VOL. 50 NO. 185. Democratic Office Jobs Efforts of Administration to Pack Departments With Men Of Own Selection Checked By the Senate. , -' Republi Control icans in (blvnco Trlbuno-Omalia lira I.rusrd Wire. Washington, Jan. 18. The senate abruptly checked effort of President Wilson, Secretary of War Baker and .Secretary of the Navy Daniels to pack the army and navy at the close of their administration with appoin tees of their own selection and thus fo fastft) tinnn :l niiv nrlll-titiictrutirm their own policies of conducting vicsc important ueparuuents or gov ernment. With the opening of the senate session at noon democrats launched an unexpected drive to force the re publicans to abandon their avowed pointuietit by President Wilson for the remainder of his terrn. After two hours of spirited debate rftid sharp parliamentary fencing, .the republicans were stilt in control of the situation and it had been.'vir- tmmtnntmtic urmilrl hp rntnirmpfi wittl the exception of about 5.000 minor officers, commissioned last summer under the army reorganization act ntzarion act. 1 .,' ' , , , Jhcse were regarded as mere tormal tDDointmcnts. Fletcher Starts 'Debate. s Discussion of the more vital issue cf major appointments began when Senator Fletcher of Horida, demo crat, called up his resolution asking the post master general to furnish to the senate, a list of the names of the war veterans r widows of men killed in the war, who have been nominated as postmasters or post mistresses. Senator Townsend of Michigan, republican, promptly moved to pigeon-hole the measure by referring it to the postoffice com mittee. The motion was carried by a strict partisan vote. Senator Robinson of Arkansas, democrat, nude several ineffectual attempts to force the senate into ex ecutive session to consider the nom inations sent to the senate by Presi dent Wilson at this session. The success of ft motion would have given the democrats a slight tactical advantage, so the republicans quickly voted it down. j Senator Underwood. the demo cratic leader, then proposed a unan imous consent agreeniclp to deal with army and :navy appointments. Hft.said he had no fault. to find with the republicans for taking advantage of thetr control to hold up all civil nominations but he . declared -u would be nothing short of "a enrrie to permit politics to intfere with the confirmation of military appoint ments. A large number of the mil itary appointments, he pointed out, were made by President Wilsoft un der his reces authority and unless the senate confirmed them now they would expire on March 4. Officers in sucb positions, he said, would ibe "forced into the street" and com pelled to "tear the epaulets from their shoulders," notwithstanding their achieyments in the world war. Senator ' Lodge, the ' republican leader, said he had fto disposition to hold up such appointments, bu he emphatically declared that under no circumstances would he permit the confirmation of apoomtmenis of bureau chiefs and other high oftt cials in the army and navy. , Lodge Looking Ahead. "Some of these appoinWnts will have to be considered very care fullv," he said, "especially those of chief importance. If I can prevent. I will not permit the bureaus of the War and Navy, departments to be packed with appointees of the present administration to hamper the next administration for the next four years." ' , ' r It was finally agreed to reter "original appointments," consisting largely of lieutenants and captains of the army, to the military affairs .mitto. tn he sifted, and assur- ancs were later given that these nominations other I I ments. Senator Norris of Nebraska, re- publican, tola tne senate a uis-1 aStrOUS Sliuaiioil wuuiu i.su'i the patent office unless the senate confirmed the commissioner ot pat- ems. x nere wouia nu ui sign patents after March 4, he said, 68 Passengers Burned to Death in Railroad "Wreck Copenhagen, Jan. 18. Sixty-eight passengers on a Russian railway train running from Luga,, on, the Gulf of Finland, to Noyogorod, southeast of Petrograd. were burned to death when a quantity of benzine ieing carried as freight exploded and wrecked the train, says a Hclsingfors dispatch to the ( 5" lingske Tidende today. The train caught fire from the flaming fluid. Holland Denies Kaiser and ; I Family Ordered to Leave The Hague, Jan. 18. The official correspondence bureau todav denied . . ... reports m circulation mat ine mem bers of the Hohenzollern family had been ordered to leave Holland be cause it was reported the allied diplomats here informed the DuKrh government that the Hohenzollenis were planning a counter-revolution in Germany. . n w a . a nn ' For Neff s Inauguration Austin, Tex.. Jan. 18. Me.xicoi's delegation to the inauguration of Pat M. Neff, as governor of Texas, ar rived in Austin today. The party is composed of 31 Mexican citizens, in cluding several of national repute. . Are Held Up would be confirmed, xne appoint- a Kenera. breakdown and a heart at-, ment of 11 major generals and sev- fcion ..... . . eral thousand other higher officuns p of the War department will have to1 Actjon 0f North Dakota wait, along wito practically an otner in all otner qepari- Eat.rt4 Omaha P. Fremont Man Robbed By Two Armed Banjdits j Fremont, Neb., Jan. 18. (Special Telegram. Arthur J. Lynch, fore man at the city light plant,' was held up and roboed by two masked men as he was 'returning hqnie frorh work about 10:30. The bandits eniplned his pockets of money and valuables amounting to over $75.- While riding his bicycle toward home in the south part of the city, he was halted near the railroad yards by a stranger who asked for a match. As he attempted to. pro ceed another bandit stepped from beside a building and shoved a gun against his stomach, ordering him to "come through." No trace of the two men was fotnyf. Five Youthful ' Bandits Hold Up U.S. Mail Truck Twelve Sacks, Including 10 Pouches of Registered Mat ter, Taken in Bold Daylight Rohbery in Chicago ' !. Five youthful rl,,pncrit Tan IS v ' JL" ' . . j . Inndils rt nn a ITnitdl States mail truck at the Union station here early today, escaping in an ( automobile with 12 sacks of mail. '10 of which contained registered mail. Police say that the pouches contained part of a federal reserve bank money ship ment destined for St. Paul. The bandits, surprised three postal .u- employes sull:l" juvi.t-o, forc;ng them at the point of guns HacK into tneir rrucK wuue ine uan dit car drew alongside and the 12 mail bags were transterrea to n. The robbers worked swiftly and the robbery was accomplished! in a few minutes. The regular mail was , composed solely of city collections, the police say. The registered mail bags were supposed to contain currency and bonds of a value not yet estimated. Robbers Work Fast. n.i. nf ttn. rir.ctal emoloves 'said that only a few minutes, after theyJ had arrived at the station wun mtir truck the bandit car dashed up. The police believe the robbery was an inside job and that the bandits had knowledge of the bank shipment. . Thomas Carter, Richard J. Sliney and Phillip Cahill. postal employes, said the five robbers, none of whom appeared to be more than 20, all wore-black masks and executed the robbery so quickly that the atten tion of a watchman and a railroad mail .foreman working nearby was not attracted until the . bandit car was. speeding away with the l pouches. ' " : V ' Wife of Millionaire Carpet Man Is Sought i VWxx Disappearance .. New York, Jan. 18.-A - general alarm was sent out last mghl for the apprehension of Mrs. EUa er cntsen of Mount Vernon, N. Y wne of Richard Bcreutscn. millionaire carpet man who mysteriously "ap peared from her home in Mount Vernon Sunday night. . ! t , Mrs. Bcrentscn had just returned from a sanitarium m Sttmtord, Conn., where she had been treated for nervous, troubles. She hid been confined there twice. , , ' Upon arriving home she inquired repeatedly for her two children, -5 and 11 years old, who are w!h rela tives in Cambridge. Mass Her Hus band assured her the children would i it-, a rlavnr two ailQ MfS. Berentsen retired at 9 o clock Sun-I day night. A halt. Hour laier husband discovered that, she was ..missing. . : . . "Little Grandmother" of Russian Revolution 111 Paris Jan. 18 Madame Cath erine Breshkovskaya, "the little grandmother of the Russian revolu tion," who came to Paris recently from Ruthenia, to attend the cor ference here of the remnant of the old Russian' duma. is seriously .ill m the Russian hospital at Boulogne near Paris. She was taken to the institution last week suffering from Rail Board to Be Probed ,'Qcliinrtr.n Tan 18Oll DPtition L the railroads operating in North laKOia, ine nuersiaie ivmmciu ituimiisiun ui uci c u vv..viaj : " vestigation into the failure of the state .railways commission 10 gram iiicicdso m iiaaotM6 . equal to those allowed by the fed- eral commission op interstate rates. Knowledge tff Mprse Code Saves Man From Death by Suffocation Philadelphia, Jan. 18. Locked for nearly six hours in i hermetically sealed concrete and steel vault in the city treasurer's office last night, a knowledge of the Morse telegraphy probably saved the life of Arthur Prnnt- iiclin' ritv treasurer. " it 'became known today. A mouse, also locked in, failed to survive, j Brenner entered the vault, a room 13 teet square and1 tcet ntgn, rive minutes before closing time yester day, hunting for a warrant. While he was there the big I steel doors swung shut. He shouted ( for help without attracting notice. ', - . He pulled open every drawer and piled the hooks on the floor to get the- maximum amount of air and then slept for a 'while, with his face us near the bottom of the door as possible. When he awoke, his hand came in contact with a wooden slat and remembering that Charles Hock-, wald a night watchman, also could telegraph, he pounded put in morse; "I am locked in." - "Will get help," came the answer from Hockwald. who ;mied'atfly telenoticd for a mnn who Vncw ih vault's combination. , , . The Omaha ral-Ciaii Matter Mir !. IMS. at 0. UaH.r Act al Mirth 1. l7S. Balloonist r y ,:jes iWci ships a All Mention of Fight at End Of Long Journey Avoided -In Testimony of Lieu tenant Kloor. Acts Not Questionable lty The Ao iutcil l'rem. Rockaway, N. Y., Jan. 18. Avoid ing any mention of the fist fight be tween Lieutenants llinton and Far rell, which brought to a surprising denouement their balloon flight into Canadian wilderness and tramp back to civilization, Lieut. Louis A. Kloor, jr., who commanded the party, de scribed their experiences today be fore the naval court of. inquiry. . "Newspaper accounts have v re flected on the actions of your two companions," the coifrt said ."Now ttate what you know of the personal conduct of the party." Picking his words, Lieutenant Kloor praised the personal conduct of .his companions until they reached Mattice, where the fight occurred. "That's all I 'have to say," he de clared, but the court remiiuled him his story had not brought the air men back to Rockaway. ' Then he mentioned that Lieutenant Hiuton had left the private car in which Ihe twb of them were seated at Mattice, to deliver to Lieutenant Far rell, Secretary Daniels' order against granting interviews. - Avoids Mention of Fight. f ."Hinton said he would tell Farrell, and in doing so he had to go to the Hudson . Bay company ' store, after which he returned to the private car," Lieutenant .Kloor said. It was vvhtle Hinton, was gone that the fight occurred, but the witness made no mention of it. , ' "The conduct of Lieutenants - Hin ton and Farrell on our return from Mat. ice," he continued, "was in no way questionable." , ' Concluding. Lieutenant Kloor turned to the newspaper men and smiled. He was then excused., During-the weeks they spent in the northern forests, at Moose Fac tory and in trudging through the snow back to civilization. Lieutenant Kloor, said each man made sacrifice aftef. sacrifice." Small Food Supply. " The party left, Rockaway with food to provide three meals, he said. They carried no balloon log and the only maps were charts of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Penn sylvania. - ' . . 1 ( xAtcr explaining that. i&eutt have been -easy to have lauded at VcIls, N. Y.;. on the" evening they left, Lieutenant Kloor said jthey failed to locate Wells on a chart before go inaf on. When they asked inhabi tants how.far it was to Albanv, he I aauco, tne oniy reply was: now should we know?" "You have put Wells on the map now, so you'll know where it is the next . time," remarked Rear Admiral Kline, head'of the court; .Lieutenant Hinton sat near Lieu tenant Kloor throughout his testi mony. He probably will be quizzed tomorrow and Lieutenant Farrell, also. Man and Woman Perish ; v In Blaze Following Explosion pf Films Bayonne, N. J. Jan. 18. Two per sons, one a 5 young woman, were killed and 10 injured in a fire which swept a building housing several film manufacturing concerns. The dead were Miss Ethel Suck ow. 24, and a man believed to be Arthur Post, 21. , ' Miss Suckov. perished by Jump ing from a fire escape at the second floor after'shc had been; carried through the flames by a- watchman. Enveloped bv flames, .she leaped to the street. The charred body of a man believed to be that of , Post, was found on the scctfnd floor. Exploding films hurled burning debris 200 feet, setting fire to sev eral dwellings and threatening to communicate ' with a l.OOfr-gallon trnk of gasnlme in a welding shop nearby, which also was fired, by "V ing embers. These fires were quick ly checked, however. .. Reorganization of U. S. Red Cross Work Planned . Washington, Jan, 18. Plans are under consideration for the reorgan ization of the 13 physical divisions of the American Red Cross in the United States, it was-learned. At a meeting of the central committee to be held soon, proposals will be made tiat the country be rediviiled into riot 'more than six or seven main divisions. ' If was. said that should the action be approved by the central commit tee, a saving of at least $500,000 a year would be accomplished through the abandonment, of the division headquarters ' and rtleuction in per sonnel without Jcsscning the organi zation's efficiency. '; ' Northern Pacific Shops To Go on 5-Day Week Basis Spokane," Jan. lb.--Mechanical dc partniits of the. Northern Pacific railway witl be put on a five-day v?cek basis -before the end of the present month, it was announced by Charles Donnelly, president of the road. v: He said that the proposed change for which "slow rail business' 7s re sponsible, would involve no decrease in pay. v, . y . . l , , Actor Is Injured s- Hadlyme..Conn., Jan. 18. William Gillette, the actor, is suffering from a dislocated shoulder received' by a fill on his house 'boat, the -Aunt Polly, Saturday evening.. . r - OMAHA WEDNESDAY, Growers Ask Tariff " On Imports of Sugar Washington, Jan. 18. Former Representative Juhn J. Fitzgerald of New York, representing sugar refin ers at the house ways and means committee's tariff hearings, revived the row over Louisiana sug?r prices. He declared the government had penalized the rest of the country to save a few Louisiana growers. R. E. Milling of New Orleans, for the ' growers, retorted that the remers wanted "to get a grip on the sugar industry and make the people pay for it." Milling asked for a 3 cent a pound duty on sugar as against the refin ers' request, for elimination of the present duty. Miners Declare -Troops Are Held To Break Strike Editor of Journal .Says State Forces , of Alabama Have Shotj and Searched Homes . of Strikers at Will. Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 18. CJiarges that state troops being held in the. coal fields near Jasper. Ala. are there for no 'other purpse than to break the strike of miners are, made in .a statement issued today from the offices of the United Mine Workers of America. ' According to the statement offi cials of the mine workers were not surprised to learn that 10 soldiers of the Alabama national guard had been arrested at Jasper in connec tion with the killing of William Baird. a coal miner, who was taken by force from jail. Baird was being held on a charge of murdering I member of the militia. The statement -prepared by Ellis Searles, editor of the United Mine Workers Journal, said: "This is one of a series of out rages that have been committed against the striking miners of Ala bama. Gunmen in the employ of the coal companies have shot up miners' homes and wounded women and children. They have shot down a number of miners for. sio reason whatsoever except to create a reign of terror to break the strike. Fif teen hundred Alabama state troops have been in the strike zone for four months at a cost to the state of ap proximately $600,000, but there has been nothing for them to do because the striking miners have been law abiding and have indulged in no dis-i-ders. "The 'military authorities havejs sued orders forbidding all meetings of the United Mine Workers." Irnme&afe Probe of - ' Department of Justice Urged by New Yorkei New York, Jan. 18. An immedi ate congressional investigation of the Department of Justice and the office of the alien property custodian, was recommended, by Samuel Un termyer, in an address tonight. Mr. Untermyer, who as chief counsel in the legislative committee's investiga tion of the alleged "building trust" has obtained numerous indictments, declared he had pot direct legal evi dence against the two departments. "There has iever been a govern mental department, national or .state," he said, "so urgently in need of immediate and painstaking in vestigation as are those- of. the alien property custodian and the Depart ment of Justice, dating from the en actment of the ahen property custo dian law: But the investigations must be conducted, if at all, under skillful searching and strictly non partisan, direction, with the aid of experienced counsel." Lahor Department Reports Decrease in Food Prices Washington, Jan. 18. An average decrease of 8 per cent in retail prices of-22 food articles in December as compared with November, was noted in statistics compiled by the Labor department. Compared to Decem ber, 1919, the decrease was 10 per cent. The products and decreases were: Oranges 27 per cent; pork chops. 25; sugar, 18; ham, 13; bacon, but ter and lard 11; round steak, flour and bananas 10. Raisins increased 36 per cent, rolled oats, 18 per cent and. storage eggs," cream of wheat and macaroni, 9 per cent. Morphine Smuggled Ashore From Ship in Parrot Cage New York, Jan. 18. A statement that $15,000. worth of morphine had been smuggled ashore from an Italian steamer- in Brooklyn in a parrot cage covered with cloth was made when four men were booked at police headquarters on a charge of violating the Harrison drug act. D'Annunzio to Quit Fiume ; This Week for Switzerland Trieste, Jan. 18. Gabriele D'An nunzio, former insurgent leader at Fiume, will .leave that pity this week, having obtained passports vises for Switzerland. Greece, Spain and Fiance, "s Five hundred of his lcgionaires still remain in Fiume. Clara Smith Hamon Trial Set for March Term of Court i Ardmore, Okl., Jan. 18. The trial of "Mrs. Clara, Smith Hamon, at liberty on bonds, charged with murder in connection with the death of Jake L.NHamon, lias been set for Match 8 in district court of Carter county, it was announced. ( U S. Seeks Cahle Injunction. New York, Jan., 18. Injunction proceedings to prevent the Western Union Telegraph company " from land its cable from the Barbados at. Miami, Fla., to which official ob-r je.ction ha been made, were insti tuted by the government. ,' Daily JANUARY 19, 1921. Mr Department Row Over Cork Mayor Still Hangs Fire Wilson Adheres to Stand Not To Interfere in Deportation r" ""Case of "Doiiald- - ' c . ' Washington, Jan. 18. The inter departmental contrpversy over Don ald J. O'Callaghan, lord mayor of Cork, who recent! v arrived without a passport, was still unadjusted after a cabinet meeting. President Wilson, it is understood, continued to maintain that the ques tion of O'Callaghan's status was one for. the two department heads of Labor and State to determine. With the State department's order for the lord mayor's deporta tion ignored by the Labor depart ment . in adjudging O'Callaghan a "seaman" and in granting him per mission to land and reship aboard a vessel bound abroad, the solicitor of the State department rcafffrmed that his department had the right to assume jurisdiction and order the mayor's deportation. A conference of State department officials, however, . tailed to disclose , what steps might be decided unon with a view to enforcing the decree. It was stated by one official that no immediate action of an extreme character was contemplated, although it was asserted it was within the State department's power to request the Department of Justice to deport O'Callaghan for violating a criminal Statute in entering the United St.He without a passport. Founder of Sinn Fein . To Be Court Martialed Dublin, Jan. 18. Arthur Griffith, founder of the Sinn Fein organiza tion, who was arrested in his home litre on the' morning of November 26, will be court-martialed if the present plan of the authorities are carried out. The date of the court martial, However, has not yet been set. y . A recent dispatch - from Dublin said the arrest of Arthur Griffith and others on November 26 was based on an effort to, ascertain responsibil ity for the use of Irish republican funds in operations resulting in loss of lives among ' British troops. It sajd Eamonn de Valera. "president of the Irish republic," might be held to be the source of those funds. Prohe of Siberian Move Is Ahkcd by Hi Johnson Washington; "".Jan. 18. investiga tion of the United States expedition to Siberia was proposed by Senator Johnson, republican. California, in a resolution introduced tod.iv and re ferred ,to the foreign relations coinr mittee. . It was proposed that th committee inquire into the accom plishments of American troops in Si beria and also the present conditions of Americans and their business in teresjs there. ' Chicago State's Attorney To Name Women Assistants Chicago, Jan. 18. State Attorney Robert E. Crowe announced .he would appoint one or more women as assistant and that in the future, all women on trial in Cook county would be prosecuted by women at torneys. , "The average woman is more competent to understand the prob lems of a delinquent girl or womuu." he said.. Bee By Mall II mr). Ild. 4th aa. DaMy aa Juailay. M: Oall Oaly. M: Sgjay. U Oitlald 4th Zoaa (ar. Daily a.d'gwia. Ill; Dally Oaly. 112; Sunday Oaly. It Safety First Brooklyn Zoo Lioness V Undergoes Pleasures Of, Modern Dentistry New York, Jan. 18. Seven years ago under an African sun, Queenie wobbled unsteadily through the jungle, a cub liofcess, born to wild life iii. an untamod land. -v';fTday,-m the Brooklyn zoo. she : g'aSiJetT'"TiV' SgOfiV "r while "a den tist, aided by keepers broke out a black ened tusk which ' had agiven her a toothach. Her teeth had succumbed to the white man's civilization.' t A half hoiir of . uproar and the lioness was made fast. ' A side of the cage was opened and her head dragged out.' Then (he park depart ment veterinary began his work while Queenie strained at the ropes which bound her. Keepers wita a rope about her head, held it down as, gently as possible and placed a crow bar between her jaws. Wrlicn Queenie was released she rpared and tried to leap to her fect, but she was too weak. ' . French Troops Disarm Mutinous Cossacks Near Constantinople . f Constantinople, Jan. 18. (By The Associated Press.) French black troops turned their machine guns on mutinous Cossacks of General Wrangcl's former army encamped at Tchatalja, 25 miles northwest of Constantinople, Saturday night, after the Cossacks had disarmed their of ficers. The Russians returned the fire, killing 10 Scncgalcz and wound ing 20 others and two French offi cers. The French encircled the Cos sacks' camp and ultimately got the mutineers under control. The lead ers of the uprising were placed un der arrest and are being court martialed by the French military. . 1 Boston Stock Brokerage Firm - Fails, Is Announcenielit Boston, Jan. 18. The stock brokerage house of Ernest S. Smith & Co., members of the New York and Boston stock exchanges, today announced that they were unable to meet their obligations. The an nouncement ' was ' read from the rostrum of the local exchange which declared them suspended for one year.. ' Swiss Socialist Parly j 1 Rejects Internationale P.crne, Switzerland, Jan. 18. Re jection of Moscow's conditions for adhesion to the third Internationale has been voted by the socialist party of Switzerland at a general confer ence held here The conference cast ..420 votes for rejection of the'eon ditions, as 'against 912 fot their ac ceptance. ' - Trainloads of Supplies On Way lo Polish Forces "' I.ondon.--Jan. 18. Trains arc ar riving daily in Danzig, loaded with artillery supplies. bomb throwers and ammunition for the Polish army, says a wireless from Moscow, quot ing rqports from Danzig. The Po lish nrinyl the dispatch adds, is hur riedly being organized under the direction of French officers. - Scores Closed Shop. Chicago, Jan. 18. J. II. Glcen, secretary, of the Illinois Manufac turers' association. ' in an address, said that the closed shop is a burden on industry, "Unionism meansCiir tailmcnt of production and ineffi ciency," he asserted. . . Film Explosion Wrecks Building; Two Are Killed Charred Bodies of People, Ap parefitly Blown Through Window, Found Near " ' Railroad Tracks. Bayounc, N. J., Jan. 18. Two per sons were killed and more than 10 injured in an explosion and fire in the plant of the IcJlows Film com pany here today. Two charred bodies, apparently blown through a window of the plant, were found beside the track? of the Central Railway near the fac tory. One apparently was that of a woman. . -' ' Firemen worked desperately to ehprlf ttl flampc. anil' rnc... .tlm.-.. who might ,yct be inside the build- j ma. ( V- 'en injured persons- were taken to the Bayonne hospital. 'Fifteen - persons ' were inside the small .building when the explosion occurred. Instantly the structure wasi wrapped in flames, - The fire was caused by the igni tion of films which flared up with a blast that shattered windows in ,1. ,r.A;H:... lobaccorlanterand Wife of Neighbor Are Held for Elopement i Atlanta, Ga , Jan. 18l Charles Grimes, tobacco planter and stock man of liarrodsburg, Ky.. and -Mrs. Cora Adkinson, wife, of another Harrodsburg farmer, were under ar rest here today charged with having abandoned their families and eloped. Grimes left his wifeand six children while Mrs. Adkinson left her hus band and four children. The couplet tola the ponce here that several times since leaving Harrodsburg in an automobile for Florida they were inclined to ttirn back and seek for giveness. . Grinies gave the follow ing reason for not doing so: ou know now it is in mv coun-J try. When a man runs off with an other man's wife, the husband is supposed to do some shooting." . - , - 1 . Connecticut Suffrage -Association Disbands New Haven, Conn., Jan. . 18. About 51 years of efforts and with its ambition accomplished,, the Con necticut Woman Sulfrage association dissolved. Among'theso who in 1869 formed '-the association were Susan B. Anthony,- Isabellc Beecher Hook er. Harriet Beecher . Stowed . Julia Ward Howe, the Rev. C. V.. Stowe, ar.d William Llovd Garrison. The . - ii'...ir....i l r ranees Lllen Uurr. b9, alone is living of the pioneer hqiul. ' She was sccretarv from 186, to 1910. The Weather Forecast. 'partly- cloudy Wednesday; rising temperature, i v Hourly Tfiniwntturr. ' S a. fl a. 1 a. 8 a. ft a. lit a. .IX .14 .l .is IH It to .si i. aan. p. in. p. tn. It, in. p. m. -P.- m. p. in. p. m. m. m. m. a. m. noon MilpiwiV Hullrlln. Protrt Mpmrnt during Hie nxt ?( In 3fi hour from tmi-ratwrM a follow; North, rant anvl writ, :0 Urgitea; soulli, Zi degret-. . THREE CENTS Wage Fight On Increase In theHouse Bill Providing lor Boost in Membership From 435 To 483 Meets Storm eft Protest. e Leaders Predict Defeat lly Thn AKWH'latrd Trma. Washington, Jan.' 18. After five hours of argument, the house, liks a jury not required to be locked up, went home to deliberate over the iwoposal to increase its membership from 4.15 to 483. Such a storm of protest was raised, however, to the bill that house leaders- predicted the verdict tomorrow nuiiiu I"- u i - ...-.. ..- for an amendment holding seats to the present total. The debate touched every possible point, al though Reprr. scntativc Clark, for- mcr democratic leader, declared !t was not different . from tllat heard after cvoty decennial-census for a half century. V, . ' .. ' " Rising to speak in opposition lo the bill. Representative Esch repub- , lican. Wisconsin, who failed 6t re election last year after a service of 22 years, was greeted by a demon stration. Then he declared the house could not justify it action in adding to the membership simply to save one seat in Maine ;andati other in Missouri. " : , ,: ; ' ! ;"v- People Want Efficiency. . "Why can't this house have the ' courage to say it will not ao, tnair he asked. "The people are not so much concerned with the number of representatives as they are with the question of ability and efficiency. It is ndt too difficult to rcwiembr the time when Maine, with four members, had more influence here . than . New York with its 30." T Nearly everybody had a chance fp 1 express his views. Representative Montague, democrat, Virginia, de clared it was sh6ckingly obvious"to the house, as it was to the country, that the- house was too big now to , ....... - -- - . Clark, who goes out of office in March, endorsed the increase, - but announced he would fight for a con stitutional amendment which would hold tbe total to 500 for all time; I Representative Mondell of Wyoming, republican leader, joined with those opposing an increase, declaring, that "if this body is to remain what the fathers intended, a deliberative body, it must be kept reasonably small'." Opposition Strong. ' v SottioOTfmbcrs; ?evcn from- states which stand to lose representation, opposed the- bill and insisted on the amendment proposed by Representa tive Barbour, republican, California, which would keep the total as at present. This was particularly true of Mississippi, slated to lose a scat, three of its representatives Sisson, Humphreys and Stephens fighting for the smaller number. : - , Under the Barbour amendment, the house would be reapportioned by shifting',12 seats from 11 states to i.s' i. ."aK5 gaining wouia ne uai iiorilia, Michigan, Ohio, Connecticut. New Jersey, North .Carolina, Texas and Washington. Listed in the los ing column (wcre: Missouri, In diana Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, ; Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, Ne braska, Rhode Island and Vermont. During the debate a plea was made by Representative Aswcll, democrat, Louisiana, whose, state would lose one member, -that reduction should nof be made when women were starting to vote,-and a warning 'by -Representative Sims, democrat, Ten nessee, that it was easier for big in terests to control a small than a big body, Mr. Sisson said all the world knew how big cities were bossed, and that the charge never .had been made that there was such a being as a village boss. . Clothing Supplies Valued at $244,000' Are Sold for $80,000 New York. Jan. 19. Excess cloth ing for United States shiooine board officers and. crews, stored at Boston and valued at ?244,000, was sold for $80,000, Byron C. Baker, district comptroller for the board at Bostoti, testified before the Walsh congress ional committee, investigating, the boards affairs. . 'The witness told the committee he had protested to- a superior officer against the sale, but without result. Iii reply to questions by Repre sentative Tom Connclly of Texa?, Mr. llaker said he had been advised by Alonzo Tweedale, general comptrol ler at Washington, not. to answer questions of policy and opinion. af fecting the general organization to tic gencr. officers of, the shipping board. , Texas Man Sues Widow for . . Damages and Heart Balm Dallas, Tex., an.JS. George M. Free laud, 45, in suit for breach of promise, asks $25,000 punitive and $1,645 actual dair.agcs from Mrs. Ethel B. Bass, a widow. In his petition Frceland says hf proposed marriajre to Mrs. Bass or March 15. 1920. r.n gave hcr'.a ring costing $680. Later lie presented he? with an automobile, he alleges, anc' spent considerable money in furnish ing a home. On September fib, 1920. he says, the woman broke the en gagement, which caused him "tc suffer mental anguish, pain, distress antf injury." - j; - , . , Oldest Elk in America Dies. Springfield. 111., Jan. 18. Col. William T. Baker, 96, said to be the lyldest member of the Order of Elks in the United States, died here this morning,' He was said to be a boy luod chum of Abraham Lincoln.