1 The Omaha Daily Bee VOL. 49 NO. 282. tt4 ll mmi-Iim aatter Mir Jg, IN, at Oaah P. 0. in let Mink J. 117. OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1-920. By Mall (I nar), I Mid. 4th Zaaa, Dally aa Sunday. W; Dally Only, tt: Suadijr. 14. Uattldi 4th Zoaa (I yaar). Dally Sanity, til; Dally Oaly, tU; Skaa'ay Oaly, II. TWO CENTS OPTBini! OMAHA AND COr!C IIL BLUFFS, KIV1 CEMMi INSURGENTS ROUT FORCE OF CARRANZA Government ' Troops at Sa binas," Coahuila, Under Gen eral Pruneda,. Defeated After Battle With Rebel Soldiers. FIGHTING IN PROGRESS NEAR BROWNSVILLE, TEX. Laborers jand Families Gather At Monclova for Protection From Federals Revolution- . ists Begin Reconstruction, tion. " x By Th Assorlutfil fret. El Paso, Tex., May 11. With the fate of President Carranza still in doubt, reports of a few minor en gagcments between federal and rebel forces along the northeastern border of Mexico reached revolutionary headquarters, tonight. Carranza forces at Sabinas, Coa huila, were routed by troops under Gen. Antonio Vruueda, and after the battle a train 4oad of wounded fed erals was sent to Piedras Negras, opposite Eagle Pass, it was reported. Fighting was said to be in prog ress at Matamoras, opposite Browns ville, Tex., with the revolutionists attacking the town. "Eight hundred laborers and their families were reported as having gathered at Monclova, Coahuila, . where they were said to be eeking protection from the menace of Car ranza forces operating in that, re gion. - Begin Reconstruction. Claiming the greater part of Mexi co as their territory, revolutionary agents here today began their share of the long task of reconstruction which faces a country torn by war for an entire decade. As the first step. Roberto V. Pesqrcira, revolu tionary financial agent in the United States, announced that he was mak ng efforts to obtain individual con tracts for Mexican laborers enter ing the United States, instead, of the collective engagements that have hitherto prevailed. Senor Tesque ira charged that exorbitant fees were being charged by labor agents , on both sides of the international .- l'ne." . .,-'' ' - " We,hatl also try. to eliminate! passport frauds, whicli arc oeing practiced by private individuals here and in Juarez, Pesquira .said. "So far wc have received (lie cordial co operation of the American authori ties in our efforts to establish bet ter relations between the two counA 11 IC3. Revolutionary agents in Washing ton were enedeavoring to obtain permission of the UnitedvStates gov ernment to establish wireless com munication between the radio sta tion at Arlington. Va., and those in Chihuahua City and Mexico City, Pesqueira announced. Doubt About Carranza. While the advices coming through .cm Mexico on the revolutionary 'luation there are fragmentaTy and -inflicting, they cast considerable ' ubt on the reports that President Carranza has been made a prisener. A Vera Cruz dispatch from tlw irwspaper El Dictamen, a member oi The Associated Press, bearing Holiday's date, dcclared-the fugitive president of the republic had brokan through the revolutionary lines and was standing at bay with 4",000 men at San Marcos, 27 miles north of Ptiebla. ' Presupposing the accuracy of the, reports that Carranza is still at lib erty, the situation he finds himself in, according to the Vera Cruz ad vices, is precarious. It is announced that government troops in Vera truz have deserted their command er, General Candido Aguilar, the governor of the state, and gone over to. the revolutionists, making that state apparently no longer a safe refuge for the fugitive president. In addition, revolutionary forces under Generate Hill and Trevino were reported closing in on Car ranza near San-Marcos. 'Will Ask Recognition. , Washington, May 11. The revo lutionary government in Mexico will ask for immediate recognition by the' American government. A movement to this end already has been inaugurated by the revo lutionary regime, which has its headquarters in the state of Sonota, where' the revolution first was launched. , Emiliano Tomez, commercial agent at Nogalesof the revolution ary government, is reported to have been entrusted with the mission of negotiating with the. American gov ernment. A report originating in yTorreon says the new regime is to call for a loan of 300,000 pesos to bejused for payment of its troops. x According to Nogales advices. General Obregon has placed himself under the orders of General de la Huerta, provisional president of Mexico. Urges Use of More Bread 'To Beat High Cost of Living Topeka. Kan., ftfay 11. "Food consumption in the United States could be cut $2,000,000,000 a year if the public would consume 20 per cent more bread in substitution for other fo&ds." said D. P. Chindlom, secretary of the American Associa tion of the Bakhig Indtfstry, in an address before the Trans-Mississippi Assqciation of the Baking Industry in convention here. "The American people do not con sume the prbper proportion . ot bread. The United States use about half as much bread, propor ;natehr. as does France," be added. illiam Dean Howells, Foremost U. S. Fiction Writer, Dies In New York (i&Slai PRESIDENT'S NAVY ORDERS F ,AD pibijc New York. May 11. William Dean Howells, the . novelist, died here today. Wtlham DeanN Howells, the dean of American fiction writers and the most widcLy1 read American author ot his time, was born at Martins Ferry, O., March 1. 1837. When still a lad Howells went to work in his father's printing shop as a regular employe.- 1-or two years from 1849 to 1851 his father pub lished a daily paper in Dayton, .O., and the clever son became an all- round assistant in the work. The writing of his "Life of Lin coln was the turning point m Hivr11 1iff' In tll lire nlar if brought him money enough to make a trip to Boston, where he made the personal acquaintance of Lowell, Holmes and other eminent literary people and came in touch with the best literary ideals ot the time. In the next place it secured for him the position of American consul at Venice, His four years' residence :.t Venice was his real education. The knowledge of the world, the experience of men and manners he Rained there, formed the- main foundation upon which all his sub sequent literary work was built. Mr. Howells was married in 1862 to Eleanor G. Mead, daughter of Larkin, G. Mead of Chesterfield, N. H. Mrs. Howells died in 1910. Iravinp two children, Miss Mildred Howells and'John Mead Howells. " Wealthy Socialist Denies . He Plotted For Overthrow of U. S. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee Lfanfd Wire. Chicago, May 11. William Bross Lloyd, wizened and wrinkled mil lionaire socialist, arose in Judge He bel's court Monday, faced a picture of George Washington, draped with the American flag and pleaded not guilty to the charge that he and 25 other communists plotted to over thrdw the American government. Fach of the defendants entered a similar plea. . The trial promises to be long and sensational. Clarence Darrow en deavored to secure a continuance because he is counsellor "Big Tim" Murphy awaiting trial for the al leged participation in the murder of "Moss" Enright, but after a heat ed dispute, the judge ordered the "red" trial to proceed. The communists have gathered in a formidable array of legal talent, leading to the irrelevant remark in court that after the trial is over, regardless o,f the outcome, there will be fewer "millionaire socialists" and some attorneys who will have to pay increased income taxes. Neutral Zone Between the Japs and Russians Is Plan Washington, May 11. A neutral zone between the-Japanese and Rus sian troops in eastern-Siberia is be ing arranged by the military com manders on both -sides, although there is no intention of erecting a buffer state" or of taking any actioii that would amount to political rec ognition of the soviet government by Japan, according to advices , to the Japanese embassy. Tovpreserve order fin - the zone it is planned to establish a Russian police force, while Japanese troops will maintain their stations aloYig the railroads. Injunction Ties Up Land In Texas-Oklahoma Dispute Oklahoma City. Ok!.. May, 11. A temporary injunction halting all op erations in a strip of land in the Red river disputed area, extending north of the north line over which the federal receiver has ontral to the north bank of the Red river, was granted the government by Judge John C.' Pollock in the federal dis trict court here. . . Dutch Decide Not to Charge Ex-Crown Prince Any Taxes The Hague. May 11. Decision that the former German crown prince and his fellow exiles shall not pay any rates of taxes has been reached by the minister of the treasury. Their stay at Wieringen is regarded as being involuntary be cause of their internment there. Bolivia Negotiates Big' Loan in United States Washington, May, 11. Bolivia has arranged with a New York in vestment concern for the loan of $10,000,000 to be used in the con version of the French loans of 1910 and" 1913, amounting to 56,603,000 fraurs. the Department of Commerce is advised . Hi.wffipubHshed Speech Of Wilsonlo Officers, Setting Forth War Policy, Is Pre sented by Secretary Daniels. BADE THEM THflOW OLD J K TRADITIONS TO WINDS Men Advised to "Do the Thing That Is Audacious to Utmost Point of Risk and Daring" Show Vigorous Stand. ' i By The Associated Tresa. Washington, Ma'y 11. President Wilson's hitherto unpublished war instructions to the officers of the Atlantic fleet, given in person on the quarter deck of the- flagship Penn sylvania on August 11, .1917, and bidding them "throw tradition to the wind," strike the word prudent from their vocabularies and "do the thing that is audacious to the .utmost point of risk and daring," were made pub lic here today by Secretary Daniels: In laying iht text of his remarks before the senate naval investigating committee, Secretary Daniels said they show the "bold and vigorous policy" the president has outlined for the navy. In opening his address to the of ficers.' Mr. Wilson said: j "Admiral Mayo arid Gentlemen: v'T have not come here with malice pretense to make a speech, but I have come here to have a look at you and to say something that per- I naps may ot intimately said, ana even though the company is large, said in confidence. War Was Unprecedented. "This is an unprecedented war, and, therefore, it is a war in one sense for amateurs. Nobody ever before conducted a war like this and, therefore, nobody can pretend to be a professional m a war. like tins. Here are two great navies, not to speak of the others associated with us our own ana tne tsntisii, out numbering by a very great margin the navy to which we are opposed and yet casting about Tor a way in which to use our superiority and our strength. Now, somebody has got to think this war but. Somebody has got to think out a .way not only to fight the submarine but to-do something different from which we' are doing. 'We are hunting hornets all over the farm and letting the nest alone. None of us know how to go to the. nest and crush it, and yet I despair of hunting for hornets all over the s.aje when I know where the nest is and know" that the nesr is breeding hornets as fast as I call find them. I am witling for 'my part and I know' you are, willing because I know the stuff you are made of I am willing to sacrifice half the navy Great Britain and we have together to crush that nest, 'because if we crush it, the war is won. . I -have come here to say that I do no care where it conies from, 1 do not care whether it comes from the youngest (Continued on Page Two, Column Two.) Bankers to Discuss Ways To Salt Orgy of Spending With Secretary Houston Suggest Concerted Action to Curtail Advance, of Credit for Nonessentials, In Effort to Stem Wave of Extravagance Preparations Indicate One of Most Important Conferences Ever Held. Out-of-Town Folks Are Chief Donors to Bee's Memorial Fund Out-of-town folks have been chief contributors so far to The ' Bee's memorial fund to decorate the graves of , American soldiers in France. . Dan McLeod, state representative from the Twenty-seventh district, writes to The Bee in sending his gift to the flower fund: "For the decoration of some sol dier boy's grave who made the big sacrifice Perhaps it may be the grave of my own son, who died of wounds received at Chateau Thierry. I have the honor to be of service in a good cause." The Omaha Bee is one of several American newspapers which is backing a movement to decorate the grave of every American soldier in' France. A maximum limit of $5 has been placed on single contributions. Total amount received. $194. Amount previously acknowledged, $174. Tod.fy's contributors are: Clella McGulre. Hampton. Neh $5.00 Mrs. E. McOuir. Hampton. Neb 1.00 Dan SIcLeod. Schuyler. Neb 6 00 III. C. Forth, Omaha 5.00 Max A. Moeller, Blnomfield S.00 The Xchraska-Inwa Grain Co.. Omaha r. oo Miss, Dora Hamilton, Fullfrton 1.00 New Mayor Resigns After Holding Office 24 Hours Fayetteville, X. t'., May 11. Twenty-four hours as mayor of Fayetteville with a hostile board of aldermeiv-was enough for Mayor Charles Rankin, and after holding the office twice around the clock, he handed in his resignation. Ran kin charged the board of aldermen had taken over all his functions. Society Editor of Coast Paper Dies of Injury Portland, Ore.,' May 11. Miss Ca milleV Dosch, society editor of the Portland Oregonian. died today from injuries received Sunday in a col lision of two electric trajins near here. Her death swells the; fatality list of the accident to nine. Miss Dosch was a sister of Amo Dosch Fleurot, a war correspondent. Settle Seamen's Strike Washington, May 11. The strike among seamen employed in insular traffic in the Philippines has beet, settled, the War department was in formed officially today. Traffic Ins jfbecn resumed, the dispatch aid. By ARTHUR SEARS HENNING. Chlraco Tribune-Omaha Bee Leaaed Wire. Washington, May 11. How to halt the orgy of spending on lux uries and other non-essentials in which Americans are indulging and divert capital to increase production of necessities which will reduce the cost of liviing, is a question that will be considered by the leading bank ers of the country in a conference with Secretary of the Tcasury Houston and 'the 'federal reserve board next week. The principal suggestion to be dis cussed is that the reserve banks and the bankers take concerted action to curtail the advance of credit for the production of npn-essentials in an effort to stem the wave of extrava gance, on the theory that the people will stop spending when there are no luvuries to buy and capital will be forced into the production of necessities when denieed the more profitable field of non-essentials. Preparations are being made for the conference indicate that it will be one of the most important so far held on the -credit situation in the United States. A wide range of questions will be considered, all bearing on financial reconstruction measures to direct the nation back to normal conditions Reckless Spending Growing. The suggestion of action to check the orgy, of extravagance has grown out of the failure of realization of the expectation that the cost of liv ing would begin to decline by this time and the increasing evidence that the wave of reckless spending lias not abated, but is even advanc ing, with the financing of the pro duction of pleasure cars, fancy wear ing apparel and other luxuries. One assertion frequently heard is that farmers are unable to procure nails, wire and other articles' of iron be cause of the prodigious demand for steel in the automobile industry. One of the most effective ways to bring down the cost of livings it is contended, would be to curtail the production of luxuries and divert capitaland labor to increasing the production of essential foods and clothing. The impression prevails that such action as may be taken alongthis line must necessarily be of a general nature. Beyond blanket power to restrict loans, the federal reserve board has no specific authority by law to define, essential and non essential industries. There seems to be no purpose to define in such -a way as was done by thfiwar indus tries board during the war, just what classes of industry shall be considered essential or nonessential. Up to Bank Head. The working out of any general plan which may be proposed at the conference .would rest, it is believ' ed, upon the discretion of the heads of the 12 reserve banks. Officials of these banks may be instructed to use an iron hand in curtailing credit for nohssntial industries and in dealincr ' with individual applica tions generally fo rloans which do not appear warranted by local cir cumstances. There will also be a discussion of the present rediscount rates, but beyond a modification of those now in effect, general increases are not anticipated. Two of the federal re serve banks, those in Chicago and Minneapolis, recently increased the rediscount rate on Liberty bonds from tyi per cent to . 6per cent. The San Francisco bank is on a basis of Vi per cent. It is under stood that other banks nave un der consideration increases which would place the rate on Liberty bonds more on an equal basis with the 6 per cent rate now prevailing on commercial paper. Offic als here believe , the results of the application of graduated re discount rates in the Kansas City district have been successful in re straining unnecessary use of credit. OPPOSITION OPENSFIREON PEACEPLAN Senator McCumber of North Dakota Delivers First Sajvo Against Reports irr Senate Hitchcock to Speak Today. LEADERS PREDICT ADOPTION OF PROPOSAL Paroled Auto Thief Marries to Escape Federal Prosecution Lincoln, Neb., May II. (Special.) Ral Sondlovich, recently paroled by Lieutenant Governor Barrows from serving a sentence for being implicated in an automobile- stealing gang, on the grounds that he had 1 1 XI. ,Deen promised immunity uy iuc istate attorney, has evaded the fed- eral net on cnarges ot violating tne Mann act. Mrs. Sandlovich. formerly Miss Margaret Smith of Creston, la., who was named in the complaint, called at the office of U. S. District Attor ney T. S. Allen here and presented credentials showing that she was married to Sandlovich at Wilber, Neb., Monday night. She told the federal attorney that she was going to take her husband away from the iniquity of Lincoln and aid him in making a new starf in life. Attorney Allen stated that as his chief witness was now the wife of the defendant and could not be used against him the case would be dismissed. His preliminary hearing is set for Wednesday. Shallenberger Will Be Chairman Demo State Convention Lincoln, Neb., May 11. -(Special.) The selection of former Governor Shallenberger of Alma to deliver the keynote address at the democratic state "convention in Omaha next Tuesday is arousing a great deal of speculation among politicians. He was elected a delegate to the democratic national convention on the Hitchcock slate. This fact leads many to believe that the "wets" have drawn "first blood " While governor, Mr. Shallenberg er signed the" eight o'clock closing law and woused the enmity of the wets in the state and politicians of dry proclivities say that his selec tion is a concession to the Bryan slate. i . V' Ttr,; Confesses to Poisoning forces will be staged over the ques tion of modification of the prohibi tion amendment to permit the sale of beer and light wines. Lincoln High School Boys Suspended for Joining Fraternities Lincoln, Neb., May ll.(Special.) --Seven boys wene suspended from the Lincoln high gchool Tuesday following a hearing that lasted all morning and at which eacfy of the boys admitted that they had violated the state law. and regulations of the school by joining secret organiza tions or fraternities. The organiza tions of which it is alleged the youths are members are the T. F. A. and Kappa Alpha Phi. With one exception all of the boys said that they were influenced to join the societies by .former high school members of the bodies. This is the first action of what the school board members say is a determined effort to stamp but secret organiza tions in the high school. The boys who were suspended from school are: Harold Schultz, Thomas Decker, Raymond Mattison, Philip Somerladd, Robert Gardner, Clyde Hardin and Ward Lichpcn stcger. Governor Holcomb Again Refuses Women Special Session Call Hartford, Conn., May; 11. Gov. Marcus Holcomb, replying to the request made by the "flying squad ron" of suffragists representing fie 48 states, again has declined to call a special session of the Connecticut' legislature to act on the woman suf frage amendment. His decision was given in a letter tp Miss Katherine Ludington, president of the Connec ticut Woman's Suffrage association. Foar times previously the gover nor has refused to summon the leg islature to consider the federal suf frage amendment, one occasion be ing after the republican state con vention had passed a resolution call ing on Governor Holcomb, a repub lican, to take action so that Connec ticut might be the 36th state to rati fy the federal amendment. Man Who Killed Wife And Two Sons Escape Webster City. fa.. May 11. (Spe cial.) Harley Beasley. who killed his wife and two small sons yester day, is still at large. All trace of him has been lost about two miles east of Iowa Falls. The county offers a reward of $3,500 for his capture and to this the state has added $300. The man car ries an automatic revolver and many doubt whether he will be taken alive. The murder here was the fourth charged against him "and relatives. Peace Treaty Presented To Turkish Delegation TarisMay 11. The peace treaty for Turkey, prepared by the peace conference, was presented to the Turkish delegation at 4 Tuesdav afternoon in the cloakroom at the ioreign office. The ceremony was the simplest and most speedily concluded of all the several formalities of the sort t rat have taken place since the peace conference began. The entire pro ceedings 'lasted but four minute' Resolution to Be Given fEx- elusive Right of Way Over Other Business With No In dications of Long Debate. Washington, May 11. Opposition fire was., opened today in the sen ate on the reports of the peace res olution Senator McCumber of North Dakota, republican, a member of the torcign relations committee, deliver ing the first salvo. . Senator Hitchcock f Nebraska, the admin istration spokesman, will follow to morrow. " . ( Adoption of the resolution prob ably next Thursday' or. Friday was predicted privately by leaders on both sides. It will be given ex clusive right of wav beginning to morrow and there were no indica tions of a prolonged debate. When Senator Lodge of Mas sachusetts, republican leader, called up the resolution today and an nounced that it would be pressed continually. Senator, Underwood of Alabama, -democratic leader, stated that while most of the democrats would 'resist" the resolution, there would be no obstruction nor many speeches. Senator McCumber opposed both senate and house resolutions. Both, he declared, would bring dishonor upon the United tates by a desertion of the allies. As a substitute, he urged his resolution to restore com mercial relations with Germany, but conceded that it had no chance of adoption because he said the "lines of division between the two fac tions of this body have been ce mented by partisanship and hard ened by time." -.' President Wilson was criticised by Senator McCumber, mho charg ed the executive with chief responsi bility for failure of the treaty of Versailles. He declared the '. president was making. a "collosal blunder" in car rying the treaty into the political campaign. Wives Vary in Style Of Reception Plans United States Marshal For Nebraska District Whose Career Is Closed For Their Joint Hubby Three Members of Family Salina, Kan., May 11. Stella Hy mai, 29 years old, a resident of Lin coln Center, near here, is under arT rest charged with murder, and, ac cording to the county prosecutor, has signed a confession admitting that she administered fly poison to her sister, Mrs. Lizzie Bunch, her brother-jn-law, . Ed Bunch, and her neice, Nancy Bunch, which caused the death of all three. Wilson Signs Measure To Deport Alien Enemies Washington, May 11. President Wilson today signed a bill amend ing the deportation law so as to make possible the deportation of Germans and other aliens who Jvere interned during the war as enemy aliens. The Weather Forecast. Showers and cooler Wednesday. -Hourly Temperatures. .1 a. m . . . in . . 7 . m.. II a. m . . A a. m . . II a. m . . V no nova . 4 I . m. " : 2 . III. S ' X p. m. 1 I I p. m. ' S . ni. w ' i. m 71 I 7 i. ni 72 p. 01. Mil 51 Leslie Walters, 25 years old, al leged bigamist, who is being sought by police" at the behest of wife No. 2 and her sister, will find two warm receptions awaiting him in case of his apprehension. Wife No. 1,'Mrs. Elsie Sterling Walters, Park hotel, said yesterday she would welcome him back and stand by him. Mrs. Idell Henslev Walters, 16 years old. who married him last Friday in Council Bluffs promised that she would make things fairly hot for him, if he came back, and do her best to land him in the penitentiary. Mrs. Charles Cucick, sister of wiffi No. 2, may have a hand in the re ception, as she told police he had taken a diamond ring from her valued at $700. Both wives were chums in school and wite No. 1 in troduced her husband to wife No. 2 at the Henshaw hotel six months ago. Bail of IVlan Held for Bomb Outrages Is Increased Washington. May 11. At the re quest of the Department of Justice the Labor department increased from $1,000 to $1,500 the amount of the trill of Robert Elia, an alien. arrested at New York in connection with the bomb outrages on June 2 last, when the home of Attorney Oeneral .Palmer here was bombed. Elia was arrested on a deporta tion warrant with Andrae Salsedo, airltalian, who.Avhile in the custody of Department of Justice agents, killed himself May 4. by jumping from a window. Company Had Advance " Information, Head Says New York, 'May 11. More than two weeks before the shipping board officially designated the Mercantile Marine company as 'the agents for the giant liner Leviathan, that com pany was 'assured" it would be so designated, P. A. S. Franklin, presi dent of the company, testified before the congressional committe inquir ing, into the matter of the recon ditioning ot the steamsnip at a re ported cost of $8,000,000. Census Shows Gain In Four More Towns of United States Washington, May 11. Patterson, N. 135,866; increase, 10,266, or 8.2 per cent. Ottawa. Kan.. ,018; increase, 1,368, or 17.9 per cent. Hackensack, N. J 17,66"; in crease. 3,617, or 25.7 per cent. Marlborough, Mass., 15,017; in crease, 438. or 3.0 per cent. Knickerbocker Hotel to Become Office Building New York. May 11. The Hofi Knickerbocker at Broadway una Forty-second street soon will he converted into an office building, it was announced today. The value of the building and its contents ha; been estimated t 4,000,000, Li ofc a LEADER IN POLITICS; HAD HOSTS OF FRIENDS . ' . KCareer Self-Made One and Successful Almost Entlrf Life Spent in Omaha Was Former City Clerk. Z Thomas J. .Flynn, 50 years olfj United Mates marshal tor Mcbraski Thomas J. Flynn. 300 DELEGATES AM L D. MEET . IN HASTINGS i ' Merger With Detroit Route Is Expected to Be Sane tioned Many Miles of Road Paved. Hastings, Neb., My 11. (Special Telegram.) More than 300 dele gates are attending the Omaha-Lincoln-Denver - Highway association convention here, which is expected to approve the merger with a direct route from Detroit, under the name of D.-L.-O. highway. Holdredge brought a band, Milford a jazz quartet and Lincoln a company of cabaret entertainers. The 0.-L.-D. now has 100 miles of paving. President Proper o Lincoln reports, and many districts are projected. "Omaha and Doug las county will pave to the county line," he said., "Ashland Will add TOM FLY MM DIES AFTER LONG ILLNESS i , . " ! ' United States Marshal Suc cumbs at Home to Heart Disv ease Survived by Wifa And Two Sons. 3 died shortly before 6 o'clock las night at his home. 2328 South FiM teenth street, after an illness of, sey-4 eral months. Death was caused byf heart disease. He was born H Taunton, Mass., May 8. 1870, and' came to Omaha with his parents Mr. dhd Mrs. Con Flynn, when j child 2 years of age. He attended the public school and high school of Omaha and latetf spent two years at Creighton cpU lege. In September. 1900. he maM ried Miss Agnes O'Connell of WeM ton, la., to whom two children John, age 19 years., and William age U years, were born. i Member City Council - ; j- In W96..' he was elected to th Omaha city council, and served fouS months when he was legislated out! of office by a new charter. In 189 he was elected to- the Nebraska leg islature and was later appointed dep uty sheriff, serving in that capacity from 1900 to 1904. He was alst citv clerk. I During the campaign of .forme Mayor Dahlman ior citv commis sioner and mayor in 1912 and 1915 he acted as campaign manager, and was an ardent supporter in thj Dahlman campaign for governor in' 1910. - Named U. S. Marshal. Tom Flynn was appointed UniteJ States marshal by. President WiU . son and in this office his efficiency; has been a feature of the adminis tration of his duties, according tqj those associated with him. In his many years of political lif in Omaha and Nebraska. Tom Flynn has made many friends botU ;n his own and the opposite politic more mileage to their paved road. I' nredict Sarnv rnnntv will nnn have several - miles of good gravel Ral party, and was considered om roads, riavelock has let a contract for two more miles of brick road, same kind of roads. Exeter is Milford one and a half miles of the forming a paving district of over four miles and Fairmont is putting in over 20 miles of brick. Hastings, McCook, Minden and Holdrege are all going to join the brick brigade." Harry N. Barham of the Denver publicity bureau told the convention that tourists spent $20,000,000 in Colorado last year, more than the wealth produced by cither mining or agriculture; 75,000 tourists trav-' eled to Colorado over the O.-L.-D. last year and at least 100,000 are ex pected this year. At a banquet Tuesday night George Wolz of Fremont gave a history of the route and entertain ment was furnished by Lincoln and other delegates. The convention is one of the . most enthusiastic-yet held by the1 association. ' The con vention closes Wednesday. The program includes road-making dem onstrations. or the greatest politicians in th.9 state. '- ' n. Self-Made Man. : - The career of Tom Flynn ha been a self-made one, since his early , days when he followed the trade of a plumber, . having been associated! with the firm of Rose & Flynn, and as a plumber of Douglas county At the time of his death, he wa$ a member of the A. O. U. W., Wj O. W. and A. O. H. societies and the F. O. Eagles lodge of Omaha and was president of the Dahlinanl Club. He leaves to mourn him beside bis wife and family a multitude ot, friends and , acquaintances in NeV braka and surrounding states, whd will always speak of Tom Flynn a a friend to be relied Oh. Conviction in Criminal Assault Case Affirmed Dcs Moines, fa., May 11. (Spe cial.) The conviction of Ray O'Meara of Ida Grove of a charge of criminal assault was affirmed by the Iowa supreme court in an opin ion handed down today. . O'Meara and Ernest Rathbun were accused by Elsi Hargens, and were convicted following a sensa tional trial at Ida Grove. Rathbun was the first to.be tried. O'Meara 1ased his appeal on the grounds of insufficient evidence, and that -Rathbun's testimony should not . have been . admitted into O'Meara's trial because it was pre judicial. These grounds were not sustained by the high court. Polish-Ukrainian Pact Gives Poles Outlet to Sea Warsaw. May 11. (Bv the Asso cited Press.) The . military, eco nomic and political convention signed by Poland and Ukraima just before the opening of the drive to ward Kiev is understood to have pro vided tor a Polish outlet to the Black Sea. Such a southern outlet has been a Polish ambition, dating far back in the national history, just as was a seaport on the Baltic. Radicals Are Spreading Bolshevism In Japan's Army Honolulu, T. H., May 11. Radicals are' spreading boishjvism in Japanese army posts, and the gov ernment has arrested leaders in the movement at Takata, a Japanese city in the prefecture of N'iigata, accord ing to the Tokio correspondent of the Honolulu Pacific Commercial Advertiser. Further arrests are ex pscted, according to the dispatch. France Will Prosecute the Leaders In Rail Strike Paris, May 41. The French cabi-s net at a meeting toda instructed Minister of Justice L'HopitAu to open proceedings against the general federation of labor, with a view to the dissolution of the organization which has been supporting the strike of the French railwaymcn by calling other strikes. ould make the pric, 1 buildings" badlyj Saratoga, Walnufr tntral, Sherman. f 'Z Unfavorable Market . WiH Delay Sale of Omaha School BoncU An unfavorable bond market anJ mounting prices of building mate . rials, have caused the indefinite postponement of the $5,000,00( school building prograra in Omaha members of the Board of Educatiori say. An effort may be made nexf fall to sell enough of the authorized bonds to build the High School of Commerce, but that probably will b the extent of the program for thij year, members say. - - j A new structure for the ComV merce High school is urgently needed the board holds. The orig1 inal cost was to be $2,000,000, buf none wouio. venture to say what th$ specifications would make the pric, iouay. Other school needed are in Hill, Benson. Cer videre and Minne Lusa districts Sugar Jumps to-28 Cents : Pound in New Orleans New Origins, May 11. ConsuthV t-rs in New Orleans, the heart ol the American sugar cane growing region, began paying 28 cents a, pound for granulated sugar. Dealer put the new prices into effect on tha authority of the federal fair prica committee, which gave wholesaler and retailers permission to increase their profits on each pound to and ZYi cents, respectively. U. S. Envoy to Japan Plans' To Resign, Says Newspaper Honolulu, T. H., May 11. (By tha. Associated Press.) According to the Tokio correspondent of the Honolulu Advertiser, it is reported that Roland S. Morris. United State ambassador to Japan, intends resign mg m the near future, to participate in the presidential elections in th United States. Senate Reports Request to Send Warships to Batum Washington. M.iv 11 A re,-.1irf tion requesting President Wilson t .-cmj an .American warship and ma rnies to Rahtm. on the Black Sea to protect American lives aiH erty at that port and along the raiU road to Baku, was reported unani moiisly today bv the senate foreigrf. masons committee. .