The Omaha Daily Bee VOL. 51 NO. 191. 12 I M I tUtt IW M., It, l M OMAHA, MONDAY, JANUARY 30. 1922. Hut II Wll. . II. MltM t M4tl M. M, to alta r"' M SUM, UM M Iwa, if St TWO CENTS DIM c -j "r JV fin LnJ EM S mm nn f1 Profits in 1922, Aim of F armei's y'lVole Ktprrt to Make Money Iy running Thi Year," ay Superior U.ntk Curlier. Few Borrowers in County y n It mar surprU mnmf rll? folk he are m mim-lir whnlrtrr in in. vmmetmw r Im know that f.p4 rtprrl I. malt i.M.nr, br farmlna In XV.'.." Thai I hal a aurf rrf'MnlMllt. of Th. Urn lu4 mi nupifli. In Ih. mklat t m fit. (arm Inr ranimnli. thla I. IN. fourlh of -rlra, el her wf Mhlrk Kill obMliJ bill). By PAUL GREER. Superior. Xci., Jan. 29. (Special.) -"lf a farm should be advertised for mt in Nuckolls county, there would be five nun after it at once," said W'cy Haiti!, cashier of the Farm er Stale bank here. Such a state ment lias an odd sound after all the idle talk in cities about the drift from the country, but Mr. Baird gives the reason without faltering: "People expect to make money by , farming in l22. ."I am optimistic for the future, too." n.iid Mr. Baird. "When you find the farmers' corn cribs and wheat bins empty and not much live stuck about, then is when to expect hard times Instead of that we now have one and a third crops of com on hand, plenty of small grain, and almost every farmer has a few extra shoals and calves. There arc from three to five cows-on the avcraKC f.-.rin, and many more on some. In past years there have been crop failures in this part of the state, and it was then that we learned to keep cows and chickens for a good liv ing. At those times we had to ship in corn for feed. Surplus Corn Used. 'The surplus corn is be;ng used to better advantage now. Milk cows are being fed more of it, which in creases the yield. A few more ears r.re being tossed to the calves, which grow better and make more beef. Hog production also has been . increased. There were more fall pigs v Mhan usual, and these wilt bring in a good deal of money, when they are grown in June or July. . . - ""'' "The- fact that so much grain ha been held on the farm is a good thing. It is a start toward more otderl 1,'arkcting in the sense of not glutting the market by shipping the grain all cut at once.- The farmers have a right to feel that they have had a raw deal, and are not taking any more chances by seeking large amounts of credit. One bank in Superior has obtained ?:U,uw through the War Finance corpora tion,' and others, about the country y also have availed thmselves of this aid, which has been nothing short ot a godsend. Economy has been thi farmer's answer to the high prices of manufactured goods, and when (Jirn to Tase Two. Column Two.) Mid'-Year Graduates of Central Banquet . "High school fellows should con sider the debt of service they owe their city, their - state and their country when they enter into active business affairs," said Louis Bock, senior class president, in a talk to 35 mid-year graduates of Central' High school at their final banquet at the Brandcis Renaissance room Saturday. He urged the students to put " their energy into building Omaha, that their success might be r.n asset to their own city.- Bock has been an active leader in school social affairs for the 'past four years. "The, Kind of an Education that Functions" was the subject of the address given by J. H. Bcverldge, " superintendent of schools, to the graduates. Beveridge told the story ot" "The-Americanization of Edward Bok" to illustrate how each high school graduate's ambitions for his own career and for the betterment of his country can be easily attained. Miss Anna Hilliard and F. F. Wol lery, teacher patrons of the graduat ing" class, followed with short ad dresses. Injunction Issued Against Striking St Paul Printers St. Paul, Jan. 29.-S-A. temporary injunction restraining certain pick eting methods of members of St. Paul Typographical union No. 30 was granted by Judge Hanft in Ramsey county district court yes terday on petition of five job print ing establishment, . Union employes of the five com panies have been on strike since lasts May. In their .petition, theem ployers alleged that pickets -intimidated and coerced those remaining at work. - Judge Hant't apportions the num ber of pickets at from 2 to 8 to each of the plants involved. New Comet Discovered From Cape of Good Hope Cambridge, Mass.. Jan. 29. Dis covery of a new comet in the south ern skies was announced in a cable from Brussels, received at the Har vard observatory today. The mes sage said that the comet was seen from the Cape of Good Hope, South - Africa, and appeared to be moving out'n and west, but gave no further details. The British government maintains an observatory at Cape Town, Troops, Police and Citizen Volunteers'. Take Lives in Hands in Attempts to 'Aid Victims in ' Washington Movie House Disaster. Omaha Hm Lr4 !. Washington, Jan. 29, Many re markable recuci were performed, following the knickerbocker theater CttUsprnphe which followed in the wake of the moot terrific mow in this Ma-linn in more than 20 year. One of the most remarkable re scue wa that of Scott Mont gomery, who was taken out at 8:20 this morning, after having bent pinned beneath an iron girder for more than 11 hour, lie died four hours later at Waller Kcid hospital, however, He was given opiatri while under the wreckage by a physician who liadao crawl quite a ways to him. Miss Veronica Murphy, whom Montgomery accompanied to the theater also it among the dead. Miss Caroline (."pshaw, niece of Representative I'pshaw of Georgia, had one foot cut off and the other so badly mangled that it will have to be amputated. Ten college Undents, living af the S- A. E. fraternity home have volunteered their services for blood transfusion, f which may be necessary to Miss I'p shaw s recovery. Vittlc Grant Kaiiston, 8, is all who can be found of a happy family of five who attended the fateful theater last night. His' father. Oscar Cans-ten, bis mother and his 9-year-old sister are among the identified dead. Another sister, Dorothy, IS is listed among the missing and is believed to have perished. The Kanstons re cently came to Washington from Chicago. Mr. Kanston was env ployed at the bureau of valuation of the War department. Tells of Many Rescues. Graphic description of many in dividual rescues was given a reporter by Lieutenant Parsons of the police. "We were digging into the ruins when we saw a tuft of red hair pro truding from the wreckage. Contin uing to dig,' we manager to uncover a small boy, probably 9 years old. While we were getting him out he told us that his little sister was be neath the pile of debris also. The girl, about 6 years old, was rescued. Neither of the children . were seri ously hurt, through some' miracle, but their mother, nearby, was dead. ("Lieutenant Colonel Taylor, an army officer, was .taken out by our men: We started to put him on a stretcher but he found he could use his legs and turned around to help us in our work. "Dr. Gearhart, a dentist,, was found pinned beneath an I-beam. He told us as we endeavored to extricate him, that he had brctt conscious nil iiiulit in, that position. '.V woman beside him wa dead. She was la'ir iden tilicd a the dentist' wife. Jokes About Injuries. "One lellow 'with both legs .hor ribly broken asked for cigaret as he was being carried out tm a stretch er. He joked w ith li reeueri about Ida mangled limbs, remarking that ite had about 'ig legs' now. He was tcrtainly full of. gnu "A group of two women and & Man whom we were digging out aio displayed remarkable nerve, talking with the men and directing their res "We were forced to be rather rough with a number of persons wht i.enundcd entrance to the ruins in order to find relatives or friends.1 We wish to express our regret to them for this, but it wa the only way we could handle the situation under the Irving circumstances." ' .When the crash came last night it began with a loud hiss, followed by a deafening roar. The middle of the roof gave away first. It was (ol Icwed by the entire roof and the-balcony.- The fallen balcony covered the pit of the theater. On top oi that was. the roof. Screams cHard for Blocks. Before the noise from the crash of filling timbers, concrete and , steel was silenced the agonized shrieks and1 cries for help from those bunej beneath the mass . began. .. Thi" screams of hysterical women and others actually, injured were heard lor blocks away. Rescue work began immediately. Those who had escaped by a mira cle joined the police reserves, and firemen, who reached the scene with in -15 minutes after the crash. There was no light. The minding , snow made the work more difficult. And above everything else, came t the cries of the injured, many of them completely buried and out of sight beneath a mass of timbers, i Among well known persons who lost their lives in the disaster were Chaunccy C. Brainerd. Washington correspondent of the Brooklyn Eagle and vice president of the gridiron ' club, and his wife. Louis W. Mrayer, . Washington corre spondent of the - Pittsburgh Dis patch also is among the dead. Guy S. Eldridge of Salt Lake City, also killed, is a brother-in-law of benator Kecd hmoot. - Another victim was former Congressman A. J. Barchfeld of Pennsylvania. His daughter met death with him. ;' Many Remarkable Rescues Follow ! Q g f m a jj y Washington I heater Catastrophe , tl,i for Relief Second Ship Runs Wild in Harbor at New York Oinnha Be leased Wire. New York. Jan. 29. Another steamship the second large vessel so afflicted in 24 hours went "loco" near the entrance to the Hudson river . veered suddenly from its course, charged toward the barge of fice on the Battery and, by a matter of a few yards, escaped smashing into the rocky sea wall at Battery park. , Today it was the Mount Carrioll of the United American line, in from Hamburg with about 200 passengers. Yesterday it was the Sioux of the New York and Porto Rico line. The fact that the two-ships "ran wild" in almost the identical place and within a short speace of time, gave rise to rumors of some "mysterious attraction" and veterans of the water front "spoke sagely of Jonahs and jinx. Mrs. R, S. Dpud to Speak at Philosophical Meeting The Omaha Philosophical society meets at 3 this afternoon in Patter son block. Seventeenth and Farnam streets. Mrs. R. S. Doud will talk on "Americanization in Social Settlements." "Drys" Win Sweeping ; Victory in Poland , , . - . . , Warsaw: Jan., 29. (By A P,) Beer containing more than 2 1-2 per cent alcohol is to be forbidden in Poland. The alcoltol law passed by the diet today, places the ban on beer of higher alcohol content, limits drinking places to one for each 2,500 population, prohibits sa loons, licensing only cafes and res taurants, makes proprietors liable to arrest in the case of drunkenness on, their premises, and places a tax of 20 per cent on all liquor stocks. A stiff fight in the diet preceded the passage of the measure, ;,the "wet" forces presenting lengthy ar guments against, as one of them phrased it, compelling the Poles to drink hair tonics as they do in the United States. - - The "dry" victory is attributed largely to the activities . of seven .women deputies. ' v Omaha-"Y" Quartet Will Give Concert in Plattsmouth Plattsmouth, Neb., Jan. 29. (Spe cial.) Plattsmonth chapter of De Molay has arranged to bring the Omaha Y. M. C. A. quartet here for an evening's public entertainment. Note to Reparations Commit . ioii Requests to Re AUj lowed to Stop All Cash Payments During I922r Plan to Negotiate. Loan Hf Tba Assort! rim Berlin, Jan. 29. The German note to the reparations commission, in re MKiuse to the commission's demand fr explanations of Germany's al leged inability-to meet its obligations for January and, l ebruary, request that Germany be relieved of all cash payments in 1922. It also asks' for k. general reduction in cash payments and an increase in payments in kind The note suggests that the; allies take measures to restore Germany's internal and external credit;, apd thereby facilitate the floating; of a big international reparation Joan. It announces that -GermanyS will rainc an internal loan in 1922. independent, ly of the foreign, in order' to reduce the floating debt. . Plan Tax Increase. '- ! It is pointed out that the allied ex perts at the Brussels conference jn 1920, recognized that German direct taxation was incapable of further augmentation, but that nevertheless bills were before the rcichstag to provide further- increases in property tax, as well as taxes on capital and corporations. .The turnover tax will be increased from 1JJ to 2 per cent, and the" coal tax from 20 to 40 per cent. The burdens on production and consumption will be increased, and the increased customs duties will be collected on a gold basis. In- explanation of- Germany's fi nancial position, the note states that energetic 'measures will , be - taken against- the . removal - of capital abroad and the evasion, of taxation. It explains " that -. railway " rates, compared -with prewar .conditions, have been increased 19 fold for pas sengers and 32 fold for freight. The postal and telephone' rates we're in creased 21 fold. ' , ... , . .To Increase Prices, r ;.;, , - The food ' subsidies for 1922 will amount to ronly 1,000,000,000 - paper marks, as compared with 2,250,000,000 previously; The price ;of bread will shortly j be increased by 75 per cent A system for insurance for the un cmployed' at the expense of employ ers and employes will be-introduced, to replace - the existing - relief - sys tem ; .;;,,.), i '". : i. ... ' The ordinary budget -shows, : with a revenue ot lUJ.zuu.uuu.uuo': marks and expenses Wf 86,700.00a)00 marks, a surplus' of 16,500.000,000' available for-reparation payments. $ - With the object of rduCingthe;' floating. 'debt, the ' government :will -raise? an. 'inter nal loan this " year -aparfirorn tne compulsory: loan-'-already ' agreed ; (Turn to Pace Twit,' Column Three.) Business Houses at Kimball to Close for Ewbank Funeral Kimball,'. Neb., Jan. . 29. (Special Telegram.) The body of John Ew bank arrived today,: from Thermo polis, N. Y., where he died, from a stroke of apoplexy. He was one of the pioneers of western Nebras ka and Colorado, and owned severol ranches. He was prominent in many enterprises, '.also a director in the Citizens State bank here. He was 66 years old. - The fuhertal will be held Tuesday . afternoon. . All-busi ness houses ,will be. cIoseA.auring the funeral. .: .L". L. -'" Snow Following Rain-Falls " Most of Day - in ' Beatrice Beatrice, .Neb.,' Jan." 29. (Special Telegram.) Following a light rain Sunday morning a wet snow fell in this section of the -state most of the day. The moisture will.be benefi cial to the winter wheat. ., - Rahin Pie and Yeast, Wailrett Say a, (Uvea Effects of Alcohol Without trafficking with bootleg Srrs or laying one's self open to ar rest for violation of the liquor law a person in Omaha can enjoy the con. d'tkm Mr, Volstead intended to pre vent. Here Is the recipe, according to a waitress in a South Side rutay rant: tat a piece of raisin pie and a cak. of yeast, drink a pint of water and then pull your chair up to a hot stove or steam .radiator. In 0 minuics. to tf-t the kick, get up an I try to walk around the chair. According to the waitress, nunv patrons of the restaurant have stand ing orders for raisin pie and a yeast lake. Up to date not one has been arrested for having liquor on the Ivp and the restaurant proprietor is not looked upon as a bootlegger. Governor Faces Hardest Fight of Career on Gas Tax Rescue Workers Fight Desperate Battle, Regardless of Own Risk; 88 of Bodies Already Identified List of Identified Dead and Injured in Theater Disaster Discussions of Bill on Eve of its ' Consideration hy Lower House Reach . .- Fever Heat. Lincoln, Jan. 29. (Special Tele Cram.) Governor McKclvie face.' the closest, hardest fight of his ad ministration tomorrow afternoon t 2 when his gasoline bill to put the burden of road-building on the user of the roads, the automobilists, will be considered by the lower house. ' Neither the administration leaders nor administration enemies were sanguine of victory tonight as dis cussions of" the bill reached fever btat. Both sides said they had a "fighting chance." Factions Cause Trouble. Administration leaders asserted they were not forced to contend with arguments against the tax so much as with a group of factions which they enumerated as follows: . Nonpartisan leaguers fighting the gasoline tax in Nebraska, while their brethren in North Da kota passed .such a bill when in power, and declared it was the only equitable" tax devised to pay tor .road building. ; ' Members - who --in -most cases have consistently voted against all tdministration proppsals. Members nursing boomlets for governor, attorney , general, sec retary of state and state treasur er. '.-.,. - Members who fear resolutions adopted by certain bodies against 'the gasoline tax. Members who believe it is a sales tax and not an excise tax. Griswold for Tax. , There is an exception to this, bow ever, in the person of Representative Dwight Griswold of Gordon, prob able candidate for state, auditor, who is -for the ' irasolifie tax. He said: "Forcing an automobilist to pay for roads ethey use will be nationwide in four-or five years and I'd rather go home and explain why I am for it than why. I was against it, be cause the gasoline tax is certain to be more popular as time goes on. Administration leaders are cbmbat ing the adverse resolutions propa ganda by pointing to the fact that in the last few days, resolutions for the gasoline tax have been passed after the people learn it is not an additional tax, but a tax that will take the burden of rbadbuilding from the property owners and place it on the automobilist. Cite Signers' Carelessness. Then, friends of the administration are telling of the usual carelessness with which a man signs a petition or resolution which doesn't cost him any money, and repeat the story of every member of a community who sighed a petition to hang the best citizen in the town at sunrise. Governor McKelvie issued the fol lowing statement tonight: "Some who may vote against the Shackleton Dies Enroute to South Pole Sir Ernest Shackleton . Ex pires on Steamer on Way to Ant , arctic. By The Assocluted Prnw. " Montevideo, Uruguay, Jan. 29. . Sir Ernest Shackleton, British ex plorer, died January 5, on the steam ship Quest, on which he was mak ing another expedition into the Ant arctic. Death occurred when the Quest was off the Gritvickcn station. The body was brought here on a Norwegian- steamer and will be taken to Europe. Capt L. Hussey of the Quest will accompany the body. Prof. Gruvel and other members of the explorer's party will continue the expedition. Sir Ernest Shackleton was born in 1874. He was a third lieutenant in the British Antartic ..expedition in 1901 and in 1907-9 commanded an expedition which got to within 97 miles of the South pole. He made his third quest of the pole in 1914. The expedition in which he was engaged when he died was to have covered 30,000 miles of uncharted sections of the South Atlantic, the Pacific and the Antartic seas. On board the. Quest, a little 200 ton ship, Sir Ernest sailed from Eng- Sis:?; r The Ao.latr4 rrMa. Washington, Jan. 29 The identi fied dead in the Knickerbocker theater catstrophe arc: Former Representative A. I lURCHI-ELD, formerly oM'ilts burgh, ..MISS HELEN' BARCHFELD, Ins daughter,- , AKCIIIK CELL, formerly of meland. .V. J. CHAUXCEV C. BRAINERD. Washington correspondent of the lirooklyn Eagle, MRS. CHALNCEV C. BRAIN ERD. WILFRED BROSSEAU. North Adams, Mass-, student at George town university. GUY S. ELDRIDGE. Salt Lake City, brother-in-law of Senator Snioot of Utah. OSCAR G. KANSTON', Chicago, bis wife and daughters, Helen and Anvln. CUTLER LAFIX. jr., 16, Chi cago. MISS NANNIE LEE LAM BERT, formerly of Ashboro. N. C JOHN" W. MURRAY. The Plains, Va. W. B. SAMMON of AYyommg, student of George Washington mi versity. W. L. SCIIOOLFIELD, Danville. Va. LAVERNE SPROUL..17. Chi cago, nephew of Representative El liott W. Sprout of Illinois. C. E. STEPHENSON. Boston. LEWIS STRAYER, Washington correspondent of the Pittsburgh Dis patch. II. CON ROY VANCE. Fred ericksburg. Va. " t MRS. H. CONROY VANCE. Fredericksburg, Va. ' WILLIAM WALTERS. Brook lyn, N. Y-, student at Georgetown university. MARY ETHEL ATKINSON. . JOSEPH W. BEAL. . WILLIAM G. BIKLE. THOMAS R.- BOURNE:'" . MRS. DAISY GARVEY BO WD EN. ' ALBERT BUEI1LER. WILLIAM M. CAN BY. MRS. D. H. CO V ELL. W. M. CROCKER. - . VINSON W. DAUBER. THOMAS M. DORSEY.' MISS HELEN DORSCH. A. C. ELDRIDGE. MRS. ALFRED G. ELDRIDGE. E. H. ERNEST. MeC. FARR. CHRISTIAN FEIGE. JOHN P. FLEMING. MISS MARY LEE FLEMING.' THOMAS FLEMING. ? G. S. FREEMAN-' K' MRS. CLYDE M. GEARHART. E. H. HALL. DOUGLAS HILLYER. WILLIAM G. HUGHES. DANIEL K. JACKSON. MISS ELIZABETH JEFFREYS. JOHN M. JEFFREYS. HOWARD V. KNEESI. L. L. LEHLER. LEROY LEHLER. M. LEROY LEHMER. Other Great Theater Disasters Since 1835 Omaha Hre Leased Wire. Lives Date. Lost. .1888 .1911 .1847 .1876 .1887 ' The Quest, the vessel In which Sir Ernest Shackleton and party were trying to reach the South pole. The noted explorer is shown in the insert. ' I Ti A ATr. t-T VT f A XT WYATT McKIMMIE. JULIAN McKINNEY. ERNEST E. MATELLIO. MRS. NORMAN E. -MARTIN-DALE. MISS AGNES MELLON. MRS. JEAN M1RSKY. MISS VERONICA MURPHY. MISS VIVINA OGDEN. D. F. O'DONNELL. MRS. D. F. O'DONNELL. . MISS LOUIS PITCHER. MISS' HAZEL PRICE, , MRS. MARIE RUSSELL. MRS. CORA C. SIGOURNEY. MISS MARIE H. SMITH. VICTOR M. STURGIN. MRS. .GERTRUDE TAYLOR. WILLIAM TRACY. MISS GLADYS THOMAS. CHARLES COWLES TUCKER. MRS. CHARLES COWLES TUCKER. JACOB URDONG. MRS. JACOB URDONG. LOUIS F. VALLYNTINE. . ' MRS. LOUIS F. . VALLYNTINE. ' MISS MILDRED WALFORD. JOHN L. WALKER. M R'S. JOHN L. WALKER: CAPT. WILLIAM R. WARNER, quartermaster corps, U. $. A. MRS. WILLIAM-R. WARNER. MRS. CHARLES M. WESSON, wife of Col. C. N. Wesson, ordnance department, U. S. A. IVAN J. WHITE. MISS MARGARET DUTCH, Lu dington, Mich. MISS M. C. BIKLE. - MRS. VIRGINIA FARRAUD. sister of Minister Bianchi of Guatc- mala. ' ' List of Injured. - Among the injured in the Knickcr- (Tnrn to Pafe Two, Column Four.) Theater. Banquet, Oporto ... Bologne, Russia Carlsruhc, Pctrograd. Conways, Brooklyn . Exeter. England Flares, Acapulco, Mex..l909 Iroquois, Chicago ."..'. ."719.03 Italian Hall, Calumet, Mich 1913 Lehman's, Pctrograd ..1836 Opera Comique, Paris.. 1887 Rhode's.- Boyertown, Pa.1908 Ring, Vienna 1881 Valcnce-Sur-Rhone, F'ce.1919 Villareal, Spain .'. 1912 Canonsburg, Pa .1911 Front Street tlreater, Baltimore ......... .,..1895 "200 120 200 295 200 250 575 72 700 75 170 640 80 80 26 23 The Weather land last September on what was to have been a two-year voyage. The voyage had as it objective; not oily occanographic research,-but I - - . -:" -v '. t the exploration of a petrified forest and the location of a "lost" island i Tuanaki the adjacent . . waters or wbich had not been ; sailed lex more than 90 years. . Sir Ernest for his distinguished services was made a knight in 1909, Various-societies have, honored him. ' ' V . I ' . ; '' '' Forecast. " Nebraska Unsettled weather Monday and Tuesday, with probable snow; colder in east portion Mop day. - Hourly Temperatures. 5 . m. 6 . m. 1 a. m . s. m. m. m. 10 i. m. 11 a. m. It noon.. ...ai ...s? ...St ...as ...as ...s; ...38 t p. m.... S p. m.. ., S p. m.... 4 p. m.,.. 5 p. m . . , . S p. m..,. 7 p. m . . .' . S p. ?... . ..39 . .4 ..41 ..40 ..40 ..40 ..40 ..39 Over Hundred Others Known to Have Been Injured in Collapse of Knickerbocker Movie Palace at Washington. Victims Caught Without Warning When Roof Falls Under Weight of Snow Most of. Dead Crushed Under Balcony. Hy the Aaaoclalnl I'm. Washington, Jan. 29. Ninety persona are known to have lost their lives in the collapse, last night, of the snow-laden roof of the Knickerbocker motion picture theater. Rescue workers, fighting a desperate battle through dark and day light, "had recovered that number tonight. More than a hun dred others are known to have been injured. Of the dead, 88 had been identified at dark tonight. The large majority of both killed and injured were local resi dents, although many came recently from other places. Ex ploration of the ruins went on unchecked after dark, but those in charge believed few additional bodies will be found. Without regard to their own risk, soldiers, marines, sail ors, police, firemen and citizen volunteers had fought their way beneath the wreckage over practically the whole floor space of the auditorium. The exact number in the theater when the steel and con crete span of the roof buckled and fell under its three-foot load of snow probably never will be known. The stories of perhaps a hundred who got out uninjured have been report ed. These account for a few more than 300 in the audience that was roaring in laughter at a filmed comedy when the roof fell on them, like a blanket, carrying down the front of the wide balcony in its crash. Storm Kept Many Away. Normally, the theater lias had every seat filled at that hour and nearly 2,000 persons was it capacity. The same unprecedented snowfall v which brought death to the venture some few, kept the many at home. Street car traffic had been abandoned and streets and sidewalks were all but impassable. There has not been time for of-, ficial inquiry as to the caue of the disaster.- The ruins disclose, how ever,. ihJt the mass - of-stecl-hcld concrete that formed the roof came down. The crash swept the supports from tinder the balcony, apparently, and this hinged down at an angle of , 45 degrees, adding to the tangled wreckage on the floor below. The building stands in an acute angled corner at Eighteenth street and Columbia road, northwest, the heart of the most favored residence section. The narrow niche of the stage on which the screen was hung was backed into the corner angle, while to the; left from the stage the line of the auditorium wall runs straight for some 200 feet down Eighteenth. To the right, the wall follows the slow curve of Columbia road for about the same distance and at the far end, paralleling the stage front, the back wall completes the audi torium proper also about 200 feet in length. . .. - Crowd Grooped Below Balcony- The space stood roofless a moment after the first hissing sound of the breaking roof gave warning above the music of .the orchestra. There is only one surviver thus far who has told of having heard that ' warn- ing and seen the first powdery hand ful of snow sift down over the head of the orchestra leader in time to escape. From his seat well forward on the main floor, he raced for the doors at the back. A blast of air, expelled as the. roof came down, hurled him out through the doorway to safety. - . Most of the bodies were recov ered from the floor o fthc oifc be-' neath the wreckage oi-the bahSohy or from, the front of the balcony. Persons on the main floor had grouped themselves just below the' front of the balcony. They were back far enough to see well and most of the front and back rows were empty. , .- : - At the point they had chosen, the danger proved to be double. Fewl of those seated there could havj escaped. Even if the falling cori crete siaos ana sicei worK ot tle roof missed them, the balcony frpnt came down on the first wreckage with crushing weight. The gleam ing brass rail of the balcony front lay spread over the wreckage of the roof, 15 feet below when rescuers reached the scene. . Those in . Back Escape. All those farther back on the main floor probably escaped. The beams that supported the back end of the balcony did not let go their clutch on the wall. The wide sweep of seats they supported tilted down until the wreckage, below took the weight of the front end then stood, covering the back rows of the main floor like a -tent. . The front rows of the balcony were ground to . a twisted mass. There was no wood in the structure. It was all steel and concrete but the enormous weight of the balcony was sufficient to wind the tortured beams into fanmstic shapes. Here again, chance played a part in reducing the number of victims. The front rows of the balcony, four or five tiers deep, were known as "reserved" seats. They were priced 1 above the succeeding rows. With the small attendance last night, prob ably only a few had paid,-thc extra prices for these seats, preferring to sit further back in the balconv. And many of those behind scrambled up (Tuns, t Vase. Tw Colore lour.) r ... President Expresses Sorrow Over Disaster Washington, Jan. 29. (By A.-P.) President Harding issued the -following statement late today, on the Knickerbocker theater disaster: ." "I have experienced the same as tounding shock and the same inex pressible sorrow which has come to all of Washington and which will be sympathetically felt throughput the land. If I knew aught to say to soften the sorrow of hundreds who are so suddenly bereave', if I could say a word to cheer the maimed and suffering, I would gladly do so. "The terrible tragedy, staged in the midst of the great storm, has deeply depressed .all of us and left us won dering about the revolving fates.'' Capper to Ask Probe of Theater Disaster Washington, Jan. 29. (By A. P.) Senator Capper of Kansas, a mem ber of the senate District of Colum bia committee, announced tonight that when the senate reconvened he would introduce a resolution calling tor an investigation ot the Knicker bocker theater disaster and also of all buildings constructed here since the beginning of the war. Senator Capper said reports had come to him that to a more or less degree the building code of the Dis trict cf Columbia had been violated during the rush of construction fol lowing the increase in the city's pop t.lation after the declaration of war. Two Tiny Tots Found Peacefully Sleeping Under Theater Debris Washington, Jan. 29. (By A. P.) bleeping peacefully- beneath the debris in the wrecked Knickerbock er theater, two girls, 4 and 6, were found today by rescuers, 10 hours after the roof had fallen. Appar- netly neither was badly hurt. They were taken to a hospital without identification. Four hours earlier, a 5-year-old girl was found unhurt, seated be tween the bodies of two women. Her life evidently had been saved by her falling between the seats and the protection given her by the two bodies. The last person to be taken from the ruins was' Dr. Scott Montgom ery of Washington, who was rescued 12 hours after the roof collapsed. He was- pinned by his legs under neath a beam which killed the- young woman whom he had escorted to : the theater. His condition is ex tremely serious. . -' nrf- .w T - 0