The Omaha Daily Bee AUVEKTlSlNQ IS THK UNIVKIWAIj LANQUAOK SPOKEN EVKimvIIEUB 11Y I1UYERS AND Sni.LKHS. THE WEATHER. Fair; Colder VOL. XLIII NO. 102. OMAHA, "WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1913-SIXTEEN PAGES. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. SEEKING TO INCLUDE TESTIMONY OF TWO 'E Impeachment Managers Present Ac tion at'Trial to Amend Article Four f Charges. INTRODUCED BY STANCHFTELD Would Have Evidence of Peck and Morganthau Placed in Record. ATTORNEY ARGUES FOR AN HOUR Asserts Court Has No Right to Take Proposed Action. JUDGE CADY TALKS FOR DEFENSE JVo Suuifeatlon In Regard to Testi mony of Allmt A. Itynn, Which la Considered Blerely Cor roborative. ALBANY. N. Y., Oct. 14.-A motion to amend article four of the Impeachment charge? against Governor Sulxer so as to Include the testimony of Ambassador Henry Morgenthau and Superintendent of Public Works Duncan W. Peck, was presented by the Impeachment managers at the reopening of the trial of the gov ernor today. No action was suggested In regard to the testimony of Allan A. Ryan. It was explained that the. evidence which he gave only could be considered as cor. roboraUvo of other charges In the Im peachment articles, unless a new article should be added. This would have to be done by the assembly. The proposed amendment sets forth that Wlllam .Sulzer "wrongfully and wll fu'ly attempted to Incite and procure Louis A. Sarccky, Frederick L. Col well, Melville D. Fuller, Disncan W. Peck and Henry Morgenthau to commit perjury and to give false testimony" be. fore the Fiawley Investigating commit tee. Article 4, as It now stands, does not mention either Peck or Morgonthau and merely sets forth that Sulzer "?ractlcfcl deceit and fraud and used threats and menaces with Intent to prevent said com mittee from procuring the attendance and testimony' of Sarecky, Colwell and Fuller. The proposed amendment was pre sented by Attorney John B. Stanchfleld, who' argued for an hour that the court hod a rlnht to amend the article. Judgo D. Cady Hcrrlck for the -defense opposed this argument at the afternoon session. "I do not mean," said Mr. Stanchfleld, "to argue here that this tribunal pos sesses the power ,to amend the charges In such a way as to be necessary to contort or twist this tribunal into an fmpeachlng body. I concede with the tal nostSearikness that the assembly alone Is the Impeaching power 'of lhl -stats-i This by no means, precludes this court from amending. the Impeachment so 16ng as the amendment It not unjust to the respondent. "If, with this motion In view, the re spondent feels now that he wlerwa 'a person to make answer from the witness stand or If he 'feels now, in the light of that chargo, that there Is other testi mony he desires to produce to meet .the accusations, the door Is open and there Is no objection raised by managers of this trial." Mr. Stanchfleld emphasized that article four, as it now stands, charges Sulzer with a misdemeanor, whereas, he main-' talned, the testimony of Peck and Mor centhau showed he was guilty of at tempted subornation of perjury, a felony. There seemed little probability that the assembly would attempt to bring a new charge covering the Ityan testimony at this late date. This testimony was that Governor Bulrer had besought him to obtain the Influence of Charles E. Murphy and William Barnes to stop the trial. According to the attorneys for the impeachment managers this constitutes "tampering with the court" &nd should not be fitted Into article four, or any other article except as corroborative evl donee on the general proposition that the governor is unfit to hold office. Mrs. Medlll McOormlck of Chicago, ar ranged yesterday to make a whirlwind speaking campaign throughout eleven mitral Illinois counties In behalf of Arthur H. Shay, progressive candidate for .the Justice of the supreme court from the Fifth district. ' The Weather Forecast till 7 p. m. 'Wednesday: For Omaha, Council Bluffs and Vicin ity Fair and cooler. Temperature at Omaha Yesterday. .Hours. Deg. 6 a. ra 30 a. m M 7 p. m , It S p. m 60 9 a. m 64 10 a. m tx II a, m "0 " m 71 1 P. m 7J Z P. in Tl 5 p. m 77 A r In fj 5 p. m. 7s 6 p. m 6S 7 p. m it 8 p. m Si Comparative Local Record. 191S. lOli 1911. 1810. Highest yesterday 77 71 C7 SO Lowest yesterday 6S 48 47 3 Mean temperature 61 Ei 17 ;j Precipitation 0) .00 .00 .00 Temperature and precipitation depar tures from the normal at Omaha since Maroh 1, as compared with the past two years: Normal temperature j6 Kxcess for tho day..., u Total since March I, 1913 i...J7 Normal precipitation CO inch Deficiency for the day 09 lech Total rainfall since March 1. .30.01 Inches Deficiency since March 1 8.00 inches Deficiency for cor. period 1912. 2.03 Inches Deficiency for cor. period 1911.13.97 Inches Reports from Stations at T I'. M, Ftatlon and Btate Temp. High- Haiti of Weather. 7 p.m. est. fall. Cheyenne, clear 13 m .00 Davenport, clear 68 TS .00 Denver, clear S3 72 .00 Dea Moines, cloudy ....... 74 76 .00 Dodgo City, clear 70 8s .09 LanAer. cloudy 44 i S2 .00 North Platte pt cloudy... W ' 68 ,00 Omaha, clear 64 77 .00 Pueblo, cloudy (4 &2 ,00 Kapld City, clear 4S 52 .00 tialt Lake, cloudy iS 63 ,0 Fanta Fe, clear 68 60 00 Sheridan, clear 42 , M .06 Sioux Pity, pt rloudy (3 72 .00 rv-lentlne. clear ... ....2 ct .00 T inrtli-ates trace of precipitation. i. Jl- WrT SFT. Tnr-I Joriva if t.r. . Traction Magnate Says Fare Will Have to Be Increased Atlantic city. n. j.. Oct 14. Fates will have to be increased If street railway companies must meet the pres ent da demands of the public and sur vive!,' was the declaration made today by George Harries of Louisville, president Of the American Electric Railway asso ciation in opening the thirty-second an nual convention of that organization and Its allied bodies. Unless fares are In creased, he said, there will be a "suc cession of more or less destructive ex periences by now tier, now there; re sulting on the one hand, from the broad entng of the city borders and the con sequent extension of lines: forcible mul tiplication of transfer points, compulsory wage Increases, conscienceless taxation, arbitrary and unreasonable service re quirements and growing cost of construc tion and maintenance and on tho other hand the fixed or rather-the diminishing fare." 1 C. Nesblt Duffy of Milwaukee, one of tho arbitrators In the recent dispute be tween tho city of Cleveland and the Cleveland Railway company, In an ad dress, declared that low fares In the Ohio city are being maintained only at the sacrifice of service. Mr. Duffy added that the sen-Ice furnished by the Cleve land company and prescribed by the city officials Is Inadequate and unsat isfactory If measured by the standard prevailing in many other cities where tho rate of fare Is higher. Oil Pipe Line Case is Argued Before the Supreme Court WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.-Tho case of the Standard OH and other oil companies to prevent tho Interstate Commerce com mission from regulating the operation of oil pipe lines was the first one taken up by the supreme court today. An Im posing array of counsel wns In court for tho oil companies to oppose Solicitor General Davis of the Department of Jus tice. The cases turns on tho constitutionality of the "pipe line amendment" of 1905 to the Interstate commerce laws. The gov ernment contends that It had a right as provided in tho amendment to require all oil earning pipe lines engaged In Interstate commerce to act as common carriers. The commerce court held that It did not and declared tho law unconsti tutional. The oil companies contend the govern ment cannot hold as common carriers private Individuals or corporations which have never posed as common carrier;, but which carry oil only for themselves and which enjoy no rights of eminent do main and no powers from the state, Widow of Admiral- ' Eatqh on Trial for Husband's Murder PLYMOUTH, Mass., Oct. 14. Mrs. Jen. nle May .Baton was placed on trial for" the murder of tier husband. Rear Admiral Joseph Giles Eaton. The defense will attempt to show that the poison which' caused the death of the admiral was self-admlntstered. The government's case rests on the contention that Mrs. Eaton gave her husband poison with his meals. It was expected that tho selection of a Jury would occupy the whole of today's session. More than 160 talesmen were summoned, so nearly filling the court room that there was practically no room left for spectators. Chief Justice Aiken of the superior court presided. District Attorney Albert F. Barker Is In charge of the prosecution and Mrs. Eaton's chief counsel Is William A. Morse of Boston. While Mrs. Eaton has been confined in the Plymouth Jail she has written a com plete history of her life since her mar riage to the admiral In 1908. She has taken exercise In the Jail and is In excel lent health. Champ Clark Cancels His Lecture Dates SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Oct. 14. Champ Clark, speaker of the house of representatives, will not come to Callfor nit to fulfill lecture engagements next month as he had planned. In a Iettr re ceived, today by President Alten I Chlckerlng of the San Francisco Commer cial club, the speaker expresses his de termination not to leave Washington during the present session. "it Is not right as I see It, for a man to take the government money for dis charging the duties of an office and then neglect the duties of that office," states Mr, CUrk In his letter. "Twice the democrats of the house have bestowed upon me the highest honor In their gift and I don't propose to neglect the duties of that office to go on the lecture plat form and lecture for money. It does not seem air to them or to the country." RELIEF STATION TO CLOSE DOORS TODAY The general relief station, whKli was organized for the relief of the sufferers of the Easter tornado, will close Its doors today as the relief committee has com pleted Its work. Four houses are still In thJ course of reconstruction and tbess will be handled directly by the commit tee. Fifteen houses are In the hands of the contractors and these wilt be com pleted under the supervision of McAl lister and Krause, who have had charge of this work and who have formed a partnership to do general contracting work. NEW EXPRESS RATES WILL BE EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 1 WASHINGTON, Oct lt-Tho new ex press rates recently prescribed by the.In terstate Commerce commission will be come effective on December 1. Instead of tomorrow. A request for extension 1y the companies was granted today, but a request that the new scale be revised was referred. BANKERS TOLD THEY MUST TAKE MEDICI Representative Bulkier Sayj Will Have to Submit to Go?? , crnment Control. TO FOLLOW THE RAILROADS Senator Owen Predicts Success of the Currency Measure. DEFENDS COMPULSORY CLAUSE Speaks for Provision Making Manda tory Joining Reserve Body. REYNOLDS STATES OBJECTIONS Dirells Upon Rrror In Present Pop. nlnr Conception Ilelntlve to Cen tral Money- Institution nnd Its Sonrce. NEW TORK, Oct. 14.-Three members of congress, all of them prominently identified with the administration's ef forts to enact the pending currency re form bill, vigorously replied today to criticisms levelled at the bill, particularly by the American Bankers'- association. Senator Robert L. Owen qt Oklahoma, chairman of the senate committee on currency and banking, and Representa tive Robert J. Bulkley of Ohio of the house committee on banking and cur rency, came over from Washington 'to present their views to the national con ference on currency reform, held under the auspices of the New York Academy of Political Science. Representative Car ter Glass, chairman of the house com mittee on banking and currency, was unable to be present on account of Ill ness. His speech was Incorporated In the record. tlnlkley In Kniphatle. Representative Bulkley gave as his opinion that, whether tho bankers liked It or not, the time had come when they must submit to' government control. "Tho report of tho American Bankers' association currency commission," said Mr. Bulkley, "seems to have been writ ten In bad temper." The railroads, Mr. Bulkley said, had been brought under government control, although their business was less of a private one than tho banking business. "There Is going to be government con trol of banks," he said. "The Time has come when the bankers must see and ac cept this situation." Senator Owen predicted unqualifiedly the success of Uie bill, defending the provision making It compulsory for na tional banks to' Join the reserve associa tion. Ilnnker Stnten Objection. Opposition to fundamental features of the-Glats-Owen currency bill, now before congress,, was expressed today by Arthur Reynold, president of the Ds Mplpes National bankaml p.resjde ofthej.Ainer lean' Bahkng"rassociatl5n. ' "The error in present popular concep tion relative to a central bank," he said, "arises from the fact that the people re gard the main features fo such an In stitution as purely centralization and fear Its powers; whereas, when properly or ganized and administered it becomes rep-, sentattve of responsibility and disinter ested public service." Great Altman Art Collection is Left to Public Museum NEW YORK. Oct. lt.-The Metropolitan Museum of Art will receive the great art collection of Benjamin Altman, the de partment store millionaire, whose will was filed here today for probate. Mr. Altman was a bachelor and his collecting occupied most of his time outside of business hours. He had what is said to be the finest collection of porcelains In tho world. Mr. Altman left the Metropolitan museum 1150,000 to be devoted to the caw of his collection. The Mount Slnal hospital of this city receives JIOO.000. Other public bequests amount to $80,000. Employes of the Alt man store of twenty years' service re ceive 2,f00 each. Those of eighteen years' service It.COO and those of fifteen years' service J1.000. In addition, eleven of the oldest employes are left JF.OOO each. Mr. Altman's two secretaries receive $10,000 each. The will leaves to each of the neccs ai:d nephews $100,000. All real estate Is willed to li. Altman ft Co. Mrs, Blake Will Push Million-Dollar Suit Against Mrs. Mackay NEW YORK, Oct. 14.-Counse! for Mrs. Blake, who recently sued her husband, Dr. Joseph A. Blake, a prominent New York surgeon, for separation, obtained a supreme court order today permitting them to file a complaint and summons In Mrs. Blake's $1,000,000 suit against Mrs. Clarence H. Mackay for alienation of Dr. Blake's affections. Mrs. Mackay was served with paper in the suit some time ago, but It was not until today that the matter came Jnto court. There had been talk that the suit would be dropped. Southern Pacific Off Three Points NEW YORK, Oct It-Southern Pacific was the weakest feature of th Haw. heavy mi-rket Uie stock declining three points to S5H, Its lowest price In almost five yeais. The direct cause of the de cline wan a recent announcement t.v v- Oepartmtnt of Justice at Washington that It purposed to bring suit against the company to force it io rellnnuuh h Central Pacific. Sales of the stock were unusually large an1 represented In part at least liquidation by shareholders who seemed concerned at the latest move of ih tA. eral authorities. While no statement has been Issued by the Southern Pacific in connection with the prcposed dissolution It Is understood the company will oppose the government move. .11 ifHfr-iCM M "HOW OMAHA REDUCLD , IB':'. K. tr: 'hp'; W( ; ITS WATER RATES" U p f ! jL-4i Drawn for The Beo ty Powell, TWELVE THOUSAND REGISTER This is Number to Bate' at the Dif- " ferent Towns, CROWBfJ AT BROKEN BOW i System Well In Hand at All Towns and Itnsh to Secure Sqnnre mile of Ground' Keeps on Unabated. BROKEN BOW. Neb., OcJ, lt-(Bpclal TeJigarri.)-Thi second, day of 'the. land regiairation nere snows a steady ofeor&mlhg-and'iroTrfirl AM o'citic till afternoon the total registration was 6,iX, AconurvatlvA estimate, based on telegrams received from North Platto and Valentine this1 afternoon places tho number of those registered tn tho three town considerably over 13,030. Ever)' train arriving on the Burlington has from five to eight extra coaches fot the accommodation of the landseekers. Eastbound No. li was held two hours to. night to give the people who arrived on the morning and early evening trains a chance to register and get away be fort morning. Tho system of registration Is so well organized that between COO an COO people an hour can be handled without any con fusion whatover, enabling a person to make the round trip In a, 'comfortably short time. Jay Gould, a young man tl years old, who claims tho distinction of being a third cousin of the lafo Jay Gould, ap peared at the booth today and took his chances along with Che rest.' Mr. Gould Is a Callofrnlan, but at present Is man aging a large ranch for his father at Elsmere, In the sandhill district. The number of atuomoblles to arrive since Sunday night will exceed 1. They are from all over the middle west and each was rcowded with applicants. Sev eral cars are here from Iowa and Illinois, . " I KEEK INTEKKST IN DRAWING Railroads Taxed 16 Handle Crowds to Reg-latratlon Polnta. Inquiries by wire for Information In regard to the land drawings In Ne--braska were received at the 'Union Pa cilia hadquarters In Omaha from per sons In Massachusetts, Virginia, Washing ton, D. C, Ohio and Kansas. Phamphlets will be mailed Immediately, The , flrt morning mall to the Union Pacific brought 51$ letters asking information about the lands. 'Over 100 personal tele phone calls came to the colonization de partment of the road Monda over tho telephone asking 'tor Information. The trains are carrying many hfJmtseekeri to North Platte, which Is one of three points of registration. . Northwestern passenger No. A was de layed over an hour out of Valentine on account of the great number of passen gers to be taken on who wars leaving Valentine after having registered for the land drawing. Besides a heavy traffic out of Omaha, the Northwestern is pick ing up good crowds along tha line be tween here and Valentine and also bring' lug down many from west of iValentlne. A telegram from the statloii agent at Wahoo stated that twenty-nlns tickets had been sold at that point for Valentine They make connection with the main line at Fremont. The Burlington has extended the service of passengers Nos. 37 and 33, w(iloh have been plying between, Lincoln and Ra venna. Until the rush for Broken Bow Is over these two trains will run from Lin coln to Broken Bow and back Instead of simply between Lincoln and Ravenna, At S o'clock Monday night after, twenty hours ofreglstratlon. 3.E1T had registerer at Broken Bow. Thirty-five notaries are working in relays. Three trains Monday morning took 73 )andekers Into Broken Bow. Many hav been Inquiring sa to whether they might register on Sunday. Thla la Impossible, aa the registration offices will be closed all day. With the arrest of three girls and tight boya, ranging in ages from 14 to 1$, the police of South Bend, Ind., believe they have solved tho mystery of a recent series of robberies. Omaha's Five-Foot Shelf Exhibit Great Britain Must Meet a Japanese Issue of Its Own LONDON, Oct. U.-8lr Hlchard Mo Bride, premier of British Columbia, hrt: Imposed on Sir Edward Orey, British secretary of state for foreign affairs, th4 task of reconciling Great Britain's pro Japanese proclivities with British Colum bia's determination to enforce Its de cision to exclude Asiatics from Its terri tory. J'm. Ttto . Japejsegoverp.menL.haavheen -pro-kYfestlng against the ottlt'jie taken tip In Canada, especially dwelling On the Jura.. nese bolng debarred from cutting timber nnd excluded from the flaherie. Tho object of Sir ltlchard Mcnride'a visit to Lbntlm? was to Impress the for eign office with the fact that British Columbia's determination Is Irrevocable and to obtain the support of the Imperial government for Its action. He sails for American tomorrow, leaving Sir Edward Grey to find a way out of the difficulty. oftor giving him a firm Intimation that this must be In accordonce with Can edlan view. Some Prison Schools Are Better Than Public Schools INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 14.'There Is not mucli difference between the prison school and the public schools of the coun try," declared Bert E. Merriam, educa tional director of the New Jersey refor matory at Rahway, who addressed the American Prison association today. Prof. Merriam said they had all classes at th New Jersey Institution, but that they fitted the work to the classes Instead of making the classes fit the work, as Is done In many of the public schools, A. C. Hill of the New York state de partment of education told of the educa tional system In vogue In New York penal Institutions. There the head teuchers are civilians and the under teachers uru convicts, A plea for the convict teachers was made by several officers of the Salvation army during tl.o discussion. They told of personal experiences In their prison work where convict teachers, especially In the south, were successful. Extreme Stylbs Are for Men Also CHICAGO, Oct. It. Sklmplncac pre dominates In the seasons styles for nn's clothing as shown In the tall exhlbttli.i of the Chicago Society of Merchant Tailors which opened today. Men's coats are to be tighter, more narrow shoulders and shorter. Trousera, cut so close as almost to preclude the presiince of pockets, are to be cuffiess and high i-nouyh to expose a flash of hosiery as the wearer strides. Waistcoats are to be six-buttoned and high enough to show above the low lapeU of the coat. The clov-flttliig style has spread to overcoats. These are to be of knee length, with neither the roll of flat lapM and collars. The fuzxy ones with belts In the back are expected to be popular. The black silk vest Is to replace th gray or white which has for some time bten worn with the dinner coat. The full dress coat will be cut tight and so scant In front that. It cannot be buttoned. The National Capital Tuesday, October 14, 1013. The Senate. Not In session; meets Thursday. Banking committee continued work on the administration currency bill. The House. Klght for a quorum resumed with Re publican Leader Mann forclqg roll calls. Adjourned at 11:30 p m. to noon, on Wednesday, YOLTURNO inTIIii AFLOAT Campania Passed Blackened Hulk Sunday Afternoon. PARENTS ABANDON CHILDREN Nnmhfr of MUle One Apparently Left to Take Cure of Them elres Sarvlvora Show Signs, of. Violence , LONDON, Oct Jt,.-Th. Vo)(urno wag still afloat on the afternoon of 'Sunday In -latitude 47,l7-northf-longtraao"33.43 TVt. There la apparently a possibility of the hulk yet .reaching Jand. "Thb CahipanU was 'n Its yldnlty at 2:lfi October 13," says Captrtln Roitron In a wlroless dispatch to the CUnartl conipatiy". "The wreck was going then southeast, making about a knot an hour. Itu hull appeared to be In good condi tion and likely to float Indefinitely. A cAre'ful search was made by us for the missing boats. The Loralne six hours lattr continued the search, but did not seo any boats." "The crew of the Voltumo, most of whom were Dutch, behaved In a cowardly manner and were brutal to the passen gers," Is the verdict of most of the thirty survivors of Uie Volturno who arrived at Graveaend .on board the Minneapolis thla evening. All the survivors are men, Russians, Hungarians and Poles. They are to pro- ced to t.ielr destination on board tho Olymplo tomorrow, ' Children Apparently Abandoned. PARIS, Oct II. Many of the survivors of the Volturno showed signs of violence, recording to passengers of the Touralne arriving In Paris today. One woman bore scatches and bruises all over her body which she received during tho struggle to get places In the boats. A child arrived on board the Touralne com. pletely naked. Most of the survivors had llttje clothing and what they had was torn. One of the most striking facts, ac cording to the passengers of the Touralne, was the arrival of children from the Volturno apparently not belonging to any one and seeming to have been comploetly left to take care of themselves by their parents. HAVnE, Oct 14. La Touralne of tho Ktenoh lino, second .of the rescue ships which figured In tho Volturno disaster to reach port, arrived at Havre this morning. La Touralne had forty-two survivors on board. On the forward deck of the Touralne when It arrlve'tt at the quay was a group or eight children froin 3 to 12 years old who had been rescued from the Voltumo and whose parent either had perished or were aboard other rescuing steamers. The children had been made much of tmce they were brought on board. Two other children with their mothers and twenty-seven sturdy Polish peasants, with three of tho crew of the Volturno, made up the total of forty-two rescued by the I.a Touralne. Many Remnnanla of Kninlllea. LIVERPOOL, Oct. 14.-The Leyland line steamer Devonian, commanded by Captain Traut, arrived here today, bring ing Volturno survivors. On board the Devonian were many remnants of fam ilies crazed with grief and terror at the tragedy which they had passed. Ernest Hermann, a German passenger, was the first to notice the fire In the hold of the Volturno, He says the flames even then had made such progress that It was evi dently Impossible to subdue them. Among the rescued was a baby which the hysterical mother had flung Into the sea. Arthur Haxolwood, a seaman of the Devonian, sprang overboard and rescued the child. Another pathetic figure was that of a tiny girl of 4 years, whose Identity and nationality even Ts unknown. She stood among the survivors, bewildered, un recognized and unclaimed. A. B. Kerlln, who made a sensational trip from Spokane, Wash., last winter to fbkt nls vot. as a presidential elector for Wood row Wilson, having arisen from a sick bed to do so. was found dead at his horns at Devils Lake, N, P., yesterday. FOUR HUNDRED MEP ENTOMBED III COAL MINE Nl CARDIFF Shafts and Machinery of Universal Colliery Are Wrecked by Ter rifio Gas Explosion, NINE HUNDRED MEN AT WORK Five Hundred Besoued Through Tunnels to Other Mines. INTERIOR OF MINE TAKES FIRE Officers Say There is No Hope foe juen still iJeiow. RESCUED MEN ARE INJURED Victims Tnken from Pnrt of Aftne) Where Ventlfotton Is Fairly Good Are llndly Bnrned Relief Work Stops. CARDIFF, Wales, Oct 14. More than 40) Welsh coal miners perished. It Is be lieved, from fire and after-damp In tho Universal colliery near hero today. A terrific explosion shattered the worka shortly after 031 meh had descended the pit. It was nt first stated that the day shift was composed of 740 men, but later the' larger figure was given out by the officials. About BOO were brought to the surface alive by rescue parties up to noon, and the managers of the mine then oxprcssed the opinion that there was no further hope for those remaining below. Mnchlnery Illoirn to Atoms. The dny shfft descended the shafts In the cages at S o'clock. An hour after ward a deafening report brought the In habitants to tho vicinity ot the mine run ning to the pit head, where they found the ventilating and hoisting machinery had been blown" to atoms. A man who had been working sixty feet away had been decapitated by the force of the blast Rescue parties of miners belonging to the night shift were soon on the scene making preparations to enter the mine In an endeavor to save their comrades. The fiery condition of the mine, how ever, gave little hope that any of thoaa below could bo rescued alive. An entrance was found by way ot an adjacent shaft On descending tho res cuing parties came across several ftroup? of men huddled together tn portte, oC the mine where the air was still tod. Ry noon they had picked up and brcl4ht to the surface altogether E00. The same pit was the scene of an x plosion thirteen years ago, when 1 mln era lost their lives. Only one of those) below at that time was res?d alive. The rescued miners, the members ef iha life saying sHmir .ond- t-hs-efflcaJa of the mine declared that they could hold out no hope for those of the mineral still beloW, Wrecked Part of Mine on Fire. Tho men brought to the surface ware found on the east side of the mine where tho ventilation remained fairly good, On the west side, where the explosion oc curred, fire soon added Its terrors and the rescue parties were untble to make any progress. The officials of the mine found It neces sary to call a detachment of polio to keep back the women and children who crowded round the entrances In hopes of obtaining some news ot their relatives. Most of the rescued men presented pitiable appearance. Nearly all were suf fering from bums, shock or the effects of poisonous gases. Alt the men In the east side of tho mine reached the surface by 4 o'clock, but 418 were still In the workings tn tho west side, which were on fire. Colonel Pearson, chief Inspector ot mines, In giving thla informttlon to tha press lato this afternoon added! "The fire Is In the Intake airway and everything Is being dono to cope with it, (We are hoping to tho last" A'nti-Frat Law is Upheld by Courti CHICAGO, Oct 14.-The appellate coure upheld today the right ot school bofcrds) to rule against high Bchool fraternities! end expel pupils refusing to obey orders prohibiting them from joining such so cletles. The decision was on an appeal from) an 6rder from tha circuit court directing the Hoard ot Education ot Oak Park, o, suburb, to reinstate a boy, won, with aeven companions, was expelled In 1913 for disregarding the ban against hlgn school fraternities. The upper court ordered the dismissal of the petition which the circuit court had sustained, The Great Breadth of Advertising If you would go through tho advertising; columns ot thla newspaper and carefully com pile a list ot all of the various activities touched upon, It would astonish you, especially if you have never given tho subject much thought. Nothing much that Is worth while goes on that Isn't bene fited by newspaper advertis ing. Merchants use It because, they have demonstrated more than any other class of adver tisers that it pays. Also it U a part ot the merchant's ser vice to bus patrons to keep them Informed ot bin doings and his wares. Tho newspaper la indeed a veritable index of all 'that la going on In this community la the way of business and pro fessional activity. The field l so completely covered that tha advertising news is aa import ant as tho regular news. .J) X V