'WEATHER FORECAST. A HAPPY BLENDING. The amalgamated SUN AND HERALD preserves the best traditions of each. In combination these two newspapers make a greater newspaper than cither has ever been on its own. Showers to-day and prbbably to-mor row; not iriuch change in temperature; iresn south winds. Highest tempeniture 'yesterday, 655 lowest, 52, AND THE NEW YORK HERALD DcUlIcM weather repprti will bo round on tho Editorial pare. VOL. LXXXVIL NO. 234 DAILY. 4fn NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, PRICE TWO CENTS in nhw yyitic crrr. f TiinuR ci;,t WITHIN 20J MIMCR. tKOUIt CKNTS BMRWllUnt:. tvr York, X. Y. S IS PREMIERS PUT WILSON OUT OF TURKISH PACT AVon't Adapt His Sugges tion of Expelling Sultan From Europe. IM! ESI DEXTELIMINATED 3ra,v 10 Set for Presenting Treaty to Prevent His Intervention. WILL MAKE CURT BEHiY Stress Fact America AVas Not at War "With Turkey and Has Xo Responsibility. LAl'HK.VCB HILLS. gltif ' or-espondent of Tur. Sex AXn Nkw Yhrx llKRji.n. Copyright, 1910, by TnK SDN 4 mi Ni:w YoitK IiEIULD. San Ukjici, April 20. The decision tv the Kntente Allies not to change the Turkish treaty In accordance with the suggestions by President Wilson seems to mark tho llnal' elimination of the Hrc.Mil' lit us the European peace-1 maKr. it now develops that tho fix- j Ins of May 10 as the day for handing to th- Tories the treaty was an idea I o. I'l-omlf r Lloyd George to preclude ..in i liance of further controversy with President Wilson and emphasized the ' British rreniier's determination to j lcue the President out of the Turkish i settlement. It is doubted In we'J Informed circles whether the treaty will be ready by j May 10, although tho council decided j ti-day that It would meet In Paris on j .May 5 for the flnal drafting of the ! pact I It is understood that the reply of , the allied Premiers to President WI1- ten, in addition to emphasizing that i the time Is too short to permit of changes in the treaty, also will stress the fu.-t that tho United States is not nt war with Turkey, and, furthermore, that while suggesting changes In the treaty America -does not offer to as sume any responsibilities, In connection with it. The second part of tho Premier's note will take up tho Wilson suggestions seri atim and will defend tho allies' decision rtsre' tins each Dolnt, It is apparent that President Wilson's ttotk as in Internationalist is lower than ever before, a fact which Is at tributed by many persons to his failure tp cumpromiso and get the treaty ratl fiod Tills lins Kreatlr prejudiced Pre- mifp I.l.jvd Cleorge against him The allied Premiers are now trying to fix the total amount of reparations Germany must pay and hope to reach an agreement on this before they leave San liimo. This accomplishment, over hl-h tho peace conference has tripped to many times, would mark' tho biggest thence in the world's readjustment after the great war, but disaccord:, pe tccn Premier Lloyd Georfe and Pre mier Mm on one hand and Premier Mlllerand on the other seems again to make its realization' doubtful. The Lloyd George-Nlttl concert to ac complish Germany's economic revival Kerns rloser than It ever was. It ap Hars now to bo working to obtain Kruicli consent to some economic modi fications of the treaty In return for acneins; to Join with tho French In determining measures to make certain the complete disarmament of Germany. Tills remains the overshadowing Issue in the sari Hemo conversations and re olve .iround the attemnt to Ox Ihc J. " '"'"""'iJ uermanj musi pay, me I'rmeipi, or when was nirrced unon In'. the last conference held In London. I BATUM A FRFF PODT- i Um A tKCC t-UKl , LF.AC.1W CFAflC MnTP .w . , , Inquires How Armenian Man date Can Be Carried Out. I lly Hie Antoctated Prest. ' ItEMo, April 20. Tho Supremo1 Coun has decided to lnert a rim, in the Turk. n, treaty making Datum a free to call upon the Bank or Japan mr renei. J?" f.r .h. republics of Azerbaijan" After consideration bank ofnclals de Georgia and Armenia. Tho council spent ddtd to extend assistance to effect the consider., uie time considering the pro- usual monthly balance. As rt result for wtton of minorities in Anatolia. It ap. a time the general condition Improved nrowu the flmncIal articles ot tho and business on tho exchango became iri'ati The renlv to !rsMnt Wllunn ' morn settled. u-'- is being drafted by the British! "ucij ir examination A note from the eaguo of Nations as submitted lo the Supremo Council uiiiernini! the nnndate over Armenia, Hie rime p.,nted out that the League of Vitlnns had no funds, no ftnff nnd no fnii'.r forces with which 'to carry out n m.Iate The League asked whether g iernments composing the Suprme u ' would provide the necessary re- T. rn.nrl l,nvln. ,.,n paper correspondents that their l-i)it. hes were liclng subjected to 'Uiini, i.nsorshlp. a delegation of them t:de.i n i.r,.InP1. fftt, t0.day ,0 mahc inquiries The Premier denied that press Ul. grams ,vcr(. controlled In any way. j I IMmntnm to Gerninny. T'. I'renilera have resumed the con vfrjntlun.s lun Sunday upon what warmm; or ultimatum shall bo sent to Ofm, n re.H.ctlng the execution of tho rri-aty of Versailles, n does not ap- Itlir limievcr. thnf their -nnanlf a II....- live le, them l,,-.,.i . Prim ,Pi,. ,hat something of n manda- ir ii-inrioi- n,,,.i i, n..ii imemment, differences in view na In I'" a t nature r,i.r.i.i.r I '. t ii.r r.w.- c ' i. i i. Ko-mi. is holding tenaciously to the view ' nntlnued on Third Page. THK dllKKMlKinn .Whltt Sulphur gprms.. - v. Throurh Comprtmnt "H. -Boiunja ra runLAiv, l NO INDEMNITY WILL BE CRY Dolegntos to Vinnncinl Con gress to Plend Inability for Reparation. Ily Il.VYMONT) SWING. Staff Correspondent of Trie Sex and Niw York IIiiulp. Copyright, 1910, by The Sun and Knur York Herald. . Bcnu.v, April 20. "Xo Indemnity without economic help" will bo the motto of the German delegates to the international flnandal conference which will bo held In Paris about the middle of 'next month. The Germans expect that the in demnity provided for In the Treaty of Versailles will be fixed and that financial and raw material credits will be granted. They nro now preparing data to lay before tho Allies to prove the utter Inability of Germany to make any reparation whatsoever at present. Max Warburg, a prominent Hamburg banker, who was financial expert of the German peace delegation, will be the principal (Jelegate from Germany. He will be assisted by Dr. Shroeder of tho Finance Ministry, and several economic experts. The Germans are not going to tho conference with any other policy than this. . As they put It, "Wo will be ready to lay all our -cards on the table, and when It Is seen what the true state of EXCHANGES IN JAPAN CLOSED Operators Refuse to Put Up Additional Margins, Wash ington Is Told. CRAZE IN SPECULATION Loss of Gold and Adverse Trade Ralanco Also Have Hurt Credit. Washington-. April 20. The Ameri can Embassy In Tokio reported to the State Department to-day under date of last Saturday that tho principal stock exchanges of Japan had been cosed for thrco days because of fail ure of operators to put up additional margins. The report added that the stock of the Toklo exchange, regarded as a barometer of general conditions, had dropped from 470 to 260 within tho last thirty days and that thero had been stringency In the money market. Humors have been widespread In this country for several days that some of tho large banking firms In Jopan were experiencing financial difficulties. At the Japaneso Embassy here it was said that tho Toklo Government had taken steps to restrict loans made by banks jfo'r speculative purposes. Tile Slate jjepariineui t,iie following statement based on Informa tion from the Embassy at Toklo: "There has been some stringency In tho money market there because of shortage of currency duo to unprccc-1 dented activity In promotions uuring me past quarter and to adverse balance of trade. Tho excess of Imports during tho first three months of 1320 was $130, 000.000. emml to nearly 50 per cent. of total exports. XJUruu ii'r.u.inui, . . - - nnc, issued a tatement on April 16. et- . ,,mi f..r Qr w,atIon. He stated that although the tightening of the money market, tho loss of gold md the adverse balance of ;;rBenlcraIly polnted t0 as tne dl- t ih nresent situation, ho nnnn'dered them v - nrnnr ine cuiincuuciiuca of the shaking up or tne uusmess worm. According to cablegrams which have reached Washington from unofilclal tut reliable financial sources In Japan the nrrsent financial troublo began about April 7. when the stock exchanges at ( Toklo. Nagola and Osaka were oDliffca On April 13 the three exchanges were reopened for business, but there was uch a rush of holders of stock to un- load that the Osaka cxchange.was forced to close the next uay. The result was that much of the ousl- fics.1 shifted to. Toklo and Nagola and In a short time thoso two exchanges had to close. No sign of marked Irrr- provemcn't has been scon up to tho date of these last, advices of April 1" but con- f!dem-ewa oxpresseil that the worst -t lUr. rlnnnclnt difficulties WOS OVer and that tho exchanges would be ablo to resume business within a few days and after some severe readjustments of ncCounts. CANADIAN ZIONISTS PLEAD, IlritUli Mondntp Over Pnlentlne la Urged. i : Ottawa, Ontario, April 20. The cx ' ecutlve committee of the Canadian Zlon l.ts Federation to-day requested N. W. Howell. Assistant Socretnry of Rtitn for , internal AtTairs. mat me nonunion Government declare Its sympathy for a tirlilsh mandate over Palestine. South AfrlCII. ino UCICBUHUh iiuiiuihu -ii. itowcll. had already taken this step. tr. llowell nromlsed to subrfllt the .question to the Cabinet Council for early consideration. -iitff T.AtiflK PKK CENT. OF AUTOMO. 1111. K OM'SKIW who nre lubscrlbera to Tho ".maud Xt York Herald mk IU elt.tl- ficu "Auto Exchange" columns exceeding 1? I productive. flr. WITHOUT AID OF GERMANY Berlin and Reds Agree On Return of Prisoners By the Amoelated Freit. BERLIN, April 20. Reciprocal repatriation of remaining war prisoners was agreed upon last night between the German State Department and Russian Commissary Kopp. The repatria tion involve 190,000 Russians in Germany and 20,000 Germans in Russia. Tho agreement stipulates that there shall be no compulsory repatriation, and that only those who expressly wish to go will be transported to their homes. affairs Is extended.' wo expect that help will be Tho German proposal to withhold pay-' ment of Indemnity until the Kntento, Allies arrange for financial and cco nomlc help for Germany U certain to( meet with strong opposition from the , French. Back of the demand by Pre-j mier Mlllerand for strict enforcement, of the treaty provisions and tho Immcdl-1 ate payment of Indemnity are the1 French people, who seo Increased taxn-' tlon in any failure of their Government , to enforce compliance by Germany. . Premier Lloyd George and Premier 1 Nittl of Italy favor a policy of tlrst af-' fording financial and economic assist- unce to tho Germans to enable them to rehabilitate their industries and meet the heavy terms Imposed by tho treaty, Znc.al,hcontZ" aJcS," en - counter opposition by tho French, they may find support from both tho British or.il tlm Ttfilliin .toli-uta 1 , 140 KILLED IN 1 . NEW TORNADO North- Eastern Mississippi, western Alabama and South- ern Tennessee, Suffer . ! ho is opposed to the large expenditure LOSS RUNS INTO MILLIONS '"ssary to grant a bonus such leg islation probably will bo passed at ! this session. As a resu!.t of tho dls-f Storm Travelling in Narrow satisfaction of various groups of ne- Path Razes Everything in Its Track. Rirmikoiiam. A'n.. April 10. A death list which to-night stood at more than H0 and a property loss of many milt Ions of dollars was the toll exacted by a tornado which to-day swept a score of towns, villages and Isolated farms 1 Ir. eastern Mississippi, northwestern Alabama and tho southern counties of Tennessee. Communication with mnny of tho stricken districts was difficult, but fragmentary reports agreed that the ! tomhdo swept down' with deadly stid- dfct.ness. obliterating everything that j iteprcsentatlvv Halney (111.) and Ri-p-&iy In Its path. In at least one case resentatlvc Johnson (S. V.) to nlsc the that of Hose Hill practically tho en-, tire town Is believed to have been de- stroyed. ana in several instances an . . ... .. 1 members of a family were reported to have been killed. Striking first apparently In Lauderdale county. Miss., about 10 o'clock this '. ; morning, the storm swept a narrow pain across me oiaie. carrying uesiruc- tlon to a dozen or more communities About tho same time death nnI damage from the same or a slm lar disturbance were reported from counties in the north- N,t u.C .i.eu.e force of tho wind being expanded before the Tennessee linn was reached In Will- lamson and Maury counties. Meridian. Miss., the heart of a rich farming district, suffered heaviest, nc- coruing to late reports, wiui a Known 1am1I, link ,9 A ft ' aha 1 V a iil1!nM n I uca.ii m mi-ww-uuu. no imuijn j G'eu. Aleom enuntv. numbered Its dead ; at 10: Ingomar. 6: Egypt, n: Haker, 5, um, imy oiuiiiK, i. v luiiiijt'i iHinii ne;ir riilladclDhia. Neshoba county, lost 1 , i.,n..i n ii j , probably fatally. J In At.tb.tniii. the rural districts around fheHeM. ?urlev, r.!tI Cove nnd Waco. 'felt the force of tho storm. , Sixteen persons were killed, scores In- I .. ., , i . juiru tun uiuyvi i iiiui-fi n. nuiiuii-iii- nt thm.om.ia ne .inii--, ,1 ,i i. .,,. . storm In the northwestern part ot Marking that the taxes be reduced. They rlon county. ' ' nrc asking that the appropriations bo re- Twenty-one persons were killed on a '"ced. And those of you who . think ytnx single plantation near Aberdeen, Miss. catering to a demand of 800.000 Harrold's hog ranch near there, one r nien will, before . you know I face the the. largest In -the South, was wiped out. ,"1 0t 100'000-0, (in. BOO of the stock belnK killed. . npproprlato 1.000.000.000 or Across the Tennessee line, 100 miles . .. . 1 from Meridian, nenr where it originated the storm still had force sufilcleni to wreck homes and farm buildings nnd to cut n swath through forest and field. Only threcj deaths are Known to have occurred In tho State, however. Tho wide territory covered by the tornado, led to a belief to-night that thero was more than one atmospheric disturbance. Itcports to-day describe the' local destruction as having been confined to a path measuring from 100 to S0O yards wide, within which tho cyclonla wind, when at tin height, left nothing but the most solid structures standing. TROUT ROBS FLYING ROBIN OF HIS WORM Connecticut Citizens See Thrilling Fish-Bird Holdup. Special to The Six and Nsw York Hf.iuui, Winsted. Coffn., April 20. At 7:10 this morning a daylight saving robin, flying low, crossed Sucker Brook at Its widest point, where the stream enters Highland Lake, carrying In Its bill an angleworm, which was extracted from sell near tho brook. A trout In the brook saw the worm dangling from tho robin's bill and jumped for It. clearing the water by several Inches and striking tho robin with such force that tho bird nearly tumbled Into the water. When the robin recovered from the shock and flew out over the lake the worm waa missing, but whether the trout or the brook swallowed it eye witnesses did not agree. o rj IIABTSHOBNK, FALE8 ft CO- Member H. X. Stock ExdiMie, IX -roadwty, SOLDIER BONUS CALLED BADGE j OF PROFITEERS Chairman Good of Appr opriations Committee As- ! , sails It in Speech, i. PUBLIC TOATJI RISING He "Warns Chamber That Such Legislation Will Arouse the Nation. TI,V A Ti L ""H'o FOR ECONOMY Moildcll SaVS Relief Bill of Soillf! Ivillll Prnililhlv Will oui,lu lvl,ul 1 iy HI , Paccori x "oii.u. Special to Tur. Sex and Neb Youk IIeraip. Washington-, April" 20. Warning ... ,.. , , ... " 'JUUS " in mean a uig j increase In tho cost of living and j eventually "bring tho wrath of the j America,, people down on Congress." j Representative flood (la.), chairman I uf the Houso Appropriations commit- 1 ; tee. In a speech to-day to the House : announced that he will tight all sol , dler aid legislation at this seSslon of Congress. Sir. Good's speech was the , Urst attack on the programme to aid I the .service men now being framed by the House Ways and Jleans Com mittee. . Despite Mr. Good's attack thero were 0Vlt,cl,cJJ ,llat other leaders of the , House have yielded to the enmor of a majority of the House members for bonus legislation. Republican leader Mondell told tho House that although publicans on tho bonus Question a caucus was called by the steering com- ; mltteo for Thursday night, at which time ; definite policy will be outlined. Mr. qood declared emphatically that tho American peoplo should renllza that the money necessary to paV tho bonus must bo raised by taxes, 'and that as a result the prices of all commodities will Increase. Ho pointed out that the action 13 contemplated In mo 1-aco of a Trcas j ury deficit (of nearly Jl.ono.OOO.OOO. He i predicted taat most of the service men (would spend tho bonus on unnecessary ,ux""e ana '?u 8,0W up I""om,ctlon u"1" lnu ""ouun as snem. Shows iicnl ninieoltr. ,Ip Mn(,.., ,. , ,, , money by taxing war profits is "lovely," but the real dllllculty Is to Invent ma Hk Mini ...III fin. I l.n .. fl t ..ft. nn. ehlnery that will find tho profiteer and prevent him from making people pay I the tax many times over. I Mr. Good sabl that giving thj service , men a bonus put them In tho uamo clns.s as tho men who profited out of the war. "lly menus, saiu -ir. -joou, "tne '..,,. U,(I(, thllt the American sol w be t,)0 of , ani, not le badK0 of a boml3 , am not ure but wo (lo him an ,.lu. t, ,f ha(, the money ,o nt- t(,n t ,0 p,aco hm aon(. t,,0 me ..,, ,..,, ,ln,,,.f.an1l imf.ilr nrofl's out of war contracts. I would i end tho one to Jail ; 1 would place the other on a pinnacle becauso'of his wonderful sr.c- rl"ces from which no congress now o: , t, futurc coulll cver rcmovo Iilm. Ouo frequently sees In the newspapers .,, ,,-r!1 Mhm of Congress ay t, !lt wo ,lro ,lonK nothing, or but mtlp fnr tllH soldiers 01 tills War. '""""i l Nothing could bo further from the ac tUl fjUS' Ileinnnil of People. "You and I are receiving let ers eery day from people wo represent In the ag- crepiitn of 210.000 of every wonsress on- " - . . ... . tr ct n tni L'niiea niaies. iiiev iuu ' '" i ZZ 'tt " V.; . a o i..mA mm Kivit n consumntmn tax? biit there Is objection t6 that on the pirt of some, and that person says, 'Oh, let us put a tax on corporations and on the earnln?s of production. "Do you really want to bring down the high cost of living? If you do. we will say to the 4,800.000 men who went Into this war and fought the battles of the llepnbllc: 'Just as you saved the Union then, you can save It now by the samo sacrifice and by the samo deter mination and manhood and place the standard of America a little higher than It was before.' " Tln Urslriiyer PnuldlnK Launched. t Camok.v, N. J.. April 20. Tho torpedo boat destroyer I'auiumg, named alter James K. Paulding, onco Secretory of the Navy, was launched to-day nt the lynrd of the New York Shipbuilding Corporation. The sponsor was Miss Mary Hubbard Paulding, ri great-granddaughter of the former Secretary. She Is a daughter of Col. William Paulding, C. S. A., retired. CLOSING-TIME ronrapxVs3,r,Eu IjC fom AND NEW YORK HERALD DAILY ISSUES 9 P. M. il Mtin' Office, 280 Broadwtj. g P. M. it former Herald Office, Hertld Buildinj, Herald Square. 8 P. M. at n other Branch OfScei. (Locations listed on CdltotUl Page.) Chicago Cop Arrests Girl Wearing Overalls Special to The Sun axd Xew York llimtu. CHICAGO, April 20. Tho over all craze ran into a snag to day in Chicago. Miss Florence Bosold was arrested at South Chicago this afternoon by a policeman for violation of a city ordinanco making it improper for a woman to dress herself in man's garb. $218,000 SILK IN ROADHOUSES Six Tons Stolen From Freight Cars Found in Maspeth Garage. POLICE IN PISTOL RATTLE Auctioneer and Hotel Keeper Arc Among Five Prisoners in Night Raid. Sx tons of shlmmerlns Japanese silk cloth, worth $218,000, torn from its original packages and rudely wrapped in coarse manlla paper, were found in u roadhoiise. garage at Mas pot h hst night. Tho silk and live prisoners, captured, after a fight In which tho police used revolvers, were brought to tho West Thirtieth street police station by detectives. Tho police uro certain they have identified the goods as tho lot stolen from a freight car In the Chelsea yards of the Xew York Central March S. The silk as It was piled onto tho po lice station floor was without lndentlfl catlon tags or markings, but the detec tives who raided tho roadhouse said they found In a kitchen stovo burned edges of shipping tags and cloth mark ers which will establish tho silk as the missing property. Tho names of the owners of tho silk were refused by the police, but they said tho lot had been consigned to seven of the most promi nent silk merchants in the city. Tho complainant against tho five prisoners was Robert Humphreys, deputy chief of the Now York Central detectives, Capt. McQueeny of tho Third Detcc 11 ?i re h, lint nl noiieo 'mh 1? troll tiL picked up . tho trail that led to Maspeth. It Is believed the Information camo from a buyer who had been approached with an offer of sale and who beeatno wary of the manner In which tho goods were guarded. Those arrested said they were : Peter Jorgcssen. 23, 26S West Thirty fourth street; Joseph Wall, 53, a porter, Maspeth ; Behjamln Scrlen, 29. proprie tor of tho Hotel Perien. Maurice and Newton uvenues, Maspeth ; Theodore nerien, a, ins orouiei, an auctioneer, said to llvo In Brooklyn, and David Welner. 31, of 2138 Flushing avenue, Brooklyn, nn nuctlonetr. On arrival at tho station the men were held on a blanket charge of bur glary. Later this was changed to vlo- latlou of the Federal Interstate Com-! mcrce law, as the silk wns in transit I also figure much in deciding on Presl to another State. The prisoners wro 1 dentlal possibilities. Nebraska Is Per- taken to Police Headquarters, where It was nnnounced the case will be turned over to Federal authorities. The account of tho raid given by the detectives represented that great nro-! cautlons wero being takon to steer pur-1 suers rrom the Hotel Scrlen. With Deputy Chief Humphreys Detectives Jenkins, Scheering and McAullffo started early yesterday afternoon for Maspeth, and after reaching tho town stopped to Inquire tho way. Tho road house Is on the outskirts, in a deserted location, with Mount 'Aon Cemetery to the rear. The detectives said a man, who proved to be Jorgcssen, stopped them half n mile from the hotel and Tied to direct them to another road. They dragged him Into tho car and went on. Beaching the hotel they went to tho garage, examined the silk and arrested Wall, who was working there. Then they rushed the hotel and gained en trance to the kitchen, whero a fight took plare and thrco shots wero fired. After the shooting the men yielded meeKly. tlio detectives said. Wall Is said by the detectives to have admitted burning the tags from the silk In tho kitchen stove. Benjamin Serlen, tho , proprietor, denied all knowledge of the i silk and said he had no Idea it was I In his garage. j 1 FOURNIER SAYS HE I IX A C nonrDrn Prirti Karly reports stated that Palmer car WAb UKUtKtU SHOT ' rled thc leading counties of ihe State. In- I eluding Chatham (Savnnnah), Blbb (Ma Told War Chief Mauheuge Was Undefendable. Paris, April 20. A sensational fact camo out In the testimony In his oSvn behalf to-day of Gen. Founder, who commanded tho fortress of Maubeuge In tho first stage of the war In 1914 before a military court now Investigating the circumstances of Its full. Gen. Founder said that when .mobili zation was ordered Afnnheupo , fcndnble. nnd he inado this known to vnr .Minister .Mcssim. "Messlmy (Minister of WaM .let-,. I mined to have me shot," said Gen. Vow- nler. "and sent Gen. Pau to Maubeuge I to make a report to that end." I The conclusions of the court of Inaulrv - I tM 1.1. V ... 1- I . J placed In evidence both praised and con. demned Gen. Fournler as to his defence of Maubeuge. SUNDAY ISSUES 6 P. M. Saturda; at Main Office, 280 Broadway, 5 P. M. at former Herald Office, Herald Buil-inf, Herald Square. 5 P. M. at all other Branch Officai. (Location) lilted -nuiltorUIPage. HITCHCOCK MEN BEATING BRYAN BY TWO TO ONE i Ex-Secretary and His Slate of Delegates Appear to Have No Chance. BIG LKAI) BY JOIIXSOX :ote for California!! Is Al- most Like Landslide in WOOD IS AWAY IX REAR; Pershing Makes a Poor Show ing in Test in His Home State. Special to The Ktn ami New Yubk Hiiui.n. Omaha, April 20. William J. Hrynn has been beaten again by Senator Gil- i hert M. Hitchcock, this time In a con , test for delegate to tho Democratic National Convention In San Francisco. Karly returns Indicate a two to one victory for Senator Hitchcock', which means, of course, u defeat for tho dry principles so ardently advanced and advocated by Mr. Bryan. Senator Hiram Johnson (Cal.) un doubtedly has won tho Republican contest by an overwhelming vote. Korty-six precincts, Including twenty In Douglas county (Omaha) give John son 2.0S7. Wood 1.SS3, Pershing, . Shallenberger, Neville, McN'eny and. Noble, Hitchcock candidates for dele gates at large to the San Francisco con- ventlon, lead Stephens, Herge, Thomas and Uryan. These candidates are run - nlng In the order named, with Stephens j and Berge closely behind McN'eny and I walk, tho throng surged around hlin j Noble. 1 and threatened to hang htm to tho i Tho first few returns from widely scp- nearest tree. orated districts indicated a landslide to ' M the En"t Sixtj..S0Vcnth street' sta Johnson. A precinct in Grand Island ,ton wne,ro ll0 waa locked up, Miss Po gave Johnson 107, Wood 1G, Pershing 11. rak accused 131 Marco of choking and V hllo other returns do not glvo John- , biting her and of talcing a total of J530 son as heavy a lead over his opponents, in moncv. She attacked him. the nollco m oniy one uistnci rcceiveu uuring mo first two hours after tho close of the polls .lid Johnson full to have a load I Wtel"ck, ""no was the only one 0,1 the democratic ta-t with tho ex - coptlon of a proprietor of a livery stable i i.Tinirtori Ur..m n.n-i,.i n.mn.r.i. to vote for this man In preference to Hitchcock, but the returns bIiow that few took Bryan's advice. On tho face of the returns so far Hitchcock simply walked away with tho preferential vote Uryan was a candidate for delegate-at- largo and not for the Presidency. In dications are that Bryan and his entire slate of rieleimtCM. nro defenterl uml Mint i the slate favorable to Hitchcock has i been elected. ; The fact that Hitchcock on a beer ! nnd wine platform nas so completely 'defeated Bryan on a ilrv nlniform In : ui-v state nlaoes Hltrhrock .srm.ir..iv nm ns real Presidential timber. Tho small showing made by Gen. Per- shine acalnst Johnson nnd Wood tnnv shlng's homo State To-day was woman's first vote In Ne braska and Indications ;tre that while the city and town women went to the polls In droves the farm women re- malned at home. Bryan rnado his appeal particularly to the women, but returns seem to Indicate that the women did not respond to his appeal to any par ticular extent. PALMER LEADING, IN GEORGIA PRIMARIES Early Returns Put Watson Second, Hoke Smith Third. "Atimnta, April 20. Incomplete nnd unofficial returns from the Democratic Presidential preference primary Indi cated to-night that Attorney General Palmer held a lead over Senator Hoke Smith nnd Thomas K. Watson, the other candidates In the three cornered race. Kcturns received nt Palmer head- quarters at 9 o'clock gave Palmer 112 convention votes, Watson 9S and Smith 70. The total number of votes In tho State convention Is 384. Figures compiled at Senator Smith's headquarters gave Palmer a slight lead but Indicated that the Georgia Senator was holding a diSate.formcr romfnrtn hie 1-H ronT.i j,, til -.i l I opullst Presidential I con (and Richmond tAugusta). With nine precincts out, Watson held a lend in Atlanta nnd Fulton county of 209 votes over Palmer, with Senator Smith third. Returns, compiled by the Atlanta Con stitution at 10 o'clock to-night showed Palmer; had carried 44 counties, with 120 convention votff; Satson. 44 ooun-1 tlofi, with ll- votes, 'and Hfnlth, S2 ' mentu to the Constitution In a manner -.nun t I..b ' l 7 Q t-nloo Tti ttlnnin ntnl'tUn -,til.1 mASltlf1-t 111 A t rxf Fulton county, with four precincts miss- Ing. Palmer was 83 votes ahead nf Wat- son- wlth i'mlt,, ttilril. IT A 1 1 A A7 Q THBFATFN -n NFW POSTAI STMFCF nCd " rKJJI oi AliVH Rome, April 20. Almost the entire press and public opinion condemns what Is termed tho tactics of obstruction on ; tho part of tho Potdal and Telegrnph - eriiiJiuyeen ivnw ihb ucinaniiiii u runner Increaso In salary from the exhausted statobudgct nnd are threatening In rase ' , iiiuir uuiuuiiua uiu nui inci atjuill lu paralyze tho country. rrn.. n...ln..nAn . vl-at, a i ..I v ,..l.,iua..,c ai uincs.1 u.vv attacked a train last night on which get an Incrctaso they will start a new Qucn victoria and her brother, tho strike, wh ch will consist of tho cm- Marquis of Carisbrookc. were travelling ployees going to their offices but doing from Madrid to Seville. In an unsuc no work. The Government already has -,f,il attemnt to carrv .iff the rovni ! adopted measures to check such a move oy illiniums uiuiuocr worKers o spe- ier. I clal quarters whero they can do a ccr- I The robbers, who were well armed, tain amount of -work. 'opened a regular fusillade when dls- . ... .Er..,. covered, wounding two ot the railway 1 rn.M.L o8u ..Ijr . sun and New.. York Uinld In hind rtid ?capo was mado In a two horse car- tba "Uelp Wata" coittmh-at. I r lace. Noon To-day Last Hour For Strikers to Return Special fo Tim Sun anii New York IIeiuld. QHICAGO, April 20. Almost nil of the railroads entering Chicago to-dny set . to-morrow noon as the last hour at which striking employees might return to work and regain thejr seniority rights. . Even though the switching strike situation is hourly improv ing Chicago is still facing a serious coal famine. North and northwest homes, apartment buildings and industries arc al ready feeling the fuel pinch nnd unless relief is immediate the Federal Government is to b'o asked to establish a fuel admin istration for the Chicago district, , N i - -.; -LYNCH THREATS IN PARK AVENUE Mob of 1,000 Pursues Man Who Attacks and Robs Girl in Store. SAVED BY COP'S GU One Assailant Escapes as She Chases Pair Through the Street. Cries of "jivnch him:" echoed through tho smart neighborhood at Park avenue and Seventy-first street last night when Tony Dl Marco of 211 East lOStli street, pursued by a crowd of one thousand men and women, was captured and placed under arrest on n charge of assaulting and robbing Miss Gertrude llorak, a cashier in the army sales More at 1226 Third ave- nue. For ten minutes, whllo Dl Marco, ; guarded by a policeman with a drawn ' revolver, stood frightened too badly to said, and they saved him only by send ng her out of tho station house. She I . was attended by a surgeon from Flower .Miss Morale was alono In tho store at h o'clock last night when two Italians entered. One of them, she told the n. . m m .on,i ... caped. ( Dl Marco said he wanted to purchase a raincoat and the man who was with him wanted a mattress. She waited on Dl Marco first. The man Insisted on looking at himself In a mirror, she told thp police. Sho lei him toward the rear of. the stor?, Wnere there was a long glass. As he ! stood beforo it he had a complete view of the storo nnd the -people walking past ll '"t1,"1 av,enm' "SR Borak thought the looking glass rrocedtire nothing tin - usual until suddenly Dl Marco, accord - Ing to her story, gave the second man a ThTnext Instant the young woman was reeling against a bale of blankets. 'mo Italian, she said, struck her a blow Ull IUU J.III. Sll MIC n.iui iiiuuivin, liic police say she told them, tho second man lushed for the cash register, opened It and took out the money. Then both nien threw her on the floor and tried te remove her two diamond' rings. When they found sho was too strong for them one of them bit hr fingers and choked her until sho uncllnched her hand. Dl Marco, she said, was tho man who bit her and also took the rings. Holding on to Dl Marco, Miss Borak shouted for help. The man bolted away from her, and sho chased him through Third avenue to Seventy-first street. half ,a block away. Then ho turned west. Policeman Joseph Norcott of the West 123d street station, enjoying a night oft and walking through Seventy-first street with his wife. Joined In the pursuit. By tho time Dl Marco reached Park avenue a thousand jicrsons were at his heels and the capture soon was made. DRYS ATTACK WETS IN QTTPffFMF 01rRT Interstato Commorce Commlsston's-opln-iiV JUrtXIlUM lJUl ,ion that such Increases were iustlfied. (Patrick II. Griffin. Mayor of Hoboken. Brief Asks Reversal of Ohio!anA John Uentley, City Attorney for r . . . i . 'Jersey City, havo opened fire upon th Jurist UectSton. Ilew tnrlfr schedules. In addition the ! Hudson nnd Manhattan Company Is Washington, April 20. Reversal of I threatened with boycott by New Jer Ohlo Supremo Court decree sustaining Uey citizens, who say that ferryboat ..ll.ll,.. r I,A Clnln "rtnalllnllrtHnl -Af-Il.il . I. t , .!... vmiun i in- 'i.i- -- erendum amendment ami dismissing junclion proceedings brought to prevent the prohibition and woman suffrage amendments from being referred to tho voters was asked in a brief filed with the Supreme Court to-day by Wayne 11. Wheeler, general counsel for the Antl Suloon Leaguo of America. "If each State," the brief said, "may adopt Its own method of ratifying an amendment, the main purpose to be ac complished in amending the Constitu tion would bo easily thwarted. Corrupt and entrenched evils could prevent en tfrcly or delay the adoption of amend- remedying wrongs that the overwhelm-' Ing majority of the people desired to be j righted I "' Jvv,t v,m.,u .h,.i. tim, "Each Stnto could have n different . fnl1"' to KPt the Interstate Commerce form of referendum. With 4. different Commission s consent to the straight kinds of referendum It would make the' eight cent fare the I. t. C. Itself sug procedure for ratifying amendments to gested that ho fllo n now six and ten the Constitution a complete farce." cent schedule. QUEEN UNDER FIRE r r- n i rar nnnnrnn OF I RAIN ROBBERS a A. . MM t , Attempt Maae to Larry Off Spanish Royal Plate. I . i M,i.vt "1'tnu, t' i a.'. j Seville, Spain, April 20. Bandits piate which the Queen was taking with BOTH SIDES IN RAIL WALKOUT . CLAIM.YICTORY Each Issues a Glowing Re port as Trade Bodies Give Out Stern Warning. 'WILL DEFEND PUBLIC Commuters to Appeal Six Cent Tube Fare, Which I. C. C. Sanctioned. PENNSY HAS NEW TRUCE Gives Strikers Until To-morrow to Report, Which, Lat ter Say, Shows Weakness. In the Xew York region the rail road innnnKcments say 70 per cent.if the strikers nre buck nt work; that passeiiKer .service Is iilmost If not quite normal; Hint .'() per cent, of the j normal amount of freight Is moving nnd that, to nil Intents and iiurposcs, I the strlkcis nt nn end. I The spokesmen for the Insurgent ! ' I Iron dors call attention lo the rgo ! -Tnlin if Mln mnli In Tor.nv Pity Hoboken, Weelunvkcn niul ,Stnton Isl and nnd reply that "0 per cent, of the bolters nre still on strike; Hint commutation passenger service within thirty miles of Xew York is. except during the so-e:illeu rush hours, n mockery, and Hint, with the exception of tho rennsylviinla and the Xew i. vin. v-ujii t tii, tnu i I'mi- .tic uwi nun- dllng 10 per cent, of the normal freight traffic. It is Idlo to attempt to account for the great numbers of freight cars In and near the big yards on all the roads. Only an expert could reduce the tremendous Jam to figures and percentages that tvoukl mean any thing to persons outsldo the railroad business. But thu railroads and the newspapers nre receiving from scores' of small suburbs bitter complaints that railroad service Is little bettfer than It waa a week agaj that tho farmers are facing ruin "because they cannot get supplies and that small manufacturers nnd merchants nre 1 closing their plants and shops be I cause they can get neither coal nor ! , ,, ' merchandise. J. C. Lincoln, manager : of tho traffic bureau of the Merchants ! delation, says that the commercial I Hfe of New York is suffering to the j extent of Jl.000,000 n day. Jerscyltes Itesent Tube Untie. With tho big carriers and their for mer employees deadlocked, tho Hudson and Manhattan Railroad enjoyed a near monopoly of commuting Now Jersey's Ire, and Oren Boot, president of tha Hudson and Manhattan, culled In re porters and said that if the patrons of his Interstate passenger carrier did not know that fares wero about to be raised they did not read the papers and failed to observe largo notices posted In all tube stations on April 7, Despite tho fact that Mr. Boot con tends that tho Chambers of Commerca of Hoboken, Jersey City and Uayonno voluntarily placed themselves on record ns favoring Increased tariff for tho tuba service, and that other public officials nnd Interests as well as private enter prises nnd citizens wero apprised of the forthcoming Increase, and received tho rioinK ia iiiuuii uicci in auuuiiL'l ltuio m-iany way. Charles Charles IV Steele, an lnsuranco bro ker, with ofilccs at 200 Fifth avenuo and who lives at 35 South Arlington avenuo. Fast Orange, started yesterday the organization of fifty prominent citi zens of New Jersey who will engage lawyer to appear beforo tho Interstate Commerce Commission on April 29 and contest the permanency of the Hudson and Manhattan's now tariff schedule. Charles W. .Marten, Mayor of Hast Orange, divides tho leadership of this committee with Mr. Steele, and tho lat ter says propaganda alined toward a boycott of tho tubes will be disbursed unl"'"' "uuu" '"' -""- v" " right .to more mont-j. Increase Backed lir.L C. C. ii'iiii ""m b v.. ,.n letter, which I shall read to you. ex- plain the situation," said Mr. Root, and .. 1. l. t r r. he read the following from the I. C. Ca letter to him dated April 3: The division Is of opinion that some increase in me lares is war ranted. Among tne tne various rea sons are the following: (1) Fares hao been Increased from Newark via the Pennsylvania Railroad nnd the Hudson nnd Manhattan Railroad from 17 cents to 27 cents to down town New York; (3) the five cent fare from Jersey City to downtown New York has apparently continued without change since the opening qf tho Hudson and Manhattan lubo in February, 1908, and. despite tho In creaso In the volume of tral'.b us shown since 1914, tho cpst t opera- t