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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 17, 1914)
POWERS WARNPORTE TURKEY INFORMED ABOLITION OF TREATY NOT ACCEPTED. MINERS MAKE STATEMENT Denial of Recognition Uncalled for 8ay Butte Workmen—Employer to Be Neutral. Paris.—The Rome correspondent of the Havas agency says that dispatches from Constantinople announce that the foreign ambassadors, including the German representative, have in formed the Turkish government that the powers could not accept aboli tions of the treaty rights accorded foreigners. To Recover Rights. Washington.— Rustem Bey, the Turkish ambassador, explained to Secretary Bryan that Turkey's abro gation of its conventions and capitu lations granting special privileges to powers was a step taken merely to re cover its national rights. The ambassador pointed out that the effect of the action was not to terminate the treaties of 1830 and 1862 between the United States and Turkey, but to remove those extra territorial rights which the American government has enjoyed under a most favored naton clause. State department officials studied the treaties and Turkish laws care fully, but it was not determined what the attitude of the United States would be. It was thought that the American government would take the initiative of the other powers before entering into diplomatic, negotiations. Discusses Questions. Discussing Informally questions arising out of the abrogation of con ventions the Turkish ambassador la ter suggested that an interesting sit uation might arise with reference to Egypt. Here, he thought. Great Brit ain probably would welcome the re moval of the capitulations as it left British control of Egypt unencumber ed by special privileges to other for eigners. He declined to discuss the effect of Turkey’s action on the Eu ropean war, but emphatically denied that it was intended as a pretext for war. Mine Worker* Reply to Operator*. Butte, Mont.—The Butte Mine Work ers’ union issued a statement through its executive committee in reply to the statement of the mining com panies of Butte, that recognition would be denied either the Western Federation of Miners or the Butte Mine Workers’ Union. “So far as the Butte Mine Workers’ union knows,” says the statement, “the companies that signed the state ment denying recognition were not called upon to take sides in the con troversy; on the contrary, representa tives of the all-inclusive mining octo pus, known as the ’Anaconda Copper | ^dining Co.,’ assured the executive committee of the Butte Mine Workers’ union that they stood positively neu tral and would take no hand in the matter of the jurisdiction of the un derground workers. How well they fulfilled their policy, as stated to the executive' committee, has been well exemplified in the activities of this company during the last ten days.” The contention of the companies that recognition is to be denied both faction® because the radical action taken by the mine workers was such that mining operations could not be conducted 1b denied, the mine workers declaring the accusations of the opera tions “are not specific and there has been a vast army of good, experienced miners ready to carry on mining operations.” Assigns Villa to Tehuantepec. Mexico City:—Francisco Villa, re cently appointed general of division by General Carranza, will be assigned to the army destined for the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. This announcement was made by General Carranza in a statement which declares Villa is in “entire harmony with and complete subordination to” the present govern ment in Mexico. Commandeers Autos. Paris.—The government has order ed the commandeering of all automo biles for the purpose of transporting troops and munitions to the front. The commissariat of the allied armies is working without a hitch. Registers Under American Flag. New York.—Formal announcement .was made by the United Fruit Co. that its twenty passenger and five freight vessels had been transferred from British to American registry. Russians Bombard Koenigsbarg. London.—A dispatch to the Post from Copenhagen states that reports have been received there from Stettin that the Russians are bombarding Koenigsberg, the strong German fort ress in east Prussia, and that part of the city is in flames. Submarine Sunk Pathfinder. London.—The war bureau admits that the British cruiser Pathfinder, which was sunk off the coast of Scot land, was destroyed by a German sub marine. Shelling of Belgrade Renewed. London.—The bombardment of Bel grade has been renewed with in creased fury, according to a Nish dis patch to the Exchange Telegraph com pany. Considerable d image has been 4one. The Servian batteries are reply, tng to the Austrian lire. Determined to Defeat Foe. Washington.—Great Britain is de tarmined not to make peace until it has decisively defeated Germany. This sentiment has been conveyed to Preei f.»t Wilson from Ambassador Pag% -t '.'V «> PLUCKY BELGIANS DEFENDING THEIR COUNTRY BERLIN ADMITS CHECK AT PARIS; TROOPSRETREAT Official Announcement Made at Berlin That the Forces of the Empire Retired. ENEMY HAD THE ADVANTAGE Numerical Superiority of 'the Allies Compelled the Backward Movement —Events of a Week of Warfare Summarized—What Will Probably Follow the Change in the Situation of the Opposing Forces. The retreat of the Germans who at tacked the allied- forces between Meaux and Montmirail in France was officially admitted by Berlin. The re treat of the Germans was attributed to the numerical superiority of the allies. On Saturday it was asserted in dis patches from London that Thermonde, Belgium, a town of 150,000 inhabi tants. wae almost destroyed by Ger man troops. Only the town hall and one church are intact. The troops or dered the people to leave, taking the sick and wounded with them. The soldiers then soaked the buildings with kerosene and set them afire. The news was brought to London by Jacques Obels, a courier for the Daily News between Brussels and London, who passed the night with the German soldiers amid the ruins. Berlin Garrison Loses Heavily. According to a Munich report re ceived at Paris the Berlin garrison alone has lo6t 42,000 men killed or wounded in the war thus far. The Munich report evidently refers to men of the Berlin garrison who went to the front at the outbreak of the war. French Minister of War Millerand ordered prefects throughout France to arrest all men liable to military duty not already in service. By this^means the government expects to get at least 200,000 more troops. German Retreat Continues. Victories for the allies on both the left and center before Paris are re ported in official bulletins from the French war office. Nowhere along the i entire line since the battle started had a reverse been suffered by the allied armies, was the claim. An official communique issued by the French war office says that the Anglo-French troops crossed the Marne, and after fighting battles with the German right wing at Ferte-Sous Jouarre and Chateau Thierry forced the Germans back until the ground the Invaders lost during the ‘fighting cov ered 40 miles. The allies were in pursuit of the enemy. During their advance many prisoners and a number of guns were taken. There was no confirmation of the news published in the German news papers of the fall of Maubeuge. A Reuter dispatch from Petrograd received at London stated that the Austrians had evacuated Cracow, their strongest post in Galicia. This clears the way for the Russian march on Berlin. Britain Adds to Army. Premier Asquith asked parliament to add another half-million men of all ranks to the regular army. After a short debate the motion was 'unani mously adopted. A correspondent of the Exchange Telegraph company sent the following from Rome: A Vienna message states that Archduke Frederick lost. 12,000 men in the recent Galician battles, or one-fourth of his entire command. Belgian Commission Arrives. The king of Belgium’s commission, which was sent to place before Pres ident Wilson accounts of alleged Ger man atrocities in Belgium and of Ger many’s violation of Belgium’s neutral ity arrived at New York Friday. In the midst of the European war Great Britain, France, Spain and China have agreed to sign peace com mission treaties with the United States. One effect gt the new conven tions is to prevent the United States from being drawn suddenly into the conflict. 4 Not Yet Ready for Peace. President Wilson, in response to inquiries, stated with great regret that none of the warring nations of Europe is willing to consider peace proposals at this time. Both the president and Mr. Bryan fear that nothing 'short of a decisive victory by one party or the other to the great conflict will induce the belligerents to listen to peace counsels. Germans Forced Back. The allied armies in France, accord ing to advices from London delivered a crushing blow to the German right flank, which was hurled twenty-five miles back across the Marne; French troops resumed the offensive in Al sace and sent the weakened German forces backward toward the Rhine; other French soldiers reoccupied Luneville and forced the Germans back to the Lorraine border, and the army that threatened Paris was in full retreat toward the frontier, with the British in pursuit German official statements claimed that the kaiser's army has capture the French fortress of Maubeuge and 40,000 men. This assertion was de nied by the French, who declare the fortress held out and was a grave peril to the German lines of. com munication. Situation at Luneville. The evacuation of Luneville, which was announced by French newspapers, followed an assault by the Germans on the French position opposite. This attack was repulsed. An oflicial com munique from Bordeaux stated that the French were advancing in Lor raine. The Germans in the district had been directed by the crown prince in person and later by the kaiser. The fighting in Alsace, according to the Journal des Debats of Paris, has been in the neighborhood of Altkirch. where the French resumed their offen sive movement on September 2. The Germans, according to this newspaper, are in retreat toward the Rhine. An earlier report than this, com ing from Basel, Switzerland, was that the Germans were evacuating Upper Alsace in order to concentrate their troops on the eastern border to com bat the Russian advance. The Germans also were said to have evacuated Amiens, and the German commander of the left wing was said to be directing his retreat with the evident intention of repassing the Bel gian border east of Lille. Russians Advance in Galicia. A Petrograd report to the Mes sagero of Rome on Friday stated that a battle near Rawa between Russian and Austrian armies resulted in an overwhelming victory for the czar’s troops after four days of bloody fighting. It said that large numbers of German soldiers who were fighting with the Austrian were prisoners. As a result of their victory, says the dispatch, the Russians are masters of northern Galicia, the Austrians re tiring everywhere and evacuating Russian Poland. This will clear the way for the Russian advance on Ger many through Galicia. More Troops for Germans. German re-enforcements estimated at 60,000 men were advancing into France in three columns, according to an Ostend dispatch to the Reuter Telegraph company of London. Pope Benedict approached Austria and Germany through their envoys in Rome, and both informed the pon tiff that they are favorably disposed to second his efforts for peace. Th6 czar is understood to be prepared to submit the pope's offer to the defer ential consideration of Great Britain and France. Pope Benedict, hopes that his appeal may lead to an arm istice, which would be a prelude to peace. The British official press bureau says the Oceanic, the White Star liner which was in the British service as a converted cruiser, is a total wreck on the north coast of Scotland. The of ficers and crew were saved. The German ambassador at Wash ington admitted that in a cablegram to President Wilson Emperor William had protested against the use of dum dum bullets by the allied army and the participation in the war by Bel gian civilians. British Auxiliaries in Canada. Positive confirmation of the • pres ence in Canada of approximately 200, 000 Australian, New Zealand and In dian soldiers was brought to New York by passengers on the steamer Stephano, from St. Johns, N. F. When the Stephano left Halifax her passengers saw the British cruis er Niohe getting ready for sea, the cruiser Essex taking on coal, and the battleship Glory convoying a German merchantman into port. The name of the prize could not be learned by ths passengers. GENERAL WAR SUMMARY. By J. L. Garvin. (Special Correspondent.) The change in appearance of things before F ris, owing to the retirement of the German trOops, officially an nounced by the German war office, is almost too sudden to inspire perfect trust. The German army which ad vanced steadily and irresistibly from August 24 to September 2, has now. without having fought any decisive battle, started falling back. This move ment continued for four consecutive days. We must not for one moment be deceived. Although we do not know what it is, some formidable counter stroke is being executed. The Ger man army has not yet been defeated anywhere in the center, where the hardest fighting has been. It is never theless plain that the Germans have not exerted their full force. They must be doing something, but what is the unknown quantity? Several answers are given. One suggests that the Germans have de cided, as the least of the evils pre sented, to force, if they can, the north ern section of the barrier of the chain from Verdun to Toul and especially to reduce the former great fortress. This would not be a solution nor any thing like it of the main German prob lem, but it would very much simplify it May Seek Verdun. The fall of Verdun or of some of the smaller forts to the south of It might compel the allies to resume their great retreat. The recent presence of the kaiser at Metz and near Nancy gives color to the view that the Germans may be hoping to batter their way through the huge artificial bulwarks of the French frontier along the middle Meuse. Then the Germans would be able to concentrate freely at least six of their seven armies instead of five as now for a further invasion of France. The biggest battle, indefinitely pro longed, would still have to be fought out more or less on the present lines. Mass on Center. Another view is that the Germans are accumulating strength and work ing out plans for a more tremendous attempt on the French center at Se zanne and Vltry in the hope of break ing the allies’ front and cutting off at least a considerable portion of their forces. A third view, and I am inclined to share it, is that at the end of the sixth week of the war the whole German position to the west and to the east is of a character too unexpected, too disappointing, and too serious to be dealt with hastily. The entire change in the military situation has only become clear to the French general staff within the last two days. Neither General Joffre. it seems, nor his lieutenants. Generals Pau, Damede. Gallienl nor Sir John French are men to be held cheaply. It is by no means easy to plan a he roic stroke. Just as the fall of the Namur fortresses forced a complete ch«nge in the • Anglo-French plan of defense two weeks ago and started their retreat, so now there is reason to believe that the failure of the Ger man* to turn the allies' left flank or break through their center before Paris has compelled a complete change in the German' offensive pro gram. Soon this new plan must be dis closed. One day lost in executing any plan by the Germans now is an ines timable loss. MERCHANT VESSEL IN FIGHT Norwegian Ship in Hail of Shell* During Naval Battle Off Hel goland. The London Daily Telegraph’s Stockholm correspondent tells an ex citing story of the Norwegian vessel King Guttorm, which was caught in the Helgoland sea fight. “Suddenly,” the correspondent says. “The King Guttorm heard a heavy ] cannonade from the north, and a few i minutes later the German and Brit ish fleets turned up, steaming straight toward her, pouring forth a fierce and continuous fire. “The weather was calm, but the dense smoke from the funnels of the warships lay like black clouds above the sea. The King Guttorm was com pletely surrounded and the terror stricken crew found themselves in the midst of a shower of shells—lit erally a hailstorm. The crew be- j lleved their end was near When the J steamer's stern was struck by a pro-1 Jectfle which penetrated her hull without, however, going through. “Many of the King Outtorm’a plates were penetrated, her funnel was dam aged, and even her flagstaff was brought down. Several members ot the crew were wounded. The sailors say they saw many Germans killed. "After an hour the German war ships withdrew from the fight and the English soon after ceased their pur suit” The wounded sailors of the mer chantmen were landed at Hull. 1 THEJUSr MAN NEW8 EPITOME THAT CAN S06N BE COMPASSED. Home and Foreign intelligence Con> dented Into Two and Four Line Paragraphs. WASHINGTON. The senate has passed the million dollar appropriation for extra ex penses of diplomatic and consular service, occasioned by the European war. • • • President Wilson has disapproved the proposal to increase the income tax as a means of raising revenue to offset a treasury deficit due to the European war. * • • President Wilson has acceded to the request of the railway executives who asked him to call the attention of the country to the pressing necessities for support of railroad credits. * • • Practically all the principal rail roads in the east have completed fil- , ing with the Interstate Commerce | commission their new tariffs propos- j ing increases in the price of mileage i tickets. ■ • • The Interstate Commerce coinmis- j sion has declined to permit the rail- j roads between the Missouri river and ! the Pacific coast to ignore the long i and short haul rule on wheat and flour. The effective date of the Interstate Commerce commission’s orders in the intermountain rate case was again postponed from October 1 to Novem ber 15, to give the railroads more time to adjust their tariffs. • • « President Wilson has approved 1 Southern Presbyterian church wo- ! men’s plan to raise “the Ellen Wilson fund for the Christian education of mountain youth” as a memorial to j Mrs. Wilson, who started the move ment • • • Announcement was made that the wireless station at Tuckertown, N. J., would probably be opened at once to receive messages of the belligerent European powers. Lieutenant Felix X. Gygax has been placed in charge of the station. • * * In agreeing on a war revenue meas ure which will tax freight transporta tion and increase revenue taxes on beer and domestic wines, the ways and means committee paved the way for releiving the government of financial stringency due to the Euro pean war. * * • President Wilson has joined the "Buy a Bale of Cotton” club, by order ing from the head of an organization in Georgia, $50 worth of cotton. Sen ator Hoke Smith told him that people throughout the south were joining the movement to take up the cotton crop left over by the European war. DOMESTIC. Steamship passengers arriving In New York from Europe tell of the movement of Russian troops through Eugiand to aid the allies on the con tinent • • • Luther S. Anderson, formerly treas urer and purchasing agent for the Union Pacific railroad, died at Quincy, Mass. He was a gradute of Harvard in the class of 1878. • • * Protests against Great Britain’s seizure of the two battleships being built in England for Turkey, at the outbreak of the war adopted at a meeting of Ottoman, Indian and Per sian Mussulmans and Hindus in New York. • • • The Salvation army was denied a permit further to conduct Its activi ties in Los Angeles. The action was taken by the municipal charities com mission and its effect will be to halt all the activities of the army except purely religious work. • • • Rodman Wanamaker will send two Indian boys to the academy in Mer cersburg, Pa. After completing the course there they will be sent to Princeton. When their education is competed they will return to their people to help educate them. * * • Wildwood (N. J.) Life Guards estab lished a record for that resort when j within one hour Captain Needham and his men, after most strenuous work rescued twenty-six persons from drowning. • • • Rev. John T. Woods, rector of the Holy Cross church in Brooklyn, has been made a domestic prelate, with the title of Moneignor, according to a cablegram from Rome. The elevation of Father Woods was one of the last official acts of the pope before his death. • • • A petition naming James W. Ger ard, ambassador to Germany, as a democratic candidate for tbe nomina tion for United States senator, was filed with the New York secretary of state at Albany. • < • Genera] John J. Pershing, com manding the border patrol from Fort Bliss. Tex., received orders from Washington to lift the embargo on arms, which has been in effect since the occupation of Vera Cruz by American troops. The order was exe cuted immediately.' • • • The Red Cross, the American ship of mercy which will carry relief to the wounded on European battleships, has sailed from New York. Its crew is made up of American^ and Span iards, men of neutral nations. i Samuel Gompers, ia bis Labor-day | address at Plattsburg, N. Y., pointed j out the opportunities of American ! commerce and American workers to be derived from the war. The German steamer Magdeburg, having evaded the British warships that have been patrolling the North Atlantic, slipped safely into New York harbor after an exciting voyage. • • • Mrs. Amanda Weeks, last survivor of those arrested at the time of the assassination of President Lincoln, and charged with having been impli cated in the plot, is dead at her home at Washington, at the age of 89 years. • * » The United Sattes district court at Philadelphia appointed a receiver for Isaac A. Sheppard & Co., manufac turers of beaters and steam boilers. The assets are placed at $1,000,000 and the liabilities at $500,000. * * * The beef packers of the United States are now in absolute control of the Argentine output of beef, accord ing to testimony given before Chief Magistrate McAdoo at the inquiry into the advance in food prices at New York. • • • Expelled from colleges and church es of Guadalajara by the constitu tionalists, forty-five Spanish and French Catholic priests and lay brothers ard forty-eight sisters of the Sacred Heart have arrived in San Francisco. * • • Baron John Henry de Villiers, chief justice of the supreme court of the Union of South Africa, died Septem ber 2. He was attorney general and minister of Mines in the Botha cabinet and was created a baron in 1910. He was born in 1842. • • • The first veteran of the present European war to reach the United States, has arrived in New York aboard the steamer Lapland. He was Alio3 Yon Nieuwenhausen of Gibson City, 111., a Belgian who was wounded in one of the battles before Liege. * * * Woman suffrage was endorsed and a plea for representation to congress of the 10,000.000 negroes in the Unit ed States was made in the annual ad dress of Rev. E. C. Morris, president of the National Baptist convention at the opening session of the organiza tion in Philadelphia. FOREIGN. According to late advices Japanese aviators have been sent up again to drop bombs into Tsing Tau. • • • Prince Albert, second son of King George of England, has been operated on for appendicitis. * * • Reports from Oostend says a coun cil of defense has been formed un der the presidency of King Albert. * » » France is calling out the 1915 re cruits, and in this way will add 250. 000 men to its forces within a few months. • • • France announces that it is sending reserves to Morocco to release regu lars now there for service with the army in France. * * A It is reported in Basle, Switzerland, that the Germans have definitely eva uated upper Alease to rush every available man to East Prussia. * * • | Frenchmen in London now have a newspaper of their own. It is the first Ffench daily newspaper in England. Its title is “L'Echo de France.” * * • Fifteen cents a day will be paid by the government of Belgium to every Belgian woman in America whose husband is with the Belgian army. • • • Maubeuge, a French fortress, has fallen into the hands of the Germans and, according to the report, the Ger mans took 40,000 prisoners and 400 guns. * » » It is stated that the resignation of Emperor William from his office as admiral of the British fleet does not appear to have reached the authori ties in Lonaon. • • • Prince Joachim Albrecht of Prussia, son of the late Prince Frederick Al i bert, regent of Brunswick and a sec ond cousin of the German emperor, has been wounded in battle. * * • Count Szechcnyi, the Austrian min ister of Copenhagen, was arrested by mistake as a spy and was detained an hour before his identity was proven. He had maps in his possession when arrested, which aroused suspicion. • • • The Japanese diet has adopted the war program of the Japanese govern ment It provides for a was appropria tion of 53,000,000 yen (about $26,500, 000). The vote was unanimous. • * » Paris reports say there are ap proximately 1,600,000 men in the allied armies in France. * * • Employes of biscuit factories in London have been working overtime to execute an order for a supply of meat biscuits to the French army. • * • The population of Paris and su burbs before the war was 3.400,000. According to semi-official figures it ia now 2,010,000, owing to the mobiliza tion of the army and the departure of the fugitives. • * • Roberto Ruiz, special Mexican am bassador to Argentina, Brazil and Chile, expressed the thanks of the Mexican government to President De Plaxa of Argentine for the latter’s aid in the recent mediation between Mexico and the United States during their recent trouble. • * * Intensive farming through the Brit ish isles and the plowing of land at every place where it is available is urged in an open letter issued by P. Lloyd Grayure, secretary of the Un ionist Agriculture committee. IN ALL OUR NEIGHBORHOOD There Is Hardly A Woman Who Does Not Rely Upon Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound. Princeton, I1L — “ I had inflammation, hard headaches in the back of my neck and a weakness &U caused by female trouble, and I took Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Coca pound with such ex cellent results that I am new feeling fine. I recommend the Compoundand praise it to all. .1 shall be glad to have you publish m y letter. There is scarcely a neighbor around me who does not use your medicine. ”—Mrs. J. F. Johnson, R. No. 4, Box 30, Prince ton, Illinois. Experience of a Nurse. Poland,N. Y.—“In my experience at • nurse I certainly think Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound is a great medicine. I wish all women with fe male troubles would take it. I took it when passing through the Change of Life with great results and I always re commend the Compound to all my pa tients if 1 know of their condition id time. I will gladly do all I can to help others to know of this great medicine. ’* —Mrs. Horace Newman, Poland, Her* kimer Co., N: Y. If you are ill do not drag along umfl fcn operation is necessary, but at once take Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound. If you want special advice write Lydia E. Pinkliam Medicine Ca, (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Nuisances Defined. To prove that a public nuisance has been committed is one of the most dif ficult things in modern legal practice. It is therefore gratifying to note that a plaintiff who set up the plea that a nuisance is perpetrated in causing noise by banging milk cans, unloading trucks containing the empty cans, dis charging ice through a chute into a building from the sidewalk, emitting steam through windows and doors to the sidewalk, and allowing drivers of teams to shout loudly in the night has won his case before Chief Justice Rus sell of Brooklyn. The health depart ment has taken note of this case ia its weekly bulletin. Look for the Woman. Woman is at the bottom of many of the industries of the world, and strange to say just now she is re sponsible for the revivai of the shark trade. It seems that shagreen is a special part of a shark's skin which lends itself admirably to a variety of delicate dyes, and it has now become very popular for the fittings of toilet cases and the backs of mirrors aid brushes. There is an Increasing de mand for shagreen vanity bags and jewel cases, candlesticks and flower vases are made of the material, which is dyed in accordance with the fur nishings of the room. Seeking Information. “What's the professor playing?” “A little impromptu." “Yes, yee, but who composed it?"* Makes the laundress happy—that's Red Cross Ball Blue. Makes beautiful, dear white clothes. Ail good grocers. Adv. Wishes are not horse6. And. any way, a horse looks lonesome in a pa rade of automobiles. Lots of people have been handed lemons in the form of advice. Too Dangerous to Overlook Kidney tronble Is too often overlooked and too often neglected. But the kidneys give early signals of distress that should not be mistaken. 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N.T. ...___-___ n The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. A Purely vegetable A —act surely and gently on the liver. Cure Biliousness, a Head- A ache, £4 Dizsi- ^ * ness, and Indigestion. They do their doty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK. Genuine must bear Signature - FOR WEAK _ _ 80RE EYES W. N. U„ OMAHA, NO. 37-1914.