Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1913)
VOL,' XIJ, vJsJpLiuC-; , - ilHIFF BILL IS BSEOIIIS , IISOII'S III Presiding orricers of " Senate v arid House Sign Document ; Which Will, Become a Law 1 With ;- President's Signature at-9; o'Clock Tonight. TARIFF WORKERS ASKED . TO'WITNESS CEREMONY Two Pens Will Be Used by WU- '.v son, - One to Be 'Given to ' ; . Congressman . .Underwood, Other, to Senator: Simmons .S railed Piea ld tfWY (Washington; Oct. s. Duly passed by both , branches of'tha national legiala ' ture and klgned bllia presiding offi cers .?. the senate and 'the house of rcpiesentaUvcs, .the, Wilson-Underwood tartrf bill only, awaited tha president' . -autograph till afternoon to become . law, ' t . . i President Wilson will sign at 9' o'clock tonight. 'vIe intends to. make- the occa slon one of 'considerable - ceremony. A numberAct representatives. and senators, . members of tlie cabinet and a few Unof ficial auMti will Vi nrnn ' ' ' ' VTUe.blU will ! be signed ;in lbs Vast room of the White House. In writing bis nanie the president will use two pens.'. Afterward he will give one oU . tiieni co senator Simmons of Norm Car olina and ' the other to Congressman " Underwood jot Alabama, 'who saw the bill rarely through the, senate and- the house, respectively, - I ' y j i . ' . ,J .The .scjHte finished Its share-ef the work of phasing, tfia bill last night. It . was returned, to the house when Speaker Clark called that body to order today. By a ylv voce vote the house, at 1:24 ft. m., adopted the conference report . on the bill. Representative Hinds bad previously moved a point of order and v the speaker ruled,, that the. house had never receded from ,lts advocacy of -the Bmun-i-ever amendment. . was ttep rraentetlva Underwood w.ho moved con--"'tiirrente ln'4th sieiiatp's elimination of cotton- -fUture'-aeetloiiv-feii)Uvii.:'"-!;f . . .ths bill passed, Bpeaker. Clark stance It at 1:20, and tien't. it back to the sen ate fat Vice president Marshall also to . slgnatura and " an a waiting menaenger - . started for th White House with the bill. The bill 'was delivered to 'the White House at 3:33 t. m; PLAGE ON BALLOT IS IDGE . County , Commissioners Make ALLOTTEO NTERSTATE BR BOND ISSUE i ; Formal Orden Campaign of K - Education to Be Conducted, X. Vptera of Multnonah county will vote upon ; tha question of the ; Issuance of 4i. 1.260.OOa -bonda-foc the building of this ', 'Jj; eounty'a; share of the great Interstate f :; bridge . over thoColumbla river on. No- yamber'!. The ordef placing' the que ; tion upon" the ballot' was. signed and ' ; sealed by the county commissioners ttiia mornlna -i Ys'i:'; nve memoers or tue cnuae committee . which has brought the question to this . jpolnt. Frank Branch Riley, .chairman; ; a. luniy.. C. Crawford, Dav i f Lofgreti and 3. H. - Noka, were present at -th commissioners' . meeting; - - this S i; , morning when .Deputy Counfy Clerk ; ' , Bush ( formally, preaented the .petition. ';,. '-Three other members ot the committee, .V - , W. M. Kllllngsworth, John F.' Igan end "; Whitney I Boise, were absent from the V h .dty- and- unable to- bs.'preseiife-i.t.a.w- i ' ' The agitation for the Issuance of . the bonds . followed i the successful election ; . in Clarke county "Washington; wheq the ?i i . citizens Vof tha county voted $500,000 i ' ; bonds to build their share of the bridge, ;: , Since that date vry effort ' has been made to have the question submitted In Multnomah county with: the result that COOO signatures were aecured with ease, although only: 1000 were necessary, i , ' 1 That no lqgal hitch .might occur, the 'y. order which the commlsulonera signed ?.V; was ' prepared yv; District ;Attorney Bvans. The, order recites that at prea. ent MultnomanV county has no bonded . ' ;,. Indobtedneas afld that the $1,260,000 to ;.- be voted upon does tqt exceed the 3 per cent - limit of bonded indebtedness ; al t lowed'by law. This limit is l per cent : of the assessed valuation of Multnomah - ' county, property, which was' $335,111,074 4.',.,i last yeari ;i-m;ti..'-!:-;'-V'V "tW . ""'r..' v'; That te fight Is but nicely begun was .s'' the 'sentiment ; expressed by -Chairman 5 Bllcy and from -now. on the greatest f forts will be made, to Interest. .the Peo--..rJ 'of , Multnomah county In jtthe , j?ro C-' Jed bridge and to. place i before the ' ' voters facta and ,flgur,es-to show that 'UmuCkS. Mt.Wl)l.-Jtvj SS..WjMC.0lg.,n4,, ' the Interest will-be paid' by the. state, thus- saving . Multnomah.--county ; tax payers any ; Increased taxation -by',' rca son of ihe bond. Issue. -...::. ,-Mviv.j,T 'i'V'i- Tho- petition was presented under van , enabling act paased by the' last- Iegla lature following the fallUre-of the legls- lature to provide for , the bridge as a '';' state matter, L : British Army Aviator Killed. ! Loti'lon, Oct. . 3. Major J. O. Merrick, fan army HVlator, was killed today, on ' tiiallnburff l'laln by the full of his aero plane. ' , , ; BURIAtFORHIS.VICTIM 7 . ' "kf - s r , , Schmidt peered.' Mu rdef pr of ' , Anna Aumuller by Coroners e 1 VIJ',W i1, Mlvtl! If I VI II' ,T i,' ? .' IColted Prew Leaiwt IVin.t' ,Kew Tork, Och. With an outbreak of violence,: which, if he. is only sham- mlng insanity, waS a truly marvellous niece .of : acllnr. Hana Schmidt, fon- feaked murderer ; of Anna "Aumuller, nearly caused a panic'' today, among the Spectators at the Inquest over the fragments-of hla victim's 7 body.' ;-v ' : " v A1 pitiable 'object with " a week's growth of , beard." dirty,' wrinkled cloth ing, 'staring eyes and strained expres- IchVlr when Coroner. Fclnberg announced that Anna Aumuller's mangled corpse would b burled In the potters field un less someone furnished -funds ' to lay; it In consecrated ground.' , ; ' - - ' At his word senrnTdt leaded to his feet with startling suddenness. -IBs eyes protruded and he shooft f rom -Jnaad to foot, apparently with rage.4 iV: ? Hnrla Boiary at Ooroaer. - - - Jerking something from-his. pocket, he wrapped it with furious Jiaate in his roaary and hurled It at the coroner. Missing 'him, the object struck a"; news- pa per-reporter- in the face,--fj - Schmidt gave ja terrifying -shrieks as it did so, 'the ' spe'eut'ors i tulhklna Bchmldt was about to run amuck among tnem, jumpea up ana pegan rugning cor the door.- Half k doxen policemen seised Schmidt, forced him back Into hie chair XContlnujd. on,Page.Tweny:Thrfe Jfc,;, Public Utility Certificates for CHARgENIM Issued Now; 1 Other Defects Are , Discovered; City, Council Will Take . 1 Af tor .working three months under the commission charter the mayor and com mlsBionera'have decided that there are several defects to the charter which can be corrected only by amendments sub mitted to the people at the November lection. ' A number . of .these amend ments have already been put into tenta. tive shape,: but an hot be filed with the city auditor before tomorrow mornlnn, at which time -the members .of the city council will take definite-action as to whether the proposed amendments shall be submitted to the 'people. There are about a doaen in all proposed. '., City Attorney- La' Roche had - ruled' that under section 80 of ihe oharter the city has no right to issue public utility certificates for the reconstruction of or ,aatlloU"t6nWlrfly,w.'h' ated within the city. -amr, according to the opinion, the clty is unable 'to ejl public utility certificates " for the con- atructlon of water txtenalona or certifi cates for the construction of other utll Itjes outside the city, .-.., , Avtendment Is Proposed, The amendment proposed gives the council the power, to sell utility certlfl- ates in small denominations for the purchase, vondninatton,' reconstruction. onttmctictn, ailuuton, eniarKpnicnt or extennlon of any public utility or any Vortlon. or part . thereof, including any E FOR OREGON PEOPLE,' J Waiufacturers-i'TelliCrods Why Homeinqtistry Should tBalenr Bureau of The Journal.) , . Balem, Or.. . Oct. , S.- "Oregon-made leoods for Oregon people " Is the slogan fnt akawiI 'n.th mtatn tain fifl this la "home manufacturera""-day. A special program was given .this morning in the auditorium at the grounds. C. A. Black of . the Union Meat company of Portland gave an address of particular ihtacest to' fiifmers. dyth Toiler Weatherred, " representing the Oregon Manufacturers' association, spoke : on "Country ' Life and Homo Industries." There were a number of other addresses by -prominent .manufacturers. .. The attendance probably will not be ao great today as -It was yesterday and the before, when all previous roc ords wire broken. The attendance yes terday -exceeded ' the record-braking at tendance of Wednesday. - There were practically 17,opO paid admissions' yes terday.i nearly 1000. greater than the day before. . AH toldnt, Is officially esti mated that the croNd exceeded 2 J.000. Representatives from eight of the Willamette valley counties, includlna Clackamas.- Tfarablll, Benton. Lane, Marlon, Washington, Linn and Polk, met yesterday to formulate plans for a Willamette valley exhibit af ihe Pan ama. Paoific exposition. It, -was decided it ..would -be more representative and profitable for the counties -to join la making the exnibif Fred B.' uynon (Cpntlnued ..on. .Page .Twenty). Water Extensions Can't Be Action "Tomorrow. and all' real or personal property, or real and 'personal property necessary, essential or convenient therefor, with in. ,or without the city; provided, how ever,, that no such property shall be acquired unless the tame Is for a muni cipal purp'ose. v J - i , . An amendment la also proposed for section I of the , commission 'Charter, which afDresenf "provides that the city shall be Invested with, all governmental powers v subject , to the limitations pre scribed. by .the constitution .and laws f the state. The amendment limits the authorty of the city to only the -con- Btuuuon and i criminal-' laws s.oC ' the state. , ,.;.:,a, amenament la . also proposed to section : $06. providing for the taking out ; of - civil ! service . the v position, of superintendent, of parka, and the secre taries to the - four commissioners, ' u .I'At prcaent. the ' parT'suStme1(!a!3t Is undet civil service regulations, while an examiuation had been planned , for secretaliet to ,the commlasloncra. I If the proposed amendment carries .the positions. of J park, superintendent' and secretaries to commlaslonera- shall ,bo appointive -offices. " ',(,' i ,iJ. , Undor section IBs of the present char ter. It Is provided that at Uisst one week ahull elapse between the introduction of and flnalf passage of any ordinance, and that no Wdlnano ahall'be amended tCuntluued on Page Thlrtecu.) OREGON-MAD GOODS SLOGAN ODAY SEATRE JUDGES m VERY UNKIND JIGS " -ABOUT EAGH MOTHER ' atii n ii i ji 1 1 mf ii.,i..uaswasas-' 'r " '" '5' " Humphries'., j Activities Jno? '.ciailst Contempt". Cases Gets Censure of Other Jurists'. . (Ualtad frwa Leased Wlre.v .' . SeatUe. Wash., Oct. .1 That the other eight Judges wof the superior court are planning some action - against - Judge Humphries' was Indicated at noon today when they met ' In 'executive session in Judge -Boyd Tallman's -chambers. . A notice of ' the meeting was twice ferved during the morning by a bailiff on Judge Humphries and., in each caae he wrote , a. s terse, pote declining to attend.'. . , ;" ;; ':, ,'. .. -'-.-!; '' Seven . more : contempt cases were heard by Humphries flila morning -and In each caae the' defendant's declared they would again algn the letter of pro test agalnst his decision in the Prlce-Tltus-Badler contempt cases. They were each fined $100. , ybree of the seven were women -Mrs. II. F. 8pencer.r Mrs. Catherine . Stlrtan and Mrs. Millard .Price. : ' ; . ; '' Mrs. Sueaeer told the judge she was the mother of four email children, and, as her ' husband,-:, H. F. Hpencer, was also going to Jail,' the little ones would be without ( care.-j ,"I want to know. Judge," she asked, "what you gre' going to do with my. children?" :J , (Continued .on Page wo. I , SOMETHING TOLD HER NOT TO BUT SHE Pendleton Girl, Bride of a k Month, Let' Husband Have ; $1000; He's Gone, ttulted BMt Leiaed Wir.) ' Ban. -Francisco, Oct. S.-Deserted by her. husband of Its than a month, Mrs H. C. Foster, formerly Miss Hattle Long of i rei.lleton. Or., t secured a- warrant this afternoon -for Poster's arrest on a Charge of grand . larceny. Foster left bi bride last Monday after she had entrusted ,$10O0 to his keeping. ; riave hlmi the money," said Mrs'. Fosten todayt "because he asked me to, but 1 didn't want to do it, something told me I Bhould keep it myself. ' I baven' t- seen hi m. since. , - dt; . jf . ; MRS RUETER.CONVICTECk OFf MURDERING HUSBAND Martleavllle. V Okla.. Oct ; 3. Mrs 'La'ura. M. R,auter was, found guilty to day of murdering - ner, . nusDano. a prominent lawyer at Tulsat The Jury recommended life imprisonment ; ';'-?-r ir r -r--or.; ; Oulmet ;Giyes Up Plifitig. i Bosfbn. . Oct : 3-T-Verglng ; on, nervous collapse,' Francis Oulmot, whb won the AmwtoaBwiiniaQjicnampjonsnip re Dying. "Tokld. OoU S.-rTlie condition . of for mer premier Katsura, who has been III for solne time, was pronounced hopelea by his physicians today. , !' - j Foolkiller -Ahoyt Washington, )!."' 3. C'ongVeasmaii Moore rvf Philadelphia introduced a bill for a "luther day." centiy, aosnaonea in. game or mt rest x-""-""tm-,v,mhh, ot the seaaon-r ; a,f ; H; " i This morning at aj 65 ocloconS of '-,. , ,t ,:i,, M-i't,,...).-!;- them was found dead In the middle f :' OFFICIAL URGES DEEPER CH. Company Will Send Big Ships Here if Water on Bar Is 35 to' 40 Feet, Says Vice Di rector. . , - MUST HAVE 30 FOOT -I'V CHANNEL TO THE SEA Entire Future of. Port Hangs , on Channel Project, As - ."serts W. G. Sickel. -The viewpoint' of a great steamip company in respect to the development of Portland as a port was explained by W, Q. Sickel, vice director and man ager of freight and. operation of 'the Hamburg-American line, while , in Port land yesterday. ,c, .'.'-: ' So far as the steamship companies are concerned, he declared, the whole com mercial future of this port depends on the deepening of the channel oyer the bar and In the Columbia river to Port land.- v. -,. ' "''. ','" The finest vessels of the Hamburg American line can. and will come to Portland If there is 35 to 40 . feet of water on the bar and. 30 feet from port- land to the sea. Until ' the 30-foot channel to the sea is established a direct line to the orient will not be seriously considered by the Hamburg-American company; with a 30-foot channel a direct line will be seriously considered. The making .of through rates to the orient from the Interior via Portland is not up to the steamship company; it is up to 'the railroads. The Hamburg American line has given Portland regu lar ship service. - It will not tie itself up with any railroad comrany, but be lieves that rate$ as favorable as be tween the' Chlcugo, Milwaukee A : St. Paul and the Osgkl .line at Puget sound could be made by the transcontinental lines In Portland. "I understand that the two Hill lines, the Great Northern and the Northern Pacific, are planning such . rates, and if so, you .won't, need to worry whether ine y.-.w. oc win meet tnem." Sickel frankly admitted that the pur -'Continued on Page Thirteen.) TELEGRAPH BATTLE IS ED ON TRANSFER OF Former Senator Bqurne Sends Vitriolic Answer to. Sassy . Message, of Chief Engineer, Presideat Romlses Aotloa. - Promise of personal attention to the protest againat the trana- e fer .of Major James P. Molndoe was received by former Senator e 0 Jonathan Bourne Jr. from Presi- a e drnt Woodrow Wilson today, the 4 president sending a telegraphla e answer to Senator Bourne's re- 4. e quest for Intervention, as fol- - lows: - '''-. "The White House, Washing- d 4 ton, D. O. Honorable Jonathan , Bourne Jr., Portland, Or.: Whall a d be glad to take up the matter you speak. Of with the war de- e partpient Woodrow Wilson," - The protest against the transfer of Major James F. Mclndoe, district gov ernment engineer, from the work on the lower Columbia to the Philippines, has developed Into a tense' contest between former Senator Jonathan Bourne Jr., and Chief of United . States Engineers Rossell. ? A telegraphic altercation brought to Senator Bourne yesterday a message from Rossell stating that despite the local protest the order for transfer was still being asked because it was the policy of the office. "It Is an Instance (Continued on Page, Twenty). liN DIES ON-STREET. ' AFTER PISTOL DUEL I'V Saloon1 Man Opens Fire VVhen 5 Commanded -to' "Throw ; 'Up.Hands,";. ft ':N v : iF "'. i Seattle,- Wash.,.:Oct.; 3.Two maaked men ehtered the saloon of J. I' Mul doon laat night and commanded him to throw up his hands. Muldoon answered by' drawing a gun. ' A pistol duel fol. lowed.' jTOfcnA the i guns were emptied the'twe ba'hdits backed out of. the a- .tia of the shootlns-.' A. bullet had en tered, Just below hla right shoulder and had goneUn, the direction of his heart. Another struck'hls left shoulder and a third tore sway-two flngers'of his right hand, -i Mgldoon'a left 'arm was shat tered below the elbow and One bullet graced his Skull. The dead man wor. an I. W; W, button,' Ho was about 36 years old. . HAMBURG LINES WAG MAM M INDUE tjorrif . Ttxrrt Admitting' Certainty of His . Conviction Theatrical Exec utive promises to Die Fight ing Tammany. FACING OBLITERATION, , HE PLANS EXPLOSION He Takes Strange Comfort in Attention the Case Is At-; . tracting Over World. By Herbert Core ft.' : ' : Albany, N. Y- Oct. 3. ''There will never be another Impeachment, trial, in this , uoun try,: said, Goyeror Sillier. "One hundred years - fro'nv now lawyers will, still be going for -precedents . to the case of the people of the i State of New Y:ik 'against William Sulser.'l', . The central figure In the moat im portant Impeachment trial since that of Andrew Johnson's some good lawyers hold that In its bearing on constitutional-law this Sulser case is even greater stopped In pacing up and down the floor of hls 'offlce In the executive mansion to shake an emphatic fore finger at his caller. His face, lighted up. , He seemed to feel a certain vanity In the very greatness of the catastrophe In which he has beeri engulfed. "All the great continental Journals have , representatives .here," s&jd he. "The reports of the trial are being printed in every paper on the globe. Lawyers have come here from every university in Europe, perhaps, to study the caae. It Is a cause celebre. I have a wonderful array pf counsel. . But they are not interested so' much In the guilt or Innocence of the man William Sulser as In the working out of the great questions involved. Why,, just think of it I A century after .these lawyers are dead students will turn to the reports of this trial, printed in a dozen langua-ges, maybe, and read the precedents they have- helped establish. It Is a wonderful thing for them." c He walked over nearer the .; Jong t Continued on - Page Nineteen.)-1 1 1 u , '!,,,- POUCESCANDAL OF Civil; Service ' Bqard- to Turn Over Evidence of. Alleged Jugglery to Authorities. :' Testimony brought out at the hear ings of the Municipal Service Board delving into the charges that the. ex amination' for' captain of police held last year was Juggled, will, bo placed Immediately- before ; Chief ; of police Clark, Ctty Attorney La Roche and District Attorney Evans With a view to having them file charges against : a number o police officials high In rank and others Involved in the alleged Jug gling of the examination. This was tho decision of Civil Service Commissioners A. K. Clark and George W. Caldwell yesterday afternoon when' the' eligible list secured from that examination was ordered anulled.- :,.. i:-if , At least two members of the deoart- ment, according, to the. commissioners. (Continued on PagS Seven) 'LEGAL LYNCHING' JOCK CCMMISSIOiJ GOVERNOR SULZER - NAMES KB W END IN10SEC10N HIPP OFFICIALS PANAMA CANAL IN PICTURES V Tabic of contents of tlie eight SUNDAY JOURNAJw for October ; 5, . devoted , exclusively to ;.nc . .-Panama Canal. :.'.'-.'. ', 'v t-.-;' k k vSli'V? Tbe thotorrapha for tbe most part arranged to give a eompiete pioture atory of ROUTE OF THE PANAMA CANALS-MAP OF THE BIG DITCH, LAST BARRIER WHICH RESTRAINS THE WATER FROM two oceans. f" MIDDLE AND LOWER GATUN LOCKS LOOKING NORTH. UPPER GATUN LOCKS, GATUN LAKE IN .THE BACK-: . GROUND.'. ' , . f ' GATUN LOCKS LOOKING TOWARD THE ATLANTIC , TYPE OF. ELECTRIC ENGINE WHICH WILL TOW SHIPS :''.;..THROUGH LOCKS. , A U ';'w ..4 ii , GATUN LAKE, ARTIFICIAL BODY OF WATER. WHICH WILL - "S-.yxii -FEED , CANAL. ' . v il f. ' .' V" 1 TOWING RAILWAY ADJACENT, TO THE CANAL LOCKS. ; GENERAL VIEW OF- CULEBRA CUT IN FINISHED CONDI- - IkrTiOH; - fl v. ' " ,,"' ' CULEBRA CUT, 'SHOWING TYPE OF SLIDES THAT HAVE i CAUSED TROUBLE. , - ' S . ' ' , PEDRO MIGUEL LOCK. NEAR PACIFIC END OF THE CANAL. VIEW OF MIRAFLORES LOCKS,' SH OWING, IMMENSITY OF ' - .THE WORK.;vi&r '-''-V; 7 MAMMOTH PEDRO1 MIGUEL LOCK GATES WHEN OPEN. ; DOUBLE GATES AT MIRAFLORES LOCKS.; j-'"';--- v CONCRETE LINED LOCKS AT MIRAFLORES . BEFORE ' WATER WAS.ADMITTED:;,V-iv.Vv;-:;v:v-' PANORAMIC iVIEW OF PEDRO MIGUEL LOCK, LOOKINQ TOWARD CULEBRA.KlvS--- -BALBOA,DUMPS.ANaMC,S CANAL. The story of the eonstruotloa of tbe comprehensively told. . - THE SUNDAY. JOURNAL Us told by alt newsdechrs Ur S cents the copy. , . - NEXT SUNDAY r,c,Mr ow thaws .-l..T. .. IUJ WILL GET OPTION 11 Great Scheme Launched' to Dredge Immense Turning V Basin and Usek Earth to Fill Mock Bottom, Guilds Lake. :-';V,''-"U' " : "''rt ytm0 DOCKAGE SYSTEM. T0' , EQUAL ANY ON COAST Estimate - Shows ' 40 : Feet i o f ? .Water Will Require Outlay, of About $3,600,000. - ' A stupendous scheme of harbor and dock development was launched by the jpublic docks commission' this morning. It includes tbe creating of a tui-nlnj: baaln 40 feet deep where' Swan island: now is. the filling of Mock's Bottom and the development of "Bridgeport "so that, the berthing capacity of slips and piers for deep sea shipping will together ac commodate 38 to 42 ships; Figures of cost have not been complied. ' ' Authority ; was given the chairman of the commission, Frederick W. Mulkey, to secure an option on Swan island. -Its assessed area Is 266 acres. ' Its actual area vis 348 acres. . An , option, has al ready been taken on the Mock's Bottom property. It has been Intimated that 8wan Island could be bought for 11000 an acre. - .... - The commission proposes t get Into definite form its proposal and-to . seek approval and appropriations from' tha people at a popular election, f : r Xoadsteed Would Be Big. : ; -' The roadsted. created - by the removal of Swan Island would be 4000 feet wide. Enough material would be supplied oy removal of the island and channel ex cavation to fill all of Mock's Bottom. Guild's lake and the Bridgeport front age where filling Is necessary -in con nection with the last named-property. . Quietly working under the direction of Chairman" Mulkey during the' pat weeks. It has been estimated by Chl-f Engineer Hagardt of the commission, that it would cost 318,000,000 to develop' (Continued on Page Thirteen.) TEN FEET LIE rET.VI "mi IU-11., f MINER AND HlBERTY . 'v t, .- '.Jj";"- --.-"V-., c1."i."- 'v "' If '-' v ; f ' ' ' s," : ' ' i " i': . -X?x '':' Toshesky; Has Not .Been Told of Nearness of Rescue Lest . v,He Collapse,' ' '!(tlaitefS6eH Maasd Wire.) VrJ-iZ-Centralla,;Fa.; Oct I. With only ,10 feat of coal separating. him from free dom. Thomas. Toshesky, entombed since last Friday in the Continental "coal mine here, will be rescued this afternoon, ac cording to the announcement of mine officials. ' Although the- imprisoned mi ner has Inquired frequently-concerning the probable time of his rescue, he has not been told, physicians fearing he might collapse if he knew Toshesky slept for several hours early today. He complained of cold during the night' and a long-Manilla rope was lowered to him. ' He coiled this on the third floor of 'the chamber, saying -it eliminated dampness.. . - General Manager Chase last nigntcon- versed through the pipe with Toshesky. Then'he ordered. that no expense or time be spared - to help either . Toshesky or ' his fsjnHy...-';i;-: page illustrated section; OF THE,; : axe reproduced la half page siae and tae great waterway. ISLAND, AT PACIFIC END OF Panama Canal gad its hnlldars ia :'.;. - ' v ,: DNSMUID