K VOL. LX NO. 18,8G Entered at Portland (Oregon) Pnmofflr ss Seond-Clss Mutter PORTLAND, OREGON, sATl RDAY, FEIiRUARY 5, 1921 PRICE FIVE CENTS CHARLES SCKSEL sum er CRIPPLE DRY AGENTS CAPTURE AUTOS WORTH MILLION JOKER IS EXPOSED; ROAD DEAL HALTED THOUSANDS AT SHOW CHEER MRS. HARDING OHIO GIRLS IX CAST .GIVE BOCQrET OF CARXATIOXS. BUSINESS REVIVAL IS EXPECTED SOON FIRE FOUGHT DURING SHAM BATTLE IN AIR NATION WILL CALL1 FOOL EVEN HOBBY 250,000 GALLONS OF. WHISKY SEIZED BY GOVERXMEXT. FIXAXCIERS EXCOURAGED BY FLIERS BATTLE FOR LIFE FX KXOWX TO SPECTATORS. GENERAL CONDITION'S- ADOPTED BABIES mm E CONFAB V Fancied Grievances Lead J. C. Poeschl to Deed. MEDAL HELD BY ASSAILANT Award for Saving Train Made by Legislature. LOSS OF SUIT IS FACTOR Blame for Failure to Get Big Amount of Damages for In juries Is Laid to Lawyer. Charles J. Schnabel, prominent at torney of Portland, was shot in the back and fatally wounded by Joseph C. Poeschl, an ex-client, as he was about , to enter an elevator on the. third floor of the court house shortly after 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon. He died In an ambulance on the way to a hospital. Fancied grievances against the lawyer, harbored for more than ten years by Poeschl. who was crippled in a railroad accident in 1910 and was obsessed with the idea that much of his suffering and failure to re ceive heavy damages from the South ern Pacific company was due to Mr. Schnabel. furnished the motive for the killing. Investigation by Dis trict Attorney Evans yesterday led to the conclusion that Poeschl was a paranoiac or a very clever actor. Mnrder Intent Denied. . "I didn't kill him. I just shot be tween his legs to scare him." declared the slayer at the county Jail a few minutes after the shooting. He re fused to believe that his victim was dead. Mr. Schnabel was talking August bchirmer. deputy sheriff, con cerning a case in which he was in terested in the district court when, without warning. there was the click or a hammer against a cartridge which railed to explode, followed by the report of the revolver as th second pull on the trigger was su cessTUL Poeschl was not more than 13 feet from the attorney and th rang was point-blank. Without a sound. Mr. Schnabel staggered toward a supporting col uran of the court house and collapsed. He never regained consciousness. . Fnsritlve Easily Cansat. Deputy Sheriff Schirmer meanwhile had whipped out his automatic and had started for Poeschl. who had broken Into a halting run. At th same moment, persons began crowd ing from the courtroom of Circui Judge Tucker at the far end of the corridor, toward which the man was hobbling, propelled by a single crutch and good leg. "Clear away, back there,;" shouted Schirmer to the people in the back grouud; then, addressing Poeschl "Put that gun in your pocket and your hands up, and be quick about it. Poeschl obeyed and was disarmed Schirmer then turned and helped carry Mr. Schnabel into the chambers of Judge Stapleton, nearby. No blood was seen and the first assumptio was that the lawyer had fainted. The gathering crowd began to search the corridor in the vicinity of the elevator for the bullet mark or spent bullet. An ambulance arrived shortly and the wounded man was started for a hospital. Death occurred on the way and the body was removed to the morgue. Bullet Enters Back. Examination by Coroner Smith dis closed that the bullet had entered the back and ranged upward, piercing the heart. Mrs. Schnabel was notified by Dis trict Attorney Evans of the shooting of her husband and started for the hospital. He had died before she reached him. Poeschl came into prominence in 1917 when the state legislature voted him a gold medal in recognition of his supposed bravery in saving prop erty and lives at the sacrifice of bis own limb and health in 1910. At various times, prominent citizens were Interested In his case and en deavored to have him pensioned by the state. He never received a cent from the railroad company, having refused a proffered settlement of $2800, and a Jury in the federal court having found for the railroad in damage action brought. At the time of his accident there was no mention of bravery or the risk of his life to save others, and there has been much question as to the facts which he later related con eernlng the incident. Schnabel Once His Attorney. The law firm of Schnabel & La Roche was retained by Poeschl fol lowing the accident and asked to bring suit against the railroad com pany. W. P. La Roche, whose partnership with Mr. Schnabel was dissolved in 1913 upon accepting the post of city attorney, commented on the case yesterday as follows: "Poeschl was a bridge carpenter working on a Southern Pacific trestle south of Fulton on January 4, 1910. A train appeared unexpectedly and all the workmen but Poeschl ran from the structure. Poeschl ran toward one end of the trestle, changed his mind and started for the other end, when he caught his foot be- (Concluded oa Page 2. Column 2.) $200,000 Requested to Guard Property Taken in Enforcement of Prohibition Law. WASHINGTON', Feb. 4. More than 250,000 gallons of whisky and auto mobiles worth $1,000,000 are now in the possession or the government, as a result of its campaign against the illicit commerce in liquor, according to Wayne B. Wheeler, counsat for the Anti-Saloon league. To guard this and other property seized by the government in enforce ment of prohibition, the sundry civil appropriation bill, reported today to the senate, ret aside $200,000 as re quested by Mr. Wheeler. The seized liquor and automobiles, according to testimony of Mr. Wheeler before the senate committee, made public today, are to be sold by the government. In some cases, Mr. Wheeler told the committee, federal marshals had refused to take care of the confiscated evidence. Mr. Wheeler said that prohibition enforcement has been 50 per cent effective in some places. He said that no good reason had yet been found for transferring prohibition enforcement from the treasury department to the depart ment of justice. TENANT FARMERS WARNED Join Union or Leave, Ultimatum ol Alabama Organization. BRIDGEPORT, Ala., Feb. 4. Masked right riders with horses covered with white cloth descended upon a score of non-union farm renters last night and served notice that they must "either join the tenants' union or leave your farms within 10 days. They also called upon landowners e.nd demanded that only union farm ers be employed or given shelter. The demonstration. It is understood, was a result of differences arising between landowners and union ten ants over requests of the latter for a ralf share in the crops instead of one-third, as has heretofore been the basis of land leasing. SLAYER OF CHUM HANGED Murderer Neither KuLs Nor Sleeps Two Days Before Death. SAN QUENTIN. Cal., Feb. 4. James C. Clark was hanged at the aiate prison today for the murder of Richard RevelL a companion, two years ago in an argument arising from Clark's accusation that Revell had stolen $76 of his money. Clark had neither eaten nor slept since - Wednesday, prison officials said. He refused to notice a special chicken dinner prepared for him last night. He was haggard and seemed near collapse as he approached the gal lows, but walked to the trap without assistance. PARISIANS GET TOGETHER Organized Move for Profit-Sharing in Industry Started. PARIS. Feb. 4. The first organized effort1 to introduce in France the system of sharing the profits of in dustrial enterprises with workmen was inaugurated in Paris today when representatives of employers and workmen met to frame such a plan. Deputy Godart. former under-secre- tary in the ministry of war, cited several individual cases of French' manufacturers who have adopted the system with excellent results. The employers and workmen formed sepa rate committees to draw up tentative projects. GOLD FOUNDJN CHICKEN Five Xuggcts Taken From Craw of Bird Prepared for Dinner. MEDFORD, Or., Feb. 4. (Special.) While preparing a chicken for cook ing today Miss Grace Orde, a nurse living in the Holland apartments. found a rich gold pocket in the chick en's craw and extracted five nuggets about the size of small peas of an estimated value of $5. Before its demise the chicken lived in the Jacksonville district. It is not unusual to f'nd one nugget in the craw of a fowl, but five is a. record for thia section. MAYOR IS P0LICE CHIEF Bend Executive Appoints Himself Head of Department. BEND. Or Feb. 4. (Special.) Emulating the example of the city executive of Portland, Mayor Gilson has appointed himself chief of police of Bend, to serve without compensa tion, it was announced today. The Job is not a strenuous one. however, for the mayor has named three assistants n addition to the night officer already appointed. Bend has been without a - police chief since January 4. although no less than 22 men bad filed their applications for the post. 0BREG0N FETES McADOOS Mexican President Host to Family of ex-Secretary of Treasury. MEXICO CITY. Feb. 4. WUIJara G. McAdoo, formerly secretary of the United States treasury was formally received by President Obregon at the ational palace -this morning. He and Mrs. McAdoo accepted the nvitation of the preeldent for dinner in Cbapultepes castle tonight. I Roosevelt Highway E Encounters Snag. SENATE "TRADE" DISCLOSED Support Pledged for Suppor of Irrigation. RECALL NOW IS PROPOSED Iniquities of Measure Within Ace of Passage Exposed Just in Time by Commissioners. STATE HOUSE, Salem, Or., Feb. 4. (Special.) The Roosevelt' highway bill sponsored by Senators Hall and Norblad has struck a snag. Although the advocates of the bill are con tinuing an active campaign and have planned an aggressive battle, they are rapidly losing ground. The appearance of Highway Com missioners Booth, Teon and Barratt on the scene has upset the programme which was worked out to push the Roosevelt highway bill through the house. The commissioners did not arrive a day too soon. Senator Vinton made a motion to day to recall the highway measure from the house and return it to the senate for reconsideration ' of the vote by which It was taken. Owing to absence of one senator, called away suddenly on account of illness in his family, the matter has been postponed until Monday. Attitude Changes Noted. Senator Vinton says that a number of senators who supported the bill have come .to him and offered to change their votes to kill the measure It opportunity is afforded. Only four votes were cast against the Roosevelt highway bill when It passed the sen ate. It will require a majority to table the bill or kill It. The house committee on roads and highways, where the bill now rests, feels like a man holding an infernal machine. The house adjourned today for the week-end before the commit tee could act. Monday morning the senate may recall the measure. which will be. perfectly, satisfactory to the house committee. Senator Norblad announced today that he and Senator Hall will issue a public statement challenging the figures submitted by the highway commission relative to the amount of money that has been spent on the coast road. Senator Norblad contends that the highway commission has not expended the sum which the commis sion states, and fhat the money was Concluded on Pas 4, Column 2.) r... ............................................ ....... t NOTHING DOING. r I ! . - i; 1 " ISKME 1W7 . H I t y y v & is wnryzyy j i ill y y ym it i ii OiSF' x yjx m I y y 3 JUAVL9J X'JA ' I f 'y JUWW I I ' . y s4Jlm WWW i I t y m m in t y jta m i mi i ii u t i y y m -t i : il.jP11 I I I' 1 1 Spotlight Focused on Next First Lady, Who Smiles as Theater - Patrons Applaud. . NEW YORK, Feb. 4. Mrs. Warren G. Harding, smiling into the glare of a spotlight flashed upon her theater box. received a noisy greeting from several thousand matinee spectators at the Hippodrome this afternoon. All of her other trips outside her hotel suite were so closely guarded that few recognized the future lady of the land, but attention was focused upon her today when Madge Loomis of 'Cincinnati, one of the leading dancers at the theater, appeared In Mrs. Harding's box between acts with a huge bouquet of scarlet carnations, the state flower of Ohio. She pre sented them as the g'ft of 40 Ohio girls in the cast. The orchestra be gan playirc "Beautiful Ohio" and the lights were concentrated on Mrs. Harding. Later her favorite air, "The End of a Perfect Day," was played and Mrs. Harding led In the applause. Over looking her box were 80 orphan chil dren from Jersey City, N. J., each munching a box of chocolates which she had sent them. Crowds gathered in the street near the side entrance, where Mrs. Hard ing's car awaited her, and she stopped and smiled to the accompaniment of cheers and the clicking of movie cam eras upon emerging from the theater. Tonight she visited another theater with her companions, Mrs. Edward B. McLean and Mrs. H-rry S. New Tomorrow Mrs. Harding expects to make a few final select'ons for her White Hcuse wardrobe, to which she has given almost exclusive attention all week. She will return to Wash ington Sunday, later going to Florida for a rest. SEATTLE TO HELP NEEDY Council Appropriates $30,000 for Relief of Unemployed. SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 4. The Se attle city council today passed an emergency ordinance appropriating $30,000 for the relief of the unem ployed of the city and, of destitute families. Of the sum $20,000 will be administered! by the street and park departments to relieve unemployment and $10,000 will be used to aid needy families. The council's action resulted from a conference with a committee repre senting the unemployed which waited on the body last week. RENO MAY LOSE BUSINESS Amendment Making Divorce Less Easy Cp to Governor. RENO, Nev., Feb. 4. An amendment to the Nevada divorce law, providing that every applicant for divorce must have been a resident of the state for six months preceding commencement of divorce action, was passed by the assembly of the state legislature to day. It now goes to the governor for signature. Dealers Are Told to Stimulate Buy . ing by Cutting Prices and by Reducing Profits. NEW YORK, Feb. 4. Confidence that business will soon settle down on sound fundamentals was expressed by leading financiers and practical economists tonight at a dinner of the Association of Stock Exchange Firms. James S. Alexander, president of the National Bank of Commerce In New York, cautioned against waiting for active buying, urging business men to stimulate purchasing by re duced prices based on keener, effi ciency in production and "reasonable margins of profits." "The growing' tendency of labor to become more efficient and its will ingness to accept some liquidation of inflated wages is encouraging." he said. "The readjustment is favorable to the individual worker. "Competition for work means stim ulation of efficiency and staunch in dividualism as opposed to radicalism. An abundance of labor permits em ployers to choose workmen intelli gently and co-ordinate wages to their proper part In production costs, facil itating the establishment of price levels best for all. "But employers must play fair and not attempt to lower wages unduly or to enforce greater curtailment than circumstances warrant. They must recognize that in any country worth living in, the standard of liv ing tends ever upward." $100,000 MAIL IS STOLEN Messenger Reports Being Held Up and Kidnaped by 5 Men. ST. LOUIS. Feb. 4. Willis H Thornhill, a mail messenger, reported to the police tonight that he was held up at St. Charles, 20 miles west of here, by five men, who kidnaped him and stole a registered pouch said to contain approximately $100, 000, which was to have been put aboard a train for shipment to St. Louis. The postmaster at St Charles said that the pouch contained shipments of money from the local banks. He said it was impossible to estimate the loss until a check had been made. DENTISTRY'S AID OFFERED Method of Repairing Breaks in i Plymouth Rock Suggested. PLYMOUTH, Mass., Feb. 4. Plym outh ' Rock can : be permanently patched in such manner a to restore virtually its origina shape and to preserve it for posterity, in the opin ion of Cyrus E. Dallln of Arlington, the sculptor commissioned by the Pilgrim tercentenary commission to determine the best method of rejoin ing the rock, which is now in three pieces. Mr. Dallin eald today that he thought modern methods, including the application of some of the prlnci pies of dentistry, would bring the boulder together again, so that it would stand for centuries. y Aim i n Amazing Story of Mother Love Is Revealed. TRIPLETS TALE FOUND FALSE Two Sets of Twins "Also Ob tained at ReIiefHome. REPORTER FINDS FRAUD Failurevto Register Medical Certif icates Causes Suspicion Hus band Scouts Revelations. ATLANTA, Ga,, Feb. 4. (Special.) One of the most amazing stories of mother-love that the world has ever Known came to light In Atlanta this morning when Mrs. F: E. A. South, 23 Weyman avenue, confessed that th "triplets" supposedly "born" to he on New Year's eve were not her own that twin girls "born" to her fou years ago were not her own; that sh has reared altogether 11 children who. even her husband believed, wer born to her when. In reality, the were all adopted secretly because o her great desira for babies. Mrs. South's husband, who is clerk in a grocery store, first laughed whe he was informed of his wife's confes sion, and tnen was indignant, de ciaring tt an "Infernal lie." Sinister Influence Charged. it she made such a statement, it was because some sinister lnfluenc was at work on her," he declared. They are all my children, and m neighbors will testify to the fact." While Mrs. South fooled her hus band, fooled the children themselves, fooled the newspapers and the public, looien everybody but herself and th institutions from which she procure the babieB, she has committed n wrong in the eyes of the law. and It Ik to be doubted if she has even com mitted a wrong from a moral stand' point. It appear, her motives were of th n'ghest. - I don t like movies. I don't lik theaters. I don't like to go out. Th greatest thing in my life is children she declared. "I did it because I love children and because I wanted to glv tnem the best raising I could, esn nlally the little nameless waifs in th maternity hospitals, who haven't a chance in the world." Promised Education Coveted. Thus Mrs. South declared that th reason she fooled her husband, with triplets "born" on New Year's eve, but m reality procured from Mrs. M. R. Mitchell's maternity hospital at 22 Windsor street, was because the women in charge of the "cradle roll' at St. Paul's Methodist church, where the has a membership, had agreed to educate as missionaries the first trip Uts born to a church member. 'I have raised all my children to be good men and won en." declared Mrs. Scuth, "and I saw here a chance to have three little ones and bring them up-to go and teach the gospel to the heathen." Mrs. South said she waa the daugh ter of a Methodist .minister, now dead, and that her mother was dead alto. She waa brought up In a re lig-loua home, she declared, and felt it was her duty to train as many children as possible, whether they were her own or not.- Three Children Are Own. During her married life she has actually had three children of her own, now grown and married. Mrs. South is now 52 years old. More than ten years ago, she said her yearning for children to take the place of her grown-up sons and aughter was so overpowering that she hit upon the scheme of deceiving her husband with a "fake birth," and she succeeded in fooling him, she said. She said the plan worked so well that at usual intervals she adopted three more. These four babies, said Mrs. South, she got from institutions, the namee of which she would not give. They now range in age from 5 to 13 and live at the South home, in ' complete ignorance of their true origin. Triplet Are Not Real. Four years ago, said Mrs. South, she decided to. have twins. She got them from the maternity home, she said. They were boys, but both later died. So, two years ago "Mrs. South declared,, she got two girls from the home which she palmed off as twins. And then, the last day in December she procured three l'ttle girls from the home to serve as her triplets. Mrs. Mitchell, who conducts the home, admitted Mrs. South's state ment regarding these sets of "trip lets" and "twins. The triplets, said Mrs. Mitchell, were not really trip lets,' but were three little girls of three different mothers. The birth of the triplets was first announced in the newspapers shortly atter New Year's. Their picture. were published, along with Mrs. South's and those of one pair of "twins." Hundreds of people called at the Wey man avenue home to see them. The church people were extremely Inter ested and the associated charities, to whom the case were reported on January 11, sent out two loads of coal to help the family. And then official Atlanta took no tice of the case. There began the (Concluded on Page 3,' Column 2.) Destruction of Machine Threatened While New York Is 'Bombed' to Get Army Recruits. NEW YORK. Feb. 4. A real fight for life was held above New York to day when 15 army airplanes "bombed" the city with smoke bombs and rat tled a tattoo with machine guns in a sham battle to stimulate recruiting for the air service. While thousands of persons out for noonday lunch watched the thrilling spectacle. Lieutenant Edward Black an obsciver in one of the machines, was fighting, unknown to the crowd below, a fire which threatened th destruction of the machine and th lives of his pilot. Lieutenant Ulysse G. Jones, and himself. Blacky who was In the gunner's pit behind the pilot, was dropping smok bombs when one cf them exploded in the pit. His face and hands were burned and his clothing and the fusel age of the plane caught on fire Jones turned and saw the struggle, but was powerless to help. He kept an eye on the nearest river, ready to plunge 2000 feet below if it should be necessary. Black kept his head, however, grasped a fire extinguisher and pumped its contents on the flames. When Jones saw that his companion had won the grim oattle he turned his plane toward Mineola field, 20 miles away, making the trip in abou ten minutes. Black was hurried to a hospital, where ha will be laid up for several days. STORM WARNINGS GIVEN Signs Ordered Displayed From Point Reyes, Cal., North. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 4 A storm off the coast of Oregon and Wash ington today resulted in the order to display southwest storm warn ings from Point Reyes, Cal., north G. H. Wlllson. forecaster of the United States weather bureau, said tonight. The forecaster said he expected a repetition tomorrow of today's rain along the coast north of San Fran cisco. MANY KILLED IN QUAKE Much Damage Is Reported About Isthmus of Tehuantepec. MEXICO CITY, Feb. 5, 2 A. M. Many lives were lost and much prop erty damage was done by an earth quake Thursday night in the districts centering about the Isthmus of Te huantepec, , News dispatches to this effect reached here early this morning. WILSON GETS FURNITURE Household Effects From Trenton Delivered in Washington. WASHINGTON. Feb. 4. Three trucks loaded with furniture from President Wilson's former home in Trenton. N. J., arrived here today. They were being unloaded at the house purchased by the president re cently from Henry P. Fairbanks. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTERDAT'S Maximum temperature, 40 degrees; minimum, 38; rain. TODAY'S Rain; southwesterly winds. Foreign. Germany rrfaseH to allow her experts to. Britain would wipe out inter-Allied debt. but America objects. Fags 4. Sir James Craig; made unionist leader In Ulster parliament. Pag-e 2. British draft of mand-ate for Palestine Is made public in London. Face 8. . Kational. United States to call disarmament eon ference. Page 1. Senate puts through four amendments to Fordney tarirt bin. Fase B. Ex-head of liquidation commission defends sales made in trance. Pare 4. Pressure is brought to swing foes of road aid bill into line. Pace X. Compromise looms on confirmation of army promotions, t age 11. Automobiles worth 11,000,000 and KvO.OOO gallons or wmsKy seizea by dry law agents. Fage 1. Pomentlc. , Thousands at theater cheer Mrs. Harding. Pago 1. Business revival Is expected soon by finan ciers. Page 1. Mystery Man" supposed to b missing husband or Mrs. May t:rawrord of Portland, Is released at Oakland, Cal. Page 20. Guardsman denies any part In shooting. Page !. Eleven adopted babies, passed off as own. fooled even nusbana. Fage i. Aviator fights fire during sham battle In air. Fage I. Legislatures. Free text books plan causes spirited nato debate. Fage o. Bill to restore direct primary favored In Idaho house. Fage I. Resolution halts land board probe. Page 6. Joker In Roosevelt highway measure ex posed Just in time, l ags i. Leeway ' sought In vacating streets for terminal. Fago . Pacific Northwest. Dr Sargentlch declares. Europe's attitude is "let America do it" in relief matters. Page 20. Builders will cut wages SI per day. Fage 12. P porta. We. una. Lks club plana clubhouse. Pago 14. Davis cup decision to be made today. Page n. Darcy defeats McOoorty. Page 14. University of Oregon defeats Oregon Ag ricultural college basketball team at Corvallis, Or. Page 15. Commercial and Marine. Hide buyers withdraw from market owing to lack of outlet Page 19. General gains recorded in stock market. Page 19. New steamer line coming to coast Page VI. Portland and Vicinity. C. J. 'Schnabel is abot to death by crank. Page 1. Promoters of lecture by UncoTn Steffen cannot lease hall in Portland, Page J, Promise Made in House by Chairman Butler. HARDING EXPECTED TO ACT Ten High Naval Officers Are . Heard by Committee. CAPITAL SHIP FAVORED Sims Advises Against Immcdlata Abandonment of Construction of Tj-pe pt Warfhlps. WASHINGTON, Feb. 4. Satisfied from testimony of a large number of witnesses that calling of an interna tional conference to discuss disarma meat would meet with general ap proval, the house naval committee today called before it 10 high officers of the navy and one of the army and heard a vast amount of divergent and confusing testimony as to whether aircraft had mada capital naval ves sels useless. Before the testimony, however. Chairman Butler announced positive ly that an International disarmament conference would be called by this country. He did not say when the call would go out, but it was assumed from his line of questioning that It would be shortly after President elect Harding, witn whom Mr. Butler recently conferred, takes office. Mm Favors Capital Ship. Rear-Admiral William S. Sims, the first witness called, counselled against immediate abandonment of the capital ship. He added, however. that if aerial forces demonstrated the values he expected them to, in the near future, they would soon make major surface craft useless. He op posed discontinuing work on the gen eral 1916 naval building programme, and declared "nobody is going to take his hand off his gun" until conditions become settled In Europe. The superiority of the battleshla over either the airplane or subma rine was defended by Rear-Admiral Charles J. Badger, who declared that battleships and battle cruisers would remain the backbone of the fleet for years to come. He did not believe, he said, that anything very definite would come out of the proposed dis armament conierence, dui sam it w worth-while effort. l'luke Gives Another View. Still another view was presented by Rear-Admiral Bradley A. Fiske, retired, inventor of the torpedo plane. who told the committee that aerial dreadnaughts would be the capital ships of the future. Brigadier-General William Mitchell. chief of training and operations of the army air service, called to the stand, told the committee that It was a slmplo matter for air forces to hit and destroy a battleship, and repeated his testimony of last week before the appropriations committee to the ef fect that aerial developments hl made surface navies obsolete. General Mitchell cleared up one point that had been causing the com mlttee some wonderment all day when declared that data, supposed by naval officials to bo secret, but dis closed by him before a senate com. mJttee, had been obtained by army of. ficers who attended the bombing of ' the old battleship Indiana at the ln vltatlon of Secretary Daniels. General Mitchell on Stand. General Mitchell was on the Stan when the session concluded and will continue his testimony tomorrow. All of the -naval officers who tcstl. fled stressed the necessity for the Im mediate construction of hlgh-pec4 airplane-carrying hlps. While the house committee heard this testimony, the senate naval sub. committee drafted an adverse report on the resolution presented by Sen ator Borah, republican, Idaho, pro viding for a six months suspension 'of naval building while experts study the best types of ships. Congress must determine national policies before naval, officers cart formulate naval plans, said Admiral Sims. If the navy were maintained purely for defensive purposes. Admiral Slma said, the United States would be safe, with .a navy half as large as that of any possible enemy thousands of miles away. If. however, the United States intended to rely on its navy for carrying out broad International policies, he said, Its sea power should be equal to that of any other nation, 81ms Agrees With Pennine. Admiral Sims said he agreed with, General Pershing that war with Great Britain was "inconceivable," but added that he would not abandon th navy entirely under any condition, even if there were no enemy in sight. "You can never tell what may coma out of Europe," he said. "Nobody la going to take his hand off hJs gun." Admiral Sims advised the commit tee not to slop work on the 191( building programme, particularly the battle cruisers. He added that Amer ican submarines were inferior to foreign-built craft and that America -was "extraordinarily" behind In avin ation development. The officer sug gested that two of the scout cruisers under construction be altered as air plane carriers. Bear-Admiral Badger said: "The nations of the world are nr (Concluded ea Page 3, Column 1).