The Omaha Daily Bee:. j Call Tylor 1000 it j on want to Talk to The IIh 1 or to Anyone Connected With The- Hoe. VOL. MA NO. 221. OMAHA, TUU11SDAY MOKNIN'G, MAHOH 101H-FOI'RTKKNT TAG IX Oa Trains, M Wom wewe taaaa, at. se SINGLE (TNT TWO CENTS. THE WEA TITER. Snow r VICE CONDITIONS IN MINNEAPOLIS CALLED TERRIBLE Committee Bepresenting- Women's Organisations DeclaresRecent ReTelations Only Skim Surface. GIRIS NOT SAFE ON STREETS Hotel and Apartment Homes Hit Hard in Report of the Inreitigatori. ANOTHER INQUIRY IS BEGUN MINNEAPOLIS. March 1. A co- peratlve committee representing seven of the largest women's organi sations la Minneapolis In a statement today announce! that after months of investigation It can say that recent startling revelations of rice condi tions in this city "only skim the sur face of actual conditions. That young girls are unsafe alone rn the streets at night; that many hotels are being operated wholly on the profits gained from vice and that taxlcab drivers are co-operatlug with Veepers of resorts in luring young girls from their home, were among the findings of the committee. Coaaty Take Action, I Another vice tnvestlgntlon wa begun. by county authorities thla week after tha lsyea.r-old daughter of a mlnlater, who had bean missing from her home for sev- j eral week, told of being forced Into a Ufa of shame. . The report of the committee aaya in ran; "Owners of apartment houaea are rent in, 2' ing apartments Indiscriminately to young en and young women who are inducing there to visit them for purposes of Im nv mi morality. Chop suey houses are open until early morning houra and serve aa places of refuge for intoxicated young men and women. "Cafes are not observing tha closing hour and young girls are permitted to frequent these places. "Many hotels are permitting young girls and escorts la register aa married couples, e Fly Trade tTamoIeeted. "In nearly every ease of Juvenile de linquency reported wa find the girl has been coached by tho older girls, thor oughly trained Tn vies and backed by the man in the case. T!:ey ply their trade unmolested." Nncludlng the report recommends that "soma perm then t organization be formed to combat tha evil forCM, sratra .are prey ing on the young lives of our city-" Four girls under 15 year of age will t ratify .before tha grand Jury next wealt regarding Vice Conditions, r : Verdun District is Quiet, According to Paris and Berlin PARIS. March 1. There is nothing of importance to report in the region to the north of Verdun or In the Woevre dis trict, according to the announcement of the progress of hostilities made by th French was office this afternoon. There ws an Intermittent bombard ment, last .night along the French front between Regnlevlll and Remenauville. BERLIN, March (Via London.) No mention of the fighting at Verdun Is made In the offlolal statement todsy. Rumor Strike at Sioux City Will Be Settled Soon SIOUX CITT. la.. March l.-On tha surface the packing house atrlke situa tion appeared to be unchanged today, but persistent rumor were afloat that a aettlement of the trouble la near. Ac cording to these reporta the strikers will accept the terms of the packera1 of fer of SI centa an hour for common labor. The Weather Forecast till 7 p. m., Thursday. For Omaha, Council Bluffs and Vlcln- ity: Snow, colder Tempera area' at Comparative Local Hrrnril. 19l !)1IS Hiaheat yesterday 3t L'S l.oweai yenterd.iy .... J:t no 11 Memi tfniperature ..21 X ;o I'rerlpitation dj' .(in .0 la 1 K T Ttinperoti.re and precipitation ii!--s fiom the iKJi-mal: Normal teniptruture I . i.-irncy lur the day depart T.tm tifli-fticv nce XUirch Normal precipitation In fictoiicy for the day To.; rainfall since .March I. I efii lei.c- for cor. period, 1915. Itfic.eiuy for cor. period, J'JH. 1 7 .03 Inch .03 inch .( Inch .(W Inch .03 Inch Krporlt from Stattoaa mi 1 P. M. Station and State of Weather, t'heyenne, anow .... J'avenport. snow .... 1jiiv-i, anow I es Volnvs, cloudy liiwlce City, cloudy tia!i Yesterday, j Hours. Deg. ' virpl- 7 a. in .28 t-iZ-j, .fT-hsA 11 s. m 3SA-fSa i p. m n ! 2 D- m I TJ i p. ni jo ; XfSt' I p. ni IS ?1IJ1J 6 p. m 1 ""T- p. in..... 1 7 p. in.... l.i T"W"" " SBB M SK g m jj Temp. High- Rain- 7 p. m. est. fall. ... 12 14 T ..24 2X .on .. 14 It .04 .. 30 30 Ml ... 1'4 30 T ...10 1 . ..15 3i .OH .. 0 4 .17 ... ss m ..4 N Jit 4 .1-' 4 .04 Nonh I'iatte. cloudy ana. ciouay .p.d City, cloudy i-cnta Fe. snow 'irr'dei! enow .... Mini City, clear ... Valentlr.e. clo'idy T indicates tr.e of prwipUatloil. in.t'CHta l!nw aero. U' A. VKIH. Local Fore ater. Kitchener Urges Britons to Practice Greater Economy tjNION'. March 1 A great meeting wii held In the Ouild 1111 her today to Inaugurate a national aavlng campaign. Tha lord maj-or presided and tha speak ers Included Earl Kitchener, secretary of state for war; A. K. Ralfour, flrat lord rf tha admiralty; Reginald McKenna, chancellor of tha exchequer, and ,ionar bew. aecretary for the eolonlea. Premier Aaqulth waa to hava addressed i tha meeting and to hava moTed tha prln I clpal reaolutlon. hut ha waa suffering ! from the loss of hi voir and waa un- able to attend. ' IinT Kitchener In hla speech aald: , ' Wt want Just aa many men aa we can i let aa aoldiara. We are bound to take all the men that can poaelhly be apared MISSOURI PACIFIC SLIPSJNE OVER Makes Reduction of Rates Which Other Roads Cannot Meet for a Month. TO MISSOURI AND KANSAS The Missouri Pacific has put one over on the other railroads that are competitors for the Kantms and Mis souri passenger business from Omaha. It has cut the rates from Omaha to Kansas and Missouri points and from these "points Into Omaha. Its competitors are trying to figure out how this was done, but it was done, and all day the city of fice in Omaha has been selling straight commercial tickets at a cut of very close to Vi cent per mile. Two days ago the local office re ceived a new passenger rae tariff, a tariff Issued from the general of fices at St. Louis February 2o. This tariff provided for the reduction of rates and bore the announcement that the rates would be effective March 1. When the Missouri Faclflo city ticket office opened for business, to all parties desiring tickets from Omnha Into Kan sas, or Missouri, a tariff rate consider ably lower than offered by any other road was made. The Burlington people had expected to put In a rate that wonld be In line with that of the Mlasourt raclflc, but according to the rules of the Interstate Commerce commission, thla cannot he applied until March 13, thirty days from tha date of the filing of the notice to reduce. They admit that In some " way the Missouri Pscifio people have slipped one ever on them and have' got their rate ' in working order. ' v.S-ii"':. , Iatcjratate Baaiaoe. .The reduced rate la no way an Intra state proposition, having to do entirely With Interstate points. ' . - ' . It' ia asserted that the proposition to reduce Is the result, of gentlemen's sgreement between railroad officials. Some days ago pasaenger representatives of the Omaha-Kansas and Missouri roads met in Chicago and there agreed to a reduction between Omaha and points In Kansas and Missouri. The reduction by the Missouri Pacific is the. outcome of the agreement. : ' , , ' ' The. following comparison of rates as between tha eld snd the new rates gives an idea of what it means to the traveler. There are scores of c'tles and towns af fected, but only a few are used for com parison. New-Rate-Old. Omaha to Kansas City. ..$4.78 Sl.fi 4.10 4.10 4.52 Omaha to Atchison 3.62 Omaha to St. Joseph S.tv.' Omaha to Leavenworth 4.1il. Riddell, Once in - , Business Here, Is Dead in Boston Word was received In Omaha last night announcing tha death of W. E. Riddell in Boston yesterday, after an - illness of considerable duration. lis was about 53 years of age. W. H. Riddell was one of th first but- ', ter and ' commission men to engage I ,n the """'ness In Omaha. Ha earns here j twenty-five years ago and did lousiness j on the commission row under the name of Riddell and Riddell. For a time dur I Ing his residence here a brother waa In ! the bualnras with him. This brother died i at Strawberry Point, la., many years ago. About ten year ago W. E. Riddell j closed out here and went to Buffalo, where he engaged In selling autoraob.le on an extensive, scale, doing a Jobbing business. Soma . two yeara ago ha went out of this businesa and departed for Bos ton, where he opened a Jobbing hnuse, handling butter and eggs. Pi Real Keith Edwin Dalrymple Found rilAIU.ES. i'lTY, la.. March l.-The Ke.4l keith Kdwin Iialrympl. heir to mi eeiate of S400.000 left by his falher,. has been found in a southern hospital I by M. Palmer, an uncle, and ha been jbrrught here. Dalrymple made hi home j with the Palmer at one time, but van uvay from them, aa Jie had from the i home of his father. ' I Young men desiring hi fortune 3 ; have Impersonated Dalrymple at different tlinea, the laat attempt being In Chicago, when Jullu Brlgg. Jr., waa a -rested there and hailed a the missing heir. DR. JAMES B. ANGELL REPORTED CRITICALLY ILL ANN ARBOR. Mle'i . March l.-The condition of Dr. Jamej B. Angell, aged preFlient emeritus of the University of Michigan, who has been ill for several weeks, becm critic! today. HI physl clans announced he may live aaveia cava longer, but tl'.ey rrai-tlcally hv I abandoned hop of his recovery. fii I Angell reif nt'y suffered a general break I down. He is said to be almost hll.id. from Industry, agriculture and commer- "W cannot produce all out ordifV, peace time requirement. Father he po ulatlon rauat go ahort of many thin; or' the army muat go ahort of munitions and other Indlapenaahla thtng. "Are civilian prepared ta let their brother In the trenchea endure hardship wlille they are not ready to make a raall eacrlftcaa of harder work, Increased ef fort and Increased economy? "Every war problem teachea tha aama leeson. Flratly. If we employ leaa labor, meeting the want of the otvlllan popu lation, w release mora men for fighting. "Secondly. If w Import less for eon anmptlon wa lessen the dlfflcultlea of aea transport." LAST OF BELLBOY GANG TAKEN HERE Morris Feldman Confesses to Being Member of Bunch that Forged Many Checks. SID NOT OPERATE IN OMAHA In the arrest of Morris B. Feldman. CDnfessed member of a band of boll boy check "artiBts," the police be lieve that the last of a crowd said to have obtained $250,000 by their operations has been tsken. Activities are reported to have cov ered the principal cities of the coun try, and Feldman has admitted, deal of successful operation. The members of the gang, according flrat asauranee at will, there waa noth to his Statement, consist of James F. j'ng to prevent an attempt to chsng the Wilson, the ringleader; Virgil Shel-T1'"1 -. -n....v a j jt rs a..-; tun, uuuu OAuuuriB ituu vrury au burn. It was Wilson's plan, as an experi enced bellhop, to obtatn employment in some first-class hotel, work d mi gently, until promoted to the position ! Secretary I.analni today cabled an In- bf captain, gradually weed out the!lu,r to Ambassador Gerard at Berlin. men under him and employ member!"''1"' w,"t h"' ,,h" "J'?1'" J .Ith8 Qsrman memorandum notifying this of the gang. . Shelton, Saunders and ; jov.rnm-nt tht armed v-aaeie would be Auburn would then collect the "raper," or cancelled checks left by guests, and turn them over to Wilson. Later forgeries, copied by this expert penman, passed Into the hands of Feldman, who would do the "shoving" or uttering of the worth less certificates. , Spent the Money. Tha latter aaerted that at the Tuller hotel in Detroit, the last Job In which he . took part, they had paawnl checks for tro, isq and !, splitting the money bstween himself,-Wilson and Bhiiton .j -ROCHESTER, N. T., 'March 1.-Hnry Feldman is 2ears of age and his SteU New York baakar and department home la In Rochester. N. T., whex hi ! store merchant, who ten months an pa rents are now living. ll served a term JtSnce in Monro eounty .pehltentlary, ex in the penitentiary it Elmlra. N. T.. on plrd today, was rearrested this morning a charge of receiving a' stolen, expreas by Bherlff George M. Root of Livingston package containing valuable laoee. county, on a warrant issued by District After leaving the crowd in Detroit he 'Attorney Wheeler of Livingston county, earn to Omaha and last. November With his attorney, Dallas C. Newton. worked as bellboy at the Ilenshaw, but was discharged cause of drunkenness. It was hla purpose at this time to try his hnnd at paving the way for the crew and he did send them some "paper." Meanwhile, Bhelton. Saunders and Au burn had Jurr.eed. to Portland, Or., where through a detective agency they were arrested. Wilson, who was also working with them, escaped, but was later apprehended In Chicago. After doing odd Job through the win ter, Felclman attain secured employment at the Henahaw, where he was found Sunday by police officer. Consrleaee Rotkereil lllm. "I knew for the last two montha they were after me, but decided to stick it out. It wss only a question of time, 1 figured, and It might as well coma here aa anywhere. What little consclenoe I had left waa beginning to bather a bit. The sooner I get sent up and serve my bit the sooner I can go home to the folks." Th Chicago authorities Informed the Omaha police that Wi.son gang had recently operated In Chicago, passing checks on the Centrsl Trust, Hibernian National, People's Trust and Savings, ! First National and Northern Truat com- j pany banks. Feldman do. not deny j NFW YORK. March l.-Eugene Hler. this, but emphatically denies a state-; a sufferer from anthrax, who ha been ment that a number of girla had been j a pat.ent at a hoapltal her since Feb the sentimental dupes of hla crowd. ruary IS. ha o far recovered, accord The police first got track of the forg- ing to an announoement last night.. as a ers through the discovery of photograph rMUt of four injections of the Kirh of pretty gills collec ted by tho group. ; horn serum that he will be able to lsve Officers from Detroit arrived in Omaha I the hoapltal in a few daya. All trace yesterday. W. B.Rltrhl diatrlet auper- 0f the dlseaae la aald to hav il'aap intendent of th Plnkrrton agency, waa j p(ared. directly Instrumental in 'eldman' arrest. , Third of Million Menof Military Age in Iowa State! DEB MOINKS. la,. March L Practl- cally one-thiid of a million men in Iowa are subject to military duty If this j country should be called to arms, accord- , Ing to a report by Adjutant General Ouy j E. Logan. The rrport shows thst there are 321, tSS ' men in Iowa who are of tha military age ' of between II and 45. Thea figures were obtained through county auditors, and show a gain ovr the laat previous record. In ISIS, of al most T.000. Polk county. In which De Molne l situated, has tha largeat number, there being a total of l,4-' In that county. Du buque county ranka second, with 10,47. Scott county come third, with .!, and Woodbury county fourth, with T.g-1. German Seaplane Shells English Coast i LONTTJx, STsfCIT 'V A " Herman ea 'lan bombarded a portion of the south ast of England tonight, according to an Cfi'ial statement. A ft-inonth-uld ehi'd waa killed. There ill no military damage. 6ERr4 . N0TE IS Imoad ENOUGH :o BE SATISFACTORY Asurancea Are Not So Complete at Those Originally Given in the Uuiitania Caie, it it Said. WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED NOW Next Step to Be Taken aa Soon as Situation in Congress Clean. CANNOT CHANGE AT WILL WASHINGTON. March 1 Ger many's latest assurance on the con duct of submarine warfare, presented Monday by Count Hernstorff to Sec retary Ianslng, are not so broad as the United States desires, but it Is Indicated no further steps will be taken by this government until the administration is certain its action will not he embarrassed In congress. The assurances reltersted in the latest communication are regarded as not so complete as those ortglnslly given as the result of the I.usltania negotiations, and It was indicated today that the pending Lusitanla agreement would not be finally ac cepted as satisfactory at this time. Cannot (ha a a at Will. Official were represented a fee ling that If the Garman government toon the posl- Itton that It ontild modify or rhane th assurance and th-y do not Intend " "'". lt was said that the next sp would he taken a soon a the- situation In congress waa clarified. Offielala eipect the admin istration will find ltMlf In a position to continue the nag-ollatlona within tha next few days. aunk without warning: b'glniilna; March 1, had been d'apatched and when they might bo expected to arrive. Tha appendleea are aald to reveal the xlatno of secret ordrr of th British admiralty Instructing British merchant men to attack enemy submarlnea. Siegel Finishes His Prison Term; . a a n is Again Arrested ; Blegel waa taken before Justlc Qeorg a A. Benton to arrange for ball. The bond was fixed at I2S.O0O bv Jus tice Benton and this .waa furnlahed by a surety eampany. Aocompanled by his attorney, fileget then departed for Qen eco, where h said he would remain fcr seme Urn. Dupont Plant at Ashland Threatened ASHLAND, Wis., March 1. Warning that the plant of the Dupont Powder company at Parkadale would be blown up "early in March" haa been received by employes of tha company. It waa learned today. Letters ware received by the workers urging them to remain at horns. Guards have been doubled at the plant, which covers 1,00 acres, and powerful searchlights hava been Installed. Man Recovers from Attack of Anthrax The Day 'a War Net GERMAN OPFRSJSIVK aawlaet Ver iaai -which had broaght th trowa llae t freach defeaae, haa hailed thrrr, arrordlaac to taday'a tft rlal alaleuient (rum Paris. Tha lall which yealerday cave ala of aetttlna tu now extend alesg elr lually the eatlrc froat where th desperate straaale of tha last week have beea aolBj There were no lauoortaal de veloatsarota at any pylat darlagr the algrht, tha Krrsek war office report. j t MOFKIt'l L C Oil M EKTATOna la rstfstf raallals adaalt theaaaelera at m ! n deteraalaa mm yrt whether the (irruii drive haa peal H (orra or whether lb reaawal before the hard-woo pesl- the froal. POSSIBLY SlfiMIFK t.lT I. thl euoaerllon I the French offlolal Geraaaa preparatloat hehlod tho froat weat of Foot. A-Sfuosoa, elahteea anile aualheaet of Mel, ' aod 1st the Moselle river regtloa. APharATir this heikmt t.r- olhloar auoro Itisa m loval ar. tloo, a It ha aot ao far hrea fol lowed . LIEUTENANT SWEENEY, West Point graduate, was one of the first of the many Americans to join the Foreign Legion when the war began. He was the only Amorican advanced from the ranks, and today he wears a Legion of Honor ribbon, the highest honor L?stowed by the French He is now on furlough and expects to return to the trenches on May 1. - f f V , y 1 j HIS tTTE Jk A J GERMANY SENDS DEFI TOJPORTUGAL Kaiser Dispatches Ultimatum to Lisbon Demanding- Return ; y . of Ships. .i.H TWO - DAYS' TIME 617X11 lNDON7, March l.-Oermany has sent an ultimatum to Portugal de-, raandlng the restoration within forty-eight hours of the German ships recently selted by that coun try, according to a dispatch from Madrid to Reuter's Telegram com pany. ' The first seisur of German merchant vessels by Portugal, occurred February S3 at Lisbon when the naval authorities took possession of thirty-six Oerman snd Austrian ships in the Tsgus. Klaht Ship Seise. On February 2 th aelsur of eight German titeamxhipa by the Portuguese authorities at fU. Vincent, Caps Verde islands, was announced and It was un officially declared the requisitioning . of Oerman and Austrian vessels had been xtended to all tho lying in tha ports of Portugal and its colonies. A Lisbon dispatch on February St quoted Premier Coats of Portugal as de claring In th Chamber of Deputlee that the government's action In requisitioning vessel had been prompted by the neces sity of the nation'a eeonomio aituatlon. The premier further declared that he considered it to tha beat interest of Portugal that th existing treaty with Germany be allowed to lapse and that the Portuguese government wss prepared for all eventualities that might arise. Kreqnent Hamora Current. There hav been frequent rumor since the outbreak of hostllltlea that Portugal waa about to declare a state of war with the central power because of it treaty relations with Great llrltaln. President Discusses Draft of Complaint About Mail Seizure WABHINOTON. D. C. Mrch l.-Hels-urea of American mall by Brltlah naval authoritle were dlacuased at a confer ence today between Preaident Wilson and Henry Van Dyke, American minister to The Netherlands, who also conferred with Secretary Lansing and t'ounaellor Polk of the Plate department. It I Indicated that the mail question will be d apoaed of before the t'nited statea send to (Jreat Britain' the note on contraband now in couiae of prep aration. The United States, It , la understood, had mad formal complaint on Mr. Van Dyke' Informal proteat against the seizure of mall from the ateamer Rot terdam, on which he eame to the l'nlle'1 fetates. It wa revealed today that tha diapafh received at the ttate department ytater day giving notice that Great Britain' reply to the mall aelxure protest waa on it way by mall, but did not atat mhat poaltlon Ureat Britain bad taken. Woman and Man Rob Bank in Oklahoma MfHKOOEE, Okl.. March 1. A woman lohber with a man companion entered the tank at MUlerton, Okl., late yeater d). covered the caanirr, raked up about f.'MV backed out th door and, escaped tn the mountains north of the town. II i j- I SLOAN FORCES DEMS TO LOYALTY STAND Motion on War Claim Bill . Pre vents Southern Members from Making Raid.' " ; . r STZPHEITS , VOTES ..WITH S0tJTH (From a Staff Correspondent.) , WASHING. March 1 Special- Telegram.) Thia waa v a, ' field day for Nebraska. ' , . ',. , .'.'.c,, Congressman Sloan, a pinch hitter, forced the house, a democratio house, to go on record for proof of loyalty In the final aettlement of war olaJms and thereby created a new record for himself, not only as a clear, logical thinker, but aa a big American eitl sen. An acrimonious debate grew out Of a bill allowing Claimants Under the law of 1863 to have two years' extension of tints to prove their claims as to losses of cotton, etc., taken over by the government during the war and sold for their account, the proceeds of such salea now being in the treasury waiting distribution. ' The bill hsd been - reported favorably by tha war claim committee ef the house, but with the required "proof ef loyalty en th part of th claimant" omitted.' Sloam Force Roll fall. Representative Sloan submitted .' sn amendment requiring tha calmer, to show nut only Uia ownerahlp of th prop erty taken, but th "loyalty" of the owner during the civil war. In a very dignified speech Mr. Ploan pointed out to th house that thla had been the prac tice since lfa, snd he thought this was not a time to' get sway from funda inetitHls. Naturally the partluan on both sides went at It. hammer and tonga, and one of trie most acrid dobatea of thla session resu'teU. V.'.'ilU In committee of tie whole, a standing vole was taken on the Sloan Amendment to recommit the bill, with in structions to attach hla amendment a to "loyeJty" and the . amendment was beaten by a vote of 69 to 74. Many of the northern deinocrate voting with their southern brothers. lemo-rale t oo) Record. .Wlien . the Mil wss reported to the house, Sloan movid tn roconmilt the bill with Instructions to incorporate th "loy tiltv" ninentlr.Kiit. On 'l.o roll cull the vote atood IKS for to 170 egaltist Sloan. rorlng th flrel heating the oViiiorrata hav hsd during trio prwernt ronure'e. Coiigresaman I.olx-ck was sctlng apeaker while the aye and nay .vote wa being taken, Speaker Clark calling the Omaha uifml.tr to the thalr during th taking of the vol. I.otieck and Hliallmberger nrre not caught asleep. Thy votsd for "loyally." but 6tej bn voted against hli colleagues and for the bill aa originally reported from the committee on war claim. ( Two purpesv have been strved by th vets today, It puts the northern dm-ccj-als oil record and t irake th bill a It was originally Intended it should bo. It also t-nd to ahuw the temper of the noise I for I all y . JUDGE SHEA APPOINTED AMBASSADOR TO CHILE WASHI.NOTOV, Mareh 1 Judg Jo. epk II. Hhea of Hey mo nr. Ind., ha been elected bv Tresident Wilson ambaa smlor to Chile and will be nominated In the near future. He will aucoeed Henry l Fletcher, who ha been appointed Ainhaxsarior to Mexico. ) CONGRESS CHIEFS ARE UNDECIDED ON COURSE TO TAKE May Send Joint Committee to Find Out Just What Can Be Done to Please Wilson on Ship Warning Question. DOESN'T WANT ENDORSEMENT Eepublicans as Well as Democrats Are Divided Over Reso lutions. KITCHIN BECOMES SARCASTIC WASHINGTON, Feb. 1. After being In session more than two hours the house foreign affairs com mittee adjourned until 10:30 tomor row morning without agreeing upon any course of action. WAKHINfJOV, Mareh l.-Conferencea motif leaders In the senat and house developed that so few men who talked with th president were agreed en a courae In regard to what congress should do In regard ,to 'armed ship" controversy that nction seemed Improbable without enothrr conference at th white hone. It was understood rresldrnt Wilson does not feel thst a vote of confidence will ac complish the object he seeks snd thst foreign capitals enn he made to under stand that the American government 1 united In the submarine negotiations only by the out snd out defest of a resolu tion proposing tn warn American off armed ship. The views of om of the leader de veloped to he so much in conflict with thote which the president outlined st hla morning conference that, the leaders urged the appointment of a joint com mittee to go to President Wilson to aak him for an official statement of what he wants congress to do. The leaders con sidered the aituatlon very much muddled. C lark for Joint ftesolatloa. . Speaker t'lnrk after a conference with other house leader and some democratic senators advised the foreign affairs com mittee to recommend a Joint resolution which would provide for th appointment of such a committee. Senators atone. Kern. Overman, Martin, gwanson and (lore held a brief confer ence, at th conclusion of which It waa agreed, that nothing should be don in the senat today, Ilonao Leader Draft Iteaolatlon. ' ! House leader todsy drafted for con sideration of th hone e measure pro posing thst congress expreas Its confi dence In th president's handling of the armed merchantmen controversy and recognise that It Is not a matter of leg islative, but of executive atoacern. ;Tti president positively did not ask for such a ' resolution." aald Mr. Flood, speaking of th nw proposal. "This form has ben breached sine t returned from-the White House conferenoe." Pending th Sounding of sentiment on the resolution the' meeting of the foreign sffalrs eemmllteo was postponed front 1 o'clock to an Indefinite hour. - Meantime leader conferred on th new propoaal. It wa argued by eom that thl would relieve tha house of going en record on the armed ship proposition. The views of the White House were awaited eagerly. Prediction that the president would not indorse th proposed resolution ' war freely expressed. Ctislrmasj Flood sought to get demooratto and republican mem bers toeether aa tha reaolutlon might be aoreed i.nnn in nnnrtM aut when tho I committee meets lster today. j . Another ttesolattoa Fro wared." ! Chairman Flood also. PreDared another reaolutlon combining the warning reeo- " lutton with an endorsement of the presi dent's attitude. . Leader whs last week were positive in asserting a warning resolution would pass today were Silent. They insisted thare wss.ne.wsy to tell the Samper ef the house. . Republicans were said te be abnoat as much divided en th proposal as the democrats. Representative Mam would mske no publla statement of hla view. H aald merely that th present aitua tlon was a "very aericua one." and that ' wa alt. Kltcbla la Saroaatl. "Tha habit of obedlenc ha been de veloped to a high deg re in congress." wa Mr. Kitchen anawer to a question about propecta of a vote. H la one of tho who have favored th resolutions. One plan diacuaaed was for the house foreign affairs committee te report adversely one of the pending resolution and at th same time hav the rule committee bring In s rule limiting debate. By that plan a vote could be reached in the house tomor row or Friday end th question would be taken up in the senate Immediately after ward. Mysterious Airship Only Toy Balloon ril'U'TIt, Minn., March 1. Th "mys terious aeroplane" which for aeveraJ night has been een aoaring over big grain elevator her caualng city authori tle to order an investigation, burst Into flame laat night and felt on the dock. It wa found to be a toy balloon of pe culiar conatruotion. CHIEF COUNSEL ACCUSED CF PERJURYJN LAW SUIT WATERLOO. la. March l.-(Speial Telegram.) Loren Risk, chief oounaet la the case of Scribner against th Water loo. Cedar Fall aV Northern Railway company, wa held to th grand Jury, charged with aubomallon of perjury, to day and ball bond were placed at SLOW. Risk waa attorney for the plaintiff. H is now practicing law In Minnaapolia snd cam a her to defend himaelf. Thro wltneeae Ackrman, Boott and King, are now serving ten-year aenteoce on plea of guilty to perjury In th same action. C. T. rick'tt. In giving argument f or the atat. stated that this wss th first tlino In his legal practice In Waterloo of tweuty-fiv year that ueh high handed lrlury had been attemrUd. 1