1, ha Daily THE WEATHER Unsettled VOL. XLVII. NO. 48. OMAHA, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1917. OR Trtlni, it Hottlfc Niwi SUadt. Eta., H SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. HENDERSON ;IS' FORCED . OUT RITISH CABINET; U. S. ORDERS Oma .Bee II II II II 1 OF THE B FORT OMAHA BALLOON SCHOOL ENLARGED o - - GEN! GEORGE A. SQUIER HERE ON INSPECTION TOUR SAYS 1,400 MORE MENTO BE HOUSED More Than Three-quarters of Million Dollars Being Ex pended for Improvements to Leading Baljoon ' School in'United States; Work Being . Rushed On New Quarters. Fort Omaha is to be enlarged and made the leading signal corps and balloon schools of the United States. The government has authorized the immediate expend! ture of $800,000 for the construction of buildings to house the young men who will be sent here for balloon work in connection General George A. Squier, chief of-0 ficer of the signal corps of the army passed Sunday in the city, and left for Washington Sunday night. While here he inspected the present quarters at the fort and went over the work being done by the Wickham Brothers who have the contract for the erection of the cantonment build ings, the construction of sewers and the general work required. The desire of General Squier is to have the cantonment buildings ready for occupancy at the earliest possible date in order that the young men en listing in the balloon end of the avia tion corps of the army may take up their studies. DELIGHTED SAYS SQUIER 'Delighted! I'm more than pleased!" exclaimed Gcnerol Squier, as he was halted in the midst of an inspection tour at iort Umaha. With General Squier were Major H. B. llersey, commander of Fort Oma ha; Colonel F. A. Grant, quartermas ter of the Omaha supply depot, and Major Rainesford Hannay, member of the British royal fighting corps, who has been instructing students at the fort for several weeks. The party had just come from "the new barracks, now being rushed to completion by Wickham Bros, of Council Bluffs. When they are fin ished there will be room for 1,400 L more student troops at fort umana and these will be sent in immediately. Later at the Fontenelle hotel, Gen eral Squier continued his praise of the progress at Fort Omaha. - . No Aeroplanes at Fort. "We will send in more men just as soon as the new-barracks are fin ished," he said. "The school is in fine shape. But it will be kept a balloon school pure and simple,' he said. . "We will not add the aeroplane work to it." . " General Squier and other authori ties think they can work more cffec - tively if only balloon work is done here. This is important work and the students need careful detailed training. Fort Omaha is the only balloon school in the country and will remain so'. All balloon students in the United States must come here for their training. Inspects Supply Depot. General Squier also spent a part of His busy day ift Omaha at the quar termaster's depot at Twenty-second and Hickory. There is a branch sta tion of the signal corps there, which also has had a tremendous growth lately. ' Formerly it was looked after by the quartermaster, but now has its own chief, Lieutenant Kerfoote, who has just come from Seattle to take charge of it. General Squier left last night for Chicago. He has a few more posts to inspect before he leturns to Washing ton. , Tornado Kills One; Injures Twenty; Wrecks Property Two Buttes, Colo.. Aug. 11 Frank Pructt, a printer, was killed and t.wentv persons were .hurt, one proba bly fatallv, last night when a tornado struck Two Buttes. Two store build ings and three residences were wrecked and many small buildings were demolished. The storm traveled from southwest to northeast, striking this city at 6 o'clock. Telegraph com munication was cut off until today. Interstate Commission Will Not Hear Rate Boosts Washington, Aug. 11 In accord ance with the new law increasing the 44 membership of the Interstate Com irpifcinerce commission from seven to nine, the commission today notihed all rail roads that applications for increasing rates or fares without prior, approval of the commission must be discon tinued until January 1. 1920. The Weather TemiwinliirM. at Omaha Yesterday. TJ ' Hour. Deg M 5 a. m.' 63 ,-" ft a. ).... G3 O a. m 64 f Da. m 66 a. m 68 til o in B WAS- T T . MH y x 12 m., 71 ras5 rn, in .... 71 L z p. m. ........... 71 f 3 p. m 71 u 4 p. m 7! w ............... 1 p. in 76 Comparative Loral Reeord; 1917. 1916. 1915. 1914. Highest yesterday.... 75 S2 S3 3 I,oweet yesterday 63 63 61 64 Mean temperature.... 69 72 72 ' 1 "rectpltatlon 31 .00 .00 .25 Temperature and precipitation departure rom the normal: Vormal temperature 74 deficiency for the duy 7 'Total deficiency since March 1 187 Normal precipitation .13 Inchea Kxceaa for the day 19 lnchea Total rainfall etnee March 1 ... .18.49 Inches Deficiency since March 1 1.14 Inches Deficiency for cor. period, 1916.. 8.76 lnchea Bxcesa lor cor. period, 1915 17 Inch fc4 to study aviation and qualify with army service. GERMAN PLANES AGAIN RAID THE BRITISH COAST Score of Hostile Flyers Swoop Down on South End Neigh borhood; No Casualties or Damavj Reported. (By Associated Press.) London, Aug. 12 About twenty German airplanes raided the southeast cost of England this evening. An of ficial statement says that some bombs were dropped in the neighborhood of South End, forty miles east of Lon don, and on the seashore resort of Fargate, eighty miles southeast of the capital. No reports of damage or casualties have yet been received. British aviators pursued the raiders out to sea. i The text of the official statement says: ' . " "Abput ?:15 o'clock this afternoon a squadron of about twenty enemy airplanes weres reported off Felixstowe (in Suffolk. They skirted the coast to Clacton (Esse) where they ap parently divided, a part going south to Margate s(in! Kent). The remainder crossed the coast and went southwest towards, Vickford, lear which place they turned southeast and dropped bombs in the neighborhood of South End (in Essex). Some bombs also were dropped on Margate. "No reports of damage or casualties have yet been received. Our own air craft were very quickly in the air and they pursued the enemy out to sea." Land Under Italian Control Wants Men in Greek Chamber Washington, Aug. 12. Dispatches from Athens to the Greek legation say the deputies of upper Epirus have sent to the chamber of deputies a memorandum affirming the Hellenic character of their country and its at-: tachment to the mother country and asking to be admitted to sit in the chamber. In his response Premier Venizelos said he sympathized with the feeling of the inhabitants but that as Greece was at this time deprived cf an in ternational title to upper Epirus, now occupied by Italy, the government could not admit the deputie without creating international difficulties. Governors of Six States Meet to Talk on Home Guards Portland-. Ore., Aug. 12. The gov ernors of six western states met here today with Colonel Charles E.-Dent-ler, U. S. A., who commands all troops in Oregon, Washington, Ida ho, Montana, Wyoming and Utah and discussed measures for meeting sit uations which might arise from In dustrial Workers of the World, to pro pose steps by which the states might get guards of home constabularies to replace the organized militia which are now in the federal service and to talk over steps to be taken in the event of trouble over the war draft. Submarine Collides With Excursion Steamer in Fog Boston, Aug. 12. A LTnited States submarine collided with the Nantasket Beach excursion steamer Mayflower in Boston harbor during a thick fog late today. The navy yard officials said the material damage to the sub marine was slight, but that the May flower had a hole stove in its port side near the paddle box. One sea man on the steamer suffered a broken leg. Fifteen hundred passengers on board were transferred without ac cident to the steamer Rose Standish and brought up to this city. When the Soldiers Go What they will most want is news from home. Subscribe for The Bee for your boy and it will be mailed to him daily. It will keep him constantly posted and save lots of letter-writing. ' A subscription to The Bee for the Boy is the Best Present for the money you can give him. Special Price to January 1, 1918 (Including Sunday). $1.50 - Send the order now and we'll start the paper as soon as the troops leave for destination. German of His Tragedy of AMERICAN SHIP SUNK BY U-BOAT; CAPTAIN TAKEN Navy Announces That Big Standard Oil Tanker Is De stroyed and Five Men Captured. Hy Associated Tress.) Washington, Aug. 12. Sinking of the American steamer Campana, a Standard Oil tanker, with the prob able capture of its captain and four members of .the naval guard by the attacking Qerman submarine, was an nounced today by, the Navy depart ment. The department issued this state ment: "The Standard Oil tanket Campana, .-unci itau steamer, 1 was sunt Dy a submarine on the morning of August 6, 143 miles west ot He de Re. Fortv- seven survivors reached land in safe ty. It is believed that the captain of the steamer and four of the armed guards are prisoners on board the German submarine." English Built Ship. New York, Aug. 12. The Campana was formerly the steamship Dun holme. She was built in 1901 at West Hartlepool, England, and was regis tered at s,6li tons gross, 2,133 tons net. She was 335 feet long with a beam of 47 feet. Gunners of British Freighter Sink U-Boat , Off Coast of France An Atlantic Port, Aug. 12. Anoth er German submarine has, been sunk by the guns of a merchantman, if the gunners of a British freighter which arrived here today are correct in their assumption that three shots which struck an undersea boat off Brest, France, sent her to the bottom. The Britisher encountered the submarine on her last outward trip from this port. One shot destroyed the periscope. The second and third were, followed by an explosion -and the submarine disappeared. The gunners were con fident that the submarine went down involuntarily. . Soldiers Not Prosecuted For Wrecking I. W. W. Place Oakland, Cat, Aug. 12. There will be no prosecution of the 200 or more soldiers and sailois who wrecked the Industrial Workers of the World headquarters last night, unless the military authorities at the Presidio of San Trancisco take some action, ac cording to a statement today by Act- ting Chief of Po:ice Frank Lynch. Lynch said that the police ha,ye no official knowledge of the affair, as no complaints have been made. He declared that the Industrial Workers of the World leaders said they would not make any complaint. The raid, according to information in the possession of the police, was inaugurated by men from the Presidio to avenge the recent rough handling of a soldier by a person alleged to be a member of the Industrial Workers of the World. Socialist Paper Loses Second-Class Mail Right Chicago, Aug. 12. The American Socialist, official weekly publication of the national socialist party, today re ceived word from Washington that its second class mailing privilege had been revoked by theuPostoffice de partment. This order is said to have grown out of the fact that the last three is sues of the publication in June were held unmailable under the espionage law. Supposed Omaha Man . Suicide in Milwaukee Milwaukee, Wis., Aug- 12. (Special Telegram.) Frank O. Pnmslow, whose home is believed to have been in Omaha, was found dead in a hotel here today. He is believed to have committed suicide. - Pardon for Swedish Woman Secured by King Alfonso . Paris, Aug. 12. The Spanish min ister to Belgium, says a Havas dis patch from Madrid, telegraphs that, thanks to the intervention of King Alfonso, a Swedish woman who was condemned to death" by the Germans, has been pardoned. mmander weetheart Awful Undersea' Warfare Forgiving Father Relates How Friend of Family Was Agent , of Death for Daughter ., and Son. An Atlantic. Port, Aug. 12. Lars Larsen, an elderly man, but still vig orous and erect, who arrived here aboard a small cargo steamship, told a story of U-boat romance which, for dramatic interest, is perhaps unparal leled by anything ever narrated con cerning, the submarine warfare of at rocity. Larsen was an officer aboard the Swedish , steamship Ada, which was sunk June 12 while she was on her way from Gothenburg, Sweden, to Hull, England. This is his story: "Before the war began a handsome young German became acquainted with my son Swen, and, before long, was a frequent caller at our home in Stockholm. He fell in love with my daughter, Minna, who was 16 years old and considered beautiful. "The German, Hans von Tuebinger, was an art student, and had come to Sweden to study some phase of his calling which Jie said he could not find in any other country. I never understood exactly what that phase was; but, at any rate, it was the means of .bringing, unhappiness to me and mine. ' "Minna soon grew to return the love of the good looking youngster, and when the war broke out and he received notice to present himself at once to the jiaval unit to which he belonged in Germany, the poor girl was ready to die of grief. Evidently it cost Hans a terrible struggle, too; but he said he did not believe the war could last a week and that he would return at the latest in two weeks. And it was arranged that when he did return he and Minna were to be married. . "Two months elapsed before we got a letter from Hans. It told us of having been detailed to submarine work and of the unhappy time he was having counting the hours when the war was to end and he could come to claim hia bride. After that we never heard from him again., . V "For a while Minna bore up brave ly ibut she began1 to- fade perceptibly. My wife died three months after Hans had gone and, as my son Swen was a'. eady a sturdy help, to me aboard my schooner, the J3aldar, I decided to take Minna along on our voyages too. "Toward the end of April, as we were nearing the coast of England, on a return voyage from the west coast of Africa, shell struck the Baldar amidships. A splinter of the smashed woodwork struck Minna and killed her. The rest of us had barely time to get into, a pmatl boat and get away before the schooner sank, car rying down the body of my daughter. "It was only then that we noticed the U-boat from which the shell had been fired. .It came close to us and, judge of my horror and that of Swen when wf discovered that 'the captain o" the murderous craft was the man who was to have become the husband of Minna. "He appeared to be greatly affected when he saw my boy and me; and his first question was, 'How is my Minna; and does she still think of me?' ' "I pointed to the place where the Baldar had sunk, 'What,' almost shrieked Hans von Tuebinger, 'Minna is dead?' "His grief was terrible. We told him what had happened. He soon braced up, however, and, after saying, 'War is hell,' he ordered his men to stock our boat with provisions and bade us goodby. A moment later his boat was speeding toward an other sailing vessel which had just hove into sight. After many vicissi tudes we reached England "Last June my son and I were of ficers aboard the Swedish steamship Ada, under Captain Ternston. Again we were nearing the British coast when a submarine fired a shell. There was no delay in getting into life boats this time either; but somehow the gun fire did not seem to do the destructive work quickly enough to suit the submarine captain, and so a (Continued on Pats Two, Column Two.) Secretary Baker Tries to Settle Lumber Disputes Seattle, Wash., Aug. 12. Secretary of War Baker, acting for the National Council of Defense, urged in tele grams yesterday acceptance of the eight-hour day as a absis for an agreement between Pacific coast lum bermen and their striking employes. An appeal to the patriotism of the lumbermen was made by Secretary Baker. He said that every foot of lumber that can be produced now is necessary for the prosecution of the war and he strongly urged both em ployers and employes to settle their difficulties. the Slayer in Romantic OMAHA MEN DRAW COMMISSIONS AT FORTOTDAN Adjutant General Announces Names of. Thirty-One Iowa and Nebraska Men Ac cepted for Service. (11 j- .Morlated l'rodi.) Washington, Aug. 12. Commis sions awarded to the students in the Eleventh, provisional training regi ment at Fort Sheridan, announced today by the adjutant general, in clude: Maurice C. Johnson, Omaha, cap tain; William B. Weston, Ames, la., first lieutenant; Gien M. Crosby,, D , battery, Iowa field artillery, second lieutenant: John B. Simmons, Ottum wa. la.: Webb B. White, Humboldt, second lieutenants; Harry F. Stream, Creston, second lieutenant; John B. Penniston, Coon Rapids, second lieu tenant; .Lyman II. Thompson, Des Moines, second lieutenant; Loyal M, Hayncs, Lcmars, second lieutenant. Commissions awarded to students at the coast artillery training camp at Fort Monroe, Ya., include the fol lowing: Captain coast artillery, officers' re serve corps, Alva 1?. 'Davis, Bethany, Neb.; Wayne O. tiilmore, Waterloo, Iowa. i First lieutenants coast artillery, officers' reserve corps, Erwin P. Sny der, Council Bluffs, la.; Walter Hall, Elk Creek, Neb.; Albert F. Hull, Marshalltown, la.; Ernest V. Evans, Williamsburg, la. Second lieutenant coast artillery of ficers reserve corps: Ernest Boyce, Ames, Iowa; Isaac W. Carpenter, jr., Omaha, Neb.; Kleamo O. Longley, Dows, la.; George E. Kline, Lincoln, Neb.; Ralph O. Lahr, Lincoln, Neb.; John' J. Hahighen, Omaha,' Neb.; Ira D. Beynon, Lincoln,, Neb. r Second lieutenant quartermaster de partment officers reserve corps: Will- T". Til ..... f !i tl 1 jT . T . iam u. i lamer, council niuiis, ia.; Lawrence A. Palmer, Lincoln, Neb.. Provisional second lieutenant coast artillery corps: Harold M. Jobes, Atlantic, la.; William W. Wcrtz, Trenton, Neb.; Guy W. Thomas. Win field, la.; Frank If. Haupert, Perry, la.; Hiram If. Maynard, Waterloo, la. Commissions awarded at the Platts burg' camp: William J. Gallagher, Ottumwa, Ja.; second lieutenant; Chester C. Woodburn, Boone, la.; second lieutenant ' Britain Thinks Stockholm Conference German, Scheme Copenhagen, Aug. 12. Peter Wright, director of the' British sea men's and firemen's, nniott, who has leen devoting sometime in Scandin avian countries to the Study of condi tions underlying the Stockholm con ference told the Associated Press that he was firmly convinced the confer ence is wholly a Geramrt scheme. He added that all the arrangements and the sympathy with the idea are the result of wire-pulling by Germans or pro-Germans in neutral countries. He approved the stand taken by Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor,' and spoke bitterly of the conference ad vocates in his own country, saying that they merely were fielping the Germans jout of difficulties and that peace now would resuk in a renewal of the war within a few years. Former President Taft's Condition Is Favorable Clay Center, Kan., Aug. 12. Will iam Howard Ta's condition tonight was reported as "very favorable" by Dr. B. F. Morgan, attendant upon the former president. The ex-president was taken ill here Tuesday with acute intestinal indigestion. Here's Omaha Boy Who Is Serving With Sammies' Somewhere in France GEORGE WURMBACH. LABOR HEAD QUITS WAR R0ARD AFTER ROW WITH PREMIER Lloyd George Accepts Resignation Following Decision of Labor Party to Send Delegates to Stockholm Con ference; Premier's Letter Puts Henderson on Defensive; Public Is Mystified. " ' (By Awuiriiitrd l'rein.) London, Aug. 12. -The course of Arthur Henderson in advising Saturday's conference of the labor party to send a representation to the Stockholm conference has Wen followed , by the tender of his resignation as a member'of the war cabinet, ' which constitutes the inner council of the government, and the prompt acceptance of the resignation by the premier. SPY STATION IS FOUND OFF MEXICO COAST Strange Wireless Prnt Discov ered by Carranza Inspector 'Believed to Have Been Used by Germans. Ily ANu'lntd I'rcrnM Mexico City, Aug. 12. What is be lieved to have been a German informa tion forwarding station has been dis covered by Mexican officers on Lobos island, a lighthouse station off the Mexican coast northeatt of Tuspa nl The Mexican authorities believe the station might have been converged iu to. a submarine or naval base had it not been located by them. The government recently decided to place a wireless station on Lobos island and when .Manuel Rodriguez GuitJrfez. stibscertftiry of communi cations, went to Tampico on a trip of inspection, lie sent Alberto Mande. chief of the wireless department of communication, to the island. On. Ins arrival at the island, Mendez found a complete wireless plant in operation. It had been built by the lighthouse keeper,, who formerly was a mechanic, He was unable to give a satisfactory account of how he obtained the wire less appartus and was placed under arrest. Mendez also learned that a launch which had made the island its head quarter had been carrying supplies, arms and ammunition to rebels on the main land, who had been interrupting traffic around Tuxpam and interfering with the oU business. The launch was confiscated. Mendez has made a full report and the government is conducting a rigid investigation. Its agents are scouring the coast in search of other wireless plants. Aeroplane Used in Tests Is Found in Dry Lake (By AwoclBtad PrfM.) Los Angeles, Cal., Aug. 12. R. L. Bailey and George Moore, Los Angeles aviators, reported to the sheriff s office here today that they uiir ih nuinrri rtf the airnlane riound yesterday at Pry Lake, in the northern end ot Lot Angeles county, and had come to Los An geles for material with which to make repairs. They stated they took the air plane from here to make test flights and selected an isolated sec tion in order to avoid publicity. The machine was damaged in these flights, they said. The discovery of the abandoned machine gave rise to reports here that its ownership might have been of enemy origin and a guard was placed in charge of it to await the possible return of the aviators. "Don't w orry about me, I'll be home some day," writes George Wurmbach, who is with our other "Sammic" somewhere in France, to his lister. Miss Catherine Wurm bach, 3816 R street, Omaha. "I arrived safe in France." he writes. "We had a pleasant trip over here and are all feeling fine. "How are all the folks at home? Remember me to all of my friends. Say, have any of the boys I know joined the army since I left?" Wurmbach has been in the service only sfx mouths. He was in Fort Logan for a few months, then his regiment was down on the MexicanJ Doraer ur xoriy uays Deiore jt saueu for France. He is a membc. i f Com pany B of the Sixteenth regiment. Seward Board Sends Out More Draft Notices I Seward. Neb., Aug. 11. -(Special.) Three hundred more notices were sent yesterday to drafted men in this county, making a total of 573 men notified here for the first draft. , Premier Lloyd George wrote Mr. Henderaon a scathing letter of ac ceptance, in which he practically ac cuses Mr. Henderson of bad faith and duplicity in his dealings, both with his cabinet colleagues and with the laborites, and promptly gave the let ter to the newspapers. The premier thereby created a situ ation which puts Mr. Henderson on the defensive and which may cause the laborites to retract their decision , to send delegates to confer with Germans, Russians and neutrals at the Swedish capital. Mr, Henderson stated in a note to the press that his position will be ex plained to the House of Commons. CABINET OPPOSES MEETING. - The letter of the premier makes it ' plain that the cabinet is opposed to ' the Stockholm meeting and also that the present Russian provisional gov ernment is lukewarm, if not opposed altogether. The gtot of Premier Lloyd George's letter is that Mr. Henderson gave the cabinet the impression that ' he agreed with them. They expected him to advise the labor party against the conference and were greatly surprised by his change of front. They also expected him to read Premier Keren9ky s message re garding Stockholm, but he suppressed it and by so doing misled the labor ites into taking a, course which they thought the russians de.ired. v Important labor societies already arc arrayed against 'the verdict of the ' party yesterday and it may be re versed by a referendum or by general consent or failing such action, it is wholly possible that the government may act with France in refusing pass ports to Stockholm. Public, Is Mystified. N The whole incident is "mystifying, Mr. Henderson's reputation has been that of a most straightforward man, one of the last of whom thfr public would expect shifty diplomacy or double-dealing, and an honest mis understanding on his Dart mav be th real explanation. ... Mr. Henderson recentlv returned from Russia with the conviction that the .Russians were stronar. for the Stockholm conference and the British should meet their wishes. He has taken no part m war cabinet delibera tions since his return, being absorbed in the labor partys' business, but he has been generally regarded as a sort of government ambassador to labor and as the government's spokesman on labor matters. The Saturday Review says'the gov ernment sent Mr. Henderson to Petro grad with the intention of making him ambassador to Russia if it appeared that a laborite would be more ac ceptable to the revolutionary govern ment than Ambassador Buchanan, whose previous position as ambas sador to the imperial court might have prejudiced the revolutionary partr against him. Arthur Henderson entered the Brit ish war council without portfolio to represent labor in December, 1916, when Premier Lloyd George formed a ministry in succession to that headed by Herbert Asquith. Was Center of Storm. . Mr. Henderson has been the center of a political storm that has been brewing in England for several weeks. In June last, as a member of a British mission to Russia, he went to Petro grad and after conferring with the Russian council of workmen's and soldiers' delegates, returned to Lon don and advised the British labor con ference to send delegates to the inter national socialist conference at Stock holm. The labor conference by more thau 3 to 1, voted in accordance with Henderson's, advice. Considerable feeling was aroused in England last month when Mr. Hen derson went to Paris with the pacifist, James R. MacDonald, and George J. Wardle, acting chairman of the labor party in the House of Commons, and several Russian delegates, to confer with the French socialists reeardinsr i the proposed conference of entente allied socialists m London and the subsequent international conference ae Stockholm. Irritation was increased when Andrew Bonar Law, speaking for the government, admitted that the, trip to Paris had been made without the knowledge of the British govern ment. , , After hearing Mr. Henderson's ex- (Continued on Pr Two, Column Oil.) Street Car Men Striking ' In Illinois Are Returning Springfield, 111., Aug. 12. Willi concessions by both sides to the street; car strike controversy which has con tinued for three weeks with. disorders and rioting in which one policeman lost his life, a settlement was reached late this afternoon and all car oper atives who have been out will rcturv to work tomorrow morning, ! a ) I I 4 '"L - f