The Omaha Daily Bee f i VOL. 51 NO. 8. ATariff Lav Fight to Be Launched Fordney Bill Will Be Intro duced Wednesday Valua tion Provision and Lum ber Duty Cause Battle. Clash Over Hides Likely By ARTHUR SEARS HENNING. Chicago Triblin-Omh B Leased Wire. Washington, June 26. The great battle in congress over permanent tariff revision, the first big construc tive measure on the Harding admin istration legislative program, will be gin this week, , Chairman Fordney of the ways and means committee promises to introduce the voluminous . bill Wednesday in the form agreed upon hv the republican membership of the committee. lne next step will be to'determine whether any of its pro visions are unacceptable to any large proportion of the republican mem- iership of the house, which will be lone at a republican caucus Thurs- ay night If any provisions are disapproved by the caucus, changes therein will be made by the ways and means com mittee before reporting it formally for passage. Controversial Features. Indications are that the major con troversial features will be the pro vision for American valuation of im ports, the duties on lumber and wool, which are alleged to be higher than those of the ill-fated Payne Aldrich act, and the provisions of the chemicals schedule for protecting American manufacturers from the destructive competition of Germany dyes. , Advocates of American tyistead of foreign valuation of imports subject to advalorem duties, which would mean increased protection on such articles, claim they have enlisted the support of President Harding to force the provision through the sen ate, which rejected it in the emer gency tariff bill and which will be the scene of the crucial contest this time. Opponents of the plan are en deavoring to win the president to their side or induce him to hold alooj from fhe controversy. Plan Rejected. The plan suggested by the treasury officials of introducing the American valution provision of the bill in ad vance of the provisions containing or duty has been definitely re- The fisht aeainst the proposed duty on finished "'"lumber has veloped greater momentum than in the case of opposition to other schedules. It is considered quite probable that the opponents will win out in the caucus and that finished lumber will remain on the free list in the bill as formally reported to the house; Fearsv that the duty of 25 cents a pound on scoured wool content may prove tod high in the case of some wools have caused the committee to insert a proviso that in no case shall the duty be more than a certain ad valorem rate. ; The cfuestion as to whether the wool duty is too high will be one of those brought up at the republican caucus. Other provisions against which a fight will be made in the caucus in clude those which leave hides and crude petroleuem on the free list. Wellesley College Address Delivered By Gutzon Borglum Gulzon Borglum, sculptor and for mer Omahan, was orator of the day at the Wellesley college commence ment exercises Monday, when Ma dame Marie Curie was given an honorary degree, the first time in the UtVory of the school. : . Borglum is a brother of August and Arnold Borglum and of Mrs. Alfred Darlow of Omaha. TT a lif ninr A J Jsi a lirtvAf tliVn 1 1 Wj . lie uiavussu mi iai gti iiaiiuiiai interests of the American women of today, urging women voters to hold aloof from partisan commitments. ; "If the women divide up with the men and vote as the parties have been voting," he said, "there will be but ose result the printers' bill for ballots. Even as a minority your power can determine the course of government for good if you remain free," he de clared. Tariff and Revenue Bills Will Be Taken Up at Once Washington, June 26. Passage of the tariff bill by the house before fuly 20 was predicted both by Representative MondeH) republican house leader, who conferred with President Harding, and by Chairman Fordney of the ways and means com mittee. They also agreed the rev enue bill would be taken up on pas sage of the tariff measure and Mr. Mondell added that the special ses sion of congress would end when the tax bill was enacted. Representative Fordney announc- cd that the tariff bill would be pre sented to the house next Saturday after democratic committeemen had been given an opportunity to con sider the measure framed by the re publican members. - im a a , Beef Should Sell at Lowest ' Price in 10 Years, Packers Say Chicago, June 26. Good pot roasts and boiling beef should te available to the consuming puonc at the low est price in 10 years, according to an announcement made by Armour & Co.. Chicago packers. "It ought to "be possible for con sumers to obtain good pot roasts at . 10 to 12 1-2 cents a pound at any re tailer," the announcement laid, Cetma SmuJCIiu Oaalta p. 0. Uw Women Prisoners Riot In Attempted Escape Marysville, O., June 26. A number of prisoners and attendants at the Ohio reformatory, for wom en here were stabbed and beaten as a result ol a riot designed, according to officials, to effect the escape of 25 prisoners. Three em ployes were severely cut with butch er knives in the hands of the in mates. Two inmates are in the hos pital. ' Sheriff Collier and a deputy were called to aid the reformatory offi cials in subduing the rioters, 10 of whom escaped, but were later appre hended. . The trouble is said to have started over inmates obtaining tobacco, one of them being punished tor the or fense. Conspiracy In Miners' Strike In South Charged Labor Committee Chairman Says Northern Miners and Operators Conducted Outrages. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee Leased Wire, Washington, June 26. Charges that the coal miners' strike in West Virginia and ' Kentucky, which the senate has just voted to investigate, is the result of a conspiracy by the United Mine Workers and the coal operators of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and west Pennsylvania, was made here today by Harry Olmsted, chair man of the labor committee of the Williamson coal operators' associa tion. Olmsted, after welcoming the senate investigation, said that evi dence would be submitted to the senate committee to show that work men have been murdered and wound ed by the Mingo strikers, and added We will show by confession of strikers arrested that assaults were planned at meetings of the local branches of the United Mine Work ers and conducted by men affiliated with that organization. We will show that the strike was, not the spontaneous or even the planned act of the workmen living and working in this field, but came in the nature of a siege contrived and conducted by state and national officers of the mine workers' organization; that its origin really dates back more than 20 years, to a tune when the United Mine Workers entered into a con spiracy, which has run ever since, with the coal operators of Indiana, Illinois, Ohio and western Pennsyl vania, to organize the West Virginia coal fields, by any methods and. at any cost, for the purpose of driving the West . Virginia, coal from the western-' markets that conspiracy being directed against the West Vir ginia miners and operators, alike, and so, necessarily, affecting the in terests of every citizen in the state. Fourteen Arrested In Raids on Suspected Disorderly Houses Three raids by police moral squads on alleged disorderly houses netted a total of 14 arrests. In the first raid staged by Ser geant Murphy's squad at 2923 North Sixteenth street, Helma Classen was arrested, charged with keeping a dis orderly house, and Nick Goodheart, 142 Jaynes street; Herman Haloff, 1330 Ogden street, and F. A. .Os borne, 1403 Brown street, as inmates. In the second raid by the same squad, Peter D. Fcras, 816 Pierce street, was charged with unlawful possession of liquor and keeping a disorderly house. Melvin Bakke, 4616 South .Twenty-second street; Roy Brandt, Thirty-sixth and Cur tis;; Leonard Richards, 2402 ' North Thirtieth, and E. W. Mackey, 4J8 Charles street, were booked as in mates. .The third raid was made by Ser geant McDonald's squad. At a room ing house at 1308 Capitol avenue, police arrested Ruth Lovelace on a charge of keeping a disorderly house, and Stella Williams, 1528 North Sixteenth street, Bessie Mar tin, 1308 Capito avenue, A. C. Da vis, 1308 Capitol avenue, and Vic tor Casperson, Keen hotel, as al leged inmates. Mme. Curie Returns Home With Radium New York. June 26. Accom panied by her two daughters, Mme. Marie Curie sailed for home bearing many degrees from Ameri can universities and two preciS packages presented her by American women. One package is a steel-lined ma hogany box, wcighine more than 250 pounds and holding a gram of rad ium, valued at $110,000. - The other package contains half a gram of mesothorium,' valued at $30,000, which the scientist will use in connection with the radium in her search for a cancer cure. Conveniences of "Home" Found in Vacant House Chicago, June 26. Police dis covered what was termed the most convenient house since prohibition went into effect. In this dwelling they saw no signs of habitation, but in drawing in what was to be a tank of water from a faucet, they re ceived wine, and further investiga tions revealed three barrels of wine, connected to the pipes. Govern ment authorities were notified. . Return Soldier Bodiesx New York, June 26. The trans port Wheaton has left Antwerp for New York with the bodies of more than 4,000 soldiers, the graves regis tration bureau announced .today, , Hitter May M. ISM. at Act l Marah . 1(7. Norris Bill Is Opposed By Hoover Secretary of Commerce Sees Failure in Prdposed $100, 000,000 Farm Export Corporation. Private Firm Is Advised By The Aaaoclated frets. v Washington, June 26. Secretary or Commerce Hoover opposed the Norns bill authorizing the formation of a government $100,000,000 corpor ation for the financing and market ing of exports of farm products to day before the senate committee on agriculture. Mr. Hoover said that while he sympathized with the pur pose of the measure he hesitated, "to suggest or approve any plan that would involve the government further in any undertaking which might result in failure, and which should be left to private business. Mr. Hoover suggested, however, that it might be feasible to broaden the scope of the war finance corpora tion somewhat. Under the terms of the Norris bill, the proposed agri cultural export corporation not only would aid in financing exports, but would act as selling agency, finding markets for farm products abroad. The . secretary of commerce cited the shipping board as "a terrible ex ample of the failure of attempted government operation." He said that work of the nature proposed should be left to private business as much as possible. One of the chief difficulties in making such a corporation a sue cess, Mr. Hoover said, was the problem of finding men to take charge of it who had had sufficient business experience. He said that a man capable of earning $100,000 a year in private business should be in charge of such a corporation in or der to insure its success. "It is hard to induce a man capable of earning a salary of $100,000 a vear to make the personal sacrifice accessary in order to direct the ac tivities of a government enterprise 8uch as is proposed here, said Mr. Hoover. . "It is easy to secure the services of a $5,000 a year man, but hard to get one of the other kind. Mr. Hoover said a man like Julius H. Barnes, former United States wheat director, would be needed in order to make the corporation a suc cess. Labor Union Law Halts Funeral Husky Gang of "Educators" Nearly Precipitate Riot Band Is Dismissed. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee LeuseJ Wire. Chicago, June 26. -Labor union laws, backed up by a gang of husky "educators," today halted the funeral of a woman and nearly precipitated a panic. It appeared for a time that the dead woman would be barred from her grave or that her inanimate body would be kicked and tumbled about the street in battle. Mrs. Nicola Laduca, for many years a prominent figure in Italian society, was to be given a funeral in keeping with her position. Her son had employed a band, made up of Italian musicians, who are em ployed as shoemakers, peddlers and in other occupations. The band. resplendent in new uniforms, marched up to the residence of the late Mrs. Laduca and began to play. Ralph O Hara, business agent of the musicians' union, appeared im mediately and notified Peter Laduca, the son, that he would have to hire a union band or there would be no funeral. "YouH dismiss this band or there'll be no funeral," was the final dictum by O'Hara. . Ihe crowd had grown to thou sands and matters looked very threat ening. A riot call was sent in and the police told the agents of the auto livery chauffeurs' union they would have to get away from the home and let the funeral proceed, whereupon all the drivers leaped from their seats and left the carriages and hearse deserted. On advice of the police the fami ly finally dismissed the band; the union chauffeurs then returned and the funeral proceeded. Omaha-Bluffs Debate Lands Sextet in Jail "AH was serene among a sextet of acquaintances yesterday afternoon at Ihirteenth and Alarcy streets until .John J. O'Grady, 2418 N street, boasted that Council Bluffs didn't "quite come up to the stan dards uv Omehaw. That riled Thomas P. Robertson of the Bluffs. It also began a free- for-all fight among O'Grady, Rob ertson, John Kelly, Twenty-fifth and M streets; John Howard, Park hotel; Dan O'Rourke, Chicago, and Thomas Murphy. Buffalo, N. Y. At Central police station all were charged with drunkenness and fight ing. . Plymouth Rock Pieces Are Now Stuck Together Plymouth. Mass.. June 26. Ply mouth xRock was put together again today. The boulder took on some thing of its original aspect when, the three pieces into which it had split since the forefathers landed on it, were taken out of n nearby building, and joined on its former site. The rock, now entirely exposed for the first time in years, will be covered with a canopy, . , OMAHA, MONDAY, New York Curb Market Ends Outdoor Career New York, June 26. The New York curb market eneded its outdoor lite Saturday. Wrhen the noon hour came, the babbel that has marked the curb operations on Broad street, died to a murmur after a final roar. Monday the curb will have a roof over its head. ' But the final roar was unprece dented. Brokers multiplied the shouts, the furious wigglinsr of fin gers, the waving of arms, the swing ing of caps and the mad milling that have made the curb seem more like a band of deaf mutes than a busi ness body. Up into the air went scores of vari-colored caps and bizzare jack ets curious habiliments by which brokers perched . beside telegraph wires in windows above had been able to tell their representative from the other fellows. Nobody agrees on the date when the business of dealing in unlisted securities on the curb started, but 1873 marked organization of the as sociation. Its members transacted business in rain or snow, sleet or sunshine. Four Lincoln ! Disabled Vets Go to Detroit Will Attend National Meeting Of Disabled Sol hW Or ganLzation as Delegates ; Legion Backs Them. Lincoln. Tune 26. The Lincoln post of the Disabled American Vet' erans of the World War will send a four-man delegation to the first national convention which opens in Detroit Monday, July 27. At the regular semi-monthly meeting of the local post Tuesday night John Davey, Kalph . fsreitenstein, John W, Schmolz and C. S. Royer were elect ed to represent the Lincoln post. While the post has been organized only a short time; it numbers more than 40 ex-servjee men who were partially or, totally disabled during the war. Regular meetings are held in the American Legion club rooms the second and fourth Tuesday of each month. A number of local mat ters affecting disabled veterans have been" satisfactorily handled by the post. , . , It was made possible for the dele gation to go to Detroit through the kindness of the Lincoln Chamber of Commerce, which donated $20 a man to the delegates. The post is putting up another $25. With reduced rail road fares the men will have to spend very little of thr own 'money. , : The Lincoln men will hold a pre liminary meeting and also meet with the post before leaving, to receive in structions as to the measures to sup port. It is practically certain that the plan advanced by the Seattle post of introducing a bill in congress to give the disabled vets a loan when they have finished their vocational training and are ready to set up m business, will receive the local order's endorsement. The delegates will also boost for some middle west city as the seat of the next national con vention. ' Hears Child's Cry Nine Miles Away Jailed Mother's Assertion That Son Calling for Her Proves to Be True. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee Leaned Wire. Chicago, June 26. Although she has no knowledge of the occult or thought transference, Mrs, Burnice Soble, heard the cry of her sick child, Henry, in the Isolation hos pital, nine miles away, and was committed to the hospital ward or the county jail in the belief she was afflicted with hallucinations. She and her husband had been sent to jail by Judge Horner be cause they could not produce a note of $700, necessary to the settlement of an estate. Neither husband nor wife can speak English. Through an interpreter they denied knowledge of the note and the judge sentenced them to jail until one of them con fessed. - A month dragged by and there was no one to care for the three children, aged 6, 4 and 2. Social service workers finally took them to an orphans home. Last Friday night Henry, aged 4, became ill and was taken to the Isolation hospital. At about the same hour his mother, un aware of what had been done, be came hysterical in the jail and de clared her child was dying and call ing for her. Jail authorities thought her demented and transferred her to the jail hospital. Social service workers went before Judge Horner today and told him all three children would die unless their mother was restored to them and he ordered her immediate release. Chicago 19th Ward Feud Victim Killed Chicago, June 26. The Nineteenth ward political feud claimed its fifth victim today when Joseph Laspisa, wealthy contractor and lieutenant of Anthony D'Andrea, slain political leader, was shot and killed. The victim was driving his auto mobile through the Italian district when two men riding in the tonneau of the machine stood up with drawn psitola and fired several shots into his head. They escaped. With the dead man's fingers still gripping the wheel, the car continued 50 feet, swerved and wrecked itself against the curbing and a telegraph Pole. . , ' Sl ' . " "' ) . JUNE 27, 1921. All Pleasant Jobs mt $1$ m ting tm tra Father of 'Fifi' Stillman Will Help Daughter James Brown Potter Says Guy Was Always Recognized By Supposed Parents' ' As Legitimate. Chlrazo Tribune-Omaha Bee Leaned Wire. Ww York, June 2b. When James Brown Potter, father of Mrs. James A. Stillman, takes the witness stand in the defense of his daughter, he will swear: . . "I affirm that Mr. and Mrs. Still man have always acknowledged to me Guy Mulman as their child everywhere and at all times, in' their homes, in Newport and in New York City." This was . ascertained when. for the first time, the father's atti tude and views in the suit of the former president "of - the National City bank against the former "Fifi" Potter became known. Attacks Stillman 'Lawyers. ' ' "From press reports it was appar ent that. Mr. Stilhnan's lawyers and himself were concentratinsr on their I annot help from so staling it unmanly and ungentlemanly attack on an innocent baby and an assured ly neglected wife," Mr. Potter said today.' "With reference to the mat ter of the legitimacy of my grand son, Guy Miiiman, 1 aftirm that Mr. and Mrs. Stillman - have always acknowledged to me Guy Stillman as th'eir child everywhere and at all times. "I have criticized Mr. Delancey Nicol's attack in 1 a public court on behalf of his client as 'outrageous, because real men and true gentlemen' do not attack women' and "children under any circumstances, but always strive to defend them, and because the Stillmans constituted a family which good citizenship should seek to defend and not destroy, just as patriotism seeks to protect the greater family and aggregation of families. Too Much Alone. : "That my daughter was much alone, too much alone for marital happiness, I know, but I never knew that outside attractions in New, York City were wrecking a family and the first I knew this was so- was in a letter from my daughter, which -was written to me from the Stillman country place at Pleasantville, N. Y. The letter was dated May. 1, 1920. ".Nothing in this letter or anything which came to me abroad hints at Mr. Nicol's charges: which, .even if they were true, should never have been made publicly for the honor of the James A. Stillman- family,: of every individual member of it. and of the honorable connected families on both sides." . v ' Mr. Potter at present is living in Westchester town. He and his wife, the second Mrs. Potter, will be strong for the defense when the pre sentation of its evidence begins probably during the second week of uly. Due to the death of John ' B. Stanchfield, chief of counsel for the defense, hearings in "the case were postponed . from next Tuesday until Wednesday to give attorneys in the case opportunity to attend the fu neral. Dry Laws Mean Nothing in Young Lives of 13- Souses lice arrested 13 nersons for HrnnW- enness yesterday. , on "cornola," the , favorite alley arinic, ponce .said. "JIrw mm , ilmftaj mlmmg mt $15 m mL mmd thmrm i, Bmxtmr, mm him By nail (I war). Dally in tuafay, S7.W: Dally mly. II; Ssaday. 11.56; ta aolMi la Unite Statu. Canada an Mulct. Come Only After Years of Hard Work towns: Utts aV' mnL mad tkmrm im Am aaimry I gat, J m Unclad Bathers Annoy Residents Vigilante Committee Formed To Protect Beach From ; Moonlight Frolics. Chicago Trlbane-Omaha, Bee Leaeed Wire. Chkagcyi June: 2u.-A "vigilante ,committee has been formed to pro tect the beach between Seventy first and Seventy-eighth streets from the frolics of the moonlight bathers. For ' seven years citizens - along this stretch have been bothered by men and women who come thither to swim and spoon and sing and dance and cool themselves unattired in the breeze. . The. matter came to a head the other night when one of the long suffering citizens broke up a sugar barrel and prepared to paddle the annoyers. r . Saturday night the Vigilante com mittee held its first meeting at the home of John T. Russell, 7238 South Shore drive.' At this meeting- $500 was pledged for attorneys' fees and the first step will be to secure an in junction to restrain ,Tat and ;Hey worth from erecting a prospective dance hall on the beach. ' - "It is -becoming absolutely un bearable," said P. J. McDonagh,, who acted as spokesman for the vigilantes. "We have been fighting it for seven-years. ; . ' ' "They come to the beaches clad in the scantiest of bathing suits sometimes at night entirely without covering. They dance obscenely, use profane and obscene language." American Soldiers On Rhine in Germany Don't Want to Return Chicago, Tribune-Omaha' Bee eatd. Wire. Washington, June '26. American soldiers on the Rhine don't want to come home. Many- of them insist on re-enlisting and as it is the policy of the War department not to refuse re-enlistment of men with good rec ords, . the practice is proving em barrassing in the face of the absolute necessity, of reducing the strength of the army to the size decreed by congress. "" The number of . officers in the American army of occupation has been reduced to that required for a force of about. 7,500 enlisted men, but the enlisted strength in Germany re mains at about 12,000 men. . The original intention was to have an en listed strength- on the Rhine of ap proximately 8,000. .' - Secretary Weeks explained that it was expected that the enlisted force on the Rhine would be reduced to about 7,500 by July 1. Those who oesire to return are for the most part soldiers who have married German woman and who do not care to re enlist. There has been, an epidemic of these marriages. Jack Johnson Arrested as He Hides With Loaded Gun Jack Johnson was arrested earlv Sunday morning by Detective Bug- lewicz. - Johnson was booked for investi gation. When arrested at the end of the Albright car line, he had a loaded gun and a flashlight. According to a report made by the arresting of- ncer, Johnson, was hiding behind a sand box, evidently waiting to hold up a street car crew. Johnson is a negro, but not a rela tive of the noted pugilist. Horn Bmxtmr to31mmn: mmfy hmU em Wnf mm I mm mm J gat- ammp lika hU." Sharp Curve in Boulevard Makes Mess of Joyride Two Girls and Three Men Ar rested .on Intoxication Gharges n When Z Car . . ' s Turns Turtle. .' Two girls, young and' pretty; three young men, all having partaken lib erally of , liquor,' so police said; a brand new touring car and a sharp turn on Happy Hollow boulevard, three' blocks south of Dodge street, combined in forming' a mess which required the efficiency of two police men ' and a police : surgeon to un scramble. ' ' The party" was joy riding. The driver of the car, so he told the desk sergeant, '".was just rambling along the boulevard" when' he came to a turn which , he did not know ex istedJ ';;;.''. ' - "I slammed on my brakes and the car turned turtle," he said. The driver was hurled through the windshield. The younger girl lost a wrist watch and most of her clothing was tdrn to shreds and the others suffered scratches and bruises on all portions of their anatomy. A third girl, so the others said, was in the car, but ran , for' home after the ac cident. The demolished machine stopped on the brmk of a 25-foot embankment. ' ; - At the police station, those in the party gave their nanies and address es as Julia and Emelina Johnson, 1548 South Twenty-fourth street; Harry. Harkins, : 1415' ' Missouri ave nue; C. J. 'Regan, 4722 1-2 South Twenty-fourth street, and L. Lone ran, 5316 ' South Twenty-seventh street. All were charged with intox ication' and the driver of the car was charged with reckless driving. 1 50,000 Observe Second Anniversary of League , London, June 26. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Crowds estimated at 50,000 observed the second anni versary of the birth of the league of nations , by demonstrations in Hyde Park. The coal strike caused a modification of plans for- pilgrim ages from the United Kingdom,, the demonstration being confined to the London area. . . Parades marched to Hyde Park, where 20 : speakers, including Lord Robert Cecil and the Archbishop of Canterbury, addressed the . crowds, which included representatives of the 48 nations an the league. Viscount Grey declared that the league could not be scrapped, but ex pressed the belief that ' the president and people of the United S, fates de sired world peace as much as those in this country, who were the strong est supporters of the league. - The Weather Forecast. t Nebraska Probably fair Monday' and somewhat cooler. Hourly Temperatures. ft a. m. a. m. T a. m. a. m. a. m. in a. m. It a. m. ....Ml p. ....67 S p. ,...M,S p. ....1114 p. ....! p. p. ..MX ..: ..7S .. ..TS ... "V ..mil p. 1 BOOB ...Mi. .. p. m. THREE CENTS Mysterious Fire Burns 11 to Death Bodies of Two Families, Charred Beyond Recogni tion, Found in Ruins Of Home. Evidence of Foul Play Cbh-ato Tribune-Omaha Bee Leaned Wire. Mayfield, Ky., June 26. Charred beyond recognition and with only parts of limbs, trunks and skulls re covered, the bodies of 11 persons, representing two families, were found burned to death early this morning at the home of Ernest Lawrence, six miles north of this city near Hickory Grove. The fire which destroyed the log and frame three-room farm' house started about midnight and lasted until nearly 4 this morning. When the fire had subsided enough for neighbors to reach the victims, there was hardly enough flesh and bones left to identify the dead. They are: . Ernest Lawrence. 35. Mrs. Lora Lawrence, his wife, Fred Lawrence, a son, 5. Ethlyn Lawrence, a daughter, 4. Ralph Lawrence, a son, 11 month'. . Otis Drew, 26. His wife, Ola Drew. 23. . Harry Drew, son, 5, : V Otis, jr., son, 4. - , .'. , . ' A 4-months-old baby of the Drews and : Delma Drew, 14:year-old nephew of the Drews. Drew and Lawrence are brothers-" in-law and the Drews were spending' the night with Lawrence and his family. Neighbors to the north of the lonely, f.lmost isolated little farm home, stated under oath at the coro ner's inquest that they heard women and children screaming and heard six or seven shots. rtt A a. a ; ine discovery or a ,u caliber rifle, pistol, shotgun, ave and oil can, all in. the front room where the fam- or the work of some maddened maniac. Searching far and near, not the remotest motive for the act could- oe gieanea toaay. rsieitner family so far as is known had a single. en emy and scores of people attested to their genteel relaf.ons. , The most pitiable, episode of . the day was when the aged mother of the two cremated women, Mrs. Net tie Riley, appeared on the scene. She almost went , into hysterxs and had to be removed from the scene. was mat pans ot piotning wr -clinging to the' charred flesh of tht two men and it is supposed they had not gone to bed. A theory is ad vanced that sudden insanity on tin part of some member of the house-, hold prompted the act. . Certain of Murder. Sheriff Marion McCain said to night, after spending the day work-. ing on the case: There is no doubt every oersor) Itl ' tfip fimiCA ttr-ie mil fAVMA Tli. dress of one of the babies wa ... . ...v T, no ...... U,.VUt A 1 drenched in blood, which prevented the clothing from burning. An ax was found in a bed with one of the women. A five-gallon coal oil can, usually kept in the kitchen, way tound just inside the room where the H were sleeping. "Four shots had been fired from a pistol. , "The only plausible theory -I have is that Lawrence, who was struck a blow on the head several years ago and since has been addicted to occa sional spells, became insane. He never had shown violence when he was delirious before, however." Compensation Claims To Former Service Men Total $226,486,891 Chlottfu Tribune-Omaha Bee Leaeed TCfre. , Washington, June 26. The gov ernment has to date made a total disbursement of $226,486,891 in meet ing, compensation claims of former service men disabled by reason of wounds, injuries or diseases incur red in the World war and death claims of dependents, according to an announcement by Director C R. Forbes of the bureau of war risk insurance. Disbursements for disability have aggregated $192,677,589.48 and death disbursements. $33,809,301.86. For the 'month of May alone the total amount disbursed by the bureau for compersation purposes was $10, 5.75,416, the monthly payments on disability compensation claims for that period amounting to $9,145,288 tnd the monthly payments to the dependents of deceased soldiers amounting to $1,430,128. Between June 1 and June 15. the bureau maileo 221,612 checks to co- . er this disiuisement of former serv ice men. Fluctations of Retail Coal Prices Are Compared Washington, June 26. The- aver age retail price of anthracite stove coal April 15. was $14,872 as com pared with $15,631 March 15 and $12,588 January 15, 1920, according to Labor department figures. Prices of chestnut coal averaged $14,859 April 15; $15,661 March 15, and $12,768 January 15. 1921 and on bituminous coal. $10,577, April 15: $11,147 March 15. and $8,808 January 15 1920. : . . : In Denver prices on Colorado an thracite stove coal were: On April 15 was $16; on March 15, $17,167 and on January 15, 1920. $14, while Bos-, n users paia $10 ana ?l.5. j Open Irish Parliament j Belfast, June 26. A vice regal prr, clamation issued fixed . June 28 'as the date for the opening of the par liament for southern Ireland M. "7 it- a