Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 9, 1916, Page 1

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§ Call Tyler 1000 THE WEATHER. \ With The Bee. Y ) ‘ VOL, XLV—NO OMAHA, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 9, 1916-TWELVE PAGES (o8 T a owl SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. \ CYMRIC SINKING, 'PRESIDENT DRAFTS | " HITBY SHELL: N0 NOTE T0 GERMANY PASSENGERS 0 White Star Liner in Service of Brit- RESENTS LOND’TION ATTACHED ish Government Carrying Arms | Will Continue as Long as the Subsea Order is Obeyed. i 2 LU} N, is Wrecked in the | WABHINGTON, D, C., May § Atlantic. The American reply to Germany's submarine note was sent to Berlin AMERICANS NOT ON BOARD Carries Crew o( Hundred, None of Them United States Citizens DETAILS ARE NOT AVAILABLE BULLETIN today and will be given out for pub licatlon later today, It I8 described s brief. Becretary Lansing announced that the note was about 200 words long and would be given out today ftor row morning's papers. to discues it belng puolication in tomor He declined LIVERPOOL, May 8.~The White! A . =0 Star company, from reports it has ASHINGTON, D, C., May 8.-—A vedeived, belleves the Cymrie W note to Germany has practically been completed and probably ward Berlin publie will go for It will soon afterward It is will be brief, 4nform ing Germany that as long as the new ingtructions to gubmarine ory are obgerved dipldmatic relations will be continued, but that the United States cannot allow Germany to die tite negotiations with Great BLritaln, The president worked on communication early today, conforonce with Secretary night While torpedoed about today The steamed carried no passengers noon to today be made understood It Ay § LOND®N, The Exchange Telepragh understands that the Cymric was torpedoed by a German cubmarine in the Atlantic, It 48 understood here that no pas wengers are on board the Cymric The Lloyds' Shipping agency re- port on the Cymric states that it simply is reported ginking and glves no details, Later it was stated by officla of the line that the Cymric’s cargo fncluded the usual amount of supplies which carried by line's freighters, Fivenrmn Bonrd, The monifest discloren that it command its the proposed following his Lansing last In has averted for the present at least & break In diplomatic relations, It was sald today that the president was not satisfied with the the German note war the | are upparent conditions nttached by Gor many The Unfited States stands by jts demund that Germany cease ity attacks violation of law, regard- had on vomsels In hoard 101 casos of rifles and other fire- |77 . arms, and also a quantity of empty |1°#8 of " ‘4‘ b ""'l \“‘ ) may n led on 1 ire Irita over 0 food shells, parts of meroplanes, bayonets and | "icd on with Great Britain over the food Bsad blocknde The White Star line company confirms the statement that the Cymric has no puwsengers on board The Cymric fs a White Star of 13,000 tons and has been in the service of the British government for some fime It walled from New York for Livérpool April 20 and carried no pussengers, Story Pope Appealed to United States and Germany i¢ Denied Officlal denlal was steamer The Cymrie salled on April 20 from| LONDON, May & Now York for Liverpool made today of the report that Pope The Cymric has been In the service of | Benedict appealed to FEmperor Willlam the British government for some time, | and President Wilson in an effort to 1t had on board no passengers on its last vip avert o rupture the between Germany and United The ;m:-lxh office fe this ennous With regard to the American-German negotiations It has been widely stated that the pope on Friduy last telegraphed the CGerman emperor and the president 8. Carrles Crew of Hundred, NEW YORK, May 8,~The Cymric when it left New York on April 29 carried a crew of about 100, none of whom 0 1ar g ""‘\ ":":"h" e C;'"""rn‘l:h "]‘I WIR| ¢ the United States urging eoncillation. Fophniri 08 y aptain Bendnell, 4| oo yuch step has been taken by the g 1o the Lni's officiaisy the | POP®: and the report s entirely, withot K. : foundation, The authority is a dispatch Cymric was in thelr service] denlal bé-| %o the forelgn office from @iy Henry ing made that it had been taken over ny‘ the British government, It was 'ne l""‘,’l“”“"' (British ministor to the, Vatj armed and carried a general freight it tacaitions v wer, 3o tir | Million Dollar Fire in Lumber Plant at Duluth they knew. It was due in Liverpool to- day. The Cymrie helongs to the White Star iine and was for years in the passenger service between New York and Englisn ports. It 1s a 13,000-ton vessel, 6% feet long and sixty-four-foot beam. It was| DU LUTH, Minn, aay 8.~Fire, which built in Belfast in 1808 brike out In the Alger-Smith plant today, The London bulletin stating that the|driven by a sixty-fivesmilo gale, spread ‘ymrle {8 reported sinking is the only |rapidly to other buildings and late this the loss dispatch thus far recelved, As it does|afternoon was estimated at not Indicate what has happened to the |nearly $1,000,000 ship, this dispatch presumably tollows| Nearly 40,000,000 feet of lumber were festrayed. Traffic between Duluth and | Superior was suspended and the fire de partments of both cities worked to save mills and bridges in the path of the flames. one previously sent that has not yet ronched New York because.of the cen- sorship. No Word Recelved. No word has been received at |'\" ————————————— t oitioen of the e e e Mevanie | A€TOplane Carries H il gt oo ".'.'.‘.’"”.','ni.l. Five Men at Rate of losed for night at 6:30 o'clock . ; The Craric ot Now York Nay 1 with 106 Miles an Hour o cargzo of munitions and“supplies, in-t i@ . J. MacPherson, vice con B chay and eleven minutes, flying the 17 The Weat] Four Burn to Death ) 18 veather as Home Destroyed T ratures at Omaha \l'-lrruyl:\ h “.“ ot \‘ A3 tw X'},.l' l‘,y ¥ Winter Wheat Crop "‘ R G b o e Half Million Bushels ’ ! : | ) Reparts fram Matinns ot T ¥ M \ Fe Bankhead Good Road N W Bill Passes Senate ¥ : ) Y . . It Will Say Diplomatic Relations ¢ | Omaha enough OUR BOYS IN MEXICO—This picture shows part of a four-mile line of United States cavalry wending its way into Mex- ico. This cavalry started south across the border during the conference between Generals Scott and Obregon at El Paso. LUDVIK KOZACK Sweetheart of Ro'e Vlack, Who | Threw Herself Under Train, Returns to Omaha, WANTS T0 CLEAR HIS NAME Ludvik I\u/,mk luw returned from Tyndall, 8. D., In the hope of clear- ing his name of the stigma that has | been attached to it since the sulcide of Rose Viach, who threw herself under a moving train north of Flor- ence the evening of April 27, | in The Omaha Bee Viach, with whom he had heen keeping company in Omaha, Lad killed hergelf; that her act was wttributed to worry over the fact that slie was soon to become a mother, and that he (Kozack) had left town after promising to marry her, He 14 hers to give himself up to the police. Kozack that Rose Were to Be Married, In the office of Attorney Joseph T, Vo- tava, whom he sought for legal advice, Z Kk did not deny that he had had re. lations with the givl, He waid, howaver, it Tig had promised to marry her, and that, together, they had agreed to walt | whout two months until he could save some money To n representative of The Bee, he told the story “She had no money and 1 had no money,” he sald. “We thought we had better walt until we could get 4 little money to start with. We expected to walt about fwo months. I told her I was going to Bouth Dakota to get a job on a farm, but it is true I did not tell her the very night T was going. It will be three weeks ago this coming Wednes- day evening that T took the train for Dakota “In Omaha T had been working in the | Alfalfa Milling company. 1 quit I thought there was not money in it for me. cents an hour. They work a ten-hour day Tha dust was very bad, get back on a farm. hecause Seeks Work on Farm, T went to Tyndall because T had been there before and was acquainted there, T went straight to the home of Joe Cap at Tyndall. He fa a friend of mine, and he used to live In Omaha a few years ago. | was staying with him all the time 1 was up there—nearly thres weeks I could get no work on the farms, for the farmers had all hired thelr help ba fore T got there “Then when T saw this story in the newspapers, I came right back, 1 want to clear my name I want to police and tell themn the whole story, 1 don't know what they can do with me, 1 ald not kil the girl, and didn’'t know any thing about i, until T saw It In the Kozack says Miss Viach was 3 old and that he 1s 28 He says he ns ed In Omaha »e n years. Tabor Farmer Finds Ten Young Wulvos TAROF In 1 wolal b<Charles Robber T lkt' Imn Thousand from Bank f At oA A . e ' . e head, dis Nehrasha Peasiune CAVALRY LINE GWNG INTO MEXICO. 'America Tells Germany Relattons GIVES SELF UP Unbroken While Sea Laws Respected ON VERDUN FRON] They pald me % | 80 1 wanted to WASHINGTON, May §.-—-Follow | Ing in the text of the note cabled to- duy by Secretary Lansing to Ambas- sador Gerard at Berlin with instruc tiong to dellver it to the German | minister of forelgn affairs: | “The note of the jmperial German | under date of May 4, ed careful considera |tlon by the government of the | United States. It is especially noted a# indicating the purpose of the im- ,|mrlul government as to the future, that it ‘ls prepared to do its utmost [to confine the operation of the war for the rest of its duration to the tighting forces of the belligerents,’ and that it is determined to infpose upon all its commanders at sea the limitations of the recognized rules| of international law upon which the government of the United States has insisted. *“Throughout government, 1916, has re: the months which ernment announced on February 4, 1916, its submaripe policy, now hap- pily abandoned, the government of | ‘llhe United Btates has beén con- | stantly gulded and restrained by motives of friendship in its patient | offorts to bring to an amicable set-| tlement the critical questions arin» ing from that policy. Accepting the imperial government's declaration of its abandonment of the policy which has so seriously menaced the | good relations between the ‘counlrlel, the government of the Presulent of Smn Fein Volunteers is Now in Custody DUBLIN, May 7, John MacNelll, Fein volunteers, (Via London, May 8.) president of the Sinn who disappeared on the day the Irish disturbances began, has been arrested. On the Saturday hefore the trouble started he sent out a notlce postponing Indefinitely the parade of volunteers arranged for llaster Bundny MacNelll held a high position countant general's office, but resigned to take a professnrship In the Nationa intversity, A Iarge number of lnote have been arrested and are being trl i the police courts Bervices were resumed i the cf ¢ todny Four More Rehels Executed in Dublin LONDON, May 8.1 " of the .v.w.uwvn-- Iriah revolt ha leath by the Dublin t tatement (ssued tonig ) were: ( Al imind ' ' \ ) 1 Hou Reed is Named for Philippine Board Kaiser Asks Pontiff to Initiate Exchanges with View to End War TN have elapsed since the imperial gov-| two | FUNSTON STARTS PURSUIT OF NEW BAND OF BANDITS Army Begins Chase of Mexicans Who Reided Three Texas Towns and Killed Three Soldiers and a Boy MAY CALL ON NATIONAL GUARD Intimation That State Troops May Be Sent to and in Guarding Points Along Border, BANDITS HAVE A BIG START BULLETIN, Tex., May Generals X1, PASO conference 8. ~~Today's botween Heott and General Obregon, of Juan Amador, ex-secretary of forelgn af falrs, ended late today without an agreement having reached, It was Indicated, however, that efforts to effect an understanding regard Ing the status of the American troops in Mexico had not been abandoned and that another conference would be held. and Funston Melean minister war, and been (_)/lvll nrr SERVKE, VIOLENT FIGHTING WASHINGTON, D, ., May 8,—A rew American expedition may al- ready be across the Mexican border in pursuit of the bandits who ralded Glenn Bprings and Alpine, Tex., last week, Becretary Baker sald today he Lud recelved a report from General Iunston as to steps taken in that di- | rection, but declined to reveal its . United States will rely upon a scru- ution henceforth of the poliey of the lmperial French Report Defeat of Series of 7 German Assaults in Vicinity altere of Hlll 304. government, such as will remove the prineipal danger to an interruption LOSSES OF 'lEUTONs ENOBMOUB puloug e now | of the good relations existing be | [ tween the United States and Ger i contents, many, BERLIN, May 8.—(By Wireless It was belleved possible some “The government of the United |to Sayville,)—In the recent fighting | !'ethod of Uirect co-operation for the States feels It necessary to state that | on the Verdun front the Germans extermination or capture of the it takes It for granted that the im- | captured an entire system of trenc n--.““"nn Springs raiders might result perial German government does nat | on the northern slope of Hill 304, the | from the conference today between intend to imply that the maintenance war office announced foday | Cenerals Scott and Obregon at El of its newly-announced policy I8 in Piso. The War department has any way contingent upon the course | PARIS, May 8.—Fighting of great Leard informally that General Ca or result of diplomatic negotiatfons | yiolence continued last night cn the|ranza approved the Scott-Obregon | between the government of the | verdun front, Furlous German M_‘xv an with the minor exceptions, It United States and any other Imlugm- | tacks near Hill' 804 were broken |,y\ was hoped here the whole matter ent goyernment, notwithstanding the | | the French, the war office announced | W¢ uld be disposed of today by the fact that certain passages In the Im- | {oday, The report says: ;mnrrrm-n 5 | perial government’s note of the 4th “Phe losses of the Germans are de- | There was no Indication at the depart- instant might appesr suscepiible OF | scribed an extremely Heavy, ool i i r'JlJf"flZ".'ff-'."T? | that construction, In ‘order, how-| “The French attacked enst of Hill m!.h, Glava’ Rpriigs ingigent, ever, to avold any possible misunder | and drove the Germans from a communi- | standing, the government of the |cation trench which they penetrated yes- | May Cnll on Natlonal Guard, Becrtary Baker would not say whether United States notifies the {mperial | terday. General Funaton had made new récomi: | ‘government {hat it'emnot for o mo- | “Jast of the Meuse In a serfos of night | mendations on this question, It 18 known engagements the Germans were drl\un‘lhn( the calling out of a portion of the ment entertain, much less discuss, a| .. 050 (unen south of Havdremont | Natlonal Guard to aid in the border ps- puggestion that respect by German | which they occupled today, and thirty | trol is now under consideration, ’navul authorities for the rights of [&wn, Including two officers, were cap-| Army officers have feared some such eitizens of the United States upon | tured.” oocurrence, As that at Glenn Wprings: Other developments of yesterday are|since it became necessary to break up the high seas should in any Way O [, o0 vextunlly as follows: | the border guard into squad patrols. It in the slightest degree be made con “The night passed quletly on the re-|is understood that company command- Hlnuknt upon the conduct of mainder of the front, except in the region | ers In several Instances have urged that {any other government affecting the | °f the wood of Remieres and the wood | their commands be held together for | Fights '0f ‘avirath Al Rousonihat | of Joury west of Pont-a-Mouson, where | protection | our artillery was very active. The State department today recelved | ants, Responsibility in such matters| ‘rwo German aeroplanes have been!a report of the lonn Springs rald Agr ig single, not Joint; absolute, | relative.” v . not | brought down as a result of aerial en-| ing with those received from General Irmln!ryn in the reglon of Verdun. One Fupnston and with press dispatches. of them fell not far from Omes and the Randits Have Gool Btaves other, serfously aamaged, was compelled | . | to land south of Azannes.” | ALPINE Tex., Moy 3.-FV000E S the wild mesas of northern Coahuila, the Filipinos Give Up Amoritan_ sotiamant. 66 Giouk ol Flght for Immediate féuffragists Expect Planks in Both the National Platforms and Boquillas last Friday, killing three cavalrymen and u 0-year-old boy, are he- |lieved to be heading into the interior to- 3 OOInp](\te Home Rule day, many miles from the scene of their MINNEAPOLIS, Minn,, May 8.-Discus depredation. slon of methods for inducing the coming A posse from Marathon and a de- /AS GTON, May 8.~Manuel Que repulilican and democratic national con WASHINGTON M Manuel Q tachment of twenty-three troopers of - zon, Philippine commissioner, who has . ventlons o Inwert an equal sutfrage (¥ b 2 ) : the Fourteenth cavalry are sald to have plan 1 thelr platform hela the interest "'L”l' ITRING E. ‘““V!‘“ q '“')""' ';"“"'i followed the trafl of the Mexicana into of delegates to the Mississippl valley suf- | ok Pre u-l'm‘ ‘\ on V“vlhl\IV x’m (o ug | Coahuiln, whila other reports have it Faih Sanbinhohe: ack R his followers had abandoned the fdea of [, Wt (R B FO e orded the 1 freedom in the near future and hoped | Leaders predicted both political par Rio Grande, ninety-five miles from hers, tes w g0 on record In of |congress would pass house bill iV~ | org swaiting st the Fiver for meltie equal suffrage, pointing to the fuct that |IN& & Ereater share of sclf-government | oo\ ie ™ Captatre Sharpe Colo 18 hups there are mnow 40000 entranchined |t0 the islands, but setting no date for | . ™00 "a o ting to take command, men in the varfous states whose vote |/ndependence while two companfes of the Fourteenth muat be taken into consideration. . cavalry and a machine gun company are The campalgn in lows, where suffrage FI‘(‘IlCh Bark 18 expected here or at Marathon this after- " ] \In'-d ‘1“ n t month, was dis g g ; noon, when they will Nead southward to ssed, Flora Dunlap outlining the work % k 1 S l 2 [ the Big Bend country which s helng carri SUNK DY SUDIMATING | ™ 28 o inees hoce whether: (i troops « emplate a long pursuit of the Lincoln Silo Plant LoN N, May 1= French bark | bandits into Mexico or will be placed as e e 1 s tollr an :‘ ”‘:"“"u- .u r"v ‘I'H‘lr'v\l ,‘.“;:'.,m“"‘ |I'm 1'[\'vmi". . 1 fay ¥ festr 4 1t : x : \” .l’ v “K‘.”V“‘.Mln““.l:: v‘“:::lh h from u" . ranee ¢ ke and wa lays' start, only & relentloss pur e, accord : * NEBRASKANS AT CAPITAL T ot : : ON BUSINESS AND PEASURE s boon Dacrd of PR James M, Sullivan o Moo where B ETE p panions for 1 ng howrs Released at Dublin Vet e Nexlana. and. thn 1 \ n Twe Bee Want-Ads Becoming very popular 144 MORE PAID | Want-Ads last weoek, 4-30 to 5.8 inclue sive, than in same week last yoar, | ! COLVILLF RESFRVATION OPEN FOR SETTLEMENT ‘ e | Let Bee Want- ‘ - s v s | Ads work for : W o v (| YOU.

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