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THE F FRENCH REPORT * | ACCUSES GERMANS Commission Says Kaiser's 'l"roopt' Shoot Wounded and Beat Pris- | oners to Death. LAWS OF WAR ARE VIOLATED PARIS, Aug. 2.-~The commission presided qver by George 8. Payelle, president of the French court of ac- counts, has presented to Premeir Vi- viani the final report of its investiga- tion into acts on the part of German soldiers in violation of the rights of man. 4 This report contains 12,000 words and gives in detail the evidence gath- ered concerning the use by German troops of military and civilian prison- ers as shields against the fire of French troops, as well as of the em- ployment by the troops of Emperor Willlam_of cartridges in which the bullets were reversed, in order to cause more serious wounds; split bul- lets and other bullets cut to make thém more rending. Order to Kill Wounded. Continuing, the report cites orders given by Oeneral Stenger, commander of the Fifty-eighth German brigade, Airecting his soldiers to kill the wounded enemy and to take no more prisoners. Bvidence confirming the issuing and the circula- tion of this order was obtained from German prisoners belonglng to the 11ith and 1434 regiments. The report contalns evidence of a of French sok diers as 8 result of thin order, as well as the massacre of wounded men after {he battle of Feth in Belglum. It reporta the allegations of many soldiers who de- clare they saw their wounded comrades put to death. Prisoners Beaten to hile the skulls of others were HERE IS A WHOLE RESERVE ARMY--It belongs to the republic of S8an Marino, located in the Italian Ap- penines. When Italy declared war San Marino, the small- est republic in the world, threw in her lnck with the allies. It sent its entire standing army of fifty men, with the ex- ception of these two here, to the front. JEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, AUGT JST -3, 1915, IS ABANDONING POLISH SALIENT | (Continued’ from Tage One.) tacks upan our position. Our artillery and our Infantry fire succeeded in checking these attncke. “Pont-A-Mousson and the villages of Maidieres and Manoncourt-SursSeille, were bombarded yesterday from the air with incendiary shells.” Fighting Northwest of Warsaw. GENEVA, Aug. 2—(Via Paris.)~The Geneva Tribune has published & dispatch | from ita correspondent at Innsbruck, | Austria, who says that to the east of War- | saw the Germans has ceased their at-| tack, but to the northwest terrible fight- | ing s still going on. | To the morth of Lubin, since July 31, | the Rosslans have been fighting a | In this| Vicinity the Austrians have lost no fewer | than 0,000 head during the last forty- elght hours. To the south of Chelm, the correspondent continues, there have been constant counter attacks and the. Aus- triana have riot advanced in this section since last Saturday. To the east of Ivangorod, the Austro-Germans have ad- vanced a distance of forty miles in the last four days. Allies Preparing To Continue War Three Years More/| NEW YORK, Aug. 2-~The Allles are preparing to continue the war for at least three years more, i necessary, accord- ing to Willlam Eills Corey, former presi- dent of the United States Steel corpora- tion, who arrived today on the French liner Espagne from Bordeaux. Mr. Corey sald it was problematical as! to whether the Allies would like to see | the United States enter the war, but hc | thought they would rather have the finan- cial than the military aid of this country. Miss Anna Selby, 61 years old, of Menio Park, Cal, who was accompanying her | mother on her way home, died of heart | fallure on board ship yesterday. Her bady was removed at quarantine. | | | | metabolism, induced, in all probabllity, by f‘angy: Pacl;aéc;s Often Hold Food of Inferior Grades BAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Aug Speaking of relative food values and in- creases in the price of food stutfs, Dr, | 8. J. Crumbine, secretary of the Kansas State Board of Health, today addressed & meeting at the Panama-Pacific exposi- tion. Dr, Crumbine first:called attention to the inevitable incréase in the price of food and, in making & plea for feod thrift, declared that the cheaper grades of frult sometimes were more nutritive than the cholcer grades. ‘People should know,” he sald, “that the food value of fruit itself, outside of the syrup, s quite as high, it not actually higher, In the cheaper grades of fruit than it is fn the fancy and higher priced fruit. “It oocurs to, me that, at least in some instances, the marketing of often inferior grades of food in fancy containers, to- gother with the use of brilllant labels, making the artiole appear oxtremely at- tractive, is bordering very closely on the prehibition In the law that foods must not be made to appear better than they really are. If the truth wefe known of the actual caloric valiie of many of the fancifully packaged foods on the market that wre widely advortised as having ex- ceptional nutritive merits, their salew would encounter a heavy slump. “Probably the greatest waste in food products in this country ocours bhecause of improper methods of gathering and marketing. This applies to berries, to fruits and to many vegetables and notably and partioularly to eggs. “It is now pretty generally accepted that that mystorious disease, peliagra, which is making such rapid inroads in our southern states and is gradually spreading In the north, 1s a disease of S the monotonous diet of the poor—those who chiefly suffer from pellagra, who live in a very large measure out of the can.” Bad River Floods Stop Rail Traffic PIERRE, 8, D, Aug. 3.~(Bpecial Tele- gram.)—Bad river has been at flood Thompson-Belden & Co. All Summer Apparel Reduced Decided Reductions on Suits, Coats, Dresses and Skirts Not a Large Offering But Prices are Very Attractive Children's Bloomers Biack Sateen Bloomers of very good quality naterials; sizes 2 to 14 years...35¢ and 50¢ Children’s White Bloomers, 3, 4, 5 vears, 50¢ Children’s Wear—Third Floor. THE AUGUST LINEN SALE Table Cloths | $2.50 Bleached Table Cloths, RO $1.80 each ' | | | Napkins $1.75 Siiver Bleached Hemmed Napkins ....81.25 a doz. $3.75 Fine Bleached Napkins at. ... $4.50 Fine Bleached Napkins 83, a dos. ed Napkina . o000 .83, a doa. $7.50 Fine BluchsJ q\llpllnl o5 uoq a dox $7.76 Fine Bleached Napkins IR o ® a doz. $10.00 Fine Bleached Napkine at ... et . 87.50 & doz. Hemstitched Damask Tray Cloths 46¢ Hemstitched Damask Tray Cloths......25¢ each Bleached Table Cloths Bleached Table Oloths ceiian 88,75 each Bleached Table Cloths cieeaee 84,75 each Bleached Rable Cloths -+ 85,00 each Bleached Table Oloths -+ .8$6,75 each ed Table Cloths Bt ... 0eie..87.50 each stage the last two days and this morning {was covering a large part of the lower | part of Fort Plerre, ' T heonly death so far reported is that i of ePter Werle, an old resident of Stanley | from the butt of & mus- Prices Hold Good Not Only Three British Ships Sunk; crews saved county, who was dorwned when his horse > (fell with him while In several feet of | LONDON, Aug. 2—~The British steam- | wagar in the flats. SAN mnmos RESERVE ARMY, end dangerous system of “billing’ cattle i ; z H i £ il ) J i 41 £} ] I l £ ] H 5t o | | | | I : Heavy Damage by Rain and Hail in Eastern Wyoming OCHEYENNE, Wyo., Aug. 3.—A disas- trous storm swept over eastern Wyoming and touched western Nebraska last Sat- urday and early Sunday it became known here today when communication was re- stored. In Converse, Niobrara, Natroni *1and Platte counties, sWyoming, growing assured that Canadian stock interests will follow suit what the steckmen of thia country do." Plan Diffidult to Entoree, C, G. Lamb ot Denver, representing the te Sanitary commisston of Colorado, Venture dthat, aithough he agreed in o large part with the oplnlons of Drs. Mercer and Gibson, it would be s hard r“bbflulh cattle grasers of his i ; 2 nd the timidity of the { Graff, president of the Ne- Stock Growers’ assocla- In defense of that they tion when £ i ! ] gk hi E £ i n_were . J. Gramlish of the Uni- ka agricultural college. officlal action' was taken, however. Those present were: thflurun of ‘ouncil Bluffs. r i 1 i S Dr. W. G Day, state W':kb-"'v#.‘w rado r.m.' Loomlulunu i P G R e w. Lincoln ; Voting on Strike £raln, railroads and highways suffered heavily. o Near Glenrock a. detached locomotive crashed through a bridge. At Sunrise Ralph Creer was killed by lightning, Near Big Springs hail stones as large a8 hen's eggs,smashed sixty windows of. Unlon Pacific passenger traln No. 1, ' Scatterhig glass over the passengers. The assistance of the American-Hawatian | cars were drenched, but no one was seri- oualy hurt. Bastern Nebraska suffered damage to crops, rman Torpedo Boat Destrmr is Sunk LONDON, Aug. 2-The Hritish ad- miralty tonight announced that a British submarine had returned and reported tho sinking of a German torpedo boat des- troyer, believed to be of the G-108 class pled n 1811 The vessel displaced 689 tons and was capable of traveling at a speed of more than thirty-two knots an hour. It was fitted with two twenty-four poundefs and three torpedo tubes. Ity comploment in normal times was seventy- it Villa Post Revolts | And Joins Carranza | BL PASO, Tex., Aug. 2~The Villa oar- irlnn @t Guzman, 30 men, seventy-eight jmiles south of here on the Mexican | Northwestern rallroad has revolted, im- risoned Its officers and declared for Arranza, acoording to & report to the consulate here. The fact of revolt is confirmed by an official of ® the rallroad. RUSSIAN TORPEDO BOAT DESTROYER IS SUNK BPORLIN, Aug. —~(By Wireless to Bay- ! ville)~A despateh_from Constantinople #[to the Overseas News Agency reports the | Sinking through an unknown cause of & 1 ship Clintonia has been sunk. Fifty-four) of the persons aboard it were saved The British steamer Fulgens, of 2501 torls gross, has been sunk. The crew ! has been landed. | The British steamer Benvoriich, which | left Manila May 1 for London by way of | Marsellles, has been sunk. Sixteen mem- | bers of the crew have been landed. The | others are still in the boats. ! The Clintonta, a vessel of 3388 tons gross, owned by C. Robinson & Sons of North Shields, was last reported to have sailed from Tynemouth, July 32, for Marseilles. It was built at Sunderland in, 1907, was 30 feet long, with a beam of fifty feet. J ‘ The Fungens was bullt at Newcastle In| 1902 and was owned by the Gas Light and Coke company of London. The yessel was 206 feet long, forty-two feet beam and | nineteen feet deep, l | | Freighter Georgian is On Duxhury Reef BAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 2.—Life saving crews and tugs early today went to the A number of cattle and hogs have been lost and sheds floated away. The rallway to the west is out of commission and 1t is estimated it will take a week to get trains across. A “For Sale” ad wili turn second-hand furniture into cash. TROUBLE OF THE SCALP AND HAIR From Dandruff. Iiched' and Caused Scratching. Hair Came Out. Entirely Relieved by CUTICURA SOAP AND ‘CUTICUMTMENT steamshlp Georgian on Duxbury reef, a | few miles porth of the Golden Gate, where the freighter went ashore in a dense fog last night. Captain Nichols and a crew of more than thirty men are aboard the | stranded vessel. i Quicksand Swallows Plant; Iflr Men Die HUDSON, N. Y., Aug. &—Four men were killed and four cthers injured, one of whom will die, when the power plant of the Knickerbocker Cement company submerged in quicksand here today. The entire building disappeared. All of the dead men were laborers. PSR Tramps Make Trouble at Yankton. YANKTON; 8. D, Aug. 3—(Special)— Hoboes are in the eity in large numbers | and giving & good deal of trouble to the officers. Charles Mallett, a coal heaver for the Milwaukee was accidentally shot in the head by a brakeman, who was try- ing to forpe hoboes away from a melon car. Mallett will recover. A harvest nand reported belng robbed of 8. He told the police that he was only one of 30 men, like himself, harvest hands, who were held up here by four hoboes armed with guns, who went through a string of empty cars and 'held up every mam found, securing, it is thought, a large amount altogether. P Apartments, flats, houses and cottages can be rented quickly and cheaply by a Bee “For Rent” e Department Orders. pens M. Starb Ulysses, W lsther -carviars olf, Wilber, Neb.; John U. Forva. Il Monroe ‘B, Monk, 'Ruthven. Fred M. W Fruitddie 8. D. nted: | Sample Each Free by ‘With 82-p. Skin Book on request. Ad- dress post-card “Cuticura, Dept. T, Boes ton.” Sold throughout the world. APPETITE ‘Where there is im) di tion, with little relish for foom ek peand By Iosk 3¢ phoepisin, ca y of of which the system has been deprived. Supply this lack and appetite will assert itself with the returning vitality, To accomplish this, take— for One Day, But ALL WEEK We are nicely settled now! Store is cozy; inviting, and but a few feet from the city’s most traveled corner. We intend to attract by means of PRICES —low prices — inimitably low prices—and DE- PENDABLE goods, of course.- We Operate at LESS Here; Expense , Prices Like These Readily PROVE it 10c Palmolive Soap ....@%¢ 10¢ Jap Rose Soap ......0¢ 10¢ Bocabella Castlle Boap goes at ... . 10c La Superba Soap ....8¢ 10¢c Albert Wright's Soap, all kinds, at ... 26¢ Palmer's S8kin Buccess now 14e at, . 20¢ 26¢ Cutlcura at . 26¢ Sandholm’s Soap ....17¢ 16¢ Dr. Maase Complexion Soap Btaosvans $1 Dr. Hebra’s Tonic now 1 9¢ $1 Lambert’s Listerine at 58¢ $1 Glycothymoline ...... 50c size Lavoris .... 2%: 25¢ size Lavoris g],f 10¢ Jergen's Peroxide Bat! Soap . .... ?¢ 10c Jergen's Viglet Glycerine * Soap . 50¢ Horlick’s Maited Milk $1 Horlick’s Malted Milk $3.76 Horlick's Malted Ml at . $2.69 0 50c Peroxide of Hydrogen (1 WY B S0 eIN T o o' oY $1 Irondequoit Port Wine (full quarty | ... uu ... 5S¢ $1 Duroy Port Wine“ (full $1.50 Bonded Whisky _(full qt) for medicinal use, 98¢ 1 1b, Good Cotton ......24¢ 5c Banner Matches, 3 for 10¢ 76c Jad Salts ..........58¢ 26¢ Lyons' Tooth Powder now Mioion 14¢ 25c Graves' Tooth Powder now Al.sesessirennnnnns 260¢ size Mum at ‘. 26c¢ size Spiro at ..... 26c Wilber's Talcum jar) at D¢ 10c P. & S. Soap at 4 for oreach ...... cen $1 Rubber Gloves at . ... 26¢ Allen’s Foot Ease .. 50c Nonspi at . §0c Pape’s Diapepsin ... 17 (glass ¢ Myers-Dillon Drug Co. 1609 Farnam St. Phone Douglas 150 . Ammunition The success or fallure of the Retail Jeweler can be summed up in one word—AMMUNITION. Great battles may yet be fought and victories won, but it will take, AMMUNITION, Not the shot and the shell kind ~0, no! but something that an- swers the same pur] in a Re- tall Jewelry Store. . Clasey, up-to- date goods at moderate prices. Mail order houses seem to vie with each othér in establishing or maintaining & War Zone, and by cleverness and superior force gral or destroy that which was intend- ed for the “local” jeweler. We have the right kind of AM- MUNITION, ,s¢ that you are pre- to follow keen merchan- about stirring up trade; TYETARMER The Missourl Valley's Greatest Farm Paper. " OMANA 110,000 Copies Weekly 75,000 within 150 miles of Omake HOTELS AND RESORT! Glen Morris Inn Christmas Lake, Minnetonka opular Rendvez e Owned and Operated by HOTEL RADISSON 0O., You Get Your Money’s Worth Every Time You Buy ITEN'S FAIRY SODA CRACKERS Because these high-quality pure food products glv the biggest and best value obtainable. Fairy 8oda Crackers are made of the purest :;’dwhut. :uhrhl:.. carefully selected and thor- before using. They are baked by our own perfected methods in sauitary Smow White Fairy Soda Crackers are packed while warm in protective <ontainers, under strictly sanitary Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Bte. conditions al 80 reach g ust be- pic nlru:hum,mmmmo They taste so good, J | OIAIIA.I:.I- ¢ ' Largest stock ‘west. 8 gt fresh and fine Fairy Soda Crackers at thalyh in the any geod grocery store. In 10¢ cartons, in nuamwm-cnme O I Tarateed by PO L | B | EMPRESS ., SNOW WHITE BAKERIES | - we may help you out; we have Minneapolis, Minn. helped others. We certainly would) not push it if it was a fallure. The A.F.Smith Co. NEW YORK, Aug 8-The climax of the dgadlock between 90,000 workers om 1 Woinen's gaments end the manutactur- 2 ballotiog AMUSEMENTS. WOELS| R Edward Lynch Az, sz “THE AVIATOR” 4 K ‘parER. || 10¢