BEE WANT ADS WILL HELP YOU TO THE JOB YOU SEEK OR TO THE MAN FOR THE JOB. The Omaha Daily Bee Bs RIEF THE WEATHER: Showers and cooler Saturday) Sunday probably shower and cooler in extreme east portion, generally fair in west and central portions. Hourly trmprraturra: IGHT EEZY 5 . m 70 a. in AS 7 a. m 6! 1 p. m S p. ni . . 3 p. in . . 4 p. m , 5 p. m . . p. m . . 7 p. m. . 8 p. m.. BITS OF NEWS 8 a. m 71 ALLIES WILL NOT GIVE WAY, SAYS LLOYD GEORGE. London, May 30. Premier Lloyd George, in his speech to the Welsh division at Amiens last Sunday, de clared, according to the South Wales Daily News: "We say to the Germans: 'Gen tlemen, you must sign. If you don't do so at Versailles, you shall do so in Berlin. We are not going to give way.' " ENGLAND THREATENED WITH POLICE STRIKE. London, May 30. England is threatened with a country-wide po lice strike. The metnpolitan police of London are balloting on the question. The Liverpool men al ready have voted in favor of stop ping work next Monday at .mid night. The police in some provincial cities also threaten to strike over wages. 1,600 AIRPLANES TO BE SENT FROM FRANCE. Washington, May 30. One thou sand Nieuport and 600 Spad air planes and 1,000 Hispano-Suiza and 800 Gnome motors will be shipped to the United States under the terms of an agreement between the French government and the United States liquidation commission. The planes and motors represent a part of the aviation equipment contracted for abroad by the War department NEWARK BAY SHIPYARD ' CLAIMS WORLD'S RECORD New York. May 30. One shin a week for a year is the world's ship building record claimed at the launching of three 5,500-ton steel cargo vessels at the Newark B.y shipyard today. The event marked the first anni versary of the launching of the Ag awatn, the world's first fabricated ship, at the Newark yard. HAWKER WISHES U. S. FLYERS BEST OF LUCK. London, May 30. Harry G. Hawker, in an interview in the Eve ning Globe, regarding American press comments on the speech he made at a luncheon to newspaper men Wednesday, said: "The Americans misunderstood my point. I was not criticizing their attempt. It is impossible to compare two flights. We did not wish to have battleships supplied by the government along the route. "My remarks were intended for thos: who were criticizing the gov ernment for not supplying them. I wish the Americans the very best of luck. Their flights have been beauti fully organized jobs from beginning to end. "I am very sorry, indeed, that the American press has misunderstood me. Nothing was further from my mind than to criticize the Ameri cans." COURT TQ DECIDE WHO OWNS, ?ASH CA.l BABY" New Work, May 30. "Bobby Ash," so called because; he was dis covered in an-ash can, is much more in demand -tKan the contents of ash cans usually are. Bobby Ash, is to be produced before Supreme Court Justice Whitaker, who will decide whether the Children's Aid Society, which claims him, or Mr. and Mrs. John Finebloom. who have him. shall be the arbiters of Bobby's future. Bobby was estimated to be five months old when discovered in a Mount Vernon ash can last January, bearing a tag reading: "Mother dead, father unknown." He was given the surname of Ash and the Fineblooms, who are wealthy, learn ing of the incident, claim to have adopted him. Mr. Finebloom offered to bank a trust fund of $5,000 for Bobby and to add to it a similar amount yearly until the nest egg becomes $20,000. "We've signed regular adoption papers and we won't give Bobby up unless his real mother comes to life again and claims him," said Mrs. Finebloom. GREATEST SUN GAS ERUPTION PHOTOGRAPHED. Vhat astronomers believed to be il greatest eruption of gas on the sun ever observed was photographed yesterday at Yerkes observatory. " The eruption was first observed May 27, and steadily increased in intensity. Whether it has reached its maximum was not determined. Observations will be continued. EX-KAISERIN VISITS UNHAPPY SON IN EXILE. Amerongen, May 30. The former German empress returned to Amer ongen castle late last evening after having met her eldest son, Freder ick William, at Amersfoort, for the 'first time in two years. The former empress was alone with Frederick William for several hours. The day was a national holiday, it being the religious festival of As cension day. The former German emperor abstained from his usual occupation of sawing logs, and at tended services in the chapel at the castle. London, May 30. Announcement by Bonar Law in the house of com mons that the former German crown prince will be placed on trial to de termine his responsibility for the war has had a depressing effect fn the kaiser's heir. Recently he has denied himself to visitors and refrained from greet ing even the village children with his former air of cheerful familiarity. l nose wno nave seen mm ui uic say he is morose and nervous and has lost all traces of his old jaunti ness. START NATIONWIDE " PROBE OF LYNCHING. New York, May 30. A nation wide campaign for a congressional investigation of lynching has been inaugurated as a result of the mob murder of Jay Lynch, a white man at Lamar, Mo., the National Asso ciation for the Advancement of Col ored People announced today. The announcement declared that 21 persons had been lynched, five of them burned to death, in the United States this year. VOL. 48. NO. 298. PEOPLES IN SADDLE DECLARES PRESIDENT Private Councils of Statesmen Will No Longer Determine Destinies, Says Wilson in Memorial Address. Paris, jMay 30. The day of secret councils is past because "the peo ples of the world are in the saddle," President Wilson declared in his Memorial day address in the Amer ican cemetery at Suresnes. The private councils of statesmen, he ad ded, will no longer determine the destinies of nations. An earnest defense of the league of nations was a prominent note of the president's address. He said he looked for the time when a man who failed to support the league would be as ashamed as the man who opposed the union of the states after the civil war. The president's address was de livered in the presence of thousands of American soldiers and many ci vilians and the official representa tives of the French government, in cluding Marshal Foch. Message from Clemenceau. Before President Wilson began his speech, a message to the presi dent from Premier Clemenceau, dealing with the fellowship between the French and Americans, was read. The letter begins: "Faithful to noble tradition, the living army renders homage to the dead army, and all France has as sociated itself with this homage." After comparing the Americans who have fallen in France with the French who fell in America, M. Clemenceau continues: "France will ever cherish their memories. With America, France will preserve in p'eace as an inspira tion and example an undying re membrance of their enthusiasm, dis cipline and courage. We see the wreaths on their tombs, and will take care of them as piously and gratefully as the tombs of our own soldiers." Address of the President. The president's address follows: "These men who lie here are men of unique breed. Their like has not been seen since the far days of cru sades. Never before have men crossed the seas to a foreign land to fight for a cause of humanity which they did not pretend was particularly theirs, but knew it was the cause of humanity and of man kind. And when they came they found comrades for their courage and their devotion. They found armies of liberty already in the field men who, though they had gone through three years of fierce trial, seemed only to be just dis covering, not for a moment losing, the high temper of the great affairs; men seasoned in the bloody service of liberty. Joining hands with these, the men of America gave that greatest of all gifts, the gift of life and the gift of spirit. A Treasured Memory. "It will always be a treasured memory on the part of those who knew and loved these men that the testimony of everybody who saw them in the field of action was their unflinching courage, their ardor to the point of audacity, their full consciousness of the high cause they had come to serve and their constant vision of the issue. It is delightful to learn from those who saw these men fight and saw them waiting in the trenches for the sum mons to the fight that they had a touch of the high spirit of religion, that they knew they were exhibiting a spirit as well as a physical might, and those of us who knew and love America know that they were dis covering to the whole world the true spirit and devotion of their motherland. It was America who came in the person of these men. and who will forever be grateful that it was so represented. "And it is the more delightful to entertain these thoughts because we know that these men, though buried in a foreign land, are not buried in an alien soil. They are at home, sleeping with spirits of those who thought the same thoughts and en tertained the same aspirations. The noble women- of Suresnes have given evidence of the loving sense with which they received these dead as their own, f6r they have cared for their graves, they have made it their interest, their loving interest, to see that there was no hour of neglect and that constantly through all the months that have gone by the mothers at home should know that there were mothers here who remembered and honored their dead. New 'Understanding. "You have just heard in the beau tiful letter from Monsieur Clemen ceau what I believe to be the real message of France to us on a day like this, a message of genuine -comradeship, a message of genuine sym (Contlnutd oa Pace roar. Celuma Five) EMartd u Neoiitf-tlaM (tor Mty it, 1(0. it Onittl P. 0. under met of March J. I87. American Soldiers on Way Home Stop to Pay Homage to Comrades Buried in France Romagne, France, May 30. (By the Associated Press.) Americian fighting men, homeward bound, paused today to pay tribute to the memory of the Argonne dead roughly 30,000 of them many of whom were buried on the battlefield where they fell. The principal exercises were held at the 25-acre Argonne cemetery on the outskirts of Romagne, the larg est American burial ground in Europe. General Pershing made the principal address here, where 9,572 officers and men are buried. Of these only 160 remain unidentified. Argonne cemetery lies on the side of a gently sloping hill just outside Romagne, on ground captured by the 32d division late in October last. Each grave was decorated with an American flag and a wreath of ever greens from the Argonne forest. Twenty thousand men who fell in America's greatest battle in France are yet to be moved from where they now sleep to this cemetery. In the Argonne cemetery there lie NC-4 FORGED TO SPEND NIGHT ON BAY OFJERROL Engine Trouble Prevents Com pletion of Transatlantic Flight; May Continue to Plymouth Today. Washington, May 30. Motor trouble, which caused the NC-4 to be regarded as the "lame duck" of the American transatlantic flight squadron until she left Trepassey bay, Newfoundland, prevented com pletion today of its voyage from Lisbon to Plymouth. After covering 100 miles of the last leg of the history-making flight, the seaplane was forced to descend at the Mondego river and it was held there too late to reach England. With his engines repaired. Lieu tenant Commander Albert C. Read drove his plane 225 miles to Ferrol, Spain, where he moored for the night, ready to get away early to morrow, if weather conditions were favorable. The course to be cov ered measures only a little more than 450 miles and, if all goes well, the NC-4 should be in the English harbor before 9 a. m., Washington time. Commander Read reported after landing in the Mondego river that he had to await high tide before starting again. Lands at Ferrol. When the NC-4 finally floated again and was once more in the air at 13.28 G. M. T. (9:28 a. m., Wash ington time), Lieutenant Command er Read searched the coast for a safe harbor in which to spend the night and finallv landed at Ferrol at 4:35 G. M. T. (2.35 p. m., Washing ton time). Today's delay caused considerable anxiety to both the American and British officials, but this was quick ly relieved by a message from the commander of the NC-4 asking that the destroyers along his route keep their stations. Keen disappointment was expressed on all sides when it was learned that the NC-4 had been compelled to alight after flying ap proximately 100 miles from Lisbon. The arrangements forLieutenant Commander Read's reception will be carried out with but slight alteration if he arrives tomorrow. The royal air force stationed at Plymouth has offered facilities for dismantling the NC-4, which, under present plans, will be shipped to the United States on the mine layer Aroostook. Police Seize Five Barrels of Whisky in Denver Residence Denver, May 30. Five barrels, containing 250 gallons of whisky, consigned, according to labels, to "Charles J. Wall, Box 977, Chey enne, Wyo.," and several cartons containing liquors consigned to H. B. Gates at the same address, to night were confiscated by the police in a raid on a fashionable Capitol hill residence. Gates, former state treasurer of Wyoming and wealthy oil man, re cently purchased the residence and the first shipment of furniture was removed to Denver today from Cheyenne by motor truck. Wall is slated to become commissioner of safety and head of the Denver police forcewhen Dewey C. Bailey be comes mayor next Monday, accord ing to announcement today. Three American Nurses Killed in Auto Accident Paris. May 30. Three nurses at- arv fnrr tirar dnrlav in an automobile accident at Chateau j merry, it became known toaay. 'TVl mir... ...... FU.ana tifi V. t rr of New York City; Ella Delton, of Toronto, and Alice Hagadorn, of OMAHA, SATURDAY, MAY 31, 1919. rui Americans from every state in the union. Their graves are in long lines, forming a plot of approximate ly 13 acres. A cross at each one's head bears the name and unit of him who rests beneath. When complete the cemetery will cover 25 acres, Romagne having been selected because of its central location. ' Exercises also were held at Thiau court, where 4,000 Americans are buried; at Beaumont, where there are 700 graves; at Verdun, where several hundred more are buried, and in the small cemetery near Mbnt Faucon, southeast of Romagne, where men of the 79th division fell in the capture of Mont Faucon. Parade at Bayonne. Bayonne, France, May 30. Amer ican troops, civil and' military au thorities, veterans of the war of 1870 and a detachment of the garri son paraded the town today in cele bration of Memorial day. Magnifi cent wreaths were placed by French and Americans on the graves of their soldiers in the local cemetery. AUSTRIAN PACT IS REMARKABLE FOR OMISSIONS Skeleton of Treaty Featured by Many Blank Sheets; Clauses Deal Mainly With Frontiers. Paris, May 30. (By the Associat ed Press.) A summary of t!ie skel eton cf the Austrian treaty sub mitted to the smaller nations Thurs day for examination is remarkable chiefly for its omissions and reser vations. Subject heading after sub ject heading is followed either by a noncofiimittal display bf;blank paper or by the statement: "This clause reserved." This applies particularly to defi nition of the southern frontier, the reparations clauses and the question of Italian rights under the political clauses. The greater part of the summary, in fact, is devoted to those clauses which are practically iden tical with the Germany treaty. Deal With Frontiers. The new clauses are chiefly those dealing with frontiers, finance and the internal affairs of the new states and of Austria itself. Under the latter heading come the disputed provisos for the protection of racial minorities in the new states, against which it is understood the repre sentatives of the new states may ad dress a protest to the council of four and also ask for revision of the fi nancial clauses, particularly that part requiring the new states to compensate Austria for public prop erty. Austria also is bound by the trea ty to respect the rights and priv ileges of racial minorities in what is left to her of her ancient domains, including the right to use their own languages, although Austria is ex pressly authorized to make the teaching of German obligatory. The treaty will consist of a pre amble and 14 parts, the preamble and section one embodying the cov enant of the league of nations, as in the treaty with Germany. Provide for Minor Changes. Part two deals with frontiers. That with Czecho-Slovakia follows practically the old Bohemian fron tier, although the reservation of a possibility of making minor changes later, Austria retains on the west her old frontier with Switzerland, the question of the union of Voral berg with - Switzerland having ap parently been dropped, despite the plebiscites already undertaken in that province and Switzerland. The southern frontier is not determined in the treaty. Part three contains political clauses, including also some of the reserved geographical provisos, and clauses establishing mixed commis sions to determine them later. The sections referring to Italy are all omitted. Others deal with the fu ture relations of Austria with Czecho-Slovakia, Jugo-Slavia, Po land, Hungary and Russia. Here are found the stipulations for the pro tection of racial minorities which so far as the minorities in Austria are concerned, are to be embodied in a "bill of rights" as part of the Aus trian constitution. Former French Premier Faints During Discussion Paris, May 30. Alexander Ribot, former premier and foreign min ister and long" identified with the political affairs of France, suffered a fainting spell during the discus sion on financial matters in the sen ate today but later recovered suffi ciently to continue his address. M. Ribot said the country wanted to know what Germany was going to pay and in what measure would be realized by the allies of France the principle of financial solidarity accepted by them in 1914 and 1915. MOILS REVOLT OF LABOR IN IS SPREADING Minister at Toronto Thinks Aim Is to Overthrow Gov ernment; Says Movement Deserves No Sympathy. Winnipeg, Man., May 30. Arbi tration of the differences between the Metal Trades council of Win nipeg and the leading industrial employes was officially begun this afternoon at an hour when tension caused by the general strike dead lock, which began May 15, seemed to be approaching the breaking point. For the first time since the gen eral walkout, crowds of idle men paraded through the business dis tricts jeering persons who were do ing work usually performed by un ion men. Some of these marchers joined a delegation of returned sol diers who paraded to the parliament building and insisted that the gov ernment "do something at once." The men were told that the govern ment was considering the advisibil ity of legislation to enforce the prin ciple of collective bargaining and that the offer of mediation by exec utives of the railway brotherhoods had been accepted by the leading forces concerned. The demonstration dispersed after these announcements were made, but told Premier T. C. Norris that they would march to parliament again at 11 a. m. tomorrow. Change Program. Success of the railway brother hoods in initiating the first move ment toward actual arbitration made since the strike began caused city officials to make changes in the pro gram arranged for today. Nothing was done regarding resumption of street car service. The matter of immediate dismissal of policemen who refused to sign the anti-sympathetic strike pledge was left for de cision at a special council meeting this evening. About 100 regular firemen have returned to work, it was announced at the office of city fire commis sioner. Announcement was made at Mayor Charles F. Gray's office that 450 of the city's 1,000 employes who went on strike have been reinstated and that a few others have applied for their former positions. Senator Gideon Robertson, federal minister of labor, today sent the fol lowing message to the mayors of Fort William and Port Arthur. Ont.: "It is currently reported that a joint meeting of Fort William and Port Arthur trades councils has been called for this afternoon for the purpose of taking sympathetic ac tion with Winnipeg workmen now on strike. Deserve No Sympathy. "After carefully going into the whole situation here since last Wednesday, I am fully convinced that the general strike at Winnipeg deserves no sympathy from organ ized labor outside. The underlying motive in --calling the strike is, in my opinion, undoubtedly intended to be a blow at international trade unions and in support of the One Big Union movement, and with the probable intention of seeking to overthrow constitutional affairs and government, both as to federal, pro vincial and municipal affairs." Strike Begun In Toronto Toronto, Ont., May 30. Orders for the sympathetic strike to begin today to aid the striking metal workers who are demanding a 44 hour week, higher wages and im proved shop conditions, were obey ed by a large number of unionists in Toronto. The city employes have not yet quit, nor have the federal government's employes on the rail roads, or street railwaymen. The mayor has sent out an ap peal to the citizens, asking for main tenance of the peace. A committee of 10,000 persons is being organized, it was stated this evening, to help local authorities in the. event of need. Utilities Maintained. Ottawa, Ont., May 30. In a state ment today defining the attitude of the Canadian- government toward strikes now in progress in the Do minion, Sir Robert Borden, prime minister, declared that despite "un fortunate labor difficulties in a few cities," public utilities are still being maintained and, except for a brief period in one ,city, the public has suffered no serious inconvenience. There have been no riots, the state ment added. Bacon Funeral Services Will Be Held Monday New York, " May 30. Funeral services for Col. Robert Bacon, for mer secretary of state and ambassa dor to France, who died last night, will be held at Grace church here Monday. . Interment will be in Mount Auburn cemetery. Cam bridge, Mass. i CANADA By Mall (I yaar). Dally. $4.50; Dally aad Son.. $5.50; autilda Nab. mm Huns Must Accept Peace Treaty In End, Declares Former French Preimer Owing to Numerous Translations and Clash of An tagonistic Ideas, Pact Cannot Be Ideal Document Will Prepare Way for League of Nations and Sub sequent End of All Wars. By RENE VIVIANI. Former Premier of France. Former Premier of France. (Written Kiprrsnly for Universal Service.) Paris, May 30. We are now ap proaching the end of the long drama, the development of which has been followed by public opinion with patience and resignation. The last act, now being played at Versailles, may offer some few sur prises but these need all call for the display of great emotion and need not delay the ringing down of the curtain upon the drama of war. The peace treaty, while it has been drawn with care and precision, is not an ideal document; it could not be because it is the product of numer ous translations and the outgrowth of a clash antagonistic ideas. A spirit of conflict has shown its ugly face throughout the general discussion. The last dispute and one of the most serious, that growing out of the Adriatic question, has at last been settled amicably. Most Important Question. The important question now, there fore, is, will Germany accept the amended proposals to be laid before her delegates in the palace of Ver sailles, where the moral and material ruin of our nation was consumnrated by Bismarck in 1.V1? It is the irony of fate that a humiliated, although impenitent Germany, had to come to this same palace to register her defeat. In the end she must accept be cause she cannot do otherwise. Her military defeat is complete and as the army which, under direction of RANTZAU WILL NOT SIGN TREATY IN PRESENT FORM German Delegate Sends Word of His Decision to Berlin; Further Notes Pre sented to Allies. Versailles, May 30. (By the As sociated Press.) Count von Brock-dorff-Rantzau, addressing Herren, Giesbert and Landsberg, of the Ger man peace delegation, before their departure for Berlin several days ago, asked them to tell the people of Berlin that he would not sign the peace treaty in the form in which it was presented. This information has been gath ered from the peace delegation here. The Germans are so little satisfied with the clearness of the counter proposals they presented to the al lies that further notes were sent to the allies to explain parts of the doc ument. Bound copies of the counter pro posals to the number of 150 and also the remaining part of the transla tions were forwarded to the council of four today. A small party of attaches of the German delegation left for Berlin tonight. "Another party will depart tomorrow. Would Enter League. Berlin, May 30. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Germany is willing to agree to the proposed stipulations regarding its military, aerial and naval force contained in the draft of the peace treaty, provided it is permitted to enter the league of na tions on an equal footing immedi ately upon the signing of peace and particularly that it be permitted to share in the complete equality and reciprocity of all nations in the economic domain. While the German government, in agreeing to accept the stipulations referred to, is thus ready to disarm before the other powers, the mem orandum adds, the government must, on the other hand, demand a transitional period during which it may keep the troops necessary for the maintenance of internal order. Shocked at Terms. The "covering note" presented to the peace conference by thevGerman delegation says: "We came to Versailles expecting to receive a peace proposal framed according to the agreed basis. We had a firm resolve to do everything in our power to fulfill the heavy obligations assumed by us. We were shocked when we read in that document the demands which the victorious might of our .opponents had set forth. The more we studied the spirit of the treaty, the more we were convinced of the impossi bility of carrying it out. The' de mands in this treaty go beyond the strength of the German people. Hindenburg to Take Rest. London, May 30. Field Marshal von Hindenburg expects soon to go to Switzerland, where he will take a long rest, according to a Berlin dispatch given out by the wireless press. TWO CENTS. the? autocratic militarists, was the backbone of her resistance, has now ceased to exist, she perforce must yield. Undoubtedly she will carry in her heart a burning desire for re venge, but will her people permit themselves to be led into another war? Guarantee of Prosperity. It may be that the downfall of the old system which was brought down by determination of the peo ple to escape from the bonds of mil itarism and the establishment of a new government based on principles of democracy will remove from Ger many all temptation to engage in war in the future. If Germany does not veil her eyes to the light of truth she will be able to see that in reciprocal relations with the other nations of the earth there is to be found a guarantee of progress and prosperity. For the present she is claiming justice. But where is justice vio lated in the treaty? The territories awarded to France had been stolen by Germany. Jus tice demands that the robber give back what he has stolen. Of Alsace-Lorraine, Germany sets forth that she made these lands richer and more prosperous. The robber can make the claim that he has added value to the stolen object, but would that be a reason for not enforcing restoration? France Has Complaint. France, on the contrary, has every right to complain that .the awards under the treaty fall far short of re- (Contimied nn Pane Four, Column Four) VILLA FORCES DEFEATED BY FEDERAL ARMY Rebels Lose Heavily in En gagement Southwest of Santa Andres; Chihuahua City Not in Danger. El Paso, Tex., May 30. Col. J. G. Escobar, in command of ' the Juarez garrison, late today gave out a telegram from Gen. J. A. Cas tro at Chihuahua City, announcing the defeat of a Villa force at Santa Andres, 45 miles to the southwest. The battle, according to the mes sage, began Tuesday morning and lasted 24 hours, the Villa troops, commanded by Martin Lopez, los infi one-half of their forces. The federals were under command of Gen. Petronilo Hernandez. The message gave.no details of the num ber of men engaged. Consul General Andres G. Garcia today issued a statement denying reports that Chihuahua City was in danger of attack. He said a large federal force, estimated at close to 10,000 men, was en route from Mex ico City to crush rebellions in north ern Mexico. Angeles Named President. Dallas, Tex., May 30. Details of the Villista council at Parral, Chi huahua, May 22, when General Felipe Angeles was proclaimed pro visional president of Mexico, with Villa as secretary of war, were given out here today by Col. Dariow Silva, formerly attached to Villa's staff. In the manifesto promulgated by the council, protection is promised "all foreigners who will devote their time and energies to minding their interests and business, keeping out of factional support, direct or in direct, making it emphatic that all Americans will be given the protec tion to which they are entitled." Dr. Anna Shaw 111 and Mav Be Unable to Come to Omaha Springfield, 111., May 30. "There is a temporary improvement tonight in the condition of Dr. Anna How ard Shaw. However, she is serious ly ill," said Dr. W. P. Armstrong, the attendine ohvsician. in a state ment given out here late tonight. Dr. Armstrong said that in all probability Dr. Shaw would be tak en to a hospital tomorrow morning. Dr. Shaw, who is 72 years old. ar rived here Thursday to address the state convention called to endorse the league of nations covenant. She contracted illness upon her arrival. Lyle I. Abbott, who is in charge of arrangements for the League to Enforce Peace convention in this city, said last night after being in formed of Mrs. Shaw's illness that if Mrs. Shaw should be unable to attend the convention other speak ers would be substituted, and the women's luncheon would be held as planned. j SuaCay. 12 JO: aotlaaa antra. 9 a. m. I A a. m. It a. m. ..74 ..77 . .HO . .7 Ml ALL 01 AHA SOLDIERS Amid Uproar of Cheers and Gun Firing Nebraska Heroes of Argonne Parade While En Route to Funston. After going through the can . paigns of St. Mihiel and the Ar gonne, the men of the 355th infantry and the 341st machine gun battalion were equal to the stress and strain of yesterday's reception during their few hours in Omaha en route from Camp Upton to Camp Funston. Although it made their hearts beat quicker to meet and greet the home folks once more, it was rather irksome for the soldiers to march in their heavy clothing and helmets, and some carrying rifles. But they marched willingly because the home folks had asked it, and they went on their way, to return in a few days as civilians again and to resume their pursuits of peace. Carry Honors Lightly. Heroes all, these men of the f!9th division, they carried their honors lightly as true westerners, feeling that they had acquitted, themselves as it. n and are now anxious, not for the plaudits of the throng, but to get home to their kin and loved ones. Omaha did itself proud in giving expression to the deep feeling of honor and gratitude with which these defenders of liberty are held. Music, flowers, creature comfoit for the inner man. sirens and noises of all kinds; tender words of wel come an tnese torms ot welcome, contributed to make the occasion a truly "memorable one. Crowds Were Patient. , The reception was observed with splendid co-operation by the or ganizations and individuals partici pating. The trains bearing the 355tli did not arrive in time to permit all of the men to march to the High school grounds at thesame time, but the crowds were patient and gave the three sections of the parade a rousing salvo of applause. - The machine' gun battalion, which was parked in the railroad yards Thursday night, moved in regular formation from the Union depot at 8:3.0 in the morning to the school grounds, where relatives and friends were in waiting. After a wait of an hour and a half the first section of the 355th infantry passed over the parade route, and, about an hour later the second section of the in fantry followed, all proceeding ,to the High school grounds for a good home "feed." The machine gun men entrained at noon for Lincoln; at 1:15 p. m. the first train of the infantry was on its way, and at 2:30 p. m. " the second infantry train was clearing the yards and on its way to the capital city. From Lincoln the three trains proceeded last night to Camp Funston, where the men will go through the formalities of beine discharged from the service. Great Welcome Home. The route from Union depot to high school grounds was a solid lane of admiring people, anxious to say "Welcome home" to Nebraska's boys who did their full measure of service in the battle fields overseas These were some of the Americans who bore the brunt of the fighting at St. Mihiel and the Argonne. "The Fighting Farmers," they were designated along the western front. The men appreciated the feelings of the home folks, but they were not demonstrative. They were serious and they were frank to say that the chief thought in their minds was the thought of returning" home to stay. Mothers, fathers, sisters, wives, sweethearts and others arrived wt Capitol hill early yesterday morn ing with supplies of eatables. For the men who were not otherwise provided for, luncheon was served in the basement of the school build ing. Every provision was arranged to make the stay at the school grounds as pleasant as possible. Governor McKelvie arrived with the first section of the 355th and OCCUnied a spat with trt rpvipurinfr 1 ' . ...... .. t VT IV T, 1,1 party in front of the city hall. The next big feature of the line of march occurred when the heroes entered the southeast corner of the Central High school grounds. This was, in its way, the prettiest re ception scene of the line of march. Three hundred boys and girh of Central school formed a lane from the entrance of the ground to the front of the school. 'The girls, dressed in white, carried baskets of flowers, and the boys carried flags. They held two long chains to mark the lane. Two distinguished service crosses and one Croix de Guerre were worn by members of the 341st. Sergt. David Kline and Pvt. lohn Kellev of Omaha, are proud possessors of the D. S. L. medal, while Mai. Er nest E. Watson, St. Paul, officer in (Continued on Pare Four. Column Oh WELCOMES BACKHORflE raimer, .n. y, , t