MOUNT JOY STAR AND NEWS, MOUNT JOY, Pa. RIF m vents That Are Chang- Great ing the World’s Destiny Told in a Paragraph. it - 3 LATEST WAR BULLETINS. Short Chronicles of Past Occurrences Throughout the Union and Our . Colonies—News From Europe That ls Not All War News. - WAR BULLETINS Premier lenine and Ensign Kry- lenko, the Bolsheviki heads of the Rusian government, order a guerrilla warfare against the invading Germans, | but the army's debacle is so complete | ’ that the Petrograd is feared. fall of city of ¥ British capture Jericho and are with- in 25 miles of 1 (s' line of communi- cations. American forces, now holding part of Aisne sector, kill German and cap- ciash with ene ture another in General Haig's troops take over a portion of the line formely held by the French without a hitch. German armies are pressing on into | Russia all along their 500 mile front, They have cleared the Russians from Rovno and captured Minsk and are 70 miles from Riga, moving northeast to- | ward Petrograd, while one force cross- ed Moon sound on the ice and began a march through Esthonia, The British airmen dropped 2 huge quantities of explosives on bil- | Rd hy lets, ammunition dumps, railway sta- | tions and aerodromes in northern ; France. They attacked enemy quar- ters from just above the roofs, fired on | marching columns with machine guns, disrupted transport trains and wrk ed big gun pits. The fine, freez weather has aided them greatly. have ing 7 The Austro-Germans are concentrat- “ ; fng along the southwestern while the forces of the Ukraine Brest-Litovsk un- front, Rada are coneentr: der Ger En Ke ed Y WASHINGTON $ — Immediate ieaching of German in South Dakota | ( by those at mony. It was dustrial city, pleted, 1 jine ro { ng a e- | I great in- revealed as a h 50 shipv f railroad tracks, shops, | ¢ The ser passe the tion change be control all inde ued at $1 00,000, place admini railro bill, nie only impo under fe 0 place pen:ent short 000 ppoin ranaa here, to ca tion and he clared labor's to the cause of | « democracy was responsible, An order to investigate prices in Boston wus issued. the Ss, 12 com- | Russ W. L. Hutcheson, president International says the ship carpenters do 1 mand the closed shop wher he go ernment is the « er, but they re serve the right w a profiteer inter venes between the govern nt and ( rpenters, Secretary Baker announced ti h vould deal promptly with t abu g» the new law allow LH N idiers Te drink in the homes of bona fide gues Director Gi for the “open tion and patriotic all employees for the best service sible. neral McAdoo shop” in 1 railroad issues a pos Six men are seized on suspicion at mysterious fire which seriously dam ages the new cargo steamship K. 1 Luckenbach while moored to a pier in Hoboken, N. J. Determined to relieve the anxiety of England, tol France Italy over America’s failure to deliver | the food expected to date, Director | General McAdoo assembled 431 cars of provisions at which ware made up into trains and started east ward as rapidly as locomotives be obtained. The need for engines is imperative That is the principal reason for the ex Chicago, pected curtailment of passenger tri by increasing some passenger fares $0000 090000 000000200 000088308000 s PPPS O POOH SOS IE SPOIL, sufficient Clothing Jor an supplies 7,000,060 men army of been purchased by the gover y 8 though the war department has fig ured only on 5,395,000 mer The great American war eq 1ent machine is swinging toward hi tide is revealed by the Enfield ri suflicient to of production, output of 250,000 month, a modified fles a number | arm 14 divisions, and the manufacture ol ammunition is keeping pace, so the big question now is tc obtain storage facilities, Secretary of War Baker denies that German over American lines unchallenged and that American air defenses, therefore, are deficient, leven men indicted in New York on charges of embezzlement, re- ceiving stolen property, perjury and conspiracy in connection with the ine vestigation which has revealed that the government has been defrauded of $5,000,000 in a widespread uniform aeroplanes are passing were profiteering plot, Fifty-five deputy *“sher are doing scouting duty around the train ing camps for the protection of young g , the Committee on Publi¢ Infor- tion announces, PPPOE o P08 Sovovece EOE OPPO POPE IIE { saved 140.000.000 ? — 1 the la months, SPORTING : and declared Ameri- | $ $ ta DOP OCIIIIOITIII OEE IONE EOOPN ESI; cans would be proud of the sacrifices 9 if they knew the gratitude of the al- McGovern, formerly feat lies over 165,000,000 pounds of beef veigl champion pugilist, died exported, pneumonia in Brooklyn. Joseph “ a k nee MceGover on t Yohns- Mr. McAdoo writes Mr. Hoover re- | rence McGovern was born at Johns : : > . : : It I Ya ar 0 S pudiating ch that food famine is | town, Pa, March 9, 1880. L threatened in east and that the rail- Andre Anderson, a Chicago heavy way administration is responsible for | Weight, was accepted for the National : . Ie wil > ati 10 ¢ Ye delays in supply movements. Mr, | Army. He will be stationed at Camp \ ore 3 1 (irant der ' is Poot ¢ Hoover's reply in effect is, “Make | “Fant Anderson, who is G feet 4 good.” inches tall and weighs 218 pounds, The food administration warns the ; “W48 _ pronounced physically perfect, 1 1 » 1 t Adair AW i bakers to obey the mixed flour rules. | He did not claim exemption. Food Commissioner Hoover dis : John K. Ten presiden : : : ti eague, declares a closed that the food situation is the! ' on Lea ue declared that most acute in the nation’s history, with wil be legislated out of the entire east facing a shortage for | ‘1H€ near future, ono x : al 1¢ I'S y are holdine ont 7p the next 60 days. He put the whole Ball players who are holding out for 7 : I ‘o vw need n y set their e blame on the railroad congestion. more money need not expect their em The Senate Judiciary Subcommittee | PIOYErs to go out of their w to sign indorsed » Overman bill with only | said President Tener the Na 3 v . : . 3 tiona Lea > if liscussine the slight cht indicating a favorable on ; Lc ue in discussing the gen report to S¢ where its oppo- | * 3 ; holdout sitharion nents will wage : ter fight. First Baseman She - : . with the Salt Lake ( By an order from the Ship Control! | _. : : ne . : a summer, will be a cane Committee no vessel of less than 2,500 z $13 ¢ 03 : ck position on the tons dead weight will be permitted to | ,. Te . v . : daians this sp clear for a transatlantic voy 2. The "my : 3 ar pli = i : : : : t I'he pitching staff of the Senat steamships that will be excluded by a Y : 17 i > Xt season may be the smallest ir this order will be diverted to the coast- ‘ Bure ‘ YW iis A circuit. Manager Griffith ks that wise or West Indies trades or “other | . : ' ¥ : » i * twirlers are enough. suitable service. . . : 3 Among the more prominent of the Double profits on foodstuffs with a players who are holdouts are R resultant price advance to the con- Hornsby of the Cardinals, Derrill Pratt sumer, caused by the practice of | of the Yankees, Dave Robertson wholesalers in selling to each other to George Burns, Ferdie Schupp and Poll make up depreciated stocks, were con- | perritt of the Giants, Walter Johnson demned in a statement issued by the | snd Eddie Ainsmith of Wash neton €, 1 a¢y i i 2 i = L001, food adr ion. Cheney of Brooklyn, Charley Hiram W. Belknap wt appointed of the aves, Leslie Nuna- manager of the safety appliance sec- Fritz Maisel and Nick Cullop > tion o road administration, of the Browus. Blevvesao WISI eeoeorsred Feooeess EPP eoP roy 4 GF ¢ : GENERAL FOREIGN ¢ 4 HWeoorsrco Foersorrsesrss Dolsheviki in prociam ierman proletariat tor showing | was ordered by t State Council of | “insufficiently determined to stay w Defense, ‘ong, criminal hand of its The Hog Island shipyard, 1 ism” and appeal to work phia, long closely guarded from the | not to let militarisés stifle the re olu- | public and recenuy subjected to ecrigi- | cism for extravagance and mismanage- ns interpret closing of Swiss | ment, was frontier by Austrians as signal for re- | | riewed offensive. Be T n puts off peace ians after Bolshevik ¢( way to Ber Is all the storehouse ower vuiants, cranes, hos- with Rumania ; pitals, be 8, restaurants, schools, a | proclamations call tor “defense to police ferce and five department, d h.” denounce utter lawiess: 1 leclures operi- appeal to immediately and ould $ . ‘ { German-American War $ 6 we RUSSIATO FIGHT TO THE DEATH | ‘| Decree Calls for “Real Revolu- commissaries, | | | gars at a time. { All cases of exemption granted to | in Canada will be reviewed and | juestionnaires will be sent out. | Peace negotiations between Iuma- | fish | nia and the central powers have been started, 3 PITH OF THE tionary Mobilization” to Keep Back German Tide. | GUERILLA WARFARE ORDERED. | | | { | Russia at the Mercy of Germans, but | Red Guard Troops Masten to Dig | Trenches Near Petrograd for a Last Defense, Yatroor: i i Petrograd.—A proclamation ordering resistance to the German advance, call- ing on all Russians to defend the fa- { therland and declaring Petrograd in a state of siege was issued from the quarters, at the order of the people's | Smolny Institute, the Bolshevist head- | Lenine and Ensign Krylenko, the Bol- ISt commander in chief, It the Germans refuse peace to Rus “a struggle to the death or victory for us is inevitable,” “The people's terrorism must be opposed to the advancing enemy.” The : ments it declares. statement 1.000 to and detach- 1,500 lightly able to intrench quickly and attack determinedly, will be able What is revolutionary that strong, says | armed to stop the German advance. characterized as “real mobilization” is ordered. If, the statement goes on, the people succeed in throwing against the enemy concentrated masses of revolutionary citizens, who not only in accordance with military strategy, but also secret- ly, from every corner, everywhere—in small detachments and large battal- ions—will struggle for every town, vil- luge, street and house, then there are no forces which the Germans can suc- cessfully oppose against them. The statement says that all able- bodied men must be ordered to work nm fortifications and in the tion of obstacles along all of the German is who construc- the routes Any bour- tried and advance, resists must be cibly compelled to work, Registra- f for the revolutionary been opened at all local s and with the staffs of the Red acilities have that ¢ localities. added deliv- Revolutionary dis- » must be brought to the highest if efficiency by handing over to revolutionary tribunals all who do ot obey the order. All to arms! All to the defense of ke revolution! S will be says the statement, mobilization for the zing of trenches is ordered. The dig- be under the orders of the ‘ils, and every detachment will be nded hy responsible commissa- vith unlimited powers, zeneral EAST FACING FOOD SHORTAGE. *{focver Declares Situation Worst in History of the Country. ishington.—The eastern part of the ited States faces a food short- age likely to continue for the next 60 «d rator Hoover declared the most try’s history. that the critical in the He said in many of ge consuming areas reserve food | tion is stores are at the point of exhaustion. The whole blame is put by the food It is signed by Premier! ! land and Townsend. {DAVID B. FRANCIS | } | | | United States Envoy to ] * | | vr RED GROSS LINE FLORIZEL LOST British Steamer, St. John's for New York, Battered to Pieces on Newfoundland's Rocks. o¥ Russia Leaves Petrograd. BP PPPPPPOO POP PIPPI OPOPOOLEIOETED Rescuers, Unable to Offer Aid, Watch Sturdy Craft Pounded to Pieces on Rocks — Use of Life- boats Impossible. Halifax, N. S.-—The hardy steamship Florizel of the Red Cross line pounded | herself to pieces on rocks of the New- foundland coast 146 persons aboard sank while shore and a fleet of short distance lend every assistance. and with watchers on vessels only a ready to rescue away stood The Red Cross liner crashed on the 1ocks, only four ship lengths from was bour.c from St, John's, N. I, York via Halifax, A short number of steamers and three or shore. She to New time later a warships were dispateh- ed to her assistance, and a relief train up and sent on way. IZarly in the evening a light in the for- ward part of the afforded the hope that some lives could and everying made in readiness for the rockets carrying life lines, All during this time maddened seas, the teeth of a raging bliz- zard, were breaking over the decks of stranded vessel, Little by little her resistance—she was built especial- ly for battling with the lashing weath- er of the Newfoundland gave way, and, with rescuers on every side, she went down with her entire comple- ment, with the exception of five hodies, which previously had been ashore, was made its officials said renewed Russia | had progressed to a point the departure of Ambassador Francis and the allied from Petrograd was determined { State department the | German offensive in where Uf submerged vessel he saved, wis : shooting of diplomats upon. { { driven in Nn LIMIT ON RAIL CONTROL Government Ownership Defeated by Vote of 61 to 1C. the coast Cummins Loses Fight tc Cut $173, 000,000 From Compensation to Railroads by 52 to 23. shore. sely by ship or from idly but te | either from the Life savers stood Washington.—By a viva voce vote | of the sea. Once during the day five or Six men appeared on deck and then | disappeared as quickly as they came i from below. the administration railroad bill passed The on all except two An providing for the control of the short the senate, administration won important points at issue. amendment was adopted | nesses of the disaster tell of men and the rigging being weakened women clinging to ually but inevitably to the point of surrendering their last grip for life. Wilson and d that discretion of ough Mr McAdoo desir the line railroads, alt Director General this be left in the President, and the limit of government | The bodies washed up at intervals along the beaten coast were badly control was made 18 months after | instead of being i mangled by being dashed on the rocks. In a terrific the Iflorizel had | rounded Cape Race and was defiantly peace is declared definite, Sea The rate the Interstate fixing power is placed in hands of the President, with the Commerce 48 | The bill carries tlie “revolving fund.” | the Snowstorm route to Halifax, hugging coast, when the blinding struck her. The ship hit the rocks with ter- rifie force. Only one wireless call was sent out, and then the distress call of | the sea ceased. A check of the passenger list shows Commission a court of appedl. $500,000,000 Senator Johnson cf California, who | led the advocates of government own- | ership, said that he did not expect to | i renew his effort. The fight is regard- | 12 women and three children were | ed as ended for the present in the sen- | aboard the Ilorizel. [ ate | | ate. | a | The Cummins an 1ent e | ¢ S imendment to reduce | REFUSED TO FIGHT GERMANY. | the annual compensition of the roads = % | $173,000,000 was defeated by 52 to 23. The the Cum- ins amendment to reduce compensa- Army Captain Sentenced to Twenty- five Years—Forhears Teuton. New York.—Capt. David A. Henkes senators voting for Bop wele! f the Sixteenth United States Infar e IXteenth 1ted States Infan- | Democrats Ashur Gore, Hard- of ace hot : : { +Trle ; try has been sentenced by court mar- | wick, Henderson, Hitchcock, Hollis, |." ; : i : x E s tial to be dismissed from the service Johnson, South Dakota; Kendrick, ¢ the Toited Stat od tod : >. >a "m 0 1¢ ef SLares ang 0 e con- King, Kirby, Reed, Thomas, Tram- fined at hard labor for 25 years for re- mell and Vardaman Ria ; fusing to fight against the central pow- Republicans — Cummins, Gronna, Washing- y, Norris, Suther- | ers. Johnson, California; ton; Kenyon, M¢N Jones, Captain Henkes was with the Amer- and ican expeditionary force in I administrator on railroad congestion, An amendment offered by Senator | had asked to be relieved fr ror ; : : £ < a Nt ierea bo Senate { : 1 ic) which, he says. also has thrown the! pou: : i i | assigned to other work because his ar 5 ; : cE Frelinghuysen of New Jersey and|‘ ‘ | food administration far behind in its adopted provides that the New nw forbears were Germans. He had program if feedine +1 allio 3 $ 4 al ti ae < l . x alntivos. ap onde. 3 Noy EO n of feeding the allies. The | gy not interfere with states, taxa-| Pd reigiives ang friends in Ger: ion he sees is a greatly in- rail movement of foodstuffs, exclusion of much other ased t even to the coinmerce. ‘ Inability to move the crops, Mr. Hoover law of sets forth, has suspended the supply and demand and has a price margin between pro- ducer and consumer wider than it ever was before, PAPAS ASN NANI AS NS NIN INI NI NSAI NSN NINN NAPS basal created WAR NEWS ~ro0 ore so Germany's humiliating peace terms have becn accerted unconditionally by the Belsheviki. A Russian dele- gation to sign the terms of surren- der is to start at once for Brest- Litovsk. The German artillery was silenced promptly after American guns near Toul directed a heavy retiliatory fire on enemy batteries which had con- centrated their fire on an American position, evidently with the inten- tion of obliterating it. Those bat- teries since have fired scarcely a | shot, evidently having been put out of action. The Germans, in a trap, must give battle on the western front against | their own wishes, according to the view expressed by allied military chiefs and reported in a special cable dispatch to the Herald from Paris. The dispatch reveals the fact that French opinion believes that the seizure of Russia by the Huns may be preliminary to the conces- | sion of the demands of the entente | powers. 3erlin reported some resistance to the German advance and also the cap- | ture of 4,000 more Russians. Also | some guns, | | olution favoring a | Mr. Hoover wants {| Brough of | be three more years of war. a ice | It was in connection with his de and gainst either many. His wife is an Austrian, he felt he could not fizht a | Germans or Austrians, t.on or railroads. An amendment by Senator Robinson of Arkansas reducing payments to the railroads about $6,500,000 annually by elimination of allow better- ments and road extensions in 1917 was | adopted by 44 to 34. £ German Aviator a Deserter. Geneva.—Official announcement was made that a German aviator who land- | ed near Basel is a deserter. The gov- ernment decided to intern the aviator and return the airplane to Germany. for Bill to Put Lenroot in Senate Is Killed. Madison, Wis.—A measure empower- | | | | ing Governor Philipp te appoint a United States senator to fill the va- | #eee ve ¢ cancy created by the death of Senator aul A. Husting was defeated in the senate, 7 to 3. In the assembly a res- | 1 election for | WORLD'S NEWS IN | y CONDENSED FORM or was adopted, 80 ! Sree oan STOCKHOLM.—Swedish forces oc- ! cupied the Aland islands, routing the Bolshevik garrison. WASHINGTON. — Secretary Baker, in his weekly review of the military situation, said America had taken Russia's place, and both the artillery and infantry now are engaged actively | in operations on the western front. BERLIN.—Peace parleys of an in- | formal nature were begun by the cen- tral powers with Rumania. WASHINGTON.—President Wilson | fixed the price of wheat at $2.20 a | bushel, the same price as it was last { year. HARRISBURG, Pa. — Fire in the plant of the Hershey Chocolate Com- | pany did damage amounting to more | than $500,000. | MADRID.—Prussian intrigue to em- broil Spain in a war with Portugal is | revealed in a copy of a pamphlet re- ceived by the general staff, BERLIN.—The prediction of a revo- Brough made this statement here in a | lution in Germany, made by Doctor speech at the congress of national sery- | Cohn, Socialist deputy, in an address of the National 8 ity L | on the Ukraine peace, throws the reich- } stag into an uproar. LONDON.—Sixty-three survivors of United States senat to 18. CALL FOOD PROBLEM SOLVED. Misunderstanding Between Hoover and McAdoo at an End. Washington. — Herbert CC. Hoover, the food administrator, issued a state- ment that sets at rest for a time the misunderstanding that between his administration and the railroad ad- ministration. Director General McAdoo says he will move the rs wherever | arose them, but demanded that requests be made specific. Hoover | calls on buyers for to furnish iists dail ied governments SEES 3 YEARS MORE OF WAR. Governor Brough Tells What Washing- ten Expects. Chicago.—According to Gove or H. judgment of | there will | Governor | Arkansas, the official Washington is tl 1 et tion that a conservation and educa- tional program must be adopted in or- | the Tuscania still are in hospitals in | Jer to win the wsr. | Ireland. : as they watched the destructive force | | BLIZZARD PREVENTS RESCUE. | washd | The use of lifeboats was impossible | The stories of some of the eye-wit- | grad- | sticking her nose into the long roll en | J | Werrosrrrsrsvrsrrsrrrrrrr’s { MRS. NICHOLAS RONANY ‘ $ 3 3 $ Former Czarina of Ru Whose Release Kaiser One of Germany's demands to be presented to the Bolshevik government will be the surrender of the ex-Czari and some other members of the for Russian ruler's family, who are rela- tives of the Kaiser. A BRITISH ENTER JERICHO Haig’s Line Extends From Near North Sea to the Oise. American Casualties Light Since Pere | shing’s Men Have Been Fighting in Chemin-Des-Dames Sector. London.—General Allenby has cap- tured Jericho, in Palestine, the war of- fice reports. Australian Jericho, establishing themselves on a and the W mounted troops entered line between Jericho Auja, a dispatch frown Allenby deci ed. The Wadi Auja is a small tribu- tary of the Jordan. North the British extended slightly and rendered secure, During the fighting Wednesday the casualties of the British troops and northwest of Jerusalem advanced positions were were again slight. The Mar Caspio, a ship, has fallen vietim to a submar it was announced in Madrid. The ves- She was of Spanish s sel was sunk by shellfire. 23 tons. In a patrol fight units under instruction in Americans from the famous Chemin-des-Dames sector Killed one German and captured another. One American was slightly wounded. This is the first time it has been permittéd to reveal the fact that new American units have entered the line, The troops have been there for some time, suffering slizht but their presence was kept secret until it was certain the enemy knew they were there. The American casualties since occupation of a this tinually active ridge of observatories have been light and even, The American forces line on the darkest of through a pitted region dotted with shell wrecked towns. The French the sector, a hero casualties, the segment of Lom entered ‘he one of shell general commandi of the Marne, greeted them as coms | rades in arms and kissed the American | flag. “Early in the night a large party of the enemy raided two of our posts in the neighborhoo'l of the Ypres-Roulers railwa and a few of our men are missing,” says the war “On the remainder of the British front report. ofiice there is nothing special to report.” The British line on the west front now extends from the vicinity of the North sea to the region of the Oise. General Haig's forces have thus ex- tended their holdings through taking over a considerable sector held by the French south of St. Quentin. xcept for the French sector near the coast and the Belgian sector, the British now occupy the entire front from the coast to the Oise. EDGE APPOINTS BAIRD SENATOR 78-Year-Old Camden Man to Fill cancy Caused by Hughes’ Death. Trenton, N. J.—Governor Edg nounced that he has appointed Da Va. Baird to be United States senator from New Jersey to fill the vacancy created by the death of Willian Hughes of Paterson. Mr. Baird, who is seventy-eight, will serve until such time as the successor, who chosen at the next regular election in November for the unexpired term of Senator Hughes, assumes office, will he SWOBODA ARRESTED AS SPY, Identified in Switzerland as a German Officer. Geneva.—Raymond Swoboda, who claimed American citizenship when ar- rested recently for espionage, being released subsequently on bail, was re- arrested at Berne and brought io prison here. He is said to have been identified as a German officer. The number of Austrians and Germans ar- rested in Switzerland for espionage since the war began is now more than a hupdred A