Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 15, 1921, Image 1

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    The Om Aha Daily Bee
, VOL. 51 NO. 128.
OMAHA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1921.
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Un Trial
Film Star'. Fatuous Smile
Missing As Fight to Free
Him of Manslaughter
Charge Opens.
Few Jurors Are in Box
San Francisco. Nov. 14. Roscoe
, .'rbmkle appeared today (or the
I'M time in the nuikt notable role of
a broad career defendant in man
daughter proceedings arising from
the drath of Virginia Rappc, like
liiniM'If. a fiKure in the motion pic
lure world. Arbuckle's audience was
one of the smallest that ever watched
I'int, only a few hundred persons
crowded into a court room, but what
it lacked in size it made 'up in inter
est. No crowd ever watched the screen
antics of the comedian more closely
than today's gathering gave attention
ti the dry procedure of selecting a
jury. Arbucklu mmscii snowed ne
felt the importance of the occasion.
JJc glanced nervously about the
room and gave the impression that
he was worried.
Smile Is Lacking.
1 His smile was lacking. Indeed,
since charge were filed in court,
ftccising him of being instrumental
in the death of Miss Rappe as an
outcome of a party held in his rooms
at the Hotel St. Francis here, there
is only one time on record that the
iamous smile has been in public evi
dence. That was when the charges
were reduced from murder to man
slaughter. Arbucklc's wife was in court to
day, but did not sit beside him at the
counsel table.
Few in Jury Bex.
Gavin McNab, chief counsel for
Arbucklc, early confirmed public ex
pectation that the defense would
make no effort to i!iscuss the char
acter of the dead girl. He told the
court this formally, i
When adjournment came late this
afternoon four jurors, one of them
a woman, had been accepted tenta
tively, and the only inklings of the
lines to be pursued by the prosecu
tions and the defense that had been
brought out were McNab's state
ment, already described, and a hint
that some evidence to be offered by
the state would be circumstantial in
character.
Police on Duty.
. The corridors were kept clear by
k special police &Hiar4. f-flU -who- did.
not have tickets into the courtroom.
Arbuckle was represented by six
attorneys. Brady's staff was made
un of three, including himself.
The defense, after an hour's argu
ment, succeeded in having a ques-
(Turn to Pu Two, Column Two.)
Gigaret Smokers Are
Scored by Church Head
Ogden, Utah, Nov. 14. President
Hcber J. Grant of the church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, in
an address here yesterday before a
conference of church members de
nounced prominent citizens who vio
late the Utah anti-cigaret law.
"I have seen men of high standing
in this state smoking in places -where
the practice is prohibited by law,"
he sad. "And yet these men would
be indignant if they were called law
breakers. .
"Men don't like the laws which hit
them. Thieves don't likt the law s
which prohibit thievery and these
smokers are really in the same class
with the thieves."
Radicals Threaten Life
Of U. S. Consul at Tampico
Washington, New. 14. A crowd
of 300 radicals, in which were a
number ofc soldiers in uniform, con
gregated before the American con
sulate at Tampico, Mexico, last
night and threatened the life of the
consul, the state department was in
formed late today. The demonstra
tion, it was said, was in connection
with the conviction for murder by
a Massachusetts court of Sacco and
Vanzetti, Italians, uniciais or ne
department expresses me ueuci mai
(the Mexican government would
"full steps to protect the consul.
.New All-Steel Electrically
Driven Vessel Is Launched
Chester, Pa.. Nov. 14. The twin
screw electrically driven motor'hip
Californian was launched today, at
the merchant shipbuilding corpora
tion. The craft was sponsored by
Mrs. George S. Dearborn of New
York, widow of a former president
of the American-Hawaiian Steamship
lines, for which the-10.000-ton carg
carrier was built. The ' ship was
christened with a flask of old Cali
fornia wine.
The Californian is of a new type,
being of all steel construction. .
Fisher Has Proprietary
Rights in "Mutt and JefP
Washington, Nov. 14. Proprie
tary right to "Mutt and Jeff as
characters is possessed by Harry C
(Bud) Fisher, cartoonist, and de
cisions to that effect by the New
York state courts are final, the su-
preme court today refusing to con
sider an appeal which the Star com-
i pany, publisher of the Heart news-
papers sought to bring.
Validity of North Dakota
Recall, Oct 18, to Be Tested
Fareo. N. D.. Nov. 14. Validity
of the recall election in North Da
kota Oct. 28 probably will be at
tacked in court by group of tax
payers affiliated with the non-partisan
league, it was. indicated today
when appeals for funds to finance
tht contest action were sent out
from Bismarck,
"Murder Mode? Stir
Parisians as Society
Storms Landru Trial
Paris, Nov. 14. "Murder modes"
furnished the most exciting discus
sion of the week, due to the fact that
society, led by Princess George of
Greece, has been storming the court
room at Versailles where Landru,
the man of 24 .1 sweethearts, is fight
ing in the shadows of the guillotine.
Due to the arrangement of the
spectators' seats the court Saturday
was literally framed with the jewels
of befurrrd women wearing ropes of
pearls and diamonds.
At the Landru trial and the open
ing of the opera, the two biggest so
ciety events of the week, the moit
striking innovation was the "Jacobs
coat" worn by former Queen Amelic
of Portugal. It was literally a patch
work of furs dyed different colors
including red monkey, green Astra
khan and pink seal, while stained
paradise feathers formed the ' sole
head dress.
Black Reported
As Recommended
For Postmaster
Postmaster General Hays De
cides to Recommend Con
gressman Jefferis' Choice
For Omaha Office.
Appointment of Charte E. Black
as postmaster of Oman was indi
cated in word received from Wash
ington last evening.
Postmaster General Hays was re
ported to have decided to recom
mend Mr. Black to President Hard
ing, thus ending the controversy be
tween Congressman JcrTeris and Na
tional Committeeman R. B. Howell,
the former favoring Mr. Black and
the latter urging the appointment of
Former City Commissioner W. G.
Ure.
Mr. Black and Mr. Ure both were
certified by the civil service com
mission as eligible for appointment,
the third name certified being that
of Herbert Daniel, present acting
postmaster.
Nine Die in N.Y.
Tenement Fire
Five-Story Building Becomes
Roaring Furnace as Flames
Spring From Basement
Up Through Shaft
New York; Nov. RAt least nine
persons are believed to have been
burned to death in a tenement house
fire early today. Five bodies, all un
identified, were found huddled to
gether near a doorway on the fifth
floor of the building and firemen
later found three more bodies, none
of which was-identified. - Two men
and one woman were seriously in
jured, while 30 others were treated
for abrasions and shock.
The building, a five-story tene
ment, was occupied by IS families.
Investigation showed the fire had
originated in the , basement and
roared upward through a shaft. "
Many of the people who lived in
the tenement groped their way to
windows, where they clung to ledges
and screamed for help.
Postoffice employes from a sub
station across the street saved many
before the firemen reached the scene.
One man became exhausted while
clinging to a window ledge and fell
to the street, suffering a fractured
skull. . . - ;
Son-in-Law of Carranza
Arrested at San Antonio
El Paso, Tex., Nov. 14. Candido
Aguilar, son-in-law of the late Presi
dent Carranza of Mexico, and
Antonio Moreno, former Mexican
army colonel, were arrested at San
Antonio on charges of "jumping
bonds" in the federal court here, it
was learned at the local marshal's
office today. Aguilar and Moreno
were awaiting trial here on charges
involving their reported attempt to
start another revolution in Mexico,
the specific allegation being entering
the United States without passports.
Their bonds were $1,000 each.
$32,000 Collected First
Day of Campaign for Fund
Workers in the drive for $300,000
for Father Flanagan's Heme for
Boys started yesterday, reported
$32,000 subscribed up to noon yes
terday. V .' .
The largest single subscription
was $3,000, from the Union Stock
Yards company. 1
ELIZABETH, Mary,
and Ruth had a repu
tation to maintain.
They were the town's
opinion of model
daughters, and moth
er was the involuntary
sacrifice.
The Rule of 3
By ETHEL TRAIN
Blue
Ribbon
k fiction i
BLUE RIBBON fictfoa in
Next Sunday's Bee
Peace With
Germany Is
Proclaimed
Harding Signs Proclamation
Formally Restoring Prewar
Conditions, Following
Treaty Ratifications.
War Endedjijy 2,1921
Washington. Nov.. IS. President
Harding signed a proclamation de
claring peace with Germany.
The president's signature was at
tached to the document without cere
mony at 3:52 p. m. today upon his
returning from laying the comer
stone of the Victory Memorial in
Washington. Not even Secretary
Christian was present and the procla
mation was taken to Mr. Harding
by a messenger following the regu
lar routine of executive office business.
Text of Proclamation.
Text of flic president's proclama
tion follows:
"By the President of the United
States of America. ,
"A proclamation.
"Whereas, By a joint resolution
of congress, approved March 3,
1921, it was declared certain acts
of congress, joint resolutions and
proclamations should be construed
as if the war between the United
States of America and the Imperii I
German government had ended, but
certain acts of congress- and the
proclamations issued in pursuance
thereof were excepted from opera
tion of the said resolution: -
"Whereas, By a joint resolution
of congress, approved July 2, 1921,
the state of war which was declared
by joint resolution of congress, ap
proved April 6, 1917, to exist be
tween the United States of America
and the Imperial German govern
ment was declared at an end;
"Whereas, A treaty between the
United States and .Germany was
signed at Berlin, August 25, 1921,
to restore the friendly relations ex
isting between the nations prior to
the outbreak of the war; and,
"Whereas, The said treaty has
been ratified on both parts, and the
ratification of the two countries
were exchanged at Berlin on No
vember 11, 1921;
"Now, therefore, be it known
that I. Warren G. Harding, 'presi
dent of the United States of Amer
ica, hereby proclaim that the war
between the United States and Ger
many, terminated on July 2, 1921,
and "cause the said treaty to made
..public. to Jhe end that every article
"and clause thereof may be observed j
and fulfilled by the United States
and the citizens thereof.
"In witness whereof I have here
' unto set mv hand and caused the
seal of the United States to be . af
fixed. Done at the city of Wash
ington, this fourteenth day of No
vember, one thousand nine hundred
and twenty-one and of the inde
pendence of the United States the
one hundred forty-sixth. ' , .
"WARREN G. HARDING,
"By the President.
"CHARLES E. HUGHES,
"Secretary of State."
Envoy Material Lacking. ,
Press dispatches from Germany
have indicated that the Ebert govern
ment was having difficulty in find
ing a suitable appo'ntee to the Wash
ington ambassadorship in view of
the expenses through difference in
exchange rates.
It has been suggested that Ger
many might, for a time, be content
with a charge d'affaires, but such
suggestion has not been officially
communicated to Washington.
President Harding, for some time,
has had under consideration the
names of several possibible ambas
sadors to Germany, and it is under
stood Representative Allenson B.
Houghton of New York is first in
his mind in that connection.
Cherokees Ask High Court
To Review Claims for Land
Washington, Nov. 14. The Texas
Cherokees and associated tribes
asked the supreme court to review
their claim to more than a million
acres of land in Texas. The court
took the motion under advisement.
They contend that in 1822, they
settled on unoccupied land in east
ern -Texas, then a part of Mexico,
that the republic of Texas recog
nized their title and entered into a
treaty with them to obtain their
friendship, but that after acquiring
independence, Texas repudiated the
agreement and they fled to Mexico,
Canada and throughout the United
States.
i
Colorado Fuel and Iron Co.
Announces Wage Reductions
Denver Colo., Nov. 14. A wage
reduction of approximately 30 per
cent will be announced soon by the
officials of the Colorado Fuel and
Iron company, it was announced at
the headquarters of the company
here today, the reduction to affect
11 of the campanies 18 coal mines.
The exact date for promulgating the
new wage scales was not made pub
lic. Reporter at Landru Trial
Kills Self With Revolver
Versailles, Nov. 14. Vital D'Ar
zac, a loulouse newspaper man,
covering the Landru trial here, left
the courtroom this afternoon, tell-
insr his comrades that the case was
driving him crazy. He went to his
hotel and ,kilfed himself with a re
volver.
Negro Woman, 102, Dies.
San Aantonio, Tex., Nov. 14
Mary Williams, negro woman, said
to be the oldest regress in Texas,
died here aged 102 years. She had
lived in Texas 40 years, coming here
from Louisiana where for many
years she was a slave.
Diplomatic Red Tape
Cut by Delegates to
Armament Conference
Washington, Nov. 14. (By The
Associated Press.) Armament dele,
eatcs have cut the red tan :&
...,......,.,, V ' ,,1 1 .,.,W
They will dis'
and otnciai ca, ' v;c,
tution. au ..itt
Somebody fi,'? ' . it all
the diplomats a -caches and ad
visers here were all to call on one
another in formal fashion, it would
use up more than 40,000 calling
cards.
Stationers, at first overjoyed, are
mourning the naval holiday,
Larscn Denies
Charge He Was
A "Poor Loser"
Suit for Aviation Trophy Be
fore Judge Wakeley Is Re
plcte With Humorous
Situations.
John M. Larscn, donor of the
trophy for the aviation contest
bearing his name and owner of the
two JL-6 monoplanes, which he
contends won the event over the
S. V. A. biplane which was awarded
the victory bv the Aero congress
contest committee, denied emphat
ically in district court yesterday
afternoon that he is a "poor loser."
Larsen was called to the witness
stand in Judge A. C. Wakeley s
court to nrove his claims that E. F,
White, pilot of the plane which was
declared winner, used fraud in the
contest by carrying more fuel than
was charged against him. I ne
technical committees report after
the race on November 5, showed
that the S. V. A. used 23.88 gallons
of gasoline.
Alleges "Plain Steal."
"That is 'so preposterous that no
man with any mechanical knowledge
would claim it, Larsen declared
"It's a plain steal."
He said the Italian plane could
not possibly . have gone the 240-mile
distance on less than JU gallons ot
fuel and offered figures based on his
opinion of the motor's possibilities
to prove his contention.
Larsen, on cross-examination by
Paul L. Martin, counsel for White,
said he does not know what the
Larsen trophy's value will be or
what it will cost to produce. It has
not been completed, he said. He
characterized the $3,000 cash, award
for first place as "cigaret money,"
in comparison to the value of the
trophy and the honor of winning it.
Lddie Stinsoiv one of the Larsen
pilots, who has flown an . . V. A.
plane, testified ' he believed t White
could not have covered the race dis
tance on the amount of fuel which
the technical report shows him to
have used.
No Direct Evidence of Fraud
Throughout the day, however,
there was no direct evidence of
fraud introduced. White testified he
had drained the tanks of the plane,
including the one Larsen allcgoswas
filled fraudulently, and that all gaso
line he carried was charged to him,
in addition to a gallon or more he
spilled after it had been weighed
and he was trying to put it into the
tank.
Larsen kept the courtroom in a
constant uproar by his verbal tilts
with the opposing counsel, launch
ing into dissertations on aviation af
fairs often, instead of answering the
questions propounded. He was
warned by the court to refrain from
the impromptu speeches, but the
warnings had little effect. .
The case will be continued this
morning and is expected to occupy
the greater part of today.
Enforcement of Bread
Law Further Delayed
Lincoln, Nov. 14. (Special.)
Further delay in enforcement of the
Smith bread law, held constitutional
last week by District Judge Morn
ing, was insured Omaha bakers to
day when they filed a $1,000 superse
deas bond in the Lancaster county
district court, which means enforce
ment of the law is held up pending
appeal to the supreme court. Notice
of the appeal was filed in district
court.
Ordinarily it takes from four to six
months for the mills of the supreme
court to grind out a decision. This
means that at least a year and a half
will elapse before final action can be
taken on a law passed by the legisla
ture last winter.
Machinists' Mate Dies As
Plane Falls at Pensacola
Pensacola, Fla., Nov. 14. Ma
chinist's Mate Colton was killed to
day when a seaplane carrying him
and Lieuts. Steadham Acker and
O. D. Spaulding went- into a tail
spin at an altitude of 1,000 feet and
crashed near Barancas Beach. Acker
and Spaulding were seriously in
jured. Senate Passes House Bill
On Statute of Limitations
Washington, Nov. 14. The sen
ate today passed the house bill ex
tending trom three to six years
operation of the statute of limita
tions W-ith respect to criminal con
spirators and attempts to defraud
the government The change in the
law, however, does not extend the
statute with regard to civil liability
in such cases.
All Bodies of Yanks Are
Removed at Brest Cemetery
Brest. Nov. 14. Disinterment of
the bodies of American soldiers
buried here during the war has been
completed. Army authorities have
forwarded to the four permanent
American cemeteries in France
L080 bodies, removal of which to the
United States was not reauested br I
relatives. .
Just When Mother Has Company
Six Men Killed
In Clash With
Mexican Troops
Filibustering Parly Baltic
With Federal Forces Near
Tijuana in Lower
" California. ;
San Diego, Cal., Nov. 14. Six
members of a filibustering party of
40 Mexicans are dead as a result of
skirmish the detachment had with
a party of federal troops in San An
tonio canyon, six miles south oi li-
juana, l-ower laiitornia, tins morn
ing. In the skirmish four of the in
vading party were killed. Two were
captured by the federals and later ex
ecuted.
The report of the skirmish was
made by Col. A. Armenta, comman
der of the federal forces at Iijuana,
to David Gershon, United States de
partment of justice agent here, when
Gershon called on the Mexican com
mander at Tijuana yesterday after
noon. . -
For a time there was much excite
ment in Tijuana, but tonight all was
quiet and Governor Epigmenio
V'Barra of Lower California, said" no
more trouble was expected.
No Americans were allowed in the
main part of Tijuana and for several
hours yesterday the border was
closed to traffic.
There are 100 well-armed Mexican
federal soldiers in Tijuana,, accord
ing to authorities, and the garrison
there is equipped with four machine
guns.
Rumors ot impending trouble have
been current for several weeks and
about two weeks ago three automo
bile trucks loaded with guns and
ammunitions believed to be enroute
to Mexico for revolutionary purposes
were seized by federal agents in
American territory near the border.
War Correspondence on All
Foreign Loans Published
Washington, Nov. 14. Several
hundred letters, comprising corre
spondence between the State and
Treasury departments and foreign
governments in connection with the
$10,000,000,000 of toreign loans
made during and after the war, were
made public today by the senate
judiciary committee.
The correspondence was submit
ted to the committee during its in
quiry last summer into the foreign
debt question. All important details
contained in the correspondence had
previously become public.
Secretary Hughes Entertains
Delegates to Aramament Meet
Washington. Nov. 14. Secretary
Hughes and Mrs. Hughes were
hols tonight at a reception in honor
of the armament delegates. Other
guests were from the diplomatic 'ist
and official circles.
The reception was held in , the
Pan-American union building. '
Deed Transferring Baby.
For $10 Is Filed at Houston
Houston. Tex., Nov. 14. A deed
transferring the ownership of a
three weeks' old baby boy for "$10
and other considerations, declared
by officials to be the first instru
ment its kind known here, was
filed in district court today.
Senate Talks on Meet I
Washington. Nov. 14. (Bv The
Associated tress.) Discussion ot
the American proposals" for limita
tion of naval armament hrnW.- nut in
the senate todar wit hin an hnttr aftr
it convened.
11 f'L1 '
Needy Children
Watch Shoe Fund
They Run to School to Keep
Warm and Hope Fund
Grows.
Many little boys and 'gitls "are
watching The Bee"s fund which supplies-slices
-to "the children" of very
poor families. They are anxiously
waiting their turn. They run fast
going to school so their toes, peep
ing from their ragged shoes, won't
get cold. And they hope the fund
will grow rapidly so they can have
shoes. " ' '
Each case is carefully investigated
by school teachers, without expense
to the' fund. So your dollar is 100
per- cent efficient in buying shoes
for desperately needy cases.
Send of bring what you can to
The Eee office now. ' For the need
is very great. .
rrevloUHly acknowledged ....... .$115. 00
1). 1). Proper , ,.. 6 00
Joseph Kahourek 1.110
Nell Duncnn .- 5.00
Dr. Genu I. Cleaver, Council Bluffa 5.0(1
Total $131.00
Women Support Plan
To Limit Armaments
Washington, Nov. 14. Support of
the American program for limita
tion of armament, was voiced at an
"international mass meeting of
women" last night. The speeches,
with the messages read from femi
nine organizations in foreign coun
tries, comprised approbation of the
purpose of the conference from
practically every country.
Kesoiutions were adopted for
presentation to President Harding,
urging in addition to reduced arma
ment, "control of the yet unmeas
ured powers of chemical science."
Receiver Takes Inventory
Of Lincoln Motors Company
Detroit, ' Nov. 14. The Detroit
Trust company, appointed Novem
ber 8 as receiver's for Lincoln Mo
tors company, announced today it
was completing an inventory of the
company's assets, and has asked
creditors to forward statements of
their accounts for comparison with
the company s records.
Through error it was stated No
vember 8, that the Lincoln company
had filed a voluntary petition in
DanKruptcy. . i ne court action in
volved only appointment of a re
ceiver.
In the receivership petition the
company s assets were placed at
$14,800,000. while its liabilities were
given as $8,237,280.
Bank Examiner Declares
Joplin Bank in Good Shape
Joplin, Mo., Nov. 14. L. K. Rob
erts, national bank examiner, who
lias been investigating the condition
of the First National bank here, an
nounced today that its affairs were
in good condition and that the
bank would reopen tomorrow. The
bank closed Saturday, following the
death in Mexico City of its presi
dent, Amos Gipson, who is reported
to have committed suicide.
Labor Leaders Preach
In Churches of Boston
Boston, Nov. 13. Labor leaders
mounted pulpits in nearly a score of
churches here today, to preach on
religious ideals" in industrial rela
tions. Through the agency of the
Central Labor union and the Greater
Boston Federation of Churches.
union heads spoke in Congregational,
Baptist, Methodist and. Universalist
edifices and a synagogue, j
Fox Surrenders
Self to Sheriff
On Indictments
Former President of Omaha
Refining Company Released
On $5,000 Bonds
District Court.
in
L. V. Fox, former-president of the
Omaha Refining company, who was
indicted for embezzlement by the
recent grand jury, surrendered him
self to Sheriff .Clark late yesterday.
Fox's $5,000 bond, fixed by District
Judge Troup, was signed by J.' C.
Hardman of Ashland and Ben
Handler. Hardman listed a three
story apartment building at 526
South Twenty-first avenue and three
lots to qualify as a signer.
Eleven indictments were returned
against Fox. One alleges that on
Jui;e 23, 1919, while president and
director of the Omaha Refining
company, which office it is alleged
he held until January 31, 1921, Fox
embezzled $37,000 from the company.
' The other 10 indictments, charging
Fox with both embezzling and steal
ing funds from the company, specify
the following amounts ralleged to
have been embezzled, and dates
when embezzlement is alleged to
have occurred:
January 31. 1921, $3,000; Novem
ber 2, 1918, $7,525; August 1, 1920,
$2,000; March 21, 1920, $6,000;. De
cember 16, 1919, $5,500; February
25, 1920, $5,000; June 23, 1919, $3,
550; September 9, 1919, $5,000; Sep
tember 13. 1920, $4,500; October 27,
1919, $3,500. .
: )
Lakes-to-Sea Route Project
Discussed at N. Y. Meeting
New York, Nov. 14. "-Plans for
bringing a new trade route into the
heart of the North American contin
ent were taken up today when
American and Canadian engineers,
educators, economists and public of
ficials met in a public forum to dis
cuss the proposed St. Lawrence
Great Lakes ship channel project.
The meeting was presided over bv
Julius H. Barnes, president of the
L7nited States Grain corporation, and
will be addressed by many well
known advocates of the plan, includ
ing Secretary of Commerce Hoover
and Governor Henry J. Allen of
Kansas.
Former G. 0. P. Leader Dies
Louisville, Ky., Nov. 14. J. F.
Grinstead, 76, former mayor of
Louisville and for many years a re
publican leader . of Kentucky, died
yesterday.
The Weather
Forecast
Nebraska Cloudv Tuesday fol
lowed by rain or snow at night and
possibly on Wednesday; colder
Vv ednesday.
Iowa Unsettled weather Tues
day with probably rain or snow at
night and on Wednesday; warmer
Tuesday, colder Wednesday.
Tuesday partly cloudy; not much
change in temperature.
Hourly Temperatures.
S a. m
8 a. m
7 a. ra
ft a. ra
V a. m
10 a. m
J 1 a. m.. .
..
.in
..17
..is
..S3
..41
I p. m.. ..
t p. m.. . .
3 p. m.. .
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U. S. Plans
Too Drastic
For Britain
England Seeks Elastic Re
placement Program Ralher
Than 10-Venr Holiday
Would Ahol if h Suits.
Accepts "In Principle"
Ky Tim Awixtnlnl Irm,
Washington, Nov. 14. Great
Britain's acceptance "in principle" of
the American proposals for limita
tion nf naval armaments contem
plates an alteration of the plan in
several important details.
The British acceptance will be
presented at tomorrow's preliminary
session of the conference by A. J.
Halfour, head of the mission. Japan's
p.cceptauce "in principle," although
forecast by the statements of llaron
Kato, may be delayed as the Japanese
mission must confer with Tokio.
Mr. Balfour may not outline de
tails of Great Britain's reservations,
but they are substantially described
this way:
Want Elastic Program.
Instead of a flat 10-year hol'ay,
Great Britain wants the replacement
program to be an elastic one
spread over a period of years.
Great Britain would like to sec the
submarine outlawed front naval war
fare; failing this, she wants to see
their tonnage and equipment dis
tinctly limited. She feels that tTic
submarine fleets allowed by the .
American program are too great; she
has never had so large a submarine
fleet as the proposals would allow
her.
The United States, Great Britain
feels, would have hgr at a disadvant
age in airplane .carrying ships, under
the American proposals, because .
while Great Britain has an equipment
of these craft, the United States
would have to bnild new the number
allotted. They would be of later de
sign and of superior improvement
while British ships would be obsolete.
Want Limited Disarmament.
Great Britain wants the replace
ment program spread over a period
of years, because, British naval ex
perts argue, the program could be
carried on with a small equipment :
of building plant at a small scale,
probably a ship at a time. If a flat
10-year holiday were to be declared,
they say, facilities for making a
wholesale replacement after 10 years
would have to be kept in organiza
tion and although great fleets of war- .
ships might be consigned to the junk
pile, facilities for reproducing .thenW
still would exist. '
Such a program, the British naval
experts say, does not go to the root
of the question. Therefore they will
. (Turn to Vaga Two Column One.)
"Big Tim" Murphy Gets
Six Years for Holdup
Chicago, Nov. 14. "Big Tim"
Murphy, former state representa
tive, gang leader and president of
the Gas Workers and Street Sweep
es' unions, was sentenced to six
years in Leavenworth and fined
$30,000 by Judge Kcnesaw M. Lan
dis today for his part in planning
the $360,000 Dearborn station mail
robbery here last April.
Vincenzo Cosmano and Edward
Geirum, alleged driver of the mail
bandits auto, were each sentenced to
four years and fined $20,000 and Paul
Volanti, in whose grocery store four
stolen $1 bills were found, were sen
tenced to two years and fined $10,000.
A 30-day stay of execution of sen
tence was granted the men to per
fect an appeal to a higher court.
Probe, of District Attorney
' Of Los Angeles Is Dropped
Los Angeles, Cal., Nov. 14. An
investigation of the office of the
Los Angeles county district attor
ney, Thomas L. Woolwine, was
definitely dropped today by the
county grand jury, which had initi
ated it several weeks ago, when that
body received a request for further
evidence from Attorney General U.
S. Webb, to whom it had turned
for action. The foreman of the
jury said there was lio more evi
dence to offer and, as he believed the .
attorney general would not proceed
further without it, the incident ap
peared to be clc;d.
Birth Control Advocates
Released in Police Court
New --York, Nov. 14. Mrs. Mar
garet Sanger, and Miss Mary Wind
sor were discharged today when
evidence in court to substantiate
police officials failed to produce
charges on which they were arrested
last night when they resisted efforts
of the police to breakup a birth con
trol meeting.
Farrar-Tellegen Divorce
Case to Be Tried in New York
White Plains. N. Y., Nov. 14.
The marital differences of Geraldine
Farran Metropolitan Opera star,
and Lou Tellcgen, actor, will be
threshed out in the courts of New
York City, in accordance with the
wish of the diva, who today won
her fight for a change of venue in
her husband's suit for separation.
$ L000,000 Added to Budget
To Complete Alaska Road
Washington. Nov. 14. A house bill
authorizing inclusion in the new bud
get, cf $4,000,000 additional for com
pleting the government railroad in
Alaska between Seward and Fair
banks, was px-;sed today by the sen- "
ate.
Countess d'Eu Dies
Paris. Nov. 14 (Bv the Associated
Press) Countess d'Eu, 75, daugh
ter of Former Brazilian Emperor
Dom Pedro II and Former Em
press Theresa, died today.
i