k D Bee Omaha All The News All The Time Th Be gives It readers a- daily panorama of the happenings of th whol world. AILY VOL. XLI NO. COG. OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE S, SI.XTKKX TACKS. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. TIFT FORCES WIN FIRST JjONTESTS Regular Delegates-at-Large from Alabama Seated by Unanimous Vote of National Committee. CANNOT FIND OIL KING'S JJKOTHER Subpoena Servers for Money Trust Committee Unable to Locate ; ' New York Banker. Committee Sets Very Fa& Pace First Session to Hear Contests Lasts Nearly Ten Hours and Almost Wears Out the Reporters Borah Starts Some Fireworks. !-1 THE WEATHER. ' Showers HP DISTRICTS ALSO FOR TAFI First Division Comes Over Contest from Ninth District. VOTE THIRTY-EIGHT TO FIFTEEN Rosewater and Lowden Vote for Roosevelt Delegates. ARKANSAS FOR THE PRESIDENT Twenty-Four Delegates Are Added to Toffs Lint by National Com mittee's Action Yesterday at Chicago. CHICAGO. June 7. Twenty-four dele Kates from Alabama and Arkansas were added today to the Taft column by the action of the republican national com mittee upon the Roosevelt contests from those states. All of the contests pre sented before the committee today were decided in Taft's favor, and in all but two the decision of the committee was unanimous, although one roll call test apparently had shown fifteen anti-Taft votes. The cases decided today were those of the six delegates-at-large and the two each in the First, Second, Fifth. Sixth and Ninth congressional ditricts In Ala bama, and the four delegates-at-large and the two in the First and Second districts of Alabama. . There remain to be heard of the Arkansas contests, those in .the Third, Fourth, Fifth and Seventh districts. Arizona Case Postponed. The contest over the six delegates-at-large from Arizona was postponed until a later day on motion of Committeeman Penrose of Pennsylvania. In view of the bitter feeling between the Taft and Roosevelt adherent, them eeting was surprisingly peaceful, although it opened with a contest which seemed to forecast a degree of friction. This contest arose over a renewal by Senator Borah of Idaho, of his motion of yesterday, which would permit only tight members of the committee to r; mand a roll call instead o ftwenty, as provided by the existing rules. Dennis T. Flynn of. Oklahoma, holding at the time the proxy of Committeeman Flanagan of Nevada, moved to lay the Borah motion on the table. Mr. Borah wanted to debate- the matter, but Chair man Rosewater declared it undebatable s a proposition of parliamentary law. 4C6,.G lles:;?mamovalcs ' t" "I don't intend to be choked by a gag tis early In the campaign," said Senator Borah, with some show of heat, "and I will either have my say here, or I will occupy such a position that this conven tion will make no DroEress." - Holes Maat Govern. " "This committee will conduct Its pro ceedings under the usual parliamentary rules," said Mr.-Rosewater, with marked dignity. ' "But you shall not adopt any rule or gag by laying motion on the table this early in the campaign," retorted the Idaho senator. The committee proceeded to table the Borah motion by a viva voce vote, and then Mr. Borah was permitted to con tinue, which lie did as follows: ' Mr. Chairman, we will not make any progress here. Now I know that you have a steam roller. I don't even desire to cushion the steam roller. I am per fectly willing that the steam roller shall operate, but I want to say here and now that it will be known to the country that it dues operate, how it operates, who is operating it. Men who have not the moral courage to record their vote before the people of this country are not worthy to represent the great republican organ ization of this United States. (Applause). ' Men who have not the manhood to stand up here and state for whom they are going to vote, how they are going t vote, are evidently acting as " The C'ha!rman-The gentleman from Idaho Is out of order. Mr. Bartholdt There is nothing before the house. Senator Borah I am before the house. Mr. Bartholdt 1 ask unanimous con sent that the gentleman be permitted to proceed in order that this proceedings be made parliamentary. .Mr. Penrose I hope consent will be given to the senator from Idaho to continue and I think we should give unanimous consent now and let him get his remarks Into the record. Holl Cull Allowed. It was made plain very soon after this that even though Mr. Borah's motion had been tabled the majority Intended to give the minority a roll call on demand, on any question. Penrose, Crane and others of the Taft faction repeatedly joined Borah and his colleagues In the minority In asking for a roll call, and they always got It. The test vote came in the case of the Ninth Alabama district, in which the Taft delegates were seated by a vote of 33 to 15. These fifteen were Knight of California, Dupont of Delaware, Borah i f Idaho, Lowden of Illinois, Burnam of Kentucky, Wight of Louisiana (whose vote was cast by E. W. Thilderger), Kellogg of Minnesota, Rosewater of Ne braska, Flanigan of Nevada (whose proxy was held at that time by Lucius M. Llttauer), Ward of New York, Capers of South Carolina, -Thorson of South Da kota, Monday of Tennessee, Loose of I'tah. and Bieber of the District of Co lumbia. An incident of the day was the rejec tion by unanimous vote of the brief of I. A. Gomer of Little Rock in the Arkan sas delegates-at-large case, on the ground lhat it contained "Indirect and Insulting language." Members of the committee taid later that proper regard must be ihown for the dignity of the court by which these cases were being heard. Tomorrow's work will begin with the remaining Arkansas cases and these prob ibly will be followed by the Florida ases. The case of the two delegates from the Fourth district of California, who are contested by the Taft faction, will not be heard until Monday, as the parties cannot reach here in time for (Continued on Pago Two.) BY VICTOR Editor of The Bee and Chairman CHICAGO, June 7. (Special Telegram.) At its session today the national com mittee got down to real business, starting at 10 o'clock In the morningi and keeping steadily on the job of threshing out the contests for nearly eight hours. The session was such a strenuous one that even the newspaper men who had been clamoring so loudly to be admitted said to me, as 1 passed their desks, that they wished we had shut them out, as they would have had an easier time of it that way. We had a little fireworks in the early stages, when Senator Borah, offering a motion to amend the rules adopted yesterday so as to permit ten instead of twenty to demand a roll call, encountered a motion to lay on the table. As chairman I ruled that that motion was not debatable, in spite of the fact that the senator loudly insisted on his right to hold floor for a speech. He said something about gag rule, and not suh mlttng to any order shutting off debate. I put the motion, just the same, and it carried by a large majority, first remark ing that the meeting of the committee was subject to parliamentary law, and that as, long as I was in the chair a motion to lay on the table, duly made and seconded, would be received and put without debate. At my suggestion, unani mous consent was granted immediately thereafter to enable the. senator to give expression to his feelings and get his re marks in the record, which was what he wanted to do. y It turned out that there was really no need for apprehension that a roll call would not be granted on demand, for roll calls were freely accorded whenever asked for on every contest case that came up today. Three-fourths of them, however, disclosed the committee to be practically unanimous In rejecting the MOORE AND MM OH WAY Rumor Dixon is to Be Supplanted as Roosevelt Manager. PERKINS REACHES CHICAGO New York Financier Soya lie la Con fident Colonel Will Be Nomi nated Roosevelt Uinta at Bolt. CHICAGO, June 7. The expected, ar rival of A. P. Moore and William Flynn from Oyster Bay was the chief topic o discussion at the political headquarters of the Taft and Roosevelt forces. Vari ous construction were placed on the" trip to Chjeago of the eastern ftoosevelt men at this time. . " ' . . United ,5ttes Senator Dixon of Mon tana, manager of the Roosevelt cam paign, denies reports - that he was te be supplanted as active director of the former president's interests in the pre conventlon struggle. He said leaders would be called to Chicago from time to time as their services were needed to further Colonel Roosevelt's candidacy. Senator Dixon said the arriyal of Moore and Flynn had Just that significance, and no other. Congressman McKinley of Illinois, President Taft's manager, hailed the Moore-Flynn Incident as a harbinger of weakness in the Roosevelt campaign management and said that it indicated that "desperate efforts were being made to save a sinking ship." In a statement to the press, Mr. Mc Kinley said among other things in refer ring to the departure of A. P. Moore of Pittsburgh and William Flynn that: "The significance of these byplays is that every time Mr. Roosevelt 'sends help he admits defeat." George Perkina Arrlvea.' George W. Perkins of New York ar rived today and registered at a Michigan avenue hotel. Me then left the Hotel without revealing his destination or pur pose in coming to Chicago. Later Mr. Perkins said he was confident that Colonel Roosevelt would be nominated. "The convention will t)e too wise to nominate a man certain to be defeated and Colonel Roosevelt will be tlnir choice," he said. "I am very enthusi astic over the outlook." Roosevelt Uinta at Bolt. NEW YORK, June 7 "If they act hon estly there will be no occasion for any one to bolt," said Colonel Roosevelt today of the report from Chicago, that an at tempt would be made to bind all the delegates to the republican national con vention to support the nominee of the convention whoever he may be. In regard to another report from Chi cago to the effect that Colonel Roosevelt would leave tor that city next Tuesday, (Continued on Parte Two.) Sterling Says His , Plurality is More Than Thousand REDFIELD, S. D., June (.-Complete returns received at Sterling headquarters here' from fifty-nine out of sixty-one counties give Thomas Stirling a plurality of 1,152 over Senator Gamble for tne republican nomination for senator. The Sterling men consider the remaining counties of Corson and Harding site for Sterling. YANKTON. S. U, June 7.-(Speclal Telegram,) Revised figures at Gamble headquarters from sixty counties give Gamble a lead of 90m over Sterling. OMAHA ELKS HAVE SPECIAL TRAIN TO PORTLAND, ORE. The Omaha Elks have lined up a party of 100 who will make the trip to the big meeting to be held at Portland, Ore., July The Omaha members of the order will travel In a special train over the Union Pacific, taking five standard sleep ers, an observation, diner and baggage ear. Victrola concerts will be given in the observation car each afternoon and evening ROSEWATER. Republican National Committee. claims of delegations that had been set up in behalf of Roosevelt. The commit tee got through Alabama and hair of Arkansas, und In only one contest was there anything like a sufficient showing made on the Roosevelt side to hold in line those members of the committee who favor Roosevelt. On that one case, I voted "no" myself because l did not be lieve either side had made out a con clusive exhibit. 1 have no doubt the newspapers will be full of talk about steamroller and gavel rule, but so far nothing has occurred to justify such charges. I know that the newspaper men who were present throughout the proceedings were really astounded that the terrible things they had been led to suspect did not material ize, while, on the contrary, the commit tee proved to be a more orderly and In dustrious body than most legislative organizations. All kinds of reports and rumors are in the air about spectacular, and even forcible, demonstration on the !part of the Roosevelt following to over awe the committee members. I do not believe such counsel will prevail, much less avail. A significant sidelight was shown In the Alabama contest, which may possibly have some local interest. The attorneys looking after .the Roosevelt contestants came right out in the open endorsing the position I have taken all along that my tenure as member of the national com mittee from Nebraska cannot rightfully be superceded before the national conven tion constitutes a . new committee, and tried to apply an analogy In behalf of a chairman of a'state committee who had undertaken to resurrect his official ca pacity on the theory that he had been chosen for a four-year term, although an Intervening state convention in which he had participated, and in whose action he had also acquiesced, had elected his suc cessor, and he had yielded possession. Delegates-at-Large from North Carolina Are for Wilson RALEIGH, N. C, June T.-After an all night session the state democratic con vention elected eight delegates-at-large to the Baltimore convention and by a vote of 503 to 39ti endorsed Governor Woodrow Wilson's candidacy. "The dele gates were uninstructed, but six are said to faror Governor Wilson and two are said to be neutral. The convention was a tumultuous one and adjourned at 6:39 o'clock this morning. Each dele gate will have a half vote. W'hifl.-thi, rl trttw HHfltJnjr, announced t 1:30 o'clock thfcr real fight over ..Instruction was still ahed, , The Wilson supporter wen determined to have the eight delegates, with their lialf;of; a vote each, instructed for Wilson, while the - follower of -Underwood and other, presidential candidates were- holding out for no instructions. The convention battled until after mid night last night over the nomination of a state ticket and a resolution endorsing North Carolina's state officer and repre sentatives in congress. Friends of Gov ernor Kltchin vainly endeavored to pre vent the endorsement of the record of Senator Simmons, whom the governor is opposing for re-election. Locke Craig was unanimously nomi nated for governor, and candidates for other stnte offices were chosen without opposition except E. L. Daughtrldge for lieutenant governor and George P. Pell tor long term corporation commlseioner, who won after hard fights. The eight delegates-at-large are: Kx-Governor B. R. Glenn. W. C. Doud, E. L. Justice. General J. ilia n S. Carr, Maj.w E. .1. Hale, A. M. McLean, W. C. Hammer and Lieutenant Governor W. C. Newlan. Francis D. Winston and Cells Gardner were chosen electors-at-large. Supreme Court Reverses Court of Commence WASHINGTON. June 7. With the declaration tint the commerce court was not. to :ul-t-tulc itself for the Interstate f'ommerctt-coiniiiiiisiiin'. the supremo court Oi the doted i-iates in u decision nftel ;ecislcn today reversed the commerce court and upheld the Interstate Com merce commission. The principal deci sions were announced by Chief Justice White und concurred in by tnc entire court. Jurisdiction of the commerce court over complaints of shippers denied 'y t!i- Interstate- Commeice commission, a.i well as over thos recognized by the coouns sion through affirmative orders for relief, was denied today by the supreme court. The supreme court today reversed the commerce court's decision which would have allowed railroads to carry railroad coal at lower rates than commercial coal. The Interstate Commerce commission was j upheld. Honors Bestowed j at Hubbard's Bier HOCX CITY, June 7. Sioux City, Iowa and the nation this afternoon paid final honor to oCngressman Elbert H. Hub bard, deceased. National respect for the late congressman Was extended by a dele gation from the United .States senate and house. The condolence of Iowa was expressed by the attendance at the funeral today of nearly all the state col- ; leagues of the late Mr. Hubbard in the house, and by the presence of political and personal friends from various sec tions of the state. The auditorium of Hie First Presbyte rian church, where the ceremony was held, was filled to overflowing. The church services were in charge of Hev. Wallace M. Hamilton, patsor, who pro nounced the eulogy, nlterment was In the Hubbard family lot at Floyd cem etery. A "What are -"Nop. Chica From the Washington Herald. TRIES TO KILL COUNT TISZA Deputy Fires Three Shots at Speaker of Hungarian House. ALL BULLETS' MISS THE MARK Chagrined by Bad Marksinanahlp, Would-Be Aasqasln Shoots Him- , elf Twlrr Outcome of Agitation. BUDAPEST, Hungary, June 7. Count Tlsia, president of the lower house, had a narrow escape from ansasslnatlun In .the Wet this morning. He wu flreC upon thr tlm hy Deputy Ju.Hu Kavcs, who then shot himself, tifobabiy.j with ( fatal effect. ' Count Ttsza was Onwratched. Kovacs was one of the most militant" members of the opposition and was among those who were ejected from the chamber Wednesday because of disor derly conduct. He was suspended for Several sittings, but this morning when the chamber reconvened he managed to evade the police and found his way into the press gallery. Soon after the proceedings opened Kovacs moved to the front of the gallery and shouting "There arc still opposition members In the chamber," drew a re volver and emptied three chambers in the direction of the president. Then seemingly chagrined at his bad marks manship, he put two bullets into his own body. Outcome of Agitation. The attack upon the count Is a direct outcome of the agitation which has been persisted In since his election as speaker on May 22. Tlsza Is an opponent of universal suffrage and on this issue Ills election was contested with a bitterness (Continued on Page Two.) Officers of Railroad Union Are Enjoined from Calling Strike PHILADELPHIA, June 7.-Judg Bregy, In common picas court hn-i io day Issued an Injunction restraining fed erated committees of the Hrothcrlioods of Trainmen, Cundui tors, Kriemen and Engineers from taking any action that may lead to a strike on (lie lines of t he Pennsylvania railroad east of Pittsburgh and Erie because of alleged grievances. The Injunction was Issued on petition of John S. Hemphill, an engineer, whose home Is in West Philadelphia. In his petition he claims that the Brotherhood of Engineers and Firemen, of which he is a member, has no icgal right to partici pate In the conferences of the brother hoods which arc now going on In this city. The federated committee numbers' about 155 members and has been holding ses sions at frequent Intcnals here for sonic time. The prlmipal difference between the company and the men is over a re quest that steum railroad engineers be employed on a certain percentage of all ilectri" trains rimniii.; between New York City and Newark, N. J. The National Capital I'rldny, June 7, lulU. The Senate. ! Convened at noon when Senator Kern resumed his speet Lorimer's election. The House. Convened at 11 a. m. and resumed con sideration of sundry civil appropriation bill. Representative Aiken called up his reso- lutlon for Investigation of the weather nureau wnicn was reierren 10 me .Agri culture department expenditures' com mittee. The Interstate Commerce commission reported favorably on the bill to prevent the reproduction of tho Johnson-Flynn prize fight moving pictures. s. Appropriation for tariff board was sub ject of spirited debate. Adopted Representative Merger's resolu tion directing the Judiciary committee to investigate charges against Federal Judge Hanford of Seattle. you decorated for, Cuban uprising?" go convention." Decree Entered in the Aluminum Trust Suit I'lTTSBrrtGII, Ph.. June l.-For thr purpose of destroying the alleged substan tial monopoly of the so-called aluminum trust, an agreed decree was entered In the 1'nlted States district court here today against the Aluminum company of America. Following closely the prayer of the federal government In It civil anti trust suit filed a few weeks ago charging the corporation with monopolising the industry. the. v decree, abrogate, ,n.leged, unlawful 4:orftracts' and restrain the de fendant company1 from negotiating, simi lar pacts or purHulng-tinfa'lr methods to ward competitors. ' The deciee was consented to -by th Aluminum company . of America ss a result of protracted negotiation with Attorney General WickerSham prior to I the filing of the suit. The mandate was ! draw and accepted by both the ffdvern j ment and flip defendant long before the I suit was Initiated. This Is the first time a decree has been agreed uppn under the j Sherman iuw before court proceedings had beeii started. ) The ottlpany Is forbidden to participate in any combination or ugrcement to con I trol the output or pi Ice of aluminum. ' It Is enjoined from combining by stick owneiship or otherwise with other manu facturers for this purpose. The decree places a long list of specified unfair method to competitors under the ban of t.ie court. Provisions of slleged agreements to .suppress competition between the alu minum company and the sj-cnllcd Swiss, or Ncahaiisen company of Europe, the Central Chemical company, the Norton company, the Pennsylvania Salt Manu facturing company and Gustavo a Krutt srhnltt and James C Coleman, both of Newark, N. J., are abrogated by the. decree. i Whenever It is shown lhat substant'al I competition has arisen in the uiunwnum ! industry the decree may be mortified on the production of evidence Hint it l working an injustice. Application for mollification, however, cannot be made iftcner than once in every tluee years. The decre was presented to the Court by William' T. Cii.'iiitt.un!. spe-lul wwb-.t-ant to the attorney genci-nl, who devel oped the government's ease, and I lilted Stales Attorney Jordan of Pittsburgh. Berger Makes Formal Charges Against Hanford WASHINGTON. Hune '..-lKlwiitu.-tlvi; TJcrger, socialist, uf Wisconsin today lagan Impeachment proceedings against Federal Judge Hanford of Seattle, who n i'i ntly deprived Leonard Olssr u of that illy of lils citizenship because he. was a Miclalir.t. Kcpresciitative Berger charged Judge Hun ford "with high crimes and misde meanors, a look scries of corrupt und un lawful decisions und being u habitual drunkard.'' He "iu:ked tiiat the judiciary committee investigate. The Department of Justice- -ia alraafty assisting Olsstii's attempt to have Judge Hunford' decision reopened The house adopted Mr. Birger's reso lution direct Psi the Jud.iUry committer to Investigate. Transport Workers Postpone Strike LONDON, June 7.-The threatened na tional strike of transport workers ha been postpone ! again. The strike leaders had pledged themselves to issue orders for a flrlke tonight unless the employers agreed to their terms, but the employers said they would not be able to reply to the government's proposals before Mon day and the strike leaders decided to defer further action until next Tuesday, t - MAY SEND TROOPS TO CUBA General Staff Preparing Expedition of Five Thousand Men. ' FOUR TRANSPORTS ORDERED Itetnt-hnient Will He Uranu from INmla In I'll at and South nml Will He Aembled at e tv port New. WASHINGTON, .June 7.-The general staff Of tho army today issued prepara tory orders for the dispatch of a military exuedltlan of fi.OOO troops to Oub! The" four big army transports now at Newport News were ordered to be put in commission, provisioned and supplied. Order slo were sent to the army post from which the trqob Will he drawn to ha v them In readiness for the move ment. The troops will be taken from Pint. 1 burg Barracks, Forts Niagara and Gov- I crnor's Island and Porter und Forts Mo- Ph Arson and Oglethorpe. In Georgia. At the War department It was em phatically stated that if the expeditionary force did go to Cuba it would nut be with any thought of political Interference in the affairs of the Island republic. The principal object would be to aid Cuba ;n lector. ng older The military components of the expedi- i tlon would be the Fifth Intantry, plaits- bum bin-racks, New York; Twenty-ninth I Infantry, at Forth roller, Jay and N agjia. N. Y.; the Seventeenth . Infan- j try, at Mcpherson: the Eleventh cavalry, i at Fort Oglethorp, and battalion of thei TJrTZZ:y Ul-! Hnvnnu Suburb AttncLcd. HAVANA, June 7. A body of negroes aimed with rifles attacked the Toledu sugar mill at Aiarlanas, a suburb of Havana, today evidently with the Inten tion of burning It. They were held at bay by private armed guards, bill the flrlng continued until a troop of cavalry I. lined at the Woelleisdorf ammunition summoned by telephone from Camp ! rCc tory in Wiener-Xeustadt, today when Columbia appeared, when the Insurgents ! :r explosion occurred in a house cojl-'i,mI- j talnlng sctsitc, the Australan-equivalent Km ly today eighty negroes attacked i for melinite'. ' and burned a village on the (iuantanamo The ' victims were soldiers and . work Western railroad, eight miles from the . men. The shock 'broke windows through rlly of (luaiitanamo. where a garrison of .out to town and did much damage in the KM American' marines is slutioncd. . neighboring" watering place of Baden. Harding Will Present Taft's Nairifc to the National Convention CoM'ULtUS, O.. June f.-Tho name of President Taft will be presented to the Chicago convention by Warren O. Hard inf;, former lieutenant governor of Ohio. Mr. Harding announced today that he. had received a letter from Mr. Taft ask ing him to name him at Urn Chicago con vention. Mr. Harding announced he had accepted the commission . The Taft forces expended a total of $fiJ,473 In the campaign to elect the na tional delegates and alternates from Oh'o. This, Is shown by the statement of U C. Laylln, filed with the secretary of .static toduy. Charles P. Taft of Cincinnati gave )3,S50. M. A. Daugherty, an attorney of Kan caster. O., will probably present the name of Governor Harmon to the national democratic convention at Baltimore foe the presidential. 'nomination. The honor is said to lay . between Haugherty and .Senator Pomcrene, with chances In favor of the former, who Is an eloquent speaker and a physical giant. New York Woman Robbed of Jewels NEW YORK, June t. Thugs dressed as women attacked Mrs. May Bernhelnier at her home in a fashionable uptown apartment house this afternoon, beat her Into Insensibility, bound and gagged her and escaped with gem valued at $10,000. SHERER RESUMES TESTIMONY Manager of Clearing House Tells of Panic of 1907. CERTIFICATES HOW CALLED Says Act Did Not Cause Failure of Morse Banks. JAMES G. CANNON ON STAND lie Say He Refused Committee Arcesa to Clearing; House Rec ;, orda on Advice of Attorney. ' c " NEW YORK, June 7. Just before thf j Pujo committee of the house of repr: sentatives, which Is Investigating the so-1 called money trust, resumed Its sesspnr today It was made known that the con mlttee has been trying for the last few j jdays to subpoena William Rockefeller, ) These efforts have not been successful,' h(iw'. Th committee seized at any I. reports that he was somewhere in Canada ak Ika Ajllmnitanlra . 1 ilatmger Sherer of the clearing hous on the stand denied the assumption of Attorney Untermeyer that the clearing houe association and the railroads both are. Instrument of Interstate commerce. "No one Is obliged to join the clearing house." Mr. Sherer said, "but thone who join have to live up to the rules." He also took' exception to a statement) that expulsion from the clearing house f necessarily "spelled ruin." "" ' Pnnlc and ReeelTer Certificate. Mr. Untermeyer then took up the ub-! Jed of the clearing house loan certlfl-I cates Issued during the panic of l&OT. The' witness testified that a a sequence of j a demand made by the clearing housej upon four bank for the payment of their! certificates they closed their doors. Th banks were the Bank of North America and the New Amsterdam bank, which, were known as Charles W. Morse lnstlt!lj lions, and the Oriental and Mechanic and Traders banks. s Mr. Sherer Identified a letter sent by I lie clearing house committer to the bank', In question on Junuary 25. 1008, In which "It was the desire of the committee" to1 redeem all clearing house certificates be fore February 6. This letter wa Willi- drawn subsequently, Mr. Sherer testi fied. Subsequently all certificates were' paid by the several banks, and with one exception tho collateral deposited against' the certificates was sufficient to cover' Ihem. ' , ? "Had the sending of these letters any. thing to do with the insolvency of tho bank?", aktU .Mr.. Unturmeyer. No.'' 1 .V "'. Cannon llefnaea" Ihfornintlon. ' James G. Cannon, president of thV Fourth National bank and a member 5f' the Clearing House association commit tee, the next witness, explained 'the re futai of his bank to furnish Information 10 ,no mmiucc as to . - private . Mr-"' w"8 "' "Wy upo the advice l" l,,e "B,,R " The Fourth National, the witness ad-, mltted, had furnished such information to the examiners of the clearing house. Hut you will not allow the congre 1 of tho United States to have access titj the sacred secrets which you furnish ti a voluntary organization?" Mr. Cannon reiterated that counsel had advised against compliance with the com- mlttce's demands. He admitted that he !'l discussed tho question with other New York bankers, Including Frank A. Vanderllp, president of the National' City bank. , . . . . , Twelve Men Killed by Explosion Near .. Vienna, Austria VIENNA. sonB were Austra. .i una ".Twelve pr killed "wild many other jn- Wiener-N'eui tadt Is a manufacturing town tlili Uen miles south of Vienna. ! RECORDED AT CLEVELAND! .. CLEVELAND, O., June 7.-Two earth-j yuaki? shucks recorded by the scismo-' graph it S(. Itnatius college early today, probably originated at a not far distant i point, possibly In Indiana or Michigan! according to the estimate of Fathef ! Jodenbach, the curator. The first shock (lasted from 4:22 a. m. to 4:3. .Thef second began at 4:65 and ended at 6:20. 1 Owlng to the absence of , the usual j ' phases. Father Odenbach estimated the' point of origin as comparatively close; No matter what you wish to advertise, you can u e The Omaha Sunday Bee with greater advantage than you cau use any othef Omaha Sunday paper. The circulation of the : Omaha Sunday 'Bee is: the cause. This paper, goes into more homes than nU the other Om aha Sunday papers com bined. : " i Tyler lOOO - c- (t If !! if (j; i y i i