Tägliche Omaha Tribüne. (Omaha, Nebr.) 1912-1926, October 30, 1914, Image 5

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    CmiQa IrtMae. IxrUsst,'30. CfU 1311. ZtiU ö,
I
P,ltiische An,kistk.
Kongressmann
CHARLES H. SLOAN
Kandidat für die
Wiederwahl
Csnglkßmnnn Zloou ut
Neutralität
Unter den jüngeren Abgeordneten,
die sich in Washington bewährt ha
den,, ragt besonders Kongrchmann
5hgrleS H. Sloan vom 4. Tiftrikt
hervor. Er ist äußerst beredsam
und ein fähiger Tebattircr, der nur
dcmn spricht, wenn er etwas sogens
werthes hat. Er ist einer der ar
beit'anlitcn im 5d?naresz, und seine
. Fähigkeit und sein Fleiß haben ihm
rasch Ehren eingetragen, sodaß er
jetzt Mitglied der wichtigsten Aus.
schüsse ist. Vor allem aber sollten
die Deutschen nicht vergessen, das;
er eines der wenigen Mitglieder des
Hauses -war, die. fest und uncrschüt
terlich der vorgeschlagenen Gesetz
gebung entgegentraten, welche die
Deutschland 'feindlichen Alliirten be.
TV!
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irrttT
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fchatzmeisters in der Höhe don einhundertundsieoentausend Dollars
(ZtU7.lM0.lV). Im Jahre 18117 beantragte und sicherte ich als Staats,
senator die Annahme des jetzigen Stadt-Eharter mit ausgeglichener
L?l'?teuerung und zwang die Korporationen und groszen Gnmdeigen.
thümer, ihren richtigen Antheil an der Stadtsteuer zu zahlen. Dieser
preibries berechtigte die Stadt auch, ösfentliche Nutzbarkeiten durch die
Ausnützung der Kräfte hervorragender Gebiete zu erwerben: Dieses ist
Erwerb durch Snteignuns.Vkrshren. Dieses setzte auch besonders
die Stadt Omaha in den Stand, durch EnteignungSverfahren die
Omaha Wasser-Anlage in Besitz zu nehmen. Ware dieser, Freibrief
strenger gehandhabt, die Kosten der Erwerbung der Wasseranlagen
würden wenigsteiS die Hälfte betragen haben und Jahre des Prozesses
erspart sein, . . , '
ttMi ttIT -. Clllf
Tain G ity Express Co.
S)ftSe I SJTt mt v 4 ttn ,kik Ih,hks ch
,l kzdl,. b,iikb,n,n,
Ufettiitia t.ei ,,iIcht
Oiflctp 131-4 Wo wfmrd r. Ombi Nlb.
?rMft!!,!i-,
A r ' " 1
7 - .
T..
..,.,, w.irde und die da
raus .bestanden, dasz in dem jetzigen
niropäischen Kriege die Ver. Staa
ten strenge Neutralität aufrechter.
halten. Hienn war er der freudi
gen Zustimmimg aller Teutschameri.
kqner sicher, he stch sicher ihm letzt
dankl'ar erweisen werden. Herr
loan hat sich stetZ als liberal er
wiesen, der alle Leute seines Ti
striktes gern vertrat. ?'achdem er
deutsch erlernt hatte, studirte er
sorgfältig in 'Teutschland die dor
tigen Methoden der Landwirthschast
,und legte vor dem Repräsentanten
hause sowohl dies als auch die Vor.
theile klar, die dem Farmer ein
Ttudium dieser Methoden bringen
würde., Ei - solcher Mann sollte
unbedingt im 4. Distrikt die Unter
sllitzung der deutschen Wähler sin
den. '
Wahl aus 3. November
JohnC.Barrofl
(Advokat)
Demokratischer Kandidat
- (i'i -
Staats-Reprässntant
i
l
.own und ufgzoz, i Tougla
Cfouni
ED. E. HOWELL
lZandidal für
.JAATS - SENATOR
: Wahl am 3. Nodember.
Warum ich Ihre Beistand erbitte.
' Im Jahre 1894, als ich Mitgggd deS
Stadtrathes war. entdeckte ich Unter
schlaaungen in der Äbtheilung deS Stadt
GerraaniFatcfuI Hounfe
By KÜIfO FRANKE, Pref. es HUtory,;;7(ar7mw Ä päuie;i!y in
oroorrnin utmureanauirioror
th Cermnl Munmn. , HaTwd
UnlTtrslty.
It It eiy lo ie why Amtrleao pub
11 cpinion hould hat con
dcmrted by n ovrwhf.liiin ma
jority th diplomatic ci o Aus
trt na uermany winen nave
leert the iii.mtU.ji o(
th frnfie xplotion whith pow
thaktt th (rtundattoni ( the whul
civihzed world. Auitria'i trek with
fervia nd Girmany-'i viouiion cf
lidirian nutrality the ne leadint
to war betweea kuma nd Cermany,
tht, str bnnjing l neland into th
fray muit appear to ti uninitiated
ai recklcii and indefensih! provoca
tiont and aa vtanton attacka upon th
Ui of aationa.
Tb thouliiful cbierver. Iiewcver,
ahould lonk beyond the immediate oc
casion of th a world Conflict and try
to undmtand it underlying causet.
liy doing 10 he will, 1 belicve, come
to th concluiiun that fundamental
justiie ii to b found on the Gernian
ide and that Crrmany has been
forced to fight for her life,
France Oppoaed to Unisication of
Cermany.
' It is an unquestionable fact that the
unisication of Cermany and the eitab
lishment of a ttrong Gernian tmpir
half a Century ao wer brought about
against the bitter Opposition of
france, and that the defeat incurre4
by France in 1870, in her attempt t
prevent German uniScation, i at fhe
botloni of the constant Irritation that
has) ajjiuted Europe during the last
4.? years. Germany'i policy jtoward
France during these 43 year has been
one of the utmost restraint and for
bearance. and has been dictatcd by
the one desire of making her sorget
the loss of the two prvince,, Ger
man until the 17th Century and inhab
itated largcly hy German atock, which
were won back front France in 1870,
Whether the acquisition of these pro
vinces was a fortunate thing for Cer
many may be doubted. The possci
ion of Alsace-Lorraine has certainly
robbed Germany of the undivided
sympathy of the worl I, which she
otherwise would liave had. But it is
probably true that, from the military
point of view, Alsace-Lorraine was
needed by Germany as a bulwark
against the repetition of the many
wanton French tnvasion from which
Germany has had to suffer since the
time of the Thirty Years' War and
the age of Louis XIV.
However this may be, Germany has
done her best during the tist four dc
cade to heal tbe wountls struck by
her to French national pride. Sh
abetted French colonial expansion in
Cochin-China, Madagascar, and Tunis.
She yielded to France her oyvn well
founded Claims to polilical iniluence
in Morocco. In Alsace-Lorraine it
seif she tntrodueed an amotint of local
seif Government and home rule such
as Fngland has not aecorded tven
now to Ireland. While Irebnd stii)
is waitinj? for a Farüament at Dwfe
lin, Strassburg has been, for scveral
years the scat of the Alsace-Lorraine
Diet, a provincial Farüament based
on universal suflrage. , And even in
spite of the incessant and inflarqma
tory French Propaganda which last
year led to such unhappy counter
strokes as the deplorable Zabern af
fair, there can te no reasonable doubt
that the people of Alsace-Lorraine
have been gradually scttling down to
wülinpr co-operation witS the Grrman
adininistration an administration
which insures thera order, justiee, and
prosperity. Nothing is a clearer in
dication of the peaceable trend which
affairs have lately taken. in Atsace
Lorraihe chaa the fact that the Na
tionalist, i. e. French, party in th
Strassburg Diet Las never been able
to rie above insisnificance, and that,
on the other band, a eonsiderable
number of responsible Offices in the
civil . administration, inctuding the
highest governmcntal positions, have
been occupied by n'ativi Alsatians.
While Germany has thus repeatedly
shown her willinsness and desire to
end the ancient send, Franc has re
mained irreconcilable; and particula
ly the intellectpal dass of Fxance
cannot escape the Charge that they
have persistently and willfully kept
ilive the f'ame of discord. It surely
cannot be said that the restoration of
Alsace-Lorraine is a vital necessity to
Franc. With out Alsace-Lorraine,
France during the last gencration ha
recovered her prosperity and her
Prestige in a manner that has been
the admiration of the-world. It ia a
mere Illusion to think that the recon
quest of Alsace-Lorraine would add
to her glory. It would have been a,
demand of patriotism int the intelUc
tual dass to eombat this Illusion. In
stead of this, French writers, scholars,
orators of whatever creed or party,
except, the Socialist, year in and year
out have been dinning into the pop
ulär ear the one word revenge. And
there can bo littte doubt that Prof.
Gustave Lanson, the distinguished üt
erary historian, voiced the sentimenta
of the vast majority pf bis country
men when in a lecture, delivered sorne
years ago at Harvard University, h
staterl that France could not and
would not recognire the peace' of
Frankfurt as a final settlement, and
that the on, aim of the French policy
of the last 40 years had been to forc
Germany to reopen the Abace-Lof-raine
question.
If there were people in Germany
inclined to cverlook er to minimize
this constantlv increasing oienace
from France, their eye rmist have.
been epened when, in the
French government, having previous
ly abolished the one-year volunteers.
raised the duration of active, military
service for very Frenchman from
two years to ihre, 'and. in additton to
this called out in the autgmn of 1913
the recruits, not only of the year
whose turn had come, namely, tbe re
cruits born in 1892, but als these
born In 1893. This. was a measurc
nearly identteal with mobilization; it
was a measure which clearly showed
that France would not delay muck
longer striking the deadly blow. !r
no nation could possibly stand for
any length of time this terrific train
of holding under the colors it, entire
male Population from the 20th to the
23d year, No wonder that the Paris
Bioer wete tpeaklns; as Ions ago ti
summer es 1912 of tne reglmentss
tioned in th astern drp,irtmrnt
,, the "vangtiard of cur u
Kiorioui '
rmy
nd wer dvociiting doubl
emuet nn
tN ULA N II LUMMtU
C1AL SUPREMACV
Th econd foe now threatening
th destructioa f Germany 1 ring
land. Can it be truly said that Eng
land'! bostility has been brought
about ky German ax,re,ion? True.
Germany hat built a powerful navy;
but i hav Japan, th United States,
frrnc and v Iy. lias Lng
land feit any rnenace from these?
Why, thn, ii th German navy -gled
out (I t pecially smutcr threat
to England? If Germany, in her
icheme of nava.1 construction, ad
out th main emphasis wpon the
buiMing es fast cruiters, England
might proptrly tav rrsented thu ai
mnc to her commerce all over
the gieb. Hut the German naval
Programm' has aimed at nothing of
th, kind, it has had )n view abov all
th building of a fleet of battleshipt,
that is, of öeet for coait defense.
The eourse of the war thus far is a
striking nroof of this defensive na
ture of the German navy. Germany's
weakness in fast cruisers has enabled
the Fnglish flee to sweep German
commerce off the seas: but th Ger
man baltle fleet still guards success
fully th German coast.
Has th German diplomacy during
th last gencration bern particularly
nieuacing to England? Germany das
acquired some colonic, in Africa an
in the far easfc But what are Kain
t.ln and Dar-es-Sala;itn and Kiao
chau compared with the coloniea of
tlie other great powers: v nere nas
Cermany pursued a colonial aggres
siveness that could in any way be
compared with the Eritish subjuga
tion of the South African republics
er the Italian conquest of Trinoli or
the French expansion in Algiers,
Tunis- and Morocco? What recent
international transaction es a more
eurelv defensive character is the
0 record than th ceding to Eng
land, in 1850, of the important Ger
man protectorate of Zanzibar, in ex
chane fr the barren little North
Sea Island of Heligoland? Wherever
Germany has made her influence feit
on the globe she has stood for the
orincinle of the oven door. Wher
ever she has engaged in colonial en
terprises she ha betn wllling to
make compromUes with other na
tions and to aecept their co-operation,
notably o in the Bagdad rail-
wav undertakinc. And yet the colo
nial expansion of very other nation
is kailcd by England as "benesicial to
mankind," as "wrk for Civilisation";
the slightest attempt of Germany to
take part in this expansion is ae
nounced as "intolerajile aggression,'
as vidence of the "bullying tenden
(üe of the War Lord."
What is the reason for this slngular
unfairness of England toward Ger
many; of this incessant attempt to
check her and hem her in? Not so
nmch the existence of a large Ger-
man navv as the encroachment upon
English commerce by the rapidly
growing commerce of Germany has
made Germanv Viateful to England.
The navy has svmply added to this
hat of Germany th dread of Ger
many. But if there had been no Ger
man navy, and conscquently no
dread of Germany, this hate of Ger
manv rnisht have come to an expio
sion before now. For the history ,of
the last 300 years proves that Eng
land has habitually considered as her
mortal enemy any, nation wmen
dired to contest her commercial and
industrial supremaey ftrst, Spain,
then Holland, then France, and now
Germany. As long a, German firms
by the manufaetvre of artificial indigo
keeo on ruining the English iropor-
tation of indigo from India, and as
long as the Harnburg-Anicricän Llue
qnd the North German Lloyd keep
oa outstripping the prestige of the
Cunard and White Star, there can be
no real friendship between England
and Germaay. Although England
has repeatedly propossd to Germany
naval Agreements, these agreements
wer avowedly nieant to pernctuate
the overwhelming preponacrance ot
England 1 hghting power, so lhat sne
would at any Moment be in a position
to erush German commercial rivalry
for all time. She apparently thinks
that thu moment has now come.
RUSSIA CHALLKNGED CER
MANY That Germany's third implacable
enemy, Russia, is clearly the aggres
sor, and not th defender o her own
national existence, need hardly be
demonstrated. Sh, xoss, as tne
guardian of the Balka states. But is
ther any caje on reeord where Rus
sia das really protected the independ
ence of maller neighboring cou
tris? Has he not crushed out pro
vincial nd ractal individuality wher
ever she hat extendcd her power? Is
it not th sole ain of her national
policy to . Russianize forcibly every
national! ty under her way? In Ein
land sh has gone back on her sol
einnly pledged word to maintain the
Finnish eonstitution, and is ruthlessly
reducing one of her iriost highly de
veloped provinces t the dead level of
autoeratie wile. In her Baltic prov
ince she ia tryiug to destroy root
and branch whatever there is lest of
German ulture. Wherever the Rus
sion fcherch hold dominion. ,intllc
tual büght sure to foliow. Te
think, therefore, that Russia would
promote the frec development of a
number of independent Balkan states
under her protectorate, is to shut
one' eye to the whole history of
Russian Expansion. Ne, Russian ex
pansion in the Balkans rneans noth
ing less than the extinction es all lo
cal independence and the establish
ment of Russian despotisra from the
Black Sea to he Adilatic.
Not Fussia, but Austria. ! the nat
url protector of the tqm'libriurn be
tween the existing states en the Bal
kan peninsula, an their natural
guardian apaitut Russian dornination.
Austria is their nearest eighbor; in
deed, the possession of fiosnia and
Heraregovina makes her Balkan
state herseif. Bing herselk more than
half of Llavie atock, he has very
rcVson for living on good terms with
the various Slav kingdom south of
her. ' Bcing herseif forced, through
the coflglomerateness of her popula
tioj, to onatant compromises in. her
internal affairs between covkicting
nationilitici withia her border, he
could not posiibly absorb larg ad
ditional niount of foreign trrntory
.Sh i, bound to respect the existing
lins of politieal denurketion Z th
haiSttu, and her sole Object can be
through commercial treatics nd
tan Irgislation to open up what
ued to b Eurpcan Turkey to her
trade and her civiliring influence. Jn
hu sh, rnutt eleatly b upportea cy
Germany. For only if Austria is ich
free to exercise her natural protecto
rat over th, Balkan täte tan the
passsge between Germany and the
near Orient, on of the niost import
ant ronte of German commerce, b
kept open. Fussia unwillingness,
then, to allow Austria fre band in
her dealings with Servia was an or)cn
menace to Germany, challenge
which had to be accepted. unless Ger
many was repared t abdicat all
her influence in the near Orient and
to allow Russi to override the legit
iiiiate Claims and piration of her
only firm and fauhful ally.
ENTEP.S JAPAN
Thi formidable eoalition of th
thre fjreatest European power,
threatening the very existenc of
Germany, has been joined by Japan,
openly and baldly for the purpose of
snatching trorn oermany ner one
Asiatic oossession. If any additional
proof had been needed to make it
clear that Germany, if she wanted to
retain the shghtest Chance ot extn
cating hcrself from this world-wide
conspiraey against her, had to sinke
the first blow, even at the risk of of
fending against international good
manners.this stah in the back by Ja
pan would furnish such proof.
And now as to the tactical neees
sity of the two aets which have, unde
servedly, put upon Germany the od-
mm of appearing as tue aggressor in
war in which sne nas notning ia
gam ana everyming 19 ,
which ske nas tne to siav on agam
and again, war in which sh find,
such overwhelming odds against her
that, even if she fights "to the last
breatk of man and horse," it is dim
cult to se how she can maintain her
seif. AUSTRIA'S EXuibNLtii
THREATENED
If Germany had prevented her ally
Austria from th punitive expedition
against Servia, she would imply hv
helped thereby the dreaking up ot tne
Austrian ernpire. For it is fully
proved, it is openly acknowledged by
the Servians themcelves, that the
Greater äervia movement Kas no
other im than the undermining of
Austrian . rule in Croatia," Slavonia,
Ualrnatia and other South Slav prov
inces of the Dual Wonarchy, and
the ultimate Union with Servia itself.
Whether this Greater Servia move
ment rests upen legitimst national
aspirations or not, is a question which
will be answered differently by the,
advocates of the disterent causes now
opposed to esfeh other. Certain it is
that it constitutes peril to Austria
so grave and portentous that it can
be met only by direct counterstrokes
of Austria, not by the rulings of a
European court. To talk of arbitra
tion to government which sees its
sovereignty challenged within its own
terrilory by another power, is likc
promising the blessing of heaven to
fcian whom you helg to p'.under,
Gefmany was right in ssertmg that
thi was a question between Austria
and Servia only. It was not Ger
many's fault that tl.rough . Russia's
openly sidir.g with Servia, war be
came inevitakle.
EELGIUM A VASSAL STATE OF
FRANCE
The Belgian question is not a sim
ple one. When the neutrality of Bel
gium wau guaranteed in 1831 by in
ternational treaty, Germany as a Eu
ropean power did not exist, and Prus
sia played only a minor part in inter
national politics. The two powers
which, at that time, watcheo each
other jealously and by afeguardnig
Belgian neutrality were hoping tu
check each other, were France and
England. And it was against Franc
that in 1870 the declaration of tha
English government, that it would
consider a. violation of Belgian tern'
tory a casus betti, was niatnly directj
ed. Only from 1870 on has tbe main
tenance of Belgian neutrality come til
bo a burning question betweeil
France and Germany; and from this
time on it has been one thing ist the
orv. and another in practice. For
there can be no doubt whatever that
France, while not openly violatin? in
ternational agreements, has gradually
succeeded in circumventing them by
making Belgian territory to all in
tents and pnrposes a part of th
French line of defense against Ger
many. The Belgian fortresse cov
erin th main passages from Ger
many into France were strongly for
tified; the Belgian rmy, under
French supervision, was brought up
to the highest point of efficieney; all
Bclgiurn was systematically imbued
with French Sympathie and ideal
and strong dislike nd fear es Ger
many. so that in reality it has been
for the last 25 year not a neutral
state, but a vassal täte of Franee. (
As a tclling Illustration of thi state
of things, it may be inpoint to relate
an episode from thfe International
Exposition at Brüssels in 1910, which
can be given on unimpeachahle au
thority. The German exhibit at
Brüssels was a marked suecess, in
decd one of the niost striking features
of the whole exposition. But it. was a
svecess very nweleom to th Bei
gians and very grudgingly admitted,
Indeed, when the German sectiet was
the only one which opened pn ched
ule time on the first of May, this fact
was conimented upo in th Brüssels
papers as an evidence f the "preci
sion brutale" so characteristic of th
German. And when in the latter
part of the Summer a majority of the
Exposition buildings burned te the
ground, regret xpressed in pri
vate and scarcaly wtthhold in miMie
that the German, avillien should not
have been destroyed also.
Germany at the outbreak es the
war found herseif in a position
toward Belohnn very nutch like th
one in which England found horself
in 1807 toward Benmark. Napoleon
by crushingt Prussi and Fweden had
obtained a foothold on the outhern
coast of the Baltic Sea, he had intim
idated Denmrk nd was tbreatenin
by the closing of the Danish Sound
to shut out England, from the Balticj
altogether. At this juncture, England
proposed to Denmark an alliance.
vVhen this propotjition w rei'ustd.
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Das
scuanste
Baut bessere Geschäfte auf
Herr Ladendes. her:
Elektrizität, das schärfere Licht, baut nicht allein
ein Geschäft auf, sondern eS entwickelt besiereS Ge
schäft. Ein anziehender, gut erleuchteter Laden
zieht nicht allein Käufer an--eS zieht gewinn
bringenden Handel an. Die nach einem seinen
Stück Seide Umschau haltende Dame kann die
Waaren ebensogut bei elektrischem Licht al5 bei
Sonnenlicht heraussuchen. Verlangen Sie eiue
Vorführung. , ,
Telephonieren oder schreiben Sie unS heute um einen
.Voranschlag der Jnstallationökosten für Ihren
Laden. Es wird nicht viel sein und Sie können
dafür zahlen, wie eS Ihnen paßt. Rufen Sie nur
Douglas 1062 an und unser Vertreter- wird kom .
men, Sie zu sehen.
Omaha Electric Light
& Power Co.
. ' :
V
V
'' ' ' . ' .'ijr
mTr Erste Klasse Haar-Waaren
Zöpft von nsgefsrnrntern Hase erferttgt
Tel.: TulaS 2S70 1522 Diugla Str., h
Mm 4 Riepen
Deutsche Leichenbsstatter
an English fleet without ay preeed
ing declaration of war, appeared be
fore Copenhagen, opened a bombard
'xnent upon the unfortiüed town which
laid the larcer part of the city in
rüins, and seized the whole Danish
navy.
? The moral Indignation of the Eng
fish government of today over the
German Invasion of Belgium would
be more impressive if one could
feel sure that there would hav
fieen the same moral indignation
nd eonsequent declaration of war had
(Belgium been invaded by France. I
it not likely that England, true to her
traditional policy of seizing the right
Moment and of finding the niost plau
sible arguments for effectiv action,
would have applauded such an inva
sion as a Step neces ary for the
maintenance of Belgian neutrality?
It ia time to drop these hollow
phrases of Standing for the rights and
liberties of the weaker nations. The
svhole gigantic strug"gle.. of which we
re made shuddering observers, is not
tstruggle between right and mighti
ut between menaced might and ien
kcing might: and justiee lies ou th
eid of that nation which has txied
hardest to maintain peace. That na
tion haa been Germany, not from any
sentimental eure for the weif are ot
pther nations, Kur from heter instinct
Df self-preservation. For Germany
knows that the Conflict into which
sh now has been forced can add
nothing to her present gr-eatness an
may wreck her whole naticmjii exis
erfte. ; .
B. F. Wuk, deutscher Opti
ker. Augen uiüersucht fiu Brillen
4135 Brandts Gebäude. Omaha
klbonnirt auf iie Tägliche Tribüne.
$4.00 daS Jahr durch die Post,
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Extra fein gewellte Zöpfe-. $5.00
Shsrnpoolng Ravfrssur Uanlcsrlsg
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SchadaU's Half Dresslng Parier
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T . r,ltt 1103
701 sädl. 16. StrSe
Sei. S. 1226 Omaha
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William Sternberg
Deutscher Advokat
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