9 . -vaiT'fc" The Omaha OMAHA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER. 23, 1920. VOL. 50 NO. 162 Bv Mall it ywfi. laiiot 4th Zoaa Dally ana Sunday. $: Otlly Only. fl: Saae'ay, M Outlive 4th Zona tl yur4 Dully tad Suaeay. ioj Dally Only. 112: Sunday Only. II THREE CENTS Eatani Saeoiti-Clau Matter Nay 11, ISOS. at Oath P. 0. UaaV Act el Mirth 3, I ITS. Daily Bee X oman in Hamon Case Surrenders Clara Barton Smith, Sought in Connection With Death of Oklahoma Man, Gives Up to Sheriff. Glad to See Officers Br Tk Aaaoclated Yrtt. ,'Juarer, M., Dec. 22. Clara Bar ton Smith, wanted in Ardmore, Okl., in connection with the death of Jake L.! Hamon, Oklahoma millionaire, arrived here-at 6:45 tonight, and im mediately . was taken into custody by Sheriff Buck Garrett i of Ard more, who had arrived on the bor der an hour before. After Miss Smith stepped off the train, vwhich came from Chihuahua City, she rushed to Sheriff Garrett, hook hands with him cordially, and exclaimed: VMr. Garrett, I am so glad to see you." The- sheriff then conducted Miss Smith to a waiting automobile and UK party of peace otttcers ana at torneys drove off in the direction of the home of James L. Smith, the woman's father. Escorted by Party. ; Besides Sheriff Garrett. Sheriff SetB. Orndorff of El Paso, Charles Coakley, attorney of Ardmore; W. P. McLean, jr., attorney of Fort Worth, Tex., Oscar Harper, Ameri can vice consul here, "and Ben F. Harrison. Miss Smith's uncle, ac companied her back to the' Ameri can side of the border. ; Whin the party headed by Sher I Garrett reached El Paso they were met at the station by a corps of newspaper. " men. Both , the sheriff and the lawyers refused to give out a statement at the time and speed ily entered a service car and drove away. The newspaper men took an other machine ands a lively pursuit began, lasting more than an hour and ending at the passenger station in Juarez, i Ends Long Search. Surrender of Miss. Smith ends a nation-wide search for the woman, which began November 22. when the prosecuting attorney at Aromore ou tained warrants for her, charging her with the shooting of Hamon and with a atatutory offense. - Hamon was shot. in his hotel at Ardmore on Sunday, November He walked to the hospital, where he said that a gun he had been cleaning was accidentally dicharged. He died November .26. " :, , , : , .-affile search for Mjm omitti iea tnTough the (OklahQjn and-Texas oil nelda tfia into yiexico. at. vari ous times she hadbeen .reported at Cisco, Tex., El Paso, and in Juarez, Mexico, going from the border town to Chihuahua Citf, f rom which place are arrived, toTiight. BnieFirm Of New York Fails Foster and" Lounsherry Sus pends Operation After 20 Year of Business. ' New York, Jc. 22. Failure of the brokerage firm of Foster & Lotinsb,ery was announced from the rostrum of the f Stock exchange shortly after the opening today. The firm consists of J.- Hegeman Fnstsr. -floor member: S. Durell Lounsbery and . W. . Fraser Gibson. It has done business on the . ex-1 rhanffe for nearly 20 vears. Foster & Lounsbery are under stood to have been active traders in Vanadium, Steel, which was one of the stocks that led in reent heavy reactions on the market. iThe failure, which was unexpect ed in financial circles, was regarded as the most important recently. - rr- Architects Favtjr.Bill to Establish Stale License Body Omaha architects voted Tuesday ?ht. to favor the presentation ot a y the Nebraska chapter ot tne American Institute ot Architects at the next meeting of the legislature, prpviding for the establishment of a registration board to pass on all those who wish to take an examina tion fof a license. H. W.; Meginnis of Lincoln was nominated for president; Charles W. Steinbatlgh for vice president; J. D. Sandham, secretary; George B. Prinz and, F. A. Hefininger, executive committee. Eletion will be held January 18. Attorney of San Francisco Dies In San Matdo Hospital San Francisco, Dec. 22. Henry P. Bowie, California pioneer, retired at torney and wealthy land owner in Hillsborough, south of San Fran cisco, died last night at the San Ma teo Red Cross hospital after a short illness. : . Mr. Bowie had an( extensive knowledge of the Japanese and Chi nese languages and was' appointed a special emissary to Japan in 1918 on a Department of State mission. He was decorated with the order of the Rising Sun. Lloyd George Says All Nations Must Join League London, Dec. 22. David Lloyd George, the prime minister, presid iitg at a luncheon given today in the House of Commons tor the British' and Dominion delegates to the recent league of nations assem bly in Geneva, declared the league would never achieve real progress mm all the nations were repre- ii Kr I.lovd Georee said he looked forward hopefully - to the United - State coming fnto the league. This, he asserted, was essential Coal Operator Tells About Purchases by Government War Department Bought 150,000 Tons at $11.50, While Many Firms Were Selling on Contracts -For $3.20 to $3.70, Witness Tells 'Senate ' , Investigating. Br aha Aaaoclatod Preaa. Washington, Dec. 22. How the National Coal association, an organ ization of coal operators, dealt with the government and coped with the fuel shortage last summer, were fields in which a senate investigat ing committee today spent 10 hours. J. D. A. Morrow, a vice president of the organization, told how the association drafted orders for the Interstate Commerce commission to issue on transportation matters, paid the expenses of the United States geological survey in collect ing official figures on coal produc tion, kept Joseph P. Tumulty, secre tary to President Wilson, informed of all steps, and successfully fought proposals (to re-establish a fuel ad ministration although coal, prices continued to mount. D. W. Wentz, the association's president, testified to purchasing for the War depart ment at the height of the shortage, of 150,000 tons of coal, for which the government paid $11.50 a ton, while another corporation which he con trolled, was mining and selling con tract coal for $3.20 and $3.87 a ton. The examination of the two of ficials was enlivened from time to time as senators produced corre spondence taken from the organiza tion's files during an unannounced search of its offices in Washington last Saturday and Sunday and ques tioned sharply the purpose and pub lic interest of the steps taken by the association and government agen cies alike. Opposed Purchase. Mr. Wentz declared that his pur chase of coal for the War depart ment had been made over protest and agreed to a suggestion of Sen ator Calder, republican of New York, that "it was bad business for the government and increased the difficulty for the public." "A representative of the War de partment came to me and said the department had ordered all its coal for the winter bought during Sep tember," Mr. Wentz said. "I said that the department should buy a little then, a little later oh'nd not co into the market for the full t amount because it could all be ob tained later for much less, money, but I was informed that the order Badger Game of Omahans Fails Testimony in Fremont Trial Shows- Fraud, Judge Rules, And Deed to Land Is Taken From Lawyer. Fremont, Neb., Dec. 22. (Special Telegram) Judge Frederick Button m Dodge county district coun set aside the title of 40 acres of landlforce SCoured the city in automo-, deeded , by Joseph L. Milhgan of Scribner to Thomas, L. Curran of Omaha and ordered it returned to the original jowiter. The court ruled that Milligan' at the time of the transfer was mentally incompetent and that he was,th victim of a fraud scheme between Curran and Jack and Zelma Short, also of Oma ha. ' The case was one of the most sentational ever heard in Dodge county equity court. The testimony offered tended to show that Milli- , gan transferred . . n t I W acres, oi lanu worth about $2,000, to Curran, who was acting as attorney tor jacit Short Milligan went to Omaha on prolonged sprees, testimony showed, and it was alleged that while on one of his debauches he met vZelma Short, alleged wife of Jack Short, declared by Oniaha detectives to be a disreputable character. The allegations charge that Milli gan was drawn into intimate rela tions with, this woman and later Jack Short, claiming to, be her hus band, threatened him with suit for aleniation of affections. Unable to act or think for himself because of his weakened condition and fright ened by the thought of ' public dis grace, Milligan transferred the prop prtv to Short as damages. Milligan dissapyeared and has not been loj iaieu. , . When Curran attempted td take charge of the property Ogfen Mil ligan, brother, intervened and asked the court to adjudge the tW of Cur ran 'null and void. Texans Protest Land Sale To Subjects of Japan Brownsville, Tex., Dec. 21. fol lowing the announcement of the sale of about 28 acres of land near Har lingen, Cameron county, to Japanese for a consideration of about $75,000, a mass meeting was held m Browns ville last night, at which the sub ject of excluding Japanese coloniza tion from the lower Rio Grande truck raising sections was discussed. The meeting adopted resolutions en dorsing a bill which is planned to be introduced in the next session of the legislature to prevent Japanese colo nization in this section. ' ' ' - Christmas Burglar Honors Girl's Request Not to Take Presents Chicago, Dec! 22. RuthMailey, 10, had a story to tell heifcchool m2tes today about, the "Christmas burglar" she found at home yester day. Her mother had gone down town , shopping. Ruth . decided he was a "nice burglar," for she begged liira not to take her Christmas pres ents, which her mother had placed in a. closet, and he never touched them. He played the piano for her cnieruunmcni lor a iinic ana ten without taking anything; Committee. was to buy immediately. The story I got was that the secretary of war felt the step necessary. Mr. Wentz said he received com missions amounting to $75,000 on the purchases. Senator Calder, pro ducing a sheet of figures, said that "millions of tons" had been obtained for fie army by other buyers during September and October, at prices ranging from $6.90 to $16. Another report from the shipping board, say ing that bunker, coal at Hampton Roads during the summer and fall had cost the shipping board $16.50 a ton, in quantities, Mr. Morrow j treated by saying that it "was as in excusable an example of government inefficiency as ever I saw." Kenyon Reads Resolution. Chiefl the examination touched the actions relative to coal shortage taken by the government agencies, presumably in the interest of con sumers at large. Senator Kenyon, republican of Iowa, armed with minutes of the association's execu tive committee meetings, read a reso lution which authorized the "draft ing of an Interstate Commerce com mission order to make mines immune from damages", for failing to fulfill contracts to furnish coal. "You did draft that order?" Sen ator Kenyon asked Mr. Morrow. "We did, and the commission issued it, with some changes," the witness tola him. "And its general effect was to free mines from their liability to furnish coal they had contracted to deliver?" Senator Kenyon continued. "Only insofar as the release was in the public interest and necessary to get supplies to keep people in the northwest and new Englard from freezing this winter," Mr. Morrow returned. He added that the con tract breaking allowed the coal to move to the Great Lakes during the summer. Senator Kenyon developed that the association had agreed to "go ino the courts and defend the order" in case any operators brought injunction proceedings against it, that a number of the association members dissented from the policy and that a "Colorado local associa tion withdrew as a body because of it." Marksmen Scour New York in Hunt For Bandit Gangs Sharpshooters Armed , With Rifles Roam Streets in At tempt to StopAlarm 1 ing Crime Wave. New York, Dec. 22. Armed with repeating rifles, 20 picked sharp shooters of the New York police biles last night in a hunt for bandits. They were tinder orders' to shcot every suspect who attempted to es cape them. ' . , i Other drastic measures to curb New York's crime wave which swept into nearby New Jersey towns1 were launched by police of ficials and judges. Removal of Police Commissioner Enright was proposed in a resolu tion introduced, at a meeting of the was tabled, however, similar ac tion .was taken on a resolution to appoint a committee to investigate the police department and report to Gov. Elect Miller. An increase in the police force of 769 nva was ;thorized by the board , of , estimates. board of aldermen; The resolution Speedy justice was meted out to two robbers captured this morning when a ( band of four attempted to rob the First National bank of Milltown, . N. J. Within 12 hours after their capture by a posse, they were under sentence of from four years and eight months to seven years in prison. ' War Department Deficiency Estimated at $76,278,127 Washington, Dec. 22. Deficiency estimates aggregating $76,278,127 will be submitted by the War de partment for the present fiscal year, Secretary Baker announced. The figures were made public, he said, in reply to statements that the 'de partment deficiency would amount to as much as $150,000,000. Of the amount, to be asked, $42, 573,000 represents pay, subsistence and similar expenses for the army of 175,000 men, which congress appro priated for, Mr. Baker said, as cur rent appropriations were that much short on that basis. The remaining $34,000,000 deficiency was due to re cruiting to a strength ot more than 175,000 men, he added. New York City Threatened With Another Harbor Strike New York, Dec. 22. New York may experience another harbor strike if a dispute between employers and boat owners is not adjusted be fore January 1. This prediction was made by Cap. William A. . Maher, head of the United Association of Masters, Mates and Pilots, in a plea before city officials for adjustment of hour and wage scales on city owned ves sels. ' , Candy Man Fined $10 for Frank Tirro, proprietor of the Omaha Candy kitchen, Sixteenth uid Cass streets, was fined $10 by Police Judge Foster in Central polke court yesterday for failing to- properly mark the- weight on boxes of candy sold in his store. Tirro was arrested on complaint of Thomas Zacek, state lood intpector, ( Farmif i By House Measure Imposing High Emer gency Tariff on Score of Ag ricultural Products Car ries by 196 to 86. aaaaaaaaaaaanaaaaat V Fate in Senate Uncertain By ARTHUR SEARS HENNING. Cblcugo Tribune-Omaha Bee Lrmeed Hire. Washington, Dec. 22. By a vote of 196 yeas and 86 nays, the house tonight passed the farmers relief bill imposing a high emergency tariff on a score of agricultural products, the decline in the price of , which is attributed in part by the farmers to competition with, importations. The measure now goes to the sen ate where its fate is uncertain. It will be taken up by the senate fi nance Committee after the holidays, but the prolonged discussion made possible - for senate rules may com pass failure of passage. Supporting the bill in the house were 154 republicans, 41 democrats, and one prohibitionist. Opposing it, 72 democrats and 14 republicans. A considerable number of republicans from industrial sections severely criticized the measure as class legis lation which would increase the cost of living. Democrats from Texas! Louisi ana, Florida and other states whose products are furnished protection under the bill, joined with the repub licans from agricultural regions in its support. Their defection caused them to be subjected to severe crit icsm by Representative Henry T. Rainey of Illinois, ' Representative Garrett of Tennessee, and other democrats who fought the measure as in conflict with their party doc trines. No Change in Bill. ' The bill went through without change. In. the case of each of the commodities covered by the bill, amendments were offered either re ducing the duties to the level of the former Payne-Aldrich tariff law or striking out the section entirely. The items covered by the bill are wheat, wheat flour, corn, beans, peanuts, potatoes, onions, rice, lemons, peanut oil, cotton seed oil, cocoanut. oil, soy bean oil, cattle, sheep, fresh mutton and lamb, long staple cotton and its manufactures, and wool and its manufactures. The bill is designed to apply to a period of 10 months while the tariff law is being completely revised. Representative Fordney of . Mich igan, chairman of the ways and means committee, expressed the hope that at the beginning of the special session, either the Payne Aldrich tariff law 6t the Dingley law would be re-enacted as an emer gency measure for the protection of all classes of industry pending the passage of the revised bill. j ; Madden Opposes Bill. r Representative Madden of Illinois was one of the republicans speaking against the bill. He said that while it was claimed that the wool grow ers would benefit from th hill ih actual effect would be to increase j the value of wool i the hands of others than wool growers. He said it would double the price of clothing. Representative Fordney of Mich igan, chairman of the ways and meais committee, led the fight for the bill. "Information was brought to the committee that 90 per cent of the sheep on- the western ranges are mortgaged for $9 a head, which is more than they sell forin the pres ent market," said Mr. Fordney. "In formation was brought to the com mittee also that 90 per cent of .the cattle on the western ranges are mortgaged for more than they will sell for. "The farmer today is suffering be cause of lack of protection for his products resulting in an inability to obtain anything like the cost of pro duction. "There is no possibility of passing a bill including all the economies ad vocated by some. The committee has attempted to include the com modities most affected by the pres ent situation." ' House Committee Quits Hearing Until January 6 Washington, Dec. 22. After a brief hearing on tax revision, the house ways and means committee adjourned today until January 6, on which date it plans to turn its at tention to a general revision of the tariff. V While the committee does not contemplate further consideration of tax questions at' this session, Chairman Fordney said this did not mean that new tax laws would be drafted on the basis of information gathered thus far. He" explained that the committee felt it should start on tariff revision immediately after the holidays and 'devote itself to that task until it was completed. Stale Department to Probe Charges Made at Hearing V ashington. Dec. 22. Charges made by Mrs. Annot E. Rob inson of Manchester, England, that American Consul Wells, at (Manchester, had attempted to pre vent her trom coming to this, coun try to testify before the commis sion of the committee of'one hun dred investigating conditions in Ire land are to be investigated by the State department Consul, General Skinner, at Lon don, has been asked for a full re port of the circumstances surround ing the vise of Mrs. Robinson's pass port. ' Noted Pianist Dies. Boston, Dee. 22. Mrs. Annie N. Baldwin; a pianis who had been associated with many musical eel lebrities, died here today. She was a sister of the late Lillian Nordica, and was her accompanist on many ..concert toursj , 16 Persons Are Killed in Fresh Riots in Ireland Many Persons Wounded in Clashes Between , Civilians And Soldiers Between Cal- ; lan and Glenbower. -,' By Th Aaaoclated- Preas. Dublin, Dec. 22. Heavy fighting has taken " place bet weed , .large forces of civilians on one side and soldiers and police on the other, in the section lying between Callan, county Kilkenny, and Glenbower, county Tipperary. The military and police were ambushed at not less' than three different places 3'estetvday and numerous casualties resulted on both sides. These included Sergeant Walsh, R. I. C, killed, some soldiers, number unknown, killed, 10 or 15 civilians killed and Sergeant Shan non and several soldiers wounded. About 30 civilians were wounded or captured. The inhabitants of the countryside are in a state of terror and manv are fleeing from their homes,;- j Air Station Officers Give Up Hope for Meri , In Missing Balloon Rockaway. N. Y.. Dec. 22. For the first time since the disappear ance of the naval balloon A-5598 nine days ago, officers at the Rock- away naval air station here reluc tantly expressed the' opinion' thaf the three occupants of the missing craft are dead m the wilds of the Adirondack mountains. Officers at the station pointed out that in the event the occupants of the balloon landed uninjured in the thickly wooded sections of the Ad- lrondrcks, there was a strong prob ability they succumbed to the bitter, weather of the past - few days, m view 'of the fact that the . balloon was poorly provisioned with -food. The airplane hunt for the miss ing craft, with Glens Falls as the base of operations, will "proceed, it was announced.1 . Man Held in Winnipeg, for . Passing Bad, Checks in Iowa - Winnipeg, Man.;. Dec 22. Jos'eph Gadbury , who ' arrived here yester day by airplane from Minneapolis, was arrested on. a charge of pass ing worthless checks for- $1,300. at Britt, Iai The airplane in which he crossed the international bound ary also is being, held. , '. Prisoner "Draws" Charge of Burglary . And Pleads Guilty New York,, Dec. 22. Assistant District Attorney Sullivan, in gen eral sessions court, held five slips of paper in his hand five charges against Lawrence ' Hawthorne, . 22, held under $100,000 bail for his part in the Hotel Astor holdup last week Beside him sat the prisoner, waiting to plead f) them. " i "I'll draw one 'card' and plead guilty to the indictment on , it," Hawthorne said. "Which oner asked the assistant district attorney. , ' . He held the slips : a he would. a poker hand. ' The indictments ranged from assault to burglary in the first degree, punishable by ''not less than 10 years in state prison." "Any one will do." Hawthorne drew at random. He picked "burglary in the first degree," the severest of the lot. "Guilty to the charge, your honor," he said.- ... He will be sentenced Christmas .ve, . ' v The World's Greatest Boss" tCotVrtfM: IWfl: Br ThCbkfTrflaMF International SwindlcBarei! Sioux Chy Janitor' Confesses To Obtaining Money by Use of Mails. Sioux City, la., Dec. 22. An in ternational swindle, police . and fed eral-authorities believe, has been un earthed in the arrest here of Harry P. Saunders, 42,' janitor at a Sioux City college,' on a charge of using the emails to defraud. His alleged scheme was to get money from Eng lish 'estates. Authorities say Saund ers may have secured from $500 to $500,000. .. ' , Saunders has made : a compleU confession, according to. postal In spector J. A. Szarkowski and Chief of Police Earl Morgan.- He is in the county jail pending ' a hearing before a United States commissioner. Where large estates were left, Saunders would write a letter to the dead persons. M6rgan said Saunders confessed. This letter was supposed to have been in .answer to one re ceived a year or two previous from the dead person, while alive: Saund ers' letters would contain informa tion supposed to have been asked regardieng some debt of from. 5 to 50 owed by the dead party. If is admitted by Saunders, ac cording 6 Morgan, that he had been in correspondence with 56 estates since" coming to Sioux City, three months 'ago. His records also show he wrote 45 others while, at Plankintoh. S. D., Morgan stated. From many of these Saunders re ceived ' from 5 to 50, Morgan' says the records show. Four Charged With Death of Teach King' Dismissed by Judge Macon, Ga., Dec. . 22. The four defendants, charged with the mur der by poisoning of Fred D. Shep pard wealthy Georgia peach grower, last 'June, we're discharged by Judge H. A. Mathews,; before whom they had' been arraigned at a preliminary heating. .:; . i The, defendants were Sheppard's widow,', now Mrs. .Pauline Elmer; her soiy Ernest Hopson; her sister, Mrs. ...lona Henry, and Mrs. Annie Cutts. of -Fitzgerald..,: The state had charged T.they hadipoisoned Shep pard in a plot to obtai possession of' his money. ' . . Judge Matthews held that even if Sheppard had .been poisoned, the state had not -presented evidence sufficient to connect the defendants with thedeed.'-Testimony of medi cal experts;-: he said,1 had been con flicting. , V.'.V; . ' Teamsters and Laborers Have ray t,ut at loriOlK N'ortolR, Neb., Dec. 22. ( Special.) Laborers-employed by the . street department have 'had , their wages reduced from 60 cents?,to 40 cents an hour. jThe wages ' of" teamsters dropped to $7 a day. Dry Agent Dismissed East St. Louis, 111., Dec. 22. S. Glen Young,, prohibition enforce ment 'officer here, charged with mur der and a statutory offense, has been suspended indefinitely, it was announced here . today. Young is under indictment in connection with the fatal shooting of Ltika Vuko virh, at Madison, III., November .6. when a raid was made on the Vukovich home in search of illicit liquor. . ; . Several weeks ago a warrant was issued against Young, charging him with having attacked Miss EmiKc Bombardier October 23, while raid ing the Bombardier home at Staun ton. He denied he attacked the airl IHl."""' Trains Delayed And Wires Down In Storm's Wake Cold Snap, Which Arrived in Omaha Tuesday Night, to Continue Today, With Fair Weather.' Real winter descended upon snow covered Omaha Tuesday night start ing a drop m the mercury whicn continued steadily until 6 p. myes terday, when the thermometer regis1 tered only 4 above zero, the coldest of the season. After this the weather rising. The forecast yesterday, how ever, called for fair and continued cold last night and Thursday.'' During the few. hours of near zero weather Omaha experienced broken train schedules, frozen water pipes; poor wire service and' the air tnfiil planes ran from one to six hours behind scheduled time. ' All Trains Late. Yesterday all trains were running trom one to tour hours late. Bur hngton - trains came into Omaha from anTiour to two hours behind and Union Pacific trains were run ning anywhere from one to two hours late. The Rock Island train from Den ver was reported from three to four hours late. The Northwestern train from Chadron, Neb., was reported font hours late. For a time Northwestern wires east of Council Bluffs were down in the morning and no report of trains running east of there could be received. About noon the wires were again in operation. The air mail planes made, their regular trips. .! k Either rain or snow has been fall-, ing throughout the; Mississippi and Missouri river valleys.from Canada to the Gulf of. Mexico. 'it was report ed at 'the weather bureau yesterday. The snow and rain and falling temperatures . were .traveling east ward and were expected to hit east ern Iowa-some' j; time last night or this morning.. ' v 10 Below at Valentine. -The mercury at 10 yesterday morning at Valentine. Neb., hit the 10-below zero mark, the coldest spot in any of the states, it was reported. Other 7 o'clock readings wired to the Omaha office follows: North Platte, Neb.. Pierrf, ,S. D. ." , Rapid City, 8 V. . . Huron. S D Shfrldan, Wyo..,. Cheyenne, Wyo...., TcnVer. Colo Dea; Molnee.. la Kttnttua City, Alo... SI. Paul. Minns.... Chicago- 5 below . 6 below 6 below 2 below 4 above below . .Zero . .18 above 18 a bove ..20 above . .40 above ' " ' Denver Wires Down. Denver. Colo., Dec. 22. Storms east of Denver and the exolosion ot a freight engine south of here this .in.., mug v-ui nil iiiy oil iruiu Wire rrmimimiratinn fnr a tim ,-i.In, ,,-itS ! all parts of the country except to the. west. All -trains due here from the east are late. Railroad officials I would not attempt to predict when (Turn to Pa.fe Two. Column Flve.l The Weather - Forecast'. 'Thursday: Fair" and continued cold: t HOrKLT TEMPF.RATt'RF.S. II a. 6 a.- 7 . ' a, a. Ill a. 11 a- m. . . . m.... m. . . . m . . . . m . . . . rh.... m. .... ....? I '.'.'.'.(, ....6 ...5 ....4-..-..6 ....( .... I. 13 noon Tentpmtnrea at 7 r, M, Station Temp. ' At 7 p. m. rhivonn 12 North Flatta .... 5 Pavennort 15 '.Pueblo Js Denver 13 Salt Lake j.it Ilea Molnea 14 SmiI Fo IS Doi1 City 14 ShrrUtan I Lander -4 Valentine -4 Shipper' Bulletin. Protect ahliimenl during h next 34 to 16 houra from lemperaturee at followa: North, 6 dttreea below; eaat and south, iero; weat. 10 ilutiaea below,- Jury Holds Ex-Omahan For Murder Son-in-Law Shoots to Death Mayor of Seward Wounds Wife andjMother-in-Law And Attempts Suicide. Divorce Suit Is Cause Seward. Neb.. Dec. .22. (Special.) Patrick McFarland. alias Arthui Andrews, formerly of Omaha, wa ordered held on charges of ui:rde; in connection with the fatal thoot ing of his father-in-law, George A. Merriam, mayor of Seward, last night by a coroner's jury, which re turned a verdict at midnight. The mayor was shot and killed about 8 while on the way to th opera house to see his son, Fay, in a home talent play of the American Legion. . He was accompanied by his 'wife and daughter, Mrs. lessi McFarland, and her 3-year o!d son. -George. ' McFarland met them in the riiddU of the street in front of the high . school and a short distance from their home. . Opens Fire. He opened fire ou his father-in-law, who fell to the ground with three bullet wounds, one in the head, the neck and the breast. Mrs. Merriam, her daughter and g.-andson screamed and began to run across the street. McFarlani emp tied the remaining chambers ot his revolver at thein and ran t.i his home, where he slashed hi throa' with a razor. ; " The women reached the home of Wilkinj Boals and were given ref uge there. Police , and, the sheriff were summoned. Mrs. Merriam was found suffering from wounds m the hands and side. , Wounded in Breast Mrs. McFarland was wounded in the breast.' She had been beaten over the head, apparently with the butt of the revolver. Both were re moved to the hospital where they Lwere reported resting well today. Mrs. Merriam will recover, physi cians say, but Mrs. McFarland's condition is considered still critical. Fear that his small son, George, was to be estranged 'from him for ever through divorce proceedings instituted a month' ago by his 'wife is said to have been the cause of McFarland's shooting. ' Through, all the shooting, the baby escaped injury. He was taken to the home of his uncle, Fay Mer riam.,' -: ' ' ""; " . "" Refuses to ,Talk. When v Sheriff Lee Richmond reached the McFarland home, he found the man sitting in a chair cov ered with blood. He nodded a greeting to the officer, and made another attempt to get his ' razor which his mother, who came to visit him from Colorado, but a few days ago, had hidden. He refused to talk, but when doc tors arrived, he pleaded with them to let him alone and not dress his wound. "I want to die," Chief of Police (Torn to Pae Two, Column Two.) . Rule Today on New Trial for Borwick Arguments Presented to, Court , In Case of Man Convicted Of Manslaughter. i Judge George W. Cullison may hand down his decision this morn ing in district court at Council Bluffs in the matter of a new trial for Ernest Borwick, convicted of manslaughter by a jury two weeks ago when tried for the ' death of Leo Holzfastcr. Yesterday ,W. E. Mitchell, attor ney for Borwick, made extended ar guments during; the forenoon before Jddge Cullison, citing errors on which he based his claim for an other hearing. He argued that several , matters were left by the judge in his instruc tions' to the jury, when they were established by uncontroverted ' evi dence and also urged that the court erred in failing to direct the jury as to the defendant's rights in de fending himself and the other oc cupants of the. car. lit made many other extended ! arguments on detailed points in the instructions ot.the court to the jury. Among these was-the claim that in structions on the law of retreat were inapplicable, since Borwick was unable to leave his seat in the car. ; He also argued that the fact that his client was tried immediately following the Barrett- case was preju "ia vaat. ! C E. Swansni. rmtntv nltrrnv spent tn atternoon in arguments ! against the new trial. Many Die In Petrograd London, Dec. 22. A serious labor riot occurred recently in Petrograd. says a Helsingfors dispatch to the Central News uuder yesterday's date, in which many persons were killed or injured. The riot was crushed and 105 laborers were exe cuted, the dispatch adds. The trou ble started when lie soviet authori ties refused the demand of the city laborers for more food and shorten ing of the working day, which is 16 hours. Man Hanged for Murder,, Lethbridge. Alberta, Dec. 22 Thomas Bassoff, .cohvicted of mur der, was hanged at the jail here at 6:04 a. m. He was, convicted of the murder of Corporal Usher of the Ca nadian mounted police and provin cial Nonstable Bailey in a gun fight between the police and Bassoff's ban dit Banff in Bellevue last Auguat V " at -1