Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
The only evening paper in Washington with the Associated Press news service. 5 WEATHER. (TS Weather Bureau Forecast.) Partly cloudy and colder tonight: 1 16 dex tomorrow increasing rising temperature. \tures: Highest. 38, at 4 p.m. t 1 am. toda) on page * -C|osing N. Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 2 29,841. rt WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ch WASHINGTON, ¢ Foening Star. 2 < second class matter Washington, D. ¢ Yesterday’s Circulation, 102,070 Entered post oflic No. . COAL PEACE GONE ™ i s NiTions Now isvorven UPIN A DEADLOCK oy Rezime . OVER ARBITRATION Horthy Regime Ma Miners and Operators Ad- journ Without Setting Date for Renewal of Conference After Hopeless Session. D. ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1926—_THIRTY-SIX PAGES. * G Mans Miveniatod ress) | T O, OENTS.. SENATE SEATSNYE BYVOTEOF4TT03 AFTER WARM FIGHT | Governor’s Right to Fill Ladd | Vacancy Upheld—New Sen- ator Sworn In. TROOPS WIPE OUT TRAIN MASSAGRE BAND IN MEXICO Recover All Loot—Horror of Gang’s Attack Revealed by Americans. I'Ve'GONE ASFAR AS HEALTH PERMIT. Lose Control. | the first disclosures. Count stated flatly that the ringleade the Budapest plots are Germans, nam- ing Gen. Ludendorft one. while Judge Alvez Fereia, in Lisbon, who is investigating the Portuguese end, announced that the whole thing Bolshevist propuganda. Whether old Hungarian royalists are as deeply implicated in the scan- dals as appears at present remains to Dbe seen, but even the rovalists them- selves no longer deny that they are being suspected and interrogated and, in some cases, imprisoned. b A fantastic story came Bucharest today to the effect that | legitimists approached Nadossy, the | Hungarian police chief, before his a; rest and warned him of the appr ing crash, advising th: ance with old Hungarian would do well (o avoid grace by committing suicide. fused. whereupon he was ind the xtorm broke The situation In each of tals concerned is as follows: In Bu nest men have been put in jail including Nadossy and rince Ludwis | train Windisch-Gratz, a member of a fa 1 mous legitimist family, ch d wit (Continued on P 16, ¢ a REVENE METHODS SCORED IN REPORT SUBMITTED SENATE Charges Improper Allow- | ances of $210,655,360 in Tax-Free Deductions. BY JOHN GUNTHER. a0 Daily News ~Further ar- rests in connection with the luropean unterfeiting epidemic are being made in seven countries as evidence piles up, perhaps pointing to some vast international conspiracy by e pert swindlers. The countries now involved are Hun- gary, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Jugo- slavia, Czechoslovakia. Switzerland and Holland, while even England is getting uncomfortably near an inti mate connection with the plots by dis- covery of forged Bank of England notes in Switzerland and Germany. The apparently simultaneous out break of these forgereis ma rious coincidence, and they something deeper. Responsible com- ment in London today feels that the Hungarian seandal has so shaken the government that the ministry will be obliged to resign soon. with possibly angerous political repercussion on 1econunt of the alleged legitimist sym pathies of the accused for s An almost comical tang in con flicting accusations is resulting from URUGLAY REPORTED ASKEDBYUS, TOAD INARICA DEADLOCK Mediation Believed Suggest- ed Would Not Substitute Coolidge Authority. PARTY LINES BROKEN IN VOTE ON QUESTION WOMEN AND CHILDREN RUTHLESSLY SHOT DDWN' from Twenty Bodies Already Found in Burned Coaches—All For- eigners Are Safe. | Is Given Seat on Democratic Side. Although Named as Re- publican. WAGE BOOST SOLE BASIS MEDIATION. LABOR EDICT dossy arrested Miners, However, Vote for Last Adjournment, With Evident Re- luctance — Operators They Have Reached Concession.™ 4 Pre ITY, January An ber handits who ssenzers and zu; 1 By the Associa ALENTCO unkr massacr the capi of the Declare “Utmost runnin Mextcn City Killed in Eight tured were imm the loot secured by the been recovered and the | believed have been persed This announcement was made early | this morning by the department here. Dispatches from State of Michoacan the bandits had {eity v the federal troops and that | were surrounded After the handits last Sunday night ruthlessly murdered passengers and zuards, 4,000 troops started scouring the mountainous regions of the States of Guerro, Jalisco and Michoacan They were under orders to Lring in the bandits, dead or alive Twenty Bodles Found. Just how many persons when the bandits opened fir woman and child passengers knifed the train rds, or who ished later in the burning coaches, which the bandits <et on fire, is un certain. Twenty hodies, burned t vond identification. at last accounts, hetween Gu Sunday ni fight with whe execy o have heen fe e can All e hers =is lately we troops = i U verno ate tempora bandits entirely dis Br the Associated Press IW YORK. Jar vach other for their Blaming o s and the joint < left tically Ty 12 stubbornne recede an inch from the anthrac up today. T n t six the 158.000 since Sep Immediat ilure to nounced he was & He Vice President's des of office Dakot to a sea taken, — broke neg were Meantime TROPICS FREEZE WHILE ARCTIC LANDS BASK IN SPRING CLIME ElTlZENS, GUUNSEL | - WEAK, BELL HOLDS Enjoys Swimming. Says Public Loses Heavily Through Inadequate Rep- resentation. position nference the wage they ago workers tember 1. will remain & The break, while sudden. was not unexpectes the operators vester. iy indicated they had said their last rds in the way of concessions. The otion to adjourn the conference sine was made and seconded by the rators and, according to a state ment of the union leaders, the miners reluctantly voted for Zamora. in the previously said throuzh that flecinz from later they nonths passed mine strike o morning ted With Nve Democrats. « Senator the Demor although publican Leaguer, a tor La } campaizn of gallery that the vou i the Issues Statement. th issued a statement after the break-up. John L. Lewis, head f the miners, said the responsibility r the failure to agree and a con wiance of the strike re the anthracite operators arrogantly refused to make contribution toward industrial le By the A CHICAC Winter is making fiving dashes Packin his started s of Kunsas, Nel to rise in | Minnese and the Dakotas Among the low temperatiure marks -gistered last nizht were § below a Omaha, Nebr.: 4 below h Moosehead, Minn.: Charl Towa below, and Minneapolis, 7 Heavy falls of the latest wave of cold white cove: heing north central States | Rocky Mountain toited workers through snow 15 Denver met death on man, and e ip with a sious auantity of snow und icv winds, he hopped off from Manitoba on a hee line for the Central \West, left some subzero temperatures in his wi nd then scurried on East. where he shows his wares today Snow and colder weather were pre dicted for the Eastern seftion of the United States, with cold waves noted for sections of Ohio, western Pennsyl | between vania, New York and northern New hefore 20 persons marooned in auto. | England. Even the Southland will get | ! were led. __Many rains # taste of the passing wave, althouzh | moving eastward from Nebraska were most of the Tuesday forecasts for that | delayed. Improper Treasury 210,655,360 in tax-free deductions from income for amortization of war facilitles of manufacturers and min- AIRES allowances of January Montevideo correspondent of Nacion says he is in a position 10 affirm that the Uruguayan Bovern- | pe wan vpopmn ment has been unofficially approached | (o 1)e \.L‘::f, ""n"d:‘,”‘”\','",P;‘fl'"‘:":“f;"‘ {had been removed from the debris. Es by the United States In order to ob- | .o 16 FETEIE toCay bY Hhe speclal | timates of the fatalities run as high in its friendly mediation in the | (OPURIUES WBICH investigated the In-fas Arey acna Arica dispute between Peru | Cqil [ e Noneiof the forelgiers on chie traly e eport also was presented to the | was injured. but all of them were rob The correspondent understands that | A1ANCE committee today with a view 'bed. G. M. Wynkoop of Berryville r res stands 10 having corrective provisions incor. | Vi, a representative of the Buick such mediation would not involve sub- | 00 (" ©RFEELEE BEATEINE N0 Motor Co., who was a passenger on stitution of any part of President The report makes many criticisms | [h® train. gave a graphic account on ‘oolidge’s authority as arbitrator in | of the method of administering the | IS arcival here. > the dispute, but that it would be|income tax by the Bureau of Internal| AS darkness fell 20 men with rifies jarea cull only for slightly colder| At Chicago the undertaken Jointly with other South g = selyes doors ane her. during _the night Rbvane el deciarin: | stationed themselyes at the doors and | weat |a d immediately Legan firing on passen-, The cold snap will be short-lived, as | Snow plows cleared American countries, including Argen- Comproties Albaaes’ tina and Brazil. Coaches. Nomercy was shown. Wom- | nesday In the Central States and the The temperature in Chicago has en and children were brutally shot | far East. Already the mercury F ontinged on B oo a valuable consensus of opinion, | the commissioner of internal revenue | S0 208 (Connieaion PassEIn ol | which would give added strength to[to exceed the authority delegated to | dier guards were slain. | | Al together it was a perfect night they (to solve the question other than by i S in ! that | a plebiscite, if it were found that the |®T: in compromising taxes, has fol-| thjratiness, said Mr. Wynkoop. lowed the policy of giving the unse. % jevted by the miners, clearly indicated | The Uruguayan foreign minister re. | CUr d ot Bandits Drove Train. that the negotiato 1 reached the!fused to comment on the subject. Insolyent corporations precedent aver) the Government's claim for taxes the bandits, with an expert engineer in the cab of the engine, ran the train » U penalty fixed by Congress is never en- | forcd, but is treated as a maximum | wires and murdered other Mexlcans The foreign pussengers were forced to | S s | | 090.825 were made by the Bureau of | the line a short distance and set on ucceeds Senator Sheppard| Senate Committee Approves | April 30, 1925. An analysis shows | baggage cars had heen looted of val- | that the two principal grounds for | uables. These were piaced on the en gers in the second and third class rising temperatures are expected Wed | and street car travel Tt would, he says, serve to form| It has been the consistent policy of down, the same as men. All the sol- | the |any formulas which were discovered | compromise taxes. The commission : | = . !mare of incredibly wanton blood- "' I iaster iwas Impossib'e to.carny joul cured creditors and storkholders of | ' 4 When the horror had been completed end of their labors. However, so long e CHILEANS ARE ACCUSED. “As administered by the commis 10 the station of Yurecuaro. Here they penalt refunds amounting to $439,. | leave the train. which was taken up | Internal Revenue from July 1, 1921, to | fire, but not before the express and | = g0 of Texas, Forced: to Re- Bill Providing $50,000.000 these allowances are increased al- gine, which was uncoupled, and e 12— While pa in the vote the Democrats of Senator Nve were split more eve The elections the se: heen evident, week or two improv with thus marked | weather, the general ir and in the Rescue tunnel drifts Colo) snow declared I consider that h or ruin. to operators’ statement Mr. Lewis refused to constructive policy and position was one of “rule The operators have heen reach a wund settlement reason and justice.” the id, Mr. Lewis insists shall rule. Until his nges, further discussion That the public had not been fairly eartien esented in hearings before the Utilities Commission or in cases the public utilities have car- court their contests against the Utilities Commission ‘as emphatically expressed Engi ecr Commissioner Bell when hear ings were opened today on the Blan ton -cent street car hill before a sub committee of the House District com- mittee. headed by Representative Ired Zihlman, Republican, of Maryland Maj. Bell. the only witness before e committee that the Public es Co which is identi- with th Commissioners, {is not now physically able properly to | transact the duties of public utilities commissioners because overcrowded with other work. He explained that the people are not fairly represented because an attorney at $1.000 a v cannot be expected to cope against legal talent costing $100.000, such as is retained by the public utility cor porations. ares ours feer deep and Limo! 1o rep repo Pu wh (T n o that les 2 rates fixed hy ing by Strong One ind one attitude Argument Offered use- | 8 mercury dropped | to eight above. | the way for bus | less. st e The operat upon compl miners held th: Arbi bt s 1 to the end| e Sasdl arbitration, while the! if they accepted any | ration it should be so only on the | of increasing wages and with- any reduction. The proposition operators yesterd: termed the “utmosf could be made e With he Senators 4 which they voted to this in rd dered Senators te mind, some of ed objections technical and Nye. The vote was taken or resolution directing tt he seated, which was tor Stephen the minority repo; d elections comm Record of Roll The roil call was as fol Those voting to sez Senators Ashurst Tdaho; Bratton hart, T Capper, Couzens presented ) which by hope reack ever, sho t o settlement would be oday’s developments. how- ed the hopelessness of con they remained in session there was 3 sioner of internal revenue, the fraud Heating Wollows Desiions looted the town. cut the telegraph stration Against Americans. ARICA, Chile, January 12 (#). | A summary hearing was held vester- day the residence of Gen. John J Pershing, chairman of the Tacna-| Summary Lewis Blames Operators. Immediately after the broke up John L. Lewis, president of the Mine Workers, called | Urges Commission Change. Maj. Bell urged support of the leg- islation _now pending before the Budget Bureau which would enlarge conference at United Arica plebiscitary commission, as the of a demonstration in which 400 Chileans took part and assumed an anti-American The Chilean delegation on represented at newspaper men and dictated this state- | result | about which character. the commission the hearing. The demonstration hegan when an American named Lambert, employed by the Peruvian delegation aboard the transport Rimac, came ashore to sell | copies of the newspaper published aboard the Rimac. Near the residence reserved for the American delegation he was stopped by a group of Chil- |eans. On learning that he was an American. the crowd. which increased rapidly, raised loud protests inst what they termed “American partici- pation in Peruvian propaganda.” An American photographer attempt- ed to make a picture of the scene, but was prevented by the Chileans, who ,said they feared the photographs would be used for Peruvian propa- ganda. The crowd dispersed when police ap- peared. It is reported, however, that William (. Dennis of the American delegation was addressed in a disre- spectful manner by Jorge Silva, head of a local patriotic society, when Mr. sed while the demonstra- nt a statement ves the conference, the mined to break up | an agreement. | aitless discus. operators moved | irpment with de- | t the r snr(md‘ Conscious of all responsi- | and still imbued with the hope sreement might be reached 1tors abandoning arbi- W refused to As predic n my Ty, mad FAtOrS W conferencs hout After a per 1 this morning was wanded th the motic Lility that an through the tration th mine kers Fhe opera seconded their rman put the wdjournment. Under < the mine workers they could not, keep the without the reluctantly s later awn mo the chai sueh eireumstan recognize conference i pre n voted for mation Expressing Keen Regret. vorkers profoundly re maintained the same un which they evi tiations bega City, and ever | e operators it the s attitude when the ne Atlantic 3 i maintained its height. responsibility for the fail- ure ree and a continuance of | the strike rests entirely with the an- MERCURY TO DROP. thracite operators’ interests, who thus | refused o make any con-| Temperature of 16 Degrees Above = toward industrial peace. N Here Tonight. he mine worke re prepared to onlliive the Htupele Tof i erion winimum temperature of 16 de- e Tnsting pesce, which will pre. | Erees tonight was the only indic S Mghts of free | tion of interest on the weather map i { today. The pgrtial overcast sky will lermain hropmout the day ana con: tinue through tomorrow. attended by Sowly Hising temperature The Weather Burean saw no pros pects for rain or snow within the next 36 hour and likewise no colder ! weather for the same period. ‘Whooping Coughers Marked. MALDEN, Mass., Januar) ing the words months t hey I i which since A men he motion to adjourn was made hy Geor Hadesty of the Philadelphia | ind Reading Coal and Tron Corpora- | jon. 1t was seconded by Thomas Thomas ¢ Leh ley Coal Co. [ Operators Blame Lew ment operators after the adjourn it this statement: ny davs of conference we no change whatever in attitude. He absolutely | Arm bhands bearin; consider any constructive ' Whooping cough™ must h‘rA worn by In a few words, his posi jon | children who have the ailment, the he will rule or ruin. | board of health has tecreed. is Lewis' o exy s0 pl the taxes sion for the law provided for the de- termination of the tax by comparison with the tax neerns cases where invested capital could not be determined or where the taxpayers suffered a special hardship by abnor- mality in income or invested capital. divi: unit protests by leaves the divis their superiors in ignorance of how the law is really administered. Promulgating Princlples. “Many of the principles, methods and formulas applied in the determi- nation of tax have never been reduced to writing and of the formal plicable published. “This publish the principles and practices to be followed results: ot | of employes of the income tax unit is tion & cases, lowanc ing b, “Invested ar w Fail “The, culties |and special assessment are due to the | failure to observe the plain provisions of the law “The tionary sioner e inco u have granted others similarly situated. published forced to employ former employe: | (Continued on Page ised by the division heads. These on heads are governed by no ade quate rules or jnstruction less « taxpaver is dissatisfied with the determination of his tax, or unless a | refund exceeding $30,000 i thers is no review of the work done under division heads. ATt fs the policy of the income tax to results for invested capital and tax- | driven aw: special assessment i capital was the basis of | profits profits dits shout and excess are revolutionists.” av. Mr. Wykoop gald he heard the ban- : “We are not bandits. We One of the Mex; sign as Member. Resignation of Senator Morris Shep. The speclal assessment provl- | cans told him that they were rebel- pard of Texas as one of the Demo paid by representative | revolution in the same industry, in| _ Most of of throughou lure to Observe Provision: principal administrative diff incident to invested capital| The was a amed Ri wite practically unlimited discre- power vested in the commis- f internal revenue is actually | | treal, also were They harmed. , and un Berryville involved, | BERRY George M vietims of ourage complaints and bordinates. This policy ion heads supreme and is an offici agency His mot! only 151 per cent written rulings, ap- to Income taxes, have been failure to promulgate and she had perience. Mr. Wy, Year eve daughter has had the following Information for hte guidance omplete that gross discrimina- from the failure to ap- principles to similar to visit hi niform the sugge Taxpayers falled 1o instances allowances in many claim To secure the benefits of un- precedent. taxpayers are TELLE T0 Column 3.) has informed us in no uncer- | tain terms that he cares nothing for the opinion of the public or publ officials. chambers of commerce, re- ligious orsanizations or the press. He will_have his own way or nothing. “The operators’ proposals. the Luzerne legislators' plan, the Markle plan, the engineers’ and economists’ Inebriated Carp Bring Fancy Prices After German Thieves Play Little Joke by ling against { watch dev, | reached Guadalajara. Wynkoop walked until they found altrict committes bec: train for Mexico City. They suffered | of othe t 72 considerable hardship. e Shamitics other mining man of the lajara branch of the Bank of Mon- and her arrived VIRGI | Specia! Dispatch to The Star. the Mexican capital. { California Business President Calles. * elopments,” he added. is not ov the foreigners camped out Others night and Mr. and walked finally Mrs. t the American on the train from Pachuca . H. Sharratt, of the Guada- nssell. Mrs. manager five-months.old passengers. at Guadalajara baby, un- AN ON TRAIN. Man Escapes Bandits After Being Robbed. VILLE, Va., January elvin Wynkoop, one of the the train robbery in Mexico, is a native of this section and the son of Mr. koop, who live here. He has been in Mexico City for five or six years and nd Mrs. George W. Wyn- ial of the Buick Motor Car there. her has heard nothing from him for several weeks and press dis- patches were the only information concerning his recent ex- nkoop was married on New to Miss Marie Chambert. of an American family in He had planned is home here on his honey- moon trip, but changed his plans on stion of his mother that he come next Summer. R IS NAMED SHIPPING BOARD Man Nom- inated to Succeed Lissner—Urged Shortridge for Post. cratic members of the District com- ! mittee and appointment of Senator William Cabell Bruce of Maryland te Sunday night in the wrecked town fill the vacancy was announced today Yurecuaro. by Minority Leader Robinson. | Senator Sheppard said he found it | necessary to be relieved from the Dis use the pressure k prevent { him from giving adequate attention to | meetings of the committee. | Senator Bruce said this afternoon i that he was glad of an opportunity to serve on the District committee be cause the proximity of his own State to Washington has enabled him to be come familiar and interested in the welfare of the Nationl Capital. Favors Development. “I am in favor of improving and de veloping Washington,” Senator Bruce declared, “because I believe that the richest and one of the largest nations in the world should have a magnifi- cent capital. 1 feel that whatever tends to improve Washington also en- hances the Nation. | Senator Bruce said that while he i had not studied in detail the various phases of the fiscal relations between jthe United States and District gov- ernments, he is of the opinion that ‘the Federal Government should bear @ fair share of the cost of maintain- ing and developing the Capital City. Favors Permanent Plan. The new member of the committee indicated that he thought this di- vision of expense should be made defi- nite, and placed on a reasonable basis. the merits of the question when the | opportunity presented iteself. Senator Sheppard has been an ac- tive member of the District commit- tee for & number of vears, and was the author of the local prohibition law, which went into effect some time before national prohibition. Strikers and Authorities Quarrel Over Auction Funds. CANTON, January 12 (#).—Strikers and military authorities have quar- reled over the distribution of funds | secured by the auction of ships’ car- i Senator Bruce said he would study | for D. C. Program. A favorable report on the bill carry- ing $165.000.000 for public buildings Washington and throughout country was ordered today by the Sen ate committee on public buildi and grounds. Only a few amendments were made by the committee, and but one member, Senator Trammell of Florida. indicated opposition the bill. The total amount measure is enacted nto three groups, urgently needed structures authorized if this would be divided as follows: For in Wash similar Federal buildings throughout the United States, $100,000,000, and to complete the unfinished portion of a building program ordered in 1913, $15, 000,000. F Senator Fernald of Maine, chairman of the committee, will make the fa- | vorable report to the Senate and will move for passage of the bill as soon as other problems before the Senate will permit. A similar bill is also being considered at this time by the House committee on public buildings and srounds. One of the committee amendments provides that outside of the District of Columbia not more than $5,000,000 shall be spent in anyv one State an- nually. The purpose of this amend- ald to Make Report. distribution of the among the various sections country. Another amendment provides that where an equal need for a public building exists in two cities prefer- ence will be given to the city im which 4 site has already been purchased. A building of fund the | sure the completion of the buildings that may be started under this pro- sram. Want Early Passage. Nearly all of the Senators at the committee meeting indicated a desire ing out that the Government has not had a building program to meet its growing needs for 12 years. While this measure will not construct all of the buildings needed by the Federal Government throughout the country, | Chairman Fernald said today, it would ington. $50,000,000; for post offices and | tc see early passage of the bill, point-| ! {and { ment is to bring about an equitable | third amendment was inserted to in- | | Mr. Blanton, Democrat, of Texas | Democrat | fore the Public Utilities Commission so as to include an engineer skilled in valu- ation accounting and a well qualified attorney. Incidentally, he remarked that if the people of Washington had teen represented hy adequate legal alent during the seven vears of | gation which resulted recently in a mpromise over Poto Electric Power Co. tes, restoring to the peo- ple £3,000,0¢ he believes a much bhet- ter settlement could have bheen had the opening of the hearing today au 5 cent carfare bill. which throw the street railway rict back to proposed joint thor the proposes to | hearings with a similar subcommittee from the Semate Represenjative of that this a Senate Blanton was joint hearing. Reads City Heads Letter. Mr. Whitehead read into the record the letter of the District Commission. ers in opposition to Mr. Blanton Representative Reid of Illinoi: publican. suggested that Mr. Blanton, as author of the bill, make a state- ment M1 District Joseph committee. Whitehead, Virginia, raised the legislation is not be. subcommitee and Mr. only one yoting for a point Blinton repeated what he has previously said in a letter to the Dis- trict Commissioners, in a statement hefore the House District committee vesterday on the floor of the House. He said his whole purpose in making this fight is to restrict the two principal street railway com- panies in the District, the Capital Traction and the Washington Rail- way and Electric Co., to their cha ters. He said that the Supreme Court of the United States has held that a charter is a contract between the corporation and the people. Wants Public Guarded. “If a fair record is made,” continued Mr. Blanton, “not such a one filied up with the street of the the District Commissioners have sub- mitted to the House District commit- tee, T believe it would show that the street railway companies could oper te at a profit, while giving street car ders service, at 5 cents a ride. There should be somebody to represent the people’s side at hearings and let the issue in regard to the rates stand or fall on a true record.” Mr. Blanton said he would like to show the street railway officials and members of Congress motion pictures of how workmen for the sireet rafl- ways loaf on repair jobs. He de- scribed how he himself had seen gangs of 50 standing around talking. Mr. Reid interrupted to ask him if that Niss Lebr Georgia: a Harrison Howe X 4 MoK Nary., Oregon West Vi Overr Louis pard, Simmo: South Car Stephens ginia: Trammel nessee: Underw Wheeler, Mon Those voti ator Nye—3 Senators ham, Connectict lina; Bruce, M chusetts; Ca | Kansas: Dal nols: Edge, | tuek Gerry, Rhode chusetts; Glass, Virgi Virginia: Gooding, Tdak Jones, Washington Hampshire: Lenroot Lean, Connecti d. Wisconsin: M Means. (‘olorad New Pepper Hampsh Pennsylvania Pennsylvan ckett, Ker fornia; Wads: Montana; War; | Indiana: W lis, Ohio. MEMORIAL ARMORY PROPOSED BY CAPPER Senator Prepares Resolution New Guard Home Here to Cost $2,000.000. for A joint resolution ational Guard armory in Washins ! ton, which would also stand as a me | morial to those who served in the mil { itary and naval forces during the w | was prepared today by Capper, chairman of the District | mittee, and is expected to be | duced this afternoon i The resolution calls for creation of a_commission. to be composed of Engineer Commissioner, director of { Public buildings and zrounds and the commanding officer of the National | Guard. to carry out the plans for the | armory. as submitted by the commis to provide fc drinking plain water. Thereupon the remainder of the liquor was poured into the tank. The fish survived the infiltration; they continued to swim merrily about, albeit some of them are declared to have had optics re- sembling those of the wall-eyed perch. < When Klinger opened his store he was amazed at the snap displayed by his fish. Then came customers and when they sniffed the aroma arising | from the tank they purchased the fish and hastened away to put them in the oven hefore the favor dis- appenred. was not ‘“just how the people judge Congress.” Mr. Blanton argued that the street car riders are paying for that idle- ness. He quoted from the Commis- sloners’ letter to show that there is a material dropping off everv year in the number of passengers. Many persons are walking rather than pay an 8.cent car fare, l';; sald. If the 5-cent fare MWl is carried, he | predicted that there will be twice as many people riding and that instead of 8 cents the sireet railway com (Continued on Page 2, Column 1) plan—all were discussed at length, 5 . = = mly to be summarily rejected by the| BERLIN, January 12—Liquor miners: spokesman because they | soaked, inebriated carp commanded ‘smelled of arbitration.’ fancy prices here today. Thieves last “While the operators were Dressing | pight entered Klinger's delicatessen for practical measures to end the|gtore, in the suburb of Charlotten- strike and put the industry on a per-|purc’ They found a large supply of manent basis. Mr. Lewis dragged in 2 unconstitutional proposals for Federal brica fixing and wage fixing. Such broposals are neither workable nor ! Jracticable. and while consuming time | Aid not form a basis for any serious | discussions Their insincerit “(Continued on Page 5, Column 7 be a step forward. The bill is of particular importance to Washington, because it will relieve the unsatisfactory conditions under which thousands of Government em- ployes are working in temporary buildings and in rented quarters. In some Instances various branches of the same department scattered | about different rentea n*mgx The | bill_also provides for archives | building, in which would be safe- guarded valuable records relating to the establishment and development of the Natiom. sion appointed by an act of Congress in 1908, or a modification of those plans. nn 2 il | goes. A few persons were killed and y the Ass : e o 3 | several wounded in the trouble. The p:xfif’g_”:f-,g,:'L‘z‘%;fi?fifn&"f:,‘";:‘: military authorities eventually won member of the Shipping Board, to|the dispute. succeed Commissioner Lissner, who| Gen. Wu Te Chen and Sun Fo, son resigned. of Sun Yat-Sen, first president of the Mr. Teller is a business man of San |Chinese republic, who died last year, Francisco, a former chairman of the | together with other northern generals, harbor commission and of the Re.|are expected toarrive here today. publican State central committee. His | nomination was recommended by Senator Shortridge, Republican, Cali- fornia. A maximum cost of $2.000,000 is fixed in the resolution, to be author ized on the 60-40 ratio between the United States and District govern ments. The resolution would author ize $25,000 for preparation of speci fications. It is provided that the building would have to be on ground | owned by the United States, to be se lected by the commission created and approved by the Fine Arts Commis sion. ¥ liquor and a plentiful layout of pi- quant eatables and they regaled themselves without stint. When thirst and appetite had been tiated the idea struck one of the riy that a large number of carp swimming about in =< tank pos sibly mizht have By the Associated Press. ’ « Radio Programs—Page 20