The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, September 25, 1919, Image 4

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    THE ALLIANCE (NEBRASKA) HERALD
Thursday, September 25, 1919
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URGE SENATE TO
HASTEN PEACE
Leaders in Forty Stales, Re
gardless of Party, Sign
I Ringing Appeal.
TREATY WITHOUT AMENDMENT
Say Every Day of De'ay Puts
World in Imminent Peril of
New War Point to
National Unrest.
New York (Sperlnl). Two hundred
nd fifty leading Amerleana, Repub
licans and Democrat representing for
ty different states nnd every prominent
activity liAve Joined In a non iwirtlaan
ffort to britm about the ratification
,f the reaee Treaty "without amend
ment and without delay." Their names
re 'attached to an addreaa to the
United States senate, which waa made
public today, through the League to
Enforce reaee, after It had been seat
to every member of the senate.
The signers, almost without excep
tion, are men and women of national
reputation. They Include such proml
tent citizens as ex President Taft,
eorpe V, Wlokersliam, Attorney Gen
eral In the last Republican administra
tion ; A. Lawrence Lowell, president
of Harvard; Charles O. Moore of San
Francisco, president of the Panama
Eipoaltlon; Judge George Gray of
Wilmington, Del.; President Samuel
Compcrs of the American Federation
of Labor; Harry A. Wheeler of Chi
cago, retiring presldeut of the Chain
'. ter of Commerce of the United States ;
Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, president
of the National American Woman
Suffrage Association; Cyrus It. K.
Curtis, the Philadelphia publisher;
President Heber J. Grant of the Mor
mon Church, and Spargo, leader of
the Socialists, who supported the war.
The signers derlare that every day
of delay In ratifying the treaty puts
the world In "imminent peril of new
war.,r
Their statement follows:
In the senate at Washington, now
that the committee on foreign rela
tions has reported the treaty, the lines
re sharply drawn between the Imme
diate ratification of the treaty of
peace with Germany, and It amend
ment with a reassembling of tho con
ference and a reopening of negotia
tions that would bring- great delay and
prolonged uncertainty In settling the
great Issues of the peace. No partisan
WEL
BURGESS-
plea run be made, l-.iriy line are al
fea ly Itrohcn.
Standing at a distance from the
conflict In the senate chamber, w
plead for Immediate ratlflcnllon with
out delay, our land requires It. A
Mate of nervous strain, tension and
unrest exists manifesting Itself In lls
turlmn's, which In some rases have
no self evident connection with the
war, but which are. In fact. Its after
math. The world is put In Imminent
peril of new wars by the lapse of each
day. Dissension between us and our
former allies are being sown. We firm
ly believe and aolemnly declare that
the states and cities In which we dwell
desire Immediate peace.
The waging of war steadied and
united the Ainerlcnn people. Peace will
bring prosperity, and prosperity con
tent. Delay iu the senate postponing
ratification In this uncertain period of
neither peace nor war has resulted In
indecision and doubt, bred strife and
quickened the cupidity of those who
sell the dully necessities of life and
the fears of those whose dally wage
no longer fills the dully market basket.
We beseech the senate to give the
land peace und certainty by a ratifica
tion which will not keep us longer in
the shadows of possible wars, but give
the whole world the light of peace.
Reservations In the nature of clarifica
tion In the meaning of the treaty, not
in consistent with Its terms, will not
require the reopening of the negotia
tions with Germany and with our as
sociates in the war, which we all and
each united to win.
But there Is no possibility of doubt
that amendment of the treaty, as !
now proposed in the Senate Commit
tee on Foreign Relations, would re
quire negotiation and a reopening of
all the questions decided at Paris.
Month of delay would follow. The
perils of the present would become
the deadly dangers of the near future.
All the doubt engendered would aid
the plots for violent revolution lu this
and other lands. The Issues here and
elsewhere between capital and labor,
the conspiracy of speculator and prof
iteer, would all grow and become more
perilous.
This cannot be. The American peo
ple cannot, after a victorious war,
permit its government to petition Ger
many, which has accepted the treaty,
for Its consent to change in the trea
ty. Yet if the United States should
amend the treaty for Its own purpose
and policy, Germany would have full
right to ask for concession. Ger
many has agreed to make no claim In
regard to enemy property seized la
this country to an amount of seven
hundred million dollars. Our recent
foe could ask for a reopening of this
Issue and of the Lusltanla claims. It
could raise every question open be
fore hostilities In regard to submarine
warfare and the treatment of its na
tionals lu this country. All the pro
vision for our trade in Germany
falsed, by the economic clauses of the
To
To
treaty, many of them vital to our ln
utisi.rl.vi and our farms, ns In dye
patents, dye supplies and fertilizers,
the working of the Reparation Com
mission, which superintends the trail
of all with Germany, could all be
brought up by Berlin for readjustment
by our negotiators, acting for the Unit
ed States atone and no longer as
sociated with other victorious powers
or supported by a victorious American
army on the German border.
(Continued from Page t)
It will pay you to advertise in The
Herald.
NEBRASKA RANCHMEN, FARMERS, BUSINESS MEN
It is to Your Interest to
Injsure Your Property
IN A STRONG NEBRASKA COMPANY
Keep Your Premium Money in Your Home State Where It Will Work for You
Insurauce business in Nebraska today is effectually safeguarded by the State. Each Insurance Company must conduct its
business in certain ways sot down in Nebraska law. The funds of Nebraska fire companies are invested as prescribed by the State
Law for the safety of both stockholders and policy holders.
The Liberty Fire Insurance Co.
OMAHA OFFICE:
1817 Douglas Street
Old Line Legal Reserve Stock Company
$ 1 ,500,000 Authorized Capital and Surplus
Liberty Bonds, the best security on earth, $100,000 worth deposited with the State of Nebraska for the protection of policy
holders as well as stockholders of the Liberty Fire.
Also Purchased $25,000.00 Victory Bonds in Addition to Above
The Liberty Fire writes every known kind of Fire and Tornado Insurance on-Town and Farm property, and Automobile
covering loss by Fire, Theft, Liability, Property Damage, Collision and Accidental death, also hail insurance on growing grain.
Premiums are now averaging $1,000 per day, more than $60,000 in premiums written during the months of April and May. Losses
paid in cash as soon as proofs are received.
JOHN A. WACHTER,
President
P. F. Zimmer has managed
COM
Omaha
the Aksarben Festival
And the Burgess-Nash
We invite you to make use of the many conven
iences of our store during your visit to Omaha
and to spend a few hours agreeably in seeing
the fashions and new goods assembled here.
NASH COMPANY
To Ward Off Frotts.
Dr. C.G. Anbott of the Smithsonian
Institution, suggested that If It were
possible to chnrge the lower air above
citrus fruit orchards, with a heavy
dose of ozone Its absorption
of ongoing nocturnal :adlatlon
might help ward off destructive frosts
While the amount of ozone In the low
tr layers of the earth's atmosphere I
now '.mown to be negligibly small, this
substance Is abundant In the upper at
rw.sphere, where It plays an Important
role In regulating territorial tempera
tures by Its absorption of radiation.
of OMAHA
GEO.
twenty - seven years of successful Insurance Business and has invested
Liberty Fire.
E
Artificial Eyes.
During th year Professor Uol
aoneau of France created what coulc
honestly be called an eye that wat
human In appearance. The method
of manufacturing was pnctlcally tht
sa.je as that employed at the present
time with the exception that In th
Intervening years great Improvement
have been made In Imitating tne col
ors. that are almost lifelike la their
effect. Besides, many Improvements
have been made In the tdiapes, which
are practically molded to conform to
the six-ket and fill all the available
pace.
J. ADAMS,
Vice-Pres.
Store
. rree Trunk Doesn't Grow.
Tree trunks do not grow In lengtn
between the tap root and the lowest
branch. Also the tap root when cut off
it a special length always remains the
same length, for it Is but the trunk or
body below the soli. Both root and
body may branch, or lengthen by new
leaders.
Earliest Guide Book.
The earliest guide book printed In
English Is "Instruction for Forralne
Travel" publt.-hed In 1142 by James
Howell, a famous traveler of that
day.
LIN..COLN OFFICE
Fourth Floor First Natl. Bank Bid;.
P. F. ZIMMER
Secy, and Mgr.
$55,000 in the Capital of the
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