AND SOVIET OPPOSE BRITAIN jMhmfs Tyranny In. Ea*t Jlurt ^ End. I* Cry of So|- 011IIS %?P; Will Control Large Share of Asia Minor--Bagdad Railway and Cau- ^ - vcasus Prise--Allies Accept ^ • Wilson's Flume Settlement. Munich, April 27.--"The command Is going throughout the Moslem world. Revenge upon England! British tyranny In the Bast must end!' "An entente has been reached between the Russian soviet government at Moscow and the rebel Turks, the aim of which is to cl\eck British imperialism in the En st." Tho.se statements were made here by Dr. Nazim Bey, former Turkish Minister of instruction, who, through secret channels, appears to be iu close son tact with developments in Turkey and with activities throughout the Mohammedan world. " Nazim Insists that the secret agreement between the Turkish government *nd Britain, signed in April, 1919, is neither a "fake" nor a "piece of Turkish nationalist propaganda," as it officially has been branded In Paris and London. He asserts the treaty exists and Its sxlstencfe will be proved when the time comes, and that -when the allies make public their treaty with Turkey it will be found that Britain has succeeded in forcing the terms of her secret treaty with Turkey into the Formal pact between the allies and the sultan's nation. San Remo, April 27.--Through the Turkish treaty Great Britain gets:* First--Palestine. Second--Mesopotamia. Third--Caucasus, with the ports of fiatum and Baku. ' Fourth--The Bagdad railway. < fifth--Control of the Dardanelles. Sixth--Sole rights to the Suez canal .through the seizure of Egypt and the irk recognition of the protectorate. Seventh--Protection of the Mussulman empire through maintaining King Hedjaz of Arabia. premier Nitti of Italy and Anton Trumbitch, the Jugo-Slav foreign minister, have accepted President Wilson's settlement of the Adriatic problem making Flume a buffer state, with no contiguity of territory between Flume and Italy. A plebiscite will decide whether the Island of Lagosta shall belong to Italy or Jugo-Slavla, and whether the island ef Cberso shall belong to the new state of Flume, to Italy, or to J'ugo-Slavla. The islands are valuable only for strategic naval purposes, but agreement to give them to Italy would mean naval control of the Adriatic. The terms of the settlement were pent forward to Belgrade some days ago by courier, but as he met with a railway strike and other difficulties In his journey the terms have been telegraphed. Jt is hoped a reply will he received before the council adjourns from a new Jugo-Slav cabinet, approving the tertas. It is believed that whatever cabinet is organized it will ratify the agreement of Sig. Nitti and M. Trumbitch. BUSTED REDS SHIPWRECKED i f»aSeengers of the Stranded Susquehanna Landed at Trieste When Vessel Goes Ashore. 4 t Trieste, Italy, April 27.--Bolshevist agitators and other undesirables deported from the United States were en board the American steamer Susquehanna, which went ashore near Pola early last week. They arrived here with other passengers of the ship, who were transferred to the steamship Argentine after the Susquehanna had stranded. CBRB •f America* Agents Southern RepubAc UK Answered. in Sir Oamer Greenwood has been appointed to the decidedly difficult post of secretary for Ireland. TO TAX STOCK DEALS House Republicans Agree Plan for Yanks' Bonus. on Committee to Levy Tax on All Change Transactions Equal to Brokers' Fees. Washington, April 23.--A tax on all stock exchange transactions equal to the brokers' commission has been agreed on tentatively by Republican members of the house ways and means committee as one of the new levies for raising money for the soldier bonus legislation. Three other levies for raising the money similarly have been adopted by the Republ leans. These are a 1 per cent levy on the final sales to consumers, a new levy on incomes, probably in excess of $5,000, and an increase of approximately 15 per cent of existing taxes on tobacco and cigars. These four forms of taxes would remain In effect two years, and the Republicans estimate that they would net about $1,500,000,000 for soldier relief. They will be incorporated in the legislation to be presented in the house for adoption May 3. Committeemen said the final agreement on all details of the relief bill, including the methods of taxation, were open to revision, but they predicted that the fourfold plan of taxation would not be changed. Experts Working with the Republican committeemen estimate that $400,000,000 a year will he raised by the sales tax, $200,000,000 from the stock exchange deals, $100,000,000 from a 2 per cent tax on the part of incomes exceeding $5,000, and $50,000,- 000 by the 1,5 per cent increase oa tobacco taxes. AMERICANS OUT OF ARMENIA MOB TRIES TO LYNCH BLACK Negro Confesses Killing 14-Year-Old IW at Indianapoli*---Polios " - Restore Order. Indianapolis, April 28.--It is quiet here, following riotous scenes Thursday night, when the police dispersed a mob of more than 2,000 persons bent upon lynching William Ray, colored, who 1& alleged to have confessed to the murder of Martha Huff, a young white girl. One person was shot In an exchange of shots in the vicinity of Marion county jail, where Ray is confined, and the police made fifteen arrests. Ray was arrested late Wednesday night, and is said to have signed a written confession of the crime, which was committed Monday night. Thursday afternoon, in a second statement, he admitted, the police say, that he stabbed the girl when she screamed. Prosecuting Attorney Claris Adams said that he planned to expedite the trial. J#*ench Find Yanks Safe and menians More Than Hold t Hf Own Against Turks, Ar- IWmt, April 27.--The French column of 3,000 men reached Aintatt on April 18, finding all the Americans safe and the Armenians more than holding their own in the fight against the .-Turks. They have received more arms fpom the French. WAR VESSaS START IT ONCE Cltlseits Reeldent In the Country Call S*i the Government for Protection --Carranza Governor of Sonera Arrested in Arizona. Washington, April 28.--Three American warships have been ordered Into Mexican waters. • Because of the ominous situation brought about by the widespread reolt against the Canfanza regime* American vessels were dispatched to Mexican ports to protect the lives and property of Americans and other foreigners In that country. Secretary of State Balnbrldge Colby, acting upon a request from American consuls In several parts of Mexico, announced that vessels would be sent south Immediately. Subsequently, the navy department, presumably at the direct instigation of the department of state, announced that the destroyer McCauley and the cruiser Salem had been directed to proceed south from San Diego to the Pacific Mexican ports of Topolebampo innd Mazatlnn. The cruiser Sacramento, which was at Campecho on- April 15. was ordered to the Atlantic port of Tampico, where it has arrived!; American government representatives in Mexico have asked for the dispatch of warships to that country to protect American citizens and their property. The request came from Mazatlan and Topolobampo, on the Pacific coast, and Frontera, on the gulf coast. Details as to the requests of the American agents were not made public. Advices said that 350 Mexican federal troops with two cannon had arrived at Mazatlan, but there have been no reports of disturbances there or at the other two ports. Advices received here by (Sen. Salvador Alvarado, representative of Sonora, said that Col. Rodolfo Gallegos, former federal commander in the state of Tamaulipas, defeated a Carranzista force under Gen. Rosalie Rodriguez at Linares and that the federals retreated toward Monterey. Mexico alone protested against the landing of American marines In Guatemala to protect foreigners during the recent revolution there, according to advices from Guatemala City. Douglas, Ariz., April 26.--Gen. Ignacle Pesqueira, president of the supreme military court of Mexico, said to have been appointed military governor of • Sonora, was arrested by United States officers as he stepped off a train here. A woman, said to have been brought here by Pesqueira from Mexico, was detained. Pesqueira's arrest was said to be In connection with bringing the woman Into the United States and transporting her here from Laredo, Tex., Pesqueria is married. One of his nephews, Robert Pesqueira, was financial agent for the Carranza government at El Paso. General Pesqueira Is from one of the most widely known and wealthiest families of Sonora. He has vast cattle and mining interests. The young woman detained with Pesqueira gave her name as Maria Rodrigues of Mexico City. This was the second time she had accompanied Justice Pesqueira on trips to ths United States, according to a statement General Pesqueira made. General Pesqueira showed no hesitancy In answering questions concerning his relations with the woman, whom he had known since 1914, he said. To one question he answered: "Yes, why not?" General Pesqueira said his family lived in the Arlspe district of Sonora and that he is the father of nine children. CAILLAUX IS FOUND GUILTY I Make Armenia lndepen<Mt San Remo, April 26.--Armenia is to he created into an independent state. / This action was decided upon by the allies' supreme council, because neith- * « the United States nor any other na- " ^tIon wus to accept a mandate |,0ver the country. •' (i _ j&S • ®ury Ruse Royalty In China. I: ; - Peking, April 26.--Seven bodies, four fc,,' ®f them said to be those of members ^ Of the Russian Imperial family, ar- , rlVed in Peking from Harbin, and :5 '^ere buried In the Russian cemetery, if. « outside the city wall. % ' To Lift Civil War Penelonc * J . f- Washington, April 26.--The house I ^ hill increasing pensions of Civil war ^' veterans to $50 monthly and those of the widows of veterans to $30 monthly || . was passed by the senate and now ^ gjoes to conference. High Court of French Senate Convicts Former Premier--Finds Extenuating Circumstancee. Paris, April 23.--Joseph Caillaux, former premier of France, was found guilty of having had commerce with the enemy by the high court of the senate. The vote was 150 to 91. The court by a vote of 128 to 110 found that there were extenuating circumstances in M. Caillaux's case. The crime for which M. Caillaux was convicted is covered by article 78 of the military code, which calls for a sentence of banishment for a maximum of five years or a minimum of one year. Airplane Falls Into Crowd. Fort Smith, Ark., April 27.--A boy was killed and two men injured at Sallisaw, Okla., when an airplane driven by Bob Bogg, a former army aviator, fell 40 feet and plowed Its way 'through a crowd of 2,000 persons. St. Louis Rail Men Go Back. „ l; St Louis, April 24.--The striding yardmen In the St. Louis district voted to return to work pending a decision on their wage demands by the railroad labor board, provided their seniority tights are not denied them. "Pussyfoot" Comes Home. New York, April 24.--William E. (^Pussyfoot") Johnson of Westerville, O.. returned here from Liverpool after "literally having given an eye to make England dry. He was met hf & host prohibition advocates. Flyers to Hunt Wolves. Washington, April 27*.--The com manding officer of the army aviation base at Chanute field, Rantoul, 111., has agreed to send an airplane to assist In locating packs of wolves in the wild country northwest of Rantoul. Vote Daylight Law Repeal. Albany, N. Y., April 26.--The assem bly adopted the Fowler bill designed to repeal the daylight saving law. The vote was 78 to 58. The bill, which has already passed the senate, now goes to the governor. Big Argentine Corn Crop. Buenos Aires, April 26.--Argentina'! corn crop for the present year will be 258,897,000 American bushels, accord ing to official figures made public. Re ports show 8,184,000 acres planted to corn this year. (Se'n. Sir Charles V. fr. Townshend, K. C< B., D. S. 0„ who was captured with bis forces at Kut-El- Amara during the war, and released at its termination, is spending five months' leave traveling in the United Stat*. . ; _ • r ' . ' it'll.. FAIL TO END STRIKE Deadlock Develops at Grunau's N "Peace" Meeting in Chicago. Overtures to Halt the Tieup Were Rejected Without Ceremony and Gathering Adjourned. Chicago, April 24.--Peace overtures in the rail strike were rejected unceremoniously by the rebel switchmen after an exciting session in a mass meeting called by John Grunau, Insurgent leader. Absence of representatives of the railroads from the conference was the chief stumbling block. In the way of a compromise. Grunau's very obvious hint thatN a motion for a vote on the advisability! of continuing the strike was In order was greeted with silence. One impromptu speaker then proceeded to ask Mr. Grunau what guarantee th# men would hnve of recognition,- restoration of. seniority rights, precedence over the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, and an early adjustment of their wage differences, should they decide to return to work. Gruftau did not answer the questions and the meeting adjourned by unanimous vote. Several squads of, policemen were scattered through the hall to preserve order, but there were no radical demonstrations. Hecklers in the gallery were silenced by strikers near them. Grunau opened the meeting by asking if any representatives of the railroads were present. He received no answer. lie then read a telegram from Washington outlining the position of the labor board with regard to the "rebels." He hesitated as be read a clause In the message to the effect that the men must return to work before they could be granted a hearing. But the strikers heard the ultimatum quietly. When he asked for suggestions a hush fell over the meeting. The motion that the chairman ' awaited did not come. A motion to adjourn followed and 4,000 men shouted "aye" simultaneously. , TWO DEAD IN SH00TINQ Chicago Woman Puts End to Lover's Aps and Kills Herself V Rooming House. BRITAIN TO SELL WARSHIPS First Lord of the Admiralty Tells Commons of Plans, Except \ v . Particulars. i • . London, April 23.--Walter Hume Long, first lord of the admiralty, replying to a question An commons, said the government contemplated selling some warships to foreign countries. Pending outcome of negotiations, he added, particulars could not be divulged. Chicago, April 24.--Enraged because she believed he had turned to another woman, Mrs. Louise Dimmick, thirtyfive years old, shot her lover, Thomas Scliweig, thirty-two years old, through the neck, in a rooming house at 233 Bast Hurop street. She then turned the weapon on herself. She fell dead with a bullet through the heart. Schwelg died on the way to Passavant hospital. 600 French Troops Slain. Constantinople, April 27.--Five hundred French troops were wiped oul during the evacuation of Urfa, according to messages received here. All ol the American mission workers are safe. Plume Strikers Arrested. Trieste, Italy, April 27.--Leaders of the strike at Flume have been arrested and the walkout movement there Is a failure. It Is reported. Men who laid down their tools there this week are returning to work. COLBY RECEIVES SIR GEDDES 9 Secretary of 8tate Grants New British Envoy Leave to Handle Bmhassy Matters. Washington, April 23.--Sir Auckland Geddes, the new British ambassador, was received by Secretary Colby at the state department and was accorded the privilege of taking up embassy matters with the department In udvance of the presentation of Ms credentials to President Wilson. Flume Again Blockaded/ Flume, April 26.--Flume is again blockaded by land and by sea following a-raid by D'Annunzlo soldiers on Abbazia, west of this city, where 45 horses were stolen from the regular troops. Tribunal Orders Dissolution of Big Companies. *1. GOVBUMENT WINS SITTIE Jurists Sustain Government's Contention Firms Violated "Commodities C^use" of Commerce Act---Np ^. . f Decision on Dry Law. %&8hlngton, April 28.- y* •the fiaeral government won Its antitrust suit against the Reading company and af-' filiated cool companies in one of the So-called anthracite coal cases. By a vote of 4 to 3 the Supreme court sustained the government's contention that the companies violated' the "commodities clause" of the later-; state commerce act, arid ordered dls-i solution of the companies. The Reading and Central of New, Jersey railroads, the court decided, must dispose of stock ownership, respectively, of the Philadelphia and, Reading Coal and Iron company and the Lehigh & Wllkesbarre Coal com-! pany. Justice Olarke rendered the decision for the majority, white Chief Justice White, in a minority opinion in; which Associate Justices Holmes and: Vandevanter joined, said the minority was in favor of accepting the opinion qf the lower court dismissing the government's suit. Associate Justices McReynolds and Brandels did not participate in the decision. Justice McReynolds was attorney general during the time the government prosecuted the suit, which was instituted in 1913. Another of the so-called anthracite coal cases, that against the Lehigh Valley Railroad company and affiliated rail, coal production and sales companies, is pending. ' The court set aside Oklahoma su-' preme court decrees denying judgments to sixty-seven Choctaw and Chickasaw Indian citizens in that state who sought a refund of $10,000 collected by Love county officials as taxes on land allotted them under a treaty. They claimed the landi were exempt ftom taxation under the treaty. The court also set aside Oklahoma supreme court decisions dismissing a suit brought against Carter county officials to secure the reimbursement of taxes paid by Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians on land granted theim The Supreme court failed again to hand down a decision on the constitutionality of the prohibition amendment and the enforcement act. The Massachusetts state Income tax law Imposing a tax o^ trusts administered in other states was held constitutional by the Supreme court. The court announced it would take a recess from Monday, May 8, tp May 17 next .•p4" The children love Wrlfiley's-and good for them. under conditions of ^ absolute cleanliness sod | brought to them In Wrisleyls jseaied.woltary paefcaae. , Satisfies the cravimt for sweets, aids digestion, sweetens breath, allays thirst and bdn keep teeth deaiu:^'1' tut DRY OFFICERS RAID BURNHAM Sixty Dalrymple Deputies Swoop Down on Alleged Wet Cafes in Chicago Suburb. Chicago, April 28.--Sixty prohibition agents from Maj. A. V. Dalrymple's office made a quiet trip to Burnham, raided four cafes that are alleged to have been selling liquor, confiscated many gallons of whisky and champagne • and arrested the owners and several waiters in each cafe. No opposition was offered to the agents. ECZEMA! *|*HJ3 Isn't one of those fake free treatment"]. Jl offers you have seen so many times. Wer. don't offer to give you something for nothing-- but we do guarantee that you can try this wonderful treatment, entirely at our risk, and this guarantee is backed by your local druggist. This makes the offer one which you can absolutely depend upon, because the druggist with whom you have been trading would not stand behind the guarantee if he did not know It to be an honest and legitimate one. Hunt's 8alve, formerly called Huntfs Cure* has been sold under absolute money back guar? antee for more than thirty years. It Is especially-: compounded for the treatment of Eczema, ltch^"--?/'r- Ring Worm, Tetter, and other Itching skin disf*: eases. Thousands of letters testify to Its curative properties. M. Timeriln, si reputable dry goods dealer In iDurant, Oklahoma, says: 1 suffered with Ecaema for ten years, and spent $1,000.00 for doctors' treatments, without result. One box of Huntfs Cure entirely cured me." Don't fall to give Huntfs Salve a trial--price 75 cents, from your local druggist, or direct by mall if he does not handle it. A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Shennui, Texas FRANCE TO KEEP FRANKFORT Will Not Withdraw Troops Unt{| Qcr- • j HtWiy Fulfills the Disarmament ••.f1 Clauses of Treaty. San Remo, April 28.--France will not withdraw her troops from Frankfort until Germany has ftilfllled the disarmament clauses of the Versailles treaty. Premier Millerand served notice to this effect att the supreme council. AMERICAN LOAN TO GERMANY United States Bankers to Lend Total Amount of Her Reparations Indebtedness. San Remo, April 28.--A consortium of American bankers Is ready to lend to Germany the total amount of her reparations Indebtedness as soon as the allies hive fixed It, according tQ well-Informed source here. . * * Arabs Attack British. " ^ Cairo, April 28.--Fighting Is reported between Arabs and British troops in Palestine. Two. thousand Bedouins? attacked Semakh, south ef Lake Tiberius, from which the small British .force withdrew. Offer Bakers $44 a Wetlfc Chicago, April 27.--Moire tfimf 400 retail bakers offered the union an increase of $11 a week--$44 for firsthand men and $42 for second hand, the limit the bosses say. The union asks $50 a week. Japaneee Out $1,000,000,000. Tokyo, April 24.--The silk, cotton and rice exchange closed as a result of a ten-day slump in prices. With the close of the stock exchange the losses of speculators were estimated at 2,000,000,000 yen. Strike le Up to the Board. Washington, April 24.--President Wilson is to pursue a distinctly handsoff policy with regard to the outlaw railroad strike. He will leave the settlement in flap jbantfr M. JlTifc rail furl labor board. Urges Boycott on Candles. New York, April 27.--A month's boycott of candy, soda water and pastry was advocated by Edwin J. O'Malley, city commissioner of public markets, to relieve the sugar shortage and bring down prices. Rebels Take Mexican Ports. Washington, April 27.--Capture hy Mexican rebels of Topolobampo and Guaymas was reported in official dispatches. Topolobampo is one of the ports to which an American warship was ordered. m Opie Read'e Daughter Dead. Chicago, April 26.--Enid Ada Read, daughter of Opie Read, author and novelist, died at her home here of heart disease superinduced by overwork in connection with Liberty loan and Red Cross drives during the war. Johnson at San Remo. San Remo, April 26.--Robert Underwood Johnson. American ambassador to Italy, arrived here to act as observer for the United States during the sittings of the supreme couocUrM ^ structed by Washington. ^ Champ Clark Is Candidate v' New York, April 28.--Champ Clark, former speaker of the house of repre» sentatlves, has decided to become n candidate for the Democratic presl? dential nomination, It was announced here, by Mrs. Julia Sanders. Senate Passes Rivers HlC'?-v ., Washington, April 28.--The rttWt and harbors bill was passed by the sen-? ate after it had been amended so as to make the total $24,000,000, as, against the $12,000,000 in the bill as passed by the house. < Allies 8till United. ' "JffeiM Remo, April 28.--The sUprtme council adopted the Franco-British declaration with regard to Germany, even to occupation of additional Geiv man territory, to assure the copying out of the treaty. Held In Phone Girl Slsying. jftmtlac, Mich., April 28.--Alflred Webb, thirty-two years old, a plasterer, is being held pending further Investigation of the death of Miss Vera Schneider, a telephone gapervlaor, choked to death. J Her Method. "If your husband were to call to fou to bring him something upstairs, would you do it?" "Not much; I would call him down." Making Fast. "He bolted the ticket." "Then- what happened?" "*"*• "He and the party locked I: boron" DEWSJJF EVE. No More Gentle%Than ••Cascarets" for tl(| Liver, Bowels v It Is just as needless as it is danger- >us to take violent or nasty cathartics. Nature provides no shock absorbers for four liver and bowels against calomel, harsh pills, sickening oil and salts. Oascarets give quick relief without inlury from Constipation, Biliousness, Indigestion, Gases and Sick Headache. Cascarets work while you sleep, removing the toxins, poisons and sour, indigestible waste without griping or inconvenience. Cascarets regulate by strengthening the bowel muscles. They cost so little ,too.--Adv. A Mean Regret. She--Mr. Bangs was the man I Was engaged to when you came along. % He--I always did just miss my luck. A Feeling of Security Ton naturally feel secure when yoo know that the medicine you are about to take ia absolutely pure and contains BO harmful or habit producing drugs. Such a medicine is Dr. Kilmer's Swasap- Root, kidney, liver and bladder remedy. The same standard of purity, strength and excellence is maintained ia Wttle of Swamp-Root. It is scientifically vegetable herbs. It is not a stimulant and ia tea spoonful doses. It is not recommended for everything. It is nature's great helper in relieving and overcoming kidney, liver and Madder troubles. A sworn statement of purity is every bottle of Dr. Rimer's Root. If yon need a Ibedieine, yoo should. have the best. On sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sixes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to try this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer A. Co., Binghamton, N. Y„ for a sample bottle. When writing be sore ana mention this paper.--Adv. Acme of Activity. Joshua performed his little sttMK "Bet you couldn't make a favorite son stand still," we tsunted. NAME "BAYER" • ' - GENUINE ASPIRIN Mke tablets only » ,tol(l in each "Bsyer" . Tin "Bayer Cross* Is the signature of the true "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." The name "Bayer" is only on genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years. In every handy "Bayer" package are proper flirectlons for Pain, Golds, Headache, Toothache, Earache, Hfe# Iv ralgla, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sclatlcs, Neuritis. «... fej Tin boxes of 12 tablets cost only a few cents. Druggists also sell larger "Bayer" packages. Aspirin Is the trade marie of Bayer Manufacture of Man» aceticaddester of Sallcylicacidl