EDUCATION BOARD FILESITSREPORT Asks For large Sums to Satisfy lns!illlt:01 N3CdS. NO LOWERING OF STANDAHOS. Woamn'i Building at State Univer!ty Is Designated as Mo3t Pressing Need There Considerable Portion of Additional Support Fund Request ed Is For Increase in' Salaries. Doa Moines, 0( t. 3. 1 he Ktato'lirm nl of education filed Us first report with tlio governor. It mude many recom mendations for the Improvement ol tlio Institutions in Its charge, declar ing that it propone not to lower tne standard in any particular. In res;,ert to appropriations needed hy tin eiu rational Institutions, tl.n hoard m::!:e;; the following reioniiiieiiilatioiis: University. First Tim ho (tilled special support fund of $2.'i,u(iO per annum grnntoii hy tho Thirty-third general assemhly should he made permanent, and the fund of $15,1:00 per annum for hooks and bindings for the libraries should he increased to $17,500, and he made permanent. Second That there should ho a re newal of the Appropriation for general equipment and supplies of $7,500. A renewal of the appropriation for land of $17,500. A renewal of the appropriation for 'paving sidewalks and Improvements of grounds, $3,000. And the following additional appro prlatlons should he granted: General equipment and supples. $23,000 T.nnd 32,500 Sidewalks and improvements of grounds 5,000 There should also be an equal increase In repair and contin gent fund of G:0(i KIRBY TO PLEAD GUILTY Farmhand Who Tried to Rob Bar.k Will Not Resist Charge. Council Illiiffs. U, Oct. 3. KIrby. the Oakland (la.) farmhand who at tempted to rob the McClelland hank last week and was shot and captured by young Walter Julius, Is still wear ing the bullet In his left arm. depos ited there hy tiie lad. He is occupy ing a cell in the county Jail, but says lie would not try to escape even If there was nothing to prevent him. Dr. Hanchett will try to extract the bul let today. The wound has been well cared for. hut the arm is very much swollen and painful. Assistant County Attorney RoS3 went before Justice Gardiner and swore to an information charging Kir hy with attempted ropery. Kirby says a trial will he merely a formality, for he Intends to plead guilty. Klrhy's wlft! made anxious inquiries about him and seemed terribly crushed over the wild attempt he had made to better the rendition of his family. It was said that the family was likely to be come a county charge for a while at leart. YOUNG WIFE" kTlLS SELF Deaf Mute Cirl Fires Bullet Into Her Heart at Council B'uffs. Council muffs, la., Oct. 3 Winlfrea Redlleid, a (leaf mute, ended her life fring a bullet into her heart at the home of her mother, Mrs. Samuel Harnhart. Two years ago she was married to Elmer Hedfleld, a deaf mute printer of Omaha. Her hus band was kind and loving and they were very happy until a year ago, when the young husband suddcnlly developed an appetite for Intoxicants, when his love turned to Indifference. Ills conduct became such that about six months ago his wife was forced to leave him and returned to her moth er's home In Council Illuffa. Total I $r,8,oi)0 Third That there should he an In rrf-ane of the annual appropriation:) M follows: College of liberal arts $ 50,000 College of applied science.... 5,000 College 6f law 3,000 College of medicine 21,000 College of dentistry.. 2,500 College of pharmacy 2,000 Fine arts 7,000 Library support.. ': 2 500 Administration 1,500 JllsciTaneoua 5,000 m Total $100,700 flrand total '. . .$.fiS 7C0 A considerable portion of the addi tional support fund must of necessity go to Increases In salaries. State College of Agriculture. The askings for the state college ol agriculture and mechanic arts may he summarized as follows: First That the so called special fund of $2,500 per annum granted by the Thirty third general assembly bfl made permanent. Second That there should he a re newal of the appropriation of $7,500 per annum for the equipment of de partmenta, and a renewal of the ap 'proprlatlon of $3,750 per annum for nldewalks and grading. The following Increases are asked In the annual support funds of the ' state college: Educatlonnl support fund $ 50,000 College extension 10,000 Agricultural experiment atat'n 15,0 0 Engineering: experiment atat'n 5,000 C.ood roads 6,000 Two-year agricultural nrse.. 25,000 "HOG" SPECIAL STARTS Oil TRIP Train en Rock Island Carries Corps ol Lechers. Total $11,000 The following special appropriations are r-sked: Additional department equip ment, Including furnishings for domestic technology building, gymnasium and veterinary hospital $ 60,000 Fubllc grounds Improvnemnts 6,000 Heating plant 43,000 Judging pavilion and abattoir laboratory 50,000 roultry laboratory 6,000 De Moines, Oct. 3. A special train of several cars, with agricultural and domestic science experts trom tne Iowa state college on board, lett the Rock Island utatign this morning to spread among the tanners of the state valuable up-to-date Information con cerning the hog. The demonstration trip will lust for nearly two weeks, ending at Weston, Saturday, Oct. 15. The train will make thirty minutes stops at 137 stations on the Rock Island lines. The people at each station will be seated In the cars, where the specialists will lec ture to them and they may see the ex hlbtts and demonstrations. The train Is furnished t6 the state college by the Rock Island railway. The agricultural commissioner of the Rock Island company is on the train and lectures with the state college ex perls. There are seven of the college lecturers, two of whom are domestic science teachers. Virginia Purmort of the domestic science department Is with the train. The lecturers will speak on the most profitable methods of raising hogs and the uses of pork products and the by products. There are vail ous exhibits showing model hog houses, yards, feeding appliances and feeds. Special attention will be given In the lectures to the prevention of losses from cholera. A bulletin on raising hogs will he glveu to each man who visits the train. The two domestic science teachers will give lectures and demonstrations pn old and new ways of cooking and dulnty ways of serving bacon, ham, sausage, Bait pork and other pork foods. There will be exhibits of edi ble products secured froh hogs. Each woman who attends the lectures will bo given a book of pork cooking recipe. LOS ANGELES IN STATE JF PANIC Discovery ol Two More Bombs Creates Consternation. BOMB FOUND AT OTIS HOME. Infernal Machine Discovered in Zee- handelaar Residence Effort Sus pected to Destroy Auxiliary Plant of Nonunion Paper Times Building Destroyed With Lost of Twenty. Los Angeles, Oct. 3. Following the xploslon which destroyed the build ings and plant of the Los Angeles Times,' with loss of a scorevof lives, na attempt was made to destroy the residence of Harrison Gray Otis, pub lisher of the Times, by means of an internal machine. A suspected eft'oit to blew up the auxiliary plant of that paper and tho finding of a powerful in fermil machine In the residence of Sec retary Zeehandeluar of the Merchants' .ind Manufacturers association has wrought this city to tin Intense state of suspense and excitement. General Otis and the other responsible heads of the paper unequivocally charge the Times bulldlns disaster and the nar rowly averted attempts at further de struction of life and property to labor union sources. The present trouble Involving the Diets family which led to the shoot ing Is the result of a quarrel Dietz had with Bert Horel, a school super visor of Winter, over the rent for a building used for school purposes. The quarrel took place on Sept. 7, when Dletx shot Ilorel through the neck, the wound not proving fatal, however. A warrant was sworn out for Dietz" arrest, but he has prevented service by threatening to shoot. Knowing Deltz' record as the defender of Cam eron Dam, deputies have been careful about approaching him. With equal emphasis the leaders of union labor here and throughout the state repudiate the accusations and have offered all aid In their power in the effort to detect the culprits. OWE JUiES. Congressman From KEiimy Gut For Senatorship. 3C Pc U We have all Shades in Belding Bros fc.VvV'wVH. lift In) Photo by Anwlrnri Press Association. HUNDRED AND FIFTY M1NERSENT0MBED Eiplashn In Mexican Mine Is Cause ot Clsastir. Eagle Pas;i. Tex., Oct 3. One hun- For twenty years, following a qnar- dre(1 an(j filty miners,' possibly more, rel with the typographical union which are entombed and believed to be dead resulted in making the Times a non- ln mIne No. 2 at Palau, Mexico, in the union paper. General Otis has fought La Esperanzas mlnlug district, as unionism with every resource at his tne re8ult of t explosions, presum command. lis has been ably seconded mv hemnso of an accumulation of in this fight by the Merchants' and Manufacturers' association, whose sec retary was the object of frustrated dynamiting. At Least Twenty Killed. The death list of the Times disas ter will probably total at least twen ty. There are four known dead and gas. rr.e men entoniDea are mosiiy native and Japanese miners, although the number Includes several Araer leans. At the time of the first explosion the entire night shift, estimated at ftom 15) to 300 men, were at wor'.c. Of these none haa reached the sur- Uiralliiu one yard wide at $1.00 per yard These Satins are guaranteed for two season's wear. Your garment will be relined FREE OF COST to you if they do not. the Yard! I. " E. G. 10V1Y & SOtf J sixteen missing-whose bodles -almost fare 8n,j probably are dead. Total special askings $165,000 Only one half of which sum, or $82.1(00, shall ho used each year of the biennial period making total for each year..$1!2,!00 A woman's building at the state university Is designated as the most pressing need there. Railroad Pays Fire Cn""-. Tloone, la., Oct. 3. Thn Mll vnuke" Hallway rompnnv rr l,-,t s-f'-d for n fire which o'ct JIM" sir time ago. The vim.-- - -.!"" mill at that plner wns de;troved bv fire and the evident e rv.VM! thr.t the fire was starte,! bv a a-i"-'- r:o:'i a pass lng locomotive. T!"1 l'-r"ice on the mill amounted to $5 ntxi and the com panies which carried the Insurance notified the railroad company that It would be expected to Bland for the nmoitnt of the Insurance. Tho railroad mailed a check to N' lei son & Duelund for $r,,ooo. TO FIGHT FOR BIG ESTATE Heirs Will Contest Legacy Left to Lenox College. Montlcello, la., Oct. 3 Since Monti cello has shown no disposition to en ter a legal contest for the Arch Llv Ingston property, near llopklnton, the Indications point to a big legal battle between linox college and the heirs The prize U 240 acres, valued at $25, 000, and $6,000 In cash. The heirs will attempt to show that Mr. Uving ston was not In a tuentat condition to make a will when he signed tho pa per, and that a representative of the college took advantage of his mental and physical condition, when his vital Ity was at a low ebb, and Induced htm to make such a will as he would not have done under other conditions. to a certainty lie In the still smoking ruins of the Times building. The dead: Harvey C. Elder, assist ant city editor; J. Wesley Reeves, sec retary to Assistant General Manager Chandler; It. I Sawyer, telegrapher; Harry L. Crane, assistant telegraph editor. The missing: J. C. Galllher, lino type operator; W. G. Tunstall, lino type operator; Fred Llelwyn, linotype operator; John Howard, printer; Grant Moore, machinist; Ed Wesson, printer; Elmer Krlnk, operator; Eu gene Carr, Don E. Johnson, operator; Ernest Jordan, operator; Frank Underwood, linotype operator; Charles Gulliver, compositor; Carl Snalada, linotype operator; Howard Courdaway, linotype operator; Charles Haggerty, pressman; Henry Lees, compositor. In addition there are about twenty Injured, some of whom may die. The original suspicion of the po lice that the disaster was due to a eavy charge of a high explosive was practically confirmed by the finding of the other bombs and the statements of those persons In the building or near by at the time of the explosion. Six Bodies Recovered Three hundred workers digging tin ceaslngly for two days In the ruins hnve unearthed six of the nineteen bodies buried under tons of debris The shovel brigade Is still at work No clue to the outrage has been un covered. Hut three arrests have been made. Mayor Alexander Increased the city's offer of reward to $10,000. This together with the offers of local news papers and labor organizations, whose leaders have pronounced a determlna tlon lo assist In tho search for the criminals, raises the total amount of proffered rewards to $18,500. The second explosion occurred short ly after a rescue party, composed largely of Americans, had descended, That they were klllad Is thought certain. Latest reports place the known dead at. seventy-two. Only two bodies have thus far been recovered, owing to the presence of poisonous gases. Stocking the Riven With Fish. Pes Moines, Oct. 3. George A. Lin coln, state fish and game warden, will lie ready very soon to start out with hlH Fpcclnl car to distribute young fish to tho rivers of the state. Ho In tends to start out ln ahout it week if ho can peciiro tho fisa from tho Mis ulssljipl river bnyous. Hand of Corpse Moved. Iowa City, la., Oct. 3 Scarcely had the undertaker started to prepare fluids for tho supposedly dead body of Mrs. Joseph Joza at her home on North Gilbert street, when her right hand wns suddenly seen to rise from Its posture on the edge of the roffin and lift Itself several Inches from the boards. The understaker secured physician and other aid and an at tempt was made to bring the woman to life. Tor several hours the per sons worked over her, but death had conquered. Only after two thorough examinations, however, wiu the un d-'rt:ilcr permitted '.( ront'nue Ms STANDING OF THE TEAMS National League. American League. W.L. P 1 W.L. P. Phlla ...100 46 685 Chicago ..96 47 671 New Y'k. 83 Detroit.. 84 Boston . 80 Clevel'd. 68 Chicago 65 Wash'n.. 64 St. l-outs 45 105 3001 Boston Western League. SooCity.lOS 59 647,0maha.. 84 81 509 Denver 102 65 610jSt. Joe.. 76 91 447 Lincoln.. 93 71 5678 M's. 71 95 427 Wichita. 89 78 530 opeka 42 125 253 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS CARELESSNESS IN THE USE OF FIREARMS IN CITY There has been entirely too much promiscuous shooting of fire arms within the city limits of late. Almost every day in some part of the city the report of a gun is heard, and no one apparently knows the reason, nor how near some one .comes to being seriously, if not fatally, injured. Only last week a young lady residing on High School Hill was sitting at. her piano, and while turning over her music heard the report of a gun to the south of her residence, and al most simultaneously a shot, or bullet, crashed through the window only a short distance above her head. Where the bullet came from, or who fired the gun is not known, but the young lady had a close call for her life. It would seem that one should at least be safe when sitting In their own parlor. The criminal carelessness of some persons may result ln the death of an Innocent person, and the only way to prevent such things is to ar rest and punish every person firing off a gun within the city limits. Acci dents of this sort are ' frequent enough in tho sparsely settled coun try districts, and should certainly be guarded against in a thickly popu lated city. 62 572New Y'k..87 59 596 64 568 Pittsburg 85 62 578 67 544! Phlla ....74 73 503 78 466 I'in natl ..73 77 478 84 436 Brooklyn 62 86 419 83 432 St. Louis.5 85 410 50 97 340 Floyd Gibson Injured. Floyd Gibson, son of D. Gibson, formerly in the music store ln this city, was run down last Friday, near his home at Missouri Valley, by an automobile and severely, if not fatal ly, injured.' The little boy was on his way from school in the evening, when another child of about his age seized his hat end threw it across the street, and the little boy dashed after his hat, not noticing an approaching automo bile, got directly in front of it and was run over before the . machine could be stopped. The car was not being run fast and the driver did not expect the child to run in front of his car, and could not stop In time to save the boy. No blame was at tached to the operator of the auto. The little boy was picked up un conscious and carried to the hospital and medical aid summoned. Mrs. H. G. Van Horn departed for Missouri Valley this morning to visit Mr. and Mrs. Gibson and assist them in caring for the littll fellow. BLUEJACKETS ARE DROWNED Tender Load of Sailors of New Hamp hire Overboard 29 Missing. Now York, Oct. 3. Several sailors from the battleship New Hampshire were drowned by the upsetting of a tender In the North river off One Hun dred and Fifty-second Btreet. A list was given out of twenty-nine men who wero supposed to have per ished. Appended to the list are the names of eleven men who are still ab sent, but who were not recognized as having been on tho swamped boat. The sailors were returning to the New Hampshire after shore leave and more than 100 of them, It Is estimated, had crowded aboard the tender, which was being towed to the battleship. About 300 yards off the shore the craft either swnnined or was uns?t. and the entire load of Jackles wns urechiltatod hn'l Ihu'hnnt. Into the wntcr. 1'nnf '-- limneill- Af Wickitli: American League. At St. Louis: R.H.E. Detroit 1 00 1 1 1 4 3 112 20 3 St. Louis 3 000 1 2 100 7 8 3 Works Schmidt; Nelson-Stephens. At Chicago: R.H.E. Cleveland 0 0000000 00 6 3 Chicago 00000 2 02 4 5 0 Kaler Smith; Whlte-Sulllvan. National League. At Cincinnati: R.H.E. Chicago 10 30 0 10 308 13 1 Cincinnati 0 0001012 04 10 6 Reulbach-Kllng; Gaspar-McLean. At St. I-oula: . R.HE. St. Louis 000 0 000000 7 2 Pittsburg 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 25 9 1 Steele Bresnahan; Lelfleld-Glbson. Western League. At Lincoln: R.H.E. Lincoln 011103100 7 16 2 Omaha 40 123 110214 16 1 McGrath-Clark ; Rhodes-Cadman. At St. Joseph First game: R.H.E. Topeka 00 1 00 03004 7 4 St. Joseph 2 00 50002 9 15 2 C.lffen-Maxey ; Hanifan Coe., Second game: R.H.E. St. Joseph 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 8 2 Topeka 000000 00 00 4 2 Crutcher-Frambes; Fugate-Agnew. At Sioux City First game; R.H.E. Sioux City 0 2 00 0000 02 7 2 Des Moines. ...30 0 0000 4 1 8 11 1 Freeman Tow no; Huston-Clommons, Second game: R.H.E Sioux City 0 1 1 2 3 0 07 7 1 Dea Moines 0 0 3 000 14 8 4 Hammond and Miller; Biersdorfer i R.H.E Injured In a Swing. The grandson or Mrs. Plllsby, while swinging yesterday in the yard near the house, received quite a serious in Jury to his side and leg. The boy was swinging by a single wire sus pended from the limb of a tree, and to get plenty of momentum, got his position on a box and made a spring into the air. The wire did not work even, and the boy was thrown against the tree In his descent, which tore I the clothing from his body and also look the skin off his side at the same time, and bruised the lad to some ex tent. Hla cries brought tne ioiks A Good lWtion. Can be had by ambitious youns men and ladies in the field ot "wire less" or railway telegraphy. Since the 8 hour law became effective, and since the wireless companies are es tablishing stations throughout the country there ia a great shortage of telegraphers. Positions pay begin ners from $70 to $80 per month, with good chance of advancement. The National Telegraph Institute operates six official institutes in America, un der supervision of R. R. and Wireless officials and places all graduates in to positions. It will pay you to write them for full details at Cincinnati, O. Philadelphia, Pa., Memphis, Tenn., Davenport, la., Columbia, S. C, or Portland, Ore., according to where you wish to enter. tf R. C. Jahrig and wife, who were called here by the death of Mrs. Jah rlg's father, Mr. Julius Doehrlng, re- from the house and raised the neigh-1 turned to their home at Sheridan, Dorg Wyoming, this afternoon. Mrs. Julius The boy's Injuries were dressed and J Doehrlng accompanied her daughter he will have a sore spot on his side to Sheridan, where she will visit for for several day3. tlrae- ately put out from the N V Hamp- renvoi- shire and wherever a bobbins: hend Wichita showed d niiia win n,'im,1 I AS ll 'lit CI, ...0 0 0 2 3 0 0 3 3 -11 l'l . . ,0 0 2 0 o 0 ii c I 3 1.1 3 r.-.r.n.i. J:-.i:t:.'-"1 ss.it MOP InlDlnlg We have on display our Pattern Hats and the most popular shapes in Large and Small Hats Please call and see them. MISS work. -n