Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 06, 1919, Image 1

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    tek HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Mk
\ ' • • ®jc olar-3u&c|>cnt>cnL . w> /
LXXXVIII — No. 4 16 PAGES Dm, V e c r p .t WS&t o%% e it a Ha® e ruSurf 3aM HARRISBURG. PA.. MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 6, 1919. HOME EDITION
ITALY ACCORDS
PRESIDENT HIGH
HONOR IN TOUR
Genoa and Milan Pay Homage I
to Wilson; Severe Storm
Drenches Party
GALE SNAPS FLAGSTAFFS
Executive Lays Wreath at the
Base of Columbus Statue;
Makes Address
TOILERS DEMAND
A VOICE IN PEACE
■
Milan. Jan. t).—President Wil- i
son voiced again to-day his view
that the working people of the '
world demanded from the com
ing peace conference not merely
treaties of peace hut guarantees
of the justice and the future of
the peace to be made.
11 declared his belief that the
social structure of the world rest
ed upon the great working classes
and reiterated his conviction that
the peace must be made with the
sentiment of those 'classes con
stantly kept in view.
The President made these dec
larations in his speech at the re
ception given him by the munici
pality. his principal speech of the
day. The reception accorded the
American executive was a most
enthusiastic one. both here and at
Genoa, where he made u brief
stop on his way from Home to
this city.
Hy Associated Press
Milan, Jan C.—President Wilson
journeyed from Rome to Milan yes
terday. stopping at Genoa en route.
There he was greeted by hundreds
of thousands of the common people,
who acclaimed him in the most ex
travagant terms, sought to be near
enough to touch him and even at
tempted to kiss his hand or clothing
as he passed through the dense
crow ds.
Mr. "Wilson's visit of three hours
in Genoa was marred by a tropical
downpour of rain which drenched;
the President and all his party. The ]
sticels ran uvcrs and a gule snapped 1
the Ingslaffs. Nevertheless, the Ptes->
ident carried out his full program, |
including \irils to tho monuments!
of Columbuhs and Mazzini and to the!
city hall, wlit re lie was given a re
ception.
Whatever arrangements might
have been made to receive the Pres
ident were dissolved on his arrival,
with tlie e.'ty being lushed by- the
blinding rain sqquulls. All tlie mem
bers of the c '.ficial party exc-ept Mr.
Wilson a I'd his wife were compelled
to scramble for themselves through
the troop-.ined streets and make the
host way possible back to the offi
cial tram.
The hcciei service men, seeking to
protect the President, rejected motor
cars and cuimages which were pro
vided by the local committee, hut
somehow managed to gei through
I lie program and back to the train
without mishap.
Before leuving Genoa, President
Wilson laid a wreath at the base of
the statue of Columbus and, stand
ing bareheaded in the driving rain,
made a short address.
Columbus, ho said, did a service
for the world in discovering America
and now it was America's pleasure
and pride to show it was in lie serv
ice of mankind.
'Being free," said the President,
"America desires to show others
how they may also share in the free
dom of trie womu."
The demonstration in Milan was
of the same character as that in
Geona but proportionately greater
in view of Mi an's greater size. It
seemed as if all the inhabitants and
the people of the surrounding coun
tryside had jammed themselves into
the squares and streets along the line
of march. The thoroughfares were
so choked with humanity that the
President's motor car crawled
through with the greatest difficulty!
Hoofs Mold Crouds
The balconies, the voofs and every
vantage point were black with peo
ple. and the route had been plaster
ed with posters and pictures of
President Wilson together with quo
tations from his speeches which
could be particularly applied to
Italy's position.
The President called at the City
Hull, where the freedom of tho city
was bestowed upon him. He then
proceeded to the royal pulaco where
he received delegations going thence
to ha Bcala, where he dined and
where it was hoped he would at
tend the opera. While he was at the
palace the great square before the
cathedral was so Jammed that the
cathedral had to be closed. The
American secret service men de
clared they hud never taken any
President through such demonstra
tive scenes or such great crowds.
While the throngs were orderly, they
seemed simply wild with enthuslusm
and determined to crowd near to the
President. The tour of the city by the
presidential party was to the accom-
Coiitiiiucd on Page 8
I THE WEATHER]
For Hnrrlobnrg and vicinity i
Portly cloudy to-night niid
Tucndayi continued cold to
night, with lowest temperature
nhout 16 degrees) rising tem
perature Tuesday.
For Eastern Pennsylvania i Portly
cloudy to-night and Tuesday;
rising temperature Tuesdnyt
fresh north winds.
River
The Susquehanna river and all Its
hranches will continue to fall.
A stage of ahont lUI feet la In
dicated for Harrlsburg Taesday
morning.
COL. ROOSEVELT FOUND DEAD IN BED BY WIFE
AFTER SUDDEN RELAPSE IN OYSTER BAY HOME;
BLOOD CLOT FROM BROKEN VEIN PROVES FATAL
I Wife Only Member\
of Family With
Ex - President
At Death
FELT "BULLY"
ON CHRISTMAS]
Suffered For Long
\ Time With Attack
of Rheumatism
By Associated Press
j New York, Jan. 0. —Colo-
nel Theodore Roosevelt.
| former president, American
! statesman and soldier, died
! early to-day at his home at
; Oyster Bay. Colonel Roosevelt
; had been conlincd to his room
• since New Year's Day with an
'attack of inflammatory rheuma-!
! tism. The attack settled main
|ly in Colonel Roosevelt's right
hand, and Mrs. Roosevelt sent,
lat once for a nurse in the vil- •
1 lagc of Oyster Bay. I lis condi-]
j tion did not at first seem alarm- j
i ing. anil the turn for the worse is]
I believed not to have come until last :
j night.
Hies at I A. M.
| A telephone message received later!
j this morning l'rom Oyster Bay said!
:that Colonel Roosevelt had died at 1
j -t o'c'oek this tnornin.
The immediate cause of Colonel
[Roosevelt's death was pulmonary]
| embolism, or lodgement in the lung
j of a blood e'ot from a broken vein, •
[one of his physicians stated.
Sudden Attack
News of the death of the former
| president was received here by Miss]
[Josephine Strieker, the colonel's'
j secretary, in a telephone message
• from Mrs. Roosevelt. Miss Strieker
■ said the colonel had suffered an at
j tack of inwlammatory rheumatism
]on New Year's Day and had since!
'been more or less confined to his
t room.
[ In announcing Colonel Roosevelt's!
death. Miss Strieker said:
"Mrs. Roosevet called me on the 1
] telephone shortly before 7 o'clock,
sa+ing that the colonel had died
I early to-day. She did not give me
I any patticuhirs and 1 am leaving at
once for Oyster Bay.
Xot Worried Before
j "The attack must have been very
: sudden. On New Year's Duy inflani
j mator.v rheumatism developed in
j Colonel's Roosevelt's right hand,
which became very much swollen.
[ Mrs. Roosevelt sent for a nurse in]
j the village and the colonel was made
las comfortable as possible. It did
j not occur to me at that time he was
'seriously ill."
Only Wife at Home
: ] Miss Strieker went to Oyster Bay
last Saturday to pay the colonel a
I visit. She said: >
j "At that time the colonel was
i i sleeping in hts room and 1 did not
j see him, and there nothing in
I the circumstances of his illness at
| that time to indicate to me that
i death was near. When Mrs. Roose
j velt called me this morning and told
me of the colonel's death, 1 could
! hardly believe it.
i "Mrs. Roosevelt gave me no par
-1 ticulais of his death."
j It is understood that only Mrs.
i Roosevelt and the nurse were with
j him at the time of his death. The
] other members of the family are in
i other parts of the country or abroad.
; Undergoes Operation In Hospltui
] Colonel Roosevelt's last illness
[may be said to date from last Feb
! ruary. On February 5 it was an
j nounced he had been removed from
| his home in Oyster Bay to the
i Roosevelt Hospital in this city, fol
! lowing an operation on one of his
| ears. Soon after his arrival at the
; hospital he underwent two more
] operations for the removal of dlseas
; ed tissue tn his infected ear and it
] was admitted at the time that he
} was seriously ill. He remained at
■ tho hospital until March 3.
l'Vels "Bully"' Christmas Iny
During Muy and June the colonel
, made a number of addresses, speak.
] ing at Springfield, Mass., and in New
' York. In June he made a tour of the
' We'st during which he suffered a
: slight attack of erysipelas in one of
his legs, but refusedy to give up his
| engagements. Early in November
! tho colonel was taken to Roosevelt
] Hospital in this city for treatment
| of rheumatism and sciatica. While
Ihe was in the hospital reports be
came current tallt the colonel was
more seriously ill than his physi
cians would admit. Colonel Roose
velt returned to his home In Oyster
Bay on Christmas Day, remarking as
he stepped to the porch that he was
"feeling bully."
Roosevelt's Death Painless
Death came to Colonel Roosevelt
painle.ts as he slept. Three physlctuns
had been In attendance upon the Col
onel since he was taken to Roosevelt
Hospital seven weeks ago to bo treat
ed for what was bclievd to be sci
atica. The patient's trouble was later
diagnosed as inflammatory rheuma
-1 tism which, according to one of the
doctors, had affected virtually every
joint in his body. The Colonel s phy
sicians were Dr. J. A. Fuller, of Oys
tcT Bay, and Dr. J. 11. Richards arid
[Continued on Page 12.] j
Striking Poses of Former President Who Ranks .4s
One of America's Most Famous Men
' \ IMF |
FORMER PRESIDENT THEODORE ROOSVEELT
Flags on Warships and at;
Every Military Camp at'
Home and Abroad Ordered]
at Half Mast For Roosevelt
" I
Py Associated Prccs
Washington. Jan. o. Flags were I
half-iriasted at the \Vlyte House, the'
Capitol and all public buildings to-1
day upon the announcement of-the ]
death of Colonel Roosevet and in re-;
spect to the memory of the former
president and commander-in-chief.
Secretary Dunieis and General March
ordered flags at ljaf-mast on every
ship and shore station of the Navy
and at every Army.post and camp at ;
home and abroad.
Roth bouses of C-ongress adjourned j
to-day as a. mark of respect after |
adopting resolutions of regret at the i
death of Colonel Roosevelt and pro-1
vtdlng for the appointment of com
mittees to attend the funeral.
COUNTY DOCTORS !
REDUCED FROM
THIRTEEN TO NINE
Poor Board Again Asks For
•$70,000 For Coming
Year
Reorganizing to-day the board of
county commissioners re-elected Charles
G. Cumbler president for 1919. and the
boar dof directors of the poor, re-elect
ed B. Frank Snavely, president. All the
other ocials and clerks employed by the
bflloards weer retained. There are no
salary increases.
Tlie poor directors in addition to re
ekfbtlng Mr. Snavely. named Fernando
Loudermlich as agent and Levi S. Mil
ler, treasurer. A requisition was made
for $71,000, the same amount as was
set aside , last year by the county com
missioners.
By rearranging the territory in liar
risburg to which physicians have been
assigned for relief work among the
poor, the directors reduced the number
or doctors appointed from 13 to 0. The
appointments in tlie city follow:
County Physician
First. Third and Fourth wards. J. E.
Dickinson ; second. G. G. Snyder; Fifth,
Sixth and Twelfth, C. W. Ratdorf;
Seventh, J. H. Rahter; Tenth, Eleventh
and Fourteenth. T. James; Eighth
and Ninth, A. D. Page; Thirteenth. C.
E. R. Keen.
Colored only, all of the city east of
Pennsylvania railroad, C. R. Carter; all
of the city west of Pennsylvania rail
! road, C. 11. Cranipton. '
County Districts
| Physicians appointed for the county
I districts: A. C. Coble, Uauphln. Fort
; tenHu rand Middle Paxlon township; E.
j Samuel Marshall, Halifax, Wayne, Jef
; ferson, Reed township; M. L. Nlssley,
[ Hunimelstown and South Hanover
1 township; J. A. Blsh. Lykens, Wtcon
| Isco and Wiconisco township; H. A.
Shaffer. Williamstown, Williams and
Hush townships; J. E. Dogar, Millers
■ burg. Vpper Paxlon township; W. B.
Klrkpatrlck, Highspire, Bovver Swatara
] township; A. It. Shope, Penbrook, Sus
: quehanna township; J, F. Blecker, Mlcl-
I dletown, south of railroad, southern
! part of Londonderry township ; Charles
jA. Bowers, Hoyalton; H. H. Rhoads,
I . Continued on l'age 8
Great German Military
Machine Ceases to Exist
Haste. Jan. 6. - The former Ger
man army lias seascd to exist, says
the Nor'ddcutsehe Allgemeltie Zeit
ung, of Iterltn, as 150 divisions al
ready have been demobilized. The
demobilization of the other units, the
paper says, Is proceeding rapidly.
FOX AND WK'KERSHAM
REAPPOINTED BY STROUP
District Attorney Michael' E.
Stroup announced the re-appoint
ment of Robert T. Fox. his law part-!
net-, and Frank B. Wlckershani, ofj
Wlekersho mand Mefzgor, as assist
ant district attorneys for 1913. Tie j
preaonted their names to tho court
for confirmation. j
DRAMATIC LIFE OF
FORMER PRESIDENT
MADE HIM FAMOUS
Rose Rapidly Through Stormy Career
to Highest Honors Nation Had to
Accord His Active Mind
Colonel Roosevelt's career lias left
such a vivid imprpssion upon the ■
people of liis time it is necessary to!
touch but briefly upon some of the
more striking phrases of his varied,
interesting and "strenuous" life to
recall to the public mind full details i
of his maity. exploits and expert-f
enoes.
Called to tlie White House ip IftOl ;
after President McKinley bad been;
assassinated, Col. llooseVelt, 12 years'-
of age, became the youngest Prest- j
dent the United States has ever hud j
Three years, later he was elected as
President by tnc >ar s csi popular vole '
a President has received.
Thus Roosvelt, sometimes called j
a ma not <2 >stiny, served for seven
years as tho nation's chief magis
trate. In a subsequent decade the
fortunes of polities did not favor him,
for, again a candidate for Presi
dent—tills time leading the Pro
gressive Party which he himself hud
organized when he differed radically
with, some of the policies of the Re
publican party in ld!2- —he went
FEW WHO MARRY
BECOME CHARGES
AT ALMSHOUSE
iSlatc Survey Shows War Did
Not Help Aged.
Labor
Thut. ill a' war waft far from: being
a boon to men and women over 5(1;
is shown In the report that Is to be |
submitted lo the new Legislature j
by the Old Age Pension Commission
brought into being by the General j
Assembly of 1917. Instead of being j
"the day for the old man." the re
port shows that the army drafts and !
industrial expansion did very litf.e j
to bring bacj< into Jobs the aged l
who were unable to get work prior j
to 1916. , . !
Quite the reserve of being a. boon
to the aged is shown. ' While men
und women workers over 50 shared
to some extent In the increased wuge
scales yet nowhere in Pennsylvania
did suclt Increases com pa ro with that i
accorded young labor. The elder j
labor, however, was compelled to i
pay the same increases it) living
costs, the report showing :
20 per eenl. of their earning during :
the war It toow 60 per cent.
Railroading Hazardous
The findings of the commission aro j
L Continued on Page 15.1 i
. down to defeat, together' with the
[.Republican candidate, . William
| Howard Tnfi A'oodrow Wilson,
] Democrat, was elected.
Col. Roosevelt's eiieniips agreed
with his friends that his life, his
character arid, his writings rep're
i sentpd a high typo of Americanism.
1 Of Dutch ancestry,' born in New
! York City on October 2'7, ISSS. in a
, house ill East Twentieth street, the
■' baby Theodore vvas a weakling, lie
was one of four children who came'
jto Theodore and Martha Bulloch
: Roosevelt. The mother vvas . of
southern stock and the father of
! Northern, a situation which during
j tlie early years of Theodore, junior's
j boyhood was not allowed to interfere
with the family life of these chil
dren during the Civil War days.
Delicate in I'outh
So frail that lie was not privileged
to associate with the other boys in
hts neighborhood. Roosevelt vvas tu
tored privately, in New York and
during travels on which his pal-ents
Continued oil Pagc',B
[ONLY STRICTEST
[ DISCIPLINE WILL
RESTORE TEUTON
| Montgctass Says Recovery
| Will Be Endlessly Ilurd;
i Wants Sporting Chance
Ucriic. Jan. 6. will
| slowly recover . from the disasters
i wrought by the war and will in timej
'regain its place among the nations;
! of the' world —but in it democratic,!
I not n. monarchical'spirit—^accordingl
! to Count Max Von Montage his, for
i rrierly lit charge of American affairs!
! In tlte foreign office at Berlin and:
! now Germun minister to Switzerland,;
Vice Baron Von Romberg, retired.
"This recovery," he said to-day,
.'"will bo endlessly, bard nnti will re- 1
' tfulrb every ottnen of-' GenuOn dis
! cipltue. It can bo accoinpliioed only
j in case the Entente nullons give Uer
! many a sport ng chance —\hat Is, lo|
, alleviate. the blockade sufficiently 'o
i permit Ge-many to pursue her'
fisheries as formerly, and not to im-1
pose suffocating industrial and!
j economic conditions such tj the oc-'
' cupaiton of the territories .west of j
i the Rhine." j
End Comes Quietly to Famous
Personage as Me Slept in
His Own Bed; Fighting Sons'
Scattered About the World
Oyster lla>. 1.. J . .Jan. 0. Colonel
I Theodore Roosevelt du d in his sleep
early to-day at h's home on Saga
, more Hill in this village. Death is
bo)le\ed to have been due to rheu
matism which affected his heart. The
• colonel suffered a severe attack of
| rheumatism and soigtlca pn New
Year's Day bu,t none believed hts ill-
I ness would likely prove falul.
The former president sat up most
of Sunday and retired' at 11 o'oock
last night. About 4 w..m. M,rs. ltoose
v'elt, who was Dir. only.other member
of the family at Oyster liny, went to
her husband's room and found lie
bad died during the night.
.Ajrs. Roosevelt telephoned to Colo
' nel Emden Rooseve t,. cousin of the
' f iniithmod on Pngp .],
F. W, SMITH, JR.,
RETIRES AS HEAD
PENNSY DIVISION
William Elmer Xamtcl Acting
Superintendent of Phila
delphia Line
K. W. Smith, Jr., superintendent
of the Philadelphia division of the
Pennsylvania railroad, has been fit r
loughed because of ill Itpalth, ac
cording to a general order signed
by EUsha i.ee, federal manager, and
It. 1,. O'Donnell, general manager.
William Elmer, who has been su
perintendent of the Schuylkill divi
sion, has been named a acting su
perintendent. The order was in ef
fect January,!. Mr. 1 Smith's state of
health madb'a leave of absence nec
essary.
(■'. D. Young will take Mr. El
mer's place as acting superintendent
of the Schuylkill division.
(ioail llccoril
1 The new superintendent comes to
Harrisburg with a .< high record of
| achievement gained during more than
; twenty-two years, of faithful tjervlee
I to thq .Pennsylvania Railroad during
; which timtj he arose from the posl
: tion of an apprentice In the Pennsyt-
I vania Itailroad shops at Meadows
| shops to the position he now occu
i pled.
I Horn in. 18.10 at Trenton, X. J., Su
perintendent Elmer was graduated
I from thC New Jersey State Model
School In 1888, and after a lapse of
■ several years ho entered Princeton
University In the John C. Qrcen
I School of Salence. lie was graduated
1 with the class of 1891 with the de
| gree of electrical engineer.
Entering the service of the Penn
sylvania Itailroad as an apprentice at
the Meadows , Shops on October 1,
1896, he was transferred to Altoona
as special apprentice on April 1,
1898. While serving here he was as
signed by the superintendent of Mo
tive I'ower to prepare the 1899 re-
Coit tinned on Page 8
Charles E. Landis, Delegate
to 1912 Convention, Pays
Tribute to Ex-President
; Charles E. l-andis, 1-630 Green street,
cashier at the t-alancc and Grosjean
I tinplntfi works, who was elected a
Uoosevclt delegate from this district
to the Republican national conven
tion of 1912 at Chicago, und was one
of the mono than 300 Koosevelt dele
gates who went back to Chicago the
same year and participated In the
nomination of Roosevelt and Johnson
by the tlrst Progressive national con
vention, bad this to say of Colonel
Roosevelt:
"T feci as though I had parted with
an old friend. Colonel Roosevelt was
one of those men Who Inspired en
thusiasm among all those with whom
he worked, Karscelng,.courageous in
thought and action, lovcabfe In dispo
sition, true to his <-onvlotlons, history
will ever accord liim a great place
among the great of this enrth."
Rearing up almost to the Very time
of his destli. Colonel Koosevelt wrote i
many letters to Ills friends during his '
Illness. One of these was' Just rcceiv'-j
ed by Mr. lasndis. In part, tho In- :
domltable e..\-PresidciU wrote to Mr.
I.andls:
"I hope ybti have seen my .various
editorials in th? Kansas City Star and
the Metropolitan Magaslne. I am !
aura you will agre with them." j
ALL IS HARMONY
AS LEGISLATURE
GETS TOGETHER
Not Even Prohibition Willi
Make Its Appearance td
Create Differences
SPANGLER AND BUCKMAN
•
[Whole Program Is Worked
Out Without a
Hitch
Robert S. Spanglcr. of York.
I speaker of tho House, and Clarence
j J. Buckmun, of Bucks, president pro
: tempore of the Senate will lie (lie
] program put through by tlie He
: publicans at the opening sessions of
[the legislature to-morrow.
Tlie whole program as worked out
before hand will go through without
a hi'.ch. There will be no factional
[ contests such as marked tlie session
of two years ago and tire Democrats
1 urc so hopeless that they have not
even scion oil candidates for tho two
' (duces. There was some talk yes
: terday of doing away with the Re
publican party caucus 10-nighl, due
to the fuel-that Spanglcr has no op
i
[Continued on Page li.J
Wire Brings $5O to Wrong
Archie Roosevelt From
a Former Rough Rider
Hy* AsiiA'TatcJ Pre ,
Ailinqiicique. N. M . Jan. U.—A
man and a woman 1-cg'stercd at a
local hotel here nbot.t two weeks
ago us Captain Archie Roosevelt and
wife Tito man regaled tho guests
with stories of Ills alleged experiences
on tlie French front and snld lie was
en route to California for several
i months of recuperation.
!• : Tlie couple went from here to San
la Fe, where tho man said he was a
cousin of Colonel Roosevelt, and rep
-1 resented himself to be an agent of
the Department of Justice. He sc
; cured, an interview with Governor
ljindsey.
Posing as Captain Archie Roose
velt lie obtained $3O by wire from R.
Ferguson, of Tyrone, N. M„ a
former Rough Rider.
£ G' rpcnhsgen—British warships yesterday retufrted to w
'.-jga. The riva.l bombarded successfully -the .Bolshevii--
t ' ■ ' .• <"■ ' art 40,000_ J
4 in Riga and that the total inhafeitahts of the "y
1 y
£ ty number 200,000 v <£
J . GER? ' VING COLLAR £
T Paris—Many Germans are leaving olmar and return T
X ing to Germany, according to a'Colmar dispatch to tfc ■4
2 ' 1 • 'ppe.u
■i* -v • * *
i, o Germany. ►
i 4 * '
1 • ' : *N.I :LOOD J [
j" .
"r Paris—The Seine is "steadily rising under the cor.
| ' •
• ; -
' T *
4. Is of 1010. Pivfr transport, whfch at 'the prt< ,
2| • "taht than in normal times, already ■?
4 • -d" ' ' I
| |
T "
4*
& . FOLKS CAPTURE HUN GARRISON . . ,
jfc Ar. ERDAM—THE AIRDROME. AT LAWICA, > P
It * *
m POSEN-, WAS STORMED
2ON r i DAY Br POLISH TROQPS, ACCORDING 'j J
IE TO . A D SPATCH POSEN .THE GERMAN j
Y ►
4 AND ALL THE AIRPLANES WEfeE d ►
J " ' j I
T V ROOSEVELT .DEATH J
fP Harrisburg—l can hardly realize it," commented ex V
£ President William Howard Tsft upon the death of Col IE
jf Rposevelt, as he stopped in Harrisburg between trains on -JT
his way to Sunbury this afternoon. 'T am deeply, shdickc J
Xby k ath of Mr." Roosevelt, I saw him in .the hospiL 4
X rid he seemed as. vigorous as ever. |r
JF . mourn his loss personally, and I greatly- regret.it for the *
£ country..PHis influence and advice were important. Hia £
X patriotic - influence, will' be.raisßed,. of course."..- Mr.. : Taft' X
•TP. paid his respects to the Governor at the "State Ca'pito j*
4 ahd left at 3.40 o'clock. :
T - : *•••- J
t MARRIAGE LICENSES t
X ™ H MlddlMorra, „*,| Kdnn mD *r 3!
V J; 1 "".' 1 *,I* r V.rk conr. find Suxlr Fettran, Ll.burai T
4( t bISo Brrrrm and Mary Mngioiil, HnrrUhuri. A
il'.'iH' A"A' i 'I"!' A i i 4 4jj
SPARTACIONS TRY
TO USURP POWER
AT HUN CAPITAL
Seize Office of Wolff Bureau
ancl Half a Dozen Big
Newspapers
OVERTURN ANTICIPATED
| Berlin Had Intimations Un
friendly Thrust Was
to Be Made
! KAISER'S FOURTH
SON GETS A JOB'
By Associated Press
Purls, Jan.' (1. —The fourth son
of William lloheiiKollcrn, the for
; 'tier V'rlnio August William, has
i taken a situation with a widely-'
' known German automobile firm.
u ronllns to a Ber in dispatch Ky
, way of Heine, printed In the
J Alalin to-cja'y.
liy. Associated Press
| Amsterdam, Jan. ti.—The Spai'lacUs
; group Sunday evening made another
; attempt to seize the reins of power
' in Berlin and occupied the office .of
t'he Wolff Bureau, the semiofficial
I news agency. There had been inti
mations that on overturn of shitie
fort 1n the German capital wa ex
pected Saturday. "
A telegram from Berlin to-day sUI
.that the office of the Wolff B.urei{\i,
the semiofficial news agency, vyas
( otcuplcd Sunday evening. It did not
flute by whom the seizure was made.
The last telegram received hero fr.Vfti
the Wolff Bureau announced the seiz
ure of its office. Private advices
sa> .that the Spartactons seized the
; otlices of half a dozen big news
papers, including the Socialist Vor
waerts.
!' ' ,
REGISTER NAMES tI.ERIv
A. M. I lamer, formerly secretary.-to
• the late Mayor E. S. Meals and clerk
i to the first city draft 'board, has been
1 appointed as an extra clerk In the
i office.of Register of Wills Edwin Jf.
I E!slier. succeeding Wendell Srabbr.
i James G. Miles, deputy resistor, will
' be retained for the present.