Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 09, 1914, Page 3, Image 3

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    TIIK KKE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY. DE(TEMHER 0, 1014.
3
PEACE.EGONOMY AND
MORE LAWS NEEDED
President Wilson Addresses the
Congress on State of the
Nation.
BUSINESS PROGRAM COMPLETE
Eaeratlre Departs from Test of Ills
Address to ay that No Karl her
ResYalatlon U Noit Ion.
te.ra plated.
(Continued rrom rage One.)
Ion upon which you- are now entering
will be the closing session of the sixty
third congress, a congress, I venture to
say, which will long be remembered for
the great body of thoughtful and con
structive work which It has done. In loyal
response to the thought and needs of the
country. I should like In this address to
review the notable record and Iry to
make adequate assessment of It: but
no doubt wc stand too near the work that
has been done and are ourselves too much
... .. i . . . i . . 1. 1 . ,
" v w ptay ino pari ok msiorians
toward It.
'Looking; to ke Pattrc.
Moreover, our thougnts are now more
of the future than of the past. While
we have worked at our tasks of ieace
the circumstances of the whole age have
been altered by war. What we have done
for our own land and our own people
we did with the best that was in us,
whether of character or of Intelligence,
with sober enthusiasm and a confidence
In the principles upon which we were
actinic which sustained ua at every step
of the difficult undertaking; but it Is
done. It has passed from our hands. It
Is now an established part of the legisla
tion of the country. Its usefulness, Its
effects will disclose themselves in ex
perience. What chiefly strikes us now,
we look about us during these closing
day. of a year which will be forever
memorable In the history of the world,
Is that we face new tasks, tutve been
facing thera these six months, must face
them in the months to com face them
without partisan feeling, like men who
have forgotten everything but a -common
duty and the fact that we-are representa
tives of a great people whose thought is
not of us, but of what America owes to
herself and to all mankind in such cir
cumstances as these upon which wa look
amazed and anxious.
Production .Also Interrupted.
War has Interrupted the means of trade
not only, but also the processes of pro
duction. In Europe it is destroying men
and resources wholesale, and upon a
acale unprecedented and appalling. - There
Is reason to fear that the time la near,
if It be not already at hand, when sev
eral of the countries of Europe will find
It difficult to do for their people what
they have, hitherto been always easily
able to do many essential and funda
mental things. At any rate, they will
need our help and our manifold services
as they have never needed them before;
and we should be ready, more fit and
ready than we have ever been.
It Is of equal consequence that the na
tions whom Europe has usually supplied
with Innumerable articles of manufacture
and commerce of which they are in con
stant need and without which their eco
nomic! development, halts and stands still
can bow get only a small part of what
they formerly Imported and eagerly look
to us to supply their all but empty mar
kets, i This Is particularly true of our own
neighbors, the states, great and small, of
Central and South America. Their lines
of trade have hitherto run chiefly ath
wart the seas, not to our ports, but to
the ports of Great Britain and of . the
older continent of Europe.' I do not stop
to Inquire why, or to make any comment
on probable causes. What Interests us
Just now )s not the explanation, but the
fact, and our duty and opportunity in
the presence of It. Here are markets
which we must supply, and we must find
the means of action. The United States,
this great people for whom- we speak and
act, should be ready, as never before, to
serve Itself and to serve mankind; ready
with its resources, its energies, its forces
of production and Its means of distribution.
Merchant Marine Needed.
It is a very practical matter, a matter of
ways and means. We have the resources,
but are we fully ready to use them? And,
If ' we can make ready what we have,
have we the means at hand to distribute
it? We are not fully ready; 'neither have
we the means of distribution. We are
willing, but we are not fully able. , We
have the wish to serve and to serve
greatly, generously; but we are not pre
pared as we should be. We are not ready
to mobilise our resources at once. We
are not prepared to use them Immedi
ately and at their best, without delay J subsidies led to many scandals of which
and without waste. we are ashamed; but we know that the
To speak plainly, we have grossly erred J railroads had to be built, and If we had j
in me way in wnirn we nave stunted ' over mn we snouia 01 course,
build them, but In another way. There- i
fore I propose another way of providing
the means of transportation, which must
precede, not tardily follow, the develop-
rment of our trade with our neighbor
may seem a rever-
nl of the natural order of things, but It
and hindered the development of our
merchant marine. And now. when we
need ships, we have not got them. We
have year after year debated, without
end or conclusion, the best policy to pur- m"" 01 m,r ,ra,e
sue with rojard to the ure of the ores ttrn. of Am",,- t
.nrt f -.,. .,nl of the natural onl
national domain In the rich states of the I ,n,t e routes of trade must be
actually oined by many ships and reg
ular sailings and moderate charges be
fore streams of merchandise will flow
freely and profitably through them. !
west, when we should have acted; and
they are still locked up. The key Is still
turned upon them, the door shut fast at
which thousands of vigorous men, full
of Initiative, knock clamorously for ad
mittance. The water power of our navi
gable streams outside the national do
main also, even In the eastern states, ' passed by neither house,
where we have worked and planned for ' ment such leg'slatlon , Is
1'rsrea Bslsg fthlpa.
Hence the pending shipping bill, dis
cussed at the last session, but as yet
In . my Judg-
Impexatlvely
generations Is still not used as it might 'needed and cannot wisely be postponed.
be, because we will and we won't; be- The government must open these gates
cause the laws we have made do not of trade, and open them wide: open them
intelligently balance encouragement j before It Is altogether profitable to open
against restraint. We withhold by regu- or Hwther reasonable to ask prl-
lation. vata capital to open them at a venture.
I have come to ask you to remedy andiU ' not question of the government
correct these mistakes and omissions. ! monopolising the field. It should take
even at this short session of a congress'!""0" to " ' 11 "" that transpor-
whlch would certainly seem to have done t"on,'t b
... u . , . . . . promptly provided, even where the car-
all the work that could reasonably be; . , . ., ' ... . , . ..
. . ... . . rlage Is not at first profitable; and then
expected of It. The time and the clr- wh,n tM CRrr)w bK.oma .ufflclenUv
cumstances are extraordinary, and so prof,tab,0 to and engage private
must our efforts be also. capital, and engage It In abundance, the
Poller of l e SerMnrjr. government ought to withdraw. I very
Fortunately, two great measures, finely j earnestly hope that the congress will be
conceived, the one to unlock, with proper! of this opinion, and that both houses will
safeguards, the resources of the na-i adopt this exceedingly important bill,
tlonal domain, the other to encourage' The great subject of rural credits still
the use of the navigable waters outside remains to be dealt with, and It Is a mat
that domain for the generation of power, ' ter of deep regret that the difficulties of
have already passed the house of repre-!the subject have seemed to render It lin
sentatlvcs and are ready for Immediate ' possible to complete a bill for passage at
consideration and action by the senate. 1 thl ion. But It cannot be perfected
With the deepest earnestness I urge their n1 therefore there are no other con
prompt passage. In them both we turn truclv measures the necessity for which
our backs upon hesitation and makeshift'1 wl11 at thi" Um cu yur attention to;
and formulate a genuine policy of use.' but wouM bo-negllgent of a very manl
and Conservation. In the best sense of j Wf 1 "0t l. Ca" th attenUon
those word.. We owe the one measure J6 to the fact that the pro
not only to the people of that great west-! " " V.". .T.u ?"
em country for whose free and ay.tematlc " f'n?l' tat,,h"
, , . . in the convention Itself for its accent-
development, as It seems to me, our leg- . ,h. , .. . ,
,. . .., L I i "-nce tn ,8-st da the present month.
elation haa Hone so little, but also to;The confer(mce ta wnlrh tnls conventlon
u" nanun mm wnoie, anu originated was called by the t'nlted
we as clearly owe the other In fulfill- states; the representatives of the United
ment of our repeated promises that the Btates played a very Influential nart ln-
water power of the country should In I deed 'In framing the provisions of the I
fact as well as In name be put at the j proposed convention, and those provisions '
disposal of great industries which can ; are In themselves for the most part ad
make economical and profitable use of It, mlrable. It would hardly be consistent
the rights of the public being adequately ' ''tl Prt we have play," In the whole
guarded the while, and monopoly In the! matter to lot it drop and go by the board
as If forgotten and neglected. It was
ratified In May last by the German gov
ernment and In August by tb Parlia
ment of Great Britain. It marks a most
hopeful and decided advance. In Interna
tional civilization. We should show our
earnest good faith In a great matter by
adding our own acceptance of It.
Const Snrvey of Alnalca..
There la another matter of which I must
make special mention. If I am to dis
charge my conscience, lest It should es
cape your attention. It may seem a very
small thing. It affects only a single Item
of appropriation. But many human lives
and many great enterprises hang upon it.
use prevented. To have begun such meas
ures and not completed them would in
deed mar the record of this great con
gress very seriously. I hope and con
fidently believe that they will be com
pleted. And there Is another great, piece of leg
islation which awaits and should receive
the sanction of the senate. I mean the
bill which gives a larger measure of self
government to the people of the Philip
pines. How better. In this time of anx
ious questioning and perplexed policy,
could we show our confidence in the
principles of liberty, as the source as
well as the exnreasion of life, haw bol
ter couM we tAmnn.tr. t ... ,r. 11 ls th matter of making adequate pro-
possession and steadfastness in the course vl8,on fo' tn" '"rvey and charting of our
of Justice and disinterestedness than by " " ""T"1.'' ?ung and
thu. going calmly forward to fulfill our "ec"on h ,mmen
, . . . ... coast line of Alaska, a coast line greater
promise, to a dependent people, who will tha that of th, sute, thtBe
now look more anxiously than ever to see th h u lmportant indeed
. with regard to the older coasts of the
mo uiiBeiiiBiineBB. ine couragQ, me laun
we have boasted and professed.' I can
not believe that the senate will let this
igTeat measure of constructive Justice
await the action of another congress. Its
passage would nobly crown the record of
these two years of memorable labor.
Transportation Is B large t Problem.
But I think that you will agree with me
that this doe. not complete . the toll of
our duty. How are we to carry our goods
continent. We cannot use our great Alas
kan domain, ships wilt not ply thither. If
those coasts and their many hidden dan
gers are not thoroughly surveyed and
; charted. The work Is incomplete at al
most every point. Ships and live, have
been lost In threading what were sup
posed to be well-known main channels.
We have not provided adequate vessels
or adequate machinery for the survey
and charting. We have used old vessels
that were not big enough or strong
to the empty markets of which I have,enough ud whlch were ,Q ear, un.
spoken if we have not the ships? How . .eawoithy that our Inspectors would not
are we to ouiia up great traae u we have allowed private owners to send them
have not the certain and constant means j to Tnla lg a matter which as I
of transportation upon which all profit- hava Baid seem, ,mall but , MaIlty
able and useful commerce depends? And j Vtry great. it, importance has only to
how are we to get the .hips if we wait for De i0oked Into to be appreciated,
the trade to develop without them? To Before I cloee may I say a few words
correct the many mistakes by which we I upoa two topics, much discussed out of
have discouraged, and all but destroyed doorii upon whlcn ,t u hg;hIy important
the merchant marine of the country, to that our Judgments should be clear, defl-
retrace the steps by which we have, It
seems almost deliberately, withdrawn our
flag from the seas, except where, here
and there, a ship of war Is bidden carry
it or some wandering yacht 'display. It,
would take a long time and Involve many
detailed Items of legislation, and the trade
which we ought Immediately to handle
would disappear or find other channels
while we debated the item..
The case is not unlike that which con
fronted us when our own continent was
to be opened up to settlement and Indus
try, and we needed long lines of railway,
extended mean, of transportation preJ
pared beforehand, if development was not
to lag Intolerably and wait Interminably.
We lavishly subsidized the building of
transcontinental railroads. We look back
upon that with regret now, because the
nate and steadfast?
Economy Is Not Debatable.
One of these is economy In government
expenditures. The duty of economy is not
debatable. It is manifest and Imperative.
In .the appropriations we pass we are
spending the money of the great people
whose servant, we are not our own. We
are trustees and responsible stewards in
the spending. The only thing debatable
and upon which we should be careful to
make our thought and purpose cleir is
the kind of economy demanded of us. I
assert with the greatest confidence that
the people of thn United Btates are wot
Jealous of the amount their government
cost. If they are sure that they get what
they need and desire for the outlay, that
the money I. being .pent for objects of
whlrh they approve, and that It Is being
management.
Governments gmw. pleeemeal, both In
their tasks and In the mean by which
those tasks are to be performed, and
very few governments are organised, I
venture to say, ss wise and experienced
business men would organise them If they
had a clean sheet of paper to write upon.
Certainly the government of the United
States Is not. I think thst It Is generally
a (fifed that there should be a systematic
reorganisation and reassomhllng of Its
parts so as to secure greater efficiency
and effect considerable savings In ex
pense. Put the amount of money saved
In thst" way would. I believe, though no
doubt considerable In Itself, running. It
may be, Into the m'lllons. be relatively
small small, I meat-. In proportion to the
total necessary outlays of the govern
ment. It would be thoroughly woith ef
fecting as every saving would, great or
small. Our duty ls not altered by the
scale of the saving. But my point Is that
the people of the United States do not
wish to curtail the activities of this gov
ernment; they wish, rather, to enlarge
tnem; and with every enlargement, with
the mere growth. Indeed, of the country
Itself, there must come, of course, the
Inevitable Increase of expense. The sort
of economy we ought to practice may be
effex-ted. and ought to be effected, by a
careful study ond assessment of the tasks
to be performed; and the money sent
ought to be made to yield the bet.t pos
sible returns In efficiency and achieve
ment. And, like good stewards, we should
so account for every dollar of our ap
propriations as to make It perfectly evi
dent what It was spent for and In what
way It was spent.
It Is not expenditure but extravagance
that, we should fear being criticised for;
not paying for the legitimate enterprises
and undertakings of a great government
whose people command what It should
do, but adding what will benefit only a
few or pouring money out for what need
not have been undertaken at all or mlKht
hnvo been postponed, or better and more
economically conceived and carried out.
The notion Is not nlRardly; It la very
generous. It will chide us only If we for
get for whom we pay money out and
whose money It Is we pay. These are
large and general stsndarda, but they are
not very difficult of application to par
ticular oases.
Problem of National Defense.
The other topic I shall tske leave to
mention goes deeper Into the principles
of our national life and policy. It Is the
subject of national defense. 1
It cannot be discussed without first
answering some very searching questions.
It is said In some quarters that we are
not prepared for war. What Is meant by
being prepared? Is it meant that we are
not ready upon brief notice to put a na
tion in the field, a nation of men trained
'to arms? Of course we are not ready to
do that; and we shall never be In time
of peace so long as we retain our present
political principles and institutions. And
whflt Is it that It Is suggested we should
be prepared to do? To defend ourselves
against attack? We have always found
means to do that and shall find them
whenever It Is necessary without calling
our people away from their necessary
tasks to render compulsory military serv
ice In times of peace.
Allow me to speak with great plainness
and directness upon this great matter and
to avow my convictions with deep earn
estness. I have tried to know what
America is, what her people think, what
they are, what they most cherish and
hold dear. I hope that some of their
finer passions are In my own heart somo
of the great conceptions and deilres which
gave birth to this government and which
have made the voice of this people a voice
of peace and hope and liberty among the
peoples of the world, and that, speaking
my own ' thoughts, I shall, at least In
part, speak their, also, however faintly
and Inadequately, upon this vital matter.
Champion of Pence.
We are at peace with all the .jvorld.
No one who speaks counsel based on
fact or drawn from a Just and candid
Interpretation of realities can say that
there Is reason to fear that from any
quarter our Independence or the Integrity
of our territory is threatened. Dread of
the power of any other nation we are
incapable of. We are not Jealous of
rivalry in the fields of commerce or of
any other peaceful achievement. We
mean to live our lives as we will; but
we mean also to let live. We are, indeed,
a true friend to all the nations of the
world, because we threaten none, covet
the possession, of none, desire the over
throw of none. .Our friendship can be
accepted and Is accepted without reserva
tion, because It Is offered In a spirit and
for a purpose which no one need ever
question or suspect. Therein lie. our
greatness. We are the champions of peace
and of concord. And we should be very
Jealous of this distinction which we have
sought to earn. Just now we should be
particularly Jealous of it, because It Is
our dearest present hope thst this char
acter and reputation may presently, In
God', providence, bring u. an opportunity
such as has seldom been vouchsafed any
nation, the opportunity to counsel and
obtain peace In the world and reconellla-
GASOLINE
SERVICE
STATIONS
18th and
Cass Streets
29th and
Harney Streets
'"'.,'.'V,''""
QUICK STARTING
MORE MILES PER GALLON
FROM
RE CMOWM
GASOLINE "
The two things go together both show a
high-grade gasoline. Gasoline that is all
gas explodes more readily in a cold cylinder.
It drives the car farther for each gallon
consumed.
Red Crown is a straight distilled refinery product
i always uniform the essence of heat and power.
Ask for Red Crown at any garage or supply store.
It costs no more than the ordinary kind.
YouH find your car runs best with POLARINE, the
standard oil for all motors.
- Standard Oil Company
GASOLINE
SERVICE
STATIONS '
18th and
Cass Streets
29th and
Ilarney Streets
tkn and a healing settlement of many a
mutter that has cooled and Interrupted
the friendship of nations. This Is the
tinie above all others when we should
wlnh and resolve to keep our strength by
self-possession, our Influence by preserv
ing our ancient principles of action,
l.arae Imr ot Mereaaary.
From the first we have had a clear and
ettlcd nollcv with recant to military
establishments. We never have had, and j
while we retain our present principles
and Ideals we never shall have, a large
standing army. If asked, Are you ready
to defend yourself? we reply. Most as
suredly to the utmost: and yet we shall
not turn America into a military camp.
We will not ask our young men to spend
l inn oesi years or ineir lives masing
' soldiers of themselves. There ls another
! sort of energy In us. It will know how
to declare Itself and make Itself effective!
! should occasion arise. And especially j
when half the world Is on fire we shall :
j be careful to mnke our moral Insurance
I against the spread of the conflagration
very definite and certain and adequate,
i Indeed.
I Let us remind ourselves, therefore, of
! the only thing we can do or will do. We
must depend In every time of national
peril. In the future as In the past, not
upon a standing army, nor yet upon a
, reserve army, but upon a cltlsenry
j trained and accustomed to arms. It will
be r!ht enough, right American policy. I
based upon our accustomed principles and
, practice, to provide a system by which
' every cltlien who will volunteer for the j
training may be made familiar with the i
use of modertv arms, the rudiments of !
drill and maneuver, and the maintenance j
and sanitation .of camps. Wc should en-!
courage such t4slnpg and make It a j
means of discipline which our young men
will learn to value. It Is right that we j
I should provide It not only, but that we
I should make It as attractive as possible, I
and so Induce our young men to undcrito '
lit at such times as the can command a
l little freedom and can keek the physical !
i development they need, for mere health's !
I sake, If for nothing more. Every menna
I by which such things can be stimulated Is
legitimate and such a method smacks
of true American Ideas. It Is right, too,
that the National Guard of the states
should be developed and strengthened by
every means which Is not Inconsistent
with our obligations to our own people
or with the established policy of our
government. And this, also, not because
the time or occasion specially calls for
such measures, but because It should be
our constant policy to make these provi
sions for our natlonnl peace and safety.
Would Not He vera.. Policy.
More than this carries with it a re
versal of the whole history and character
of our polity. More than this, proposed
at this time, permit me to say, would
mean merely that we had lost our .elN
possession, that we had been thrown off
our balance by a war with which we have
nothing to do, whose causes cannot touch
us, whose very existence affords ua op
portunities of friendship and disinterested
service which should make us ashamed
of any thought of hostility or fearful
preparation for trouble. This 1. assuredly
the. opportunity not only to speak but ac
tually to embody and exemplify the coun
sels of peace and amity and the lasting
concord which is based on Justice and
fair and generous. dealing.
A powerful navy we have alwaya re
garded as our proper and natural means
of defense; and it has always been of
defense that we have thought, never of
aitgresston or of conquest. But who shall
tell us now what sort of navy to build T
We shall take leave to be strong upon
the seas In the future as In the past;
and' there! will be.no thought of offense
or of provocation In that. Our ships are
our natural bulwarks. When will the
experts tell us just what kind we should
construct and when will they be right
for ten years together, If the relative ef
ficiency of craft of different kinds and
uses continues to change as we have
seen It change under our very eyes In
these last few months?
Duties of Peace.
But I turn away from the subject. It ls
not new. There ls no new need to discuss
It. We shall not alter our attitude toward
It because somo amongst us are nervous
and excited. We shall easily and sensibly
agree upon a policy of defense. The ques
tion has not changed It. aspects because
the times are not normal. Our policy will
not be for an occasion. It will be con
ceived as a permanent and settled thing,
which we will pursue at all seasons,
without haste and after a fashion per
fectly consistent wtlh the peace of the
world, the abiding friendship of states
and the unhampered freedom of all with
whom we deal. Let there be no miscon
ception. The country ha. been m'sln
formed. " We have not been negligent of
national defense. We are not unmindful
of the great responsibility resting upon
us. Ws shall learn and profit by the
lesson of every experience and every
new circumstance; and what I. needed
will be adequately done.
I close, as I evgan, by reminding you
of the great tasks and duties of peace,
which challenge our best power, and In-
vtte us to build what will last, the tasks I
to which we can address ourselves now !
and at all times with free-hearted .est
snd with all the finest gift, of construc
tive wisdom we possess. To develop our
life and our reeouroes; to supply our own 1
people and the people of the world a. their I
need arise., from the abundant plenty of
our fields and our marts of trade; to
emich the commerce of onr own states
and of tho world with the products of
our mlncn, our farms and our factories,
with the creations of our thought and
the frulU of our character this la what
will hold our attention and our enthusi
asm steadily, now and In the -years to
come, as we strive to show In our life
as a nation what liberty and the Inspira
tion, of an emancipated spirit may do
for men and for societies., for individuals,
for state, and for mankind.
as he sees fit In regard to his appointees.
The law gives each committeeman S
cents a mile traveling expenses, out of
stnte funds, and all secured Ihelr mileage
accounts as one of the principal features
of the trip and adjourned to further
orders.
JUDGE MORRIS IS ILL
WITH A SEVERE COLD
Judge Page Motrin of the United Ktstes
circuit court Is confined to his room
with a severe cold. A. a renult no session
of the federal court was held yesterday.
OSSSAIKAI
Omaha
1 "
o
o
Chronic Constipation,
"About two years ago, when I began
using Chamberlain'. Tablet., I had been '
suffering for some time with stomach
trouble and chronic constipation. My I
condition Improved rapidly through tho
use of these tablets. Since taking four
or five bottle, of them my health ha.
been fine." write. Mr. John . Newton,
Irving. N. T. Obtainable everywhere.
Advertisement. -
COMMITTEE ENDORSEMENTS
ARE NOT FORTHCOMING
PIERRE. 8. P., Deo. . Rpedal Tele
gram.) The first attempt under the new
primary act of this state to secure state
committee endorsements to appointive
places apparently ha. not worked out ac
cording to the theory of the father of
the law, R. O. Richards.
The democrats, with fifty-one repre
sentatives out of a possible sixty-three,
had but one name to pass upon, and re
fused to act upon this.
The republicans, with thirty-seven out
of a possible sixty-three, had thirteen
names upon which to act out of a pos
sible several hundred applicants, and by
resolution decided not to endorse any of
these, but leave It to the governor U act J
o
o
0
4
o
The National Beverage
"Made in America
99
William Allison Gray:
HERE I. a belief on
on the part of many
people that those who
use whiskey partake of
a stronger drink than
those who drink wine
or beer. Owing to the universal
custom of reducing whiskey,
this 1. not true. Roughly speak
ing, the relative strength of li
quors is about a. follows: Ueer,
1; wine, 20, and whiskey
45. The determining factor,
however. Is the method of- con
sumption employed In these
three drinks. Whiskey It Is
true. Is stronger, b'ut whiskey,
in practically all Instances, is'
taken in such small quantities
or in a form so dllluted that the'
actual difference '
in strength be
tween It and wine
and beer is neglig
ible. Some people for
get that when a
man tskes a drink
of whiskey he Is
handed a tiny
glass, which he
fills from one
third to one-half
full of wlhskey.
an amount vary
ing from 1 to 1H
ounces.
When a man
drinks wine It Is served In a wine
glass containing from J4 to 4
ounces. A glass of beer Is al
ways large and contains from II
to 1 2ouncrs. Zt la plain that the
strength of a drink of each ls
praotloally the tame.
There la another fact that
must be considered. The man
who uses whiskey will either
stop In at a bar, buy a high
ball and go on his way or take
a toddy at home after a busy
day's work. The' beer drinker
often sits down, remains for a
considerable length of time and
drinks many glasses.
-------
Made in America'
until It 1. desired by the dis
tiller or owner to pay tha tax of
11.10 per gallon and market It.
Under the present law whis
key may remain In, bond for
eight year, and may be bottled
In bond after four year..
The distiller or wholesalo
liquor dealer la thu. compelled
to Invest bis money many ycare
In advance of marketing hU
product.
Whiskey has many safeguard
aa to purity.
Every process from the grind
ing of the grain to the yeastlnff.
mashing and distilling and stor
age in bond is under the Govern
ment's wato h f u 1
eye and In charge
of II. expert of
ficials. Once in
the bonded ware
house, where It Is
stored to mature
and Improve, the
U n Ited State.
Storekeeper car
ries tho ware
house keys.
Finally purity la
assured by very
strict Federal and
State Pure Food
laws aa to kinds,
qualities, labeling
Sanitary Distilling.
W
IHISKKT possesses the
unique merit of being
absolutely germ less.
This Is true of all dis
tilled liquors.
' Any woman who ho
made gooseberry wine or currant
or raspberry wine Is aware of
the difficulty of preventing
secondary fermentation.
The processes of distilling
whiskey from grain are exactly
like the process ' of making
bread. The grain is first se
lectedonly the best is used,
because the best Is the cheapest
in the result, obtained.
The grain, used are corn, rye
and malt. These are first
cleaned of all dust and chaff.
The grain, are next ground
Into meal and mixed in proper
proportion.
The meal la scalded with hot
water and stirred until a proper
solution of the starch In the
grain ls secured. Malt is then
added to convert the starch into
augur. After this process has
been completed the entire nitlah
1. placed in large fermenting
vats, and In these vat. a pure,
high-grade yeast ls thoroughly
mixed with it. This brings
about fermentation, which is the
conversion of the starch into
sugar.
The mixing tubs,
yeast vessels,
yeast room and
conveying pipe,
are thoroughly
terlised.
Cleanliness must
be absolute. Not
only physical
cleanliness, but th
aaeptlo cleanliness
required by the
burgeon.
When the,. proc
ess of fermenta
tion 1. completed
in 72 to tt hours
the' fermented
masn technical
ly called "beer"
1. run Into the .till. This 1.
called "charging the .till." The
''beer," otherwise known as the
fermented mash, Is now put
through the process of distilla
tion. Up to this point the "beer" 1.
a fermented product germ lass,
but not germ-proof.
Grape, currant, gomberry or
raspberry wine, no matter how
carefully made, is always liable
to "sour." Becoming sour means
the deterioration caused by sec
ondary or acetic fermentation.
When the still I. charged the
content, are boiled. This dis
tilling or boiling process pro-
auces a vapor wnicn IS condens
ed In pipes Immersed In cold
water, and this vapor, so con
densed and returned to Mould
form, is the finished product
known aa whiskey.
and markings.
Whiskey cannot ferment
ICven when larpely reduced
with water, plain or carbonated.
It Is still a pure, germless, un
fernientel stimulant.
There Is no danger of "pto
maine poisoning from distilled
liquor. It is a medical stimulant
and sedative of the purest and
highest diameter.
VS national bsvarag of
today is diluted whis
key, the purest . and
most wholesome of all
stimulants. . Few are
those American lio.nes
that do not possess at least some
small quantity of whiskey, either
for regular use or as an emer
gency aid. Whiskey Is found In
the log house on the Yukon a.
well as In the comfortable abode
of the city dweller.. To the
farmer It Is a quick means of
relief for many Ills. To him who
works with his muscle and to
him who labors with his brains,
it Is a stimulant and refresh
ment To the sick it la. a tuule,
Tho medicinal properties , of
whiskey place it In every horn-
OJ
pltal.
ttSKNDEM
IHIHI
WW&tt055
it
The increase in tho consump
tion of American whiskey pre
sents a fair gauge of the popu
larity of the beverage. In 1891I
the annual consumption was
over 8.1 million gallons. This
amount steadily Increasod from'
year to year until In 191S. the
consumption was HO filllon
gallons.
Surely the place of diluted
whiskey as the national bever-.
age of the United States ls be
yond dispute.
Why do we use the term "di
luted whiskey r Because the
fashion of our ancestors In us
ing raw whlskejr haa practical
ly disappeared.
Even In illness, where
quick medicinal effect is de-
' sired, doctors and
nurse, nearly al-
way. give a mix- .
ture of whiskey
and water.
The Aging of Whiskey
FTKR being barreled
the whiskey is stored
In United Btates Qov
4 eminent Bonded Ware
houses. In charge of
Unite States Internal
Revenue official, and la so held
Al
Soma SO year.
ago the fashion
began of using
carbonated waters
with liquor, and
t h I . wholeome
custom haa now
become general
tht h . diffi
cult to estimate
the amount of
"barged wat.r
now consumed In
the United States.
Those who oppose th. use of
liquor, of any kind have under
taken to discus, all these .ub
Ject. by using the term "aloo-
Nobody drink, "aloohol." Alco
hol Is largely used In chemical
and scientific processes and in
the arts. When a man smokes
a cigar, nobody speak, of his
smoking "nicotine," although
nicotine 1. contained In tobacco.
Jieans are rated a. nitrogenous
food, but no one la described as
consuming nitrogen when he
eats beans.
Of course, there la In whiskey,
wine and beer, alcohollo strength
evolved by natural fermenta
tion. From these processes of
fermentation and distillation the
best medicinal results are ob
tained. Nature', laboratory of fermen
tation la aided by men', in
genuity of apparatus, thu. mak
ing American wiilskey the King
of all remedial and atlniulatln
dlto O ray. Marailae.
oa'ai. -- ..ai u " mm
.in. i, n - - -
RECTAL SPECIALIST
Dr. Tarry's mild system of treatment cure. Piles, Fistula, and other Rectal
diseases, In a short time, without a surgical operation. No Chloroform, Ether r
any other general anaesthetic used. A cure guaranteed In every case accepted fur
tieatment, and no money to be paid until cured. Write for book on KeciaJ d -eu.tt.
toulalnina- testimonials of prominent people who have been permanently cui'eU
Vii. 1AJUU liulldin.: Omaha.
1