VOL. XLIX NO. 41. CatW M MMMI-ttaM mXttr My M, ' OSS P. 0. mr Mt tf Mwk t, !?. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 28, 1920. By Mali (I war). Dally. W.OO; Sunday. 12 SO. Dally aad Sua., 17.00: outllda Nab. ot1t axtra. FIVE CENTS. HARD REDS I'JOIlll IN U. S. FOR REVOLT Wish to Establish Dictatorship Of the Proletariat in Country, According to Authoritative Information Received. FINANCIAL PANIC EAGERLY AWAITED Detroit Principal Center of Radicalism Cleveland Is Second Organizations As sume Variety of Aliases. I' hi car Tribune-Omaha Be Leaned Wire. New York, March 27. Efforts of the radicals, working in harmony, but under different names, to pre cipitate a revolution and establish the dictatorship of the proletariat in the United States are being re doubled this spring, according to in formation received at headquarters of the National Committee of United ; Americans. While the reds were disappointed by the steel strike fiasco, advertised as the beginning of the revolution, they nevertheless are so encouraged by the trend of events that they are confident they can effect the revolution not later than 1922. Next time the start is to be made in New York City instead of in the central west, because the reds figure that the metropolis can be starved into submission by a general strike, in four days. . Meanwhile the reds count on a financial panic within the next few weeks to help their cause along. A panic would cause distress among the working men and thus render them more susceptible to revolu tionary doctrines. Detroit Principal Center. Detroit has become the principal center of radicalism in the United States, according to the information received by the National Committee of United Americans. There are no fewer than 83 radical organizations in the Michigan metropolis, and they are all extremely active. Cleveland ranks second as a radi cal center, followed by New York and Chicago, though all the larger cities have large and active radical populations. One effect of the recent govern ment raids has been to cause the radical organizations to . assume a variety f aliases. For example, the communist party is no longer known as such. It has assumed the innocu ous title of the "International Pub (C'ontlmied on Two, Column Three.) Herman Mueller Forms New German Cabinet; Three Are Socialists ' Uerlin, March 27. Formation of : new cabinet for Germany with Herman Mueller as premier and for eign secretary; was announced Sat urday. The minister of labor is Herr Schlicke, a socialist, as is the pre mier. The minister 01 etuiiuunw Herr Schmidt, also a socialist. The other ministers are: Minister of Transportation Gus tav Bauer (socialist.) Minister Without Portfolio Dr. Edouard David (socialist.) Vice Premier and Minister of the Interior Herr Koch (democrat.) Minister of Defense Herr Gessler (democrat.) , Minister of Justice Herr Plunck (democrat.) ' ' Minister of Finance Captain Fischer Cuno (ceriterist and man ager of, the Hamburg-American Steamship company.) Minister of Posts and Telegraphs Johann Giesbergs (centrist.) f Minister of Food Herr Hermes . (centrist.) The portfolio for reconstruction has not yet been filled. It will be allotted to a democrat. In consequence of the refusal of Captain Cuno to join the new min istry, Gustav Bauer will become min ister of the treasury and Dr. Bell minister of transport. The others remain unchanged. Confess Failure of Plan r To Put Liberty Bonds at Par L ' Washington, March 27. Senators Vtho have been giving close study io the question of restoring the value of Liberty bonds to par confess that they are "stumped." Every solu tion so far presented seems to have serious defects, they say, and unless some new and better plan can be devised, it appears to them that Liberty bonds will have to stay be low par until the ordinary laws of finance come to their rescue. Shipment'of Fresh Meat Only 'Economically Unsound' Chicago, March 27. Demands of the National Wholesale Grocers as sociation that packers restrict ship ments in refrigerator cars to fresh meat are not only economically un sound, but would work a hardship on the general public, R. D. Ryder, counsel for Swift & Co., declared before Commissioner C. D. Aitchi- son of the Interstate Commerce commission. Mexico Not Kicking at Morgenthau as Ambassador Washington. March 27. The De partment of State has received no advices indicating confirmation of a report from Mexico City that Henry Morgenthau would be persona non grata as United States ambassador to Mexico, nor has any information to .that effect been communicated to kfeft af T4-n awiruaiu. General Pershing Fitted To Take Civilian as Well as Military View of Affairs Education Before Attending West Point Largely in Farm-Small Town University Outcome of Pri maries in South Dakota and Minnesota Helps His Chances for Nomination. By E. C. SNYDER. W tolling toa (torreipondent, Omaha Bee Washington, March 27. (Special Telegram.) Now that South Da kota has indicated that the bugaboo of a military man for president is chimerical and does not exist in fact, it becomes more and more ap parent that the farmers of the west and northwest have no fear of a military man as a candidate for the highest office in the gift of the peo ple. South Dakota hving shown its preference for General Wood, the only military candidate on the pri mary ticket, the one big outstanding thought in connection with the pri maries in Nebraska is what is that state going to do for General Per shing, its favorite son. General Pershing is being more seriously considered in the last week than ever before, because of the re sult in South Dakota and Minnesota. They say, and without in any wise disparaging General Wood's qualifi cations, that if a military man is go ing to be selected' at Chicago in June, why not a military man who has made an imperishable record for himself and his country, not only on the fields of France and Flanders, but one who has met every duty magnificently from Mindanao to the Rio Grande? ' Man Is Main Thing.' Those who have known Pershing well as a splendid soldier have some times wondered why he was so dif ferent in his general characteristics, in his view of things and in his gen eral line of thought from the ordi nary West Pointer, . the ordinary military, man. The answer is easily found. , A noted American said apropos of a great American president, who had not had much schooling, that there were two kinds of universi ties, one was the university of the brick walls and the campus and the stern-faced professor, and the other was the university of the American farmer small town. He remarked that it made little difference which of these two varieties of universities a man graduated from it ' he was the right kind of a man to begin with. Pershing graduated from the farm, small town, country life university before he went to West Point He grew up on a farm near a small town in Missouri, having the usual experience of a farm and small-town American bqy, until he was of age. In other words, he developed his character in the school of American experience. He had come to years of maturity he had his views of life fixed and established before he received his military education, and upon that factor or set of facts, hangs much that would otherwise not be easily understood in the char acter ot General Pershing. Retains Civilian Viewpoint. Furthermore, he has. as is most natural, retained the viewpoint of the civilian during all -of his army life, by frequently coming in contact with people in their usual walks and avocations. When he was in Ne braska as instructor of the cadets at the university, he took a course in law, thereby adding to his store of knowledge and information from the standpoint of a civilian and still further broadening his civilian view point. There is an incident in Pershing's military life, which, perhaps, more than any other, illustrates his civil ian training and its effect on his character. About the most difficult thing for a soldier to learn as a soldier, is patience patience under conditions that are trying and con stantly spur an energetic and spirited man to action. Some people have wondered why the president sent Pershing to (Continued on Page Two, Colnmn One.) HIGHJACKERS IN KIMBALL CLEAN UP COURT HOUSE - i - 1 $15,000 Worth of Liquor Con fiscated in Wyoming Stolen From County Judge. Kimball. Neb.. March 27. (Spe cial.) A vault in the basement of the court house here in which Coun ty Judge F. J. Bellows had stored an accumulated stock of fancy liquors confiscated from bootleggers entering the state from Wyoming and valued at over $15,000 was stolen by highjackers who carried off their loot in an auto truck. The stock consisted of over 400 gallons and was taken by the high sheriff and state agents. Local of ficials are of the opinion the work was engineered . by Omaha or Denver men assisted by local men familiar with the location of the stores. The highjackers covered their trail carefully to prevent pursuit. Cayenne pepper was sprinkled , around the scene of the robbery and behind the truck until it struck a main traveled road to prevent blood hounds being used to trail the liquor car. Efforts to Recover Body Of Girl Who Ended Life in River Fruitless All efforts to recover the body of the unidentified girl, who, Friday night leaped into the Missouri river from the Douglas street bridge, had proved fruitless up to last night. Belief that the girl might have been Hanna Nicholson, 14 years old, of Missouri Valley, la., who has been missing from her home since January 28, was abandoned yester day when word was received from her father saying that he had def inite information as to her where abouts. The girl came to Omaha with a newly married couple and disappeared soon after reaching the city. Engineers' Brotherhood Present Wage Demand Cleveland, March 27. The Broth erhood of Locomotive Engineers presented a wage demand to the railway wage conference committee in Washington last week, Warren S. Stone, grand chief, announced on his return from Washington. The engineers brotherhood hither to has refrained from any wage movement and Mr. Stone's presenta tion of the demand now completes the list of railway organizations, in cluding all four transportation brotherhoods, asking for higher wages. The engineers did not ask any specific wage increase, but requested that the same advance be applied to the organization of engineers as to other transportation employes. Doheny Denies He Gave Coin to Wood Campaign Washington, March 27. A tele gram - from Edward L. Doheny, California, denying reports that he had contributed to the campaign fund of Major General Leonard Wood was put in to the senate rec ord today by Senator Phelan, demo crat, California. It characterized statements on that subject published in the New York World and quoted in the senate yesterday by Senator Borah, republican, Idaho, as "un grounded, unwarranted and without basis," EIGHT PERSONS HURT IN STREET CAR COLLISION Rear-End Smash Occurs When 1,600 HEAR BRYAN OPEN CAMPAIGN Vents Displeasure Impassion- ately Upon Senator Hitch cock, Arthur F. Mullen, Wal Street and Liquor Interests RUNNING MATES FAIL TO ATTEND MEETING The Passing Show of 1920 Brakes Fail to Work. ' Eight persons were slightly in jured late yesterday afternoon when a northbound street car, was struck by a car directly . behind it at Sixteenth and Williams streets The injured are: . Andrew Grinneiss, 2440 South Twentieth street, badly shaken up, contusion of the hip. Harry Dragon (student conduct or) 1502 Missouri avenue, knocked unconscious, contusions of the head and body. F. M. St. John, Thirteenth and Douglas streets, left foot crushed. Mrs. Marie Ponec, 5120 South Twentieth street. Mrs. M. C. McFarland, 402 North Sixteenth street, badly cut. Mrs. Louis Baker, 2416 South Twentieth street, badly shaken and knee wrenched. Louis Baker, badly cut about knee and head. W. H. Hicks, 3108 Seward street, both knees bruised. All the injured were taken to their homes. The accident occurred as Mrs. Marie Ponec, one of the injured, was alighting from the car ahead. Brakes on the rear car refused to work, according to the motorman. The entire rear platform of the northbound car was wrecked, and all the windows of both cars broken. Fire Breaks Out in Underground Works Of Arizona Mine ' Bisbee. Ariz., March 27. Fire has broken out in the underground workings of the Briggs mine, one of the big copper producing prop erties of the Warren district and owned by the Calumet and Arizona Mining company. The mine is two miles southeast of Bisbee and em ploys about 300 men on each shift.' Company physicians have been summoned to the mine. Novorossisk Has Fallen London, March 27. Novorossisk, the. last base in southern Russia un der control of General Denikine, has been captured by the Russian bel sheviki, according to a wireless dis patch from Moscow. Notice to Bee Readers Beginning Bandar, The Bee will not ffer the early mail edition of its morn ing paper for etreet sale in Omaha, ex cept on Saturday eyenlng. Beginning Monday morning, the Noon edition, which ! now told at 9 a. m., will be withheld until 10:30 a. ro." ' Both of these changes are made for the benefit of readers of The Bee. They will permit the Improvement of the regular editions of the paper and the publication of m greater variety of news than would otherwise be possible. Newspaper readers are invited to pay particular attention to the new Noon edition. The later hour of publication means that news now received too late for use will be available. The Noon edition will not be "warmed over" morning paper, bnt an np-to-the-mrante compilation of the world's Bfttilf Plea Made for Funds to Wage Dry Campaign in Nebraska Boasts of His Ability. to Sway the Political World. W. J. Bryan, candidate for dele gate-at-large to the democratic con vention, spoke last night in the Au ditortum to an audience which was not comparable to gatherings which have greeted him on former occa sions in this building. The meeting, which had been well advertised in the press, in the schools and also bv the distribution of 25,000 circulars throughout the city, was attended by less than 1.600 people. Several estimated the crowd at 1,500. Mr. Bryan vented his displeasure impassionately upon Senator Hitch cock, Arthur F. Mullen, democratic national committeeman; Harvey Newbranch, Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, Senator Borah, republican party, profiteers, private monopolies liquor interests. Wall street and the middlemen. Running Mates Absent. He arrived at 5 p. m. from Fre mont and was joined at dinner at the Paxton by Harland L. Mossman T. B. Murray, Lysle I. Abbott and Mr. and Mrs. John Fitz Roberts and daughter. . He- leaves this morning for Lincoln and will proceed this week to California, stopping on the way to speak Monday at Mmden Neb., and on Tuesday at Denver. W. H. Thompson of Grand Island, candidate for national committee man on the Bryan ticket, and -G. W. Berge of Lincoln, J. J. Thomas of Seward and; Dan V. Stephens of Fremont, running with. Mr. Bryan as candidates for delegates-at-large, did not attend the meeting. Want $1,000 Fund. E. E. Thomas made a olea to the audience for a $1,000 fund for carry ing on the work ot the dry dem ocrats in Omaha. Mr. Mossman, chairman of the meeting, announced that the meeting had been arranged under the auspices of the progress ive democrats who wanted a plat form at the San Francisco conven tion according to democratic prin ciples and of which democrats would not be ashamed. Mrs. E. B. Towl and Albert E. May, candidates for district delegateships on the Bryan ticket, made brief talks. Among those on the stage were: Mr. and Mrs. ti. B. Heharty. Samuel Rothwell, I. J. Dunn, D. C. Pater- son, J. G. Sherry, J. Laurie Wallace, J. E. Brill. Mrs. ti. W. Lovell, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Roberts, Jerry Howard, Robert Holmes, Mrs. H. J. Bailey. Mrs. Callfas, W. R. Pat rick, L. O. Perley and Mr. and Mrs, T. H. Weirich. Fill Up Gaps. After the collection had been taken and the subscription cards sent to Mr. Thomas, Chairman Mossman introduced Mr. Bryan by stating that the democratic party looks to Nebraska and Nebraska looks to Mr. Brvan. Mr. Bryan asked the audience seated on the main floor to come forward and fill up the gap which yawned between the front row and stage. Mr. Bryan started in by asster ing that "Arthur Mullen represents the lowest and worst of the demo cratic party. He is a small edition of Murphy of New York and he has no conception of woman's part in the politics of this country. Billy Thompson is progressive." Mrs. Mullen Present. Mrs. Mullen sat in a main floor seat. . "Harvey Newbranch is the only man in the United States who ever threatened me with physical violence if 'I opposed the liquor interests," Mr. Bryan continued. "Seated in my library he asked me if I knew (Continued on Fare Two. Colnmn Two.) Believe Body Taken From River Is That Of Jeanne De Kay Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee Leased Wire. Peoria. 111.. March 28. The body of a young woman taken from the river three miles above this city Saturday night is believed to be that Jeanne De Kay, the heiress, who dis appeared Christmas Eve. She walked out of Hull house, Chicago, and no trace of her was ever found. The body found tonight answers in all descriptions, that of the missing girl. Windstorm in Texas , . Creates Great Havoc Amarillo, Tex., March 27. At taining a velocity of 60 miles an hour, at times, a windstorm has raged over the Panhandle and north western part of the state for twelve hours, doing heavy damage. El Paso, March 27. Houses were wrecked, roofs were blown off others, many windows were shat tered by a desert gale, which swept ti faso Saturday. . lhe wind reached a velocity ot 55 miles an hour. Telegraph and telephone companies reported sen pus Ufjuble to taejr service, Do ywr &p) ECTior, j-Z r russioiuH j j '-: j. ONUt 12 MORE K1S TO REGISTER I CAN HC STCK ? SPRING OMAHA MAN GRAVEST CRISIS IN HISTORY OF IRISH PRESAGED Ireland Fast Drifting Into Anarchy, Correspondent Says Sinn Fein Leader Held. London, March 27. "The eravest crisis in the whole Irish history" is the description applied to the pres ent situation by the Dublin cor respondent of the London Times, in reiterating that Ireland is fast drift ing into anarchy. lhe Irish public views current events "with profound dismay and siakness of heart," he says, "and is amazed and frightened at the gov ernment's failure to recognize the facts of the situation." Public officials, it is said, live under the shadow of murder: some are unable to leave their homes day or night.i Murder societies are com pletely organized and are aware of the movements of all officials, who on their part, are equally cognizant of their dangers. Knowing that the sympathies of the telegraphers in the state service are largtly with the conspirators they dare not use the wires to transmit official in formation. All Proved on Duty. Cork, Ireland, March 27. A full and complete investigation of the whereabouts of the police on the night of the murder of Lord Mayor MacCurtain has proved that none was off his beat or at his home at the critical hour, the government counsel, Mr. Wylhe. told the cor oner's jury, which is conducting an inquiry into the murder. Mr. Wylhe said that a system of books was kept at the barracks in such a manner that the movements of the men were checked and showed it to be impossible that the crime was committed by a police officer. Member Arrested. Dublin, March 27. Prisoners fronvvarious parts of Ireland have been arriving all day at Mountioy jail. Heavy military guards ac companied them. Philip bchanahan, Sinn tern mem ber of Parliament, and prominent in Sinn Fein activities, has been ar rested. Call Issued in Iowa for Convention to Name G. 0. P. Delegates Des Moines, March 27. (Special Telegram.) Charles A. Rawson, republican state chairman, tonight ssued a call for the republican state convention to choose Iowa s 26 delegates to the republican national convention at Chicago. The con vention will seat 1,042 delegates and will Le held at Des Moines April 22. Precinct caucuses will be held April 14 and county conventions April 17. lhe nucleus ot a statewide VVood- for-President organization was formed today, headed by J. L. Par rish, attorney, and Dale Griswold, former service man. An office will be opened in Des Moines, and an active campaign to elect Wood dele gates to the republican state meet ing will be prosecuted in every dis trict in the state. The Weather Forecast. Nebraska: Rain Sunday, prob ably turning to snow in west: colder in east and central; high northwest winds Sunday; Monday fair and warmer. Iowa: Showers and probably thunderstorms Sunday; Monday fair; colder in east; shifting gales Sunday. Hourly Temperatures. 5 a. m 49 6 a. m. 48 4 8 a. m ...r3 V a. m .....59 10 a. m..........6K 11 a. m..... AT V mob 4VfrJK.7S 1 D. m p. m.. 3 p. m 4 p. m 5 p. m 8 D. m 7 p. ra.. v... ...73 ...73 ...75 ...75 ...78 71 REDS UNABLE TO GIVE EVIDENCE OF ATROCITIES Take Party of Troops to Front, But Cannot Find Corpses Strikers Forced Back At Wesel. By HENRY WALES. New York Tlmes-rhlcago Tribune, Cable, Copyright. 1920. With the Germans Before Wesel, March 26. (Via Cologne and Paris, March 27.) The executive council of workmen at Essen sent a party ot reporters to the red front Friday to show the atrocities committed by the government troops in the fighting at the Wesel front. The reds promised to show muti lated bodies of Red Cross nurses and hacked bodies of red soldiers, but were unable to find the corpses and explained they must have been buried. The stories of atrocities are firmly believed among the reds and the nurses refuse to work in the advanced positions any longer. Red Army Nondescript. The red army of 10,000 is a non descript and ragged army of half armed and unequipped ex-soldiers, all wearing portions of their old war- uniforms. All have rifles and a tew cups ot cartridges and a couple of rusty hand grenades. The front consists of a series of machine gun nests guarding the roads, with the government troops in fox holes opposite. The 'intermittent shelling goes on all day long, with the reds woefully inaccurate, but the government gun layers placing the shrapnel right over the red positions. lwo 10-millimeter guns and four three-inch field pieces are eniplaced to bombard Wesel, but a govern ment airplane dropped warnings that the workmen hostages held by the government troops would be shot if the reds shell Wesel, so there is no firing on the town. No Prussian Officers. The red officers are former non- coms of the old German army and no real Prussian officers are dis cernible anywhere. The chief of staff of the red army is an ex-mold er in the shell works and the gen eral commanding is a former labor leader. The reds are totally lacking, in organization, wounded troops seiz ing the motor trucks laden with (Continued on Fate Two. Column Two.) NAMES OF INDICTED COAL MINE OWNERS ARE MADE PUBLIC John Lewis and William Green Among Men Charged with Violating Lever Act. Path of Bolshevism Centered in Heart Of German Nation New York Times-Clilcago Tribune, Cable, Copyright, 1930. Berlin, March 27. Germany's cancerous path of bolshevism com prises a solid area of 10,000 square kilometers, 1,000,000 people, the in dustrial heart of the nation, an army of between 60,000 and 80,000 trained soldiers, commanded by a number of efficient Prussian and Russian of ficers, and equipped with rifles, bombs, field artillery and some heavy artillery. Drouth-Stricken Farmers To Get Free Seed Grain Helena. Mont.. March 27. Bond issues for 21 counties in Montana, totalling $4,775,000, have been voted for provisions, seed, grain and feed to be furnished drouth-stricken farmers, according to data made public at the state house. In ad dition, two counties have decided to act under the law which allows county commissioners to - furnish seed grain uo to $10,000 without a vote of the people, Y Indianapolis, , March 27. The names of approximately 125 coal operators and miners . in the states f Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and West ern Pennsylvania, indicted recently by a special federal grand jury here for alleged violation of the Lever act and conspiracy sections of the federal criminal code, were made public. Jiere. by federal officers. The miners include International Presr dent John Lewis, Secretary Treasur er William Green and Chief Sta tistician Percy Tetlow. The operators named include Thomas T. Brewster of St. Louis. chairman of operators' scale com mittee; Fhu H. Penna of lerre Haute, Ind., spokesman for the op erators last fall, and F. S. Peabody of Chicago, one of the leaders among the Illinois operators. The indictments contain 18 counts, all of which charge con spiracy of some kind. One count sets out ten overt acts constitut ing violation of the federal laws. lhe Illinois miners indicted in clude Frank Farrington, president of the Illinois Mine Workers. The Pennsylvania miners include Philip Murray. Discredit Reports of Red Advances on Polish Frontier IS KILLED IN STORE RAID Harry Rosenthal Fatally Wounded When Two Negro Bandits Attempt to Rob Grocery of His Son. detectiveFnot SURE WHO FIRED FATAL SHOT Chicago Trlhune-Umnlia Bee Leaned Wire. Washington, March 27. In the absence of official advices rumors of bolshevist successes on the Pol ish front and removal of the gov ernment from Warsaw were dis credited here by Maj. Gen. Sigis mund Brynk, Polish military at tache. The dispatch from the Polish war office states: ' "On the whole southern front and on . the Polish sector the bol sheviks launched attacks. All at tacks were repulsed. "In view of the activity of the bolshevist propagandists in Ger many and elsewhere, reports of bolshevik successes are to be seri ously doubted until proven," said Geperal Brynk. "I do not think that the rumors of the fall of Vilna and the removal of the seat of the Pol ish government to Bromberg can be taken seriously," he added. Army Balloon Travels 900 Miles on Flight Stillwater, Minn., March 27. An army balloon pijoted by Lieut C. F. Bond and carrying three other of ficers landed on the Wisconsin side of the St. Croix river, fivemiles from here, Saturday afternoon. The bal loon left Fort Sill, Okl., at 3 a. m. It is estimated the distance trav eled was 900 miles. Accompanying Lieutenant Bond were Capt. B. II. Palmer, Lieut. C. P. Goodman and Serg. T. M. Shaller. From Hudson the party will go to St. Paul and later the men will re turn to Fort Sill by train. Men Arrested and Confess to Entering Place, But Deny Shooting Crowds Threaten To Lynch Prisoners. Harry Rosenthal, 64 years old, 1424 North Twentieth street, was shot and fatally injured at 8:45 last night by two unmasked negro ban dits in the grocery store of his son, Jake Rosenthal, 324 North Eigh teenth street. .' When the two bandits entered the store one man remained near the door with a drawn revolver while the other advanced telling Rosen thal, his wife, father and Horace Cole, 15 years old, a clerk in the store to "stick up their hands."' Rosenthal who had just enter the store stood near the door fac ing the rear and directly in front of the negro guarding the door. ' : Jake Rosenthal was in the rear and was not aware of the holdup until his wife, who was standing be hind the counter, called to him to watch out. : -. - Son Fires at Bandits. - He immediately seized a gun from a drawer and started firing in the j direction of the bandit near the front door. According to Cole, both men started shooting at the same time. The fatal shot fired from a small caliber revolver struck Mr. Rosen thal directly in the left ear, and lodged just behind the left ' eye.' He was rushed to the ford hospital where he died shortly after mid night. After thf chnntino' hnth nr.BrrAftS rushed from the store without stop ping to search the cash register ana ran west on Chicago street, where one of them was captured. He gave his name as Willard Carroll, 1133 North" Eighteenth, street, and made sav. bnt declared that his companion had the gun an- did the shooting. ; ' "1 After his arrest he led police t 2511 Lake street wf.ere4heVnw Rozell Cottrell, porter at the A. B.. Sweet Shop, who confessed to being the other of the two men. ;. . Doubt About Shooting. Detectives were unable to deter mine who shot Rosenthal, one of the negroes or his son, who fired in the direct line of his father. It could not be learned last night what caliber bullet struck Mr. Rosen-, thai. The gun taken from Cottrell was a .38 caliber revolver and had been fired twice. a Richard Henderson, 815 North Sixteenth street, on hearing the shots rushed into the store and found Rosenthal lying face down ward, his head toward ,the rear of the store. V A large crowd congregated about thp store, and surged toward the front of the building as police brought Carroll in for identification. Shouts of "lynch him," were heard, from all sides, and angry faces looked in the front of the store. Both men were rushed to central police station, booked for investiga tion and highway robbery, and then taken to the county jail under strong police guard, i Hitchcock Assails , Norris for Criticism '' Of World-Heralj Augusta, Ga., March 27. Senator Hitchcock. WehracVa riaa nlit i , . . .... .f,nt.i a statement issued here, to the at- xacK on nis newspaper, the Omaha Warlri-TTpmlrl marl in th Thursday b$ his colleague, Senator; iNrris. senator nitcdcock's state- ; ment save ht ha A a ca . 4V1 AlS patch Senator Norris assailed which e 1. . .. .... rcierrea 10 me latters attitude on t1lr Trier! r.-CAnr9irt ,. treaty, but expresses confidence in 1 . 1. - . r f . . . uic accuracy 01 Qispatcnes Oy 1119 -, paper's Washington correspondent "My colleague, as well as Senator Gronna," said Senator Hitchcock's sfatpmrnr "tnfnt a rmnA .... , 1' " - a Vvru fil V& ,. their time complaining about the newspapers and the press associa tions. Senatnr Nnrria if!i!nm.:.k.j ' himself by voting against the dtfcla- .., oKaiuai uic ueace treaty and the league of nationA H is against anything the administra tion is for." Johnson Running .Close Second to Gen. Wood Pierre, S. D March 27. Unof ficial returns on presidential prefer ence of thirty counties up to Satur day evening show totals of Poin- dexter, 559; Johnson, 17,003; Lowden, 15,379; Wood, 17,552. Release Nine Alien Enemies. Salt Lake, City, March 27. Nine alien enemies were rcMeased from the Fort Douglas internment camp here Saturday, one to go to Ger many and the others to their homes in various parts of, the United States. Detective Killy Mexican In Attempt to Make Arrest Pueblo. Colo.. March 27rhr1. Battv. a citv detective. Icil1r1 dore Parea, one of the Mexicans said to have attempted to assassinate the officer early today. Batty was called to the door of his home and, as he opened it, six shots were fired at him. The detective returned the' fire, and Parea dropped. Historic Mission Burns. San Luis Obispe, Cafc, March 27 The historic San Luis' Obispo De Tolosa mission, founded September, ! 1773, virtually was destroyed by fire Saturday. Paintings, said by mission attendants to be priceless, and the mission organ, were saved. Nothing but the wals remained of the old mission, and these were said -to be greatly weakened and ir danger of falling. The fire was sa; to have been due to defective M '1