Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 16, 1915, Page 2

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‘Wanta swap something for something else more useful to you? Use the Swappers' column of The Bee.l THE OMAHA DAILY BEE THE WEATHER. Fair / 2 = — - —— — PeS—— PE WS B - ¥ & e s < ¢ 0 ooy : VOL. XLV D, OMAHA, TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER on Traine, a1 wotel SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. e — <pors PRESIDENT ORDERS T g |Bill for Health Insurance for 4 THE CZAR IN SUPREME COMMAND OF HIS ARMY— I \ . . o THAT BURKITT BE Latest photo of the Russian monarch taking t.he salute wOrk.ngmen l)rawn n New Yorh while his young son, the czarevitch, stands at his side at wu-'. D|SARM THE o T TR KITGHENER MA"E 4 GIYEN PLACE AGA[N attention. NEW YORK, Nov. 15.—~The Amerioan | ployes would contribute equally and the Assoclation for Labor legislation today | state would contribute one-fourth to this iy | {mado public the text of a bill designed | amount N n ; : | | to cstablish a system of health fnvurance | The bill appiles to all those engaged in | v}-‘ wum g;}res Ilm\'“}: "(‘:“ ‘h“dro"{ | for workers in this and other states. The | manual labor and to all others earning loss e . icial Who Criticise | assoctation proposes to introduce the | than $100 a month. It would provide every 2 His Engagemcnt Be Implied Threat of Athens Govern. measure in the next New York lextalature | insured worker with medical care, in- Former Cabinet Member, in Speech - t to Take This Action R | and tn other atate legislatures during the | cluding nursing attendance, hospital care,| to Commons, Says Idea of Reliet Reinstated. ment to Iake This Action Re- |5 rew months, The general purpose of | medical and surgical supplies, and a oash Expedition Originated with | garding Entente Troops | the proposed mensure provides for health | benefit equal to two-thirds of the wase War Se ACTION QUALITIED, HOWEVER Oauses Fear. insurance for employes at the joint ex-|for a maximum of twenty-slx weeks in ar Secretary. —— i | pense of employe, employer and state. |a year. It also offers special care “for b moay ow. Winnetka Ian to De Restored to| GREAT 24 1S BLING FELT‘ As now crafted the employer and em- |the wife of an fnsured man DEFENDS DARDANELLES RUSH AIJAA o - — — —_ ——— ——— i No Ot pariined | \ . . e s g / ‘ Admiral Fisher Objected to Rsduo- i &r;esig“lms . | Assurance from O lcul. ources o BATTLE ]S RAGING ‘RUMOR ADR[ATIG Is tion of Home Fleet but Did Not { \KNOYS EXECUTIVE ey vy Oppose Method of Attack. | e - IN THE LABYRINTH SUNK NOT CREDITED szore WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—Presi- i | 4 [ | PREDICTS ULTIMATE VICTORY dent Wilson today instructed Post- BULGARIARE OCCUPY POSITION _ ——— LONDON, Nov. 15.— Winston Spen- master General Burloson to relnstate x | French Official Report Tells of | Agents for Big White Star Liner § SEOVES 5+ S Ias wedk George Burkitt, removed assistant LONDON, Nov. 15.‘—-l)|nlnmntle} Continuous Fighting with | Say Ship is Still at Its Dock cer Churchill, who resigned last wee! r k 1 representatives at Athens of the en- Hand de: ae chancellor of the duchy of Lancas- postmaster at Winnetka, I11., because and Grenades, in Liverpool. he H ¢ Commons he 'criticised the president for his tente allles unquestiohably are i | ter, sald in the House o l:;;l % [ | hat th ject for sending an engagement to bo married. The | greatly alarmed at hints that A the| GERMAN TRENCHES ARE MINED OTHER ADRIATIC IN MID-OCEAN|‘odev that the project fo o» i president qualified his fustructions | Franco-British troops in Serbia at-| | army to the relief of Antwerp o by telling the postmaster general ! tempt to fall back toward Salonikl| PARIS, Nov, 1 Infantry firing | NEW YORK, Nov. 16.—There was |ated with Field Marshal Kitchener that Burkitt should be restored to | |the Greek atuhorities may seek to|bhas boen going on witheut interrup- a report this morning in maritime/and the French government. Mr. his position it there were no other‘ |disarm them. Intimations of this na- tion at “the Labyrinth,” according [circles that the steamer Adriatic has | Churehill made this statément in out- charges against him nature have come from the premier |t¢ an announcement made in the |been sunk, but the report did nm‘l'nlng the reasoms for his resignation i Announcement of .h\," action was made |and minister of finance and the as- |efternoon by the French war office. |gtate whethor the steamship was n\.‘lrum the cabinet and expleining his 2 today by Secretary Tumulty after a brief surances from Greek officlal sources | Previous reports that the losses of |big passenger ship of the White Star |administration of the admiralty, of conference with President Wilson, It jof warm friendship and benevolent |the Germans on November 14 were |line or was the British steamship (Which he formerly was nn: lord, was sald unofficon..y that the president |neutrality do not ecarry completo |very high have been contirmed. | Adriatic, which left Kymass, Greece, | Mr. Churchill declared that it any oper- v dscharzing Bur : 3 ? | 1d :_::;7::‘:::‘ ::M',"‘”h::(_ml‘m_“',' ‘u‘t“!tmi | conviction. | Tne text of the communieation fallows: Qctober 13, for Philadelphia, .nd,:_‘;::‘: ‘r""‘r';:“:"":::u: ‘::nr‘:uu?::; Burkitt Denles Remarks Greek military crities express their be-| "In tho Artols district at "The laby: ;4g509 Tarifla, Spaln, October 19, |fury and utter disregard of life,Rhe oper- In published conference between Burkitt lef that when the rallroad from Bel-|rnith' the fghting between Infantry "y, \wpite Star liner Adriatic arrived [ations at the Dardanelles wers worth it. Poo % Feaip? grade to Sofia Is in operation without| forces, together with the throwing of . ( and Follmuflohr ;\‘wpfuh.,r s\ mm‘l“‘(m danger of attack the Austrians and Ger-|hand grenades continued without fnter- | " 14Verpool November 1l and was not| = predicts Ultimate, Vietory. it was stated t n. 3urkitt had r"t’n & eln mans will leave the Macedonian cam- huption last night. It has been con- “cheduled to leave for New York until 'Wa are passing through a bad time, i y Nov came ::";, g :h",,',:‘m:‘::: gt ey paign to the Bulgarians. They fall 0 firmed that the losses of the enowmy dur- «NOvember 2. Later a report be oy 'l"" ::J"’"',:rgu::,r n’: b wont ’:l'l St 6o it sheit. Seaiie explain, however, how the numerleally y. the action of November 14 wers| current on the Maritime exchange that ';'“‘"-d ‘f}l“ will ": ye g e R n Lewmimyins i niterio. Bulgarian force I8 to make head- |, [1t wia'the Adeiatio’ ot the Watte star|ill s8ld. VT¢ we sndurs the camUMBNISt Burleson, but made it clear that Burkitt way against the Serblans and thelr| ..Uy, Ghampagne disteict the Ger-|lne that was in trouble. The other by its shortage ot men.” i prmidindbeg g Sl - Franco-British allies. mans have attacked with hand grenades | steamship -Adriatic, bound for Philadel- " o Dardanelien. Mex RN should not be 3 y H | Regarding the Dardanelies, rel pressing the view that a man should Dulgarians Oceupy Tetove, the barriers erected in front of our Phia from Kymassi, should be about infy) gonqred that the admrial on the spot not become engaged within a year after The Bulgariens are reported again to | listening posts at Butte de Tahure. They midatlantic today. o #alq they could not be taken with a rush, the death of his wife. have occupied Tetovo, which, situated re repulsed. Officlala of the White Btar line sald i, "4 \.¢ the fortitications might be re- It was stated at the White House that twenty-five miles west of uskup, forms | “In the Woevre, to the north of Rey,|this morning they had no information re-lg, 4 c qually by bombardment. Ad- Postmaster General Burleson had no . - the extreme point of the wedge driven | the explosion of one of our mines, to-|&arding the Adriatic other than I:Jh-d iniral BiF Joha Fisher, then. firet ben 6 knowledge of the case before i* was calléd 9 > between the Serblan armies. This {s the | €ether with very sustained fire of our|arrived safely on last Thufl:lv “er"- wan' opposed to reduction, of Great L to his attention by publication in news- VAR“Y A ATORS EIGHT THO{] AND only bit of definite news from the near | trench guns, overwhelmed the enemy and | pool. They did not credit the roport. | Britain's naval atrenkth in home waters \ papers. The discharge of DBurkitt was ap- eastern front, but it s known the French | demolished its sapping works David Lindsay, atant to = ©f | but never criticised the method of attack proved by Assistant Postmaster General | eries, the passenger manager of the| . op. nyrdanelies. Roper, after an exchange of letters with Burkitt. Burkitt protested he had not had an opportunity to reply to the charges as required by civil service laws. Mr. Roper informed him that the law had been wcomplied with by a letter sent to Burkitt by the postmaster, notifying him of the charge of showing disrespect to the president. ‘White House officlals were annoyed by the publicity given to the case, and it was expected that Postmaster General Burleson would act immediately on the president’s instructions. ated. ! 55 Portoles Temtrimbnt iobied " statement today saying Burkitt was ( charged with a series of offenses which bhad been &ccumulating. for months. « It was announced that Burkitt's case was being further investigated and that | | meanwhile he stand suspended. When the Postoffice department's state- ment saying Burkitt still was under sus- pension and that the other charges were being investigated reached the White | 1 House it was siated that orders were on | their way to Postmaster General Burle- e |ing the army avidgtion school at San DO LITTLE FLYING Records Show Captain Cowan in Air Seventy-Three Minutes in About Twenty Months, PATTERSON'S FLIGHTS RARE SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov. 156.— Captain Arthur 8. Cowan, command- I'iego, Cal., was not in an army aero- plane from December “21; April 24, 1915, at which time charges SERBS CAPTURED German Official Report Says Bul- gars and Teutons Continue Pur- suit Along North Front. ALLIES CLAIM GAINS IN SOUTH BERLIN, Nov. 15.—(By Wireless to Sayville.)—Announcement was made by the war office today of the cap- ture of 8,600 Serbians, with twelve and seven cannon were taken by the { continue to hold the crest dominating the Kosturnio region in the Strumitza sector. Monastir, in southwestern Serbia, 18 showing remewed uneasiness on account of the large Bulgarian forces which are threatening Perlepe from the Babuna | pass region. Troops of the entent allles, arriving In | an unceasing stream at Saloniki, tax the | resources of the port and the raflroad to the utmost. This is accepted as an in- djcation of the intention to push military | operations without regard to the equivo- cal diplomatic positon of Greece. German Line in Russin in Danger. |18 taken here to fean that things at this end of the long Russian battle line are White Star line, saidl he was positive the {Robert Fay Makes |t Sua s s tivarmoot - Detailed AdmiSSion | ier sew York." M. Tindsay said, ana of Alleged Plot it would take at least three days to un- load it, and as many more to load the steamship for its return voyage to this NEW YORK, Nov. 15—Robert Fay, one of the stx men now under indiot- | ment charged with attempting to place port.” The Adriatic was bullt in 1906 and cost bombs on munitions ships sailing from {this port for England and France, today vear $4,000,000. It has a groas tonnage made a long statement 1o United Statos Attorney H. Snowden Marshall. The i Rt nature of & gonifession and also to fur- nish new detalls of the alleged German the steamer Duante Alighlerl of the Transatlantica-Itallana line from Genoa Mr. Churchill declared he did not re- celve clear guidance from Admiral Fisher before the expeditton was declded upon or the subsequent firm support whereto he was entitled. ' In making his promised statement Mr. Churchill dealt with eplsodes during hl 'tcnun of office as head of the admirAlt; rather than with his resignation. He' #ald hig letter to Premier Asquith gave fully and truthfully the reasons which led him to ask for a release from the 1o any other member of the cabinet who /was not in the war council, - ot incompetence and favoritism were | Bulgarians. preferred against him, according to army records made public here today. Pursuit of Serblans Is being continued all along the front. Battie at Babuna Pass, From July 10, 1813, to the date of the charges he was in the air seventy- | {three minutes, but in the four months following the filing of the charges he | ! spent fifteen hours and seventeen! n.inutes as a passenger and two hours "Sultan Thanks God son to reinstate the man, and it was made plain that he was to be restored to his place regardless of other demarits wagainst him, and thirty-five minutes as a pilot in an army machine. Licutenant Willlam Lay Patterson spent fifty-four minutes in the air as a pas- senger before he began to draw aviator's {pay. the records show, and made his first flight as a pilot less than a month ago and more than a year after he began for Victory Over. [ad more than o ~e Prench and BritlSh The court-martial of Lieutenant Colonel Louis E. Goodier, judge advocate of the | western department of the army, brought 15,—(Via |out these statistics,' Colonel Goodier is Beriin and London.)—In a speech from |charged with having improperly. advised the throne at the opening of the Turk- |junior officers at the school to prefer ish Parllament today, Sultan Mehmed V, |charges against Captain Cowan. His de- fense is that he furnished only such infor- CONSTANTINOPLE, > sald: “Events - which have passed since [mation as would be expected from one December 1, thanks to The Almighty, [In his position, but the case has developed into an airing of the general situation at have realized my wishes and have cor- responded to the hope which I expressed | that thess events might assure the hap- piness of the whole Mcslem, world and | \ the Ottoman empire. “Plerce attacks directed by the British ' and French army and navy forces against [ the Dardanelles, with the, intention to in- | vade Constantinople and the selzure cf | the straits, which for two and a haif | centuries the Russians have been coveth | ing, have been repulsed by the resist- | ance, self sacrifice and enthusiism of my army and navy." The Weather , For Omaha, Council Bluffs and Vieinity | San Diego, where eight l'eutenants have been killed since April 1, 1913, Whether or not an officer I8 entitled to aviator's pay when he is not regularly flying is a disputeq point. The charges Captain filed against {Cowan were not pressed. Douglas County Gets Requisition - for Arthur Hauser (From a Staft Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Neb.,, Nov. 15.—(Special)— Application was made this afternoon by County Attorney Magney of Douglas —Falr; warmer, < . p | counity to Governor Morehad for requisi- emperature 3 s . Yesterfar. | ion! pebers on the wovernar of Kanses 3¢ | asking for the return to Omaha of Ar-| 21 | thur Hauser, charged wigh the murder of % | 2 30 Y £ W 42 4 . 48 “ 81 43 S5 | { 1 Et 24 Highest yesterday. Lowest yesterday Precipitation 5 a1 | 00 23 ‘ 0 Temperature and precipitation depar- o0 00 tures from the normal: Normal temperature .88 Deficlency for the day 2 Total deficlency since March 1 215 Normal precinitation vees Odinch | Deficlency for the day.... o4 fach | Total rainfall since March 1..26.7 inches | Deficiency since March 1 1.30 inches Deficlency, cor. perfod, i9ii...,35 inches | Deficiency, cor. period, 1913 .57 inches | Reports from Stations P.oM. | Station and State * Temp. H gh- Rain- | of Weather. 7p. m. ety fall | Cheyenne, clear .......... 5% 292 | venport. cloudy. 5% b | nver, clear... R T ] X Des Moines, pari cloudy.. 3§ @ 0| Dodge City, clear s 58 | cloudy ... kS “ o | orth Platte, clear b 0 Omabha, cloudy... . 6 & o | Pueblo, clear eses 8 62 00 | Rapid City, clear... % 4 o Balt Lake, part cloudy.. 4 48 0 Santa Fe, clear........... 8 & 0 gheridan part cloudy. . % 4 ® Bioux City, clear....... .. 42 » Vi . clear 0 e 38 “ A. WELSH, Local Foreeaster. |form of mun! ‘W. H. Smith, City vl\_/Ia,nagers Are Meeting at Dayton DAYTON, 0., Nov. :6.—~Municipal week d here beginuing today, with & meeting of the city managers of American cities governed by this new 1pal control. City Manager Henry Waite of Daylon, the largest of these cities, delivered the address of wel- come and City Manager Ashburner of Springfield, O., responded as president of | the association. The National Municipal league will begin its sessions Wednesday, with many problems of community in- terest to be alscussed. Millionaire Kelly Admitted to Bail CHICAGO, Nov. 16.—Thomas Kelly, the Winnipeg, Man., contractor, will have ® hearing on a writ of habeas corpus, granted today by Judge Landis, in the United States district court, here next Friday. Last week United States Com- missioner Mason ordered that Kelly be extradited to Canada, where he Is charged with parliament bullding frauds totalling $260,000. Kelly is now sdmitted to ball. MILAN, Italy (Via Taris), Nov. 15.—An actount of the recent fighting before Babuna Pass in southern Serbia is for- warded by a war correspondent of the Corriere Della Sera. The Bulgarians, he says, were 2,000 strong and the Serblans 6,000, No serfous resistance being possible for the Berblans on open ground, they fell back from Veles and lsvor and set up & defenso where “the road narrows near Abal Pasa, at an elevation of 2,000 feet. The 20,000 Bulgarians were grouped be- (Continued on Page Two, Column Three.) Take Moving Picture of Ship and Boats Before Sinking It NICE, Nov. 15.—Captain Rafaell of the steamer France, which was sunk by a submarine in the Mediterranean on No- vember 7, 1s thority for the statement that while the crew was gettingsinto the small boats the submarine approached to within 100 feet of the France and when all the sallors were were ely oft the ship grouped the boats together with the steamer as a background, after which movihg pictures were taken. Prominent Lawyer of Iowa Passes Away GLENWOOD, L. in_ Glenwood. this. morning, death oaused by cerebral apoplexy of He was one of the Ia.,, Nov. 15.—(Special being an hour's duration. most successtul and well known lawyers in Iowa and as an orator his reputation | was state-wide. He was a republican, -but never sought high office Mr. Genung is survived by his widow, five sons and two daughters. Two of his sons were associated with him in the practice of law In Glenwood, Clyde T. and Norman 8. Clinton and Bert Genung are llving at Carnes, Neb., Clarence at Atkinson, ‘Neb. The daughters, Mrs, Ethel Buffington and Georgia E., live at Glenwood. Mr. Genung was born at Rapid ICty, | I, SBeptember 21, 143; came to Mills county June 23, 1870; was married to Julia Anderson March 3, 157, and was admitted to practice in 1875. He enlisted in Company H, Fifty-first Illlinois vol- | untéers, in 1861, serving four years. He was & prisoner at Andersonville and was wounded In battle, The funeral will be at the home in Glenwood Wednesday, November 17, at 10 o'clock in the morning, with inter- ment at Hastings, Governor Puts Ban on Public Hanging SPRINGFIELD, I, Nov. 15.—Pending ipts of assurances from Sheriff ‘White of Jackson county that the ha ing, would take place in private, Governor Dunne, for a second time, today re- prieved Biston BSecott, & negro, under sentence of death at Murphysboro. Re- cently nearly 1000 people attended a hanging at Murphysboro, taking their lunches and making & gala event of the affair. Ia. oing vety well for the emperor's troops. | plot to destroy or dama munitions 1 hey are advancing to the west of (shipped from this country to the allies, Kemmern, whick fell 1 thelr hands [ A prominent officlal connected with |during the recent rueh. etrograd mill- | the gnvestigotion sald a quasi-agreement Turning to the naval battle off the On Saturday the salling dateg for the| Chilean coast last year, In which a Brit- America and Palermo of another Itallan | ish squadron was defeated by the Ger- line were cancelled. At that time another ' mans, Mr. Churchill said he had been in: tary experts declared that the capture |p.q heen made between the government of Kemmern placed the Germian'line from | o ot FHCE C porbt. hbypgimi Libau to DMitau. i jecpardy, and - also | SUtHOTItSS and’Fay, and thet Fay; who laimed to bo a-lleutenant in the German section of the Tukum-Mitau | ; ot ibin apLieey raae {Stey, would PIAMG DYRp SPIR FOUSRY firm of local agenta@@xpressed the opin- fon that the salling® were cancelled be- ocause the Itallan governmient probably wished to use the veasels for transports. full agreement with his expert advisers. | The admiralty's dispositions of warships, | he sald, were sound and were the best iundnr the olrcumstances. Documentary evidence would make this clear, without detracting from the gallantry and devos | e Gormany lines are sald to be only |0 trial ‘with tHo ' fiv€ othérs on {ten, miles in advance of Mitau, which |OnsPiracy charges. It was also | leity the Russians belleve will soon be |Stated that Fay would appear be- | within' the range of their artillery. [fore the federal grand jury, but| Along the ltallan frout the fighting for | Gorlzsla dominated the situation. The Austrians are sald to be feeling some anxiety for the fate of the city, the fall of which might be expected to have a decided effect on the Berblan campaign. WABASH DEED CARRIES $18,000 REVENUE STAMPS SHENANDOAH, la, Nov. 15.—(Spe- | clal.)—Revenue stamps worth $15,000 were placed on the deed In which the Wabash Ratlroad company was transferred to the Wabash Rallway company under the re- not until his latest statement has beén | checked up by the Department of Justice {and secret service agents, If Fay goes | | before the federal grand Jury, it is con- | |sldered certain that he will not be asked to walve immunity, Officials sald that much of Fay original statement was valueloss, chiefly | because of vaguencss. Fay, who was ar- | rested while experimenting with ex- plosives, according to ' secret service agents, confessed at' that’time that he came to this country through the ald of the German secret sdrvice, with the |avowed purpose of attaching a “marine Greek Liberals May Not Take Part in the New Elections PARIS, Nov. 15.—The liberal party in | Greece may not participate in the coming elections, although the matter has not yet been decided. Former Premier Ven- izelos formally indicated to a deputation of merchants and manufacturers, who came to him urging him to pursue his |struggle against the opposing influences in Greek politics, Havas dispatch from Athens dated yesterday states, Replylng to the deputation M. Ven- tion of Rear Admiral Christopher Crad jock, who lost his life when the Good | Hope went down. The suggestion that he had overruled his naval advisers and kept the old crujsers at sea, thus causing their de- struction by a German submarine last year, was characterized by Mr. Churchill as untrue. He'sald it was for A. J. Balx four, the present first lord of the admi- ralty, to determine whether the papers should be published. He himself had no desire to préss for the publication of papers which might prejudice officers now in the service. Regarding the Antwerp expedition, Mr. Churchill sald it was not arranged by T. Genung died at - his | | bomb" of his own Invention to munitions vessels salling from this port, Judge Lindsey Fined $500 for Contempt DENVER, Colo, Nov. 15.—Ben B. Lindsey, judge of Denver's juvenile court, was held gullty of contempt of |court and fined $500 and costs by Judge WINSTON SPENCER CHURCHILL|John A. Perry in the district court late today declared in the House of|today. Thifty days were allowed for an Commons that the project Yor ppeal. Tho casé grew out of Lindsey's sending a British force to the re- refusal to disclose’ informiation In the o at ARt tober, 1914, |trial of Mrs, Berta Wrikht on & charge | originated with Rarl Kitchemer| 0f murder. Bhose rogr My oo casnihionsy Judxel Ll;\;lwy clairged the information { camo to him in a privileged manner ON THE FRONT ia northorn Franee o ,ouqh the confession ‘of Neal Wright, the Germans annouce the cap-|;, 0 00 D8 FORTOAMo 1 . e e et , during the trial: An Informa- cent reorganization of the corporation, when the deed recorded In Phge county. It con ' elghiteen §1,000 | revenue stamps and the recording fee wes $0.20. The Omaha branch of the rafiroad runs through Page county, izelos sald he thought it would be prefer- able If the liberal party took no part in the approaching elections, as even if it obtained a majority in the chamber it could not carry through its program. The party, however, would decide defi- nitely in a few days, he said. Regiment for New Army is Enlisting movement to form in Pittsburgh a regl- ‘ment of Gurrison’s proposed continental army, ann “today that some 400 men had already declared thelr intention of joining the organization, which will be perfected at a meeting in at Pittsburgh, Pa.| PITTSBURGH, Nov. 15, —Leaders of the ! | him, but had been planned by Field Mar- shal Kitchener and the Frenoh govern- | ment. He wag not concerned with it or | consulted until the arrangements wete advanced a long way and untii the troops were moving or were under orders. “At & midnight conference I léarned that plans for sending .a, relleving army to Antwerp, already far advanced, were being considered in concert by Fleld Marshal Kitchener and the French gov- Continved on Page Two, Column Ome.) | THE WANT AD WAY I trench 300 yards long northeast of Keurie, the mew position being consolidated with the German lne at that point. |ton, charging the boy with the murder | Of his father because of an alleged con- fesslon made at his mother's trial, still {18 pending in the juvenile court. Mrs, Carnegle Music Hall Yedanesday night. The plan Includes the maintenance of a summer training camp and winter quar- ters where the men can be kept fit and Wright was acquitted | | CAPTURE OF 8,600 SERBIANS is | | reported by German headquart -’World;s Whea,t Crop in today's official statement. The | Bulgarian forcks operating in Serbla took 7,000 of these, to- La,rgest on Record wether with sevem cammon. The| o Serblans contimae be driven e | WASBHINGTON, Nov. 15~Wheat pro- | Seots alt slong the lime, it s an-| 4 0110n 1n twenty countries which ql;dl. neunged narily produce 80 per cent of the world's BERLIN CLAIMS a somewhat de-| crop s placeq at 379,000,000 bushels by the Department of Agriculture, from pre- Mminary officlal estimates. That is an | increase of 660,000,000 bushels over the 1914 erops in those countries and 233,000,000 bushels more than in 1913, the previous high record. The statistlcs include the American 1,002,029,000-bushel crop, clded wuccess for German arms General Von | the German war office re-| | aeband peostas ANTHRAX AMONG CATTLE o K NEAR OWANKA S. D. LATEST OFFICIAL REPORT by (he| Iallan gemeral staff clatms prog-| APID CITY, 8. D, Nov. 15—(Special) —Anthrax is reported among cattle in ress iu the fighting om Isonse | ftromt. ) the vicinity of Owanka, in eastern Pen- SALONIKI' HEARS Lo g | nington county, and cattleraen In that section are greatly alarmed. Deputy State Veterinariun Edmiston - was sum- garian_ Rasbor of Verams, em 'the|moned as s0on as the disease was @is- Black Sea, as & base of operations. | oovered and ook steps to prevent any LATENT REPORTS from Rome im- spread. Eleven head belonging to Roy dicate that 308 persons were lowt| Humphrey were killed by the malady and fn the sinking of the Italian liner|the official ordered thelr carcasses Ancona by & submarine, 200 beilng|burned and the balance of the herd saved aut of & total of 5O7 om|quarantined, Adjacent farmers are board. awalting developments with their berds. A marines. are using the Bul. ready for service at all times. Back of (|the organization are the produce, busi- ness and professional men who spent a Pioneer Bohemian of Omaha is Dead Sunday night at his home, 1% Pierce street, at the age of 62 years. Mr. Foral came to Omaha in 1881 from Bohemia, the place of his birth, and he remained here ever since. He is sur- vived by s wife, six sons, Martin, \vil- Ham and Louls of Omaha; John of Coun- cll Bluffs and Joseph of Exeter, Neb., nd James of Detroit, and two daugh- rs, Anna of Comstock, Neb.,, and Mrs. Mary Kotera of Omaha. The funeral will be held Wednesday morning at 9 o'clock from St. Aloysius church, with interment. in St. Mary's Carranza Troops WASHINGTON, Nav. 16.—The Carransa agency today announced the of Naco. Villa troops fled Vills Verde, with 2000 Carranza cavalry in pursult. t month at Plattsburg last summer. | John Foral, a ploneer of Omaha, died | cemetery. | Take Town of Naco!: e Ul For much isk Bee Wan! use Aal mo lose, For his store be reuted by aight. A For Rent Sign attract the attentio: While « Want Ad w i folks, who not only will not pass you* storo, Louse or ent—but eouid in Do othar way know that the places we"s for rent. Ol vp Tyler 1008 row and yowr 18 Tho Omana Dally Bea " "o )

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