Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 22, 1915, Page 1

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The sure way to satisfy your wants is through -1se of the want ad pages of The Bee. Try a Bee want ad. VOL. XLV—NO. 29, 4 ROOSEVELT WANTS ¢ UNIVERSALMILITARY SERVICE IN AMERICA Colonel Denounces Pacificists and Insists on Nation Taking Measures to Prepare for War. HE CITES BELGIUM AND CHINA All-Inclusive Arbitration Treaties United States Has Enureg Into Condemned. OMAHA, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 22, 1915-TWELVE THE OMAHA DAILY BEE THE WEATHER PFAGES. On Traine, at Hotel Wews Stands, etc., Se TWO CENTS. division of German infantry marches past to the battle line in front. AUSTRO-GERMAN DRIVE ON WARSAW-—This remarkable photograph, taken on one of the main roads foilowed by the Germans and Austrians in their recent great attack on the Russians, defendingthe road to Warsaw, shows a company of Austrian infantry lined up by the side of the road, whilst a TEUTONIC RUSH TOWARD POLISH CAPITAL HALTED Rusvians Continue to Lose Ground, but Advance of the Austro- German Armies is Now Slower, SURPRISE NEAR IVANGOROD Czar's Men Make Fierce Counter At- tack, but Are Unable to Recover @ d. RETELLS HIS PANAMA EXPLOIT Lost Groun SAN FRANCISCO, July 21.— DRIVE TOWAl'LrD‘RjOA CONTINUES Colonel Theodore Roosevelt ad- dressed the Panama-Pacific exposi- tion crowds today, on “Preparedness for War.” The speech was given over almost entirely to that theme and he set it forth with new em- phasis. “I firmly belleve that there should be universal military service for our young men, on the Swiss model,” said the fo LONDON, July 21.—~Rumors of the fall of Warsaw are in circulation today, but the latest communications from both sides indicate the Austro- German rush toward the Polish cap- | ital has slowed down. The Russians continue to lose ground, but appar- ently the campaign has not yet been brought to a decisive issue. o s e 7 N 7 T e i T ST b K R o mp— ~===—————=——=| The most important success now At another, referring to the price which E P reported by the Germans has been st v it oo o 10 e WELCOME GIVEN ~ |PAPAL DELEGATE ~ |Just Interpretation of the llls of ONE KILLED, SIXTY |von b oqaorat von worricn, soucn paredness, he said; ! 4 [ - . o ) of Ivangorod. This seems to have May Have to Tay. \ ¢ | Society Next Step in Coming Order been a surprise attack. The Rus- Home day or other it may \(\A“l‘; be that b | sians, who had heavy reserves in the we shall have to pay on a tenfold greater | = et A scale the same price for exactly the same _ } SAN FRANCISCO, July 2L—Just in ““Fhe speaker doea not pretend to know F neighborhood, later delivered vigore reasons; and, If such should be the case, Omaha in Gala Dress for Opening of | Most Reverend John Bonzano, AJ0s- | terpretation of the ills of socicty 18 the | where the responsibility must be piaced | Thousands Take Part in Attacks on|ous counter attacks, but failed to re- remember, my fellow countrymen, that Saengerfest at the Auditorium tolic Delegate at Washington, | first step In t(he coming order of busl-| for what happened in the silk industry Police at Tidewater 0il cover the lost ground. Windau, in whereas the case of the Belgians exclied 2 Here ness, Rev. J. R. Perkins, tor of the of Now Jersey, the coal Industry ot Plant. Courland, on the Baltle, is definitely warm sympathy, our misfortunes would Last Evening. ere for a Day. ‘ First Christian church of Soux City, la., | Colorado and the metal industry ot ant, in the hands of the Germans, who are excite nothing but scorn and contempt, AR i & proclaimed to his fellow Rotarlans here Michigan. But he does belleve that It ¢ithin thirty-fiv 11 t th for a yich, powerful, boastiul people in- BANDS GREET THE VISITORS |AMAZED AT WESTERN STATES| conight at the annual banquet of the the spirit of Interpretation had been| COPS TAKEN TO THE HOSPITAL|now Within LT S . Y vites the ridicule of all mankind it, ol | International Association . of Rotary | brought to bear on the problems involved, | —_— important Russian seaport of Riga. whether from sheer silliness and short- A trye “deutche Wilkommen” was| The Most Reverend John Bonzano| Clubs. He argued for a single standard | the Industrial war would have been| TRENTON, N.J,, July 21,—Mayor Riga 1s Impoetant Peist. sghtedness, or from soft tmldity, Of given the thousands of singers who|of Washington, D. C., apostolic dele- | of ethics in business as axalnst a code | averted. Plerre P. Garven of Bayonne asked| poisession of Riga by the Germans from gross and greedy devotlon to Whe [\ivos i Omaha for the twenty-|gate to the United States, arrived in| Whereln & man deals in one way with| “The new moral note In modern busl-| o governor's office here today to|would force the Russian armies near material benefits of the moment, it falls | his family, In another with his ac-| ness Insists that men bufld their for-| Shavll and Mitau to retreat, as the Bale to prepare itself to defend its own rights sixth National Saengerfest. Omaha with his party in a speclal| quaintances, and In @& third with| tunes, not at the expense of one another, | *¢Bd troops to Bayonne. The re- tie port. ta’ thele ‘chiet potat’ of supeliie with its own strength.” A big reception committee, re-|car at 10:15 on his way to the consz,l strangers. | but at the expense of nature. quest was ont granted and no troops |, "ooie advance of the Germans Colonei Roosevelt spoke derisively of enforced by bands of music, gathered | The party left Omaha at 4:20 P.| “Paterson, N. I, Trinidad, Colo,, and | “No dollar Is a clean dollar that has| will be sent unless a request cOmes|in the Baltic provinces indicates they “vl:)x ;lnur‘as a &uhsll(:ln rl"& fl:““’"‘l;; at the Union and Burlington stations |m. yesterday for Denver, thence to| Calumet, Mich., are anachronisms in a|bcen made by the loss of the arm or|from Sheriff KEugene Kinkead of[hope not only to capture Warsaw, but and in his arralgnment of those W i , . N | new moral apoch,” he declared. | the eye of a workman, when a machine | 4 to cut off the retreat of the Russians stood in the way of preparedness for nd greeted the singers as “"“'"‘”Sj‘“ Lake sRASBER to Ban Prancisoo. | s L0 ™ 1n the business wordd, | vould have besn Fukrdes. ‘The new busy. | [LUASON CouRty, and then anly: afWee |, Jeciat s iactoeta "the THIIMN war, he said the “professional pacifists, train after special train, gaily deco-|The papal dolegate is making hls: there 18 a cause. Interpretation discovers| ness morality insists that before one| °VerY local remedy has been ex- armies and Petrograd. the peace-at-any-price, non-resistance, rated, pulled in and disgorged an|first trip through the west since his| tnat cause. And the man or group of | can be a model, he must operato a|Rhausted. All these late advances place Grand universal arbitration people are seeking endless procession of singers. appointment in the United States, | men, whether of organized capital or| model factory, store or mine. One In Killed, Duke Nicholas, the Russian commander< to Chinafy this country—to reduce it to In the party were Most Rev. John Bon- | organized labor, that will not consent to| “The new business morality insists that| NSW YORK. July 2L.—Serious rioting, [In-chief, in an embarrassing position. To the level of impotence to which ola __ Parade Through Streets. zano, apostollc delogate; Very Rev Francts | the decisions and findings of the larger | our Institutions be not destroyed, but|in which John Molosky, 18 years old, waa |risk obatinate resistance might imperil China sank.” The average Chinaman, When all had arrived a prccession was d i he said, had taken the view that China was ‘“‘too proud to fight,” and “in prac- tice made evident his hearty approval ot that abject pacifist song, ‘I Didn't Raise My Boy to Be a Soldier.’ " * Denounces FPeace Treaties. With all of his old-time vigor Colonel formed and paraded up tharou3n the gaily decorated streets to the howva of the Omaha Musik verein, Seventeenth and Cass streets, where all was in readiness for a monster welcome. | Philip Handschuh and A. F. Ceyer on { white horses headed the parad». Some of. the delegations had brought tweir own C. Kelly, Rev. Thomas D. Shannon, editor of the New World of Chicago; Right Rev. Bishop Glass of Balt Lake City, Rev. Phillip Bernardini of Washington, D. C,, and Rev. George Tyson of Washington, D. C., secretary to tne delegate, To Visit Coast Citles. From San Francisco the party is to go bodies of social interpreters is unsocial and a menace to business development | that they be altered to meet changea conditions In the soclal orde Wabash System Sold to Committee Bertschefi‘efls of Paying Money to killed, and nearly alxty more or leas serfously Injurcd, marked the second day of the strike of workmen at the plant of the Standard OIll company of New Jer- soy at Bayonne, N. J.' The workers, most of whom are of forelgn birth and unorganizcd, gathered ot the gates of the plant at an early hour and disorder his retreat, but It ls pointed out here that such an extended Austro-German line may contaln weak points against Which a counter move might be made In the hope of saving the Polish capital. Military writers assert that the presence not only of landwehr, but of landsturm troops in the German lines, indicates the : lastod until near . The oo central powers are exerting every SENIL v U St S R L RS, 2 [ Pl gt B, Sher of Bondholders| - Chicago Officials o tuns T wok s i the ohms 1 crumh shnciiwiatn- arbitratjon treaties which the United bands in dispensing music. The blg Chi- | eterted from Chicago, to which place the » attac) . vt | Mine warfere alohg the Britleh States had entered Into and sald that in cago®delegation carried :nauve colored | delegate had come a week before to a A declining to apply thelr priuciple in the case of the Lusitania there had been evidence of national hypocrisy or else an utter recklessness of folly in making promises. It was necessary to repudiate the principle in the Lusitania case, the colonel agreed, but ‘“‘a shameful thing to have put ourselves In such a position that it had to be repudiated.” umbrellas. Others wore hats of special kinds. At the lead the the parade the big, splendid banners of the various associa- tions were carried and' blg American flag: As the trains did not il arriva at the same time, of course, only a cumpara- (Continued on Page Four, Column Four.) | tend the funeral of Archbishop James Ed- | ward Quigley. | Bishop Scannell and Father E. Hugh Getely were at the station to meet the had been arranged for and with several cars at their disposal the party was shown apout the city. At noon they were the guests of Bishop Scannell for luncheon at | party. An automobile ride about the city | ST. LOUIS, July 21.-The property, franchises and all other rights of the Wabash railroad, a $220,000,000 corporation, were sold under the hammer for $18,000,000 to the joint reorganization committee of the road's creditors under foreclosure here today to satisfy a $41.000,00 mort- gage of which the Equitable Trust com- pany of New York is trustee. CHICAGO, July 2i.—Further detalls of the alleged protection of the clalrvoyant and wire tappers’ ring by members of the police department, who are accused of having shared in tho profits of swindling operations, were given by . Of the fifty-thres Injured taken to the Bayonne hospital, fifty are men and boys, who fought about the gates of the plant; the other three are polloemen. In- the "pector Cady had a horse shot from under him and later narrowly escaped Christian P, Beftsche, politiclan, saloon "erious injury. keeper and self-confessed ‘‘fixer,” when Bhoriff Kugene Kinkead of . Hudson he resuméd his testimony today in the °0UNty arrived shortly after noon and and fsolated actions on the remainder of the western battle line wre not of wufe ficlent importance to distract public ate tention from the eastern cempaign. The Tlallans are reported to have waged a flerce battle yesterday all along the Isonso front, with some success on the Corso plateau. Russinns Make Eight Assaults. ; 1 ¥ trial of former Detective Sergeants Wil- t00k command of affairs. Standink In [ BERLIN, July N—(Via London)—A the bishop's home, 808 North Thirty-al The road was knocked down to Robert t ' W Bhn URSA (e 1! STNA S The Nogales Preparing Mreet During. the attomobn Croghton | Goelet, who bid for the purchasing com- llam Fsar and Walter O'Brien, charged M8 car e nadresod the crowd. (elln€ |giapatch (o ‘the Lokal Anselger from ik e i e 04 g e iy "o the afternoon Crelghton | \iice of the jolnt reorganization com- With having accopted bribes. ~Bertacho the men they must remain orderly. He |Guernowits, capital of Fukowina, reports paper, e , “when e Vi - made to show that our signatures meant something."” y for Engagement of terest were visited “Oh, no, please let it go. This was all mittee. As soon as the federal district court, which authorized the foreclosure, sald he frequently made tours of inspec- CMled on overy man who would obey tion of the clalrvoyant parlors and wire Bim to hold up his hand, and a major- heavy fighting along the Dniester river, near the Bukowina-Galicla border. The 1 1 tappers’ headquarters, which were operat- |ty dld wo. : e . cs- | conf £ th 4, 1t wil | Russians brought up reinforcements and “I have @ very strong feeling about | Mex1can Factions 'D:Ihute Bontano had to say to & news- | be“lllj:'::dl::'e:,‘ll‘:) :’M‘l‘,:“",::‘“r ‘l,“m: ing under police protection Bherif( Kinkead spoke for half an hour, |nade determined efforts to retake posi- the Panama exposition,” said Colonel | aper man who approache m for a " u ey Hertsche sald ho had known former ' ®nd several times the men cheered his |tions on the left bank of the river which Roosevelt in beginning hia speech. “It | —_— ishort Interview. He was not in a mnod;"’r reorganization having In view a was my good fortune to take the action in 1803, failure to take which, in exactly the shape I took it, would have meant NOGALES, Ariz., Juity 2L—Anticipating |a battle between the Carranza and Villa {forces, opposite here, today or tomorrow, Mexican situation. Neither would he talk on the excess of rain in Nebraska. He waved the Interviewer away and darted to talk on the European war nor on the | termination of receivership then will be worked out. Among the New York: financiers who attended the sale were Robert Goelet, Police Lieutenant Tobin ten years and * toments, especlally his promise to do that one day the police officlal came toWhat he could to settle the difficulty. him and asked to have a clairvoyant|A committes of thres was appointed by known as Carlos De Alvandros taken the men to meet Sheriff Kinkead later had been captured by the Austrians They were supported by heavy artillery, but, the dispatch says, their attacks galned them nothing. that no Panama canal would have been ,residents of this town began to board bullt for half a century and, thereforo, | Windows facing the Mexican border lino that there would have been no exposi- (&n1 to move furniture to cellars. ; tion to celebrate the building of the | Governor Jose Maytorena, the Villa canal. In everything we did in connec- |leader, now has 4,000 troops in Nogales, tion with the acquiring of the Panama iSonora. All his artillery has been re- zone we acted in & way to do absolute Moved {rom Guaymas, the west coast Justice to all other nations, to benefit all | Port, which is now undefended. The Villa other nations, including especially the ad- troops in that section, including those jacent states, and to render the utmost idispatched to protect American settlers service, from the standpoint allke of |from -Indians in the Yaqul valley, have honor and of material interest, to the |Moved southward, according to advices United States. I am glad that this is . received here today. Carranza troops are the case, for if there were the slightest |reported to be advancing to take poses- taint upon our title or our conduet, it #ion of the city. care of [ “I told Tobin that I did not want any- Three Attacks thing to do with his friend, but that ll There wero three meparate attacks by could take care of him,” said Bertsche. tho rioters today. The first was at the G. W. Murray, of the Bquitable Trust; ‘“Take care of whom?" fire house of an engine company and company. eutenant ‘Tobin. I agreed to give here all the windows were broken, after Bidders were required to put up $1,= him $100 & month and I paid the money which the crowd moved on and attacked 700,000 or Wabash bonds to the amount about the first of each month." the police near the main gate of the of $3,600,000. Tobin is under indicunent and is to be SBtandard Oll plant. Three rioters were weather has crowded (tself upon the p tried soon. Anjured by bullets, Yosetag pawosd lie Thirteen Thousand The witness described how Mrs. Hopo! The rioters then went to the plant of ““This is my first trip through the | G arment Workers in the day. for the big automobile and was gone, Develops Great Men, Nevertheless, he had some good things to say for Nebraska, lowa and the cen- tral west in general, even If he did not choose to talk them directly to the news- paper. He could not refrain from ex- clamations at the beauty of the country at this time when warm, humid growing Along the Bessarablan front aleo the Russians are on the offensive, having made desperate attacks during jthe last four nights. The succeeded ir. breaking into the Austrian positions in one place, but the attacking foroes subsequently were captured, and here, as elsewhere, the Russians were unable to make gains The battle of Monday night lasted six hours, during which the Russians made elght assaults. According to dispatches reaching Bere lin, all the officlal archives in Riga, the Russian Baltic port now threatensd by member of the reorganization committee; R. H. Nellson, represeniting Kuhn, Loeb and company, and Lawrence Greer and | L. McEldowney of La Crosse, Wis, and the Tidewater Ofl company, half a mile |{Mra. Mary X. Raph of Naperville, Til, away, which remained In operation, WO B b “T oah AR e s | had been swindled out of $15,5% and $1,00, though the strikers had been led to be- derful country. 1 look out over the fields respectively, by the clairvoyeht frauds lleve that the men there would join them, d the Germans, together with the meneys would have been an improper and shame- !‘,“"“’“‘“ "‘“’"‘ ‘;:" ‘C""":e' D"r”': !and am forced to the conclusion that this Return to work and testified that he had told O'Brien As they approached the plant, L300 of |of state banks and court records, were ful thing to hold this exposition. . l;”: "m':‘y 3:;;:‘“":‘: °:;’:r'e “I‘e'y ‘_: ia & wonderfully rich country. And then, in ln:;:'fldnfe that the women were to be the men there left thelr work andltaken to Petrograd Monday. Governe “The bullding of the canal nearly g " | there s so much of the outdoors. The: b ot marched out to the crowd, but appar- Iment officials have beon advised to be i M the cans’ DOV 'mit they wero defeated by the Carranza - Thers | wEW YORK. 3 . 8 (Continued on Page Two, Column T , July 1 —Annoincement is 80 much room, so much space. Indeed, there must be a race of big and great men developing In such a land.” New Machinery Will Reduce Prices of All Lgundry Work ently this dld not satisfy the rioters, us | they made a rush at the police on guard. | The most serious fighting of the day Bloodhounds Are 2 Trailing Kidnaper . of the Injured recelved thelr wounds. | of Idaho Rancher ) | forces of General Eilas Calles, In an interview this morning May- torena relterated his determination to The We&thflr {hold Nogales, his last port on the bor- y {der, “at any cost." | DOUGLAS, Ariz., July 21.—Reports from Forecast till 7 p. m. Thursday: {Agua Prieta, Mexico, Indicate that For Omaha, Council Bluffs and Vicinity | Carranza trocps are moving on Nogales —Fair, slightly warmer. ! today, although slowly, because of bridge Temperatures at Omaha Yesterday. destroyed by the retreating Villa forces. Deg. | Representatives of General Calles sald £ that when he established his headquarters ready to depart. It is sald more than e e, (Continued on Page Two, Column One.) | THE WANT AD WAY, was made today by Jacob Fanken, at- torney for the Amalgamated Ciothing Workers of America, that 13,000 of the 21,00 members of the anion, wh) went on a strike last week, returned to work today, in accordance with an ugreement | reached late yesterday, with the manu- facturers, by which an sdvance ot from | 12 to 15 per cent In wages was made. The | (cthers will return as soon as some neces- sary formalities are concluded. The police at first, it is stated, fired | over the heads of the rioters, but when | this had no effect they shot directly Into | the crowd. Even this did not step the parties iloters and the police were almost out of ! searching for the kidnaper of E. A, Em- ammunition when help arrived, | IDAHO FALLS, thorities in Idaho, command of rescue July 2L.—Au- PORTLAND, Ore., July 21.--The prob- ing A i A The new agreement .1l cortinue In per, wealthy ranchman held for $,000 | Some time after this fight ocourred a Tam thero yesterday the Carranza mm»rulltm of how to reduce tha cost ut launder- | force until November 1, 1916. Mcmbers of ransom, today refused the services of small office building of the Tidewater ; » - "’"\"" ;’"“‘l’;‘""‘f"‘ much looting, particu- ;:“‘- 80 that American housewives no Mayor Mitchel's board of eihitration |severnl hundsed volunteers, selecting 'company was discoversd in flames and L= :|"‘y n 'lun hn:;'e t(ll:“u(: b:;_‘ "Ti 1umi'er could afford to have the work |‘'Were instrumental in bringing ehout the only experienced frontiersmen and cow- |the bullding was virtualy destroved be- g.. m i o:f:‘fwr"”;.y':omn:,_ ‘mp“"or:: % .:;v ‘d:';° “f‘ l"h""’:r lflfcl:PM( ""'I aticntion ll:- | eettiement. | bovs. fore the fire could be controlled. The | m. s A . | of the delegates to the convention ! ip.m .7 Calles executed thirty civillans on enter-[of the Leundry Men's National Asso- l lopdhonods apivAg - (i Selte AN LASRICEEN B0 G Anone. 2p m. %' b Cananas. dias ” ona 880- E_ w_ HURST' |LL|N0|S | City were taken to the scene of the kid- | This afternoon the Standiard Ol com- 3pm B i anoried' heve that: Skt 'Orbbieds C:‘“’“ of America, now in sesslon here. | |naping in an effort to track the ranch- pany officlals landed 20 men from tugs §p.m T . bel anufacturers told the convention yes- | FINANCIER, IS DEAD man and nis captor. {at the plant, presumably. deputies, who 5p.m 76 of the Yaquis, who wus sald yesterday to | terday that th oo { | y that this could Le accomplished Indicati h 4 will assist in guarding the works. 6 p. m. * 75 be coming to Maytorsna's aselstance with | L . ‘ | —_— ndications were that the kidnaper had | n & " b }n. m. 1,500 e s e b Mave l“eity:n l’;:;‘“ laundry machirery #0on | ROCK ISLAND, Ill. July 2l.—Fimore|teken his. victim in the direction of P ».m henid B8 Ymm"“"’v e o be evolved, and it was thouilit by the |y furst, financial attorney and prom- Sheep mountain, a heavily forested hill | Comparative Loca) Record. 3 | delegates that this machinery also would do much In the way of mecting the com- ; inent democratic politiclan, died today thirty miles from the scene of the action. || The Day’s War News Highest yestarday . 1!%;. lslml’. 191:, 1912, of heart disease. He was 68 years old. Emper wag forced at the point of a gun I Loweat yesterday % % % © ELEVEN LABORERS REPORTED ';;“3:;“"’:‘:“:;)‘“':"fl‘:"fl;’h‘r":":‘: Horst was Tllinols' choico for vice prest- (rom bia ranch forty miles east of.hare ean temperature. 68 a2 " 7 h " ed, p o ast night. ficlals belleve the kid: D Precipitation S8 B & DROWNED AT KENTON, OHIO nually receive $40,00000 for laundry work | 4°0¢ &t the Baltimore convention in 12, o Lo wmuw; i ’.w“: m;mun:p" [ IN THE BALTIO PROVINCES the Temperature and precipitation deper. | s e | at which he was a delegate-at-large. L . Tom | fmpressive German advances con- tures from the normal: LIMA, O., July 2L.—Reports from Ken- | - . [4netie, . tin. The campaign in this lat- Normal temperature N Dorts from Bon In a few years the women of America | ter mection is interpreted by Deficlency for the day : T, ton say that eleven Kentucky farm |wil| rise up and bless the laundry man,’ . . A . Total deflciency since March i | 249 laborers, in the onlon flelds, embarked William B. Fitch of Russians Sink Sixty- s g 3y Sty Pl Normal precipltation T yelb uring high wat S, VRN . FHOR of Ia Aepe, TK, y entente allles as possibly intended Deficlency for the b (18-A denee Suns. watsr and at-|pregident of the assoclation. : : . to cut in on Russian lines of com- Total rainfall shice March 1..16.75 inches Lorro0 10 sscepe. The ~ance wau later | Nlne TurkISh Shl S s g Deficlency since March 1...,.. .22inch found capsized. It is reared all eleven muulertion Dl". t & success- Deficlency for cor. period, 19i4. 248 inches were drowned when thelr craft hit a Ta,gga,rt Trles to . ! ful retreat of the'r armies from ey o 3 B i 18k T gt b, el e 2 : aden With Flour| & ¥ints weien. cports From Stations at 7 P, M. although the river s in its channel. The | Q h I d AUSTRO-GERMAN & Stption ang Siste Tamp. High- Rain-| water will pot drain and will emply uas n 1ctments\ Members of the great| pprnoarap, suy 2—via Landen)| fomthovn Pal Cheyenne, cear v g gl nave to ary off. Sanitary conditions are | yyp;\NApOLIS, Ind., July H—Coun- |BOFthwest Saengerbund| —The following officlal communication| &5 "*Periz ShoWs Ahe msbreant 8 ol epvalling. {sel for Thomas Tagsari, democratio na- || find Omaha decked out in | "* been received from the headauarters e kSt » :m’ Sienal commitiosmen; Mager Jesesh B. e eal p 1 ul“nm Russian army In the Caucasus: | NTINUED ADVANCES W ©» lo" i y:' man) % %! NINETY DAYS FOR TRYING v i Brgan g g Sigpovadiogh )] ors to welcome ‘Our destroyer flotilla destroyed a fleet O e eatie 201 WY oot St % 2" 70 ENTICE GIRL TO ALLEY | conspiracy to corrupt tus 104 regts- | them. Our German Sing- | of sixty-nine Turkish sailing vessels laden wton are| Y5 O0Fh the claseifiod: % .® tration, primary and election and attor- | | ; i ey - ‘.! oot B csipt Pradiom S aor]ing societies here rank A hattle ls raging in the direction of | (Coatinned tomorrow.) @ % Because of his attempta Lo entioe Mary, |a motion to quash the indictments asainst || 3MODY, OUT Pioneer musical [ Muth (Asiatle Turkey, clghty-three miles able ‘Srndurve, 1E Yau aei 5 ratn % m|the I3yeur-old daughter of Georgs |the men next Saturday. The motion to i - . 2 T e ress Aditional capitar i :08| Locoroccas, 1514 Webater atreet, to enter |quash is based on the theory that the || © r(.ndlzltionl and are | Nasyk in the course of the fighting. wadere ;,"L::k:‘::‘:':. : Wil find whas ¥ou deaire in 3 2 00/ an aley in his company, rlarry Miller of indictment does not state facts sufficlent | COUNtEd among our most A dispatch from Bebastopol to London pg b, Ly ¢ et OMAHA BEE o 'r:?:ul':"o:.. “T" indicates trace’of pnwunnt" :::c:r:m:;-’.nnunm to ninety days in :o‘tlul:::ul:ll':lulul:o:l ;( the state crlm-l valued loca! institutions, t wwiht sald that fifty-nine salling . - WELSH, Local Forecaster. n : as state v And Put an Ad in The Omabs Hee, <

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