THE SEMIAVEEKLY TRIBUNE, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA, PRESIDENT BACK IN PARIS AGAIN Wilson's Arrival at Frenoh Capital Will Speed Up Peace Conference. CHIEF FACES BUSY WEEK Germany May Be Required to Pay $30,000,000,000 In Thirty Yearly Installments, Largely In Com moditles of Labor. Purls, March 17. President Wilson. returning to the pence conference nfter j ms trip to tlio united States, arrived In I'nrls shortly nfter noon. The presi dent's train wns about an hour late. Although the time of the president's arrival had not been tnnde public great crowds fathered at the Invalldcs sta tion, The station was decorated with Mowers and flags and tho Twenty-first French regiment was on hand to do ii.llltnry honors to the American presi dent. President Wilson got to work Im mediately after his arrival In Paris. "When ho reached his new residence In ;thc Place des Etnts Unls Premier, Lloyd George was In waiting nnd tho two had n long conference. Tho president attended a conference at the Hotel Crlllon with Prcmlcr Clemcnceau, Premier Lloyd George and Colonel House. The president Is fully conversant with the work accomplished by tho ponce delegates. During his voyage from tho United Stntes he was con stantly In communication with Paris by wireless. Colonel House took to Brest a large number of papers bear ing on tho work of the conference dur ing the president's absence. The president spent several hours In going through tho papers and receiv ing explanations from Colonel Ilouse. He resumes work with n grasp of the matters under discussion. Tho report of the commission of tho pence conference which has been con sidering Greek territorial claims Is not unanimous concerning regions which should bo apportioned to Greece in tho Ipence settlement. Tho majority of the 'commission favored giving Smyrna to Greece. Tliero is n divergence in tho views ,of the members of the commission in vestigating tho responsibility for the .war on several important points, ac cording to tho Temps. As to whether the former German emperor nnd other lieads of enemy states should bo brought to trial Is a question on which a division of opinion exists, while tho matter of an International tribunal or military tribunals for judging those charged with violation of tho rights -of nations during tho wnr has not been settled. At a banquet In honor of the Portu guese delegates to tho pence confer ence. Kjns Monlz, Portuguese foreign minister, described Portugal's effort In the war. lie said that 110,000 men had been sent to tho front nnd 150,000 tons o! shipping had been provided. 2 STATES PASS LAND BILLS Washington and Arizona Vote Funds for Reclamation Work Relief for Soldiers and Sailors. Ol.vmnla. Wash., Marcli 15. Wash ington's legislature adjourned, hnvlng appropriated approximately 530,000.000 for land r6clamatlon, permanent road construction, relief of returned soldiers and sailors, increase In allowances for workmen's compensation, establishing a safety first department, granting le gal recognition to lnbor unions, doub ling of automobile license talks. Phoenix, Ariz., March 15.4ln its final session the Arizona legVlatnro repassed u two-yenr $3,000,00(1 high way bill and $100,000 for surveyig ir rigation and reclamation projects. NO "SUB" BASE OFF CUBA Secretary of Interior Denies German U-Boats Had Station on Coast of Island. nnvnnn, Mnrch 15. Dofal that a German submarine bos- was main tained on tho coast Cuba and that Cuba was a hotbed of Gorman propa ganda, was made "T J""" fliontalvo, secretary of tlv Interior, In a state ment In nnsw-'r to declarations made In a speech m Now York recently by Mnximlllr' Tocn n camoulleur cm ployed 11,0 American government. J. S. Employment Seivlce Hit. Washington, Mnrch 14. Because tho recent congress failed to pass tho ur gent deficiency bill containing an item for $1,800,000 for continuing tho Unit ed States employment service, orders were sent out by Secretary of Labor Wilson to cut the service 20 per cent by March 22. Ninety Holstelfi's Bring $48,425. Fond du Lac, Wis., March 17. A new record was sot at tho state Hoi stein sale when 90 animals brought $18,125, an nverago of $5.18 per head, or $158 abovo the average nt last yonr's stnte sale at Milwaukee. 123 Michigan U. Men Dead In War. Ann Arbor, Mich., March 17. One hundred nnd twenty-three University of Michigan men lost their lives In tho -ivar, according to figures compiled by Doctor Sensoinnnn of tho Unlvorslty of Michigan alumni. KLARA BOHM-SCHUCH Among tho women elected members of the German national convention nt Weimar was Frauleln Klara IJohm- Schuch, who has been n lender In the feminist movement In Germany. TO PROVE BIG PLOT PLANNED REIGN OF TERROR TO START AT SEATTLE. Federal Attorney Declareo Industrial Workers of the World Are Bolshe vikl of America. Wichita, Kan., March 13. Evldenco Intended to show thnt tho Industrial Workers of tho World arc "tho bol shevikl of America" will he Introduced by Fred Robertson, federal prosecutor, at the trial of 32 alleged members of the organization for violation of the espionage act. In a statement Mr. Robertson de clared he would produce evldenco to show 'that a gigantic scheme of de struction wns being fomented to over throw organized government In Amer ica nnd thnt this plot was but n link In tho chain for a world revolution. Robertson said that when tho gov ernment has gone Into tho records "the public will renllzo that demoralized Russia was to have been but u stnrtcr Vn this cnmpnlgn for the ascendency of ahnrchy. "We will prove collusion between tho soviet regime' of Russia and the I. W. W. of America," he said. "Trotz ky, the bolshevik leader, went to his land of plunder from the shores of tho United States." The plot, tho government expects to show, was designed to shackle tho world and Its trail of intended destruc tion was to lead from Seattle through tho oil fields of Kansas and Oklahoma, and thenco to tho Atlantic seaboard. Strikes and sabotage were the twin cudgels the I. W. W.'s were to wield In their war against orgnnlzed so ciety. ARMY HEALTH FNE AT HOME Increase of Deaths From Pneumonia In Overseas Forces Alarming, Says Report. Washington, Mnrch 15. Satisfactory health conditions In army camps ut home, with a decided decline in tho number of Influenza and pneumonia cases, Is noted in the report of the surgeon general for the week ending March 7, mndo public at the war de partment. The report from France Is not so satisfactory. There were three times np many cases of pneumonia In pro portion as there were among the troops nt home, and out of n total of 510 deaths in tho expeditionary force dur ing the week, 414 were due to pneu monia. WOULD SUSPEND BLOCKADE Red Cross Asks Peace Envoys to End Embarno on Food for Europe. Rerv March 15. The International commlKoo of tho Red Cross lias ad dressed to the peace conference nt Paris a petition favoring tho suspen sion of the ljockndo and nsklng prompt nsslstnnce "fV the starving women nnd children, the ftostltuto nnd tho hospit als of middle a fa eastern Europe." REDS PLAN WORLD REVOLT Swiss Named Moor Appointed Chief by the Bolshevlkl of Russia. London, March 14. Tho Russian soviet government with a view to pro moting a plan for a world-wido com munist revolution has appointed n new minister to bo known as "International commissary," according to a Helslng fors dispatch to the Mall, quoting ad vices from Moscow. Daniels to Paris Today. Now York, March 17. Secretary Daniels arrived horo from Washing ton lo embark on the transport Levia than for his trip to Paris. Ho attend ed tho dinner given by the Democratic national committee. ''Flu" Stops Wisconsin Meets. Madison, Wis,. March 17. Declaring that the Influenza epidemic Is as seri ous as It has ever been and that the public seems qulto unconcerned, tho Madison hoard of health announced restrictions on amusements. ARLY PEACE TO SAVE THE WORLD F. A. Vanderlip, New York Bank er, Asserts All Europe Is Facing Chaos. CALLS SITUATION APPALLING Declares Great Productive Machine of Europe Must Be Started to Prevent Reign of Terror. Pails, March 15. "I doubt If Amer ica has begun to cbmprchond the seri ousness of the nppr.lllng situation which confronts Europe and the wreck which the whole fabric of civilization Is now facing," Frank A. Vanderlip said to a correspondent here. He has been Investigating conditions In Eug hind nnd France and will continue ins Inquiry In Switzerland and Itnly. "America was onco told tliero might be pence without victory ho said. "What wo have Is victory without peace. Production bus. ceased and un less production enn bo speedily re sumed ono's ltnnglnntlon cunnot com prehend the chaos which may ensue. "There Is nothing to he gained by stopping to question who Is to blame or by finding fault with the way events have been guided. The great pro ductive machine of Europe must bo started or tho world will bo confront ed with a disaster such as no experi ence has recorded. Here In Franco everything waits on tho settlement of the question of Indemnity nnd the progress of events In Germany. Each day makes the prospect of Indemnity less possible. "I have seen something of tho utter wreck which the central empires In flicted throughout the. war zone. It Is complete no words can picture truly how complete It Is. Thnt wreck, how ever, covers only a , strip from the channel, to tho German border. There Is possible n wreck that will cover all Europe. If production Is not re sumed, the horrors of wnr mny bo ex ceeded by the horrors of this nfter period, which Is neither wnr nor pence, hut n breakdown of the mnchlncry of clvlllzntlon. In the face of such tip pnlllng dlsnstcr, every pnrtlsnn consid eration, every unessential difference of oplnjon, nnd every personal ambition should bo Instnntly forgotten. "Unless terms of pence fan he speed ily agreed upon and unless these terms nro such as will permit the resump tion of something npproarhlng normal Industrial life, there Is not merely a chance, there Is n strong probability of Russian bolshovlsm overrunning Germany. What bolshovlsm Is can never bo really pictured by a normal mind. No description of it has been overdrawn. One may say that the temperament nnd psychology of Ger many Is not such as to load that coun try to bolshovlsm. nunger enn lead any country to bolshovlsm nnd hunger is what ccntrni Europe Is fncing. "The first cssontinl Is lo look fncts In the face, and they cojinot be looked In tho face until the terms of pence nro known nnd tho available indem nity measured." TO SAVE EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Director General Asks Welfare Bodies of Country to Take Over U. S. Agencies. Washington, Mnrch 35. Steps were taken to provide a substitute for the government free employment agencies, which will become stranded Mnrch 22 through the failure of congress to ap propriate money for their mainte nance. Director General Densmore of I the United States employment service his Issued n request to business, la bor and public welfnro Interests to take over tho work of tho government employment agencies, which will be curtailed SO per cent nnd 700 olllces abandoned March 22, unless the offices are taken over by the organizations appealed to. ITALY GETS $16,500,000 Loans From United States to the Al lies Now Total $8, 857,157,000. Washington, March 17. Italy's loans from the United States were Increased to $1,421,500,000 by a new credit of $10,500,000. This made total credits for all allies $8,857,157,000. FOE MUST GET FOOD SOON i , Germany Facing Literal Starvation, Dispatches to London From Ber lin Say. London, March 17. If Germany does not get quite large food supplies dur ing April literal starvation will result, says n Renter's dispatch from Berlin. Atlanta Rail Clerks Out. Atlanta, Ga March 17. About 1,500 railroad clerks employed on nil lines entering Atlanta walked out In a gen eral strike In sympathy- with the striking clerks of tho Nashville, Chat tiinooga & St. Louis railroad. Ask Sinn Fein Safe Conduct. Dublin, March 17. Tho Sinn Felners nre, "in accord with International cus tom," nsklng the British government for safe conduct for their delegates to the ponco conference, but It Is said they will not ask for passports. GEN. JOHN J. 0'RYAN Gi ml O'Kynn, who has returned with lils division, was tho only gen eral ;o go through tho war without being transferred from his command. It was the Twenty-seventh division, led by him, that first broke tho Hln denhorg line. BERLIN REDS BEATEN WAR MINISTER NOSKE SAYS IN SURRECTION SUPPRESSED. Spnrtacans Marched Through Streets to Death, Handcuffed and Heavily Guarded. Basle, Switzerland, Mnrch 15. The Berlin insurrection may be considered ns suppressed, Gustnve Noskc, the min ister of defense, announced In the na tional assembly at Weimar, a German dispatch reports. Berlin, March 15. Singing revolu tionary songs, 230 Spurtuclst prisoners were marched to their death through the Untcr Den Linden. They were a bedraggled crew, with their wrists, handcuffed together behind their backs. About them mnrched helmeted sol diers with rifles and In Tront were armored cars and lorries tilled with soldiers supported by machlno guns. Tho guards constantly shouted nt the crowds to keep back and kept firing blank cartridges at windows nnd door ways to prevent1 any attempt at rescue-. Twenty-four Spnrtacldcs were re ported executed in Moabit prison ear lier In tho day. London, March 1 1. German women, fighting with the reds nt Berlin, stab bed and scalped wounded olllcers and then held a war danco about tho bod ies, said a Rotterdam dispatch to tho Pally Express today. More than 1,200 Spartaclst prisoners hnvo been confined in Berlin Jails. Berlin, March 14. Spartacan forces, under pressure from government troops using artillery and mine throw ers, were abandoning their positions In Llchtenberg this morning. The gov ernment forces took a large number of prisoners, many of whom were exe j cuted summarily. ' The behavior of the Spnrtacans In ! Llchtenberg, a suburb of Berlin, dur ing the past three days lighting, was worse than the bolslievlk cruelties In : itussln. I All well-dressed citizens appearing In the streets were robbed and many I wore killed. Several. persons were de capitated nnd tho heads were carried through the streets by female Sparta cans. The government troops, It Is ndded, continue to kill every prisoner they take. The street fighting in Berlin hud largely been transferred to tho traction subways. The mullled roar of artillery and machine guns was henrd coming from the tubes. SETS VICTORY LOAN DATES Secretary of the Treasury Glass' Cam palgn Will Open on April 21 and Close May 10. Washington, March 14. The Victory Liberty loan campaign will open Mon day, April 21, and end Saturday night, Mny 10, according to nn tinnnmiccmeiit by Secretnry of Trensury Glnss. Flve-yenr notes have been decided upon Instead of long-term bonds. Tho -hort-term notes will stay at or near par, where bonds might slump, ofll- Inls believe. Interest rate on the Vic tory loan bus not been fixed, nor bus the total amount of tho Issue. It wns intlmnted by Secretary Glass thnt tho notes will bear 46 per cent or upward. RED ATTACK IS REPULSED Bolshevlkl Raze Town In Battle With Americans, British and Russians." Archangel, March l.'l. Operating ten guns, tho bolslievlk forces shelled the village of Vlslavkn, on the Vugu river, almost completely destroying t. Repeated heavy infantry attacks followed, hut these were repulsed with heavy losses by the Americans. British mid Russians. Four Held as Anarchists, New York, March 15. Charges of iiclng "avowed anarchists" were pre ferred by the police against three men :nd one woman, the only persons held nfter a raid on a building In East 1 Fifteenth street, j . Caruso Income Tax $153,933. Now York, Marcli 15. Enrico Cnru i ,n. tlio tnnmv will imv an Income tnx ot $153,033.70 for 1018, It was revealed at the collector's ofllce In the second Now, York district. Caruso visited tho cfflco In person. Jo Wurn Nvtppr Unlonfei FROM ALL SECTIONS OF THIS MAJESTIC STATE Reports of Interesting Happenings Throughout Nebraska Condensed to a Few Lines for Quick Perusal. Mrs. Ida Bnuman of Murtlnsbiirg, who brought action for $50,000 against forty different suloonkoepors of Thurston, Dixon and Knox coun ties alleging that her husband died of alcoholism, and that the defendants furnished tho liquor that caused disp ense and death, was awarded a ver dict for $1,500 against three Dlxxm county saloon keepers by a Jury nt Norfolk-. All the other were acquit ted. (Farmers of Box Butte county are going to make somo real Improve ments on their places this year, If loans they nro obtaining from tho federal fnrni loan batik Is any cri terion. . During a slnglo week fann ers of tho county borrowed $11,000 from Uncle Sum, through the county agent. A committee from the board of di rectors of the general synod of the Lutheran church wns nt Fremont the other duy making an investigation of Fremont college with u view to buying the school and removing Midland col lege from Atchison. Kuns., to that city. A niiinlier of patrons of the Arapa hoe Telephone company sent a petition to the state railway commission ask ing If tliero was not some wny to pre vent Iho uso of German over their phones. Nebraska at present has, no law to prevent such a practice. Nebraska now has n largo over-supply of beans, says tho home economic department of the slntu university. Tho department urges pe opto to eiit The department urges peoplo to eat mure beans nnd thereby lessen the cost or living. The potato growers of Box Butte, Dawes, .Sheridan. MorrIll, Scolts RlulT and Banner counties have agreed to cooperate In every way possible this year in an effort to avoid any possible J labor shortage. Following a tilt with the state I railway commission nt Lincoln, Unfon, Pacific otllclals announced that train service on seven Inanch lines In No hnisku. suspended ns u wnr emer gency measure Is lo ho resumed. That 100 new houses are badly needed In Kearney at once Is the con census of opinion of the real estate dealers ut the city. Modern houses ori' Impossible lo procure nt any price In the I'liy. Denn Tnneo'it. chaplain of Nebras ka Universilj base hospital No. 41), who returned lo Omaha from France a few days ago, expressed the belief thnt the IS rent trouble Is due to some political scheme. Tho annual Inter-high school stock Judging contest will bo held nt the Stale Farm nonr Lincoln, March 29. High schools from nil pnrts of fiio stnte are planning to send teams. Douglas county commissioners nro considering tho ndvlsiblllty of build ing an Ice plant to supply Ire to tho court house, county hospital and nlhor county Institutions. Bankers' of Butter county hnvo agreed to loan money to boys and girls of the county who wish to en gage In the business of raising pigs tills summer. ' Tho people's caucus at Broken Bow put. up n niutilclpaj ticket, headed by (!. U. Tooloy for mayor. The resolution adopted' cnllud for sewerage and street pining. Rental property for residence pur poses In Omnhii Is more scarce now than ever before In the history of the city, according to Ouuihn real estate dealers. Gage counly Is making an effort to retain Its tuberculosis- expert even though congress did not provide funds for his Hillary and expenses, Ited Oros workers of Omaha Iinvo knitted a total of 45,428 garments since. August 1017, according to load ers of tho movement. Senator Hitchcock of Nebraska plans n speaking tour over tlio lint inn us tlio administration's spokesman for III" li'iiguo of nations. Imlic.ni Inns are that farmers of Box Rutin and other northwestern coun ties will plant tlio UMiiil size potato crop ililw Ho'uKon. nnphiln Grilllth A. Demoy of In dliinoln loin been awarded Iho British mlllijiry cross for gallantry In the war. .1. 10. Ilnuso wns clerled mayor of Norfolk by a narrow 'margin over Matt Shaffer, Jr., the women's cantll- date. First Bed Cross girl of Superior, May Dally, who was an ollirer of the United States largest base hospital at London, has arrived In tills country after a year over there and left with special train of nurses for Denver. Farmers of Dodge counly are pay ing Xfiti to $75 a month for single men, white married men get nf- high ns $S0 nnd In some Instances $100. Wages for farm hands In the county nre from 1 to 20 per cent lower than hist year, when the high water mark was reached. The present stocks of wheat on farms In Nebraska are estimated to be n.WM.OOO bushels Ijy the state board of agriculture. Nearly 1.000,000 bushels of Mils will lie required for seed If the acreage of spring wheat Is to be. as large as last year. Only two other slates have a larger number of banks In proportion to pop illation Hum Nebraska. They are North and South Dakota. In North Dakota lliere Is one bank to every 038 people, lii South Dakota one bank to every J.I 71 people, and In Nebraska one bunk lo every J ,ii0.S people. Mrs. Alvln Bockweller. wlfo of a farmer, was killed, four other persona were Injured nnd thousands of dollars' worth of damage done to fiirtn prop erty by a tornado that swept a path a half tulle wide and four miles long between Colon and Cedar Bluffs, Saun ders county. The storm was accom panied by a heavy hall, which done a great denl of dninngo In several east ern Nebraska counties. The death of Mrs. Josef. Blazka, who was reported by her husband to have died with Influenza at the home place In Cherry county, has, upon Investiga tion by neighbor, been practically proven a foul murder. The body was found In a cow shed, terribly muti lated, with all Indications pointing towards the husband as perpetrator. T. C. Byrne, chulrmnn for tho vic tory lonn In ' Nebraska, has sent In structions to workers to eliminate use of the word "bond" In connection with the lonn. They nro told to uso tlio word "note," ns the $5,000,000,000 Is to he In short term notes nnd not In bonds. April 21 Is tho olllclal dato for the opening of tho drive. Henlth Commissioner Chapman of Lincoln claims Omaha has more small pox cases than any other city in the United States, regardless of popula tion, and Nebraska has more enses than any other state. Lincoln, ho says, has kept the epidemic down to twenty six cases since December. He urged a stntewldo vaccination. Mrs. Philip Deerlng and two chil dren, aged 5 nnd 7 were burned to death at Bayard, and Philip Deerlng and two other children of tho family wero terribly burned when Mr. Deer lng attempted to start a lire at their homo with kerosene. Deerlng Is a Russlnn beet tender. Anders Jensen, wealthy Minden fnrmer. charged with saying President Wilson should be killed and the kaiser substituted In his place, has been or dered Interned at Fort Douglas, Utnii, according to Federal District Attor ney Allen. State olllclals confiscated 5.000 gal lons of grape, wine ot an estimated value or $35,000 at the Walker vine yard near Omaha. The raid wus said to he the biggest haul of liquor made In tho state of Nebraska In Its entire history. Since the removal of all ' govern ment restrictions on the buying and selling of hogs the price has shot up with grent rapidity at South Omaha but predictions firo being made that the prices will decrease beforCTlong. Of Nebraska's total population, 03 per cent will live on the proposed 5,000 miles of state roads, and 85 per cent will live within live miles, Stnte Engineer George E. Johnson told 200 road boosters at Lincoln. Farmers of Saline county are plan ning a vigorous campaign to rid the county of the gopher pest, which, Ifls claimed, cost farmers of the county at least $50,000 during the pnst year.? Conditions In Nebraska and the en tire country east of the Rocky -mountains never looked more prosperous than now, nccordlhg to General Man ager Holdrege of the Buiilngtbp. The final dividend of 2. per cent on the First National bunk o Super ior, was paid recently, making 33 V6 per cent In all realized for creditors In 5 years since tho bunk failed. About 50 per cent more winter wheat was sown in Deuel county last fall than ever before. Tliero Is a per fect stand and will no doubt harvest a bumper crop. The Nebraska Cement company at Superior, which has been n year re modeling Its plant to the wet process, expect to start making cement In n f.iw days. The Odell bond has been reorgan ized with sixteen members, several of the new members being former sol diers who have recently returned home. Gage county citizens plan lo erect a tneniorlal building In nteniory of hoys of the county who gave up their lives In the war for liberty overseas. John Mentor, near De Witt, closed n deal for tho sale of his 200-acro Gago county farm to John Schroeder for $10,000. The Kolth County Community club hns completed contracts for the fourth annual roundup at Ogallala July 3, 4 and 5. Citizens of Humboldt are ugltntlng tho question of paving u number of the principal streets of the city. A conceded campaign Is to be made by farmers of Buffalo county to rid tho county of prairie dogs. An outbreak of hog cholera which started last month In Box Butto coun ty, Is now under control. . Tho March crop report of the Ne braska board of agriculture states that 2S per cent of last year's corn crop Is still on farms. This Is the' equivalent to .11,101,000 hushols compared to 130, "05,000 bushels on hand a year ngo. Voters of Scotts BlufC county will decide on April 15th, by special elec tion, whether they will authorize the construction of n'real court house and jail to take the place or the old ram shackle affair which now house the business administration of the county at Goring. George A. Lee. who represented tho Nebraska potash companies at Wash ington, declared upon his return to Lincoln, that he was confident the noxt congress would take tho necessary steps to provide ndequnto protection for Nebraska potash companies. Thousands of bushels of potatoes aie still stored In warehouses In the North Platte valley. A few are finding their wny to market around 75 cents n bushel, but some growers have ex pressed n willingness to take' 50 cents a bushel If only they enn get rid ol their surplus.