Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 23, 1915, Page 1

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Call Tyler 1000 If You Want to Talk to The DNee e to Anyome Connected with The Dee. THE WEATHER Fair THE OMAHA DAILY BEE = —— IPRIDAY o MORNING, GERMAN UHLANS advancing for a cha ;-M“ “ wuretch of marshy and flooded ground ‘‘Somewhere in Russian Poland.”’ ! OMAITILA, 1015—TWELVE 'RUSSIAN FORCES |NOTE T0 GERMANY IN POLAND ARE | ON WAY T0 BERLIN LN GRAVE DANGER = rus mes ot ay s ! | Diplomatio Relations Upon the | | Teutonic Drive Along Lublin-Chelm | Kaiser's Government. | | Railroad May Cut the Czar's i Great Armies in Poland in Twain, PAGES. COPY TWO VANGOROD I INVESTED BY (HE GERMAN3 | WILL BE PUBLISHED SATURDAY |Russians Have Retreated Into Fort- | $3 v | ress, Fifty-8ix Miles South- N | east of Warsaw, Berlin Reports. CEN VOL. XL.V-—NO. " ART:ST MATINEE OF SAENGERFEST MOST PLEASING Enthusiastic Music Lovers Thunder Applause as World-Famed Soloists Render Pro- gram. Motel SINGLE On Traine, at News Stands, eto, bo i WASHINGTON, July new American note to Germany is on {its way to Berlln. It cleared from | Washington over the telegraph wires during the night and today was be- |ing flashed over the cables to Lon- |don and thence to Copenhagen, | where 18 goes overland wires again to ALL COURLAND ]é LAID WABTE“ the German foreign office. it should reach {ts destination tonight or tuu'ly1 |COUNTRY IS GREATLY ALARMED | ALMOST DOUBLE BILL SUNG| ‘ Gala Artists, Forced to Respond to| Numerous Encores, Render Great Composers’ Masterpieces. :Warnw is Menaced by Three Great | Attacks from North, West } and South. SLAVS RETREAT ON VISTULA | They Discontinue Useless Attecks on the Narew, According to Statement. \ . | WASHINGTON, " July 22.—The | tomorrow | ' OMAHA GIRL MAKES A HIT American consul at Warsaw cabled| Secretary Lansing announced MANY THOUSANDS ARE TAKEN " el " that th t of th would be/ R A splendidly filled house greeted the State department today that the m\‘fl:“l(l,:(h;;r:Fr(h;:yn:l";”mnn m:' the gala artists' matinee of the Belgian consul had left Warsaw and pbilestion 1 woralny pABENS of| BERLIN, July 22.——(Via London.) gaengerfest at the Auditorium lh:( (h]n Anmrl.-..l.. ‘-;\;,pumu" lha;l Satirdsd ~The war office today announced taken charge of the affairs o el | o o o v yesterday nllernuo:. ; l:| was ;: L it ad Babelk Concieting .futire sondnst of Germak | that the Austro-German forces, which audience of enthusiastic mu ; } are driving at Warsaw from the {south had compelled the Russians to | retreat into the fortress of Ivangorod, | about fifty-six miles southeast of the Polish capital. The fortress is now closely invested The text of the statement follows vl\llmwrlrw- the note does not necessarily ‘While prayers call for an answer, as it announces the for victory were being said today !intention of the United States to regard further violation of International the loss of American ‘ LONDON, Juty 22. | | {throughout Russia, the Awstrians and (¥ at Warsaw from the north, the westIv® * and the south. Meanwhile they were lovers who thundered their applause as one after another of the world- famed artists rendered the master-| pleces of the great composers with! splendid effect to the accompaniment | of the magnificent orchestra underf. HEYN BREAKS HIS |ARMY OF VILLA AT resulting in unfriendly. hand On the other the American de- direction of Theodor Rudolph Reese. None of the artists was allowed to go without giving at least one encore num- ber. Nor was it the first time that the splendid acoustio qualities of the audi- torlum for solo work demonstrated, a pleasing fact which several of the soloists have commented upon. “The Huguenots” was splendidly ren- dered by the orchestra as an overture and then Miss Christine Miller, greatest American concert contralto, sang Techai- - SHOULDER IN RELAY | |Rider Bearing Message Out of Omaha Goes in Ditch When His Light Goes Out. UNCONSCIOUS HALF AN HOUR Speed demons, carrying the motor- TORREON MENACED Forces Are Threatened by Enemy from the South and West. His OBREGON'S TROOPS ADVANCE| L PASO, July 22.—General Vil-| lN STRIKE RIOTS‘ mands for disavowal of any intention | reaching further north towards RIB®, 15 wink the Lusitanta and the request Sitnation at Bayonne, N. J., Gets Be- | yond Control of Sheriff and He Calls for Troops. TIDEWATER PLANT IS8 CLOSED NEW YORK, July 22.—~Two dead vance guard {s not more than twenty miles distant. The tone of dispatches from Petro- grad bespeaks plainly that the coun- try is aware of the graveness of the military situation, involving not only the fate of the Polish capital, but the {on the Baltic, from which thelr ad- for reparation are renewed in the new with other | |note, and very likely those, |points, such as the willingness of the United States to act as an intermediary between the belligerents to adjuet rules lof maritime warfare will be the basis for further discussion by Germany An answer is not expected for at least {two or+three weeks on those phases. It is generally ugreed among officials here, “To the west of the Argonne our troops |are further progressing. Vigorous artil |lery combats took place between th Teuse and the Moselle. South of Leintre French attacks collapsed. before the oh stacles in front of our advanced pos! tons, | “In the Vosges yesterday the enem: | attacked six times southwest of Reich | ackerkopf, but was repulsed with san guinary losses by the Bavariun trooy Counter attacking we recaptured a por an o K cycle message from President Wilson| | reon again is|and six seriously injured, one prob-|integrity of the Russian army in Po- however, that any loss of American lives tion of our trench, which wus in the f::,::y:nd 1;:;:::11 Forest? W 7% to the president of the Panama ex- :::a:?:x::}df‘::‘(i ::n:?:om two sides, | ably fatally, was the harvest reaped |land, the northern and southern sec- "l’:‘:."l“h“""":‘);"‘:“‘u’;"“""'_r:p"“:l':':“":_‘:,"v' ::‘::::, ?.;.Tr:w:m:r{;m‘:kl.l::nLi‘nr‘:.ll‘:zlv Althouse Makes Debut. position, arrived at Columbus at it reports reaching Carranza agents | by rioters at the Standard Oil ané |tions of which might be cut in twain |p 00 reply rmm'u.-nmnx " |ficers. In the ovening we repulsed a9 Paul Aulthouse, the herolc tenor of 6:42 this morning, just four hours here are true. Advance guards of | Tidewater plants in Bayonne today by a decisive defeat along the Lub- i enemy attack near Sondernach. the Metropolitan Opera company, made | after they had left Omaha, and after = as the result of two attacks on the|lin-Chelm railway. Tt is along this 1 Statement of Principles. An enenuy biplane fell down undii his saengerfest debut with an arla from | Mozart's “The Magic Flute” and clear tenor of great range was mag- nificently effective, being even more 80 in his encore number with plano accom- paniment. Mme. Marie Rappold-Berger, dramatic soprano of the Metropolitan Grand Opera company, sang an aria from “Tanne-| hauser’ with that grace which marks the consummate and finished artist. Miss Corinne Paulson, who has only recently completed her education in Kurope and made her debut here with the New York Symphony orchestra, playéd the plano solos, ‘St. Franciscus his | they had had some harrowing ex- periences. They were scheduled to make the run in three hours. The ride from Omaha to Columbus was full of thrills. Hugo Heyn with the mes- soge was making good time and was leading his companion, John Stehle and Lloyd Jensen, by about forty-five min- utes between North Bend and Schuyler, when his lights went out and he was thrown into a ditoh with a broken collar bone and a eprained ankle. Heyn lay unconsclous for forty-five minutes, or until Stehle, who had had chain trouble, Obregon's army have engaged Vil la's outposts at La Colorado, Zaca- tecas, sixty-five miles nnr}h of Za-| catecas on the railway, and about | twice that distance south of Tor- reon, Jacinto Trevino have moved westward to San Pedro, De Las Colonias, fitty miles northeast of Torreon, skirmishing 1s reported to have taken place. Expects to Reoccupy Capital. WASHINGTON, July 22.—Charles A. is reported to from Monterey about where also deputies guarding the property. Two fires also occurred, one in the Stan- dard Oil plant where & watchman's house was virtually destroyed; the other in the yard of the Tidewater 0il company where staves and lum- ber were stored. This last fire was started by means of burning waste thrown over the walls by rioters. lt’ was speedily checked with a trifling loss. Those killed in the fighting were Stan- ley Murefko, 20 years old, and Nicolay sector that the Russians are now fighting most desperately, for this railway is the sole great artery of communication of Poland with gouth- ern Russia, sweeping away from Lublin, and Chelm towards Odessa, Having several times been reported within five miles of the railroad and now, according to Austrian claime, having pierced the Russian front, this gection of the Teutonic forces should be within rifle shot of the railway, but no claim has been made ¥ The American note is in the nature of a final statement on the principle in- volved, in which the United Btates takes the unaiterable position that the ac- |cepted rules of iInternational law must govern the rights of neutrals, irrespective |of retallatory measures of the belliger- ents against one another. What action fwould be taken by the United States in the event of further violation of Amer- [lcan rights fs not disclosed in the new |note, nor was it officially commented on jotherwise here today, but a general une {derstanding prevails that another dis- aster, such as befell the Lusitania would {mean the immediate assembling of con- {our fire in the forest of Parroy. | In an merial fight over the Muens er | valley three German alrmen gained a victory over three adversaries, of whom two were forced to descend into the alley of the Thann “Bastern theater: Northeast of Shavil (in Courland) our troops atlvancing con | contrically and victorlously captured 14,150 prisoners, five machine guns and a great guantity of baggage. A movement on the lower Dubimsa led the advancing |troops into the Grynkiski-Guistuny dis- [triot and resulted in the storming of soveral enemy positions. The Russians |are retreating on the entire front from Lake Rakiewo to the Nemen. 0 o came up. Heyn was at ) & & o/ Dt " Walking on the Waves anah “lmlh that time just pulling himself out of the | Douslas, General Carranza's Ameflt:n ::.nk'!'u;hl’,‘ u::hh:t_.:vhf:‘-:"x"; ;::f of having seized it. | President Wilson has given careful con- | Bouth of the Mh'fl:n Mariampol to TRackoscy from the fifteent! ditch and he was able to mount hie | counsel, cabled the Carranza agency roug! e heal v rifie , AP Northwest of Lublin, however, - ovno, we enlarged the break and gained n raphsodie and was greeted with :;:l:mo that fairly shook the bullding. The fine tone of the Haddorff pisno addes much to this artiste's splendid execution. Henrl Beott, Metropolitan Opera com- pany bass, sang an aria from the opera “Buryanthe’ and scored as great & success as he has on his two previous appearances before Omaha audiences. machine and proceed, so that he might carry the message the entire relay. Heyn says that he does not know just how long he remained in the ditch, as it was dark when he was thrown and the sun was shining when he came to. On his return to Omaha he said that he was | confident that if he had not met with the accident he would have made Co- lumbus in two and one-half hours, or half here today that before General Gonzales evacuated Mexico City ha had distributed to the poor 1,000,000 pesos—onough to ald 40,00 families, and had brought into the capital sixty carloads of food stutfs and established M0 distributing depots. State Department despatches from Vera Cruz say Carranza authorities there pre- dict they will reoccupy Mexico City within a week. They explain they were | ently fired by the guards. The men were | killed during an attack on the barrel works, of the Tidewater plant, which be- g4n at 11:40 a. m. and lasted for half an hour. A eudden downpour of rain had much | to do with stopping this fight, A feature of this attack was the defi- ance by the strikers of Sheriff Eugene Kinkead, who had labored patiently with the Teutonlc forces have pushal forward to lh'! bridgehend positions south of Ivan- | |w6rod and thence northward. Arouhd the | circle which ts tightening on Warsaw, they have made steady progress, though meeting with serious opposition along :h: Narew river, northwest of the capi- al. Blsewhere, generally speaking, the Rus- | (Continued on Page Two, Column One.) Remington Plant Machinists Given Written Contract BRIDGEPORT, Conn., July 22.—John A. furthor ground to the eastward, captur- ing four officers, 1,210 men and four machine guns. “On the Narew the enemy disc®inued | useless counter attacks.' | “South of the Vistula the Russians were pressed back toward Warsaw on the line running through Blonle, Nadar- | #ny, and Gora Kalwarla. | “Yesterday, by bold attacks, the troops Volce of Tremendous Volume. lan hour better than the schedule. He obliged to evacuate to “prevent raiders ' (Continued on Page Two, Column Three) |siuns are falling back employing the | J0hneton, vice president of the Structural :r’““j"l';:' "“’I' :.:ry'f_h s s Miss Julia Clausson, the contralto of |had mace sixty-five miles without mis- | from the north cutting communication tactics with which they har Na, | Ifon Workers, today announced that he :rm‘ lh:“n ';""o‘ 0 SRRy the Philadelphia-Chicago Grand Opera hap, going most of the distance at fifty | at Ometusco,” about half way to Fa fhe DavT; War News poleon in 1813, That is, they are not had beon advised by J. J. Keppler, vice his defeated troops before lvangorod. At moon the company, charmed the audience ‘,')"." miles an hour. pof g only burning all bridges ani destroying '“:",':"',',' 9t the International Aspodistian | Sl woiasanead gonitich’ mear Yalbew three selections from Wagner, r Walks Three Miles. Mr. Douglas s leaving Vera Cruz to- {ronds, but are laying waste the coumtry= | Ha s ooninits, that & “writien ABteer | o owawels. wab: Btosmssd: by (ot Engel” ‘“Traume” and “Schmerzen' | KEARNEY, Neb, July 2.—(Special| night and expects to be in Washington side with fire and dynamite, removing Leh . hich would settle the strike of| r 4 and even these were not enough to satisfy her delighted hearers, and she rendered Telegram R. Goodwin, transconti- July %. He has asked for an appoint- DESPERATE FIGHTING continues such provisions as they can, destroying the machinists in the plants of the Rem- | brave Silesian troops. In close connection A Arms and Ammunition company| With this, with the assistance of the nental relay rider, making the relay from | ment to discuss the situation with Secre-| hetweem the Teutonie mies | (GO = Ington P | an encore. The grace of her presence | Columbus to Kearney, arived here at|tary Lansing. s et - S o SRS nued on Page Two, Column Two.) |and rovd-ru-u. sub-contractors, had been :h‘;':x-uun&mm":m;p- u.la t-n:;:.y’wuu and the ease with which she 8ingS, |9:21 o'clock, nine hours behind schedule. Russian forces defending it, with Fecured, R o the en ront into the fort though her voice is of tremendous vol- ume and clear as a bell, were the secrets Mr. Goodwin reported that he rode ten miles on the rallroad track, walked three Carransistas Take Santa Or NOGALES, Ariz., July 22.—Five hundred Carranza troops captured Santa Cruz to- the i ue still in the balance. vances nlong all the fronts Sandford Fleming, According to Mr. Johnston, the vice president of the machinists telephoned ]l'o- which 1s now closely invested. “Northwest of Ivangorod, Austro-Hun ] from New York and requested that| garian troops are still fighting on the of her charm. miles and had one bad fall. The other |4, 4ocording to reports reaching here. | €laimed in the Intest German Father Of Ga d ™ 3 = ¥ s H Other orchestra numbers on the PFo- | two riders wero put out of the rununing |ganta Gruz is @ few miles southeast of [ Amstrian official atatements, DL s e e | o gram were Brahms' “Hungarian Dance |outside of Columbus when they sustained | Nocules Sonora, where Governor Jose | Petrograd, while mot denyi i DLUPed IOPS CHAR NOW. SESINDR No. 2’ and the prelude from “‘Lohen- grin.' The final number, which had in it an element of musical humor. It was a fantasy, a humorous attempt to demonstrate how various great mas- ters would have treated in their char- blowouts, the packages being turned over to Rider Goodwin. The three riders left Kearney immediately for North Platte, but will undoubtedly be delayed because of the heavy rains at Lexington last night. Maytorena, the Villa leader, expects to make his last stand. The Carransa force is said to have captured a cannon, which, it is sald, was turned on the fleeing Villa soldiers, two of who were killed. werts held statiol ward at vit ON THE IMPORTANT FRONT south Pacific Road, Dead HALIFAX, N. 8, July 2-—8ir Sand- ford Floming, sclentist and engineer, died here this morning. He was known ag the father of the Pacific railway. |be asked not to contradict any more | statements regarding the settloment. Mr. Bavege denled last night that he knew anything of a settlement after Mr. Kep- pler had announced that the strike had been declared off and the men would go and eleven machine guns. “Hetween the Vistula and the Bug, the battle, which ¥Feld Marshal Von Mack- | ensen 1s directfng, is proceeding. South- west of Lublin the Austro Hungarian troops are further progressing. Between Goo- Alleged Looters Executed. Sir Saniford held man t back to work Monda Blennika and Wola, south of Rejawice, acteristio manners the wel-known epeemppbianiii b Mnaed DOUGLAS, Arix., July Z.—General P. beach in what | y posttions ot | P30 5. Wi Momiex { 4 of Rejawice, . ki e \gh publi 3 n sal eppler would re-| man, ik sene; - ‘Comes ":ernr NORTH PLATTE, Neb., July 8~The | "o il do o o mmander in So- moan the eutting of the Dublio trust, but his ohiet work|en’ o Bridgeport with the written| TicLie Politicns were starmad over s the r o ing,” then played in the styles Bach, & Mozart, Chopin, Beethoven, Strauss, Verdi, Gavotte, ‘Weber, Wagner and In the military march style and the funereal style of Mendelssohn. pecullar to motorcycle relay, carrying President Wil- son's message to the president of the Panama-Pacific exposition at San Fran- cisco, arrived here at 12:48 p. m. The message was delivered by a fresh rider, who left immediately for the next relay nora, confirmed today previous reports that his soldiers had executed between fifty and sixty Villa troops caught loot- ing stores and residences at Cananeas. Calles also sald that his advance guard resistance seems to be strongest. The Petrograd statement claims Was In connection with his chosen pro- fession of clvil engineering and in sclen- tific rescarch. In the early gixtles Sir SBandford did his firet Imnortant work when he con- duoted a survey for the first link in a agreement this afternoon. Mr. Johnston said he also understood that the girls who walked out at the Union Metallic | Cartridge plant of the Remington com- pany had voted to return to work, hav- wide sector. Lagow s situated thirty kilometers east of Zwolen. Lugawawola is ten kilometers northwest of Zwolen." Movements of Oceana Stemmers. Port, Arrived. Balled was within tweive miles of Nogales,| the Teutonic offensive has beem |, ® SUTEY ToF the f {ing been promised an increase of about! NEW YORK..... T crate Never before probably have so '"‘:Z st Big Springa where Governor Maytorens has concen- | Arrested there. Alantie 107 the Pasfic’ ;Tm.:ml';‘mllj.‘:“ cents & day. et 4 A world-famous artists sung in one Prov| Owing to bad roads along the orlginal |y \1eq gli available Villa forces. COUNTER ATTACKS have driven|territory. This rallway was the Inter| WASHINGTON, Juty 2.—samuel Gom- | GKNOA: ... ... Taormine gram in Omaba and the people route, the course was changed from here, te N the Germans back along the 1 Colonial and hief pors, president of the American Federa- CADIZ Buenos Alres 1 guests at the |going by way of Big Springs and Ch Evacuate Naco. e was chlef engineer dur- | LIVERPOOL. sensseecsessnsssen Saxonla Omaha and the visiting 8D~ | 0O, Ariz, July 22.—1f authorities at | ©f the River Narew to the morth of | ing its construction. |tion of Labor, and representatives of saengerfest testified their approval in no uncertain style. Comeerts Today pell, Neb,, to Kearney, Wyo. The relay passed through here about twelve hours behind schedule, owing to bad roads Washington wait & few days there will be nmo need of protesting against the Warsaw, the Russian decla They assert also that their lines on the In 1871 he was appointed engineer-in chiof to carry on the Pacifio raflway sur- | other trade unions, who met here yester- day to consider the Remington strike, Last C . t N Mex., ac-| left bank of the Vistula, to the veys and the rallroads that will go to Bridgeport tonight for a con- usical military occupation o aco, 3 ra # that travers this Thia 1 the last day of the musical east of Chicaso. |cording to Carranza officials, who say | Seuthemst of the city, are holding. [resion today are & monument of the|feTeRCe tomorrow, despits the develop- | THE WANT AD WAY. portion of the twenty-six that Just as soon as & civil government iy | The fortreas of Novomeorievek |successtul [reliminary wors he did|™ePt# which may end the trouble fatsdantalibaints oS {(Continued on Page Two, Column )| Boy Confesses to organized the troops will be withdrawn. neemn to be giving effective help in there. The rallway across the island of Tt was sald today that the ‘nvisdictional The Carranza men declared today, how- | * & Teutons in check to the |New Foundland is also In large measuro|91%Pute for control of crymnlsed mill- St l' J ever. that the agreement made with Gen-| morthwest, for the time at least. |due to his work. Sir Sandford is grate-| “T8ts between the International Ae- €a lng ewels ‘ . 2 5 fully remembered in Ci | moclation ¢f Machinists, 1'nited Rrother- Th W ather eral Scott was violated by Maytorena [IN THE BALTIC y remembered in Canada as the dean | POCRtIOR €L . : 3 e e f 0 Ch' H within two weeks after the town had | German ndvance of its engincoring profemion and the [h00d of Carpenters and Bridgs and —— rom lGa.gO ome been evacuated by Carranza troops in | with their outposts barely twenty | ‘*her of the Facific rallway.” ogee. s ‘mpfmm“"wh’::h n'”d‘ :|"‘N': For Omaha, Council Blutfs and Vicinity — conformity with the promise given Gen-| miles from Rigm, the immediate| Literature snd sclentific research oc- |07 PRImS IHORArEAROS SOURR BRets BOUTH —Falr; warme OAKLAND, Cal. July 2.—Frederick |eral Scott. Shiaatimar oupled the luter years of his lifs. He | TNt an RIS onferane: Te at Omaha Yesterdny. . . 1 x ! was elected chancellor of Queens uni.| Wil be held regardiess of other devalop- s nf Deg, | Cor®, an 15-year-old immigrant admitted - ALONG THE AUSTRO-ITALIAN [ 08, VOVe, SROnoe o L "™t | ments in the situation. Se. ™ @ | here today, according to the police, that Bertsche Contlnues frontier Rome clatms R do (et attia w‘ mhloh RO 6a. m i {he stole diamonds valued at $10,000 from for more than thirty years D k N' h 1 ew ® | the Chicago home of Mrs. Willlam Selig St fB 'b f Gra.nd uke Nicholas i B et o e ory of Bribery o e 10a m a[ Cors was arrested in San Francisco 1 i The Intest report from Vienna de Russla,ns set Flre wages Army to Help fam 71| mst night by the Oakland police, who Chl(}a,g() POllcemen clares all attacks on Gor t .t b he confessed selling the jewels in been checked. o Citv an 1p. ™ | S8y Z2p.m Q»L'hl(‘llo for $300, with which he made a CHICAGO, July 22 —Christian P. HEAVY FIGHTING in Alsace s re- y 0 nSWer rayers Sp.m itrip to the Panama-Pacific exposition. . i ot ported in the Fremeh tlelal W k w d —— . m.. i on of eriminals ng . - 79| his native town of Wehrdun, Oermany, |rsumed the witness stand today | of German communication lnes in o5 oh m— =88 8. oplar o sha Ny Iaptad. % AShe 7 p. m 17| and the Seligs took Lim in 83 a servant. |, o rormer Detective Sergeants Wi acroplane ralds is reported from | PPRLIN, June 22.—(Via London)—Be- [nection with the services prayer sp.m ) Mra. Mellg Ped etown me the Jewels |y & ¥ goants Wik- | o o ote. fore evacuating Windau the Russians which are being held throughout Russia Ham F. Egan and Walter O'Brien and Comparative Local Recor abi'Asd e Daw Miak IBAE Send Warth. applied tho torch *o the city and the |toduy, Grand Duke Nicholas, the com- TR TR 1 e i o s ey | (88 :mubjeoted 10" furtiior Oross-axasmslinias harbor works, according to advices re- |mander-in-chlef, calls upon the troops Highest vesterday..... 61 M 8 62 ol more. i int T tan tion by -eounsel . for - the delsndanis celved at Libau. Tho greater part of |to mccomplish fresh deeds to achleve & Lowest yesterday g: éi : ": shy ha ‘orn hem &) she left them Bertsche admitted he hoped to secure im- = the city 18 sald to have been destroyed. | victorfous end of the great battle now (All rights reserved.) P liation e ® T & mn" ':'l:l J:u:lu(r‘:‘: ‘l';, ‘l::-":::"“‘"u" munity by his revelations of corrupt deal- {The Russian troops also are reported to raging. The order of the day follows: The business he started Remperatare and precipitation depar-| 1 et It e L e ook P |ings with the police. It was brought out || Rpe@ Coupon have fired villages and farm houses in| By desire of the emperor and holy Is now on the boom; tures from the normal: g3 AGA. et e mptation.” | that Bertsche's saloon cashed checks for || = T ™% _p__ jother parts of Courland, in accordance [aynod, the whole of Russia ls today g heve hals Selenging Deficiency for the day Tl . Deliesmens and other city emplores ag- | with the Lrovisions of & recently Pub- |praying for the vietory of Russian arms. o . e Total detlciency since " =| Premier Botha- greguting #5000 4 month. {| For the lished wrmy order, T fivmly believe the Sofat prayers of the | 4 ewns o fine aute, Normal precipitation. . inch p S ! e — 5 2 hi le will be fulfilled Drives down about nine; DTk LAIY inco Murch L. 10T lach is Given Ovation!PROMINENT RAPID CITY || Best Movi i theri [ mo whola of Russla has united ia | Baye CEHxe’n juse fime ™ Total rainfall since Murc 7 Inches 3id Gath 3 Deficiency since March 1 3 inoh 18 cS ovies 1aeons rathering Deficiency for cor, period, 19i4. 261 inches Deticiency for cof. period, 1813, 2.64 inches WOMAN DIES SUDDENLY ! By special arrangement with for Convention efforts to supply the army with all that ‘ll necessary to wage a viotorious war “And now let tell g3 A sew .-=.“. You, CAPETOWN, Uni f South Afric minst the enemy. You men of the ¥ou can fill all your Soptste BV Riations 4% V. 7. N+ Pyia tanten 30 B M bremior Botha ar| RAPID CITY, 8. D., July 2.~(Spscial) | | eight of the leading moving [Raeia army: nd navy he have. basm Wilh" lille B2 WD tation and Btate Temp. High- Rain- | i ed here today from the campalsn which | ~Sudden death came to Mrs. g-mm.j picture theaters THE BEE s § DS MOINES, Ia, July 2.-Incoming |confided to me, @o not farget that the The fudiclous use of WANT AR 03| ended on July 9 with the surrender of P- Matteson, one of this city's best enabled to give its readers a trains today brousht Gideons from all|smporor and all Russia are aiding you | %286 1, T OMARA BRX Wil 0| German southwest Africa. The premier| Xnown women. Bhe was siricken with | mbinati 1 sections of the country 1o attend the six-|by their prayers and their labor. THE BEE goes into the homes of : : was cheered wherever he appeared. Busi-| apoplexy at noon and three hours later v pon good for teenth annual conventlon of that organ- | “Imbued with this thought and strong its readers. § 0| ness was suspended. The city was dec-|Passed away without regaining con- & freo admission to any ome tzation, which was forma'ly ovened with |In our courage, let us show them our o bur or' ool macuchilh R » 00|orated und the people thronged the| sclousness, With her husband she has! of them on days specified. A meeting of its national cabinet. Two |gratitude by fresh deeds. God and His | wmervice of any kind, just blace an {.“'"' Oity, & ®|streets. On the arrival of Premier Botha | resided here since the early elghties, and citles are contestants for the 13§ con- |powerful hiep are with us, and we carry | AD in THE OMAHA BEE Teles AT L] trace of A b IR ATy, at the government house, 10,00 school children sang the national snthem. was (dentified with chureh and soclal affairs. l . In Sunday’s Bee vention, Huntington, W. Va., und Chal- anovga, Tenn in ourselves that earnest of victory. faith which s the phone Tyler 1000 and PUT IT IN THE OMAHA GLE. )

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