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PAGES 1 TO 12 VOL. XLVI—NO. 7. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 80, 1916—SIX SECTIONS—THIRTY-SIX PAGES. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. | # TR g o VatimTimg RUSSIAN DRIVE 1§ RAIN 15 FALLING [™nicesomss™ | s [NUSSANORNEL : PENING THE WAY OVER WESTERN BN (SRR OPENINGTH @ PART OF STATE ON TOWARD KOVEL vacation ! é Germans Being Pressed § | Cooling Winds on Outer Border ; £, ’ of Nebraska Run Down NS and Direct Blow at Armies L WEATHER "‘ FOR POLE RELIEF Germany Assqgts English 8cheme for Aid of People of Oonquered Territory Not Accepted. Mercury td 64 in Half Def;ndlng Vhsdhur Is * an Hour's Time. xpected Soon, WET BREAKS HOT SPELL GAIN SIXTY-MILE FRO Thro Estimate of the Results of hec:zt:::O;onionngdg:: i First Half of Summer Cam Orops Relief. paign Made, OHANGE IS VERY SUDDEN MOTIVE IS ATTAOKED Asserts Proposition Proposed : 2 : = et ” by Viscount Grey Trans- / parent Hypocrisy. - % ' AN OFFICIAL STATEMENT| |Just finished —— my vacation = feelin' finer ‘n a fiddle ! TAKE MANY PRISONES Petrograd, July 29.—After bein compelled to halt their advance several weeks before combined A trian and German resistance on ] northern wing of General Brussiloff's’ front, the Russians have again sco: an important success and are pre ing the Germans back along the tire front from the Kovel-Lutsk rai way as far south as Brody. f Although the official war o statement gives no particulars of thig new penetration of the Teutonic linesy it apparently took place south of Kiselin on the Vladimir-Vol highway and was a direct blow the Austro-German army defend Vladimir-Volynski. The unexpected widening of breach, begun at Lutsk in the e days of the summer campaign, has thus been effected is consid ;‘ more significant than the occupatio of Brody, which was a foregone clusion some days ago. The fa Brody was sealed when General S haroff won his brilliant victory on ! start mine to- morrow. Goo'bye | ‘lfllll"llllIIHIIINIIIllllllllllllllllllll F.’S, HOWELL. * Berlin, July 29.—(By Wireless to Sayville)—At the German foreign office today the following official FRANK HOWELL IS statement regarding Great Britain's reply to President Wilson's appeal for the feeding of occupied territories COMMITTEE HEAD|vss iven ot \ “Viscount Grey (awllsh sccretary T, J. McGuire and William E. for foreign affairs) answered the i American president’s appeal to all Rhodes Vice Ohairman the belligerent nations to establish yRain in western Nebrakka. and Treasurer. an understanding with regard to re- Thus did the first chapter of the lief work in Poland and issued a weather man'’s prediction come to| MEET IN OOURT ROOM |declaration which is no more or less pass. than an attempt to include the terri- Cooler for eastern Nebraska today.| Frank S. Howell, former United|tories occupied by Germany and Aus- It is devoutly hoped that this, the | States attorney in this district, was|tro-Hungary in the system for the second section, will be fulfilled also.|elected chairman of the Douglas|starvation of Germany which has been Omaha had another rather unpleas: | county republican central committee. |proclaimed by the British govern- ant day on Saturday, but not as bad| T. J. McGuire, assistant city attor- ment contrary to all international law. as it might have been. The maximum |mey, was elected vice chairman and G Viscount Grey tries to “‘?lie the was only 95, and while the humidity | William E. Rhodes of the United | % von gov""mc'"h.r;”'ms'-be qu: ) ) o e consequences which this incredi was some annoying, a steady breeze | States National bank was made treas- | ple plan has for the inhabitants of the kept discomfort down to a minimum. |urer. occupied territories. This is British Special telegrams from towns in the| This was the business transacted hYP,Ufi"SY which in this case is es- west end of the state came early in|at the organization meeting of the|PCC'3lly transparent. river Solnevka, the evening with news of rain. This|new county committee elgcted at the T —— ¥ iy i condition is"traveling east; and is due | county convention last Sla;turda . The strlke Of street i . Opens Way to Kovel. aveuns ; ! e e i R tack south of e v ot b 10 Car Mon Spreads MRS, THIELKILLED [LESLI SCORES THE 'BLACKLIST MEANS |15 51 55t vkl . s . . . a successtul attack on oV B ca g~ i, o 0 23 s 8t ToManhattan N AUT0 ACCIDENT| LAWYER WHO GOUGES| ONLY PRINCIPALS [ ety oot wa; over the north half of Box Butte i i ; 3 ‘the roximity of the Russians and aouth Balf of Dawes, one.half o Saturday at the county convention the) New York, July 20.—The street car proximity to & Ol chairman of the new committee is|sri : . | Sokol likewise constitutes a- definite ?i"nfemt‘g 2:;;1,;&.":;,:; ::3 c;;,::a:,; Slicrizedith intaint aliearsin nd ‘T‘CJ?;.S.‘LT?&' : ;z dl?c[ta:r‘;a:::i‘ l:]%‘zg: Wife of Omaha Business Man Says It is Not Province of At- | Not Intended to Extend Be- |, ¥ Lemberg Sront. that. ciaosl . 2> |an executive committee of seven.|men of the Third Avenue railway quit| Meets Death When Oar torney to Get Everything yond Those Firms Named |[tion. The chief significance of the :lrnedll;::ptfiggnegl:heat and oats which | Thig will be done later. at 10 o'clock this morning, and. labor Overturns Near Fremont. In Bicht. : in the Notice. :\'::: ‘a'd\;:n:;.e ?;:ltev;:::isliied:;ee‘:fi _Ellsworth, Neb,, July 29.—(Special : — leaders declared that unless some un- : g scored by the Russians against Gers Tlegram\The " infense Bt that Suspect in Bomb formza gomplatmiss, yas sfiocted He OTHER OAR TURNS WEONG SHOULD NOT BSOAPE LAW SPRINGRICE EXPLAING THIS ma forces In the pregent cam 3:'(& eakd" & “his syehin g carmen operating in Manhattan would Py } fasons o TR NGBS Siret breachiat the L ;‘,‘,fiif,f,;}" ,“J-;:}:,OR?,:]}Z'W svgjng bl}i'n:‘ oxpe Is qhar ed strike w:lt)l:k: ltvs_o;lty-f:mr liouf:.l > 4 Fremont, Neb, July™09.—(Special | An attorney’s duty to his cliept is a| Washington, July 29.—~The British g"’,“‘r winds that ran:%e}thgmogufin Wlth urder Additional policemen were sent to!Telegram.)—In an automobile acci- o1d th 38222332 MY BOSS GONE To THE COUNTRY HOORAY ! 0RAY ! MOARN _— responsibility and a trust, not an op- | blacklist is not jntended to go beyond hold the Ru‘s(:;:;s'on the o 64 above in less than' thirty min- . ;‘i’:ofi'g"x today and there was little| gy fiv; miles north of Fremont at | portunity to get everything in sight, | the principals named in the list and | Stokhod. bl ' utes. o1 Ny oy e ik 3 9 o'clock this morning Mrs, =dwatd | in the opinion of Judge Charlgs Les- | thete can be no direct injury to Ainer- | The combined effect of the two in&‘icfi?gx:'lseo?ilt: cignm:n{:l“tll‘i{o&&, 'V{zflhu&{‘:?fig:' g::ydrizv,:r, oIn!:a;} Mitchen “isarms Thiel, residing at ii 5031!’[ Thirty- | lie, who believes that levérll‘Doig- ican' firms, as explaified to the Stdte 5“:{"'}(|‘d‘a"‘1¢=!~rgflfg Vladirlm, out the night. The heated spell just|nine suspects held ih connection with fifth street, Omaha, was instantly |las county attorneys have been over- | department today by Sit Cecil Spring- b:’ ”‘"t’:) d‘r‘i‘ve ?}x'k““':;_é;':"", pie. closed bore a close resemblance to the |the investigation of the preparedness 600 I W Wl’s a,nd | killed. stepping the bounds of propriety re- | Rice, the British ambassador. ,,,ieu back along a sixty-mile front, droathy condnioglfiitheT?fly o hl“; 2:;,‘;'5,,"32"’( a;plag;znchxhfin £ R | Accompanied by her husband and|cently, It was represented that there is no | The fall of Brody, however, has not’ ::;;,":,;Tfie s]','-lg'ye',:'o, ‘:,:"m:d- murder today, thi being (ghc first Arrests Lea,ders children, Helen arid Hatry, she was| “There are many cases which come | idea of blacklisting a neutral firm |as yet seriously awakened expectas i i i i iled i bound for Tilden to visit relatives.|before the district court in which th 1y ib i inued to do |tions of an immediate pressing on to: greatly in overcoming the damaging|formal complaint to be filed in the 0 A \ ¢ e ct court in which the | merely because it continued to do 5 b inflsence of the southeast hot wind (case. The warrant alleges complicity | Mitchell, S, D, July 20—The|The family left Omaha this morging. |actions of counsel is reprehensible,” | business with a firm that is black. | émberg by the Russians, i that has blown constantly throughiout in the ‘death of George C. Lawlor, | \itchell ¢ommittee of vigilants re-|North of Fremont Thiel tried to pass says Judge Leslie. “The Douglas | listed, but if a neutral firm habitually By Rush of Infantry. the heated spell. The cooling breezes|one of nine killed by the explosion. | sponded to the riot call again this\another cat that turnéd in the wrong! C iatd and systematically acted as cover fi Military critics call attention to the comes as a blessing to both. Humans et morhing af 4:30 to méet a train load 3 8, County Bar association should take ! y act ver for irecti i im i i i : i i 1 and artificial defen stock it ; i | he ditch. | noti f f them and discour- | the blacklisted firm and so caused di. | strong natura a 1 and stock as.couditigns were becom- w' of hieybst hands, sald’ fo- be]|Sirection, forcing:him' info:d naties of" sgine of the ot | rect trading between British firms and | protecting the Galician capital. It ing very dcpressi“g,\ ].fe Of sel}ator_ me; %(e}rs of the Ingius‘mll Workers '}l'{]u' laummobxleht:rnedd tur::le. fM::' ;7:;2:::5.‘3.’:";2'3.' and the extortion b!tckliated‘firm., st o exp;cte_d that tl:’e .Am;':r' : ' willimal Crop Condldo-nl Pine. Hea,ly Klned in ?f c"W?r‘l‘d‘band dlsar!rg them. {h; hie '}vn Sl?"l'de under de {: : “When the attorney is found' guilty dxilz:rcn!‘..r : sllie:rl hn: :!:;l Bt':dt e'lnzru!then‘;m-i. Norh sty gy ot 1 ot | B Tovn. e by e o ity e of pteron, 1 B e the ch | Ko pugments o Mg gl e of Brot, s he el Nor s f Jar i Styr. g crop conditions find the corn as AlltO AOGldent with weapons drawn, and was later | "oy PAINTUYY bruised. at least one recent action in court, he herded on to a north bound train. A | . Thiel conducts a_tailoring estab- should not go free with merely re- not to affect payment by neutrals, as| ' According to some confidential ine 2 3 i b is | the British government habitually | formation, Brody was taken withouf eva and Harvard, where they termed | pijioq Mont, July 20—Mrs, gohn half dozen of the leaders, upon whom |lishment ~at 719 South ~Sixteepth |Storing property =or d““"f;“gih‘.' 3 3 A : . | grants licenses to the British firms to)| artillery: preparation by an irresistib it “fair.” {Soil conditions are generally| s"Healy’of Hibbing, Minn., wife of | Were found Industrial Workers of the | Street, in Omaha. gll,::’:a ll:;!(;:n%u:lfl nt:t ;;‘l';r:. a p“nl, pay current debts to blacklisted firms | rush of the infantry. The onslau “good,” ‘with the exception of Gen- fair and estimates of the time before h sas | World literature and membership ¥ H s a deterren | unless it is clear beyond doubt that|was. so sudden and unexpected that | corn Will 'be materially ‘injured vary E;fi:fi ?,:';::f;agow'}‘,en‘k;n l::::{';om: cards, were placed in jail here. Andover Offlcer "‘fi::::;ig;t :o 'lheu,re:e,:,‘%;?i?:{;:n such payments vgouldy be passed on to | the. Austrians had no time to remos frqu_?l ‘vvto"o ::fn g‘ays.m_ 5 +t ig|driven by her husband went over an D utm 'll F over the Boob estate in Sarpy county, | OF crez!te a.lcrcdu for enemy firms in thzlr enormous dep(;ltis hof n‘:umti he tone e entire report is| .. honkment at Elbo creek, about udge Leslie says that he believes the | €nemy territory. ‘ an provisions which they ens optimistic but almost every station ot ‘;:eh"e pork eutscnlan Kl ed by Ba;ndlts 'l')oux T Cour{ty Bar association| The department was informed that |deavored to destroy, but a large parg qualifies the corn crop statement with turning a complete somersault, pinned G. t A T d Ty should investigate, and that he plans |many licenses already have been | of which fell into Russian hands. S the provision, I‘f‘ we get rain soon.” | 4L L Cdy beneath i, Sena- € Wa;y 0 ay Aberdeen, S. D., July 29.—Den A.|to call attention of the organization | 8ranted to British firms to receive| The latest computation of prisons - Creighton says, “Cooler wedther and | (o Healy was not seriously injured. 5 Passage, night patrolman of Andover, | to the matter. rom and Xl%m Knauth, Nachod &|ers taken during the first half of rain needed to make record crop of|Their 16.year-old daughter was slight- | Washington, July 29.—Apparently |S: D., died in a hospital here today Kuhns and Zimmerman & Forshay. |summer campaign gives a total of corn.” Lehigh reports that corn’will 1% buri authentic reporfs that the = German |as the result of a fight last night with | Two Municlpal Band and that there is no objection to the | 350,000, according to Russian office stand ten days of hot weather with- ynderwater liner Deutschland would |two holdup men. Passage found the . Goodyear Tire company filling out-|who estimate also that the total out rain. Exeter says tth the cotn T B d leave Baltimore tomorrow reached of- | two highwaymen in the act of hold- Concerts This Afternoon| standing orders and that it would be Austro-German losses, includin 5 5‘“71"‘3 and needs coo;.r ‘:vgat e: r00ps on bor er ficial quarters late today and officials ; ing up three Andover citizens. He| Municipal concerts will be held Sun- well to obtain a statement of the |idlled and wounded, are close to 100, ant_rain '.°“‘":l“" EXOp NI TASLNO I : e conferred on what measures, if any, |attacked them and succeeded in dis-|day afternoon in Fontenelle and|2Mount unfilled. 000. On the basis of these figures, ye{d‘;l:tm:fa t%e aa?:fi:s'repon alfalfa n Flne Condltlon should be taken to protect American |arming one, but the other freed him- | Spring Lake parks, beginning at 2:30. Colonel Shumsky, military critic i 0 neutrality. There was no evidence of | self and shot Passage twice through |J, M. Finn will be director at Fonte- Ma,n About tO sta,rt the Bourse Gazette, argues that the C‘i'etldfo;n5han:t;2?:htu$78rwu:g: g;)l:g New York, July 29.—Troops along |30Y . effort to afford any special pro- | the abdomen. The murderers made | nelle and C. B. Jones at the South . . Austro-German losses since the bes %y moisture. If the dry spell con-|the border and in Mexican territory | t€ction to the submarine. good their escape. Side concert. Por Electrlc cha,lr ginning of the war have been fully tinues the fields which have been left |are in excellent condition in so far G g ;nli the total of their available ~Gontinand on Page Tve, Gotuma Fway |38 Bealth and sanitation are con- ranted Reprieve |forces st seertng o3 vt | Second Y ear of the Great War in Review; iy g ML Ossining, N. Y., July 29.—As| Faris, July 29.—Two strong Gers The Weather [Sions made an extendon vy of 2 Charles £ Stelow was dbout fo et man, deaEhments which aitempted | the border camps at the request of Resume of Changes Wrought by Battles T I Saoke'c il ous e wate pe iy ;ef“\‘"e‘r}:alx‘;ag;cineljr,flo;t :hl:Oigto;’m. 5 . el on this morning th i . {Nebraska: Generally fair, slightly cooler | Acting Surgeon General Birming- ties receivgd wgrd Ifyl)tl:l!:nho.n“:h&r;t front, yesterday were repulsed, it was | e sortion and east and south-central por- | hani of the f\l}v;y d;zp.brtme:;st, He was - Supreme Court 'Justice Charles L. |Officially announced by the Fren A% SUncay. accompanie obert Bacon; for- 5 : s % - elo:d'y‘;: -?l:';f:{;"zuorllelrr :al:v'.' .i‘::“n.n{-;:.'::}.{ merly p;e,cregaryyof state. i The second year of the world war | on the Somme took place in this|figure of 450,000. The assailants E"um ',‘?‘1,-5,’:;‘,:'{*0“'; 'h':y of execution w[.r: t:}el]e)a:ter;‘e:: z)()fd.tie French fore . tral portions. “In only a few of the campsewas| closes with the “battle of Europe,” a|period. fought their way to within about Lk Temperatures at Omsha Yesterdsy: there any room for improvement,” |concerted effort of the allies on three| The battle of Champagne opened | three and a half miles of the fortress, Sticlow s condemned to die for the ress of Verdun two Germin AACHE ) on a redoubt in the ravine south of ba says Dr. Strong's report, “and con-|{ronts to crush the central powers, |on September 25, after a week's ter- | but for several weeks have reported ;‘}Hd,f{. ?,{,fit;z‘:sfl?hfi]::'.: ?WE{’ Fleury were checked. The French, C@@]L]ER a. ditions there were being speedily rec-| Which has developed into a titanic | rific bombardment of the German |no further progress and the force of tt, at Medi Yoo U f 75, | the official statement says, made some A g tified.” struggle before which superlatives, | lines by the French, British and Bel-| their attacks appears to have les- gol i at) f"n;’ AR 'g July, 1915, rogress in the region o('Thil\lmonh' S g : already exhausted, are completely|gians. In a week of the bloodiest |sened. ‘l‘f ow's frieacs’ conténd that men-|EII87H3 A, G SEE LSS Highwood, | A LS5 g beggared. ighting that had been known up to tally he is scarcely the equal of a 7- L : N ; 5 Operations on the Somme. -old child and th London, July 29.—British - trooj ) and Great Britain in the | that time the alli n d tha s g car-old child and that also an al- * e 4 A councll VOtes Money wcl';:mi{:m, in(zhe cast, Italy in the | they had taken e:w:nlt‘)?u“rfi?leg 0; The Franco-British offensive on |leged confession was wrung from him | Yesterday made progress to the north * ) 1 f g ftar wave | tfench : s and 23,000 pris- | the Somme opened July 1, 1916, It|by third degree methods. and northeast of Pozieries and near | For Hummels r]p south are hurling wave aft t es, six towns and 23/ ris d Sl I e el Highwood, it was officially annou of ‘armed men on the Teutonic lines, | oners. But there they halted. They | W28 l’"l'ce ed by a bombardment of T A mdzn Sonera ok Dm]{ Aagouy : = together with an avalanche of shells | could not break through the mighty |Unparalleled duration and intensity, Armed Bl‘ltlSh Shlp Iso reported that two d i te Ge! The city council, by a vote of four [ and bombs such as the world has not | German wall, and the grim deadlock | f¢atured by the “lgp.'.‘“"" of new RS epO) e kw ‘."’"'Del ‘lrl; to three, voted to "approprite $300|known up to the present time. For|which marked the western front for |nd. gigantic !British howitzers. Taken b Germa‘ns ;)an ;oun Sy alc ; agauist {Delvy from the miscellanzo.s fund for ex-|the first time the Teutons are, tem- | so many months was resumed. The|Under this awful hurricane of big y 20qCgere 1epIsed. [ enses to cover & trip to be made| porarily at least, on the defensive on | battle of Champagne marked the re.|8un fire the German first line de- e Germans Yield Ground. 1 y Commissioner Hummel of the the thousands of miles of the exist- | moval of Sir John French, the Brit- fenses crumbled. When the British Berlin, July 29.—(By Wireless to| , Berlin, July 29.—(Via London.)— - park department in October/ The |ing battle front. ish commanderein-chief from the be.|and French troops advanced they re- Sayville)—A German ~ auxiliary After repeated futile attacks northe Fosh ames proposed trip is to ‘attend the an-| A year ago the Germans, continu- fi""i"' of the war up to that time, w;:_ted that they found trenches in |cruiser at 1 o'cluck on the morning of | West of Lutsk, says the German o Temperatur nual meeting of the American Asso-|ing their gfeat drive against the Rus- | In December, 1915, it was announced | Which there was not a single sur-|July 27, after an engagement with | ficial statement issued today, the jos Shager ciation "of Park Superintendents. siang, pushed the Slavs back along | that he had resigned to take a home |Vivor, only the dead guarded the|the armed British steamship Eskimo, | Russians succecced in penetrating the | P ey~ 3| Notwithstanding that four members | the ~ entire _eastern front, captured | command, and Sir Douglas Haig was | Silent fifles and machine guns. Ger- | captured the vessel and brought .t | German lines in the region of Tristyn, | Totul excess since of the council voted for the appro-| Warsaw, the great fortresses of |appointed his successor. man first lines were carried over an |into port, according to a_statement |and caused the Germans to give up Normal precipitation t priation, it is believed Mr. Hummel| Kovno, Novo Georgievsk and Brest- Battle of Verdun. extent of twenty-five miles and the | given out today by the German ade |their advanced positions which they Total raintall since Maroh 1 will stay home, because he fears the | Litovsk and established lines far in-| In gheer hu;J:‘int::e::' the battle | 255ond ph"”"""’ pierced at certain giralty, The {nczunter took place |Had previously held beyond the Stoks Deficlency since March 1 legality “of setting aside money for|gide Russian territory, which they | of Verdun probably surpasses all|BCints: but up to the present the |,y aé:oint fifteen miles southeast of | hod river. i T et 14, RN incEe this purpose. maintained virtually unbroken until| other ' individual events of the war, | 181ting has been indecisive in so far | Aren al, a Norwegian seaport on the |, West of Lutsk, the statement Deficléncy for the day, X ithi the forcing of ‘the Germans to the Russian attack has been broug Stations 8t T P, M. 7 within the last three months. They| On February 23 the German crown | % ! P ; Skagerak. § . ppmaee e e e (WCRUMING Rocord to gl o et b e, s o e, o o bl ST it | e [l e s Gt S 3 G ussi e - i | ce . f as | ¥ i‘)ing;o:vn:‘:f:fityc ! 3:"' 15? m.‘:g Show Gain Over Last Year try, and expelled the invaders from.:;l:c,:::;cnf::‘::f::' :‘:wt‘;: ':;a‘:fl’) bitterest possible description and the ihed for Working Girls o avenport, par enver, cloudy - Chief.Cletk Isitt of the city build-| Galicia and Bukowina. Field Mar-|to F ¢ gror i the de. | reports of press correspondents at| Longer Than the Law Allows (TRt 0 ing department estimates th};[ jluly shals von Hindenburg and von Mack- (:nd::,ncf,“e ovrlmn‘w;:ng:‘on:h:mr; :, the front teem with accounts of the Habeas COI‘WS Case of es Molnes, clea d ; Y ? Edward Costello, superintendent of by Dodge City, ¢ n ‘00 | building operations will exceed "the | ensen were the heroes of these great|the fury of which the world has g"“"’éotl','“:i('flg h;;‘:'t’a"';‘ '“dh d""{’“““ the Iten Biscuit co_mpplny.qllnt. ng Leo Angus UD Monday e ar » ‘g0 | same month of last year by $50,000, | successes. stood aghast. Foot by foot, almost | P8 POU S€q, THOLE ‘.‘“’n,'“ ,"“ fined $10 and costs in municipal court | Habeas corpus proceedings Omaha, clear wooom This month will not be closed until Little Change on West Front. . |inch by inch, the Germans forged | " S .":"°’; h"‘ ®|of Judge Robert W. Patrick Friday |case of Leo Any against Shel o S U s .5y | Monday, but the increase is assured.| On the western front the changes forward, with a reckless disregard whnp m:,x'med“" m:"h.‘”' ou °Pf1' on a charge of violating the law es- | McShane will be heard Mon e i " 7| The Omaba Electric Light and|in position during the year were com- | of their lives, a tenacity and cool | 10, fA0NCH ?“t : 'l'ée t)f‘mb ;." tablishing fifty-four hours per week |morning by Judge Sears, Sante Fe, part cloudy ) 10| Power company has applied for a|paratively small, but the twelve|courage which was only equaled by ‘;“fi- At ‘fi Tt l’;’ jat ded ‘t’ 'f" as the maximum for working women.| Angus attacks the legality of i e plerxllr‘ut tfoar m' a?dfil{(}n&‘(&) l&ghpc)sw:r‘ mfomhs were ?;rkc};i b threfe a‘enu ;‘_he herog deter;ninatiun "of ; the | 96 8 whnt;nst;:)'d e thelr fo:smf:o; Cosl:ello .?:ni"jd thle charge, say-|police court informations signed ‘alentine, part clo o8 .00 [ plant, at a cost o ,500. e San-| of interest: The battles o am- | French. On June 3 an unofficial rs- . ing that rush orders for biscuits tamp. is Y Iadioates trace of précipitation. ord hotel addition permit will be|pagne and Verdun and the opening|timate of theJGerman losses at Ver.|days until succor reached them or s ok olacuite to ) Zibae 8 e N e L. A. WBLSH, Meteorologist. | issued on Monday, e! 1 1 ; o e PO OT | be supplied soldiers on the Mexican hirty-day sentence oh a vags of the great Franco-British offensive | dun placed the total at the appalling | (Continued on Page Twelve, Column 0One.) border was responsible. charge. Yy PN