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THE WEATHER. Fair THREE AMERICAN CRUISERS ARE OFF | f AGAINST YAQUIS Colorado, Chattanooga and lhleigh‘ Ordered to West Coast of Mexico to Protect Americans. i ALL DESTINED FOR TOBARI BAY Indians Have Declared They Will! Expel Settlers from Territory Given Them. WITHDRAW TO THE MOUNTAINS SAN DIEGO, Cal., June 17.—Peril | of American settlers in the Yaqul valley of Sonora state brought orders today for the dispatch of three cruis- ers for the west coast of Mexico and authorization or Admiral Thomas B. Howard to land an expeditionary force if he thinks best. The flag- ship Colorado sailed first, under or-g ders from Washington, carrying three companies of the Fourth regi-| ment, United States marine corps,| under Major W. N. McKelvy. Rakeigh Gets Up Steam. Somewhere ofr the coast of Lower Cali- fornia the radio began snapping back orders from the admiral which started the protected cruiser Chattanooga after the Colordado. The protected cruiser Raleigh, also ordered to sail, began get- ting up steam and was expected to get away in the night. All three were destined for Tobari bay, near Glaymas, rallroad terminus and sea- port in Sonora. Ninety miles southeast of Guaymas |s Bsperanza, where an American colony, which has successfully resisted attacks of Yaqui Indians, is re- ported to be again in danger. Withdraw Hills. The Indians have declared their inten- tion to expel settlers from land which is | #said to have been taken from the Yaquis under the a dministration of President | Diaz. They are reported today to have withdrawn to the mountains. The three cruisers have available for landing purposes 1,100 officers and men ‘besides the marines. BRIDGE of British navy, against Austrians. o QAL CROWN PRINCE OF SERVIA A" o S TROW. OMAHA, FRIDAY @ Vg aid o0 Lervian campaign 600D SHIP JULIA COMES INTO PORT CATFISH BAKE AT MANAWA FOR T.P.A. 5y De—— FLIER WHO WRECKED Z¢alians Advanc ZEPPELIN KILLED N _AIR WITH AMERICAN . VERONA, June 17.<(Via Chiasso and ‘arie)—News recelved here from the o ront Is that the Italians have virtually 4 a ocoupled the town of Mori, advancing Lieutenant Warneford, Canadian |from both the south and east. Morl is about twenty miles from here and about five miles from Rovereto. The way ibe- tween Morl and Roverto is, however, {most difficult. Fortifications have been ,erected on virtually every commanding position In the,district, and to move for- PLANE CRASHFS AFTER BLAST | ward out of Mort will necessitate the dis- |mantling of many trenches. Expltuion Causes Machine to Fall, | UDINE, June 17.—(Via Chiasso and g o Paris.)~The artillery duel between Aus- Killing Heroic Birdman and |trians and Italians in the Carnie Alps Aviator Destroying Dirigible, and Henry Beach Needham, Passenger, Lose Lives. 2 3. is continuing. day and night When Magazine Writer. !darkness falls, searchiights and rockets {are brought into play to make fighting JUST GIVEN LEGION OF HONOijoume. The Austrians have been suc- - | cessful in bringing powerful artillery 17.—Lieutenant | against the positions in these mountains PARIS, June held by Italians Reginald A. J. Warneford, Canada,| ™., "0 " (Fo ot the Itallans would who gained fame recently by bIOWIDE | appear to have been able to maintain to pleces a Zeppelin over RPelgium, | their superiority Ttallan troops, cus- was killed today by the fall of an|toms guards and the Alpine men have made many successful surprise attacks aeroplane at Buc, France, upon the Austrians, compelling them in Lieutenant Warneford was pilot~|soveral cases to surrender without fight- |ing the machine, which had as a ine It is their custom to advance upon e fré;fi south and East and Occupy Town of Mori — ] SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. On Trains and at Motel News Stands. 8o IRUSS ABANDON ' POSITIONS ON the trenches, which are considered im- pregnable, over little known smugglers’ trails, and win their fight by the sud | denness of their appearance. In this | . | manner the mountains to the west and |mouth of Malborgeth have been occupied, |as have also certain helghts dominating ’Tentunio Allies Force Slavs to Flee the plateau of Gall | BRESCIA, Ttaly, June 17.—(Via Chaisso | Defenses in Galicia and Cross and Paris)—Information has been brought Into Poland m”r. here of alleged Austrian ways of pro- | cedure in the Codino distriot. | | In this locality the Austrians decided DECISIVE BATTLE IN PROGRESS | they would make no resistance. .Con- | A 4 | sequently they compelled all the people ' Berlin Report Says Line of Contact | Who were favorable to Italy to leave, in Poland and Galicia is 682 | leaving behing only those who sided with u“e' hn‘ | Austria. They wera instrucied to act| | an spies and to organise brisandage on | —_— | the Ttallan rear. In order to deceive the | RUSSIANS ADMIT Invaders they were to pretend to be en thusiastic supporters of Ttaly. BERLIN, June 17.—(Vis Lon- The Itallan authorities discovered this alleged plot. In some cases they .‘,""dnn )—The Russians have aban- caught and convicted offenders who had (doned their positions to the north of been found in powsession of underground | Sjeniawa, on the San river, in Gali- telaphonea and other means of signaling. But ou the Italans fotnd 1t HnpOWIS cla, and have retreated toward Tar- to watch ell the people in this district, |n08rod, in Russian Poland, accord- the complete evacuation of the villages|ing to the official statment given out today by the German army head- REVERSES TURKISH ATTACK ON TRENCHES. FAIL ! 3 Caused by Exploaion. | Attempt to Retake Positions Cap- i p Twelve is Repulsed. { passenger Henry Beech Needham, the American writer, who also was killed. | ILieutenant Warneford and Noedham | fell from a helght of 50 feet. The | | licutenant had been spending a few daye | in Parls, where he came after hia Zop- | pelin exploit to recelve his decoration n!; the Lexion of Honor, in midair which caused Lieutenant | Waaneford to loss control, the machine | crashing to earth. | GERMAN COMMANDER I8 KILLED Nedham's body was taken to the En# lish hospital in Trianon Palace, Ver-| © bout | BULLETIN, sallles. Ho had been in Europe about| poNDON June 17.-The Star re- four months acting as correspondent of | magazines and a New York newspaper. iceivnd today a telegram from Athens He had recelved permission from the |saying news had been received there military authorities to make a mxhl"l'n from Mudros that a British subma- order to get material for a story s| i I wite, who also 18 & writer, accompanied | Fine torpedoed and sank three Turk | him during the early part of his trip | 1sh transports loaded with troops in |abroad. Mrs. Needham sailed for Amer-|the.Dardanelles above Nagara. The ica six weeks ago. great part of the troops and crews is Suddenly Becomes Famouos. sald to have been drowned. was ordered quarters staff. WAR IS RESULT OF | ‘aemieerote pulsed. Otherwise nothing of spe- Fleo Posi Southeastern theater of war: “North of Sienawa attacks by the Teutonic allies forced the Russians to abandon their positions and re- treat towards Tarnogrod. The army under General von Mackenzen followed in hot pursuit. Dachnow and Lubacsow were taken by storm. “The southern bank of the Wysznia was cleared of all enemies. At Niemerow the resistance of the Russians quickly broke down and the Niemerow and Jaworow rivers were crossed. Fuyrther south the Russians are retreating towards Wercszuca. | i | Mr. Bryan Discusses Preparedness in | Second Paper on Causes of the European Conflict. U. S. SETS A GOOD EXAMPLE WASHINGTO, June 17.—Assert- ing that preparedness provokes rather than prevents war, and that the upheaval in Burope was the re- sult of the false philosophy that “might makes right,” former Secre- tary Bryan today in the second of his series of three statements on “The Causeless War’ submits an argument | Reginald A. J. Warneford, a young [ Canadian sublioutenant in the Royal I navy, suddenly acquired world-wide re- | nown by destroving a Zeppelin over Bel- 7, this being the first time glum on June 7, |on record that a Zeppelin had been | | LONDON, June 1i.-—Turkish | troops in the Dardanelies have been | repulsed in thelr attempt to recapture | the trenches lost by them to the Brit-| against military preparation by the of President Wilson in the interna- tional emergency. “It any natiop is without excuse United States and praises the course | “The situation southeast of the Dneister swamps is unchanged.'" Malt Way to Lembers. LONDON, June 17.—The latest news from the eastern front does not Captain Stevens Pleased with His|Visitors Enjoy Unrivaled Taste of | wrecked by an aviator in an aeroplane. | for entering into a mad rivairy with Hail and Heavy Rain Does Damage in West CAMBRIDGE, Neb., June 17.—(Special Telegram.)—A destructive hail storm visited this section this afternoon cover- ing a territory from eight to ten miles wide and extending to west of McCook. Three inches of rain. fell. - Many flelds |of grain are a total loss. The Republican river is out of its banks and no trains are running.’ BEATRICH, Neb, June IT.—(Special |Telegram.)—A terrific rain, wind and electrical storm visited this section this |afternoon. The rainfall amaunted to about four inches in some localities. ‘Wheat was blown down and considerably damaged. All trains are behind time on account of the storm hnd the Union Pa~ ciffc was unable to get its passenger north through here tonight because the tracks are under water at Clebourne, Kan, Wymore, Barneston and Odell and other towns in this section report heavy rains. ORLEANS, Neb., June 17.—(8pecial Tel- egram.)—A rainstorm of forty minutes' duration, during which time nearly four inches of water fell, struck Orleans and wicinity at 8 o'clock this morning. Train service in efther direction out of Orleans is impaired on account of washouts and | soft track. Between here and Alma a ‘washout twelve feet deep and over sixty fuet long was made by the heavy rain, ‘the water taking away the rails and tles. Austrian Submarine Sinks an Italian-On | LONDON, June 17.-It is officially an- nounced that the Italian submarine ‘Medusa has been torpedoed and sunk by an Austrian submarine, says a dispatch from Rome to the Stefani agency. The Medusa was a vessel of 241 tons and was bullt in 1#11. It had a speed of thirteen knots above water and eight knots submerged. Its ordinary comple- ment was fourteen men. The Weather, For Omaha, Council Blufts and Vicinity | ~Showers, warmer. Temperatures at Omadha Yesterday. Hours. Deg. 5a m . 0 m 61 Ta m 58 Sa m ok 9a m 5 10a m. 7 Uam e 4 12 m. T8 ip. m [ 2p m. .2 3 p m. .8 ip.m 68 6p m [14 €p.m 9 Tp.m ] 8p. m.. & Comparative Local Recor: 1915. 1914. 1913. 1912, [Highest yesterda, 68 T JA‘.v'vheu y’uurdny. %Y Mean um&lm Precipital . Temperature and precipitation depar- turés from the normal 28! Noy te: ature | Deficle) for 12| ‘Total deficien: . | Normal | preeipitation . JTinch | Excess for the day.. . 2 fnch | Total rainfall since March 1..10.17 inches Deficiency since March 1...... 1.6 inches Eixcess for cor, period, 1914.... 1.31 inches Excess for cor. period, 1913 .1 inch Reports from Statlons at 7 P. M. Station and S 'l'.’emD. High- Rain- ate of Weather. i P.m. est fall iCheyenne, partly cloudy.. 6 ] 00 Davenport, cloudy........ 6 0 Denver clear....... ™ ™ | Des Moines, rain ] 14 | North Platfe, clear § 4 Omaha, ] “ Jiapid City, ciear 2 ® Sloux City, cloudy 2 » Valentine, "clear..... . || Z 2 L A WELSH, Local Forecaster. Trip and 8ays Will Have Larger Boat Next Year. WILL MAKE NEEDED REPAIRS “Land, Ho! On the sta’board bow,” sang out Mate Hannoca frora the lookout on the upper deck o the N Julia as she swung in under tha Union Pacific bridge on its way up the river from Glasgow, Mo., to De- catur, Neb, At 10 o'clock as the Julia tied up to the bank near the Douglas street bridge, a band on shore played, “All Hail the Chief,” and. the crowd clambered on deck to congratulate Captain Stevens upon his safe arrival in port. Crowds Gathered at Dock. Regardless of the steady downpour of rain fully 200 people gathered at the docks and all joined in a loud cheer as the Julla tied up at the dock. Then everybody was invited on board and a thorough inspection of the boat and its consort, the barge Ann, was made. Into port the Julia brought some 21,000 pounds of freight, mast of it for the H. J. Hughes Grocery company and ths Sun- derland Brothers. It was a mixed cargo of heavy groceries and building material. To Make Repairs Here. The Julia will ramain here a week or 8o in order that repairs may be made and the’ craft again rendered seaworthy. This having been done, the boat will take on a cargo of freight and proceed up-river to Decatur. Twenty-elght days ago the Julia and its barge Ann left Glasgow, 500 miles below Omaha by, river. Since then the boat and barge have been tied up seven- teen days on account of bad weather, breakages and for repairs Captain Stevens asserts that with a low stage of water and when the channel has become fixed he can made thirty- five to fifty miles a day up stream and considerably more going down. The barge Ann has a carrying capacity of fifty tons. It s sixteen feet wide and sixty-three long, decked over with can- vas, and is set square against the bow of the Julia and fastened to it with chains. Stern Wheel Type. The Julia, the boat that furnishes the power to push the barge, is twelve by sixty feet over all twenty-four horse power, of the stern wheel type and uses gesoline for motive power. It draws two feet of water, while the barge needs four feet to move in the clear, that is, if joaded to capacity. Captain Stevens 1s pleased with success of the trip from Glasgow Omaha, and upon landing sald “This trip has demonstrated conclu- sively that the navigation of the Missouri river up as far as Omaha {s practical find profitable. I shall continue making regular trips during the balance of the season, and next spring I will have a Jarger boat in the trade. During the win- ter I will construct a larger barge and a larger boat. [ shall bulld the new barge to draw not to exceed thirty inches when loaded, and the new power boat will be of 15 horse power, the engines to be crude ofl burners, a fuel that is much less expensive than gasoline and gives Letter results.” the to \Sioux City Has Coldest June 17 Since 1889 SIOUX CITY, la, June }7.—The tem- perature dropped to 48 degrees here to- day, the coldest on June 17 since 1589 Furnace fires were started in many houses and steam plants started in busi- ness houses Fish Cooked on Fire in the Oven. VARIED ENTERTAINMENT GIVEN Bun and rain yesterday alternated in lifting the hopes of the Travelers' Protective assoclation. entertalnment 'committee and dashing them to the ground. The South Omaha festivi- ties were carried through with great eclat. ‘The thing that held in the balance of doubt was the catfish bake | at the Council Bluffs Rowing asso- clation grounds Lake Manawa, Thirice did tho entertaitment cominittee | oeclare it “off” while Lhe rain poured, +nd thrice did they declare it “on again.” Finally, about 3 o'clock, they got mad st the vaccllating weather and said, “Gol cing but it!" they'd have it if it rained pitchforks. And the guests were soon streaming Manawa-ward. 2 The rain fell. But about the timw the first cars reached the scene of the bake the rain stopped. “Fortune befriends the trave,” and so it did In this case, for the rain stopped just about long emough for the fish bake and then started In egaln, ‘What is a catfish bake? It's a fair question. Eo listen closely. The guests yesterday found a long fire btullt. It was about 100 feet long. And on each side of this fire all along it length were the fish on sticks stuck ia the ground, grilling away merrily, How to Bake a Catfish. There's a right way to put catfish on the sticks, as was apparent from watch- ing the men who were still doing it. You tuke a stick about three feet long and stick it through Br'er Catfish from stem 10 stem. Then you take a small nali and hammer it through his head into the stick, using a beer bottle for & hammer. Then you take a couple of hitches around his tail with a plece of string, ticing it tc the stick. Then you stick the st'ck in the ground by the fire. Don't: forget, also, to douse the fish with salt. A valiant brass band stood in the wet yesterday and played lustily, and at times merry gentlemen actually tangoed in the oozy turf. The tables were hree jn number and were the longest tables you ever saw. They looked about a block long each, made of pine boards lald on stakes driven into the ground and with heavy planks for seats. Pago Morrison, secrtary of the Iowa division and past grand master catfish baker, presided along thé line of htn- dreds of baking fish with about ten as- sistants | Then came the word that the fishes (Continued on Page Two, Column Four.) \Two Hundred Killed | by Bombs in the Air Raid on Karlsruhe | LONDON, June 17.-A Rotterdam ‘“‘" pateh to the BExchange Telegram com- | pany reports that the damage done at) Karlsruhe by the air raid of the French | squadron of aeroplanes was much greater than the papers were allowed to state “Two hundred persons were killed,” | says the correspondent. ‘Fifty bombs were Gropped, onme of them almost destroying one of the ducal palaces used as headquarters by the Karlsruhe com- mandant. Others destroyed a number of factories engaged In manufacturing shells. A greut panlc was caused and [the victims will be buried secretly at | night ‘“The peopie are ignorant of the utter failure of the anth-aircraft measures and they complain that mo signals of the ap- proaching of the French aviatcrs were given. !By a brilllant flight, Lieutenant Warne- | ford obtained & position above the Zep- Ipelin and dropped bombs on it. The dirlgible crashed to the ground and burned up. The twenty-eight men in the | crew were killed. For this feat, Lieutenant Warneford | was decorated with the Victorla cross nd the cross of the Legion of Honor. Lieutenant Varneford mpade his first | | | flight at Hendon, Eungland, less than five | months ego, and hat been with the flying squadron only & few weeks. NEW ZEPPELIN MADE EVERY TWENTY DAYS GENEVA, June 17.—(Via Parls.)—News dispatches reaching Geneva from Friedrichshafen set forth that double Ishifts are now working in the Zeppelin |airship factories, which are turning out a completed Zeppelin airship every twenty days. One of the two Zeppelins destined for operations against Italy was sent away from Friedrichshafen yesterday to re- place the dirigible destroyed over Hel- gium recently by the Canadian aviator, ‘Warneford. It is reported in Geneva that the Ger- man authorities are preparing for an important combined rald of Zeppelins and seroplanes on Paris and London in re- tallation for the recent attack on Ger- man towns by aviators of the allies. The Day’s War News BERLIN REPORT BSAYS Austrian German foroes o 6832-mile front in Poland, Galicia Bukowina had begun & general attack in a battle expected to be decisive. GERMAN ADMIRALTY anancunced the loss of the submar V=14, whone crew was captured by the Rritish, CAMPAIGN AGA on which th concentrating their offensive ef. forts, is developing another phase in a viclent attack in Russian Po. land. At the same time the Ger- tional villages Baltic region, but states that the near Prezemysl, GALICIA CNAMPAIGN has reached | the mecesses of the and Germans. " OFFICIAL ADVICES from the Ttalian quarters, repre- sent the Ital'ans as gaining ad- | vantages all along the front, par-| e in the Adige valley,| which leads to Trent. | ith and French on June 12, according to an official statement on the situa- tion in the Dardanelles made public here today. The text of the announcement follows: “On the night of June 16 a party of the enemy, led by a German officer, (made a gallant attack on the trenches ocoupled by one of the British brigades. A few of the enemy wera killed on the parapet, but a mwjority of them fell be- fore reaching our trenchés Fifty dead were counted, inéluding the Gérman leader and his Turkish subordinate. ““These trenches were captured by us on the night of June 12. After a strong attack the Turkish positions were en- filaded by our machine gns from right to ‘left. The Dublin Fusilllers attacked with their bayonets. When the trenches were ocoupled they were found to con« tain 200 dead Turks. Twelve prisoners also were taken. Our casualties wore very slights British Battteship Aground. AMBTERDAM, June 17.—~(Via London.) —A dispatch has been recelved here from ‘Constantinople saying that according to officlal announcement a Turkish aviator reports having observed a British war- #hip of the Agamemnon type aground in Kefala bay, nd of Tmbros. The deck of the vessels is almost complete sub- merged, The island of Imbros is off the entrance to the Dardénelles straits. A story pub- lished recently that the battleship Agamemnon had been sunk by the Turke was categorically denfed by the British govérnment. Suffragists Say Statesmen Forgot to Lift Their Hats SAN FRANCISCO, June 17.—A deputa- tion of twenty-five suffragists, who called, they sald, upen invitation of Rep- resentative Frank Mondell of Wyoming to ask a three-minute hearing from nine members of the congressional appropria- tions committee, were refused audience in a hotel here today by Representative J. J. Fitzgerald of New York. . Bix of the nine congressmen, a state- ment {ssued by the women said, “rushed | by them without even lifting their hats." In the party were Mre. Jesse D. Hamp- ton and Miss Doris Stevens of New York. “We are here for a purpose,” Mr, Fits- gerald sald later. “If we allow our- selves to be interrupted to listen to other causes we will get nowhere.” The women, it was learned, appeared at the opening for a hearing on re- clamation and were excluded They walted for the congressmen outside the doors, and renewed their pleas to those who would listen. Accused Middies Gain Big Point ANNAPOLIS, Md,, June 17.~The court | the belligerent nations in preparation for war it is the United States,” said Mr. Bryan. “We are protected on either side by thousands of miles of ocean, and this protection is worth more to us than any number of bat- tleships. “We have an additional protection in the faot known lo every one that we have the men ‘with whom to form an army of defense If we are evet attacked, and It is known also that we would have the money, too—gore money than we would have had If all the surplug earn- ingw of the people had been invested in armament. Preparation Leads to War, “We not only do not need additional preparation, but we are fortunate in mot having it, since It seams impossible for a nation to have what is called prepared- ness, without having along with it a dis- position to use Its preparedness on the slightest provocation. o the) pree- ““The leading participants ent war are the nations that were best (Continued on Pago Two, Column Two.) Bernstorff on Way to Washington To See Lansing WASHINGTON, June 17.~Late today Secretary Lansing recelved a telegram from Count von Bernstorft announcing he would We here for a personal conference tomorrow. In regard to the statement already re- colved from the charge d'affaires, the following announcement was made by the State department: ““The Department of State has received A telegram from the German counselor dated ‘June 16, calling attention to arti- cles appearing in yesterday's papers In regard to an alleged breach of confidence on the part of the ambassador in send- Ing a secret German government agent jo Berlin in place of Dr. Gerhard, the Red Cross delegate. In reference to these articles, the counselor states as follow: “‘It is unnecessary for me to assure you that the story circulated by these a ticles {s untrue from beginning to end, It contalns a personal attack upon the ambassador and his delegate, Dr. Meyer H. Gerhard, an? is likely at the same time to nullify tae sincere and earnest efforts of the ambassador to bring about an understanding between the United States and Germany on the Lusitania question.’ ** CHESAPEAKE & OHIO PASSES DIVIDEND NEW YORK, June 17.—Directors of the Chesapeake & Ohlo Raflroad company voted today to pass the dividend. The stock has recently been on a 4 per cent hasis ‘“While the earnings are the largest in the road’'s history,” reads a statement is- sued by the directors, “there has been a change in the character and direction of the traffic carried, entalling a large de- indicate that anything has occurred thus far to upset the plans of Gen- eral Von Mackensen, who has fixed July 1 for the arrival of an Austro- German army in Lemberg, the Gall- clan capital. General Von Macken- sen’s army, driving due eastward across the San to the north of Prze- mysl, is already half way from the river to Lemberg. On the Dniester theé Teutonic forces have suffered geveral severe repulses, but their check thus far has not been of sufficlfent moment to offset Rus- slan losses. In the west the allies have resumed the offensive north of Arras. The French claim progress there as well as south and southwest of Souchez, east of Lorette and In “the Laby- rinth.” Russinss Admit Reverse. PETROGRAD (via London), June 17.— Occupation by the Germans of additional villages in the Shavll district and farther south in the region east of Mariampolis adinitted by the Russians in a statement issued last night at the War office. The statement follow: “German atacks for the last three days around the village of Litajeff near the ‘Windau river hgve been unsuccespful and the fighting Tuesday ended in our favor. In the region of Popeliary our trgope crossed the Venta. In pursuing the en- emy our cavalry sabered hundreds of Germans and made some dosens of pris- oners. “The fighting near Shavll continues with various fortunes. Some villages fell irto the enemy’s hands. There have been artillery duels on the Dubysa. “‘On the western front beyond the Mid- Nieman the enemy has sustained heavy losses in the last two days in fruitiess offensive attempts. In counter attacks in the region east of Mariampol some villages were occu- pled by the enemy, and Tuesday night the enemy began bombardment of Osso- wets, but at 2 o'clock in the morning the fortress got the upper hand. % "'On the Narew Omulew valley frontier (Continued on Page Two, Column Twox | of inquiry which is investigating irregu- |larles in examinations at the Naval academy has no intention of considering {as evidence in the present proceedings | the testimony given by midshipmen be- | fore the former board of Investigation | named by Superintendent Fullam. This announcement was made in the court today and was regarded as a de- cided point for the defendauts. All were recommended for dismissal, largely upon their own testimony before the [ormer board, d ‘to throw that record out | leaves the court with no direct e/dence | that any midshipmen at the academy had | eny advance copy of the actual examina~ { tion papers. No one so far examincd in Free Coupon For the Best Movies By special arrangement vith eight of the leading moving picture theaters THE BEE is enabled to give its readers a combination coupon good for & free admission to any ome of them on days specified. | o a . proceodings here has seen or ad In Sunday's Bee | maitiod aosing o aotual examisatios | | paper crease from hire of equipment and larger payments to other lines."” GERMANS ANNOUNCE LOSS OF SUBMARINE BERLIN, June 17.—(By Wireless to Say- ville, N. ¥.)~The Overseas News Agency today gave out the following “The admirdlty publicly announced the loss of the submarine U-14 Its crew was captured by the British.' | | | Youngsters starting out to werk | can find opportunities by m | In the House of Commons last week A. » ted columns J. Balfour, first lord of the admiralty,| IWien yeu wwant work of e cheis ncunced that a German submarine had| to u'urH our present "':fl.‘.".. S , yo-r the > "’v{hu n sunk, and that six of ita officers| Ioo" Uie Flelp Wanfed Ada = When | and twenty one mémbegs of ita crew had phone Tyler 1000 been captured PUT IT IN THE OMAHA BER