CONTENTS THE WEATHER Portland Snaday, eoaditloaa favor, abbl tor lair watnr, westerly wind. Orf on aad Washington Sunday, condition! favorsbl for fair weather la wst portions ' of states and for ihowtrt la astrn portion, westerly . winds. - -Idaho Sunday, showers. Section -' ' 8ctloo -a 5 0nerl XTcws torlaO, General 8 -Sportf, Antomft . Patus bUs. Good " Society, Clnbs, : Bot4i, Maria, Mnslo, Pas. Markets and Pt- Ion. 2rdl - - Mae. Bal work. tat and Build-5 HagazlB, Plc Ing, Waat Ada. tortaJ Supplement 3 Dramatic. Edl-S Coxnio . . , VOL. XII. NO. 5. CITY EDITION PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 25, 1915. PSICE FJVE CENTS RANDOLPH HIT BY A BREAKER: 3 Captain Anderson and Henry Colvin Taken From Hole Cut in Hull by Lifesavers, Partially Overcome. CHAUNCEY CARPENTER SWIMS TO SAFETY R. E. Knorr, Victim, Formerly Lived Here; Schooner Is. Upside Down. Marshfield. Or., April 24. The wrecking of the gasoline schooner Randolph when she was struck by a big breaker when attempting to enter the Coquille river at Uandon this aft ernoon, resulted in the loss of three liven. The dead are: MILTON COX. baseball player; pas senger. ' KKNEST McCONNKLX., part owner and acting purser. R. K. KNORR. druggist of Gold . Beach; passenger. Captain Anderson and Henry Colvin, engineer, were rescued, and Chauncey Carpenter swam ashore. It is reported that one body was washed ashore but has not yet been Identified. Life savers are trying to find, the other bodies, and as the tide is going out this evening they may be able to get a line on the boat. The Randolph is upside down in the surf just outside the south jetty. . On By Witness. Stephen Gallier' of the Gallier 'ho tel, Bandon, was the only one to wit ness the accident. He happened to look out toward the ocean just as a big breaker struck the boat and turned her over. The alarm " was at once piven the life savers. Chauncey Carpenter, who swam ashore. Bald that he was on deck as the boat started to enter the river. He saw the breaker coming and antici patlngthe danger called to the others in- tne caDin to come out ana save themselves, but they did not respond In timet to his warning. One man was seen swimming, but he evidently lost his bearings, as he turned away from shore, and finally perished. -"!": When the : life savers reached the Randolph she was upside down in the surf, and they cut a hoi in the hull tCoitttoded eta. Pace Bis. Column Three) GRATEFUL TO SENATOR LANE , FOR ASSISTING THEM Reel Men Dance Around Ben efactor; Senator Returns to Portland, When Senator Harry Lane met a group of Indians from the Blackfoot reservation, Montana, at the Panama ' Pacific exposition, a few days ago, they formed a circle about him and danced for joy. He Is the Big White Chief wHb has been a great friend to the Indian. Last 'fall, when Senator Lane was returning to Washington, D. C, he visited the reservation in Montana. He found the Indians in half-starved con dition. He saw pappooses without clothing. He saw conditions unfit for any human being. As Senator Lane ts a member of the senate committee on Indian affairs, the agent at the res ervation got scared after the senator's visit and immediately saw to It that the Indians were supplied with food and clothing. Claims Indians Defrauded. This accounts, in a measure, for the expressions of joy -when the Blackfoot Indians, who are with the exhibit of the Great Northern at the exposition, inet Senator Lane a few days ago. Senator and Mm Lane and their daughters. Harriet and Marjorie. and Miss Nellie Pipes, reached Portland Friday from Washington. They visited the expositions at San Diego and San Francisco on the way. As a friend of the Indian, Senator Lane unearthed conditions in the bu reau of Indian affairs that he declares the American people never will permit when they learn the truth. These con ditions, under which the Indians have been defrauded out of millions of dol lars, had been growing worse for years and were inherited by the present ad ministration. . Senator Lane caused a sensation by- fighting and defeating the Indian appropriation bill.' - "Since the formation of the Indian bureau years ago the books had never been experted until after I started this . fuss," said Senator Lane. "The books are not balanced now. The bookkeeper admitted that they could not balance the books." Bed Mn Being- Defrauded. Senator. Lane said he found where the. Indians weret being defrauded of millions of dollars through mal-ad min istration of their funds and lands. He said Indians that were wprth thou sands of dollars each were . actually being starved (or want of .food. He found this to be the case among the Osage Indians iri Oklahoma where, they were not getting the income they should receive and when they borrowed money they were charged 40 per cent Interest. Conditions regarding their land allot, ments were just as bad he said. When an Indian is allotted a piece of land he (Concluded oa fag Six, Column sour) BROWNED ND1ANS NEWS INDEX SECTION i ONE 16 PAGES. -. 1. Schooner Randolph Wrecked. Indians Grateful to Senator XAne. Un buried Dead a Kenaee. D. C O'&eiUy Bays North Bank Boats. Russians in Hungarian Territory. German Drive on Ypres Checked. Viviani Dashes Hope of Early Peace. 2. Rockefeller Ready to TeU All. . Colorado's Labor War Reviewed. Peace at Present Would Be Futile. 9. Washing-ton Mews Latter. 4. San Francisco Mews Letter. 2C00 Registrations Invalidated. Salt Deposits to Be Developed. 8. Barnes Has Sarnrite for T, R. Shepperds' De'.l Soenle Beauty 6pot. Apartment House Owners Form Associa tion. Lumbermen's Trust Gets Bond Award. 6. Oregon Halibut Wins Praise. Crippled Children Guests at Movie. Girl's Scenario Wins. 7. Public Welcome at Civic League Lunch eons. Tocrist Traffic Headed Portlandward. Jitney Official Is Sned. . Effect of "Dry" Verdict. Willamette Lctks to Share Honor With Celilo. Church News. 9. Ho Understanding About Highway' Work in Columbia County. Youth and Beauty in Canal Celebration. Homeless Boy Rescued. 10. New Food Law Powerful Aid. 11. Tax Exemptions Ducatwd. 12. Industrial Accidents cf Week. Cow Creek Canyon Road Completed. 13. Seattle News Letter. Flans Laid for Commonwealth Conference, RocD-e River Bank Robbers Still at Larx-e. 14. Oregon City Talks Fish. Conference at Mcdoc Lava Beds. Lewis Prepares to Take Over Highway Work. Vancouver's Part in Celilo Celebration. Oil Found at Baker. , 16. Portland to Become Wool Center. William Purdy Declared Murdered. Le Monn Denies Wrong Doing. Interview With Queen of Belgians. Advanoe in Korean Affair. 16. How to Retain Jobbing Business. Portland Firms to Bid on Alaskan Sup plies. SECTION TWO 16 PAGES (Sports, Automobiles. Good Reads, Want Ads, Marine) SECTION THREE 12P PAGES Page. '. "' 1. Britain's Recruiting Flans Are Many. 2 Dramatic News, 3. Photcplay News. 4. Photographs from the War Zone. 6. News from Foreign Capitals, 6. Editorial. 7. City News in Brief. Who's Who in City Hall. 8. The Celilo Canal. Its Origin and Meaning. 9. Illustrated News Review. 10. Real Estate and Building Kiwi. 11. Markets and Finance. Marcus Whitman Relics Unearthed. 12. University and College News. Reed Seniors Lay Plan. Public School and Democracy Benjamin Ide Wheeler. Corvallis Schools Start Garden Work. Work of Visiting Nurse Caroline A. Dieck. SECTION FOUR lO PAGES Page. 1-4. The Week in Society. 4. Women' Club New. Parent-Tee. cher Affairs. Social Service Activities, 6. The Realm of Musio. - 7. Fraternal Notes, Woodmen to Entertain Head Consul. Tour Horoscope W, F, Adams. Osteopathy Dr. H. P. Bloxham. 5. What Well Dressed Women Will Wear- Anne Rittenhouse. 9. For the Needlewoman Sarah Hale Hunter. 10. The Housekeeper's Council Table. SECTION FIVE 8 PAGES (Magazine and Pictorial.) Pag. 1. Suburban Home la Springtime Glory- Veil Winner. 2. - Clemencie's Crisis Edith Ogdaa Hsrrison. 3. She's a High Flier Mary O'Connor Newell. ' 4. The Beauty Hour Mm. Qui Vive. 6. Down and Up the Ladder Bert Lennon. 6. On the Sunny Side of Life. Statesmen Real and Near Fred C. Kelly. Random Facta aad Fancies. With the Cartoonist. 7. Science aad Near-Seieaoe Up-o-Date. 5. Cartoonaa-rama Charle A. Ogdea. "The Proud Chicken" Georgsne Faulk ner. SECTION SIX PAGES (Comic) Linnton Will Vote On Merger Monday Bond Issu to Far for Water System Extension Also to B Decided Upon. Linnton is to vote tomorrow on the question of merging wiih Portland. Those favoring the merger say there will be a decisive vote In favor of annexation, while those opposing" the plan are confident that they will win. The election promises to be a quiet one, however,- for little campaigning has been done by either side. C. F. M alone, present mayor; Or vile Kruse, recorder, and S. M. Mann, treasurer, are among those leading the anti-mergerites, while the other side is led ' by J. B. Schaefer, ex mayor, and several of the Linnton business men. At the same election the people will vote on the Question of a $50,000 bond issue to pay for extensions of the water system and take up warrants for work which has been done. The population of Linnton is esti mated ' at 2000, while the number of registered voters is 400. It is believed that a very light vote will be cast. Last fall a straw vote' was taken among the voters and of 336 voting there was a majority of Si in favor of annexing with Portland. The southern boundary of the town is the city limits of Portland. The northern boundary'is about 5 miles north from this limit, making the sire of the town 5V6 miles by one-half mile. The bonded indebtedness is placed at $150,000. This includes outstanding bonds on the present, water system, street and sewer improvements. Off setting this is the water system val ued at 316,000. Hot Spell Causes Death in East Hsw Xtcord for Bat In Michigan and Other Points In Mlddl West MsliwiTlW Was 87. Chicago. April 24. fU. P. 1 Chicago and portions of the middle west, espe cially in Michigan and eastern : Iowa. sweltered and . boiled ' today under a grilling sun that set new high records for heat at several points. One death occurred at Detroit. Maximum temperature was 87. This was within one degree of being the hottest April day since 1873. The mer cury climjbed to 88 in 1899 ana to 86 in 1910; . Ati Sault Ste Marie. Grand Rapids and Alpena, Mich., new-high records for April : were set. It was 84 at Grand Rapids and 88 at Alpena. GERMAN QUITS THE HAGUE Amsterdam! April 24. (I. X. S. Herr Von iluller.r Gtrman ambassador to The Hague, .has retired. . .. - , , . MAP OF WESTERN WAR ZONE : : ZL ; : , II i I x-iXx, l5 30,000, UNBURIED DEAD THREATEN EUROPE WITH BLACK PLAGUE WHILE GERMANS AND FRENCH DARE NOT STOP EVEN TO BURY THEM Lime Guns Squirt on Those Their Range Is Short, a Turning-Troops in fron By Herbert Corey. At the Front in France, March 28. "At night the dead cry out in torment. They writhe in the greeir light, of the bursting shells." That was the statement word for word of a Parisian captain as we gazed at a part of that dread -field in the Champagne country, where 30,000 dead men lie unburied. ile was no sentimentalist, this captain. The re fural of the French to permit the burial of these festering heaps was accepted by him calmly. It is a part of the great, slaughterous strategy both sides are playing. But his face worked as he spoke. "When the sun comes out," said he, "no man can bear the odor long. It is an impossibility. Thb atench cuts you. throat as though by the fumes of acid. In the foremost trenches the men cough and cough as they work with their rifles." I wish to tell calmly in as matter of fact way as possible of a condi tion which is unlike anything the world has "ever seen before. That statement may .be qualified in -ust one respect. A similar condition once existed in St. Mihiel and there the dead men conquered. .They drove the living . enemies out of their trenches. Before their awf,ul weapon neither French nor Teuton could Island. Battle Zs Ceaseless. For 85 days the Kronen have been trying to "batter their way through the German lines between Perthes and Cernay, in the Champagne country. Their efforts have been ceaseless in the most literal acceptance ' that term. There has not been a moment on that six mile long battle front that guns, somewhere, have not been speak ing. ' The bombardment has been almost active by night, as by day. Few days have passed perhaps . no days have passed in which at least one at tempt to storm German trenches was not made. On their part the Germans have been quite as determined. Be cause they have been .on the defensive. because they have only been holding thelr trenches their losses are much less than those of the French. The Germans say their losses have not been more than one third. A space, sometimes 100 yards wide, sometimes 600 yards wide separates the two lines of advanced trenchea along this ribbon of helL, On that ghastly terrain 20,000 Frenchmen lie dead. , . Let that total enter your conscious ness. ",: 30,000 TTnboriad Bead. Twenty thousand French soldiers died there In every form of agony. Some mercifully died quickly. Some laid" there in the sun and snow 'and rain ' and cried out to their God to end their 'suffering, and. so died by Inches. :;Some lived four days in that welter of corruption before a kind death came to, them. They, began dy ing there in October. They died there the day I watched Jhe fight. Not one body has ever been buried r removed. Th most that either French or Ger man ; has been able to do has beert to throw- lime upon them : from forve pumps. Thet . pumps carry- tut . JO meters, i and . no t m in dare leave his trench to cover these levolting masses t hat, tiow threaten the. Champagne Nearest the Tenches, But nd Others Defile the Air, t Trenches Deathly III, country with pestilence the revenge the dead - will take upon those who live. With the French dead cheek by jowl, elbow to elbow lie other thousands of German dead. They have fallen In the counter charges which often follow the French attacks. Most of the Ger man dead, however, ate piled back of their own trenches. The estimate of the German staff, is that 10,000 may have died here since the battle lock began iri October. That is the very highest estimate. No 6ne knows pre cisely. No one knows precisely how many French dead there are.- It Is but guesswork. Slaughter Wins Votnlng. "The Frertch washed us out of three fchort, trencher yesterday," an officer of the general staff said to me. "They simply tore away the trenches with artillery fire. It was not that they killed' the men. They destroyed the trencher. The trenches they are no more. They are Kaput." The three siiort trenches covered a total cf.600 meters. In return th Germans "washed away" an approxi mately r iial length of trench by ar tillery fire. Those trenches, too, are no more.- They have ceaeed to be. Where they were are but the craters of the heavy shells, mingled witli bloody and corroding fragments whicn once were men. The Germans re treated to the next terrain perhaps 100 meters back to tse next line of trenches. The French, in their turn, held their own second line of trenches. Neither bide had gained' or lost. The deadlock was maintained. In this six miles of perdition there is a hill known as No. 199' on tne staff maps. On February 3 the French held that hill. For three days the Germans kept their big -guns playing on it, unil the surface of the hill was scarred and pitted as though by an elemental pestilence. , Machine guns rained their balls upon the levelled escarpments of the trenches. Infantry men put aside their not rifles to cool while they used the sun of the friend ly dead man, who shouldered them tn their trenches. Then, at noon one day, a German mine exploded beneath that hill. With the thump of its discharge the German wave rushed forward. They took Hill 1 91). They have It still. Bnuns Boll for Dying. On February 14 tne French began their counter attack upon that position. They have never ceased."" As I sat in one of the observation points, used by the general staff fresh craters which marked the limestone land in every di rection told that it had been shelled that very morning I, could see- the shrapnsl bti sting c-ver .the hill, and the vast clouds ai the heavier pro jectiles found their targets. It is about Hill 199 that one hears the "drum roil" of the big guns, as the Germans call it. They beat the long roll for ' th dying, ceasele&sly. endlessly, day ana night. -Time after time 1 the French have assailed the trenches on this hilk They hate died upon its slope. . Since .October 1 ,41, French regi ments ; have attacked and bave never returned to the attack. I do not mean that nly-41 regiments have Jteenent onward to - the sto.in I mean it la known that 41 "regiments "have broken iCoacladaHt ecr Pas flv. uiluas On AND SCENES WHERE FIGHTING IS THICKEST " , left Map of Ypres and environs, - snapped on their- entrance Into D. C. O'REILLY BUYS NORTH BANK BOATS OF UP-RIVER LINE Commerce Commission Order Carried Out in Sale; Serv ice to Be Continued, Negotiations - pending for two days ended yesterday in the purchase of the stock of The Dalles, Portland & Astoria Navigation Co. by'-D. C. O'Reilly, well known local contractor and steamboat man. The purchaser announced at once that the steamers Bailey Oatzert and Dalles City would be. operated as be fore on the run between Portland and The Dalles, the Sunday excursions of the Gatzert to Cascade locks included. H. H. O'Reilly, at present general man ager of the Clatskanine Transportation Co.. in which t. Cf O'Reilly is one of the heaviest stockholders,, will he the general manager of the line. . "We have no idea of taking the two boats off the run on which they have operated for years," said O'Reilly last night. "We paid good money for the good will of the line and ? exptct , to take advantage of it. The Bailey Gatz ert enjoys the distinction of being the best advertised boat In the world and we expect to do a tig tourist business on the Columbia this summer. The two boats will be placed In the best condition possible, the Dalles" City -being in the shipyards at present, while the Gatzert will follow her shortly for the few minor repairs that she needs.' The sale of The Dalles, Portland & Astoria Navigation Co. by the North Bank road, which has owned .he line for eight years, was ordered by th interstate commerce commission 16 months ago, but owing to the petition (Concluded on Page Eight, Column Two) Norwegian Hits . Mine and Sinks Stanr Caprli Oos to Bottom Fif teen Miles Off Tory Island; Crw Landed at Bonagal, Ireland. lAndon, April 24 (I. N. S.) The Norwegian steamer. Caprivl was struck by a mine and sunk yesterday 15 miles off Tory Island, nine miles northwest of Dumfanghy, on the Irish, coast, and the crew was landed at Inishtrahuil, Donegal. . Ireland. The Caprivl, Captain Peterson, waa a steel cargo steamer 316 feet long. 39S2 registered tons and - was built in 1892. She was registered at Bergen. Germans Capture Danish Ship Copenhagen, April 24. fl. N, S.) The Danish United Steamship company has received word that the steamer Nidaos. bound for Grimsby, Kngland. with a cargo - of ; butter, eggs and bacon, has- been captured by a German i ruiser-and - taken to Kylf island off th Schleswig coast of Germany. Photograph Copyright 1013 by : the International News, SertU-e s where grim -conflict rages. ,Rlght, ; topTJiree British '.war vessels, -The Dardanelles. "Bottom Frencii - artillerymen preparing for an WHOLE ADVANCE LINE OF RUSSIANS. IS NOW IN HUNGARIAN TERRITORY, EXTENDING FOR ' 40 MiLES ON CREST OF THE CARPATHIANS Austro-Gerrnan Forces, Still Control Railroads Leading to Mountain . Passes, but Russians Are Gradually Ad vancing Between Two Converging : Rail - Lines., Petrograd, April 24. (I. N.( S.) The whole line of ..the . Russian " main ad vance inj the Carpathians is now in Hungarian territory, the capture ol enemy's trenches on height No. 101 having brought the left wing of 'the main army across the boundary' line between Hungary and Galicia- The main front extends 40 miles between the. two main' lines of railway which cross the, Carpathians at Mezo-Laborcr on the west and I-'zsok on the east. It is evident -that while awaiting the return of the flooded rivers to their normal beds and the drying up of-the impassable roads, no opportunity has been lost In gaining a mile advance here and there by local fighting. Early in the morning, of Thursday the enemy assumed the offensive on the line indicated by the villages of Lublnja, Sukovets and Sianka, but were Wilson to Review The Atlantic Fleet President Will I.aT -Washington May 15 Aboard th Mayflower and Will . B In Kw York May 17 aad 18. Washington, April 2. (IT. P.) President Wilson will leave Washlng ton .May 15, on the Mayflower, lt was announced today, to review the At lantic fleet off New York. The presi dent will be in New York May 17 and 18, when a land parade will be held, in addition to the naval review. Two Turk Fliers , Bagged by British Aroplans Tlylnr Over Allied Battle ships la Dardanelles Ar Bitot Sown; Bombardment Is Continuing. Athens, April 24. -(U." P.) Dis patches received tonifcnt say that twr Turkish aeroplanes which were flying over the British warships were shot down. .: The bombardment of : the forts In the straits continues intermittently. Germans Don't Want Peace. , Berlin by Wireless to London,- April 24. (I. N. S.) The North German Gazette states regarding rumors of preparations for peace and especially peace with England, that these are based on the wishes of . the Knglisn people and that no person competent to fornr-sn opinion would think of abandoning a situation favorable to Germany In favor of a . premature peace. r . '... : . . . .. . .. .i , , ' flung back with enormous looses, and the Russians captured height. No. 101, taking prisoner seven officers and 200 men and capturing two Maxims. The Russians now' occupy the up per waters of inost of . the rivets run ning south in the fertile plains of Hungary., over the front' of 40 miles and are endeavoring to get a foothold on the railways. The enemy is strug gling with all the disadvantages of flooded . rivers and ruined roads , be hind this front.V Although In th pos session of an uninjured network of railways, greatly facilitating his oper atlons. the Russians are forcing an ad vance between- tire lines f railway which converge and- approach within about a. score of , miles , south of th Russian forward posts. " Thus the railways will be permitted to give no tactical advantages to th enemy in the. region where fighting Is In progress., f Flood Causes Many Hearts to Ache With 60 Bead, City of Austin, Teaaa, Plans Many . Pnnerals Sorrowlnf .Parsons Visit Morms. - Austin, ; Texas., April 24. (U. P. ) The state capital tonight was a city of gloom. With its flood death list reckoned at 50 or more, and Its dis covered dead already 45, -the city was planning for single, double even quintet services for the identified victims. , . ' . " ',. Sorrowful, expectant groups still crowded the morgues tonight to . gaze upon the corpses dragged from tha raging waters, Relieving that perhaps they might find there a loved one missing since Thursday night. , Rescue "parties of " police, citizens, and firemen -stilt' dug , tonight In the masses of debris cast upon the flood waves, - seeltlng the missing. " , ' The worst is past. The flood waters are receding and Austin now-looks confidently to no further destruction. Railroad .traffic will be about normal tomorrow. , - Sultan Hounds' Out Neutrals. . Paris. ... April 24. (1. N. . 8.) Th Temps ;. states - thac ' according to ' a message ito the well informed Petro grad telegraph agency, the grand viz ier of Turkey has sounded the Italian and United States ambassadors to din cover 'if their countries would be will ing to act as Intermediaries : between the port and th Triple Kntent with a view to th signing of. a separate peace.; . . , , .... mm sits DAY AT WM BY HER BLO Canadian Troops Check Ter rific Onslaught, of German: Who Cross Yser Until Brit ish; French, Belgians Ccrr. 3 UZERNE, ONCE LOST, IS TORN FROM FOES' HANDS I Bearing Brunt of Fighting, Canadians Once. Lost But Regained Guns. ay Von Kindanbnrr Zsds. It is estimated that the Ger mans employed COO. 000 troops hi their latest effort to break the allies' lines. Another report which Indicates the importance of th movement to the German plans is that-General" Von- llln denburi;, hero of the German at tempt, on Warsaw and called the kaiser's fighting leader, . is actively at the head of this new German drive toward Calai. Information from the Dutch 0- Infonnatlon from the Dutch - 'border la that the German" plans W - for the rw.ewed offensive were f Just reaching the, point of corn- pletlon when the Hritlsh attach: on hill No. 60 precipitated th movement before the appointed i time. - ifr London, April 24.- (I. . N. 8.) Th second German drive on Ypres, the key to Calais, has been checked. Brought to a halt by the Canadian-, who gave the advancing hordes of in vaders such terrific-battle, even wltr their left flank exposed,' that the French, English and Belgians were able to reform their line between Steenstraate and Ilet Has, the kalser'n forces today- were turned back at Llserne, the village they' captured west of the Yser, and the Franco-Belgian forces are now crowding them bactc to th eastward. The Germans have fallen back Vo the left bank of the canalized stream and heavy reinforce ments ar being concentrated ther a hurl them back across the Yser. Th crisis of ther battle at X,lzrr, cam this morning at dawn, According to the French official com in unique re ceived tonight from Paris. After ter rific cannonading and sporadic Infantry actions all night the French and Bel gian, carbineers Joined In a brilliant attack, upon the newly occupied Ger man defensive works at th edg of therlllag. The dash and vigor of th attack carried the allied force" over, th trenches, and after sharp fighting in the street th invader were forced back and out down into the low ground stretching down to ward the bank of the Yser. Meanwhile the Frencn and Belgian toward. Dixschoote. and the British In the angle at Het Sas, where the sa lient projects from the main Una to protect Ypres, carried on stubborn engagements with the Germans, who fought with Intense fury. Numerous fresh battalions have been seen coming up behind the Ger mans' line for the past 2i hour, Apparently the kaiser's force, flushed by their temporary suocess In bending th allies' line, were ddter- (CoDcluded on 1'mre Mite. Column Two.) VIVIANI DASHES HOPE OF EARLY PEACE OR OF TRANCE GAINING CASH Whatever Indemnity Ger many Pays Should' Be Bcl ' gium's, He Says, The Hague, April 24, (J; N. S.) Re liable news has . reached here of h highly Important statement by M. Vivlanl, th French prime minister, this week, that there is no question of peace in the near future, and that France at least has .Itll nope, If any, of obtaining a war Indemnity from Germany, even If the latter Is de feated. This statement was made to th editors of til the leading Paris news papers, whom M. Vivlanl summoned "u his working cabinet for a heart to heart talk on the situation. The pre mier said: "It is highly advisable not to give th people the impression that peace will "oe-concluded in the near future. "It is also highly, advisable not tn lead the gpeople to believe that we shall obtain en important monetary Indemnity from Germany." By "we" the editors-understand that Vivlanl referred to France. After their chat with tha' premier their conviction wan that any indemnity that could be wrung . from Oernany would not bu heavy enough even to cover the coat of the tuln of Belgium, and that Eng land, and France, as guarantors nf her neutrality, would be In ' honor bound to hand over to Belgium the total sum tiiat Germany may pay, Paris editors also understand that it' is the opinion of the French gov ernment that, contrary 10 what mlKht be expected at the winding up of th great peace, the peace preliminary will occupy very littl time. ' Ono r-peacs is serfouily mentioned on both sides,' hostilities wilt cease wltU minimum of delay. ,