Fhe Omaha Sunday Bee. VAST own JNS SECTION paoes oira to eiojet. vEATlirUl FORECAST. For Nebraska Fair; colder. Fnr Iowa Clencrally fair. for weather report see pngo 2. VOL. XXXIX NO. 3. OMAILA, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 0, 1910-SIX SEC110NS-TIIIIMT-EIG1IT PACKS. DAY OF DISORDER IN PHILADELPHIA Sympathetic Strike i Marked with Disturbancei in All Parti of the City. CEOWDS ARE KEPT MOVING Careful Work of Police Prevents Serious Outbreak in Square. FOOD DELIVERY NOT HAMPERED Drivers for Milk, Bakery and Grocery Firms Not Called Out. f SEVENTY THOUSAND STRIKE TkU Is Estimate of I'nlon fommlttw, bat Director of Public Safety Clay finyn More Than Twenty Thousand. PHILADELPHIA, Pa.. March 5. Dis order In mnny parts of the city marked the first day of Philadelphia's great sym pathetic walkout of organized labor to Lack up the fight of tho trolley men .ilnst the Philadelphia Ropld Trnnslt ompany. Nenrly every section of the city 1 had Its talo to tell of cars attacked, of men assaulted hy strikers or sympathiz ers, or of clashes with police. The scene of the most general disturb ances shifted from the heretofore turbu lent Kensington district to the very cen ter of the city. The greatest trouble was experienced by the pollen at Independence square whre, despite the announcement by Mayor Royburn that no demonstration could be held on that historic ground, a crowd of 25,000 persons feathered to par ticipate In or wath tho demonstration of orgnnlzcd labor. Policemen, mounted and afoot were wars there by the score with strict orders to keep the 'crowd moving. Tho city au thorities had learned much during the last week in the handling of crowds and It was the belief that if the Immense throng could be kept on the move trouble Would be averted. Crowds Kept Moving. Thl( was accomplished and It Is due to thei patience carefulness andd steadi ness of the police that no serious out break occurred. A great crowd of strikers paraded through the square and weee not molested by the police. There was a wide difference of opinion today as to the extent of the strike. Sat urday, being a half holiday and In some Industries no work being done at all on ths last day of the week, It was utterly Impossible to get more than rough esti mates of the number of men that quit work. The committee of ten of the Cen tral Labor union, which Is conducting the strike, In a statement made ' tonight Charles A. Hope, secretary of the Central Labor union and a member of the com mittee, announced that reports show that 70,000 union men are out and that ths walkout has affected 30,000 other workers. " Food Deliver? Not Hampered. , Secret ory Hope declared that bakers, milk wagon drivers and grocery clerks were not called out and would hot be. It was not I the desire of organized labor, he said, to Inconvenience the public to the extent of handicapping the delivery of the necessaries of life. Other labor leaders said that 65,000 men had struck and that the number would be greatly increased by Monday. Although the entire population of the City looks upon the Btrlke as a most seri ous affair, the effects of which are likely to be felt for a long time to come, the city officials, from Mayor Keyburn down, de clare ths walkout Is not as widespread as olalmed by the labor leaders. Usury Clay, director of the department tat jmbljo safety, said today that 'he had police reports to show that not more than 20,000 men were on strike. However; with all the conflicting reports, It was evident that Philadelphia's in dustries are not yet prostrated by the con flict The great Industrial establishments, such as Baldwin's locomotive works, Cramp's "shipyards, Drill's car works, the Mldvale steel works, all of which are "open shop" concerns, were in operation today with practically their full forces. Building; Trades Are Oat. The greatest number of sympathetic strik ers were found among the textile works In the Kensington district and the allied building trades. . The strikers claimed that 50,000 persons wore out In these two industries alone and that the scattering unions in other trades were well represented by strikers. The master builders at a meeting today ad mjuffj that their Industry is seriously crlppfcd. No hand was raised today to stop the conflict which is rapidly paralyz ing business. Thcro was a rumor in cir culation tonight that the labor leaders might request President Taft to use his Influence to bring an end to the trouble or take some step along the lines adopted by President Roosevelt In the coal strike of lOUf. Such a move, it Is believed, would be welcomed by the people of the city, ,There was no talk of arbitration or peace hoard during the day and It la evident that employers of large numbers of work men are walling the events of the next, few days before attempting any settlement Of the general strike. More Cars Honntni, The dny developed nothing In the street car strike Itself. The trolley company had about aa many cars lu operation as it hud yesterday, according to. the company a little more than l.OoO. However, the cars did not carry aa many passinger as on other days of this week. People generally were not willing to take a chance of being Injured and many would not ride in them because of principle. The company opened one new line In the southern part ot the city, but after a few trips the cars were withdrawn because of the frequency with which they were as sailed by stones and bricks. - ltalf ot the cars In operation during the day were withdrawn at nightfall. EXPRESS CAR LOOTED ON TRAIN Thousand I'arkaatea Broken Open aad hivvs i Contents Scattered hy Robbers. ROCHESTER N. Y., March E.-When j ( train No. r? on the New York Central fi reached Rochester today, It was discovered ; , ' that an American Express car had been looted. Nearly all 0f the 1,000 packages ' had been broken open and their contents I sx-attered. Just how much the robbers got not learned. Basin Has First Explosion from Natural Gas Wyoming City Experiences Small Earthquake as Result of Pocket of the Gas. BASIN, Wyo., March 5. (Special Tele gram.) When James ONrll, superintendent of the Pig Horn Oil and Gas company, opened tho door of an unused coal vault beneath tho Wg Horn County bank this mornlnfT and thrust a lighted match Inside to locate a supply pipe, a terrific explo sion followed which was heard all over town. O'Nell was blown out of the vault clear across the basement of the bank building against a brick wall, sustaining serious burns and painful contusions. David Lewis, one of the proprietors of tho Hustler newspaper, whose establishment is on the same floor, was also hurled a dlst.anco of thirty feet, escaping uninjured. The doors of the basement were blown from their hinges and splintered Into kindling wood. Every window was shattered, thouph the property damage resulting was not great. The accident was caused by tho natural gas escaping from the street main and ac cumulating In the coal vault. This Is the first casualty from using natural gas In Basin. Germans to Join Race for the Pole Geographical Society Has Decided to Enter Competition with United States and England. BERLIN, March G.-The German geo graphical society has decided to send out a South polar discovery expedition and so contest . with tho United States and Great Hrltain In the race through the Antarctic. The German plans were made public tr day at a meeting of the society at which Dr. Nordenskjold, the Antarctic explorer, v.as present. Big Phone War by Morgan Concern United States Telephone Company Decides to Enter Rate Fight Against All Competitors. CLEVELAND, Maroh S. Directors of the United States Telephone company, the Morgan Independent Distance company, de- elded late today to wage a rate war against all competitors. - - WILSON RECEIVED BY DIAZ Successor to D. E. VhAnipson' Becomes , Dean of Diplomatic Corps at Mexico City. MEXICO CITT, ' March 6.-Pro:j)Jent Dlas received Henry Lane Wilson, who succeeds David E. Thompson as LrHtod States ambassador to Mexico, at the am bassadors' salon at . the national palace at noon today. Mr. Wilson was presented to President- Dlax by Captai Alfredo Bar ron. President Dlas expressed and the na tion's regard for the United States. As the American government has the only embassy here, Mr. Wilson will, by virtue of his position, be the dean of the diplomatic corps. ITALIANS' VICTIM IS DEAD Detective Wren of Chicago Snccnmbs to Woanda Inflicted by Black Handera. CHICAGO, March 5-Detectlve John Wren, who with Detective Patrick Qulnn, was shot by three Italians yesterday, died today. Wren's death occurred a few' min utes after his wounded comrade had been carried to his bedside, that the men might bid each other a last farewell. The detectives were shot down while pursuing the Italians, whom they believed to be connected with the Black Hand society. The murderers have not been caught. TEN NATIONS HONOR PEARY Formal Recognition of Ills Clnlm aa Dleeoverer of Pole by Scien tific Societies. WASHINGTON, March 6. -Formal recog nition of Robert E. Peary as the discov erer of the North polo has boen given by the leading scientific societies of ten gov ernments, according to advices which have reached the National Geographic Bootety. Treasury Statement. 1 WASHINGTON, March B.-The condition of the treasury at the beginning of business today was as follows: Trust funds-Gold coin. $.SM,3S7.8CD; silver dollars, 1480,141 000 silver dollars of ISM, $3,832,000; silver certifi cates outstanding, $4X8,141,000. General fund Standard silver dollars in general fund 5.496,570; current liabilities. $97,105,457; work ing balance In treasury offices, $21.706.6o3; In banks to credit of treasurer of the United States, $35,04,WO: subsidiary silver vin tn 11 )3,47&; minor coin, I1.1SS.41G: total biin0' lu general fund, l.y2.01j,TO. Grownups Catch Marble Fever and Are Kids Again thLV'V0." '.aV?"1Ve? 1TPSJ and,rUrChaSe" wero m " whenthe three - w VMVV.I IBV II V V on the minds of youngsters. bchool attendance officers and probation officers have more kicks about truancy and more complaints about troublesome boys at this particular season than at any other. The balmy air Is laden with "spring rever," which surely develops Into a ds termlnatlon to play marbles and toss the ball and let school go hang. But the boys are not the only ones. Thtlr elders have not forgotten how to "knuckle down" and "fan hunching." In a group of grown up .men yesterday Daa Whitney, the ball player, was showing a handful of agates, glassies, whlties and poeweea he had bought for his boy. "John r.lo" Dineen, some ball piaytr himself, and John Coffee wanted to know where Whit ney bought the marble. Dan touk the two wltbj him to a news company. More THIRTEEN BILLS AGAINST HYDE Kansas City Physician Charged with Murder of Colonel Swope and Chrisman Swope. CHARGE OF MANSLAUGHTER He is Also Accused of Bleeding J. M. Hunton in Negligent Manner. TEN OTHER INDICTMENTS These Charge Attempt to Murder Members of Swope Family. DEFENDANT IS UNDER BOND lie Was Arrested Last Month oi Information Charging: Mnrder and Released I'sdet 50,000 Ball. KANSAS CITT, March 5 Dr. B. Clarke Hyde, husband of a nlecs of tho late Thomas II. Swope, was Indicted on thir teen counts in eleven Indictments returned by tho grand Jury that has been Investi gating tho Swop mystery for the last three weeks, at 6:35 o'clock tonight. Two Indictments charge first degree murder In connection with the death of Colonel Swopo and of Chrisman Swope. Hr. Hyde Is alleged to have given them strychnine tablets. One Indictment accuses Dr. Hyde of man slaughter by bleeding James Moss Han ton, a counsln of Colonel Swope In a neglectful manner. The Indictments also charge Dr. Hyde with attempting to poison Lucy Lee Swope, Margaret Swopo and Stella Swope, all nieces of Colonel Swope, and Leonora cop. prldge, a negro servant In the Swop home. The indictments charging murder found that Colonel Swopo came to his death by taking poison In the shape of strychnine pills administered by Dr. Hyde. When the indictments were returned, Virgil Conkllng, county prosecutor, said he believed the grand Jurors had done their duty. He said the evidence of the case gave him no reason to doubt that he had taken tho correct position In regard to it. Dr. Hyde la the husband of Frances Swope Hyde, niece of Colonel Swope, who inherits about $300,000 of the millionaire's estate. Dr. Hyde was arrested on February 10, charged with the murder of Colonel Swope. His arrest at that time followed a formal charge of murded In the first degree pre ferred by John G. Paxton. The physician was released ' on a bond of $50,000. His preliminary hearing- was continued until March U, pending the re port of the grand Jury. On February . a coroner's Jury, which .had fcivertlgaticd the death of Colonel Swope, brought In a report to. the effect tht Solonel Swope had died from the effects of strychnlnlng poisoning adminis tered In g capsule at the direction of Dr. Hyde, but the Jury was unable to de termine whether Dr. Hyde had been guilty of felonious Intent In directing that the capsule be given to Colonel Swope. FIREMEN DEMAND MORE PAY Employes of Thirty-Two Roads Make Same Appeal aa Conductors and Trainmen. NEW YORK,. March B.-The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Englnmen of the thirty-two eastern railroads have sub mitted to tho General Managers' associa tion a formal demand for an increase in wages. This demand is similar to that presented to the, same roads last Decem ber by the Order of Railway Conductors and the Brotherhood of Railway Train men and which are now in their final stage of negotiation. General Manager J. C. Stuart of the Erie refused to accept the demands as chairman of the General Managers' asso ciation, declaring he would meet a com mittee of the Erie firemen, but that the brotherhood would have to deal with each railroad separately. The demand Involves about CO.OOO firemen on the railroads east of the Mississippi. The wage demands are for an Increase In pay of from $2.60 a day to $3. BALTIMORE, Md., March B.-At the ex ecutive offices of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad today it was learned that both the locomotive engineers and the firemen n aa asaea lor a revision of the schedules. wage J0PLIN MINERS WALK OUT Demand Restoration of Old Scale Following Boost in Price ot Zluo, JOPLIN, Mo March 6. Seven hundred miners employed at the plants of the American Zinc, Lead and Smelting com pany have struck for higher wages. The miners contend that It has been the custom of operators to raise their wage Bcale when the price for sine ore went above $40, but recently when the price fell to $40 tho wages were cut and, although xlnc blend has gone to 115, the former scale as not Tteen replaced by many of the operators. lf'ft tha it.A . u i m . r - '" aa ti.M wortn or mar bles between them. Around the corner was a billboard with a nice clean piac, behind It. Josh and taunt led to action, and soon Whitney was making a ring with his boot heel, in the good old way. Then the three went to It on their knees, like three kids. Their wrangling attracted something of a crowd and Whitney, between "kidding" the oth ers and thus rattling them, and by the exercise cf his limber thumb knuckle "skinned" the other two of all the mar bles they had bought Coffee and Dineen insisted on revenge, and offered to go and buy more. "No said Dan."I've got all the marbles my boy can use this year. You fellows are too easy; go and get some kids to play with, so you can throw them down and take thtlr marbles away from them." From tho Chicago Post. SIXTY KILLED BY SNOWSLIDE Work Crew of Canadian Pacific Buried by Huge Avalanche. DEBRIS EIGHTY FEET DEEP Men Were Working; to Clear Tracks from Debris of First Slide Wheal Second Came Thundering Down Mountain.' VANCOVBR; B. C. March B.-Slxty,tWo men, who we- tngaged In clearing the Canadian i'-yc f c 'Crack in Rogers Pass,' at the Summit of the Selkirk range, were entombed by an avalanche soon Hfter mid night this morning and all are probably dead. . The men were a working creW engaged In clearing away a small slide that had come down early In the evening. They were working a rotary engine over It when a larger slide came down and carried them to their death in the canyon below. At first it was believed thaC all the hundred men engaged were k tiled, but later It was found that many had escaped and the death list is now estimated at fifty. The accident occurred near a snjwshed, one mile west of Rogers Pass and at the actual summit of the Selkirks. Seventy five per cent of the dead are white men. the remainder Japanese. Conductor Buck- I ley and Engineer Phillips of the work I train, headed by a rotary snow plaw. were killed. . Relief Harried to Scene. As soon as the news reached Revelstoke, a relief train conveying physicians and nurses and over 200 railway men was speeding east to Rogers Pass. The scene of the accident was reached at 6 o'clock this morning, when the task of digging in the tangled mass of debris in the hope of finding a few survivors was commenced with vigor. Calgary made an equally prompt response. It also sent a special relief train with 126 workmen, as well as nurses and doctors. Acting Superintendent Kllpatrlck of tho Paciflo division of the Canadian Pacific railway left Vancouver today for the scene of the accident The first slide occurred at B:40 yesterday afternoon in the Arrow valley of U'-ar Creek, flanked on either side by mountains, covered with a depth of snow varying from twenty to fifty feet. The slide had a length of GOO feet and a depth of eighty feet. Wlillo men were working to clear the tracks at 12:30 this morning, half of the first slido having ben removed, the second avalanche dtsceuded. It started on the side of the conyon opposite the point where the first slide occurred. Thousands of feet above a few rolling masses of snow grow ing in volume and momentum started on a pathway of destruction. Second Avalanche Breaks. Loose. In a few seconds, with a noise like a thousand thunderbolts crashing in unison. the avalanch leaped from shelf to shelf, uprooting and carrying with It a tangled mass of Ice, trees and boulders. There was no oscapa for the unfortunate workers. The avalanche plied on top of the first slldo. burying the tracks for a distance of a quarter of a mile around to a depth of fifty feet. Hndreds of thousands of tons of other debris in the wake of the ava lanche bounded off tho huge heap and half (Continued on Second Page. The want ad col umns of The Bee will be interesting reading this morning:- A Peruse them. You will get tho pulse of the people. See who wlBhea servants who wishes places who wants to sell, and the things they offer. Read the hundreds of little treasures today. It may bo the most profitable half hour of your life. A Peril of the Chantccler, Hat Thirty-Three Miners Killed By Explosion Bodies of Ten More Men Are Found in Mexican Shaft of Treadwell Mines, JUNEAU. Alaska. March 4.-Thtrty. three miners are dead as a result of Wednesday night's' powder magailne ' ex plosion in the Mexican shaft of the Tread well gold mines, It was announced today. Twenty-three bodies were taken out soon after , the explosion, eight others were Wnd in a later search and two died in a hospital. Five other men In the hospital are badly Injured. It Is supposed the care lessness of a miner caused the explosion. The dead men are mostly foreigners, all copper miners. St ope Boss Nels Rustgard is among the dead. Tschaikovsky to Have Secret Trial Police Fear Co-Defendant, Mme. Breshkovskaya, Will Make Revo lutionary Speech to Judges. ' ST. PETERSBURG, March 5.-The pre fect of police today ordered that the trlai of Nicholas Vasillevich Tschaikovsky, the widely known member of the social revolu tionary party, who was arrested November 1L 1907, charged with revolutionary activity, be held behind closed doors. The present is the first occasion upon which the closure has been applied In con nection with a political trial in the circuit court of St. Peterburg for a number of years. The prefect was influenced by the prob ability that Mme. Broshko-Iireshkovskaya. who is to be tried with M. Tschaikovsky would make a revolutionary address to the Judge. Upon the eve of his trial M. Tschaikovsky has Issued a long statement analyslzlng the accusations of the indictment. USES BANK FUNDS IN HIGH LIVING TELLER CONFESSES Was About to Rmbark on Bis; Build Ins; Scheme In Effort to Recoup Losses. PHILADELPHIA, March 6-Thomas E. Larsen, receiving teller of the Philadelphia branch of tho First National bank of Cam den, surrendered to the local police today when he learned that he was wanted on a charge of embezzling IS0.000 from the in stitution's funds. Larson confessed to the charge, the police say. Larsen, according to the police, had been taking the bank's money for seven years. He lived In expensive apartments and was married about two years ago. Irsen also told the police he was about to start a big building operation in an effort to recoup his losses. General "Wood Cared. BALTIMORE, Md., March O.-Major Geneial Lfonard Wood left the hospital here today pronounced cured Death Takes Louis James; Heart Failure Stops Show HELENA, March 6 Louis James' long career as an actor was ended by death here this morning, following an attack of heart failure lost evening, Just before the curtain went up for a performance of Henry VI II." The body Hill be shipped tomorrow to Kansas City. Tho company will disband and Mrs. James will return to Kansas City. KANSAS City. March 5. Louis James, the actor, had for many years made his home In Kansas City much of the time, although he also had a residence at Mon mouth Iieach, N. J. His second wife. Miss Aphle Hendricks, was a Kanaaa City woman and for several seasons she has taken the leading role la all his plays. CRACKS IN ENGINE BOILERS Senate Committee Hears Evidence Roads' Inspection is Poor. BROTHERHOOD TAKING INTEREST Assertion Made Locomotive Boilers Need aa Thoronch . Supervision by Government as Does Marine Machinery. (From a Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, March 5.-(Speclal Tele gram.) The committee on commerce to which was referred the Burkott bill. com. pelting more rigid Inspection of boilers on locomotives In order further to safeguard the traveling public today, completed Its hearings, during the course of which it has been very emphatically shown that there Is necessity for government Inspection of locomotive. At present there Is no government su pervision of the condition of locomotive boilers. Tho railroads themselves have a system of Inspection, but though Inpected, It has developed during the hearing that very often locomotives are sent out known by englnemen to be unfit for service, who if they protest are marked, and soon lose their Jobs if they protest too vigorously. These defective engines are started out upon the theory that they have sufficient strength to make another run. The committee today had before It Presi dent Stone, grand chief of the Brotherhood or Locomotive Engineers and Firemen. He said that often engineers were ordered to take out engines which they knew were In bad shape. He said the bill as drawn would meet with most cordial aproval of 52,000 locomotive engineers employed In this country. ( Example of Marine Service. General Uhler, chief of steamboat In spection of the United States, was also upon the stand. Under the service over which he has control, rigid Inspection of 14,000 boilers was made during the year paRt and there was but one explosion. Gen eral Uhler thought that locomotive engines should be as rigidly Inspected under gov ernment supervision as Is exacted of en gines and boilers aboard ship. Exhibits were made to the commute by those fav oring the bill to controvert statements mado by the railroads that no defective engines are sent out. A plato was px hVbited which upon. Its exterior showed no signs of decay, but upon the Inside was cracked and therefore much weak ened and dangerous. Another exhibit presented showed that In this particular instance an englna wa sent out by certain well known railroad ""i"ri wnere mere was a cluster of seven aerectlve staple or rivets and that the sllghest attempt to Increase the steam pressure might have caused the explosion of the boiler. That It did not explolde was an act of providence, rather than the will of man. Senator Burkett today sold he now feels assured that his bill will receive favor able report from the committee and If the bill Is amended, at all. It will be to ward making Its terms even more strin gent In order to safeguard the lives of those who travel behind railway locomo tives. The secretary of war and the regents of (Continued on Second Page.) Louis James was born In Tremont, III., In Hi. first engagement was with McAuleys Stock company which he Joined at Louisville. Ky In 1884. Laier for five years he was Lawrence Barrett's leading man. From 1S86 to 1889 he starred with Joseph Jefferson and In the nineties he starred with Frederick Ward. In recent years he had been the star in Wagenhals and Kemper productions. At the time of his death Mr. James was play ing "Henry VIII." taking the part of Cardinal Wolesey. Last week while his company was stalled on a snow bound train in the west they produced "The Mer chant of Venice" to amuse the passengers Mr. James first wife, MIm Lillian Scan land, whom ha married in Philadelphia in 1871, died five years ltr. SENATE PASSES POSTAL BILL Measure Creating Savings Banks Goes Through Upper House by Vote of fiG to 22. CUMMINS AMENDMENT LOST Clause Designed to Limit Government Use of Funds Defeated. SM00T AMENDMENT ADOPTED It is Intended to Keep Funds in Localities Where Deposited. PROVISIONS OF THE MEASURE Deposits Made In Any Money Order Office Will Drnvr Intereat at Rate of Two Per Cent Funda to Re Deposited In Local Ranks. WASHINGTON, Mart'h 6. Dividing prac tically upon party lines, the senate, at the close or the third session of the legislative day of March 3, today passed tho adminis tration postul savings bank Xilll. Of the seventy-two votes cast, fifty wero In favor of the bill and twenty-two against. All tho negative voles were cast by demo crats, oven Mr. MoEnery, who had voted with the republicans throughout the con sideration of the bill, In the end Joining his, own party. Senator Chamberlain of Oretton was the only democrat who stood with the republicans in favor of the bill. As It goes to the house, the bill author ises the various money order postofflces to accept sums of tl or more from depositors and to deposit these sums in the local bankB, where the money Is to remain un less withdrawn by the president In case of war Or other exigency. In case of this withdrawal the funds are to be Invested In government securities, but with the pro viso that such securities shall not draw less than 24 per cent interest. The control of the funds is vested In a board of trus tees composed of the postmaster general, the secretary of the treasury nnd the at torney general. The aggregate balance al lowed to any depositor Is $600, and no per son is permitted to deposit more than $100 In any ono month. The government is re quired to pay 2 per cent Interest and must exact not lees than 2 per cent from trie banks, the extra quarter of 1 per cent be ing required for tho payment of expenses and losses. It Is calculated that such a law would bring much money out of hid ing and result In a fund ranging all the way from $500,000,000 to $1,000,000,000. Cummins Amendment Defeated. . Beginning at 11:46 o'clock the senate's session continued until 4:60 p. m., and practically all of the time was devoted. to the consideration of amendments. Almost Immediately after It began the first vote was taken. This was on the cummins' amendment to the Smoot pro vision, upon which yesterday's debate waged so .fiercely. , . The Smoot amendment looked to th authorization of the withdrawal from the local banks of the postal funds In case of war or other exigency and Mr. Cum mins sought to modify It by making it apply to war as the only exigency Justify ing withdrawals. The Cummins' provision went down under a vote of 40 nays, as against 18 ayes, tho afflrmatlvo vote be ing cast by the so-called "Insurgents," republicans and half a dozen democrats, with the slngl exception of Senator Mo Cumber, a stalwart republican. Later in the day and after considerable debate the 8moot amendment was adopted after It had beon amended by the Insertion of an amendment Introduced by Senator Borah, directing that the funds with drawn should not be Invested in govern ment securities carrying less than 2Vi per cent interest, the rate required from the banks. Text of Smoot Amendment. As adopted, the amendment in the shape of a proviso reads: "When, In the Judgment of the president, war qr any other exigency involving the credit of the government so requires, the board of trustees may withdraw all or any part of said funds from the banks and Invest the same in bonds or other securi ties of the United States. "Provided, That no part of said funds shall In any event be invested in bonds or other securities bearing Intereat at less than 2 per centum pr annum." . Two other Important amendments were agreed to today. One of these was sug gested by Benutor Bailey and would per mit the withdrawal of postal funds de posits by the original depositor "upon de mand," and the other by Senator Galllngty specifically Including savings banks sX4 trust companies doing a banking business, among the banking institutions permitted to accept the deposits of postal funds. Debate on Borah Proviso. The "Insurgent" republicans were much elated over the acceptance of the Borah modification. They contend that it will save the effect of reducing to a minimum the government securities in which the postal funds may be invested and prvent the national banks from using the funds to relieve themselves of a class of securities which are not popular with them. On the other hand, it was contended, especially by Senator Bacon, that the Borah provision would never be accepted by the house, and, therefore, will not be a portion of It when the bill becomes a law. Mr. Carter, In charge of the bill, made no objection to the borah amendment. He simply remarked that it was fair to require the government to pay the same Interest required of the bank and that there was no reason for opposing It. The provision was agreed to. 49 to 11. The republicans voting nssiMBi ii were juessra. ttrandegeo. Bulko ley. Burnham, Burton, Keati and Wetmore; and the democrats, Messrs. Bankhead, Money, Paynter, Rayner and Smith of South Carolina. The opposing republicans made no expla nation of their attitude, but Mr. Money, speaking for the democrats, based his oppo sition upon the theory that an amendment, constitutional in iu.if. ccu'.d not render valid a bill which In Itself was In contra vention of the constitution. Amendments Voted Down. Soveral amendments were voted down, the mont important being one offered by Mr. Owen of Oklahoma, which was Intended as a substitute for the whole bill and which provided for the establishment of a fund to guarantee national bank d pjlls along the lines of the state bank guarantee plait of Oklahoma. Mr. Oaen spoke In support of his pro vision, again holding up the Oklahoma plan as a model of banking legislation. The sharpest dlstgusslou of the day roe l e.