iiiK lih:K: OMAHA. TlintSDAY. (X'KWKK 1TJ. 1!U4 5 -Comb Sage Tea Into Gray Hair Ladiea! Try Uii larkcn bauti fulljr ana nobody ran Ir-ll Urine back It gi9 and tlilrknrs. Common garden rags brewed into a Aeavy tea. with sulphur and alcohol a Med. win turn rrsv, streaked and faded hair beautifully rk and luxuMant. re nnv every bit of dandruff, stop a'caln Itching and falling hair. Mixing the Sage Tea and Salphur recipe at home, though, la troublesome. An ea!cr way in to (ret the ready -o-u? tonic, costlru; ahout iA cents a larxe bottle, at dm store., known as "Wreth'a Sajte and Sulphur Compound." thus avoldlna: a lot of muu. "While wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youth ful appearance and attractiveness. By darkening ronr hair with Wyeth'a Sag and Sulphur, no cone can telt. becauaa it tiee It ao naturally, so evenly. You Just dampen a sponge or eoft brush with tt and draw this through your hair, taking uiw small strand at a time; by morn ms; all gray hairs have disappeared. After another application or two your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft and luxuriant and you appear years younger Advertisement. SHELL FIRE RACKS HERYES OF HEN Entire Krgiment of Wtlihmen in Trenches Tnder Fire Prey to Sleeplessness. COLLAPSE WHEN SEST TO BEAU soldier Cael aal Collected 1 ader trala of Weeks Pteeea After Their Removal froaa fiastajer Soae. Jfttf -ts j-.r u w I , , f Ur SJV Robert Burns are made for the 99 One man out of a hundred likes a strong, heavy cigar. The Robert Burns won't please that one man. Its flavor is too delicate. It is too delightfully mild to suit his taste. As for your taste RoB Bums Cigar IO . Little Bahbiojf . Conway Cigar Co., leas City. Iowa Harle-Haas Drug Co. for Omaha ana Con noil Bivffa - (Coprright. 11. Py Press Publishing Co.) NRW.TOKK. Ui-L. 21. Sperlal THe grarn ta Tim Omaha Bee..' A remarkable story of a World staff correspondent, who jrot to the British firing Una In Fran was received today after having been held by the cenvors In London. It wn permitted to pass th? censors under an agreement that no nines of places, mili tary command- or Individuals should be i mentioned.' so the identity of tha reel ment cannot be given. It Is impossible also for censorship reasons, to give tha name of the correspondent. The story follows: Farina; Price of Bravery. LONDON. Oct. 1 tSpfdal Cablegram to New York World and Omaha Be.) The English regiment tttat cannot Bleep tbe men with nerve so racked by the terrific stmgglo in the trenches on the Aisna thatlthey cannot bring thcroselvea to go to bed 1 the grimmest spectacle I have met In this war. I spent night and day with these men. and left them rather hysterical myself, only a few hours ago. We parted company and stilt tt seems to m like a bad dream, from which it Is hard to wake. This regiment is made up almost entirely of Welshman and has one of the finest records. It waa visited and congratulated by : Field Marshal French. It has been mentlonel hi official dispatches f"r bravery, and now It si paying the price. Men did not begin to break until after tha tenseness had passed. So long as they were Under fire, they were cool and In command of themselves; but the position they held was so exposed to fire that they never had a moment's rest, and after a month, when they wera ordered back they went to pieces. I had spent the night before within a mile of them, and there were other men there nearly as badly- off. but they had held an advanced position and had blocked the German advance, Vhen I turned south from the Aisne after a night in the trenches, I took refuge for the night at a farm on a rich plateau that borders the Aiane, t is a big estab lishment, employing- dosens of men at ordinary times, and tha house itself is built on a quadrangle 30 by feet. It was almost big enough to shelter a regi ment. Seek Billets far Rearlaaeat. The owner and his son are in tha army and the only person! there are two old women, an old man and a girL They took me in. gave ma a good dinenr. and we were sitting around an open fire talk ing, when a bell on the great door to the court yard rang. We went out, to find a tall English captain and aix ser geants. ' . . The captain explained that he had beea sent ahead to find billets for his regi ment, which had been relieved by- French troops. - Ha spoke in a rapid, nervous way. - and tha . six sergeants seemed strangely fidgety. I acted as Interpreter, and assured them that the ' lafra could shelter three companies, and a farm two kilometers farther oa could take -care of the rest. Handler of Serves. '.' Leaving ' three sergeants, the captain and the other three, went on to the farm and arranged for billets. There two ser geants remained. One returned with us and took tha road back into the lines, to show tha 'approaching regiment tha way. AU this time I kept noticing how nervous all these mn were, but It waa not until I went into tbe comfortable hall of the farm bouse again that I noticed how bad it was. I bad arranged for them to go to bed, but I could not Induce them to do so. The sergeants prepared for COO men., but all night they-"kept knocking about with a -lantern. There were beds for all; they admitted they bad not seen beds for aix weeks, and professed a de sire to get into them, but did not. Iaaaoaalblo ta Sleep. The captain was the worst instance I have ever seen of a strong man going so completely to pieces. lie stood six feet three inches and weighed about 20 in bone and sinew ona of the best types of Englishmen. I knew by his type that be by babit and training waa reserved. si9 e' "t Vaa Tua ufifSI n "MyJrYHTMJs; tvQRLO ovzn Your Gillette dealer begs leave to introduce to you tbe "Aristocrat" Gillette set, cased in French Ivory, and Blade Boxes to match clean, beautiful, compact, in keep ing with the latest idea in men's toilet articles. With Triple Silver plated Razor, $5 , With Gold plated Razor, $6 CUXETTE AFETY RAZOR COMPANY, BOSTON KINO GEORGE AND HIS MILITARY CHIEF The king and Lord Kitchener, who has been planning the British campaign against the Germans, walking' along the ma neuver field at Aldershot. f 1 ' I - sf I I ' - WW" A J i f I i --ii--;. :-y7l -k--tl British Officer xTclls of Sinking of Glitra by Germans IaINIhiN. u t. ri. t"aj:ain Johnt-t'irt and jitxtn men of the new of the Hiltie! terrer Glitra of llth, whli h a a suna hy a riormtn '.ihmai Inc. hao iarr!ed In Stsaner. Noiway. from j .kude.ne. aecordina to a diftch to i the Reuter s T lejrraph company from i that place. In telling of hla experience. Captain Jolmaton said: "The tilltta le't Granaeino.ith. ?-o. land. Sunday - noon with ('al ar.d coke tvr St. Vsnrer. At !.'. Tuesday after noon the 'Sermn atmarin N-l" poprs) out of the Water to the MA'hoard anl i 'Jl.d. Ir. th J co ir. ii any Rust-tans a cue Ru'lri f i .ers I. i guna were elun taken. I "The Ai.sriana have occupied St.yj. i forty. tea ml its sotthl of Lembi. J Koero-Ewve. oe and Perth after s'rorg , P.ulari reiditaroc." ; capt ird, liKludlD ! State Librarians Seveial p-a-hine ( a i a. rt JAPANESE BATTLESHIP RIZON OFF HONOLULU CiENEVA. Nh. Ot. .! ial. I The twentieth ai.nual ireetlng of-the Ne bratka Library ass-vlvtlon took pUn.a yetenlar. A bufineea meeting 'opened rl.e presrsm. after whl.b report a wera given from p'ibltc libraries as follows: Ainertenn Library Arociatlc.n report. M'es Kv5ith Toblit, llbririan of publia It brafv, uniaha. Puldlc !JbvHti of Nebraska, lllus- ' I tarv Nebra-ha IJnrary- mrriaekm. a I- L-,i,.,'i. nt I.lhr..- t'rlvlleVM to Out HO.M.LlLr. T. II.. txt. M.Tli Japan battV.h p Riton. fully coaled ' and iTovlsl.tped. an-eared today off the harbor here, tut will not enter. It fourteen daya out from Tnhosuka. a ' aide Town. Mlas Uia Bowen, Omaha naial depot near To'inhar.ia, and atirpos- public library. . . .... niinty unrarie. itrs. r. v. . umt, Jfadvann. Stopied ns. about nl ie mlle.4 aontbm-et or S'Kitdeiine. ' No "'her craft was In "The submarine sent a inat aNmrd with f!c men. With rolvere In h.ihd they ordered trie KralHIi T.c ken dwa, 1 threat" nlng to shoot .( if 1 did not obey: Furthermore they allowed nv nt, pinre tb.an ten minutes to let down the life boats and take off the rrew. "I took down the flan, nlien.up.jn tbe German offUer torn !' out of rue hands and trampled under foot. 1 aai forced to take the' ahln'a paper b.ti k when I attempted "to take them off and none of the crew was allomrd to take j any of hs belongings. "The crew went lu lo lifeboat which the submarine quickly toned yo jarda I fmm the Ulltra. Three Oeimuna re j tnalned atHard.. searched the ship thor jonghly and rapidly, and one of them, e.1 j dVntly opened the bottom valve, bet-ana t'.ie rear of the ship bo a an to slrk. Then in a few n.lnutes' tha Oiltra disappeared 0,'tietly." ' "We were ordered to row to the shore. "W hen wa leached Not woplnn ' territory e met a pilot boat'whfrh lowed u un- j til a NorweKlao torpedo boat took us ' aboard. The Glitra nas not ins'ued.", i ' .... edly la dolnjr the double dity of riotect Ing Japenee" ard Prltleh comme.-ce and sooutinc for Herman crulners. The little iteiman guntcat tleler is still undergoing repairs here to Its crippled enerws. . After the hae ben rompk ted tt muM either put t sea or Interne her fr the duration of the wr. Tta liiton e formerly the Uuaaiao battleship Rrtvisao. anl waa raptured at "Township Libraries Pev. Thomas Griffiths, ligar. A luncheon waa glvru by the Stata In dustrial School foriilrlt lo tho visitor. IMve . . '...w-. but bis tongue was loosener! and he talked for hours. I was learning aatonlah ing thknrs, but tried many times to get blm to go to bed. but ha would not even take off hia shoes. He said ha could sleep better In an arm chair before the fire, and. In tha end. he never closed hia eyes. I had not slept the night before, and about 1 o'clock In tha morning fell Into a heavy sleep, asking nearly at 4. He was sitting, -wide-eyed, starting at the fire and smoking. A few minutes later others came in. Tha captain said: "Sleep? How could wa sleep, sitting tense all night in tha trenches, knowing that the Germans were less than a hun dred yards away, and were watching every moment for an opportunity to overrun us? Even la tbe day wa ha to lie just be hind our trenchea, alwaa alert, .sleep ing half an hour at a 'time, waked by rifles on either side, and knowing that tha country was filled with tpies, telling everything we did. VI am a soldier. I follow .war as a profession. I hare fought in South Af rica and have been in Indian campaigns. I thought I knew what war was, but never have seen battles between savage tribes so fierce as the fight back there. I am sick of war. I am no coward, but I want to rest, to forget this last month. Ha-aae Folks Hardly Kmw. "I have seen papers from borne, and it has struck roe how . little peopie at home really know-about this. If I could sbow England ona of these trenches, with Englishmen dying of thirst and gangrene within forty pares of their regiments. "To go after them. to attempt to rescue them. would mean throwing away hum dreda more. "Shrapnel ia breaking around you all the " time. I have, seen abrapnel ao thick that it did not seem possible for anyone to lire through; but it doesn't seam to kill much. But these big: shells 'coal boxes' they're the boys that do dsmage. If they break near you, you are gone. "oi tuuntely. they don't al ways break right. I counted thirty-seven yesterday morning that psssed ever us Into the valley, that did - not explode Thank heaven, the Germans are poor marksmen, or none of vt would b here. Shell Ft re Like Drac "You know, 1 miss tha shell fire. I cm ued to iu- It baa got so it tortures me, but J bare grown used ta it. It see ma to act on my nerves aa if it were a drug; but tt doea not make ma dodge tha way it used to. if a shell breaks within a few feet, you 'ordinarily duck. You can't belp it; but it doesn't make me dodga any more. I. hate them Just as much, but they don't affect me." The colonel, a kindly-eyed, gray faced man, with sen ice ribbons half way acroas his ' coat, kept saying thsl hs was going to bed. but stayed up for breakfast at i o'clock. . Then he said it was too late. They talked al-out the big sleep '.hey wera going to have tho next night, and kept talking about it until noon, when a die patch came ordering them to move, on at nightfall. Then they agreed It was too lata to try to get any more sleep. They seemed to welcome tbe night march. Gulf of Smyrna Closed to Warships COPENHAGEN. Oct. u.-Vla London.) Tha Frankfurter Zetlung prints a mes sage from Constantinople to the' effect that the foreign anibansadora have been notified by the porta that warships are forbidden to eater tbe Gulf of Smyrna. Tha Vossischo Zeltung states that the porto's action ia directed against the Anglo-French Itfedltteranean fleet. MILE OF CEMENT ROAD WILL BE BUILT AT KEARNEY K EAR NET, Neb... Oct n.-CSpecial.) Through the efforts af the Buffalo county and Kearney town couauls the seedling mile of road to b laid in Nebraska will be laid in Kearney next 'spring. The as sociation offers J.WX) barrels of cement and tbe necessary steel culvert. Through te sale of certificate the local consul rials ran be induced to assist in Uylng tbe second mile, which will para the state property for that distance. On Oclober 11 the local boosters of !he highway will hold a bsnqtret m honor of the flrot an niversary of the road. Austrian Envoy to' U. S. Hears Russians Given Sad Beating Ui.'IK)N. OU. ii.-An official com munication issued In Vienna at noon Tuesday ta given In a telepram from Amsterdam ' tao the neuter's Telegram company. It says: , . "Tbe tattle In central Galicla baa in creased in force, especially north of the Etraiaa ' nver, where 'our attacks are progressing. : . "The attempts of the Kuulan to re gain the Magiera heights have been re- STEAMSHIP POTSDAM tS NOT DAMAGED BY MINE the IfAOUr.. Oct. 21 (Via London.) To-t Arthur when that .strop ah aid fl-ialiy t Rumors yesterday that tha Holland foil In 1&. after a prolonged siege. Tha j America liner Potsdam had struck a mine Jenanrre rned ar.J refitted the vessel, , (B the North Oa were Unfounded. The whlrh had been unk. The Riron waa roU.lam Is at Its dock In Rotterdam, built at PiiUade'.i hia by the Crsmps and I where it arrived lt week, and" is ex dr'hered to JK'jffi in !". I r-ectcd to sail tonight for America. To show you any of th( named by the House of Kuppenheimer," try them on ftiej are so different from the ordinary clothes that you'll find yourself well repaid when you see them . $10, $20, $22.50, $2$, etc. Berg Clothing Co. IT I itm f TnTTTllTTITITTTTJTTITrrTfTTnTITTrT'rTTn'fll V'FI I r T f T 1 1 fTTITTlTTTTTTTY TPfH 1717117 nnTIT 1TPTT TTT TTTT1 1 HIT fMlTTI f I ! have raie4 close to tl.. and from the! I C3 automoiHie tax tuna at teast ll.sw mora can be obtained. Tna road will be built sixteen ' feet aide and alll adioln tbe State Industrial school property on the racl. Jt U believed that the ita'.e offl- . : : V. . : . . s-a X '. --X '' 1 J . , II"- " ( ' ; J i -vfFN II IIIIHIIHIIIIHIIIIIUMllV . iiiMillMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIII We Forevard dm Sack Suit House of Kuppcnheimed TIOU heir of tbe 1 wonderful work of . ' the Kuppenheimer Tailor Shops that they achieve certain niceties in fit and tailoring cot known before. , ' . Here is a case in. point the FOREWARD Model, of special inter est to the man who carries his head and neck slightly forward. Over half the men of America have this tendency. . Yon doubtless know (his difficulty. You know the sort cf ccat that kicks out in the back or falls away from the neck. This FOREWARD Model hugs the neck, sits forward, fits' accurately. Yod can see it at Kuppenheimer Dealers' in a fine selection cf new. fabrics and patterns. ' It offers just one more practical reason for your getting acquainted with the work of this house and with the clothier who represents it. We wtat y tt luasw u fceHer a we want to know fe. Wt are f ob j ta talk ta yea ri.lt aloof ia tail at wt paper. Kappenleimer Qotliea arc tali fcj a repreMBtaa'Te store ia Mart erery MetropaLtaa center ei tie Uaitei Sutea aaj Caaaia. If jom cart ta We sa yoar aame aa a aost-car. wa will la Ui ta end you aar Book of FaaLiau. THE HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER Maker af Clotaea for Maa ana1 Young Man Chicago To bo found only at Dorc Clothing Co. Tmi TnfTt Ml I ITTTTTTi nnnmnrnmnnnin