10-A THK OMAHA SUNDAY I'.KK: NOVEMBEH 1, 1014. WAR PREDICTIONS GENERALLY FAIL Forecaitinr Events of a Great Strangle Are Practically Impossible. SITUATIONS LITTLE CHANGED AralM In Wattle Hold About ATaafts 5w F.rlr ep Itaibrr, with Varlona blft ln Made. tcnurn of the actions slnr Prpti-mher; rmnn rlaht win; risl hen undertaken of Arrss, but was driven bark. the Of r- J rol.tTH A I, ADYt:llTflJ. 1.1 are here rrsontl. On PPi trmlur 1 the fiirman forofs the western theater of war formed line rrai-hln from of Hclfort to near In POLITK'tl. AIHT.BTIJMn. I- the Frenrh on September K. hn a ; tnsns sucr-eert.n; In re-estallisMn; their j laraa Freneh forre mot-ait u far north- "n- Ionian teiween irunn ana u-r- west aa Papaiimo, whlrh will checked. the Immed'ate rant however, by w hat the Oermana claim to l'nla about twenty have been a murh Inferior force. Karld man cavalry wna established, west of Ityesel and I-enn, but the Oermana sue- ceeded In holdlnc the ground they had gained. Several attacks by the Frenrh on the Herman positions at Arrss-Alhert-Roye were wlthntaood eucr sifully, though a founter attack of the Oermana at Laenigny was met by the French with success. . Collisions between the Herman rlM nhllre.1 Ihe latter to hrlna renrn ana Herman iienaing cavairy new troopa from the home Harrisons, and tr"f" occurred Immedlntelv north of In forced marches additional bodies were Tourcolng. Infantry and artillery bodies taken from the vicinity of Verdun to meet fl'w'n th mounted troops added an the enveloping maneuvers of the French. other f'w kilometers to the ever-growing Meanwhile the leases on both aides had 1 "n- Somo unA was lost by the French, been very henvy. the wounded monop- . however. Though the Oerman dispatches ollslng almost the entire railroad service I m"" no mention or aucn a gam. ine (The following review of the operation In France, written by a former military fffleer sent to the war mne b the Asso ciated pres. could not be csh'ed beraiise of the restrictions of the British snd French military censorship. It br'ngs the situation up to October . The Asso ciated Press.) (Correspondence of the Associated Tress.) THK HAOt'K. Oct. 10 Though official predictions that the battle In eastern and northwestern France would come to an end w'thln thla or that number of days have been many, ao far none of them hv been borne out. That either the French left wing or the Oerman right wing would finally be enveloped andj crushed haa been asserted by the varlottr general headquarters time and again, hut so far thla haa not been done. The same applies to attempts made to break tht centers of the two opposing armies. After herculean efforta up and down the tre mendous battle line, from Albert to Bel fort, conditions at thr writing are vir tually those of Sc;temter 11 ! .But official dispatches Indicate that the two armle have more or less worn them erlves out by the Incessant attacks and counter attacks, and French and Oerman nd English military writers have come to accept aa certain that whichever a'de retreats from the positions at present occupied will be In a sorry plleht. ese cjally If the victor should be able to put in the field fresh troops at the critical moment Th rigid restrictions of the French and Itrltlsh censorship have made It Impossi ble to cable In any detail the day by day developments of this stupendous action, r to point out the significance of cer tain eventa. The meager official state ment from Ixndon and Parla naturally disclose only what It Is desired to dis close, and the review la designed to pre sent the situation aa It stands today, apA to Indicate auch eventa aa have had In fluence upon the final outcome, what ever It may be, of thla aorles of battles. Rf forts A hoot fimr. i Th effort expended by the French and German armies In offensive and defen sive operations la about equal. While the Germans In northeastern France, the right center and right wing, have made desperate efforts to gain new ground by continued offensive operations the French forces opposing them have done the same In an effort to clear France of, the In vader, This haa led to one of the strangest (He of offensive-defensive maneuvers known In military history. While trie French have hurled themselves against the German entrenched positions, the Germane have followed up each failure of the allied troopa to take part of the German defense line, only to- learn that ground ao taken bad to' be surrendered gain as soon aa reinforcements appeared or the scene. To thla there are only. two except'ons. The Oerman right wing ha advanced from Papsume.to Roye. while the center behind the Verdun Txil fort line ha succeeded In 'breaking through t. BL Mlhlel, Lea Pa roc hea and Camp do Homan'nee. : To the determination of both aide not to surrender ground gained la due tht, protraction of the struggle. The Ger man admlOliat a break of their present Una would transfer the theater of war te Oerman territory, and the French seem to real' that without the support ot tha Verdun-Toul-Eplnal-Belfort defense Una of fortification their difficulties would be greatly Increased. At this mo ment the fortifications In question still prevent a German advance on central France, and their reduct'nn would, trean of course, that the French line would be considerably thinned out If In addition to stemming the German tide In north eastern France It would have to meet an advance from Alsace-Lorraine In the open field. While the French field force have successfully discounted the break on the Verdun-Toul i'ne, ' a widening of thla breach might lead to a condition not so easily disposed of. I4 Hare gfnext GroanA Wetter. It la at least a strange coincidence, as Dutch and Italian military writer have pointed out. that the'Oerman right wing should have been able to stand Its ground better, and even advance slightly, Jusl as soon a St Mlh'rl, Lea Paroches and Camp de Romalnea fell In the hands ot the Gennana. Italian and Swiss corre spondents profess to know that a furthei turning or the German right wing was prevented by the breaking of the Ver dun-Toul line, because It became neces sary to mass large French forces oppo site th breach, anl In ao doing the French were obliged to sh'ft their en lire left center and left wing further southeast laaing advantage of this contraction me uermans, on Peptembej- 29, advanced as far aa Bapaume, . reached Albert on th following day, and drove the French aa far aa Roy by October 3. There Is no doubt that during the day which have lapsed sine thla great atruggle be ear. the opposing forces have been ao accu- mlles soiithwet of Anilen In northwest-) railroad transportation seems to have! em Fronde. In the south and so fsr a been of great assistance to the French In j Verdun, this line occupied the territory ! these flank movements, that In the dlrec between the Oerman border and the re. Hon of Bapaume being entirely made, fH.t-nln,IT,I.V.r,.n (rlr,.. tin. n( ' IlSSllIC by It. I f w - ..i v.t..i. ... The nrtlvllv nf the French acalnftt the "!'" I n riT-n.ii. K 1'iin nun wni'ii .luriiiK i lit- ------ - - - -- - rrcent heavy flght'ng ha never materl- . ally changed. North of Verdun the Oer man line formed a semicircle, extending along the valley of the Mcuee and the border of Helglum, and then, tnklng a sharp turn to the west at Mer.ers, It pasted Pt. Quentln onward to Tolx. Verdun Made Pivot. . Tn the subsequent operations Verdun of the two camps J French offlcltil dispatches of October ? '" 7th V LI it were houah fori The herculean effort, of th, French left flounced that the ground lost by the became the plxot. as It were, though for. . .tiii.d n Serv. 1 French between Chaulnes and Iloye had a time the Oerman center and right w'n f"1 "prm" rlR',t rontln'"d. but " ; r(,ukcn . .,, r ..,, ,.!, ' tember 19 the French advance was vlr- Dern lKcn- advanced and were later driven oacg, , .... . itnifiank ... , . . , . ,,h , v,rt tually checked along the ent re Ine. The "otrianu French l avslrr. the troops east and south of Verdun w ... I On October 7 another attemr-t was made r.ever changed tlielr pos'tlon to any greai or Important extent, and todny moat ot them occupy the ground then token. Forced marches brought the. Oermnnl on Beptemler S very near Purls. With .... r.r.-v. ., o. . plotely. other Oerman reinforcements had Verdun on the left of the forces which meanw,,1Io r,(.hM , v had taken up the pursuit of the French fl niJ troops, the Oermans changed their posl- , tJ )n tlons In the north so that on Keptmiher 4 their line bad a true cast and wrst dl rect'on, extending from Immediately north of Verdun to H'telms and a point between Heauvals and Morn, directly north of Paris. The many attempts ot the French left wing, in which f. light the English expeditionary forces, to check the Oerman advance proved futile. Bt. Quentln had been lost by the French and the La Fere-Lnon-niielms linn of fortl firntlons hsd been reduced by the Oer mana w'th surprisingly little resistance on the part of the French. La Fere and Ion surrendered quickly, and rthelms was defended. The prospects that Paris would be Invested had become so threat ening that the French government moved to Hordeaux. For several days no, tniiterlal change In the location of the two opposing ar mies took place. On September 5 the Germans reached the valley of the Mnrne north of Chateau Thierry, and the first contact actions with the Frenrh troops lying before Paris took plnee. On the following liny French and Eng lish reports cla'med that for somi un known reason the German right wing was contracting and that the hody In general was moving In a southwesterly j direction. , Little credence was at first given this report, but on September 1 inferential' confirmation came from the German general headquarters. What the purpose of this . movement could be was at fsfst not understood, but It was learned afterw'nrd that not alone have the Ger mans transferred a large force to Teln forre the troopa opposing the Russian. In East Prussia, but that there had been serious difficultly In the supply arrange ments, the' troop In France lacking both food and ammunition. nermna Itlubt Winer Contracted. . On Beptember the German right wing had contracted to such an extent that It army corp were no longer north of Pari, but east; ot It. Back of the ad vanced German right wing wero the forces which had been occupied with the reduction of French fortlflcatlona, but these could not be employed In field op erations, being hampered with the- rare of the German heavy siege park. Offi cial report from ' the followng day ahowd that the Oermana passed Cha lons, crossed tha valley of th Murne be tween La Ferto and Hessnno and were about : to roach the, valley ot the Snine otitheast" of Pari. --" . ' Though nothing definite of this ma neuver ha been learned from German sources, the Impression prevails thai the German intended to follow up the re. treating French force by passing Paris on the southland In so doing separate the troop In the capital from those ot the f'eld army. There I no doubt that had this movement been successful th German main force would have preased on, leaving the reduction of the Purls fort to the troopa which had been en gaged In similar work at Maubeuge, Longwy," Olvet and Mamur. Preimre.l Flunk Move. Tt appears, however, that while the Gentian advanced on Paris, domandini superhuman exertions from their famous right wing, the French government, counting on the res'stlng rapacity of th Pelfort-Verdun defense line of fortifica tion, quietly withdrew a large part ol Its field force In that part of the ter rain, and ahlpplng It past Paris on the west, prepared for a flank movement against the German right wing. On Bep tember 11 th' maneuver began to bo felt by the German troopa north ot tht Mame valley the folding back, of the Cernian right wing had begun. With Verdun still the extreme of the German troopa affected by the maneuver, their line was bent back, until with lome ground gained In the Marno valley, It formed a semicircle the end of which rested on La Fcre-l.aon defense line and Verdun. On Beptember IS the German right wing spread out ega'n In a north westerly direction, and on the tamo day the German center fll back byond Cha lons, reaching on the next day tht strongly fortified positions about which since September IS has raged one ot the most desperate struggles In military his tory. lthelma had been reoccupled b the French, and the German I'ne occu pied more or less the terra'n In which It found Itself on September S, retaining, however, the fort line of La Fero-Laon. Teutons lleslt attempt. Another flank movement was attempted attenuated to continue its enveloping i Dy ,ne "" cavalry to outuana me f maneuvers. A further extension of the ! Fr',nrh cavalry northwest of Arraa, but line might lead to a break and In that 11 "PP" '""t Germans were thrown case tables would have been turned com- I bBLk- Attacks made by the French on the uerman positions In tho Roye district t were unsuccessful, though the -French re- took some ground they had lost a few 1 dsys before. - There had been no fighting in the cen- 1 ter between Verdun and St. Mlhlel, but ' en October 7 the Germans resumed the t offensive, gaining a little ground noith . of St. Mlhlel. An advance on llatton- I chatel was cheeked by the French. Fight ing was ulso reported from Woevre, where tho Germans moved west from Apremont, but were checked. An attack on the Ger mans in the Argonno forest was success fully withstood by them. From October 3 to C large German rein forcements arrived in Belgium. No rcli aMo figures on their strength were ob tained, but It was learned that a force of about 30,000 Infantry, cavalry and artil lery moved In the direction of the Franco Betglnn bonier near Arras. Nothing had been learned of their destination on Octo ber 9. ry ftvrmnn Itlght Wing Heals. On September 80 the Oerman right wing again restart on Albert, where, on that day, it defeated a large French force, ac cording to (1 report of the German head quarters. The bombardment of the forts between Verdun and Toul continued with un abated vigor In the meantime, but the ground gained by the Oerman on the right bank of the Mouse had to be sur rendered again, according to French offi cial report. Wlilo the French gained some ground In tho Vosges they do not seem to have penetrated as far as the summits of the range, as has been asserted In the French and English official dispatches. Nor Is It possible to find confirmation of the report that the French had again Invaded tho Knndgau In 1'pper Alsace. That another Invasion of Oerman terr'tory was at tempted from that direction seems likely In the face of German reports, but that it was effective Is denied by the fact that no operations of any Importance have been recorded, from there. On October 2 the Germtins repulsed a frontal attack on their light wing at Itoye. The Germans gained considerable ground in following up tho retaretit of tho French . Roth Forces Concerned. While tho Germans niado every effort to break the Eplnal-Toul-Verdun line the French were equally concerned with breaking tha German center north of Verdun, whose strong entrenchments have so fur defied every attempt of that char acter. French, English and Italian ob servers have combined In saying that no field works of such an elaborate and ex tensive character have ever been laid out by a modern army and tho French opera tions of the last tew days have Indicated that It ha been abandoned a hopeless to further attack them. From Oerman sources . has been learned that these en trenchments were laid out behind the ad vancing Oerman forces by working col umns of the Oerman "landsturm with out arms,", a the organisation Is known. Thla Instance of remarkabla foresight per mitted the retiring German force to fall Into a position which had been carefully selected and prepared, In which, in fact, everything va ready for a most tub born defence. , According to French and German offi cial dispatches fighting In the vicinity ot Arms, norths estem Franco, was In full progress on October 9 and 4, while -there was a lull in operation In the Perutino district, alight gain were made by the French in the neighborhood of Solasons, whore several German trenches were car rled. In the Woevre district, near Apre mont on the Mouse. th French claim sev eral successes, with German dispatches clulmlng the very opposite. Get Into Hhartt llattlra. Several sharp attacks were made by the Ooriimm on October S and 4 on the French positions between Craonne and the Argoune forest. Some of the ground gained by tho Germans was lost again cn tho fourth, but on tho whole the opera tion appears to have been advantageous to them. On October 4 fighting on the German right and French left subsided considerably, tho attention of tho various commanders being occupied with an ex tension of their forces beyond Arras, where, on the following day the Inter minable series of attack and counter at tacks of the two oppoaing wing were continued without decisive result. West of Lille and west of Lens collision be tween cavalry screens of the two forces occurred, but these, like the fighting on the Arraa-Albert-Itoye line, led to no definite development. , Meanwhile th situation on the French and German center had remained the same, no fighting being reported from Ither tho Olse-Meuse or Verdun-Belfort lines. The claim of the French to have made, alight advance In the Meuso hill is lnd rectly supported by the Oerman dis patches dealing with the situation on Oc tober 4-S. New General Kawace.tneuta. On October 6 a new general engagement ha.i bftun on the French left and German right wing. French cava.ry penetiated aa far as twenty-f.ve kilometer northeast Fifty More Men Saved from Wrecked Hospital Vessel WHITBY, Eng., Oct. 31. (Via Ijondon, 12:50 p. m.) Fifty more men were saved this morning from tho wreck of the Brit ish hospital ship Rohllla, which ran on the rocks off the Yorkshire coast near here early yesterday. Bearing physicians, nurses and hosplt'il supplies, the Rohllla was on her way tj a Belgian or a French port to succor the wounded when she was driven ashore. It Is understood that all the women on board were saved. Thej total number on board the Ill-fated ship Is not definitely known, but some estimates place It at ZOO. There are said to bo still about s'xty persons on the vessel. Several men this morning, In response to signals from the shore, decided to take the risk of swimming. A few of them reached land safely, but others were drowned. Bodies are washing up on the bench. UANLJIIU cms HEAD IK 2t A- "I tried rately and clentlfle,lly distributed thatlby th6 Frenh "' wln " Pn"iler even a l'ght local reverse must affect the entire line. In view of th fact that the outcome of th present struggle I expected to de termine th result of the first phase ol the war tn France, a review of the op erations preeee'ln It torMher with a Free Troatmont for Pile fbunpl treatment of Pyramid Pile Remedy mailed tree for trlul aivea 011I. k relief, atop Itching bleeding or protrud ing pUaa, hemorrhoid and all rwtai troubles. In the i.rlva :y of your ow n honte. Pyramid Pile Remedy la for sals at all druggtoia, Ue a box. 1, but German resistance proved too much for It, and the period from Septem ber IS to 28 la marked by a series of en veloping movement alnt the Germat. r'ht wing, which, though brilliantly con ducted on the part of the French, nevel led to material results. As th French left xtendcd " the German right would expand, reinforcements being hurried Into bsttle ronttnuoimly on both sides. Mean while the centers of both armies hurlea themselves against one another, with tht French troops acting generally on Ihe offensive. A Hint for Coming Maternity When Two Weeks Old. . Broke Out iri Rash. Got Worse and Worse. Did Not Sleep Day or Night. Used Cuticura Soap and Oint ment. Head Well Entirely. Batesvllle, Ohio. " My child wa about two weeks old when I first noticed a sort of dandruff coining on his head. I tried to comb It off and In so doing I irritatod It and caused his head to get In a sore. My child's head broke out ' In a sort of rash or yellow looking pimple. It just got worse and worse. He was very cross with it and he did not sleep. aud ' and they did ot do a bit of good so one day my father In-law asked me If I had tried Cuticura Soap and Ointment and I told him, 'No.' So he went to the drug (tore, got a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Oint ment. I washed hi head good with Cuti cura Soap and warm water and then put the Cuticura Ointment on with a llttlo flannel cloth. It seemed like it stopped that burning and Itching for he soon got so he could sleep. In about a week I saw it wa getting better so I kept on. I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment three months and then hit head wa well entirely, not leaving a car." (Signed) Mr. Clinton Bollinger, Mar. 21, 1814. Samples Free by Mall Although Cuticura Soap (25c.) and Cuti cura Ointment (50c.) are sold by drug gists nd dealer throughout the world, a sample of each with 32-p. fekJn Book will be sent free upon rciuat. Address post-card: POLITICAL AVKIITISIG. VOTE FOR In a little book designed for expectant mother more complete instruction la given In th use of "Mother' Friend." Thla is an external embrocation applied I to the anaommai muscie iar ins purpras nf rl.irln the atrabi on llsramenta. cord Nothing, however, wa gained in th!k'nd tendons, by either '.de. While the French falleu ' lit thus bringing relief and avoiding to take any of the German entrenched rain great good la accomplished. It position, they were uniformly successful In retaking such ground as th German, ,y,tera mni thousand ot women have had gained In offensive operatlona delightedly told bow they wer free of On September 20 the German finally 1 nauaea. had no morning slcknes and pressed Into the valley of the Mrue ' went througn tn oraeal wun am Mail this Coupon to th PYRAMID DRFG COM FAN X, 61 Pyramid Bldg Mar shall. Mich., wiiti your full nam and adarea on a slip of paper, and ssinpie treatment ot th great Pyramid pile Remedy, will then b ent you at once by mU, s'RUt;, tn plain wrapper. after Fort Camp de Romalnes had beer, ienced on th Sth and Fort La Pa rcche on th following day. These two factor of the Verdun-Toul defense line, together with Ft. Mlhlel, opened the road for a German advance from th center, but due to the fact that th French left wing still gave much trouble, the Ger man general staff could not concentrate Its efforts against th French troop be yond the breach in the Verdun-Toul de fene line. Another general movemeat against th markabl success. "Mother's Friend" haa , been growing In popular favor tor mora than forty year. In abaoat very com ' munlty ar grand mot h-sr who used it themselves, their daughter hava used it , and they certainly nut know what blessing it I when the recommend it I so warmly. Ptrlrtly sa extern! application ; it haa no other effect than to eas tha muscle, cord, tendon and ligament involved hence I perfectly mcJu to UM by all woisien. It I used very successfully ' to prevent caking nf breast. "Mother's Friend" I prepared In tha ' laboratory of bradfleld Regulator Co i Lamar bit-, Atlanta, C. 1 . ' K: t'XY L k. ll!a Vote for a Doctor lor County Coroner and Separate the Coroner's Office From the Undertaking Business! ' -t. ': ..?! Liu W1LLAKO H. QUIGLEY, Candidate for Coroner. The statues ot Nebraska pro vide that the duties of a coroner are to hold inquests and decide the cause of death; therefore the office belongs to a physician, ho la qualified by " nil training. The duties of an undertaker are u oe.l in.-Ketn, embalm bodies and direct funerals. 90 per cent of the coroners of the United States are doctors. For the last five years my opponent has been coroner aud he has monopolized this under taking business, and If you de sired to choose your own fam ily undertaker you have to pay him a Twenty-five Dollar ($25) embalming fee. ' My opponent states he ba handled 1,088 cases and has glvn away 552 cases to other undertakers, but before he yielded to the wishes of the relatives hp demanded a Twenty-five Dollar ($25) em balming fee, therefore he has taken approximately Fourteen Thou sand ($14,000) dollars out of the pockets of the other undertakers. I will place the cornorer's office In the County Court House instead of some private undertaking shop, and will give every un dertaker his Just and equal share of cases coming under my Juris diction. My opponent has doubled the expenses of the cornorer's office, because he held inquests contrary to law. FHil KKS DO NOT LIE. Below are figures taken from office of county clerk: v JIKJ8 $3,305.85 Davis, Coroner J10 $0,815.00 Crosby, Coroner 1912 $0,6-8.75 Crosby, Coroner 113 $0,380.85 Crosby, Coroner A doctor will hold less Inquests and save the taxpayers thou sands of dollars, because oftentimes the cause of death are so ap parent to a physician. I will give every undertaker his Just and equal share of the County Business, because they are all taxpayers and they are all entitled to an equal share of this County Business. Vote for a doctor for county coroner and separate the coroner's office from the undertaking business. DR. WILLARD H. QUIGLEY Democratic Nominee for County Coroner. Horn, Reared and Educated In Omaha. politic 1. AUvr.HTunn. The Workmen's Con fiscation Law A Comparison With Present Conditions Who's Who in the School Board Race 1 i. ! o V - - t 1 1 V Alfred C. Kennedy, candidate for the Board of Education from the Seventh Ward, has been a res ident of this city for forty-five years. lie is the son of Omaha's first Superintendent of schools, received his education In the Omaha public schools, has had four children In the High Schoot, has two others In the grade schools, and is as interested in the welfare of the schools as any one In the city. Mr. Kennedy belongs to no faction, has no one to pun ish and no one to reward, but be lieves in a "square deal" for all. He haa served this community for seventeen years, first on the public library board and since ou the school board, without one cent of compensation, at a con siderable sacrifice of time and money and without shirking any thing that it was up to him to do. Conscious that he has given of the best that was in him and that no act of his on the School Board merits your condemnation, he is unwilling to voluntarily retire under fire, and therefore asks for for your vote on November 3d. F. M. Coffey In his campaign favoring; the Compensation Law quotes a table of statistics compiled by himself for tha Intended purpose of showing that tho nmounts recoverable under the general law ar? far below the schedule of tha Compensation Law. While he fails to cite any particular case, yet he say his figure cover the year 1912. This Committee, which waa selected as the representatives of the Omaha nntl ' South Omaha Central Labor Unions, be ing instructed to opposo the Law, have also compiled statlfttcs covering a period of eight months in 1914, and we find the following startling information: I 1st. We have the case of Larson vs. i Selden-Breck Construction Company on . the State Bank building, Omaha- Larson lost his life, leaving ,a widow and on child. They secured an award of 1A -000.00, which Is Just $11,400.00 more than 1 they could have secured under tho Com pensation Law. I 2d. Tnklnsr tha riu nf Paul T...1,,. ... Union Stock Yard Company of South Omaha. Jaulus wa 21 years of age; was earning a salary of but $30.00 per month. 1 He received an injury to his left hand jfor which he recovered Judgment for j t7.5O0.0O, which is Just 3,750.00 more than he would have received for the amputa tion of the hand under the Compensation j Law, the difference being that he still I retain the hand, which the physicians ay will in time fully recover. d. The case of William Bower vs. Northwestern Railway. Mr. Bower lost the sight of his left eye. He was 67 year of age, thu having a life expec tancy of but 18 year. He secured Judg ment for $11, 500.00, which is Just $10,050.00 more than ha could have recovered under the Compensation Law. Allowing, for the sake of comparison, that his attorney received 50 per cent, which he did not, this still leaves Mr. Bower $4,300.00 more than he could have recovered under the Compensation Law. 4th. In the case of Joseph Mason vs. The Cudahy Packing Company, Mr. Ma son sustained an injury to his back. The ! physicians calculated that he would be I incapacitated for one year. He was re ! celving $16.00 per week In wages, anl I secured a verdict of $4,900.00, which is Just $4,310.00 more than he could have ro ceivsd under the Compensation Law. j Kh. In the case of Elisabeth Kriss, widow, vs. Union Paciflo Railroad Corn fan y. Mr. Kriss wa killed, hi widow receiving Judgment for. $18,000.00, which,, is Just $14,400.00 more than she could have received under the Compensation Law. Her attorney received a fee of $5,000.00, thus leaving the widow $13,000.00 a her share. If she places this amount out at interest at the rate of 6 per cent, ah will receive $15.00 per week for the re mainder of her life and the life of her children, whereas the Compensation Lav allows her but $10.00 a week for a period of 350 weeks, plus $100.00 burial benefits. j OMAHA CENTRAL LABOR UNION, I By Louis V. Ouye, C. L. 6hamp and John Kerigan, Committee. WE PEAL? C. V. Warfield, present member of board, endorses Wm. E. Davis for nomination for school board then decides to oppose him. Certificate of Nomination by Petition Omaha, Nebraska, August 20th, 1914. To Harley O. Moorhead, Election Commissioner: Douglas County, Nebraska. . . - ; W. tha urdrlnd o.valtfll alaotora. raWin In ttuslM County, fctraaka. do. pursuant to th. prtrrtaloa. of.ftlor H3 V50 of the BevlBsd -Statute of Sotraaka. hartfjy nominate W. S. nmfl ; rsiaii at No. 4203 Grant 8trt. Cmha and doing tuatoa at Ko. 428 . Mth etroot. Bouth Oaaha. all In Dowlas County. Hrtraoka. a a oandliat. for th offlo of kort.r of Board of Bduoatlar. of tho School Pl,txlot of Oraaha. In Vh County of Do-JgU'. State of tWbraa. In and for th. 4th 'art. City of Oraha and - do herOy petition and uMt that th. nana of Win j0" . plaoad on th Offlolai Ballot tot uaad ty tho'-or of suld . I- t't vi.et.ion to h hall ta-&ruriiWir. on tha (5SD3C3 doJ&at" 'a'lnoral Elootlon to o hall 3rd day of Xovr'tr. 1914. r9. -r . . 4 J u.dttf ft.... Ja W.T 1 , .v IUEDTS03 alOT'.PS Uii 1. ... .n 1,:-; -eT:- V x v vv- . W. B. EASTHAM Broken Bow, Nsbr. COMMISSIONER or PUBLIC LANDS AND BUILDINGS. 30 Years in Nebraska IS. k-,- ,l. T ' Original filed with Eloctlon CommUsloner. 9ta- J A Vote in All Warda for For 1 Edward L. Dodder For Board of Education Lived in Omaha 19 Years. State TiLrik Examiner for 3 Tears. ;; Leading Funeral Director in Omaha. VirTE FOR Morey 6. Hillard Morearty FOR JUSTICE OF PEACE Democratic Nominee. Graduate of Park School, Boyles College A Law Student. Prominent In Amateur Base Ball, Foot Gall and Golf Member of Carter Lake and Mooa Clubs. Son of Attorney E. F. Morearty. Only Candidate In N. Omaha, for Thlj . . Pil0. i