Bee The Best ools and Colleges A Jvcrtived in The Bee JLUK UMAHA JLAULl Fair VOL. XLV -NO. r,2. OMAHA. MONDAY M0KN1N0, Af(UT 30, Hir. On Trains, Sews bisaus. HaUl SIN(il.I': IMI'V TM i.L-:Tri K RUSSIANS KEEP FALLING BACK ON NEW POSITIONS Austro-German Drive Meeting With Continued Soccess Save in Fart of Noithern Conrland. WHIPPING RUSS FROM GAUCIA German Report Indicates That Big Triangle of Fortresses There Are. in Danger. HOW FAR WILL TEUTONS GOt nrt.i.ETiN. BERLIN', Aug. 29. Passengers on the Holland-American line steam er Kyndam arriving In Amsterdam, bring n report that a British trans port with 2,000 Canadian troops on board, vus torpedoed off Scllly ls Ir.nda on August 15. It la fa:d about 1,000 men were saved. LONDON, Aug. 29. There are yet !-o ul.sns of the slackening of the 'orrnan pursuit of the retreating lliissians and according to the of flclil roport Issued In Berlin today, progress has been made In all seo Hons c-t the eastern battle. l'ne ex cept In iiortnern Courland, where the r miles of Grand Duke Nicholas are offering an effective resistance. Speculation again is being Indulged In as to whether the Germans Intend to follow the Russians further or prepare positions Trom which they can hold the Muscovites, while the Teutons attempt an offensive in the Balkans or In the western line in France and Belgium. Must Indicate Plan. Military observers here are of the opin ion that this question mutt be settled before many days have elapsed, arguing that with the summer coming to an end any ventures propsed for the fall must soon develop. TU artillery has been the chief modo of warfare on the western line. The most activity has been displayed here by the guns of the allies, which have been shelling; virtually the entire German line. In addition, the allies have been using their air craft in large squadrons to bombard German positions. It ts being vaguely hinted here that mid-October has been chosen as the time for the long-postponed "big push" of the allies, but the general publio does not expect strong offensive movement. "There baa been more heavy fighting on the Galllpoll peninsula, according to the Turkish official report This claims that the allies suffered heavily in a series of attacks last Friday." Rmk Ramilaa Lines. BERLIN, Aug. 29. The Austro-Oerman troops have broken tie Russian lines along the Zlota-Upa river in east Gallcla, the Teutons resuming activity on a sec tion of the front where for a long time they have been merely holding their posi tions. The Russian extreme (eft, which hitherto has been unaffected by the general de feat, now apparently is shaken and In volved in the general r j'lremr Mili tary experts express the belief that the invaders soon will be expelled from that little corner in Gallcla, where alone they l ave been able to maintain a foothold on Austrian soil. New Move in Sooth. This development together with the sharp advance by the Austrlans north east of Kovel, is believed here to indi cate the opening of a campaign against the fortress triangle formed by the strongholds of Lutsk. Dubno and Rovno, (Continued on Fage Two, Column One.) New Break in River Levee in Arkansas LITTLE KOCIC, Ark . Aug. 29. A new break today In the White river levee, this time ten miles above Des Arc, flooded another lurge area of farm land, but ample warning ena' led th Inliab tants tc reach places of safety with most of their personal possessions, aHho.gh they suf fered heavy losses in crops. Except for this break, the flood situa tion improved materially. The break caused the river to fall slightly at Des Arc, and ita effect was expected to be fe't tomorrow upstream, where the river continued - to rise today. Newport has begun the task of restoration where the flood wrought ruin, an refugees have been S'ipplUd wlih abundant food. How ever, along the lower Wh te r.ver the number of refvgees continues to grow and more than &X persons were quartered tonight In the hospitals of Georgetown, Detail's B uff, Augusta and C arindon. There has been no confirmation of loss of life. The Weather For Nebraska Fs in r. Irmp rtiurt at Uu-.aha Yesterday, Inlir. 6 a. m... a. m... 7 a. in ., 8 a m... n. m .. 19 a m.. 11 a. in.. 12 m 1 p m. . 1p.m.. S p. in.. 4 p. m.. p. m . ( : . m.. De F7 6 6 SS 61 6i . ' . 5 61 , til , 6i . ? . 2 . 1 . 60 7 p. m.... t uiparatlr Loral Urcord. m& int. uu iti? 03 SI Si H M i 61 fil M Tl 74 7s o T .01 ,io Htfrhest yesterday , I. wes ys eruay , ea ' Umpe alura V tcil llaU i Temperature and precipitation depar tuna from the normal: N . ... . . . , -j 3eficney for the dav 14 Iw-fl lentv flnre '!ch , 1815 '.A'yi Norn al precipitat'on 1; nn h 1 e'irienry for tie dtr II inch 1' -. I Ilk Hon sine ilsrch 1.. 22. 17 In he t cc. since Ma-c) 1, 1-15 4 inch 1M ctency cor. period 1114. . .. S.fl lm hc J.. I Irnrv cir. l.-rl d. iJll tf.ut in li.n ' "T" indicates irnoe tit .'i it.t', ., L. A. Wi:i.Ml. Local i'oie ajiur. WW IT GREEK REFUGEES FROM THE TURKS Photo taken on the island of Mitylene, where thousands of people, fled from the mainland of Asia Minor, are adrift as objects of charity. J !! n n l n p TJi U W .4 i i il !j M U i S 1 1 mmmV '"'IWI a ' ' WKBSSf. BtSSSSBBfis 3smmmm IBMaaMBi ar V' ;14ter 111 vv&ifi M , ; TWO ARE ORDAINED TO PREACH GOCPZL Bishop Fouke of Chicago Presides at United Evangelical Confer ence Held in This City. TALKS TO Y0UNO PREACHERS Bishop W. H. Pouke of Chicago ordained two young Nebraska men to the ministry of the United Evan gelical church yesterday afternoon befovo an audience that completely filled the First United Evangelical church, 2420 Franklin street. The two men were J. L. Lobaugh of Rosedale Neb., ordained as dea con and J. H. Kohler of Cozad Neb., as elder. Assisting Bishop Fouke were Pre siding Elder I. II. Holderman, Kear ney district, Presiding Elder M. T. Maze Llnooln district; J. H. Wil liams, a former presiding elder from Blue Springs; S. B. Dlllow a former presiding elder from Hastings, and A. E. Miller, Blue Springs, secretary, of the conference.' ' The day was filled with activities, be ing the principal flay In point of religious features in the nineteenth annual ses sion of the Platte River conference of the United Evangelical conference which will come to a close today with the ap pointment of about 100 stationary preach ers of the denomination to various charges throughout Nebraska. The keynote of Bishop Fouke's address to the candidates for ordination was "service." "No matter how small or seemingly unimportant your charge may be, do your work as faithfully as though you had the biggest congregation," he ad vised. "I am going to a certain small couh- try church next Sunday frorn which thir teen ministers and seven ministers wives have sprung to lives of usefulness. And so yo may be doing a great work even thouh you do not see great re sults around you. It may be that God has appointed you to sow the seed of the "Word and that others who come after you shall reap the harvest. But you shall have your rewara none the less. Servants of the Church. "You are servants of the" church, not commanders. But It is a Wescd thing to be a servant Moses was the servant of God's. So was David and so was Daniel, and Joshua, too. And Christ himself was the servant of God. ' came not to be ministered unto, but to mln- V later,' he said. . And when his disciples 1 were quarreling among themselves as to which would be the greatest In the , kingdom of God he rebuked them by washing their feet. ' "Don't perform your duties for a sal j ary. This does not mean that you I should not receive a salary, and a good salary, too. God does not take his min isters home on 8unday night and feed and clothe and give them a place to sleep all through the week. Yet they have to eat and sleep and support their families the same as other men." The bishop asserted that In the record of new churches built there is nothing elsewhere in Christian annals to excel that of the United Evangelical church. Last evening B. H. Nleble, Harrisburg, Ta., general secretary of the missionary and church extension societies of the de ; nomination, preached the annual mis sionary sermon before the conference. Minnesota State Owned Mines Are Paying Revenue ST. PAUL. Minn., Aug. 2S.-J. A. O. Preua. state auditor estimated that t.OtO.OnO tons of ore will be shipped from state-ownod m'nes on the Iron range be fore the end of the ore year. "More than LOW.OO tons of ore were sent from the state-own1 mines in the first half of the ore yea." sild Mr. Preus. "Future annual shipments will rrow rapHly. According to the records, there is an admitted tonnage of ore on j s'ate pro rrtlea a?regatlng H4 Oonon. I Deposits making up this tonnage are con ! talned in the area covered bv forty , seven leases, which on the average have ' th'rty-four years to run, thus making th averare annual output required to exhaust these mines abo'it 4.2'AO 9 tons." He added that at a royalty of 25 cents a ton there is a total future royalty rev enue In sWht for the state's permanent school. nlve-sly and rwamp land f'inds of approximately l0 In addition to j the mini to ther credit. I The record shirinent in Mlnneota was .J..'joj teas in IbU. Famine in Mexico . Growing More Acute WASHINGTON, Au. .-Tho Interna nstlonal relief committee In Mexico City reported to Red Cross headquarters here today that despite other reports to the contrary, famine in Mexico City dally be comes more acute. It was stated that ap plications to the committee for food were bring made by more than one-fourth of the population of the city. BRYAN SLAMS T. R, WHO ALSO TALKS Roosevelt Issues Long Statement in Reply to Garrison, Scoring Naval Management. COMMONER GROWS SARCASTIC CHICAGO, Aug. 29. William Jen nings Bryan, on his way to Wlnnona Lake, Ind., stopped long enough In Chicago yesterday to criticize Theo dore Roosevelt for his speech at Plattsburg, N. Y. Mr. Bryan -aid: "It Is said to have been an ancient custom" for" parents to teach 'their children the evils of intemperance by taking before them persona In an intoxicated condition. It Is possible that Mr. Roosevelt la serving a use ful purpose In warning the public of the effects which the doctrine of preparedness may have on a man when ho gives himself up to It aa a regular business." ' T. R. CrltlrUrs Navy. OYBTKR BAY. N. Y.. AUJ. 39-Formef President Theodore Roosevelt tonight Is sued another lengthy statement in reply to Secretary of War Garrison In the controversy brought about by Mr. Roose- ivelt's Plattsbuig speech. Colonel Rooah- vtlt took Issue with the secretary on the administration's attitude toward Mex ico and Haiti. He also called attention to what he called the unpreparedness of the American fleet, saying In part: "I point out to him that for nearly two years In 1913 and 1914 the ships of the navy were never exercised In fleet maneuvering, and, as I am reliably In formed, were never exercised In fleet or squadron gunnery. What Child of Nix Knows. "A moderately Intelligent child of six knows that the failure for two years to undertake such meneuvera means a literally criminal deterioration In tho fleet and cannot possibly mean anything else. No expert knowledge is needed on this point; It is a mere matter of or dinary common sense. "The very great falling off In the gunnery that was shown by. the results lant spring and the early part of the summer are directly due to this culp able misconduct In handling our navy; and it represents unpreparedncss of the very worst kind because unprcparednesa that takes the shape of letting the weap ons that have been made ready utterly deteriorate is even worse than failure to provide r.ew weapons." Brickhouse Fastest Telegraph Operator BAN FRANCISCO. Auk. 29-T. S. Brick house of San Francisco, until recently w!th the Associated Press, was an nounced tonight aa the winner of both tha receiving and sending events of the press contests, held yesterday, one of the features of the Telegraphers' Champion ship tournament open to the world which was concluded here tonight. The contest called for the sending and receiving of l.fOO words of press matter, using the Phillip, rode. Brick house's time for sending was V minutes, to and ne-flfth seconds; for receiving. 31 min "tea A. O. Tebbs of the International News service, bos Angeles, was second In the sending event and C. V. Barflcld of the Associated Press, Ban Francisco, took second nonirs aa receiver. In a aieclal contest pitting hand gainst mach'ne senders. C. V. narflcld. "sing a vibrating machine, defeated his brother H. E Barflold. aUo of the As sociated Presa. MLEGED MOONSHINER IS FOUMf. t trS ANGELES Tw A'a'!H ,-SJ.. An T Perk olWrd fuei'lve rnAnrxMner from here rtv a-sl'lni pr'-limisrv bear. inir Ti Ipv tfr.. a Unfed 8il rnrt' tl .f r PrffV. -tin vm fyHrlf mrA th-T n y enr "o Pr.rt Prnlh, vs ' - '' - f b r l.rcthrr se- i-IUl uiJ llj'll. PAN-AMERICAU SEYEHTO MEET Will Consider Replies from Various Leaders Throughout Mex ican Republic. WATTING FOR CRRANZA REPLY WASHINGTON, Aug. 29. Thr next step In the effort to bring peace In Mexico will be considered by the Pan-American conference probably next week. A majority of the mili tary and political leaders in Mexico having replied to the appeal of the conference for a peace government. It was officially announced today that the conferees would be reassem bled soon, although a definite date for the meeting has not been set. Copies of the replies already re ceived have been furnished to the six South and Central American d p lomats who, With Secretary Lansing, composed the conference. General Carranza'g reply Is v expected early nxf3ee1t 'anil "if" Is'undorslood" the call for the meetings will be Issued as soon as it is in Mr. Lansing's hands.'' Responses favorable to the appeal have come from Villa and all his military commanders, members of his cabinet and political advisers. All replies from Carranza'g generals and advisers have referred the de cision to their chief. All Mexican leaders outside the Carranza and Villa factions have accepted the of fer of the conference. Eimel Seume Dies After Long Illness Eimel Seume, resident of Omaha for thirty years, died at the Lord Lister hos pital Sunday morning after a lingering illness. He ts survived by his widow and two children, Herman and Alma of Omaha. Air. Seume had been bookkeeper and cashier for the Mets Brewery company for the last fifteen years. He was a member of the St. John's lodge. Ancient. Free and Accepted Masons, Woodmen of the World. Ancient Order at United Workmen and Piatt Detuscher Vcreln and was prominent in German circles, j Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 1 1 o'clock at the Masonic temple, under the auspices of St. John's lodge. Inter ment West I .awn cemetery. Tho pall tfearers are: 'har'es Koran Henrv Prheuer Peter Peterson W 11 lum Cockhoff K. M. Alison .1. r. Klotis John j. Johnson V. Miller Summary of Day's War N ws WIIILR PBTHOUB D nofflclally r( presses the. oplalon that the Hu-.i-n. are the f ,.( themselvrs la and maklaar stand obi a froat, there are a a ladlcatlona aa yet of a halt In their retreat movement or of any letnp In the force of tha Trntonlo onrush. TO THE COJiTBlRV the Aiitf Gets... .flen.lv aaalm ! etor where there had been comparative lifartlvlty for (BP better part of two months past nrs nlonst the Uul'strr, the Xlota Llp and the tirllo lion kuTe rhanard only alnea earlT Jalr, whn the Tentonle cos'a la movement waleb re-. nlted In the RnailM withdrawal frm the Waraaw salient. THE EARLY IIJC". Berlin rllnta, Xlota l.tpa and tha Raaalaas are In fn'l retreat ander eatrtrlts A nstro-t'vrman paraalt. appar rtlv It la the Tentonle alia com plete! r to clear Gallel of Hnealaa t roups. THE RETREAT of Grand Dub Nlchalna' armies from Brest-I.l. tnvaU and the line to tha north Is belnsr harassed by Field Marshal on Markensrn's armlea aud thwae of Prlnee Leopold of Bitsarla, the l-tter kulnx pvr.etrated the Hlrl. nv'rsh foret, ithlle uulki-aM of ,LI)ilj Crui'lal v j I-t'hburM ilORE GREAT GUNS OF LONGER RANGE TO GUARD CAM Coast Artillery For.es Will De In crrased to Fal EtLcnglU of Twenty -E g..t Co.uiiamn at Early Tate. READY FOR A DJAL ATTACK Sixteen-Inch RiT'.ci Will Be In stalled in All Ne.v Fortifica tion in Zone. REPLACE OLD WITII BIG 0UKS WASHINGTON. Aug. 29. The coast artllhry force on duty at the rnnania canal will bo Increased lf full RtronptH of twenty-cl ;ht com panies or about 2,000 men. It ai learned today, the forbier ml ry of maintaining the big gun crews at abot't half strength In peace time having been abandoned. Fortifications of the cnnal sone are rapidly nearlng completion. Origin ally It wns plunned Mo man them with fourteen companies on the theory that it was improbable that tho defenses at both ends of the waterway would be attacked simul taneously and the canal and railroad mado rapid shifting of the forces to the danger point possible. Under the general readjustment pinna of the army, full garrison for the canal defences have boen determined upon and It Is conslilertd certain that a big In crease In l ho const nrtlllcry corps will i ' r i'"i conirrcss renntembles, an thn doubling of the canal force will materially reduce the forces In tcrrttor- I'lniiN ore now before the army forti fications board for the equipment of new fortifications of the first clam with six teen Inch rifles, having a range of about twenty miles. It Is not proposed to substitute there gigantic weapons for the prcs.nt twelve Htid fourteen Inch bat teries, but In all new works and when the smaller guns are worn out and dis carded, the sixteen Inch rifles will be lnstalicd. Chnntres of gun carriages, mnnmlnos aid otht r equipment for handling tba btirger guns would make tho cost of sub stituting them fur the present twelves and fourteen utmost prohibitive. One sixteen Inch rifle, built several yenra ago, has been ordered Installed In the cannt sone defenses. It Is un derstood, however, that a nower type of gun haa been developed by army en-. gmeT--vrttT'TnpreasflTMto,anfl "sTrlV" Irtg power. No July Ever Like it For U. S. Exports WAHIXnTON. Aug. 2P.Exports of tho products of American farms and fac tories In July vilued at IMT.gCR.Mrl were the greatest ever recorded in that month, the Department of Commerce announced tonight. The nearest ap proach to the now record was made In July, 1SH, when American shipments abroad reached $1i10.9W).778. The trade balance for the month tho excess cf exports over Imports wns flM,fl?9,!t?0, compared with balance of l-l,9i.00S in July, 1.1U.. Ono year ago In July exports were less than Imports by I moro than $5,000,0o. Fa ports for the first seven months of ! the year valued at Sl.9fl9.TS7. 495 gave a ' balance of trade In favor of the United SUUUs only a little short of l,0i)0,000,r0fl. The total was 9M,S7S,054, comiwred with Ji,3KS,TH9 In the first seven months Of L!K4. J July Imports were valued at $143,099,831), compared with lC9,677.2!d last year; for the seven months, $1,W.909,441, against 11,140.61)3,373 t ne year ago. VON BESELER APPOINTFD GOVERNOR OF POLAND AMHTKROAM (Via London). Aug. . Word was received here todiy from Ber'ln that Oeneral von Beicler, con queror of Antwerp and Novogorglevsk. had been appo'nted general of the en'ire occupied Russian territory. This an nouncement Is credited to the Poven '-eblutt. town of Marew. I THE KORTIf, however, where Vllna and Itvlask are at stake, tho Russians are offering a stiff re slalarre. At some points here, is. parentl, they have even tnkea the offensive. Ilerlla declnrea their attaeka were repalaed. OK TIIH FRONT, In Fran re, tho artillery aad alriurn have been active, bat Infnrtry sallies from in" irrnenea. nnve neen ISf kiss, llerllo aaya that Frenrh air at lurka on Ostearf, llill"lkrrke and llrnaes were without success and that In Muelhrlm, Hadea, three persona killed In a bomb attack were civilians. LITTLE t'llAMGK In the situation In the Dardanelles I laiHct4 br recent adtlcea, both official aad naofflclsl. The losses of the en tente allies la the attack mada at Aaafarta whl'e the recent hal. Inc was taklnit pl-.ee arc declared bv a corresponds! at Tarklsh headquarters to have bcea ti. trcmely heav, the killed alone betas; estimated at about 6,000. tO.VKk.RUX K arc la progress be tween British sTovcrnmcnt offl rials aad members of tho Welsh miners, amonaj whom I hero U dls. satisfaction over tho arbitration award ru'lowla tha recent coal strike. Several thousand opera tives already have out de spite the advice of thrlr leaders, 4,000 bring udiled yesterday to the number ou strike. CARRY BREST BY A BAYONET STORM; Teutonio Fortes S.c?p Throu0h Tarbei V.'iie Eat ...,.e i ..t4 anl Hodi DcTenJciS. rnrr.Rs D3 not iioid tithm Al'STKO HUNG All! N 11 IC A 1 -U'W ;T"ttS (Va I. i.Uonl. Aim. 2H. T:ic f.it tieH of lire: t I. tovs1 was t;';o:i largely w.th Ilie bayorw'. nc cor.SI.ig to divnlts of le Teutonic; 1 1 hi in In t of lint stronviho'd roce ved i , lic:i. The Croatian and Cracow In-j ! fimtry ore s lid to h ive ills! n ulshd i .it -in. 'ii. in i.i tiiaifsi-s nitlii.v liiu M'tulicrn and woieru fronts while the tlcrnmn reserve corpn for.cd Its i' ny ln:o tho c.tadcl and town from the north. The R .sslana hr.d dur ns the war entered a new line, of w rtts beyond illn swuniri.i enclrrllnv tim fortrc.ts. I three to four RlUn.iolcra outs do the permnneul fort glrdlo. and had forti fied It etroiig'y ai.t! provided il with ten nerios of baiind w re entang.e menls, as ll us a broad field of burled mines. Storm llrutna l.ate. The storm began late In the afternoon of August 25. Tim lnrnntry or General von Arse advanced nn both sides of the Mala turnpike. They hewed their way with rntrenchlng tools nml gun but:s through the entanKlenicnta under heavy rifle and machine gun fire and charged the forts with tho bayonet. The charge was Irresistible. Tliey nd vanced recklessly over bidden mine flel.ls and springing Into the works they en gaged in a desperate band-to-hnnd struggle with the stubbornly resisting Ituss.ans. Tne Inst fort was taken by li o'clock at night. The Itusslun survivors across the Bug river were destroying the hrldKCs be hind them. The Austro-Hungarlsn forces pursued them vigorously, Tho Teutonic troops reached the river at 3 o'clock In the morning, where they were obliged to uwalt the arrival of pontoons. Storm the t Hailel. The Germans In the meantime, attack ing from the north, carried this sector of the fort girdle and, unhampered by the river, stormed the citadel and forced a way into the town. The Russians fired the city In their retreat. Most of the 63,000 Inhabitants lert before the siege and only a few re main. ThOj amount of spoils taken baa not yet been ascertained. To Give Nvy Guns --Greater Elevation WASHINGTON. Aug. S9.-Maln bat teries of American battleships hereafter will be given an elevation of thirty de grees, practically doubling the present angle of fire, according to a decision reached by the Navy department ex perts, It Is said, after close study of all available Information on naval engage ments of the European war. Wherever possible ships now under construction and those already in commission, it Is understood, will be similarly fitted. The effect of the change will be to Increase materially the range of tho navy's fnurteen-lnch guns and also to make gunfire more accurate In rough weather. Tho guns now have sufficient range to reach anything within tho limit of vlaon at sea, and the added ele vation will enable them to hurl shells at objects far beyond the horlion or over bills of considerable slae In bombarding land fortifications. Navy officers have heeded closely In formation of the battles of the North Bea and off the Falkland Islands In reaching their determination, It la said. Doth were fought at almost the extreme range of the biggest guns engaged. ' Russians Carry Off Books from Warsaw WARSAW (Via London. Aug. f-The committee of cltixens which is dlsrhsrg Ing the functions of city government here hns voted to raise a loan of t,0ii0,000 ruble (2.5oO.Oil). The committee on schoo's has applied to the Uennan civil governor for permis sion to ohtaln from Cracow, (iaic!a, a'hool hooks published In the Pullsh lan guage, for use in the schools here. The Russians carried away with them nearly all the valu ihlo books and other mo.uble property from the pubic llhrary and other Institutions. The Herman mllltury and civil authorises have Installed them selves In tha Rus.lan government build ings. Remington Works Faces New Strike URIlXIEPORT, Conn., Au. . fi.-R. porta that another strike wis threatened at the Remington Arm ard Ammutrtlon factories, this time among the polishers and braiers, in nit t'day as a disturb ing factor In the Industrial situation here "'Mph was beileved to lie r;iplrtl.- clenrlng through adjustment of the troubles of the vn Ions plnnl4 of the city. ; The polishers and bras era. It Is under stood, when wages Were advanced on the settlement of the recent strike were not Includid. When they designated a shop committee to seek adjustment of wages the committee was dutrhaigeU. Hungarian Aviator Is Critically Injured ,' l LZNTOWV. r- ut. ! I.'eefen nit Baron von Flgyelmesry, the noted Hun gar an aviator, was crlt'cally Injured here today while demonstrating tbe abilities of aeroplanes In wsr times. He bad aacendod several hundred feet and was In tha act of dropping bombs on an Im provised fort when bis engine stopped. Falling to right his engine, he tried to volplane to the earth and In an effort to avoid striking a big crowd of spec tators he struck an electric light polo when within Ibirty foot Qf tha ground. PEACE EUSGPE S SEEN THROUGH U. Sc DIPLOMACY German 0'jscr. cvs Here Hope Sucli Will B' llc3.iit ol ileiaxing Tc.isicn O.er Sabsea Wa;fr.:c. PACIFICIST PUTIFS APPEAR Believe G-ouyt in Eich Country Seet Possibilities of Ending Confli t AMERICA KA "ITD ALREADY Diplomatic Events The Arnblc Irclilent end Ger many's submarine pol'ev are tha snblerta of eonstilrratl n at a conference now b"lnir held at tha enslern hendquartera of tho German army between Emperor William and Dr. von Rethraana. Ilntlwea, the German Imperial rhancellori Admiral von Tlrplts, Germnn minister of marine, and Admiral von Mneller, chief of the private marine cabinet, and the emperor's personal adviser on naval affairs. No news concerning the confer ence has reached Berlin. How. ever. Admiral von Mueller Is said to have thrown his Influence with that of the Imperial chan cellor and Forelan Minister Tin Jnsow In an endeavor to, reach an amicable undcrstandlrjr with the t nlted States. For thla rea son the opinion la expressed la the German capital that there la no ranse to rhaaae the optl. mlstlfl view of tho situation cre ated by Dr. voa Bethmann-Holl. wesj's pronouncement ml last Wednesday. WASHINGTON. Aug. 29. Count von norntitorff, the German ambassa dor, will leavo Washington tomorrow for New York to await instructions from his government, which ha con fldently expects will lend to negotia tions that will bring a wholly satis factory conclusion of the entire con troversy between the United States and Germany regarding submarine warfare. Unless the situation In Berlin wliolfy chahgei before the dispatches Are tent, the anibaRBador believes he will be authorised to reopen formal discussion with Secretary Lansing to the end that a note may be framed by the German government entirely satisfactory to the United States. Bo far as the Btate department Is con cerned formal presentation of the Arabia ease to Oermuny awaited receipt front AmbuKwuti.r Gerard at Berlin of tha Ger man admiralty report on tha destruction of tha ship. M-iy Not f'onic for Fortalaht. Dlsnatehea from Berlin tonight said the report might be made any day or might be delayed a font light. The last of tha German submarines operating south of Inland wl I not return to port before that t mo, t'ntll tne admiralty statement It received, however, and the Arabic casa dlapoaed of, II Is unlikely that a dis cussion of the broader question of Bub marine warfare will be reopened. In German oirclea here It Is firmly be lleved that the Berlin government la anxious to bring to a quick and friendly termination the whole discussion over the submarine campaign. Tha visit of Count von Bernstorff to Washington, acting on instructions from Berlin, is viewed aa conclusive proof that the lib was the suggestion sent to Berlin by Count von Bernstorff Immediately after his Interview with President Wilson. Even . should tha submarine commander attempt I to justify his action, or should no report ever be recet wed from a German com mander aa to the Arabic, It la believed tha German government will seek to make it clear that as a national policy (Continued' on Page Two, Column Two ) I THE WANT-AD. WAY You may howl at hard time To your heart's content; You may kick and complain. Till your money's all spent Hut the hard times you feej Are only your own, Aud could not exist If yon had kiiown Of the little Doe Want Ad, Which Is always quite ready, To Jump on tbe Job And bring biialuess In steal. ! r f i I There are no hard times for the men that use t' Want Ad Columns of THK OMAHA HKli Because WANT AILS slwjt.. s bring big results. Try I THK fur your next want ad. Tale- I (lion Tyler loot now and I TLX IT IN TUB OMAHA BJ&Q.