TOP J- The Omaha Daily- Bee VOL. 51-NO. 197. u limi tmi tiwwt n 14. in. .1 , . VMM -4 4 .. OMAHA. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1922. t Hail It hhI, ImIii, M. Mini n. Ma will mm. , 12 Mt M Ota, Will VU4 SuMa, laHH M .., W M TWO CENTS Good Roads Big Asset of State liighty-Mile Motor II in Trip From Hastings to York Eye-Opener for "Hard Ti met" Howler. Marketing on Increase '4 Mad am of Impart., ta maat "MM nuimIHm. all paMrafer train.. Th. .pi.ndla h if . aoir t.r a aiarf rpraaiaiita ml Th. IW In ale trip .rr lh Mala am aaolher af th .leu thai Malu la far from rial aa II. hark. Thl at lha aaemth ot lha atria f w tiulao aap1n( sally. x By PAUL GREER. York. Neb., Feb. ..-(Special.) iiooa road are not least among the asseti of Nebraska.. A great deal of money Mas been spent on their con struction and upkeep, and it would be splendid if road cobti could be re (lured, but there ii not one highway that person living anywhere near regret having built or willingly would cc neglected. An cW-mile journey by motor bus irom mstings to Urand Island, Aurora and . York would open the ejes of a good many city folk. All the way the road is smoother than nany city streets, and for several miles in Hall countv it is graveled like boulevard. This material is due trom pus near Grand Island, The existence of so many brick yards in other localities suggests the idea tiiat some day, when population and prosperity have increased, and the price of brick decreased, long stretches of. roads may be paved per manently. . Dirt Roads Fill Need. But for the present dirt roads fill every need. This one is kept open through, the winter by snow plows and is maintained in constant repair. T he driver of the bus asserts that he has not missed making a regular trip one day this winter. . The sights 'along the way prove that good roads are of importance to many beside competitors with passenger trains, Everywhere in the state there is a great deal cf. trucking between towns. Poultry and egg dealers 'send out . from larger centers to smaller ones, bringing back loads of produce.' Jobbing houses send out loads of fruit in ' this way. We passed an immense oil truck just out 'of Hampton which covers this whole region. ' Farmers seem to be cashing in more of their produce than for some time. A good many horse-drawn .wagons heavily laden with wheat and corn were heading" for the loading points. ' Twb farm wagons, . loaded more lightly, were being drawn to town by... automobiles., In one of these cases the cargo consisted of hogs and in the other corn. An in genious farmer even was carrying two hogs in a Ford, with one fas tened on . each running board. ' Trade Better. Gossip along the way never fails to touch on the fact that more money is coming into evidence and that trade is better. , Passengers in the bus are mostl' traveling salesmen, although there is at least one farmer and a bevv of school teachers. 1 he (Turn to Pate Three, Column One.) United Statu Vartu to Seven ot Eight tads F ormed at Arms Meet Wa.hljigton. Feb. l-(Br A. V. tnle present plans ait charseJ. the Washington conference will give to the world tight treaties, to seven I which the United iMe, UI be a party. This the tat: Four-power I'acifie treaty, signed Drremtwr IJ. Five-power naval limitation treaty, reacy lur signature. I ive-powcr suhmarint an! po!on gas treaty, ready lor signature. Six-power treaty allocating Ger man i acme cable, dralnng. Nine-power treaty on Chinese Unit, drafting. Nine-pov.rr treaty on Other Chinese auctions, draftini. i American-Japanese treaty regard lug Yap, irtua!ly ready tor tigna ture. Chinene-Japanese treaty reaardina snantung, near completion. Parole Asked by Man Who Shot Poker Player ; ' Fremont, Neb., Feb. 1. (Special.) .Richard Henry Dunkle, serving from one to 10 years in the state penitentiary for manslaughter in the lcilling' of Ross Wickcrsham, after a poker gams, at Ni.ckerson last winter, has applied to the state board, for a pardon. . . Dunkle is an ex-sen-ice man and ever since his discharge has been suf fering with lung and heart trouble as a result of being gassed in France. Since being at Lancaster, Dunkle has been a patient in the pen itentiary hospital. Friends and relatives fear that even liberty in the fresh air will not prolong his life to a great extent. 1 County Attorney J. C. Cook stated today that he did. not know what action he, will take in regard to the pardon ". when it comes up onFcb- ruary 4, before the state board. Air Mail Refund Bills to, . Be Introduced This Week Legislation providing reimburse ment of western cities that advanced money for establishment of air mail fields and hangars will be introduced in the house and senate this week, according to J. David Larson, com missioner of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce, v who returned from Washington yesterday. Representative Jefferis will intro duce the bill in the house,. while Sen ator Smoot will father the bill in the senate. The sum involved is close to $150,000. of which Omaha is claiming $33,000.' ' Influenza Epidemic Increases in New York New York, Feb. 1. Influenza cases in this city have -reached epidemic proportions, Health Com missioner Copeland announced last night in making public a report showing that 813 cases of the dis ease and 283 cases of pneumonia had been reported during the last 24 hours. There-were 43 deaths from the two causes. Man in New York Prison Named Delegate to Soviet Moscow; '. Feb. L (By A. P.) James Larkin, who is serving a pris on sentence in New York state un der conviction for criminal anarchy, has been elected as one of the dele gates to the Moscow soviet by the voters of a tailoring factory here, whose workers are largely composed f tailor. - who- came from America. Packers Carry on Injunction Fight Though Strike Off Counsel for ''Biz Five" Will Ask That Order Be Made ( Permanent in Hearing Today. Notwithstanding the calling on' of the packer strike on the South Side, counsel for the "Big Five" pa:kera will present their plea for an inj-mc tion against picketing in the strike rone at a hearing to be held in fed eral court today. Judge T. C Munger is expected to preside at the hearing. The packer strike was called off Tuesday. Want Permanent Injunction. That will not deter us from seek ing a permanent injunction against picketing in the future." declared G. L; De Lacy, member of the law firm representing the packers. "We want a permanent injunction to be a matter of record. ' No doubt there are many strikers ,who will not be taken back to work imme diately and I think a permanent in junction will be a protection against them in case they become dissatisfied and resolve to renew their moles tations." Bigelow to Represent Anson H. Bigelow, counsel for the unions, declared he would be present for the hearing. Packing plant employment agents predicted yesterday that most of the old employes of the plants would find work within the next week as the packing season was just opening. Of l,0OQ applicants yesterday only 165, however, were given jobs. Think Unions Shattered. Managers stated yesterday morn ing that their reorganized torces were nearing normal efficiency. .The packers believe that the fail ure of the. strike will shatter the , , unions Deyona recovery. Tots Die in Flames When House Burns Mother Working in .'Yard Looks Up to See Fire Consuming Cottage. The two infant daughters of -Mr. and Mrs. Bcrelson Decker, 1014 South Seventeenth street, Council Bluffs, were burned to death late yesterday afternoon when the cot tage in which the family lives caught fire from an overheated stove pipe and was completely gutted. The -two children, Dorothy, 4 months, and Mary, IS months, were left m the house while Mrs. Decker was hanging out washing. When she glanced toward the house it was in flames, with no possibility of res cuing the babies. The frantic mo ther made several attempts -to res cue them. Decker is employed by the Droge Elevator company. "Wobblies" Active in Colorado Mines Poor Work Blamed for Disaster Senator Capper Hold Faulty Construction and Bad En gineering Rfupotuihle for Movie Collapse. Failed to Anchor Beams Denver, Colo., Feb. 1. The min ing districts jot southern Colorado, particularly in Huerfano county, are infested with scores of followers of the Industrial ' Workers of the World, Patrick J. Hamrock, state adjutant general, asserted in a re port to Governor Shoup. The re port was made following the with drawal yesterday of state rangers from Huerfano county, which has been under martial law since No vember 17, last, when the Colorado Fuel & Iron company cut wages and a strike of miners followed,' Jonas Marsh Libby Plunges to Death in N. Y. New York, Feb. 1. Jonas Marsh Libby. editor and international authority on ' industrial matters, plunged to his death this afternoon trom a point hign up on the Z5th story of the Municipal building. His bodv fell in the midst of lunch hour pedestrians. .- Rightly So! The people of Omaha and Nebraska are justly tired of purely news paper controversies on matters that do not af fect the public welfare. Mr 1 AaMTlaUj Pre-a. Washington. Feb. I. Bad eugi Herring, couplfd with cheap and faulty construction, was held re sponsible (or the collapse of the roof of the Knickerbocker theater and the resultant loi o nearly hundred lives, by Senator Capper ot Kansas, in a statement issued after an inveMigation of the ruins of the ill-fated structure. senator tapper, who as a mem brr of the senate District of Colum bia committee, introduced a reoIu tion providing for senate investiga tion of the disaster, was accom natiied in his inspection of the scene by fcenators Jonei of Washington (ooding of Idaho and Sheppard of Texas, all member of the District of Columbia committee, and Repre sentative L pshaw of Georgia, whose neice, si its Caroline L pshaw, was injured in the collapse. ihe Kansas senator said District of Columbia oflicials who approved the plans for such construction as was used in the Knickerbocker were responsible to a large extent for the collapse of the building. , Beams Not Anchored. "Government engineers on the ground told me, said Senator Cap per's statement, "that none of the bearings of truss or beams on the walls were anchored or fastened to the walls, which in my judgment was a tundamental error in such construction, because any unusual disturbing cause might gradually slip the beams from their supports. Coincident with senator tappers statement the American Association of Engineers issued a statement in which it declared the disaster "was evidently due either to faulty de ign or construction which - would not have occurred had licensed engi neers or architects supervised the work." The association has a com.' mittee investigating the collapse. Hold Inquest Tuesday. Other developments in-the inves- ligation today was an- announce' ment from Coroner Nevitt that he would inaugurate the inquest to be held over the bodies of two of the theater victims luesdav and a con ference between District Attorney Gordon and the two army officers etailed.to assist him preparatory to presentation of the matter to the grand jury. Three more messages of condo lence from diplomatic representa tives of foreign governments here were received today by - Secretary Hughes. The expressions of sympa thy came from Arthur J. Balfour, head of the British delegation to the Washington conference; Minister De Cespcdes of Cuba and Minister Sze of China. Mr. Balfour's message said: : "It is a matter of most poignant regret to myself and to each of my colleagues that the city in which, for the last three months, we have received such hospitality and such kindness, should have been plunged into griet by a disaster 50 terrible at the moment when the labors of the conference are approaching their conclusion. Grand Island Family Is Overcome by Gas Grand Island, Neb., Feb. 1. (Spe cial.) Dr. and Mrs. Cates and their 3-year-old daughter, Dorothy, and 1 1-2-year-old son, Jack, were over come, by gas, the nature of which was not ascertained for two days, when it was found that a prior tenant of the house had placed the cover of a mason jar on top of the rent of the bathroom gas heater. The little girl was the first to be overcome, immediately after break fast. Shortly thereafter the little boy became unconscious. A physi cian was called. Mrs. Cates was. the next apparently to faint and the at tending physician, not being able to discover any evidence of gas, thought that in the mother's case it might be excitement: Dr. Cates . -was . next overcome, and the physician in charge himself began to feel the effects in a severe headache. Plumbers and gas men were called and the mysterious malady was ex plained when the covering of the vent was accidentally - discovered. The woman of the family previously occupying the place, had also been overcome and the family had vacated the premises under the impression that something was wrong. Receivership Asked for. Locomobile Company ' South Norwalk, Conn., Feb. 1. A receivership for the Locomobile com pany of Bridgeport xvas applied for in papers filed with Federal Judge Edwin S. Thomas at his office to day. This action was taken,-it was stated, as a step toward reorganiza tion of the company. The company and various credit interests were represented by counsel who stated that the proceedings were by agree ment .It was represented in the ap plication "that the interests of banks and merchandise creditors, as well as the stockholders can- be best served through a reorganization through a receivership." ;;s Encourage Writers Quebec, Feb. 1. The provisional government is to encourage produc tion of literature, a bill just having been passed by the legislature pro viding three annual cash prizes for budding authors. The highest' is $2,500. Volica Announces Sky la Great Solid Dome Hettlng on Wall of Ice They Have an Advantage Over Him (CPT?fkll J:j V Tka Calc TnbttM I Zion, III., Feb, l.-Wilbur GlemS Voliva, overseer of Zion and bead of the Christian Apostolic church, hat completed the fixing of dimen sions of hit (Ut world, exitfiue of which it now taught in the Ziou schools. ' According to Mr. uliat pi nouncrmeui. the sky is a vat doiuu ..'.'' ' f' v wtiw 14, II VIII nmvil Ills- ' sun, moon and stars are hung like chandeliers, J lie rdgrs of the dome lie explain, rest on the wall of n? wlikh surrounds the flat world to keep foolhardy marinera from tumbling over the edge. "That is the plain teaching of the word of God." he said, "that the heaven, the dome, the vault, like a tent, is a solid structure over the earth and all the lights are let within the firmament, lirckial sayi 'the throne of God Ii above the vault.' t The ' firmament above our heads is a solid structure and the stars are points of light, that it all." Arbuckle Case in Hands of Jury on Second Trial Defense Submits Case With out Argument Comedian Visibly Nervous as Jur . ors Deliberate. San Francisco. Feb. 1. The case of Koscoe C. (Fatty) Arbuckle, ac cused of manslaughter in councc tion with the death of Miss Virginia Rappe, went to the jury at 3:42 this afternoon after a trial covering three weeks. It was his second trial on the charge, the first having resulted in a jury disagreement. Airs. Lstclle Baumeister. one of the two alternate jurors w ho were excused when the jury retired, said that in her opinion Arbuckle is not guilty. Henry Ottenberg, the other alter nate, declined to express an opinion, although he congratulated the de fense on its showing. Defense Waives Argument The defense inserted a sensation. into the proceedings by announcing it would submit the case to the jury without argument. It was this ac tion which accelerated the case so that the jury was able to begin de iteration a day earlier than had been anticipated. The announce ment came at the end of the first argument by the prosecution, made by Milton f. U Ken, assistant diS' trict attorney. It has the effect of shutting off further argument by the prosecution as, under the law, such further, argument can only be a. re buttal of the final defense summing Arbuckle, jovial and appaMfitly carefree most of the day, was visibly nervous when the jury retired,- Courtroom Thronged. Today's session saw the conclusion of the prosecution s rebuttal . testi mony, Three minor witnesses testi fied. The defense announced that would make no sur-rebuttal and U'Ren then began the sole closing argument. He attacked in detail the testimony given by Arbuckle in the first trial of the cause, holding .that no proper explanation- had Jacen given as to what transpired in Ar buckle's room in the . Hotel St. Francis when the comedian is sup posed to have attacked miss Kappe. A throng was drawn to the court room lor the tmai arguments and the police guard had its hands full for the first time since the . trial opened. Neither side would speculate as to the period of time it would take the jury to reach a tmal decision. Governor Spares Tree Monument to Scout Burwell, Neb., Feb. 1. (Special.) Two vears aeo. when the state high way was constructed through Val ley county, by a request mde to Governor McKelvie, a large cotton- wood tree was left standing in the road, the owner of the land permit ting the state to take the right-of- way around the tree. Ihis tree was planted by A. J. Smith, not far from the. homestead of "Happy Jack," government Indian scout,, in 1872. Recent reports that the tree was to be removed were sent to the gover nor and he sent the division engi neer to inform the principal parties that the tree would stand so far as the state and county were concerned. Col. MacNider Mentioned . as Successor to Kenyon Des Moines. Feb. 1. Although Governor N. E. Kendall would give no intimation yesterday as to whom he would appoint to take Senator W. Kenyon s place in . the United States senate, belief was current in po litical circles here last night that the governor has made up his mind to appoint a resident ot the nortnern half of the state. 1 Local supporters of Col. Hanford MacNider of Mason City, nationa; commander of the American Legion, are mentioning his name in connec tion with the appointment. ' - ' New York Newspapermen's Club Is Incorporated New York, Feb. 1. Supreme Court Justice Wagner today signed the articles of incorporation of the Newspaper Men's club, a new social organization of newspaper men here. The incorporators include reporters and editors of morning and evening newspapers, news associations and several trade publications. ' Prince Yamagata Dies . London, Feb. 1. Field" Marshal Prince Yamagata, one of the few re maining of Japan's "Genro" or cider statesmen, died at his home ii: Oda wara today, says an Exchange Tele graph dispatch from Tokio.. He was in his 84ih yeai , , Witness for State Gives Lie to Pierce in Dainato Trial Says Man ;Accused of Fogg Murder Did Not Associate '-With Accvmer Defense -Scores Points. Leo Kernan, 28, witness for the stafe in the trial of Mike Damato for the murder . of Frank Fogg, druggist, created a sensation late yesterday by testifying that Dama to and Frank Pierce, star witness for the state, had not associated with each other when confined in the same cell of the city jail. Pierce testified earlier in the day that he told Dainato of the alleged plot to rob the Fogg drug store while in the cell at the city jail. . ; Told to Keep Away. , "Pierce and Damato never had anything . to do with each- othjjr," testihicd .Kernan. - Damato told me to stay away from Pierce, too, while we were in the cell. Under cross-examination bv Wil liam Lovely, attorney for Damato,- .fierce admitted he -was a constant user or dope, and that he had taken a shot in the morning before he appeared on the stand. Pierce said he had obtained morphine from a police, surgeon, and from other sources. He told of watching the Fogg drug store for the arrival of a shipment of morphine. , Identification Fails. When asked to identify Mrs. "Finger" ' Stevens, Pierce failed, even when she was asked to stand up. He had testified she was' pres ent at the alleged confession of Da-' mato and Stevens to the drug store, "stickup." Pierce also admitted un der cross-examination that his de positions regarding the murder, given in Kansas City, were partly false, declaring . that . he had ' made the depositions as a means of get ting back to Omaha." 2,000 Striking Mill Workers Storm Company Offices Providence, R. I.. Feb. 1. Two thousand striking mill workers and their supporters, armed- with rocks and clubs, stormed the offices of the Natick mill of the B. B. and K. Knight company at Natick in an effort to release Michael Lautien, striker, who had been- arrested on a charge ot assauinng..a police man.' They forced the1 front door, shattered the-glass in every window of the building and invaded the of fices m their hunt tor J-auticn. The arrested man had meanwhile been, taken out a 'rear door by a police guard. s ' , . , Maj. Gen. Kernan Assigned Commander of Fort Crook Washington,- Feb. 1. Assignment of Maj. Gen. Francis J. Kernan to command the Seventh corps area headquarters ' at Fort Crook, Neb., was announced today by the war department. ' Gen. Kernan recently was relieved' from "command of the Philippine department, in which post he will be succeeded by Maj. Gen. Wright of the Ninth corps area.' - Treaty Approved. London, Feb. 1. The , Bulgarian cabinet, says a dispatch today to the London Times from Sofia, has approved of a treaty with the Unit ed States, which' i passed bv the sobranje will be sent to Washing ton for ratification. Accuses Wife of Adopting Twins Man Jailed on Charge of Non , ( sup'port Declares Babes - - vr. . Are Foundlings. ' - ..;.( ' - . "-,' '' - ' -''.' 1 .. . ..All attempts- to' bring about a rec onciliation between - Mr.-, and Mrs, Carl Fisher over the disputed par entage of twins, Eleanor and . Carl, 18 months old, failed yesterday. . Fisher claims the children .were adopted by his wife, and that they are foundlings. - Mrs. Fisher and her twins appeared at the county jail where Fisljcr is being held for nonsupport 'of his family, but the man refused the over tures she made. .He asked her to prove that she was the mother of the children. ' "It was after she had gone to visit a sister and then returned to Omaha that she wired me at Grand Island: 'Come home at ' once. We have a big fine boy,'" said Fisher when in terviewed at the jail. p . "When I got home it was twins." Mrs. Fisher's story. was to, the ef fect that Fisher abused her so that she, did not dare to remain at home during the birth of a child. German Government- . Ready for Rail Strike TVrl.iv Feh 1 CTW A. PI The Kovernment has announced if will take aggressive measures, in the event of a strike of the railway' men, which it is ;undcrstood becomes ef fective at midnight tonight. . .Gov ernment authorities point out that the- workmen have taken an oath, to support the government ..and ;de clare that, in case of disorganization of traffic they will be prosecuted. This, is the first time in' the his tory of Germany that the govern ment had expressed its determination to take drastic steps against a Jabor union.. Only .the most radicaj labor quarters openly ..approve , of the strike decision, the moderates -contending that ,. proper consideration was not given Jo. the" question before the vote was taken; f ,.- , . ; In the meantiine.ithe strike leaders are in ..hiding.-fearing arrest .. - . Portuguese Cabinet, Formed. December 16, Forced to Quit Paris, Feb.- 1. The Portugese cabinet,' headed- by Cunha' 'Leal, which was formed December 10, has?-beei obliged to resign', ' it is as serted in, a dispatch, to .the-Temps tddayl, from Vigo, near the Spamsh- Pjr.tui;ese... border, relaying, a Lisbon telegram. :Ihe- .Cunha ;Leal-cabinet resigned January . 2f but President Almeida . declined , to accept' the resignation. . ' 't i : ; .- Four Men. Found Guilty ;. of Robbing Mail Train Oklahoma City, Ok!.. Feb.: 1. . Four defendants' were found guilty and one not guilty." by a federal jury today roi7 charges of robbing a Santa Fe mail tram' near, here . last September. The: men found guilty are Jett jJuree, uan uuree, tr. jx (Babe) Downer and Ed. 'Dodge. Woman Held for Murder. Berlin, Wis., Feb. 1. Mrs. Fred Gardinier was held on -a murder charge, following the return" of 'a coroner inquest's 'jury ' verdict that Gardinier, 40, a farmer, died of poi soning. State Chemist Lovenhart reported finding -traces of poison in Capitol Levy Is. Passed With Two Opposing Votes Democrats and Nonpartisans ' Repudiate Their Party ' ' Press in Voting for Appropriation. Lincoln, Feb. 1. (Special.) Dem ocrats and Nonpartisan leaguers in the ' lower house repudiated their party press today when they voted solidly to continue building Nebras ka's new statehouse. . : There were only two votes against the bill re-appropriating the 1919 levy for the new statehouse. They were cast by Representative Charles Epperson of Clay and Representative David Bowman of Omaha. . v Epperson has been against state road construction, state bridge con struction, the budget system of gov ernment, the code bill and every thine With which' Governor McKcl vie has been connected. The reason Bowman voted against the bill was not.expkincd. , . ' The" repudiation of the demo cratic and Nonpartisan league papers by members of their own- party fol lowed an address before the. lower house bv W. H. Thompson, demo cratic national committeeman, ex tolling every loyal Nebraskan to do away with the old diiapidatea struc ture .and erect, a building fitting for Nebraska. ' The members were given an op portunity to investigate every move made by the state capitol commission, composed of representative men from all political faiths, and the vote of confidence, today was the result. , Little Progress Made on Tariff Valuation Washington, Feb. 1. Half a dozen , or , more experts discussed tariff valuation plans for. several .hours before republican members of the; senate finance committee, but at the finish, sentiment among the senators ': apparently . was no nearer crystallization . than before. Some committeemen, thought a decision might be;reached within a few .'days, but , others thought it would be put off for. a week or more untiL consideration-, of specific rates . in " the bill had been concluded. The discussion, which 'was be hind closed, doors,- was said to have covered, the whole' range of plans suggested, including 'that"" in the Fordney bill, -which -was' endorsed in a memorial adopted by the Na tional Association' of -Manufacturers in ' convention ' here -yesterday and presented ' today : -to- "the majority committeemen by J."E. Edgerton of Nashville, Tenn.,. president of the association. 1 the vital organs. TheWeather Conference Approves Naval Pact Treaty Represent Agreement Reached by "Rig 5' Fol lowing Proposal of U. S. fur Naval Holiday. Work of Hughes Praised Washington. Feb. 1. In a thraa hour Kttion today tha Washington conference approved both the naval limitation treaty and th treaty put ting submarine warfare against mer chant craft and gaa and chemical warfar under the ban of five-powar disapproval The plenary session then adjourned on cau. Washington. Feb. 1 Sec-cta.x Hughes shortly after noon today presented to the arms conference the text of the treaty iof limitation of naval armaments. The entire forenoon of today plenary session of the conference the fifth in in course had been consumed with the presentation and 'adoption of committee res olutions Droviding for the return of certain sovereignties to China and the announcement of the settlement of the Shantung dispute. Treaty Not Read. The naval treaty was not read but Secretary Hughes outlined i:i terms and declared that so far as capital ships are concerned, the in tegrity of the plan poposed on be half of the American government has been maintained. A description of the terms of the naval limitation treaty outlines the results agreed upon between "the big five" following the dramatic an nouncement of the American propos als by Secretary Hughes at the open ing session of the conference on No vember 12. Secretary Hughes gave a some what detailed review of the principal terms and stated that the original American proposal as Tl capital ships, while changed in eMails, had been adopted substantially.' Integrity of Plan. 'The integrity of the plan present ed on behalf of the United States' said Secretary Hughes, "has been maintained and the spirit in which that proposal was made and in which it was received has dominated the entire negotiations and brought them to a very successtul conclusion. There was applause when Mr. Hughes said the United States re tained the number of capital' ships proposed on November 12 and that Great Britain and Japan were situ ated similarly, the latter with the ex ception of the new battleship Mutsu. The effect of the retention of the Mutsu, Mr. Hughes continued, made necessary the changes in the or iginal American program by which two dreadnaughts of the West Vir ginia class are to be completed and the battleships North Dakota and Delaware then scrapped. Four Principles. In the American proposals, Mr. Hughes said, four principles had been governing. They were first, that all capital ships now building and -contemplated should be aban doned; second, that there should be a further-reduction of naval arma ment by "scrapping olderships; third,' that regard should be had to the ex- (Torn to Pare ' Two, Column Two.) Increased Pension Bill Passes House Washington, Feb.' 1". Pensions of widows and dependent ' children of men who served in the army or navy ' during the war with Spain, the Philippine islands or the China re lief expedition of 1900 would be in creased from $12 to $20 a month, under a bill passed by the house and sent to the senate. . The bill, also increases thenum- . ber eligible for pension by provid- i ing that. the 90-day service require- ' ment. does not mean 90 days' dutv outside ' the continental ' United : States. Enforced furloughs are to be included as part of a soldier's 7 service." ' - - .. - - ! ' Forecast. Thursday fair and continued cold. , .f.Hourly Temperatures." . , . S ft, m. a . m. 1 7 a. m. ' M ft. m.( . t ft. m, 1 a. ai. . II a. m. n ...43 ...43 ...41 ...S4 r.. ...1 ..'.! 1 p. HI. t p. m. 3 p. m. . 4 p. m. A p. m. a p.1 m. 7. p. m. p. m. ...19 ...1 ...IS ...JS ...It ...IS ...13 Highest-Wednesday. Chyenne ' .. , Haven port .. lnvr ' DB Moines . Dodce. City . lender . Nortfc Platto ... . . .'SS ...3 ...ti ...41 ...12 ...II Pueblo .... RBld City Salt Laka . Santa Fe .. Sheridan .. 8loux City- Valentine. , I ..40 . .is ..SO ...6 ..IS Head of Traction Company Horsewhipped by Woman Champaign, 111., Feb. 1. F. W. Bedard, superintendent of the Ur- T)ana and Champaign . Railway, Gas and Electric company, was horse whipped in front of the Illinois Traction System bffices this after noon by Miss 'Jessie Daniels, for merly an employe of the company. She later, surrendered to. the police, but no-formal charge lias been filed against her. She told police Mr, Bedard had defamed her name.' Mr. Bedard said She was dis charged ,by the company because of inefficiency. ' , France Pays $10,000,000 on Surplus war Supplies Washington, Feb.' 1. Payment of $10,000,000 on surplus supplies pur chased after the Avar was made to this country today by France..-, The payment was the third In stallment of semi-annual interest on the- $400,000,000 debt created by the liquidation, commission after the wan when 'army supplies in France were disposed of to the French gov ernment. " ' " . The principal of the debt is due, August 1, 1929, and the annual -5 percent of interest, is payable -in semi-annual installments. i 1 Noted Musician Dies. Cleveland, Feb. 1. Emil Ring, 58, prominent musician, died at -his. home here' today. He came here frbm Bohemia in 1888 to direct a singing society and two years later became director of th Cleveland or chestra - . - '