The Omaha JMiffiB VOL. 50 NO. 230. tiHni Sctnd-CIu Matter May 2, I9M. t Omaha P. 0. Uaaw Act at Mirth 3. 1173. OMAHA, SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1921. Br Mall (I yaar). UiHe 4tH 2o. Dally ana Sunday. 9: Dally Only. aundt,. l Oatnldaathana (I '). Dally an Sundai. Jit; Dally Only. Sunday Only. $a THREE CENTS Final Vote Blocked on Censorship Debate in House Ended by Ad journment To Resume Discussions at Monday Session. Berka Measure Carries Lincoln, March 11. (Speciaf Tele gram.) -A final vote on motion pic ture censorship was blocked in the lower house late this afternoon when those opposed to censorship pushed through an adjournment motion. It ended hours of debate on the motion picture problem. The house must decide Monday whether to continue the fight then or set a special date for consideration of motion picture regulation bills. Possibly the house will turn the bills over to the sifting committee. It looked ominous for those op posrd to picture censorship when the house adjourned. Omaha mem bers and others whose votes were crtain to go against the censorship bill wanted to go home on an early train and if the house had failed to adjourn, the proeensorship faction apparently had vietdry in their hand. They fought the adjournment motion.' Berka Bill Carries. In the preliminary skirmish, a motion by Foster of Omaha to vote on the Berka bill, memoralizing con gress to pass a federal censorship law. carried. The Berka bill passed without a dissenting vote. ' Then McFarland of York moved to indefinitely postpone his regula tion bill which would make it a mis demeanor to show any picture tend ing to disrupt morals of youth and old age. "Withdraw my bill in favor of the Byrum-GifTord bill," McFarland said. The withdrawal of the McFar land motion left two bills for con sideration. One was the Byrum GifTord bill and the other the straight censorship bill providing for a paid commission of three in Lincoln to censor pictures before they are shown in the state. The Byruni Giffofd bill provides a jail sentence for picture show and theater men who show pictures or scenes por (raying first degree murder, statu tory offenses and scenes involving undue exposure of the body. Showmen Lose Hope. Apparently motion picture men hare lost hope of succeeding in quashing all regulation hills and turned their forces behind the By-rum-Giffprd bill fn an attempt to de feat censorship. J. Reid Green, sponsor of tic cen sorship bill, moved that it be ad vanced to third reading. Byrum moved as a substitute that the By-rum-Gifford bill be advanced to third reading. 1 Byrum, in support of his bill, de clared censorship created more jobs, was unAmerican in its nature and failed to make as stringent regula tions for straight dramas as his bill did." i 'The girlie, girlies in the regular theater and some of the scenes and lines m them would put the motion pictures to shame." Bvrum declared. A dozen spoke in behalf of the censorship bill before adjournment. Representative Good said:, "The motion picture people are killing their own business the ame as the saloons did. We would have saloons now if it hadn't been that the owners refused to obey, the law and clean up their .joints. The motion picture exhibitors pejsistently refuse to clean un their nurtures ".. T he gallery was filled with women. Scores of telegrams from club women throughout the state were received by members todav urging support of the censorship " bill, i " Woodrow Wilson Now Fully Established in Washington Home Washington, March' 11. Wood row Wilson rounded out the first week of his return to private life with a privatec dinner at which B. M. Baruch of New York and Nor man H. Davis, former under secre tary of state, who has been retained in the Harding administration as the American member of the internation al communications conference, 'were guests. It was said to signalize Mr. Wilson's intention to keep in touch with men and affairs. The former president, it is said, is r.ow fully established in his new 1'ome and has suffered no setback in heatth. His principal household difticuty, his friends report, has been to find room in his new house tor hi library of 8.000 volumes. Mr. Wilson spends some part of every day dictating-to a stenograph er attempting to dispose of a heavy correspondence, and with Mrs. Wil son, frequently takes motor drives in the afternoon. Senator Cummins of Iowa Confers With President Washington, March 1 1. Senator Cummins of Iowa, one of the authors of the transportation act, conferred with President Harding today at the White House, but said the matter discussed was appoinments. The railroad situation was not taken up, the senator said, adding that he did not expect to talk with the presi dent on that subject until next week. Colorado Fuel and Iron Foundry to Put on 1,000 Men Pueblo, Colo.. March 11. The Colorado Fuel and Iron company to day announced that owing to im proved conditions in the steel in dustry, 1.000 additional men will be employed commencing next Monday morning. Four idle mills will reopen, running two eight-hour shifts. Body of Langdon Will ReachU.S.onMarch15 San Francisco, March 11. The body of Warren II. Langdou, who was killed by a Japanese sentry in Vladivostok fast January, will arrive in San Francisco March 15 on the army transport Sherman, officials of the Twelfth naval district said to rt a v. The transport will be met here by Capt. Cecil G. Langdon of Mare Is land, a brother of Lieutenant Lang don. and other relatives. Referendum on Soldier S BoilUS i Passed bv House American Legion Charged With Bad Faith Twelve Refuse to Cast Votes. Lincoln, March 11. (Special.) A $10,000,000 appropriation for a o! diers' bonus will be submitted to a vote of the people of Nebraska under the terms of the SturdevatU bill which passed the committee of the whole of the lower house today by .i vote of 57 to 32. The bill provides that cx-soldiers, sailors, 'marines ami nurses shall re ceive $15 for every month of service during the war, with a mini mum of $50. ' This bill followed on the heels of a bill passed two days ago provid ing for a $2,000,000 appropriation to be placed on Interest to go to dis abled soldiers and their families, to be handled by the officers of the American Legion. Would Call Referendum. The Sturdevant bill as first con structed provided that an appropria tion be made by the legislature. Representative Mears put in an amendment calling for a referendum on it. This amendment carried. Representative Rodman declared that American Legion men in the house were acting in bad faith in backing the Sturdevant bill with the Mears amendment. "We were told by the American Legion men in the house that if we put the $2,000,000 appropriation bill through they wouldn't demand an other," Rodman said. Passed Legion' Bill. It was declared that the $2,000,000 appropriation bill passed several days ago was the bill demanded by the American Legion lobby while the Sturdevant bill was demanded by World War veterans and some members of the American Legion. Following Rodman's denunciation of American Legion members in the house, they declined to vote on the Sturdevant bill, excepting Represen tative Griswold, Avho voted against it. "I-am an--American Legion manl but I think it is up to the federal government to provide the boniis," Griswold said. Representative McKee, father of five sons in the service, voted against the bill. !'My boys can make their own liv ing," McKee said. Vote on Measure. The vote on the Sturdevant bill follows: For: Anderson (HamiUon). An derson (Knox), Beans, Bethea. Bock, Cole, Davis, Druesedow, Dyball, Fos ter, Franklin. Frost. Gilmore, Green, Hakanson, Hoare, Hoffmcister, Jac obs, Jeary, Johnson, Lauritsen, Lun dv, Lynn, McFarland, McCleflan, McLeod, Mears, Medlar, Mcllor, Mickey, Moscley, Murphy, Nelson, O'Gara, Osterman, Palmer, Park, Perkins, Peterson, Rank, Robertson, Ruddy. Sandquist, Smith. Sommer lad, Staats, Stephenson. Strong, Sturdevant, Thompson. Vance, Yo taw, Webster, Wight, Wood and Young. Against: Acton. Armstrong, Ax tell, Barbour, Beckman, Behrens, By rum, Clizbc, Downing, Dysart, Ep person, Essam, Frazier, Clifford, Good. Goodrich, Gould, Griswold, Hanner, Kendall. Leftwich. McKee, Miner, Morian, Nieweddc. Rodman, Snow, Sprick, Ullstrom, Wallace; and Williams. 1 Not voting: Bowman. Doug1a. Frantz, Hascall, Nutzman.- Randall, j Reed. Reneker. Wcsterhoff, Wolfe, eiser and Anderson (speaker.) Papers Claim Roads Charge1 Too High Rate on Newsprint Washington. March 11. Nine newspapers filed complaints today with the interstate commerce com mission alleging that unreasonable rates were charged by the railroads on newsprint paper. The complain ants were: Enid (Okl.) Eagle;' Dennison i Tex.) Herald; Wichita Falls (Tex.) Record News; El Paso (Tex.) Times; Kansas City (Kansas) Journal; Miami (Okl.) News; Hastings ,(Neb.) Tribune; Fort Smith (Ark.) Southwest American, and the Hutch inson (Kan.) News. Trailing the Rum Hounds A thrilling and detailed de scription of methods used and diffifulties encountered by Omaha and federal sleuths in trailing bootleggers and home brewers will be a feature of next Sundays Bee. ' Dont miss it. A collection of photo graphs of worl( and play in Omaha "Night Life" is of fered on Page One of the Rotogravure Section. On Page Two is a series osfr ing light and shadow pictures of screen stars. Railroads' jWajuts ay Association of Executives An nounced Concerted Move Will Be Made to Reduce Pav of Skilled Men. Great Western Leads IVv AstHH.'lnled Prehn. I Chicago, March 11. Virtually ail of the larger western railroads to ! day had swung into line in the policy started a few days ago by several eastern railroads of taking steps to bring about reductions in the war time wage scale of unskilled em ployes. The reductions will be urged, rail road officials said, to keep the roads out of bankruptcy and enable them eventually to reduce traffic rates which were said to be "higher than the public can bear." Various rail road presidents declared the roads were existing entirely on credit. None Will Escape. At the same time came statements from officials" of the Association of Railway Executives that lower rates of pay for skilled workers probably would be sought after the wage for unskilled men had been settled. One road, the Chicago Great Western, took the lead among the western lines in the matter of re-' ductions by announcing that it pro posed a 20 per cent decrease in lii; pay of every employe, from the president down, with the exception of train service men, telegraph operators and unskilled men. The pay of unskilled workers would be brought down to conform with the rates paid in cither industries, if pos sible. Conferences will be held with the employes at Oehvein, la., March 19. About 9,000 men would be af fected. The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, and the Chicago & Alton were two roads to announce today that they would seek reductions for unskilled employes. The former proposed a reduction of 8J-S cents in pay of unskilled workers at a meeting with representatives of em ployes yesterday. ' All Follow Leaders. The Santa Fc; the Chicago, Mil waukee & St. Paul; the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific, and the Chi cago & Northwestern announced proposed reductions last night. The Northern Pacific and the Great Northern previously had announced conferences with their employes. The Illinois Central had no of ficial statement to make, but it was understood that this road find sev eral others expected to take the same action as the other lines. The Chicago Great Western railroad, which yesterday announced that it would seek conferences con cerning wage reductions for its un- (Turn to rage Two. Column Two.) Opening Arguments Heard in Rate Case Before Supreme Court uasnmgton, u. .. March 11. i In opening arguments before the su preme court in the Wisconsin rate case, counsel for that and 42 other states declared that the transporta tion act as construed by the Inter state Commerce commission to give the commission control over state rtes, "is destructive of our dual form of government and contrary to the spirit of our constitution." Counsel for the railroads argued that the commission had full author ity to right the injustices caused where a state had "claimed an un fair advantage over a sister state who has acted liberally in the pub lic interest." M. B. Olbrich, special counsel for the state of Wisconsin, appeared for the principal appellant and John E. Benton, general solicitor of the Na tional Association of Railway and Utility commissions, represented the' numerous state bodies. Omaha Printer Seriously Wounded While on Train A. Rhode, about 40, 617 South Sixteenth street, an Omaha printer for the last 10 years, lies critically wounded in the Ensworth hospital at St. Joseph, Mo., with a bullet through his left lung. Rhode shot himself on a Burling ton train en route from Omaha to St. Joseph at 1:30 yesterday morn ing. The bullet entered his breast just below the heart, passing out through the back. Physicians state that his recovery is doubtful. Rhode supposedly was on his way to visit a brother, Charles, in St. Joseph. His mother is a resident of Piattsmouth. Neb. ! Heirs to $800,000,000 Estate i Organize to Fight in Court ' Portland, Or:.. March II. Heirs to the $800,000,000 estate of the late ' Col. Jacob Baker of Philadelphia have been enrolled in two associa i tions of Baker heirs to fight in courr j for possession of the property, ac ; cording to a statement today by O. j N. Ford of Gresham, Ore., who said ! he is one of the heirs and a mem j her of the board of directors of the Baker Heirs' association of Detroit, Mich. j Russians Form Regime j To Supplant Soviets ' London. March 11. Reports fiom ! Rcval today state tJiat Russian emi-1 j grants are forming a government I there, to include representatives of j all the anti-bolshevik parties, which soon will enter Russia. The flood I of Russian refugees over the frontier ha suddenly ceased, the reports say. : and it is presumed the soviet outhori- ties are preventing anyone from Wiv ing Pctrograd. Missouri Legislators Engage in Fist Fight Jeiierson City, Mo., March 11. Representatives Hubbard of Law rence county and Burch of Sullivan county engaged in a fist fight in the cloak room during adjournment for lunch today. The fight resulted, according to witnesses, over differences over the veterinary inspection bill. Neither sustained serious damage. L Lavvson Given Life Sentence III State Prison Wife-Slayer Found Guilty' of Murder in First Degree; Jury Out Only 3 1-2 -Hours. Bunicll Lawson was found guilty of murder in the first degree for the slaying of his young wife January 2-1, and sentenced to life imprison ment in the Nebraska state peniten tiary by a jury in District Judge Troup's court at 9:25 last night. The jury had retired for delibera tion at f. Young Lawson tolk the verdict calmly, although showing some signs of apprehension as the jury men filed into the court room, lie sat with his face buried in his hands until the last word of Foreman Theo dore K. Rud's finding had been read. He was then returned immediately to his cell in the county jail. Neither the prisoner's mother, Mrs. Hope Lawson of Little Rock, Ark., "nor the sister of his murdered wife. Miss Eulalia Wortstnith, were in the court room. This murder trial was one of the longest on record in the local dis trict court. It started Monday, February 28. Nearly two days were required to get a jury. Adjourn ment was taken last Friday evening until Monday morning. Since Mon day the case has been pushed, so that altogether it took 10 days. T'he court room was crowded throughout the hearing. Lawson was charged with murder in the first degree. County Attorney Abel Shotwell, leading the prosecu tion, fought for the death penalty. The defense was emotional insan ity, an attempt being made to prove that Lawson came of a family in which there has been insanity and also that his mind had been weak ened bv disease. Immediate Action on Tariff Legislation Is Promised by Penrose i " Washington, March 11. Speedy action on .tariff and tax revision at the special session of congress was promised today by Chairman Pen rose of the senate finance commit tee. He said the object of the con ferences arranged for Monday be tween republican members of con gressional committees and Secretary Mellon of the treasury was to ar range a program "behind which all republicans can put their shoul der.' "We cannot look for improved business." said Senator Penrose, "until the tariff and internal reve nue legisation is outlined and gov ernment extravagance stopped." Urging less interference by the government .in business, Senator Penrose said he favored abolishing "all of the autocratic mushroom gov ernment boards all the Wilson boards which rose during the war." Mrs. Brandeis Unaware Suit for Divorce Filed Madeline Frank Brandeis, whose suit of divorce from Ervine John Brandeis was filed in district court in Omaha Thursday afternoon, is win tering at the Beverly Hills hotel in Los Angeles, and was unaware her divorce suit had been filed, she told newspaper men there yesterday. Mrs. Brandeis told them, however, the petition had been prepared and she expected it would be filed soon. Chief Deputy Sheriff Foster said yesterday that the summons on Ervine John Brandeis to answer the suit of his wife, Madeline Frank Brandeis for divorce, would be served by leaving at "his usual place of residence." War Degrees Slill Figure In Howard College Awards Cambridge, Mass., March 11. War degrees still figure in academic awards at. Harvard college. Jn an announcement today, it was stated that about half of the 87 men given the degree of A. B. were granted it with 25 per cent allowance "for hon orable service in the war." Award degree was conferred post humously on Richard B. Yarnum, '21, of Oakland, Cal.. word of whose death in Paris reached here a few days ago. Yarnum was a former aviator who was in France as the holder of an American field service fellowship at the University 'of Toulouse. Sleeping Sickness Found. In Town in Wistfcisiu Wausau, Wi., ' March 11, Seven cases of sleeping sickness in or near this city and one death from the disease in the village of Biruamwood have been reported to the health au thorities here during the past week. OMAHA. AUTO SHOW March 14-19 CITY AUDITORIUM , Clarke G. Powell, Mgr. Omaha Charter Bill Is Passed By Senate Body Committee of Whole Passes Amended Measure After Recommended hy Cities And Towns Committee. Lincoln, March 11. (Special) The Omaha charter bill ivas referred out of the senate committee on cities and towns with a favorable recom mendation this morning and passed through the senate committee of the whole. The bill carries with it the amend ments prepared by the committees from the Chamber -of Commerce, Real Estate board, and members of the city commission. lliese amendments were explained in full to the Douglas county dele gation at a meeting here a week ago. The bill also carried amend ments proposed last night at a meet ing of the cities and towns commit tee of the senate. Proposed by Zimman. These provide . civil service com mission for the Omaha police depart ment and power for the city coun cil to call a special election to vote bonds not exceeding $225,000 to re pair and modernize the Auditorium. The Auditorium amendment was proposed by City Commissioner Harry B. Zimman, who said in his plan, the basement of the Auditori um would be completely excavated, and stalls put in and rented for a icitv market. 1 he rent trom these stalls, he argued, would, in time, pay for the bond issue. Another amendment proposed by Col. Amos Thomas provides for call ing a special election to vote bonds for an armory in Omaha for the Nebraska National guard, the amount of the bond issue to be de termined at a later date. Hearing Tuesday Commissioner Zimman aUo urged that policemen and firemen salaries should be fixed in an amendment put in with that bill. This was not included, however, in the charter bill which was put up to the third read ing today. The charter bill introduced in the 1 lower house, however, does carry this amendment. A hearing .on the house charter bill will be held next Tuesday evening, according to an announcement todav by Robert Druesedow, chairman of the house committee on cities and towns. Woman Kills Three Children, Shoots Three, Kills Self Lovcll, Wyo., March 11. Mrs. James Walters, wife of a prominent rancher in the Big Horn basin, last night shot and killed three of her children, wounded three others, and reloading the revolver, killed herself. Two of 'the children were reported to be dying, while one may live. Mrs. Walters' is believed to have been insan'c. West Point High School ' Holds Declamatory Contest West Point.- Neb.. March 11. (Special.-) Richard Krausc of the local high school will represent West Point at the district declamatory contest. His subject will be, "The Wid Olive Branch." Miss Adeline Oelscblaecer took second place and S Miss Kathryn Rcimcrs, third in the ! contest here. . Mining Engineer Killed San Pedro, 'Cal., March II. Kred ' W. Nash, a niiiifiig engineer of na tional repute, was killed when the j automobile he was driving plunged 100 feet down the side of a precipice. The Danger (Copyright, 1121, Tha Chicago TribiiDd.) Anti-Saloon League Declares Open War On Opinion of Palmer Boston, Mass., March 11. Three ways of overcoming what he termed the erroneous opinion of former At torney General A Mitchell Palmer that beer and wine can be prescribed as medicine were outlined by Wayne B. Wheeler, general counsel of the Anti-Saloon League of America here today. "First,", he .said, "we will ask the attornoy general to revise the opinion. "Second, we will endeavor to get the renjaining nine states that have no enforcement codes to do what the other dry states have done and prohibit the prescribing of beer for medicinal purposes. "Finelly, we will ask congress to change the law in this respect if it is necessary to do so. "In the meantime the brewers can not make any real beer until the new regulations are made, and then only in very small quantities, as it can only be used in nine states under strict regulations." Man Who Helped Draw Final Covenant' Says League is Successful Philadelphia, March 11. The covenant of league of nations was declared a success, in that it met the first real test when it was ac cepted by the competent governmen tal authority of nearly every coun try in the world, by David Hunter Miller of New York, here tonight. Mr. Miller, who with J. B. Hurst of the British foreign office, drew the final draft of the document, spoke before the Philadelphia Public Ledger forum on the peace confer ence. Mr. Miller w-as attached to the mission of Col. E. M. House and later appointed technical adviser to the American commission to nego tiate peace at Paris. ' "The covenant has two schools of critics," he said, "and perhaps three: those who think it goes too far, those who think it does not go far enough and those who approve of it, but do not like some of the people who wrote it." Chinese Murderer Is Hanged in Wyoming Rawlins, Wyo., March 11. Yec Geow, Chinese murderer, went to his cieath early today with a smile on his face. The death trap of the gallows was sprung at 12:24 o'clock and death was not pronounced until 13 minutes later. Yee Geow was -convicted of the murder of ;Thomas Holland at Chey enne on September 10, last. Several requests for clemency were made to Governor Carey, who at the last mo ment appointed a committee of doc tors to examine his sanity. He was pronounced sane. He refused to make a statement. Merger of Southern Pacific And Rock Island Planned Los Angeles, Cal., March 11. A merger of the Southern Pacific, the Rock Island and the El Paso and Southwestern railroads is being considered, according to a statement by N. L. Amster of Boston, mem ber of the board of directors of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific railroad, made public here today. Mr. Anistcr said no formal proposal had as yet been made by any of the lines to the others. Southern Pacific officials here said they knew nothing of such a plan, Revolutionists Send Ultimatum To Soviet Heads Surrender of Pctrograd De manded bv March 25 Under the Threat of General Bom bardment and Offensvie. London, March 11. Revolution ary authorities at the fortress of Kronstadt have sent an ultimatum I to the soviet authorities in Pctro grad, ' demanding the surrender of the city before March 25. If the city is not given up, the ultimatum declares, there will be a general bombardment, it is asserted in an Abo, Finland, dispatch to the Lon don Times. Wholesale arrests and executions of workmen are said to have occurred at Oranienbaum, Systerbak and Petrograd. Kronstadt last night sent out a wireless dispatch denying bolshevik statements that the fortress was without food, says a telegram from Stockholm. To the contrary, there is plenty of food and ammunition there, the message stated. "Artillery fire from Kronstadt has been extremely well directed," the wireless dispatch is quoted as say ing. "The fortress of Todleben and all other soviet batteries on the Karelian peninsula have been com pletely demolished. Two of the four 12-inch guns at Krasnoye Gorka have been silenced by. shells from the battleship Petropavlovsk. Kras noye Gorka has been isolated, the railroad to it has been destroyed and a thaw has placed the surround ing marshes in such condition that the fortress has been cut off from the rest of the bolshevik forces." A great anti-bolshevik movement in the vicinity of Minsk, white Russia, is reported in a Reuter's dis patch from Helsingfors. Soviet troops are said to have mutinied and murdered bolshevik commissars there. Another dispatch mentions street fighting between the bolsheviki and anti-soviet units in Kiev. Prominent Banker of U. S, Sues for Divorce New York, March 11. James A. Stillmbn, president of the National City bank, has begun an action for divorce against Mrs. Sillman, the former "Fifi" Potter, and Mrs. Still man has started a counter suit, it be came known here today. Although attempts have been made to keep the action secret, filing gf the suits was confirmed by Supreme Jus tice Morschauser. He has appointed John E. Mack of Poughkecpsie guardian of Guy Stillman. born in 1918, whose inheritance rights arc said to he involved. The Stillmans were married here June 3. 1901. Bishop Henry C. Pot ter, uncle of James Brown Potter, the bride's father, performed the cer emony. Her Another, a well-known beauty, went on the stage in 1886 after a.separtion from her husband. The Weather Forecast. Probaby snow and colder Satur day. Hourly Temprniturn. ff a. ni 6 a. m. 7 a. m . a. m. a. m. 10 a. m. 1 1 a. m . 11 noon. 44 1 P. m . 34 2 p. m XS S p. ni 8.1 p. m S 5 p. ni sn li. m S7 M S3 SI sr. i i p. in '. sn St ' R p. m. 34 MiipiinV ntlllrlin. TrolrM liipmrnln ilurinff th nt Tl to S hours from tompf rtur- nn follows: North and vest, a degrees above; east, 16 acT09. HAVING ASKS MEDIATION IN PACKER ROW President Urges Employes and Employers to Join Lahor Department in Settling Wa;gc Cut Dispute. , Davis Sends Telegrams By ARTHUR SEARS HENNING, flili-BSo lYIIiunp-Oninhn llrr loaurd Wire. Washingon. March II In an en ! deavor to avert the threatened strike i of packing house employes. President 1 Harding tonight asked the employes and employers Jo join with the Dc partment of Labor in settling tha dispute over the reduction of wages and lengthening of hours to be put into effect by the packers next Mon day. After a conference with the prcsi" dent in which the plan of action wa evolved, Secretary of Labor Davi( sent identical telegrams to the pack ers and Secretary Lane of the Mca Cutters' union, requesting that each side appoint two representatives tu assi-t the Department ot Labor in making an investigation such at would promote a peaceful settlement of the controversy.' Telegram to Packers. The telegram addressed to ih4 Armour, Swift, 'Morris, Wilson and Cudahy companies follows: The federal government is deep ly concerned about the mainten ance of industrial activities in full est understanding and hopes there will be no interruption of the con tinuity of employment in the great packing industry. If the Depart ment of Labor can be helpful in promoting understanding and can aid in any way to avoid the cessa tion of operations, such service by this department will be given most gladly. The whole problem of industrial readjustment is of such widespread public concern that the Depart mcnt of Labor, with the knowledge of the Departments of Agriculture and Commerce, requests that two representatives of employing' packers will report to' this depart ment to make possible such in quiry into the situation as may prove helpful in leading to a just and satisfactory solution. I am sending a like request to the em ployes and am acquainting them with this request to, you. Surely there must be a just solution and the good offices of this department are tendered in the hope of find ing that solution, so essential toy the promotion of the common . good. Discussed in Cabinet. Secretary Davis put in the whole day studying this first problem of his administration of the Department of Labor. When he reached his office at 7::30 a. m. he found on his desk the Omaha telegram from thl (Torn to Vage Two, Column One.) ' President Discusses Department Questions With Official Family Washington, D. C, March 11.- Many problems of departmental ori ganization together with various pressing question? of public policy, were discussed by President Hardin.qf and his cabinet at a three-hour mee ing. "' . Departmental patronage is said tci have been one of the subjects left; out of the canvass. Several of th secretaries were ready to recomniemt important appointments within their departments. Their sugestions, how ever, were put over to be discussed privately with the president. It was said that few decisions wer reached,, most of the discussion he ing of a informative nature. Th( reorganization plans to be inaugm rated arc understood to have been) touched on only incidentally. Harding Requests Benson 1 To Continue on Ship Boardi Washington', March 11. President Harding rque'sted Chairman Benson of the shipping board today, "to con tinue to function as though the boardl were fully organized." The request embodied in a lctte sent by the president to Chairmanl Benson was not interpreted a meaning that Admiral Benson would be continued permanently as head of the shipping board, but merely to give the practically memberless board a definite status pending tha nomination of new members. Fritzi Sclieff Anderson r. Granted Divorce Decree Waterbury, Conn., March 11. i Fritzi Scheff Anderson, comic opera star, was granted a divorce in tha supe'rior court "it the grounds of in tolcra'. le cruelty and intemperance. Her husband did not contest tha, case. This makes tier third divorce. She told the court her husband bad frequently struck her in th face, blackening her eyes. He also refused to work, sl.e said, and had a liquor bill of $75 a week. Her husband was "a charming man" when sober, she said. One-Step Father of All ' Dancing Evils, Officer Says Kansas City, March 11. The one step was placed under the ban in Kansas City, Kan., under regulations covering public dance halls issued bv N. V. Reichenecker, welfare officer, "The one-step," said the officer, "is the father of all dance evils. From it come the 'grizzly hear,' the 'tod dle' and other varieties of alleged dancing which permit the tloc rm brace and the cheek-to-chcek glides, If we eliminate the onc-Mep tffo mate them all." " ' v I ST i