MRS. WINSTON CHURCHILL CAPT. H. GIBSON III till OLD CONFERENCE WITH VEILED THREAT on ON GGMMITTEE CARffllZAAIISWS DISREGARD FOR THE GANAL ZONE LAWS HGOHE TAX REPORT - IS MADE PUBLIC ;,-.;.j:- jlEN FROM THE SOUTH DISCUSS ED PLANS FOR USE OF LOAN FUND. WILL REQUIRE REDUCTION Estimated That $70,000,000 at' Least of the $135,000,000 Pool Will Be Applied for by Growers. Washington. The $135,000,000' cot ion loan fund plan to finance the sur? plus cotton crop, was approved unani mous If by representatives of commit tee which will aid in handling the fund in Southern States. - The repres entatives held an all-day conference with the cotton' loan committee which las final supervision of the fund. Although no definite statements ere made at the meeting as to hoW much cash will be drawn from the fund to carry the surplus crop, esti mates ranged from $10,000,000 to $70, 000,000 and members of thj&- cotton loan committees :wi5Vcb1ttnScfehf hun dreds of applications for loans would be forthcoming before January 1. Most of those present believed that between 4,000,000 and 5,000,000 bales of cotton must be carried over until next year. It as estimated' tha about $150,000,000 w6ul'd be- heeded ' to take care of this cotton,J and it , was : the general opinion 'that unless" there is a natural expansion of credit through out the South the loan . fund will be used to aid cotton producers. There was evide.nc-thatiaiany , Of the state committeemen agreed with the idea advanced by officials here that cotton producers.;nxe;mufi cut meir cuuuii yrouHj;uou,n lue uui IUU iuau Will 1 1 UHCC , rr txx U.OO J means to convince growers of, the ne cessity of curtailment. . . ' ; 'The representatives Irc.ilOtatCT included: . , Moorhead Wr&TOtisa&V-Jt Maddox, Georgia; Sol" Wexler, Louisi ana: Z. D. Davis, Mississippi: Joseph G. Brown, North Carolina; A. 'u Trumbo, Oklahoma ; R. G. Rhett, South Carolina; Henry DLindsley. Texas; E. L. Rice, Tennessee fanAr State Senator Milton, Florida. The cotton loan . committee was represented by W. P.. G. JHardingt-anC Paul M. Warburg, of the Federal Re serve Board; J. P. Forgan of Cblca go, Festus J. Wade of St Lo'iila, Al H. Wiggin, New York, and Levi Rue, 4 uiittupiiiat 0 0 . , DANIELS FAVORS NORFOLK. .8 Place for Dry DockRecommenda. tion to the Committee. Washington. Formal, announce ment of successful naval tests of coaLi from government-owned fields : in Alaska was made by Secretary' -Dan iels before the naval committee of -the house. Trials by the cruiser.. Mary land about 10 days ago, Mr. Daniels said, had demonstrated that the .Mat anuska coal was as goods as any to be found. . . .' : .; ". Three recommendations were :made by Secretary Daniels. They were; Appointment of all second lieuten ants in the navy hereafter as " "act ing second lieutenants" so that thpse- "who do not measure up to . require ments after appointment may , be dropped. - . v" ' ,v-.". Graduated system in retired pay of naval officers on the basis of their length of naval service and the extent of their disabilities, 'isXX XX Authority for uslnsr nart of a $40, ,v" -wiiuugem lunu w, protect- uo navy's rights and property oh its oil land reserves. - ; i he secretary said the navy was trying to put its yards on a business oasis with industrial managers, trying we plan at New York, Norfolk and Perhaps some other plants. ..T.v ": "The Philadelphia navy yard is in Excellent shape," he added, "and has5 at as many evils card systems and otner paper work as "they have: , in ome of the other yards. We are go- to put a 'construction officer - in cbarge at the Norfolk vard." - Mr. Daniels has spent his last , day werore the investigating committee. French Gain New Advance. Pari? The following official com . Judication was issued by the war. of : "in Belgium several attacks by e French troops have "resulted in Progress along the Ypres canal - and est of Hollebecke. Several violent counter-atacks have been repulsed by ur troops. The railway station of ommercy (Department of Meuse)' as bombarded by batteries firing daT a great distaace. Insignificant fen?? Was done- In Alsace an of no!!6 movement resumed by the wwuny has been repulsed. BAYS HE WILL CONSIDER ACTION aTNACO UNFRIENDLY RE GARLESS OF MOTIVE. 0ISPATCHES REPLY TO NOTE Repudiates Blame For Firing Across Border. Expresses Hope of "Good , - ' . . . ' Friendship.". .- Vara Cruz. "If the United State employs force to stop the firing ty Mexicans across the international boundary line at Naco, it will be con sidered an unfriendly act, - notwith standing the friendly . motives cloak ing th:actv H'-vf V;A ' r In this maimer ICarranza made an swer, in a statement to the Associated Press to the formal notice served by the "United States on both Provisional President Gutierrez and Gen. Car-ranza- that unless such firing ceased, force would be employed to protect American; territory; - ' - Carranza's reply to the American note,' repudiated responsibility for shots that have crossed the -line ana clearly, set" forth that he and nisi gov ernment will regard Intervention at Naco as , a hostile act. At no r time since the receipt- of Secretary Bryan's note calling attention to the re peat e a wounding and killing or,' residents ol teh American town has Gen. Carranza appeared perturbed r.but he haa, had long, conferencesVwith those close, to bim, "and, ja f raming - his reply jt. Is said he has- been careful not to let himself sta,nd In any uncertain light, v "Gen. Hill,;, constitutionalist coni gander "cthe; iroopMt Jacols on ;'tne--iefendiv';;'c6ntinued- .Gen. Car ranza, "and, since , his back was to the line, it Is difficult to see how he could be . responsible " for j,the ifiringi rnect iBthat jxaytorens,'e jmn havo been . attacking .and therefore ttap p.eaTSf reasonablely clear that they, and only they, could have been to blamo. ."As a maUero4 fact4"d-6"not know i'herighf s of -American citizens have been violated. It seems to. m that it. would be well -ibT. the s ta; hiepdrtment to investigate the ques tion in order to flex the responsibility. "I remember similar instances - at I fcl Paso, when the Madero forces were attacking there. -' In that case those shots 'were for the most part theim-i prudent, and curious Individuals who flocked, to -witness the" fighting as If it had been a spectacular show staged for their benefit. ,t ; - SERVIAN ARMY VICTORIOUS. FrenchCut German Line of CommunI catforts Nears St. Mihiel. London. Both the German and official reports contain evidence : thtt the . Allies offensive movement is be ginning to eather . Impetus and " Is meeting with stphborn -resistance. The French have - 'been particularly active m- the Woevre. region. ; At severar points the Germans have made counter, attacks which the French clal mhave been repulsed. The GeVman report shows that Gen- grat jonres men nave, rreacnea a point . midway between St. Mihiel and; Pomta-Moussoiv which would Indi cate; that they- had crossed the tGer- man line of communications. In, these operations -the French, lost heavil3r:,v The battles in Poland continue al most without intermissibn and, while both' Russians and Germans announce success, apparently no decisive result has been reached. . JThe Germans still are delivering heavy blows aV the Russian center, where they assert they took 11,000 prisoners and 40 ma chine guns. South of , Cracow the Russians claim - the capture 4,000 prisoners, four guns andt s'ef en ma chine guns. r ; - Another -.Russian force , Is holding the passes of the Carpathians "pre venting ; the n Atistrlatns : from sending relief to their Galician army. There Is no news of the. German troops ad vancing south of Mlawa, with the ob ject of attempting to turn the Rus sian right.. The rehabilitated Servian ariy continues victorious in the Bal kan area of the war. That the former German- cruiser Goeben, - now owned , by Turkey, was not so seriously damaged as was re ported in her . brush - with Russian crulsersyyis shown, by the fact that she took part in the' recent attack on Datum, the Russian fBlack Sea; port. According to a Russian statement the bombardment ''; did little damage. ' Bulgaria, "according to a Paris re port, has expressed to the Powes ol the : Triple Entente her desire to re main neutraL Tls is taken to mean that Rouinanfa, if she so wished, couW Join the Allies without fear jot being attacked by Bulgaria. ., X- .VJfJtS- 1 J9::::::::xjMK:'K, , ' ' " New photograph of Mrs Winston Churchill, wife of the first lord of the British admiralty,, who U herself actively enaaged in aiding the Brit-" Ish soldiers at the t front.;,; "'"X- DANIELS TELLS HIS PLAN IOWA REPRESENTATIVE SAYS SQUIRREL SHOOTERS': CORPS; ; COULD PROTECT COAST Daniels Favors Four Fighting Ships X An nual ly I listead of Twp jAuiary '? " Predicts " World . Conference; ' s y ' ' Wasnington, Military preparedness of the' nation was again: the, tiominant subject of Congressional Htteatlon secretary uanieis, oerore me ' nouse 'Naval ; Committee, defended? his ; two-b'attleship-a-year, .construction rpro- .'gram-iand.r aiijclaf ed -thrshtlmentf 6f -.. - - i - . . - the people of the United States oppos-, ed - turning the country; Into a great military power.-' Meantime a free-for-all national defense debate; occupied the house itself; ' - 2LMr. Daniels, during an all-day exam ination, said this country already had a powerful navy, and that while "with abundant revenues" he might favor the general board's four-battleship plan, he thought the twobattleship pro gram adequate. Pressed -for-an opin ion as to the world military, situation' at the close of the European war the Secretary predicted an international conference on armament. "When the war is over," he: said, "those countries will be so exhausted In', their-resources and burdened with debt that there will be a ; great revul sion against war. I expect the revul sion will be so great i that we will have an. international conference on armament more possible now. than ever before and that we will get some action, by which the navies of the World Powers will be used only to carry Into execution the agreements the countries reach:" - Representative Gardner precipitated the' military discussion on the house. floor ' with a speech criticising the administration for "laying the cold hand, of death" on his proposal for special investigation of military and naval conditions. He ' assailed the Rules Committee for refusal to grant him a hearing and the Naval and Military Committee for failure to sum mon before them former Cabinet offi cials and other witnesses he wanted- examined. .X;"-X: 'XX'-.-- "If war were to break out today, said Mr. Gardner, "it would 'be found our coast defenses have not sufficient ammunition for an hour's' fighting." Representative Fitzgerald of New York replied briefly and promised to make ; a complete statement .later which would make "notoriety-seeking 'ex-Secretaries" less anxious to' dis cuss, the national, defense. Represen- tauve JJies oi iexas riiucuieu jiub thought of impending (danger , of" at tack. Representative Sisson of Mis sisslppi - charged . the "war propagan da to the manufacturers of war mater ial." 1 Representative Pouty of Iowa pleaded for international disarma ment, arbitration and. an internation al police; declared a force of trained squirrel-shooters could prevent :.the landings of a host!1 e force on Ameri 1 '"i-,-'. i. FINAL COTTON ESTIMATE. RecordCrop of All -Previous Time Is ; X: V ' : X: . '' ' Grown. V Washington. The ; United States this year, has produced the . f greatest crop of cotton in ; its history. More thkn sixteen million bales ,or "1566,- 000 bales of lint cotton and iinter cot ton, unofficially "estimated: at from 600,000 to 6$0,0000 bales constitute the crop. -, " . . - ' ' - COLONEL GO ETHALS WANTS TOR PEDO BO-AT DESTROYERS FOR; - K PATROL DUTY. 5 ' 1? COLLIERS AND OTHER CRAFT Th.se - Vessels Leave Without Clear ance Papers. Few Have Health " : ' : - v ' Certificates. Panama. Col. George W. Goethals, governor -of the Panama Canal zone, announced ; that his request that two swift-American torpedo boat destroy ers be, stationed at the en trances v of the -canal" was, prompted by recent ac tivity of warships , and colliers of the belligerent European nations in the vicinity of the waterway. - The action of the Australian collier Mallina in leaving Balboa without clearance papers and f' the fact that other,; colliers have shown a disposi tion ot disregard canal zone shipping laws convinced- Colonel Goethals that decisive -measures should be taken to preserve f the neutrality of the canal. , : Nearly; all the colliers in 'canal wa ters arrived without health certificates and in . several instances sailed with out clearance papers. It is presumed the steamers met said coaled the Aus tralian and English fleet which con centrated recently in the vicinity: of the iPeral Islands, which lie B0 miles southeast of Panama .City. v. X Th torpedo ; boat X destroyers re quested?;by the governor are expected ia. do patrol duty and overhaul bellig eren craft attempting to disregard the canal- regulations. -. ; - Alleged violations of the ;! Canal shipping laws are said to .have been th subject ot cofnp.laint to Sir ClaudeJ C, MaUett, British; -minister to Panama- and also; having resulted In orders th4 Zoztl fications prevent unneutral colliers'" remaining . in ports, ; on v the zone In disregard' of the orders ' of caAal .authorities. . .:: ; In 'the case of the - collier Mallina it is stated that she arrived without - T., . . t .. . caie una wun no coat or supplies, one.1 A 1 attempted to buy $30,000 worth of sup-, plies,'. consisting' 'largely '.-of articles in tended for Christmas dinner for a large force. She was refused the sup plies and was ordered to ; depart be cause she refused to state her. desti nation, as required by the .Canal, Zone laws. The collier Protesilau is point- L ed to as a similar case. " ' . . It is stated that there has been much wireless interference In panal waters on the part of eight colliers which were recently in the vicinity of the canal and 'also by large warships fleets, reported to be within 25 miles of both ends of the canal. CONGRESS PUSHES WORK. No Extra Session for Next Summer .'. Is Spur. ';'... Washington. - Congress continues ."work of the winter session determined to complete, its tasks March 4 so that no extra . session will be necessary next summer. '. ' . Democratic leaders pi both houses agree with President Wilson that the country should have a rest from ; na tional legislation. -Right "of way will be given appropriation bills with con servation . measures . the - Philippine bill and ; the government's purchase bill . following. . ' ' - 'While' nb special investigation of military preparedness seems in pros pect, much attention will, center about investigations before reguar house committees. The naval .com mittee will resume consideration of the appropriation biUV at once . with Secretary Daniels againvon the stand. vl The immigration bill, with its lit eracy test for aliens, will again "be under debate in the senate while that body waits for the appropriation-bills tr nnma frnm tha "hnneo - Its enn. ! porters insist that ; it will be ; passed although it was not included in the' President's t outline of legislation. ;;; Conservation measures the " water power site and the 1 mineral " leasing bills . probably will be reported frpm the senate committee on public lands early in January. . - , Mines Were German. , ;V "-''Stockholm,-'via London. The Swed ish forign, minister: in' a' statement regarding the sinking of . the ' three Swedish steamers by mines . in r the Gulf of Bothnia said: "The Germans" declares the mines were Russian, as no German mine-laying had been done up to the time" of the disaster. - Offi cial investigations by. Finland disclose that several groups of anchored mines were, German and not Russian and that, they had - been laid during the war in the Gulf of Bothnia. No float ing mines had been found." Ts ammtMt . 11 iiu VJUiiuuuMiiwMail . ' l .- . v.-' . , , i Captain Gibson is the commander of the submarine K-5, one of :he latest additions to the United States navy. WATERWAYS CONVENTION ADVOCATES OF BIG APPROPRIA TION MEASURE GATHERED IN WASHINGTON. Senator Ransdeil Says Charges Were Made That South Was to Unduly : . .. Profit by Bill. : Washington. Advocates of.: : wa terway improvement from all. parts of the country met in the eleventh an nual convention, of the National Riv ers and - Harbor x Congress. " Secretary I Bryan f welcomed. -the delegates,, pre Idicting? -?a-rl2aigel percentage: ofathe country?s ; traffic would be drawn to waterways soon because of .. cheap ness -of- transportation. Vigorous replies were made to criti cism of the last river and harbor bill I as a pork barrel measure. ; Senator -r, . . . . , Ransdeil, president of the .congress, made this attack the theme of his an nual" address. Albert Rettinger of Cincinnati, 'defended the , measure against the same criticisms and Rep resentative J. Hampton" Moore com pared the small appropriation of the last 40 years for waterways improve ment with the large sums spent for the army, the navy and for pensions. Sen ator Fletcher of ' Florida, expained the claims of'the Oklawaha River for at tention in reply to - criticism of the Qklawaha item in the bill. , Senator Ransdeil said that attacks on river and harbor legislation "were unfounded practically without merit and many of them devoid of even- a vestige of truth." v He vigorously de nounced attacks on the bill in the last session of congress and the filibuster that resulted in the practical defeat of the measure's purposes. Critics of the legislation, he added, had been unable to suggest a better system than the one they criticise.. . Senator Ransdeil said that under the present method of waterway legis lation the nation's I waterways lhad been greatly improved, commercof os tered, freight movements facilitated, and transportation rates cheapened In competition with . railways. ' ; "Attacks were made on the - last river and harbor bill," declared Sena tor Ransdeil, "during the debates in congress and particularly during the recent campaigns , on sectional and political grounds and it was - freely charged that favoritism had 'been (shown tr the. South. These attacks are unworthy of their authors." U. S. CAN MATCH NAVIES Admial Fletcher Says Only Endland Has a Better Navy Washington. The ability oi the ? American navy to successfully meet the ' warfleet' of. any nation except Great Britain was' asserted by Rear Admiral Fletcher, commander-in-chief of ihe Atlantic fleet, Before the house naval affairs committee. : The possi bility of conflict with Great - Britain was so remote, the admiral said, that he did riot believe In - & navl policy designed to control the v oceans as against that country. German Cruisers Destroyed.' London. The victory off the Faulk land Islands where the British squad ron sank the German cruisers' Scharn horst, Gneisenau and Leipzig, and the success of the Indian' troops on the Gulf of Persia, where they compelled f surrender of a Turkish army, have for the moment, overshadowed so far as England is concerned, . the larger events which heve taken nlac. FORTY-FOUR PEOPLE WITH NET ANNUAL INCOMES OF MIL LION OR MORE. " THE BIG WEALTH CENTERS New York, Philadelphia, Chfeago, Boa ton, Detroit, Wealthiest Cities - of The Nation. Washington. The first complete compilation of returns under the in come tax law was made public in the annual report of commissioner of "In ternal revenue. It showed returns for the collection year of 1913 by 357,591 Individuals as follows: . ' Net Number, .. income ' . returns. $1,000,000 and over . . 44 500,000 to $1,000,000 91 400,000 to , 500,000 44 - 300,000 to 400,000 84 250,000" to ; 300,000 , 94 200,000 to 250,000 145 150,000 to 200,000 311 . . 100,000 to V 150,000 " "785 75,000 to lOOjOOO" . 998 50,000 to . . 75,000 ' 2,618 . .. .. 40,000 to ' 50,000 ' 2,427 30,000 -to 40,000 , 4,553 ' 25,000 to 30,000 4J64 20,000 to 25,000 - 6,817 15,000 to ; 20,000. . ' : 11,977 10,000 to ' 15,000 - 26,818 ' 5,000 to 10,000 101,718 .3,333 to 1 5,000 . : 114,484 . 2,500 to . 3,333 79,426 Returns were made by 278,835 mar ried "persons, 55,212 single men and 25,551 single women. The normal tax of 1 per cent on all taxable4 in comes produced $12,728,038. Incomes of" more than: $20,000 a year and subject ' to sur-tax , produced $15,525,-497.-, V ' j-'v '' - :-'' . individuals with large net" Incomes live in districts near, the cities of New York ".Chicago, PhiladelphiaV Boston and Detroit. More single women, as well as more single men paying the tax were' found in New York than any where else. Married women made separate returns In every 1 collection district except in the Fifth North Carolina. ' ' THAW ENTERS COURT AGAIN. Attorneys Fight Extradition on the Grounds That Insanity Was Proved. Washingtoni. The request ot 1 the state of New York for extradition of Harry K. Thaw from New Hampshire to answer an :. indictment charging conspiracy to obstruct -justice by. es caping from Mattewan Asylum was taken under consideration by the Uni ted States Supreme Court after oral arguments. ',. ' - - - -', Members of the court asked Thaw's attorneys many quesitions about ? va rious points in their contentions. They did not interrupt Williams Travers Je rome, however, during his ; argument that Thaw was a fugitive from justice nor challenge the argument of Franklin Kennedy, Deputy Attorney General of New York that the law under which Thaw was committed : to Matte wan after-the killIng3of Sanford White was constitutional. ' " " i Germans ' Close to Warsaw. . y' v . ' v 11..' a a mAa. Xjonaon. ui iue uYeBBuy-uciiuau columns- which for some days appear ed to be making steady progress, in their Invasion of Poland, three have suffered Checks, according to official report from Russian headquarters. . '.' JA - -J' - stroke from Mlawa on the East Prus sian' frontier, reported in one dispatch from Petrograd to be within 15 miles ' of Warsaw,; was repulsed after an energetic offensive and under counter-attacks from the Russians was compelled to retire at some points. The attacks of the main German column which had its front on the . line between Lodz and Lowicz and which came down diagonally " from Thorn, were delivered, with great forcei but according to the Russian account were " repulsed with heavy losses to the Invaders, ' , XX- Carnegie . Visits White House. Washington.--Andrew Carnegie, a White House caller expressed decid ed opposition to. a Christmas truce in the European war. It would be unchristian-like and; Immoral he said to stop fighting arid then resume it He added he did not 'believe any nation which adopted such a suggestion was doing it sincerely. Mr. Carnegie gave it as his opinion that the military caste in Germany was responsible for the war. and that at the timehostIll tles broke out the Kaiser, was ill and UUL'Bdf tu s49 n .