Omaha unday Bee PART ONE NEWS SECTION PAGES ONE TO EIGHT. WEATHER FORECAST. t or Nebraska - l'str and warmer. I'or Iowa- I'nlr mul warmer. SINC.I.i: COPY Fl'i: CKNTS. iVOL. Xl-NO. 4a. OMAHA. SI NDAV MOKNLMi, Al'KIL !. T.M 1 - SIX SIXTH )Ns -FOKTY IWCiKS. ANOTHER BATTLE HAS BEENT0UG11T llexiean Regulars and Insunectos Come Together at Velardena, in the State of Durango. FIGHTING CONTINUES TWO DAYS Many Axe Reported Killed and Large Number Wounded. FEDERALS REPORTED TRAPPED Madero Prepares for an Automobile Daih Into Chihuahua. HITCH IN PEACE PROCEEDINGS Large Force of Federal Troopi Itraeh sonorjl to Take the Field 4a.alnst the Hrlirli Who trr In thr Xlclnltr n f rlrpe. K.I. TASK. .Vpiil H.--The severest buttle 5'i-t fought In the Male of Ihirango was In progress at Vc inlrna Tuesday, when mall Hih I' . vmm f hi ni fnni Tun ex. The battle he lieen in piouip I wo ilavs, federal Soldhis oot ui, I ii k the town unci 7"0 Insur- rutin ni nii.iniini: Hie place. Fifteen or I Slxlcin of the ieb.'s had been Willed fttid I oiii- n.iu i r whm m.ii.i iii ton and ix mm- j fomiiamniK mh woninii-il. The nchting coiitlu in o u'li.e .u ullai mii. miuI die led- a.H h t. oiiitetl ntiuTid hy h' hand of tv'" s In vte lilai t. Th" Aitii.vi) l i te i out linu-rl Ihe r pu p-I -i i.liiiis loiiM.v to niMke an utomohlle iIhkIi I fherlffa Oeptle .rrlp at Ilia Home Uit ' I. ill mil,. a ui oiKri;i! with tin; Inxur- I nl i oil. it) and.'! In i hlcf thu pofl 1I I : I y of j PLmr. 'the !t:er reiteration In un An- j ia.nl I'MKf lnterlew. that Ilai! muni 1 I Of is ;i the re:ilnr tlnl not (Impress them. Taekmrtia were ex hHMKi'it hetween till" tll ami nrhlniit-'n and l hllmuhua, but tl.tlr i-ohlent rn- not dlvulgcrt. There la alv.a. a th' pohsihiitty of aoine hitch wtikh may ilclnx ilrpnil no, lull It H staled thAl nolhiiiK hut ao ernmenial opposition lih li K. li.i ivi.i'it. i an piewnt the In tuvhw hrtneen Kranrlaco I Mmlero, Jr., aiid hia lather. Iiiaiirreetoa Near hlhaahnn. ' T 1 1 1 1 L' A 1 1 1 A . Ainll 8. -Via Laredo, Tex. A reiMit'i tilihli lacKa ufflclal confirma tion la In peralatent idroulation that In event of 1'realdetit l'ia putting Into effect the reforms Biiaa.eaied In hla recent mea Ke to the Mexican conKreaa with peace Hit! lea. lit. lr. aa.ii(- Uoniei!. the Insur-1 rci.to confidential aftent at Washington, will ba called to Mexico City to aaaume a hi ah office. lih the uulpoata of the Insurrectoa and the fcdeial troopa anparated by only a faw mllt'M t'hlhuahiia today continued In a late of expectancy. A message has been viit to Madero urging him to permit de trucllon of the Mexican National railroad to the aouth, which la now the only meane of bringing supplies here. Buspenalon of trains would place t'hlhuahua city under aiaxe. and the presence of federal troopa hare, ao far as food Ii Concern td, ' would work a hardxhip on the noncombatama. Iteiiuetn to Madero when presented hj foreigners invariably have been granted, llo l.aa , permitted provision trains to paaa through inanrreclo;' territory, to the niinea noi-thward, where many Americana are em ployed. ' Shipments of dynamite to the ntlnea have been allowed by the Inaiirrectos, aometlmea oil the condition that a portion oC the dyna inl'e ba surrendered. It la said that air eral nieflsagea have been exchatvg-nd be tween this city and Mexico tTty and that the replies on being received here have been dispatched to the Interior, presumably to Madero a camp. It Is eaJd the meeaagea were aent by private cltl-iens who are anx : Uus to bring about peace and that they have no ufflclal character. Mtileaa Trupi at Cmamaaa. t'ANANKA, Honors. Mei., April 8. One thousand Mexloan federal aoldlera, Indud lug cavalry and infantry regulars, volun teers and Yanul Indians, arrived In Ronora last evening by special train from the scene of the recent fighting In the vicinity of llermoslllo. The troopa are commanded by Lieutenant I'olonei I 'lax. Commandant Barron and 1'rrfert Chiapa. The soidlera occupied four teen coaches, and their horses, mules, sup pliea an I auimun tii n filled nine boxcars. The troops were rushed ulther to take the field aaaln.it the reoeia who a few day sun occupied the important loan of Aiizpe, luar here. Tliev will be aent to Arlzp iroin Lininn ii once. i'olonei OJada, who commanded th gov ernment troops at i.rea, is on his way overland from Urea to Arltpe with WO men and will form a juncture with the troops from t'ananea in tbe vicinity of Arlspe. The government soldiers are well armed. and with their experience In the Urn and Anna I'rleia engagements, are the best flvhtera the government haa In Sonora Commandant Barron had been reported killed at I'm. and hla appearance here today waa In the nature of a surprise. Aaaerlraa Diea f Waaaaa. WASHINGTON, April S. Ueorga W. Crltchfleld. the American who was abot from ambush several days ago at hla ranch Bear Tuxtan. Mexico, died yesterday. Thla fact waa reported to the State department today In a telegram from Clarence A. THE WEATHER KOIl N KHRASKA- Kelr; wanner Sunday I IOWA Fair, warmer Sunday. Tern iM-f i Oman ladar. Hour. leg s a. m to a. m ti ' a. m sj t a, m S3 a, m 36 10 v m S( 11 a. m St U m 41 1 p. ra... t p. m... 1 p. m ... p. m. . . 5 p ta... k p. m... 7 p. m... I oiMparallT LM-a I Merors, lull. 11U lH. 1!J. Highest today e ;i it 11 Lowest KMlav x." 4 xi Mean teniierature o an :r, trecipltaiion i .ti iM U) Tviniwrature and precipitation depart ures from Him normal. Normal temperature 47 lef!i lenev for the day 7 Total eife since March I. 11 1 ltd Normal pro -ipltatlon o Inch 1 ficiM for the dav wlm Total rainfall since March 1 1 Inches .fn'lenc) since March I clinch 1 K-ficleiii for cor. period 110 . J el Inchea 1 tendency for tor. period 1 . .1 1 inches Iwvmi wvax eA Ja mi ti&e ia I imi MS naaai 'J PAZPAfMTIOir rfrns- TEE PACKAGE SAM ; Local Events as Viewed by The Bee's Artist ( ! SCHULZ MUST GO TO PRISON Chauffeur Convicted of Manslaughter Loses in Supreme Court. ARRESTED ON WAY TO PARTY rindlna Hint Drcsrd for Social Pnnrlliia llr Is Now In Jail. 1 First to be convicted of a killing as ! the result of wreckless driving In Oinalia, ! AI Sclitilx. chauffeur, has lost In his ap I pesl to the supreme court. He must serve out his sentence of three years In prison imposed in the district court here, j Senilis was arrested on an order from i the supreme court early last night. The action of the district county court was sustained In a ruling handed down at noon yesterday. The finding was kept secret until the arrest of Schulx. Pressed for a party, the convicted man was taken Into cuatody at his home, 172S South Twelfth street. The arrest was made by Ira Flannigan and M. B. Thomp son, deputy sheriffs. He la held at the county Jail. Schulx wax convicted of manslaughter In district court He waa arrested .tune 26 to answer for the death of William Krug, who was killed In a crash between hla machine and that driven by Schulx. Jury Disagrees as to Hamiltpn's Guilt Six to Six the Ballots Stand on Man slaughter Charge Against - - Young Driver. Disagreement, s to A, ended the deli berations of the Jury which heard the evidence against Robert Hamlltan, the boy charged with manslaughter In running down and killing a bicycle- rider while driving an automobile last aiMnmer. The Jury had been out twenty-four hour when discharged at t o'clock last night. Tbe accident occurred last Fourth of July on the boulevard near Twentieth and Corby streets. Klllot Robinson, a class mate of Hamilton's at the high school, was riding a bicycle aouth on the boulevard, BeHlnf extraa on the Jefferles-Johnaon fight. Hamilton came up from behind, running at a high rate of speed, according to the prosecution. Robinson waa thrown from his bicycle when struck by the heavy auto, which passed over his body. He died on the way to the doctor's office. The trial of the Hamilton boy, for he lacks several months of being 18 years old, has been watched with much Interest. The testimony of the witnesses put on the stand by the defense and prosecution to fix the rate of speed, conflicted sharply. County Attorney Kngllah had six or seven witnesses who swore with unanimity of opinion that Hamilton was going twenty- five miles an hour. A like number of witnesses were put on the stand by C. J. Smyth and Kd P. Smith, the attorneys who conducted the defense ,to show that the machine was going st varying rates all below fifteen miles an hour. The boy on trial Is the son of It. P. Hamilton of the Hamilton Bros, contract ing firm. Priest Tells Why He Denounced De Angelis Ciro Vitozzi, Further Examined by Court, Says He Acted in Good Faith in Matter. V1TF.KBO. April S.-A glorious day has followed a stormy night and thla led Ciro Vltoxsl, the priest, when brought Into court with the other Camorrlat priaoners today, to remark that the weather corre sponded with his spirit, which Is calm after week of passion. The Interrogation to which he waa subjected had told kverel on the priest, but he has Improve since the court commanded him to break his fat Speaking of the approaching Faster, Vltoxxl said lie hoped his ascension to heaven 'would come soon In the form of hia liberation. The proceedings opened with the exam ination of Oennaro Aserlttote, who is ac cuatd of having denounced l'e Angelis and Amadeo aa the murderers of Cuoccolo In order to save the real assassins. His de fense was that he acted In good faith, and ha deacrlbed at length how he became convinced of l'e Angelis' guilt. "Two days before the murder." said lie "De Angelis came to my home and asked to be given a room for three days. 1-at'r I understood this to have been a ruse on his part to aid him In establishing an alibi after Cuoccolo had been killed. Some time afterwards he returned to my house dis guised ss a coaiheavr, and. opening his coat, exhibited a dagger. 1 allotted him to sleep in the courtyard "Later he came to me clean shaven and explained his fonnrr disguise by alngSlie had raced with death half of the dla- that he waa at Castellamare Adraitlco j tame to safely. Her parents, Mr. and when Yltoxxt arrived there, to make In- I Mrs Klmer Mover, were dsnserouslv qulties In tbe interrsi of Rnrrico Alfano. who waa tiirn under suspicion. le An gelis said he feared arrest and fled. He showed a wound In the leg which, ap parently, had been caused by a penknife. HI actions from the first convinced me that he mas one of the murderers of Cuoccolo." American Fighter Hurls His Forces Against Mexicans General Black of Commission Says Document is Long One and Has Not Been Gone Over. MKXICALI. Mexico. April With the mules stolen yesterday from American ranches In Iiwer California, laden with extra rifles, ammunition and auppllrs. Stanley Williams, the American insurrecto leader, left Mexicall today, headed straight for the federal forces of Colonel Mayot. which are beshging the city. It was ap parently the Intention of Williams to hurry his little force of. eighty-five men. all Americans, against the entire Valk line of federals under Mayot. The latter, with charactei IkIIc deliberation, is near Packard station, five mllca southeast, waiting until tomorrow" before launching his assault on Mexiralt Williams blew up a bridge yesterday at Packard In order to delay the advance of the national troops. It Is expected the fighting will occur at that point. It la to do 07 die with Williams, for, un like others of the rebel army, there Is no sanctuary for him across the border of the Cnlted Slates. WTlltsms Is a former quar termaster sergeant In the United States army and faces trial toT desertion If he Is caught on the American side. Most of Williams' men are mere youths, but all are heavily armed and have four to five belts of extra cartridges. As they marched out of Mexicall their bearing Indicated that the former Ameri can army soldier had not been drilling them in vain during the last few weeks. They walked erect and In military order. Civil Service Has Agent Moss' Report Federal Leader Delays Action and General Williams Takes Only Course Open to Him. (From a Staff Correspondent. 1 WASHINGTON. D. C, April 8 (Special. Telegram.) OeneraJ John C. Black, presi dent of the Civil Service commission, said today that the report of Special Agent Moss, who Investigated the charges against Postmaster B. F. Thomas had been re ceived by the oonimlsslon and Is now being eva mined. "There is nothing regarding ita contents that I can now make public." said General Black. "The report is very voluminous covering many typewritten pagea and It will take several daya even to read It. much less to r.asa Judgment upon Its findings." P. W. Daugherty of !el! Rapids, assist ant attorney general of South Dakota, Is In Washington upon legal business before the departments. Senator and Mrs. Hitchcock will be President and Mrs. Taft's dinner guests next Saturday evening. President Taft hav ing Invited a dinner party to ruetet new United States senators and their wives. Senator Brown today recommended the appointment of Burt Krotrer to be post master at South Sioux City, Neb. Rev. H. K. Warren, president of Yankton college, was among Senator Gamble's call ers today. Dr. Warren Is en route home from a trip through the New F.ngland states. CASE SETTLED OUT OF COURT Standard Trait, Illinois Central and Soutbrra Hallrray and Tennessee Central Get Together. NKW YORK. April S (Special Te gram.) Action of the Standard Trust com pany of New York, the Illinois Central and the Southern railway against the Ten nessee Central. Involving claims aggregat ing upwards of 1.flon.l'K have been with drawn, and settlement made out of court. These claims were the subject of bitter controversy between the roads named and results In the Tennessee Central being bot tled up at one time and unable to do any through huxineps Recourse was had to the courts for relief, and the Illinois Cen tral and Southern were compelled to c;fi cel the methods adopted to force a aet tlement by refusing to interchange traffic. Fire Sweeping Cornfield Burns Little Girl to Death CAMORA. Neb.. April S. (Special Tele- . about her. She sped across the field as gram.) Flames wind-driven scross a!fa' " '' could in the rough ground cornfield overtook and killed Bessie 1 Moyer. I yeara old. this afternoon, after burned tn an attempt to rescue the child. Several playmates escaped. Tbe little girl was at play In tiie corn- field. She lighted a pile of fodder stalks and clapped her bands In glee aa they crackled In the bbieexxe The flames flared highly and aparka fell ahhout her. She started to run as the fire spread Coming and Going in Omaha END NOT BEFORE MONDAY Last Long Day Piles Up Work for! Clerks in Legislature. , j 1 , MATRAU BELL MAY GET THROUGH Prince Nonpartisan Meaanre Killed and Other Providing; for Appoint ive Body Haa Hern !btl tated by members. I From a Staff Correapondent.) LINCOLN. Nth., April S.-(Speclal ) Any chance for a final ndjournment of the legis lature was lost for Saturday night, when it was announced that the clerical work in the enrolling rooms was so far behind that It would not be reported before Sun day mornlnK and possibly not then. The long and detailed maintenance and sala ried bills were not only the occasion of tiresome fussing between the conference committee, but were also a long time In the enrolling romns. After bills are amended they must be copied In long hand before they are ready to be signed. The legislature cannot adjourn until all bills are thus engrossed and atgned by the presiding officer of the last house to art upon them. The house passed all of the bills up before It In the middle of the afternoon. The senate has stilt some bills for consideration. After all bills arejiiassed and amendments agreed to, the house must still remain In session until they are en grossed and signed. The outlook tonight makes It reasonably certain final adjournment will not coma until Monday though all but a handful of members will leave before that night. Official Farewells. " Saturday morning was the occasion for the official good-byes end gifts of appre ciation Iri the aenat. I-.leu'tepanr Gover nor Hopewell was presented witli n pale of diamond studded cuff links and Ser-geant-at-Arms Costello , received a jjold- hesded cane. In both houses confusion grows ss the last hour approaches. The younger mem bers of the house In the brief momenta of recess that become, frequently neces sary wander about the halls Intoning in mournful accents, "how dry they are," etc. The senators, being more rtaid and j a trifle bored, are busy watching their j pages pack up tneir noons aim pipers, 1 preparatory to trekking back to their tie lighted constituency. May I'asa Matron Bill. After the morning slaughter of board of control bills, the senate had a reactionary fit of conscience and reconsidered the post poned Prince bill, changed It to agree with the Matrau bill and then passed It. The house also had Its reaction against Its neg lect of the platform pledges, shared by both parties, and Norton of Pulk tried to get fifty-one votes to resurrect the Selleck board of control bill. He could only get forty-seven, however, and had to give up. The Prince hill came to the senate as the sole survivor of the half dosen bills for, a non-partisan board to controll all state Institutions excepting educational ones. The board was to be elective by Its provisions and the senate being opposed to the elective method of choice as not really non-partisan, defeated It. The dead Matrau bill, however, provided for an ap pointive board and the senate put the Matrau bill under the enacting clause of the Prince bill and passed it by a bare twenty votes. It will now be up to the house to concur In the amendment. If the house falls, the party pledge will be en tirely unfulfilled. U&1.. W.J, 1 villi ! (iovernor Aldiich will not give his de cision upon the appropriation of $100,000 for the medical department of the atate to be spent In Omaha until he has given both aides a hearing. Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock he will hear the doctors and others Interested 'n a public meeting to be heJd In his office. Two Conferences Fall. The two houses seem unable to agree upon senate file 147. the Volpp bill, for a four-year term for senatora and a raUe in salary for all legislators. The house does not look kindly upon the idea of giv ing the upper house the privilege of sitting' through two sessions and three different conference committees have been appointed In the effort to reach an agreement. Fight oa Telephone Bill. Assertions that the telephone lobby haa spent large sums of money and has been H'ontlnued on Srcond Page.) ana through the tangiea corn stalks.. Twice she stumbled snd fell, aa the fire ' bor, down her The fUmM ,1 upon her as she fell exhausted. Her j ; screams attracted the attention of the Darenta who ran to tha reacue. I ' The child's clothes were burned from her body when she was borne from the biasing field. A physician was called, but before he could reach the Moyer home ; Bessie waa dead. Mr. and Mrs. Moyer were badly injuied tin their desperate struggle to save the girl. TI.ey will recover. Georgia Mob Slugs I Sheriff and Hangs TT IT T I HIS NPPTn rrisnTlflr -' - Charles Hale Lynched at Lawrence ville After Keys of Jail Are Forcibly Taken. LAWRKNCKVILLK. Ga . April 8 Shortly after midnight a mob of U00 masked men stormed the Jail here and secured a negro, Charles Hale, arrested earlier In the night for assaulting Mrs. C. C. Wil liams. The took him to a corner In the business part of the town, and. after stringing him up on a tree, riddled his body with bullets. While sheriff E. . Garner was psr leylng with the mob's ringleaders In the yard of the Jail three others slipped be hind him and dealt him a heavy blow on the head, rendering him unconscious. They then secured his keys snd made away with the prisoner. Mrs. Williams' husband, a young farmer, waa away from home when the negro slipped Into the house yesterday afternoon and seized her. Wlllams, who Is paralzed In the upper part of his body, found the negro at the house on his return. Hale, It Is said, threatened them with death it they re vealed his crime. As soon as Hale disappeared Williams gave the alarm and Sheriff Garner started a hunt with bloodhounds. Three miles away the negro was captured. 1 ELLAV1LLK. Ga., April S.-Dawson Jor dan, Charlie Pickett and Murray Burton, negroes, were lynched near here early to day. They. bad been accused of the mur der of Newton fcaenn, a white man, on January 2.- T mob oierpowered Jailer Cliff Hough and took the prisoners to the outskirts of town. From he positions In with the negroes' bodies were found ft appears that Jordan escaped from' the mob, but was killed before he had ran far. The two others were hanged and shot. American Fleet Will Be Invited to Visit Kiel j German Foreign Office Directs that Preparations for Reception of Men and Officers Be Made. BKRLIN. April . There Is no doubt that an American squadron will be Invited to visit Kiel during regatta week. June 19-24. The absence of Bmperor William, who Is at Corfa, Is delaying formal action In the matter; but pending a reply from his majesty, the foreign office today com municated the purpose of the government to the admiralty, with the request that preparations for the reception and en tertainment of the Americans be made. A visit from the battleship squadron will be the more welcome because of the failure of the United States Atlantic fleet to call at German ports last fall, coupled as It waa with Commander Sim's Anglo-American speech at Guild Hall, London. WASHINGTON, April 8. While the Intln erary of the second division of the At lantic fleet on Its cruise of International courtesy In the Baltic sea this spring and summer rsnnot yet be officially announced, It Is generally believed the vessels will visit Germany, Norway, Sweden and Den mark. Kiel Is a German port that will be visited but the names of the other points of call are not yet obtainable. Man Blind in One Eye Loses the Other Gary Harris of Postville, Iowa, is the Victim of a Most Unusual Accident. POSTVILLK. la. April S. (Special i-A peculiar accident befel Gary Harris the other day. He was engaged In Installing a telephone In the George Schulti farm j home. J. It. I-auKhlln waa boring a hole , and Harris waa in the other room watching where It wss to come through. The latter is blind in one eye and did not see dis tinctly, and got his face too near the wall. The point of the bit-came through, with considerable force behind It. and struck Harris In the good eye, letting out the liquid and rendering him totally blind. He la now at a hospital, and if a cataract can be successfully removed from the old eye he may again have partial sight. Murderer of Ed Jones Given Lite Sentence Cornelius P. Kir-win is Convicted of Murder in First Degree at Butte, Neb. Bi'TTK. Neb.. April S.-iSpe.-ial Tele gram. ) Cornelius P. Kirwln, who kllied Kd. I Jones at Gross. Neb , November 10. ltu. was found guilty of murder In tha first degree last night and the penalty fixed at life imprisonment. The rsse went to the jury at 4 o'clock and the verdict was returned at 11 lX 1 SEYENTY BODIES RECOVERED Disaster in Collierv Much Greater I . . .. . . I man at first Estimated SEVENTY-FOUR ARE KNOWN DEAD Undertakers Fight for the ltodles and Police Interfere Worst IHsaatrr of Kind lnce F.lahteen Mnety-Slx. 8CH ANTON. Pa.. April S.- A revised list of dead tonight shows that seventy-four men and boys met their deaths In the fite In the Pantoast colliery at Throop. near here yesterday. A canvess of the victims families shows forty-five widows and 137 orphans. It is said that every corner of the workings, which a fleeing victim might have reached in his search for pure air, has been entered and every body has been removed. , The last group of dead, comprising seven men, were brought up shortly before noon today. The first body was taken out at 10 o'clock last night. Seventy-three bodies j have been recovered. Aa fast as the bodies were Identified. If relatives did not come to claim them, they were turned over to undertakers, ac cording to nationality, to be prepared for burial. The undertakers fairly fought for the bodies, believing the company would stand for a good round charge and scenes that were disgraceful resulted. Police au thorities had to Interfere to preserve de cency. About every house In Throop, a typ ical mining settlement, had crepe on Its door and in some houses there are more than one - corpse. John Stoyak and his two sons and cousin lie In a row In his i humble ' home. In on foreigner's house, seven children are orphans. The eldest is 1 years old. Another forelimer'a body was taken to a home where one child Is HI of scarlet fever and another of typhoid. The funerals probably will be held Monday, Worst Disaster for Years. In the number of victims this Is the worst mine horror that haa ever occurred in the Lackawanna valley region and the worst In the whole anthracite coal fields since the Avondale disaster of September, 1K69, when 110 men lost their lives by suf focation consequent to the burning of the breaker. -lsabcllea?,fagSca.S Tb45-hp?w tenln The Twin shaft disaster of June 2fi. 18!!, in Plttston, near here, claimed fifty-one victims. These men were entrapped by a cavein which they were working to pre vent by the rectlon of pillars. Not one of their bodies was recovered. Many explanations are offered as to how the Pancoast victims came totheir death, but none is accepted. One contributing cause. It Is said, was the failure of inside mine bosses to realize the Imminence of danger in thetunnel until it was too late for them to be gotten out. The fire stsrted a little after 9 o'clock. Mining operations continued until 11 o'clock. It that it was nearly 11 o clock w hen the danger to the men in tne tunnel was realised. There was a way, a winding, devious way to the aecond opening, but this was prob ably filled with smoke and white damp before the men could get started. Some attemtped to come back In the direction of the fire. Some got a considerable distance in the other direction. None got anywhere near safety. They fell In thler tracks or laid down exhausted, burying their faces In the wet culm to avoid the choking amoks and deadly gas. Some were found huddled up under sheets of canvas used In the mines In constructing (Continued on Second Page ) FINE WIGS and TOUPEES NOCvtarTHina im HAIR GOODS Omaha Bee, Omaha, Neb. Dear Slrg: We are glad to say a word about The Bee and the splen did results It has brought to us from our advertlHlnn in It; we have got a larg trade from advertising In The Bee and It Is with much pleasure we tell you that The Bee hag ac complished a great deal for ua in the enlargement of our trade. We d'al almost entirely with ladles and our Increasing business proves that women must be fond of The Bee. Respectfully' yours. 115 CONVICTS DIE IN MINE 1I0HH0R 'Explosion in Banner Colliery. Near Littleton. Ala.. Entombs Night Shift Before Leaving. FIVE BODIES ARE RECOVERED I Thirty White Men and Eighty Negroes ' Still in Shaft. RESCUE WORK BADLY HAMPERED Ventilation Apparatus Must Be Re paired Before Entering. SMALL HOPE FOR BURIED MINERS ItcscnliiS. Parties Watch Men stacrer tna In Vi.rUlna and Klll on Ml Sides 1 tie Me to Help Them. I 1TT1.KTOV, Ala . April s - At o'clock this afternoon It considered practically certnln tliat 11"' no'i had been killed In the stmrt r.ilne i vploslon lliat occurred thl 1 iiiuruinc Mvo hndlrs liavo horn tnii rrm, a! .I 11? out ttiirtv while men and elRlitv - fi- J n I I I fil'll' 11 B I n f Tlore mall hops for the eiitoom"d men. all but five of whim are convicts Wot k of tettlnt: out the bodies Is necrs Miiily slow ii the ven! lint Ion apparatus must bo rcintrriV lr. J ,t. llotlrslKe snd the government mine rescue cur have left Chattanonsn for Banner. The rescue car apparatus Is needed to get the bodies from the mine. Rescuing parties liHve seen men tagrlng In the mine and dropping on all sides, but have been unable to reach them. At noon fifty men bad been taken out of the mine. A number of them were more or less seriously injured and two, both Jefferson county negroes, were rietd. Rescuers are golr.g down Into the mines j as rapidly as possible. The explosion came arier the night crew had uult work and before the day crew of free miners had entered the mine, here were K convicts and shout ten free min ers In the workings at the time. , The greatest damage has been done to a new shaft known as No. 5. The fan In this shaft was destroyed, making rescue work difficult. COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE LORIMER MOVES TO CHICAGO Illinois Senator Confers with State Leaders, Outlining His Plans. Hla CHICAGO. April 8,-(Speclsl Telegram ) The committee Investigation of the Ixirl nier election scandal today was brought to Chicago. While Senator William Lorlmer said he was preparing to return to Wash ington, members of the Helm senatorial committee, who had quietly come from Springfield, went Into executive session at th Hotel I .a. Salle. John J. Healy, special attorney of the committee, was with the InvcRtlgntor. It was said. Senator Lorlmer remained closeted at the I Salle street National bank until long after the noon hour. It wan said lie was In conference with his Illinois leaders, out lining plans for his defense. He Ignored telegraphic appeals to return Immediately to Washington, and finally announced he would go late In the day. Senator lorlmer, reached hy telephone, said he would go east on an afternoon train. He refused to discuss any charge In connection with his election. "I am rot disturbed over anything that Is being said," said Senator Lorlmer. "I am going back to Waahlngton. There all may hear my answer when the time comes." That the real crisis In rapidly approach ing for the senator was Indicated by thn finding of evidence which would have di rect bearing on the charges of Clarence S. Funk, the International Harvester com pany manager, who told the Helm com mittee of a $100,000 election fund. It was said that books and records of a bank would be used In support of the Funk charges. Meantime, Scrgeant-at-Arnis Inn of the Helm committee, and five assistants, wrer secretly rounding up millionaire packers and bankers and others who will he ques tioned by the committee. DETECTIVE GETS NEW TRIAL Only Man Convicted In Browne Bri bery Cases Has Aoolher Chance. CHICAGO. April &. Patrick .1. Keefny, formerly a detertlve In State's Attorney Waynian's office, who was found guilty of perjury In his testimony In the aecond trial of Lee O'Nell Browne, today was granted, a new trial. The conviction ef Keeley was the only one gained tn the numerous trials growing out of chsrges that the election of William Lorlmer t't the United States senate was tha result of bribery. KSTSSklSHIO 1SBO Omaha, neb. March 20, 1911. ' . 4 I i - r .)