GERMAN GDNS SHELL T0WN& Tryon Lei Paroches, Camp ret Bo mains Lioumlle Bombarded. STRETCH BOB . TEUTON COBPSES Official tatemest at Berlin ' i British Crntser Bank Mat hr I Mine, bat hr 9nb- ! -arlae. 1 BERIJN, Sept. 24-Fy wlrpless to eajrvllla, 1 I. The official announcement Mued yesterday by the headquarters of Itha Oertnan army says that Oerman fcenTy artillery Is successfully bombard ing Tryon Les Parodies, Camp Pes Ro pnaina and Llourville. Tha Wolf bureau, the seml-offlclnl pwm agenry baa p'jhl'nheit a statement prlvlng details of an Alluded outrnne com puted by French military Mryollrts In charge of an officer on wounded Herman poldlers In two Red Croas motor cars pear Be-thencourt. Only two men sue. peeded In making their escape and this fn spite of their wounds, while the re mainder were killed by the bicyclists, iwho then robbed the corpse. The Ger inan press says this Is another proof of Eha barbarous treatment of wounded iermans at the hands of the French. Loan OTeraabaorlbKjj Tha war loan has been over-subscribed suid Is a huge success. Official figure Just published give the final results of the subscription as follows: The total la 4,3f,oT,000 marks U,7, 29.594.000 In Imperial bonds and 1.1T7. 894.000 marks (294,3nO,O0O and 1.894.171,200 marks ($473,542,800) In other forms of se curity. , Tha German submarine lT-9, In charge f Lieutenant-Commander Weddlgen, escaped unhurt after the sinking of tha British, crulser3 Abouk'lr, Cressy and .llogue. In the North sea. All the mem bers of the crew of this submarine have ten decorated with the Order of the Iron Cross. Bank by Snbtnarlne. An official statement says that the British cruiser Pathfinder was sunk, not tiy a mine, but by the German submarine U-21. This' submarine also escaped un hurt. Bye-witnesses to the bombardment of the Rheims cathedral say that the build ing was only slightly damaged. The Ger man press calls attention to tht fact that the Ettgllah, when they attacked Delhi In 1867 did not spare the glorious monu ments of India, and It recites, also, that Nino BUio, leader of the Oaribaldians, threatened to bombard the watlcan when lie was besieging Rome. ZAPATA WILL JOIN -VILLA MOVEMENT Continued from Page One.) secretary of state to learn details of the C'arranjta-Vllla break. The report which reached the embassies and legations here was that Carranza had not been mani festing a pacific spirit. (ionsalra Appeal to Villa.. MEXICO CITT, Sept. 24. Efforts are fcelng made here to patch up the break between Carranza and Villa, It was an nounced today. . Efforts were made to condeal the break, but news of it leaked out Jn certain cir cles, causing a sensation among military pen. It was regarded as most Berious. peneraf Pablo Gonzales, cbjfif of the army ft tha east,' has telegraphed villa an appeal 'which gives, eight reasons . why (Villa should reconsider his action and re nain friendly to Carranza. These reasons summarfzed are: . "'First A breach now would bring on fthe common enemy' who Is a foreigner. 'Second Tho ideals of the revolution ajv- Accomplished. "Third To retard the peace movement because of personal questions Would nul lify the good already accomplished. , "Fourth Your prestige wontdTsuffer In public opinion at .home and abroad and lyour . aota be compared with those of pascual .Orozco, whose, treason ob- flructed the labor pt rehabllatlon during revloua revolutions. ' "Fifth You would bring sorrow to the Ration. i ' Pixth Gonzales, requests Villa not to r institute' himself a Judge, "Soventh-Sonzales suggests that if (villa's action la Inspired by elevation to power ofpersons whom .Villa opposes, a jsrttlemeh probably can be arranged If iytll-wlll jJVsent tha grounds of his ob jection. " . , J Gonzales then adds: I "Eighth I believe In grand i national problems,, not personalities and 'l believe there Is yet time for the country to en counter In you a. true factor of benefit. Hot an element of discord. I appeal to your patriotism by asking you to remem ber that the entire constitutionalist army (Should be umllvlsible and ever ready to retain the nation's honor." IJURKISH ENYOY TO QUIT WASHINGTON (Continued from Page One.) t jdxations, reminding the American people jaf those incidents. ' , , ine amDussaaor alter explained per sonally and then wrote at length. The ymiurai aireriea xar. tiryan to aay In answer that the statements made by the AtmVmaiuMltit wijb AhlAi.tlnn.kl. . ,k. : . . - . fcw mn 1 American government and but Jor the act mat a tense situation existed in Turkey, which he did not desire to ag gravate, the diplomatic impropriety com mitted by the ambassador mlirht other jrise be a subject for dlsucsslon- with the Ottoman government. The president j asked whether In view of the situation, the ambassador cared to make any ex jpression. The Turkish envoy replied that he did not wish to alter his view in any 1 fway and that he would leavo in a fort night 1 Voa Srheea Dealra Interview. NEW JTORK. Sept. 24.-Count von vSernstorff the German ambassador, said today be bad received a letter from Baron Wllheim von Hrhoen, an attache of the German embassy in which the lat ter emphatically denied that he had stated in an interview that he believed war between the I'nlted Ptatea .and Ja pan was Inevitably. Raron von Bchoetx further denied be had made any state ment that could be construed to mean the same thing. ' TeewsasrJh Man .raBten Patent. TECVMSEII, Neb., Sept. t4.-(8peelal.) 3. A. I'lllon of this city has been granted a patent for a woven wire stretcher or clamp. With the aid of the. clamp one I man can do the work of two. Bee readers are too intelligent e over look the opportunities In the "want ad" , eolumna. They're wofth . while, reading. TIRED TROOPS RESTING AFTER ENGAGING GERMANS This . picture was snapped in Antwerp two weeks ago. Here is shown a group of the survivors of a Belgian regiment that numbered two hundred -when it went out to attack the German right wing.- Only thirty-seven men of this regiment returned alter the Battle. KAISER PLANS TO CAPiwE "Antwerp (Continued from Page One.) the Germans should the Germans be com pelled to retreat from Franco." The correspondent with the .. Belgian army, under date of Tuesday, says: "The Belgian army emerged from the ramparts of Antwerp, today In a sortie against tho German army based on Brus sels. Tha advance guard exchanged shot with the German , outposts on the road tMrteen miles from tho capital. A correspondent of the London Chron icle, who Is with the Belgian; army In the field, wires that the Belgian army Is push ing on toward Brussels and Is confident of regaining control of the city. No state ment is made of the detailed movements of the . Belgians.. . Most of tho dispatch Is devoted to a crlHclsra of the Germans for having burned many, dwellings m Lebbeke and . villages beyond. . According to the Chronicle man at Leb lekc, Octave Verhulst, SO yearn old. his two brothers, Leopold and Arthur, 21 anl Vt,t respectively, were stood against-, the charred walls of their home after It had been burned . and bavoneted to death by German soldiers while their relatives looked on. ' " , ' Another Ghent dispatch lo the Chronicle quotes a local 'newspaper as saying that 4?C Inhabitants of the small Belgian town of .Tamines, In the Naruur district, . have been killed, 'presumably on account of some act against the Germans occupying the dlstrlhts. The dead Include the priest and the local notables. After wholesale executions, says the .dispatch, the torch was applied so effectually that only one 1 ouse remains standing la the district. Queen Wilhelmina Inspects Her Army ROTTERUASf. Sept. 2S. (Vlv Lotidoni Sept. 'J4.) Qufeen Wilhelmina today' in spected the troops along the border, leav ing this morning and returning tonight. Two hundred and sixty survivors of. the British cruisers sunk in the North sea mere transferred this afternoon to Gaaatar lnnd for internment. . Captain-Nicholson of the eruiser llogue paid- a visit today to the British embassy. Cruisers landing at the hook of Holland have been taken to FrieetlaiKi.-: 1 . DEMOCRATS NOT DISPOSED TO PUSH CUMMiNS' BILL . (From a Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON. Sept. 24.-(Hpeeial Tele gram.) A. F. Htryker. who represented the South Omaha Live Stock exchange be fore the committee on commerce ot tho hearing . today on the limitation of lla blllty to . railroads for loss or damage to live stock in transit, left for home to night. The commerce committee will continue the hearings" on the liabilit y clause of. the Cummins iUl tomorrow and the repre sentatives of the Iowa state government who came here in this connection will re main over until the hearings are con cluded, which will probably be tomorrow afternoon. The committee aa yet has given no in dication what action will be taken, but Inasmuch aa It is a measure put to the senate by a republican there seems to I' a dleootlon to pass It over until some democrat may , have any. credit which may attach to the passage of such n a Department Order". WASHINGTON, Sept. 24 Heclnl Tele gram.) Nebraska pensions 'grant!: Honor M. Miller. Wood River lit; Ldlih M. Westherby, Waplehurst. $12; Mary A. Trout. Grand Island, $11; Anna A. hte, St. Paul, $12. - ... ... Iowa poatmneler arpolnttd: M;ha, Fayette county, Mrs. Harriet M. inter, vi... i II t inier: Relrlt.. I.von county, lolla Imrkee, vice A. C. Hemlrfon; Mlnnl. Mills county. Hernun Pttrs. vice A B. A. Hartjc. reeigred: Silver fTify, Mills ooontv, Ethel McHuynoldn. vice T. V. . I1:mb: Ktone C'ltV. Joi?t county. Anna Ronen, vice John Rnnrii. Iowa postmasters reappointed: Carbon, Adams county,. Janws M. Barr: oQdell, Hancck county, George M. Hall: Maynard, Fayette ourty. Purley .tenniiton; Mount Ktna,' Adams county, George T. Thomp son: Scotch Grove, Jones county, Ernest L. Hlmebausih. ...'..' ; Iowa potofflce dUcontinued: Osgood. Palo Alto rount y-; mall to Kmmeetaburg; Sattre, Winneshiek county, niall to Iecorah. I On the recommendation of lemocratlc Committeeman Wade, Or. E. W. Bous baugh and O. H.. B;tel have been ap pointed pension surgeons at Rock ratil " - - : ' 0m - in ill sppsiliflp i " 'ii : ' W-- I a v, . iris i 1 ?Vi - - -'-v J - .. J'l " e ...... j-T , . V N ';' , . 'V A1 . PV. . AwtfV f - XSr '" n. ., ?,,y,-M-mt,Ta-1f , n sWJ&rL - Ji rjC". SgAA TirE .DEE: r ; .. Russ Force Eagle Back Into Silesia and Threaten Movement on Breslau (Copyright, 1814, Press Publishing Co.? PETROGRAD, Sept. S4.-(SpeclaK Cable gram to the New. York World and The Omaha Bee.) The Germans are assem bling their greatest forces between Kallsh and . Wlelun, on the frontier of Russian Poland east of Breslau, and southward to a point nearly wast of Cracow. There have been heavy .collisions,), wherein .the Germans have been forced backward into Silesla. ' ... . j . The' Russian general staff's statement, however, 'says today of this part of -the campaign: , '' "ypon ' the German front the Russian troops ' are in close ' contact - with - the enemy,' but no battle' haa yet taken place." The. esars congratulatory ' message 'to Ooneral Ivahoff," oonteYrlhs uptfn'hlm' the" order of ; St. Aletfaijdjir tNevasky,-i ex presses' high ' gratification that1 Russia's southern . array lenow advancing 'west ward on Cracow, Evidently the s ' k - Austro-German forces t ' vr 4 t . 1 v p. . i'fti i..,.;,.-r,i di ' ' M . f . 4 ' i t-,. , rfs ft V i . v. j 1 v OMAHA, FRIDAY. . SEPTEMRKU 2. 1014. hope only to make a slow defensive cam paign during the rains, but the same con ditions are likewise delaying . the Ger mans' attempted ' aggressive ' operations from the southernmost, comer,. of. east Prussia, through Soulvalk . province. . .' A; request, has been "received' from , the Goroblagodatakl mining district In 'the Urals, r which 4 Is under) government ,oon- I trol'ior i. 10,000 prisoners to be' employed! In the mines. ' , ' ' ' " ' Stimpson is;Namecl f ' . i for -Argentine Post . 1 ' ---- - ' ' i WASHINGTON, . Bpt. J4. President .Wilson sent to the senate tod ay, the nom inations "of 'Frederick 'Jesup. Stimson' of -Ha wsrd 'university ' to be ambassador, to Argentina - and HenryJ Prather J Fletcher, 'now' minister 'to Chile, to ' b 'ambassador to that country. rfl ' li f i.H." ' J -4. fc U , l S ; -tit t- 1 t "5- t Sv A ' Ut , :.'. i Si ' " is 'X. i t 't s t it - jA. , i 1 t V ' . . - i . ' The Pabst Company I 'Telephone l307'Lverjw,ortb-t MISS PAULINE PAUL WEDS YOUNG BANKER AT STPAUL ST. PAVL, i Neb..' Sept.' M,-(Special.) Miss Pauline Paul, daughter ,ofN.'J. Paul of this city and Carlos E." ArterburnA son of Mr. and Mrs. E, K. 1 Art'erburn ofUn coln,' were married ( at ' the ' Presbyterian church at 'o'clock' last 'evening. Bishop Guorgo A. .Beecher perfdrrtied the'eere mony. x Miss Helen Bartehbachiof .Ora,nd island , sang. "I Love rTou'; and ''Oh, Promise Me,", and Miss , Halcyon Cotton of Omaha played the weildlng'mareh'.' MJsa Margaret Balladln of Vassar'was'm'aid'.of honor -and. Miss Alice PciUry,' of rCdar Rapids,, la., and Mlse LuceHe rferhum of Lincoln we're brldesm'aldsMafy.liOuise Arterbiirn of Lincoln was ring bearer'and Perollja ,VanDecar-of 'Ord, Neb., anrt: Helen Norton, Cosad, i Neb., '.were' flower girls. ' -' .-t.'---n ' . , . B.: D.-.TemP'le of Lincoln ( was best. man and i Ed Bartle and Ed .Kotlk,' bothofjSt.' Paul, were ushers. The churoh'.was'beau tifutly, decorated with banks" of ferns! and palnis,'. together 'with I cut flowers. J The ring' ceremony of fhe"; Eplcoial J church Immediately, after .thecerenjony a l-e- v .. , i t. , : tut ft ' '?ti Mt A i- t LVVTGOlElfv',,-,.; 41 ' - fcUJal ...'-;' ! f i I " 4 t m.m i 1 " Dougla 79 Omaht.;Nebr. wpwejejjMtfif, ception waa held at ' tha home of : the bride's father. The oou pie received many useful . and valuable presents, among which were a oheck'for $10,000 from tha bride's' father and a deed to ISO acres of land' from the parents' of the groom. The. bridal couple loft. on a honeymoon trip to' Tenver and other western points. They will' be at home In St Paul after November 1.' Mr.' Arterburn is assistant cashier of the St., Paul State bank. ',''.' Headache, Stops, Neuralgia Gone Nerve-racking, . spitting or ' dull, throb bing headaches yield in Just a few mom enta - to .' Dr. James" Headache Powders which' cost' only '10 cents 'a package at any drug store. It's the . quickest, surest headache relief In the whole world. ' Don't suffer! '.Relieve' the agony and ' distress nowl ' ' Ton ' can. . Millions ' of men and women have found that headache or neu ralgia inlsery . la ' needless, ef-what you ask for. Advertisement, t, ' UJ t?J3 ssouri Pacific Leave Omaha . . ; ... . . ... ... .8:00 A. M. . , . Arrive Kanaaa.City v.. ... . ; . ; . 3:35 P. M. - - Modern equipment " Sleeperj' CI: air Cars and our ownv un6urpae8ed dining cars. - (Meals A la Carte). Leave Omaha .". 2:00 P. M. , Arrive Kansas City .......... . 8:35 P.M. Observation Sleeper,' Chair Car," Dining Car. I Leave Omaha l...ll:15yP. M. , Arrive Kansas City .7:10 A, M. ' Electric Lighted,' Observation Sleeper, Chair Cais etc. 1, f i A pr J . r fell .;!-. j,,., i : . l ':4 "J I i " ' - --;. ' f i - I : ,. r - - - - -' - -t,2 ' " 'L ' '...- , " v.v;-'' . . , j . nt.i --,'.... :v .S .. : SO. OMAHA. NEB. i . . 1 Most Modern and BanJUry Urewerj Ln the Went. family trade supplied by: Houth Omaha VVM. J77TTER, 2fl0a N Street Telephone Houth 8a. Omaha lit OO F. B1LZ, ?34 Itouitla! Street' Phon Douglas 8040. OouncU Bluff OLD AlUS RAH, 161'i boulb hOiti Street FIumm. 8tt!8. - 13 ITCHED Al BURNED Arms Swelled. .Very Painful. Couldn't Do Any Work and Lost x Much Sleep. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Healed In a Week. 84 Cnapm Toledn, Ohio. "My reMe standi one day when I got poUoned by ly. . Mr en" swelled up and were very painful. They broke ant with a sort of a rash. ItrhMt aan burned and. I bad to keep my arms all tied up H beep from scratching them. I bad to keep something soft dn them so aa not to Irritate them. I couldn't do any work and I lost much sleep. "I bad treatments and they seemed to taake It worse, so I dropped them and used Ctttlcura Soap and Ointment. Every morn ing I washed my arms wtth CnMcura Soap aad tbea applied the Cutlcura Ointment. At the end of a week I was cured." (Signed) Mrs. O. Schroder. Apr. 7, 1014. ' UNSIGHTLY PIMPLES ON FACE R. r. D. No. 1. Boi It C, Harvey. Bl. "About two years ago pimples and black heads broke out on my face. They were red and inflamed and burned terribly so that I sometimes would scratch them. They were very unsightly. I lost much sleep. I used two cakes of Cutlcura Soap and a box of Cutlcura Ointment and the burning stopped. In two months I was welU" (Signed) George Madderom, May , 1914. Samples Free by Mall A single hot bet h with Cutlcura Soap and gentle anointing with Cutlcura Ointment are often sufficient to sfforti Immediate re lief la the most distressing cases of skin and calp diseases when aU else falls. Sold throughout the world. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 8J-p. Skin Book. . Ad dress pest-card "Cutlcura. Dept. T.Boston." eoOTw- WITH IVY POISON IlliSillifl Bee readers are too lnAelHceat to oer- look, tha opportunities ,ln 'the want ad" ; columns. . They're worth, while reading. mm THREE TRAINS DAILY via Direct connections in Kansas City Union Station (or all points South and West. Full information at Ticket Of floe, 1423 Farnam St. or Union Station THOS. F. GODFREY, Gen'l Agt. Pass. Dept. r