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Show Entente Mission Is Interned in Hungarian Capital By Soviet Government A A A A & A tft tSb A A (tt) 3 A A A Allied Governments Urged to Send Troops Against A C A INSISTS New El York Veterans , Part Loot FIRST SIXTEEN THREATENING March jn Triumph 1V1 ER 1 of Found In Former Palace it XU.! FI B II wsaoV-- ? u. ,; '! Up Fifth Avenue L Herbert Swope Obtains Out NEW line of Statement Drawn F - By , OurNaval. Envoy Backed by President m M Maj. Gen. thronged Fiftif. avenue all night and F O'Kyan's 27th division, at dawn today many persons were YORK, March 25. London Morning Papers Blame Pari Peace Con-f- ference - For Hungary Embracing Bolshevism. Fifth avenue was a waving lane of lmpreg-- 1 color and many of the last summer the nationalwere . magniflcentty ' dec- umph'uj'fl-decked'nftavenue' Surging crowds battled with the h today to the tumultuous acclaim Pf Pl! of the broke through into the middle nP'y a million or more spectators. avenue, causing the parade to be heldthe U a pageant waa difficulwith emprr'ly' it like of which the metropoH. seasoned to so many briUiant pVoclona on 'V that the paradera went forward at point. (that the worlds famous thoroughfare One policeman was trampled by the has perhaps never before witnessed. (.crowd and sustained injuries to leg sidewalks the The crowds packed body. almost to a point of and cross-streecrowds again broke At 77th suffocation. Every window wascrowded" and owners of rooms facing through the police lines. babies were carrying the avenue charged fancy price to; Women knocked down and injured and some spectators. Single windows, see from the fainted. An emergency hospital waa which several persons could set up here. procession, brought as high as 575. Of the thousands of persons perched Relatives and friends of troops stand immense an were seated In . precariously .on window ledges and of roofs eastern length entire along the line of march, two fell running the Central park. Hundreds of persons and on was killed. erw rnke m. ifn the soul-stirri- Amendments to Covenants (By Herbert B. Swope.) Made to Conform With Ideas of Senator Lodge and Other States Are World-DcserNews Staff Correspondent.) (Copyright, 1919, by Press Pub Co.) PARIS. March 25. What shall be done with the German warships? Tins question Is proving vexatious and difficult of the Council of Tcp. which will impose final military and naval terms upon Germany and which is now trying to formulate theee terms. Substantially all the provision of these feature of the treaty have been approved with the exception of tbe disposition of the Teutonic fleet and the treatment to be accorded to the Kiel canal and Heligoland. 'It Is probable that the American view will prevail on each of these tbree potts, there is superficial opposition, seemingly widespread, "to the destruction of the German naval vessels. .For the purpose of making clear the American attitude and of placing before the public the precise reasons that underlie our position, I am privileged to present In this dispatch an authoritative outline of an official memorandum defining the policy we are urging upon the conference. It may be said that thi policy, in all likelihood, a ill be finally accepted. J President Wilson, after reading the memorandum, at once declared it to be logical and reasonable, and announced himself aa wholly In sympathy with It It was drawn up by the American naval advisers, under the direction of Admiral Benson, whose work In Paris has won him the respect alike of his American associates and of his foreign collaborators. ' America Wants No Booty, The plan coincides with the general disarmtendency toward International ament. Before proceeding. It is proper to aay that America will not sharevea-inany distribution of the German ( New pIUs, March 25c Au Aiucrl amendment to protect against tlie influx of foreign labor was adopted today by the league of nations commission. It affirm tlie right of any country in (lie league to control matters wlclj within domestic Jurisdictnu-jto- ns can ' ion. ' PUGS, March 55. (Bv th Associated Press.) The American peace tjcdegatlon, it is understood, has definitely agreed pon the amendment It wtU offer to article X of the covenant of the tactic of nations to safeguard the Monroe doctrine. The amendment provides that agreements under the covenant shall not be construed . as an In- - , fringe roent upon the principles of Inlrrnafional policies heretofore " ' generally reoognlaed. fork et . men. PARIS, Monday, March Ti? Associated ' Press.) 24. (By During a three-hosession tonight the league ef -- nations commission considering proposed amendments to the covenant, disposed tentatively of the first If sections, agreeing upon a number of changes In form which the member of the commission believe will meet more than SO per cent of the objections offered by Senator Lodge and other American senators. The German war fleet to be surrenPresident Wilson attended the sess- dered to the Allies and America conion at which suggestions from neut- sists of 21 battleships. Inclusive of ral nations as well aa belligerents Austrian ships; I battle cruisers. 16 are Austrian; sere discussed. light cruisers, of which No action was taken on amend 101 destroyer, of which 9 are Austrimenu for safeguarding the Monros an. and 135 submarines, of which 15 doctrine but this subject. probably will are Austrian. ho considered Wednesday. Two methods of disposing of the The Japanese amendment to secure fleet are under consideration by the de-aHie Equality of nations belonging to, conference, the first being thedlstri-sn- d th league was not considered tonight j struction, the second the no action was taken on tha pro- - button among the various Allied PO'ed trench amendment for the creasub powere Arguments have been favortion, of an international military staff. mitted for each course, those The entire covenant when amended ing destruction being as follows: ana agreed upon by the commission, The first covenant of the League of U1 b.The submitted to a drafting Nations. Article VIII., says; which wilt put It into more high contracting parties recognise the finite legal form befpre It submissof principle that the maintenance ion to the supreme council. peace will require the reduction of lowest national armaments to the IA HIS, March 25. (By The Asso-c'.itpoint consistent with national Safety, All the delegations to Press) Destruction of 'the German and the peace conference are very anxious Austrian war vessels would furnish JSnsituation in eastern to the world moe and are impressed with the neces- - practical demonstration of the sincerity of the high contract- ill fof quickly doing something to;, jn their determination to pJtlei the return of normal Conditions reduce armaments. Distribution of ,0 the rest of Kurope' President the surrendered fleets would Increase 1iKo,i and Premiers Lloyd George, the strength ot the naval, armament and nriuencpau Orlando have decld- - of tbegxeat powers about 50 per cent. tburt hertnpiltg.-'f'tie-wiaV 'Xtwmi'lg M Great BtUaJn, - the Ifntted" States, d sc'rioTr'tiatiy to bringe Japan, France bpi i'oaCJuc.Itjsi in the shortest posai-l-imthe principal questions con-'- " !ng the I'ranco-Gernia- n and the frontier '"i the league of nations. reparationsThe minis-- j number twenty-seveutv of foreign affairs,-whWould Kill Rlisiry. have here- -j V f",(V keen included in Important con- The' second point advance is that during! the removal of the German-Austrla- n J'l'urs will ti6t be pieaent this week. (menace of naval power will render !'i ttilson and Premier Or- - j unnecessary any increase la the v tjo tit meet Tuesday morning to (strength of the navies of the Other , :of th Italian , of Europe indead, the logl- "ue.ier. ',? Ih becpmi.ig more urgent! nations effect of the iiminUon of thi fstK reach a aolution of this j would be the reduction of tnihi ? the European natal armamenu. ?? 'he T 6 VL Ad: Is that the addition AnotKer .iat uot,of fler? nd of German point and Austrian ships to the E"m,cr 0,,land Brnnier i navies of the European power, would toplturs w,on I HT,ctlv be to increase the economic burden '''fii'b the more moment tt present -As the United ''iitGy felt because of the spread of of the recipient. States is expected to assist finan.'"ex lam. cially the great powers of Europe, which are already heavily in our CANONIZATION OF debt, it is to our financial Interest to Oppose any unnecessary addition to financial obligation. JOAN OF ARC I their The fpurth point in the argument le j , the distrlbutfon of the German rthat The j aris March 25. Havas iT conAustrian vessels would rouse dla- -j satisfaction and Joan of Arc nfaton Jealousy In the states dls-- 1 that to rer not satisfied with their re- n from Rome. U50'H''8Benedict, ltlapectlve shares and would tend to Pope "tilted, will give a decision on thal Jit March 26. '(Continued on page five, section two) - com-ndu- ce ui ! wHt-hot- n, o c rr,Ltc -- Forces Tl Helmet Ex-Kaise- rs ! A tSa A, stt ts i Boche Navy Even STEAMSHIP -lv a. Ekatrr-inovskay- "5 V , - PARIS. March 25. Budapest dispatches say that Count Michael Kar-oly- i, formet premier of Hungary, has been negotiating with tbe Moscow government since last September through M. Radovsky, the Bolshevik leader In Ukraine, with the object Into Hun-garof introducing Bolshevist a. Rumania and Rumania, which is the last ram part against Bolshevism, la seriously Russian Bolthreatened shevik troops and six Hungarian division, 'the dispatch aay. The should rush men, munitions and food there, for every hour lost may have aerioua consequences. Dispatches received at Berne say that Nikolai Lenine, the Russian Bolshevik premier, intends Vo send a delegation to confer with M. pogany, who is said to be the real chief of and The Rumanians Hungary. Czecho-Slovaare reported to be mobilizing troops. so-vi- O VENEZIA 000 , NEW .YORK. Mifrch .45. With 1.496 troops, all casuals, the steam- ship Venezia arrived here today from . ExcImdiTfor The y s Jugo-Slavi- Misled Army and Helped Lose War '(Written -- Death For Resisting Bolshe-vi- ki Robbery and Loot v 7Y ing Go on Jugo-SIaw " Delegates Pessimistic. LONDON, March 55. SU Bol. sbevtk regiments on tlie northern Don front have been driven oxer the Donets river by the Don according to an undated from Kkaterinodar. The Cossacks also eeoccuplod Al-U- ea Marseilles. Marines, regular army and Dew-re- all other branches of Hbe . American News 1 -expeditionary forces were represented. Tub. al Pness 1919. by (Copyright. LnUll ineluded tbe followin(r casual was companies Nos. 1968 and 1991, Texas LONDON, March 26. Friday the anniversary of the opening by 2406 Nebraska, 19S1 Oregon, William Hohensollem used to wear the German mrmlee of 4 hew 4at offensive on the weern this helmet on parade occasions but waa, effort front- - How desperate the the oddd are ten to one that it dldn hpw and why it waa hurried forward look end as well on him as it does on this trained troops with inadequately are triend of Lowell Thomas, American something of its cost to the enemy n a'Ger-marevealed tn adulter written by war correspondent. The helmet was officer to a brother officer, now of which appr inilaled as hi part of the loot in war England, a prisoner of by a Rpartacus soldier during the riots a translation has been furnished to in which the deposit kaisete palace . the Daily News. March 24 MADRID, Monday, Berlin waa sacked, and all his uni in The first great mistake of the war, was comptete "un- -' tiil law was proclaimed at 5 o"clock firms taken. Mr Tinman, Wi.c as a land j this morning, It Is understood that report.ng the riotin'?, bought tbis inderrating of the Englishman 1 from the Fpartacan sus- teresting souvenir New fighter, the second was the- underrat-York. and brought it to both to constitutional guarantees may be ing of America's capacityforthwith throughout Spain. pended build ships and to raise an army We got false information from our j' navy which had been thoroughly PEACE CONFERENCE spoiled by the great fuss made over It down," kaiser the from one, every - SECRECY SCORED by Injuthe German officer - stole, distinctions distributed diciously BY PARIS PRESS caused the submarine commanders to of number a ships much larger report sunk than was really the case, so the March 25. The decision of on a PARIS, great army general staff worked council of the peace conthe supreme mad were false basis. Great mistakes allow to ference. nothing to be pubin Germanys shipbuilding program, and the navy failed in any way to dis- lished regarding its proceedings, but of American the official communique has aroused turb the transport troops, with the result that. In Janu- the indignation of the Paris press. ary. 1915, the American army in tbe field was much larger than the gen- Raymond Recoly, for instance, writes in the Figaro eral staff was awgre of. detail were asccr When Whet the hi tuUo f) As so d v vit wamore necessary to batkinf Uiqed . at a mohjeot w hen the Allied gov-ha- d : fe naive with ail speed. left no blunder been planned, and before the ernmeots, we more than exer in need armv had been sufficiently trained for unmade of the support public opinion .they it- The troops from the east, esperegular Chinese wall between cially. were extremely backward, the I ihemselves ebd relh!L,I,uli.c As mbn. a officers as well as the Matin ears of the decision: suit we had enormous loose durinj-th- , The nature-o- f the Bertlnax artifirst phase f the offensive 1180,- cleThe In the Echo may he suf0(H) men). Discipline at the front undescribed by its caption derwent considerable deterioration last ficiently which reads. year, particularly among the troop The council -- of ten goes underfrom the east hut, also, in from home Substitute battalions had ground.'' Le Journal says- old and - Incompetent colonels and, "The ctmfei eirSe hag made a heroic often, very lazy and conceited dug-b- resolution. to drape officers spent their time grum- its wounded It was decided dignity inr the most abso. bling and nothing waa done. lute mystery Ludendorff's fighting methods are held by this authority do have been very xccllenljjbut his plan, lt spREFERRED PRISONED pears, were jreceived wUh..litUe favor in the field where senility, incompeSERVING AT FRONT tence and war weariness . militated against them. HARBIN. Thursday, March 20.' (By the-- Associated Press.) Rather TRANSPORT MELROSE than serve. at thq front the UNDER JURY RIG Bolshevlkl, 3.500 Rumanianagainst prisoners V J of war. who had been released "by th NEW YORK, March 25. The a rmy ' government at Omsk, 24 Melrose officers and have surrendered their arms and re- with transport men from Bt. Nazaire reported yester- turned to prison, a dispatch from day as being in distress because of a Irkutsk says. broken rudder, about 900 miles east of Bermuda, advised today by wireless that she was proceeding tinder a jury BILL 5CH0T0V CHIEF. rig for Newport News, tasslsted by th U. S. 8. Cape Lookout. -- flrlier-thB,;ioK- I the-draf- , ut ks British-Frenc- h Mission At Budapest Disarmed March 23. VIENNA. ' Sunday. (By the Associated Press.) A dispatch to the Neue Freie Pxesse Bays mission at that the British-Frenc- h has Budapest, consisting of 246a men. wireless been disarmed and that message has been sent to Nikolai Lenine. the Russian Bolshevik premier, that the Entente - missions announcing Tbe message have- - left - Budapest IN THE H. Si added: "French troops, filtered by Bolahe-viki- ,haVe been disarmed by us. Mutinies have Occurred- -! nrsome French WASHINGTON, March 25. Gaso regiments." The executive committee of the line production in the United States of German-Aus-trian H. workmen's council In 1911 was said today by to the proclamation of replying of Manning, director of the bureau the Hungarian proletariat, says it, too, mines, to have borne out at least in is of the opinion that after the collapse of imperialism in Germany and part the statement of a British ad Austria-Hungarthe Imperialist vicof cessation the mlral sllortly 'after tors are our chief enemies. If the hostilities that we floated, to victory Pans conference seeks to offer vioon a sa of oil lence to entire nations and violates the A little lees than. 50 (too.ooo barrels right of self .determination tt wttl of gasoline were produced in the j rpect with determined resistance from United Stales tn 1916. ilfj Manning the workingmen. ' l to us to stated while In 1917 the production! Unfortunately was Increased .under the spur of wars; follow your example oannot be to 68.000 090 barrels (plied with, for the Entente has cut off "It wrag thought by many that this our supplies, We would starve befor was the peak of American patriotic i the Russian soviet could help us. TV e, effort," Mr Mann'ng declared, bull therefore, are fn h worse position In 1918 the production of gasoline waa than you. aa we kre completely 85.000. (00,.an increase for lhe year of more than 17,000,000 barrels' 8 473,102-har-rel- s In 1916: there w()-of gasoline sent abroad in 1917 to the exports increased For Hungary1 s Coarse 9,0I 877 barrels and in J9lg to T3,312,5QS bai-r- e 11818 a. y, your-appea- com-necess- e la. LONDON, March 25. . Morning e- VIENNA, Monday, March 14. (By the Awaclsled Pres.) of llie Allied mikns In Budapest have been Interned, including Col. Vlx, the chief of tBo French mission, according to travelers arriving here by auto- mobile from the Hungarian capital. ZURICH. March !3.Pr. -- Born-- hard Demburg, former chief of . tbe German propaganda. mtvIm re- in the United (hates, writing far the TageblatX of Beylin, declare that the German people will not sign a treaty of peace which docs not contain a league of nations in which Germany is admitted with full rights and will only oonwnt to disarmament when other members of the league disarm. PARIS, March 2. (Havas.) Russian soviet government according to the Matin has sent a message to Budapest asking Uie new soviet govern moot there to ' detain the French military mission. The Russian authorities, ft w as announced, desired this action with a view to bringing about tbe exchange of this French mission soviet mission which the fiv Russian soviet authorities alleged bad been Ixld by the French at . The . Saionlki. The repcvtrd voluntary surrender of arms by French soldiers In Budapest because the men were alleged to be infected with Bobbed v is incorrect, the message states. There is a rumor that the Entente commission at Budapest has been detained by the Hungarian. The capital, it Is added, has been sealed by the government aghit foreign countries. UOPEN HAGEN, March 23. Tbe claims of the Hungarian soviet government to poker, as set forth in its wireless' communications, are largely untrue, according to a Y ienna dispatch to the Acbtuhr Abendblatt- - A panic prevails in Budapest, but tbe country, H is declared, has not yet resolved upon a soviet republics PARIS. March 2 (By - the Associated - Press.) The cuiull--Uun Ju --Hungacj seem u, have artcried Gemtnn-AiiM'riAdvbtw Ao llic American peace conference delegates from private agents in ienna Indicate the cxlttenee Pari peace conference wfttr re'ponstbthty ROBBERS HOLD UP for Hungarys embracing Bolshevism, and the general dtuKsatisf action ovej "BANK AND SECURE ' the delay of peace. W hile, treating the more . than episode Hungarian TWENTY THOUSAND f others because it doe notlightly . believe the of a ihreau-nin- g state of arfairs whole country will become Bolshevik, tlicre. DES MOINES. la. March 25. Two j the post accuses the confeience of peace, while its idealists are men held up Hi Iowa State bank m PARIS liondav, March 24. (By called foiTowing the the heart of the business district heie the league of nations The newspaper tjic Associated Pres,-- ) Unofficial re- shortly before 9 a.rrf. today and es- suggests that in dealing with the sit- i caped with more than 20.000 in cash. uation supreme direction be given ports from. Budapest stats that Allied M. R. Pharmer, assistant cashier, Premier Clement missions there are debating the adso that probG. D. Pickett, clerk, and K. M. Hunter, able failure arisingfau frorinjlvided coun- visability of leaving and that the diswere for bookkeeper, getting ready cils mac he avoided armament of freneh I roo ps,l n the' the days business when tho two men trusts , the lesson of The knocked at ithe front door and asked urgencyTelegraph and suspense which is being, city is being considered. Alrder pre If they weie too early to make a detaught dailv will not be lost on those vails and no Injury has as yet been posit. elements which are time done foreigners. American representHunter admitted the men. told them with efforts to secureconsuming In the peace are being assured protection reto make out their deposit and ilhich slip, results facts oppose an atives Jo treaty . and may-- be asked to remain, tt is said. turned to. hi Pharmer Was insurmountable barrier Martial law has been declared and carrying money from the vault to his The Chronicle thinks Vt ?JT cage when one 7if the mem presented given unhealthy shock to Hungarhas. the death penalty has been prescribed public a pistol ind Ordered him to put up his .that ir the opunci of ten to the Bolshevik!, it mav prove a blessing in dis- for hnds, STOCKHOLM. Monday, March 25. of stood in the front guise.' A fine of robbers One the for and e robbery looting. The present chief of police In Petro-gra- of the bank while the second made hla If the council of ten.V it says, had 5.090 crowns has been fixed for tha it has been learned here, is Wil- way back of the counter and ordered not for many months show n marked sale nf'aJcoholIc liquor ami aine of liam Schotov, more frequently called the three bank employees Into a lava- Incapacity for action, po ohe need 10.999-crowfor Th door. the drinking Jt. Two robbers locking tory, the 7 doubt result. Bill Schotov, said to be widely their work Five minthen Th newspaper maintains the rem- British monitors are reported to have known In New Tork labor circles, utes completed to Hunter, the edy 'n9w 'Is' prompt and combined airbed at Budapest, havtDgT&IW uo- - v later, according where he was formerly active as a So- bank attaches broke down the lavaK cialist agitator. s (.Continued on page tbres.y tory door- and notified the police. (Continued on page . V xsicm 9 Mrmqwuty'-emr- v.D th--- - ' r -i n. , -- t-- SECY. DANIELS AND PARTY REACH PARIS wi-k- opln-jon.a- armed-resistan- PARIS, March 25. Josephus Daniels. the American aecretary of the with his party reached Paris this morning. Mr. Daniels came from Brest, where the Inspected the American military embarkation camp. He declared that he had found more reason to praise that camp than any he had xdsited in America. navy," ce d, ns t tir.) f j |