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Today Col. RooseYelt Is Excited. Brewing 7. rble for 1920. (hr War Is No Failnre. And Americans Know It By ARTHUR BRISBANE. (Coprrtfht. Ills.) Long am Voltaire said: "The linjr in the world which it is toceived that one can roost easily J -without is an Emperor.' "Amen," say Austria and Ger- tway. The ItaliuT is said to have ex- tressed a desire to become presi pnt of a German republic. B.ut -when people decide that an imperor is something they can do itaout, they also decide -what to o with the emperor, ims uie nfortanate Russian Czar dia- vered. He planned to po to his estates , the south and work in his ranipTi. "I am renr fond of my flowers," aid he. Now. voor man. flowers re growing out of what is left f him. There are ugly muttering in he armies of Austria and Ger lany: old men of the German landttum, sent to the front in pite of their age, weary of, war nd hunger, are saying, "We shall ave something to do when we t bade in Berlin." That some- bing-wul -perhaps not be; pleasant or "autocracy; Tha Austrian Emneror. in his Blest message, says practically, Bo anything you please; cut -up ay land into independent Wng- loms, one -for each of the forty lationalities in my dominions, if tra will. BUT LET ME HAVE 'EACE." And with aU this, Colonel Roose- elt, who has been fighting WI1 on, while Wilson has been fight og Germany, tells us that it is lecessary to elect a Republican 3ongress "TO WIN THE WAR." It is a free country; each man an Vote as he pleases. But the iverage American had an idea hat America vas winning the war ilready. Colonel Roosevelt makes charges igainst the President that would and a little Socialist editor in Jail a twenty-four hours. .Read, for nstance, this extract from Colonel Icosevelfs speech: The world would be better off now by hundreds of thou sands of fearless lives and many- billions ot dollars of treasure if JSr, fTOsoa Aa4 been Trillin g-to supplement his ' ,owp- seU-frttfileient Ignorance by the counsel of those who would gladly have counseled him wisely, but who would not creep into his presence as slaves." The wise- counselors that would hot creep include Colonel Roose- relt, presumably. One paragraph from Colonel Jooseveltfs speech may come home o roost unpleasantly in 1920. We -efer to Colonel Roosevelt's per sonal and intensely insulting ref- Tence' to the President Colonel Joosevelt said it was small won ler that in the cloakrooms of the louse the bitter jest circulates: 'Here's our Czar; last in war, first award peace, long may he waver." There are hundreds of men oeked in detention camps for of fenses less serious than that. When two million American mldiers come back from France hey will not report that Wood ow Wilson was a Czar, or last n war, or that he wavered. It may turn out that Colonel Roosevelt in his attacks on the President of the United States in war times is serving the Republi :an party about as well as he did arhen he started the Bull Moose ire aad cooked poor Mr. Tart If it be true, as Colonel Roose relt asserts, that in the cloak rooms of the House, Republican Members circulate insults be littling the President of the United States, what becomes of Colonel Roosevelt's statement that the Re publicans have loyally supported PToodrow Wilson? la it loyal support to say that the Commander-in-Chief of the United States army and navy is a Czar, "last in war, first toward peace, long may he waver?" Do you wonder that the Presi dent responsible for the ending of this war, and for important legis lation dealing with difficult and dangerous problem of unemploy ment and lower wage after the tear, should request that the people send to Washington men who will jo-operate with him in the dif Seult work that the people have given him to do? What Colonel Roosevelt calls fitter jests," the people of the United States will call "shame ful." The Attorney General of the United States has put men in prison for'' statements such as Colonel Roosevelt made in a speech to Republican members of Congress. The Attorney General atight as well demand of Colonel Soosevelt the names of those dr alatfng such treasonable state ments, and take action against them, if not against' the Colonel, ho repeats the insults and gives them publicity fa every newspaper laths United States, ... . WEATHER: Rain tonight and prob ably Thnrsdayi cooler. Normal temperatare.. 81 Temperature B a. in.. . 07 W&k tem lltne flaaVcSEir aaaaaanaTSt aaaV W m sw ft 51 ' INAL i r r.."j7r - - , " ft 'fifet-rro n te tf NUMBER 10,966. Pnb!Un4 ortry eTonier llaeladlnr 800007) Bntered a oofld-cUoo matter, at tat poet- office at Wasblastoa. D. O. WASHINGTON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 30. 1918. PRICE TWO CENTS. JjL-j AUSTRIANS TROOPS LOSE 45,000 IN PIAVE CIVIL SERVICE RULE AGAINST RELATiVESHf WORKERS ENDS The rule against more than two members of one family working for tha Government was suspended to day by President Wilson. The action of the President is one of the biggest victories for Govern- m eat .workers scored m months, and is in accord with numerous editorials in The Times. The text of the order issued by the President .follows "In view of conditions eriirting in Washington, D. d, due to the influ enza epidemic and the inadequate housing facilities, the Civil Service Commission is authorized as a war measure to certify to the- executive "I LOVED HER SO," CRY OF HUSBAND WHO KILLED WIPE r BySlMlUDl ITKVaEHSON: BAIHMOEEOct 30. Flame to him and ice a all others that was Carlyle Webster's ideal of a woman, a sweetheart, or a wif e. And, because jealousy and not common sense ruled him,, his bride of less than a week lies in her casket in her bridal satin while he is fighting almost certain death as a result of bichloride of mercury poisoning. SUSPICIONS UNFOUNDED. lishments'fn the District of 'Coram' bia for probations! (orf permanent) appointment the names of persons, who, by reason of having two -or more members of theireamily in the service, would otherwise be barred from consideration for such appoint ment" Effective Immediately. The order, which is to bo Into ef fect Immediately, will permit the ap pointment of several thousand Wash ington residents who hare heretofore been restrained from taking civil service positions. Congress has been repeatedly nixed by the Civil Service Commission to take action similar to A at decided upon by the President, but no prog ress was made because tha unani mous consent of Congress was neces sary before the measure even could be considered, Finally the situation be came so acute that the President was appealed to and action was promptly forthcoming. The civil service act provided that whenever two or more persons were already in classified service, no other (Continued on Page 2, Column S.) FIRE WIPES OU I VILLAGE IN OH 0 AT.T.TT.-rw, Ohio, Oct. SO. Han over, a village in Columbian county, southwest of this city, virtually was wiped out by fire early today. The property loss is estimated at between $150,000 and $200,000 The fire Is believed to have been Incendiary. That W Jealous suspicions War absolutely unfounded is patent to everyone but himself, but oven to day as 'his wife's bruised aad bat tered body 1ST betas; borne to tha grave ha is stin unconvinced of bar loyalty. Besentment against her still burns aa fiercely in his breast as" it did at the moment of tha crime. The true story of what happened in that bridal suits at the Belvedere Hotel from tha tlmo the yeans; cou ple arrived last Friday sight until her dead body and his unconscious one were discovered wonder after noon is yet to be told. .TBe girl wife's lips axe sealed by death. Boa cannot , defend herself. Bit by bit and piece by .piece the tragiehoaey jnoon le being' wave U.tip& taavt-3shrS-Biaii- rm show -this modern .TJeSdenionavwetJt through: twenty-four' hours r lt ter denunciation and torture before her husband's cruel fingers dosed in a. vice-tike grip around bar throat. Held a Pxiat-acr. That she was either dead twenty- four hours before Webster admits killing her or that she was held a prisoner in the bridal suite, destined to be a death chamber, is the belief of the girl's immediate family. They last talked with her over tha tele phone Just before noon Saturday. Af ter that all telephone calls to ber were answered by Webster himself aad one excuse after another was made by him as to why she could not coma to the .telephone. The last call was put In at 0:80 Monday morning by Edna Chaaey, the bride's nineteen- reaceid sister. "Brn!c 1 asleep." Webster told the sister. T. think ne told tha truth," Edna says today. "Hr sister was-ln her llasr long sleep." Webster declares his wife was allva at that hoar, and that ha dldnot kill her-nntll halt an hour-later, Tha swt, terbellevsf thatit was ber teleaoM fiirWTilrhTSlnelii'.Mre.' re 'tes-erfiir poison. Vy ' ' , Bister's Theavy. "tfe knew It wss only. matter of time when Z would come to the hotel." aha told the writer; "he did not dare to face me." Apparently as happy a two chil dren, they registered at tha Belvedere Friday afternoon. Anxious to share (Continued on Page 3. Column i.) "MYSTERY GIRL" HELD AS BURGLAR NEW TORK, Oct 30-EUzabeth Lehman remains the "girl of mystery." Through finger prints taken by the New York police at the time she robbed the home ef Mn. George W. Perkins, at Riverdale, K. T the girl was Identified in Newark. K. J, where she is being held on a charge of at tempting to rob St. Colurania'a Church, of that city, and the Church of Our Lady of Good Counsel, In the Wood- side section. Though she wss arrested on the complaint ot the Iter. Father XL J. White, of St. Columbia's Church, and later charged with having attempted to steal sliver pieces from the altar. and still Identified by the Rev. Father Thomas J. Judge, assistant rector at the church of our Lady of Oood coun sel, the girl refused to make a state ment. Finally her flnrer prints were taken and seat to the police here, who sent word that the girl was Elizabeth Leh man; but that does not clear her Iden tity. Where she lives, where her rel atives live, or anything additional about herself she absolutely refuses to divulge. She wss first In the hands of the police after being arrested for the theft of a pocketbook from the Per kins home. Confined in the Bronx county Jell she refused to glre her name and was arraigned as "Jane Doe." Later she said her name was Elizabeth Rose and still after that it was Elizabeth Lehman. She was placed on probation on Sep tember 5 for the robbery at the Per kins home and disappeared from sight Saturday night Father White, about to turn down tha lights In the church, noticed a shadow near the altar. Investigating he found the girl, and, it Is alleged, she was In the act of removing one of the silver can dlesticks from the altar. Re bad the girl arrested. TO ERECT MEMORIAL LUCCA, Italy, Oct 30-A com mittee has been formed here to raise funds for a monument to President Wilson. BRITISH FRONT QUIET LONDON, Oct 30. "Apart from pa trol encounters. In which we made progress and secured a few prisoners, there Is nothing to report" the war office announced today. n SENDS NEW NOTE 10 r U.SDESCRIBING FOE REFORMS W9 Rtfer Plea - To Versailles . Aatrl'B sinilme at Veatt WHawa's eaaaJtluaa tor taa aatij.nto steaTQtia Waits far sat mr Wflfs saeel peace, eUveed to ke Metta Dcawrtsaeat lata yester r, nfl b forwarded at aatee to at TerssaHeav It wOl b tta eablear taselgM, It Is SmderstooaV T; f TUssttttesiwa decM- fet Aleirtar tSaasaiiam Wtiieen Pms- 3&3r -l3fc vnate aanstag. T gwsiswsr sa, ' unterstooa; te 'nay akea tha p aHlaa taat',laaraiaen aa tfca. nata feBawed tha earns geaenl lines .as the Genera caauaanlcattso sew befBreahoyeraainea confer enee. It skoals be considered by that bdy lausedlately. LONDON, Oct 30-It-was reported from a Swiss source to day that Count Anixassy, the Anstro-Hungarian foreign min ister, has decided to open direct negotiations with Italy. Germany has sent a supplementary communication to the United States on the subject of peace. It reached the Swiss legation this forenoon, and was delivered by the Swiss charge shortly before 12 o'clock. The new message describes what Germany is doing in the way of con stitutional changes to make the" gov ernment responsible to the people. It was said that it does not alter the peace situation as it stands to day by making any new proposals. It is understood to have been un solicited and constitutes a volun tary move on the part of Germany. The text may not be made public immediately. Say President "Knows." The supplementary message was by way ot amplifying previous state ments ot the German government that It had been politically reformed. The note, which it supplements, declared that the President "knows" about these reforms. It was regarded here, therefore, as (Continued on Page 2, Column 5.) BOLSHEVKI DECIDE UPON GENERAL -MASSACRE , LONDON", Oct 90 The Bol afceviki have dedeted upea a gen eral mi mum. f all tha upper classes ea Nemfcex 10, said aa Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Cayemhages today. It wa he another "St Bar thefoaeVa night," acerdlng to the dispatch. The upper classes in Germany an ia paste of igdeatrfbahle pnpotUeac. KAISER TO QUIT, SAYSBERLIN REPORT -CDPSJTHAfl"wr . Get JO. The IjiaW- ''TWgy Bopeieeav ana xs prapaxsa. to aooi- -cate, according to on report reach. ing here from Berlin today. The Kaiser is reported to have reached this decision following i meeting of the leaders of tha var! ous German states. Travelers from Germany declared today that a definite statement i gardlng the abdication of tha Kaiser may be forthcoming within twenty four hours. BERNE, Oct 30. "The world war will nqt last longer than a fsw days; we must arrest the vain flow of our blood," declared the Socialist news paper Vorwaerts, which is now re garded as virtually a German gov ernment organ. BUDAPEST IN RIOT, SIEGE PROCLAIMED ZURICH. Oct 30. A state of siege has been proclaimed In Budapest fol lowing the attempt of a hundred thousand demonstrators to enter the palace of Archduke Joseph. The dem onstrators are demanding a republic. German troops are reported to be arriving. Students In the city have formed a council to co-operate with the Magyar national council. MANY KILLED IN BUDAPEST RIOTS COPENHAGEN. Oct. 30. Rioting;. In which many persona are already reported to have been killed. Is con tinuing at Budapest, said a dispatch (Continued on Page 3, Column 8.) ROUT VV X aaamBBBBBBa anaaa...aa..aaa "V ITALIANS AND BRITISH : PIERCE ENEMY M OTHER FRONTS ill T7ITH THE TTAT.TA'Nr Ammra in THE HELD, Oct. 30. The Italian and Bri&h armies, completely piercing the Anstrians' last line of resistance, are ad-; vancing rapidly eastward between the two railway lines feeding the Anstrians on the Piave front They have cat off all lines of communications on. the Venetian plains. PAEB3, Oct 30 (12:45 p. m.). French and Ameri can troops, attacking northwest of Bethel, have penfe? . . tatted deeply into the German positions at many point ' reaching the support lines, wjuch-jspere. ahno3tjl'mpyi'J p4FKvUBfsxAi9rmu)rmm tmm-tsavTw bka 23flOQ'TWu a-nofe than 200 ftac m tMr pfetat OafwuiTty it wh ofidaHy annotgaceJtoay. Total Auatrka cm1B an ectaxactee at 4000. ( Huravry torn by intemaT tTigeriHoa and frsmticaBy eeldnf peace, the allie are battering ber arrmec to bka on the Italian front and rapidly approaching rfangurtttst territory at several points in the Balkan. The Italian front offenaive is rapidly aaaing tlM proportioM of an utter rout 1 British and Italians are across the Rare on' a thirty mile front west of Valckbbiadene to the Trerito-Odcaef railway. They have advanced about eight rmlea beyond the river on this front, capturing more; than a headrest villages, meludmg tha Important raOt GROENER SUCCEEDS LUDENDORFF AS ARMY CHIEF Oct was COPENHAGEN, SO. Announcement made in Berlin today that General Greener has succeeded General Ln dendorff as first quarter master general of the German army. rt,. World's 8mallet Wawanaoer , - "!BzMSzMS5kWtm S V T 1 H tfM TT" .agaaaaa, aaaaaaaiaa A Z- f tKKBKKKHtt I afV '3 rTa aaal " ' (Coyrirt, llt, CblisJfHje0 way center of ConegTiano. afore JSJSO pJliouus have eeBdaSy counted. American troops, comiulitfuf- OaM units, are across tha Piava. part)etaw ting- in tha advance. KTng Vtaterf' Emanuel parsed over tha river 'at. Oaj head, of a regiment of BaraaclierL, XI la reported to hava bean chaared! h Austrian prisoners. The allies are wlthte seven mSas 4 Vlttorio. the principal Austrian sopaq bass for tha whole Venattaa phaaw region. " In the Grappa district, tha, ItataaW are advancing' slowly in tha faoe o stubborn resistance. Tha battle, frsat Is biasing westward dear to th-Aj ago region, making a total tcttrt front of -more than fifty miles. Tha battle front now extends sat follows: , Ua at BatOa. South of Aslago; northwestward ef Uont Slsemel; eastward to Tesxt northwestward to Mont Solarola; eastward to Alaao: eastward throuzh Valdobbladene, San Pletro, Farra, and Refrontolo: southeastward through Conegllano, Clmetta. and Fontanelle: southward to Fonts dl PUve. The allies are sweenlnr thronvh Serbia like a prairie fire. At three points northwest of Negotln, and northwest and southwest of Ushltse they are within twenty miles of Hun garian soil. The Serbs, in the greet Morava valley, are within forty miles of Belgrade, their former capital. juro-eiavs, operating In aConta. negro, have passed Ipek and DIakova, ana runner to the westward ra naartng the frontier ef Bengovtna. The battle una rn the Halknns ap parently runs aa follows: From Negotln in practical! straight line westward to a point northwest of Chaenak: southward through Montenegro to Kukus in Albania: southwestward to fits Adrlatle at a point north ef AHssta. The latest reports from neutral sources indicate that the Hungarians, (Coattnned en Page 2, Column 1.) BAMTMOMi RTKtlt TACECT XXXg. CTtESATKAKE BTEAktSIlrr I-COt StTHDAT SAH.INQ3 DCTWKEK 1TOB rOVX. AND OIJ POINT AND BALTJ Btoravr of OMMiukt IJim will ( Norfolk tor Baltimore SUNDAr. Norombet .r1 on mwmmww . uaiumon TIT to Tit Paebol Uno SDNDAV, NoTombor lota at : P. N4 sad tkoraattor Btoaaore et thon Lints via aHorsato oa 8CNDATS. ttoaota ot both Llaoe wtir bo hoaorod oa SUNDAVBtooraoro. AdTI, THR OVLT MORNtNO COWIC MflS To Drlnled ororr doT In tK. mrur Tno AUERICAN. VTAXT IBS DAT' wm3 jl nmiiiii i'wii. '