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VOL. LVI.—NO. 37 FOCH GMHilES NFW IIRiSIfCF TEMintlllFtES PRESIDENT SPEARS Tb tHfe FRENCH REAODE ASSOCIATION Frgjch As! Nations»at the Murat palace, ii Ate HBelieved to^ be MoreSeyere Ihafl the Passed Conditions. TO EXTEND INDEFINITELY French Newspaper Forecasts Armis tice for Long Period Yet—Pre dicted That German Army Must be Reduced to 20 Divisions—Allies convinced that League of Nations will pleted before his return confident'that a fter'my relurh to France we will celebrate its com pletion, at least in its advanced staged: \I will co-operate heartily in your plans after my return,\ the President concluded. The address was made last to Control More Territory and Materials. ' tVATElRTO'WN, Feb. 13—(Special). -^The jury trying John Brown, paper inlll foreman of Fulton, N. Y., on the charge of abandoning his four chil dren, were out all night and disagreed. Brown said his family would not go to ■Pulton to live with him. ASK STATE TO PKOSECP'I PARIS, Feb. 13.—Slarshal Foch was to leave tor Treves today, carrying with him the new conditions on which extension of the armistice will be bas ed. It is understood they provide that aiti food from the are supplied. The Matin forecast today that the armistice will be prolonged indefinite ly; th a t hostilities will be commenced on short notice in the event the enemy shows bad faith in carrying out the conditions, and that a de'aaifhe 'win 'be drawn beyond which German troops will bo forbidden to move toward' Poland. who are alleged to be mulcting farm ers out of millions, and Irregularities S S .S .T & ■.SK,VU*.’;»S5 . t Dairymen’s League from raising milk to twenty cents a quart. _____ _________ yhen he agreed tc transmit the request for an armistici to the Allies,’’ said the MaUn. “The Ih^esldent recently stated that ‘we will not reopen hoatllltes tor any futile reason, but If we a re shown that Germany has refused to qonform with the clauses of h just peace, we will not hestltate fb attack’ IVllson, llKe other- Allied statesmen, reallj cflfusaL butter held In storage in this country, Isjt. Every commodity showed * ii creases from six to 119 per cent, q : siiTsyiiiopoi L'lnforoilittdii ,'pi^odicted that un&r the new a x ^ s ’ti^e terms the 6 ’eymany IMffiRSHIP s taken over. The heSrspaper estimated vfjsbsr --------- ACSTBUN ASSEMBLY TO MEET. PARIS. Feb. 13.—The Atistrian _ 4 l 6 i i a L : a S i ® S I O a t t 3 E M - P ^ ^ 17th, according to here today. One to be taken up, it union of German was said, will be the a Austria and Ger- To coifsniK E OF TROOPS PROM RUSSIA •WASHliNGTON, PeJ). 13.—Withdraw al oT Dntted m a tes anR Allied forSeS from Northern Russia and Slbei ' wlir Re the Hfsl questToh. before'i proposed Allied-lRussianl session laEt Princes Isjand, diplomats unaerstood today. ‘New notes * r6 paasing between the. Russians and AlUeS which may trOstpoae the meeting Set for February 15th, tor a mouth b t more. PLOTTED l^ATH 6 f IBESDREIfT. OHICAicb Feb. 13i--JChicago polit today revealed, iU cdiffaeotlou with Y revealed, iU cbiffaeol W. W. ro'Urtdups, alleged plot-to PARIS, Feb. 13.—President Wilson I his address ..tg members of the ^sociation BIG PHTSHmOH BANK CLOSED OP rcioty of indicated not be com- to the United Iflstkution Haviag Deposits of Over Two and One-Jialt Million Dollars Fails. PITTSBURGH, Feb. 13.—The Park JllRy DISAiJKEED. COMBIfFES OF 1 died depositors gathered in from of was threatened at any time. The bank was regarded as one of the strongest in the city. It is declar- IJf(0BEASE IJE STORiVGE GOODS. ■WASHINGTON, Feb. 13.—Great in- in the amount of meats and Action Approved by a Protect ive Committee Representing Nearly 1,000 Stockholders. NEW YORK, Feb. 13. — Appoint ment of a receiver for the New York. New Haven & Hartford railroad, was asked ’today In a suit In equity filed In the United States District Court by Harold Norris, a stockholder, in _bo- half of 235 otte r stockholders. was filed with the rapprovaP of--a--protectir '0f''lnoTri:han-?(K>-add:itonal-&tqcltholfl~ 'ers,«who have joined issues in the ing the! railroadailroad officialsfficials to showow causeause r o to sh c why a receiver should not be appoint ed. Sol. S. Myei-s and Ex-Senator lyei-s and Ex- Edgar D. Brackett represent ------- attorneys. titioners as attorneys. , The petitioner alleges that prior to . -18»3r the-defendanti-contPoUed A ll the , and trolley lines and steaml It was also alleged that Willi Rockefeller, J . P. Morgan and George McC. Miller had entFrcrTSto cBaspIr- ac)r to monopolize the tfanspormlon .lines of 'New England through doml- It 5s alleged ‘ b s W E G O D A IL Y PA L L A D IU M , S U t e S D A Y , FE B R D A R V 13, 1919 B S T A B L U i l h , . - OMAHA, Neb., Feb. 13.—Storms In C u e s t i o n - o f Intferhafibnal -Army- western..,and.,£entraLJieb^^ »T, ■ fT- • J ' to<iay reached blizzard prbportloUE asTniF.-is'd' J. S. Swartz, cashiet, charged with embezzlement of $80,000, Is in the lercy Hospital here in a delirious con- 'Swartz was arrested at-his home up on c-harges preferred by the bank di rectors. The police fpund him in bed, suffering from a mental break-down, and unconscious, it is stated. Swartz ved to the hospital, where he and Na v y - U p ^ oday. /. MAY DELAY lEAGl'S PUNS .When news that the banl Eresident .Plaas.,tft..j||yo Pam |or Home TonR»rt|^*tv Night, But P League CQiitstitaHon fe Delayed He Will Change tilRihf Depai Report Bfg A’nfry and Navy Planned. By ROBERT. J . SENDER. (United. Press Staff Correspondent.) PARIS, Feb. 13.—The question of a huge Intel-national -military and naval police force under the League of Na tions, was to be thTMhcd out at to- for couditi bank's cloi a statement exonerating the bank di- rcctoi-s of any blame in conne( tvith the bank’s failure. 'cussion of new article might pre vent acceptance-tJ^-tlre^ eoostltuUon todaytoday andnd thushus eliminateliminate possibilityossibility a t e p of p r e s ^ tin g the draft to the genera! NEW EREIttHT KATES PKOPOSED On Basis off Flatlat Mileageileage Charge Plus o F M C Teiminal Costs. WASHINGTON, Feb. 13.—Details ol a proposed system of freig-ht rates based on a flat m'leage chai'ge plus terminal costs, were submitted to the Senate Interstate Commerce Commit tee today by Robert W. Woolley. Inter state Commerce Commissioner. imately twelve cents a mile for fjrelg¥r haul.- The terzninal charge- he placed at about $16 a car. The Commission’s plan, h e said, was worked out on the bas!s of car mile s ; a ed o u t on th e basi Blnoe a ll railail linesines r l compute theU unit of expense. The 5 on that unit of expem ilnal charge is computed ( terminal charge is computed on a pet- car basis because that cost is arrived at on a p e r c ar basis, Woolley stated^ iNSlIRRECTWN BEING PL&NNED BY GERMANY BERNE, Feb. 13.—A nation-wide in surrection in Germany, aided by s ‘J Russian Bolshevik army, has beer, planned for March, it -was revealed in 'doctirasnts— discovered when— Kar)- rested in Charlottenburg, acco to cross the German frontier and in sure the success of the revolution. Radek, who was one of Kai Larl^IAeb- lice. - -H is\ lildit„ . _ Charlottenburg was discovered by wafdhtsgwafdhtsg tiiermovcmfentsermovemfents off hisis sec-ec th o h s retary, Lina Becker. She was also ar- 31,487 J & E S f H S m t • ., llG ^ iE ir 2 A lK 'u..,S . w A B H itogi^i. :#lh. were 81,42^ dnStkifn th‘o De front Influh^i^Troin-^ehti^ BIG m i l s ARE MOVING EASTWARD mmm Ctrding O ^ J^ t icials, who predicted It would reach laba before night. Omi Udren. were sent home : anticipation of Its arrival. are said' to oppt Tbebe beliefelief waas T b w expressed that ission of the new article might Peace Con|ress tdmorrow. President Wilson’s plans’ftrieaveFaris forborne 1,400 WODNDED SOLDIERS ARRIVE ON SANTA TERESA lizzards Reported in CenDal and Wesi estern States—Much Damage .^Being Caused. to reports was moving'' eastward NEW YORK, Feb. 13.—More than 1,- 400 wounded soldiers arrived here to day on the transport Santa Teresa. Many.of them were able to walk about decks as the ship caine Info the harbor. Bed-ridden were sent to nearby hospitals. Walking cases were iuled for demobilization camps. •TK'e'''m'eh 'wefe-rr6-C OT connlry. iccordlng to Weather Bureau stormtorm wasas Reports from interior :lties said tbe s w worst In many years. It was panted by a drop In temperatui Plattelatte reportedeported thee North P r th mercury ten shortly after noon. Fruit growers fear the temperature win cause heavy- damage to crops. Re centt warmarm weather,eather, they said, had w w rted.„sap4n.-£i:nlt-te®es.-.-Live-stock' - —n Westernll Nebrask aranges also loss o ' Was fear( KING FERDINAND WOUNDED DYRDMANIANREVdlUTIONISTS tomorrow night, in th is event, would have to bo changed. Not only has he been selected to rea ^ th e constitution at the plenary eessTon.^ Jiut he w i^es *o take a copy back. I'ke United COPENHAGEN, Feb. 13.—King Ferdlnajid was wounded when the royal palace at Bucharest was bom barded by Rumanian revolutionists, ■according to a Vienna dispatch pub lished in the Cologne Gazette. The royal family is reported to have at tempted to escape to Jassy, but work men prevented them. The revolution la said to be spreading throughout the ^ Politieal unrest has beeh rcpprted fn Rumania at various times since the country’s surrender to the Central t the Bucharest conferenr- A special triln ]ha^ been ordered Many Of~the people felt that Rum, ---------- ^ “ B been spreadlng'ret*- fails to ^ e e m e n t today, however, bls 'gpiilg YWJl be postponed '.mtn Sunday liiktit w M i i l - e r p i O M W b isperiag-StiJifieii ~ R « s p o iu iU e - - for Fceni^ WASHINGTON, Feb. 18<-The trans- port Ortega, Brest, for New York, ia flue February 17th with the supply company, medical detachment, detach ment machine gun company. Compa nies K and Uof 161st Infantry, (Porty- fTrst DfvfsrohL foY discharge a t Camp Dix and casual detachment of marines (Pennsylvania). PLANS BEDTO StADE FOiT G‘UAB3) REOBGANIZATIOK ALBANY, N. Y„ Feb. 13---Rpeclal legislation will not be necessary to 5kj.r,6lnetate. former--members-ot.-tha.Na-. tlonal^Guard of the State, it develop- The committee appointed by the Ad jutant-General to inquire into the question, today submitted its report to the Governor, who transmitted it Jto the Legislature. The recommendations are. that the AdJiitant-Gengral of [the State, im mediately order each unit commander to take all fieceasary steps to reor ganize the guard so that ft will attain the standard required in 1913; that when the unit is so reorganized the GERMAN AGENTS SUSPECTED Propaganda Now Tturoughout Europe in R(««r4 to United Statro’ Stand atPewe TiUe is Similar to That CAriiT dnld This Country During War. ..... ganda.\ with which Americans familiar during the war, was .b«UaV^ to be responsible for the chan‘gf4 a t titude toward tbe American dele|ajt«a in Baris. The suspicion was ^oWinjlc German agents are soWfpi; fb I which produce tbe wUd-'tiiihor rculation and create a fa pression of President WUlOii al Government for and equipment. ■ The third recommendation provides that where a unit occupies an ar mory, the commanding officer shall tnake such arrangements as may be pnssfble, to have units returning from Federal service, march to their or armories and make mutnal arrange bients to s ------ ------------ ‘— *— REFUSE YWE ON g r a s s 8 gmaranh n by- tlon, in the belief that Prance tutes the strategic center of Europe. Previous to introduction of this .plan,- r tentative agreement bad been reaco- “■ any na- Crown P r te^constl- and Pfinc entative agreement had been reach- that no such force was to be •med, and that the League's decl- ns would he enforced by moral ‘luaalon and economic mxsatere. There was the widest speculation today as to the basis of the report ■■.irculated in certain Frehc'h circles ‘ate yesterday that the Americans and British had agreed to the plan 'o r such an international police force' rt can be stated on the highest au thority that the report is unfounded. lly and refuised :en Marine fu to eniindorse . Prince labeth, 5 Ration leaders tOday rte^Bbedi'to ||^r^ the Btlcba- DSE OF ENEaCY SHIPS. PARIS, Feb. 13.—The Inter-Allied Council on Maritime Transport decided a report is rt said that Prance had in favor of Council on Maritime Transport decided today that German and Austrian lln- •ers shall be temporarily employed principally in repatriating troops, and th a t freighters shall be used In carry- ‘ing food for both enemy and liberated \countries. ' The ships will •the associated p( the Senate to vote on Seifialpf iHlram Johnson’s resolution nrginl earliest possible return, of Amerlcai troops from R ussia ' After nearly t* o hours of Btiirlng debate. Senator Johnson’ ^ k e d the 'resolution 'go over ufltll tomorrow, that a vote might-be had on I t Sena tor Hitchcock, chairman ot the Fot«fgn Relations Committee, objected, and the, ^resolution went’to the calendar. Hitchcock had previously stated ho Jwas strongly opposed to the resolution and would seek to have it referred to ;tho committee. ^ 3 ® •jpon the ] deet to throw r a s a th a protect threatened natioi ’reslden time to offletal addjtlon ibout a threatened nation. The President devoted most of his lietal business today. In In case something happens to prevent tho battle from coming OK after a lot of money has been invested In the project. Jim Corbett or Jim Jeffries will referee,’ It Is believed.'' , ^POBX OF POLISH DBITE -AGAlN8P«EBM43S»’-DgIfIBW: frontier were dc- .president at ,_^eetlnr. ^ lectaLtbpreSenlktive froiii the *Bel- •nment and formally GEKERAL ^WTTDHB ------------’MIlOMlNATJBt)' ipf J ~ r a R r s : - F e r T » . ^ m f t t th a t tho Poles have c ilvo along the eastern ;nled tn both Pdiish khd French quar ters here today The Temps declared the reports pTObahly were on attempt to justify a German offensive against Poland. WASHINGTOI4, Feb. .18.-sMaJor^ General Knock H. ‘ ‘ ' * renominated ty \ TOBAT'8 StOdlK.MAMCET. Ifc-KatiSajm. J?.’ T. i