The Omaha Daily Bee Don't Walt for opportunity; create It for yourself by Judicious uno of Tho Bee's advertising columns. THE WEATHER. Thunder Showers VOL. XLin NO. 23. OMAHA, TUESDAY OKNING, JULY IS. 1013 TWKfVK PAQIflS. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. FIGHT UPON TARIFF BILL IS OPENED B ER North Dakota Man Says Democrats Are Deliberately Kicking Ameri ' can Parmer Into Gutter. , HYPOCRISY ABOUT RECIPROCITY Underwood Bill Much Worse Than Bill Condemned by Demoorats. WILL NOT AID CONSUMERS Price of Farm Products to Producers Will Be Lower. SHOULD BEGIN ON LUXURIES Senator Snra 1.1 no or Coat More Than Meat, Tobacco More Than Flour and Amusements More Than Potntoes. WASHINGTON, July 11 Senator Mc 'Cumber "of North Dakota opened tho re publican assault on tho democratic tariff revision bill In the senate today, de fending tho farmers of tho country against the free listing or great reduc tion In tariff, rates on agricultural products, and charging tho democratic party with deliberately "kicking the American farmer Into tho gutter." "In this year, 1913," said Senator Mc Cumber, addr6sslns tho democrats, "you are about to commltt a greater crime against the American farmer than has oxer been perpetrated by any political party against any claaB of people during any period of recorded history." Tho tariff bill, Senator McCumber de clared, seemed to have been "conceived in animosity against every American in dustry that needed protection," with the American farmers aa "the special object of its choler and hate." "Is it because of his past political af filiation that you are heaping upon him tho vertecance for all your previous de feats? Or do you consider yourBelt to bo the Instrument through which Provi dence Is to work its punishment because in the last political campaign he forgot the faith of his fathers and went chasing after a strange, god, with cloven hoofs and branching antlers? If he Is, to be punished for his heresy, are you tho proper person to inflict the punishment? You are. tho beneficiary of the farmers' Infidelity to his "own party last fall." Ilypocrlar About licclproclty. It' was the democrats, Senator McCum ber declared,, wbo told the farmer that ho had been wronged by Mr. Taft be cause the' former president sought to '.trade off his protection for reciprocal tariff 'reductions by Canada" and it was thd 4erf!9'ilt"who tried to convince the - (armcr-that- the-republlcan -PetjMvaiinot. to be rusted ahd that they,, instead. hould-te trusted wtlh his Interests. The reciprocity proposition, the senator ar gued, had. one VJrtue. in that It pro posed to got something for surrendering nothing, while tho democrats proposed to trade away tho, farmers' interest In everything "for absolutely nothtng." Senator McCumber asserted that tht) democrats admitted the tariff bill would Injure the farmer, contending that he re ceived too much for . his products and must be compelled to sell them'cheaper. The senator submitted statistics seeking to .show that the tariff did riot affect the price of farm products to the consumer and. again addressing tho democrats, said: "You are reaching a point where your Income Is unable to keep pace with your extravagances, and you are asking the farmer to make good the deficit by reducing the price of his products. It never occurs to you that tho proper place to begin economy Is on the luxuries, tho unnecessarles of life. Luxuries Cost More Than Food. "You declare to him that the American people are paying1 11,600.000,000 a year for meat, and you say that Is too much. Ho answers, 'They are also paying $2,000,030. 000 a year for liquors, Cut your liquor bill In half and you will save enough to buy all your meat You declare they are paying Jt35.O0O.OOO' a year for flour. He replies.. 'They are paying JSOO.000.000 for tobacco. Cut your tobacco bill In half and your flour is free Tou declare they are paying J5.)00,0OO a year for potatoes. replies, 'They are paying $500,000,000 for "theaters and amusements. Cut your amusements ono-half and your potatoes are free.' You declare they are paying $300,000,000 a year for butter and eggs. Ho replies, "They are spending X,CO0,000 a year "for confectionery. "Ills replies are unanswerable." Prices Will Be Lower. The North Dakota, senator asserted that prices would be lower of ter4 -the tariff bill becomes law, but that It would be because of the inability of the public t pay higher prices and because of the general stagnation of business" brought Yfbout by the tariff bllU "Pass this bill and, unless this cutthroat policy which annihilated the republican party In WIS continues there will not be a democratic state In'the whole north," said the eerxtor." ' Nominations Sent to Senate.' WASHINGTON., July H.-The president today made the following nominations: Secretary of legation of Paraguay and Uruguay. H- F- Arthur Schenfeld of Dis trlctTof Columbia. The Weather For Nebraska Generally fair tonight Mid Tuesday; cooler tonight; warmer ruecday west portion; moderate winds. For Iowa Tunder showers tonight or Tuesday; cooler tonight t west portion; moderate to brisk winds. Temperature nt C-.nnrm Yesterday. Hours. es. SENATOR M'CUMB i 1 inii.i JXjflfffijffi 9 a. in M u!lsF$xf29A P- "l jggr p. ro iw j 7 p.' m"'. 94 1 p. m 91 SMOOT HAS WOOL SCHEDULE Utah Senator Introduces Substitute for Underwood Provision. THREE GRADES OF RAW WOOL Proposed Dittr Ranges from Seven to Sixteen Cent n l'oaml Cnrpet Wool Are to De Prac tically Free. WASHINGTON, J.uly 11. - Senator Smoot, republican member of the finance committee Introduced today a substitute for the wool schedule of the Underwood Simmons bill, proposing rates based directly on the report of the tariff board and adopting In each grade the lowest rates. Tho schedule Is lower than, that In troduced last year by Senator Penrose as a substitute for the Underwood bill and Is tho lowest of all wool scheduler ever Introduced by a republican senator. As a substitute for freevtaw wool the JSmoot schedule divides raw wool Into three grades and establishes rates rang ing from 7 to 16 cents per pound. Clasn one wools, made dutiable at IS cents per pound If scoured and IS cents per pound on cleaned content. If Imported In the grease, Including Merino wools Imported usually from Buenos Ayres, New Zea land, Egypt, Australia, Cape of Good hope, Russia, Great Britain, Morocco, Down combing wools and Canada long wools. Wools of class two. made dutiable at It cents per pound If scoured and 13 cents In cleaned content In" the grease. Including all hair of camel, goat, alpaca and Leicester, Cotswold, Lincolnshire and similar long combing wools of Eng lish blood. Wools of class three, dutlablo at 7 cents per pound If Imported in their natural state and 14 cents If scoured, ink eluding donskol, native South American, Cordova. Valparaiso, native Smyrna, Busslan camel's hair, Bagdad, China lamb, Cost Branco and all such wools upually Imported from Turkey, Greece and Syria, A drawback of 89 per cent is pro vided for on wools of class three used In the United States for the manufacture of carpets, druggets, mats, flpor rugs, has socks, art squares, etc., which would make carpet tyools practically free of duty. The duty on wools or hair on tho skin would be 1 cent less per pound, In every case, than on the wool content. Manufactured goods and wools ad vanced beyond the natural state, the rates of the Smoot bill are correspond ingly lower than present raesj The schedule contains a provision that the rates on raw wool should be effec tive November 1, 1913, and on woo) manu factures January 1, 1914. Auto Tosses Buggy Over the Horse WASHINGTON. Jul; 11-Search is bi Ing made today by- the police 'for a high powered automobile which crashed into a buggy, tossed the vehlple completely over the horse, throwing out the four occuparrtr'-Timl "Injuring" pone "ol "Ihe frightened persons not" the animal. Thu driver of the car did not check his wild flight. Wlljlam. Parrls, his wife apd. their two daughters were returning from the coun try. When they turned Into a road n the outskirts of the, city the touring car swung with great speed around the bend and crashed into the rear of the vehicle. Tho four were thrown high in the air, falling by the side of the road, while tho buggy was hurded completely over the Jogging horse, which broke from the wreckage and bolted. Aviators Die When Biplane is Burned VERSAILLES, France, July 14,-The charred wreckage of an aeroplane with the incinerated bodies of two aviators lying In tho ashes, was found this morn ing near Nohacouft, near Paris and Gran ville. The dead flying men were recognized as a man named Percin, who was ex perimenting with a new monoplane of Ills own Invention, and his eon, who accom panied htm as a,' mechanic. Their aeroplano capsized from an un known 'cause at a height of 150 feet, and the violence of the compact caused the fuel tank to explode. Pinned beneath tho motor, the aviators were' burned to death. MANY RAISE ASSESSMENT OF HOMESTEAD MINE DEAD WOOD, 8. D., July 14. (Spe cial.) Mining circles and businessmen generally of this section are much ex ercised over the appearance here of the members' of the rtate tax commission which has pust held a speclcal session with the county commissioners who hitting as a county board of equaliza tion. The commissioners came here ostensibly to look Into all assessments, but the real purpose of their visit, developed when they summoned T. J. Grler and the Homestake officials of Lead to ap pear and show cause why the Home?, .stake assessment should not he raised from the 13,000,000 assessment returned by the city and county assessors. Commissioner Preston submitted Mr, Grler to a gruelling examination of the methods of- operation, values, earing etc., of the Homestak and got Into a tilt with Chambers Kellar. attorney fot the Homestake, over the tactics he pur sued In the course of the examination The commissioners spent much time In questioning Mr. Grler concerning the market Value of the stock of the com pany. It Is declared that the Home stake companyy will not pay what It considers too excessive taxation and will attack the position of (he commissioners In the curt, Such a legal struggls would deprive Lawrence county of, any Homestake taxes until the case was de cldede which might be years' and min ing men here assert that this would cut off the county's chief tax resources as the Homestake now pays "over 1100,000 taxes In this cbunty- Incldentally the commissioners ruled that the assement made In this county this .year had not complied with the law in the matter of affidavits by those taxed, but that as the -time was tooo short and the expense too great, they would 4e permitted to stand and no new assessment 'would be ordered. RAIL MANAGERS AND MEN TOARBITRATE At White House Conference Yester day, Amicable Understanding is Reached. ARRANGE FOR ARMISTICE Settlement to Be Made Under Pro posed Erdman Act. AS SOON AS IT BECOMES LAW Vote to Walk Out Had Bee; Previi HUNDRED TH fULVED President Lee nntl UnVretson Had Ueen AnthoHed to Call n Strike PcndlnK Outcome of AVanh x Ington Meet. . UULLISTI.V. WASHINGTON. July ll-lmmedlately after tho conference President Wilson announced that the railroad managers and union officials had agreed to arb, trate their differences under the provi sion of the Newlanda act an soon as It should become law. In the meantlmo and armistice has been ngrccd on by the rail roads and the unions. Strike Vote Ilntltlcid. NEW YORK. July 14.-Labor leaders and railroad heads looked toward Wash ington today hopeful of a favorable out come of the conference with President Wilson through officers of tho National Civic Federation, railroad representatives and officers of the Brotherhood of Rail road Trainmen and the Order of Railway Conductors, wer,, to seek a solution of tho crisis Involving tho demand for higher wages by 100,000 men on torty-flve castorn roads. The roads navtng refused to arbi trate under the Erdman net In Its present form, and the employes having refused to modify .their demands, apparently tho only compromise possible lay In altera tion of the law by Increasing the number of arbitrators from "three to six, thus re moving tho railroads' chief objection to the act. ,Wlth a strike authorized by an over whelming majority and ratified by gen eral committees of both unions, Presi dents Lee and Garrctson of tho train men and conductors, respectively, wero authorized last night to defer calling u walkout pending the outcome of the Washington conference. Both left for Washington last night. Porifiril Notice io Mnnnnrrrn. The conference commltteo of the rail-, road managers' received from the union formal notification that the strike vote had been ratified yesterday.. The state ment recites' that the general commltteo' of the unions, meeting separately, "have unanimously approved the strike vote' and haye authorized Messrs, Lea and Qftrtiontelsi'theJ hdur-at which these1 organizations.1 Will retire from.' service;" The latter says that Leo and Garrctson havo at the "earnest solicitation of dis interested interests" been authorized to attend tpdayfs conference at' Washing ton, and' adds: "The local committeemen have returned to their homes under Instructions not to return to tho service pending further In structlons, and we sincerely trust that a crisis may not be precipitated by an effort to compel any of those committee men to return ,to' service," Mopt of Undelegates who attended the convention ' that ratified the strike vote left the city' last night. The general com mittee of 100 Is still, here. Leo and Gar retson expect to return to New York to morrow morning and before leaving they said the hour for calling the men out In the event that no settlement could be reached was uhknown to anybody except themselves. CHARGES FRUIT WASTED BECAUSE FREIGHT IS HIGH (From, a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, July 14.-(SpccIal.)-Repre-sentatlve O. A. Corbln has filed his ap plication for a hearing on a reduction of freight rates on fruit with the rail way commission. The complaint Is mado against all rail roads In the state and eats outt hat there aro very large amounts of fruit go to waste In Nebraska every year while other portions of the state are unable to get Nebraska fruit at all on account of the high rate In shipping rates. He cites that from his town of Vest to Grand Island on the Burlington the rate la 16.3 cents per hundred pounds, a distance of 139 miles, and from Vesta to Alliance the rate Is 4MB cents, a dis tance of 41S miles. He shows that 'the Iowa commission has fixed the rate on fruit n one Instance at 10.7 per hundred for 140 miles and 2$ cents per hundred for 420 miles. No date has yet been set by the com mission for the hearing. ' SCREENS FOR CRYSTAL LAKE TO KEEP OUT COARSE FISH (From a .Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN. Neb., July 14.-(8peclal.)-Game Warden Gust Rutenbeck and Fish Commissioner O'Brien havo returned from Dakota City, where they went to look up the proposition of putting In careens at Crystal lake near that elty, to prevent carp and buffalo fish from getting Into tho lake during high water periods and destroying, the bass, which are quite plentiful In the lake. The lake Is com' prised of the old bed of the Missouri river .and Is about six miles in length. It has been, stocked with bass, and If the carp and buffalo can. be kept out of It the fishing for the former will bo good, OMAHA BAffALlbTORDERED, , TO LINCOLN RIFLE RANGE (From a tSaff Correspondent) LlNCOIiN, July H.-8peclal.)-JkdJu. taut General Hall has ordered the Omaha battalion, composed of of Companies A, K and C of the Fourth Infantry, to re port to the Lincoln rifle range for prac tice. They will tx In charge of Captain C. A. Lloyd. They will report tomorrow. Company A of IJncoln, Fifth Infantry, has been ordered to report at the Lincoln, line range July 3. Captain Ion Keeaterson Is at Alma this week, supervising the work of the Alma company on the range at that place. From Tho Philadelphia Inquirer. ELEYEN DBAM70 INJURED Two Electrio Trains Collide Near , Los Angeles. BODIES ARE BADLY MUTILATED Stories of Pnsaencccrs Differ So Widely that It Will lie Difficult to Fix Responsibility -Cars Meet 'cnr dtirvr. LOS ANGELES, Cal July 14. Cor rected lists showed today that eleven persons wero killed last night In the wreck of -two .ele'ctrlb tralps between thla cltyrarid Venjc'e' a '.seaside resort."" Tho tllred-cnr flyer' rah into a stalled Irn'ln ahead of It; Twenty passengers were jSerlodsly Injured, several porhaps fatally, und 160 others received cuts and brillses. ( P. R. Forrtster, motorman of the flyer, whose failure to observe signal Is inougni to navo caused the accident, dis appeared after the crash. He was lo cated today by company officials. Carrol Bathoiumni, conductor of the last car of the stationary train, said to day ho made an offort to "flag down" the approaching cars, but that the inotor mair failed to observe his signals. Bodies ninlly Mutilated. Stories of the accident related by pas sengers'on tho two trains differ so widely that much difficulty was experienced by llio road's officials and tho coroner's jury. The craBh came-so" suddenly that only those on the rear car of' the stand ing train had any wnrnlng. Of tho dead four men remained un identified early today, two Japanese, and two whites. The dead are: MIKS KDNA ALTPJR, Pasadena. OLI.IE W. AXI.KY, 8nn Francisco. MISS VERONICA MILLER, 1B An geles. , MERLE EVANS. Los Angeles. WILLIAM TAYLOR. JACOB UARNAM. EDWARD MURRAY, addresses un known. The injured: Miss Iugcborg Swendscn, Chicago, knee fractured. L. T. Denton, Kansas City, leg and ribs broken. E. Arey, Torreon, Mex., both legs broken, Internal Injuries. Sidney Johnston, Youngstown, 0 In ternal Injuries. Helen Ilane, Escanaba, Mich., woa re ported today as probably fatally Injured. Her body was crushed. C. B. Craig and his wife of Detroit were internally injured und their condl tlon Is serious. While no formal statements have been Issued by railroad officials, they aro In clined to place the blame for the accN dent Upon Forrester, tho motorman, ana the conductor of the stationary train. Four Iloillcs I'nldrntlflrd. Most of tho killed were cut In pieces. Their Identification was slow. Special trains rushed the Injured to Ios Angeles hospitals and the dead io morgues here. Passengers on the rear ear of the stand Ing train filled the seats and stood In the aisles when the crash came. Tho scats were shuffled as a deck of cards. Those who stood were crushed against each other Into the far end of the car. The lights went out. Arthur Hill, a sailor from the torpedo boat, Paul Jones, carried out eight bodies, tnc)u'dlng a woman gripping an Infant's body In her arms. Mother and child wero dead. Mrs. W. B. Stewart of Los Angeles dragged out the prostrato body of her husband, who had been stunned. Few of tho Christian Endeavor dele gates were on the. trains. The headquar ters of the Toronto delegation of 1 an nounced late last night that none' of the Canadian visitors were In the wreck. The National Capital Monday, July 14, 1010. The House. Not In session; meets at noon Tuesday. The Sennte. Received answer to Tillman resolution Informationon armor plate from Secre tary Daniels urging investigation cost of government armor plate factory. Senator McCumber, North Dakota, -assailed agricultural schedule In speech on tariff bill. Lobby Investigating committee contin ued hearing Mulhall testimony. The Prfee Loaf, Preacher Defies Tradition and We&rs White Suit in Pulpit CHICAGO, July 14. The Rev. Arthur J. Francis, pastor of tho First Presbyterian church of Englewood, defied church tra dition yesterday by appearing III tho pul pit dressed entirely In white, There was nlmost ,ii gusp from tho congregation When he stopped on tho platform. The preacher appeared comfortable In a tem perature of 92, while many members In Prince Alberta and stiff Sunday gowns fanned vlatirausly. After tho sermon thu preacher solii ho .lhaUKhl the convert ... . . . . . uqnai neavy diuck ooai anu sun collar wero "nonsense." He said ,f eAteru&yis costume permitted him to '3eI.Vfr three times a better sermon" In hot weather. Auto Thief Puts One Over on Policeman CHICAGO, July 11 Policeman George Argyle, his hands and head bandaged so that ho was not recognizable, reported to tho Stanton nvenuo station last night to tell of a weird expcrlonce with an auto moblto thief. Early yesterday morning ho stopped a negro drlvjng a touring car. The latter didn't know tho license' number and fin ally confessed he had stolon the machine. "Jump In and I'll drive to the police station," he told the fficcr. Argyle climbed In tho rear seat. After tho auto mobile has gono a few blocks tho negro turned In full epeod and leaped. Tho drlverless car careened down Cottage Grovo avenue nt a forty-mile gait for a block and crashed Into a saloon entrance. Tho owner .of tho machine and the saloon keeper are going to sua the police department for damages. Millionaire Mine Owner Disappears TISRRE HAUTE. Ind July 14.-James McGregor, said to be rf millionaire mine owner of Salt Lake City, has been miss ing from the homo of his sister, Mrs. Frank MqKcou, since Friday evening. A negro, who lives on the hanks of the Wabssh river, says he saw him walking near tho stream. The river was dragged Sunday and the "search will be continued today. Mr. McGregor had been under treatment sovcral weeks for a nervous disorder. Frank McKeen Is a brother of Will MoKeen, president of MoICeen Mptor Car company of Omaha. GRAND SECRETARY OF CONDUCTORS IS DEAD CEDAR RAPIDS. la., July II W. J. Maxwell, grand secretary and treasurer of the Order of Railway Conductors, died at his homo hero today after an Illness of several weeks. He was S4 years old, and had occupied his position with the conductors' order for fifteen years. Mr. Maxwell was taken seriously til at the recent convention of the Order .of ' Railway Conductors In Detroit, where he was re-elected. He formerly was a con ductor on the Pennsylvania lines and ro elded in Philadelphia. STRIKERS BURN TRACTION CAR AT LEXINGTON, KY. LEXINGTON. Ky., July1 11-Dlsordcr marked the attempt of the Kentucky Traction company to operate cars with strikebreakers today and as a result an appeal has been made for state troops. One oar was filled with passengers, but everyone was ejected by the strikers. An other par was burned On the tracks and tho company abandoned Its efforts. Many arrests were made und a number of strikebreakers and deputy sheriffs were badly beaten. The men struck Saturday for higher wages and recognition of their newly formed union. WHEELER DEFENDS BUSINESS President of National Chamber of Commeroo Makes Address. MANY INDISCRIMINATE CHARGES lnulnr Prejudice First Aroused An-nliiflt Itnllronds Is IlclnB Kx tended to Other Line Business Men Honest. SAN FRANCISCO. July ll-'To aid every administration by cordial co-opera tlon! to draw together In' a.iicoromon. bond tho business men of- America In -dsfense.of their good name, and In the creation of an instrumentality through which they may spook as a wholo With authority to the executive and to con gress relative to tho tilings which busi ness needs; to create a forco comparable In every respect to tho organized forces of labor, and of agriculture." These. are tho objects of tho chamber of com merce of (he United States now being formed, ns outlined by Harry A. Wheeler of Chicago, president of the organization. Mr. Wheeler, expounding his theme here tonight before the San Francisco chamber of commerce and other com mercial bodies, said frankly thut, aside from the natural evolution, another reason for the organization of a national body at this time, Is "the Indiscriminate nttacks mado upon business generally, Upon public .platform and In the dally and periodically press of the country." Prejudice HrIntr Extended. "The popular prejudice, which flrst2was aroused against the railroad, has ex tended Its line of attack to include the Industrial life of the nation and the pro fession of banking," he snld, ''Popular sentiment has It that all who have been successful In the accumulation of wealth, have become so by predatory means, and that rottenness underlies tho entire com murclal fabric of the nation. To be popular with the general public upon the platform has been to glvo voice to vio lent attacks upon these Interests. To popularize the periodical press statement having little foundation often have been made or an Isolated example of evil doipg was mode to bear upon an en tire Industry, "As an argument for the larger gov ernmental regulation of business, one of the candidates In the last presidential campaign repeatedly declared that the business Interests of the country were engaged In a chaotic struggle to devour each other and that all were combined In an effort to enslave tho working man. "For ten years this campaign of mis representation has been going on with little or no contradiction on the part of business, nnd the Chamber of Commerco of tho United States enters the field tp present a legitimate defense against these unjust attacks. Business Generally llonent. "Ninety per cent of business Is honest. The American business man stands In the forefront of those who adhere to the highest principles of honor and Integrity, but single-handed he has been powerless to present a proper defense." Other objepts touched upon by Mr. Wheeler were the assistance of Indus trial corporations; the development of a merchant marine; the enactment of mone tary legislation, making the banking sys tem more stable and allowing fo branches in foreign ports and the en couragement of reciprocity. Tho organization, he said, was being effected not for tho purposes of warfare, but that compromise and arbitration, might take the place of open antagonism. WILSON PARDONS TWO IDAHO BANKERS WASHINGTON, July 11-Presldent Wilson today granted unconditional par don to William F. Kettenbach and George 11. Kester, each sentenced to five years' Imprisonment for making false reports tt tho comptroller of the currency on the condition of tho Lewlston (Idaho) Na tional bank, where they were president and cashier respectively. They were con victed April 4, 1911, but have not served any of their sentences. MULHALL OFFERED $158,000 FOR HIS LETTERS ID PAPERS .Obbyist Says Manufacturers' Associ ation Tried to Buy Records Now in Evidence, OFFER PROMPTLY REFUSED He Asks that Editor Maxwell of New York World Be Called. DETAILS OF FIGHT ON PEARRE Lobbyist Tells Why Manufacturers Wanted to Get Congressman. WRONG ON THE INJUNCTION BILL Much Persuasion Nrressnrr, nt Many Voters llnd to lie Seen Often Says (Soinnrrs Threatened Itooserelt. WASHINGTON, July 14.-Mrtin L Mulhall, self-styled lobbyist for ten year for the National Association of Manufac turers, Interrupted the senate lobby In vestigation today In reply to what he declared wero personal attacks on his character and his purpose In the expose. He denied that he had tried to sell tho great mass of papers and letters which were recently published and which now are In the hands of the senate com mittee. Later, he said ho proposed to In troduce witnesses and letters to show! that he had been engaged for months' In "trying to glvo away" the great file of correspondence which has brought offi cers of tho National Association of Man ufacturers nnd labor leaders and conn gressmen Into prominence. Mulhall's statement was made In con nection with his request that he bo al lowed to read a letter he had written May IS, 1913, to Perrlton Maxwell, editor of Hearst's Magazine, urging him to havo William R. Hearst make tho mass of let ters public through his publications, Thut letter reiterated former statements that the writer did not want money, but wanted to get the lobbying documents published "aa c. service to the public." Tried to GIt Them Amir. "I havo attempted for the lost twtt months to glvo them away,"' Mulhall told the committee, "I never had In mind tho question of the money I would receive for them." "But you did sell them later to the New York World?'" asked Senator Reed. 'II would like to 'offer further lettera and witnesses on that point," said Mul hall. "I did not sell them. I fell Into tho hands of a gentleman named Barry, who came over to look at the letters for Mr, Ilears. I haVe learned atn,ce that hq IfC&hatl Is known its,. a. newspaper tipster. The letters were given to the NewTorit World, but Idler Mr. Barry came an! wanted me to break the contract with tha World, saying he could set Jl&O.OOO for the letters from the National AsaoclM tlon of Manufacturers. "I said the letters wore not for sole! the National Association of Manufactur ers did not have money enough to buy them; that I had no proposition of blacks mall in connection with (hem." At this point Mulhall's statement was Interrupted by the committee. He said he wanted Editor Maxwell and Louis S, Eibold of the New York World and) other witnesses called In his behalf, Mr. Slcbold Is already under subpoena by; tho committee. The house committee appointed to Inves tigate the Mulhall charges was unable) to proceed today owing to the monop olization of the witnesses by the senate and Is consideration taking a recess for two weeks. John Mitchell, the labor loader, was subpoenaed for today. Former Congress man George A. Pearre of Maryland was excused until next Monday and Mitchell was told to come back July 15, when Samuel Gompers has been directed to appear, " Campaign Airalnst Pearre. Mulhall's first testimony today related to letters from Marshall Cushlng, secre tary of the National Manufacturers' as soclatton, suggesting a campaign against Pearre. Mulhall said he made frequent visits to Pcorre's district and conferred with Farmer Senator Wellington, George H, Jlpltsman. postmaster at Cumberland, and others, "Why did you oppose Pearre?" asked Reed. "On account of his stand on the In junction bill, same as I did McComas," said the witness. The plan by which Mulhall and the of-, fleers of the Philadelphia Typothetae pro posed to break down the printers' strlka there In 1505 was outlined In a report 1 Cool, Correct Summer Clothing You can't wear hot clothlnsr In Summertime and maintain your mental and physical poise. Cool, comfortable, good looking clothes are not beyond the reach of the average man or woman. It is ail in knowing where to go and what to buy. If you make a habit of read ing tho advertisements in THE BKB you will be able to buy the right kind of Summer cloth ing and at prices that will save you enough money to buy something else. Off with the shackles of cum bersome garments. On with the light weights the cool, heat chasing garments. Let common sense aid you in fighting high temperature and humid conditions. Dress to fit the time of July.