The- Omaha Daily Bee T1 VOL. 61 NO. 179. latent m m4CUM II Hit I. IMS. M Oaaa r, 0, VMM M at IMS 1 Mr. OMAHA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1922. )) II (Ml). O.lll ... M. H. alllW lk 41 IKIlt MM. tutmttf I; M, M) MM HOU W UU S'tlM. CM Hunt S-'-M. TWO CENTS ., . r.. .... I - IeaiJcr.f m j i an .Ai I I ' m-Jrfn t' ft Naval .Plan Delayejl by New Tdiide Methods of S. pping Capital Ship Fresl ifficulty in Completh of Five- Pact. I poses Hughes Balf. our By ARTHUPI VARS HENNING. lltlraia Trlhua 1 .i,, BM i.. W'a.hiiiKtonlfff,,,,. j . Fr-j.h dif fcultics in P'ltfiiR the naval limita tion agreement down in black and '.vhltC were ffmnunlrrnl linlaw bv llie heads of t.'Jhe delegations of the five powers. ns that the rotucrence arc purpoclv delaying action hope that if France and Great reach an understanding at , J' ranee will forgo its siil- ie building program and make ii i p.HkcIi.mi nml nil ,1 fit l, II oi submarine and auxiliary tounaKC were pronounced unfounded bv the American delegation. The hope that the Cannes toiiier i lire will bring about this result is not 'based rn anv official reports, it was explained, it was addud. however, thnt it will not be too late to include (submarines and auxiliaries in the limitation agreement right tip to the hour of signing or even thereafter, for a supplementary compact could be executed. - Argument Over Annex B. The difficulties encountered today had to do with Annex B prescribing .six' optional methods of scrapping the 08 capital ships which are to be eliminated from the navies of the United States, Great Britain and lanan. . Mr. Hughes strongly advocated the destruction outright of the bulk of the retired capital ships and sougiit to obtain a definite understanding concerning the ships actually to be scrapped and those to be converted into merchantmen and naval train b SuRg'adflie ing craft. l . The FrcncrBnd Ilalhfl delegates -supported Mr. Hughes. Mr ,i Balfour, opposed M. Hughes' 'proposals.. He' was unwilling to . commit Great Britain definitely as to the amount of tonnage to be de stroyed and thfc amount to be con v erted to peacetime uses. He held that so long as the retired capital ships were disarmed it made no dif ference whether they were destroyed or not for jSey never could be used t ;.gaiu as batxifeships. When pressed, by Mr. Hughes, Mr. Balfour said he desired to consult with London be- fore continuing ,thc discussion. . , . ...Kato WiU:Tftiitrtctions.' ' . -Final approval" of 'the agreement to fcintaifl -. the -status,, quo of naval v ai-Wscs and fortifications in the Pacific iu'.s been postponed until Baron Kato receives instructions from Tokio as to the Japanese islands to be ex - -eluded as comprising "Japan proper.' It was asserted by a member of the Japanese delegation tonight tha: Japan does not wish other people to refine Japan proper, that being a matter solely for settlement by .'.Japan; but there had been no ques . lion, it was added, about the precise i.ipancse islands to ic mciuaen i-i the fortifications agreement. These inlands, the only Japanese islands discussed in this connection, it was .si'.id, are the Bonin islands and Oshima. upon which Japan has cgreed to maintain the status quo in regard to fortifications. Packing Strike Cases Tried at Nebraska City Nebraska1 City. cb Jan.' 11. ( Special.) Several leases growing out of the packing house. strike hers ;vqre before the county court and women were, among the defendants. Bertha Lewis and Homer Halsted, chr.rgcd' with assault, were fined $t0 each and gave notice of appeal. ; Jay Rccdcr.' Fay Felthauscr and Joan Danlcy "were charged with as sault upon George Garreans. Recdcr .-.nd Fclthauscrv' were dismissed and Danley bound over , to the' district court. . ' - ',- Martin Mullaney. charged ' with detaining Arch' Cruder, ct al., plead ed not guilty. Robert Walls, charged with obstructing the highway with a log to prevent passage .of vehicles to packing house entrance, pleaded not guilty and.his case was set for January 16. ' ; - -i " Earl Thompson, charged with as- ' saulting Harley Laughlan, pleaded not guilty. Ruth Gallant and Elsa Malcn, charged with assaulting Jo sephine McGuire, were released and the charge against them dismissed. Murder Not Suspected in , Mysterious Poisoning Santa Rosa," Cal.. Jan. J!. Johan na B. Ha,berhaur, 19t daughter of a rancher, w ho was mysteriously pois oned at her home near here last night, was not the victim of. a mur der in the opinion of Sheriff John Boyes, who investigated the case yesterday. 1 Boyes said he would .in vestigate further and until he com pleted such investigation could make no further comment on what he be lieved to be the exact cause of the girl's death. -An inquest was ordered. Man 74 Years Old Pleads , Guilty to Bigamy Charge Ottawa.-On t, Jan. 11. A biga mist at 74, Paul Bloom, gray of head and bent" of figure, entered a plea of guilty today and was given a one to two-year sentence in the Ontario reformatory- Bloom said he left his first wife IS years ago. , Continued Fair .Weather. Continuation of fair weather with not much change in .temperature is predicted by the weather man. -The I ighest , recorded Tuesday w as 38 and the lowest 19 at 9- yesterday. N'orth Platte, with 14, was the cold t ooint in the state i ,... Japs Agree to Get Out of Kiaochow Wellington, Jan. II. (By A. P.) The Japanese delrgatei to the armi conference today tentatively agreed to the withdrawal of Japa nrc troops from the former Grrman Kiaochow Irate hold and from the Tsing Tao-Tsiiun-Fu railway on condition that Japan furnish proper policing. The delegate! did not discuss the date on which the withdrawals would take place but the Japanese suggested that the railroad guard withdrawal would be treated sep arately from that of the withdrawal of other troop in the liae hold. Britain to Make Frances Safety Vital Problem British Memorandum of Pro posed Anglo-French Pact Declares Naal Rivalry Must Be Avoided. (.'amies, Jan. 11. The British memorandum of the proposed Anglo French pact which was telegraphed tcxlifally to London, declares Great Britain makes the security of France a problem of her own and that she will be ready again to throw in her forces, as in 1914, if French soil is attacked. Naval rivalry must be avoided by the two countries, sets fortli the memorandum, which declares that the submarines have proved m tour years experience to be inept either in naval attack or defense and can be used only to prey upon the merchant marine. Naval competition, it is added, would corrode any accor.d. Consent of France. Assumption of trade relations with j Russia were declared by the memo-j randum to be indispensable to the re-1 covery of Europe and the consent of France to Russian participation in the economic negotiations was made one of the conditions of the accord. A copy of this British memoran dum was handed to Premier Briand yesterday. -. , The document, referred to in :he foregoing is apparently' the memo randum ct the recent talk tn London between Premiers ' Lloyd George and Briand regarding the proposed Anglo-French treaty. s , . , .Representatives oi tne oermun government today were summoned to appear this ' evening before the allied reparations commission to ex plain Germany's inability to meet her January and February reparations payments. i f ; - ( ' Briand to Demand Text, Cannes. Jan. rll. (3y- A. P.I Premier Uriand will IcaveXannes for Paris at 3 this afternoon, it was an nounced this morning, not only to inform the French cabinet as to the status of the negotiations here, but it is understood to meet and answer criticisms of certain groups of the opposition and to demand tr.at the chamber of deputies support or re ject him. The principal differences between the premier and the opposition, it is learned, are with regard to the new tprm nf navmpnt hv Gi-rmanv adopted by the council's expertsTmt not yet ratified by the full council. France under these terms wnuld re ceive less- than, under previous ar rangements but a greater proportion in kind. ' . ' ; . Prominent among the matters coming before the council of the league of nations today was the re appointment of members of the com mission governing the Saare valley and .definition of what constitutes ""an inhabitant of thevSaare." - Under the treaty e-t .Versailles the majority of the inhabitants of the valley are under French control but Germany insists they ' do not for this) reason lose their German na tiorfality. Germany also ' protest against a Frenchman being chairman of 'the governing commission. , Morals Cotirt Judge Threatens Publicity Chicago. Jan. . 11. The power of the press was resorted to by Judge Heap today in an attempt to clear the morals court of the spectators who daily jam their way into it to listen to the tale's of difficulties into which their fellow citizens have fallen, but- it failed to have any ef fert on the, sightseers, , ... After repeated orders that every one not in the room on business gel out had failed to reduce the number of onlookers, Judge. Heap called in a newspaper photographer, who took a picture of the gallery. - ' "This picture will' appear in the newspapers tomorrow so that your friends .will know you come to a place" like this for diversion," said Judge Heap. , X . The announcement merelv caused many more to try to force their way in Less than half a dozen persons lcft . 20 Visitors Arrested - at Cook County Prison Chicago, Jan. 11. Yesterday was vistors' day at the Cook county jail, and after it was over 20 visitors found themselves inside looking out, instead of outside looking in. A squad of detectives went to the jail in the belief that persons wanted by the Dolice would conieUo see. some of their friends in jail. The score of men seized is said by police to include several men wanted for burglaries, and holdups. Alabama Man Flagged. ' Birmingham. Ala.. Jan. 11. Lester Hagwood of Woodlawn, a suburb, reported to police today- that he was severely flogged last night by five men after being enticed from his home. According to the police, he j said his . assailants accused tiini of some irregular" real estate transactions aith his mother, Newberry Scored by Nebraskans Michigan Senate Seat "Placed on Block," Declares Norris, "Sale Was Public, Bid ding Open."' Hitchcock Joins Attack Washington. Jan. 11. National republican leaders were charged by Senator Underwood, Alabama, dem ocratic leader, in the ncnatc today with having "determined to buy a seat in the aenaie for Truman II. Newberry, whose retention of that eat is contested by Henry Ford, hi democratic opponent." The democratic leader, entering into the debatf for the first time, de clared that as he saw the Newberry case and as he believed the country viewed it. the issue .involved is whether the republican party, as party, intend to obey the law of tin: land." Owen Present Resolution. A resolution declaring Newberry nnt to In- entitled to a scat in the senate' because of "admitted expendi ture bv relatives and friends of $200,(KK) in his behalf."' but making iio reference to questions of moral turpitude of Senator .Newberry's connections with his campaign com mittees s activities, was introduced in the senate today by Senator Owen, democrat, Oklahoma. Taking the floor against Senator N'cwbcrrv, Senator Norris, repub lican. Nebraska, said, that a senate seat had been placed on the auction block" in Michigan. Says Sale Was Public. "The sale was public, the bidding was in the open and it was knocked down to the highest bidder," said Senator Norris. 'Then why all this fuss? The question is, shall that sale be con firmed, (i seems to me the pur chaser paid more than the blamed thing is worth." Senator Hitchcock, democrat, Ne braska, also speaking for the opposi tion, said the micstion before the senate was not Mr. Newberry's guilt or innocence, or whether he knew or was ignorant of "scandalous expendi tures." The question, he declared, was that of protecting the integrity of the senate. Couple in Auto ; Crash 10 Minutes South Dakota Man and Bride of Few Moments Injured in Accident at Turn in . Council Bluffs. A few minutes after Rev. Wilford Ernst Mann, rector of the St. Paul Episcopal church in Council Bluffs, had pronounced them husband and wife. Henry Tienken, 28,' of Dallas, S D.. and his bride, Julia Hanna Bruning, 20, crashed over the em bankment on West Broadway at Thirtv-eiehth Itrect in their automo- hile. ' ' Tienken, who is registered at the Conant hotel in Omaha, and" Miss ccombanied bv A. Sutej, 1214 South Thirteenth , street, Oma ha, drove to. the Bluffs early, yes terday afternoon '.in Tienken s ma chine. After obtaining a license at thfv roiirtiio'use. thev.'went to- the home of Dr. Mann on South Sixth street to have the ceremony per formed: V ' , Ten minutes later, , while ap proaching the Douglas street bridge on the return to Omaha, Tienken lost control of the machine and .it climbed the curb, rolling eight feet to the bottom of the bank which borders Broadwav at that-point. Tienken sustained a fractured skull, several fractured ribs and a punctured lung. He is in the Jen nie Edmundson Memorial hospital and has slight chance for recovery, according to attending surgeons. Neither Mrs. Tienken nor Sutej re ceived injuries of serious character. Marriage of Princess Radziwill Annualled Rome, Jan. 11. Princess. Radizi will announces that the, Sacred Rota tribunal of the Vatican has annulled the marriaee of her son. fnnce Radziwill, to Miss Dorothy Deacon, ! which took place in 1910 at London. - r Miss Dorothy Deacon was the daughter of the late Edward Parker Deacon of Boston' and became a princess by reason of her marriage. She was noted for her beauty and ad long been prominent in society is- London and Paris. The Duchess of Marlborough, who before her marriage to the duke last June was Miss Gladys Deason, is a sister of Princess Radziwill. The duchess attended the wedding of her sister Dorothy. Jefferson County Motorists Take Out 1,400 Licenses -Fairbury, Neb., Jan. 11. (Special) The rscords in the county treasur er's office show that 1,400 automobile licenses have been sold. This num ber represents nearly one-half of the csrs in Jefferson county. It is esti mated that . the auto fees for the county this year will aggregate $40,- 000. Boston Coal Price Cut. . Boston. Mass., Jan. II. A reduc tion of 50 cents a ton in the retail price of hard coal was announced to day by one of the larzcr companies Acre. . Auto Racing Train Crashes; 2 May Die Monroe, 'i$ Jan. II. Racing a Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul rail road paiscugcr train due Iters from Milwaukee at 8:30 o'clock last night may coit the lives of two persons who were pinned beneath the wreck in their automobile, which turned over twice in a ditch (our miles southeast of here. The victims are Fred llausen, 22, and MUs Clara Streubcl, 20, both of trod head. Wis. The automobile had nrlc ami nrrtc with lli . ..it is..! nl olw nit M) milo in V.-U - - - - - - - several miles, when the act x oC rurred, according to the rngineer who stopped Ins train and with the aid of passengers, loaded the injured i-ertons aboard the mail car and hurried them to a hospital in this city. New York City in Grip of Worst Gale of Winter Wind Velocity of 90 Miles Off Sandy Hook Pedestrians Are Hurled to the Pavement. f The Auoclntrd I' " New York, Jan. 11. This section was lashed today by the worst gale of the winter a gale . that at 2 o'clock this afternoon reached a ve locity of 90 miles an hour off San dy Hook. , "t'sbcred in with snow that later turned to hail and rain, the storm buffeted New Yorkers without mer cy, hurling many, to the ground. Window glass fell tinkling into the street, mail package boxes were blown over and traffic generally hampered. Many pedestrians were injured. Traffic Impeded. Harbor traffic was liard hit. A number of small boats were blown from their moorings and incoming liners were held at quarantine by high winds. Some concern was felt for the disabled army transport Crook with nearly 1,000 passengers aboard, despite radio messages that repairs had been made and all. was well. Outside the city the full strength of the storm was felt in New Jer sey and Long Island, especially along the coast, and at several points a tangle of telephone and telegraph wires was reported. At Garden City Pilot C. B. D Colver. flvimr a mail plane from Cleveland and Chicago, reported that he had been unable to land, even though he gave his plane the gas and nosed lt down almost perpen dicjtfarJyniitU.erang a.fj"eak wind that swirled upward, tne machine; nose down, seemed to hang for sev eral moments still in air. Then the pilot flew over Hazelhurst field and anchored his sleet covered ship by lashing it to a motor truck. Pedestrians Injured. Tom Breen,23, despite his best ef forts, was blown into a tasxicab that stood nearby with its door open, The machine took him to a hospital, where he was treated for severe con. fusions. - ' Wind-borne missiles of various kinds knocked several pedestrians down. One, Anna La Cart, 14, was killed by a blow from a limb ot a tree. ; Several . persons -were hurt when portions of roofs and building cor nices were blown into the street. Majority of War Claims Settled by Government - t - Washington, Jan. , 11. Secretary Weeks -sent to the senate today, in response to a resolution by Senator King, democrat, Utah, a report giv ing the number ot cases acted upon bv the War department' under the law of March 2, 1919, providing re lief in cases of contracts connected with the prosecution of the war. The secretary stated that the num ber of claims filed for adjustment under the act were 13,837, of -which 26 remain undetermined and 7.088 have been adjusted and settled. The aggregate payments made on the claims adjusted amounted to $238, 177,513. .'.' The discrepancy of 6,723 cases ap pearing between the total number given as filed and those given as adjusted or pending, he added, was explained by the fact that in 3,203 claims, all relief was denied and that 3.520 of the claims filed were with drawn. - -; ' Legion Posts Urged to Aid in Hunt for Canadian Vet JndianaDolis. Ind.. Jan. 11. Han- ford MacNidcr, national commander cf the American Legion, today is sued a bulletin to all legion posts, asking their assistance in a search for Thomas Dace, vice president of the Great. War Veterans of Canada, who has been missing for some time. Mr. Dace, whose home is in Ed monton, Alberta, Canada, was la-?t heard of in Winnipeg December 25 and was believed to have been on his way to Minnesota. He had been ill for some time as a result of wounds received in the world war. Mr. Dace is described as. 38 years old, 5 feet 4 1-2 inches tall, weighs 153'pounds, has black hair and grey eyes. Families of Oyer 200 Ohio Miners Facing Starvation . Pomeroy, Ov Jan. 11. Reports reaching here are that the families of more than 200 miners are facing starvation in the Dark Hollow dis trict at Forest Run, a mining town. The distress is attributed, according to reports, to be lack of work in the coal mines, which have been shut down for some time. - . G. O.' P. Leader Dies - Sapulp.i. Ok!.. .Jai. 11. Mrs. Warren H. Brown, 42. vice chairman of the republican state .committee, died yesterday. I The Shadow- " I - : 1 ' Crippled Youth ' Sued for $15,000 in Love Tangle Brooklyn Miss Says Ardor of Fiance . Cooled After All . Arrangements Had Been ;viw"Made for CeremonyJ Lincoln. Jan: 11. (Special 'Tele gram.) For years Isaac Stine, crip pled son of one of Lincoln's wealth iest citizens, sat in a wheeled chair with everything money could buy at his disposal. But a limousine wasn't the end of his rainbow. Stine wanted a wife and a "home, so the story goes, and chose to conduct a "sight unseen" courtship ' with Miss Gertrude Hen och Of Brooklyn, N. Y. .today, the shell burst in his love nest and a breach .'of promise suit emerged. Miss Henoch tells the court bluntly - love has left her, a near husband has refused to take her for better or worse,.' she is 45 hours from -Boadway , without a friend in the town and suffering $15,000 worth of mental anguish, humiliation and spent cash. ( In her petition, Miss .Henoch de clares Stine obtained r her name through a friend and opened ;a cor respondence. A black and white proposition on high "grade, scented stationery was: the result, she says. Transportation was furnished .. so wedding, bells- might , ring at ihc Stine home -she further charges. In Lincoln, she says, a diamond ring, a wedding - trousseau, , re-assurances of. love and a wedding date, January 8, were paid for and assured, respec tively, by Stine. She says she arrived December 14. j On January 2, she says, Stine took her riding- and said he wouidn t marry her. On January 7, she says, Stine ordered her from his mother's home and before he could get her baggage out the wedding trousseau was taken from her. , Stine refused' to discuss the, case. C. E. Matson,, his. attorney, said: "Stine did send her money, but he' didn't promise to marry her." Tom Allen, former' United States' district attorney and brother-in-law of William Jennings Bryan, is Miss Henoch's attorney. , . . . .- 1 .-; ord Company Seeking to Buy Lincoln Motor Firm Detroit. Mich.,- Jan. 11. Repre-i entatives of Edsel Ford and the Ford, Motor company will bid for the prop erty of the Lincoln Motor company at the auction set for February 4, it was stated at the Ford Motor com pany offices at Dearborn today. If the Ford company obtains the prop erty a new Lincoln Motor company . will be organized, it was stated, and the Ford interests will begin .manu facture of higher priced- cars than has been its custom in the. past. . Montana Bachelor Tax Law Declared Illegal Helena, Mont., Jan. 11. The state supreme court today declared uncon stitutional, the "bachelor tax" law passed by the last legislature, and the poll tax law which has been in force for more than 21 years. The poll tax included all male per sons from 21 to 60 years of age. The bachelor tax was imposed on all males more than 21 years old -who were not heads of families. . , Farmer Buried Under Corn. Callaway. Neb.. Jan. 11. (Spe cial.) Tom Burke ofTDuuning suf fered a broken shoulder wh?n a load of corn he was hauling upset, and j buried him underneath. He was re-i vued by a passing neighbor. 5v n WC'j-fi 1 i! 7 A ' . ; r 1 Court to Probe Child Labor in Beet Section 200 '.German-Russians Called at Lincoln to Explain De linquency of Children . 'v"". From Schobl.." ' Lincoln, Jan. 11. (Specials- First steps of. the state to impress on the minds of 200 German-Rus sian parents ot 1.00U children jr. Lincoln that Uncle Sam thinks moi e of educating children in this country than of the money they can make in the beet fields of western Ne braska will be taken next week whe-.t the parents ' will appear before Juvenile Judge Morning in Lincoln. . In the court the parents will be asked why they have ignored the state laws demanding a certain at tendance, at public schools. , It is charged that thev take their chil dren to the beet fields in the sum mer, put them to work there and fail, to bring. them- back to Lincoln in the winter in time to get neces sary schooling. . ; ., ; The move was initiated by H. TL' Antles of the state department of public welfare. . ; . ' . ', Air Mail Fund Cut From Postal Appropriation Wasliington, Jan. 11. With pro visions for the air mail -ervice elim inated the annual posijrfice appro priation bill, carrying approximately S554.000.000 was favorably reported today by the house appropriation's committee -As drafted by a subcommittee: the measure provided $1,915,000 for the air mail service'during the fiscal year beginning next July 1. The full com mittee however, in approving the bill, struck out this sections. , The total carried in the -measure is $24,70T,976 .less-than the appropria tions for .'the curre.nt fiscal v-earnd 24,735,691. less than the amount re quested by the budget bureau. , "Beer and Wine" Measure ' , . ; Introduced in New York 'Albany; N. Y:, Jan. .11. A "wine and beer"' bill was introduced in the legislature today by Assemblyman Custillier,: democrat. The measure seeks to legalize the sale 'in hotels and restaurants - of : beverages . containing- not more than 8 per cent of alcohol by I weight to be drunk-on the premises. r - ; . - . Milwaukee,' Jan..'.ll. Directors of the Milwaukee Chamber of Com merce have voted "in' favbr of '"beer and light wines,? - it became known today. "Increasing lawlessness iand crime is attributed to prohibition in a resolution adopted.. : ' . Salt Lake Youth Wounds l. Serf During. Nightmare Salt Lake City, Jan. 11. Kdnueth Wright. 22, is in the hospital suffer ing from a builct wound in the chest. He said that he retired with a revol ver under his pillow, that he had a nightmare and that when he awak ened he was standing in' the 'room with the smoking weapon in his hand. Doctors said Wright would recover. Ax Murderer Kills Woman. Birmingham, Ala.. Jan. II. Police are searching for an ax wielder who last night killed Mrs. Clem S. Crawford and seriously wctmded her husband, a grocer. Robbery is be-l-cvcd the motive. I Litigation Over 1 $1,000,000 Baum Estate Dropped All ' Suits Dismissed After - Heirs Reach Agreement - Out of Court on Divis- ion of Property. . The battle of the-J. E. Baum heirs and David Baum which involved the $1,000,000 estate of the former has come to an end. ' " ' ' , All suits have been dismissed both. in county and district courts and according-! to the heirs a satisfactory settlement' has been reached between all parties concerned. The '$94,000 claim of David Baura against the estate was "cut to $75, 000. Claim of the Bennett company, originally $147,000, was reducel by credits to $130,000 and adjusted to $110,00p. . Claim of the' Baum Iron company was also adjusted and re duced to $15,222. . In the' Baum Iron company the heirs share on a 50-50 basis the same with ' the Paddock-Hawley company of" St. Louis. , v The Bennett company gives 617 Shares each to the David Baumand the heirs. ' Daniel Baum," jr., gets three shares.'l '-"'- ,- David Baum still will have to give an account ot all transactions since he 'was administrator, said County Judge Crawford. CM. Wilhelm is now the administrator. After a hear ing lasting several days. Judge Craw ford ordered three claims totalling $337,000 set aside. ' The heirs are Mrs. Otiha Baum. the widow; J. E, Baum, jr.; Richard Baum, . Bownie Elizabeth Baum Rouse and aKthcrin'e L. Baum. . Tram Car Carrying 75 , Is Bombed in Belfast Belfast,. Jan. . 11. (By' A. P.) A bomb was,, thrown at a-tram car bearing 75pl persons-to their work in a -Crumlin.' road district today. The quick action of the' driver, who put &n full speed when he heard a re volver shot, resulted in the missile going wide of the mark. 1 he ex plosion splintered the car. A -man and his wife living nearby, who went to. the door of their house to learn the cause of the commotion, were 'shot dead by a volley of rifh fire which -.swept the street. Rockefeller Pays $391,698 Income Tax From Pipe Lines New York, Jan. 11. John D. Rockefeller today sent to' the feder- j al building a check for ?J91.698.jy, which the supreme court decided he owed as taxes on income .from pipe lines transferred to oil companies. The Weather ' . . Forecast Nebraska, Fair Thursday and Fri day;' not'much change in tempera ture. Iowa Fair Thursday and prob ably ' Fridajf; rising temperature Thursday. Hourly Temperatures. - S. m.. . it I 1 p. m S a. m.. ....... .tl I t p. m 1 . m S p. m n a. m IS I 4 p. m a. at.... IS ; S p. m 1 a. m.... IS s p. at..... tl a. in..... SI I 1 p. at..... It acoa 43 ' at p. m H:grest Wednesday. ..41 . tj ..t . M ..IS Chvinne : JVnver . . .'. lwi Mai net ldr- illy No" ritllt N Pu-lilo "I : Salt Ij!.- -a . .CO Snl r . .J', K-.i.rldn . . Valentin ..3: Economy Demanded by Farmers I'liiou Hqilies to Governor's Attack on Agricultural Bloc Kndorses the St. Lawrence Waterway. Finance Body Is Formed The reply to Governor McKrlvic's condemnation of the aKricultural bloc was given by the state conven tion of the i'armrr union at tin Auditorium ycterday. A series ol resolutions were adopted condemn ing the calling of i M'fciul trition, the gasoline tux, the expenditures of the capitol commission a welt as dealing with a number of other it sues, state and national. Senator ('. W. Norris,- who is a member of the agricultural bloc, was congratulated for his work in behalf of the farmers, while Senator G. M. Hitchcock, who ius no connection with this non partisan bloc, was left without any mention. Waterway Endorsed. The St. Lawrence waterway project was unanimously endorsed. A reduction in the automobile li cense tax was the counter sugges tion to the gasoline tax. The greatest piece of constructive work accomplished by the delegates was the authorization of an agricul tural investment company to work in conjunction with the War Finance corporation to obtain more credit for fanners. This, it was explained, would also serve to prevent blue sky stock sales and may finally be converted into a co-operative bank. The reason assigned for not starting such a bank now was that the farmers did not wish to embarrass those banks now iu the field. Fight Marketing Plan. The greatest struggle of the session caine over the question of endorsing the United States Grain Growers, Inc. Charles Woostcr of Silver Creek led the opposition to this plan for a national grain marketing organiza-' tion of farmers, and the decision was surprisingly close. There was evident considerable feeling that this organi zation, and the Farm. Bureau federa tion as well, was poaching on the pre serves ot the .farmers union. C. H. Watts, formerly manager of the livestock selling agencies operated by the farmers, mace most of his ap peal for the presidential office on this animosity, . particularly condemning the livestock marketing plan of lb-- Committee of 15, which is sponsored by the same intenesUi -' '-" : lhe election of officers, however. favored Pres. C. J. Osborn of Sidnev. who was re-elected by a vote of 455, (Tarn to Pje Two, Column Im. Business Revival Seen in Chicago Factories Will Resume Opera tion on Large Scale Many Purchases Made. Chicago. Jan. 11. Signs are not wanting that the country is getting back on its feet after the orgy in cident to the war and the shamclcs; profiteering during-and after thai period. Retail and wholesale busi nesses find they must go into the market with purchases. Six big rail roads ate asking bids for millions ol dollars worth of rolling stock .and demands in other lines arc beginning to be felt. : With the reopening of industry in Chicago, a survey shows that 2.00(1 jobs will -be open by . February 1. This, of course, will not make much of a dent in the 100,000 unemployed, but it is an indication of what is com ing. . ; Among the plants to reoocn be. fore February 1. is the American Car and Foundry company, which will put 500 additional men on the ;ayrolls. Various other plants will employ anywhere from 35 to : 100 men. If the railroads come into the mar ket for steel, the mills in the Calumet district will reopen on a large scale. Sheet mills are already running full bi&st. Othcr mills are running 50 to 75 per cent. Of 19 factories of the American Can company in the Chicago district, only one is idle and 10.000 persons are on the payrolls. Officials of the company say this" number will be in creased in the next two months,- , Army Tanks Aid in Search for Missing Cook County Man Duluth, Jan. 11. A dozen mem bers of the Duluth tank corps, Min nesota National guard, with tanks and trucks, were to leave here this morning for the wilderness of the. northeastern tip of Minnesota io es tablish a base for an airplane ordered by the slate to search for James Maher. Cook county commis- sioner, who has been lost for two weeks in( the vicinity of Thunder Bay, Lake Superior, The tank men will aid Major Wilier of the guards observation squadron, who arrived here late yes terday in an airplane from St. Paul. Two Pupils, 14 and 16, Stab Teacher, Probably Fatally Princeton. Ky., Jan. 11. Ernest Howton, school principal at Dcwitt, was stabbed, probably fatally yestc--day,' by two pupils, when he at tempted to punish them for infrac tions of the rules. The pupils alleged o have at tacked him are Otis and Aubrey Blalock, brothers. 14 and 16. Five Killed in Explosion.' Galati, Rumania. Jan. II. Five pcrsons were Kiuca ana six others in jured when an explosion occurred in the Milaud marine arsenal today. Tht arsenal was badly damaged ' ? t