THE WEATHER; Snow and colder Sunday; Monday unsettled. T R i E F ui u 11 1 MAHA Hourly Temperniitrm. REEZY flour. Keg. HiMir. THE BEE IS THE ONLY NEBRASKA PAPER WITH A ROTOGRAVURE PICTURE SECTION EACH SUNDAY Bee Sunday Ilr. 4 II 4H 1 4H 4 43 B a. ni. a. m, 7 a. in. a. m. SI 1 p. in. .34 i. in. 84 3 p. III. .84! 4 p. m. BITS OF NEWS 9 a. m. Mi 5 p. m. MILITARY PRISONER HEIR TO $5,000,000. Leavenworth, Kin. Feb. 1. Gor don Reed Patterson, serving a five year term in the disciplinary bar racks at Fort Leavenworth, today was notified that he had fallen he r to JS.OOO.OOO through the death of an uncle at St. Paul. The telegram stated that $25,000 has been placed in a Kansas City bank for Patterson's immediate use. He was convicted of desertion and his sentence will expire in February, 1922. SITUATION IN EAST SAID TO BE GROWING WORSE. 1 Copenhagen, Feb. 1. General von Hindenburg and General Groner are at Kolberg, headquarters of the new German eastern army, according to word received here. The situation in the east is said to be worse. General von Quast is at Brauns berg. headquarters of the German northern army, and General von der Borne is at Breslau. headquarters of the German southern army. - MRS. VERNON CASTLE DENIES ENGAGEMENT. New York. Feb. 1. Mrs. Irene Castle, the dancer, denied, on her arrival on the Adriatic from over seas, that she was to marry Tom Powers, the close friend of the late ' Vernon Castle. Mrs. Castle s hus haur! whn was killed last vear a southern aviatton camp. She said: "The whole matter is absurd. I am not engaged to Mr. Powers. We were good friends and wilUtfemain so. He has heard the report, as well as I, and has taken it good natured- iy" ",, . VISCOUNT GREY OF ENGLAND IS SLOWLY GOING BLIND. New York, Feb. 1. Viscount Grey, Great Britain's former sec retary of state for foreign affairs, is going blind, it was declared at the Hotel Plaza by Sir Arthur Pearson, bart., who is himself blind and -who founded the St. Dunstans hotel for blind sailors and soldiers. Viscount Grey's sight has been going for three or four years and he has been unable to read for about three months, said Sir Arthur. SUFFRAGISTS HALTED ' N TRIP TO FRANCE. Washington, Feb. 1 In connec tion with the cancellation by the tate department of the passports of Miss Mildred Morris of Denver and Miss Clara Wold of Portland, Ore., itist before they were to sail for France this week, it was stated at :he State department todav that the l.wo women had reported that they -ere going abroad for war work ind that the cancellation order was ssud when the department learned they had been engaged in the activ ities of the woman's party before he White House. A statement, issued by the worn an's party headquarters, declared .t- . f ;ta Hi.mk.re fllrar1v were in France and that it was thetrn intention to petition the president by banners and demonstrations wherever he goes for enfranchise ment of American women." ASK TO HAVE LICENSE OF ARMOUR BRANCH REVOKED. Buffalo. N. Y., Feb. 1. (By Uni versal Service.) Erie county food administrator yesterday asked the inforcement division of the food ad ministration at Washington to re voke the Buffalo license of the Ar mour Packing company. This action ioll&wed the refusal of the Armour company to contribute $5,000 worth of food to starving French children as a punishment for alleged viola tion of food regulations. Armour i.nd company will ask for a Wash ington hearing in the case which is based on charges preferred by 70 Buffalo grocers that the Chicago packers sold storage butter which was improperly marked. The de fense is that the food administra tors' interpretation of the ruling is incorrect. IE PLANS EDM BY COfMlSSION fhey Provide for Compulsory Arbitration, Limitation to Armaments and War Penalties. By Associated Press. Paris, Feb. 1. Leon Bourgeois, the French delegate on the society of nations, today presented to Presi dent Wilson, Premier Clemenceau, Premier Lloyd George and Premier Orlando the text of the proposal for the formation of the league, as agreed upon by the international or ganization embracing the American, of which William Howard Taft is president; the British, of which Viscount Grey is president; the Italian, French and other associa tions. M. Clemenceau had previously asked M. Bourgeois to secure an agreement on the details among the advocates of the prtjgram in all the : countries and the plan presented to day was in response to this re quest. It provides for compulsory arbi tration in all disputes without ex ception; the limi ation of arma ments and a series of penalties against nations provoking war, and a detailed provision is made for the organization of a society of nations to whih all countries giving guar antees of loyal intentions are ad mitted. Miss Wilson Stricken . With Flu at Brussels Brussels, Feb. I. Miss Margaret Wilson, daughter of President Wil son, according to the Etoile Beige, is suffering from an attack of in fluenza. She s co ".tine! to her room ii the American legation. LEAG! flPP VOL. XLVIII NO. 34. J W P Officer Suspended by Ringer in Automobile Scandal Says Will Have Plenty to Say at Proper Time. As the climax of seven days of cpncatirtnul rha rrrpc that detertives were conniving with thievesPolice Commissioner Ringer Saturday an- Commissioner Ringer Saturday an nounced the suspension irom tne police department ot Detective JJen Danbaum. ' The suspension of Danbaum is taken in police circles to be the pre lude to disclosures of graft which Chief of Detectives John Briggs de clared existed in the detective bureau. Mayor Smith declared the investi gation will be thorough in every re spect. 1 he specific charge jnacie against Detective Danbaum is "willful ne glect ol duty." What Briggs Says. Tt, flirroa a11rr Vic failed to arrest Don Chrisman, 2865 Mander- sbn street, accused ot stealing a car owned by G. A. Richardson, an Omaha real estate dealer. Detective Chief Briggs declares Danbaum forced Chrisman to reveal the hiding place of the car and then failed to arrest him for its theft. Charles Pipkin, an Omaha insurance adjuster, said to have accompanied Danbaum to the Chrisman home, re ceived $125 for the car's recovery. Chrisman denies the theft of the machine. Danbaum's removal from the de tective department is but one of a number which city commissioners have said 'will be made. Expect Further Developments. The trial of Fletcher (Red) Neat, Peru, Neb., garageman, and -M aurtce KatlemaiT, proprietor of a furnishing store of this city, are expected, it is said, to furnish further material for Commissioner Ringer , and liis detective chief to weed out the force. Neal and Katleman arc charged with aiding and abbetting grand larceny activities of Omaha automobile thieves. They are await ing trial in district court. Makes No Comment. William McKenna and Love 11 Jones, recently held on charges of automobile stealing are said by the police to have been part of a gigan tic gang of automobile "hustlers.' McKenna, in a signed statement, in criminated both Neal and Katleman. William Bixler, 20 years old, now serving a penitentiary sentence for automobile theft, is said, also, to have made an affidavit to Omaha police officials naming "higher-ups." He is in the Nebraska state prison and is a .former "pal" of McKenna. Both were at one time inmates of the Kearney reform school for boys. Detective Danbaum refuses to comment on his suspension from the police department. "I'll say enough when the time comes; nobody's going to make a (Continued on Fat Two. Column Fire.) iAIBAOIi Omaha Mother Gives Two Sons to Cause of Liberty Burris James Jeremiah Duke Dies at Camp Stanley of Pneumonia; Brother First Nebraska Soldier Killed. Like a Spartan mother of old, Mrs. Josephine Wineinger, 2640 Seward street, has given her all to the cause of liberty. Again she has been- called upon to mourn the death cjf a son, the second who has made the' supreme sacrifice that the world might be freed from autoc racy. This time she mourns for her second and only son, Burris James Jeremiah Duke, 22 years o!d, a member of Company D, field artil lery, who died last Wednesday at Camp Stanley, Texas, where his command was stationed. Mrs. Wineinger was with her son at the time of his death He was taken ill 10 days ago and his mother was sent for. He seemed to be recovering when pneumonia de veloped and he failed raoidly, quietly passing away Wednesday night. The body will arrive in Omaha tonight and the funeral, which will be a military one, will be held from the home., 2640 Seward street at 9 o'clock Tuesday morn ing to St. John's Catholic church, Twenty-fifth and California streets Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre.' Although born in South Dakota, Burris Duke was an Omaha boy. having come here with his parents when he was a child. He was edu cated in the Omaha schools and at the time of his enlistment, March 22, last year, was one of the trusted Entaro awea-alaa matter Mm W. . IMC it 0 j-K P. 0. under let it Mann . S. 1173 viz Federal Agents Find -Whisky in Mail Sack And Old Brass Shells Two of the most unusual "cam ouflages" ever employed by booz smugglers were discovered Saturn day, when a mail sack was found to contain two quarts of whisky and a trunk containing seven hol low brass shells war trophies were containers of two quarts of whisky each. James McClure and L. W. Welch, postal clerks, were arrest ed on the Douglas street bridge with a mail sack containing two quarts of whisky. The trunk of shells Deputy Marshal Quinley discovered irt the Union station, and though the shells were "loaded," the peculiar rattling gave their secret away. OFFICERS ASK I1Y1108DWAS PlrflMORIIER "Idol of Army" Treated Like German Spy on Visit to Front, Says Letter Read to House. Washington, Feb. I. Reiterating in the house today charges that rational guard officers were removed from their commands after practic ally continuous fighting service to make room for regulars, Representa-' tive Gallivan of Massachusetts, dem ocrat, read a letter signed by 40 wounded officers, saying investiga tion would prove that medical offi cers had been ordered to report as unfit officers who might replace the regulars first assigned for duty. The letter also asserted that na tional guard officers and reserves were sent into the thick of the fight ing while the regular army men were held back. Asked by . Representa tive Hamilt'un of Michigan, who was responsible for the removal of the national guard officers after months of service on the front line, Mr. Gal livan said it was due to "the Leaven worth clique by its influence with the. high command." The "high command,'' he explained, was the general staff in Washington. - - Referring to Major Gen. .Leonard Wood, the letter read by the Massa chusetts representative said: -:, "When General Wood-visited the front he was treated-more like ft German spy than an Officer' of the United States. We have the word of several colonels that know him well for this, .He was ordered back without being allowed to visit ..the j Italian front or returning through England as he was invited to do by Lloyd George; ' ' "General Wood was the idol of the army, officers and men alike, and was one of the most efficient officers, yet he was kept in a corner all the time. Who did it?" "We can prove also that scores of men were sacrificed because officers in command were anxious for pro motion," the letter also declared. "We know of a national guard colo nel relieved of command after a successful advance and sent back to the service of supply because of jealousy." The letter concluded by saying the officers signing it were of various political affiliations. Eight said they were national army officers four na tional guard officers and the re mainder reserves. Their names were not made public by Mr. Gallivan. BURRIS J. J. DUKE. employes of the Standard Oil com pany. , Another son f Mrs. Wineinger, Leo, a brother of Burris, was killed April 9, 1917 He was the first Ne braska soldier to lose his life after the1 United States entered the war. Leo was a member of Company. D, Fourth Nebraska National Guards, and at the time of his death was sta tioned at Waterloo, guarding the Union Pacific bridge over the Elk horn river, preventing its destruc tion by German sympathizers. He was run over and killed by a train. I i ;. . 2 ; OMAHA, SUNDAY, F. E. Mayer Quits Executive Secretaryship of Omaha Fed eration; Lack of Support Given as Reason. Frank E. Mayer, who has been since September 1, 1918, the execu tive secretary of the Omaha Church federation, presented his resignation Friday to the board of directors. The resignation was not accepted, but will be considered further at a meeting to be held Monday after noon. According to Rev. Harry B. Fost er, president of the federation, the executive committee did not feel like taking the responsibility for ac cepting the resignation, and will probably refer it to the whole body. Determine Policy Later. The committee did nothing," he said, "at the Friday meeting, except to arrange for a meeting 'Monday to discuss the situation. At that time we will probably arrange for a meeting of the federation to consid er the resignation, and to determine the furture policy of the organiza tion." . The statement credited to the treasurer of the federation, A. N. Eaton, to the effect that Mr. Mayer was quitting on account of lack of financial support, and that he had aready accepted a place paying a much larger salary was positively denied-by-Mr. Mayer last night . - Money No Object "You may say for me," he Said, "that': I am going to Chicago tomor row night, that I haven't a job at a bigger . salary or at any salary. I have nothing in prospect' along these lines and am positively not leaving the federation because of the lure of more money. "You may say also," he continued, "that the suggestion that I was afraid I would not get the salary due me is also false. I have at no time worried a bit on that score." - "It is true, however, that the $6,000 budget mentioned in the alleged in terview with Mr. Eaton, was at least partly, mythical.' This was supposed to have been pledged at the Black stone hotel, but when I received the list of pledges it amounted to only $5,000, and I have been able to find only $4,500 which may be counted on. This is not enough to carry the expenses of the federation as it ought to be conducted. It is not a question of the salary of the secre tary; but of having the financial abil ity to undertake the work which the federation ought to be doing." The real reason that he has re signed, according to Mr. Mayer, .is because of lack ot support that would make the federation the force that he has felt it should be in the life of the community. Interest Lagged, "The interest in the work of the federation has lagged," he. said. "Per sons who have been given tasks to do in carrying out its plans have many times failed to do what was expected of them, and many of the churches of the city have given no support or very inadequate support. This condition has made, it impos sible to carry out any large and ef fective program, and I simply feel that I can invest my life to better advantage somewhere else. This is the sole and only . reason for my resignation. I sincerely hope the federation will continue its work and will be successful in it." Mr. Mayer came as executive sec retary following the meeting at the Blackstone hotel in May of last year. After Mr. Mayer arrived he found the constitution of the fed? eration lacking in many ways and (Continued on Page Two, Column Two.) Two Thousand Troops Taken Safely Off Ship ' Stranded Upon Rocks Southhampton, Feb. 1. In the early hours of the morning in a calm sea, but a blinding snow storm, the American steamer Narragansett ran on submerged rocks off the east end of the Isle of Wight, which have claimed many victims in the past' The ship carried 2,000 soldiers, of whom 60 were Americans. All were rescued.. ' American Labor Delegates Refuse to Meet Germans Paris, Paris, Feb. 1. The Amer ican Federation of Labor delega tion. haded by Samuel Gompers, decided tonight to support the Bel gian socialists and trade unionists, who refuse to meet the Germans at either the socialist or trade union congress which will convene simul taneously at Berne next week. This decision was adhered to through a two days' session, despite the pro tests of the British and French trade unionists who will go to Berne to morrow. , FEBRUARY 2,. 1919. I . J HP :rtX w'n JMJMI u n 1, j LLx i ' light Will Drive Him Back to His Hole. , HfEHCA ''. Alii Y LOSS liillii- ;MkA " ''' v' Most of These Not Alreadv I I Umlill' " Reported as Dead Likely 1 I'll IlliS ' ' ' to Be Added Finally ;; 1 il,,. ' to Hojtot Roll. - ; Wine, Women and Song Have Given Way to the Straight, Narrow Path in Legislature No More Staked Poker Games, Free Room in Best ' Hotels for Entire Legislative Session, But Hard Work and Real Arguing on the' Part of ' 1919 Lobbyist, Now dn Order. ; By J. H. KEARNES, (Staff Correspondent of The Bee) Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 1. The primrose pith of dalliance, with its flush days and purple nights, its devious turns that led to crooked deed3 and entangling deals, is no longer trod by Nebraska's members of the legislature. " Rather are their feet set in the straight and narrow path of rectitude and righteousness. . . . The reason for this is that the old-time lobbyist and the hand-pickecKstatesmen seem to be things of a past now so far in the perspective that it is dimmed by the haze of history. Days of Bixchus and Gambrinus. Time was when a membership in the Nebraska legisla ture was in the nature of a hectic joy-ride'throughout a ses sion The water wagon rarely carried a passenger, but the good old ship Gambrinus, manned by a goodly: crew, was packed and jammed from stem to stern with a cargo of jolly good fellows. In the good old days when lobby ing was an art, rather than a science, Lincoln was made gay by a band of proficient men whose sole aim and duty in life was to show the newly elected member of . the house or senate the time of his life. Greeters, with fat expense accounts provided by corporations and other interests, would meet the man of budding gen ius and great ambitions and by their generosity .and magnetism induct him into the free-masonary of their crowti if he was at all susceptible. He wa"s wined and dined, and in many cases sheltered in a room with bath at the most palatial hotel he had ever seen. Annual passes on the railroads, and franking privil eges over the long distance tele phone lines were furnished him and bundles of free passes to the visiting shows of the town were thrust upon him. Soon Was Political Tool. He accepted the hospitality of the friendly strangers and chance ac quaintance no matter how lavishly Car Which Killed Boy Carried Number ! Beginning With 128 A touring car bearing a license number beginning with 128 Neb., ran down and killed 9-year-old George Bachman, son of G. H. Bach man, plumber, 4220 Seward street, Friday 'night and then disappeared. The injured lad died Saturday noon. The accident occurred in front of the lad's home. Following ,a house-to-house can vass by detectives in the immediate neighborhood of the accident, it was brought to light that the speeding car that struck the boy bore a license number beginning with 128 . Chief of Detectives Briggs de clared he will not give up the case until the driver of the car is ar rested. D. B. Keeler Dead. Fort Worth, Tex., Feb. 1. D. B. Keeler, for 30 years the head of the Fort Worth and Devner and the Wichita Valley railroads and before that a prominent railroad official and business man of Denver, died today aftpr ati nnpratinn T-T u-94 7ft i,ai-a I Old. . , ,. ... Br Mill O nrl. Daily. U.y: timtn. i? OTt Call aa 8a., M.S0: eutilda Nat. kium ailta it was tendered until he soon found himself enmeshed in a net of obli gations which broke down his moral fibre and soon made him the tool of the persons whose deliberate plan and purpose, before they met him personally, was to use him. Today all this is changed. The member of the legislature ' who comes to Lincoln finds none of the glamour of the old-time days and no one except his old and time trust ed friends of honest purpose and without guile are there to meet and greet him. The lobbyist of today is tagged and registered. All who see him, know him; for what he is. There is little chance for him to camouflage. The modern lobbyist does not trust to devious ways and subtle methods of debauchery to achieve his end and earn his wage. He is a highly specialized agent or an interested person who can ap pear before a committee and either (Continued on Page Seven, Column One.) Sees Husband With Another Woman; Gets Dinner; Takes Poison After preparing a luscious dinner, entailed with courses of the finest viands for her husband, Mrs. C T Lee. 35 years old, 2638 Seward street, swallowed an ounce of poi son in an attempt to end -her life, late Saturday afternoon. She grew despondent when she saw her hus band with an unidentified woman in the afternoon, she said. ' The husband came home shortly after she committeed the act. "I wanted to show him I cared for him," she said. "I've always mad home a happy place for him." She will recover. Rent Shirkers in Vienna Parade and Pillage Shops ' London, Feb., 1. Serious distur bances have occurred at Vienna, where thousands of the unemployed, incited by violent speeches to in timidate the people of Budapest and refusal to pay rent paraded through the streets, accordine to a dispatch to the Exchange -Telegraph, .- - . FIVE CENTS. Til OFFICERS SEEN BY URETO AT PRISONER Commissioner Says He File Complaint Against Detectives Graham and Franks. . .Complaints of abusive treatment of a prisoner will be filed before the city council Monday morning against Detectives Graham and Franks by W. G. Ure, city commissioner. This action is a sequel to the arrest of Charles Aytch, colored, by the de tectives Friday night. Commission er Ure witnessed a beating the de tectives gave the negro at Eighteenth and Davenport streets, he said. "I came upon the detectives ar resting the man at Eighteenth and Davenport streets," said Commis sioner Ure, "and chanced to observe they were beating him. As they put him into the patrol wagon one of the detectives gave him several kicks and jolted him behind the ear. Im mediately, I went to the police sta tion and asked Captain Vanous about tne affair. Captain Vanous told me tbe prisoners are not treated like brutes as a rule. "I have the names of the detec tives, and will report them to Com missioner Ringer Monday morning." Detectives Graham and Frank said: , "We just hit the man a couple of times after he attempted to escape from us," said Graham. Aytch was booked for investiga tion in connection with the breaking of a plate glass in Hayden's store, Sixteenth and Dodge streets. Ten More Omaha Boys and Many Nebraskans Are Home from Dodge Ten Omaha boys among ISO Ne braskans, who were discharged from the Twenty-third machine gun bat talion of the Eighth division at Camp Dodge Saturday, arrived in Omaha at 1 o'clock this morning. After indulging in coffee and dough nuts at the Red Cross canteen, they scrambled on street cars homeward bound. They have been in active service on this side of the pool for nearly a year, and were in overseas outfits at Camp Mills. Long Island, when the armistice was signed. VWe were in the battle of life," one of the huskies shouted. Gustav Buergquist, Forty-fifth and Military) avenue; Edward Lee, Twelfth and F. streets, South Side; George Shank, 2803 Bristol; Joseph Adams and Pete Polito, South Side, were some of the Omaha boys who returned wearing silver chevrons for services given. The rest of the Omaha and Ne braska boys, who are in the Twenty third Machine Gun regiment of the Eighth division, will be mustered out next week. Largest Dry Dock in U. S. Opened at Portsmouth, Va. Portsmouth, Va., Feb. 1. The largest dry dock in the United States was opened here today at the navy yard. With a length of 1,022 feet and a depth ot 43 feet, it will ac commodate the largest vessel afloat. It cost $4,000,000. By night work and added labor, it was completed seven months ahead of the time scheduled. Mrs. F. R. Harris, wife of Admir al Harris and Mrs. George Leary, wife of the contractor building the dock, opened the sluiceways which made the dock ready for service by flooding it. Ill . in RHj p, in. II a. in !i 7 p, in. U n 4I p. m. Washington, Feb. 1. Official tables of the major battle casualties , of the American forces in France, made public today by General March, chief of staff, show that ap proximately 10,000 nen remain wholly unaccounted for, nearly three months after the ending of hostilities. The deaths, missing and known prisoners are tabulated in1 to January 10 for each of the 30 combatant divisions of General Pershing's army. The total is 56, 592, of whom 17,434 are classified as missing or captured. An ap pended statment shows that only 29 American military prisoners were believed to be still in Germany Tan- uary 8, and that 4,800 prisoners had been checked up as returned and 118 died in captivity. Some portion of the great body of missing men may be located as the return of the army thins out the American force in France. Indica tions are, however, that the majoritv of the 10,000 finally will be added to the roll of honor shown in the"'tab!es of those killed or died of wounds, now recorded as 39,158 men. Death Roll Now 40,709. To that figure, also, must bp added 1,551 men of the marine bri gade, figures for which not carried in the tables were obtained from of ficial sources. This brings the grand aggregate of deaths from battle tip to 40,709 on returns estimated of ficially to be 95 per cent complete. As figures on missing and prisoners of the marines are lacking, the num ber of unaccounted for which final! v will be added to the roll of th dead cannot be accurately estimated. The army tables, however, give a total of 14,649 men missing in action and 2,785 known prisoners, making up the 17,434 missing or captured The army rolls record 4,918 American military prisoners accounted for. Admittedly, there are many possibilties of error, but the statement says it is anticipated that thr indicated unaccounted for list of 17,516 will be brought "down to less than 10,000." The tables do not furnish any data a9 to the wounded or deaths other than those resulting directly from battle. A new estimate of the com plete figures on American casual ties is not possible. It is significant, however, that up to tonight the War department has published the names of 43,882 men killed or died of wounds, as against 39,158 shown in the 95 per cent tables. The differ ence is made up by additional re- 1 turns since the tables were closed January 10. Estimate Exceeded. , On November 27 General Persh. mg estimated that his total killed . and died of wounds would be 40.455 i Presumably, publication of the lists' of these known deaths and ex clusive ot the unaccounted for U -nearly completed, having exceeded . the estimate by more than 3,000 due in part to additional deaths from wounds and to the listing as dead of men formerly reported missing The names of 149,418 wounded had been published up to tonight, compared with a November esti mated . total of 189,955. Of these missing in action, 11,676 have been published against the estimated 14,260 total and compared with the 17,434 missing and prisoners shown in today's tables. The War department's explana-( tion of the table follows: "The following pages are a tabu lation of casualty cables received; through January 10. They give . totals of the casualties which put a" soldier permanently out of action.; Tfiey do not include wounded ficr ures, as the lists of those slightly, wounded are still incomplete. "The totals given are about 95 per cent complete for each division. Field signal battalions, ambulance companies and trains are not in cluded in the tabulation of the di visions. . , "The record of units, outside d divisions, will be available in a fe days. This addition will have a rela tively small effect on the totals here given." A summary of the casualty tables, giving the classification of losses by (Continued on Toire Two, Column Thro.) Conferees in Agreement on Oil Land Leasing Ei!i Washington, Feb. 1. The dead lock in congress on oil land leasing legislation was broken tonight when senate and house conferees reached a tentative agreement on the bill which has been in dispute since last May. Chairman Pitttnai: of the senate manRgers announced that changes would be ma'e public Monday after a final mccling of f ,i conferees.