The Omaha Daily Bee VOL. 51 NO. 306. I ----- --- aaiM Mm ML I tat M) OMAHA, SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1922. tM . S. Waft M ) Maft 4, tMb Mill (I )Hfl Mil M Mil. Ml SaaawK H.M. ftltna M ft laaa. OwMM IM 41 I M )H)I Sail M aaaaaj. taaaai Ml. M TWO CENTS rn nn fa ils JV Utt W Mi mm 1 Death Chair Claims Life of S I ayer James King Calm as He Ii Strapped in Place Spends Last Hour in Prayer. Two Shocks Necessary Lincoln. June 9. (Special.) James B. King, negro, calmly walked from the death cell at, the state prion this morning, as calmly tat down in -the electric chair while the doth cap was placed over his head and his arms and legs strapped to the chair, and paid with his life for the murder of Kobert Taylor, prison guard, whom he stabbed to death. At ,9:30. Warden W. F. Fenton read the death warrant to King as the doomed , man stood leaning against the door of his solitary cell In , the next cell was Charles Nichols of Sidney, also under' sen-, tence of death for killing his sweet heart His case now is before the supreme court. Pray Until Death Hour. ' As Fenton read the warrant, Vihila ru. frAm hi. rnt-. walirett to the door of his cell, and listened at tentively. "How do you feel, Jim?" asked the warden of King. "All right," replied the negro. At 9:45 Rev. O. J. Burkhart, pastor of the A. M. E. church of Omaha, and Chaplain Charles Maxwell of the prison, prayed with King in his cell until the death honr. Promptly it 10 Warden Fenton led King out from the death cell. King was handcuffed. Armed orison 'guards lined both sides of his path from the cell to the .death house. . King walked, down the lines of guards, unassisted. He never faltered once all along the 250 yards of his last walk. ; -.-.'' ' ' As soon as he disappeared into the stairway of the death house a white hearse drove around the -corner ana backed un to the door. -'- When King reached -the' doorway , to the death chamber Chaplain Max well offered a short prayer, in which ' he said King had confessed Jiis sins. repented and was seeking forgiveness in the hereafter.- ' ' ;:.;. As he prayed, King repeatedly ut tered "Amen." . . ; At the conclusion of his prayer King started to walk' to the chair, but he was restrained because the at tendants were not yet ready for him. Bids Client Goodby. , v His attorney walked into the death chamber with him, but, declaring he .... ... .i 'I.i ..IJ t!- client goodby and walked out. t King's handcuffs were then re moved and he coolly stepped up to the chair, sat down as unconcerned as though he were about to sit down to a chicken' dinner, and t,he cap was fitted over bis head and eyes. In this process one of the attendants asked him a question, and he nodded his head in approval. He sat iri the chair at 10:03. At 10:05 E. B. Currier, official executioner of Boston, whom King (Turn to rag Iivo, Column Bight.) Rickenbacker Delayed bylgniti hon Trouble Capt Eddie Rickenbacker again encountered trouble in . his ' around-the-country flight, when his air plane was forced down near Dexter, la.. 80 miles east of "Omaha, late yesterday while he was flying on the Chicago to Omaha leg qf his trip to the coast. ,' ; The Diane was forced dewn in a Liuvci liciu inu inula nuiti ju.vv- l,i : :.: . 1.1. ' Captain Rickenbacker in a long distance telephone conversation with the air mail field said the mishap was directly attributable to the one which occurred in Detroit .Thursday when his- plane was struck by light ning. Efforts to" repair the machine and .continue to Omaha last night -were futile, : according to Captain Rickenbacker,- who -said that , he would not resume his flight to Omaha until today. Salt Lake City Slayer Executed by Shooting Salt Lake City, June 9. Nick Ob lizalo was executed at the Utah state prison at 5:08 this morning for the murder of Mario Laus, a miner, who was stabbed to death and robbed, of $1200 in a lonely spot on the out skirts of the city August 3, 1919. Ob - lizalo appealed to Governor Mabey of Utah yesterday for a reprieve, but the state executive, after conferring with members 'of the state board of pardons, refused to intercede. The board ' had previously .declined to commute the death sentence. ' Steve Maslich.who perpetrated the murder with Oblizalo, was executed at the prison January 20. Both men chose execution by shooting instead ot nanging. : v - . . New Navy Selection Board. Washington, June 9. The Navy department today announced the per sonnet of the . new naval selection board, which is expected to begin the selection . of officer! for promotion June 27 as follows: Admirals Hilary P. Jones and Ed ward E. Eberle, Vice Admiral T. D. McDonald, and Rear Admirals Harry MtU V. iiuse, Henry B. Wilson, S. S. Robinson, C F. Hughes, William v. iratt and JU M, Nullton Shriners to iNeed Wraps for Jubilee at Frisco Weather Man Promises Nippy Temperatures in Pa cific Coast City Next Week-All Pilgrims Are Being Requested to Park Their . Camels Outside Moat San Francisco, June 9. Shriner pilgrims traversing the desert dunes on thetr way to Sn Francisco for the golden jubilee of their order next week will need their respective over coats or wraps, for the weather man promises a nipping coolness after the hot sands have been left behind. It would appear, according to hit sur vey of the weather of past Junes, that ban rrancisco does not swing into its actual summer scascvt until some days after the Shriner caravan is due to start it plodding way back across the figurative wastes that lie be tween the new niecca and the new cast. The jubilee will be held in a sort of transition period so far as the weather is concerned. It will ante date the high, cool fogs that are whipped from the broad Pacific ex panse by the swift-trading trade winds; the fogs that bring the actual San Frr.ncisco summer on their pinions. It will predicate the spring. Warm During Day. The actual weather condition will be "moderately warm during the day and cool at night, and occasional threatening," according to the best prognostication of the weather man. S.-1 Francisco usually refers to it as "great convention weather" and as such it is usually accepted. ' Pilgrims reaching here are being Harding Dedicates New Monument to FatKer of Country President Breaks Away From Prepared Manuscript in Paying Tribute to Mem ory of Washington. Princeton, N. J., June 9. Presi dent Harding , dedicated a monument to the achievements of George Wash ington In Princeton today, and heard himself bailed at a man of "quiet courage" and "immense patience and self-effacing modesty" in his own policies towards current and con troversial issues. The words came from Dean West, who used them in mention ' of the president's stand against the veterans' bonus and his votes for anti-strike law as senator, as he recited the reasons which in duced Princeton university to give the president an honorary degree of doctor , of laws. Twice the stimilus of an intent audience . caused President Harding to break away from prepared manu script in his speech.- . Before the Princeton student body, stirred evidently by the high praise of the- citation of himself, he almost disregarded preparations to lay down some standards of valuation of men. "I care iot what position a man may momentarily be in," he ex claimed, "you can measure his stand ard of usefulness to America by the service he renders the community in which, he resides. Cannot See Future. "Less than a Century and a half has this republic endured. The found ing fathers who gave us America no more dreamed of what 125 years would bring than we today can dream of the possibilities of the fu ture. "When I realize what .has happen ed in that time I dare not lift the cup of optimism to my lips. There are such limitless possibilities; we have seen- such incomparable contri (Tnrn to Page Two, Column Two.) Hot Wind Damages Crops of Oats and Potatoes Beatrice, Neb., June 9. (Special Telegram.) With the temperature ranging close to the 96 mark and a strong wind blowing from the south, today has been one of the worst on crops of the season. Oats and pota toes are suffering from lack of mois ture, but corn and wheat are in good condition. . The .harvest will begin here in about two weeks. - "Follow Your ' Advertising Talk No. 5 "Please allow the advertising you are now placing with ' us to influence you to place more with us,' substantially, says the newspaper which continually argues its advertising velum as a reason for a larger volume. When facts' are available, however, a better basis is easily found for placing advertising; the result producing power of the paper. The Associated Retailers found the "rate per 1,000" circulation of the three oUily papers to be as follows: The News, $0.0218; the Herald, $0.0196; The Omaha Bee, $0.0200. In other words The Omaha Bee charge per 1,000 cir culation is lower than the News and practically the same as the Herald. , . . V The findings above are especially significant, construed with the fact, also, that the byiag power of The Omaha Bee's , subscribers was found to be considerably greater per 1,000 ub cribere than any other paper. Seveaty-fiva par cent of The Omaha Bee, Omaha subscribers, own their vt homes, ac cording to the Retailers' Survey. v requested to park their camels out side of the city moat, known other wise as the Bay of San Francisco, lor there will be plenty of convey' ances for all occasions. A call was sent out for 7.000 automobiles sever al days ago and it is expected the number will be reached easily. Two wards of 10 beds each have been set aside by the San Francisco Munici pal emergency hospital service for the treatment of everything from sand blisters to "charley horses" and even more serious complaints. The hos pital attendants say that they are even prepared to entertain the corn fed" members of the Aladdin Temple chorus of Columbus, who weigh on the average of luu pounds. '. Turns Earth for Hospital. Portland. Ore., Juno '9. W. Free land Kendricks, potentate of Lulu temple. Philadelphia, and oast im periaP potentate of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, today turned the first spadeful of earth at the site of what is to be the sixth hospital for crip pled children to be established by the Shrine in North America. The ceremony was witnessed by representatives of many temples here enroute to San Francisco for the coming convention of the Shrine. The hospital is to cost $250,000 and will be operated for the benefit of all crippled children applying for aid. Consideration of Bonus Deferred at Least 10 Days Exact Course on Measure in Senate Still Uncertain Another Amendment . Is Offered. Washington, June 9. Efforts to obtain - senate consideration of the soldiers' bonus bill will be deferred for at, least. 10 . days,- it was stated today. Whether it will be taken up by agreement among republican leaders: or without the consent of some remains to be determined. Chairman McCumber of the finance committee, who will pilot the legislation on the floor, has informed senators that in nixing a time to call the bill up he will try to suit the convenience of most of them. ' He said he realized that there were those on each side who had to be absent from time to time because of primary campaigns in their states and who desired to be present when the bonus is considered.- Another bonus amendment was of fered today, Senator McNary, repub lican, Urcgon, proposing the smith- McNary ; $350,000,000 reclamation measure as a land settlement feature, This bill already has been reported to both the house and senate, but as a Dart of the bonus measure it would be changed, Senator McNary said, so thaj: veterans would be given prefer ence in the purchase ot land in ex cess of the farm unit, and inthe preference to homestead public lands lying within a reclamation district Under another change the service of' veterans would be utilized as practicable on the construction of each .reclamation project. Mr. Mc Nary said it was his purpose to press his amendment provided a majority of the senate show5 a desire to in corporate land settlement provisions in the bonus bill. - Bankers Sue for Return of Money Paid for Stock Columbus. Neb., June 9. (Spe cial) Claiming that the 142 shares of stock which they bought when they secured control of the Farmers State Bank of Creston last October were not worth what they paid for them, because certain notes carried as assets" proved to be practically worthless, Oscar H. Hahn, Rudolph V. Prokop, John D. Wolfe," William Hahn, Sam twine and Emu E. Dudek, have filed suit in the district court, a'gaints Otto H. Shurman, Ira D. Wolfe and L. M. Maxwell for $7,100. . - Dollar Through" High Court Is Scored by Gompers Labor Leader Interprets Colo rado Coal Decision at Nega tion of Rights of Unions to Strike. j May Appeal to Congress Cincinnati, June 9. Protests of organized labor, as voiced here to day at preliminaries for the annual convention next week of the Amer ican Federation of Labor, centered against the supreme court, the con gress and state legislatures in general. Samuel Uomoers. president of t federation, in addressing a club of business men, interpreted the' su preme court decision in the celebrated Coronado coal case as a negation of the right to strike, and declared that organized labor would appeal to con gress tor new legislation setting aside the decision. ' . Will Not Dodge Fight In criticizing the supreme court. Mr. Gompers said that he expected to be "taken strictly to account" for his utterances, addinj that "I do not run away trom a tight. "But. it has come to a pretty pass. he continued, "when an American citizen can no longer discuss and criticize the decision of the court. Any one, if he feels so disposed, can criti cize even the president of the United states or the United Mates senate or the congress. Pray of what flesh are the members of the supreme court that they are above criticism beyond that of the president of the United States?" Delegates to the meeting of the metal trades department of the federation, by unanimous action, as sailed congress and state legislatures as enemies of labor, and declared for labor's active preparation in the fall campaigns in an effort to elect its friends regardless of their poli tics. Unions Liable. In his speech, Mr. Gompers said the Coronado decision made inter national unions, endorsing strikes', liable for damages, and he asserted this meant the unions must with stand ."'constant litigation " o; get out of business." - .?' "If you compel men and women. regardless of conditions," he con tinued, "to-work against their will, you have re-established slavery. Some people seem to think now is the time to take advantage of the working people, reduce wages and break up their organizations and under the open shop weaken or destroy the unions." In this connection, he warned against "driving the bargain too hard," asserting that a "day of reckoning will come, and adding that the organized workers are the "greatest stabilizing force," in the country. Referring to rail union chiefs, he said they had prevented strikes, which he said had been de sired - by the union members gener ally and he concluded with the ex pression ot a hope for the time wnen employers and employes would solve their problems at ttrc confer ence table. Baron Kato Offered Premiership of Japan Tokio, Tune 9. (By A. P.) Ad miral Baron Kato today was offered the premiership of Japan. He asked time to consider whether he would undertake to form a cabinet to suc ceeded that of - Premier . Takahashi, which resigned Tuesday. Adimral Kato headed the Japanese, delega tion to the Washington arms con ference. The council of elder statesmen de cided to recommend that Admiral Baron Kato be invited to form a new cabinet to succeed the Takaha shi ministry which resigned Tues day. , . Observers here see m the decision pf the elder statesmen to recommend Admiral Baron Kato for premier ship further assurance of the gov ernment's determination to carrv out whole-heartedly the engagements made at the Washington arms con ference. Baron Kato. as head of the Japanese delegation at Washington, neiped formulate the policies that were accepted by his government for reduction of armaments and for re moving possible causes of interna tional misunderstandings in the far east, -v - i La Follette Names Body ' to Probe Gasoline Prices Washington, June 9. Investiga tion of gasoline and crude oil prices will be conducted by a senate com merce subcommittee, consisting of Senators La Follette, republican, Wisconsin, chairman; McNary, re publican, Oregon; Rawson, republi can, Iowa; Smith, democrat, South Carolina, and Jones, democrat, New Mexico, under appointments made by Mr. La Follette. When the first hearings .will be held was not an nounced. ., Three Mexican Army Officers Shot to Death on Border T arn Tm tun O Th Kni4;. Of Uen. Lucio Blanco. Col. Aurelio Martinez and Major Garcia, killed by Mexican customs guards and soldiers Wednesday night as they headed a hand of men attempting: to enter Mexico, were recovered from the Rio Urande today. What Would What would YOU do if they were yours and needed ice and milk these hot summer days? Just look at the pictures and then ask yourself the question. The Bee's Free Milk and Ice Fund . is the answer. - This fund, raised each year by The Bee, is distributed through the Visiting Nurses, who purchase the milk and ice from local dealers and then send the bill to The Bee to be paid from the fund. Bring or mail your contribution to The 'Bee. It doesn't have to be large; any sum is acceptable. All contribations will be asknowledged in The Bee. Thursday the Union Stock Yards company sent in its annual contribu tion of $50. The county assessor's office reported 100 per cent perfect. "It is a pleasure to give to The Bee milk fund," wrote Henry Beal, deputy county-attorney, who mailed his annual check for $5. - Contributions so far: The Bra S SM Union Stock Yard 60.0 Henrr Bnl S.oe Thomas r. Godfrey S.M Hertha Levy 5.00 Hn. E. Jacobs 1.0 A. T. Shotwrll ' Paul 8tlnwender : .89 Bay Coffey .SO jona neater-.. County Atumor'o Off lee Chailee I. reklo M Pat Lynch Vie Kranoa .tS Joseph StoDnhl ' .S I. AiaeHa- . ...., .-.,.-.,-.--Bath taaa i . HJaeoboen , JBS Art oaanae ., , . . BforlM Fotsxh " . Mrs. F. P. McGonch - M Alex Beed -2 H. O. Couiuraen John Smith 8am Mayer . Le Sear Bedford .to Total .1.T World Bankers Decide to Adjourn Plan to Resume Consideration . of Proposed Loan After Lapse of Three Months. :' ! - ' . Paris,' June 9. (By A. P.) The international bankers at a session held today, virtually decided to ad journ for three months and then re sume consideration of a proposed loan to Germany. Although the bankers' committee will meet again tomorrow morning to complete its answer to the repara tions commission, the decision to adjourn was taken this evening after its members had agreed that in view of the situation created by the rep arations commission's vote, nothing could be done at this time toward arranging a large loan for Germany. The final decision is expected to be taken tomorrow by the bankers. . No official communication was issued tonight. Shortage in World Wheat Supply Is Predicted Washington. . June 9. World wheat stocks by July 1 will be lower than for several years,x according to an analysis of the situation issued by the Commerce department. . Both Argentina and Australia, the department explained, have consider ably less1 wheat than last year, the United States carryover will be light, and only - Canada has considerable stock on hand. A larger demand than last vcar, it was declared, was indicated by the upward trend of European consumption. 1 "Until next , February,,r the de partment said, "the. international trade will be largely dependent for supplies on the surplus of .North America and. a limited quantity from India. With Russia entirely out of the export trade, North '. American wheat is in a. very strong position." - 1 New Bishop, of Sioux Falls Congratulated hy Pope Rome, June 9. Monsignof Bern ard J. Mahoney, for many years spir itual director of the American college here and recently appointed .bishop of Sioux Falls, visited Pope Pius yes terday. 'The pontiff congratulated the prelate and praised him for the work he had done in Rome. . This work, he added, showed that Mon signor Mahoney was eminently gifted in the art of guiding and directing others. During the audience Pope Pius made reference to the late Right Rev. Thomas O'Gorman. bishop of Sioux Falls, who is to be succeeded by Monsignor Mahoney, saying he ren dered valuable services to the church and his country- You Do If They Police at Loss for Clues in Ax Murder Mystery Only Suspect Arrested in : Michigan Slaying Gives Satisfactory Account of His Actions. ' Omaha Bee I.eaied Wire. Jackson, Mich., June 9. Police ad mitted they were on the point of abandoning their two principal clues as to the' slayer of Miss Alice Mallett, matron of the Florence Crittendon home, who was slashed to death with an axe lasf night." - " ' a. It is believed that Robert Brockie first suspect taken in for questioning, will be released. , He has given a satisfactory account; of. his actions last night. Supposed blood stains found on towels in his kitchen are now believed to bevarnish stains. . . Search of a swamp about two and a half miles north of here was virtu ally given up late today. Farmers at noon reported a man making to wards the swamp. A posse of 30 dep uties and more than J00 townspeople hurried to that district. They beat through the heavy underbrush. The swamp itself is impenetrable and it is conceded no man could fight his way through it Officers declare the crime was tne work of a mentaMy disordered per son and wide search has been insti tuted to round up every suspicious character within 50 miles. The last person to see Miss Mal lett alive was Mrs. Adelle Wejsh, a dressmaker, at whose home Miss. Mallett spent the evening. Mrs. Welsh walked with Miss Mallett to wards the Crittendon home. The body was found about 100 rods from where the two parted. ' Blood hounds followed a trail from the dead body to a pond half mile distant, where it is believed the murderer washed himself. At trail appeared t to be the pond the lost. . Pension Bill Passes House Washington, June 9. A bill ex tending the provisions of the 1912 pension act to officers and enlisted men of all .state militia and other state organizations who rendered service to the union cause during the Civil war for a period of '90 days or fnore, and providing pensions for their dependents, was passed today by the house and sent to the senate. Road Fund Approved . Washington, June 9. Approval of expenditures aggregating $586,000 tor construction of 106 miles of roads in Colorado was announced by Sec retary Wallace. , - ... ; " The Heel of Amies " By i P. G. WODEHOUSE. ', -,- MiY-Wodehouse in this-humorous Blue Ribbon short story presents "the only golfer who ever ap proached the game in a - spirit of - pure reason." Aforesaid "only golfer" makes some startling dis coveries. "The Heel of Achilles" will appear in The Bee Magazine Section for next Sunday. , ' June graduates of three Omaha high schools will feature next Sunday's Rotogravure Section. , The section will contain photographs of the 232 gradu ates this year from Technical, South and Benson high schools. The Sunday Bee Were Yours? War Department to Aid Reavis in War Fraud Cases Announces it Will Give Every Possible Assistance ' ' in Prosecution of - Al- leged Graft. Washington. June. .9. (Special Telegram.) The War department, it was announced today, is planning to give - every possible assistance to the corps of assistants which Attor ney General Dauahertv has surround ed himself with in the prosecution of alleged war frauds. The report of the army liquidation commission, which has never been published, will be placed at the disposal of the in vestigators together with all the evi dence that has been collected. Much of this refers to settlements of claims in the quartermaster department which will, come within the province of former' Congressman Reavis of Nebraska and his assistants, Maj. H. E. O'Neil and F. B. Enfield. The secretary of war announced today also, that $30,000,000 worth of claims, which have already been li quidated, . but which have a suspi cion of criminality about them, have already been handed over to the De partment of Justice " Gen. Lord, who is the head of the finance division of the War depart ment, is the man who is empowered to deal with Mr, Reavis in handling the war cases. Kansas City Man Named Rotary Clubs President Los Angeles, June 9. Raymond Havens of Kansas City, Mo., was chosen presidejitof the International Association of Rotary clubs at the final session of the 13th annual con vention of the organization this after noon. The selection was ' unanimous by the delegates after the election com mittee had announced the result. Mr. Haven's closest rivals were H. J. Lutcher Stark of Orange, Tex., and William Coppock of .Council Bluffs. Revised figures showed Havens received 58 1 votes, Stark 291 and Coppock 137. , Three Die of Heat Chicago, - June 9. Three more persons died today from'theeffects of the heat wave in which Chicago has sweltered for . three days.. Five persons succumbed yesterday and nearly. 100 have been overcome. The mercury reached 90 degrees this afternoon. - Terrorizes Women in Restaurant Walks Into Lincoln Cafe and Compels .. Proprietress and Ceok to Fix His . Dinner.' Hints of Plan to End Life Lincoln. June 9. (Special Tele gram.) Fred Brown, alias Gui Grimes, manacle man of Benson, held up two women in small res taurant here for an hour and a half this afternoon while posnes searched for him half a doren blocks distant, The women, Mrs. Edna Craig, proprietor of the restaurant, and Nettie Frederick, a cook, hysterical and tearful,- telephoned to police at 4:30 this afternoon a lew minutei after Brown left the restaurant and disappeared on the Missouri Pacific railroad tracks. Ihe tracks parai'ei the state fair grounds and dozen; r ' acres of thick underbrush sur them. Brown, they told officers. into the restaurant about 3 and asked for a big dinner. "I'll pay for it," he said. After eating. Brown sat and talked to the women. "I'll live about one more day, he said, "but no officer will get me. But there is one woman in this town I'll get first- Gives Sweetheart's Address. ' The women cave State Sheriff Gui Hyers the address of Mrs. Ida An derson, 4411 West Washington ave nue, Seattle, which they stated Brown requested mem to wnie ana Keep. "She's my sweetheart," he said. "1 want you to remember her name." Continuing, Brown assumed ' I bragging mood and declared he had $6,000 in the First National bank in Lincoln in the name of John Wright - Before leaving he ordered a lunch prepared and paid for it and for th dinner.' . - t "As tomorrow is my last day on earth I want you to have dinner fot me tomorrow at 2," he said when leaving. .. ; - The women stated that no one entered the restauranr "while Brown ' was there excepting Mrs, Craig's lit--tie daughter, . Waneda, who ran in from play for a few minutes. "Hello, kid," he said and punched the little girl in the ribs. Had Pair of Pistols. . ' Brown, they asserted, did not dis- ' plajr a gun openly but they could see two guns protruding from his oockets. v ' The holdup occurred at 905 North Twenty-first street, a block from a cellar in which a motorcycle officer who chased Brown last night claimed he disappeared and two blocks from one of the places where he once lived here. rJ, - . At 3 this afternoon the posse found $300 in stolen goods in the basement of a church at Twenty-third andtO (Turn to Fue In, Colum FIT.) Irrigation Farmers Demand Fall Resign CmftcKltiff XTaK Tun- O f ciai .telegram.; ine resignation oi Secretary of the Interior Fall was demanded of President Harding in resolutions adopted at a mass meet ing here of farmers and business men of the region, from Bridgeport to Torrington. .. ''-' , The secretary was declared to be unjust, and to have shown a lack of understanding of the problems of the ungaiiuii tatiticis in ins ircaimcnj -rxt l.a ...t. .i .. i r I I mem wucu nicy . askcu lor rcuci from oppressive charges. Resolutions were also adopted urg-; ing tnat government irrigation con struction charges be reduced to a .U.A.IUU1U w, pa..as an acic per year, asking for the passage of the Smith McNary bill and asking that the be completed. Its completion would open 100,000 acres to cultivation. Travelers' Association Brands I. C. C. as "Oligarchy" Atlantic City, N. J , June 9. The National TravpW' Pmi-;,. scciation, in session since Monday, Paul for the next convention, elect tug officers and adopting resolutions referring to the Interstate Commerce Commission as an "ntiaarrW tU,t u repugnant to a free people, and asked nai congress re-invest state rail road commissions aud utility boards with power to deal with transporta tion. A request was made that the commission icui. an MAmr Ac tinuing the 50 per cent surcharge on unman ana parlor car service. The Weather forecast Probably thunder showers Satur day; not much change in tempera ture. Hourly Temperatures. S a. e m. a . . is . it ft. i . p. s p. s . e . ' p. s p. .St .M ,.S4 .ss is Highest Friday. Chrrnn ..lijPutblo Dartnport Danver .... Da Moints , Dad City Lander .... North Platta ..... Rapid City Mait uu 4 8nt r . j8hrlUt . lilSleu City rvtu?nuaa