SOMETHING DIFFERENT IN WAR STORIES-HARRY LAUDER'S WAR FRONT EXPERIENCES The Omaha Daily Bee THE WEATHER fair VOL. XL VII NO. 290. OMAHA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 22, 191814 PAGES" 0 Train. ffttE SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. Nm Standi, L71 RJ L7 LlVl uvu r " r: LI BENT BACK AT4 Germans Show But Little of Habitual Fighting Spirit Un der Vigorous Blows by -Allied Armies. Hli NS POINTS (By Associated Press.) Striking viciously at the enemy at various points along the western battle front, meet ing each outburst of German artillery with a thunder of cannon fire and maintaining the mastery of the air in every sector from the North Sea to . the Swiss frontier, the armies of the entente allies are pre venting the Teutonic armies from quietly perfecting their preparations for coming battles. With the knowledge that the pass ing of each day brings new Amer- ican legions to help crush the next - German offensive the allies are find ing satisfaction in the fact that the ''Germans have as yet been unable to launch a new blow in the struggle which Berlin had expected to be the decisive one of the war. Fighting Spirit Weakened. For the' most part the Germans have shown but little of their liabi 1 tual fighting spirit along the line in v France. They have been thrust back in four sectors and the allies have . succeeded in winning ground which will be of great importance in the future. A heavy German counter attack .y against the British lines northwest of Merville along a front of about two-thirds of a mile broke .down under the strong British resistance, according to Field Marshal Haig's report Tuesday night from British headquarters in France. The French . also repulsed an attack north of -Bailleuil. " Capture Strtegic Ground. " The attack by the French near . Locre, on the northern side of the Lys salient, and of the Australians ,before Amiens appear to have been more successful than was at first ' understood. Near Locre the French have not only taken strongly forti fied points, but they have made secure their lines on each side of - Hill 44, which they recaptured from the Germans recently. " The Australians too have- won ground which is all tactical impro tance along the Amiens sector. They have gained higher ground which lends itself well to defensive tactics and will be valuable when the time conies. ' - The French, still seem to be the most active of the forces of the entente nations. They again have engaged in raiding operations near Lassigny, on the flank of, the Ger man line as it stands since the ad vance toward Amiens. American Artillery Active. On the American front there has been die usual lively exchange of artillery tire, but no infantry fighting. The same is true of the situation in the Italian theater. A report from Athens states that Turkish troops in Asia Minor have iriutinied and that a force sent to " quell the disorder has deserted. It is said that there have been many v desertions from the Turkish gar risons in towns along the Asia Minor coast. The Weather For Nebraska Generally fair Wednesday and Thursdays cooler in southeast portion Wednesday X warmer Thursday. , v ' Hour.'": 1 Dr. d a. in oi 6 a. m 61 7 a. m 62 8 a. m 61 S a. m 65 10 a. m 64 11 a. m 73 12 m 77 1 p. m 81 2 p. m 82 3 p. m 82 4 p. m 85 5 p. u). . 8:! 6 p. m . . . 85 7 p. m 85 8 p. m. 63 ' Comparative Loral Record. ,. 1918. 1917. 1916 1915. Highest yesterda .. 85 67 72 61 Lowest Vsterday (. . 60 42 ...6S 46 Mean temperature ... 72 64 64 -i4 Precipitation 68 .50; .64 .63 Temperature and precipitation departures from the normal: Normal temperature 64 Excess for toe-Uay 8 Total excess since March 1 394 Normal precipitation 14 Inch Excess for the day 44 inch Total rainfall since March 1 2.67 Inches Deficiency since March 1 4.69 Inches Deficiency for cor. period, 1917... .87 inch Deficiency for cor. period. 1916. .2.(6 Inches Reports from Stations at 7 P. M. Station and State Temp. HiKh- Raln- of Weather, . 7 p. m est. Bill. Cheyenne, cloudy 60 62 T Davenport, cloudy ..... 76 , 7. .36 Denver, cloudy 70 72 .00 Des Moines, cloudy .... 80 , 84 .38 Dodge City, clear 88 90 .00 Lander? cloudy 68 68 .00 North Platte, cloudy .. 74 8.' .12 Omaha, cloudy 85 8S .68 Pueblo, clear 80 80 .90 Hapid City, part cloudy 58 63 . .00 Hart Lake City, cloudy.. 54 M , T Far.Ui Fe, clear .". 88 68 .00 Sheridan, clear 6 -66 .01 Valentine, clear ....... SI 72 .01 T Indicates trace of precipitation. ' ' . U A. WSL6U. Meteorologist. MAIL PILOTS BATTLE WITH WINDANDRAIN Washington, May 21. Airplane mail pilots today had their first battles against storms. . Soon after leaving Belmont field, "Long Island, Lieutenant Bonsai ran into an electrical disturbance, wind and rain and was forced to return, the mail being forwarded by train. Lieutenant Edgerton left Phila delphia for Washington in heavy clouds and encountered a storm near Baltimore at an altitude of 10,000 feet. He fought through and arrived here in two hours and 34 minutes, with the propeller slightly damaged by hail. OMAHA REACHES $50,000 IN GREAT RED CROSS DRIVE Nebraska Reports Half Million Dollars in Hand, While Many Counties Are Giving Over Quota. Omaha and Nebraska are contin uing the liberality shown in former drives for war funds in the second Red Cross campaign, ifo fear is felt by the directors but that the quota as signed will be over-subscribed. Large cash subscriptions from firms and individuals total more than $50,000, one-fourth of the Omaha quota. . The campaign will be car ried to every individual in Omaha and as the smaller subscriptions pour in no doubt is'expressed for the success of the drive. ' Counties in the state already are reporting over-subscriptions, with the drive just starting. Cash subscriptions received at the state headquarters now equal Tme-half of the state quota of $1,300,000. As the pledges are tabu lated the tptals will rapidly pass the quota assigned. State Has Half Million Cash. F. W. Judson, state director of the Red Cross, at a late hour said it was impossible to give actual figures on the amount of money pledged in the state to the Second Red Cross drive. "We now have more than $500,000 in actual money," said Mr. Tudson. 'IThis a .. t :i..,i 1-J v does not include pledges. "We have a larpe force of clerks preparing a total of the pledges and getting in communication with cities that have not reported. It is im possible to estimate the amount raised until we can compile a total of the pledges." Lcrge Cash Subscriptions. Everett Buckingham, chairman of the Red Cross war fund committee for Omaha, late TuVsday night announced a list of the larger contributions of Omaha firms and individuals. "These contributions are only samples of what are yet to come," said Mr. Buckingham. The larger cash con tributions for the first two days of the drive are as follows: American Smelting: and Refining Co. ,$7. BOO Swift and Co 7.000 Cudahy Packing company 6,000 Brandeis Stores -...J"; 6.000 Union Stock Tarda company V.. 6.000 Hayden Brothers 2.500 BurRess-Nash company ,E0fl Thomas Kllpatrlck company 1,000 K. E. Calvin 1,000 F. B. Johnson 1,000 W. Hretenberg; 1,000 Victor J. Jeep 600 Women's committee report: C. B. Nash Interests J5.000 Mrs. George Brandeis 1.000 Pittsburgh Plate Glass company .... 1,000 Mrs. Harold Gifford ' 600 John Deere Plow company 600 Frank I,. Haller 600 Robert Morseman i 400 F. W. Judsoa 230 Mrs. D- Forest Richards 250 Churches and Clubs Active. , At th; Burgess-Nash store 75 chick ens, a hen and a rooster were auc tioned off. They were given by A. D. Peters from his chicken ranch. At the grain" exchange building "chances" on a Chalmers touring car were sold at auction. This c?.r was (riven by Mrs. H. H. Harper. Mrs. Fred Hamilton with several assistants has undertaken to sell Mchances " thus raising $5,000. 10,000 LEIBERMAN WINS BRAIN TEST Police Judge Madden Sends First Victim Jo Psychopathic Board for Examination. - FOR WORLD'S SPEED RECORD Charges of recktess driving and ex ceeding the speed limit against E. Leiberman, 2608 Franklin street, re sulted in conviction in police court Tuesday. ?. Leiberman was ordered to appear before an examining board of physicians for a mental test to de termine the extent of his sanity. Leiberman was arrested Monday night . His car ran into an automo bile belonging to " W. H. Griffith, 2706 Brown street, at Fifteenth and Harney street. "Whv inrlcp. T liannpnH in see Hum,' City prosecutor McGuire said. "And I tell you, he almost :an over me."i Tfle arresting officer testified that Leiberman was voin,? at least. 40 miles an hour directly . through the Colonel .William Hayward's Fighters, Old Fifteenth New York Ethiopians, , Now in.First Trenches in France GRACE LUSH TO TELL HER STORY TODAY 8 Woman's Letter, Frankly Re lating Her Relations With Dr. Roberts Completes Evidence for State. Waukesha, Wis., May 21. Grace Lusk, will take the witness stand to morrow to reveal eyery detail of her relations with Dr. David Roberts at her trial for slaying his wife. This was announced by attorneys for the defense late today, after the prosecution had completed the pre sentation of its evidence against Miss Lusk. Her story is expected to be a flat denial of Dr. Roberts' statement that she pursued him with the bject of wrecking his home. Before the prosecution rested, it in troduced a letter written by Miss Lusk and found in her desk, after the trag edy. It was addressed to Mrs. Rob erts and was only presented as evi dence after the attorneys for the de fense had registered an emphatic pro test, in which they declared that Miss Lusk could not be used as a witness against herself. Letter by Miss Lusk. "When your husband first came to me, it was for business," the letter read;"at least, that was his excuse. He did all of the pursuing. I thought it was all quite a good joke,' and, in fact, it would never have occurred to me to take the situation seriously if one nieht at the Baptist church af fair you had not come up to us when we were talking in the most innocent fashion imaginable and rushed him away. You did not do it in a courteous manner weU( not rather, i vowed thereupon to get even with your dis courtesy,, and I. have. Only I have hurt myself in doing so.". The letter then frankly related her -relations with the veterinarian, how he spent his evenings with her while his wife was ill, his jealousy and his state ment to her that he felt that he "had been cheated in the marriage game." Eternal Triangle Repeated. "It seems to me," the letter said, "that if you loved your husband un selfishly you would want him to be happy honorably, even if it were a sac rifice to you in some respefcts. It is not an unheard of thing for a husband or a wife to give up voluntarily the mate whose love has been lost. Did you ever hear the story of Ruskin, or, more recently, of James K. Barrie. In the eternal triangle the only solution of the problem is the elimination of one character, the two who should re-J main are those whose affections are"! mutual." Sorry for What Happened. Several oth letters found in the little desk, some of them covered with brownish stains, indicating that Miss Lusk had handled them after she had killed Mrs. Roberts and shot herself, also were read. One headed, "Explanation," 'declared: "Oh, I am so sorry that all this has happened. Yet I had rather have had this experience, painful as it has been, than to have gone' throogh life without knowing what love can mean. I can't honestly believe I have been sinful. The only treason has been in not tell ing Mrs. R. I always wanted to, but he was afraid. Oh, well, it soon will be over." Wrote Directions for Her Funeral. Another letter, which was marked, "Open in case of accident only," gave directions for her funeral, which she desired to be without "much fuss." She also directed that she be dressed "in the little new gray frock," which she wrote would "be ready formy last party.". , Dr. Roberts was recalled to the witness stand for cross-examination by the defense early in the morning session to answer a series of questions regarding the defendant's meoital con dition. He testified' that she ap peared normal except when she was angry, when she occasionally lost con- trol of herself. a principal thoroughfare of the city, swerving from left to right just as he saw fit to enjoy himself in his mad ness to "get somewhere in general, though nowhere in particular."' Leiberman is the first victim of the judge's warning to automobile speed ers and reckless drivers that they will be taken before an examining board of physicians given a test to ascertain their mental capacity. W. H. Brokey, Fourteenth and Douglas streets, was. fined" $15 and costs on a charge of violating traffic rules. , D. C. Bradford, president of the Bradford-Kennedy Lumber company, was fined $.'5 and costs for exceeding the sperd limit. Mr. Bradford ap pealed the case Former Nebraskan Wires Gra phic Description of Battle ;.' . Where Unseen Guns Roar. Colonel William Hayward, well known in Nebraska and son of the late Senator M. L. Hayward. formerly residing in Nebraska City, is now in command of the 369th United States infantry "somewhere in France." The following graphic description of Amer ican soldier life in the trenches is tak en from a letter addressed to his uncle, Major E. B. Hayward of Dav enport, la., whom Colonel Hayward asked to distribute copies to his friends: By COLONEL WM. HAYWARD. Headquarters 368th United States Infantry in France, April 12. "This letter is principally to say that the 'Fighting 15th Heavy Ethopian Foot' (now 369th United States infantry), is at last in the trenches, and what is more to the point, in the front line trenches, and has had its' baptism of fire, at least one battalion of it is and has, and the battalions are succes sively rotating each other in our tiny sector,, tiny when considered as part of the "great battle front from Switz erland to the sea, but by no means tiny when the responsibility of hold ing it is contemplated. Of- course, I was under fire a couple of weeks ago with about a hundred of the men up north, but it was long range stuff, and not much to it. "I put the Brooklyn battalion, com manded by Major Morris, in' night before last. I have often told these boys I would never ask them to go anywhere I did not go myself, so I went up to spy out the ground and get our last instructions. This regi ment has broken so many records that I hoped we might go into the trenches by sunlight on a clear day and thus prove all 'the stories told previously of outfits goin in in the drizzling rain, etc., did not necessar ily describe the universal situation. But not at all. We left the regimen tal camp in the conventional drizzle, the rain . being driven in our faces by a very raw north wind, and went sloshing up the road toward, the big noises and big flashes. ' 'We- ramped the night before and made final preparation. These consisted of baths and clean clothes for all the men, as well as hair cuts, to make the gas masks fit tighter, and also to deprive Friend 'Toto' (our boys say 'Seam Squirrels') as much as possible of any of their ' favorite roosting (Continued on Page Five, Column One.) AVIATOR HALL OF IOWA PRISONER IN GERMAN HOSPITAL (By Auoclated Freu.) With the American Army in France, May 21. Captain Tames Nor. man Hall, of Colfax, ia., who has been missing since May 7, is wounded and a prisoner in a German hospital. Captain Hall, who is attached to the American aviation corps, disap peared after an aerial engagement, near the German lines.. 2 DEAD, SIXTEEN SOLDIERS HURT IN TRAIN CRASH Texarkana, Ark., May 21. Troop train No. 554, northbound, was wrecked near Garland City, Ark. to day, the engine and four coaches be ing overturned. The engineer and fireman are reported to have been killed and 16 or more soldiers in jured. Disloyal Farmer Given Tar-and-Feather Coat Sioux Falls, S. D.; May 21. Hart Duxbury, a wealthy farmer living nine miles north of Spencer, S. D., to day was tarred and feathered by a crowd of fifty farmers after he had been taken from his farm and brought"! to the city jail at Spencer, where the cqat was applied. Duxbury, it was said, was ordered last Friday to purchase Liberty bonds or contribute to the Red Crqss, by Monday night. He refused, it is stated, and shortly after midnight the farmers fullfilled their threat.. Airplane Drops Flowers On Noted Aviator's Cortege New York, May 21. Army officers representing the United States and each of the allies, served today"as pallbearers at the funeral in St. Patrick's cathedral of Captain An tonio Silvio Resnati, famous Italian aviator, who fell to his death at Mineola last week. Thousands of persons, bareheaded, lined the streets. A large Caproni airplane, carrying nine Italian avia tors, flew over the cortege, dropping red, white and blue flowers. Harry Lauder's Own Story of War Zone Experiences Will Be Found On Page 4. R. R. HEADS ARE OUSTED BY MADOO Director General Will Appoint Federal Director for Each Line, Responsible Only to Administration. (Br Associated Freu.) Washington, May 21. Every rail road president was relieved from ac tive duty as executive manager of his road today by Director General Mc Adoo, who will appoint a federal di rector for each road, responsible only to the railroad administration. In many cases the president of the rail road may be named federal director. ' To safeguard the interests of stock holders and maintain the individuality of each railway, federal directors, whenever possible, will be appointed from among the operating officers of the property, the director general an nounced. This will avoid disrupting any road's working organization un necessarily. Creates Two New Districts. As another step in the reorganiza tion of railroad management, the di rector general ordered the creation of two new operating districts the Al legheny region, consisting of the prin cipal trunk lines east of Pittsburgh, excluding the New York Central, managed by C. II. Markham, now re gional director for the south, and the Pocahontas district, consisting of the east and west trunk lines terminating at Hampton Roads. Regional directors for the Poca hontas district and for the southern district to succeed Mr. Markham will be appointed soon. A. H. Smith of New York will continue to act as regional director for, that part of the east not included in the new Alle gheney district, and district directors wiine named to serve under him as supervisors of roads in New England, and for the section between Pitts burgh and the Mississippi river, and north of the Ohio river. Other smaller operating districts will be created from time to time in the southern and western regions, now operated as units by regional directors of the railroad administra tion. v Failed to Obey Orders. The first act of the director-general today in executing this new pol icy was the removal of C. W. Hunt ington, president of the Virginian railway, as chief operating officer, on the charge that he failed to carry out promptly the railroad administra tion's instructions regarding the re pair and maintenance of his line. This was thought to be the fore runner of similar deposition of a num. ber of railroad presidents, but an nouncement of the plan for wholesale replacement of railway presidents by federal directors came as a general surprise at this time. It was explained tonight that a large proportion of present railway presidents will be named to manage their own properties, particularly whenever the president actually is the most active operating officer, but in all these cases the presidents will be required to resign their official posi tions with the companies, "and to be come exclusive representatives of the United States railroad administra tion." . Salaries Will Be Reduced. Consequently their salaries will be paid by the government, and they can receive no pay from the railwaytor poration. As an indication of what salaries they may expect, it became known tonight that most of Mr. Mc Adoo's principal assistants ' of the railroad administration will receive no more than $15,000 a year. For most of them, this is much less thn they received as officers or executives of railroads under private manage ment. In this connection, it was no ted that Mr. McAdoo, as secretary of the treasury, receives the usual cabinet member's salary of $12,000 a year and is paid nothing as director general of railroads. Swiss Painter Dead. Berne, May 20. Ferdinand Hodler, a leading Swiss painter, is dead here at the age of 65. Smuggled Satsuma Years Old, Is A teapot of genuine Satsuma ware, smuggled from Japan by a seafaring ancestor more than a century ago, when Nippon was the true "hermit empire," has been donated to the sal vage department of the Red Cross, 1409 Harney street, by ,Mrs. A. E. Aronson,of Florence. The teapot was brought by Mrs. Aronson from Sweden. It was an ob ject that a connossieur or collector would go into ecstacies over, and must possess great value because of its rarity and it beauty and delicacy of fabrication. The landscape and flower decora tions on the bowl are beautiful in CALVIN HAS NOT HEARD OF WAdOO ACTION President E. E. Calvin of the Union Pacific railway, at a late hour last night had received no information regarding the change in officers of the railroad and his deposition as head of the system, "This is the first information I have had of the proposed change," said Mr. Calvin. "I cannot say whether I will be appointed a fed eral director or not." Questioned as to the advisability of the proposed change at this time Mr. Calvin refused to express an opinion. "I do not care to express myself until I have been officially informed of the change and am familiar with the details of the ad ministration's policy," he said. FUNSTON BOYS ABOUT TO START TO BATTLE FRONT Camp Scene of Great Activity as 89th pivision Entrains; Details of Movement Not Disclosed. Camp (Special Censor. )- Funston, Kan., May 21. Telegram. Passed by the -The Funston boys are going over tliere. wnere tney go from here br when and how they leave are points of information that cannot be made public. The men themselves know litle about it and care less. Sufficient for them there is action afoot at last: lots of action, with trains loading, night and day work, and speed such as has never been seen here before. Soldiers Enthusiastic. Surmises amfing the men as to what the big step they are about to take means cover a range that includes everything. Headquarters alone knows what is taking place, and headquarters is not telling, There was no lack of enthusiasm, however, as a result of lack of information, for good privates do not question orders from higher up. , - Eight and a half months of strenuous training has reached a close. For a few it has been less than a month. Squads right and squads left have been mastered long ago, more intricate drills perfected, rifle practice carried on steadily, muscles turned into iron, and now the entire 89th division stands as a perfect unit, ready to serve its country and the countries that have held the line. Details Withheld. Details of the biggest event the middle west has ever staged must be necssary, for although every officer and every private has written and telegraphed to one or more friends or relatives of his plans, the more ntricate details must not be offered to those who might use them to work harm. But at any rate the middle west may know it's boys were wonderwul in their parts, and every mother with a boy in the 89th division may know he answered the call "ready ' with a smile on his lips and in many cases a tear of enthusiasm in his eye. The few civilians who are sfcang the sight of a lifetime-can never tell what they saw. Words would not describe it. Mrs. Mildred Allee Dead; Struck by Car Los Angeles. May 21. (Special Telegram) Funeral services for Mrs. Mildred L. Alice, former president general of the Daughters of the American Revolution of Nebraska, who was struck and instantly killed by a Pacific electric car yesterday, will be conducted in Columbus, 0., to which citv the body will be sent either tomorrow or Thursday. Twen ty-six years a resident of Omaha, she was one of the founders and first presidents of the Women's club of that city. Mrs. Mildred B. Pierce, a niece, is the only relative. German Women in U. S. Required to Register Washington, May 21. German wo men in the United States arc required to reoisler with chief. of police or with postmasters between June 17 and 26 under regulations issued today by the department of justice. Teacup, 100 Given Red Cross their tints and perspective, and the peculiar geometric design and gold embellishments are of a character that speak of ancient art. If the teapot could tell of the ad ventures that attended its smuggling by the bold Norse ancestor of Mrs Aronson, when Cathay was as a closed book and ' land of mystery to the western world, the story would be as intensely interesting as a saga of old, The value of the teapot can hardly be computed and it will undoubted ly attract numerous bidders at the next auction sale. Mrs. Aronson has placed a bid of $25 on the teapot and it will undoubtedly start off ' at this figure. TORNADOES KILL 1 7 IN 1 STATES Four Dead and 50 Injured in and Around Boone; Toll of Ten Taken in -.' Kansas. . De Moines, May 21.- -Tor-' nadoes in central Iowa late , today caused the death of at least seven persons and in- jured approximately 65 others, reports received here ; late tonight showed. Prop erty damage was estimated at $750,000. . - . The casualty list, incom- , plete at midnight, gave four dead at Boone 'and 50 in ; jured; two dead at Newton, and one killed and, two in-' jured near penison. While the storm area extended from Denison, Crawford county, east about ' ISO miles through Jasper county, se rious damage was reported only in the district near DenisOri, Boone and New , ton counties, although details from y some sections were lacking because of crippled wire communication. ' , PROPERTY LOSS $500,000. Boone was most seriously affected.' Property damage in the city is esti- mated near $329,000, while the loss in the surrounding country will bring the total to $500,000, it is feared. New-' ton's loss exceeded $100,000, pfinci- ( pally born by three washing machine manufactories there. Near Denison. Emmet Fling was killed when a farm building crumpled upon him and two others were hurt, one seriously. The farm residence ot Frank Houlihan was entirely tiemol iahed, but a new-born baby and its mother escaped unscathed. .Newton's two dead were employes of the factories. It was said that sev. eral of the injured were in a serious v condition, Hail preceded the tornado there, causing much damage to gar. dens and early, crops. Many houses were unroofed and smaller buildings. wrecked. . MOTHER AND BABE KILLED. Renorts from Boone after midnight declared sonje of the injured might die. The killed were Mrs. frank Rob erts, her 6-year-old son, a laborer, and baby. One family of five had a narrow es cape from death, entering their cellar just before their home was entirely destroyed. ' Twenty-five houses in Boone were damaged by the twister, six or seven" of them being crushed to kindling. The Chicago and Northwestern .rail- . road s Iowa division shops there, val ued at $1,000,000, were damaged $250,- ' 000, it is estimated. An Illinois Central train ' narrowly . escaped the funnel cloud traveling along the Boger river valley, accord- , ing to report of passengers arriving in Omaha lasf night, j H Ten Killed in Kansas. I lavs Kan.. May21 Ten persons .' were killed, two probably fatally in jured and dozens of others less se nously injured in a tornaao wnicn swept across northen Ellis and south, em Ro6ks"counties last night. ' , ! - The little town of Codell, in Rooks county, was practically annihilated. All the' churches, schools, buildings' and larger business houses and resi dences were demolished. The tornado started 15 miles north-; west of Hays and swept a strip ' mile wide for a distance of 35 miles. I Only meager reports have been re- . ceived and the death list may be augumcnted when the full details are learned, The list of dead and fatally in jured as far known follows: Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Geist and three children, -living near Hays. Mrs. Walter Adams and baby of . ' Codell. ' Two children of Frank Jones of : Codell. . ' Mr. Turan of Codell. - Injured, probably fatally: Anton Bungardle, of Hays. Frank G. Huber. Hundreds of head of horses and cattle, were killed and much damage was caused to growing crops by haiL Wisconsin Village Wiped Out. ; ; Madison, Wis.. May 21. Lone Rofk, a village 30 miles north of Madison, was practically wiped out by a tornado tonight, according to reports received here. , At Mount Horeb. 18 miles south- r west, barns and houses were de- ,v stroyed by the wind. The storm broke; . the Madison power line from Prairie , I)u Sac and for three hours this . city was in total darkness1. . Rumor of Hindenburg's )' Death Generally Curren With the British Army in France May 21. The Tumor that Field Mar . shal von Hindenburg died recently has become, current very generally;' .' among the enemy in the back areas -as well as among - civilians. What . basis, if any, there is.for-tbjJCa'oi,. is not known here ; "S v .1