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irt eraohstie term? in ?.. note by the State Departmei I on May 31, 1321, will continue iri effeet \ nt ii Japanese troops are actoally withdrawn in ac? cordance with the agreement made be? tween the American and Japanese gov fornments \>hcn they sent their troops r.to Siberia jointly in 1918 Mr. Hughes's asscrtion th;,', America regretted" that Japan ftnds it nec -s?nry to occupy Saghalin Island as a reprisal for the ma.?s*cre cf 700 Th;i ane.?? nationals at Nickolaievak ln 1920 found ar. echo to-day fr-mi thc delegates of the far Eastern Repuhlic of Chita. Mr. Hughes referred to the massacre ns "nn incident" of the joint expedition > f American ar.d Japanese forcci, and indicatcd that as such the Ispar.eFc wr;, not juatificd in continu -,g Jndaflnitely in Saghalin tccording *o the Chita delegates, more Russians than Japanese wen killed in the massacre. "Thc N'tcol *ievgk events were not a Russian but * Japanese atrocity," said tbe Chita delegates in a statement issued to day. Fearfu! that the conference will ad ourn without hearing them. the dele? gates from Corr-a addresscd ar. appea: to the r.ine powers to-day. The appeal sets forth that Corea, once nn indc pendent kingdom, but now a province of Japan, is atruggling ?o regain her indenendence. t.ontrol hy China of Otcn Kadios Proposed hy Root WASHINGTON. Jan. 25 CBy Thc Associated Press"!. ? Consent would nave to be given by thc Chinese gov? ernment for the crection of wireless ?tati^>ns in China under a resolution nrescr.tc:! to the Far Eastern commit? tee of the Washington corfer?nco to? day by F'.ihu Root, of the American U egation. The resolution, after dis? cussion. was refcrred to a drafting committee, with a view, it w.-'.s under? stood, of consolidatlng it with other agreements thus far reached on wire less cemmunication in the Far East. -?-,-.-_ Mrs. McCormick Urgres ^oraen To Be Passive Former Wife of f (arvester Mag nate Gives First Address on Synthetic Paychology Haactai DUpatch to Thr Tribune CHICAGO. Jan. 2.";. Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick to-day di* cussed synthetic psychology for the first time since her return from Eu? rope. The subject has engrossed Mrs. McCormick f< r several years and she now plans to use her Lnl.e F rest home for promntinp- its study. Her tnlk to? day was before a club. "Man ia the positive force in iife." Mrs. McCormick said. "Woman the etgativc. Woman is madc to bcar and ?uatain. Man is made for assertion and adventure, The rclation of men snd women is something like the tra , and its rails. Thc train is the dominant moving power, but v.-itiiout -he rails it cannot function. The train repre senta the man, thc rails the woman. "A woman is as great in her negative capacity as a man in his poaitive. v '? ?-'' =i woman entcrs a man's field, underatands her limitationa and pow? ers. she ia likely to succeed. It is when wemen try to be other than they are by nature and play the game according to man's rulea that they nre likely to fail. "After many yars of study I have concluded tha: the whole happinesa of nd ?? nt bringa poise and serenity ,o the soul consists in an understand? ing of ono's self, why that self is placed in the world and how to use it I to the best advantage. To br passive ! ia the woman's great forte. .t;ho has the patience, the ability for bearine;, th? strength to Iive, though she aufl'er, that makes her the counterpart of the TY.mult Raised in House Over \nti-Lynching Bill WASHINGTON, Jan. 26.- Debate in tne Ho'.;-" on the river antl-lynching was ended to-day end the measure was taken up under the five-niinute i rule. which nfforcis members an oppor tunity ! i offei amendments. Republi? can leaders, announcing that the bill would be kept before the House until ? ' ' >h " '< was reached, anid thev were c, ?' Icnl the measui : would be sent to the Senate late to morrow or Friday, Rollealla indicated that supportera ' ' he bill were in a majority. T:''r ?"" i ;- ;' day was marked by a ",,!,i" ' :i h between Representatives Sisaon Di nocrat, ol Misaiosippi, and ' ooper, Ri publican, of Wisconsin, which threw the public into confusion. Sevcrr.l hui Ircd negroe8 ir. the. Kal lenea joine I in a demonstration that was sllenced with difncultv, The flare ue came when Mr. Cooper declared Mr. Sisson had "openly advocatcd" mob ;"'' ?'?; "'! ??' " in an attack on the bill had contended thnt mob violence could not be stamped out until "black rascala keep their hands off the throats ot white women." ? Eno's Faulty Meinory Is Described bv Cousin Irs. Grace Allen Hawes, a cousin o." the Ir.te Amos K. Eno; her husband Alfred Hawes; Mrs Constance Morgan R ttenhouse and the Rev. Andrew F. Underhill added their stories to the mnny already told about the peculiari tieg of Mr. Eno, whose will is being lor.tested in the Surrogatea' Court. Al legations have been made thet thc tcs 'ator was not mentally capable of making a will. Mr. Underhill now rector of a church in Northampton, Mass. was acquainted with Mr. Eno when the clergvman was assistant pastor of the Church of the Ascension. Mr. Cndcihill testified that h<< was a dinner gest of Mr. Eno in April, 1916, n few months before the dk-afh of the testator. Prior to that time, said thc witness, he had known .'< testator :,s an alert, clear minded, gracioua gentleman. Itut on the occa ''r described by Mr. Underhill the *i.ed millionaire, he said, looked feeble, r.'.s speech was not coherent and "he pushed or shoved his feet aluno- in 'rent of hirr.." Mrs. Hawes said thnt once- when Mr. V.no had .r.\ite,i her to dine with him ?he asked him whom he had invited to the dinner. and the testator could not itcali the names. Austria Calls on Allies For Quiek Financial Aid LONDON, Tan. 25.?An urgent aopeai rrom Austria to the Allies, intimating that disastroua consequencea are prob hie ur.l^ss financial aid ia piven the country, ia engaging thc er.rneot atten? tion of the British government, and a decision favorable to Auitr:a possibly will be reached Thursday or Friday, according to "Thc- London T;mes." Ii J-j understood, says the newspaper, tnat Austr.a needs .mmt-d:otejy ?2,500, 000, the same sum she vainly tried t'o raise ir. London before Christmaj on the secur.ty of the famous Gobelin taj cstries Maintaining that Austria will be un J^ble to ra <e a foreign credit until the randing bill of Secre?<-:ry of the Tr<-;.i ury Mallon has pr.ssed the United States Senate, enabiinjr the United States to forego its iicn on Austrian assets, and until other interested wowers have waived their liens "Thi Times" remarks that Austria'i inability , '.o offer secunty against a )o?b is more ? ?pparent than rea!. because the pres? ent irr.pafsr a!mi.?t certainly will er with the paseage or the Mellon bill. t wht-r. Austria will be ab'e immediate y to repay thc sum she nc-ds so urgently as a carry-over lo:.n ro prevent the < further collapse of tiie crown Thr painting. shown in the center of the group, ts on exhibition at the Corcoran Galleries in Washington. It will be present ed tn the Italian government. At the extretne left is Mr. Trotta. the art ist; next is Secretary Hughes, and then Ambassador Ricci Tax Compromise Puts Off Cabinet Crisis in Germanv Socialist Leaders in Reieh slag Accept Profjrram Of? fered by Bourpeois Par-! lies and Save Wirth i By Wircleaa tn Thc Tribune I I Copyrijrht, 1922, Xew Yorli Tribune Inc. ' I BERUN, Jan. 25. ? The Socialist: I leaders in the Reichstag are under [ stood to have accepted at a meeting j to-night the taxation program offered by the bourgeois parties, and thus to i have ended the crisis that thrcatened I to overthrow the Wirth Cabinet at to- I morrow'a meeting of the Reichstag. i Chancellor Wirth. Walther Rathenau nnd Minister of Finance Hermes took; ? a leading part in working out the i compromise proposal. The Socialists | hnd been demand ing a part confi.scation j 1 of property to raise money to pay Germany's bills. Thc chief feature of the compromise ' is a compulsory loan of 40,000,000,000 I paper marks, which tlie large landcd j and industriul interests must make to the government immediately to help cover cxpenses for 1922. The loan will bear no interest for five years. The Socialists' acccptance of this plan is said to have bccn foreed by their desire to avoid a Cabinet crisis and the general election which prob abiy would have heen entailed. For several weeks the Socii-liats and Cen trists have been bluffing one another to such nn extent that the crisis came cn without either side wanting to force Wirth out of ofTice. BERLIX, Jan. 25 (By The Associated j Press). A draft of thc law covering the enforced loan is to bo prefented to I the Reichstag during the present week. Chancellor Wirth on Thursday also will place before the Reichstat; the Rovern- , nient's declaration of its taxation pro? gram. The Chancellor has announced that all previously enacted taxation laws will Le subject to re-examination on account nf the depreciation in the value of the mark. The Cabinet will meet Thursday to I give ils final approval t.o the memorialg j which the government is to transmit I to the Inter-Alliod Reparations Com? mission. Has Wife and Chanffeur Arrested After Gnn Play' Special Diapatch to The TVibuiie KALAMAZOO, Mich.. Jan. 25.?Mrs. Robert Uhler and her chauffeur, James | Delaney, are in custody here on a. charge of conspiring to murder the woman's husband at his branch office ! in Otsego Tuesday evening. Uhler | conducts a dental supply office ln thc New Burdick Hotel Building, with of- | ftcts in Otsego and Grand Rapids. A shooting affray at Otsego was the! culmination, officers aay, of months of j domestic trouble. Uhler, it is claimcd,' was fired upon twice by Delaney, with? out cft'ect, while. the former was enter- : ing his Otsego office. Blame for the incident was placed' on her husband by Mrs. Uhler, who declared that it was the dental mer- 1 chant and not the garave owner who fired the gun. The wife, the only eye-. witnesa to the 3hooting, said she could' produce the weapon her husband used in what she charges was an attempt to kill the object of an unreaaonable jealousy. Delaney also asseris it was ! the husband who fired the pistol and declares he never owned a gun. ?-.??-?. Soviet Government to Seek Loan in America BERLIX, Jan. 25 iBy The Associated Press).---A committee representing the , All-Rus8ian Co-operative Association, with 50,000 branch organizationa in Russia. which has arrived in Berlin to negotiate for German shipping with which to carry on relief work, has an? nounced that its efforts scon will bc i directed toward obte.ining in the United Statea a loan for the Soviet govern ment. The committee also cxpects to negotiate with English Interests in the ' liope of opening up trade relation* be? tween Great Britain and Russia, but its chief work will be directed toward the promotion of commerce with Ger- I many. M. Tachinczuk, chairman of the com? mittee, 61-id that the visit of the Rua fiar.s followed upon recent conversa? tions between M. Tresiinaki and Chan? cellor Wirth, when it b?camo known that the Reichstag Foreign Affairs Committee discussed Russo-German rrnrie probabilities at ita last session. Wceps Over IV.an She Slew PHILADELPHTA, Jan 25.?By per mission of court M*-* Cathi rjr,e Rosier to-d;,y M4 permltted a final view 0f the remaini of ner husband, 0<-.nr Roaier, whom she shot and killed in his office last Saturday. Soe leaned over hi? blaek caaket and rop:!?.'.r i ,-, said: "Oscar. I lov?d v>u " The funera, of Mildred G. Rec'^itt Ros;??r'? r.!r.eteer.-\ ?.-ir-o!d stenogra nh?r. who a!<!0 wm shot bv Mr:,. Ro sicr, waa held to-day. Mrs. P-Tii' r, under guard, arrived at ?n undertaker's rlace an hour r,e".r> ??'?' *?' ?-? - toi her hasband's funeral. Ever; erecaution ??,, taken to eheel any erTort 'hat might have bfen con templated by relativts o< Roa er to >r? /:?* tr: from viewir gr the body. Mr*. ?" '? "' paased a hal hour ?>? tl I be ".tni, becoming almost stcr et . jrief Iiiternalioiial Irish League Formed to Seek Indepeiidciiee Dc Valera Presides al Paris Convention: to -Organize Sub-Committce in Each Country toWageCampaign PARIS. Jan. 25 (By Thc Associated Pieas).?The International Irish League, organized here to-day by the World Congress of the Irish Race, decided thc principal object of the league must be co help Ireiand gain fuii independence. The congress, with Eamon de Valera as presiding olTicer, adoptod a resolu? tion to this cft'ect unanimously in the end. nlthough-Ait was fought in the de? bate by about a dozen of thc hundred orid delegates from fourteen different countries who make up the congress. Thc resolution reads: "The object. of thc international or? ganization is to assist thc people of Ireiand in their efforts to obtain to the full their national ideals, political, cultural and econpmical, and secure for Ireiand her rightful place among the free nations ot the carth." Mr. do Valera's followers interpret the resolution as approving their load cr's stand on thc Anglo-lrish Treaty and as committing the international league to b campaign to obtain the abaolute independence of Ireiand. Mr. de Valera himself, when asked to in? terpret the resolution after the session, said: "You may say the resolution means litcrally what it says." The debate and thc vote on the reso? lution took place behind closcd doors. The international league, it was de? cided, shall have charge of the cen? tral administration, the seat of which is to be fixed later. One national sub committec will bc established in each country, with wiiich may he fedcrated all Irish organizations, whether politi? cal, social, atliletic, cuiturai or tco nomic. DUBLIN, Jan. 25 (By Tne Associated Press).?Thc executive committee of the Irish Unionist Alliance has adopttd a resolution in which it is declared: "Viewing with alarm the increasing anarcby prevailing in Ireiand, we are gravely nDnrehensive that when the crown forces have been withdrawn there will be no reliable protection for life and property." Decimal Coinage System Favored for Irish State Money and Postal Issues To Be Taken Up Next Week in London by Cabinet Offieiah Spac'.a' Cabte to The Tribuiie, 1 'opyriglit, 1022, Xew Yorl; Tribune Ine. DUBLIN. Jan. 25.?The Free State proviaional government virtually de? cided at a meeting at the City Hall to ds.y to adopt a decimal system of coin? age for Ireiand. This and questions arfccting new postal issues will bo taken up next week in London by J. J Malsh, Free State Postmaster, and other officials of the Dublin Cabinet. The Ministry is not waiting for the transfer of all powers from London, but is pushinfr its social reform plat form. Five million dollars will be given to assist local authorities in easing the : housing famine. A strong reaction to the Collins-Craig peace agreement between north and south is evident. The Belfast press and public men there have swung around to the view there is need of fnendly association between north and j south because of their interdepend ence. Andrew Jameaon, former Union? ist leader, spoaking at the Dublin ! Chamber of Commerce this afteinoon, I declared Ulster and the south ought to j work together for the good of the I country. and added that this. was thc I view of business men. Hc pointcd out I that Ireiand would bc about the only country on earth with a small debt and ' that its credit ought to be good. Britain Will Reject Poincare Treaty Draft Moriification of Alliance. Providing Large Military Force, Incompatible With Poliry of Lloyd George May Affect Genoa Parley Reports America ls Not Iiiclined to Atteml Dis heartening to Promoters By Arthur S. Draper ;-,.,i,? 7'Ji* Tribunc'a European Bureau CopyrlRlit, 1022, New York Tribune Inc LONDON, Jan. 25.?Tho French pro posals for modification of the Anglo French alliance have been poorl;; re? ceived in British official qunrters be? cause they smack too atrongly of rld timc diplomacy. The Poincare sug? gestions would providc an ofTensive defensive alliance, lasting for a long period of years nnd entailing the m -,n tcnance of a strong military cstablish i ment. These provisions aro incor.i l patible with the predominating desire I 111 Great Britain and most of the other j Allied countries for a reduction in thc j cost of armaments. Morcover, thc Gcddes economy committee is working out general plans for cuta in national expenditure and particularly in army and navy appropriations, ao thnt lower taxes will be. possible. Therefore, when the Marquis of Curzon, Minister of Foreign Affairs, hands France the British answer he is going to make. it plain that the. Lloyd George Cabinet cannot accept thc pro? posala, even if their rejection means that France will not bc represented at thc Genoa "economic conference, upon which Lloyd George haa placcd such j hicrh hopes. Promoters of thc Genoa conference have been disheartencd somewhat by i press reports from Washington that President Harding nnd Secretary of State llughes were disinclincd to send delegates tr> the gathering, because they have been counting on the par ttcipntion of the United States. The possibility that both America and France will be abaent, or will predi catc their presence on conditions that will make their active participation virtually impoasible, iR distrcssing to the bnckers of the conference because without these two nations thc Genoa meeting would bc handicapped, just, ns the League of Nations was nt first by thc absence of thc United States, Russia. Germany and Austria. In this .situation the possibility of rcaching any kind of a settlement would not be very bright. The attitude of the British toward the French alliance proposals, as af fecting matters of British policy, re gnnilesR of the fate of the Genoa gathering, is well expresscd to-day by "The Evening Standard," which always is friendly in comments on France It says: "The whole idea behind the British conception of the Anglo-French pact is disnrmument nnd thc elimination, so far as may be. of the risk of war. The whole idea behind the French concep? tion of the pact is nrmament and costly insurancc against the risks of war. The British people, we believe, are perfectly willing to enter the pact if it reallv promises to sccure peace nll around. They would be very unwilling to enter the pact. if it me'ans simply . such preparations for a new wnr as I would almost constitute provocation of j war." j Of course, Premier Poincare may | decide to take pnrt at Genoa even if j Great Britain rejects his alliance pro | posals, but it is believed here that j his reprcaerttativea would be at the I gathering only to prevent discussions ! of quor.tions which directly affect , France nnd which France won't dis I cuss with the Germans and Russians. Sclmabel and Rose Heard In Town Hall Recitals Yesterday's recitals at Town Hall | brought the third appearance of Ar i thur chnabel . His program was 1 devated to Wcber's Sonata in A . mnjor, Chopin's Twenty-four Pre hidcs nnd Liazt'a B minor Sonata. I The pianist cTTsplayed the same charac , teristics which he showed upon two ; previous nppcarances, the most con : spicuous of these being a hinrhly de i velopcd technique and an ngre'onble j touch. As nn interpreter of Chopin and Lis/t hc did not stray fnr from tho J path3 prcscribed by conventionality. > Last night Maximilian Rose, vio | linist, gave a recital. In Bnch's Suite ! in E minor, Chaussnn's "Poeir.e" nnd j Bruch'a G minor Concerto he dis played nn agreeable tonc, fidelity to in tonation and a smooth. if not brillinnt, technique. He was jrcnerally more ef? fective in his performancc of the Suite and Bruch's Concerto than in the com j plorities of Chausson's music, which , lequire more mattire intcrprctativc ! nbilities. Resignation of Ohinese Premier Is Demanded PEKING, Jan. 25 (By T'ne Associated Press).-? President Hsu Shih-chang in timidnted by General Wu Pei-fu In? spector General of the provinces of Hunan and Hupeh, who was supported bv the six provinces in the Yangtse Valley which are threatening to de eJare their independence on Tuesday demanded the resignation of Premier Liang Shih-yi. The Premier, however refuaed to take upon himself the onua of ahandomng the government prior to the New Year settlement and declincd to tender his resignation. He insistea tnot the President, who anpointed him must give him his disniissal. Latei the Premier went on sick loave By so doing he avoida political resnon sibihty, He retains Lhe r r'ht ever, to look after the treasurv 'ncte issue which will enable '''<- .?,--,,,.?,. T partinlly to meet its New'Year obll gations. MID-WINTER SALE ALSO PLRSJAN ,nd CHINESE RUGS >% AT REDUCTIONS OF 10% TO 50 ?^rdinS.m?ney-saving opportunities which in th, tace of nsmg costs of manufacturing, are not likely to again prcr.cnt themselves lor a considerable period. ,Our entire stock is now reduced Burl Walnut Davenport Table 7.4xf>') inche*. *? A A Kormerly $75. NOW ' 44 FiintcHofnerCoin, m 2o-26>?feAt36,x5i Cmovtnimrtir nw rint, x??n? tce Cream Boom Slirs British to a Trade War From The Trtbune'e rJuropson llurea,i Copyrlght, 1BJJ3, Ni vv Voi'K Tribune Inc LONDON, Jan. 25.?Mobillza tion to meet n new kind of Amer? ican invasion wns revealed to-day when a group of British and Italian members of the Refresh mant Traders' Association de? cided to construct ice cream fac tories and soda fountain plants throuyhout the United Kingdom to compete with tlie influx of American soft drinks expected this spring. Last summer wns so nxcessively hot that the ice cream J4iabit hud a great boom here. Housing Crisis in New York, Guthrie Tells Supreme Courl Crowded Coiidildons IVIcnare lo Hon Ith and Morals, f Counsel Declares al Hear? ing on Renl Law Case I ?'),,! Thc Trtbunc'a Washlngton Bureau .WASHLNGTON', Jan. 25.?Thc quea tiOn of the constitutionality of tho emergency housing laws of thr State of Now York is once more under con? sideration rn tho Supreme Court of thc United Statea. Tho court to-dny listened to nrguments in the cases of Edgar \. Levy Leaaing Companv agt. Joromo Siegel nnd 810 West End Avenue, Inc, iigt. Henry R. Stern. Roth caaea in \o\v<s tho question of tho constitu tionulity of the rent laws, tho Levy cnao nrising from a 50 per cont in? crease in rental and the other case froni an nction of ejectment. In the argument to-day William D. Guthrie, tts special Deputy Attorney General, laid emphasia on tlie housing shortage in New York, the increase in rentals, which in some instances was unconscionable; the diatreaa caused by the shortage and the unfortunate situa? tion which wiil obtain if the court holds that such laws nm beyond the j power of the Legislature of the state to seek to pive relief io the. citizens. He held that if, in the faco of such conditions as the people of New York hnve been confronted hy neither the courts nor the Legislature can rrive re? lief. it would be most unfortunate. The Supreme Court of the Unueti States already has upheld the laws in the case of Mnrcus Rrown Holding Company, Inc. vs. Feldman. This was decided April 18, 1921, Mr. Guthrie and his oolleagues maintain that the present cases are foreclosed by that decision. Mr. Guthrie, in his arrjument, stressed tho fact there is a crisis nnd an emer? gency, and that the crowded condi? tions and lack of housinp are a menace to health and morals. Furthermorc, he laid emphasia on ino point that the laws havt: worked well. "The effect of these laws has been eminently satisfactory," said Mr. Guthrie. Insisting the laws had been of bene? fit, Mr. Guthrie said as n result of that there had been an increase in building of 400 per cont in the last year. He cited the fact that a committee of the United States Senate, headed bv Sen? ator Calder, had reported there was a shortage of 100,000 houses in thc State of New York and 1,000,000 in the United States. Mr. Guthrie pictured n great fiock of unemployed from outside centering in New York and described the great crowding of people there at the time of I the war. The eiTcct wns to deprive I many of the people of New York of | moderate means of their residences. j "You represent these outsiders aa | ruthlesa invaders," said Justice Mc ! Kenna. S "Must the state stand with folded I arms in the face of such a great cm lergency?" Mr. Guthrie asked.' A part of Mr. Guthrie's argument wns given over to an interesting legal : and historical discussion of the broad ! question of regulation. He asked the court thntj if any question existed in its mind as to the fncts in this contention it pormit a j rearrrumont nnd prant Such time ns necessnry to the state to set forth the* truth. Passenger Believed Lost From Steamer at Sea T. O. Sprague Missing "When Ship Reached Cristobal, Radio Message Savs T. O. Sprnrrue, a passenjrer on board ! the United Fruit Line steamship Pns- ! tores. is believed to have been lost at j sea. A radio message was received yes- i terday by the United Fruit Company, at ! 17 Battery Place, stating that when the ! ship reached the port of Cristobal, in I the Canal Zone, Sprague was missintr. j The messngc was from Captain C. r! ! Glenn, master of tho ship. It said Sprague had boarded the vessel on January 7 at Now York and that he was bound for Cristobal. He wns last seen on the night of January If? ono day after the Pastnres left Jamaica. At the offices of the shipping com? pany yesterday a clerk who booked Mr Sprague recalled hearing him aay that he intended to visit his father,R. H Sprague, of 4',4 Montgomery Street Snn Francisco. The cUrk said Mr' Sprague told him that he had been at tcnding n New York agriculturnl ex penment station at Geneva, N. Y. From further conversntion, as the ' clerk remembera it, Mr. Sprague's health was poor, and he had decided to take the trip to Cristobal, thence acroas the Canal Zone and to San Francisco MINERAL SALTS Animals ied on a diet from which all mineral salts have oeen chemically removed Will die in a shorter time than will those from which ? all food is withheld. rhis interesting fact is men tioned to show the import ance of mineral salts in the ' diet. The delicious baked beans served at CHILDS are par? ticularly rich in these neces- ! sary salts. N?w York or Boiton b?Ued oe?.ns M.tn ? b,t ut ?vory pork lo ZiTC tnam r.att. German Ruin Sought Abroad, Borah Charges U. S. Economic Aid Futile bh Long as Versaille" Treaty Remains the La>v of Europe, He Tells Senate WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.?DUcuaaion of economic conditions in Europe nnd an attack nn tho const.itutlonnlity of tho meusuro marked Senate debate to-dny on tlic Allied debt refundincr bill. Chairmnn McCumbor of tiie Finance Committee, in chnrgo ol' the measure, told the Senato before adjournment thal he hoped to get a final vote to morrow. Thc situation in Europe waa brought into thc debate by Scnutor Borah, Re? publican. LlahOj who declared thnt "the key to tho policy" there v/aa the eco? nomic destruction of the Gennaji people. He declared that while the Treatyof Versailles "remains the lnw of Eu? rope" it would be futilo for tho United Stal.es to seek a satisfactory adjust mciit of the forcign debt and that any asaiatanco this country might seek to render European nations would be of little avail. If the Treaty of Versailles were ro vised and the Allied nations reduced their armies even to a reaaonoble ex? tent, Senator Borah said, thoae nations not only could meet the intereat pay? ments due the United Stntes but could retirc part of thc principal of the debt as well. Under present conditions, he said, no man could say when the debtor nations could begin to pay interest, adding that it was proper for him to call attention that so long as present policies were pursued in Europe "we nre justificd in transacting this debt matter on a purely business basia." A eonstitutional point against the bill was rased by Senator Walali, Demo crat, MontanH, who argued that by mcans of it Congress was undertaking to transfer the treaty making power Irom thc President to the Secretary of the Treasury nnd a commission. He quoted authorities to support his argu tnent thnt the agreements which would hn ontercd into between the United ' States and the debtor nations would be I in fact treaties, and declared under the ! Constitution the negotiations could be I conducted only by tbe President. Senator McCumbor and othcrs dis i puttd this contention, thc Finance j Committee chairman nrguing that the j demand obligationa which were to be I refunded were the property of the ' United States and thnt Congress alone hnd nuthority to dispose of government property. -? Manufacturer Shot by Gunmen; Wife Felled Max Greene, manufacturer of cigara, cigarettcs and playing carda, was shot and probably fatally wounded last night by three men who entered his store, at 286 East Tenth Strcet, when hc waa alnne there taking stock. The place is stacked to the ceilinrr with boxes, and either because of this or because the intrudcra had silencera on their weapons Mrs. Greene, who waa in their apartment in the rear of the store with her two young children, heard no shots. She entered the store after the shots had been fired. Her husband was lean ing ncross a table. The air v/aa blue with smoke. Mrs. Greene sprang nt ono of tho gunmen, a slight youth, and the other two began backing toward the street. Greeno staggered to his wife'a as sintance, but dropped to the floor un conscious. Mra. Greene's antagonist felled her with a blow, leaped ncross Greene's body and ran out with his companior.a. They had vanished when a patrolman arrived. Grcepe waa taken to Bellevue Hospital. His wounds are in the abdomen, right side and left shoulder. So far as the police could learn no demand was made upon him for money and nothing waa atolen. -??. Fight Over Houghton's Committee Seat Begim From The Tribunc's M'rt.thinffton Bureau WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.?With the I certainty that Representative Alanson | li. Houghton, of Corning. N. Y? will ' go to Berlin as ambassador about "March 1, a fight hns developed in the I New York delegation over filling Mr. Houghton's place on the Wnys and Means Committee. This ia the beat committee nsvignment of the entirc House. Not only does this committee j have exelusive control of all tax and revenue legislation, including of course the tariff, but membership on it offera unusual opportunities on the path to lendership of thc House itaelf. The present light is between Reorc aentativc Ogden L. Mills, of the 17th District, New York City, nnd Repre? sentative Frank Crowther, of the 30th District, Schenectady. Uoth are com parativoly young members of the dele? gation, Mr. Mills being in his tirst term and Mr. Crowther in his second. Unth hnve had considcrablo political experi? ence before coming to tbe Houae, how? ever, Mr. Mills having served in the Now York Stato Senate and Mr. Crowther having aervcd in the New Jersey Legislature and held other of? fices in New Jersey before moving to Rchcnectadv in 1912. Hc waa presi? dent of the Common Council in Schen- ; ectady before comln<r to Congresa to j aiicceed Oeorgn R. Lunn. Mr. Mills de- i feated Pcpreaontntive Hcrbert C. Pell last election. Mr. Mills ia now a member of the Labor Committee, nnd ?l?o ?f thc Mer chnnt Marine nnd Flshrries. v/hlle Mr. Crowther Is a member of the Military Affnira Committee. Near East Settlement Urged to Pacify India From 'J'he Trttrunr'u ICuropr.an Bureau Copyrlffht, 1'J2l. N?w Vork Tribune, Inc. LONDON, Jnn. 25.?The Indian au? thorities aro bringing prcssurc to bear !n London to force aome kind of a aet tloment of Near East problema nt thc Allied conference on those questions in Paris February 1. The jjrravlty of the non-co-opcration movement from India to Egypt and the alliance be? tween the Hindua and Mahomctans necessltate an immediate considora ?ion of the outatanding problems in thc Near East In offieial quarters here it is believed thnt although tho visit of the Prlnce of Wale* to India haa been a moral cm, the non-co-nperation m',v?m... woul* falter nnd Gandhi would llT errnin the h?rmln? vinl(?BRry Zv?? waa before the Hindu-Mahom-uV ?* Hanee vrnn arranged. ?' Idea and Copy Man WANTED Tly a f/ru> Vorfc Advertising Agency Preferably he rt ? yormg ?,,?, j, with ? rhorough arotmd-worlc m i(j vertising praehce .nd agency roil^e" He muil have found htmnelf" ln c ' ative advartiting worlt. He muit ? aWe to eonceiva originj. ^^ e muit be able to pu? ,he mdi*|<j tial advartuement in Us rntirety Thj man know. hit crafi. He know, $1 relation of p.clure. layou. ?n<j to good ?dvertiiemenf-buildinji ?j ev^n ?. young man he ha. le,rnt<J ?o be hit own h.rde,, ta.kn,,,,^ Application ahould g,v, p.? ^ ence in deta.l. All application,1;',. be held in .trietejt eonfidVno aj dret, Box D 677. New Yorlc TrnC "?. GOOD AS GOLD zm The Chemical National Bank of New York m its fascinating advertisements of the early history of that old and solid institution, tells of an in cident where all kinds of money were refused by a suspicious ticket seller?but one. That one was a Chemical Bank Note "as good asgold", as the suspicious payee remarked. The chances are that that particular note was engraved on Crane's paper. At least an old day book says that the Chemical Bank was buying Crane's Bank Note paper about that time. Of course it was the words "Chemical Bank" engraved on the paper that made it good as gold, but surely Crane's paper shines with a sort of reflected gln^ since it was the paper chosen by the bank whose notes were as good as gold, 100% selected new rag stoc\ 120 years experience Banhpotes 0/22 countries Paper money 0/438,000,000 people Government bonds 0/18 nations Crane' c BUaiNESS PAPERS gSF5? ABSOLUTE SAFETY Our 5i/2% Guaranteed First Mortgacres, e nad m amounts to suit. Guaranteed First Mortgage Certificates from $100 up. Amount of Loan $4,000 6,500 14,500 Rental I Value of Securiry $1,200 Owner 5,052 $8,000 13,000 25,000 New York Title and Mortgage Co. I3 5 Brnidway, New York 103 Montague St., Brooklyn Lon5 hlind Citr-Jamtiea- Mount Vernon- Stattn hUnd-White Phins Gloves and Hose for Men and Women A Huge Final Potpourri at 1.65 MEN'S GLOVES-Plenty of those superb South African Capcskin gloves?some English Chamois?a few Arabian Mochas? and imported Scotch wool gloves. MEiVS HOSE?Imported plain and novelty* wool socks?a good selcction. WOMEN'S GLOVES-French Kidskin, wri3t length and strap-wrist gauntlet gloves? some of Suedc, Mocha and Chamois?an abundance of Capeskin; and stunning imported bcotch wool gloves, wrist-lentrth and ,.???..? WOMEN'S HOSE-Still extensive varietv in plain and noyelty imported wool stockings. Centemeri Clearance Sale length and g.unUet. ?QQ FlfTH AVE. (Near 37th Street)