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The sure way to satisfy your wants is through -1se of the want ad pages of The Try a Bee want ad. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE THE WEATHER Showers VOL. XLV OMAHA, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 2, 1915. BRITISH PLAN | 10 FIGHT UNTIL | THR ALLIES WIN Sir Edward Carson, in Outlining First Year of War Says Peace is Immoral, Im- possible. | ALLIES MUST CRUSH GERMANY No Such Word of Peace in the| Vooabulary is Assertion of Cabinet Member. NATION'S FOES ARE MISTAKEN| GERMAN ARMY DENTIST HELPS OUT THE RUSSIAN PEASANTS-—Military tooth doctor in great demand among the inhabitants of Russian Poland. COPY SINGLE TWO CENTS. [KAISER POINTS T0 ' MIGHTY TRIUMPH OF THE GERMAN ARMIES Emperor Says that Enemy Troops that Boasted They Soon Would Be in Berlin, Driven Back East and West. WAR FORCED UPON THE NATION | | | | | | Fatherland Did Not Seek Conflict, But Once Entered Must Teach ‘ Opponents a Lesson. }AOAIN SAYS “GOD IS WITH US" LONDON, Aug. 1.—BEmperor Wil liam has i{ssued a manifesto to the German people on the occasion of the anniversary of the outbreak of the war, according to a dispatch re- celved in Amsterdam from Berlin {and forwarded by a correspondent of Reuter’s Telegram company: In the manifesto, which wns issued at |the main headquarters of the Gorman army, the emperor says “‘One year has elapsed since 1 was obliged to call to arms the German peo ple. An unprecedented time of bloodshed | has befallen Europe and the world | Connclence Clear. | “Before God and history my consclence is clear. 1 did not will the war. After {preparations for a whole decade the | coalition povers, to whom Germany had {becoma too great, belleved that the mo- ment had come to humiliate the empire, (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Aug. 1.—(Special.)— Is another chapter in the famous Bartley case soon to be opened up? That s a question said to be disturb- ing various former “friends” of the former state treasuver, who had per- suaded themselves that the story had been closed and that they could sleep in comfort, only now to hear dis- quieting rumors that Attorney Gen- eral Reed 1§ congldering the question of proceedings to recover back for the state treasury the sums that may be traced to beneficiaries who are in a position to make reimbursement. While it has been known some such steps had been figured on at different times, only to be held off by Invisible “Influence,” the hint that something may be soon doing now comes in this tip from Bdgar Howard in his personal column in his Columbus Telegram: Attorney General Reed is a pretty busy man, but still I belleve that within a fow weeks he will find time to file a sult to collect many thousands uf dollars from the fellows who borrowed the school money from Joe Bartley and for- ot to pay it back. Attorney General 1s not a big-bodted man, but he the ability to make big trouble for school-money thieves, and I guess there will_be something doing before the ides of November. when Bartley was pardoned out, it was with an understanding that he would himself collect in the money he had loaned out and pay it over to the state, representing that he could not do this while behind prison bars. He mnever turned in any of the money, nor did his bondsmen, nor dld any of those to whom he had loaned the stolen money. It is sald that no statute of limitations can run against & claim owing to the state. Amos Pinchot Flays Operators for Part in Convicting Lawson LONDON, Aug. 1.—8ir Edward, Carson, attorney general in the As-| quith cabinet, has prepared for The! Assoclated Press a signed statement| giving a broad outline of the first| year of the war from the British standpoint together with expression of the unalterable purpose of the| British government and people to| carry on the war to a successful con-| clusion. The statement follows: “How long will the war last and what | will be the result? To such questions as this any British subject can give but one answer and that is the war will last until the cause of the allles has been brought to & successful issue and Europe and the world have been relleved from the ideals Involved in the aggression of Prusslan | domination. Peace Not in Vocabulary. “The word peace does not enter mm-HlNT NEW GHAPTER our vocabulary at present. It is banished | from our conversation as something im- moral and impossible under existing cir- | cumstances. And yet we are the most| peace-loving people in the world, a nation which, throughout the globe, within its| — many dominions, has inculcated good gov-| Attorney Géneral Reed is Consider- ernment and social and industrial prog-| . : it 9 Ton and the free exercise, in Its widest| iNE Suit to Recover from Friends sense, of civil and religious liberty. ‘Who Borrowed the Money. “Rightly or wrongly we have in the| past devoted our energies and our intelli-| gence not to preparations for war, \-nn.zNO STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS to that social progress which makes for | the happiness and the contentment of | the mass of our people. And in this, no doubt, is the reason why other nations imagine that we, as a nation of shop- keepers, are too indolent and apathetic to fight for and maintain these priceless Iiberties won by the men who laid the foundation of our vast empire. Foes Are Mistaken. “But they are entirely mistaken in forming any such estimate of the temperament or determination of our people. Great Britain hates war and no nation enters miofé reluctantly upon its horrible and devastating operations but, at the same time, no nation, when it s driven to war by the machinations of its foes who desire to filch from it or from | its co-champlons of liberty any portion of their inherited freedom, is more re- solved to see the matter through, at what- ever cost, to a successtul issue. “A year of war has transformed Great Britain. Of our navy, I need hardly epeak. It has held up to the fullest ex- tent the great traditions which fills the pages of history in the past; it has driven its enemies off the seas; it holds vast oceans free for almost uninterrupted commerce of neutral powers, and it h preserved these highways for its own supplies. of materials and food without interruption. Perll of Submarine. “I do not minimize the peril of the submarine, which is in process of belng | dealt with through the careful and zealous watchfulness of our admiralty; but while the submarine has enabled the Germans to commit savage and inhuman atrocities contrary to the laws of civili- zation and against the settled rules of international law, it has done nothing to affect the vast commerce of our empire. “The (arman submarine attack has signally falled to hamper our military operations. Under the protection of our navy hundreds of thousands of men have been brought io the fighting area from the most distant parts of the empire. Troop ships are crossing daily to France and not a single ship or soldier has been lost in the passage. The manner in which our troops have received their supplies is a source of satisfaction to us and ad- miration of our enemies.” England to Declare | pexver, Lciali day" was celebrated here yesterday un- Cotton Contraband ! i s susices of the Womena Justice league and largely attended by union Colo.,, Aus. labor adherents. A mass meeting to- night was addressed by Amos Pinchot, James H. Brewster and Mrs. Champlon. John R. Lawson, in whose behalf the meeting today was held, remains in jail in Trinidad as a result of his conviction of first degree murder in connection with strike disturbances. Reviewing the conviction of Lawson, Mr, Pinchot sal ‘““To convict a man of murder in the fourth degree upon such unsound, fully impeached, hired evi- dence i simply a travesty upon justice. “Forcing strikers to use violence has become & part of the operators’ regular technique in industrial disputes. Temperatase ot Omaha Yesterday. | .. LaboF can no longer win strikes alone. Hours. Dex | Pirst, Y | large. Second, labor cannot bring half | the violence to bear that the employer can, * * ¢ * not only on the fleld of #ction, but in the courts, newspapers and 79| legislatures. Labor no longer wins -0 | strikes, peaceful or bloody, except inso- '\ | far as it succeeds In calling public at- .85 | tention to existing conditions. 88| “Political parties, reform bodies and ‘a5 even the church do mot play a helpful 84! part in the struggle for economic jus- 88 tice.” LONDON, Aug. 1—The Weekly Dis- patch says it understands that the Brit- ish government s about to declare cotton contraband and that it will offer com- pensatior. to planters and make new ar- rangements with the neutral countries of Europe. The paper adds that it is stated that the government is also taking up the question of modifying the order- in-council for the satisfaction of the authorities at Washington The Weather For Nebraska—Showers. 8 B e BITERERFLEY W15, 1914, 1913, 1912, o et 8 8 8 | O PO ARE DROWNED Precipitation B 00 Temperature and H‘.dflullon de- artures fra : AFLUIN Svams the. mevweal .| 1OCK HAVEN, Pa., Aug. 1.—Four girls pxcess tor fie gy . - 3| were, drowned af Flemington, near here inoe M; Total geficiency dh 188 | today. They were: Normal precipitation .14 nch | ESTHER FISHER, aged 2. I’xcess for the day. .09 Inch 'HELMA FL ) Total raintall since 3 1934 x',!fim.;m'flf,f;"“‘ FLORUMS, aged 13, of Flem- Fxcers sin arc o 92 inch MARION BOWE: 9. - Lbu;:d‘:nl‘v ;or cor. period, 13i4. £31 inche ment, Pa SRR k1. of, Bany eficlency for cor. pe . 292 inches | ERMA BUTTERBAUGH, aged 15, LA, WELSH, Tocal Forecastor.® | Cherry Tree, Pa. B oo od The legal status of the matter is that | because the labor surplus is so | (Germans Take Men From West to East PBETROGRAD, Aug. 1.—(Via London.)— The Russlan war office tonight issued ‘he following official statement: “The Germans continue to transport troops to our front. Prisoners confirm the first appearance on our front of the | Fifty-fourth and Fifty-elghth divisions”of | German infentry, which participated in | battle on Thursday last. They had just| arived from the western front. LAD I KILLED ON - A HUNTING TRIP Arthur Ostergard Accidentally Shot While Examining Rifle Early Sunday Morning. At about 6 o’clock Sunday morn- ing, Arthur Ostergard, 19 years of age, 2236 South Eleventh street, was |accidentally shot, while on a hunt- ling trip just across the river, and | died before the police surgeon could |reach him. With Robert Wendt, 17 |years old, whose home is at 2115 South Fourth street, James Delany, 19, Walter Bastian 15 and Harry Schnell 16, Ostergard left Omaha Saturday evening to spend the night fishing and hunting along the river {on the Iowa side between the Union | Pacific and the Douglas street bridge. About 645 Sunday morning Wendt started to shoot at a target with a small Z-caliber rifle, when the gun refused to shoot. Ostergard went to the ussistance | of his friend, and tried to see what was the trouble. He had looked down the | barrel, and the gun went off, shooting | him In the breast. The b@ys took him | to & boat they had, and rowed across the | river, landing at the foot of Jones street. | The police patrol rushed to the landing | with Offiers Plotts and Graham, Detective Rich and Dr. Zimmerer, but the boy died about four minutes before they arrived. Other Boys Held, The body has been taken in charge by Coroner Crosby. Wendt, the boy who had the gun when it went off, is being held on & 3200 bond, and the other boys are held on $100 bonds. Although there seems to be no doubt that the shooting was purely accidental, The dead boy was the only son of Peter | Ostergard, & carpenter in the employ of the Weirich Fixture company, and has lived in Omaha all of his life. His father | 18 heart broken, and the boys who were | at the scene of the accident, all of whom | were chums of young Ostergard, are very much affected by the tragedy. BRITISH BLOW AIMED AT | GERMANY HITTING BELGIANS WASHINGTON, Aug. lL—Great Britain s disinclined to permit the unmolested passage to this country of ships loaded at Rotterdam with Belglan products, ac- cording to & message today from Consul General Skinner at London. Belglan goods form & part of the vast accumula- tion of American-beund merchandise tied up in Rotterdam. The London government holds ship- ments from Belgium to be the same as soods of German origin, Insofar as the British order-in-council is concerned, tak- ing the position that so long as Belgian territory is dominated by Germany it is lly German territory. Great n fears exemption of Belgium prod- ucts would open a way to market for German wares. For that reason, it is sald, the blockade order was extended to Belglan goods recently, the action caus- ing astonishment here because of its ap- parently unfriendly attitude toward Bel- glan merchandise. ' OCOMOBILE COMPANY WILL SHARE PROFITS BRIDGRPORT, Conn., Aug. 1-Notice was glven to 3000 workmen by the Locomobile Company of Amerjea today that profits would be shared with them The plan Is to increase wages propor- lllonl(zly with the increase of product. ON THE EAST SIDE OF RIVER |, NOnday 1 Iowa-Kan | party | which lovally stood by her Austro-Hun |garian ally in a just cause, or to crush {for conquest, as I already announced a year ago, hae driven us into the war. FOR BANNER WEEK‘ “When in the days of last August all able-bodied men were rushed to the col {ors and troops were marched into a Je- fensive war, every German on earth felt, In accordance with the unanimous ex- ample of the Relchstag, that it was a | tight for the highest good of the nation, {its life, its freedom. What awAited us {if the cnemy force succeeded In deter- WEEK IS FULL OF THRILLS mining the fate of our people and of Tractor Show for Next Week Arous- ing All Sorts of Interest All Over the State, !¥urope has been shown in the hardships One week from today the big7endured by my dear province, East Prus sta. National l"ow:r Farming Demon- stration at Fremont is to up'an. ThAL| e ccnsclovsness that the fight was will be August 9. By 1 o'clock in forced upon us accomplished miracles, the afternoon every engineer will be | Conflict of opinion became silent, old p- in his place at the throttle of his Ponents begen to understand and estecin farm 3 ' each other, the spirit of true comrad- rm tractor. The great machines, | .., yoverned the entire people. some elghty in number, will begin “Full of gratitude, we can ray today to move and a big parade over the that God te with u 1,000-acre field north of Fremont The enemy’s armies, who boasted they will be on. Miracles Accomplished. {would entcr Berlin in a few months, are {with havy blows driven back far east day. Governor 'and west. Numberless battlefiolds in Morehead and W. J. Bryan are to be various parts of Europs and naval bat- among those who will attend the formal ties off near and distant coasts testify opening. Governor Morehead goes there Power farming demonstrations are, of | ''An Interesting point is whother the course, to be given during the afternoon, forts of Novogeorglevaky, Warsaw andleconomie problem of the eountry, not on !the basis of Wednesday is to be Nebraska-lowa Im.. | IVansorod will be retained or evacuated. plement Dealers and Nebraska Agricul- Rallways, Germany needs for a further tural College and County Farm Demon- ®dvance pass through these fortresses, strator day. Excursion trains are to be DUt if Russian garrisons are left they run In over the Burlington, from Sloux M&Y Absorl 100000 men who may never Qity, Lincoln and Beatrice. The tractor b® seen aafn.” men are to have & fishbake in the even.| The Chronicle believes Cermany wifl Ing st Morse park. Bpecial entertain. e content to allow the Ruassians to re- ment, including a battle royal, is to be Ure to a new line, meanwhile occupying staged for them at this time, The first hemselves with fortifying thelr newly section of the 4,000 feet of moving pic. Saptured pesiticns ture films of the power farming r:lm.’;v:o “Tt I8 Lol mays the Chroniole, are to be taken on this day. | “that the Germans will not try to break W {hrough the new Ruesian lines, which gives them In turn a short and easy line Stecher to Wrestle, Thursday is to be Nebraska-South Da- - to defend. Then they can promptly kota day. Excursions will come In over transfer their hugé surplus forces to an- the Chicago Northwestern from the Al- giher area for an offensive against Italy, bion, Norfolk, Hastings and York di~ Serpla or the Anglo-French frunt. Be- visions. The Stecher-Henderson wrestling match is to be held in Morse park in the evening. The tractor men are to be the guests of the Commercial club at the tacked.” match, | “Warsaw touches us in England very Friday of that week Is to be Omala ! pearly and sharply,” says the Mall in and Ak-Sar-Ben day and Live Stock an editorial. “We shal] feel the loss of Men's day. The Unlon Etock Yards of |ihe city even more thun the Huwslzns, Omaha are to furnish and roast a big 0X | who have limitless space in which to re- for a barbecue. Unlon Pacific excursions | reat. We hope authoritative means will will be run on the North Platte, Grand |pe taken to inform the Russian Duma at Island, Omaha and Columbus divisions. |j1s sitting tomorrow that Great Britain The school of instruction will be ‘njgtands firm with Russia In its strug- progress and farm tractor demonstra- | gle tions are to be given on that afternoon | e ———————————— as well as on every othér. A theater First Prozen Beef Comes from Brazil is to be glven the tractor men in the evening. The third and last section of the big moving picture film is to be! taken on this day. i NEW YORK, Aug. l—A shipment of 1100 tons of frozen beef from Santos | Brazil, sald to be first consignment of Brazilian beef ever received at a United Four Inches of Rain Does Damage ln Keith States port, arrived here today on the inlrumlluu Rio De Janeiro. Argentine OGALLALA, Neb, Aug. L—(Special | peet has been shipped here for some time. Telegram )—Four inches of rain fell in| According to representatives of the one hour last cvening between 9 and 10| g ¢y which the beef was consigned, oclock. The water come down Off the|iner shipments are to follow. Negotia- hills flooding some business houses and |goiy gor the business were begun dur- Awellings on the first floor. No damage | ("'t "Ll here of delegates to the Pan- from hall resulted In town but r»por\-f::‘m(_m Financlal conference. from the country, north, west and south, | ————————— indicate heavy damage to crops from hail POSTAL TO CUT LEASED WIRE RATES TO PAPERS and wind. A washout one mile east on to be hammered hard and signs point ta Serbla or Italy as the first to be at- th eUnion Pacific's main line delayed traffic till after dayliwht Hold Aceldent Unavold & NEW YORK, Aug. L-—Announcement FALLS CITY, Neb., Aug. 1.~Special)— |that the Postal Telegraph and Cable The verdict of the coromers jury over |company would make a reduction of & the body of Harvey Ward, the boy who was killed by an auto July 15, was that the death of the boy wes caused by an unavoidable accident and the driver of the bus was exonerated per cent in its leased wire rates to new papers throughout the country effective August 2, was made here tonight by Charles C. Adams, vice president of the company in charge of traffic. |e | propaganda; |reiterate and re-emphasize thelr Chicago |its fight stralght out and flat-footed.” fore autumn one of the three ls likely ' MURDOCK IS NOW | - A-SBENIN' THINGS | Bullmoose National Chairman In- sists that His Third Party is | Still in the Game. TO HOLD CONVENTION ANY WAY RUSSIAN ARMIES ARE EVACUATING POLISH GAPITAL Fate of Grand Duke's Foroes Re. sl | ported in Retreat Believed to MOUNT PLEASANT, Ia., Aug. 1 Be Hanging in the ongressman Victor Murdock of Balance. Kansas, chairman of the progressive national committee, gave out following statement tod “l have just completed a "‘"‘"‘Whn Portion Will Succeed in months' personal canvass of the sit-| uation with progressives in the con-‘ Ren(‘hmg New Line is the tral west and on the Pacific coast,| Question Now. ’ and after making it, I am ready to | say flat-footedly that we progressives are golng into the 1916 fight as a party, and to win | “Moreover, a meeting of rvprvavn(-, ative progressives, held this month in New York City, reported the same wARSAW, the moal of the Teutonie conditions in the erst that I hav armies In the east, I being evae- found in the west, and they are lin-| Wated by the Russian forces, me- ing up for the next battle. This is tording to’ ndviees Festived THGN the CAN THEY MAKE AN ESCAPE? AUSTRIAN HORSE AT LUBLIN The Day’s _War News Lathach, Anstrin, transmitted also the sentiment of (he progressive| (hrough Genevn. German aviators, national committee. We will hold| returning from observations over our national convention early and| the eaplital, reported that . the troops of Grand Duke Nicholas nominate a candidate. | - ot be soun. vaEITRpEs (o' bhots “The great battle of 1916 will not be | ward, over candidates, but will be over plat- ot A mUD L forms. The storm will rage, not in the | w'_:-::m”‘" "":’ houthonst o committee on credentiale, but in the com- [ gLSFRAT S ERLTO-HETmE mittes on resolutions. Tho board of [ (T G CE “,;‘l republican lendership will not only in- | o slst on n standpat candidate, but “ml fight for an unstinted and unequivocal | Indorsement of the administration of | William Howard Taft, including the | Payne-Aldrich tariff bill. | :"::“ the “The democratic leadership, likewise, | - will point with pride to the equally la- mentable Simmons-Underwood tarift bill and against a Bryan insurrection of the first magnitude will cancel the one-term presidential pledge and other' Hryan and the progressives will | [ effort to reach Vilnm, with th object of mevering the Warsawe Petrograd rallway an. making rdous the retirement of n forces in the region platform of 1912, That platform remains the most nearly perfeet utterance of the principles of Abraham Lincoln of modern | times. | *“Both In its protest ae =n? the privileged fat LONDON, Aug. | the sections still hangs in the balance. 1.—The fate of Ruesian armies in the Polish inst the inroads ning on an arrant No official confirmation had been |gross materialtsm, and in its practical | pecety, {program of concrete nomic remedies, | 5 h."d tonight of the. evacuation the progressive platform has hecome to | Of WATSAW by the Russian troops, hundreds of thousands of wugressive | DUt that they are withdrawing east- Amerieans the ark of the covenant, and ' ward is eertaln, there 1= not a township anywhere without | “What portie a n o will lely to its preservation ulation. The arrival of A .,|.-,' i of Austrian Vi : The prokressives have the right plan at Lublin, Whi-h is officlally nn::unul or the tariff and other e mie lssues, from Vienns hows t X na, sho hat th {Including the truet problem. The demio- line of retreat fs entirely ,,tu:,.;“'::h':;: cratic lendership, after two and o half | ;etlelng army &8 Fleld Marshal ven venrs' (119l has wixnally fatled in solv- Muckensen hod previously..crosssd—this VInE the natien’s economic questions, Ite rallway. tarift law, slammed together under the Other Roads Open (0l log-rolling leadership, {8 utterly un-' There remain, however, the main doubls what German anger In self-defense and Productive of auy of the results track 10ute throagh 3 especially to lend his officlal presence to German strategy can do. No violation of ouely claimed for it Its trust h-lllxll(lnn good road I‘!:\,n\ l':],u:(xl:;x:’:dllnr? ‘: r‘v‘.\‘s\, the formal opening of a blg show and internationsl law by our enemies will be |flounders, its attempt at development of kow and through the nul"zlv‘!’l" 1 4 demonstration that means so much to the able to shake the economlic foundation of |ocean-golng craft has fizzled. That th's Which runs south of the Bug m,""‘ e improvement of the agricuiture of his our conduct of the war." in the judgment of the voter fs amply Nothing of fnnumerable vehiele °::' :'mn:‘-; onnm:h\\l',a.l. ltzrydm“v\m be in Fre- :-\Munwd by the tremendous anti-de which cuter the Pollsh eapital rro:: l.h.; at day to deliver a lecture at : ocratic sentiment that has developed at eust. Ther o long the chautauqua in progress there during Russlans Have LOtS ithe polls at virtually every .h.l‘mn 1..: sha) von Ihmlv.xl-uvg‘ fll\:‘\::}:‘x :‘.:; the demonstration week. Of R R the last two years. At many of these Ccrossing the Bug from the northeast it 8 Banquet in Evening. oom to Btreat |eections the voter cnst a republican :beltsved Grami Duke Nicholas has still A power farming demonstration is to vq |Dallot because ho belleved that the re- |an excellent chance of saving his whole be given on the flelds during the after- ' In Sa,ys London Mall publican lendership had learned ftw les- | ATMY. noon after the big parade of tractors. ) (#on and would hereafter tuke the pro-| 'When the Russians do reach the new A get-together b#nquet of tractor men S, | gresstve path, formation they will be faced by another and Commercial club members is to be MONDON, Avg. . L—Discussing the | “But now the voters kmow for a cer. Ganger—that arising from the advance of /held in the evening. probability of a retirement of the Rus- tainty that when the republican loader ieneral von low's army, composed Tuesday is to be Wyoming, Colorado S8R army from Warsaw, the London ship has been restored to power it has 'Ar€ely of cavalry, which s now ap- and Fremont and Dodge county day. A 1Mes savs editorlally tpday: lshown more, not 1 veaibionial. thns 18 Wik the fortress of Kovno and school of instruction on the technical The Russion wings must hold on nn- dencies, as notahly denced by the me- WHIED i within three days' march of the matters relating to the varlous engines 'l the center from Zerock Novegeor- tions of the leglslatora in New Vilna-Fetrograd collway. to be opened on this day. Former Goy- £1¢VEky and Warsaw comes abreast of (Ohto and Massachusetts. Hand-in-l Acoo v Flghting, ernor Glenn of North Carolina is to !hem and unless the Niemen and BODF | with the progressive proposition to en- ‘The rciirement, aithough described by speak at the chautauqua in the evening. | {ronts hold firm there will be trouble. |sompass soclal and industrial Justice, Petroxrad as voluntary, js sccompanied igoes the necessity of solving the great |by very hard fighting, reminiscent of neral Kuropatkin's retreat from Liao- Yang, when he Inflicted on the pursuing Jupanese losses greater than his own. political advantage, of which’ practice both the old parties are infamously guflty, but on the basis of ' While the main army, with the fleld ar- service to mociety. [tillery 1s making its way to the rear, “Bvervwhere I found these progressives | IDfantry and cavalry are protecting the who made the fight of 182 with the idea | [18NKS 6nd making repeated attacks. I uppermost, cager now to continue the |'h18 Way Nhoure are zained which are of fight, Whenever they have had chance | Netimable advantage to the retreating to make good they have done o forces “The spectacle of republican reaction | 1 1roMably will he several days befare Hin New York and Ohio, fn contrast tn the Strugile is finally decided. \Nobody progressive achievement in California |3U¢5!10nn the fact that with the capture under Covernor Johnson, s & dramatie |f Wor*uW the Germans will acore & vie: (Continued on Page portrayal of the need of the new strong, patriotic party of public service. There- fore the progressive party will go on with lumn Four.) THE WANT-AD. WAY ey ///\\\//’/\| I | . Gompers Advises The Laboring Men To Avoid Strikes MERIDAN, Conn., Aug. L—While in- sisting that the right of the werkingman to strike s of paramount importance, | Bamuel Gompers, president of the Ameri- can Federation of Labor, in a speech here today advised the laboring man to avold strikes and to remember that “employers have some rights.”” He also referred to the effect of the Buropean war on Amer can labor conditions and expressed the opinoin that the Eastland disaster might have been the act of God to defeat the out cry against the seamen’s act Referring to labor conditions, Mr. Gompers sald: “Men must learn that employers have some rights. If you will investigate, you | will find that strikes oftener are caused | by unorganized or recently organized | labor. In the latter case the workers suddenly think themselves all powerful | and imagine employers have no rights Avold strikes. The Fight to atrike o of | For 2 have fo sets paramount portance, not the exercise of that right. | S af She WANE-ADG “Of the effect of Buropean war con-| : ditions on American labor, Mr. G 80 he bought THZ BEE sald: o " omflfll And saw ad: “I need & “The great European conflagration, And i Ded. may result in good if it crushes out the ! spirit of militarism, and in its place of- | (Continued ‘Tomervew) fers the apirit of humanity. In this| m, secure the mervices of the most T country when the war is over, thousands efficient help, you m\ll.l‘r“ your of workers will be thrown out of em- beal ";mlho“nnli.zf ployment, because of the cutting off of | "% thI8 I8 eas y U the present artificlal market for the | lertising. {.3' “The ‘ou necessities of life as well as for the im-| be well p od wi l cured, lephone now plements of . Labor organizations should prepare for this condition.” PUT IT IN THE OMAHA BER : ¥