The Omaha Daily Bee The Best Schools and Colleges Advertised in The Bee THE WEATHEB Cloudy VOL. "XLV NO. 50. OMAHA, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 10, Om Trains, Sot! Raws auads. etc So SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. STANDARD OIL. DENOUNCED BY WALSH BOARD DATE ARRANGED FOR THE SACKING OF BROWNSVILLE RUSSIAN FORGES REELING BACK TO THEIR M LINE Teuton Armie DriYinf Grand Duke'i Legions Toward Brett Litovik Front in Rapid . Fashion. ' WITH THE ENEMY JUST OVER THE HILL Body of Italian troops, during the advance on Trieste, waiting on the crest of a hill for artillery to come up and protect their attack on t he enemy. Funston Announcci Evidence Estab lishci Disordcri in Texai Fostered by Carranza Official!'. MEXICAN FLAG TO BE RAISED ' CAN THIS HOLD INVADERS? I1 - 'I r ' .-. .... r i f r-w !i&Vfc . ;- - '-r,x.-:- ., v- i I ' ' -l -.V-'. " -. 'V:ir.; ... -C ' Report of Investigators for Indus trial Commission Flays Com . pany for Attitude in the Bayonne Strike. DECENT WAGES ARE NOT PAID Refusal to Deal With Union Repre sentatives Criticised in the Findings. SHERIFF IS GIVEN A SCORING CHICAGO. Aug.-15. The report of George P. West and C. T. Chen err, who Investigated the July, 1915. strike of the Standard Oil Co. em ployes at Bayonne, N. Y., for the United States Commission on Indus trial Relations, was made public to night by Frank P. Walsh, chairman of the commission. The report said in part, after stating that the strike was against the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey: "The company is the most Import ant of the Standard Oil group and this group is the principal contrib utor to the wealth, prestige and power of the largest estate in the country, if not in the world, that of John D. Rockefeller, Sr., and his immediate family. '"The facta regarding the company'a labor pnl Ides must therefore le regarded aa of special Importance, because of the tremendous power wielded by the group of men who control this Industry, and because of their announced Intention to titer the field of Industrial relations with a view1 cf widening their influence and activity by propagating what they doem to be the proper theories and principles that uhould govern the relations between employer and employe. . Flndlnars of Fact. "The following findings .if fact are to be considered In the light of the fore going; '"The Standard Oil company of New Jersey, although conducting an enor mously profitable enterprise, pays wages too low to maintain a family on a com fortable, healthful basis. "It Axes wages not with relations to the earnings of the company, but by taking Into considerations wages paid by other companies In the same locality and then .fixing the wage as low or lower than the prevailing wage in that local ; Ity. In Bayonne,' It paid common labor ers less than two companies whose plants , adjoin Its refineries. This la In direct contradiction to the claims of the com pany in a statement Issued at M Broad way., that It has always paid the pre vailing wage or better- The statement of the general manager of the company that the Interests of other companies in the same locality are considered in the fixing of wages constitutes. In effect, an ad mission that the company combines with the poorest and least generous employer to fix the wage rate. . Won't Deal With Union.. "The company maintains a settled pol icy of refusing to deal with any labor organisation or 'professional labor man' and even refuses to permit those em ployes who cannot speak English intelli gibly to engage an attorney as their spokesman and representative." Developing this last point further in the report, It was stated that Paul Supln sky, a Jersey City attorney, visited Gen eral Superintendent Hennessey, of the company aa spokesmso for a committee of six .employes who had hired him to negotiate .for him. It was further stated that Mr. Mennesney, "acting in conjunction with Mr. Glfford. general manager of the company, refused point blank to connlder the demanda and ex pressed Indignation that the men should have engsged a non-employe of the com pany to old them In presenting their grievances." "Tho men are made to understand," the report continued. "that they must seek no outside assistance in their deal ings with the management und that any how of independence or any hint of compulsion will be vigorously resented. !V Means of Rtdmi, - "The company has Instituted no ma chinery by, which real or fancied griev ances may be peacefully and promptly adjusted. The officials say that any man has access to the general superintendent, but the employes allege that they would be discharged before reaching the office. 'General Manager Glfford Is not a be . Ilever In child labor legislation and on tho other band, thinks the children should Ikj alloyed to go to work earlier. He and Mr. Hennessey apparently have lit- (Continued on Page Two, Column Three.) The Weather For Nebraska Partly cloudy. Temperatare at Omaha yesterday. Hours. Tern. a a. m un t a. m 7 7 a. m 69 S a. m at a. m TO 10 a. m 9 11 a. m it m 77 1 p. m 82 S p. m J 3 p. ni M f p. m M t P. m '. f n. m M 7 p. m 77 OonpsrsIlT Local Record. Official record of temperature and pre cipitation compared with the correspond ing period of the last i"-e vw 191S. 191 1 1911 131!. Highest yesterday M 94 13 If Lowest et-terCsy M 65 7 h6 Mean temperetire 77 W 90 71 Precipitation U .00 .00 .04 Temperature and precipitation depart uras from the normal at Omaha since Maroh 1, and compared with the last two yearn. Norma.! temperature 7J Karen for the day .. I leficincy since March 1. 1915 & Normal precipitation 11 Inch Kicesa for the dsy .. 07 Inch Pmripibttlon since Search 1 .... SO. u inches Kxcess since March 1 .ul inch Iwftrtem-y for ror. period, rll. 4 M inches Jjefidency for cor. period, W1J 4.43 Inches "aaaasassssssssassss I!Z2lumumm!uif UTAH PROFESSORS' ' DISKim SCORED One of Men Doing Probing, Roscoe Found of Harvard, a Former Nebraskan. PUNGENT CRITICISM IS MADe! SALT LAKE CITY, Utah. Aug. 15. The complete report of the com mittee of inquiry, appointed by. the American Association of University Professors to investigate conditions at the University Of Utah, made public here yesterday, concludes that of the four charges given by the presi dent of the university, as reasons for dismissing professors last spring, "three specify no proper grounds for such action and the ourth is with out basis In fact." The report is unanimous and is signed by R. A. Seligman of Columbia, obn Dewey of Columbia, Frank A. Fetter of Princeton, James P. Llchtenberger of Pennsylvania, Arthur O. Lovejoy of Johns lioptUns' university, .'Roaooe Poun. of-Karrard and Uowaxd, jCV Warren of Princeton. Not only does the report find that Profs. Knowlton Wise, Snow and Bins were dropped without cause, but it gives pungent criticism of the conduct of the university by Prof. J. T. Kingsbury and" the board of re gents. . Speaking of the grounds for dis missal, the report says, for Instance: "The government of the university, like that of many others 1l America, is a government of men and not of law." Most Be Resented. Commenting; on conditions at the uni versity the report says In part: "It our state universities are to con tinue to be Institutions in which self respecting scholars can serve or in which the true character of a university Is maintained, it la essential that all such attempts be vigorously resented, and that no ground be given even for the suspicion that teachers to these Institu tions are under pressure of the sort ex emplified in the first case cited by Prof. Roylance. "There may be room for legitimate de bate concerning the proper limits of free dom of teaching; there cart be no room for debate as to the impropriety of per mitting powerful individuals outside the university whether In or out of public offices to dictate to university presidents respecting the utterance "of university professors. And the resistance to such attempts must necessarily come first and chiefly from the presidents of the state universities. "To the committee it seems that Presi dent Kingsbury, while personally de sirous of maintaining a due measure of freedom In the University of Utah, has not sufficiently resisted pressure of the sort mentioned, but has rather at times, permitted himself to be used as an in strument through which such pressure waa transmitted to members of the fac ulty. . What Hits Hardest. "Nothing has done so much tu strengthen the widespread feeling of dis trust which has unquestionably been en gendered by recent events at the univer sity as the attitude still reld by the board of regents; a persistent refusal to permit the disclosure of all the facts in such cases, always gives color to the belief that there exist facta unsuited for disclosure. The committee gathers that the persistence of the board In Its pres ent position has aroused on the part of a large section of the local public, Includ ing many of the alumni and a majority of the students, a degree of suspicion, and even hostility, which must be a con- ; tlnulng detriment to the university's effU Ulency as an Instrument of public eduosy l tlon, and must affect disadvantageous! tho position and the work of teachers In the Institution." Roscoe Pound of Harvard, named la the foregoing as one of the investigators, is a graduate of the college of law of the University of Nebraska and a former member of the Nebraska supreme court commission. BANANA. TREES GO DOWN IN FIERCE JAMAICA STORM KINGSTON, Jemarla. Aug. IS.-A II along the central districts of the north coast fruit plantations were almost com pletely wrecked by the disastrous storm which swept Jamaica yesterday. U. S. Soldiers Run Mexicans Home NOOALES. Aria., Aug. 15.-Pcores of American soldiers were participants In a riot on the streets of Nogales tonight aa the result. It is ssld, of a rumor that Mexicans had threatened to take their guns away. Ten Mexicans were at tacked before the officers got control of the men. One American is reported to have been slain In Nogales, Mexico, Just across the border from here, by infuri ated Mexicans. , The soldiers that engaged In the riot ing were members of the Twelfth In fantry and the Sixth field artillery. They were Joined by a number of civilians. who shouted "Run all the Mexican across the line." ' i The riot was the culmination of high feeling between Americans and Mexicans. Soldiers, it is said, had been pushed off the sidewalks by Mexicans and subjected to other petty insults.. TEAMSTERS' STRIKE IS OFF AND0H AGAIN Jnion,. Men ,.,"Peny:.i Settlement -" Reached After 0wucrAfttt--l-,i Vr Say. it Ii. ; POLICE AND RIOTERS HOHT ST. LOUIS, Aug. 15. -A lew min utes after George J. Taosey, 'active bead of the team 'Owners, had an nounced that the strike of teamsters and chauffeurs had been settled, fol lowing a conference between com mittee of owners and the. men, of ficers of the teamsters' union dented that they agreed to the . settlement and said the strike was still In prog ress. ' . : Mr. Tansey would not divulge the ex act terms of the alleged settlement, but he virtually admitted that' the men's de mands for Increased wages had been granted In part. The teamsters also have made concessions, he aald. Hold Long C onference. , The teamsters were In conference with the team owners until midnight- after which Mr. Tansey burned a typewritten statement which said the chief condi tions of the settlement Was the prosent scale of wagea remain in force for one year and that the teimsters appear- at work at 6:30 a. m.. Instead of 6 o'clock. D. J. Murphy, president of the team sters' union, said: "Wa neither agreed nor repudiated the owners' proposal. We will submit their proposition ; to the union-at-large tomorrow." The police were forced to draw re volvers . to prevent a , mob of striking teamsters rescuing two men who had been arrested for inciting riots. . A series of riots occurred about the tables of the St. Louis Transfer com pany when nearly 1,000 strikers and sym pathisers attempted to attack a dosen non-union drivers of mail wagons who had quit work for the day. The police succeeded in protecting the non-union drivers, but a newspaper men who had accompanied city detectives to the scene was mistaken for a- strike bresker or transfer compsny guard and was badly beaten. He was rescued from the mob only after the detectives had drawn their revolvers and threatened to f're Into the crowd. . ' Aa-alu Driven Bark. Later when the detectives arrested two of . the 'mob leaders the strikers ,agln charged on the police, ' but were again driven off by the show of revolvers. Metcalfe Boosting ; Carranza's Game . (From a Staff Correspondent) WASHINGTON. Aug. 14.-(8pecial Tel egram.) R. lm Metcalfe, former commls sloner of the canal sone, Is In Washing ton, having recently returned from a visit to Mexico. "'Governor" Metcalfe Is convinced that the United States should allow Carranxa to work out his owq government. In view of the fact that of the twenty-eeven states In Mexico, Carransa controls twenty-five. Mr. Metcalfe stated that his visit, to Carransa was Incidental to looking ever the situation, and that while he suffered somewhat for food and water during his Journey through the sone of fighting, he was Impressed with the bigness f Ctr ranza to bring order out of the chaos now prevailing In Mexico. Mr. Metcalfe expects tu return to Oma ha in a few days. ALLIES HOST SAK THEFIRST WORDS Kaiier and Royal Aide" Tell Pope They Are Heady to Accept Negotiations. BUT WON'T MAKE OVERTURES PARIS, Aug. IB. A dispatch to Fournler's News agency from Rome says that the German emperor, In answer to the peace letter of Tope Benedict XV, declared , his willing ness to accept peace negotiations pro vided the nations with which Ger many was at war made the first over tures. Austria made a similar reply to the pope's letter, the dispatch adds. The Pope's Apnea). Pope Benedict's appeal for peace, addressed to the belligerent nations, was Issued July 28, the anniversary of the opening of the European war. It asked why a direct or Indirect ex change of views could not be initi ated In which' "the right and Just aspirations" ol: the variousr-poples Could tie considered as far aa possible and "thus put to an end the terrible combat, aa has been the case prevl ously under similar circumstances.' Blessing: on first One. The letter Invited the "true friends of peace in the world to extend their hands to hasten the end of a war which tor a year hag transformed Europe Info an enormous battlefield" and declared , that he, should be blessed-"who first extends the olive branch and tenders his hand to' the enemy in offering htm reasonable conditions of peace." Senator, Is Given Judgment Against . Anti-Saloon Lejtgue SIOUX FALLS, 8. D.. Aug. 18. (Spe cial.) W. B. Van Demark, state senator from Hanson county, as the result of an action commenced by him some . weeks ago, was yesterday granted a Judgment against R. N. Holsaple, superintendent of the South Dakota Anti-Baloon -league, for alleged - def amatory statementa made by the defendant against the plaintiff In a printed communication to an eastern tem perance publication. . , . State Senator Van Demark Instituted the action for the recovery of damages In the sum of a?9a placing the sum at the lowest possible amount, as he sought vin dication of his character rather than money damages. 'The hearing In the case was held before Judge Carpenter of Alex andria. .There waa no defense. At the conclusion of the hearing Judge Cn neu ter awarded the state senator a judgment for $99, together with the cosa, which amounted to til.',' When the damage suit 'was Instituted some weeks ago a sensation was created throughout the state because of the prominence of the plaintiff and' defend ant and because of the nature of the action. State ' Senator Van Demark charging that the defendant had libeled him.- In the communication published by Mr. HoUaple he attacked the plaintiff's offi cial record cs a member of the upper house at the last ucssioti of the Uglsla turn. The defendant was given a period of thirty days In which to appeal tbe rase to the state circuit court, if he wUhes to do so. ' POPE SENDS SYMPATHY TO. EAST PRUSSIANS AMSTERDAM (Via London), Aug. 14 What purports to be a letter of sympathy sent to the . people of Esst Prussia by Pope Benedict, through the Bishop . of Frauenburg, Is printed by the Bayerlsche Hurler, says a telegram from Munich. The letter, which wss sent through t hi ps pa I nuncio at Munich, is given aa foi fows: . "The holy father deplores with sin- rarest sympathy the sad position of the population of the Baltic provinces, who, in fact, for their loyal Christian views deserved a better fate. At the same time the holy father welcomes most heartily the wonderful readiness of all Germany to make sacrifices tn order to assist the stricken provinces. As a sign of his fatherly and loving rare he sends this gift of 10 000 marks (12,500) for the relief of sufferers." Rob the Safe and the Jewelry Store, Then Get Away SHELBT, Neb., Aug. 15.-(8peclal Tele gram.! Sometime between U o'clock Sat urday night and this morning, burglara entered the drug store of Thelen Broth ers, worked the combination of the aafe and took out 1100 in currency. Then they Uok from the showcases of R. A. Zim merman, who occupies a part of the store with a stock of Jewelry, t:00 worth of watches, rlns, chains and general Jew elry. The burglars entered the front door of the store, unlocking it and when they de parted, they closed It behind them. There s nothing to Indicate who did the Job. No suxpicloua characters have been seen about town In several daya. y LIBERTY GODDESS REPOSESJN ALLEY Proud Statue Which So Long Adorned City Hall Hat Been ;'. Condemned ai Unsafe. SWmrfSTlMr rn n STCtrn ' ' 'TIs the Irony of fate! , The Goddess of Liberty which has placed on top of the city hall tower June 10, 1891, Saturday afternoon was removed by workmen, who had been engaged to take down the figure. . In a recumbent position, tn an al ley east of the city hall, this once proud statue was placed by rough hands, an object for the scrap heap. For twenty-four years, two months and four days It occupied Us lofty po sition upon the municipal building, an emblem of liberty, reminding the passerby of patriotic sentiments, of this land of the free, of the rilgrlrn Fathers, Plymouth Rock, the spirit of '76 and of other thoughts. Is Fennel tasafe, A few weeks aga Mayor Pahlman, Building Inspector Bridges and other of ficials went Into the tower of tbe city hall and Inspected the statue, finding that it was unsafe: that it might fall down upon the heacf of some pedestrian and deprive him of life, liberty and pursuij of happiness Bo the Goddess of Liberty was condemned.' Yesterday Woods and Howard did the work. They fastened a long rope around the body of the metal symbol and lowered "her" to the ground. The handlcss right arm of the statue was still extened as It holding the torch of liberty to enlighten the world. But there was no right hand nor torch. The left arm was gone and the crown was badly disfigured. An expression of pain appears on the face, aa if the elements have not dealt gently with this fair fashioning of the metal worker. . The statue Is twelve feet , In height and weighs nearly 300 pounds. It Is made of heavy sine. , Most of the city hall tower will be removed for reasons of safety. The roof is to be repaired and the smoke stack raised. First Arrest Made in Sunday Tabernacle When rolUeman Boacoe pmlth, patrol in hi-" Ieat near Fourteenth and Cap itol awiiuc- last night heard raucous snores emanating from the Billy Sunday tabernacle ho invesl (gated and found Joe fierce, Crescent City, la., farmhand, asleep. For 'a nlllow Mr. Pierce had a full qur bottle of rare old whisky, and strewn about him In profusion numnrou smsll flasks that tad contained tlx fiendish Influence Mr., Sunday tonus here to combat. Officers the Chief Need of U. S. Army PLATTSBUBGH, N. T.. Aug. IS. The United States has plenty af material lor a volunteer army of 1.269.000 men and all that is now needed are plans for utlllting It. Major General Leonard Wtfod declared hare today In a statement as to the pre paredness of the nation for war. The chief need, he .said, was officers and he advocated training students In their junior and senior years along the same lines as now are being used at the mili tary camp of Instruction here. General Boaited Colon Would Be Given to Br:ece from U. S. ' ' Foitoffice. AFFIDAVITS ARE SUBMITTED SAN ANTONIO. Tex.. Aug. 15. After a conferenro held last night by General Frcdor'ck Funston. com manding the southern department, ; with a committee headed by Con- ; grcunman John Garner, General Fun jston announced that he believed the committee had thoroughly estab lished Its coontentlon that the dis order In the Rio Grande valley had been fostered by constitutional Mexi can authorities. Affidavits were sub mitted to the War department to the effect that a date had actually been set by the Mexicans for the sacking of Brownsville. General Funston candidly admitted that up to the time of the conference held with the committee today, he did not believe the outlawry in the valley was receiving Its backing from the Mexican aide of the Rio Grande. Warrants Priimit Action. But upon presentation of a maaa of evidence he said he waa convinced the committee poaaessed Information which warranted prompt action. Submitting further alleged proof of a report that Q neral Nafarrate, . the Car ratjsa commander at Matampros, had hoasted that when the time came he "would plant the Mexican flag on top of the Rrownivllle poatofflce,", affidavits were shown General Funston. While given authority to order such additional troops as he deemed neces sary, General Funston decided to com municate with Washington' and orders were Issued at once to dispatch artillery to the Rio Grande valley In addition to Infantry and aeroplane service. The new troops In tho field will be the Nth regiment of Infantry from Texas City, Colonel ft. L. Bullard, command ing: batteries B and B of the Fifth field "iery irom ran niu, nno oni ura- Tri"" alae from Fort RIU. Battery B, hnth I ha ..-I llli.. , both the artillery detachh.enls, are equipped with heavy field plecer. I'etachnx tito are equipped With heavy guns, battery B having 17-Inch howlt ser and nattery regular field pieocs of the same calibre." ' . . .Will Retnrn to Qaarters. Immediately upon, tho arrival of the Twenty-sixth at Broansvllle the two bat talions of the Ninth Infantry recently sent there from I .a redo, will return to their heailtiuurtar. One of these bat tallona Is In, the city of Brownsville and the other is In scattered detachments tn the ccuntlds of Kleburg, WHIacy, Hi dalgo and Cameron. The net result of the changes will mean the restoration of a full regi ment of Infantry at Laredo, the Increase cf the forces now nt Brownsvllls by four rntnlwnlM nf Infantry Iwn nitl.ri.i nt artillery ami one aeroplane detschment. Late reports from Brownsville ssy that the Carransa forces along the border at Alatamoros have two batteries (eight pieces) .f artillery on the French ?7 mllimetre model, which corresponds oughly to the . American 3-Inch pieces. There are about 8CC Mexican J nl filers In the garrison lietween Caniargo and Mat a mores, a rttat'incs of 100 miles. Jt Is said that should Obregon decide to ' co operate with Nafarrate .the artillery strength could be trebled within twenty four hours and the number of men In creased to 4,000 or 6,009.. ,. - State Normal Board Continues Its Queer Action'on Accounts (From a Staff Correspondent ) LINCOLN. Vup IS 8neel'il. Peculiar methods of the Rate Normal board have been shown at various times and the latest comes up' through a bill allowed at the last session which was recommended I for payment by the committee consisting i of Treasurer Hall, J. H. 'lettys ami Dan , Morris. j The bill was for water 'urrilshed the I state normal at Peru oy the vlllavce of Peru. The contract had be?n mado Willi j the village to supply the wtter at n-nls j per l.OoO gallona The bill t ailed for M cents per 1.000 gallons. similar bill had been allowed by the boarj at a former ' meeting for the latter rnte alter the Pjru ' member of the board had mado a slate scent that the village coJld not ariord to furnish water at that rate. Out thla time the committee cut the bill to contract rate of S cents r 1,000 gallona ; and It waa allowed. ) The pecullur part of the matter la that : ,h" bill was recommended and passed were 1 through the hands of a committee, of nce I which J. B, Oettys was a member, not th&t j wlthntandlng the board at tho meeting I had decided that Getty was not a mem ber of the board and had fired him over the transom and seated anoth-jr num. it will also be noted that Morrla waa a mt-mger of that committee, who, as pres ident of the board, later ruAd tltt Gcltys was itot a member of the board. ' The question naturally arisca la a board not a board." "w hon Poison is Fatal to Mrs. Charles Strieby ST. LOCI8, Mo.. Aug. li.-(8pecl. Telegram.) Mrs. Charles Strieby, whs took poison here yesterday, after a dis agreement with her husband, a repre sentative et the Maxwell Motor Car company, died tonight. PetrogTad Hopeful Rush Will Stop at Fortress, but London Critics Show Anxiety. FORTY MILES TO STRONGHOLD The Day's War News TIIK BtaaiAJf ARMIES are feeing; rnnldly driven bark tn their on 4 linn nf defense, centering sa Brest-llteTsk. Ttsn Oermana r nnw nnly forty snllea frana that fortress. Van Maekensen's fnreea have reach4 the Radsyn-VladeT. line. TIIK Rl'BMANa rlnlna they re eontlnnlnsjr to hold the Germane hark from Rica anal Ko?M. Thn American ronsal han taken British Interests at Rlara. TKt TON ARMIES are feelnar anneee a the Balkan frontier tn tare nnasaa of ahella said to fee needed by Terkey, LONDON, Aug. 15. The rush of the Teutonic advance eastward In Poland is rapidly hurrying tbe Rus sians to their second line of defense, centering upon tbe fortress of Brest Lltovsk. Auetro-German concentra tion of effort seems to be tn the di rection of this stronghold, from which their forces are at points now barely forty miles distant. Opinion In allied capitals seems divided as to whether the Grand Duke Nicholas will be able to hold this new line. Petrograd military observers express confidence that the Teutons will be checked at the elected points while London Is won dering whether a further retirement of the Russians will not be neces sitated. The latest official reports seem to show the Russian lines rapidly yielding In the center and to the south, where Field Mar shal' von Mackensen'a forces have pene trated to the Radsyn-Vladov line, while in the north the Russian appear to be making a rnor determined stand. ' '. ', In the west, the chief activity Is in the Argonne, where the French report the repulse of new German attacks. Berlin claims om ground has been gained. Reports from the Dardanelles carry the story of the operations little further, if any, than that "told In' recent British of ficial statements which reported a new landing, of troops and advances inland. Turkish .reports deny any further gams by. the entente allies. On the Austro-Itallan front the fighting of late aeems to have - been confined chiefly to artillery actions with little change of ground through . Infantry at tacks. .... Vienna Official Rennrt. VIENNA (Via London). Aug. If The following statement waa Issued today: "Russian theater: In the district of the Bug. advancing allied troops again drove beforo - them the rear guards of the re treating enemy. Austro-llungarian force advancing on both sides of the railway from Lukow to Brest-IJtovsk reached the sector west of Mledsyrxec. "Oermsn troops conquered the district of Wlssotiloe and advanced across the Rolodawa." , . , ' Takes Over British. Interests. .WASHINGTON. Aug. 14.-The Amerl rsn consul at Riga has taken over the British Interests there. Ambsssador Marys so reported todsy from Petrograd, but gave no explanation. THE WANT-AD. WAY When you've tried to sell And you've tried to rent And you ato? and think. Of I he money spent. Then is the time If you'll llfttcn to mo To try a WANT Al) In The Omaha liee. If the man here shown Had this method tried He'd have rented his house) 'Aud been satin fled. The most economical wsy to rent vaA, rant Apartments. K in or Houses Is to I lee a "FOR RENT AD" In the classi fied columns of "THrt EIRE." Oiys eJ good description of your propsrty, to! gother with t'i location and the rtnu per month. Telephone TyUr 10e aJkJj ' 4 zrrir iH PIT JT IN TUB OMAHA