Nomination of ! -^slames G. McNary , Given to Senate; Banking Committee Favorably Reports Selection for Post of Comptroller of " Currency. Washington, March J.—The ail i | ministration plan for American pa-- I ticipation in the international eourt organized by the League of Nations I was finally put on the shelf for this session of congress by the senate to day when it voted 49 to 94 against proceeding with considerations of the resolution of Senator King, democrat 1'tah, proposing to grant the presi dent the necessary authority. Washington, March 3.—The contest ed nomination of James G. McNary of New Mexico to he comptroller of the currency, was reported favorably to day by the senate ltanking committee. A minority report, criticising severe ly Mr. McNary’s administration as president of the El Paso, Tex.. First National bank, based upon the evi dence of bank examiners an% others in the committee's recent extensive investigation was prepared by Sena tors Couzens. republican, Michigan, and Hitchcock, democrat, Nebraska. Senator Couzens also prepared a per-1 sonal statement detailing his reasons j for opposing Mr. McNary’s confirms Excessive loans from the El Paso . bank to Mr. McNary and other bank ! officers: ‘'speculative” banking, espe cially in Mexican currency, and pay ment of large dividends without reduc ing doubtful loans, were satd to be the principal counts in the minority | report. Washington. March 3.—An investi gation during the recess of congress into the gold and silver industry, w-.-.s ordered today by the senate. A com |f mission of five was created to con duct the inquiry. l.esser Hills I p. Washington, March 3.—Its major tasks all hut completed, the 67th con gress found time In its closing hours today to take up many of the lesser l ills and resolutions such as usually die unnoticed amid the hurry and con fusion of a session's final windup. From the opening of the last day's * work in both senate and house discus sion of legislative "chicken feed" was the order of business with many nieni liers seeking, and yt many cases, finding an opportunity to get a vote on this or that private or local meas ure which they never looked or hoped to bring to the stage of action. A Formality. The only bill of first magnitude to which attention hgrl to be given during the day was the farm credit measure as finally agreed to last night by senate and house conferees. Ac ceptance of the conference report hy the senate and house themselves was more or less of a formality, pse^tapate night sessions were expected ^n both seante and house with s view to finally clearing the decks and leav ng only formalities for the brief meet ing tomorrow preceding the final fall of the gavels Sunday noon. To avoid (he technical Sabbath meeting and still comply with the letter of the law for ending congress March 4. the leaders planned to recess tonight until an hour nr so before noon tomorrow, tjius making Sunday an extension of today’s "legislative" day. In the Hopper. Dozens of bills and hundreds of nominations were in today s legisla tive hopper, but most of the 14,000 on the calendars were doomed, their loss conceded and no efforts at resuci tation planned. Today also was a day of farewells and "swan songs,” of a scramble for accommodations on outgoing trains, of packing and clearing in capitol offi ces and of preparations for the first long \acation had hy congress in eight years. America's Spirit Draws Foreigner, Says Armenian It iff not America’* money, but America’s spirit which attract* for eigner* to fjii.s country. Dr. \ . H. N r»r l t,«nian of Omaha univeriity told the * ’antral Hi-V club Friday nigbt. Pr. Vartanian came to America front Ar menia 12 years ago. “It i* the 9pirlt of sacrifice, right ■ e. igncss and universal service which fies the people of the oppressed na ris of the world look to America * outstretched arms for protection,*' he declared. Miss Dorothy Steinhaugh sang was grrornpanieeen notified to appear. She de clared that her . husband is able to pay alimony, because she has seen him dancing with other women at local dance halls. Power Company Kmploye Severely Burned hy W ire. A. i'. Carstena. 4402 Leavenworth street, Nebraska Power company em ploye, was severely burned on the hands when a short circuit occurred In the wires on which he wjy, work ing yesterday near Forty-third and l^avenworth streets. Me was taken to the Lord Lister hospital. Ant KHTIKKMKNT. Simple Application That Dissolves Blackheads No more squealing and pinching to »et rid of thou* unsightly hlemiahe*. blsrk hoad*. There in one nimple, safe and »nre way to get them out and that is to flu* •olve them. (Jet about two ounras o* c*Io nite powder from your druggist sprinkle • little on a hot, wef cloth -rub briskly *r the blackhead* for a few seconds i*h the part* and every blackhead will gone. Pinching and aqueeting out blackheads make larK* pore* and you cannot ge* all of the blackheads out thia way while thla^simple application of calonite powder and water diaanlvea every particle of them and leave* the akin and pore* in thair ftaturtl conditio* i ' The Gamest Woman I Know ■ ■ ■ -By 0. 0. M'INTVRE. For three years she laid in a cheer less room In St. Vincent’s hospital, New York, encased in a plaster cast. The only tiling she could look at was a tarnished chandelier. During all those torturing hours not a whimper passed her lips. Doctors from everywhere doomed her to per manent invalidism, but not once has her courage faltered, nor has she recited her Illlad of woe. Now the fight has been won and Nellie Revell Is able to be wheeled out into the flooding sunshine of the hos pital yard. It was there that I found her the other day. I think Irvin Cobb said a strikingly true thing when he called her, “the gamest guy I know.” Here is a woman who had risen io the top of her profession as a journal ist and a theatrical press agent. She had a bank president's salary, drove to work in a limousine and was one of the most beloved women of Broadway, and then —< ( amile at Both Knds. One day she found that she was lit, erally working herself to death. The candle had been burning at both ends and there was a sudden collapse. Diognosncinns stood over her and shook their heads. Nellie Revell, In the argot of Broadway, was “through.’’ She would never walk again, may never leave her lonely hospital cot. She heard all this. They thought it more merciful to tell her. So she went to St. Vincent’s and began the dreary round of lagging hours with suffering that would, in most instances, crush the heart of hope and dumb the voice of courage. Instead of submitting to hopeless invalidism, she decided that she would fight. In the long watches of the night she thought, not of herself, but of thousands of others in all farflung corners of the globe. She wanted to carry a message of hope to the bruised and beaten. So she lifted lipr Voire through the medium of printer's ink and sent her inspirational cheer ringing around the world. To “Aunt Nellie.” as her friends knew her, no one is licked. And she has proved it with herself. On a little pad she laboriously wrote her daily message. It was printed here and there and then picked up and reprinted by others. Mail came to her from far off Nome, the African veldt and the borders of Sahara. From the bed of pain went personal letters begging them all to keep up the fight. “It’s worth while," she wrote. Savings Swept Away. Tier own private savings had been swept away, hut she began to rebuild it with her pencil. » She has. aside from her newspaper and magazine writings, written a book of her ex periences which is shortly to be pub lished. Not once did she ever lose faith that health would he restored. In the closet of her hospital room her dress, hat, shoes and stockings are await ing her. Not long ago her eyesight failed, and then she was kept in a room of inky darkness, yet when friends carne to call, she made them laugh. Another time, her heart fluttered feebly and medicos saw- the end. Hut she sent them away laughing, too. Nellie Revell is not a Pullyanna. She hates Poliyannism. tihe is not a devotee of Coue. or any other cult or ism. She merely has supreme faith in herself and her Maker. A visit to tier hospital room is like a visit to a gallery of celebrities One may perhaps meet there Irvin Cobb. .Vorma Talmndge. Itox Beach. Flthel Barrymore. Joe Ihtvidson, Harrison Fisher and Jackie Coogan. She turns no one away atul has a Knr many months site foiunl joy in watching a building across the street raise its walls cloudward, brick by brick. She saw In it a lesson lor the human builders of character. cheery message for each. Her friends I are chiefly among theatrical folk, for it was in the theatrical field that she 1 so long labored. She has. through th** power of the printed word, made many actors, plays and producers. Oppo«tunities Await. There are now' more than 100 op portunities awaiting her in the world outside. Hut she is not impatient. “Just give me time," she Says, “and 1 11 be back on the job." Mrs. Re veil has reached middle agr She has seen life at every angle. She | came from a family Illustrious in the “Fourth Estate” and naturally took to writing. Because she was so long a publicity agent for a circus, the idea got abroad that she was a bareback rider. And. out of this idea, grew the story that she was thrown from a horse and her spine permanently In jured. When her visitors call, she keeps the conversation adroitly away from herself and her illness, and the most taciturn soon find themselves chatter ing away like iflagpies. One of her closest friends is the adopted da ugh ter of a famous actor. Each has known life in fcigh tempo and low and understands the other thoroughly. When they meet there Is no sugges tlon of solicitation for one another's health x>r fortune, but just good-na j t ur#d bandinage. For the truth is. “Aunt Nellie" and her friend know that tears are most always in vain, so why attempt to start them'* During the hours when the spark of life fluttered dangerously to war I extinction. Mrs. Tievell would talk of the time when she would leave the hospital. No one else save herself i believed that she would, ever leave. She has told me that there was never a moment when despair came. When she felt that such moments might come. she would have a row wvith a doctor or a nurse. Afterwards she would apologize ami tell them she was just trying to "start a little excitement, so that she might forget herself." She has sat as a high goddess in her little theater of tragedy and di \erted the world with laughter. It is a human thing to enter the sickroom oti tiptoe and apeak in hushed whisitters hut only once does one do that at Nellie Revell's. She snaps you out of that attitude, and, if you don't watch yourself, you will be pouying out your troubles to her. One does not feel that here Is a woman who has tinnumerahle times faced the accumulated troubles of the world, but. rather, one of the active doers. There is a dynamic vitality about her that is contagious. She has sent countless away from her bedside to do bigger and better things. It may l>e the variety actor with the cinna mon colored Fedor and the patter of the Broadway curbs, or It may be the phlegmatic scientists of ponderous mien. With one sweep she strikes all oe tavea of human emotions. She can well say with Henley, "I am the cap tain of my soul." For many months she found Joy, she who had been In the swirl of fur ious life, in watching a building across the street raise its walls sky ward, brick by brick. She saw in tt a lesson for the human builders of character. And she wrote columns and columns of hopeful philosophy about it. People came from miles and miles to see a building undergoing the or dinary processes of construction and went away with nobler thoughts Perhaps It nlay sound a bit slangy, but if you know Nellie Reve l you'll understand It seems to me that now thst she has heen sav'd to continue her useful activities it would be a fitting epitaph at Nellie Revell's "fi nal curtain" to write: "A Game Guy." (CopjfT ght list i School Vice Quiz Placed on Skids Police Morals Squad Head Agrees ,\ot to Appear Before Board. Sergt Frank William* of the police morals squad said Saturday that after a conference with W. E. Reed, president of the board of education, he decided that he would not appear before the s< hool hoard to speak on the subject of high school students i buying liquor During the week it was announced 'that. Dr. Jennie Oillfas, member of [ the board of education, obtained a ' promise from Sergeant Williams t«» ap j pear before the board of education j next Monday night. Agrees to Soft Pedal. "After Mr Reed and I discussed the situation, he said he believed it i would he good policy for me not to appear before the school board," said Sergeant Williams. i "Mr. Reed expressed the belief that 'our department has been and Is do i ing all we can do to suppress this ' pra< tic** of some of the high school • youngsters. I do not believe that Cen tral High school is affected in the same manner as Technical High I school on Leavenworth street. "Of course, recent publicity on the subject has put a quietus on the sit uation." Circulated Cards. Sergeant Williams explained that | among recant raids was the case of a woman whose ph»«*e was raided on South Seventeenth street. She is said I to have promoted the circulation of I her cards among high school stu dents. Later she was raided at an ; address on Forest avenue, according to Mr. Williams ' "I told Jennie to get in her auto mobile some day and go around to Leavenworth street and see what some of the high school students are doing," the sergeant added "Don't think that I am indicting all high school students. Probably not many have been Involved, but there have been enough to make it a situation." Chief Justice of Oklahoma Supreme (ionrt Succumbs Oklahoma Pity, March Jl.---John If. I Pitchford, chief Justice of the su i prome court of Oklahoma, died at his | home here Inst night. Mr. Pitchford hud been seriously ! til for several month*. He was con fined to hi* home at the time of his elevation to the chief justiceship ear . ly in the year. Chief Justice Pitchford was born j March 8, 18u7. Dr. Hubert Work. Say? Goodby to Postal Workers Washington. March 3.— In a fare well message. Dr. Hubert Work, post master general who relinquishes the position of head of the postal service Monday morning, to Senator Harry N'ew of Indiana, said goodhy today to the 339.000 postal workers .through out. the country. ■ From the little girl who printed her thanks for ‘bringing my t'hrist mas doll to me.' to the manager of the gr»Mt mail Older house.* I have found friends. "During fhc two years of our con * tart, nut one discourtesy nor *dis loyalty has marred the pleasure of jour association. The public has not ed your attitude toward this govern ment service, has approved it. and I lelve you with the keenest regret." Mail Wauled for Murder Smuggled Over Iowa Line Siouxi'lty March 3.—, mplicated m the murder of Mrs. John Mudloff, at Tabor, H I*, on n confession said to have h«*n made by I*. Jarman, a Sioux City youth, was smuggled across the- Iowa line into South Dakota tonight from Sioux City, despite the vigilant eyes of off! ‘ ers of the law who w ere watching for the automobile in which the South Dakota officers and their prisoners v si m riding Writs of habeas corpus were waiting at practically every point along the line between the two states and were • o he served on Judge F. D. Wick®, representing the state attorney's office 1 of South Dakota and Sheriff D A. Tuinstra, of Bon Homme county. S D, who were with (’ooley llirlbs and Drulli?. H a i n and If*/.**! Itycmann, 23*4 South i Thirteenth street, bo ‘ I**• fIeH mid l.ijnlie klUHhsr, 4» ’n Houih I TwmiI>• -second street, mi i Wllllsm and Margaret Fdtnnnds h<>ai,t I fa 1. htr I ' Hffold still \ era Huger* hospital, g 'I trank and Helen S. ndarholIT), h"«pit,tl. girl bleb arid Sarah W olfsnn, 44*6 South Twenty fifth «*re#-t girl Urile hr,*| Hlrtdys Hlrhardaon, 2716 Cam- : den, avsnue, boy Minor and Hma Nelson. 3714 Cemden ' a\enur. girl Charles and Minnie Wstann, hospital • firl Carl and Mabel ( arisen, hospital. a rl Jam*** and Anna Houkoup, Seventeenth and O afreet*. girl Frani^aio and fouls* Catania, I4|j South Fourteenth afreet, boy IteMfltM. John K Hacon, I year, hospital. Margartdha TftinsfeUJ f, 6H years, 2714 j North Sixty-second str**, t *■: n t’onatandlno Infant, i o I j ourh Thirteenth street Mi* Sadie Huff 44 vears. Hospital Hlr hard that fie Id. on hospital Charles H Mccluee, 't ye»,a, hospl la!. Hannah I. frame, 6ft veara hospital Marianna Nigro. infant, '9t6 North Twenty seven I h street Robert Mult M v ears, hospital William Kragakow, 66 year*. 3116 Cor ky at reel. i • Generally Fair Forecast For Week Beginning Monday Washington, March 3—Weather outlook for the week beginning Mon day: Upper Mississippi and lower Mis souri va!le\s Generally fair except for rain o\er south and snow or rn n over north about middle of the week temperature below normal at begin ning: about normal thereafter. Northern Rocky mountain and plateau region** Generally fair ex cept occasional rains or snows w#*sf of divide. Temperature near normal. Southern Rocky mountains and plateau regions: Fair and tempera ture* near normal greater part. William Gerrish Beale Die*. i'lilragu. Man h .1— William (Jerritli U. ai»-. mi- of the foremoat mend* >•« of tho I'hlrMO 1or;iI profr—ion. wa dead lrert- today. Death occurred Inn veaterday, after n brief Him — I'rububly the meat notable of Mr Beale a legal achievement- was the drawine of the fnmoua will of Ihe late Mar-hull Hiebl, 1 a document -aid to have -ucoeaefullv withstood niim< r oua leg*I attack Gatina Wal*ka to Join Spotter. Chicago, March Oatuia Wnl-kn bride of Harold Mefortnb k. today w ,i -nld to lie preparing to Join her hu band In « allfornln whither lie immi punier! hia venerable mother -nvernl day- «*fo, The -timer bride attended the Hit—la opera la«t night She In the gueat of her -later In law. Mr-. Kmniona Hlaine, and !• i xiiectcd to leave for the umm within five day tl»VK*1l-ltOi'T. Iowa Physician Makes Startling Offer to Catarrh Sufferers Found Treatment Which Healed Hu Own Catarrh and Now Offer, to Send It Frew to Suf. ferer. Anywhere. Davenport, Iowa. Dr W <• ’"ffe* Suit* ih0St. J»imm Hotel Hl.lv ihl* dfy, on* of the mo,i widely known phv ulrtana and lurgnma In the central *•-* innminrM that he found a treatment which eompletelf hf-alc*! him *»f ratar.' in tha head and noaa. deafneaa and head pniar, after many year, of Buffering II* than *a\* • ha treatment to a numSfr of other auffarara and they *•*».- 'hat th< alao wer# completely healed The i« *o proud of hia ahievement and **f* i f*n(idant that hia treatment will hung ,*lh*f Bltfferera tha ,atne freedom It |f»* •' him. that ha n offering to nand a !'» lay* auppla ahaolufaly free »«» any ford *r of thla papar who wrltra h m. Dr f’offaa ha, aper|all*ed on a>»y. »-ai noa# %nd throat diarate, for wnr# Ilian thirt fixa yaara and ia honored ami reaper**d by lountla,, thousand* If you nulfat from noae. head nr throat catarrh l a r r ha I daafiia-a or haad nolaaa, tend htftl your nann and address tod ay French Advance Into Mannheim Pu rely Fiscal Operation. For eign Office Announces at Paris. Mayence. March 3.—OP)—French troops today advanced outside the Mayence bridgehead and occupied ad ditional small sections of German ter ritory. Three railroad repair shops were occupied by the French troops st Darmstadt, which is Just on the rim of the bridgehead. The ports of Mannheim and Karls ruhe. respectively 40 miles and 79 miles to the south of Mayence, fur ther up the Rhine, also were oc cupied. (Karlsruhe is not immediate ly on the Rhine, lying about six miles to the east. The little town of Maxau, on the Rhine, where other reports say the French crossed the river, is opposite Karlsruhe and in the Karls ruhe fiscal district.) According to information here, these polls were occupied because of eases of Sabotage on the railroads and eanals in the Rhineland and the : Ruhr. ————— Viola Dana Recoverg. Dos Angeles, March 3.—Viola Dana, ; motion picture actress, who recently j underwent an operation for appen dicitis at a hospital here, has recuper ated sufficiently to return to her home. She said she expected to re i sume screen work about March 29. Pressman Elected Secretary of Union George Aj. Steiner, formerly secra tary of the local union of printing pressmen and assistants and of the Allied Printing Trades council, hai been elected secretary of the Central Iaibor union to succeed 8. C. Jackeon. deceased. It Is the first time a mem ber of the printing pressmen's unlp^ has been so honored. Steiner was elected to the secretary ship Friday night. Daugherty Moves to End Anthracite Coal Trust Wahington, . March 1.—A proceed ins, described at the Department ef Justice “as the first atep to bring about the dissolution of the snthris clte cosl trust ordered by the supremo court,*' Attorney General Daugliritv today ordered filed In the I nitel States distrlrt court at New ^ orl< r» final decree for separation of (lie to high Valley Railroad company frop' its coal subsidiaries. Bea Want Ada-Produce Results. Introductory Offering Imported Silk Lamp Shades {Bridge-Junior Reading Lamps) A new lirie of finest Japanese silks, triple linings, new shapes and designs in the (finest tailoring you have ever inspected. We are proud of these lines, for each is a work of Art, 1513 Douglas Street The prices are most reasonable, quality considered, and to insure your prompt acquaintance with this line we make this Introductory Offer. Every Every Shade Lamp Some are individtial designs that cannot be duplicated. Quality Good* F»ir Price* -for CREIGHTON - f Being keenly alive to the great value of The Creighton University to Omaha, not only from a dollar-and cents point of view, but also as regards the high type of edu cational, philanthropical, conservation and research work that Creighton is doing; also realizing that if Omaha is to continue to become the great city it is destined to be. it must do and have the things that go to make up a great city, Every salesman of legal reserve life insurance in the city of Omaha, co-operating through the Omaha Association of Life Underwriters, are working with the Business Men’s Cam paign Committee of The Creighton University to help in the attainment of this great purpose, by creating an additional building and endowment fund for The Creighton University. During the next two weeks our accredited represent atives will call upon every business house and business man in the city of Omaha, and will place before the people of Omaha, in a systematized, business-lrke manner an EASY-TO-GIYE AXD-EASY-TO-PAY plan of creating for The' Creighton Uuiversitv a * Two Million Dollar V Building and Endowment Fund There is very great need for this money* in order that The Creighton University may have the additional loom necessary to accommodate the hundreds of applicants for entrance to ibis University that must now be turned away every year. While, under our plan of operation, every subscrip tion secured by our representatives is to be converted into a ten-year endowment policy, payable to The Creighton Univer sity. the moving spirit behind our representatives is the slogan “For Creighton and Omaha.” and you will find our representa tives competent and willing to co-operate with you in every way possible to make it. for you, EASY-TO-GlVE-AXO-EASY TO-PAY, according to your circumstances and the dictates of your judgment. We want the people of Omaha to know that with our organization the writing of insurance in this campaign i^ a secondary consideration. We appreciate thoroughly that both from a view-point of dollars and cents and from the view-point of making Omaha a more desirable place to live, anything that helps The Creighton University, helps Omaha, and anything that helps Omaha helps us, collectively and individually. With this thought in mind, we bespeak for our rep resentatives your hearty co operation, in order that both your and their time may be conserved as much as possible and the object of the campaign more fully and promptly consummated. • The Omaha Association of Life Underwriters f