The Omaha Sunday Bee. f ART 03E HEWS SECTION rxaca ose to eiqiit WEATHER FORECAST. For Nebraska- I'nupHlecl. For Iowa Increasing riniiiilnps For weather report o pan a 2. .VOl 1I-N(. VA. NEXT LAND SHOW HELDINOCTOIIER Omaha B and Twentieth Century farmer Western rrodocte E libit for 1911 Announced. TO BE PUT OS AT TEE COLISEUM Down Town Facilitiet for Display Are. Outgrown. EA130J TO REMODEL OLD TEN XnlfhU ef Ak-S&r-Bea Propose Re Jure nation ef Structure. ROADS ARE CARRYING SETTLERS MeeaH Maaaaaanl apparent la Tralfk lisle Set In Pndlllnle Handling f rwiMlt rr" paetsnen r.arly. The rimsh l.nd r"how was organised fnr a d-f'Mt purpose It iiI.imi I in rnimillh a certain dsflnlte t t.l rar II la eomcihlng mora than a show, It I i mar than merely an ln'nimtil for the tiaa af the lend man In selling Intnl. Il I mora than a fiiare collection (if the I ear products of Ilia west Il a rrvr lhan a gnut oble I lesson In lha teat methods of am hull ore r tint atarted for Ilia purpose of Inftklntf rrif-tia-v In th,. m t,,w l.nntni'HM nr In Sltraet crowds lo llmalia J The oljecl of this mpoaltlon la til meet greal Mini problem - tn atom the tide of .rnigialton now nmni l'i Hi" noith and lo iha auMili ami tu ilirait this alreatn west ward. Ir hs been the .;ii-t of Ilia tnansge man! af The Omaha Ilea anil Tha Twen iiaih IVnlur- farmer lo devote a large amount of ara In I lir purpose of cllrect fi altent on lo i i orltinltica In tha west. touted a. Oman la. at tha gateway af tna Irananvaaoiiri riniiilr, anil Willi tha grant rallrcada preadlna out from thai Biltr fariehap. rotation great territory! fo.ni Nebraska to thr Pacific ail, .p.i. whnee interact ara miinml, II la plain thai tht ao'k can he undertaken ""I In Omaha. Knowlnk Ilia adetitage of an exposition' for tha purtHiaa of arousing interest; rrrng. nutria! lha ah l Ir of tha powerful rallrosds to recurs results through Hieli or-tailxn. Ions, l.eilatlng thai xuil. orgnlilMllon j o.l commercial rinl of Ihr weal, once' roud. can acrmiillli vastly trior in j tha future; hla exposition la organised to, i.nli thaee 'nri.t and further IhU inula I urpt-ar-In bring mora people to lha uppnr lurcllleg ml ton wrat. LJaoa af Mlraarr Mavaaaaat. Th natural irrVui of utinilxratlon la M Ika Uaaa of lajit rraialrnca. In N laat tiu will find mora panpl from aa. ItlltH'ta ami Ohio than from any Ah Maiaa. 1 oar ma from tha aaat la tr tarat. Tba rrat railroad trunk linaa tmm aar taa tka contloaat In Imaa aitn.iat aajralial Ion aaat ta waat. I'aopla ox atmn$ ml tha aama rllrrtala a that mt Ikaar aw a kclba. rut thla raawm tha paaNaalaw aoaa lo tha twrthitmm.nl MMn, a4 Ika Italia to tha aniith, whila rf utmvtma wwa uur own country aark a allmata aim Mar ta that of tta r4 aawna. Thaaa ar tha natural Una of lrr4, a4 Ik natural tiidanr la for 4raj4kiai frutm Ika araau rantral rivar all'ta k aw.ia t v ard anl nor. to tha iwia a Iw tka aulfe. Tka llnaa) of I aaat laiaiaaw-a. tkarafura. ara from tba aaat M tka waaa, Milk I! farta hafora im, M a4laoiaat l allrart. tloao n leatr a aaaMi at la tha a act ion whlt'h la taa aatarai 4aat tnat ton. Tfca raaa..a thai tha p-aopl "' t'anada j aaav ,a a4i( thatr oaiortimit:ra ao ad ra aaualy fcj aut thai tba wit a ,aa 4-y not of far graatar advantaaaa, i iMx-aii thara baa baa B ur(aiitia.l vtr4, '( H aakl axaMaMth.rt la for tha pur- aa af balny rantial turi-a la I or Bin 4 ; lata tat a 4 aVilaraH'.n iraatvard. Tha f . M aaamilahad br tha flrat I'm; lm4 ahow mrA mwat aallaf. turf. I la auo- , aa la m IniK VnM fu tha work of tha aawaml aayoattltn, which, with tha an-! aatajatlM aovp'4l a'fatly promlar.1 from iror aaatluai nfla i"t, will a.rcvnipliali i aa mora than Ilia (rodwrsajr. . I trtrti 4r net f i. iiiun rixr.tt , tlo ft a 14 l.l ft. r wite tJt n I til hrtaka a (tjo Wlaj I mrrttt rhMka. Tka arriiil annuail ftiillt fnd ahnw wtlt ha hl o-t.lHnt H- 31 T(a at.o la to ta hl. at tha Cnilawim. Tw-r'ler'i an, I R irdett atiaara. Tha ax- I'Wt a M pmr th' .Jim territory n- i mI-1 n tna fuat a.iuv l,cl, In January. rtia la' .f fia show hit a keen akana f-uo Jiiii.oi I i CH-iiihrr t-i a (. waiiir w'lh'h mn ir Interfera with) a"aa lam a ami ine ai. poient of ilelh ata archarj a'ol'0'ia m It are to ennatttute aj tars a part n. t h rvt axlithtt. T i i':lauTTr tia.a beau rhoaen aa the ej.t of tna show Kfintiiw of tha growtd af aimw heyoml thn lltnita of tha Aiftt'oroiftt "T'-a a-o v-ea ff rha first IhiiiI show aof t! a f-tr tiaranca of the movement for itci tna Un.l ato.ar iMmli have mails t1 a a. ,nl -.I'-iva itnei ,iti . a,' aatil C '. si.wawatt, niral rit'oii.-r of Tha H-e a A r "9 T4f..n! i fV'ii'irv Krmer, !u I Mliitntrlji tita .'ui i.illii prxdi.tt'v Ri h.' t-i Im 411.11 In liHf p'ti(i'iftton4. T a i i-"- 'mi 1 r.. t.a rMi,i!pftl by Ka Mm1 It of M Sin On W.ok has rr'H.t Will r When c. nii, trt Wll', ITI ike r l i' i t ' 1 1 i' i M l,i' a new hut Kill i. '.In. r i- nil i li fi'vi P' ! i -tr.tr Iiii tn STtnit.Hh m,talui I Ml I I' I 1 1 i " I, t'l , i . i it iiiii will a I m.i inttK. at llU II M failt' lir t Mill ii f III "tliii t avlitae ' MrrrHi'ifr, i i .iij'h M if th x'.(i.HMitn I 4Miiiir n-r .likfm'v dn.l hv (lfi , ti r -iiatil t4 ani-wri ah (ti ' 1 rn i t-.f- t nm i o.iht'itHi will he fin I n ('. irt ' t v kriaru4af nitatriavi i titf i i hi iiiiKMii'ta if ( i th r i -. i.. i' f in.i buiianiaj Mm rg it . . a tVr-H- , .?!. i t - ti t.u tfit rmo1lltntr ok t ,.,. ..f ltti.t Hh-iw a ' .-i,o,ri h i ii. I hi ina. hi.ury! riiMii. nana will ha ereutl' ..... I,' mi iu Ma al'lltlo,ia.l I uiia for th hatnUm- J c l.ii.l tiw wtii ta aiuiiif. 'S'laav iiilnv la prrp.l 1114 ' in .a4 jh riurcit fa Extra Session of Congress is Called for April Fourth Preiideni Taft Makei Announcement of the Date Soon After Adjourn ment of Both Houies. tVAKIflNriTON, March l -Iraaldrnt Taft ha laauad a call for an antra araalon of ronaraaa to b(fln A rr 1 1 4. Tha proi latitat Inn follow: 'Wharrn. hy tha apailHl niar..ia dutrd January M, m. thara w tratiamlttad to tha arnat and hounc of rapraaentatlva an raatrint hot warn tha I ifpartmant of St and lha Canadian (rovernmant In re" rat iprnral tariff IrRlalatlon, tr' an aamaat raromnirndatlon t aary It-Klalatlon he promptly' .3V "And, whara a bill to t it jO . -f-fcl Jd ajiraamant haa pafnaft .' houae of rapraaantatlva. but ha fallad to ranrh a vota In tha nat. "And. whfraaa. the atrraemant atlpulate hot only lha prrrtldmt of the t'nlted HtHta will communli ate to ronitra the conclu lona now rain had and recommend tha adoption of alien h-nlBlatlon a may be rterraaary on the part of the I'nlted State o kIv affect to the propoed agreement, hut alao the Kov-ernmenta of the two roun- tila will uae their utmost effort to brlna; shout inh chanffp by conrurrent laKlHlntlon at WaahlnKtun and at Ottawa. "Now. therefore, I, William Howaid Taft, '.r-l,l,nt of the I nlted Htafe of America, hy virtue of the powej vested in ttii hy the ronatltutlon. do herrby pro claim and declare that an extraordinary occaalon require the ronvenlne; of both hoiiae of the connrpnn of the I'nlted Htate at their reapectiva chambor In the city of WanhlnRton. on the 4th of 4prll, 1U. at 12 o'clock noon, to the end that they may ronaldcr and determine whether the rontrrea ahull, by the neceaaary legis lation make operative the agreement. All peraon entitled to act a member of the lxty-econd congrea are required lo iHke notice of thl proclamation. "Olven tinder my hand n.nd the Heal of the I'nlted State at WaahlnBton the 4th clay of March, In the year of our Lord, one thousand nine hundred anil cloven and of the Independence of the I'nlted State, the one hundred and thirty-fifth. WILLIAM II. TAFT. "Hy the prealdent. P. C. Knox, secretary of tate." Gov. Brady Issues Call for Meeting of Development League Will Ask Executive Committee of Association to Meet at Salt Lake March 30. IIOI8K, Idaho, March 4.-rtpeclal Tela gram l liovernor James H. Brady today Inalructed Will A. Campbell of Omaha, aecrelury of the Western I "fVcjUipment soclatlon, to laaua a call for a meeting of tha executive; committee of the association for Halt lke City March 20 at the rooms of the Halt Ijike City Commercial club. (lovernor Urady nays the people of tha went are taking a great Interest In thl work and ha any he feels that much good can be accomplished at a meeting at this time. The Western Development association waa formed during the recent land show held In Omaha and already Its work through the west is being strongly felt. Convict is Flogged Twenty-Six Times Deputy Warden Catlin of Michigan Penitentiary Tells of Punish ing Prisoners. MAKrjl'KTTK. Mich. March 4 Testi fying before an Investigating csmmitteo, Iwpiity Warden Catlin, of th state pen itentiary here, said today: "Wo- flogged Convict Stephens twenty six time. I .old Stevens that ha would get another flogging tha next day and ha was sent hack to the shop with ball snd chain, "Tha next day when we went to his cell to bring him down for punishment, ha had foolishly cut his wrist." In reply to a nuAatton as to what was tha longest time aconvlct In karquette prison hns ever been strung up, Catlin replied. "Fourteen days." Mrs. Schuyler Colfax Dead at South Bend Widow of Former Vice President Passes Away at Seventy-Three Years of Age. nTTH PF-.Xn. Ind.. March 4 -(Special Telegram M:-s. K.llen Wade Colfax. 73 "Id, widow ,,f Vice Prealdent Schuy 'er Cotfux. died here this morning after nn li ne s of several r.ionths. She was a nlc e of Senator Hen Wade of Ohio. She leaves a son. former Mayor Schuyler Col fax of South U-nd. now of Rocheater. .N Y. Mrs. ColfHt n betrothed to Mr. Colfax on top of l'lk i liens and ass married to hint the night before his election as vice president. Positive and Negative Results of This Session of Congress WASHINC.TON', .M.trch 4,-Out of the amok of tii closing battla In congress mama tiirw raaults of larger luteiests: Positlva raults: Provlolon of l3.um.ijo for th fortification of tha Panama canal. Provision tor two naw baitlesblps. Rwcdifuailoa of tha judicial cud r garded aa in., at important for tha amelio ration of tli law a delays. c'raatlon of foraat reaervaa In tha South ern Appalachaln and Wlilta u.ountalna Provldng for tiia oonat ruction of m baaav and lea.tln buildings auioad. K.--ii.lnn4 tna laspectiun of lucoinotlve bojira. Vegatlva results: i'ajlura of tha Canadian reciprocity aareamant an4 0unat4Ucnl carlatniy of an aira sasalui OMAHA, SUNDAY MOKXIXd, CONGRESS FAILS ON BIG MEASURES Sixty-Pint Gathering Adjourns With out Acting- on McCall Bill to Rat ify Reciprocity Agreement. EXTRA SESSION STARTS APRIL 4 Taft Issuei Proclamation Immedi ately After Two Houses Cease. TAPT BOARD ALSO FAILURE Filibuster Renders Action . the Senate Futile. EXPECT SCHEDULE AMENDMENT C real it rB Will Probably Not Ttrfnae Mania to Any Action Which IJoaa Xol Oppose Policy of Proteetloo. WASHINGTON. March 4-The Blxty flrst congress, heedless of one of the most Important legislative task Set before It, came to an end shortly after noon today. Within the hour following President Taft had Issued a proclamation calling the new congress to meet In extraordinary session at noon on Tuesday, April 4. He will then submit for ratification to a house overwhelmingly democratic, and to a senate barely republican, the reciprocity agreement with Canada. The McCsll hill, carrying that agreement Into effect and passed by the house, met today, at the hands of the old senate, the death freely predicted for It. The president, warned, if not entirely reconciled to the fste In store for the measure, was at the capltol to wit ness the obsequies. The bill waa not allowed at any lima to come up In the senate for a moment a consideration. The permanent tariff board bill, forced to Its passage through a reluctant senate at 8:30 o'clock thl morning was hurried over to the house, there to be strangled by a democratic filibuster. The president. In tha room reserved for him in the senate lobby, heard the news with resignation. Congress provided funds to continue the work of the temporary tariff board for another year. Democrata Requests Granted. It wa at the request of the democrats of the house and the senate that the presi dent fixed the date for the beginning of the extra session at April 4. ' The new democratic ways and means committee of the house, which Is to erve as a committee on committees, will meet on Monday to take up Its latter duties. A full caucus of democratic members of the new house will not be held until April 2. In the meantime . the plates for the xtra aeaslon will have developed. There Is little doubt now that tha demo crat of the house will undertake to revls at least twe or throe of tha schedules of h Peyne-AldUch tariff act and there Is every reason to believe these bills will b favorably reeelvad In the new senate, the Increased democratic and Insurgent strength In that body giving a majority for the principle of a further revision of the tariff downward. It also Is supposed that so long as the new schedules do not flagrantly violate tha policy of protection, President Taft will no twlthhold hia approval of them. He has announced, however, that If a general revision. In violation of tha protective policy, should be Inaugurated, ha would not hesitate to use the power of the veto. How long the session will last la problematical. While the new congress may promptly ratify th reciprocity agreement some democrats are In favor of withholding confirmation until two or three new tariff schedules are ready. If tariff differences should arise between the new house and tha senate, the ses sion unquestionably would be a long one. Prt-slaVat Mar Kaal ftraalon. In this connection, however, the Inter esting fact was developed today that tha president has a constitutional right to bring the sasslonto an end In case tha two houses of congress cannot agree upon a time for adjournment. Such action. It Is admitted, would be revolutionary, and there Is little thought to be little likeli hood that any prealdent would care to Invoke tha power. The old congress ended amid acenes of extraordinary excitement "and uncer tainty. In th housa th disorder at times In the closing hours, when the usc ceasful filibuster against the tariff board hill was In progress, became almost a riot. Representative Johnson of Kentucky, glaring angrily at Speaker Cannon, shouted above tha general roar of con fusion, a challenge that but for the speaker's gray hair he would carry tha wordy disagreement to a more serious conclusion. hTe speaker, his sparse gray hair bristling with rage, declared with a vlcoua blow of his gavel on tha desk, that no member need let hi gry hair bo a bar to any thing they had to offer. The house stood Up and cheered. Tn th senate a filibuster, conducted by Senator Owen of Oklahoma, threatened tha final approval of four of the great ap propriation measure up to within half an hour of the time sat for adjournment. Sen ators of both parties appealed In vain to senator Owtm to stop talking and let the supply hills go through. The senator said he had se ut to talk to death the resolu tion approving the constitution of New (Continued on Secomi Page.) Failure of th permanent tariff board bill, which passed the senate, but was killed by a filibuster in the house. Failure of tha resolution to admit to statehood Arlsona and New Mexico, killed by a filibuster In tha senate. Failure of the proposal to increase th rat of postage on tha advertising sctloni of tha largo magaalnas; but a commission provided for to Investigate th subject. Failure of the resolution providing for direct election of I'nlted States senators. Failure of the gan. ial ana pension bill Failur to act cm th ballinger Plnchot in aatigktlon reports. Failur to enact tha ocean mall subsidy, paaawd by th senate alona. Failur of th effort to unseat William Lorltuar aa senator from Illinois on th gruuad of altege4 bribery la hi lcUou. MAKCIl .. lull-SIX SIXTIOXS-TIUIJTY-KIGIIT IAG1. OTZRDOlira rr G- Events BAILEY QDITSjCHAHGES MIND Senator from Texas Resigns and Takes it Back. j ANG!tY a COLLEAGUES' ACTION 7 - (icrrraar 4 olttnltt llecllne t Accept Rcslanatlon and Asks Senator to Withdraw It Sherman Also Declines. WASHINGTON. March 4. Pcnator Joseph W. nalley added to the excitement preced ing the adjournment of the Hlxty-flrst congress today by resigning hi office as senator from the state of Texas and a few hours later withdrawing his resigna tion. Angered at tho attitude of his demo cratic colleagues In favoring the resolution approving the new constitution of Arizona, to whose radical , features Mr. Bailey has voiced his opposition, he wrote his resig nation and took It to the vice president with the request that he announce it to the senate. Mr. Sherman declined, so Senator Bacon, Importuned in like manner to announce It, took a similar position. Thereupon the Texan telegraphed It to (lovernor Colquitt of Texas, who promptly refused to accept it, replying: "I decline to accept your resignation as a senator from Texas and respectfully ask you to withdraw It. Please wire fully." Colleagues Reject HI Leadership. When tha resignation waa first aent by Mr. Bailey to the vice president, th latter refused to announce It In th senate. Sena tor Bacon wna then appealed to make the announcement and when be llkewls re fused, Mr. Bailey wired hi resignation to Governor Colquitt of Texa. During th last few days Mr. Bailey' leadership ha ben repudiated abaolutely by his colleagues. It wa with him that the republicans made their agreement for a vote on th Lorlmer case and making the tariff heard bill the unfinished bulness. Tha understanding was that there wa to be no filibuster on th tariff board bill, but a large faction of th democratic aena tor led by Senator Btone of Missouri de clined to be bound by th agreement From that time on th small part taken In th senate proceeding by Mr. Bailey seemed to be contrary to th Judgment of hi colleaguea. , Governor Pif)i te Accept It. AUSTIN, T-jeV-Ach 4. Governor Oscar B. Colquitt this afternoon refused to ac cept the realgnatton of United State Sena tor Bailey, when it reached him by wire. It Is believed the present legislature will attempt to elect former Governor Tom M. Ctnntiell to the vacancy, although a sug gestion Is that Ciarema Ouaiey, editor of the Fort Worth Record, may be a strong candidate. Milwaukee Road Sells Big Bunch of Bonds Twenty-Five Million Dollars in Secur ities of Puget Sound Company Taken in New York. NEW YORK, March 4 (Special Tele gram ) Kuhn. Ijoeb Co. and the Na tional City bank of Naw York have pur chased W.0U0.iOD of Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Railway company flrat mort gage forty-year gold bonds, due In 1IM, principal and interest unconditionally guaranteed by the Chicago. Milwaukee St. Paul railway. Negotiation looking to thl end have been under way for a week or ao. during which Urn there was a good deal of dis cussion lietween the road and th ban Wars aa to what sort of a bond to put out. At flrt It wa thouKht advlaable to sail gen eral mortgage bonds of the St. Paul proper, but subsequently the plan were changed providing for the sale of bonds of the Puget Sound road, th Pacific coast exten sion of the St. Paul. WM XWA S A;, 'f iiafii I 111 il i- mm r"' ' t'fs ifr,i,i" ) Coming and Going in Omaha VI A 6 of the Week, as Viewed by The Bee's State Teachers Vote to Come to Omaha During November Crvwasi of the Teachers of the Asso ciation Giv.i Omaha a Good Majority. By a vote of .12 to 1.S10 school teach ers of Nebraska, have voted to hold their next meeting In Omaha and It . will be during election week In . November,, the teacher voting almost two to one in favor of this time. Omaha'a margin of 102 votes was possi ble because the teacher out In the tate, even near IJncoln, voted for Omaha. Lin coln and Omaha were the only two cities inviting the convention to hold their meet ings In the cities. More than 3. MO teach ers were sent ballots. Over 2,900 were re turned, but only 1,722 were legal ballots, and Omaha got 1.412 of these. The announcement was made Saturday evening from Columbus, where the ex ecutive committee of the Nebraska Teach ers' association was called to meet at 1:30 Saturday morning. A majority of the committee waa present and Secretary Stockdale brought In the 2.900 ballots. President W. M. Davidson of Omaha pre sided and representatives of th Omaha and Lincoln Commercial club were pres ent to watch th counting with much in terest. It required about six hour to fin ish. The committee gave each club an opportunity to protest. If there waa any protest corning, but both declared them selves satisfied and the executive commit tee declared Omaha to be the next meet ing place of the association. With the work Omaha expects to do on the moetlng, with the program which President Davidson and his committee will arrange and the fact that Omaha Is able to accommodate all teacher at Its hotels. It Is expected to make the coming con vention the largest In th history of the association and from 4,6no to 1,000 teachers will b In the city a week. Suicide at Yankton. YANKTON, a D March .-Sp.eclal Telegram.) Tony Krauskl, aged 5 year, a Polander, working on the section of the Milwaukee railroad, hanged himself In Foresters grove In this city last night. He leavea a widow and family In Poland. Hock Island Raises Dividend, NF.W YORK, March . IMrectors of th Chicago. Rock Island 4 Pacific railway which is owned by the Rock Island com pany. today declared a quarterly dividend of Us per cent, an increasa of per cent over the preceding quarter. "A m r FREE THEATER TICKETS Ten pairs of seats 20 in all are given away with this issue of the Omaha Bee. See if your name is in any of the classified ads appearing on thoie pages. TODAY. Also five sacks of FLOUR. You need not advertise to get these gifts the Bee Gift Editor attends to the prizes. Just find your name and the gift is jours. SlXflM. YKT Vsa uijy LV -1 i ilAIE COMrrSTlOir rttECB 9 Artist THOMAS HIREUN ATTORNEY Says He Has No Statement to Make at This Time. KELLEY'S STORY SHAKES US. UP " 1Wp' Mors I In Town Working on th Case II Has Not En tered Ilia Official Ap pearance. Th publication of the detailed tory of the shakedown, which he had been trying o hard to keep quiet, ha finally made Postmaster Thomas realls that It la get ting warm. Therefore, he Is said to have hired a lawyer. Along thl Una when asked if he had any further statement to make he said, "Not now. My case Is to be tried before the civil service commis sion, and not In the newspapers." The story told In the Kelley affidavit was quickly taken up by the postofflce clerks and carriers aa soon aa they learned of Its appearance in print, and they began to fit the various parts of It in with what they knew or had observed. The employe at the postofflce. however, ara ful these days to do moat of their talking in auenc lor rear of being put on. the postmaster blacklist aa Letter Carrier Tlllotson was. but they have all known Keller for years and have no rinnht t,n that he la telling the exact truth. One carrier, who has previously expressed himself In strict confidence declared: "Mr. Kelley Is unquestionably telling the straight of It so far as he la concerned, although If the postmaster got 1100 from Kelley. It Is fair to presume h "touched" som other who are not on the list, di rectly or througn other. The gtory of the Job they tried to fix up on Burger alo show what Thomas' defense will be. He will deny that he ever told Kelley to collect any money, and be will deny that Kelley ever gave him any of the money collected. He will try to get those who paid the money to help him discredit Kelley by denying that they paid it, and he will probably try to get others to corroborate him. Instead of making Burger the "goat" a he had intended, he will now try to make Kelley the goat. A far aa th ret of ua ar concerned, we are keeping our ear, open and our mouth hut." Story of Pestmastera' Meeting. Th account printed In another news paper of th meeting of postmaster about ten day before election, held on Pot master Thoma' invitation In th federal building, at which money i said to hav been collected for the campaign, ha also (Continued on Third Page.) (X)PY FIVK CKNTS. FIGHT AND SING AS SESSION ENDS ! Scenes of Strife and Sorrow Mark the Closing Moments of the Sixty- First Congress. OWEN BLOCKS THE SENATE Filibusters on Statehood and Almost Defeats Appropriation. PATHOS OF THE LAST SESSION What the Adjournment Means to Many Members. MARKS PASSING OF OLD REGIME t.rlarled Veterans tio Dnvtn the stairs ever In Return ns Members of the Great I.eataliHlve llodj . (From n Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, March 4 -(Special Tele gram.) Not In forty yenrs has there been as turbulent and in ninny ways as unaat- j Isfartory a termination of congress as that which expired today by operation of law. I'p to (lie last It was fight, flulit. fight, and filibuster In both house and senate, and at 11 o'clock, within an hour of the constitute nsl limit placed upon the Sixty first congress, It seemed as If four of th great supply bills would fall because Sen ator Owen, forsooth, had constituted him self th esle Judge as to what sort of a constitution the president and cons. res should accept from Arlsona, the constitu tion of New Mexico linvlng lu-cn accepted on the part of the house and the new stst was knocking at the doors of the senat to he admitted Into full statehood. Not since the days when Senator Thomas H. Carter talked a river and harbor bill to death, away back In McKlnley's time, ha such sovereign power been displayed, lodged in the person ut one man, as wa shown in Owen's esse. Importuned hy his democratic friends, licseeched by his repub lican colleagues, labored with to even the Iosb of personal dignity by the vice presi dent, and asked to see the president In the room set apart for the chief executive when I nthe capltol. Senator Owen turned a deaf ear to nil and voiced in thunderous tones the Information that he waa present to defeat a republican state coming Into the union If It was not accompanied by a democratic state, for h classed Naw i Mexico as republican and Arlsona aa dem ocratic. Finally an agreement was reached to vote on his amendment to the resolution permitting both states to come. In and should his resolution fail then further consideration of the bill admitting New Mexico wa to be abandoned. Owen Kill Two State. The vote stood 39 for td 48 against th Owen resolution and New Mexico and Arl sona passed off the stage until the Sixty second congress shall enact legislation that will bring them Into the union. With the Owen resolution defeated. It wa comparatively easy to get the supply bills through and signed before the hour of noon arrived, to the Intense Joy of hun dreds of employes, especially about the capltol, who had an extra month's pay In the general deficiency bill, money to pay their board bills and enough left to get home on, while their places will be taken by a hungry horde) of democrata, who ar already marching on to Washington In anticipation of the feast which will follow fast upon April 4, when the democrats will organise the house and take the offices. Note of Madness In llonae. Although It was fight, fight, fight until the last, there was throughout the scenes In the house a tragic element of sadness, accentuated by the clear treble of one of the young pages, who sang from th vantage ground of the top of a' denk, sur rounded by scores of members, "My Old Kentucky Home" and "That One Sweet Sung," which touched the heartstrings of many of the older men of the house, for they saw In It all the pathos of severed friendships and In many casee beginning life over again. After all, while politics brings lta Joy of triumph, It 1 problematic whether these hour ran assuage the pangs of defeat, and there haa not passed out of the gray portals of the capltol la a quar ter of a century so many grlzxled political warriors who from tomorrow will prefix "senator" or "representative" with an "ex," and many of those who passed out and were swallowed up by the crowd on Pennsylvania avenue will never come back again. Heaolta of the Meaaioa. Out of the smoke of the cloaing hattia In congres emerge these results of larger interest, positive results: Provision of Ki.0uu.uii0 for th fortification of the Panama canal. Provision for two new battleships. Recodification of the judicial code. Creation of forest preserve In the South ern Appalachian and White mountains. Providing for the construction of embassy and legation buildings abroad. Requiring the Inspection of locomotive boiler. Negatlv result: Failure of the Canadian reciprocity agree ment. Failure of the permanent tariff board bill, which passed the senate, but was killed by a filibuster In tha housa. Failure of the resolution to admit to statehood Arizona and New Mexico, killed by a filibuster in (he senate. Failure of the propusul to Increase the rate of postage on the advertising sections of thn lurge magazines, but a commission provided for to Investigate the subject. Failure of the resolution providing for the direct election of I'nlted States senators. Failure of the general ago pension bill. Failure to enact the ocean mall subsidy, passed by the Senate alone. Mct'artaey Sot Confirmed. The nomination of Frank McCartney lo be postmaster at Nebraska City, which came to the senate yesterday failed of con firmation, because th chairman of the postofflce and postroads committee. Sen. ator Penrose, failed to report It In (Kite to be acted on last night, or rather esily thls morning, if it had been reported the nomination would have been rejected, but It waa an raster way to kill th nomi nation by having It held up In committee. -Ncbraskaas Coming Home. Senator ill ow n will leav Washington tomorrow afteinoou for Kearney, stopping at L. s Molt.cs un route to psy a brief usit to his mother. . Representative I-atta left for Tekamati this afternoon. Representative Macyuiie. Kltikald, Noil la snd lllnrhaw are as yet undecided at (., when they may start for coins, but lha