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T7EATHÏTR «Overcast to-day, followad by rain to-night and to-tnoirow. Colder to-morrow. Moderate, varia* winds, btecomîng froth. rnU lUport »a race IS ISrujfflotli ^sneW^ Fit-tar fn It «Mbttitc CIRCULATION Over 1Q0.000 Dally Net Paid, Non-Returnable First to Last .the Truth: News - Editorial4* - Advertisements Yoi, 1AWI No. 28.644 tropTrlsht ton. The Tribune Ass'n.l WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1017 ». * ONE CENT u "- r~* «* **"* lereej City aasi EATING PLACES ARE PUT UNDER CITY CONTROL Health Board Orders 10.000 Shops to Ob¬ tain Permits SALOONS AND HOTELS INCLUDED Authorities' Power Far- reaching-.Can Close Any Establishment '1 he Department of Health yestorday adopted an ordinance which requires each of the 10,000 restaurants and lunch counters in New York to obtain a license. Failure to comply strictly with the city sanitary code led to this ac¬ tion. The ordinance constitutes one of the most farreaching steps taken in the history of the city's tight for pure food. Kor the first time «t gives the health authorities direct control of every place in the city where food is »old and con¬ sumed on the premises, and even ap¬ plies to the free lunch counters of bar¬ rooms. New York's authorities also have un» l-mitts-d power to revoke any permit at any time, and thus, without resort to the courts, to inflict drastic punishment on restaurant proprietors who violate pirsistcntly the sanitary regulations. Permit» for All The ordinance follow«: No person »hall conduct, operate or maintain any restaurant in the | of New York without a permit therefor issued by the Board of Health, or otherwise than in ac¬ cordance with the terms of said permit and the regulations of said board. The term "restaurant," as herein used, »hall be taken to mean and include every buffet, lunch room, grill room, lunch counter, fining room of hotel and every other public place where food prepared, cooked, served, »old and eonsomed on the premises, every lunch counter in a saloon where food is given away and all kitchen» appurtenant thereto or connected therewith. Under the new eyetO., as explained hy Dr. Haven Emoraoa, Health Com¬ missioner, inspectors of 'he depart¬ ment who find unsanitary conditions in reataurants or bimilar places will warn tbe proprietor. Unies.« he takes prompt steps to conform to the la.***, his case will b»*, reported to the Board of Health. Ordinarily he, will have an oppor¬ tunity to appear and explain his side, hut in extreme cases, as, for instance, where a proprietor has been persist¬ ently neglectful, the permit may be revoked without hcirinir. Heretofore the power of the health officers has been limited strictly to Bal suit« m the court«. The un- iveraMe report of ¦ department in- followed by affidavits olation of a specific section of the sanitary code. May Continue Practices f'erding his trial on these charge», the defendant has been permitted to .on*mue in bttalneas, ami often has continued the ven, practices which caused the complaint. The delays made possible by adroit eOUBOOl for the defendants in these trials hare vexed the herlth authorities. These, combined with the awkwardness and eacy inherent in tit" Indirect control through the eouits. brouRM about the pastage of the permit ordi¬ nance. "The permit system." Dr. Kmerson «-\plained, "will be far more effective than the old method. It will not only be much quicker, bu-. it will give us the power, while- needed, to put immense jre o,i delinquent restaurant in« ... It ii« «me ma'ter to threaten a man with a small tine and a remote chance of imprisonment. It is quite Mother to threaten him with the im¬ mediate loss of all hi-, business. "1'nder the old system it was possible for a man to continue to menace the health of his patrons while we prose- «uteri h'.m for his first offence, and we wer«- powerless to stop him. l'nd«r the new ordinance he'll either change hi» ways at once or quit busir.« >v \>«'il »imply notify the Police Department that a cottain permit has been revoked and thev will close that man's place. Found Insanitary Place» "More than a year ago we made a sur- .f the places where food is served «»und a larpe number of unsani¬ tary conditions and practices. am r'ad to say that most of the proprie¬ tors have shown a disposition to meet us half way. But there are many who have not. Recent!*, we completed a «rc-- *V'** l h convinced us that ?he permit s\stem was necessar«. faults have been not so much'in the quality of the food sold as in the man¬ ner in which it was handled. "It will take two and perhaps three month» to put the system into effect. A" proprietor« will he notified of the new ordinaiu> at once and instructed to appl> for permits. These will be i«- Mien as fast a.« inspection» can be made We may work out «ome system for the A**ra of certificates of excellent to e»pecia:]y meritorious places. "The permit s>s»<m has been found ~o»t effective in handling the city's milk supply and with dealers in eggs. The present is a far greater undertak- >ng c-'i account of the numbers in¬ volved, but it will be developed alonir tn« same lines." Th« system for hotel» .nd restau¬ rants is m force in manv cities of the country, including Chicsgo. Si. I.ou.s. ..fliofcespohs, S.n Antonia, Spokane and nÍ»n..»«trtrSü0- -jn four i,,**t*-»' '¦*..'- lltlV' *{ondm< ^""«-onsin and Kansas, ¦»otel» 4re .0 controlled. John J. Astor, 4, Needs $7527 a Day to Live Mrs. Dick Sets Child's Expenses at $86,034 .Toys, Including Lions and Bubble Blow¬ ers, Required with Pillows at $50 Each «lohn Jacob Astor, four years old, ha« been »pending $76.27 a day. That is what it has cost Mr». Will- ism I. Dick, his mother, and widow of Colonel .lohn Jacob Astor, to keep him clothed, fed and supplied with toys, according to the complete accounting of her guardianship, which »he tiled yesterday in the Surrogates' Court. This accounting extends from Novem¬ ber 13, 1912, to December 31. 1916. The total cost of keeping the child during that period was $86,034.21. His mother received from the estate in that time $«50,360.07 for hi« mainte¬ nance. Besides the taxes and other infantile expense« which were listed in the ac¬ counting she tiled last April, when »he sought to convince the court that a small boy just had to have more than $20,000 a year, Mrs. Dick goes into de- tails concerning clothes and toys in the new accounting. John Jacob'» clothes cost $6,790, and as he grew elder he put »¡.way the toys of his babyhood and demanded some- thing more mature and more expen- sive. So in December, 1913, he got a "speaking book," fifteen disk» for a music box, three "roly-polies" and two boJes of horns and balls. Arrive» at Go-Cart Stage By the following June he had got to the go-cart stage, which meant $30 more, and he also had to have a pail, a sand scoop and other beach toys, a Mother Goose, a donkey, a railway and a buoit on animal land. Hi« idea« con¬ tinued to expand, and his mother sought to catch up with them again in the following December. She got him: A toy camel for $30, a toy lion for $15, a goose for $3.60, a bear for $3.76, another donkey for $6, a lamb for $1.50 and a duck for $2. In the course of time August, hil birthday month, came around and found John Jr.cob disconsolate amid the ruins of his donkeys and his lions an«i his camels. There was a gift pie for twenty guest«, which cost $18, and John Jacob got five rollomobiles at $15, three bears on wheels for $12, five hoopr, for $10, a seesaw for $5, a soap bubble blower for |1, and a magic fishpond and athletic hlides for $20. For a few days he was almost as happy as the urchins a few blocks eafrt, who blew soap bubbles from a clay pipe «nd had a contractor's saw- hor*;e for a see; aw. , One reason why John Jacob had to exercise caution in his teetering is evi¬ dent from his tailor's bills. One of them probably arrived about the time he did. It was for a dress costing $123.50, which was bought in June, 1912, two months before John Jacob could protest. A month later a job lot of clothes was bought for $102, and before John Jacob knew whether he was wearing a blue bow under his chin or a pink one, his clothes hail cost $786. Before he was five month.1« old win- i.i.iiniir.l on paar !«. column S WOOLWORTH TO BUILD STORE ON FIFTH AVENUE Five and Ten Cent Bazaar To Be Opposite New York Public Library By 1911 the two bored looking lion» that guard the New York Public Library will be wearing a »till more scornful and supercilious expression, for they will be staring across the bustle of Fifth Avenue, into the five and ten cent glories of a Wo ¡worth »tore. For the dime and nickel king is going to invade Fifth Avenue, and has chosen its busiest «pot for his entry. Tnc P. W. Woolworth Company leased yesterday the property at 463-46'J Fifth Avenue, directly opposite the library, and at 1 Fast Fortieth Street. The lease will run for forty years, and the total rental will he $4,600,uOO. M. & la, Hess, who represented the Woolworth company in the deal, said yesterday that it was the intention of their principal to erect a six story building. The upper floors will be used for offices, the lower for a "five and ten cent store de luxe." Men well versed m real estate values, while marvelling at Woolwortli's temer¬ ity in blinking one of his stores into the exclusive shopping centre of the city, said, nevertheless, that they be- liiv-d it would prove to be the most valuable o." bis long chain. "I- orty-sreond Street and Fifth Ave¬ nue is the hub of the city's traffic," one »¦.»plained. "It la not. only the wealthy who will pass hir« store daily. Com- muten who use the (¡rand Central Sta- lion and those who travel by the Stcinway tube will be attracted to the store, and when the Hudson tubes are brought north to Forty-second Street ai.d Sixth Avenue even more, possible buyers will pass it each day." BRITISH WOULD LET WOMEN VOTE IF 30 YEARS OLD Report of Committee on Elec¬ toral Reform Disappoints Suffragists - London, Jan. SO, The report of the Committee on Flectoral Reform, issued to-night, confirms the main features of the forecasts published regarding votes for women. It will disappoint the suffragists, as no definite agree¬ ment has been reached. By a majority of the committee it was decided that some measure of wom- fTrage should be conferred. The majority also were of the opinion 'hat if Parliament r>i«sed such a meabU'*'* ;the franchise should be »riven to wom¬ en already entitled to vote at municipal elections, but that such women should not vote m Parliamentary elections until they attained a specified age, which the majority of the committee thought should be between thirty and thilty-fvi- -..-ar--. M ss Sylvia Pankhurst, speaking for the Woman's Suffrage Federation, said the c-otisider-d the report most unsat¬ isfactory, adding: "Women mature if anything earlier than men. According to the census a majority of wrrren between twenty and twenty-five year« of age »re earning tlü.r living. '1 o ex-lude them from in« franchise is most unjust. We wan» complete adult suffrage for both nun and .04040." SUFFRAGISTS IN WAR PLOT "Remarkable Conspiracy" Causea Ar- reet of Three British Women and Man London, Jan. IL "Three suffragettes and a man, a conscientious objector to military service, were arrested Tue.« day on a remarkable conspiracy charge." shy« "The Daily Mail" to-day. " I fie nan and two of the women wer« ar- r..«tcd at Derby and the third woman a Southampton. All of them will be arraigned to-day at Derby, and their' trial probably will attract the widest public attention." MOTHER ACCUSED OF KILLING SON Finding of Paterson Boy of Four in August Led to "Ripper" Scare Mrs. Sarah Goldstein was Lrrested yesterday in Paterson to plead to an indictment charging her with the mur- der of her four-year-old son, Maxj whose death on August 14 last caused a "ripper" scare in the New Jersey city. Prosecutor Dunn, who conducted the investigation resulting in her arrest, refused to divulge any of the evidence against her. "The case against her is complete," he said. "I can only say that a bit of bloodstained cloth was an impor¬ tant clew.'' Max. the "Little Boy Blue" of the (neighborhood, was found with hi« throat cut and his abdomen slashed at the foot of the cellar stairs in his home, at 21 Hamburg Avenue. Beside him lay a tin box, containing live marbles. He had been missing for more than tweaty-feur hours, and the «ellar of the bouse had been visited by aérerai persons in the meantime. The theory was then expressed by the police that the boy had been held prisoner and killed at leisure. His mother appeared to he distracted liy grief. Her husband. Isidor, was a victim of tuberculosis and had lost his job in a silk mill. Resides the funeral « (peases and the doctor's bill for Isi- dor, somewhere she ha«) to find the money to keep life in her and their two other children. Soon, also, there would be a baby. The child was born three months ago, and went to the Passaic County jail last night with Mrs. Goldstein, In fact, her whole family wen«. When Patrolman Thomas Jewett en- tered the house at 101 North Third ¡Street, where they are now living. Isidor dragged h'msclf from his bed ion learning of hi« mission. "You can't have her," he cried. "There is the baby and also the little boy and the little girl. What shall we do? 1 am worthless.*' Isidor and his little son and daugh-¡ ter trailed mournfully after the patrol-- man and his prisoner. They sought in vain to stay in the jail. The baby could »fay, said the. warden; in fact, it would have to. But there was no place for Isidor or the other children. It was a still more mournful pilgrimage that they made back to the house on North Third Street, Nathan Rabinowitz. who announced; that he would appear as counsel forj Mr«. Goldstein, was inutmmental in raising a fund of $200, which was of-; fered last summer as a reward for the nrrest of the "ripper." John F. Webster, a plumber, whose shop was in the building where the Goldsteins were living at the time of the murder, was arrested soon after it. A neighbor «aid that she had seen him coming, white-faced and nervous, from the cellar, where the body was found lees than an hour later. He cleared himself of any suspicion of guilt, but is still held, it was said last nght, under $'.,000 bail, as a material witness. GIRL LEAPS TO HER DEATH UNDER TRaAIN IN SUBWAY Father at Morgue Identifies Body as Hi« Daughter's Men and women waiting for a train on the southbound platform of the 14Hth Street Iaenox Avenue subway station last night noticed the slim girl **ho vtrodr impatiently hack and forth. She seemed unable to keep atili, they re- membered afterward, but when a train roared into the station most of them forgot, her. Motorman Guy Freeland and a few others saw her dive under the wheels of the foremost car. It was some time before the body rould h.- removed. When it was finally .-.ted it was taken to the morgue. ¡1er personal effects induced the police t<. call up Abraham Silverblatt, of IIMl Washington Avenue. The Bronx. At tbe morgue !.e identified the body as that of Rebecca, his daughter. She wail twenty-four years old and lived with her parents. WILSON PLANS WORLD POLICY IN NEXT TERN Aims at Leading Role in International Politics CHANGE OF ENVOYS AND CABINET NEAR Hopes New Foreign Issues Will Block Bryan's "Dry" Campaign [From Th» Tribun« Bnr»«i| Washington, Jan. 30..World peace, and in fact world politics in general, will be President Wilson'i field in his second Administration, just as.except for casual issuei arising immediately out of the Eu¬ ropean war.domestic legislation has occupied most of his attention during the first term. The President on March 4 will close the record on domestic prob¬ lems, though there are certain projects already started which he will try to complete at the next reg¬ ular session of Congress. World politics from now on is the big thing. The President wants the United States to play a big part, un¬ der his leadership, in shaping the destiny of civilization after the great war. Want* No Discussion Mr. Wilson revealed himself to¬ day as acutely sensitive to the at¬ tacks that have been made on the world peace plan which he unfolded to the Senate two weeks ago. Ho is impatient at the contrast.» that have been drawn between his atti¬ tude toward American policy and that of Washington, Jefferson and Monroe. He does not want it discussed, either in the Senate, the papers or anywhere else. Me doel not himself desire to be more definite concerning the part that the United States will be expected to play in European quarrels, and still less concerning the part that Europe might feel entitled to play in possible disputes on this continent. To all questions designed to draw a close definition of America's relation to Europe in such a league, he replies that such matters will be left to the conference of nations which draws up the treaty. He appears to regard it largely a.« a matter of detail whether the Monroe Doctrine is to be extended only toward greater American influence in Europe, or toward permitting Euro¬ pean influence in affairs peculiarly American. Diplomatic (hange*. Likely The fact that discussion is discour¬ aged by the President confirms the in¬ terpretation that the speech to the Sen¬ ate was in fact a sequel to his peace note, to the belligerents. It was in¬ tended as further support to the Ger¬ man peace drive, though doubtlesi without much hope that it would be ef¬ fective. The President's intention to devote himself almost exclusively to world af¬ fairs during his second term is well known to his friends. It is disclosed in his determination not to call a special session of Congress on March 6, but onl> to convene the Senate to confirm appointments and take UP matters of foreign policy. The conhr.ation of new appoint¬ ments is directly related to the Pres¬ ident's new plans. There will be many new appointment» in offices that have to do with foreign affairs. All the diplomatic representativos abroad have beeen asked for their -esignations "purely as a matter of form," and some of them will be surprised when they are accepted. Cabinet J «»¦>¦» in Dancer Some of the Cabinet also may he surprised to find that the President will take their "purely formal" demis¬ sions senouslv. For such a programme as he has framed for the next four years the President needs a new per¬ sonnel, quite different from that which sufficed in 19'. .*-, when the European war and its complications were un¬ dreamed of and any politician would do for a diplomat. Colonel House foresaw years ago » greater role for Mr. Wilson than mere domestic politics. The Colonel always has laid emphasis on the world field, a"d it is probable that but for the European war the President would lonu since have launched hi« campaign. Defeat, last November would have spoiled a carefully thought out plan of development for Mr. Wilson. Rut the election impressed twe things on the President. The first was that his domestic record has been ap- pr.-ved and that h.» could afford to stand pat on it. The second wa« that the sentiment in the country was tre¬ mendously for pear-'. House to herí) Silent Role And so, under the guidance of Colo¬ nel House, the President is going out into his larger field, having conquered the smaller one. Colonel House, who knows the Fvropean capitals thorough¬ ly, is likely to remain the ».¡lent part¬ ner, in spite of r*fl*OOri that he may be made an ambassador or Secretary of State. Me like« the obscure role, and it is probable also that Mr. Wilson would rather n^it have the Colonel m an official position, where too frequent opportunity would be given the public tnWtSSUat on pa" I. column * BERLIN DRAFTS PEACE REPLY TO PRESIDENT Germany HintsÂnswer Will Urge Wilson to New Move DOOMED TO FAIL, LONDON BELIEVES Allies Ready "to the Last Button" for Spring Onslaught Washington, Jan. 30..The Ger¬ man Embassy received information to-day that the Berlin government would issue a reply to President Wilson's peace address to the Sen¬ ate, a copy of which was handed to the Foreign Office by the American Embassy. Officials of the embassy disclaimed any knowledge of the tenor of the reply or the form in which it would be delivered. The coming of the communication is awaited with great interest in all quarters here, and there is much speculation over the possibility of its furnishing the basis for another pi-ace move by the President. A dispatch from Berlin to-day said that Germany already had sent to Washington an acknowledgment of the receipt of the President's speech. The Foreign Office, said this message, was considering a reply. London, Jan. 31..The German newspapers, according to a Rotter¬ dam dispatch, intimate that Ger¬ many will acknowledge President Wilson's speech in such a way as to encourage the President to continue his efforts in favor of peace. According to the dispatch, Count von Bernstorff has been instrucUîd to say that Germany Is ready to formulate peace term** if asked to do so by the Allies and if there is a possibility of peace negotiations be¬ ing successfully undertaken. The dispatch adds that Austria has sent a similar communication to the Aus¬ trian Charge d'Affaires at Wash¬ ington and that it is believed Bul¬ garia will follow the example of the Teutonic powers. Allied Armies Ready for Signal to Strike By ARTHl'll S. DRAPKR [Pj fab!» to Tris Tribune London. Jan. 30. Some fresh attempt to inspire his own people with spirit to meet the sacrifices of the coming spring holocaust, «nd also to counteract the effect on neu'-al opinion of the Entente reply to President Wilson, is expected from the Kaiser as a sequel to hi« birthday gathering of statesmen and generals at headquarter«. Foreign Minister 7.immermann has re¬ cently made two hurried trips to ÜM Kaiüer'g qiiart»rs, and is believed to be putting -.he declaration, whatever its form may be, into shape for publica¬ tion. From Denmark and Sweden also com« reports of indication« that the Kaiser is preparing another peace mes¬ sage to the world. Great Offensive Inevitable Whatever he may say, there is no expectation here that it will prevent or delay the spring battle». The grand spring offensive ir. now considered inevitable in fact, it is more likely that there will be two. The Allies are ready "to the last button" for the first time since the war began. It is believed here, too, that, however desperate Germany's straits, she is far from a state of economic exhaustion which would mean the abandonment of military opération« or even prevent their being launched on a large scale. !t is possible that Germany may not have food to last till the next harvest, though London has heard reports along this line too often to take new one« at their face value. But it is certain that exhaustion will not come for months yet. It is also certain that Germany is not prepared to make peace now on term» which would be acceptable to the Al¬ lies, and it thought likely that she hope« to show «uch force at arms as to » iintinn.I nn pa|» I, column .*> GIRL AT HONOLULU SAYS SHE'S DOROTHY ARNOLD' Declared She Was Long-Sought New Yorker, Stewardess Says Honolulu, Jsn. ta% A girl who had calle«! herself Dawn Moore and Dorothy Arnold and who was arrested when she arrived here from Hilo, three days ago, on the steamer Great .Northern and held for investigation, was released to¬ day and immediately tiled a libel of $6,000 atrainst the steamship company. According to the stewarde«« of the steamer, the girl declared tha' ska was the Dorothy Arnold who disap¬ peared from Has» York. She ana taken, she «aid, to Shanghai by a married man. Tha police, nowever. said that there *n no resemblance between the girl and the description* they have of Ihe misamr Dorothy Arnold. The girl her- aalf refuse« to discuss tha matter. GERMANY TO DEMAND INDEMNITY AND LANDS Berlin, Jan. 30.--Count Friedrich von Westarp, the Conservative leader in the Reichstag, in a speech de¬ livered in Dresden said the rejection by the Entente Powers of the peace propos¬ als the Central Powers had cancelled the terms of the Central Powers for a future peace. "Further sacrifices now impending," said Count von Westarp, "will call for quite a different standard of in¬ demnities and restitutions. For the protection of Ger¬ many there must be terri¬ torial extensions east and west and also in Belgium for the covering of Ger¬ many's flank, especially with a view to a future war with England." Above all, Count von Westarp said. Germany must have war indemnities. Other¬ wise her soldiers would re¬ turn home to meet tax bills fivefold heavier than before the war. RAIDER PATROL OFF NEW YORK British Admiralty Ad¬ mits Warships Are Guarding Liner Lane The patrol of fast British cruisers in the North Atlantic has converged be¬ yond the three-mile limit outside of New York, a British Admiralty official said yesterday. This official stated that he had received a wireless message from the commander of the fleet at Halifax informing him that the fleet would be off New York yesterday. This man.uvre, the officer explained, ' was an answer to his request, sent Monday night to the fleet, to protect shipping lanes from any hostile Subma¬ rine or raider. "I don't know whether the raider, is off New York, and my request for protection was only a precautionary measure, to allay fears of ocean trav- ellers leaving this port that any dan¬ ger existed beyond the three-mile limit," the officer said. False Reports Alarm Many "Many transatlantic voyagers have become alarmed by various newspaper accounts that submarines and raiders arc waiting especially for their ship, 01 account of various interviews with incoming captains. "A captain will report that he saw a vessel with one funnol tant two masts on the horizon, iminedissrfr altered his course, and went at all possible speed in the opposite direction This descrip¬ tion will IH nearly any tramp steamer, and naturally means no hing. Another captain probably will report that he, too, saw a vessel on tre horizon, and immediately altered his course and es-, caped by good luck.' " "These two captains believe that two raiders are present, when both are honest merchantmen. The accounts doubtle.-s make interesti ig reading, but in reality serve no purpose, other than to alarm timid passengers. It is for this reai-on that the sqi adron will pa-, trol particularly the route« converging at New York." Warships Off Saniy Hook Great interest was manifested along the waterfront yesterday when reports of the British squadron's presence three miles outside Sandy Hook were published. This is the first time since the beginning of the war that the British Admiralty has allowed the whereabouts of any of Great Britain's loot 'tb be made known. When asked if the squadron's pres¬ ence off New York did not simply mean that it was on patrol duty between Halifax and Bermuda, the Admiralty officer replied: ".No; this manoeuvre is different. It means that the s«iuadron will be a little distance outside the neu¬ trality limit, keeping especial guard over the .shipping lanes entering the port nf New York." The fact that a portion of the British fleet, is watching New York, is an ef¬ fectual contradiction of the report that the raider wa.« sunk by the British cruiser Gla«gow 130 miles off Para on .lanuarv II, which never received of-j ticial confirmation. Among the fast British cruisers known to be hunting the raider are the Kssex, Suffolk, Glasgow, Lancaster, Ed¬ inburgh Castle, Cumberland and Grama, but it not known whether all of these vessels are watching New York or not. WOMEN HE TRIES TO ROB BATTER "L" PICKPOCKET Passers-by Arrive Just in Time to Save Him from Plucky Stenographers When a pi-kpocket at the Myrtle Avenue station of the Brooklyn ele- ¡ rota«*] attempted to relieve stalwart Miss Clarice Gunseth, of 13 (ioodwin Place, Queens, of her jurse last night he made his lirst mistake. Hi.» second! and more grievo'j« error was to hit the young woman. Immediately there¬ after he began ;»-. choke to death. Gunaoth Is nineteen and «trong. Mis.« Adeline McGregor, her companion ¡ir.d a fallow -tc-nographer in the Wll-I bur ¦en'Mtile Kxrhar-fp. Ht L'L'i» Broad-' way, eighteen and equally brawny, .'Up ha« my parse." screamed Misa' Giin»eth, clutching the culprit. "The horrid thing." Mi-« McGregor' sympathized. Then the pickpocket hit her friend. Miss Gunseth forgot her purse and gave herself up to throttling* her assailant. Her companion grabbed the man from behind and tried to dis- locate hi« vertebra*. The thief's fa.» had grown black bv the time men on ike WOtfani tore him away. When detect«»..»- ».rr-veill they ar- --»-.eil Morn« Batimán, of 55 Varet Street They »ay he confessed to the; robbery. He hueged the detectives all the way to the Seventh Branch Bureau,] for his accusers walked just behind him. BULLING FIRM GAVE PEACE NOTE TIP, HUTTON SWEARS Wire from Concern of Wilson's Brother-in-Law Gave Forecast, Leak Witness Admits HEAD OF WASHINGTON HOUSE TO BE ASKED SOURCE TO-DAY Bernard M. Baruch, Denying Advance Knowt**** edge, Tells How He Made Almost $500,000 in Few Days.Acted on Foreign Utterances The trail of the elusive leak seemed to be growing hot toward the end of yesterday's hearing* in the Custom House. E. F. Hutton, of E. F. Hutton & Co., brokers, waa on the witness stand. He identified certain telegrams received an*1 sent by his firm on December 20, about noon. At 5 o'clock on the afternoon of this day the President gave his peace note to the newspapers. But the most important telegram of all he couldn't identify because it had not been preserved. This came to Hutton & Co. about noon, he said, from F. A. Connolly & Co., his firm's Wash¬ ington correspondent. It said in substance that the President would issue that afternoon a message to the belligerents and neutrals outlining America's position in case of peace. R. W. Boiling, President Wilson's brother-in-law, is a mem¬ ber of F. A. Connolly & Co. Mr. Connolly arrived here last night from Washington. He will testify this morning regarding this telegram and the source of the information which it contained. "I am ready to take an oath that Mr. Boiling has never ut¬ tered any word about information from the White House and never spoke to me about information concerning the first peace note or any other in advance of publication," he said last night. STEEL INCREASES EXTRA DIVIDEND Earnings for Quarter of $105,968,347 Far Above Past Records The United States Steel Corporation broke all record« during the last quar¬ ter of 1916 by reporting yesterday net earning« of $105,968,347. These were larger than the prt/iona high water mark, established in the third quarter of 191(5, by 120,151,280, and were in ex- ces» of the full year's net revenue for 1914, 1911, 1908 and 1904. An e?itra dividend of 1*4 per cent was declared on the common »tock by the directors at their quarterly meet¬ ing yesterday, in addition to the regu¬ lar disbursement of 14 per cent. For the previous two quarter« the extra distribution amounted to 1 per cent. The regular quarterly payment of t*s) per cent on the preferred stock was also declared. Wall Street, in view of the exception¬ al showing of the Steel Corporation la«t year, had hoped for a larger distri¬ bution to the junior shareholder«. One explanation offered for the conservat¬ ism of the directors was that it was their purpose to use surplus earnings in retiring underlying bond issues. The net earning« by months laat quarter were: October, $36,177,392* No¬ vember, $.36,443,543; December, $34,- 347,411. Kach month exceeded the pre¬ vious high monthly record of $30,420,- 168 reached last September. In this connertion, however, it is recalled that monthly earnings in the third quarter of 1916 were on an ascending scale, whereas December fell be!"»*- the No¬ vember total. The Steel Corporation last year earned a surplus of $246,412,318 for the $508,302.600 common stock. This equal to $48.50 a «hare on that issue. In 1915 9.P6 per cent was earned, and in 1914 there was a deficit of $16,971,- 9N4 after paying the common dividend. The most ever earned on the junior «hares prior to 1916 was 12.23 per cent, in 1910. After all charcres, including common dividends, are paid there is a final sur- pltM for 1916 of $201,935,749, based on the figure« in the four quarterly re¬ port«. This means that in addition to paying common stock holder» $8.75 a «hare, there was added to the surplus account approximately $40 a share. Total net earning« for 1916, after charging off the interest on the bond« of subsidiary companies, were $333,626,086. Thi» wag more than double the previous high record of I onttnued no pas;« 3, nilumn Î THE STAATS" USED TO TELL BRITISH S0LDIEB OF SUIT Wife Here Seek» IHvorre.Court Des¬ ignate« German-American Paper George Herbert ("edge, who !<»ft New York to join the British army, will not know that Mrs. Adele Gedge is «uing him for a divorce until he read« the ".Sew Yorker Staats Zeitung." Thi« favorite n»»wspaper of Tommy Atkins was yesterdav designated by the Supreme « ouri to publish the »ummon», 'hus serving liedee by publication, per¬ sonal service being impossible. IOW RKTK TirKBT*» H TSTT * *»OITH- UE8T. Beautiful Mounlaln 8».ni-r> ala, «.ha-sapeake _ «Jhlu R«»«/. 123s Brua»d»sy . Advt. » Among the other witnesses to bo call d will be a man named Toomey, the telegraph operator who sent the message over the wire from the Con¬ nolly offices. The Rules Committee ia even con¬ sidering summoning back from Georgia G. A. Ellis, jr., u member of E. R Hutton & Co., who has goc* South for his b-eolth. Mr. EHia if supposed to be the man who per¬ sonally received the message in tht Hutton offices. In any case, Ellis is the author of I a telegram, which Mr. Hutton identi- fied, sem out by the Hutton firm to its forty-five correspondents through¬ out the country and to its branch offices in Los Ançeles and oan Fran¬ cisco, combining rue information re- ceived from Connolly with that re ceived from Clement, Curtis it Co, its Chicago correspondent. The lat¬ ter had telegraphed: I hear that the State Department will issue statement to-day regarding economic conditions European war affecting neutrals intending to pro» mote peace prospect. What you think of this and how are you on stocks? «Signed) CLEMENT. This telegram was received in New York at 12:48 p. m., December 20. The Hutton firm immediately telegraphed O reply, reading: Clement: Our Washington wir« gave us similar message to yours. Others have same information and we put it out, aa it is more or lea« generally known. Your message wa» marked confidential and treated It eo. BUTTON A CO. . Advent*« nig**-*t of Nota The telegram sent by Mr, Ellis to all the Hutton connections at 1:54 p. m. ran as follows: We are confidentially Informed that a highly important message to all belligerents and neutrals has been issued from Washington. Interpreted not as pressure on belligerent« la behalf o' peace, but an oppor¬ tunity to put American demand« on record to be considered if there U peace and warning that nevtral righto mu'.t not be further encroached upon. Full text to be given out to-night and will I « looked upon a move of great moment. «Signed) <;. A. E., Jr! Among those who received this tele¬ gram was R. W. McKinnon, of Thomp¬ son &. McKinnon, brokers of Chicago. Ellis addressed it "Rod and All." Early in the leak inquiry Representativ« Wood, of Indiana, instigator of the inquiry, mentioned McKinnon sa one of the first to receive and disseminate the advance peace note information. The chief importance of this message for the purposes of the leak inquiry lie«, II is considered, not only in it« description of the note, but in tt« ref. erence to it as having already been sent. This in'orm-j.tion wa« contained, It supposed, in the missing Washington telegram, since it is almost wholly ab- sent from the Chicago telegram. Mora. over, this information Is rauch richer In detail, apparently, than Secretary Lan- sing's announcement concerning tb« lite to the newspaper men. Lansing Gave No Digest The Secretary of State, it will be re- called, announced confidentially ta Washington newspaper men at It o'clock that morning that at b o'clock in the afternoon he would have an Ira» portant communication for them. Hi« own testimony in Washington on this point was: "At 11 o'eloek I interviewed the new«. paper correspondents -.t the depart¬ ment, and tol.l them that I would have an important communication to giv« them at 5 in the afternoon. ( told then« this in confidence. ... I stated to them that the communication was, as I slat. ed, to all belligerents, but it did not contain proposals for peace or an offer j of mediation." i It was th« substance of this ou*

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Page 1: T7EATHÏTR «Mbttitc ISrujfflotli Over fileT7EATHÏTR «Overcast to-day, followad by rain to-night and to-tnoirow. Colder to-morrow. Moderate, varia*

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winds, btecomîng froth.rnU lUport »a race IS ISrujfflotli^sneW^ Fit-tar fn It

«Mbttitc CIRCULATIONOver 1Q0.000 DallyNet Paid, Non-Returnable

First to Last .the Truth: News - Editorial4* - Advertisements

Yoi, 1AWI No. 28.644 tropTrlsht ton.The Tribune Ass'n.l WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1017 » . * ONE CENT u "- r~* «* **"*

lereej City aasi

EATINGPLACESAREPUT UNDERCITYCONTROL

Health Board Orders10.000 Shops to Ob¬

tain Permits

SALOONS ANDHOTELS INCLUDED

Authorities' Power Far-

reaching-.Can CloseAny Establishment

'1 he Department of Health yestordayadopted an ordinance which requireseach of the 10,000 restaurants and

lunch counters in New York to obtain a

license. Failure to comply strictly with

the city sanitary code led to this ac¬

tion.The ordinance constitutes one of the

most farreaching steps taken in the

history of the city's tight for pure food.

Kor the first time «t gives the healthauthorities direct control of every placein the city where food is »old and con¬

sumed on the premises, and even ap¬

plies to the free lunch counters of bar¬

rooms.New York's authorities also have un»

l-mitts-d power to revoke any permit at

any time, and thus, without resort to

the courts, to inflict drastic punishmenton restaurant proprietors who violate

pirsistcntly the sanitary regulations.Permit» for All

The ordinance follow«:

No person »hall conduct, operateor maintain any restaurant in the

| of New York without a permittherefor issued by the Board of

Health, or otherwise than in ac¬

cordance with the terms of said

permit and the regulations of said

board. The term "restaurant," as

herein used, »hall be taken to mean

and include every buffet, lunch

room, grill room, lunch counter,

fining room of hotel and every

other public place where food i»

prepared, cooked, served, »old and

eonsomed on the premises, every

lunch counter in a saloon where

food is given away and all kitchen»

appurtenant thereto or connectedtherewith.Under the new eyetO., as explained

hy Dr. Haven Emoraoa, Health Com¬

missioner, inspectors of 'he depart¬ment who find unsanitary conditions in

reataurants or bimilar places will warn

tbe proprietor. Unies.« he takes promptsteps to conform to the la.***, his case

will b»*, reported to the Board of

Health.Ordinarily he, will have an oppor¬

tunity to appear and explain his side,

hut in extreme cases, as, for instance,

where a proprietor has been persist¬ently neglectful, the permit may be

revoked without hcirinir.

Heretofore the power of the health

officers has been limited strictly to

Bal suit« m the court«. The un-

iveraMe report of ¦ department in-followed by affidavits

olation of a specific sectionof the sanitary code.

May Continue Practices

f'erding his trial on these charge»,the defendant has been permitted to

.on*mue in bttalneas, ami often hascontinued the ven, practices whichcaused the complaint. The delaysmade possible by adroit eOUBOOl forthe defendants in these trials harevexed the herlth authorities. These,combined with the awkwardness and

eacy inherent in tit" Indirectcontrol through the eouits. brouRMabout the pastage of the permit ordi¬nance."The permit system." Dr. Kmerson

«-\plained, "will be far more effectivethan the old method. It will not onlybe much quicker, bu-. it will give us the

power, while- needed, to put immensejre o,i delinquent restaurant

in« ... It ii« «me ma'ter to threaten a

man with a small tine and a remotechance of imprisonment. It is quiteMother to threaten him with the im¬mediate loss of all hi-, business."1'nder the old system it was possible

for a man to continue to menace thehealth of his patrons while we prose-«uteri h'.m for his first offence, and we

wer«- powerless to stop him. l'nd«r thenew ordinance he'll either change hi»ways at once or quit busir.« >v \>«'il»imply notify the Police Departmentthat a cottain permit has been revokedand thev will close that man's place.

Found Insanitary Place»

"More than a year ago we made a sur-.f the places where food is served«»und a larpe number of unsani¬

tary conditions and practices. am

r'ad to say that most of the proprie¬tors have shown a disposition to meetus half way. But there are many whohave not. Recent!*, we completed a «rc--

*V'** l h convinced us that?he permit s\stem was necessar«.faults have been not so much'in thequality of the food sold as in the man¬ner in which it was handled.

"It will take two and perhaps threemonth» to put the system into effect.A" proprietor« will he notified of thenew ordinaiu> at once and instructedto appl> for permits. These will be i«-

Mien as fast a.« inspection» can be madeWe may work out «ome system for theA**ra of certificates of excellent toe»pecia:]y meritorious places."The permit s>s»<m has been found

~o»t effective in handling the city'smilk supply and with dealers in eggs.The present is a far greater undertak->ng c-'i account of the numbers in¬

volved, but it will be developed alonirtn« same lines."Th« system for hotel» .nd restau¬

rants is m force in manv cities of thecountry, including Chicsgo. Si. I.ou.s...fliofcespohs, S.n Antonia, Spokane and

nÍ»n..»«trtrSü0- -jn four i,,**t*-»' '¦*..'-

lltlV' *{ondm< ^""«-onsin and Kansas,¦»otel» 4re .0 controlled.

John J. Astor, 4, Needs$7527 a Day to Live

Mrs. Dick Sets Child's Expenses at $86,034.Toys, Including Lions and Bubble Blow¬

ers, Required with Pillows at $50 Each

«lohn Jacob Astor, four years old, ha«been »pending $76.27 a day.That is what it has cost Mr». Will-

ism I. Dick, his mother, and widowof Colonel .lohn Jacob Astor, to keephim clothed, fed and supplied with toys,according to the complete accountingof her guardianship, which »he tiledyesterday in the Surrogates' Court.This accounting extends from Novem¬ber 13, 1912, to December 31. 1916.The total cost of keeping the child

during that period was $86,034.21.His mother received from the estate

in that time $«50,360.07 for hi« mainte¬nance.

Besides the taxes and other infantileexpense« which were listed in the ac¬

counting she tiled last April, when »hesought to convince the court that a

small boy just had to have more than$20,000 a year, Mrs. Dick goes into de-tails concerning clothes and toys inthe new accounting.John Jacob'» clothes cost $6,790, and

as he grew elder he put »¡.way the toysof his babyhood and demanded some-

thing more mature and more expen-sive. So in December, 1913, he got a

"speaking book," fifteen disk» for a

music box, three "roly-polies" and twoboJes of horns and balls.

Arrive» at Go-Cart StageBy the following June he had got to

the go-cart stage, which meant $30more, and he also had to have a pail,a sand scoop and other beach toys, a

Mother Goose, a donkey, a railway and

a buoit on animal land. Hi« idea« con¬

tinued to expand, and his mothersought to catch up with them again inthe following December.She got him: A toy camel for $30, a

toy lion for $15, a goose for $3.60, a

bear for $3.76, another donkey for $6,a lamb for $1.50 and a duck for $2.

In the course of time August, hilbirthday month, came around andfound John Jr.cob disconsolate amidthe ruins of his donkeys and his lionsan«i his camels. There was a giftpie for twenty guest«, which cost $18,and John Jacob got five rollomobiles at$15, three bears on wheels for $12,five hoopr, for $10, a seesaw for $5, a

soap bubble blower for |1, and a magicfishpond and athletic hlides for $20.For a few days he was almost as

happy as the urchins a few blockseafrt, who blew soap bubbles from a

clay pipe «nd had a contractor's saw-

hor*;e for a see; aw. ,

One reason why John Jacob had toexercise caution in his teetering is evi¬dent from his tailor's bills. One ofthem probably arrived about the timehe did. It was for a dress costing$123.50, which was bought in June,1912, two months before John Jacobcould protest. A month later a job lotof clothes was bought for $102, andbefore John Jacob knew whether hewas wearing a blue bow under his chinor a pink one, his clothes hail cost$786.

Before he was five month.1« old win-

i.i.iiniir.l on paar !«. column S

WOOLWORTH TOBUILD STORE ON

FIFTH AVENUE

Five and Ten Cent Bazaar To BeOpposite New York Public

Library

By 1911 the two bored looking lion»that guard the New York Public

Library will be wearing a »till more

scornful and supercilious expression,for they will be staring across thebustle of Fifth Avenue, into the fiveand ten cent glories of a Wo ¡worth»tore.For the dime and nickel king is

going to invade Fifth Avenue, and has

chosen its busiest «pot for his entry.Tnc P. W. Woolworth Company leasedyesterday the property at 463-46'J FifthAvenue, directly opposite the library,and at 1 Fast Fortieth Street. Thelease will run for forty years, and thetotal rental will he $4,600,uOO.

M. & la, Hess, who represented theWoolworth company in the deal, saidyesterday that it was the intention oftheir principal to erect a six storybuilding. The upper floors will be usedfor offices, the lower for a "five andten cent store de luxe."Men well versed m real estate values,

while marvelling at Woolwortli's temer¬

ity in blinking one of his stores intothe exclusive shopping centre of thecity, said, nevertheless, that they be-liiv-d it would prove to be the mostvaluable o." bis long chain.

"I- orty-sreond Street and Fifth Ave¬nue is the hub of the city's traffic," one

»¦.»plained. "It la not. only the wealthywho will pass hir« store daily. Com-muten who use the (¡rand Central Sta-lion and those who travel by theStcinway tube will be attracted to thestore, and when the Hudson tubes are

brought north to Forty-second Streetai.d Sixth Avenue even more, possiblebuyers will pass it each day."

BRITISH WOULDLET WOMEN VOTEIF 30 YEARS OLD

Report of Committee on Elec¬toral Reform Disappoints

Suffragists-

London, Jan. SO, The report of theCommittee on Flectoral Reform, issuedto-night, confirms the main featuresof the forecasts published regardingvotes for women. It will disappointthe suffragists, as no definite agree¬ment has been reached.

By a majority of the committee itwas decided that some measure of wom-

fTrage should be conferred. Themajority also were of the opinion 'hatif Parliament r>i«sed such a meabU'*'*

;the franchise should be »riven to wom¬

en already entitled to vote at municipalelections, but that such women shouldnot vote m Parliamentary electionsuntil they attained a specified age,which the majority of the committeethought should be between thirty andthilty-fvi- -..-ar--.M ss Sylvia Pankhurst, speaking for

the Woman's Suffrage Federation, saidthe c-otisider-d the report most unsat¬

isfactory, adding:"Women mature if anything earlier

than men. According to the census a

majority of wrrren between twenty andtwenty-five year« of age »re earningtlü.r living. '1 o ex-lude them fromin« franchise is most unjust. Wewan» complete adult suffrage for bothnun and .04040."

SUFFRAGISTS IN WAR PLOT

"Remarkable Conspiracy" Causea Ar-

reet of Three British Women and Man

London, Jan. IL "Three suffragettesand a man, a conscientious objector to

military service, were arrested Tue.«

day on a remarkable conspiracy charge."shy« "The Daily Mail" to-day. " I fienan and two of the women wer« ar-

r..«tcd at Derby and the third woman

a Southampton. All of them will bearraigned to-day at Derby, and their'trial probably will attract the widestpublic attention."

MOTHER ACCUSEDOF KILLING SON

Finding of Paterson Boyof Four in August Led

to "Ripper" Scare

Mrs. Sarah Goldstein was Lrrestedyesterday in Paterson to plead to anindictment charging her with the mur-

der of her four-year-old son, Maxjwhose death on August 14 last caused a

"ripper" scare in the New Jersey city.Prosecutor Dunn, who conducted theinvestigation resulting in her arrest,refused to divulge any of the evidenceagainst her."The case against her is complete,"

he said. "I can only say that a bitof bloodstained cloth was an impor¬tant clew.''Max. the "Little Boy Blue" of the

(neighborhood, was found with hi«throat cut and his abdomen slashed atthe foot of the cellar stairs in his home,at 21 Hamburg Avenue. Beside him laya tin box, containing live marbles.

He had been missing for more thantweaty-feur hours, and the «ellar ofthe bouse had been visited by aéreraipersons in the meantime. The theorywas then expressed by the police thatthe boy had been held prisoner andkilled at leisure.

His mother appeared to he distractedliy grief. Her husband. Isidor, was avictim of tuberculosis and had lost hisjob in a silk mill. Resides the funeral« (peases and the doctor's bill for Isi-dor, somewhere she ha«) to find themoney to keep life in her and theirtwo other children. Soon, also, therewould be a baby.The child was born three months

ago, and went to the Passaic Countyjail last night with Mrs. Goldstein,In fact, her whole family wen«.When Patrolman Thomas Jewett en-

tered the house at 101 North Third¡Street, where they are now living.Isidor dragged h'msclf from his bed

ion learning of hi« mission."You can't have her," he cried.

"There is the baby and also the littleboy and the little girl. What shall wedo? 1 am worthless.*'

Isidor and his little son and daugh-¡ter trailed mournfully after the patrol--man and his prisoner. They sought invain to stay in the jail. The baby could»fay, said the. warden; in fact, it wouldhave to. But there was no place forIsidor or the other children. It was astill more mournful pilgrimage thatthey made back to the house on NorthThird Street,

Nathan Rabinowitz. who announced;that he would appear as counsel forjMr«. Goldstein, was inutmmental inraising a fund of $200, which was of-;fered last summer as a reward for thenrrest of the "ripper."John F. Webster, a plumber, whose

shop was in the building where theGoldsteins were living at the time ofthe murder, was arrested soon after it.A neighbor «aid that she had seen himcoming, white-faced and nervous, fromthe cellar, where the body was foundlees than an hour later.He cleared himself of any suspicion

of guilt, but is still held, it was saidlast nght, under $'.,000 bail, as amaterial witness.

GIRL LEAPS TO HER DEATHUNDER TRaAIN IN SUBWAY

Father at Morgue Identifies Body as

Hi« Daughter'sMen and women waiting for a train

on the southbound platform of the 14HthStreet Iaenox Avenue subway stationlast night noticed the slim girl **hovtrodr impatiently hack and forth. Sheseemed unable to keep atili, they re-membered afterward, but when a trainroared into the station most of themforgot, her. Motorman Guy Freelandand a few others saw her dive underthe wheels of the foremost car.

It was some time before the bodyrould h.- removed. When it was finally

.-.ted it was taken to the morgue.¡1er personal effects induced the policet<. call up Abraham Silverblatt, of IIMlWashington Avenue. The Bronx. At tbemorgue !.e identified the body as thatof Rebecca, his daughter. She wailtwenty-four years old and lived withher parents.

WILSON PLANSWORLDPOLICYIN NEXT TERN

Aims at Leading Rolein International

Politics

CHANGE OF ENVOYSAND CABINET NEAR

Hopes New Foreign IssuesWill Block Bryan's

"Dry" Campaign[From Th» Tribun« Bnr»«i|

Washington, Jan. 30..Worldpeace, and in fact world politics ingeneral, will be President Wilson'ifield in his second Administration,just as.except for casual issueiarising immediately out of the Eu¬ropean war.domestic legislationhas occupied most of his attentionduring the first term.The President on March 4 will

close the record on domestic prob¬lems, though there are certainprojects already started which hewill try to complete at the next reg¬ular session of Congress.World politics from now on is the

big thing. The President wants theUnited States to play a big part, un¬

der his leadership, in shaping thedestiny of civilization after the greatwar.

Want* No DiscussionMr. Wilson revealed himself to¬

day as acutely sensitive to the at¬tacks that have been made on theworld peace plan which he unfoldedto the Senate two weeks ago. Hois impatient at the contrast.» thathave been drawn between his atti¬tude toward American policy andthat of Washington, Jefferson andMonroe.He does not want it discussed, either

in the Senate, the papers or anywhereelse. Me doel not himself desire to bemore definite concerning the part that

the United States will be expected to

play in European quarrels, and stillless concerning the part that Europemight feel entitled to play in possibledisputes on this continent.To all questions designed to draw a

close definition of America's relationto Europe in such a league, he repliesthat such matters will be left to theconference of nations which draws up

the treaty. He appears to regard it

largely a.« a matter of detail whetherthe Monroe Doctrine is to be extendedonly toward greater American influencein Europe, or toward permitting Euro¬

pean influence in affairs peculiarlyAmerican.

Diplomatic (hange*. LikelyThe fact that discussion is discour¬

aged by the President confirms the in¬

terpretation that the speech to the Sen¬

ate was in fact a sequel to his peace

note, to the belligerents. It was in¬tended as further support to the Ger¬

man peace drive, though doubtlesiwithout much hope that it would be ef¬

fective.The President's intention to devote

himself almost exclusively to world af¬

fairs during his second term is well

known to his friends. It is disclosed in

his determination not to call a specialsession of Congress on March 6, but

onl> to convene the Senate to confirm

appointments and take UP matters of

foreign policy.The conhr.ation of new appoint¬

ments is directly related to the Pres¬

ident's new plans. There will be many

new appointment» in offices that have

to do with foreign affairs. All the

diplomatic representativos abroad have

beeen asked for their -esignations"purely as a matter of form," andsome of them will be surprised when

they are accepted.Cabinet J «»¦>¦» in Dancer

Some of the Cabinet also may he

surprised to find that the Presidentwill take their "purely formal" demis¬sions senouslv. For such a programmeas he has framed for the next four

years the President needs a new per¬sonnel, quite different from that whichsufficed in 19'. .*-, when the Europeanwar and its complications were un¬

dreamed of and any politician woulddo for a diplomat.Colonel House foresaw years ago »

greater role for Mr. Wilson than mere

domestic politics. The Colonel alwayshas laid emphasis on the world field,a"d it is probable that but for theEuropean war the President wouldlonu since have launched hi« campaign.Defeat, last November would have

spoiled a carefully thought out planof development for Mr. Wilson.Rut the election impressed twe

things on the President. The first was

that his domestic record has been ap-pr.-ved and that h.» could afford to

stand pat on it. The second wa« thatthe sentiment in the country was tre¬mendously for pear-'.

House to herí) Silent RoleAnd so, under the guidance of Colo¬

nel House, the President is going outinto his larger field, having conqueredthe smaller one. Colonel House, whoknows the Fvropean capitals thorough¬ly, is likely to remain the ».¡lent part¬ner, in spite of r*fl*OOri that he maybe made an ambassador or Secretaryof State.Me like« the obscure role, and it is

probable also that Mr. Wilson wouldrather n^it have the Colonel m an

official position, where too frequentopportunity would be given the public

tnWtSSUat on pa" I. column *

BERLINDRAFTSPEACE REPLYTO PRESIDENT

Germany HintsÂnswerWill Urge Wilson

to New Move

DOOMED TO FAIL,LONDON BELIEVES

Allies Ready "to the LastButton" for Spring

Onslaught

Washington, Jan. 30..The Ger¬man Embassy received informationto-day that the Berlin governmentwould issue a reply to PresidentWilson's peace address to the Sen¬ate, a copy of which was handed to

the Foreign Office by the AmericanEmbassy. Officials of the embassydisclaimed any knowledge of thetenor of the reply or the form inwhich it would be delivered.The coming of the communication

is awaited with great interest in allquarters here, and there is muchspeculation over the possibility ofits furnishing the basis for anotherpi-ace move by the President.A dispatch from Berlin to-day

said that Germany already had sentto Washington an acknowledgmentof the receipt of the President'sspeech. The Foreign Office, saidthis message, was considering a

reply.London, Jan. 31..The German

newspapers, according to a Rotter¬dam dispatch, intimate that Ger¬many will acknowledge PresidentWilson's speech in such a way as to

encourage the President to continuehis efforts in favor of peace.

According to the dispatch, Countvon Bernstorff has been instrucUîdto say that Germany Is ready to

formulate peace term** if asked to

do so by the Allies and if there is a

possibility of peace negotiations be¬

ing successfully undertaken. Thedispatch adds that Austria has senta similar communication to the Aus¬trian Charge d'Affaires at Wash¬ington and that it is believed Bul¬garia will follow the example of theTeutonic powers.

Allied Armies Readyfor Signal to Strike

By ARTHl'll S. DRAPKR[Pj fab!» to Tris Tribune

London. Jan. 30. Some fresh attemptto inspire his own people with spirit to

meet the sacrifices of the coming springholocaust, «nd also to counteract theeffect on neu'-al opinion of the Entente

reply to President Wilson, is expectedfrom the Kaiser as a sequel to hi«

birthday gathering of statesmen andgenerals at headquarter«.Foreign Minister 7.immermann has re¬

cently made two hurried trips to ÜMKaiüer'g qiiart»rs, and is believed to be

putting -.he declaration, whatever its

form may be, into shape for publica¬tion. From Denmark and Sweden alsocom« reports of indication« that theKaiser is preparing another peace mes¬

sage to the world.Great Offensive Inevitable

Whatever he may say, there is no

expectation here that it will preventor delay the spring battle».The grand spring offensive ir. now

considered inevitable in fact, it ismore likely that there will be two. TheAllies are ready "to the last button"for the first time since the war began.

It is believed here, too, that, howeverdesperate Germany's straits, she is farfrom a state of economic exhaustionwhich would mean the abandonment ofmilitary opération« or even preventtheir being launched on a large scale.

!t is possible that Germany may nothave food to last till the next harvest,though London has heard reports alongthis line too often to take new one« attheir face value. But it is certain thatexhaustion will not come for monthsyet.

It is also certain that Germany is notprepared to make peace now on term»which would be acceptable to the Al¬lies, and it i« thought likely that shehope« to show «uch force at arms as to

» iintinn.I nn pa|» I, column .*>

GIRL AT HONOLULU SAYSSHE'S DOROTHY ARNOLD'

Declared She Was Long-SoughtNew Yorker, Stewardess SaysHonolulu, Jsn. ta% A girl who had

calle«! herself Dawn Moore and DorothyArnold and who was arrested when shearrived here from Hilo, three days ago,on the steamer Great .Northern andheld for investigation, was released to¬day and immediately tiled a libel of$6,000 atrainst the steamship company.

According to the stewarde«« of thesteamer, the girl declared tha' skawas the Dorothy Arnold who disap¬peared from Has» York. She ana taken,she «aid, to Shanghai by a marriedman.Tha police, nowever. said that there

*n no resemblance between the girland the description* they have of Ihemisamr Dorothy Arnold. The girl her-aalf refuse« to discuss tha matter.

GERMANY TO DEMANDINDEMNITY AND LANDS

Berlin, Jan. 30.--CountFriedrich von Westarp, theConservative leader in theReichstag, in a speech de¬livered in Dresden said therejection by the EntentePowers of the peace propos¬als oí the Central Powershad cancelled the terms ofthe Central Powers for a

future peace."Further sacrifices now

impending," said Count von

Westarp, "will call for quitea different standard of in¬demnities and restitutions.For the protection of Ger¬many there must be terri¬torial extensions east andwest and also in Belgiumfor the covering of Ger¬many's flank, especially witha view to a future war withEngland."Above all, Count von

Westarp said. Germany musthave war indemnities. Other¬wise her soldiers would re¬

turn home to meet tax billsfivefold heavier than beforethe war.

RAIDER PATROLOFF NEW YORK

British Admiralty Ad¬mits Warships AreGuarding Liner Lane

The patrol of fast British cruisersin the North Atlantic has converged be¬yond the three-mile limit outside ofNew York, a British Admiralty officialsaid yesterday. This official stated thathe had received a wireless messagefrom the commander of the fleet atHalifax informing him that the fleetwould be off New York yesterday.This man.uvre, the officer explained, '

was an answer to his request, sentMonday night to the fleet, to protectshipping lanes from any hostile Subma¬rine or raider.

"I don't know whether the raider,is off New York, and my request forprotection was only a precautionarymeasure, to allay fears of ocean trav-ellers leaving this port that any dan¬ger existed beyond the three-milelimit," the officer said.

False Reports Alarm Many"Many transatlantic voyagers have

become alarmed by various newspaperaccounts that submarines and raidersarc waiting especially for their ship,01 account of various interviews withincoming captains."A captain will report that he saw

a vessel with one funnol tant two mastson the horizon, iminedissrfr altered hiscourse, and went at all possible speedin the opposite direction This descrip¬tion will IH nearly any tramp steamer,and naturally means no hing. Anothercaptain probably will report that he,too, saw a vessel on tre horizon, andimmediately altered his course and es-,

caped by good luck.' "

"These two captains believe that tworaiders are present, when both are

honest merchantmen. The accountsdoubtle.-s make interesti ig reading, butin reality serve no purpose, other thanto alarm timid passengers. It is forthis reai-on that the sqi adron will pa-,trol particularly the route« convergingat New York."

Warships Off Saniy Hook

Great interest was manifested alongthe waterfront yesterday when reportsof the British squadron's presencethree miles outside Sandy Hook were

published. This is the first time sincethe beginning of the war that theBritish Admiralty has allowed thewhereabouts of any of Great Britain'sloot 'tb be made known.When asked if the squadron's pres¬

ence off New York did not simply mean

that it was on patrol duty betweenHalifax and Bermuda, the Admiraltyofficer replied: ".No; this manoeuvre isdifferent. It means that the s«iuadronwill be a little distance outside the neu¬

trality limit, keeping especial guardover the .shipping lanes entering theport nf New York."The fact that a portion of the British

fleet, is watching New York, is an ef¬fectual contradiction of the report thatthe raider wa.« sunk by the Britishcruiser Gla«gow 130 miles off Para on

.lanuarv II, which never received of-jticial confirmation.Among the fast British cruisers

known to be hunting the raider are theKssex, Suffolk, Glasgow, Lancaster, Ed¬inburgh Castle, Cumberland and Grama,but it i« not known whether all of thesevessels are watching New York or not.

WOMEN HE TRIES TO ROBBATTER "L" PICKPOCKET

Passers-by Arrive Just in Time to SaveHim from Plucky StenographersWhen a pi-kpocket at the Myrtle

Avenue station of the Brooklyn ele- ¡rota«*] attempted to relieve stalwartMiss Clarice Gunseth, of 13 (ioodwinPlace, Queens, of her jurse last nighthe made his lirst mistake. Hi.» second!and more grievo'j« error was to hitthe young woman. Immediately there¬after he began ;»-. choke to death.

Gunaoth Is nineteen and «trong.Mis.« Adeline McGregor, her companion¡ir.d a fallow -tc-nographer in the Wll-Ibur ¦en'Mtile Kxrhar-fp. Ht L'L'i» Broad-'way, i« eighteen and equally brawny,

.'Up ha« my parse." screamed Misa'Giin»eth, clutching the culprit."The horrid thing." Mi-« McGregor'

sympathized. Then the pickpocket hither friend. Miss Gunseth forgot herpurse and gave herself up to throttling*her assailant. Her companion grabbedthe man from behind and tried to dis-locate hi« vertebra*. The thief's fa.»had grown black bv the time men on

ike WOtfani tore him away.When detect«»..»- ».rr-veill they ar-

--»-.eil Morn« Batimán, of 55 VaretStreet They »ay he confessed to the;robbery. He hueged the detectives allthe way to the Seventh Branch Bureau,]for his accusers walked just behindhim.

BULLING FIRM GAVE PEACENOTE TIP,HUTTONSWEARSWire from Concern of Wilson'sBrother-in-Law Gave Forecast,

Leak Witness Admits

HEAD OFWASHINGTON HOUSETO BE ASKED SOURCE TO-DAY

Bernard M. Baruch, Denying Advance Knowt****edge, Tells How He Made Almost $500,000 inFew Days.Acted on Foreign Utterances

The trail of the elusive leak seemed to be growing hottoward the end of yesterday's hearing* in the Custom House.

E. F. Hutton, of E. F. Hutton & Co., brokers, waa on thewitness stand. He identified certain telegrams received an*1sent by his firm on December 20, about noon. At 5 o'clock on

the afternoon of this day the President gave his peace note tothe newspapers.

But the most important telegram of all he couldn't identifybecause it had not been preserved. This came to Hutton & Co.about noon, he said, from F. A. Connolly & Co., his firm's Wash¬ington correspondent. It said in substance that the Presidentwould issue that afternoon a message to the belligerents andneutrals outlining America's position in case of peace.

R. W. Boiling, President Wilson's brother-in-law, is a mem¬ber of F. A. Connolly & Co.

Mr. Connolly arrived here last night from Washington.He will testify this morning regarding this telegram and thesource of the information which it contained.

"I am ready to take an oath that Mr. Boiling has never ut¬tered any word about information from the White House andnever spoke to me about information concerning the first peacenote or any other in advance of publication," he said last night.

STEEL INCREASESEXTRA DIVIDEND

Earnings for Quarter of$105,968,347 Far Above

Past Records

The United States Steel Corporationbroke all record« during the last quar¬ter of 1916 by reporting yesterday net

earning« of $105,968,347. These were

larger than the prt/iona high water

mark, established in the third quarterof 191(5, by 120,151,280, and were in ex-

ces» of the full year's net revenue for1914, 1911, 1908 and 1904.An e?itra dividend of 1*4 per cent

was declared on the common »tock bythe directors at their quarterly meet¬

ing yesterday, in addition to the regu¬lar disbursement of 14 per cent. Forthe previous two quarter« the extra

distribution amounted to 1 per cent.

The regular quarterly payment of t*s)per cent on the preferred stock was

also declared.Wall Street, in view of the exception¬

al showing of the Steel Corporationla«t year, had hoped for a larger distri¬bution to the junior shareholder«. One

explanation offered for the conservat¬ism of the directors was that it was

their purpose to use surplus earningsin retiring underlying bond issues.The net earning« by months laat

quarter were: October, $36,177,392* No¬vember, $.36,443,543; December, $34,-347,411. Kach month exceeded the pre¬vious high monthly record of $30,420,-168 reached last September. In thisconnertion, however, it is recalled thatmonthly earnings in the third quarterof 1916 were on an ascending scale,whereas December fell be!"»*- the No¬vember total.

The Steel Corporation last yearearned a surplus of $246,412,318 forthe $508,302.600 common stock. Thisi« equal to $48.50 a «hare on that issue.In 1915 9.P6 per cent was earned, andin 1914 there was a deficit of $16,971,-9N4 after paying the common dividend.The most ever earned on the junior«hares prior to 1916 was 12.23 per cent,in 1910.After all charcres, including common

dividends, are paid there is a final sur-

pltM for 1916 of $201,935,749, based onthe figure« in the four quarterly re¬

port«. This means that in addition topaying common stock holder» $8.75 a

«hare, there was added to the surplusaccount approximately $40 a share.

Total net earning« for 1916, aftercharging off the interest on thebond« of subsidiary companies, were

$333,626,086. Thi» wag more thandouble the previous high record of

I onttnued no pas;« 3, nilumn Î

THE STAATS" USED TO TELLBRITISH S0LDIEB OF SUIT

Wife Here Seek» IHvorre.Court Des¬ignate« German-American Paper

George Herbert ("edge, who !<»ft NewYork to join the British army, will notknow that Mrs. Adele Gedge is «uinghim for a divorce until he read« the".Sew Yorker Staats Zeitung."Thi« favorite n»»wspaper of Tommy

Atkins was yesterdav designated by theSupreme « ouri to publish the »ummon»,'hus serving liedee by publication, per¬sonal service being impossible.IOW RKTK TirKBT*» H TSTT * *»OITH-UE8T. Beautiful Mounlaln 8».ni-r> ala,

«.ha-sapeake _ «Jhlu R«»«/. 123s Brua»d»sy.Advt.

» Among the other witnesses to bocall d will be a man named Toomey,the telegraph operator who sent themessage over the wire from the Con¬nolly offices.The Rules Committee ia even con¬

sidering summoning back fromGeorgia G. A. Ellis, jr., u member ofE. R Hutton & Co., who has goc*South for his b-eolth. Mr. EHia ifsupposed to be the man who per¬sonally received the message in thtHutton offices.

In any case, Ellis is the author ofI a telegram, which Mr. Hutton identi-fied, sem out by the Hutton firm toits forty-five correspondents through¬out the country and to its branchoffices in Los Ançeles and oan Fran¬cisco, combining rue information re-

ceived from Connolly with that re

ceived from Clement, Curtis it Co,its Chicago correspondent. The lat¬ter had telegraphed:

I hear that the State Departmentwill issue statement to-day regardingeconomic conditions European war

affecting neutrals intending to pro»mote peace prospect. What you thinkof this and how are you on stocks?

«Signed) CLEMENT.This telegram was received in New

York at 12:48 p. m., December 20. TheHutton firm immediately telegraphed Oreply, reading:

Clement: Our Washington wir«gave us similar message to yours.Others have same information andwe put it out, aa it is more or lea«generally known. Your message wa»marked confidential and w« treated Iteo. BUTTON A CO. .

Advent*« nig**-*t of Nota

The telegram sent by Mr, Ellis to allthe Hutton connections at 1:54 p. m.

ran as follows:We are confidentially Informed that

a highly important message to allbelligerents and neutrals has beenissued from Washington. Interpretednot as pressure on belligerent« labehalf o' peace, but a« an oppor¬tunity to put American demand« onrecord to be considered if there Upeace and warning that nevtral rightomu'.t not be further encroached upon.Full text to be given out to-night andwill I « looked upon a« a move ofgreat moment.

«Signed) <;. A. E., Jr!Among those who received this tele¬

gram was R. W. McKinnon, of Thomp¬son &. McKinnon, brokers of Chicago.Ellis addressed it "Rod and All." Earlyin the leak inquiry Representativ«Wood, of Indiana, instigator of theinquiry, mentioned McKinnon sa oneof the first to receive and disseminatethe advance peace note information.The chief importance of this message

for the purposes of the leak inquirylie«, II is considered, not only in it«description of the note, but in tt« ref.erence to it as having already been sent.This in'orm-j.tion wa« contained, It I«supposed, in the missing Washingtontelegram, since it is almost wholly ab-sent from the Chicago telegram. Mora.over, this information Is rauch richer Indetail, apparently, than Secretary Lan-sing's announcement concerning tb«lite to the newspaper men.

Lansing Gave No DigestThe Secretary of State, it will be re-

called, announced confidentially taWashington newspaper men at Ito'clock that morning that at b o'clockin the afternoon he would have an Ira»portant communication for them. Hi«own testimony in Washington on thispoint was:"At 11 o'eloek I interviewed the new«.

paper correspondents -.t the depart¬ment, and tol.l them that I would havean important communication to giv«them at 5 in the afternoon. ( told then«this in confidence. ... I stated to themthat the communication was, as I slat.ed, to all belligerents, but it did notcontain proposals for peace or an offer

j of mediation."i It was th« substance of this ou*