Cannot jr. . 77 causer S3 0maha Daily FARM IsAJTO AdvertUed la Tb Bee to the Tew-y -nce'of prodncdrtaMM. THE WEATHER. ivnu I ivui A i mvrwwn at . targe and appreciative Mdtfetvea, Unsettled VOL. XLiV no. 79. OMAIIA, THURSDAY MORNING, hEPTKMHEU 17, 1!H4 TWELVE PAGES. Oa Trains ana at KoUl Hew Staada. o. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. Wuson 'I ells Be i - The Bee AUSTRIAN FORCES REDUCED Itl SIZE JOIN AT RZESOW Anniei of Dual Kingdom Forty Per Cent Smaller Than When the War Be gfan. ROAD -TO BUDAPEST LEFT OPEN Busiian Military Critio Regards the First Period of Western Strug, gle m Closed. GERMANY MUST RELY ON SELF Kaiser Will Be Required to Do Bat ' tie at the Same Time on , Both Sides. AUSTRO-SERVIAN REPORTS VARY Claim Servians Are Driven Out May Be Discounted. GERMAN OFFICER PUT ON TRIAL I'ntrnant Charged Before Coart. Martial with Responsibility (or ' Atrocities Alleged t'oinmltted 1b Reaalan Poland. LONDON, Sept. X6. A dispatch to the Express from Rome states that the two Austrian armies commanded by Generals Dankl and Auff enberg have joinedTforcee at Rzesow, thir teen miles northeast of Jaroslau and . thirty-two miles due north of Prse mysl. In the course of tils opera- tlon, the dispatch says, they lost 40 per cent of their numbers. The Petrograd correspondent of the Exchange Telegraph company quotes the military critic, Micha lowskl, as saying that Russia's vic tory during the last week over three Austrian armies on the line from the Vistula to .the Carpathians leaves the road to Budapest, along the . northern base, of. the Carpathians, completely open. ..The first period o.fthe war on the western frontier, he adds, thus ends. 1 v Depeada oa Ge-iaaay. The debacle for It seems nothing less - In the Auatrlan armies, means that Ger many will have, more and more to rely mainly on itself; hence there will be a greater Interdependence of events In . the eastern and western fields of opera tions. What new forces Germany can put into t the campaign In the weatern area-must henceforth depend In a great meaaure on . how far tt can neglect the Russian move ment on Breelau, the capital of the Prus sian province of Silesia, 190 miles south- x east of Berlin. - According to reports today. Emperor William, himself, has gone to East Prus sia to take chief command of the Ger man armies oppoeing the Russian invad ers. He may have gone there, but little credit 18 attached to the assertion that he proposes to take the active command out of the hands of a fighting general of the caliber" of Von Hlndenberg. There la the usual diversity of stories today regarding the Auatro-Servian oper- ' ations. The Austrian general ataff claims to have driven the Servians out of the province of 'Banat and from the eastern district of Slavonia. The Servians, however, hitherto 'have . shown a marked capacity for reappearing In the same or better positions after (Continued on Page Two, Colcmn One.) . The;Weather . Forecast till 7 p. m. Thursday: For Omaha, Council Bluffs and Vicinity Fair, alighty cooler. Temperatnres at Omaha Yesterday Hours. . Deg. 6 a. m 73 6 a. m 73 7 a. m. 73 8 a. m 72 a. in 73 10 a m 75 11 a. m 77 YZ m K0 1 p. m tU 1 p. m K5 2 p.'m 83 4 p. m.... fc7 t p. m. ftt ( p. m M 7 p. m 77 ip.m., 74 Cam pa rat ire Laeal Record. 1814. Bl3. 1912. 1911. Highest yesterday ...... m . 64 a M Ueel yesterday 73 b 4 J Mean temperature SO 62 64 74 Preclpitatiun 12 '.23 .00 .00 Temperature and precipitation departures from the normal: Normal teinperatura 66 Kxceas for the day t. n Total excess alnce March 1 C& Normal precipitation............ .11 loch Kxcesa for the day 01 Inch Total rainfall alnce March 1.... 20. a Inches Drflclrncy alnce March 1 3 4s inches reftciency for cor. period, 1918. 7.21 Inches Ief iclency for cor. period, 1!)12. 3 63 Inches Reports frem Sla tlaaa at T P. M. Station and State ' of Weather. Cheyenne, clear..., Javenport, cloudy. Ienver. clear....... Lea Moines, rain..; Temp. HUrh-Rain. 7 p m. ecu .... 2 M fall .00 .00 .00 2.61 .it) .00 .12 .00 .00 .flu .00 .JO 8 4 74 34 T8 M 4 M 74 70 70 4 70 71 78 tA i TO 3 74 lender, clear , North Platte, clear.... Omaha, cloudy Pueblo, rlcar Rapid City, clear Salt Lake City, clear i-aiila Fe, clear.... .. Hherio'an, cloudy , Hioux City f Valentine, dear "T" Indicatea trare i-. Jl. Wl IIL .00 70 .0J of precipitation. 1 ' i'mtcauLMj-. HAYOC 111 TERMONDE RECALLSSAYAGERY Powell Tells of Ruin and Destruc tion He Saw in Peaceful I Belgian City. PETROL CART TO SPREAD FIRE People Offered Neither Beslstaaee Kar Pravacattaa, Even Oetau Admit raataaa tVark f Art Destroyed. r K. ALKXANDKR POWELL. ANTWERP. Sept. (Special Cable gram 16 New York World and Omaha Bee.) In the light of recent events the familiar saying ''Scratch a Russian and you will find a .Tartar." should be al tered so as to read, "Scratch a German and you yfll find a Savage." In, fact, so far as I can see the main difference be tween Oerinan methods of warfare and those employed ' by the red-skinned ..sav ages who. once terrorised our western plains. Is that the Germans have not yet adopted the. scalping knife. The war Is till youn, however. . Perhopa. .thoy may come to iW.v V. . Rala In Peaceful Tawal : ' Tou see "l hav Just returned from Ter monde. - Only a few days ago Termonde was as quaint, peaceful and prosperous a place as you -could find in a iong day's journey.' It contained 16,000 Industrious, inoffensive Inhabitants and some of the most interesting buildings In Flanders. Today the grear part of its Inhabitants are homeless fugitives upon the country side, their former homes either blackened walla or heaps of brick and plaster. " Re treating Germans showed toward 1 Ter monde the same ruthless brutality with which they treated Aerschot and Lou valn. . General Von Boehn, during my recent conversation with hlm. eacuaed the burn ing of Aerschot by asserting that the burgomaster's con had assassinated the German chief-of-staff. He extenuated the destruction of Louvaln by claiming that cltisens had fired upon the soldiers. But neither of these excuses is valid so far as Termonde la concerned. Even German prisoners admit thaV the .townspeople' offered neither resistance nor ' provocation. Tet today after the German evacuation Termonde looks 'like the fire, swept portion of San Francisco. Fully two-thirds of the city baa been de stroyed. .Practically allof the better class residences have been sacked " arid burned. The splendid Rue de Egllee Is now lined with charred walls and totter ing masonry.' Tha Twelfth century, church of Notre Dame containing Van Dyke's "Crucifix, ion", and his ''Adoration of the B.d. herds," ha been gutted by. flamea". That this wanton destruction was not due to an unintentional spread of the flamea is conclusively proved . by a German mtll- .:" :-'-' " r . ?" """' "11 . . '" . Pump u mim ior spraying petrol, which wast found after the evacuation. And if any further proof were needed f the cold bloodedness of It one Only had to read the Inscription, "Good people do not burn," scrawled In chalk on the doora at the few houses standing. Geroalnao Oatelaaaed. ' "Befora they left two German soldiers dragged from her bed and publicly as saulted the invalid wife of a policeman. I imsgine that If the. old war chief Gero ntrao, whose name wis once the synonym for cruelty throughout the aouthwest, could have been with me In Termopdo today lie would have admitted quite frankly tbat there was nothing he could teach the Germans. Australian Fleet Busy for Weeks LONDON. Bept. W.-A dispatch to the Times from Sydney, dated Tuesday says that Rear Admiral Sir George Patey, commander of the Australian fleet, re ports that the German losaea at Herberta. hoeha, la tha Bismarck archipelago, were twenty to thirty killed and seventeen O-arman officers and noncommissioned officers made prisoners. Aa Australian fleet left Sydney Imme diately following the outbreak of the war, according to the dispatch, and co-operated with the China squadron. It searched for the' enemy's eruieera, put out of ac tion the enemy's wireless station in the Pacifier convoyed the New Zealand es peditionary force to Samoa and the Aus tralia a expedition to Mlerbertspohe. and patrolled the trade route. The fruitier Melbourne, It la atated, covered over 11,000 miles, mostly In the tropica. ' Al 4 CmJ . tat.N.$ - ' . au - - S: j . ; ; KAISER WILHELM AT THE FRONT A rare photo graph, showing; Emperor William of Germany conversing vwith officers of the German aviation corps, who are ex hibiting to him photographs and plans taken during flights , over the Belgian lines.- C x . - Jik Allies and Gernians Engage -PARIS, fiept. 1 The German armies who failed, according to French Judg ment, to pletce a, road for their retreat 1 by way of the frontier toward Mete, ap- parantly , hayedeclded to fight another great battle) for supremacy la toe terri tory northeast of Paris. ' They have taken up line almost as ex tensive as that of the battle oflMarna. and' for the last two days there Has been In progress -u desperate struggle in which the entire Gernan force that made the rapid anarch on Paris, has been engaged. The allied troops, strengthened by new arrivals, also ere bringing their whole strength Into play. Their purpose Is to dislodge the Germans, who In some quar SHERIFF OF CLAY KILLED BY BANDIT i Official is Shot Down While Pur -suing the Murderer of Henry . P. Trout. GRAIN MAN IS FOUND DEAD anrrui uivri . aaae ano.ia m ivan , alnar Flg-h with Desperado Is . Killed After Which Mar terer Kills feejf. 1 HARVARD, Neb.. Sept. 16. (Special Tel egramsThree men ere dead and' one wounded as the result' of a tragedy here this morning. The dead are: HENRY TROUT, found murdered In his office. SHERIFF CHARL.KS BANDTCR80N of Clay Center, killed In a running bat tle with the murderer. ' - - . UNKNOWN TRAMP, who took his own life In a field seven miles north of ner, aftr he na(1 been .urrounded by a posse. Trout was found dead In his of floe. Robbery was apparently the motive for the crime. A tramp was located a short distance from here, soon aftsrwards, and the sheriff and Deputy George -Phillips started In pursuit: Jn a running battle with the tramp Sanderson was killed and Phillips wounded. A posse closed In. on the murderer and his body was found in a field.. He had shot himself through the head. V ' - At S o'clock Sheriff Bar.derson received a report that v a horseman, pushing his mount to the utmost. as riding out of town from the north side. SandeVaon and Phillips, in Sanderson's automobile gave chaae and caught up with the man three miles southeast of Glltner. . .Sanderson got out of the ear and shouted to the man. In answer the horse man opened fire. Sanderson was wounded by the first shot, but was able to' empty his revolver before he died. Phillips was wounded In the arm and shoulder. He was taken to Aurora for treatment. Baadlt Travels North. After shooting Mr. Trout the bayidtt took a direct route north out of the elty on foot, reaching the home of Roy kfe grue In Hamilton county, where he en gaged In a short conversation with him and passed on. Mr. Megrue was sus picious of htm and when the report of tbe shooting came with a general call to patrons to watch for the murderer ha at once mounted a horse and got -on the trail first notifying the authorities here of hta suspicion. , Sheriff Sanderson and George W. Phil lips of the telephone company at once took up tha pursuit In an auto and were stopped by the man ppenlng fire upon them Iff the road near the homes of (Continued un Pas Two, Column Three.) All Strength in New Battle ters are believed to be suffering from exhaustion due to their long continued marches and counter marches, coupled with Incessant and fierce encounters of their tlanlt and' rear guard' a they re tired, and. the advance -RuaiM .Tjf.ihe al--llea. . .' ' " .- : The position occupied by the Germans ror the second extended engagement, es pecially at the western end of their line. appear td-be suited naturally for tho combat, which, according to French mili tary critics, will have a far-reaching In fluence on the future progress- of the war. The Germans are stationed: on a great plateau , of undulating country. In terspersed here and there with wooded heights. l a BRITISH OBJECT TO U.S. FLAGON YESSEL Brazilian Authorities Induced to Refuse ''Clearance to Steamer Robert Dollar. IS OWNED BY CAITFORNIANS Repreaeatatlre Kaha la Con terrace vlth Bryaa and State Depart meat Aaka Braall to Recaa; alae Transfer of Ship. WASHINGTON, Sept. ll-Braaillan authorities at Rio de Janeiro have-refused clearance to' the former British steamer Robert Dollar, recently transferred to the American flag, and the State department has' taken up the situation through the American ambassador. . When, the captain of the Dollar raised the American flag the , British consul at Rio do Janeiro Is reported to have refused his consent to the transfer - and the BraslHan. government accordingly de clined to, grant a clearance. .Representative Kahn, acting for Cali fornia owners of the - steamer has been In final conference with Secretary Bryan, and today the State department cabled Instructions to Ambassador Morgan to ask Brazil to recognise the transfer and clear the vessel. Colorado Miners Accept Peace Plan TRINIDAD, Colo., Sept. 16-Colorado union coal miner In convention late to day voted to accept the. peace plan rec ommended by President Wilson. The vote, which came after three days of vigorous debate, was S3 to I. The Colorado mine owners have called a meeting to be held la Denver on Satur day, at which tha same proposal is to be considered. ' After the convention adpourned officers of the United Mine Workers of Amiria sent President Wilson a telegram notify ing him that the strikers were ready to return to work under the terms of a three-year truce treaty drawn up by Hywel Davies and William R. Fair ley, federal mediator appointed by Secretary Wilson of the Department of Labor. The afternoon session of the convention was featured by speeches by John R. I-awson, Colorado member of the execu tive board of the United Mine Workers, and K. U Doyle district secretary, both of whom at first had opposed the presi dent proposal. Both loday urged that Uie plan bo adopted. COMBAT IS U.S. CHIEF TELLS WILHELM FUTURE TO PASS ON WAR Wilton Telli Kaiier Time to Come Later When Nation Will Try the Sase. AMERICA MUST NOT TAKE SIDES Executive Aiterts Read Statement with the Qravett Interest and Concern. GRATIFIED BY COMMUNICATION i Wilson Honored Should Turn to Him at Representative of People Neu tral and Seeking; Truth. HE SPEAKS WITH FRANKNESS Knows Emperor Will Expect Him to td as One Friend to Another. PRESIDENT CAN'T SAY MORE Aaaerls Day of Arroaatlaar. Will Come Whea Nations of Karoae Will Assemble to Deteraalaa rtttlement. WASHINGTON. Sept. 1.-Prealdent Wilson ' today replied to Kmperor Wil liam's protest that the allies were using dum dim bullets. The president's reply follows closely the statement made today to the Belgian commlalonera protesting against alleged German atrocities. His reply to President Polncare's measaga will follow the same lines. N . The text of the president' reply to Emperor William was as follows: ( j "I received your imperial majesty's Im portant communication of the 7th and have read It with gravest interest and concern. I ejn honored that you should have turned to me for an impartial Judg ment at the representative of a people truly titelnterested- aa. reapwta tha pres ent r and truly desirous of knowing and accepting the truth. Can't Par More. - . "Tou will, I am sure, not expect me to say more. Presently, I pray God ,very soon, this war will be over. The day of accounting will then come, when I take it for, granted the nations ' of ISurope will assemble to determine a settlement. ' Where wrongs have been committed their consequences and the relative responsibility Involved will be as sessed, i "The nations of the world havrf for tunately by agreement made a plan for such a reckoning and settlement. What such a plan cannot compass, the opinion of mankind, the final arbiter in such matters, will supply. It would be un tviee. It would be premature, for a single government, however fortunately sepa rated from the present struggle. It would even be Inconsistent with the neutral Position of a natlpn, which like this has no part In, the contest, to form or ex press a final Judgment Speaka Frankly. "I i speak thus frankly, because I know that you will expect and wish me to do so aa one friend should to another and because I Yeel sure that such a res ervation of Judgment until the end of the war. when' all Us events and circum stances can be seen In their entirety and In' tbelr true relation will commend It self to you as a true expression of sin ters neutrality "WOODROW WILSON." fftao Chow Station , Taken by Japanese TOKIO. Bept. 11 The railway station at Klao Chow, five mile from th bay of that name and opposite Ting Tsau, the Cierman fortified fort, was occupied on .September 13 by Jspanese scouts, ac cording to an official announcement made today. It Is officially announced that a Japa nese aeroplane dropped bombs on the bar rack.a of the Germans at Taing-Tao and that the machine returned safely , to its headquarters. Th destroyer flotilla oper ating from La os h an bay near Tslng-Tao. drove in the enemy's patrols. Captured Uhlans First Demand Food PARIS.' Hrpt. IS. A detachment of forty I'hlans, who had been wandering In the woods of Fontaln-Bleau alnce the engagement at klontmlrall was sur rounded yesterday by a. company of ter ritorial Infantry. They were nearly famlfthed and their first request was for something to eat and drink. ', Another detachment of Uhlan captured near Auberge, swd when taken by the French troops: "Do what you .like with us afterward, but first trlve us something to est We are dying pf hunger." , Aviator Killd by A 2,000-Foot Fall PL'EBLO, Colo., Sept. 18. Weldon B? Cooke, aviator, was killed In- a plunge of J.OW feet In his aeroplane while giving an exhibition fligb' " - fair grounds today, AGAIN RAGING War Summary An official French atalamcnt Is sued In Paris yesterday after noon stated that the German army was fighting a defensive battle along Its front from Noyon, a town on th Olae river, fourteen miles northeast of Complegne, to a point north of Verdun. This would Indicate a. battle front of approximately 110 mllo. with the extreme west at a' point fifty-five mllos northeast of Tarls. The German general rtaff an nounced yesterday that the sit uation on the west front was still favorable. It was added that the allies have not won a victory at any point on the whole battle front and tat the Gernians could look with confidence to the out come. An official statement issued at Vienna declares that the Servian Invader of. Hungary have been defeated along the whole line. Demonstrators against Italy's attitude of neutrality were sup pressed by the military In Rome. According to advices received In Rome, probably from Austrian sources, two Austrian armies In Gallcla have effected a Juncture at Rressow, thirty-two miles north of Frxemysl. It Is announced at Toklo that Japanese scout bare occupied the railway etatlon five miles from the Bay of Klao Chow. . WILOK REPLIES ' TO THEJELGIAHS President Says it Would Be Unwise for Neutral Government to Form or Express Judgment. PRAYS DAILY WAR WILL CEASE High roinrataalna Declares Germans Were, Bratal, Attacked Defease leas and Destroyed Prep- - ' ' rrty la .lavaslna. WASHINGTON. Sept. 1.-Tha' Belgian commUslon, whlth. eome to protest against alleged Orrman atroolt!cs In Bel glum, was received in the east room of the Whit House todny by President WIN son. N Accompanied by Minister llavrnth, the commissioners arrived at th State de partment Just before t o'clock and were received by Fecretary Bryan who took them to the White House. Wilson's Statraaeal. President Wilson suld to the commis sion: 1 'Tennlt me to sky with what sincere pleasure I receive you as representatives of the K'ng of the Belgians, a people for whom X he people of the United States feel so strong a friendship and admiration; a king for whom they entertain so sincere a respect and express my hope that we may have many opportunities of earjaTrfg and deserving their regard. . "You are not mistaken In believing that the people of this country to give Justice, seek the true path of progress, and hav a passionate regard for the Ytght of hu manity. Thaskt for Doraateat. "I thank you for the document you hav 'put in my hands containing the re sult of 'an Investlgstion made by a Judicial committee appointed by th Bel gian government to look In th matter of which you have come to speak. I will give It my moat etttentlve peraual and my most thoughtful consideration. "Tou will) I am sure, not expect me to say more. Presently, I pray God very soon, this war will be over. Th day of accounting will then come,' when, I take It, for granted, the nations of Europe will assemble to determine a settlement. Where wrong hav been committed, their consequence and the relative re sponsibility Involved will be assessed. "It would be unwise, it will be pre mature for a single government, how ever fortunately aeparated from th prea ent atruggle, -it would be Inconsistent with th neutral position of any nation, whleh Ilk this has no part in th con teat to form or, express a final Judg ment." Belalaa "talemeat. - . The text of the statement of the Bel gian high commission was as follow: "Excellency, his nisjesly, the king of the Belgians, hss charged us with a spe cial mlsalon to the president of the United Stales "Let me say to you how much we feel ourselves honored to have been called to express th sentiments of our king and of our whole nation to the Illustrious states man whom the American people have called to the highest dignity of the com monwealth. "As far as I am concerned, I have al ready been able, during. a previous trip, to fully appreciate the noble virtues of the American nation and I am happy to take this opportunity to express the admira tion with which they Inspired me. "Over since Its Independence was first established, Belgium has been declared neutral in it perpetuity. This neutrality guaranteed by the powers, has recently been violated by one of them. Had we consented to abandon our neutrality for th benefit of one of the belligerents ws would have betrayed our obligations to aards the others, and It wa th sense of our International obligations, as well as that of our dignity and honor, that hffi driven us to resistance. "The consequences suffered by the Bel- (Continued on Pag Two, Column Four.) IN FRANCE ANOTHER BATTLE Its PROGRESS ON FRENCH GBpUND Reports from Paris Relate that Re, treating Germans Are Making Stand on High Ground. KAISER HAS NEW ADVANTAGE His Armies Now Fighting Under. More Favorable Conditions Than in Recent Encounters. " PRINCE IN DANGEROUS PLACE Heir Apparent, According to London Reports, in Dangerous Position . by Von Kluck'i Shifting. BERLIN DEMAND IS - ALLAYED Clamor for War News Satisfied with TTr nul S-mv'a Pesistanoa '." CZAR'S ATTACK WAS A RUSE nasalaaa larr.trd Koe.l.-b.r. to)' Make Kalaer Sead Troop Thfr. and Weaken Parle Attaela- A U'ltkSMIW. BI'l.I.KTI!f. : '-' . BKRL.IN, Sept. 16 (By Wireless Via 8ayvllle, L. I.) The German prospects In the battle In the arn region are still characterised In Ber Un as favorable. Tbe geacral staff has authorized the announceemnt that nowhere along U Hne of battle have the British or French forces won a vic tory. No details of the fighting In France Is given out and it Is said that no decisive turn of events seems probable for soma time to, eome. " bvllktipi. ':.'. ' LONDON, Sept. It. (5:28 tn.) ;The official press bureau to-" ay gave out a statement which says: "The general position attending the Atsne river fight continues very favorabte. ' The enemy has delivered several counter attacks, especially against the first army corps. Thesa have been repulsed and the Germans have given way slightly blre our troops and the French armies on our right and left. "The enemy's lose la very heavy and we have taken 200 prisoners." BILLKTIN. PARIS, Sept. 16. -According to of ficial announcement made this af ternoon, the German army is fight ing a defensive battle along its front from Noyon to a point near Verdun. PARIS. Sept. 16. The official communication of Monday! which referred to the preceding day's de velopments,-aald that, the enemy .showed a disposition to resist north of the Alsne river. Yesterday's of ficial communication said that the enemy had restated on the line from Craonne and the forest of L'Algle, north of Compiegne. VAs a simple rear guard stand against the allies this would scarcely last forty-eight hours, so there must be another brg battle In progress since Sunday,. The forces that constitute .the cen-! ter in the battle of Marne seem also to be seeking a position on the same line, while the erown prince's array in Argon ne continues to retreat la that direction. ' The Germans have on this line the d vantage of high, ground, with! the right (Continued on Page TwoT Column Four.) Canada Is Awake-- . a nr Are We . 1 EVERY industrial fibre in our food Canadian neighbor is already tingling with hope and courage. Canada is shipping her grain and farm products to Europe s'he is starting her mills and factories. She sees in the war a duty and an opportunity. It Is ours to shgre in even greater'' proper- -tlon. The world markets are i open. We have the raw-rca- . terial the men the money and we are getting the ships. . ( Don't SitArpund Waiting to See What Is Going to Happen It Has Happened .