The Omaha Daily Bee Everybody Roads the day's happenings every day. If folks don't read your store news CTjpry day, It's your fault. THE WEATHER. Unsettled VOL. XLIIL-NO. 119. OMAHA, TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 4, 1D13-TVEIjVK PA'GES. SINGLE COVY TWO HANTS. CAUCUS MAY TAKE FROMJPMITTEE Conference Discussing; Possibility of Such Aotion Held at White Home. PRESIDENT IS NOT SATISFIED Doesn't Like Aotion Placing Number of Banks at Four. MAXES KNOWN HIS OPPOSITION Call for Thursday or Friday is Being Considered. WILSON IS LOOKING AHEAD 'Anl-Trnt roller Armed to the Veeth," la War Those Clone to Him Describe Ilia Plan. WASHINGTON, Nov. S.-rresldent Wit nun said today he would not launch any recommendations for anti-trust legisla tion until tho currency bill was passed and that It would bo his aim to keep the currency question the center ot attention. Tie made It plain, however, that he hnd pome definite Ideas on the trust question, which he had already discussed with Chairman Rowlands of the senate Inter state commerce committee, and Chair man Clayton ot the house Judiciary com mittee as well as Attorney General Mc Reynolds and that all were thinking along the same lines. i'An anti-trust program armed to the teeth," Is the way those close to Presi dent Wilson described his plans. President Wilson let it bo known that he is opposed lo the senate banking com mittee currency amendment providing for four regional reservo banks Instead of twelve, as In the house currency bill. With work on the administration cur rency bill temporarily halted, a number of conferences among nenators and at the White HoUie today discussed the pos sibility of tailing a democratic caucus to tn.ke.thn measure out of the hands of tho committee. Tho committee Is divided over sovoral propositions In the house bill, which the administration Is firmly supporting and on several occasions com binations of a few democrats with repub licans have defeated administration pro )Ksals. After Chairman Owen of the committee letur.ned from the White House to the capltol today he talked wlh Senators Kern, Simmons and other democratic leaders about a. plan to, call a caucus for Thursday or Friday. 'SPANISrfCAPTAIN IS - . EXECUTED' FOR MURDER MAOkUJ. Spalp. Nov. .3, A tiring squad of Spanish troops at dawn today ex ecuted Captain Manuel Sanchez, a Span ish army officer found guilty by a court martial ot the murder of Don Garcia Jalon, a wealthy land owner, last May. Detachments of all tho regiments in the garrison witnessed the execution. Captain Sanches was tried and con demned for the crime as a sequel to the confession of a woman, Lulsa Sanchez, nald to be lils daughter, who was sen tence dto twelve years' imprisonment as his accomplice. Jalon was missing for several weeks after he had won about J1.000 at cards, and tho evidence showed that he had been enticed to Sanchez's flat and mur dered there by the officer, who, with the woman, cut up the body and threw It into an adjacent sewer. WOMAN DIES DAY AFTER HER DIAMOND WEDDING MASON CITY, la., Nov. 3. (Speclal.) Mrs. Ellsha Ra.ndall, alter an Illness ot several weeks, died at 8 o'clock this morn ing at the age of 82 years. She, with her husband. Judge Ellsha Randall, came to this city In 185. They were married seventy-five years ago Saturday, Mrs. Randall was a charter member of ho Methodist Eplecopal church In this city and was present when the first meeting was held. Nearly all her children were brought up in the church. The funeral eervlces wero held at the home of Mrs. Hsnry Keerl at Clear Lake. The Weather For Omaha. Council Bluffs and Vicin ity Unsettled; colder. Temperature nt Omaun, Yesterday. Hour. "eg. 6 a. m 44 6 a. m 43 7 a. in..... 44 5 a. in 43 9 a. m...... U 10 a. m...... 44 11 a. m 45 12 m 1 p. m 48 2 P. m 3 p. m W 4 p. m 4S fi p. m... 4S 6 p. tn 47 7 p. m 47 8 p. m 48 Comparative bocnl Itecord. 1313. 1311 1311. 131". Highest yesterday .... 49 M 33 64 Lowest yesterday 43 36 27 2) Mean temperature .... 4G 47 30 42 Precipitation W .00 T .00 Temperature and precipitation depar tures from the normal: Normal temperature 41 r.xceis I or ins, uajr , . Total excess since March 1 457 Normal precipitation .0u inch Deficiency for the day 05 Inch Total rainfall since March 1..20.3 Inches Deficiency since March 1.... 7.08 Inches deficiency for cor. period. 1912.. 3.13 inches Ueficency tor cor. period, mi..it.u incurs Reports from Stations at 7 1. H. ttatlon and State Temp High- Ratn- ot weair.er. i p, m. est. Tali. rheyenn. snow 26 3 Davenport, clear 44 SI Denver, snow 30 3S OS l ' -a .(O Des Moines, clear 46 5: Dodge City, cloudy 41 44 Ijuider. pt. cloudy 30 2S North Platte, pt. cloudy. 40 OT Jmaha, clear 4" 49 Pueblo, snow 30 34 Rapid City, clear W & Halt kake City. pt. cloudy 44 4S Pauta Fe. snow 31 1 & hherldan. clear 44 flloux. City clear J ? aler.tire clear . 3 4S T indicates trace of precipitation U A. WELSH. Local Forecaster .03 .16 T .00 .10 .00 .at .a M 91 OLDHAM DEFENDS THOMAS Declares State Board Acted Entirely Without Cause. NOTHING TO PALLIATE DECISION Kearner Jurist Says neennse Job "Was Pat Up by Men In lllah Place Dnea Not Mnke It n Particle Itetter. (From a Staff Correspondent) LINCOLN, Nov. 3. 8peclal.)-Judg W. D. Oldham of Kearney, one ot the members of the committee selected by the people of that town to draft reso lutions condemnatory of the action ot the state normal board' In dismissing Presi dent A. O. Thomas of the Kearney Nor mal without a hearing, was at the state houso this morning and In conversation ivtth a representative of The Bee said that Ihe people of Kearney wero behind Dr. Thomaa to a man In the matter. "Dr. Thomas has lived In our town too long and we know him too well," sold tho Judge, "to allow the state normal board to pull off anything of that kind on us. Look at the way Dr. Thomas has built up that school. Why, it Is recog nized as tho best one tn the state, and even tho state normal members ot the board who voted to oust Dr. Thomaa admit that he has made a success of the school. 'T think It has come to a pretty state of affairs when any set of men, be'thcy educators or what they may be, who can take an action which may cripple a state Institution oven temporarily. What In centive is there to any man in charge ot one of our educational Institutions to work hard to build up his Institution if he knows that he was to be thrown out any old time Just to suit a gang of po litical tricksters? Nothing; to Charges. "Had there been anything whatever to the charges made against Dr. Thomas It would have been different, but there wns nothing to them whatever. If I had gone Into cburt with a petition which had no moro foundation to It than tho charges made by the board against Thomas, the Judge would have promptly ruled It out because thero was nothing tn It. "Take It down to a nutshell, the charges brought by tho board nre that Dr. Thomas had been offered the position of chancellor of the Arkansas university according to the board's understanding from his statement. They looked the matter up and Tlalm they dlsoovered that he had not actually been offored the Job. "Upon these grounds they remove him from tho institution and expect the people ot tha state to stand behind them. Did you ever hear of anything more foolish? Our investigation of thosa charges based upon letters, received by Dr. Thomas and now In his possession snow that Dr. Thomas was considered for the position, and the only thing that stood in his way was that they wanteq Dr. Klrklaad of Vand'erbllt university 'It theyoould-get lilm.-but that If ho was not avallablo, Dr. Thomas' Was the man. Letters also show that Dr. Thomaa would have been selocted had it riot been for letters sent to the boatd'by certain men ir. Nebraska who seemed o be determined to not only put Thomas out. of business in Nebraska but also Ot follow him Into other stateB and prevent him from get ting a positton which his qualifications eminently fitted hint for. No SnTtnir Feature. "As I look at it and as we look at It out in Kearney, there was ft rotten deal put up to Thomas out of business and because tho deal was put up by men In high places and with good reputations does not In any way tako from It Its unholy character nor mayo sweeter the decomposed aroma which arises from the deal. "Dr. Thomas will stick and don't you forget it If tho board wants to tako legal action we will hallow-tin delight the opportunity it will give' us to go Into court and show up the whole deal." Judge Oldham sold that the people out over the state had little conception of the way the people of the Buffalo county cap ital and the people ot th'at section of the state felt over the matter. He said that they had seen Dr. Thomas take hold ot the school when It was new and build It up to Its present standard and while they recognized the fact that the great success he had made might be responsible some time for his leaving to a larger field, they wanted to see him go from the school In a blaze of glory instead of under a cloud. Freight Steamer Strikes an Iceberg MONTREAL. Nov. 3. The Furness line freight steamer Manchester Commerce, which left here Friday for Manchester, England, struck an Iceberg early Satur- jday morning In the strait of Belle Islo I and sustained severe damage. The : steamer, however, was not disabled and Captain Couch was' able to shape Its course for Et. Johns, N. F the nearest j I port, where It will be docked for repairs. I While only this meaner Information j concerning the accident had been re , celved here at a late hour tonight. J. R. ! Binning, manager of the Furnesa line. I expressed confidence that the steamer was in no Immediate danger ot sinking, sengers on board. JAMES GLEAS0N HEADS CHICAGO POLICE FORCE CHICAGO. Nov. 3. James Gleason, cap- I tain in charge of the Shakespeare avenue lollse station, was appointed chief of po- 111 1... ll.vAp Tfarrlann t rwl a V Kltmf1 uie - - . ' inK John McWeeny, resigned. Gleason ; u-an nmmoted from the ranks under civil .A.wtj. 141a mnat nntiLhle exolnlt : I'""" ' j jwaa assisting In the capture of the car. ,barn bandits after an all-day fight at i Millers. Ind. i GEORGE A. J0SLYN DONATES' j LIBRARY TO HIS HOME TOWN j J Word hajs reached Omaha that the new ! library which has been donated by . George A. Joslyn, SOC Davenport street. ' to his home town of Wakesfiold, Vt . has been opened. Wakesfield Is a village of 9C4 Inhabitants and Mr. Joslyn spent the 'arty port ot his Ufe there, coming i wett a l.tttu over th rtv ears ago. WITNESS AGAINST MOLLIS MISSING Lobbyist and Politician Wanted by Whitman Cannot Be Found by Subpoena Servers. LEFT NEW YORK SATURDAY Named by Hennessy Candidate wi M'LAUOHLIN'S SON Heard Father Say He Had Loaned Money to Tiger Nominee. V00RHEES' REMOVAL ASKED Demand Blade Upon Governor Glynn to Oust Superintendent of Klee tlnna "Incompetency soil Inefficiency" Aliened. NEW YORK. Nov. S.-On the eve of New York's mayoralty election, Eugene . Wbod. the lobbyist and politician wanted by District-Attorney Whitman to testify today at the "Jone Doe" Inquiry into the charges of John A. Hennessy against Tammany hall, could not be found by subpoena servers. Wood Is tho man whom Hennessy, former Governor Sui ter's graft Investigator, said gave him the Information that Edward E. McCall, Tammany's candidate for mayor, had bor rowed money from .former Police Inspec tor W. W. McLaughlin to pay for his nomination as supreme court Justice In 1P02. District Attorney Whitman announced at today's hsaringthat Wood left town Saturday, the day after Hennessy tes tified, and that hs subpoena servers had been unable to find any traco of him since. In his stead,, the prosecutor called the fo'imcr police inspector's son, W. W. McLaughlin, Jr., who recently corrobo rated Hennessy'n accusations by swear ing, In an affidavit published In tho New York World, that he had soen a photo graph of a check for i:r,0X) which he said McCall had given his rather in pay ment of the alleged loan. Closely Questioned. McLaughlin was closely questioned by the district attorney and reiterated thnt he had heard his father and mother dis cussing the deft and that he had heard his father say he had loaned tho money to Judge McCall to pay for his nomina tion. The hearing will bo continued Thursday. The summary removal of John R. Voorhees, superintendent of elec tions, a democrat, Is asked In a letter addressed to Governor Glynn today by Francis W. Bird, chairman of the national progressive party of New York county i L. J. O'Reilly, chairman of the city pampalgn cornmlttee. of, tho In dependence, league.a,nl Cf emtmUJ. . Drlss col, preiidentof, the Voters'-league. The' litter charges Vobriiees with fall, ure to Investigate violations of the elec tion law, with perrnlttlpg his office to "LJ S P , J'. wlt J it l Zhn anJJncfflolenc-" It MIcgos that lie appointed aa deputy superintendents ''men totally unfitted and , ,vhlch , itA 0 ,)eavy h "t'-l.T": .,eomo 0 whom. ..h?!the larger crowd comes In Wednesday oiuifi'cu nun revolvers ana permmea "to suppress and Intimidate electors." Will Submit Chaws. Upon receipt or tho communication from Bird. O'Reilly and Drlscolh Governor Glynn announced that he Would "submit tho charges to Mr. "Voorhees at onco and ask him if he has anything to say In his own defense." The governor said he would tako no iurtner action until ho received Voorhees' reply. High Court Upholds Bay State Tax Law WASHINGTON. Nov. 3.-After vears of vain endeavor by state authoring to iv foreign corporations doing business within JTne or,,y avowed candidates so far in their borders. Massachusetts has solved .Miss Kate McIIugh of Omaha, Chancellor the problem. The supremo court .is- Samuel Avery of the University of Ne talned today pjt constitutional tho Massa- ibraska and President A. O. Thomas ot chuseets foreign corporation tax law of the Kearney Normal school. This does 1SK, Chief Justice White and Justices I riot mean that they are the only candl Vandevanter and Pitney dissenting. ' latea that are receiving votes. The teach- Tho decision was regarded by many jors have minds of their own, and It Is who heard Justice Day deliver it as said that ctrtaln candidates who have marking an epoch In state taxation. jnot been mentioned publicly will show up The Massachusetts law provides that (strong In the counting of ballots on the every foreign corporation shall pay an- istrengh of heir general popularity, nually an excise tax of one-flftteth of I j A regular ballot box securely locked per cent of Its authorized stock. Justice J with a. brass padlock stands on the table Day. Holmes, McKenna, Lurton, Hughes ,nt headquarters. Tho 'teachers receive a and Lamar interpreted this to mean nl- ballot when thev .nroll Thev writ, their most the same as the federal corporation tax law which avoided previous erron by careful phraseology. They held that :the box. The five names receiving the hu."lnenwi?hinXn th,e,prlvll!ge ' -"Ighest vote, for the Various offices will oTJHi n. f ,a"ib8 th0 candidate, whose name, will be on the corporation outside tho state. jot6d upon , , , b Steers Run Amuck in New York Streets NBW TORK. Nov. X In a fusillade of shits, fired by police to check the mad rush of sixteen steers which escaped from a railroad stockpen on the west niuo cany loony, one man was Killed and one wounded. George Ileattle toppled from, the seat of an express wagon 'hcn a bullet pierced his brain. Another bullet bored a hole through the foot of Walter Wangenhelm, a waiter. rn ,.w l- ... ... truck 77 V admitted to meetings of the state aaso- truck .putting It out of commission, an-. olfttlon after tho ielon, havt) been m tJZ nyn ,I?"mr- brul,""r called to order, nor will a.ny ZcUtrT and V.i?ednn,nVMU: RlkWwl to le4Ve ,he the meet Cardinal Fartey ' 1 w havo nd. This ruling has ' ' been promulgated by the local committee. MEDALS OF HONOR FOR SIXTEEN LIFE SAVERS XV M HINGTON. Nov S. - Secretary Mc- Adoo today awarded gold medals of i of honor to sixteen members of the United States Life Having service in rec ognition of bravery at the wreck of the Rosecrana on Peacock Spit, at the mouth ot the Columbia river, January T, 1911 i nit iioBcurans unu tier carifo wero oe- j stroyed and thirty-three ot a crew of I thirty-six were drowned. Two power "ri a. w u,vu u; 1 1 1 c ,,.tB ea t. y. c i c lUBl before thev could get to the sinking -hip. boat used by the life sabers were lost The legislature of Orego-i commended tue slxen men for their brai cry s My Dawg HOME FIDO i 1 f M M tfSH "J Drawn for Tho Ko by Powell. TEACHERS ARERE6ISTERING Several Hundred Local Educators . Turn in Names to Avoid Rush. JOLLY TOPIC Buitsrestlona of AVho the Ncvr Officers Mlitht Be Brlnir Fortfi Consider nulc Mirth nn the l'nrt of Voters. Although tho Nebraska Tcsolnrs'. ssso. oiatloiMoesi"not'OpMr-lMconvcntfoft hero Until Wedfitsda morning; iieverolhun- dred ttaohtr have enrolled for the crn- ventlon at the Rome Hotel. They wero I Mint. 111. n.l.. , V. 1 time to slip down to tho headquarters to enrol, durlnB the noon hollIV Tq , pan .u i... ..iu... morning. Treasurer John F. Matthews of the as sociation opened headquarters In the lobby of tho Rome hotel Jilst before noon. Shortly after 13 o'clock nearly 300 teach ers stood In lino to register. From that time until 1 o'clock there was a con stant stream ot teachers filing past the I desk paying In their Jl and taking their enrollment card, together with their bal. lot, on which they expressed their prefer ence for president and other officers foi tha association next year. A Jully Topic. Tho election of officers nailed forth a great deal of Joviality, but up to this time there seems to be no one systemat- (Ically pulling with file teachers in line to 'Influence votes on the referendum ballot. preference for the officers of the assocla-1 !iinn nn ih. hDnn ,irnn h. jthat will bo taken by mall. .More Came Later. Only the teachers from the nearer satvoola In the city registered at noon. After 3:30 In the afternoon, witnn tha schools were dismissed, another nnoU icame In from the ward schools farther 'out. and from the schools In South : Omaha, it I. hnn. ih.i t,.r day morning every teacher In Omaha will be registered, so that when the Wednes day morning rush comes on the enroll ment of the Omuha and South Omaha teachers will have .been completed. TS?A.Pfl .1(1 I,. . . ..v". nuuvi icawiiun will IIOl DO Omaha school teachers will sit In the ! hAlrnnv nt thA Allriltnr1ttn IVMav nl.kl " aad'kl cert win i given tickrts to the balcdny, No seats will be reserved. Th. arrangement has I , " . ""'" '"r liimni V . . n . . I . ..I.I.I...- . . I . . I ' be better accomodated at this concert. Gompers' Contempt Case is Advanced WASHINGTON, Nov. 3 -Oanteinpt of . 'www,. .....v..... .,- v.. mw...w. .-... 'pers and other labor leaders was today court sentences Imposed on Samuel Gorn- ELECTION IS A advanced by the sjpreme court for hear- i ju g on the first Monday In January J Must Stop Followin' Me.Aroun' Waterhouse Comes Back in Defense of the Schoolmasters Superintendent A. 11. Waterhouse ot Uie Fremont schools comes to tho defense of tho Schoolmasters' club In an extended communication to Tho Bee. Tho Fremont superintendent suy the Kchoolmasteis' club has been "absurdly" charged with Wielding a baleful olltlcal Influence. Ho says Prcildtnt A. O Thomas ot tha Kearney" Nofnulctfjpr wa lubs.tyd- tlid cmp1 uecauso lie was snrJs.II' persona non grata Superintendent Waterhouse, speaking as a charter member of the Schoolmasters' club, continues to say that tho oharga that the club Is controlled by a book company Is without foundation. "Arrant batdordaah," l tho way the Fremont man characterizes the warnings by educators tu save the educational In stitutions of tho state from the School masters' club before It Is too lute. Dr. .Thomas Is severely arralgnod by Mr. Waterhouso for tho methods tho former has used In his campaigns for president of tho State Teachers' associa tion, the same being Ooclared "politics. pure and simple.'' In conclusion Mr. Waterhouse says he Is speaking out now firmly and sin cerely In tho Interest of the Hchoolmos tra' club and that he has no desire to bo drawn Into a discussion' of the case, believing his communication will stand as the final word tn full explanation of the whole affair. Two Killed, Three Fatally Hurt by FaUof Building HARTFORD, Conn., Nov. 3.-The entire side of a four-story brick house in North Front street collapsed early today and crashed through the frame dwelling house of John Hughes, Immediately adjoining. As a result two persons are dead, three fatally Injured and another seriously hurt. The dead are John Jughes, 19, and Eva Dooly, C, his grand-daughter. The store house, a new building, was filled with bales of rags and tobacco. Michael Orrenburg, its owner, said the building was dynamited, but firemen and police found no evidences of an explosion and declared faulty construction probably caused the collapse. All the dead and Injured were aleeplng when the crash came. The wall of the warehouse slipped In a diagonal direction, emptying thourands of bales of rags and other goods on top of the Hughes home. Denver Charter is Declared Valid DlJNVKlt, Nov. 3,-Tha state buprem court today upheld :ommIssluii form rf of government In Denvor, In i'ffc-!t, t!lt court held that when the ttuto arsembly approved the Russ bill, it.it"'ns charter government to the city if Denver, it gave unlimited powr in matters ot o cal government; that the opft hud Ihr right to amend the chart?? either by a charter convention or Initiated amend ment, aa waa done, and that the Initiated amendment Is legal. Aa brought before the supreme court, the presidential syr tem of voting also was attic'ted. The court sustained this system of voting. The National Capital Monday, .Vovruibrr 3, 1UI.'I. The Senate. Met at noon. Ranking 'committee In adjournment to "senator Rced'a bill to make natural .gas pipe Ilies common carriers passed . . .. Rnd e"t to ,he nou"e rM rlluuae. U session meets Wednesday. ATTEMPT TO RUN OARS FAILS Indianapolis Without Traction Serv ice Since Friday Night. MAN KILLED IN A RIOT SUNDAY Deputy Sheriffs Will Try tn Kern Crowds Mnvlnr and Police Will Guard Rami and Help MoTf Cars, INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Nov. 3Streot IcAr,,sjriccJiYblch has. been tied, , up .since I Friday ihght by the strike of i the etri PtaVss it the Indliknapoils Traction and (Terminal company, was not resumed t today. Crowds o( strikers and tympathlt- ra iiochou prar inc ixjuiniana sircci birns, ' The crowd wss orderly, RAnkers. merchants and professional In Hi are to guard the streets tonight In ! order to let the Police devote their full time to the preventing of destruction of , street car property. Sheriff Portlus'served i summons on S00 representative business inn this morning, ordering them to re port for guard duty as deputies later In the day. The summons stated that lawless dl. order, accompanied by many breaches of I tha pea co and destruction of property, prevailed In the city, and that the police have declared themselves unable to cope wlth-thn situation. The men were called on to aid the sheriff under pain ot nrrest. Pol I ir Use C'lnlis. Clubs were used freely by tho police whon an attempt was made to run rnrs which stood on street corners Into the barns. Much talk was current on the streets that sympathetic strikes would be called by numerous trades and there waa a re port that the building trades might call a strike, No such action had been taken up to noon, however. Most of the factories were short-handed, owing to the Inability of employes to reach their places of business. Thn auto mobile and truck transfer systems that have sprung Into life since the calling of the strike could handle only a small pro portion of the people. Few women wero on the streets, fltrlkefirenlter Killed, In an attempt last night to rush the IuUlana atreet rar burns, where the Imported 'strikebreakers aro quartered Isaao Fleischer, aged 14, a strikebreaker from Philadelphia, was fatally shot In the neck and died on the way to the city hospital. FJelicher was shot by one of the men In the barn, who was firing Into the crowd from a second-story window. The police had the streets around the barns roped a,nd when they let down the ropes for an automobile to pass, the crowd rushed through. The strikers and their friends pushed past, the police and as they approached the barns they wore met with a volley of shots. Fleischer fell almost at the feet of Police Sergeant Sanders, whom he was helping to stop thq rush. He was the only one hit. The mob then started for the Washington street barns, but was met at the Labor temple by Milton U Clawaon, an attorney prominent In labor circles, who persuadixl them to disperse. W. G. Ileatty, president cf the Central Labor union, sent a communication to Governor Ralston declaring the crowds around the car barns did not represent organized labor and urged that they be dispersed. Robert I. Todd, president, and John J. Mahnney, superintendent of the street car company and Chief of Police Hyland. were attacked by a crowd of strikers and sympathizers this afternoon, but were not seriously injured. The mob threw missies, striking the officials sev eral times. LOWER RATE ON LEMONS DECLARED REASONABLE WASHINGTON Nov. 3,-The Interstate Commerce commission's order reducing the freight rates on lemons from Oallfor nit to Atlautl'' seaboard points from $1 15 c II was upheld by the supreme court, BACON SAYS PEOPLE WILL LIKE WILSON'S MEXICAN PROGRAM Chairman of Senate Finance Com mittee Insists It Involves Neither Conquest Nor Acquisition. ANNOUNCEMENT COMES SOON Congress and People Are Sure to Approve Policy. CONFERENCES IN VERA CRUZ German, Russian and Norwegian Ministers Consult Lind. WEALTHY MEXICAN ARRESTED Genernl Terrraens, Richest Sinn In Country, Paid tn lip In Custody of Feriernl Troops In City of Junres. 1 WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.-A declaration that the policy of the administration In the Mexican situation would meet the approval ot tho American congress and the American people was matin In thn senate today by the chairman of tho for eign relations committee. Senator llncon was speaking of a letter rcul Into thn record by Senator Urtstoa'. who said ho hnd received It from a friend of thirty years' standing, In Mexico. Tho writer urged that tho United States keep hands off and nllow Mexican factions to fight out thelr difficulties, condemned the neutrality policy which keeps "thousands of American soldiers on the Mexican border,-' and deduced If the United States Intervened by military force It would moan "only conquest and the acquisition of Mexican territory, by the loss of hun dreds of lives and hundreds of million, of money." "I think I can nssuro the senate,' said flrnntor llacon, "that nothing Is further j from tho thoughts of the people or tin officials ot the t'nlted Stales thnn tho conquest ur acquisition of Mexican terri tory. "The tlmo Ims nut jet come when th'.i matter may bo properly discussed, hut the time l not far distant when we muwt discuss It. I can give the assurance that tho matter Is having thn moot careful ami conscientious consideration, and what ever may bo done will meet tho approval of tho American congress and the Anv r lean people." Conferences In Vern t'rus. Reports from John Llnd, President Wilson's perwnal representative In Mex Ico, conoornlnif his recent conferences in Vera Cruz, with thn itn-lnn n.n1... nd. NorweglarjjuJiiUteM to. Mjalco, con "veyed tbefmprei)otV to Preiildeti't Wl- nri-lA-ii ikl ifVV .. .il.j- ... '"""i mm iiititu wns a aisposuion Cll the purt Of those diplomats to co-operntn with tile United States In lending thi'lr support tO tllO Plans Of thn Wimhlnirtnn irovernment ri filvinn it.- .in..,in ... - i . -. . . . . r. w..A.uii, I Administration officials today tool; or 1 caslon to say that publlrjied storks fore ; casting armed Intervention were not Jus tified at this time, that there was noth ing so far as. the Washington udmlnls- iraton was concerned to warrant tuich an assumption Tho arrival of Roberto V. Pesqulern, ait emissary from General Carranza, tho constitutionalist chief, raised the ques tion of whether Uio Washington govern ihunt would receive representation from constitutionalists. Ntntu of Conntltutlnnnllals. President Wilson made It, clear to those lth whom ho conferred that officially tho government could not receive any format representations, but that in somo way or other tho Information which tho constitutionalists desire to lay before tin American government would be received". In that connection It became know thnt constitutionalists nt a recent conference or chiefs decided not to ask for recogni tion of belligerency, but to request that there bo no Interference on the part of the United States to volvo the situation m r-rty m Tl. nnn.ll.nll...ll... . . .... J ... ,, U vuunilluiluUUUBlB VtllllV illQ i embargo on arms removed so that all factions may be supplied on an equal footing. The president has been peti tioned to rcmovo the embargo. Tha understanding hero is that th (Continued on Page Two.) Mrs. Blank's Stunning New Gown Mrs. Blank's husband's sal ary Is no more than tho salary of many ot her .friends' hus bands. Hut you wouldn't think. bo unless perchance you knew what a smart and capable wo man Mrs. Hlank Is. Her gowns look better because she isn't satisfied with the first corset she sees. She keeps posted on the corset question. When sho buys one you may ba euro it suits her style of figure and that it has all of the little quirks and improvements a corset ought to have to set off her gown to the best advantage. "A corset," she says, "is the very foundation of a gown and it must bo perfect or all is spoiled." Everything else that Mrs. Blank buys, either for herself or her children or her house hold, la bought in the same careful, Intelligent manner. Consequently whfn you see the Blanks or go to their borne vuu get the impression of sunerior ity and quality and orderliness. Most any woman, who really wishes to, can be a Mrs. Plank, Th flrt etnn Is to mak friends with The Bee's advertising col umns. They are Guide. Phil osopher, and 'friend to all who wish to learn. J