THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURO, PA. SINGLE D ID PEACE PLAN PRESIDENT TAKES Somewhere in the U. S, A, THE PRESIDENT'S STATEMENT MEN ONLY JEW IS TURNED DOWN E RAILROADS Those With Dependents Not Be Taken. Will DRAFT LAW TO BE CHANGED Prvf Marshai General, In Ex hauitlve Report Saye Class 1 Should Provl de Men For All Military Needs Of Country. Washington. All men for the war a,rmles still to be raised by the United States will come from Class 1 under the new seleotlT service plan. That means h nation's fighting to to be done by young men without families dependent upon their labor support and unskilled In necessary industrial or at rlcultural work. Provost Marshal General Crowder announces the new policy in an ex haustive report upon the operation of the selective drift. law submitted to Secretary Baker and sent to Congress. He says Class 1 should provide men for all military needs of the country, and to accomplish that object he urges amendment of the draft law so as to provide that all men who have reached their twenty-first birthday since June 6, 1917, shall be required to register for classification. - Also, in the inter est of fair distribution of the military burden, he proposes that the quotas of states or districts be determined here after on the basis of the number of men in Class 1 and not upon popula tion. 1,000,000 IN CLASS 1. Available figures indicate, the re port says, that there are 1,000,000 physically and otherwise qualified men under the present registration who will be found in Class 1 when all ques tionnaires have been returned and the classification period ends February 15. To this the extension of registration to men turning 21 since June 5 of last year and thereafter will add 700,000 effective men a year. Class 1 comprises: "Single men without dependent rela tives, married men who have habitu ally failed to support their families, who are dependent upon wive for upport or not usefully enraged and whose families are supported by in comes Independent f their labor; un skilled farm laborers; unskilled in dustrial laborers, registrants by or in respect of whom no deferred classifi cation is claimed or made, registrants who fall to submit questionnaire and in respect of whom no deferred classi fication Is claimed or made, and all registrants not Included in any other division of the schedule." CROWDER PRAISES PLAN. I'arrowed down under the analysis of the first draft made in the report the plan places upon unattached sin gle men and married men with Inde pendent incomes most of the weight of military duty, for the aggregate number of men in the other division of Class 1 is very small. . General Crowder finds that the first draft surpassed the highest expecta tlona of the friends of the selective service idea. He pays high tribute, not only to the thousands of civilians who gave ungrudging service to mak ing the plan a success, but Ibo to the high patriotism of the American people m a whole. "At the President's call," he says, "all ranks of the nation, reluctantly entering the war, nevertheless in stantly responded to the first call of the nation with a vigorous and un selfish co-operation that submerged all individual interest in a single en deavor toward the consummation of the national task. I take it that no great national project was ever at tempted with eo complete a reliance Upon the voluntary co-operation of citizens for its execution. Certainly no such burden and sacrificial statute ever had before been executed with out a great heirachy of officials. "This law baa been administered by civilians whose official relations lie only In necessary powers with which they are vested by the President's designation of them to . perform the duties that are laid upon them. They have accomplished the task. They have made some mistakes. The sys tern offers room for improvement ARGENTINE DIPLOMAT OUT. Luxburg Affair Leads To Ambassa dor's Retirement. Buenos Aires, Argentine. It is re ported, without confirmation, that Dr, Tt. S. Kaon, the ambassador at Wash ington, has resigned in consequence of friction arising from the publlcnt'on of the secret telegrams sent by Court Von Luxburg before his dismissal as German minister to Argentina, to Ber lin, through the medium .of the Swei ish legation. NAVY THANKS RED CROSS. Sailors Send Message Of Appreciation For Christmas Parcels. Washington. The Red Cross an nounced receipt of this message from the men of the Atlantic fleet: 'The men of the fleet and New Year's greetings to the Red Cross and flanks for Christmas gifts received." NEWFOUNDLAND PREMIER OUT. Ir Edward Morris Announces Retire ment From Politics. St Johns, N. F. In a letter Just made public Sir Edward Morris, Premier of Newfoundland for the last nine years, announced his resignation as Premier and his retirement from politics. Sir Edward is at present in England representing the colony in important matters connected with the war. He said he would make his home In England in the future. iHiaillllllllMlilB -"-""1 NORFOLK HE LOSS $2,000,000 Nearly Two Blocks in Heart of Business District FIVESUSPECTS CAUGHT Big Hotel Among Buildings Burned Montlcello Victim Of What Is Believed To Be An Enemy Plot, Norfolk, Va. Supposed German sptea brought home to Norfolk the horrors of war, when what the author ities say was a well-planned plot re sulted in the destruction of more than $2,000,000 worth of property and the loss of at least three lives. The hu man toll may reach six or seven before another sun sets. A score have been Injured. Nearly two blocks In the heart of the business district, Including the Montlcello Hotel, were destroyed in the series of explosions and fires. The flames had been checked tonight, but were still burning fiercely in the ruins. Three distinct explosions in as many buildings, one after the fire once vir tually had been brought Under con trol, led to the general belief that enemy agents were at work. Mayor Mayo practically placed the city un der martial law by turning the situa tion over to naval officers and some 2,500 marines and bluejackets from nearby naval stations, who assisted the police and home guarde in main taining order and preventing vandal Ism. Naval patrols rounded up suspicious persons while a number of men were arrested as suspects. Two of these, Hugo Schmidt and H. K. Leasing, said to be Germans, were turned over to the Department of Justice agents. There were reports that two Germans had been shot by sailors during the day, but neither the police nor naval authorities would confirm them. The fire started at 3 o'clock A. M. In the old Granby Theatre building on Granby' street occupied by the Nor folk Stationery Company. Flames Bhot out of the building almost immediate ly. This fire consumed three other stores, one of which was Nunnally's. When this fire was practically out there was an explosion in the Mon tlcello Hotel, followed by a burst of flames. There were over 400 guests, nd many of them were' still asleep when the fire started. Smoke spread so rapidly that when people started out of .their rooms they could not find their way through the hallways. While this building was a mass of flames, a third fire, also preceded by an explosion, started in the Lenox Building, over a block away from the Montlcello. It proved as serious as the others and before the already wearied firemen could get a stream on the flames the fire spread to the building occupied by D. Carpenter Furniture Company. This building burned like kindling wood and Nor folk sent out a call for assistance. Suffolk, Newport News and Torts- mouth sent firemen and flre-flghtlng apparatus. Special trains were op erated by the Norfolk and Western Railroad to bring the extra firemen to Norfolk. With the firemen came the mayors and a large number of citizens. The Navy Yard sent over 300 men and Its flre-flghtlng equipment. Five hundred men were sent from the Naval Base, 200 marines from the St. Helena Sta tion, and 1,000 sailors from warships. All of them were 1 alned fire-fighters and to thorn more than to any other one cause Norfolk owes a debt of gratitude. FIRE NEAR CAMP STUART. Soldiers Help Fight Blaze On Out skirts Of Newport News. Newport "News, Va. Three dwell ings near Camp Stuart, on the out skirt of the city, where 15,000 sol diers are quartered, were destroyed by Ore. Soldiers and firemen prevent ed the flames reaching the camp build ingn. BIO WEEK FOR U-BOATS. B2g 18 Large And Three Small British Vessels. London. Eighteen British mer chantmen of 1,600 tons or over have been sunk by mine or submarine dur ing the past week, according to the Admiralty statement. Three mer chantmen under 1,600 tons were also sunk. This Is a material lactase over the previous week, when the sinkings numbered 12, of which 11 were more than 1,600 tons. RAILROAD STAFF NAMED BY M'ADOO Steps Taken to Pool All Equip ment in Country U. S. OWNERSHIP FORECAST Roads Deny Wage Increase, Passing Question Up To Government Willard On Committee To Pool Facilities. Wahlngton. Definite steps toward national unlnoatlon of ml! rends and improvement of congested conditions were taken by Director General Mc Adoo In the appointment of a tem porary staff and the Issuing of his first formal order directing absolute pooling of all traffic, common utiliza tion of terminals, rolling stock and other facilities, hauling of freight by the shortest routes, and retention of all present officers and employes. Special instructions were Issued for the clearing of congestion in New York and Chicago through pooling of terminals and other traffic facili ties, and Alfred H. Smith, president of the New York Central, was named temporary special assistant to super vise transportation in the trunk line territory east of the Mississippi and north of the Ohio Rivers, where con gestion is greatest. Walker D. Hines, of .New York, a railroad lawyer and for many years a special student of government op eration, was appointed assistant di rector general, pending the forma tion of a permanent staff. The In terstate Commerce Commission was drafted for an immediate Investiga tion by its Inspectors of general freight conditions on Eastern trunk lines. While the director general was con ferring with a number of railroad heads, Interstate Commerce Commis sioners and members of Congress and planning immediate action to remedy faults of transportation, it became known that the. demands of the four brotherhoods for a 40 per cent, wage increase had been denied by the rail roads and that consequently the labor men had decided to postpone for probably 60 days the presentation of their case to the government. It was thought probable that Presi dent Wilson would take up the labor situation in his addres to Congress this week. FOUR OVERCOME BY HEAT. Pasadena, Cal., Sees This Wonder At A Football Game. Pasadena, Cal. Four persons were overcome by heat In the crowd of 42, 000 which witnessed the football team of marines, stationed at the Mare Is land Navy Yard, defeat the army team from Camp Lewis, Washington, one of die features of the annual Tourna ment of Roses here. The score was 19 to 2. Profits from the game will go to the Red Cross. THE COUNTRY AT LARGE Forty-three public schools In Phila delphia faifed to open after the Christ mas receee as a result of the continued severe cold weather. About 25,000 pupils are affected P. J. Sheridan, Irish political leader, who figured prominently In the trial or Charles Stewart Parni! for treason in England, in 1S90, died at his ranch home near Monte Vista, Col. While residents of Huntingdon and other Central Pennsylvania towns are suffering for lack of coal, tho Hunt ingdon and Broad Top Railroad has more than 800 cars loaded with bitu minous coal for the South Broad Top region standing on Its sidings. The time for fixing the date of the trial of Paul Hen-nlng, a naturalized American of German birth, chnreed with treason for bis alleged tampering with gyroscope used In torpedoes made for the United States Govern ment In the factory where he was em ployed, was postponed until January 14, when he was arraigned In Federal Court in Brooklyn. Private George Pldd, Company B, forty-fourth Infantry, Camp Lewis, Wash., wa dishonorably discharged from the National Army and sentenced to hard labor for the rest of his life at Leavenwoith Penitentiary for slug ging Lawrence Berqulet, a Tacoma taxlcab driver, with an iron bar. The motive was robbery. Following the release from the Ham ilton (O.) jail on bond, of all of the union men who were sent there last week after pleading not guilty to the charge of rioilng, the strike of more than 4,500 'iien ended and all o( the workers returned to their Jobs. Teuton, Emissaries Not to Be Trusted. PREPARATIONS FOR DEFENSE An Interruption To The Peace Pro ceedings While The Delegates Re port Upon The Block. That Has Occurred. Petrograd. The chances of a sep arate peace between Russia and the Central Powers being effected seemed remote, because of what are regarded as Germany1 unrearonable demands. Leon Trotzky, the Bolshevik foreign minister, and his associates take the stand that the Baltic provinces are In realtty under military pressure while they continue to be occupied by Ger many, and that their votes with re spect to peace must be ignored. The Russian delegation upon its re turn from Brest-Li tovsk laid before the Council of Commissioners at Pet orgrad Germany's demands, which caused amazement and the declaration that the council was not favorable to acceptance. An elaboration of the German position in. letters and state ments Which followed the general statement of terms showed that tho Germans hold that Poland, Lithuania, Courland, Livonia and Esthonla i ready have defined themselves n t Ion ally within the meaning of the peace terms proposed and Insist that they shall not vote again. The Germans also explained, through General Hoffman, that Ger many cannot evacuate Riga, Llbau and other occupied points until cer tain that all Russia sanctions peace; otherwise Germany's enemies might assist Ukraine or other disaffected sec tions in opposition to the Central Powers. The Russian peace delegation re turned to Petrograd and reported to a Joint session of the central executive committee of Soldiers and Workmen's Delegates and the Petrograd Council of Soldiers and Workmen's Deputies the progress of the negotiations with the Austro-Genmans at Brest-Lltovsk. M. Kamcneff, a member of the Rus sian delegation, read the German terms, which he characterized as showing the positive annexation plans of the Central Powers, and he de clared they were unacceptable in their present form. He added that the terms had not b(en discussed. "If after tho resumption of negotia tions," the delegate said, "the Ger mans insist upon these terms Russia will conclude peace not with the Ger man imperialists, but with the repre sentatives of the people, the Social ists of Germany." TREATY-PROVISIONS. Included in tho treaty provisions are the following: Article 8 Russia agrees that the ad ministration of the mouth of the Dan ube be intrusted to a European Dan ube commission with a membership from the countries bordering upon the Danube and the Black Sea. Above Bralla the administration is to be in the hands of the countries bordering the river. Article 9 Military laws limiting the private rights of Germans In Russia and of Russians In Germany are abol ished. Article 10 The contracting parties are not to demand payment of war expenditures, nor for damages suf fered during the war, this provision including requisitions. Article 11 Each party Is to pay for damage done within its own limits during the war by acta against inter national law with regard to the sub jects of other parties, In particular their diplomatic and consular repre sentatives, as affecting their life, health or property. The amount Is to be fixed by mixed commissions with neutral chairmen. Article 12 Prisoners of war who are invalids are to be immediately re patriated. The exchange of other prisoners 1b to be made as soon as possible, the times to be fixed by a German-Russian commission. Article 13 Civilian subjects In terned or exllod are to be immediate ly released and sent home without cost to them. Article 14 Russian subjects of Ger man descent, particularly German col onists, may within 10 years emigrate to Germany, with the right to liquidate or transfer their property. Article 15 Merchantmen of any of the contracting parties which were In ports of any other party at the be ginning of the war, and also vessels taken as prizes which have not yet been adjudged, are to be returned or, if that be impossible, to be paid for. SPRING-RICE MAY RETIRE. British Ambassador To Leave U. S., Says London Paper. London. Sir Cecil Spring-Rice and Lord Bertie, according to the Daily Chronicle, will shortly retire from the British Embassies at Washington and Paris. The newspaper adds that it is rumored that Sir George Buchanan is about to resign his post as Ambassa dor at Petrograd. NEUTRALS TO GET 8UPPLIES. Necessities To Be Sent Denmark, Sweden And Norway. Stockholm. The Svenaka Dagbladet ascribes to the Swedish Foreign Office Information that negotiations with the United States have been concluded satisfactorily. It says that an agree ment has been reached under which 11,000 tone of necessities, chiefly coffee, petroleum and drugs, will ar rive In Sweden about the middle of February- Nzimbs McAdoo as Director Gen eral for All Lines in United States. EARNINGS TO DE GUARANTEED Action, Which Affects Also Coastwise, Lake and River Steamship Prop erties, Taken as a War Measure. Washington. President Wilson, under his wnr powers, has as sumed possession nnd control of all the railroad? nnd steamship lines with in the United States. The president Issued a proclama tion Invoking his war authority to take over the railroads and appoint ing Secretary of the Treusury McAdoo to the position of director general of railways. Mr. McAdoo will remain secretary of the treasury, nnd In his dual role will be the most powerful official In the nutlon except the president. The railroads will continue to be operated by their respective corpora tions under the direction of Mr. McAdoo, and the primary function of the lines will become the transporta tion of troops nnd wnr supplies ami materials, to which nil other service will be subordinated. . Properties Which Are Taken. The properties that will pass Into the control of the government ore: All railroads, comprising 200,000 miles of Hues, vultied ut $17,000,000, 000. All coastwise, lake and river steam ship lines. All terminals, terminal rompnnlcs, and terminal associations. The Pullman company's sleeping cars nnd parlor cars. The packers' and other concerns' pri vate cur lines. All railroad elevutors and ware houses. All railroad telegraph and telephone lines. - All Interurtmn electric lines carry ing freight only. Street Car Lines Exempt. The president will not take over at this time any street car or loenl pas senger carrying Interurbnn electric lines, hut he provides in his proclama tion thnt by subsequent order he may take r.ossesslon of any such lines found desirable, Including subways nd tunnels. The proclamation does not specific ally mention express Touipnnles, but the language of the proclnnintlon, In which there appear the words, "and all other equipment and oppurtennnoes commonly used upon or operated as a pnrt of such system," would seem to Include these companies. Guarantee of Fair Profit. The government guarantees to the stockholders of each of the railroads n profit equal ut least to the average profits of the road during the fiscal years of 1915, 1910 and 1917. Tnfclng all of the roads of the coun try as a Imsis, the general overage wos 5.21 per cent on their total capital In vestment. The president says thnt he will ask congress to provide for the guar antee of pre-war earnings to the own ers of the properties, and he adds: "Investors in rullway securities may rest assured that their rights nnd Interests will be as scrupulously looked after by the government ns they could be by the several will way systems." McAdoo td Negotiate. Director General McAdoo Is Instruct ed to negotiate with the rallronds im mediately Agreements providing for a compensation to the owners of the properties amounting to tho average net profit derived by each company dining the three-year pre-war period, these agreements to be submitted to the president for action In connection with the legislation asked of congress. Bondholders nnd other security hold ers are to receive the some return on their Investment they received during the pre-war period and other creditors are to receive their due with rights unimpaired. The president takes possession or the rullronds by executive order under tho authority conferred upon him by a provision of tho army appropriation net of August 29, 1910, which follows: "The president In time of war Is em powered, through the secretary of war, to take possession nnd assume control of any system or systems of transpor tation, or any pnrt thereof, ana to utilize the same, to the exclusion, ns far ns may lie necessary, of all other trufllc thereon; for the transfer or transportation of troops, war material and equipment, or for such other pur poses connected with emergency ns may he needful or desirntue. Cut in Passenger Traffic. The government will be required to provide the railroads with approxi mately' $1,000,000,000, It Is estimated, for the expansion and building of new terminals, extensions of trackage and additional rolling stock. Government control will nlso entail a general shifting of rolling stock to the centers of wur Industry to relieve the congestion of transportation of war materials. Hundreds of engines and thousnnds of cars will be sent from western r.nd southern rors to eastern territory, where 80 per cent of the war supplies are being produced. Passenger traffic Is scheduled to be greatly curtailed. On western roads TRIALS OF THE HOME MAKER Women Find Dally Samenesa of Work Exasperating and Long for Res pite From Duties. At the outset the home maker often accepts cheerfully enough sivh max ims as "blessed be drudgery" nnd "he vyho Is faithful In that which Is least shall become the greatest." She mas ters in a year or two yenrs nt most de tails which must, nevertheless, be re pented, although nil the freshness nnd "A Great National Necessity Dictated the Action. I Was Not at Liberty to Abstain From It." By WOODROW WILSON. I have exercised the power ever the transportation systems of the country which were granted me by. the act of congress of August, 1918, because it has become Imperatively necessary for me to do ao. This Is a war of resources no less than of men, perhaps even more than of men, and It Is necessary for the complete mobilization of our resources that the transportation system of the country should be organized and em ployed under a single authority and a simplified method of co-ordination which have not proved possible under private management and control. The committee of railway executives who have been co-operating with the government In this all Important matter have done the utmost that it was possible for them to do; have' done it with patriotic zeal and with great ability; but there were difficulties that they could neither escape nor neutralize. Complete unity of administration In the present circumstances Involves upon occasion and at,many points a serious dislo cation of earnings, and the tommlttee was, of course, without power or authority to rearrange charges or effect proper compensations and adjust ments of earnings. Several roads which were willingly and with admirable publie spirit accepting the orders of the committee have already suffered from these circumstances and should not be required to suffer further. In mere fairness to them the full authority of th government must be substituted. The government itself will thereby gain an Immense Increase of efficiency In the conduct of the war and of the Innumerable activities upon which Its successful conduct depends.. The public Interest must be first served, and In addition th financial Interests of the government and th financial interests of th railroad must be brought under a common direction, the financial operation of th railway need not, then, Interfere with th borrowings of th govern ment, and they themselves can be conducted at a greater advantage. Investora In railway securities may rest assured that their rights and Interests will b as scrupulously looked after by th government as they could be by th directors of the several railway systems. Immediately upon the reassembling of congress I shall recommend that these definite guarantee be given: First, of course, that th railway properties will ba maintained during the period of federal control In as good repair and a complete equipment as when taken over by the government; and, second, that the roads shall receive a net operating income equal in each case to the average net Income of the three year preceding June 30, i 1917; and I am entirely confident that the congress will be disposed In this case, as In other, to see that Justice is don and full security assured to the owner and creditor of th great systems which th government muct now us under Its own direction or else suffer serious embarrass ment. The secretary of war end I are agreed that, all the circumstances being taken Into consideration, th beet results can be obtained under th immediate executive direction of William G. McAdoo, whose practical experience peculiarly fits him for the service and whose authority a sec retary of tho treasury will enable him to co-ordinate as no other man could the many financial interests which will be Involved and which might, unices systematically directed, suffer very embarrassing entangle ments. The government of the United States Is the only great government now engaged In the war which has not already assumed control of thla sort. It was thought to be In the spirit of American Institutions to at tempt to do anything that was necessary through private management, and If zeal and ability and patriotic motive could have accomplished tho necessary unification of administration it would certainly have been accomplished; but no zeal or ability could overcome Insuperable obstacles, and I have deemed It my duty to recognize that fact In all candor, now that It I demonstrated, and to use without reserve the great authority reposed in me. A great national necessity dictated th action and I waa therefore not at liberty to abstain from it this curtailment will be marked. Com petition In passenger traffic between Chicago nnd St. Paul and Chicago nnd the Pacific const, for example, will be abolished. This will mean the with-' druwal of many trains. Why Course Wu Taken. In a statement necompnnylng the proclamation President Wilson says that he takes this radical action "be cause it has become imperatively necessnry for ino to do so." In order to mobilize In the shortest possible time all the material resources of the nation for the conduct of the wnr the railroads, says the president, must be organized, co-ordinated, -and employed under a single authority. The attempt of the railroads them selves to provide this single authority and simplified organization In the ex isting railroads' war board nnu us special operating committee hns nroved n failure because of physical limitations, nlthough the president pays high tribute to the ability ana zeul of the live rail executives whose efforts have been devoted to the task. The organization effected by the railroads' war board will be the foun dation upon which Director Oenernl McAdoo will build the structure of government control. It Is not unlike ly that some, If not all of the members of the war board, will be associated with Mr. McAdoo In administering the management of the unified lines. In his statement the president refers to the defeots of tho system of unifica tion uttempted under private control. Several rnllronds have suffered finan cially and physlcnlly from carrying out the orders of the war board, which required them to be utilized In ex tremely unprofitable trnnsportutlon In order that the transportation of war materials might be facilitated. Need Fear No Losses. Under government control no rail road will incur such losses. 'The rail roads will not be Interested in what clnss of traffic they handle, will not rare whether It Is profitable or unprof itable. If It Is unprofitable the loss will be made good by the government, for the government assures the stock holders the return on their Investment they enjoyed (on tho annual average) for the three yenrs ended June SO, 1917. Under government control the rail roads are to be nssisttd In obtaining the capital necessary to finance tne vast extensions of trackage and ter minals and the building of additional locomotives nnd cars made Imperative by tho demands of wnr. The president says that under gov ernment control "the financial earn ings of the railways need not then In terfere with Ihe borrowings of the gov ernment." Railroad Investments ore to be made attractive to Investors by the government guarantee, fcventu ully a loan mny be made by the gov ernment to the railroads. It Is suld. however, in the selection of Mr. McAdoo for director genernl of railroads that there lies tne greatest promise of government assistance to the rnllroads in financing their opera tions and-extensions. Interest have gone out of them. Through many years of conscien tious work the home maker does not quite realize her plight, yet nil this time she suffers from a growing suspi cion that life Is not acquiring for ber the values which she expected, thnt for her It is bringing no widening of sphere or of outlook. In a vague un nnnlyzed way, says a writer In the New Republic, the feels the inexorable effects of child training nnd house keeping upon her own mentnl life nnd powers. While Sir. McAdoo will not relin quish his post as head of the treasury department he will be compelled to turn over to others most of the routine business of the department to which nt present he Is giving his personal nttentlou. Of course he will hare a number of capable assistants to re lieve him of some of the responsibility connected with the duties he will short ly assume. No Limit to Powers. In his proclamation the president confers upon Mr. McAdoo powers that will be practically unlimited when ho enters upon the direction of the rail ways and can be limited subsequent ly only by the presideut or by con gress. In the first place, Mr. McAdoo Is au thorized to control nnd dlre.t the rail ways under private operation by existing directors, receivers and offi cers "so long nnd to auch extent a he may determine." The railroad offi cials are Informed In the proclama tion that they will continue the opera tion of the properties "until and except so far as snid director shall from time to time by general or special orders provide." Mr. McAdoo will have power to dis charge existing directors and other of ficials and appointed new ones. How ever, It Is expected that generally th executive forces of the various roads will continue in their offices. In fact, there Is supposed to be no one else available for these Jobs, from presi dents down. Can Decide on Rate. The director general Is to wield au thority paramount to thnt of the Inter state commerce commission and state railway commissions. The statutes and orders of these bodies are to re main binding upon the railroads only 30 long as Mr. McAdoo approves. When he decides that rates should be revised upward or downward, or that national er state regulations should be charged, all he will have to do Is to Issue an . order putting the change Into effect, and thnt order, on der the president's proclamation, "shall have paramount authority and be obey ed as such." The regular dividends hitherto do clared nnd the Interest upon bonds and other obligations are to be paid as usual, unless Mr. McAdoo should de termine otherwise, but nil renewals nnd extensions of maturing obliga tions can be made by the roads only with the approval of the director gen eral. "' Why McAdoo Was Chosen. The president says he nnd Secretary of War Buker, In whose name the ex ecutive takes possession of the lines, are agreed that existing circumstances make advisable the appointment of Mr, McAdoo, "whose practical experience peculiarly fits him for the service and whose authority as secretary of th treasury will enable him to co-ordinate, ns no other man could, the many finan cial Interests which will be Involved and which might, unless systemat ically directed, suffer embarrassing en tanglemenls." Earning and Spending. Earning money keeps some mg from tbetr wives. Speudlng moo drives some women farther away frotf, their husbands. The proper way ii ff husband and wife to earn together sat spend together. Wanted Company. Professor (In chem. lab.) "Thla K ia- very explosive substnnce and II Might blow us all sky-high. CoiM loser, genthnuen, so you mny bo be ter able to follow me.