The Omaha Daily Bee VOL 51-NO. 223. r. It. tlMM IMI 1 14)1, OMAHA, SATURDAY, MAKCH 4, 1922. M II 4H (tilt . Mi !- II M auaia Hu 4i . P.IMM IM 41 m ll r 1 1 4 !, hM Hl, M. TWO CENTS Widow Is Called in Potash Suit Edltor-Prcsldent "Holds the 'Phone to Help Reporters Mri. Uerg Tcfctifiri Uundcy Paid Her 1100 for Article! of Incorporation Ha nV. en Take Stand. Tell of Promised Wealth The lt Charles L. Dundry paid her only f 100 for the articles of in corporation of the William Berg V company, afterward raked from. a $I0,(XK) to a $l.noo,)00 corporation. Mrs. Matilda ltcrg, widow of the late William IWg. tctifie4 in the alleged potash fraud rate in federal 1 court yesterday. Comet from Sick Bed. Mrs. Berg rose from a tick bed ' to give her testimony. Other giv ' ing testimony on Mock transactions fl. were Lynn Manner of.Giltnrr, Xeh lf who bought $2.5X) of stock in the company; Lee Halstead of Hay Spring. $100; Dr. A. W. Smith of Albion, $150; Mrs. Agnes Harm, Giltner, $100; C. J. Chlcboun. Clark son, $2,500, and C. M. Janicek, drug gist at Schuyler, $1,500. Jacob Masse, one of the four defendants. was mentioned as negotiating some of the deals. All told of promises of future wraith made by stock salesmen. Dividends were expected within 90 days after the potash plant began operations, Charles Wohlberg, secre tary, wrote to Lee Halstead. Gives Warning to Jury. In dismissing the jury until Mon day morning at 10. Judge T. C. Muu gcr gave stern injunctions to the , jurymen prohibiting them from con versing with any one relative to the Jk , case. "Don't even talk to anybody you think can give you valuable informa tion about the potash situation. Re member vou are to be governed sole- ly by what you near in this court room," said the judge. OgallaUMan Called. Roy A. Dc Voe, for 17 years coun ty attorney atOgallala, heard the siren song of potash riches to the tune Of $1,000. He was among the witnesses to testify yesterday, C. E. Lear, 34 years an attorney at Springfield, and vice president of a Dank there, lost $.2,01)0, and C. C. Carek. cashier of the bank at Touhy. !., $400. . On cross examination, they denied they ever used their influence 4o assist Berg stock salesmen to sell r " minjties, or that they received com missions ior so cioiug. "Bird Dog" Evidence. Evidence of such "bird dogs" who - figured in tr.'insactions of this kind will be unfolded ip stock fraud cases now being prosecuted" by the gov ernment, W. M. Coble, postal , in spector, stated recently. A bank at Mcrrinian, Neb., gota judgment on his 'homestead in Cherry county, for a $2,000 note he negotiated with them, Ara Starr of Mullen, Neb., testified. Despite his loss, Starr never held his stock certificate in his hand. It (Turn to Faf Two, Column ' ' Washington. March 1 President Harding, having betn a reporter once himself and knowing how it it, stopped tht wheel of govern, ment busmen fiv minutes today and "held the phone" to ht would not interrupt a score of newt, paper men who wei letting a ory from Acting Secretary Fletcher at the tut department. It happened this way, much to the amuement of other official who Uiu.liy reverse the process and let tht reporter wait. President Harding called up Mr. Fbtcher, but learned that 'tht latter wat talking to the reporters. When Mr. Fletcher heard that ths president had telephoned ht hastily concluded hit discussion and went to call up the president, who he found still "holding tht line." The clock showed the president of the United Statet had waited five minutet so he would not in terrupt the reporters in their daily work. Murderer of Chicairo Men Pays Penalty Haney V. Church Is Hanged for Slaying of Auto Sales men Goes to Gallows Strapped to Chair. Dogs Disclose Body of Murdered Woman i . Tarrytown, N. , Y., March 3. Barking dogs disclosed today the murder of a woman whose body, the neck hacked with a penknife, was found at the end of Jones avenue, near John D. Rockefeller's estate at Pocantico Hills. : Mrs. Joseph Taylor, annoyed by the persistent barking of the dogs, looked through a pair of opera glasses, saw the body and notified the police. The condition of the road indicat ed that the woman had been slain after a struggle. Mrs. Patrick Tur ner, who lives .a few hundred fee, from the scene, told the police sha had observed an automobile headed toward the end of the street about 10 last night. A short time later she heard muffled wails and later noted that the automobile had retraced its route. , ' The body, which had not been identified tonight, was that of a wo man of about 35, probablv of Ital ian extraction, Coroner Fitzgerald said. . , 'Crippled Jury Hearing John Judd Damage Case An "11-man" " jury in District Judge Day's court is hearing testi mony in a damage suit of John Judd against Frank A. Johnson. The twelfth juror, Phillip Cun ningham. 2119 W street, was excus ed by agreement of both sides and Judge Day. after the latter learned that Cunningham's father was re ported dying. , Kiwanians Shown Proper Electric Lighting Methods Practical demonstrations as to the proper lighting of homes, offices, stores and industrial plants were made yesterday afternoon before the members of the Kiwanis club at Ho tel Rome, under the auspices of the Nebraska Power company. Lighting effects to produce the most efficient light on an economy basis were 'showpr - Balfour Honored by King. London. March 3. (By A. P.) W Kins George today conferred the h. , C .! f . A ..1 T i Balfour in recognition of his services j st the Washington conference. This i is the highest honor within the gift j cf the king. , Omnha Ke ImwI Wire, Chicago, March 3. Harvey W. Church, strapped in a chair, dropped through the trap at the county jail at 3:54 this afternoon and 10 min utet later was dead of strangulation, The force of the drop broke the chair, but did not dislocate his neck, Thus ended the career of one of the mpst cold-blooded murderers in the criminal history of Chicago, to save whose lite the most frantic ef forts have been made by various at torneys. Alienists have claimed all alonor that Church was simulating insanity and this was proved by the fact that he shook olt his stupor on the way to ths gallows and during his last moments in the death chamber. He called for his parents and sister. His mother fainted and was unable to respond, but his father and sister did what they could to comfort him. . On the way to the gallows he perspired freely and after the noose ana cap had been adjusted, he began to pray. At first he mumbled, but his voice became stronger and he re peated the Lord's prayer distinctly. Then he lapsed into silence again, the signal was given and the trap was sprung. These were the first words he had spoken for 46 days, when he began his hunger strike. ' , Prisoners Silent. Other prisoners in the jail did not stage their usual hideous clamor of obscenity, profanity and rattling of cell doors. Heretofore this has been one of the' features of an execution, but this time everything was silent. Even as Church was being harlged, an outside attorney, who had no con nection with, the ca'se, was making desperate efforts to secure a stay of execution. Church's own attorneys naa previously exhausted every known means of preventing his execution. The murders for which Church was hanged were committed Scp tcmbec 8 of last year. Church, who wanted a new automobile, went to the Packard company, picked out a $5,000 car, and asked that a salesman be sent with him and the car to a bank, where he had a certified check waiting. Bernard J. Daugherty was directed to accompany him and as an afterthought the manager also told Carl O. Ausmus, another sales man, to go along. Church tried to dissuade Ausmus, but they finally got in the car. ' Instead of going to a bank he asked them to drive by his home until he attended to an errand. He went into the house and in a few seconds appeared at a basement door and beckoned Daugherty to come in. As Daugherty descended the stairs, Church hit him over the head with a baseball bat. Then he dragged the body into a coal bin, cut Daugherty's throat, handcuffed him and cleaned up the floor. Ausmus Also Slain. Ten minutes later Ausmus, worried over Daugherty's absence, started down the stairs. He, also, was struck down, his hands tied and he was beaten to unconsciousness. Church testified that Ausmus was not dead when he buried him under the garage ; floor and that he stamped on his face and chest to crowd him into the nar row grave. - He took Daugherty's body to the Desplaines river and threw it in. Half an hour later he returned to his home, whistling merrily and asked a neighbor to take a ride in his new car. That night he and his mother and two girls drove to Indiana Har Tnrn to Pa-e Two, Colnmm Three.) National Wheat Pool Effected Between 75,000,000 and 90,. 000,000 HufthrU of Grain Represented Ly New Or ganization at Denver. To Form Zoning System Denver, Colo., March J. A fed eration of all the state wheat grow- crt co-operative tocietiei on the 100 per cent pooling plan, to be known zt the American Wheat Growers, Associated, resulted from a series of conferences here, which ended today, The membership represented in the organization, according to its offi cers, controls between 75,000,000 and 50,000,000 bushclt of wheat, and this control will be further augmented, they said, as various statet now either in the process of organization or contemplating organizing com plete their work. Establishes Zoning System. In addition to the formation of this gigantic pooling plan for controlling the flow of wheat from the producer to the consumer, the conference re sulted in removing the antagonism that has been growing between the various state organizations and the United States Grain Growers (Inc.), it was announced. The details of the federation pro vide for the establishment of a zon ing system for the handling of wheat. The federation will function as soon as a zone, consisting of two or more state organizations, is formed. The Northwest Wheat Growers. Asso ciated, now is organized and has been operating for two years and is the first zone of the federation. Another Detail. ' Another detail of the organization provides that each state organiza tion will retain its individual organ ization, the national federation being pledged not to absorb the powers of the various states. The national fed eration, however, will centralize the activities of the various state so cieties and would handle all details of exporting grain and finding for eign markets for the wheat grown by the members of the society. In addition, the national federation would supervise the work of secur ing funds for the various state or ganization members, would maintain a statistical department, the results of which would be available to all members and would work out a co ordinate system for marketing the wheat controlled by the federation,. Finl Details. The final details for the establish ment of the national federation would be promulgated at a meeting of va rious representatives of state organ izations now functioning and in the process of organization, to be held March 9 at Kansas Ljty. The resolution providing ; for the formation of the federation was adopted unanimously by representa tives present at the conferences held during the week and includes the provision that George C Jewett, gen eral manager of , the Northwest Wheat Growers' association should act in similar capacity for the Amcr-1 ican Wheat Growers, Associated. Girl Given to June 25 to Decide Between Man and Diamond The Man With the Hoe lUwntki; JIM; i TW Ctoat Tnbuaa. j' New Yoik. March 3. Iterauoe Morri llerchowiti let a $000 Un. tnond toliuirc do al the talking, lie found hiiiuclf facing hit suppokcd fiancee, Mikt iJie Ncudlcnuit, in Justice XafTrey't municipal couit vetcrday. He wanted the ring back, he said, ince Mitt N'eudlrnun hail threatened to have her big brother throw him out when be finally got his courage up to the point of ask ing her to name the day. Mit Neudleiuan testified regarded llernchowita't m - tentation at its face value- ,u . ivS gilt and nothing more. iu,', Do you want tint prcciou or thit preciout girl?'' inijuiua j" tico Caffrey, indicating the tw treasure. The girl," Hcrschowiu gulped, "And you?' asked the justice. turning to Mist rteudlcman. "Well I'll have to think it over, the said. Justice Caffrey gave her the ro. mantic months ot spring unt. June 25, to be exact to decid whether the would accent the rini with what he held was itt implied bondage. Governor of 0 k 1 a li o m i in Fist Fidit State Chief Executive Resents Remarks by Head of Pe' troleum Company Blows Exchanged. hurchill Denies Betrayal of Ulster Fraser had kept silent and alone for 25 years and the village thought he was insane. He tells his secret in The Culvert By J. J. BELL Tomorrow in The Sunday Bee London, March 3. (By A. P.) When debate was resumed on the Irish bill in the house of commons today discussion of Lord Hugh Ce cil s amendment was continued, this declares that in approving Article XII of the Anglo-Irish treaty, relat- ne to the Ulster boundary, the British government did not intend to agree to transfer the main area of any of the six countries of northern Ireland to the territory of the Irish free state, but agreed only to minor boundary adjustments. Ronald McNeill, unionist member for the Canterbury division of Kent, said this was the central point of ob jection to the measure, the provision m question being resented by many 1 the members as a breach ot taith toward northern Ireland on the part of the government. : He quoted Michael Collins, head of the Irish provisional government, as having said Sir James Craig,- the Ulster premier, had been tricked by his own friends. Winston Churchill, secretary for the colonies, said the statement that promise had been Riven by the prime minister to Collins and Grif fith that the counties of Fermanagh, Tyrone and Londonderry would be handed over to them was aboslutely untrue and had been repeatedly de-l nied. A Fish Story Read It and Weep Waukegan, HL, March 3. Dar win I. Granger, mill man from Mc Henry, considers himself in Jonah's class when it comes to experiences with fish, but he is not very talka tive when dogs are mentioned. Granger was fishing through the ice at Fox lake, using ajunall min now as bait A fair sued perch was hooked, but before it could be drawn from the water along came a lVa-pound bass and viciously grabbed the perch. . But swift pun ishment awaited the bass for -his piggishness, for a hungry 12 pound pickerel, swimming by, eagerly gulped down bass, perch, minnow, hook, line and sinker. Granger landed the outfiit, but while jumping up and down in glee at hit good luck, Mat Pitson's dog wandered by and, apparently op posed to midwinter fishing, sunk his teeth into Granger's anatomy in a most inconvenient manner. Okmulgee, Okl., March 3. Re scnting an oath hurled at him by lames G. ' Lyons, an oil man of Okmulgee, Okl.. Governor J. B. A Robertson of Oklahoma this morn ing engaged in a fist encounter with Lyons in the county courthouse here, which was crowded with lawyers, court officials and spectators. A half dozen or so blows were exchanged by the two men before they were separated. Neither bears any marks of the conhict. The governor had just concluded a conference with James Hepburn, county attorney, relative to the gov ernor's appearing before the grand jury in connection with the failure of the Bank of Commerce of Okmul- eee. ' At the governor's private office, Hepburn turned to W. H. Crume, a citizen, and-asked him to introduce the governor to the boys. r , . ... Governor Called Name.; ,The governor shook' hands with several persons. When they reached Lyons, who is president of the Lyons Petroleum company and head of the depositors' organization formed after the failure of the bank ot Com merce. Mr. Crume said: "I want you to meet the governor, Mr. Lyons. I would not shake hands with the " said Lvons with an oath, ac cording to Crume and according to Mr. Lvons admission later. The ' governor then attempted to strike at Lj-ons with his right fist, according to the statement ot the affair by Crume. tirst accounts stated that Lyons struck the first blow. Secretary of State Honer. who was standing near by, intercepted the blow, but in a! moment the state executive and the oil man were exchanging blows and struggling to free themselves from the grasp of spectators who inter vened. Several Blows Exchanged. A half dozen blows were ex changed, according to the spectators. Governor Robertson attempted to remove his overcoat, meanwhile struggling with men who interfered. "Let me go," Governor Robertson said. "I am a man." "I will say this, that I can't be bluffed' physically ; legally or any other way," the executive odded." "I wonder if the people know that Lyons had a deposit of $18.75 in the bank and owed the bank $10,000 on a note." "Who started the fight?" County Attorney Hepburn asked, pushing his way through the crowd to where Governor Robertson and Mr. Lyons stood facing each other. A spectator spoke up and said: "Lyons started it." Arrest him, Air. - Hepburn ordered. When informed that Governor Robertson was the other principal in the fight, County Attorney Hep burn ordered his arrest, but later told Sheriff Sowers not to carry out the order. Officers forced a guard around the governor and forced their way through the surging crowds out of the office and to the third floor of the courthouse, later going to a hotel. : German and Swiss Brewers Worried Over Prohibition Fur Flies at Probe of Road Costs Jo!iuou Uiargfa llillier Grafl or Poor Judgment in Coun ty PunlM!" liivt'slipa tiotis Arc A Veil. Charge Forgery in O'Connor Will Case at Hastings i ' lleven Complaints Filed and Others Considered Jury Dcliherates 5Q Hours on Four Claims. , EnglandFears Revolt in India Berlin, March 3. (By A. P.) Minutes which have just been pub lished here of a secret convention of German and Swiss brewers dis close that the brewers admitted they feared prohibition would sweep Eu rope. ( It was decided at the con vention to send a representative to the United States to, study the ef fects of prohibition and to start a campaign in the newspapers of Eu rope against the prohibition of the use of alcohol. The campaign in the press would attempt to prove the tonic advantages of alcohol, es pecially with regard to beer. . Df. Kuery, president of the Swiss Anti-Prohibition association, assert ed it was necessary for the brewery interests of the world to unite in a campaign against the auti-alcohol movement and particularly to fight the antaeonist of beer. HastingSj -.Kfcb. -March -3-r(Spe ial Telegram.) Complaint charging forgery of a will was filed here to day against James B. O'Connor of Kansas City and 10 other relatives, who recently filed heirship claim for the $100,000 John O'Coujior estate. The proceeding grows but of a for mer case in which James O'Connor sought to obtain the estate through a will, which the supreme court has declared to be spurious. ' One heirship case involving the claims of four groups has been on trial in district court 32 days, and the jury this afternoon returned a erdict lhe fames U Connor claim is a new proceeding and if the claim ants come here late this month, when their claim is scheduled for hearing in county court, they will find the heriff waiting for them with war rants. ' County Attorney Addie said he was considering prosecution of John T. Culavin of Omaha, another claim ant, who offered an O'Connor will which was later declared invSlid by the supreme court. Mdren Held for Back Rent Released Detroit. March 3. Four children, 11 under eight years old, alleged to have been held by Koseiine Russis as hostages for over due rent, were returned to their iath- er, Albert Mozejko, late today after Mozeiko laid the case before raul W. voorhies, prosecutor. Mrs. Rus sis and Mozejko will confer with the prosecutor tomorrow over the unpaid rent. N Mozeiko claimed the bill was SlaO. Mrs. Russis said it was $340. The ifference led to Mozejko s ejection, whereupon, he declared, his landlady kept the children with the statement: could get $100 for any one ot them." . Grand Jury to Investigate , Detroit Stock Brokers Detroit, March 3. A grand jury investigation ' into the activities of local stock brokerage firms, alleged to have been operating in violation of the Michigan "blue sky laws," was stituted yesterday, atternoon by Prosecuting Attorney. Paul W. oorhies. The inquiry was first directed into the affairs of L. J. Sinkula & Co. and it was announced it would be extend ed to take in the other four com panies which have suspended re cently with a loss to their investors that authorities say may reach $2, 000.000. - Mr. Voorhies stated he intended to ask for a blanket warrant for Sin kula and his aides. Pittsburgh Attorney Is Shot by Wife of Client Pittsburgh, March 3. Charles F. Patterson, a lawyer, was shot four times yesterday by the wife of one of his clients who is suing for di vorce, it became known today when a warrant was issued for Mrs. Noda Thompson, charging her with fel onious shooting. . Mr. Patterson was" not seriously 'wounded. In a state ment Mr. Patterson said Mrs. Thompson called at his office late in the day and when he refused to discuss her affairs except in the pres ence of her attorney, she opened fire on hint Newspaper. Reports Indicate Situation Is Beyond Con-' frol of Authorities. ' London, March 3. (By A. P.) Scattering reports to the newspaper! indicated .that the situation ii India is causing inaariiig anxiety .to the authorities,- particularly in the Pun jab and the united provinces of Ben gal. ' . v There is said to be danger in Ben gal that the members of the oH revo lutionary party will take control of the . political movement out of the hands of the nationalist congress .party, owing to the anger of the ex tremists at the postponement of civil disobedience. The Daily Telegraph shows that agitation is growing in all the above named districts, where the situation is getting more and more out of the control of the, authorities. Thp rpnorr" nf flip imnendiner ar rest of Mohandas K. Gandhi, non- co-ooerationist leader, is reiterated The Daily Mail - says that the prince of Wales has abandoned his intention to visit Amritsa., where, it is recalled, troops fired on agitators in April, 1919, killing iU) persons. The reason for the alteration in the prince's plans is not stated. Prince .of "Wales Shot in India, Says London Rumor London, March 3. (By A. P.) The Evening News today published what it characterizes as "an absurd rumor ' which is being persistently repeated in London that the prince of Wales .was shot in India. Offi cials here know nothing of any such incident, lhe latest report from In dia says the prince left Satwari to day for Peshawar. ' Dispatches from India February 24 reported that members of the prince of Wales' party had been fired upon while motoring from Delhi to Put tiala. An Indian officer's version of the incident later, however, declared that although one of the motor cars had been hit by a small object, the missile was not a bullet, but a stone, either thrown or 'kicked up by' the wheels of the car. - . - - " : 7" " ' Chairman of Irish Prison -Board Slain by Robber - Belfast. March 3. (By A. P.) Max S. Green, chairman of the Irish prison board, was shot and killed in Dublin today, a Dublin message an nounces. .. He was a son-in-law of the late John Redmond, the Irish nation alist leader. .' v . The shooting of. Mr. Green oc curred during a chase following .a robbery. An official of the ministry of pensions carrying a considerable sum of money was held up by armed men, who took from him a bag con taining 600 pounds and, ran. away with it. The police gave chase and captured the -robber who bad the money in his possession. Another of the fleeing men fired on his pursuers and it was then that Green was struck by a, bullet and killed. Another man was wounded at the same time. Mayor of New York "Wroth at Subway Conditions New York. March 3. Mayor Hy- lan, taking the position that com plaints of congestion, indecency and insanitation in the subways are justi fiable, yesterday wrote Frank Hed ey, presidentl of the Interborough Rapid Transit company, that unless use was made of all available equip ment so as to end the "abominable conditions.'" the city would resort to drastic means. Threat of British Premier to Resign Office Suspended Union Members Have Asked Lloyd George to Continue in Present Position Says ..'August . Chamberlain. By TUe Amoftlatrd Prew. . Loudon, March 3. Premier Lloyd George's threat to resign has been suspended at the urgent solicitation of his .unionist colleagues in the cab inet, according to an authoritative statement tonight, but no justifica tion for its withdrawal is said to exist as yet. Official denial is made that any exact time limit has been fixed for ceiving assurances of loyalty to the premier from the adherents of Sir George Younger, the unionist leader, although it is added that obviously the tension cannot be extended in definitely. Meanwhile there is no Indication of any move on the part of the union ist party to dethrone Younger as its head. No meeting of the whole un ionist party has been called and the general opinion is that the only hap pening would be that the unionist members in the cabinet A. J. Bal four aiid Austin Chamberlain may publicly reprove Younger for his tactics, as Lord Birkenhead already has done. Speaking at Oxford today, Austin Chamberlain announced that the un ionist ministers had unanimously re quested the premier to continue as head of the government. Not the slightest repentance has yet been shown by the "die hard conservatives" whose opposition to the leadership of the prime minister is primarily responsible for the pres ent crisis. They are co-operating with the Ulsterites in the house of commons in putting up a stiff fight against the free state bill by present ing amendment after amendment. Neilsen Resigns Post in State Department Washington, March 3. (Special Telegram.) Fred K. Neilsen of Omaha, solicitor for the State de partment, has tendered his resigna tion to enter upon private practice, it is understood. Mr. Neilsen pre sented his resignation several weeks ago" but Secretary Hughes asked him to withhold it until after the latter's return 'from Burmuda. Postoffice Examinations. Washington. March 3. 'Snecial Telegram.) The postmaster general nas requested the civil service com mission to set a date for examination for presidential postmasters at the following places in Nebraska: Butte, .Newcastle, silver , Creek and Wauneta. The Weather Forecast. "Saturday fair;' rising temperature. Hourly Temperatures. 5 . a. 7 a. R . a. 10 11 It ...2 ...s ...2,1 ...4 ... . ..S ...M . ...44 Z Conspiracy Is Alleged Lincoln, March 3, (Special Tele, gram.) Fur continued to fly today, the fourth day of the state and count by road probe. Briefly, the event! w!iich transpired, weic: Crorge Johnson, state engineer) offered to cite instances where cer tain standard road machinery, which the Mate paid $700 for, wat pur chased by certain counties for from Jl.JiM) to SI.JIK'. "Ibis eithrr represents grait or poor hu'iiucs judgment," Johnson aid. "and certainly klmws the need of a Mandurd purchaing law with teeth in it. Certain members like Representative Henry Bock, appear ing here before the committee, took the terth out of the hill at the lat session." Johnson further charged that he had been inforuied that the Portland Cement company had inircted one ot its agents on his payroll to endeavor to bring about a scandal which would result in his removal. Referring to testimony offered by T. W. Ham ilton, one of his employes, at the morning ses.sion, Johnson declared it was his belief that it was a part of the cement company's plan to dis credit him. Forced Prices Down. "The reason they want to ruin nie is because 1 was instrumental in starting a movement which discon tinued purchase of cement until it dropped 23 rents a barrels in price," Johnson said. "Let me explain another powerful factor fighting this office the gravel trust which has been forced to sell gravel cheaper to Nebraska contrac tors than contractors working in any other states, through my action by purchasing a gravel pit at Ashland. I have been informed of meetings held by gravel men in Omaha in which ways and means of removing me from office have been discussed. "Many attacks made upon me have come either directly or indirectly from this source." Ask County Probe. W. S. Lyda, former mayor of Falls City, Richardson county, Speared before the committee- to refute j charges of certain Richardson counti? oihcials concerning state road and bridge work in that county. In ad dition, Lyda. representing a number of substantial Richardson county residents, asked the state to send an auditor to investigate the road and bridge expenditures of Richardson county commissioners for the last five years. "We could do it in the county, but if the state did it, we would be free from the never ending entanglements of county politics," Lyda said. "Furthermore, I want the com mittee to understand that certain of these politicians who appeared here objecting to Mr. Johnson's work do not represent the entire county's opinion Dy any means. "Fully 80 per cent of the people are proud and satisfied with the state roads in the county, which are bet (Turn to Pa Two, Column Whisky Restrictions Lifted in Colorado Denver, March 3. With influenza" reported in epidemic form in a num ber of Colorado counties, the federal prohibition director for Colorado, E. H. McCIenahan, today lifted the stringent restrictions on the writing of whisky perscriptions. McCIenahan announced he had temporarily ordered the usual pro cedure involving a written application for a permit to write liquor prescrip tions done away with. Inside, phy sicians are getting into touch with the national prohibition department at Denver by long distance telephone; and asking permission to prescribe whisky. In practically every case, where McCIenahan is convinced of the identity and reputation of the physician, he announced, the permis sion is granted over the wires. The physician proceeds forthwith'to write whisky prescriptions in as large a number as he deems necessary and druggists are filling them as fast as they are presented. Man Held in Oskaloosa, la., Not Terrible Tom O'Connor Oskaloosa. Ia., March 3. Deputy Sheriff William Van Horn of Cook county, Illinois, who arrived here this morning, announced that the man held by local authorities as Tommy O'Connor, escaped murder er, is not the man sought by Chi cago police. The man held here, who says he is John Clark of De troit, will be released today. Deputy Sheriff Van Horn said that Clark looks a great deal like O'Con nor but that Bcrtillon measurements show that he is not the man who made the sensational escape last De cember 11, several days before he was to have hanged for the murder of a Chicago policeman. Highest Friday. Cherenn E4iT"ubIo Davenport ... .421 Rapid City Pnvr ...... . .n; Salt Lak Ie Motrin ....4iv Santa Fa . rlr City stirldan Lanilar I . ..30' Pioux I'lty North Platta ...M Valentine ..4.1 ..47 . .5n . .4 ..46 ..43 ..4 ..44) ....5 ....iJ ....14 ....43 ....3 .....4 ....it ShlpnrfV Bulletin to S houra from temperature as follows: sonn, 3 oejreea: east and Treat, Zi oe freta; aoutb. 3 degree Appointment of Woman . to Succeed Landis Urged Chicago. March 3. Appointment of Miss Florence King as judge ot the United States distrct court here to succeed Judge K. M. Landis was urged in resolutions made public here today by the Woman's Bar as sociation of Illinois. Miss King is a member of the as sociation. Copies of the resolution ae to be sent to President Harding. Attorney General Daugherty and Illinois representatives, in congreia. r