest and win , weitome nn opptii cunuy 10 write n tew books dealing with the great Interna- tlonal and mt'onl matters with which . , . ... ...- 'i lnso touch " Thn ipi t l i"u a ,.A I. ui,I n Ii ..! lUIelgh V C, bald 1 , n off, rtd the po- ill'' ! cm in unii sitmn at $ tbat tin tlienevi. could be obtained limn heavj endow- in. nt mule to th orth i nrolina Fill- erstt be t hi l'l igler estate and nth, r phiianthr ipi.s, 'Vvrt lj ttnnvt" AflYIMtllll I UllilUI L fvyi UUIIU With 1000 WfllllHlP.il t fiiitlllli-tl from Pace One Pom of Wtiods. about tvvi miles ist i of Flro Island vvhltb i known among mailreis us the i.ravej.atd of tho t- I antic cjoast i Th N.rnhern PatUU.. position Is ,11 ' rtctly opposite the naval radio EtutlMi umnarKauon oiuciais uc iitiuoiien rs- ,,,i th. onlnlon that the heaxv fog was entirely resjionslble for the trans port s plight i Itiin groiiml ut Modrrutn s,r The snon-ton steamship ran into the to.kv shore when traveling at moderate ispeed Tho transport failed from Franco e'hrUtmas Dav The Identity of tho unit,, aboard, with the exception of tie lllghth Trench Mortar Battery of tho 1 lllghth Division, was not given The Northern Pacini, whith Hceretarj Baker used for his return from Fr.tm e on bis last trip to ihn front. Is one of with tlf.v five olllcer, and sold.trs and llt. , r , lout i ' from IJrtst i A nun armed lure todaj ' Irnu.Unl Wl i.n 1. 1 .1 l.. ., ...1 t. ISIH TTOin tlln nrsl to lllrt .lt I nt itf ilUI rflSH ,t tllftt 111? Of 11., I W - FOUR JERSEY MAYORS START TERMS TODAY Gloucester, Woodbury, West- villc and Wenona Executives 'lake Oaths of Office The newly elected major of four Jerscj- towns took oaths of offlie this noon In their respective executive build ings Major Dald M Anderson rnlirrd t u(ju ma nuru term as .Mimir or limn UHtr Samuel II I.ulil fiuk his third nth of nfflie iih Major nf Woodbury Ir Charles II Winer, after belliR out "f nftlco for Mv jours, arfiiln bet nine Wenona's Major Jim llerrj tntired i "flii- nt Wi stMIle ' N'ooti on N'mv ears D.aj marks he uitrntuo of the i xeeutlvos Into of lire and tho beginning nf the work of the ounrlls In those towns lb i. Hoard of Frttholdors In eaih rnutilv Hn organlrnl at the same hour, "'ii iiicinnerM cnn-en at tho November election took their Mats t the org miration of Gloucester City I Council, Cheslir P.mroist, who lupins .his sirond term, was eh t ted nnsldint ii iu t,,., ..utl ,-. : . ' no Is a Ilcpublli an Th, new hoilc pnn. slts nf Mnen llipuhlli ins mil two Dcm ocrats "Hilt um the first time tint the m ijnrltv w.isnlloHnl toslt Im.iueiis ( h.irli s W I.etRus was n-eleiled ( Ity Snlli llor Ills Kiluy was Inrreased from Jino in jsnn per ji.ir, with no fees for mllerMiiR. ddliifiucnt watir lints and lroi,rtj tixis The penaltj and ro--ts In tin. fiituru will go Into tho City Pre.i nir. Itolurt Lincoln was electid u perilsop of Uriels; Oliver J ftitser, H member of tin board uf assessors i .Inhn M Arms, i hit f of the waterworks, Dr I . llei k i III liluslilm. ttnlinrl A ll.lm.olii and Ilinry Y.irdlev. members of tin Hmrd of Ht.iltli The oni.us of Clerk of the W'.itirnorks and Cltj Clerk wtrn comblmd I Tile Ho-ltd nf I!ilnn illnM , ill .t , Jiiuuinn members James O Morgan and (lirrett It Selunck nr.. tin, unw members of the bod v. i:rnet II ltluir. of the Third Ward, who was re-cleited, was cuiticl president John c Ford. "J1" resigned ns sup. rlntendent of the "'"( r iieparim-nt early In the Mimmer and was succtedttl bv IMwnrtl W Facer. was ciecteti to the position again at 1 RiHrv of $2000 per jiar which will he nrarlj- $.(m ov.rwh.it ho rett Ived I "efor. Fdg.ar S Whll.len wns elected aRpstant up. rlntcmlent Francis W Urt nn in was elected as.e-sor of the Third Ward, William MeCartcr Cltj hur vejor nnd Albert Henry Ilulldlng In sputor Tho Gloucester County Hoard of Free- holders was orginlztd .at the Courthouse nt Woodburj bj re-eltctlng Charlts Walton, of Woodburj-. dlrtctor Tho ' new board consists of sKtetn Repub licans nnd live Democrats Tho now numbers ire C lnvvltr Kline, vUinsi term ns M.ivor of W'unomh fur several jears expires todav . Finn r 1, Shirpe, Man tun township, nnd Joalah G Cluud, Stconil Ward, Wondbnrv Cbirlts lit 11 was re-eltttetl Cb rU ind '"car N" Ittdrow Solicitor 1399 CITY SOLDIERS GAVE LIVES FOR U. S. Total of Soldier Deaths ill 1 9 1 Will He Increased. Howewr During 111S approximate lj 1.1SD Philatklphl ins died from attldtnt or. tllst lse or w.re si tin nn tlm h ittixtlxlila tnst iso 01 wire slain on tho nattlellelils , of France. This total does not Include tltjths In trilnlng camps at home ' ' Of the totnl, 1103 met death on the t'eld of battle. I0S succumbed to wounds , ,, I (tutt .m tnu 111 iiitin,' 1 unit) nern killed in accents, .m. when thcr air- , planes 10 lapsed, ethers bv bursting eannnp In practice and still othi rs by collisions between hta muliirapp.11.1- tus bthiml tint lines 1 tus utmntl tlm lines These n cords are as complete ns unj obtainable and are based upon casualtv nnimnr stun- n, ,,t (JIL LUIVlrANY MUST PAY TAX I - J ' "' ,rtA ' Mimtpillien CoiirtM I pliolll A-1 . ' n. . i .. . . .. - I'IIKMII (ill IJI-lriDtllllli; Motions 1 hi vtluiti lb fining I'miii tin uni-t pn a mtn intll 1 1 i a nil h- i-nsli utlug stations tin. ughnut Jlnniinnnii count:' This wns ilnldul w In n tin Court dismiss, , n, nppi.il of tin com- j p.mv from the ass, smiii nt bv tin Mir I mi,, vmirain r on t n subsi.tilims In Vnrrislown, Lansdale Jenklntown n Mir iiml i.tlur nl..v It wa tnntendeil ,,, Kh .pralser .stimnted volum. of -..- - UKlntss nnd that the compaiiv was nm liable for mercantile tax op these plates I utilise nf tin tax It v ad on Its main t-t itlmi In Plu'adt Iph'n It must b conceded ' sivs Ihn urt, the ten stations are dlsiln't and aiurt from the factor In Philadelphia Thev U eonstl,,,,. stores or wareh-us within the contemplation tf the law Iner. ..in b, no other construction kI i, i il i it inn ttw l ttHnii-itii tl-iii ,11 .. . u Istitlois are malntalnt-l for tl. purposti lef conveniently vendlnir lis t.,..u .. ,1. n" I... .me tl,,. sinjett f buttr and rale until thej nrnv. ihre CZECHS SUPPORT MASARYK Pri.lo in ovv N.Uiot, 15.,ks ni. ' ovv N.ilion li pliovist Plans Spinal ( nblr In I ti-iiing I'libltt I.eilfrr iifyruhi nil ly iuni I . , ,, Iippmih .I.ih 1 Iitr.iitiini..,.. ....I..i ..,,..,,, i,, i bv promlm in ( z. i lis in Svv an rl ind con- , nmi ., ue,.., mat i-rtsiueni .MisirvK HudliiiK Not fralil I'Ti'h" "i'iT'm . m;""tl "' I'" ':0llt- While . Mtago unearthed one of ,!, I. il parti, t ln his work of nation il re- mo"t"7,(ir,,in,r internal plots t.f the const i ut ion Although Ituhnnla Is I ,P unr tb signed to destroy and It r-large-ly an Industrial eountrv, tht re is no , rori7e Indiscrlnilnatelv resulting in pros. dang, r of Bolsht v Ism Cznh uurkimr. men uri hut I ilists but thty follow their lead, is, wilt si- s,mm ismndtrate and law -abiding and pit nolle Pride in the realization nf their n iiional aspirations outweighs the temptations of class strife I.enlne his diFp Ut hul numerous mils sarles Into the Bohinilin mining dis tricts to tonvtrt the miners to Ilolshev- Imii but their pre p u.and l to far 1mh ' proved it, complete failure WAGES RAISED $1 A DAY Ford Motor Company Furrea'-es Pav From S. to Sd Detrnll, Mlih, Jan 1 (Ilv A P J I A new inlnimum wage faf of Id a d tv, a ttat hit re ist nf $1 n, tlty fur nnnitix!- mitilv .'!' imiilove throughout the i luntrv w ami unt ed totlav by tho I Ford ..t. r .iniianv Kmnlojct, of the ' Fori! t.i r ini rests also ar, inclutled in the Iin renst I i he new wage minimum becomes ef. fcUive today Horrible Outrages Practiced by Austrians on Helpless Population Maddened Defenders to Achieve Great Victory, Says Colonel Franklin ustil.iti kultur, ns practiced In Italy, Kriatly nsmhlid tho brutal methods of (lirnuins In Iklgtuni, according to l.lriilennnt Colo m 1 (' 1' Frank lin, of this city, whi) wroto to Vic tor J Hnmllton, of Sixteenth and tjombard streets, relating atrocious ihcds Children's1 hinds wro cut off, women wcro ravaged nnd nil tho other tricks of kultur were practlcid with I-KAMvI.IN tlm Rime mlrlt bv tho Austrians as th iriiettrl7i.il tho work of tho Germans, Hr iSt 'H v he t.ild I ugees during the turning wlnttr And thej- hid tho same effect In I Speaking of coming home, he writes Italj that they hud In llelglutn Mad- . that there are still forty jenrs of hard dentil by tho dtstructlon and crimes worll btforo tho soldiers, "ono ear to of tho luvnilus, the Italians fought as , clean up tho present conditions, and ntvtr In fore, and nchlevtd n. great lc- thirty-nine In which to wind up the al torj In throwing Inck tho Austrlin, I most Inconcclvablo massca of barbed Colon" 1 Franklin said, the Italians over- I wire " tnim natural obstne'ts that were birder I I.liultnmt Colonel Franklin speaks to imi'iuer than were tin soldiers or of tho enthusiasm with which the Ital tht tin mv Most of the fighting wns lans treat Americans, and saja thej an nrtllltrv tluellng. and tho heavv fit Id pirtlcularly fond of tho American Jazi pletes wire hulled through tho moun tain districts with tho grtattst possible dlllkultj'. BOMB FOUND IN BOOTH AT FEDERAL BUILDING l tmtiiiiit il from I'iik Ontt divided Into at least tbreo groups of ter rorists Moo.va Is being held on a technical charge of being n. suspicious person. After bo had been tiuestloncd several hours he was plated In a cell, the police tlmjlng him nn attorney Mills an nounced tint hn would even Ignore h.ibeas-corpus writs In order to hold Moore, declaring ho was determined to use stern measures to ferret out the per petrators of the outrages Tint tho polite are not facing m rely n (.tmrniHii nllMitlpst nr man wun 11 i-rlet.. men lur.ilnst a 'urico. a. business lender or a police chief, but a well-or- ganlzed tirrorlst movement nroblblvt financed by foreign plotters, is nl-o plain f p 'flIO'' honest ve?e"lctf to Mills, be s.ajs. from the tut hat tho $ T"vl"i'ca"o" exploded bombs wcro planted In such -Do vou mind telling who jou nre? separatn sections ns liverbrook, Wtst'the reporter asked Philadelphia nnd the center of Phlla- delphl.ru old residential eiistrict Way llnve 1 mind Ilninh W iirkHhop A pl.ato known ns lloom Xo 1, In Iteed street, near Fifth, may have been tho workshop In which the three bombs were manufactured It Is slid nt po lice heatliiu irters This vicinity Is known bv the police and Feder il authorities to be the head quarters of I W. W, Bolshevist, nnd olh'r riidlinl clans Fntll rectntlv the gioup of foreigners, called the Arbiter iting, rormeii, it Is a'IrMd, to resWt the draft, held Its 1 meetings neir Fifth and Heed streets , . 1 BOMB SUSPECT HERE WAS HAYWOOD'S AID lMwartl Moore under arrest Wr ex amination In connection, with thevbomb p'ots. his long been kntAvn to thepollt nnd Fedeial authorities as u fieri radi cal 1 During the trial of men convicted for thu anarchist riots here on February 20, 1D(1S, Moore Issued tevernl st ite mtnts couched In violent liingu ige. It Is s.ald Offii nls who caused the driest and the conviction of tho men were dt -nouneed, ,iml the prisoners vvero de fended In these state mints ainom lias had a varied career In J 'ir,l""s iin.ilchlst niovemt-nts Of lite ho j, t, ) , n n(IU ,tP,i UI ,, j w AV the polite assert The police refund to ti , '1, 1 1 1 , ,fl11, hut . in be was marched te, hi tell he waved v hand to the re pnrtt rs, smiled and wished th'vhaK1,i'u nY !ir. , , .ioore it developed, nas long bt en wii.in mh t iii.tiit'p ,0 n.g YlllI Il7vwoo0d:" ."r Ww N idi r leiinth ttnvlttetl of miIIIImi Hi ''hi' ago together with some thlrtv-tvvn J!'1'''' ,,u workeis In rec nt vc irs. now over Moore bioko nw.iv from llaj- d j ,M( It 11,11, on Kt iislngtnn avenue Moore oteordlnR to the pollt 1 , ret entlv uiiiitti into tut uitr.i-raiiu il ore, tions as a t h impitm nf I W W nu thoils "' ,,ds wandtitd almost all over tho "!'' , ,,,. , ,, , JAiore Is tlftv six vears old As a mere s. lalii-t some tvv.nlv j. irs ago Moor.- w is l.ithtr n nr.it . r, ttser I ii.uuli tmi p. ;ih ln t,,,,,,,,. i,i.,ek, with a little black In vv th that gav, him the nir of a ministri But as a revolution, 11 v Moore tlistl ilns his old time neatness of appell ant e lie .ippi-artd nt cjltv nail inuir. I, s with an t Id hincinc and torn sweater and a slum b hit olnretl bv wind and winihn His long drawn fate was I" . .'"" nis rvt s inoKtii hit t pi. ss i r tutl ills evi s lnokt .,ii still Ittrivid i he tilt tint used to 1H1 tin m in bis nup-nov. div PRIESTS DISORGANIZE 0E BAM) OF RADICALS I W W orgini-.iin lis downtown re. '" "' tint, so noitt in tin ii- in tiine J- , ,7 'ur. b , ombi. ,7rl tnx&V. ,on f one bind whose bt tiltiu irtrs was back of tilt church, at Third and Hiu n ulrnlc Inqulrj reve-iled tint tiftb ers t.f the I WW h,il gain.d eiitrtnci-to several . .. .1 .. -J L .U...1. . ., ..A- .V..t inK rlinsliernblf Inllutnce The nrl.sts nt ome heenn to tounter.ut the activities- of these men, and as a icsult of the priests work the local Is be Ilia id to have, disbanded fids Is one of the tit veiopmcniH in il V w" W members '"Bolshevists Vadlctl Kociallsts antl nnaichlsts driven out of ther iltltw. have b.en tlocklng to Plula. dtlphl.a In nddltinn to the ailnus Soclillst and revolution irvRroups tht polite h iv n - .... ... .. ... r n.. a ,1..,, AOli Molina uni me rt nre iii. t,t- ... vv members of tht I W W In the tlty t cutinns wbltli sent "IHg BUI Hav'wood ii,.. t w W leader, and tnon man a hundred of his followers to Jail for terms ringing from twentv jears down It was ttolnted out jestertl.iv that some what similar proserutlnns In Philadel phia did not bring results oatculited to strike lnstlng fear to the hearts of tl oso opposed to all organized government ami society in,v. ,,, Vies tt t he I W W are ,, i,t,i. . unnn s throw of ea' ll other. lone nt 8JS South set ond street, direetlj ontiOSlte tne sei null noil i uristmn sneem ' I . .1 .- .t. ..U- k lit. ii kAiin At.s r.i-.u.A ctntinn the other tUM around the turner, In r'ntr-irlno streit. between Front and Sccrnd ver a garage Tho first Is known lis the Marine ivnnonnrt Workers' I.onl. No 100 I !W W with a fluctuating membershlii ... A- ..,...., "nnfi Tlie second Ir the T.oncr. 'i r,inen s" I-ocil No 8 I W W.and in. 1 ides at hast 30fll) numbers t, ...n nt tb former ndrires tint pi. me Information was gained list night, throwing aJditlonal light upon the police ndmlsslon of eongregated I W W's Roishtvikl anarchist il(rl iin 7 i- sandithcrVadicals nv -... .- did most or tne shooting One of his bul- conmletii report of tho nresent stntil. n and one womei.'ltls tore uw ay part of Policeman Hunt- of the Finnkford InBtltution will be for t tne time Onn nf Imracoat. ..i.i ,, i,. it,,- rr,-.- Half dozen men I do Ihe 'were In fhe room at the time One of i Iteferrlnp again to tho crimes of the Austrian soldiers, he told how one enemy oltlccr had compelled nn Italian girl to leavo the funeral cortege of her mother to accompany him Another time he saw the civilian population of a rccov- ered district taking tho meat of a horse that had been dend Severn! days, and ono small girl, about scjen jears old, lunnlnn nwny with hor sharo of the meat claspid In her arms, ns sho would havo held a doll In normal times. "I havo seen tho limlscapo so torn by shellllre that not a blade of grass or treo was left," ho wrote. "There was nothing but great holes nnd clods of earth nnd tumbled ruins, not a single bul'dlng standing In inanj- of tho x II- ligts, Tho American and Italian Ucd Cross arc doing wonderful work, and are concentrating on caring for the ref bind Ho Is attached to tho United Mates army ambulance scrvlco with the. Italian army the men volunteered the information that the local branches hive no permanent olllctrs, but elect a different eh ilrmati for each meeting He tald they were constantlj' visited bv Oovernment and loPct Investigators, "who never get anj thing" W Iiohc HllnlnntH? Tho woman stepped in vvlti fiery In terruption "I wouldn't say nnjthlng to a news paper reporter," sho said "We nre I. W W's, hut whoso business Is It and what Is that ng.alnst us? Tho newspa pers are responsible for nil tho trou ble In this country: thev aro tcsponsl- hie for evry I W W prosecution Thev anneal onlv to tho Ignorant omv to 1 no minas, nnn mc ignorant mintrs ne- ' wn,it im-j if, in iiKiiuiht mc 1 v. , 1 11, 1 f iif-- ii in ,i-l I'rrn nil nun- In Ves I'll te'l toll." she answered 'I'm Mrs W T N'eff, and my husband was one of the 1 6(5 persons sentenced In the I W. W prosecution 111 Chl t.tgo He pot twenty vears and bos servlnR his time now For what' Be cause a Jury was put on the bench, not toihear the evidence, but to bring In a tnnvlctlon " "Are jolt a resident of PhilidclpliK?' was asked Mrs N'eff smiled, so did some of the men who had gathered about her She nesitateii ant! then replied "I m n resldtnt of Philadelphia for tho pi est nt That's nil III sav" ,si1( n fused to wiy what her mission here was, or how long she Intended to remain but tin re wns little doubt she stootl In a position of leadership toward tun men inr inpv an roiioweu ner tue anil rtfued to discuss nnv thing further N'eir Fifth and Iteed streets until re centlv w ih nn organization of fnrelgut rs vvhle-li t tilt tl ittf the Arbiter King 1 he men were banded togcthtr, It Is alleged, to reslKt the draft Ixicnl Draft Hoartls V'i i. 11 and n called for 11I1I from VJashlnglnn and the support of the local police, vvllli tho roult that the Arbiter lUng as such, was broken up and nil but ,1 few of Its numbers lndutted Into the draft In stctlons of port Richmond the police Hiv are other anarchistic nssoria tlons and br.iruhes of the llevolutlonarj' Iibor initv The police aver that In ,1 store nf tllfftrtnt places throughout the cltj are nests of potential terrorism and destruction. In one or more of which may hivn hi en c-oni octet! and conunij mated tlm plot that was brought to ft 'jit Inn .Monday night BOLSHEVIKl HERE UNDER SUR VEILLANCK Mnie than a hundred Bolshevik! In this illy hive been under constant sur veillance for a jc.ir or longer according to Chi, f Cortelvou, viho sild tho out lasts of .Monday night were Intended to be the fort runnel of m.anv similar octurrtnets, pot only In Philadelphia, but throughout tho eountrv 'Wo knew of thtsn IlnMirvlkl at least i j ear ago." Mr Cortelvou add ed, 'hut we tould do nothing while the I tilted Slates was tit wai Our mission was to prote.t tho Amerlc in Oovern ment not from tho outside, but from the Inside 1 vtrv rt source of the Federal depart ments was placed at tin disposal of Cap tain .Mills nnd the various Investigators lumped Into tin puisult of the bombers' Mr iort.lv. hi Capi iln Mill OMIlin of the .Secret Service here I, .1 llorinan. in Iliu bt atl of the Di partmtnt of Justice bureau of Invtstlg.itlon and a torps from the Fnitttl hlntm shipping board, as will as trilnttl men from the armv and imvv lntelllgi nt bureaus offered their services to tin- local pollc he id Aithlv.s of nil tbes,. departments wen scanned 1 1 iselv tor Inform ltlon idling upon the llbgal netlvltlts of meruit s of tin Pi (lira! 'lovemment pirtu ul irlv those men nnd womtti who bad vlul.itnl provisions of the esplonnre ai t di.'i.ig the war Tin polite of the Mxtj-flrst antl 1 bnmpson streets station aie working on a due furnished bv i nt gro whose name was leftist d for puli'lt atlon which mav slutl soivm light on the bomb-planters who tlimagttl till lcslileme nf Crnest T Trigg presldt nt of the Chitmliee f Cnmmert. at (Won (ivrbrnnk avenue Fniperor which wns kept at Potsdam At coidlng to tin utgro who s emplovett h is bi en burned ns well as a number ns a curler bv Ptank a nt wsp ip, r iof documents dealing wllh Internal dialer ln Overbrook he saw a man uestlons, according to a statement emerging fiom tbe Rinunds on the SlxtJ'-I 'nade to a correspondent of the Matin fourth street sleb of the Trigg homo bv Call Knutskj, who Is preparing a iibout a tiuartei of an hmir before the I white book dealing -with the origin i -vploslnn net u r red He saw tho man f 'ho war drive awnv In a motor tar which bad K.iutskv said that the book would betn 1 ft nt the nub 'contain all the illplomatlo documents 'Iln ih script Inn given i.r the mn who bearing on the war from tho nbsasslnn Is he llev ei to be white Is that he was I'0'1 of Francis Ferdinand to the In of normil height nnd wore a long dark i '"'"n of Belgium The book win ton rvereoat The negro s.ivs be gave no lain many p.ir'rs annotated In pencil second thought to the incident nf ii,e ill the hindwiltlnc of tho former Km. man coming down tho loadvvav froniil"'r"r Knutsky slid th it not one paper the Trigg gir.ige, ntir where the ex iilosiim ci. .'lineil until he was aroused bv the i tnloslon nnd had been tol.l v hi re It had taken place JUSTICE SENTENCED REDS IN 1901 RIOT Juvtiie Robert von Moschzlsker. whoe home was one of the three bombed lie " i irntinKi, iiujkjm-ii sentence on rour mm who took pait in the riot during a piratic of lleds In llroad Hreet Feb ruarv 20 lf08 Whetl er tho men involved In this nf. fair long since discharged from Jail, are or have been in this iltj and nre under suspicion In the present outrage, tho police will not say The rioters and the sentences Imposed by Justice von Moschzlsker, then a Judgo of the (Juirter Sessions Court, nret Domenlco d'Anella. live jears. Joseph Tioln. two jears; Michael Costella, eight een months, Francisco PUzlsano, one j ear rwo policemen narrowly missed being injured bv bullets from the revolvers of the anarchists during tho parade Ine'scoat, Court Appoints Lindlcy M. Garrison to Look After Cor poration's Affairs w York, Jan 1 I.lndley M Gar rison, forcr Secretary- of War, -was apiwlntcd receiver for the llrookljn lUplel Transit Company nnd Its sub sidiaries by Judge Majcr In Federal Court upon application of tho Westing house Flettrlu Companj, which has a large claim against tho corporation for supplies furnished It Negotiations with the city for carrying out tho Brookljn Rapid Transit's part In tho "dual subvvnj' sjstem" were con summated In 1913 nnd under them the corporation assumed rcponslblllty for three distinct lines with a trackage of approximately 281 miles A large sharo of this work remains uncompleted and It was this delay to which arc attri buted most of tho corporation's finan cial difficulties. Another element which is believed to havo led to the receivership was tho disastrous wreck In November on tho Brighton Beach lino In which nearly 100 persons lost their lives with attend ant damage claims amounting to an enormous sum. Tho Brookljn Rapid Transit con trols, lrtual!j nil tho transudation lines In Brooklyn surface, elevated and subways. Its elevated lines cross the tho Brookljn, Manhattan, Williamsburg and Queenshorough bridges Into Manhat tan It owns tho Broadway subway ex tending from Times Square to Whitehall street In Manhattan with two tunnels under the Fast River to Brooklyn. The elevated and surface lines of the com pany extend to tho far corners of Ilrook Ijn, to Conej" Island, Canarsle, Flush ing, Jamaica nnd Bergen Beach. Colonel Timothy S. Williams, presi dent, Issued a statement In which lie said tho corporation did not oppose the receivership, for It felt Its Interests would be subserved by a temporary re ceivership "Tho lmmedlato requirements were for meeting Jnnuary obligations for about J2,00O,O00," he said, "and this could have been obtained But to complete tho construction and equipment work now under contract, nnd to provide for additional expenditures for similar pur poses during the coming jc.ir. will re quire the raising of many million more nnd the general situation nffectlng strtet rallroids. with their stationary fares and rising costs, had Injured their cndlt nnd mido Impossible-, up to the present time, provision for the Investment of fresh capital " Mr Garrison declined to dlscus his plans for the rehabilitation of the com- panv bejond savlnp, "I am going to run the toad as directed liy tho courts " RHINE FOLK LIKE YANKEES - l , e nn,ln,l '':,. sKICIlt Ol UCClipiCtl I crntorj " Hope Americans Will Kcinaiu Sprcinl Cable to JViciiirig Public Ledger Copyright, IDtVt by Sew lorL Time' Co, The II ii it lie, Jan, 1 According to a neutral traveler Just nrrlved from oc cupied tenltory on the Rhine, Inhabi tants of Cob'cnz anil other towns occu pied by Americans all hope the Amerl enn troops will remain In Itermanv 'lliej ndnilre Ptrshlngs froldleis, think tin in lint, wcll-hullt men ami nre anx ious to please them The Rhelnische (tiizctte, commending the American troops In Coblenz, sajs "I he Ann rlcan lomni Hiding ofllccrs' wish that the people should live as though the troops wire not present has bit n fulfilled We feel no objection to the Vmirlttns, and communication Is not Impede il, civilians go where thej like and there aro no restrictions be tween the two sides of the Rhine The Amerlcins organised a beautiful public Chrlstmis festlvltv for t lvlll.ins" The paper continues that tin normous git en muss noss wns tttcted In front of (lovernmint buildings on the Rhine nnd Illuminated with electric lights There was also a Christmas tree twentj sevtn fttt lili.li, which was Illuminated at night, whtn thousands of persons collected and sang Otrmin Christmas songs and the b mil plajetl After which, the paptr continues, sweetmeats nnd tin trumpets were Riven the chil dren TRENTON OFFICIALS AROUSED Suit Ap.iint Defense Society Is Threatened by Trustees Trenton, .Ian j The Trenton School Bond has Instriitted Its counsel, Mal colm Buchanan, nnd James; S Mes sler. a initnbt r of the bo ird, to go to New ork nnd determine the InsN of the reporttd utlon of the American Defense Snriilv which is said to hive passed a rt solution asking for a reopening of tlm cise of Dr William A Wetzel, principal of the Truiton High School who wn" aifpiltted bv the board In September of charges of pio (lermanlsm preferred by M ivor Fredern k W Donnelly The bo ml members nre arointed bj the reporlcd ii.tlon of the New York so-tletj- mid tbriwten to .sue If the honor of tin boiril has been Impugned KAISER'S LETTERS BURNED Kvideiue Atjainst Former Em 1 peror .it Potsdam Destroyed rri. .Ian 1 (Bv A P 1 All the corresnonilent e nf tlm frtrmwe e'-m4. nan nussmg irom tne loreign tjttlce, WAR RISK BUREAU CATCHES UP Announce Checks Uuc in Decem ber Arc All Mailed - W HbinKtit, Jan 1 (By A P) On the opening of the new jenr the Trens urv s war risk Insurance bureau today land allowance checks to soldiers sml announce ii it nan iiiiuieti an allotment ..., . ., ., ... .-.......... eninirs uejit ntifiivs cueriug UClOUer pav, due In December Beginning Thurstlaj tho bureau will begin to distribute checks overlng allot, nient from soltllers' imv In November, duo ir. January and this distribution will continue throughout tho month. ARSENAL IS CLOSED fclork-Taklnp Releases 3000 Workers From War Plant Frankfort! Arsenal Is closetl for an In definite period pending completion of a comprehensive after-the-war Inventory of materials antl stock on hand Ap proximately. 3000 workers art) temnn. rnr."' ou, , epplojment. , ,Arsenn ofhclas nre confident of com- warded to the War Department. ARRESTED :-. HOMB PLO Etl w aril Mnore, vvlio ailmits'lii? rad ical anarchism, is being held for in vestigation ley the polite in roimcc lion with homb explosions here TARDIEU DENIES U. S. PAID TRENCH RENT French Official Classes Wild Report as Purely German Propaganda lly the Associated Press Pari,, Jan 1. Captain Andre Tar dlcti, html of the general commission for Franco-Amerlcnn matters, (.peaking to the Associated Frets rciatlvo to cer tain extraordlnnrj rumors which had been In circulation In Paris, denied of ficially tbnt the American army had been required to pay rent for the trenches It occupied nt tho front or for tcrrltorj occupied militarily behind the front "Numerous leports of French ns well ns American and British origin " he said, 'havn revealed to us that German propaganda Is not dead and the work of Its organization Is minting Itself felt One Indication among others Is found In the persistence of this absurd rumor. It Is nlmost Inconceivable, nnd I would not taku the pains to denj It, If 1 were not Informed that It Is still In circula tion todaj- It bos been said that when American troops took up a new sector on our front thej' had to paj rent for It to the French Government nnd tint when American troops captured ground from the enctnv In battle they had to pay rent for the reconquered terrlttuj'. I tlcnv It officially In the most cate gorical fashion " CRUSHINGOFTURKS TOLD BY ALLENBY British General Makes Report on Unusually Spectacular Campaign I tuition, Jan 1 llrltlsh Wireless .Service (By A P ) Details of what was, perhaps, one of tho most spectac tilur operations of the war became known totlav when General Allenbv's report on the Palestine campaign was published Hrltlsh. Indian, French and Italian contingents participated in the fighting, and, In addition, Arab fortes from east of the Jordan rindercrt effective as sistance. The Hrltlsh navj' also had a. share in the operations General Alleiihj'H campaign was nm bitlous He sought to break the Turk Ish lines, send his cavalry through and encompass what lie describes as a "rec tangle fortj-tlve miles In 'ength and twelve In depth" In which the Turkish troops vero crowded. Ily this stroke he Intended to cut tho encnij's commu nications nnd complete his dlscomllture by joining binds with tho Arabs A force vastly superior to the Turk Ish armies was gathered against the right wing of the eneinj's army near the Mediterranean coast. On the morn ing of September 10. after an intense bombirdvncnt lasting only fifteen mln- utes, the Allied Infantry nttneked A great gap wus torn In the Turkish lines. I and through it were i-i.ni muw, e I cavalry that had been held In leash for that opportunity. "Within thlrtj-slx hours," saj.s Gen eral Allcnbj, 'all the main avenuer of i scape for tho Seventh nnd Flgbth Turkish AnnleH had been clohed. 4 'I organized enemv resistance ceased, nnd mads vvue blocked by re treating men and trinsport Then the Allied nlr forces hurled themselves at the huddled masses of Turks 'The Turkish armies meltid Intonotli Ingness," sajs the report "A junction was niado with the Arabs and the way to Damascus .end Aleppo was open" TRAMP GOOD SAMARITAN Noniutl iirgcs Two Families Suf.i leruij,' from liillueii..i llnrlpton. Ph., Jim l John Kennedy and Th inias I'anipbtll two firmers lli- iiik in ii tunny i-truou oi tester tovvn-i-hlp, between Ilazleton nnd White Haven, have reported to the authorities that they and their families undoubtedly i bail been saved from death through In fluciiza by the timely appearance of nn unknown tramp nt their homes, when' evtry member of both families was, down with the plague I The tramp discovered the entire Camri bell household critically III In bed Go. tug to the net house, bo found similar conditions, and then decided to act as the Good Sunarltnn He nursed eleven '.t cue iiaiienia tiacK to realm, looked after the fires, did the cooking nnd ut-' tended to the stock until Campbell and Kennedy were able to look lifter the wmtr thoniBfiliaa I Tloriila Is Now "Hone Dry" Tnmpn, Fla., Jan 1 The entire Ktnte of Florida became "dry" nt mid night with tho operntlon of tho recently adopted amendment to the Mate Fon stltutlon making sale, manufacture or transportation of liquors, wines or beer Illegal, nnd providing heavy penalties for Intoxlcntlon. Mail-order houses here sold the last remnantu of their stocks yesterdaj. Negro Acrusetl of Attacking Man Klmer Bowman, nineteen years old 1518 St I,uko's street, u negro, was held ln 500 bnll for further hearing today by Magistrate Wrlgley on a charge of at tacking Joseph riprlan, 417 Fast Kitten house street Clprliin was struck when he tried to put Bowman and other ne groes out of his newapaper distribution station In Qermantown avenue above Lycoming street. . Prnnnsal ) WILSON IDEA CLARIFIED President's Explanation of Moral Force Removes Many Objections to Proposals Ily n Staff Corrrtvomtritt Wanlitnittnti, Dec. 31. The United States Senate Is now showing marked sjmpnthy toward the President's pro posals for a league of nntlons nnd free dom of the sens, nnd It Is now certnln that It will not reject a peace treaty "Igni-il nt Versailles embodjlng these all Important Issues. When President Wilson sailed for Fu rope two weeks ngo, pledged to support these two principles nt the Furopean peace conferences, tho Senate shared In full measure tho opposition expressed by the statesmen of Orcat Britain and France to the Ideas It vvas at first believed here nnd In Furope that the President ndvocated nn Ironclad treaty with tho Furopean na tions which would create an Interna tional nrmj and navy to police the world nd carry out the agreements regrrdlne the freedom of the sens nnd the league of nations Thla would havo been con trary to the American International principles and traditions nnd would have hampered the Furopean nations with an unwelcome restraint. Hut since the President made the ex planation In his speech nt tho University of Paris that his Idea of a league of nations was onl.v tho exertion of a moral force to guide the nntlons In the path of right nnd Justlco his Ideas have been Indorsed by Foreign Minister Plchon, of France; Premier Mojd George, of Great Britain, and the Italian statesmen, nnd Is now rapidly gaining tho approval of the United htntes Semtors. Senators he re and there, like Senator! Lodge, Knox nnd Keed, still firmly be lieve tho President's Ideas of a league of nations nnd freedom of the seas are Idle dreams and unworknhle In practice, but the rank and file In the Senate has been converted to tho President's Ideas alone with the Furopcnn statesmen. The Senators who are opposed to Prea Ident Wilson's pioposal for a, league of nations aro making the mlsUkc of glT Ing tp the term a mistaken, meaning, a meaning that tho President has never given to It, and a meaning that no repre sentative of a great nitlon has given to It. Senator McKellar. of nissec, declared lit a speech ln Senate. ISAfMiKKIVIAIWIlilKII 11' TO KILL ALL DOCTORS Wounded Signalman at MeajS Says That Wns Reason fo Bombing Hospitals Uprclal Dhpatch to EvcMno Puilie Lcdoer ( nmp Meade, Mil., Jan. 1 r German! bombed American nnd Allied hospital for the sole purpose of killing doctors, at cording to Private Gilbert Major, of the 105th Field Signal Battalion, who Is here recuperating from wounds received nt St Quentln when the famous Hlnden burg line was broken The lad declared that the captured German officers gave this its the reason or their attacks on hospitals behind , the lines "over there" Ho quoted one Hun captain who vvas tiptuied as sajlng, "Privates ran be made In a few dajs, noncommissioned officers In a few weeks and commis sioned officers In a few months, but It takes at least seven jears to make a doctor." Majer Is a Wdshlngtonlan He Is an exptrt tadlo operator nm! enlisted at tho outbreak of the war Assigned to th lOCth Field Signal Battalion, he served as an "eye" for the army before the famous lllndenburg line and was in much of the hottest lighting of 1918 He was fixlnff telephone wires at St Quentln Just after the fun-mis ''"- "'is broken when a bit of German Bhrapnel got him In the leg Taken u ick ae hospital In the rear, he narrowly escaped death several times when the hospital was bombed. He sajs he heard German olllcers who were taken as prisoners de clare that it was their purpose to kill nil tho doctors thej could Majer arrived here a few dajs ago with a big tletachment of wounded men who arrived In New York. He walks about with a cine and Is rapidly recuper ating, but Is anxious to get back to civil life and his old emplojmcnt (Al Another uctltn of German shrapnol il nerc is rrivaie iconert Morse, of the 147th Infantrj. a former unit of the Ohio National Guard Morse Is n. bit more fortunute than the other soldiers who wcro wounded, because he can proudly display tho piece of steel which crippled him In No Man's Land In the big drive In Belgium nfter th6 lllnden burg line was smashed Both of these hds complained about receiving no pay from the Government. Neither of them has received a penny from Fnclo Sam for their services "over W there since Julj, and they were specu lating this morning as to whether or not the pajmaster will find them here when he makes his rounds In a few days. The convalescent detachments are being filled rapidly and the wounded men are recuperating still more rapidly. Large numbers of them will bo dls iharged In a few dajs Pi iv ate -Henry Albert, Company F. Seventy-first Infantrj', was discharged this morning on account of dependent relatives. SNOWSTORM IN KANSAS Railroad" Traffic Helil Up- California Liuiiteil Stalled Kiiiii.ii ( lie, n.. Jan 1 (By A. P.) - A snowstorm reaching the severity of a blizzard In many places prevailed iHSt night from northern Kansas to the Gulf, according to reports reaching the local Weather Bureau lUillroad tralflu in many places waa Impelred Transcontinental tralnH on the Sante Fe, the Kock Island and the Union Pacific roads have been tied up In Kansas and tho Santa Fc'a Cali fornia limited train, eastbound, Is snow, bound nt an unknown point Tour Hurt in Joyricle Crash York, Pa., Jan 1 (ihurles Brown, Robert Austin and Harold Arnold, of Lancaster, and Richard Drummond, of Philadelphia, were Injured seriously when the automobile In which they were returning this morning from York to Lancaster vvas hit by a Pennsylvania Railroad locomotive nt Stony Brook, The automobile, Ihe police Bay, waa stolen frnm Doctor Forey, of Lancatttr. HW SXI.K fjaMjllailHphiu CAM, KOK (INK OK OUR JtACHINKKwJ will Blmlly how nu throunh soma nt our "'."L Properties In thl rfulrlctnl sectloni a and 3 inrv om with ear t- i I) V ' -twin j, fncjMAH ins . notn ; . S' .) ' . 1 ' - J .. 1 v
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers