The Omaha Sunday Bee PART ONE NEWS SECTION PAGES ONE TO SIXTEEN THE WEATHER. Fair; Warmer VOL. XLJ1I NO. 40. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1914-SEVEN SECTIONS FIFTY-FOUR PAGES. SINGLE" COPY FIVE CENTS. TWO COMPANIE AT BELFAST LAY DOWNTHEIRARMS . Mutiny Follows Announcement that I Battalion is to Be Trans ferred from City. SOLDIER SHOT DOWN BY SENTRY Attempts to Scale Wall and Perhaps Fatally Hurt. ULSTER SITUATION IS ACUTE Officers in Regular Army Resign Rather Than Serve There. ARMY COUNCIL IS IN SESSION Effort Being Made to Replace Com manders Who Have Quit. DELAY MAY MEAN SETTLEMENT "While Troop from Other Fnrtn of Empire Are Delnff Transferred " to Ulster Lender Mny Ilcncb Agreement. BULLETIN. DUBUK, March 21.-The first victim ot the existing state ot excitement in Ire land was a soldier at the Curragh camp, who was late for roll call. He attempted to scale a wall of the barracks and was shot by a sentry. It Is thought that the wotnd will prove fatal. The ' commander-ln-chlcf In Ireland, deneral Sir Arthur Paget, has arrived at the Curragh, whqro conferences are In progress between the officers who havo resigned their commissions and the mili tary authorities, ,v 1 LONDON, March 21. A mutiny of two companies of the Dorsetshire regiment stationed In Belfast is reported by the Fatt Mall Gazette. ' , The Pall Mall Gazotte'smcssage says: "When tho men of the first battalion of the Dorsetshire regiment Were paraded in Belfast today and notified that they were being transferred elsewhere, thoy threw down their arms. A sergeant stepped forward, saluted tho of leers and sal: 'Wo will have no home rule here.' " This Is thought In somo quarters to bo an exaggerated version of the reports of unrest among the regular troops in Ulster. MHny Arrar Officer Ileslgu. The outstanding feature ot the nows from Ireland today was the disaffection among tho officers of the regular army under orders to proceed to Ulster with their regiments. The actual number ot resignations ainotigvthtni .ffj.ttfl)l..problemaUcal, but that It was considerable was evident, from tho earnest early morning consulta tions ot cabinet ministers regarding tho lest means of counteracting tho move ment. Tho actual fact of this disaffection is the more discomforting to the military authorities, since the army is already seriously short of commissioned oticcrs. Threats ot a crisis In tho army if a movement of regular troops was under taken against Ulster had long been cur rent and in some quarters it Is bollevcd that tho sudden marching ot a limited number-of troops was ordered so that the military authorities might gather an Idea as to how. widespread tho threatened dis affection was. Array Council In Session. Immediately after Colonel Seely. the secretary of Btato for war, had been In audience wltn Kins Georgo at Bucking ham Falaco this morning, Colonel Seely rummoned a meeting ot the army Coun cil wVifiVi rtnlr iVirt n n.. n .Inn. n replace officers who had resigned. According to reports, however, the number of vacancies Is rapidly Increasing, and It, seems possible that all the reg ular regiments which have been serving la Ulster may have to bo withdrawn and replaced by fresh troops, as both men and officers havo openly expressed their disinclination to take tho offensive against men with whom they have been fraternising. This momentary shlftinsr of the lmmed- late crisis from Ulster to the army may give tho peace makers tuelr desired open ing. , If ope for Settlement. N The return of Arthur J. Balfour, former unionist premier to London, has given heart to the advocates of a compromise. He and Premier Asqulth have served long years side by side in the political field and understand and appreciate one an other. Premier Asqulth and Andrew Bonar Law, the official leader of the opposition in the House ot Commons, whenever they have come Into contact have given em bitter displays of partisanship. It was thought in many quarters to- (Contlnued on Page Two.j The Weather For Omaha, Council Bluffs and Vicinity Kair, with rising temperature. Temperature nt Omaha Yesterday, Hours. Dee. 5 a. m 19 6 a. m 21 7 a. m..,...iTtrr. 23 8 a, m 23 9 a. m 23 10 a. m 2 11 a. m 23 12 m 25 1 p. m ,..261 2 p. m , 26 1 j v. ra..... s p. m 23 5 p. ni 25 6 v. m 24 7 p. m 22 Comparative Local Itecord. . . , . 1914. 191S. 1312. 131L JHigheet today 25 22 23 76 Lowest -today 19 8 8 5 Mean temperature 22 is la C6 Precipitation T T .00 .03 Temperature and precipitation depart ures from the normal: rtormal temperature .... 59 Deficiency for the day n Rxcens since March 1 45 Normal precipitation 01 inch Kxc.es for the day Ot inch omurnimiiii since Aiaren 1,... .15 1 noli efiolency since March 1 er inch KxcesaTCor. period in 1913 l.ffli Innhnu Excess C6r. period in j13 1.02 inches T indicates trace of precipitation. L. A. WELSH, Local Forecaster. LONG HGHT FOR HOME RULE Agitation On Since Irish Parliament Abolished in 1801. BRINGS SPLIT IN LIBERAL PARTY Secession of Chamberlain nnd Other Itadlcnl Leaders Cnmed by Uladstonea efforts to Kren Erin. Ireland has striven for home rule with out a moment's cessation ever slnco the Irish Parliament was- abolished and tho legislative union of Great Britain .ma Ireland was proclaimed January 1, 1S01. In the 113 years that havo passed since that date tho agitation has gone on undtr various forms, pacific and violent, led by such patriots as Daniel O'Connell. William Smith O'Brien, Charles Stewart Parnell, O'Donovan Rossa and Michael Davltt, to mention only a few of the more prominent. These were succeeded by tho Redmonds and tho Hcalys, who aro In the forofront of the movement today. Tho patriotic movement was suppressed time after time by coercion acts passed by tho British Parliament onlv tn tnUn another form. Tho Molly Magulrcs, the T;oung Ireland party, tho Land leaguj and the National lcaguo were all Irish poUtlcal societies which had their day. Thousands of Irish nationalists served terms of imprisonment for their partici pation In tho fight for leglslatlvo inde pendence from Great Britain. Hundred! were exiled, many of them proceeding lo tho United States. , Tho agitation somo times took on tho Helmet ot extreme violence, as when Lord Frederick Cavendish, the chief secretary for Ireland, and T. H. Burke, permanent secretary, were assassinated by "Invlncl blcs" May C, 1SS2, In Phoenix park, in Dublin. Tho parliamentary fight for home rule was waged for many decades and gave riso to extraordinary scenes In tn usually staid British Parliament, often ringing about the exnulslon nf mrmtior and the stoppage of business. Th first effort of tho British covpxn- mcnt to meet the demand for Irish home rule was made by William Ewart Glad stone when premier in 1SSC. Tho bill wn rejected after its introduction had brought aDout a great split In tho liberal party, Which caused tho secession nf .Tnamli Chamberlain and other liberal leaders. who slnco on Irish questions have acted with tho consorvatrVe party. Since then several Irish homo rule bills have been introduced by liberal governments, and the last'one passed tho House ot Com mons, but was rejected by tho House of Lords. This led to tho passage threo years ago of tho Parliament act, under tho provisions of which any bill jiot on appropriation bill rcJeoted bv th notion of Lords becomes automatically a law on passing th House of Commons In Carson Heads Agitation. Tho Present agitation lian.bnon mnlnlv brouBlUahoift,Jy itlio-piactical certainty or iToralcr Asquith'a Irish homo rule bill becoming law without the consent of tho Housq of Lords. Sir Edward Carson Is at tho head ot tho agitation against homo. rulo among tho unionists of Ulster. He ana several other leading men took tho Initiative In organizing an army of Ulster volunteers to resist the Introduction of homo nilo for Ireland in its ontlrotv. They Insisted that Ulster should be left out of its operation. The chief points at Issue in Ireland Is tho religious ono. Out of a total popula tion of about 4.G0O.00O, approximately 600,000 are Protestants of various denomi nations. Most of these aro found in the four Ulster counties of Londonderry, Antrim, Armagh and Downing. The other five counties of Ulster are predominantly Catholic. As a matter of fact, Ulster re turns seventeen nationalists and only six teen unionists to Parliament Difference Between People. Thero is considerable difference between tho pcoplo of the eastern part of Ulster and fhoso of tho Jest of Ireland. Many of the Ulsterltes are descendants ot English settlers sent thero by Cromwell to foster the agriculture and induatrica'of Ireland after he had subdued tho country. Others are descendants of Scottish cove nanters. Not all the Protestants of Ire land aro against, homo rule. Parnell hlm eolt was a Protestant. Three Iron Workers Are Denied Preedom by Federal Judge KANSAS CITY, Kan.. March 2t-Appll-cationa ot three of the labor men con victed at Indianapolis in 1912 on charges ot transporting explosives illegally, asking their release from the penitentiary at Leavenworth were denied last night by Federal Judge John C. Pollock. Philip Cooley of New Orleans, J. E. Munsey of Salt Lake City and John whti of New York asked release. They wero not released on bond with the others ot the convicted men while awaiting the final disposition of their cases In the su preme court. Release for the three men was asked for on the ground thoy wero convicted In Indiana, while none was a citizen of that state. Judge Pollock held this not suffi cient grounds for taking up the matter. DUBUQUE WOMAN CHARGED WITH MURDER OF HUSBAND DUBUQUE la.. March 2L Mrs. TWn Braxxell was today Indicted by tho uuDuque county grand Jury for the mur der ot her husband, Charles Brazzell, a motorman, who was found murdered in his home hero two months rnrn. Aftr being absent from Dubuque for a week, Airs, urazzeii returned home and reported the finding of her dead husband In their home. The body was badly muttintur No arrests were mado until today, when sirs, urazzeu was taken into custody. ABDUL HAMID. DEPOSED SULTANJWTICALLY ILL LONDON, March il.-Abdul Hamld, the deposed sultan of Turkey", Is In a crlttical condition, according to -a dispatch from Constantinople. The fotyner ruler ha been 111 for some time. Abdul was do posed April 17, 190?. CAPITAL HEARS FIGHT STARTEOJTTORREON Engagement Between Federals and Rebels Reaches Ws,r Office at Mexico City. NO DETAILS OF THE BATTLE Previous Message Tells of Enemy Sighted Approaohing. REBELS FULL OF CONFIDENCE Chief Transmitted His Energy to His Subordinates. SURE CITY WILL FALL SOON Constttutlonnllst Hnve Twelve Thonsand Men nnd Are "Well Supplied with Artillery nnd Ammunition. MEXICO C1TV. Maroh 2l.-An engage ment between tho federal and rebel arm lea at Torrcon began today, according to a terse meusage received at tho Moxican war office at noon. The dispatch contained no details of the fighting. Another message received by tho War offico a short time previ ously, announced that the rebels had Den sighted coming toward Torrcon. llendy for Action. CONSTITUTIONALIST HEADQUAR TERS, YERMO, Durango, Mexico, March 21 With cannon planted, with practically all 'accoutrements ot war burnished and ready, General Pancho Villa with his 12,000 rebel soldiers today wore almost prepared to begin tho Investment ot Tor rcon: to hurl tho first shell Into tho trenches of tho resisting federal army, under General Refugio Velasco, in what Is considered the dcclslvo battle of tho constitutionalists' revolution. Full of Confidence. Full of confidence and certain ot vic tory, General Villa has magnetically transmitted hts energy to his subordi nates and today the waking camp at Yermo presented a scene which noyer had marked a revolutionary movement in Mexico. Tho peon soldiers hurried here and thero giving final touches to the es tablishment of the rebels' plana for open ing assault, spurred on by the sharp command ot superiors whose every order Is given with an admonition against do lay. Refreshed by a night's sleep atter their long, hard march through the desert from Maplml and Ilermcjlllo, tho little' khakl-clad soldiers of Villa sprang to their work with a test which discounted tho stern order for haste. , General Villa's army, numbering- IZ.Wi men, has more than forty field pleies1 and an Immense supply of ammunition, probably . 2,000 rounds to the man. The constitutionalists have been movnc- tq uieir Dascs by train, aisemoaruing at BcrmeJUlo and Maplml. Ilnerta Hxectites Officers. BROWNSVILLE, Texas, March 21. Nlneteen officers wero recently executed in Santiago Tlatoloco prison by the order of Prasldent Ilnerta. according (o-prlvat-i advlcM"received In Matamoros. Tho reason for the execution Is said to havo been U10 tact that of floors were pupils ot Genoral Follpo Angeles, one time 'professor in the Mexican military academy, and now in charge of General Villu's rebol artillery. New York Democrats Are in Favor of New State Constitution ALBANY, N. Y., March 2L Members ot the newly reorganized democratic state committee gathered today to discuss plans for getting out the vote on April 7, when tho question of holding a constitutional convention In 1915 will be voted on. Speeches by Governor Glynn and Will iam Church Osborn, recently elected chairman, dealt mainly with the fluestiou of the proposed, constitutional convention to which the party Is pledged. Charles F. Murphy, Tammany hall leader, was present as a committeeman. Tho governor declared changes in the life, business and views of the people made necessary a revision ot the state constitution as adopted in 1634. "Woman's suffrage, for Instance," he said, "was then a theory while It now Is a fact. Leglslatlvo abuses, which have crept into the government were not fore seen. Legal procedure Is so complicated that Judges cannot clear their dockets. Tho Influence of corporations has wid ened. Bribery at etecttons and malfeasance lu otflce, once silently endured, no longer aro to be tolerated." Chase Orders Arr,est of Mother Jones on Sight if She Eeturns DENVER, Colo., March a.-AdJutant General John Chase, who arrived today from the coal strike district, said that he had given orders to arrest "Mother" Mary Jonea on sight it she returned to Trinidad. "Mother" Jones still was at her hotel In' Denver. She said that the time for her departure for the strike zone had not yet been fixed, "Mother" Jones, who la S3 years old, was released In Denver last Monday, after having been held as a military prisoner at Trinidad more than two months. TRINIDAD. Colo., March M.-Jnfor-matlons charging seven strikers of the Forbes Tent colony with the murder of Nell Smith, a nonunion coal miner whose mutilated body was found on a railroad 1 track near Scotleld , on March S, wero filed today in thq district court. Ball was fixed at 110,000 each. THIRD LARGE GIFT TO METHODIST MISSIONS NEW YORK. March 21.-The Board of Foreign Missions of the Methodist Episco pal church announced today a gift ot $50,000 designated for the permanent fund for retired missionaries. This Is the third large gift received recently by the board, Tho others were for 0,000 and W75.000, re-' spectlvely. In all three cases the donnn have requested that their name be with-' hell Druu.i lor Tho tfeo by iJowelt JONES PANAMA TOLLS Resolution Goes to Committee After Lively Debate After Objections Are Withdrawn. WILSON'S STAND CRITICISED Executive la Aconcy ot . Attempt m 10 t,iinit xiiscnssion and of Interfering wltfe LeRl'a lutton. WASHINGTON, March 21. -Senator Jones' much-discussed resolution calling on Presldont Wilson for Information of what nations had protested against the Panama tolls exemption today was re ferred to the foreign relations commltleo after Senator O'Gormah and its author had withdrawn objections. Senator Hoko Smith nnd Senator Jones clashed when tho latter wanted the clerk to read a newspaper story saying tho president wanted a limit In Panama tolls debate. Senator Smith blocked It, bus Senator Jones, walling until a bill on tho calendar had been called up, read tho arti cle, which sought to show that the presi dent had told members of the houso that debate on the bill should bo limited to fifteen hours. 'I don't believe tho presldont mado any such suggestion," said Senator Borah, re publican. "We seo In almost every newspaper every day," Senator Jones continued, "re. ports of senators or representatives goinrf to the president to ask whether this ur that bill suits him or this or that amend ment Is satisfactory to him. Whethirj these reports aro correct I do not know, but they occur so frequently that thero must be som,e foundation for them. "It was published that during, a con ference I had with tho president the otlie' day regarding my recent speech on this tolls question that the president had told me I was 'skating on thin Ice.' I novtr heard any such statement from the presi dent, if it was made afterward, it was made for consumption ot the press." Tho incident ended with-a general vol ley of remarks from democratic senators that they had profited by consulting tho president on various subjects. Boy Fatally Shot While Playing Jail KANSAS CITV, Mo.. March St While playing "Jail" with two other small boys at his homo here today, Richard Bright, 9 years old, was shot in tho stomach and fatally wounded. A closet was the Jail. Roy Roderick and James Green, aged 9 and 10 years, respectively, were the guards. Richard, the prisoner, attempted to break Jail. One of tho guards pointed what he believed to be an unloaded shot gun at tho escaping prisoner and pulled tho trigger. SERIOUS FAMINE IN CAPE VERDE ISLANDS BOSTON, March 21. A serious famtne it reported In tho Cape 'Verde Islands In dispatches received here today, It la stated that many persons have died ot hunger and herds of cattle have perished. Lack of rain during July, August and September of last year is given as tho cause ot the food shortage. The National Capital Saturday, March 21, 1014. The Heuntc. Met at noon. Referred 10 the foreign relations com mittee the Jones resolution calling on the president for full Information of pro tests against the Panama tolls exemption. The House. Met at noon. Debate was resumed on tha river and harbor bU QUESTION REFERRED Forward, Tot Backward IOWA MUSICJASTER FIRED Charge Made Prof. Sohoettle Em braced Woman Instructor. WIFE OF ANOTHER TELLS STORY Mrs. IJbo Itledrl Said to Hare. De clnrrtl Mnnlctnn Asked Hereto Get Divorce Ho ICu'trrs Hmphatlo Uenlal. ' IOWA- CITy, Ja., March 21.-(8peclat Telegranv)Thiit prof. Qustav Bchotte Tiead of tho School of Muslo nt the Unl verctty of Iowa, waa the faculty member whoso dismissal led to tho resignation of President John a, Bowman, was admitted by officials ot1h university today, Prof. Schocltlo was summarily dls mlssod at the meeting of tho State Board Of Education on March 11, and as this was done without consulting President Bowman, it brought tho differences be tween him and tho board to a head. Sen sational charges filed against Schoottle by Miss Efflo Moo Profltt, an Instructor In tho School ot Music, led to the board's action. Tho first charge was that Prof. Sohoet tle had been caught embracing a young woman Instructor In the School of Music, and tho second was that he had asked Mrs. Maria Desanty Rledel,' wifo of (Jbo Rledel anothor Instructor In the School of Music, to get a divorce. This was told by Mrs. Rledel to Mrs. Cyrenus Cole, wlto of tho publisher ot tho Cedar Rapids Re publican, and by her brought before the board; Prof. Schoetulo denies the charges en tirely, and In this he Is backed by Presi dent Bowman. Ho says that ho told Mrs. Rledel that ho would retain her on tho faculty of tho school ot music, but would not keep her husband, and that she, being a foreigner and not well acquainted with the English language, evidently misunder stood him. . Tho charge as to embracing the young instructor Prof. Bchoottte denies flatly; Members of the Btato Board ot Educa tion staled that they will accept Bow man's resignation, to take offect at once. They refused to discuss the charges against Schoettlo, except to admit that they wore filed and that Schoettlo has been discharged. Mother Dies Here While Watching at Side of Daughter While watching at tho bedtldo of her sick daughter, Mrs, Ella Campbell of Lexington, Neb., died at tho Swedish Mission hospital Friday, and her hus band, a traveling salesman, who is work ing through the western states, cannot be located. Only his wife, knew hts fouto and dolly address and the secret ot Ids present whereabouts died with her. Several days ego Mrs. Olga -Mcfar-land, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Camp bell, was brought to the hospital hore. Mrs. Campbell came to Omaha to be with her daughter. The weary waiting and watching provtd too great a strain for her, and she died ot a hemorrhage Friday. Mr. Campbell left Omaha several days ago, stsrting to work a route which he mapped out to the Pacific coast. So far efforts to locate him through the firm by whom he is employed have failed. Relative, dospalrlng of finding him, will bury the wife and mother at her old home at I'lattsmouth today. Holdrege Leases Tract of Oil Land BASIN. Wyo., March Sl.-(SpecIal Tele gram.) General Manager a. W. Holdrege of the Burlington, Lee Champion. A, M. Glldersleeve and A. M. Johnson ot tho Midwest Oil company of Casper, who came here Monday with C, A. Fisher, geologist, tojay closed a deal for the purchase of eighty acres of land lying in the heart of the Uasln-Greybull oil field. They are trying to lease other tracts, 1 CASHIER FELT SAVS HE IS REAM PLEAD Says He Expects to Plead Guilty to Looting Superior Bank in the Federal Court. HE MEETS HIS FAMILY HERE Will Thrurr Htmsejf on the Mrrcy of tlir Court In the Hope. of Hc - crlvlusr the Minimum fientence. Admitting that h Is ""! ot hunk wrecking, as charged in. federal Indict ments, and saying (hat ho Is going to face the whole affair und take tho eon sequences, Albert C Kelt, lato cashier nnd for nearly a quarter ot a conturi" connected with tho defunct First Na tional bank of Superior, Neb,, arrived In Omaha Friday night -In custody of , government marshal and guard from San Francisco, whero he Was nrrcsted March 0, atter being driven by his conscience to surrender. Following a conferenco this morning with his wlto, Mrs. Lena Adams Felt, his 15-year-old son, Albert, and his broth er, Merle J. Felt of Sioux City and Frank B. Felt of Hupcrlor, tho twb lattor staled for publication that they thought their brother would lu all probability plead guilty to tho federal cliurge and throw himself on to the morcy ot tho court in" bono ot getting tho minimum sentence of fivo years for violation of tho national banking laws, Felt's defalcations havo been variously estimated at from $30,000 to 170,000. Opo of hits brotkora said yesterday that the. lutter. figure hod been set as a posslblo maximum by certain authorities, but that the real losses would total much less than that amount. Took No Money Avrny. "I didn't got a single dollar of the monoy," Felt sold. "In spite- of my twen-ty-four years of experience aa a banker I have proved myself to bo a poor one. I advanced money to corporations and individuals to whom I should hav rn. tused loans, and then mado speculations in stocks and other ventures that I should not have mide. I mado a mistake in doing it and then I used bad Judgment In the Investments, so the thlnir has wiped me out as well aa wrecking the bank. I am anxious to faco the whole alfalr and tr io straighten it out and tako my pun ishment. "My conscience forced mo to surrender," Felt continued. Ho was president of the Nebraska Basoball league and was at tending the annual meeting at Krurney Just before his bank closed January 9. Going to Denver and Cheyenne, he tin ally reached Pan Francisco without be ing arrested, and says he walked, the Blreets there for two weeks, broodlmj over his trouble. llnnk Muy I'nj- Out. "I couldn't stand It. I worried and brooded until I lost thirty-five pounds and was lu a terrible mental hell. Then t wrote Father Fltxgorald at Superior and surrendered to the tnlted States marshal. My friends have all been good to me slnco, and I have been ashamed to meet them after what I have done. All I auk Is that I be given a chance to untangle the bank's affairs the best I can. I have hopes that it will pay out 100 cents on the dollar, without tho as. segment which has been mado." Ills Ilond Heady. Folt had a brief interview with United States District Attorney Howell, and then was taken back to Jail by Deputy Haze. HIh bond was fixed at HO0O some time, ago, and tho brothers declare they are ready to furnish. It, but Felt Is said to desire counsel from an attorney, before accepting his liberty under ball. HEAVY SNOW FALLS IN THE TEXAS PANHANDLE WICHITA FALLS, Tex., March 21.-A heavy snow today Is falling in this sec tion ot the Texas panhandle, the latest fall experienced in many years. EASTER TORNADO IS NOW MEMORY; ALL TRACE GONE Qeneral Relief CCommittee to C1ob4 Up Its Books at a Meeting Tomorrow GREAT CHANGE 18 WROUGHT? Scarcely a Trace of the Great Sis- aster is Now Visible. DEBRIS ALL CLEARED AWAY General Relief Fund Amounted to More Than $420,000. 720 FAMILIES ARE HELPED Total Dwellings Wrecked Reached! the Large Total of 2,141. OF THESE 752 A TOTAL LOSS More Tbnu 1,ItOO ImllvlrtnnJa, Firms nnd CIHrs Subscribed to Relief Fund, nnd Practically All Una Been Pnld. Twolve months hns made a great chango In tho strip of territory In Omaha torn by the tornado of Easter Sunday, March 1, 1913. Tho lapse of twolve months to day finds tho 2,000 damaged or destroyed homes practically all rebuilt nnd the path of tho tornado hard to follow. Today a man who went over the wrecked dls trlct dozons of times a. year ago, woutd have extremo difficulty In attempting to trace out tho path of destruction. Stately mansions havo arisen where old ones fell. The debris has been cleared away and burned with the exception ot hero and thero a neglected corner on a va cant lot, where, among tho weeds, may still bo found llttlo plies of crushed plastering and lath, and a few broken bricks. The relief committee, or committee ot fifty, organised the day after the tor nado, did great work In rebuilding the district and helping those who needed help most. When It was learned through out tho country that relief money would be accepted by the committee, money poured in from all parts of tho United States and even from foreign lands until tho relief fund, Including state and city appropriations, mounted to $130,000. Mnnr Fnmlllrs Helped. Some 729 families were given financial assistance from tho relief fund to re store their homes. This meant that fJO bqtp'cs wrecked or partially wrecked, very soon began to repair and in a few days the whole district could be traced by tho yellow flare ot new roofs In tho sun light. Tho total number of dwellings de stroyed noyohd repair was T5J. The total number of dwelling houses .damaged, in cluding (hose destroyed, was i,Ht. Between the nslh given by the rellet committee anil the loans made by tha restoration committee from a fund of some 120,000 subscribed by railroads nnd packing companies, tho homes were proe tlcslly all rebuilt with tho exception of a very few. tho owners ot which havo not yet decided just how and what they want to build. These ore mostly lots that belong to nan-residents, who for one reason or another, of their own have not yet decided whether to rebuild n. dwelling or sell the lot for other pur poses. To Complete Work. Tho final report of the relief committee Is to lo mado at a meeting ot the whole commlttco to bo held at tho Commer cial r.lub rooms Monday afternoon. It will show that groceries was distributed to Homo 1200 families, and wearing ap parel to somo 1,700 families. That coal was given to about 370 families, cooking utenalls to 1S3 families, building material to some ninety families, bedding to about 600 families, furniture to 340, stoves, to sixty-eight, prescriptions to nearly sev enty families, tents to forty-seven fam ilies, tools to twenty-six families, rent orders to 1C0 families, teaming furnished to elghty-nlno families and medical at tendance to 31 families. Many Klve Ilellef. More than 1,300 persons and firms sub scribed to te relief fund. Subscription came from practically every state In the (Continued on Page Two.) Millions thinking m unison Hero la something (or manu facturers to think about that is, tlioso manufacturers who make something worth while for which thoy wish to create a natlon-wido market. In this country there are many hundreds of first class, uepondable newspapers like The neo, serving millions of people. Collectively these millions aro intelligent, burious-mindod peo ple the back-bone of the na tion and the corner-stone ot public opinion. If you wanted seriously to in fluence these mUUonB of minds, or any given section or group, geographically selected, what would be the quickest and sur est way of doing It? The logical answer Is, through the newspaper. Millions of people make up their minds dally from tho read ing of dependable newspapers. And it Is this great fact which underlies the increasing use of 'wim,er advertising by man ufacturers and distributers who wish to create a nation-wide market for some article ot merit. It means something to have millions think daily ot your particular brand ot merchan dise. That's what good newspapers are doing for manufacturers.