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ft GERMANS TO GIVE POLISH TROOPS RIGHT TO LAND AT DANZIG FRENCH TROOPS ARE ATTACKED BY on the Neutral Zone Near I Border by VXtUB, March 31 (Associated .Pres)-- A ftnnll force of French troop, stationed In tho neutral ono between Hungary and rtouroanla, has m f JOten attacked by Hungarian troops, (..i'3 of tho Trench being taken prison er, according to an official report. rHclcnso of the prisoners huH hi-c- Cpfomlfed by the Hungarians. M Greatly disturbed conditions nro Srepiirted to exist In Hungary, jjw Con. Mangln, who, It has been will be appointed to com-Jsma- Allied operation In tho Hal- - ?kan and lUlssIa, had a conference iwilh Premier Clcmcncoau y ut line Ministry of \War. HASEL, Hwlticrland, March 31. rrhs Iiunirarlan Government la re- - imported In Vienna despatches to havo iMent nn ultimatum to tho Czccho- - tSlovaJc Covernment. This action, It staled. Was taken because of tho corieentraton of Cxocho-Blova- k :5roon and a rumor that thero would $b a general mobilization 1n Huherala 4ifln the near future. ' nUDAPEST. March 31 (Associated m. s Jlre8s). Soviet elections will bo hold 'within a fortnight,\ said foreign Mlnleler Dcla Kun, y, \Our Ictatorshlp does not moan terror. ho latter will prevail only If it is necessary.\ Dcla Kun said that nutomony has ecn punted the Iluthcnlatis. The evolution l continuing to accom plish sweeping changes In nconomlu Ite throughout Hungary. Lawyers. ' ihyslclans, engineer and other men- - ;tal workers aro forming irttuo itunlnn. . 'f Each hospital has hern put In JJqharge of ono physician and one ,Vther mcnUl worker. All clergymen ,.nd nuns have hoon removed from .&he hospitals, except those acting In Whe capacity of nurses. Ilellgloui 4?tutlon schools have1 been abolished. I named after Lenlne, Trotsky, Bebel and other social revolu- tionary Isaders- - , The Red Army Is Ineresslnn dally. Elphty women at Szekee feshea volunteered, but wire re- fused. A, soldier, convicted of robbery by the revolutionary tribunal at Kecsko-men- t, was promptly executed. This !wa the first execution since the Bov- - et Government was established. Horse racing has teen prohibited Rand all the race tracks will be utll-ffiiz- as vegetable gardens. f 27TH MAN I FOR DOYS n Answers That it Wus Per-\- I fcctly Natural for Soldiers g fer Home to . A letter from Private W. M. Voxlk, luttery u, ioih nia Aruuen. X7tn Division, ttiankbiir the Mayor for tho theatrical shows and tho dinners which roro arranged for the soldiers of the tf:dlvlon tost week by the Mayor's Com mlttee and which tho soldiers very ten vrally failed to attend, was cWt'ti out at the City Hall The Mayor's re ply was alto given out. It snld In part: \Tho people thorouifhly understood that tho boys took navantaxo of the nrst opportunity they had to te father nnd mother and thrlr sweetlieartt. even 'jthouch they htd to forfeit tliu nt and dlioer provided for them. .Thlj was perfectly natural,\ t SAW FINISH. , Wrote an Oct. 'M iJLti Tbat tier- - many Couldn't Win, STOCKHOLM, March 31. A letter i? written by Field Marshal von llliiden- - I burr on Oct. 10. 1318. was published there y. It says: i, -- in oonseauenco oi ma Micraoninn disaster, with Its attendant weakening tfof the west front, and In conscienrc ot Ktne iropotsiDiiuy or repiacinr our (treat FJosses, thers Is no longer any possibility I'of our belntr able to tinuoitfl peace on \the enemy, it Is imperative to cease tho (ttruxrle to save the Central l'oweis Y from unnecessary sacrincea.\ iLENINE PROPOSES THE HUNGARIANS LEAGUE !LC!ash Roumanian Sweep- ing Changes Government. THANKS MAYOR SHOWS IGNORED JHy.an \Wcicortie.\ HINDENBURG THAT RUSSIA JOIN OF NAT ONS Promises to Pay International j Debts and Allov States to Form Own Governments. LONDON, March Jl. Ocorge Lans-bur- y, editor of tlio now Iibor nows-pape- r, the Dally Herald, declare that the Allies havo received a proposal for an understanding with tho present rulcrn of Jtussla nnd Intimates that tho conditions of tlint understanding are tho withdrawal of Allied troop from Iliissla nnd the nbandonmont of tho policy of Interference in Hlisstan affairs, Itussla, on her part, would bo willing not lo Interfere with tho affairs of other nations, allow Bin-lan- d, Knthonln, t'kralno nnd other re- publics formed from tho bygono Hus-slii- n cmplro to chooso their own forms of government and to pny Itumla's International debts. Tho writer inlnlmlxes stories of out- - ragen by Itusslan revolutionaries, de claring that such happenings havo been less frcqilont t hah In other revo- lutions on a similar scale. Ho avers that Nikolai Lcnlnc, tho llolahevlk J'romlcr, and Loon Trotsky, the llol- shevlk Minister of War and Marine, havo Iwcn \oiitrngeously slandered,\ and describes the present administra- tion of Ituisla as \clean and tincor-rupt- .\ Tho reorganization of Indus- tries Is proceeding everywhere In HUB-sl- u, Mr. Lansbury says. Ti YIELD DANZIG (Continued from llrst Page.) dccldo tho Question within twonty-fou- r hours. The Temps declared to-d- the Allied governments havo definitely de- cided tiio Gcrmnn objec- tions concerning Danzig and to land tho Polish troops In this German port by force. If that becomea necessary. Hut thl; move, nays tho Tempi, would not necessarily Imply, In tho mind of the Allies, tho union of Dan-l- g to Poland. Tho nowspapcr adds that concerning tho qtientlpn of tho Pollnh frontier tho Allied Govern- ments neem Inclined to create about Uanxlg a neutral otnto In order to avoid attaching this part of tile coast cither to Germany or to Poland. TROOPSHIP SEES DERELICT; DISTRESS SIGNALS FLYING Three-Maste- d Sailing Craft, Evident ly In Collision, Sighted North of Bermuda. The transport Muurl, which reached New York today from llrest, dchted derelict last Priday In latitude 3iM de gress North and longltudo 5.03 West, about 20 miles nurlli of UcrinuJa, fly ing a sIkiisI of dUtress, Lieut, r.vvrett II. Handerlln. Navlitat-In- s txtlcer of the Mauri, and eighteen volunteers, laucneu a ureDonl in a terrlflo toni und after considerable work innnaxed lo rrach the deck of tho derelict. No slcns of llfn wero found on Iraard, A lifeboat on top of the deckhouse had been rmusued anil the wreelt liad all the appesranco of havlriK been In collision. The vfc was a three masted sailing ci.ift. DEBS LOSES LAST APPEAL; MUST SERVE SEN 1ENCE WASHINGTON. March 31 Supreme Court y denied KuReno V. Dobs' application for a rehearing of his op peal from conviction under the Hsplon ue Act. Tho court several weeks co alllrined Debt's conviction and runtetico of ten years In tho penitentiary for utteranciu in n speech at Canton, Ohio The action y cuts off from Dvbi any further hope of freeing lilnlsolf throuch the courts, lie mint now either servo his sentence oi depend upon Executive clemency. zrr Deservedly The Largest Selling Ceylon Packed Tea in the World f THE EVENING WORLD, MOJNDAY, MARCH 31, 1919. New York and New Jersey Soldiers Come Home on Transport Alaskan; 9,500 Troops Landed at This Port ,!. Infantry, .Completed at Camp Dix, Got to the Front as War Ended. OHIO H0ROI3S AKRIVF. Gen. Stansbury, Promoted in France, Leads Guardsmen Back With Honors. Tour troopships arrived y with 3.800 homecoming officers and men. Thcso woio tho Maul with 3.C47, Hlbonoy with 3,297. Alaskan 1,215 and tho Lorraine with 3S7. The Iloma wna due later with 875, making tho total arrivals nearly 0, The first to dock was tho Maul from Itrcst with thu UCth Iteglmi nt of tlio 37th Division, Ohio National Guards- men, the senior ofllccr on board belli; Uric- - Ucn. Kanrord II. HtnnHhury of the 73d Brigade. Many of I ho troops of tho 37th Division have already nrrlved and tho story of tho UCth Is tho same at theirs. They fought In tho sector and at Ht. Mlhlol Gen. Htnnsbury went away as tho Colonel of tho H7th Koglment and was promoted on tho other tdde, In prlvato llfn ho Is a wholesulo lumber- man df Cincinnati, O., and has tx;en In tho Guard for many years. His son, Prlvnln f'arroll A. HlunHbury, Is JiIh orderly. Gon. Htnnsbury's brig-ad- o hcadquartcra also caino on the transport. On tho 3(aul also wcro several casualty companlrn und 130 shell-Khoc- k rases, most of which Improved on tho voyago. Two thousand men of tho iHCth In- fantry, 87th Division, enmo homo on tlio Alasknn. Tho regiment, whllo In tho West, haa many Now York and New .Jersey men. Tho regiment was formed at Camp Plko and sent to Camp Dlr, where Its ranks were filled. The regiment ar rived In Franco In Hcptcmber nnd was sent to Pons for training, nnd afterward to .St, Naxulro. Just nbout tho time It wan to go Into action tho armistice was declared, no tho sol- - diem had to return without hearing tho bursting of a shell. Tho troops on tho Alaskan were In command of Major It. XI, lluttcrfleld. Thirty otllccrs nnd l.OJ men of the t)Ctli will go to Camp Dix; ihroo offl- - corn ana sua men to camp upton, ana the roinalmler to Western camps, Tlio Alaskan also brought two casual companies. MAJOR GEN. JOHN F. O'RYAN RECEIVES DISCHARGE FROM THE UNITED STATES ARMY Commander of 27th Gels Papers at Biltmore Members of Staff Being Mustered Out. GEN. JOHN V. MAJOIl of tho J7th Divi- sion received his dlschnrgc papers this morning at the Divi- sional Headquarters at the Hotel lllltmore. Tho documents were forwarded to him from tho Port of Debarkation, Hobokcn, by Major Ucn. Shanks. Gen. O'Hynn has not yet An- nounced hid plans for tho future nor signified whether he will con-so- nt to lead ngnln the New York Statu Guard. Ily order of Gen. O'Hyan tho following elaff officers received their flnul dlrchargo papers to- day at Hoboken: fol. Walter C- - lontgomory. Lieut. Cols. J. I.etle Klncltd, ndw.ud McLccr. Joseph J. Daly, Henry H. Hlornbergcr, Lcffcrts llutton. Lucius H. Hallsbury, Kd- ward Olmstead. William T. Starr, f. Mayhcw Walnwrlght and Walter A. Delamatcr. Majors Tristram Tapper, Hay-mon- d T. Monlz, Sidney H. Do-Ka- y, Augusto 11. Peterson und Matthew l'. Carney. Capts, Joseph D. Kddy, Ocorgo W. Pcppard and Louis M. Oln-dra- t. l.lcuts. Theodore Crane, Henry A, MorrlKB, John Kerr, Kdw,ird II. King, Kllsha It Wothorlll. Herbert Forsch. George li Stern-bergr- r. Louis M. Clark, Joseph G, l'loershelmor, Charlos C. llubbs, Udwln L. Dale, George W. Grove. Alfred H. Hooker and P, V. Jackson. Chaplains Francis A. Kellcy and Alr.ion A. Jayncs. CARRY AWAY 350-L- SAFE. lluroUr. lri n,l00 of \llooie\ Crr llllratrx, Jrivrl nnd Cash. tlursUra who bmko Into a saloon owned by Mrs, Hnrry Bllvcr, No. 67 Centre iltreut, Clifton, N. J., neir l'awalc, thl morning varied away a safe weighing 3S0 pound and rnntnmtnt: JVnOO of whiskey ccrtlllrates. money uml Vwel vshiiil at 11.000. Iron llllnss found on tho lloor liiiUoatnd Unit they had trl to open tliu safe und fullitl. Mr. Bllver. who liven nbove the w loon, heard n noire, but thought It was a dough niUer In a bukushop hcioss the street. s'ttituui, ti 9UM (h (4b tn4 H4rSfl an4 ttoiU Ut lb Cola, LQRRAIN E BRINGS Is WAR WORKERS Mi MEN HOM E Collision Rumors Denied Ac- tress Back From Four Years in Enemy Country, f u La J.orralno of tho Line ar- rived y from Havro with 396 Chilian passengers, five casual army companies of eight officers and 276 men nnd a number of casual officers. Tho passengers reported that thero was no foundation for tho rumors spread by passengers of other slilpa last week thut n Iorralno had been In a collision. Tho trip was rough and last Wednosday passen gers were forbidden to go on deck Among the Lorraine's passengers ,A Was ilUSH .UllllMU J1I1I1U Ul iU, U.I East 133(1 Street, a moving picture' and vnudovllie actress, who was In Hungary. Austria and rtoumanla, inrouRiium wic wui. , \Kvcn after the United Rtaten went Into tho war,\ Miss liurKo sum. \ina nly protection I needed was to make known that I was an American. Up to that tlmo nobody had made llfo tho least bit unpleiisant for me, but thought It was best to go to tho ollco Administration In liiidnpcst and report thut I was nn alien enemy. All they did was to lhank mo very much for calling nnd glvo mo a pass good any lime, anywheru in Austrla- - Hiingur'' Wo were in Hudapcst when tho revolution was declared in October. It was very much a matter of form. There was no massacre or shooting Into crowds. The soldiers went through the streets In motor trucks firing their rlflen Into tho air. Except for the fond shortage and high prices and the la:je proportion of men la uniform In tho streets, ono- would not have known, llrst, that hero was u vtir, or later, that thero was a revolu- tion. This was aluo true of Vienna.\ Others on tho Larralno were l ather P. A. Qulnn of Btapleton, H. I., who was Chaplain of l!as Hospital No. B at Paris, and It. II. McKclvey of Suffern, N. Y an Insurance broker of No, 10 Cedar Street, who worked in tho V. M. ( A. offices In Paris. Mr. McKclvey brought with him n HcJglan police dog, named \Loost which served throughout the war, llrst as n hospital dag, searching out the wounded, und later as a sentry dog, trained not to bark when ho sensed a Jtosch approaching, but to paw und nudgn with his nosu tho soldier with whom ho was working. Mr, and Mrs. Amos Tuck French roturned after a year abroad. Mr. French was niunager ot tho Soldiers' nnd Sallora\ Club at Tours. Ono hun- dred thousand enlisted men of tho Army nnd Navy wero entertained at tho club, which was financed by Hod- man Wanamaker. Madamo Alexis Carroll, wife of tho French mngron of tho llockefcllcr Institute, icluined In tho uniform of the French Itcd Cross, wearing tho Croix, do Guerre and u Lorruino Cross made from a piece of Ihell. Sho went to France at tho beginning of the war and served as neat o.f tho \Am- - r' btikincc Currell,\ which saw sorvlco on till fronts. Hho unnounced that It her intention to Join her husband In his work nt tho Institute. Mrs. Nntallf Ingram, an American Hod Cross nurse, was so Injurad when the Church ot Saint aorvals was demolished by a shell from tho German's blj? gun on Good I'rlday last year thut sho only recently re- covered sulticlcntly to be able to, re turn homo. Mljf Kthcl Douglas Merrill of No. 51 West 3th Street, returned from lied Cross work In Paris with Dr. Pitch and Elsie Do Wolfe. Mlsa O. B. McArthur of No. 42 Hast 58th Street, told (if her work In managing Y. M. C. A. centre for American telephone girls of tho Signal Corps at Ncufchateau. Dallam, a nowspaper man who went to Prance to do Y. M. C. A. service, said he never saw real danger until ho 'accepted tho offer of tho driver of a wagon who had under- taken to deliver two barrels of pickles to the American lines In front of liar lo Due. Mr. Dallam said he had rid- den with the pickles about u quarter of a mile when the driver swung his tAnm nrnlinrl flfirl Til nil A fnr fit ft fltV. m t mw th(j MvM draffRCj tho Y. At. C. A. man by the scruff of the neck und pulled him away from tho wagon Just in tlmo to savo his life. A Qerman buttery had \found\ tho mn. . 1,lW,nr ., vorv ..ffwllVM alraiiiMt tho delivery of the pickles. 'Asliln from that lesson in tho fool IMmess of riding nn u plcklo wiigon,\ said Mr. Dallam, \I found life at the fmnt nio.it coinmoniilacc. Casual Compuny 2481, commanded by Cap'.. Donald H. Howe, wus mudu tin of members of tho Chemical War faro Service, who had been In action on every front occupied by American from six to eighteen months. More than half ot them had been wounded or gassed. Major llmry Hanford, Q. M. C, who has been In Franco since June, 1917, bundling transportation problems at tho front and ut baso ports, was u passenger, tsinco rsepicmucr aiujor Hunford wus In charge of trafflo at tho gieat warchouHo centre at Ht. Sulpice on tho Garonne. Itlvcr near llordeaux. Another passenger wus Capt. r.mnnucl V. Voska. Gen. I'crshlnn's Unison officer with tho Czecho-Blova- o farces on tho Italian, and Itusslan fronts, dipt. Voska has been sent to tho United Htutes to tell tho public of tho services of the Ciecho-aiovac- H to tho Allied cause. ACCUSED OF PERJURY IN $50,000 LAW SUIT John U. Arraigned Before Judge Rosalsky on Bench Warrant. John D. Fowler, who says he lives at No. 13 Went Htli .Street, was arraigned beforo Judgo Ilosalsky In General s y on a bench warrant churBlnR perjury. Frank Secre- tary of tlio Alliance Against Accident Frauds, charited that Fowler swore to an untruth Ajril SO, 1917. In the trial of his suit fur IW.OW against Dr- Joseph It. Alvarez, whoso automobile had knocked him down In Central Park, In July, IMS. At that time Fowler, whose attor- ney was .Tereiuliih J. O'l.eary. swore that he had not after the accident been In nny other accident Hccords were shown to tho Grand hoJUIntor PU III. uri 1, II I iihni,i - hoi oiik-l- l Nov. 29, 1!UU Tor JiU.OUU for injuries sustained by Fowler In fall- - liiB down tin. lnox Avi-nu- auhway steps at UOlhfKtrent and against tho Fifth Avnnuu litis Corporation ror In - Juries duo to slipping on an oranao peel In a bus Nov. 23. 1917. .. A\'ny i ' Vi- - ViWti.a Ho had iuod, SAYS POLICEMAN Fl AID AR TO AVOID ALIMONY Attorney.Tells Judge Detective ,,1?-- . i i uononue rieipea uonvici Patrolman's Wife. Allegatlona that Detective Kdward J. Donohuo of Police Inspector Doml-nic- k Henry's staff In tho Fourth In- spection District had conspired with Patrotmnn William C. Nlctnan of the ! The members of the Homo Auxll-ram- o .llstrlot, nrrest Memanajnry AMOclal,0.H commltlee9 arc wife of disorderly con- - ( )T, William T. Manning, Mrs. order, that Nlnman would not crt Ilacon, Mra. Snowden Pahncstoclt. have to continue paying alimony atul ( Mi K. J SJ to ohtnln possession of seen-- i K1Uot J5acon Mro j, Uoyi I hoy, wero made to-d- be-- i Major Archibald G. Thachcr, Capt. V. i foro Judgo Ttosalnky In General Ses I slons. The chnrgea were made by Attor- - ncy N 1). Chadsey, of No. S2 Uroad- - \ \ \ \ ';, 7 I snlskv reverse rullnir City. Magistrate Norman J. Marsh, who on Feb. 20 adjudged Nleman i ot disorderly conduct but suspended Hcntcnce. Ho Impressed was Judge ltosulnky with the statements of tho nttorney that he promptly reversed Mra. Nlcman's conviction and ln- - ntniRtnil AnnUtnnt District AttornCVH TnmAU r tlmllh an.f .T. I Sullivan to start an Investigation. \If these statements are true,\ Judgo Ilosalsky told the Assistant District Attorneys, \both theso po- licemen should he In prison.\ On the night of Peb. ti Mrs, Nle- man was arrested with her cousin, Ireno Webb, by Detective Donohue on Hroatlway near sisi aireci. iw foro Magistrate Marsh, Donohuo I aworo that ho had been watching Mrs. Nleman more a nmong a of Llbton trucks as on Hroadway. denied in police they approached the offices at court, he know Patrolman Nle-,- 1 Street. The but admitted having seen him him I nn In c vlUan clothes In tho police tu- - - \ ?, JI\ tsl\5h tlo gen- - Nleman ih?re?nD?nuobShwdMha And ,hcre 1,0 .nKrlilSi1-- Bppr0Mhi Ti er, ta bo u sjiccessor to his .famous cruising yacht, the Krln. courts for many years Mr. C sej told Judge Ilosalsky. \and this Is the ) most outrageous case of oppression , that has ever brought to my attention.\ Judge ltoeaisuy directed tno As a sistant District Attorneys to pro-- ,it.n nil . v. a n.r,nna rnnrArrt-- ft hnforo him in court inai incir stories may be hoard by a Jury, Donohue denied tne cnargca y. \I arrested Mrs. Nleman nnd another woman on Feb. S at 69th Street nnd Columbus Avenue,\ no said. \I had no Idea wno tnoy were at the time. I had followed them on the street several diocks nnu saw tiim talk tn a number of men. It is part of my dutyvto arrest disorderly! women, i mudo this arrest when ' h.f ntr-i- l a hotel with soma men It was not until I got to tho station with them that I learned one of them was a policeman's wife.\ Nleman could not be reached this afternoon to tell side. j PLANS ' FOR 77TH DM9 $5,000,000 CLUB (Continued from First Page.) i lease on tho temporary Astor Library building haa expired. The new club house has been con- ceived with the ot tho Division Aseo-clatlo- u, of which Major Gen. Robert Alexander. Commander ot the Divis- ion. Is tho honorary President. He is tho real founder of the association and tho 'one who originated tho Idea of electing a permanent club In New York. Tho executive committee that has tho matter In consists of Major B. Fullerton Weaver, Capt. George C. MeMurtry, Major Lewis Sanders and Major Julius O. Adler. Major James A. Roosevelt, who died on tho transport Great Northern while on his way homo from France, was also a member of this committee and ono of those who worked out tho plant for the pormanent club house for the association. small army of workmen attacked tho old library building to-d- and will have It In readiness the the 77th gets home. Tho cost of ren- - ovatlng will bo about $20,006. The library, which tho has tho appearance of an will mntntn olcht meetlns rooms, a cnnnaslum, library, sleeping quar ters and a restaurant Members of tho division who find themselves hard pressed financially will discover that tho club house Is a friend Indeed. Within Its friendly walls they wilt be privileged to sign !chrcks for meuls and sleeping accent- - Inflations. Thoro also they will find ia ,,ranch mco f th 77lh Dlvl9lon\J . . . , umpioyrocnv uuirau, uu uitiiuiikiuu ,nat aiready has proved Its worth by placing 2.609 members of tho 77th In ' - .o - i ij,. I b At the offices of the bureu, No. :if) I Madison A.venue. It was said y thmVractlcftlly all tho Jobleea men ot the 77th wojld bf p.ov'.drd with pos.-tluti- s within a lew duys after their arrival. Ono of tho principal objec's of the cluli house Is to provide a placu for the mc'ti to make their headquar- ters vhllo atvaltltn; Jobs. Oftlrers of the 77th that tho club house will weld tho association Into a permanent organization, from which thu work of rendering neccc-sur- y asslEtanre to depcndont.i of sol- - to on a chargo H6b- - duct In M-- their Derby, year-ol- d Mrs. guilty for than month fleet He Llpton drivers that man. fnlzcd \ JlS iJURt ho brfttthed a l0 \.Y.cn..T? had been Monday for his Idea perpetuating Seventy-sevent- h nouso charge was A. by time from outside armory, Urxe believe dlers who died In Franco cun be di- rected. The association Intends to sc \in ',,0,f?re\ ,f tuJ fHllc,, \h\ KrnJicc nro cared for and that their relatives hero ro. telvo needed aid. The arrangements for establishing the temporary club house and the permanent one that Is to sugcecd It haVe been handled by tho KxecutlVe Committee and tho Committee on Ar. rohgementj, of tho 77th Division Homo Auxiliary Association, co- operating with the Kxecutlve Com-mltte- o of the 77th Division Asocla- - tloti. H. Oreene, I.lcut. Col. Charles W. Whittlesey. Major Uradlev Martin. Major Kenneth Iludd, Major Horbert T. Hpooner. Major Delnncey K. Jay, Capt. J. M. Loughborough. Uqtlt. Shelton Martin, air. Cleveland II Dodge. Mr. Stephon II. Olin. Mra. J. c.. Tnm.a i nnn...i, Mr. Walter Grafton, Mr. 8. It. Uertron. iDRYU.S.ISWHAT (Continued from Plrst Page.) it. There is so much protest even now against our war time restric- - H0\\ of J'nuor that they are begin- - tun, i w iju ruia.vu ylr Thomas's tdil threaded its way whlnti mriiiA n u.nn.-1nt-- til iiir r!orfl torp,-doe- t almost at the end f h WRJJ Hunk JuM arter t hjll, -- ,. . mlnihr of women nnd children from another torpedoed boat One boat that has been mentioned as poFKthln successor to th Erin Is the Vandcrbllt yacht Warrior. \Six of my crew wcro lor.t with tho Krln.\ said Sir Thomntt. \And the Germans cheered when une weni down, BOY SEES HIS MOTHER END HER LIFE WITH BULLET Seven ear Old IjOUIS De Fuzio Getting Ready for School When Parent Shoots Herself. ilrs. Lnn Dp Fszlo, thirty-fiv- e, was found dead y In the bedroom of her apartment at No, 18 Avenue A, with a revolver bullet wound In tile right ear. by a pollcemnn who wont to the apartment after the woman's son Louis, seven, hsd run to the street and told passersby that his mother had shot herself. The boy, according to the police, said that as he was preparing to go to school his mother took a revolver out of a wooden box and. after flrlnsr a shot at tlio celling, turned the weapon on her- self. Hho then fell lb the floor. The boy suld that ho nicked ud tho arter tncxing ine door, ron to ine struct. lie was found crying- in front of a store In 12th Street, and when questioned told of the shooting. ALL DRAFT BOARDS CLOSE. Employees (Iff Payroll fcat Mn.brrn Krrs Stntas. WASHINGTON, March $1 All clerks and other employer of local draft .board-- ) throughout the country ro off the Uvcrnment's payroll at mUnlRht, Offices of the boards will bn closed, as their work Is finished, but the members retain thlr offlclal status until 'they are released formally by President Wilson. Hdln, natina jarKiia ar our ricn, aU sort und kliHla of tatlr rrntrr. thmt we esnnot .town t .Herfflc llncntATK COVKUKIl risrrKiii Ihfl bis ll... HUk. nl matin drllelout lifts, flavwil nith flnnl Oil ol l'fu- - Drrmlnt and Jatkrll In our anes celled. rh. fmsrant. iy unaeaiBir. VUCXtHO i 49c AMKIUCAV ni.l.KI) ONriM-TioN- S Thl Is a nonrltr collrctlort of lustroal tlnUlied bard rand; (ems, fint- - las iiuinas or iff him luscious pars fruit Jrllr or' tty crusheil Nut, prrfenti In u uatt ol piraaina kapta anil tints. 59c Htorrai Far eiact locations TUo sDclfad weleht GODSOL'S RELEASE UPHELD BY COURT; FRENCH LOSE FIGHT Paris Accused Army Man of (Waking Millions on War Contracts Merc. WASHINGTON, Murch 31. The de- cision of tho District of Columbia Supreme Court ordering discharge from custody, on habeas corpus pro- ceedings, of Frank J. Oodsol. whose extradition was sought by tho French Government, was upheld to-d- by the District Court of Appeals. That Godsol, while uctlng as an agent of tho French Govcrnmen., made several millions of dollars on contracts for automobile was alleged tn tho proceedings ordered by Ambassador Jusscrand. In defense It was asserted that thero was noth- ing Illegal In the profits. Godsol, who Is ubout forty-fiv- e years of age, served as a prlvato In tho French army, coming to thlif\ country as an uttacha of ono of tho French war missions. Ho was ar- rested March S. 1918, tho French Em- bassy1 complaint reciting that ho had been Indicted In France and that, as a measure to secure Jurisdiction, tho French military authorities had or- dered him back to duty. Upon the appedl or the French au- thorities from the lower court's or der for his release. Godsol furnished ball or 50,uoo in Liberty Bonds. JAPAN TOLD U, S. TROOPS REFUSED TO Declined to Fight Reds at One Place in Siberia, Says War ' Minister. LONDON. March 31 American troop refuted to with th-- i .Tap.ineso In fighting the rtolJhevlU. near Blaslovvstchenik, 600 miles north-wo- of Vladlvottok. War Minister \'D-al:- declarcJ In answering questions pu in tho Ja.panoss House of Kepresents-tlve- s Wednesday, u ToUlo despatch r ported Asked If the Americans' refusal to co- operate with thu Jnpinese amounted : Insubordination, Tsnaka replied he understood that the orders of On\ Ut.inU Allied commander In that regloi; ero effective only when consliten' with the principles ot America's polletei. The American attltiil\. he is Id, pros-sbt- r was due to a dlfferr.nea hi-- n 'the Amerlrans an I Japanese as to whs U'onitltmed Uoishevlsm. REDS DRIVE BACK COSSACKS. Iletaka Half of Don Territory The; Had I.mI. LONDON, March 31. Cossack force in retreat before the Dolshcvlkl ha given up half of their hard won Don Territory, according to a despatch dated March 17 received by the Times to-d- from Bkaterinoolav. The Co, sacks ore now holding the line of the Donots niver. 4 The llolshevlk official communkju. dated March 18, tayit \In the region of Pineiro (IS miles southeast of Arch- - swteu we nave assumes ine orreusU and have occupied Toromsjoe and strongly fortified positions near Oier-- i and qollanskoe.\ DIED. BURKE JOHN BCItKE. Btrflees at CAMPDETLt. FtTNEIUI. CIltlROH, Uroidwtr, th it.. Toc4r, 3 'clock. OINOMAN. nriNflT DINOHAT7. Strrlee at CAUPOELI, FWERAI, CHURCH, Broadway, 0th at., lfaoUar, 3 I. U. KIN0O March Sfi. ANNA, twlof.d wife of Thomas Klnr and dausjbter o( Mary and John Shea. runtral from her lata residence. I'tospcct I'lacs, on April It tnenca in Et. Atnes'a Church, East 43d at.. Vt 10 A. U. 8TACB.1NIT. OB Saturdar, Uaich 30, 1010, UUUEPTE STAUOBANOT, In bis ti yr. Funeral aarrtcaa at CAOTBZLI. CUUnOlf, Droadway and Mm at., Tuesday, April 1, at V. It. Mount Hops, N, T, TruJa Mask irssnnii iinr v ihnviiiit mm In fnet. Iliv lti U w sTrut B CZg .Uwrlntfans. ZZSJi, ((LAThh riii- - rriitrrt of llir.r Mtrta nro roiupilaril ol tlio rlctimt, meiluiV- - rut sugar ei mi. firri-iitr- in a butt of UcSirloUa -- .;ir .i rs. Thr nrc of our mini-- . IHmnns umrr iiiu.-n- k nni-r- i k 54c C'tlOCdlI K. COVER. Kl) t)AIHJII.Xs-Th- (.. dainty iqilarn i lelirt rurnnifl creuni. vnunKini Uh U.tj chopped Nntk.'cnrrop nl In roivrlnic-- t of oar . II I mI st ,a 4 valrclv tinmnal , rd J borolatV of porilr. 49c New Vork, nox twatv. sea televtaeaa sllrretory. lncludsa lbs cjsuiaar, kii . jJt Mid-We- ek Special for Tuesday and Wednesday, Aprilht&2d CIIOCOLATK rpVKnEU 8WEKTlltAT& .toathMn TIiU la a 'tlrcUon of Monday's Splendid Attractions CHKAM Tuesday's Attractive Offerings beantlful urooHirn. trucks CQwrlnc-- . A I V v N