BRIEF RIGHT REEZY BITS OF NEW,S COLD STORAGE CHICKEN SUBS" FOR CANNED BEEF. Chicago, April 10. Cold .storage thicken will be used as a substitute for tanned heef in feeding the . United States army in France, Ger many and Russia this summer. Four million pounds of chicken have been purchased of Chicago dealers :y the War department in the last it w days for immediate shipment abroad, according to local commis sion men. Members of the Chi cago butter and egg board Mated Uniay that 250,0011 cases of eggs have been shipped from the United Mates to Europe since January 1. 500 CINCINNATI FIRE FIGHTERS TO QUIT WORK Cincinnati, O., April 10. "Blanket" icsignation of all members of the Cincinnati fire fighters' union will be presented to Maj. John Calvin to morrow morning to become effec tive Saturday morning at 7 o'clock. Officers of the union declared that the petition will include the names of approximately 500 members of the fire department. The conclusion to resign was reached at a meeting of the union late todayafter the failure of the city administration to send a reply to union headquarters, agreeing to the demand of the union that four discharged firemen be restored to duty. WOMAN HELD FOR MURDER OF NUN ELEVEN YEARS AGO Traverse City, Mich., April 10. .'Irs. itauislawa Lypchinski was to day held to trial at the May term of the circuit court on a charge of murdering Sister Mary John, a Feli cian nun who disappeared front the convent at Isadore, near here, 11 years ago. Mrs. Lypchinski, now 50 j ears of age, was a priest's house keeper at Isadore when the nun dis appeared. A body recently exhumed from the church basement there is held by the prpsccutor to be that of Sister Mary. The trial is set for May 13 at I.elaml. MAY RECALL MEMBERS OF TACOMA CITY COUNCIL Tacoma, Wash., April 10. The Central Labor council voted, i9 to li, last night to support a movement to recall the entire city administra tion because of the arrest last Satur day of 66 persons for selling tags for the benefit of the Soldiers' and Sail6rs' Mutual Aid society. An nouncement of the council's action was made today. When members of the society ap peared on the streets to" sell tags in the face of an order prohibiting the sale, the police made wholesale ar rests. Various labor organizations scored the city officials for their action and began plans for emulat ing recall petitions. MAY RETURN ENTIRE 77TH DIVISION IN ONE CONVOY. Washington, April 10. The War dtpartment has instructed the army embarkation of officials in France to return in one convoy the entire 77th (New York national army) di vision, if possible, or as large a part of it as may be possible with the available shipping. This action v, as taken in connection with plans , for the parade of the division in New York City. PHONE RATE INCREASE NOT TO BENEFIT OWNERS. Washington. April 10. Postmas ter General Burleson declared to day that increases in telephone and telegraph rates under government supervision of the wire systems pro vide only for advances in the wages of employes granted or contem plated, and for greater cost of ma terial and supplies and that no part of the increases benefit the own ers of the systems. Officers ot the Commercial Telegraphers' Union of America, which is now conducting a strike vote, have charged that em . ployes have failed to receive ad vances in wages commensurate with the increased rates. "The increase of wages allowed employes of the wire systems un der government control aggregate ior telegraph and telephone com bined $34,000,000 per annum, while the total rate increases made or contemplated amount to less than $40,000,000. It is necessary to pro vide for increased cost of apparatus, material and supplies, as .veil as for the wage increase and the in crease of rates is not as great as applied to either service, as Would have been unavoidable under pri vate control." DEBS TO SERVE IN PRISON, SAYS DISTRICT ATTORNEY. Cleveland, April 10. Re-arrest and enforcement of a 10-year prison sentence imposed upon Eugene V. ' Debs, socialist leader, convicted of iolation of the espionage act last summer, is expected within the next two days, according to Dis trict Attorney Edwin S. Wertz, who .aid that upon the arrival of the su preme court mandate Debs will be arrested and taken to prison. TRAGEDY OF WAR TOLD IN PERSONAL AD. London, April 9. "Six ladies and two gentlemen require situations to gether in a country house as the sole staff of servants: Cook, kitchen maid, parlor maid, footman-valet, two house maids, an old man. Avail able from April 15." This advertisement appeared in agate type in the "personal" column of the Times this morning, inquiries to be addressed to that paper. What tragedy of war or poverty lies behind these six lines of agate? ATTORNEY GENERAL SAYS LABOR MEASURE VALID. Lincoln, April 10, (Special.) The fact that the district court of Douglas county declared unconsti tutional chapter 199 of the 1917 ses sion laws, regulating private em ployment agencies, does "hot affect the validity of S. F. 55, which makes only minor changes in the old law. "There is little doubt of the con stitutionality of S. F. 55." says At torney General Clarence A. Davis, in an opinion prepared at the request of Governor McKelvie, who is holding up the signing of the senate file on protests questioning its validity. Enttrid Omaha PRESIDENT CONSIDERS CALLING CONGRESS Wilson May Start Session Go ing While on Other Side and Not Return Till End of June. Paris, April 10. While the ses sions of the council of four are oc cupying the chief attention of Pres ident Wilson yet, those close to the president who have seen him in recent days say he is giving serious consideration to the condition of publje affairs in the United States, particularly the situation created hy the failure of the appropriation biMs and the necessity of calling an extra session of congress. It is known that some of the pres ident's advisers are of the opinion that a call should be issued at a very early day, so as to permit the new congress to assemble in perfect or ganization by June 1, and complete the appropriation bills before the end of the fiscal year. Should this prevail, it would require an early call in order to permit the usual period for assembling, but it is not known that it will prevail, for while the president is listening to these councils, he has given no intimation of the course he intends to pursue. Several new factors have recently entered into the consideration of this subject here. One is the de parture of the military committee of the new congress for Europe and and it is foreseen that the committee, which is chiefly interested in the appropriation bills, cannot make the visit and get back much before J une. New Bills Necessary. Another phase is the conclusion that the usual method of extending appropriations beyond June 30, by concurrent resolution of congress, would not suffice in the, present case, as conditions are so entirely changed from a war to a peace basis that the former appropriations are not applicable to the present con ditions. This, it is believed, will make necessary entirely new appro priation bills, requiring considerable time for their detailed elaboration. The fact that the United States transport George Washington has been ordered to proceed to Brest has given rise to the suggestion that it was the situation at home, rather than in Europe, which might require the early return of President Wilson S America. But, according to the view of those in the confidence of the president, his physical presence in Washington is not essential to the meeting of congress or until the end of June, when the appropriation bills will be ready for his signature. It is contended that the call for an ex tra session can be issued here and the work of the new congress can proceed without the president's at tendance. Wilson Creates Precident. It is pointed out that no president had personally appeared before con gress until President Wilson created the new departure, and it is said he could revert t the custom of his predecessors in issuing calls and transmitting messages, without his personal presence. The final decision depends largely on the progress of the peace con ference, as the situations at Wash- (Continutd on Pane Kleien, Co'amn Four.) Omaha Charter Bills Both Postponed by Municipal Committee Lincoln, Neb., April 10. Special Telporam 1 The cities and towns committee of the lower house Thurs day afternoon indefinitely postponed house rolls 165 and 166. These are known as the Omaha charter bills, whose provisions were to enlarge greatly the powers of the city com mission to order new grading and paving and create larger bonded in debtedness on its own initiative. The bills were held in committee by Chairman Druesedow, who had a petition signed by 4.000 Omaha property owners, who were opposed to the passage of the bills. Commissioners Ure and Towle District Clerk Smith and R. B. How ell, manager of the Metropolitan Water district, worked hard to ob tain the passage of the bills, but withoijavaill. Kansas City Man Guilty of Obtaining Money on Bond Santa Fe. N. M., April 10. A jury in the district court last night found W. G. Kelly of Kansas City, guilty of the charge of obtaining payment of 52,605 on a fraudulent Santa Fe county bond, after a trial lasting 10 days, "in which half a dozen promi nent former officials of the state were witnesses. A motion for a new trial was announced by the defense, and the court set April 18 as the date for hearing argument uoon it VOL. 48 NO. 255. COMING BACK MONDAY THE POPULAR FAVORITE, ADELE GARRISON'S REVELATIONS OF A WIFE. The Omaha Daily Bjee Moaitf-eltM matter May 21, 1906. t P. 0. miliar act at March 3. 1879. LT-3 Interstate Liquor Police Force Among Possibilities If Constitution Is No Bar Attorney General Davis Sends for Copy of Kansas Law With View of Having it Applied to Conditions Here ; Nebraska, Iowa and Sunflower Authorities May Then Act Together. A From a Staff Correspondent. , Lincoln, April 10. A league of states, involving a triple alliance of the law enforcement divisions of the states of Nebraska, Iowa and Kansas, and organized for the pur pose of fighting bootleggers and automobile thieves', is now in effect. ' For several weeks negotiations have been in progress between the governors and attorneys general of three states for the purpose of co-operating in the enforcement of the "bone dry" laws which prevail in Iowa, Kansas and Nebras ka, and the first of the week the plans were perfected by which the three armies of law enforcement agents of the league of states will work together for the suppression of the organized gangs of bootleggers and automobile thieves who work out from the different points in the neighboring state of Missouri. Kansas, Iowa and Nebraska will place their booze hounds at the bor der counties, and by interchange of information, organized interstate pursuits of criminal suspects and exchange of evidence for prosecu tion, will obliterate state lines so far as law enforcement is concerned. May Adopt New Plan. Attorney General Davis is se tiously considering the use of the Kansas method of dealing with liq uor smugglers. In Kansas the mat ter of prosecuting prohibition law violators is placed in the hands of special prosecutors. These prosecu tors are rewarded for their activi ties by being awarded all of the fines assessed against persons found guilty on prosecution. In some of the larger counties of the Sunflower state the position of special prose cutor is a sinecure. The special prosecutor of Wyandotte county, Kansas, for instance, makes as high as $1,000 per week net by his ac tivities. His office is so profitable ihat he employs his own booze hounds, who r, .Kansas, are called "spotters." It is thought that under this arrange ment the office of special prosecu tor at Falls City, Nebraska City or Scdtts Bluff would be extreme ly profitable. Attorney General Davis has sent Murdock Made One Miscue When Hired Mary Vaughn Young "Hindu Maid" Has Show Manager Arrested on Battery Charge When He Stops Scene Not on Program; "You Were Always Late," He Says; "Tell it to Judge," Is Reply. Murdock, appearing at the Boyd theater this week, is a magician who can also foretell future events with seeming accuracy, but when pretty Mary Vaughn, 2302 Cass street, ap peared Sunday night and asked to appear in the play as one of the several 'Hindu maids who decorate the stage, then it was that Mur dock's powers of prediction went sadly awry. Miss Vaughn had a propensity for coming in about an hour late for every performance, according to Harry Seber, manager of the Mur dock show. Warnings were of no Getting Along in Years, But Ready to Help Uncle Sam While He Cannot Go Out and Fight, John Delaney Will Help Make the Ma chinery Turn. Agile and hearty at 53 years, John Delaney, a bachelor, living at 1306 South Thirteenth street, wants to attend some school in order to learn a trade. Yesterday he en listed in the army and was sent to Fort Logan for his preliminary training, after which he will be sent overseas. An opportunity to attend various trade schools will be given him. "I'm gettin' old, but not too old Drug Evil Greatest Problem of Nation, Says Revenue Officer New York, April 10. Asserting ihat three New York physicians re cently investigated had been found to' have dispensed 1,500,000 narcotic prescriptions to drug addicts in six months, Major Daniel L. Porter, supervisor in New York for the in ternal revenue department, declared today at a conference with state and municipal authorities that the parcotic evil was "The greatest prob lem of the nation." Potash Supply Short Washington, April 10. Official dispatches received here today said the German situation promised no such liberal supply ofpbtas.li as in the oast. OMAHA, FRIDAY, T to the state officials of Kansas for a copy of the law relating to the appointment of special prosecutors and if he finds that it complies with the constitution of Nebraska, may make an effort to have the law adopted during the present session of the legislature. Attorney General Havner of Iowa, Attorney General Knox of Kansas and Attorney General Davis of Nebraska have entered into the compact for co-operrftion in enforc ing the prohibitory laws and are placing all the enforcement ma chinery of their respective states at each others' disposal. Interstate Police Force. To all intents and purposes this arrangement will have the effect of creatine; an interstate police force for the suppression of bootlegging and automobile stealing and the originators of the plan are hopeful that it will suppress the activities of the organized gangs now operat ing in the three states. State Law Enforcement Officer Hyers, who helped manipulate the organization, is now awaiting the passage of the law which gives his subordinates the power of sheriffs in order, to put the plans he has. in mind, in the use of the enforce ment officers of Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska as co-operative units. avail, he said. Neither did she fear threats of loss of wages, and when finally, she was told to quit, it is declared the young woman would have gone on the stage and let the audience into her confidence. It was here that Seber sk' he interfered and Miss Vaughn then had Seber arrested. He was released mi $50 bond. Miss Vaughn alleges Seber struck her several times, and that Alurdock failed to complete his part tf their contract when it came to paying her wages. Seber vill be tried on the charge before Police Judge Foster this morning. to learn a new trade," Delaney told recruiting officials at the Army building. He has been in Omaha 10 years, earning no small salary at a packing house. He is a skilled machinist and is a connoisseur of meats. Army officers drew their breaths and ran relays from office to office to give out word of "the old man's enlistment." "No, I'm not kidding," Delaney said. "I want to join. If the army is offering a schooling in trades 1 want to take advantage of it." De laney spent six years previous service in the army and was in the Philippines during the war with Spain. He left last night for Fort Logan. High Water Forces Jamestown Residents to Flee From Homes Jamestown. N. D., April 10. More than 50 families were forced to flee from their home tonight in the northern section of the city because of water of the James river and sev eral other families, unable to make the way to safety in time, were forced to spend the night in the sec ond story of their homes. The flood is due to the spring thaw and the heavy snow fall here, the first part of the week. Every bridge between Jamestown and Kensal, about 30 miles north of here, has been washed away and the water, which has risen two feet in four hours, is slowly creeping to ward the main business section of the town. APRIL 11, 1919. GOMPERS WEEPS AS HE TREADS U.S. PIER American Labor Leader Re turns to "Own Land" and ( Thanks God That He Has Reached Home. New York, April 10. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, came ashore from the steamer Rotterdam, which brought him back from France with the other members of the American delegation to the international labor conference which framed a covenant to govern the affairs of labor throughout the world. The veteran labor leader had ex pected to spend the night aboard the ship, which will not dock until morning, but came back on the cut ter with immigration officers, when informed by two of his sons that his wife was ill. They did not tell him that their mother had suffered a paralytic stroke several days ago. When Mr. Gompers set foot in the darkness on the concrete of Bat tery pier, he asked: "Is this terra firma or a bridge?" When assured that it was the south end of Manhattan Island, he burst into tears, exclaiming: "My own land, thank God!" Mr. Gompers was ill when he hoarded the ship at Plymouth, but his health improved greatly during the voyage, and he was able to make three patriotic addresses to 2,238 and the 570 civilians and officers on board. In his last talk he denounced vigorously the remarks made through an interpreter by G. Zil bourg, secretary of war in the Ke rensky cabinet in Russia. The labor leader declared the Rus sian had shown pronounced bolshe viki tendencies and as a consequence the immigration authorities decided tonight to hold Zilbourg at Ellis Isl and for further investigation. Geneva Is Chosen as Seat of New Nations League Paris, Friday, April 11. Geneva, Switzerland, has been chosen for the scat of the league of nations, ac cording to announcement here. At a meeting of the commission on a league of nations, 10 sections of the covenant were considered and passed. The Japanese amendment was not reached and the actual text of the section exempting the Monroe doctrine from the provisions of the covenant of the league of nations is not yet available. American commissioners stated, however, that the document was def--initely named in the provision guar anteeing that it will not be affected by the terms in the covenant. An other meeting will be held tonight, when it is hoped that the work will be completed. The adoption of the section ex empting the Monroe doctrine was the only real exemption made dur ing the meeting last night. Pres ident Wilson offered the amend ment and made a plea for it, saying that he believed the doctrine was protected tinder - the terms of the covenant as they stood but, because of the demands for specific ex emption, he felt it imperative that the amendment should-be adopted. There was some adverse argument but the amendment was adopted without prolonged opposition. Allies Overwhelmed by Ukrainian Soviet Troops Geneva, April 10. Some details concerning evacuation of Odessa by the allies have been received here from Bucharest. These are to the effect that the allied army was over whelmed by the Ukrainian soviet troops, ,who outnumbered them six or seven to one. The allies fought stubbornly in the Streets for many hours, but finally retreated to the port, where they were rescued by allied ships. The French troops suffered most. The advices from Bucharest say the retreat of the allies has greatly encouraged the bolsheviki. Ensign Condict Again Commissioned in Navy St. Louis, Mo April 10. (Special Telegram.) Ensign Condict. for several months in charge of the Omaha navy recruiting station in Omaha, has been recommissioned a lieutenant in the L'nited States navy. Ensign 'Condict Was in charge of the Omaha station when recruiting was at-its height. He was city editor of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Honor Congressmen Brussels, April 10. Both cham bers of Parliament gave a reception last night in honor of a party of American congressmen who are vis iting Brussels GOT FIF By Mall (I yaar). Dally, H.50: Sunday, 12 M: TlVD PPMT Oailyaad Sua.. $5.50: auttlda Neb. polite entis. vEiiVI .1 O. Strikers and Rioters Hold Sway Over World Since War; Torches Vie With Red Flags Spirit of Unrest Felt in Nearly Every Country of World ; Estimate Over Five-Hundred Walkouts Have Taken Place Since Signing of Armistice by the Battling Nations. By Universal Service. Washington, April 10. From the ornate and luxurious "clock room" of the Quai D'Orsay, with its velvet carpets, priceless portieres and marble embellishments, to scenes of violence, where lives are being taken and the mutterings of mobs heard, is a far cry. Yet since January 18, the day the peace conference formally opened, to the present date, the world Has seen hundreds of strikes, riots and other disorders. Based on information obtained in Washington today it is believed that more' than 500 strikes, riots, upris ings and the like have taken place in topsy-turvey existence that the year 1919 has thus far seen. The number is abnormal, and it is exclusive of the many wars now being waged in Eu rope and Asia. These, of course, are what are known as "little wars;" nevertheless, they exact a toll of dead and wounded every day. The United States is not immune from the unrest visible in all parts of the world and which many per sons ascribe in a large measure to the seeming failure to obtain peace. Since the peace conference began its analysis of the problems before it, there have been over 20 major strikes in this country affecting over "200,000 workers; there have been unemployment riots in Buffalo, N. Y., riots in Butte, Mont., and at Pas saic, N. J., and at Lawrence, Mass. STATE WITNESS DISAPPEARS AND BLACK GOES FREE Verdict of Not Guilty Returned by Jury in Case Wherein Al--- legations Made That Bribes Were Offered. A jury in criminal court yesterday afternoon, after being out a short tune, returned a verdict of not guilty in the case wherein Jesse Black was charged with receiving a bribe to allow Gladys Thompson to escape from the Women's Detention home, November 29, last year. Gladys Thompson, principal state witness, failed to appear to testify at the trial. A bench warrant was issued, but the police and deputy sheriffs were unable to -find her. County Attorney Shotwell pro ceeded with the case without her. Jt she is found in Nebraska a charge of contempt of court will be filed against her. Policemen on Guard. County Attorney Shotwell's sus picions have been aroused by the disappearance of his principal wit ness. Several policemen in uniform were on guard at the detention home when Mrs. Thompson escaped. Mrs. Thompson was at the court house Tuesday morning. The case was not ready to go on trial then, but both Mr. Shotwell and Judge Redick told her to be sure and be on hand Wednesday. She didn't ap pear. Black, according to the testimony of George Thompson, husband of Gladys Thompson, Wednesday aft ernoon came to his home, 709 North Eighteenth street, November 26, with a note from Emma Brown ask ing that Black be given $100 and that then the Brown and Thompson women would "be home tonight." An affidavit signed by the women after their escape stated that Black told them he would give them the signal when to make a run across the detention home and over the fence and that he said the officers on guard in the yard "would shoot, but wouldn't hit" the women. Black denied that he had ever received any bribes or had eved connived to assist inmates of the home to escape. Emma Brown, another former in mate of the home, testified for the defense. Chief of Police Eberstein was on the stand for a few minutes for the state. Dahlman to Open Offices and Begin Investigations James C. Dahlman, former mayor of Omaha, has returned from Washington, where he reported to his new superior, William J. Flynn, chief of the United States secret service. Dahlman recently was appointed inspector of the secret service, and police section of the railway admin istration for Nebraska, Iowa and Colorado. He will establish his headquarters in one of the local railway headquarters ' buildings. Iowa State Senate Votes for Hard Surface Roads Des Moines, la., April 10. (Spe cial Telegram.) The Iowa senate today passed the hard surfaced road bill, but only after friends of the bill had been forced to adopt a coun ty option provision. The bill will now go back to the house. The house is expected to concur in the senate action. Hi xuigiana, Ireland ana scouana nave experienced many disturbances ( Labor Troubles Abroad. Strikes and riots have broken out in Glasgow and Belfast; there has been a "red flag" procession in Lon don and two grave instances wherein soldiers have temporarily taken the law into their own hands. These were at Folkstone, when a number of British troops rebelled at being sent back to France, and in north Wales, when Canadian soldiers went on a rampage. ... Throughout the British empire there has been trouble. Egypt has seen the torch of mobs, and Cairo has been gripped by riots. India has been the scene of local troubles, the latest one culminating several days ago in Delhi. ' Australia has"pro-bolshevist" dis orders and "anti-bolshevist" attacks (Continued on Page. Eleven, Column six) RESTRICTIONS IN TRADE WITH POLES CONTINUE Censorship of Mail and Tele grams Still in Force; Ameri can Delegates Seek Modi- fioation of Blockade. Paris, April 10. Although the blockade has been formally lifted against all efiemy countries except Germany and against- bolshcvist Russia, restrictions on trade with Poland, Esthonia and eastern and southeastern Europe continue. There is still censorship of mail and tele grams and an absenceof postal com munication with the infant states, and resumption of trade and of bus iness relations is virtually blocked. The American delegates have been pressing in the inter-allied economic council for a modification of the cen sorship, but the system as regards Europe remains in force. Peculiar Situation. The associated governments there fore remain in the position of giving with one hand by lifting the block ade and withholding with the other by maintaining, commercial censor ship. It is hoped, nevertheless, that there soon will be relaxations in or a removal of the censorship. The business situation in Pofand, Esthonia and the other new states illustrates the entire dependencies of trade upon communications. The blockade no longerexists for ese countries in theory, buiowing to the absence of postal or cable commu nications, business men in Poland, for instance, are unable to commu nicate with the outer world to plac orders or arrange for a resumption of business relations. One Pole, reached Paris with the Polish mission this week, brought no less than 180 important letters which will reach the United States, thanks to this special opportunity. Other business interests in Warsaw and Lodz and similar trade and in dustrial centers of the new state can not even lay the preliminary foun dations for business with the United States until a mail route is estab lished and the censorship is modi fied. Hines Refuses Steel Prices Agreed Upon by Industrial Board Washington, April 10. Accept ance by the railroad administra tion of the steel prices agreed upon by the representatives of the in dustry and the Department of Com merce's industrial board was defi nitely and formally refused today by Director General Hines. The refusal was announced after Mr. Mines had conferred with Ch.-.irman George N. Peek of the board. The director general's decision, announced as final, was based on the grounds that the prices aT agreed upon are too high; tint the industrial board is without power to impose them upon the railroad administration, and that the return of all prices to normal will "be se riously retarded by the approval by a governmental purchasing agency of prices which it deems excessive." ChairmaT Peek of the industrial board let it be known after his con ference with Director General Hines that he would present the questions involved in the contro versy with the railroad administra tion to President V THE WEATHER. Generally fair Friday end Satur day; ' warmer Friday; colder In west portion Saturday. Hourly 1niM?riMtirrN. Hour lv.:ltour P 3 a. in .14: 1 n. in.. . . S3 H n. ill HI '1 l. Ill M a. in HI 3 . in 84 It a, n 4 p. in.. . . i 14 9 n .in o S p. in. .,.. 10 H. in 85 i. ill S 11 a. m :! 1 i, m 81 IS m 3D 8 p. in 36 SOLDIERS REFUSE TO ADVANCE IN RUSSIA Demand Definite Assurances Regarding Withdrawal; Say America Not at War With Bolshevik Forces. Archangel. April 10. (By Asso ciated Press.) A company of Amer ican troops recently showed some hesitation in returning to the light ing front south of Archangel, declar1 ing that the war with Germany was over and that the United States .was not at war with the bolsheviki. The regimental commander, irra speech,, said that thev were righting a dCs- perate defensive battle and appealed to them to stick it out. The com pany then left for the front. ' The situation arose when ' the ., .company named was ordered , back to flic front after a rest period at Archangel. The officers' were in formed tli at the men did not want to go to the front again.' They asked to have their arguments answered. ', Net at War With Russia. The men contended that they wnye draft men, conscripted for the war with Germany, which was fin tshed now, that America was uot at war with the bolsheviki, that the entire bolshevik question was tjje subject of nnich political debate and indecision in the United States and that so far as they were concerned they were unable to see why they should be fighting if there was no war. , . The regimental commander said that perhaps their own lives de pended on the fighting on this front, and then made his successful apv" peal, reciting to the men traditions of the American army. Service Distasteful to All. , This incident was only the out cropping of what seems to be the general Jeelmg among the Amen can troops, officers as well as men. Because of this feeling, it is admit-, ted more or less generally, that the troops now here probably will be of little use after June 1. In oliicial circles in - Archangel there is no disposition seriously to blame the troops for this condition. On their arrival in north Russia last September the Americans were keen for lighting the bolsheviki, who they had been told were German agents. They have fought bravely through- . out the campaign and they arc still doing so. ',;'' Propaganda In Evidence. rS However, since the armistice with Germany was declared, the soldiers have been subjected to constant bolsheviks propaganda, which, to-' gether with their desire to return; home" after the end of the war fori which .they were drafted and the j hardships and loneliness of the. Arctic winter, has caused them to lose their spirits. Meanwhile, they have had no of ficial statement from the govern ment to answer bolshevik propa ganda and no American in Archangel is in a position to tell them officially what they are fight ing for. Official Statement. Washington, April 10. The Wat department issued tonight an 'of- (Cuntiniiwd on Pago Kleven, Column Three) Red Army Promised ; Bavarian Radicals ; . by Leader in Soviet I Munich, April 10. Bavarian soviet government and the government which it is attempting to depose is-. sued appeals to the Bavarian popu-' lition today. Eric Muehsam, a, member of the communist central ;: council, in an appeal to the prole- i tariat, said: "Without regard to differences of opinion, the communist leaders and the working population are united tu working for the realization of so. cialism and communist dictatorship. ' A red army will be created and con nection witk Russia and Hungary will be effected immediately. ' (. "The new revolutionary powet will order new elections as soon as possible on the revolutionary basi( in which the council system wiXi build itself up and in which all ques tions about their. affairs will be de cided by the working people. But.'1 only by the working people, because the capitalists will not share in the ' pight of determination." From Bamberg the" Hoffmann; government countered with an ap peal to the Bavarian people, calling ' attention to the sufferings of four years of war and outlining a pro gr?m which the cabinet has decided upon for the welfare of the state. The appeal concludes by urging the workmen and all others to stand be-v hind the government they elected ?nd in a spirit of democracy to carry on the reconstruction work notwith standing the dictatorship of term "which threatens the freedom of tfcg Bavarian people " ?