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Big Labor War Planned Here ?v Bolslieviki Leaders in Lawrence Strike Aim to Disrupt American Federation Through Ki\al Textile Workers' I nion Led by Two Preachers Massachusetta Fight Break? ing Den* n and Wider VivUl h Sought lor \ctivities \.'A York as their haao, and . ,,M (ho vn I lior oi r.un a I . ? . id? i.n support, .,,,, t;,, ipnll ' i -, >v !>> hw\ 6 DP$n di i ,1 I'oxtilu Work | ntlH'tl, \l I HI ; v i ml pvopo o i" luunch n gon ,,,?! . , |i i it\ Um for i' i object nl i in' Vim ' ieavt iVd , . i nhor, \,,,,!,?|n lu tfoi in it ion \? iiIch lu?? tilo f( ilt'iul lull HI ,t pjty, (he program?lo cull foi ,,,,. ,,,, nf rival unlona, mora parti? ni"' ' in th*? ? lothinu mu? to* Hie " fha h tho PXiatUlR I .! I NOUgll (u pll ?! IU ,. lu'.il . ?,'iiu'iil . ! ! s) hum oaiotit, ill' ' inntion whleh. will bo |?,,| |,, 0 I -I . :|l IVO , UUlU'll III {ha I,,!, mi'', -H 111 ItM in"! ini'i'l mi', ?,? iiu' Ii ?? i ''<ii le ' onu ?",| ' he. ?;, v \ .' " i ??.?'? ' i'\ nun w IthOUt I'liiirKO'. i with line Kaplan, uro ,m,l tu hin ?? lu h i "'?' ' i "i'il m the fjttWMIIC? tl'Olllllc l'latik Hi"!-.ii, ?ecretai y of the fi dcrnl Ion, said ? on terdny thai t! meeting will be held in \\? ihini ton on Miij :'. i allure m Lawrence Iho dec ' of the Luwrence lead- I ,.r.<, whi re i plity per cent of the ? workers Bre opposed to the methods being used, to come to Now York, follow* tlm gradual collapse of that movement, and the offer of a wider field in this city fur their peculiar method-! of treating industrial ques? tions. Mrs. (llendower Evans, an aged Boston woman, who is haul to have helped the Lawrence trouble, is cx pected to as n the work, which will have tho passive, lr not activo, support of tho Amalgamated Clothing Workers' Union. organization, which has been, righting the Ai erienn F?deration of Labor i ?no ?I cept ion, has been t he causo ol bi ' v ? ' -. tho larger body and the United Hebrew Trades, which has I paired at roo ?nt convon tions of the ?? . ration. It has backed all movement j calculated to weaken the federation. T!u> present move is I particularly iirocted againBt the Unit-1 ed Textile Worki rs. According to the information reach-j ing federa: cadera in this city, the i decision to abandon Lawrence as a ! field of operations synchronizes with ! a falling off in contributions for the1 support of that strike and tho decision j of the Massachusetts authorities to ask for tho . rtation of many of tho local leaders. Nearly all of these aro aliens, who ? obtained ( N imption from the draft by ; claiming | > . ns of Russia or Italy. Likely to Urge Deportation The State Board of Arbitration :? expected to recommend deportation following the conclusion of the inquii ? begun ealy last week. This inquiry . i? the preponderating! majority of the Vorkors in that city are satisfied with the existing condi? tions, and arc content to follow the advice of the United Textile Workers and wa;: until the milla have plenty of work before lemanding any increase in wage . V. ith ?? mills on a thirty ?x-hour basi -, and some idlo, these, led by John Gu len, declaro discussion of wage im -. waste of time. Must W ork ?ir Starve ." he says, "are to do what its of knives and many of them "ut. G ire gi tting to the Point eVen these, ?he moi , r fui ds are depicted H,1'l thi work or draw upon 'heir ivini . This tney will '. "^ i.r the money nrovid ??J bj '? ,. ,. hoi u funds Now 'ork radie ? iri pro\ id ng, tlm thing ( *ould ' . . , Hgo, Aa ?t U, tlov 11, and this, wupli ol wider on , of work m N?w Yoi ed to tho (loci don ol '' " ? to gradually withdra for t ho time i ?ron io sympath . i,- to not, limit \ lerii in I i loi in this tho > nl Ire omenl has ? in I ipo toi ig uublo hero and Count Czcrnin Schied Former I oreif/n MIn?Mter Taken on vu i-s Itonlrr Count Ottokar ro Hungarian Vox ? i ,| W odw \ i ir?an authorities I tu cross the I Iwi i ? 400 Slain or Wounded in Two Riots in hulia glMLA, Brltiab India, April M. A r has made an? other v -..< nl ?ti ,.-.. . at the au i were repulsed L-"' '" ml ??..,, with a lusa of 200. ?'v ? red at Ahmedabar] * '"r 200 i m laities had been In " < rioters and the tele ' ?nd ??.:'. ctor's offices burned. 9 0R1CWR TOOTH PASTE 4*flt Ktfp<:tiw l'rcirlhv? hy Unit ist s JvOk whitening the teeth ^ ?nd rfr/.oviriK, rriucm film. Will n-,t Hcratt.h enamel. Aids ? preventing Pyorrhee. ml septic J!l?l?<<lANI) CIMANSINd Will Germany Sign? By Frank H. Simonds IRAKIS, April 18.- The announcement that the Germana are coming to Versailles on April 'Jo serves to indi? cate that the conferences in Paris are drawing to a close, that a solution has beon at least sketched for the largest problema that affect Germany. Five months and a half after the armistice the Germans will he asked to sign a treaty ol peace. They will he allowed fifteen days of grace, to expiro on May lu, the anniversary of the Treaty of Frankfort, Two great questions arise, still un? answered, with the arrival of the (?er mans in sight. The first is: What exactly uie the torm.3 of pence '.' The second i Will t lie del m:i!; , - ic n It Remains To He Scot Neither quo.-I loll coil yol UO no - w t ici! hj nn.\ evidence at hand, although In every case, ?o far us the peace ternis oie concerned, n sketch hua boon put out officially 01 unofficially, We know Germany inutd rooognUe the Ions of Alsace Lorraine; the .?.epnnltion, at least temporarily, of the Naur coal region, the sill lender k\ the llol ih .i h half oi Schien? in and rtearij, h not oil, id' the i'oii-ii (Ufttrleta ^( Went I'ntnsia, I'oseti mol .'oie ii A-i to lepalut loii-i, It hin heeii an IHHIIlCed ill nil the I'lciuli p:i|tel:i thill the l-'reticli nolulion winch would pl.oi the cohtn of (ho war Hint In, the eo-.c of rebuilding the devastated areas h France and Belgium, replacing (he ships of iho Allies sunk by submarine! and of bearing pension charge i an (o be horno hy Germany, Many tig uros have been cited as an estimate none seems to he exact. The sum of live billion dollars is to he paid inimodi tttely; that is, wit Inn two years. There after, according to a very intricate am complicated system of computing, tin Germans are to pay largo sums o money, anywhere between twonty-flvi and fifty billions of dollars, to mee the costs of restorations and the bur di.'n of pensions. Pawning the Rhine's Bank Finally, German payments and pei formances are to he guaranteed b the occupation of the western han of the Rhine for a long period of tinn dependent upon tho performance I. Germany of her agreement, exactly n German troops occupied the caster departments of Franco after the Treat of Frankfort. As a supplementary guarantee, Ge many ?3 to be disarmed, forbidden ( maintain more than 100,000 troops, ii Rhine is to he the military frontie For all time, Germany is forbidden fo titications for troops west of tl Rhine, while France in due course time will retire within her own frot tiers, thus leaving a zone political German but military neutral on eithi hank of the Rhine, and thus insurii France against a new invasion of h territory while she is still unprepare There remains one single great pro lem, probably Fettled, but concernii which no details have been publishei Who is to mount guard on the Rhi luring the years in which Germany w have to make reparation? France ai [ielgium certainly, but what of Gre Britain and what of the United State How long will our troops stay thei low long will the British? What gua intees will the English give of c iperation with the French if the Rhi is passed hy German troops? "W h guarantees, if any, have we given? So far as affects Germany, the fort ?oming preliminary treaty of peace w hprive her of between 20,000 and 80,0 iquare miles of European territory, i -.1 t habited by from 6,000,000 to 10,000,000 people, as well as of her colonies in Asia and Africa, amounting to moro than 1,000,000 square miles of territory and from Ri.000,000 to 15,000,000 peo ; pie. It will disarm her. It will deprive lier of her fleet. It will deprive her of her commercial marine. It will tempo? rarily, at least, deprive her of the Saar coal region and it will place uoon her a burden of between $25,000,000,00,0 and $50,000,000,000 to be paid as a reparu? tion for her crimes in her war of ag? gression. What More The il uns lose Germany will lose her subject popu? lations in Kurope that is, the people i>\ Alinee I.ol?ame, the Ihillc.i of Schleswig, the Poles of the Intciu piovinooa, {-?ho may ultimately be per 111 it tod (o tilines the Gorman provinces. oi Austria, but tins romains problem atloal, und there nie many Germans who oppose such annexations, since it would raise for Germany many ditbcuit (?UoatloUh, In sum, us a consequence ni her attack upon the world Germany will 11 it il herself disarmed, h.er economic machinery praottoally destroyed, so fur ?.. world muikcts uve concerned, the non districts "' '"iriimo, the coul (Us tnct.-i ol the Sum and tho industrial legions of Upper Silesia gone. She will have paid the greatest price ?ny coiiutiv im evpi paid in history for what mu? i bo reckoned the greatest ofFenee against civilisation of nil time, Now, bt'OUght fuco to face with Iho?f tenu., will the Grrmuus Sign, or. loi lowing the example of the Russians at Hre-d LltOVSki will (hey refuse to sign Mid offer passive resistance? Again if they sign, will they sign in the spirit they signed (he armistice une ?hen. as in that case, oppose every con ceivable obstacle to its performance compelling new efforts, raising unit j i disputes, seeking to postpone payment i ! ! until Great Britain and America are i i ' eliminated from the continent and i France and Belgium stand alone in the I presence of a superior enemy? Equally interesting is the question whether modern Germany will follow the ex? ample of Prussia after Jena, and evad i ing the provisions of this treaty as i I'russia evaded the provisions of the | Treaty of Tilsit, arm herself for a new ! struggle and seek to revive the tradi j tions of Leipzig and Waterloo. These ! are great concerns for the future. Wherein the Terms Are Weak The weaknesses of the terms which stand out at. the present time are to be found in the. innumerable list of ques i ' tions out of which disputes can and ; must arise. The Saar Valley solution - is one of the most intricate of modern 1 documents, recalling that Algeciras ! convention which "was a prelude to i Agadir, and half a dosen Balkan set | Dement s winch led. without delay to new unsettlenieiits. When pence with Germany is signed, on or about Muy the loth, assuming the Germana do sign, there will remain all (ho groat questions of thi' le I und of the South, ranging from Russia to die Persian Gulf, few of which have been more than opened SQ fur. Uni) iho Italian boundaries ami claims arc BUrC tO be settled by the time Gemini' difficulties are out of the way, but al linst und at lust there ueents n leu possibility thut we shall be ut peuci with Germany again within a month ant that the main business of the peaei conference will thus he liquidated, al though the mup of Rastern Europe um Western Asia will be still unmarked, (1 'il|iVI II.le l:U'i. lo Ilia Mel'l?l? Ntof, il'i J.ra . > 'nil, ate i ? KiniiuniaiiH in Huttle Willi Hungarian l<W<*n COPENHAGEN, April ir?. Rumania forces have attacked Hungarian troopi according lo n dispatch from Budaprs which fails to tell where the engage ment took place. The Rumanians, sn\ the message, "suffered tremendou losses," COATS CAPES WRAPS Individual, distinguished look? ing outer wraps have long been a particularly strong feature of this establishment. Capes or coats, or the lovely silk and chiffon creations for ? which Summer affords so m a n y opportunities?utility wraps for motor or for street ?whatever the occasion the models here shown are grace? ful, dignified and exclusive. JteGDORF ?OODMAN OIQ FIFTH AVENUE jnt.sssssi-ar i -iJtit.w sue. ? >?? ? ? ??^^ J FUR STORAGE?Remodeling and Repairing?Phone 6900 Greeley I franklin Simon & Co. ! Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets Important Price Reductions Monday J WOMEN'S TAILORMADE SUITS ? Mostly one or two of a kind. j , Exclusive Franklin Simon Models. ? Reduced from $69.50, $79.50 and $89.50 to 50.00 y A COLLECTION of high class suits, reflecting in every I **? detail Franklin Simon & Co's incomparable tailoring. Included are embroidered, braided or plain tailored suits of wool tricotine, Poiret twill or gabardine, in navy blue, black, beige or walnut brown. i V 1 In all sizes, including a number of long line f I suits designed especially for full figures. I I WOMEN'S SUIT SHOP?Balcony Floor I flaw -~wm-^Mic- ? ,,?-- - m ?.?-n-m- W Danzig Decision Is Big German Victory, Savs Polish Leader . ! Paderevvski 4?Heartbroken,', by Plan to Internationalize Town, Stepson Declares; War U Called "Lost" "The Aliies have lost the war against' Germany through their announced de? cision to internationalize Danzig," said IV, ('. Gorski, stepson of Paderewski ind head of the Polish Information iureuu here yesterday, discussing re? torts from Puns that the Council of ?'our has Anally disposed of the Polish ieruuiu boundary question. "The actual boundary line has not yet been disclosed," he continued, "but with Danzig internationalized Ger? many achieves her chief ambition here. She gets her long desired and cease? lessly plotted for pathway into Rus? sia. An internationalized Danzig means a German dominated Danzig. "It means, too, an emasculated Pol? ish state. It means the poner rat ion and supremacy of Germany in Russia, with all the resources, the men, the j raw materials that implies, and with the resultant commercial world dom? ination which lias so long been the ? German dream. Since the Pans con- , clave began its sessions no more tragic , decision, from the standpoint of world , interest and world security, has come forth from the deliberation ' To Make Another Appeal Mr. Gorski added that he yesterday received a cablegram from Paderew ski m which the Polish Premier ex? pressed himself as "broken hearted." Next week, Mr, Gorski said, Paderew SKl intends to return to Pans and make a final effort to persuade the Council of Four to change its Danzi? decision. Irish Trade Union to Take Control of Strike Limerick Merchants Join Em? ployers and Men in Protest Over .Martial Law LIMERICK. April 10 (By The Asso? ciated Pressi.?The conduct of the general strike will pass o\\ Monday from the Limerick Trades Council to the Irish Trade Union Congress, whose headquarters will he moved from Dublin to Limerick. The con? gress is the executive authority of the labor movement in Ireland, and its re? moval menus united support for the Limerick strike. A meeting of merchants, employers and strikers, summoned by Mayor O'Hara, was luid to-day to discuss the situation A r .'solution was adopted protesting against the establishment of a military area, and demanding in? stant und unconditional withdrawal of the military cordon, Safeguard Your Horn? Against Disease and Vermin ? FUMIGATE We do tt ?ith.-mt ?neonwdenee ? odor; ?Ithoul li iurj to t*1.'us BgS o[ metals. Plsru? Garros and Vermin tare*? li -'?ti ?, Th<< Urn? in -omplclrlj di Mr u ' them U \i>\\ ; . ' .-< their Fum. liare unis to derelop. W ?.;..' > -:? g t A?i?n:-ic t ot tru> 'arit.M tu'.i.ii:t. itaamshlp, et.- . at. a moinoi.tt ?ce i'i ? twi> to four hour. required Nothing need be removed fnna pmsui > n r m fi v >i>r dallj routine '>?? alterad Alt?.- fvimt rtll bs ?ale, ,;<??., refreshing i irttUig an, ri'j h 'or Imm?diat? . We have alto ethar Uuar.n tied Procrmi tar Mtorminatlon of Bad Bust Koarh?? Mr -. etc Wo alio dl?|nt??t All aur ?o?? is at>io lutel? guaranteed. GUARANTEE EXTERMINATING CO ?jiOO FIFTH AVf. 42??ST Nt\V tOlfK No Connocfion With Any Other Establishment in the World ?o 0 l?o THIRTY-FOURTH STREET * NfTWCIN ' BROADWAY. ?fTN AVKNUft nnniiii?iiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiMnoiiei?fe^ ?iinr.Mi'fiiiiiiiiii.......... APPAREL OF EXCEPTIONAL CHARM Correct interpretations of the newer versions of the seastm's most favored modes selected with infinite care to meet the requirements-of the woman of taste. The Values Are Most Extraordinary FROCKS OF UNUSUAL BEAUTY rHEIR quality and adaptability (jive Wool Jersey and superior Serge an individual charm, especially for after* noon and street frocks designed to reflect the graceful lines of the latest style interpretations. Very Specially Priced, 18.50 TJ\XC E PT ?ON ALLY modish and of unusual distinction ar? mi beaded frocks of Georgette Crepe. Emphasizing the "^-^ correct Spring modes are the dainty tailored and draped models of Moire Silk, Figured Georgette, Satin and Tricot i ne. Very Specially Priced, 25.00 J~\AINT1NESS and exclusiveness are very cleverly reflected Et in the frocks of Tricolette, Georgette and Paulette, com' binations of beautiful material with distinction oi modeling accentuated h y startling effects in beading and em? broidery. > Very Specially Priced, 30.00 to 85.00 Braid bound tuit of !' nrrt Twill, with WaisU nit of Silk Surde Cloth, $ W0 ULTRA-MODISH TAILLEURS YYT OS DUR FULLY adapted to the new silhouette and ex* w%/ pressing the allurement of feminine grace and retine ? ment in marvelous finished tailoring, arc the suits of Poiret i will and superior Serge, i \A Very Specialty Priced, 30.00 Embroidered Suit of Trico tine, in the new straight line effect, $75.00 FULL of the esprit of Spring and charming with that simplicity of design that makes the newer models so exceptionally attractive are the exquisitely tailored suits of Tricotine, Serge and Poiret Twill. Very Specially Priced 40.00 to 85.00 DRAPED WRAPS AND CAPES THE vogue of the draped garment reaches the highest mark of style expression In the capes and wraps of Cashmere Velour, Silvertone, Silver Tip Bolivia, Wool Jersey, Tricotine and Serge, fashioned in tones of ro? mantic grace. Very Specially Priced, 25.00 35.00 48.50 Cafe of Pauirttf and Silk Duvetyn, .ulk lined throughout, $9>j?V 3E| -O 3EI