S. s Bernhard öernburg Strikes ESigh Motem twiitiMMr-nii5Tifiwrfn"rMr',',,'8ri'!! 4,UiIi-li Omaha Xri&iinf, Jtreilnsi, 20. Ja., 9I.". Ztite u ti n ri ti u u ti ti H ARD TIMES SKIDOO BALL Warshlps Have no Richt on Qca.-Propoeal to Rcatrlct Men-of-wor to Territorial WatereOcean to be Neutral. des f r New York. jn. PpraVinir thli ftcrntxm betört lli Rrpublican CluU , i the Cily of New York, Dr. Bern lü.ftl Dcrnljiirg, former colonial e cretary o! the Gerrrun empire, nade ii arnnt pla to Amcricam to ludiiuua tli uiifof luiial tiitcU, commercially ,nd piritiully, which are IiouikI to attrnd tbo iiilul(cnce of i icclitid ert the part of neutral .toward pniicipals in tli European war, tnd pladrd for unitrd and ra tional csfuri to roinimiie the neers arily disastrou rcnulti of the tni(i!Ic. Dr. Dernburg dwclt upon tlie liriiuh interference witli Ameri ca:! trade with neutral countrici and declared that tht high lea Ire and of riirhl ouglit tu be a neutral ground, whetrupon hip of nunbtlligerent ation iuuld be irre so come and go prtriicly as in timc of peace. The former imprrial Cerman mini ster went to make the ensational dcclaration that, in hu j'idizment, liipt of war höuld he forbidden to go ovitside of the three rnile terri torial liinit of the Nation, to which they brlon. ' Dr. Dcrnburg aid: I do not proponc to pralc on the v.ar o far a itf iinnicdiate causrs and the nilt for starting it are ton terned. I'hc United State are in a most fortunate positioti not to be lraRged mmdiately into the vortex of the European crisis. While tlie tninds of pcople on tlie other side of the water are niore or lessetouded ly the srnoke of the battlc, by their iinnicdiate necessities, by the in flurned feclings atti.-nding a stniggle for existeuce, pcople on tliis side liare the advantage of a clearcr viiion. They are at the necessary distanee, both nuterially and geo graphically, to have a better perspec tive, and they are sui'ficiently di iutcrested to focus, in tlye broad cnse, the issties at stake. I think everybody agrees that the presi-nt European war is a orld ca lauüty, threatening prosperify and civilization atike, and that it müst be the duty of all well nicuiiiiig pcople to see to it that it eaases are per maiietuly removed and that the actual state of the world should be bronght in harmony with the higher ideal of civilized peoples. 'l'he view they mast takc is one of detachment from the incidents of the day. It niuät be taken from a higher plane fer the common interest of all man kind, and it must come from people 'ho conimand the tnist and con lidcnce of all the warring nations 1 trust and coiit'idence that can be iCfjuired only by a high moral itandard and an unbiased, jmpartial state of public opinion, withotit fe.ir or favor to anybody hüt fricndly and hmnanitarian toward all- - America's Commercial Losse3- Already a great deal of damage has been donc to tlie prosperity of the world. Lct nie speak first of the commercial side. The trade of all countries has been dislocatcd to an alarfnir? extent. Most of the Ger man overseas trade has been stopped. Neutral shipping is being seriously disturbed. Mcrchant ves"icls are latking. and enormous freights are being charged by the only nation (the English) that has any bottoms to öfter. Constant interfering with the ahipping of this country has ten ified American exporters. This may be a necessary consequtnee of a state of war, but the danger and the fear must be lest this dislocatiott of trade should become permanent Gennany, for instauce, is throwti jiow upon her owa resoarces as regards foodstuffs, metals and oil. The importation of cotton is so far harassed by Eng land that the balcs opened in Eng l od harbors arrive in Europc in con dition hardly fit for use. In Ger many and Atistria 120,000,000 con sumers of American produce have been practically eut out from the use of such staple produce. and .they mu5t look for stibstittttes. If a man breaks hi arm and n Is not properly stt at once it will remain crooked and dislocated, or eise st must be broken again. The war waged' by England against Gcrmany is a war of starvation. It n based on the ycontention (contrary t proof and to the rule of three) that foodstuffs going into Gcrmany i would pnmanly serVe to fet-d 7,000, uih) soidiers in the sield and not 130,000,000 pcople at home. That hfl, of Course, prodüced counter meas ures. t Every available spot in Germany has been planted thi fall with wheat and other foodstuffs importcd befor, so there can be no donbt that the shortage of 0 per cent of fopdstuff that ha so far been impoted will be fully niade up. To repiace wheat bread, rye md corn mixed make a very nou shing bread- American benzine is largely replaccd by ben to, a volatil matter gained in the production o coke. Inatead of cor) per a great many alloys of other metals containing a srnall percentage of copper are being tried. Instead of American cotton large quantities es Indian cotton come in by way of Italy. The same hold good as to cotfee and tea, rubber and Other productSMii which the United States is Is- interested. Shall (Zur Lossei Be Permanent? Uut the advancement of the world U largely based on every member workin up to hia utrnost cfliciency. 'j h , vast domain of the United States is the prodneer of th'c cheapest wheat and cotton, oil anci copper. Gennany has developed an excellent tfchiücal education, shown a very inventive genius and a most com plefe Combination of applied tech ivhiu fid science. The interchauge of the goods that have made up the bulk of the trade between, Germany and Austria on the one band and the United States on the other has been a ' great boon and blessing to the whole world, giving everybody in these countries of a combined Population of 310,000,000 people the best and cheapest Service under p rezent conditions. . But it is to be. feared that this Interehanffr, rrr.eii.iry for the well, bring and tuppmrss of a great part of the tiviVied world. will be tiermanently disturbed. lf h peorlt havt one for norm constderabl Um dticarded th use of certaia proii'Kt it is difacult to bring them back again to their former hablta. Ai Inng at a repetition of the preient ealamity !s to bc feared th countries tnuit go on to in n V them itlvti independent permanently in order not tt be placed sgain In the ante rtraits. Therefore is it highly desirable and mo!t nerrl'tiry to t,d some permanent means of avoiding the potaibility of a rrtnrrenc of tlie preicnt Situation, in the interest of the commefee and the happiness of the world. III Feeling Commercially Unfortun at. A difficulty is added by the great deal of ill feeling shown in the United St.-.tes toward Germany and Austria, fof'reasoii whuh do not want tO enter into n w, but which I do not cortiUder ju4titicd. Ccrtainly this ill feeling is most fortunate from a merely commercial view point. All business ha it fotmda tion in trust and conlidence, breause it is carried ott on Credit. And if this ill feeling (unwarranted as I coniidrr it to be) is to continue it will add greatly to the di"iclty of the Situation. We in Germany believ that the people here have been in flueneed by talse reports and have been unable to get at the truth. l!ut there are sigm that Gcrmany and Austria are conmienciiig to think that the truth ought to have per, etrated over there by this thue, and it is hiimanly, intclligible (much as I should like to comitcract it) that resentment should spring up and make itself feit. This may bc to the interest of Great Uritain, since (ac eordiiig to the utterances of its statesmen) she desires to captare and to steal German commerce and shipping (I se this , Word rcluctant ly, but I have no othrr so. the way in which German trademarks and patents a. : being captured in Eng li nd). But it is certainly not to the interest of this, country. And it seenis to me necessary that the dis cussion as to who brough' on the war, whö commands a higher civil ization, an that all these unfottndcd tnles of atrocities should iiow be dropped in order to gain that view from a higher plane. The view that gathers its force from a Ioo!ung into the 'untre should prevail. Hatred a Spiritual Misfortune. But the relations have also been disturbed in another direction. I have always wondered why the people hi these statrs should take sides at all. All thinking men, to ixy mind, should try to prevent this. The United States is a cousiiry of many nations. It has a very large Population of English descent. It has a larger populatwn of German and of Irish descent. It ha- tried suc cessfully to obliterate national lines and transform all comers who make the United States their permanent home into its own citizens. Amer icans first, last and all the timc. But if the leadeii of the uation, spcciaJ ly thosc who are teachers of the erming gencrations, the professors, the antbors and the journalists, do not see their way to keep füll re serve toward the various factions at war, it must of neecssity occur that the peace of this Community will be d:sturbed, that the various com ponent part s will rem?mber their old affilialions, that blood will assert it self. that factions will arise and that political atrifc will become more arrimonious.and stirely this canqot servc for the good of this country. This is, after all, a matter that should concern America alonc, so I will not enlarge on it. But the split among the people has also touched or. the spiritual relations. German professors and scientists who have tried to defend their country are being ridiculcd by their brethren on this iide. Lifelong friendships have br iken p. The interchange of scientitic attainmänts nd invention is checked. Hatred has been engendered. and we have the woeful spectacle that the men who should stand for the advancement of science, the men of independent rc search, the-.finding of the truth, the "Keepers of the holy fire," have tüken sides and added ta the general ill feeling. From my point of view I can only decply dcplore it. I cannot recognize the aecessrty nor the oceasion for such actions. I think that it should be the noble duty of the scientihe world to stand above the happenings of daily lifc; that it should preserve and strengthert the ties that have hroughe so much ideal good to tlie world; that it should seek and dis semiuate the cternal truth; that it should try to tmderstand human nature and make it understood; not that it ihould pass a wholesale judgement on 120,000,00 of people who havo cemtributed to the good of the world at ieast as mneh as have their present adversaries. If this necessity does not dawn upon the scientilic Community the r'islocation of thought and scientitic relations may prove even a more serious thing tor the future, and it will take perhaps a generation to come to heal the wounds unnecessäriiy infliefed. . Religion Endanger ed by War. And lct me now shortly turn to a third matter which perhaps less than to others bclongs to things usually discussed in this circle. . One of the saddest aspects of the present Situation is the deep gulf feit by all thinking jtieti between the acts of vtoler.ee and destruction and the teligious creeds that, every one pro festes. There is a deep feeling of unrest among all religious people, gentile nd jew alike, It seems to them that the teachings they re ceived have not obtained that hold on the soul necessary to put these teachings into acts wheu the emer geney arises. This unrest is all over the world. It is aeccutuated in this country by crtngrrgations plittln up, by political prenchiiig from tlie pinjm nn vy launig nir, m p,.,ce whrr the univerul brotberhood of man hould be the one and only text. I he s piel, according to histtory, will be the wenl , lüg of the ji van-! uation. Ihere will spring op eiihrr any patro'lmg outside of tlice ter. rtligum iudilTcretK'e or a wild . ritorial watre. It is prrejtely hk tectarianitm with political tendencies, ' sending tr ,,s into for, ign territory. all of which c.itmot be in the interest ! It is a ' free sea" tl,. e sre all of any country wh.-tso. ver. If th ' f gl.ting for, the United Siatc as European war i not eoiiMiIrred a, a I well as Gcrmany, as Mn iia, as Str passmg event, as an explomou after via. It is a clon-l and "Imttlcd up'' an euorniou;; presure, it may come ica thut Great Hniaiu im to hold to pas tliat tue upr;me te.it Imnt on , which aloue the hope of a permanent and ' lastiug peace, of a heiter nd holier world, can be based, that of the universal brotberhood of man, I tliat inoilest and Intinble feeling to- war tne transcetnlenial, will, be tnost grievously disturbed and one of the fundamental pillars dstroyed, upon whiej' 1 bad incerely truted vi t vMi'.A build up the shatteied world again. What I the War About? Iit view of tbis grave Situation, of the absolute ueces.iity of drawing the lessons from this universal disaster and of staniping out the causes that brotight it about, it is incunihent on all independent minds to examine into thosc causes in order to find out, not why the people took tip arm,, but wh.it their ends ar and their ambitions, so that tiio.se nations that are free to exprejs their sen timents sl,-,ll fpe.ik up and hclp in the fight direction. To my mind th whole fight and all tiie f:ght is, on the on side, for an absolute dominion of the seven seas and, ott the other side, for a free sea, the traditional mare li herum. ' A free sea will mean a cessation of war danger and a itopping of world wars. There is no dotibt that the s'.ruggle, commenced because Servia fnund nersclf deprived of an outlet to the Adrhtic sea, in cottscquence of the jealonsy of the Mediterranenn powers. The eause of Servia was taktn up by the Russian empire, which is figdting now, as for a hundred years, for an ottilet from the Black sea. She is fißliting Ger many because of the Russinn feeling that the way past Constantinople was going over Eerün a feeling that seems perhaps jusified by the fact that Ttirkcy has now joincd the dual alliance. The Japanese, by occtipying all the. Islands formerly in the possession of Gcrmany in the Pacific, want to strengthen their hold on thosc waters and bring them under the command of the Japanese fleet. The Ei.glish have ttme and again declared that their dominion of the chaune! and the North sea depended upon a neutral Eelgium; that Britan nia must rule the waves as a matter of safety for the empire. Germany has for years back bad to prepare a navy of its own in "order to protect its rapidly growing overseas trade in case of an emergeney just as has now arisen. The üritish have chased al! German inerchant vcssels front the high seas. and ßritish statesmen have repeatcdly declared that the German navy must bc utterly de stroyed. America Involved by Lritisk Action. Even the United States, which has no part in the European struggle, has h.id to take up that same fight with England because of the viola tion of its own doctrincs regarding contraband, the stopplng of the ships, the searching , of cargoes, the corn pulsory purchase of supplics nceded by England and the delaying of quite iiiuocent American shipping. I cannot but consider the whole Situation a most anomalous one. The ßritish doctrine is that Eng land mnr.t dominate on the high seas, and her policy has been to fortify those seas by at least sixty naval stations all around this continent and around the whole world. That doc trine lead, further of necessity to the claim that the British empire begins at thu tre mile ltmit of other territory a claim that has no founda tion either in the law of nations in a higher sense or in the feeling of the civilized world. The sea is free to all. It belongs to no nation in particplar, neither to the British, nor to the Germans, nor t the Americans. The rights of the contiguous nations ceasc with the territorial linc of three miles from low tide. Any domination exercised beyond that line is a breach and infringement on the rights of the otfiers. The sea is the common property of all the world, and the patrolling of the sea by any one force is a breach and violation of that right. The evidence is now conclusive that hcretofore and for a consider able.time back all mercantile ship ping has been donc under British perniission and tolcrance and that Great Britain eould stop it at any tirnp she chose. She has done so now, not only in makmg war on her adversarics, but iu taking action to the very great detriment and disloca tion of the trade "of nctttrals. But the sea is not only in faw a free territory and the common prop erty of all th nations, but it is also the vital Instrument for human activ- ein tor iiurnan activ-, t and trade, the luues is activity draws it.J ity m commerce from which this activity nourishing and iiphuilding breath, and the voluntary clo.:ing and lock iug up of thosc lungs can at any time destroy thCwhols body. The High Seas Most Be Freed. lf you want to do away with wars in the future we must put the prize for which these wars are being fought beyond the reach of any One competitor. we mast re-establish that "Ire sea" to be plied on tx - clusively dy th, rnerekani marine of all nation,. Vv'ithin their territory the peoples have right to take such measures for the ix defense as they think necessary, but the sending of troops and war tnachints into tho neutral'red Casus bclli. Uhüe it may be thrrrjnre prrfectly Irgitiuute to patrol, for the ake ot seriirity, the coasts of fvrry rottntr withiit it territorial watcr, there i,, on the other haiTd, no fundamental nriiicinle that can be rrem-ni-ert sn, and force upon the rrM of the world. llow ran this end hc bronsbt .out Nomtnally the .Kuea c.inal is neutral!??,!, I,t it is tu, ,1er Uritish gnns. The Dardane ! are under Turkikh guns. Tlie strait ot Gibraltar ,s der the uns guns of the fortres of that riaine. The Hriti h chaniicl is stopped up by the Brui,i with the help of the nrtitraliavl I,ow Coun tries. The Bahic is bluckrd in the Sound. The only truly urutralizcd w.itcrway, the Panama c.inal. is un der the practical command of I'cr nnida, the Bahainas, Jamaica, Barba dos, Trinidad and Georgetown, seven British naval bases in its immediate vicinity, most of them doser to the Panama tanal thn.n is the United States. The Red sea is bottled tip by Allen and the Island of Perini and the strait of Singapore by that city. Une might try to seciire tlu neces sary freedom by the neutralization of all the.se waterways, indispensable to free shipping, but we kuow that such neutralization treaties have only a very frail existence. As Lord Derby said in 1j3 rrgarding tlie Belgian neutrality treaty, he took "very little stock in papers of that kinth"- On the other band, Erancis Lynde Stetson qitoted three days ago Lord Lansdowne ,tl,e leader of the Conscrvative party in Great Britain, as follows: He (Lord Lansdowne) remarked nuictly to bis coUcagues in the hoite of lords that "sooncr or later' the nations would have to decide to what extent a belligerent power, controlling narrow waters which form a great trade aventie for the commerce of the world, was justitied in entirely closing such an avenue in order to facilitate the hostile operations in which that power might tiud itself in volved. And, enlarging th inquiry to all its Philosophie bearings, he observed, "Just as public opinion in any country would bc slow to tolcraie arraugemetus under which a locil trade dispute might have the eise et of paralyzing the whole industrial life of the country, so public opinion among the great nations would be slow to tolcrate a state of things under which a local Conflict involving only two powers would be aüowed to create t such serious detriment and dis turbance to the whole tradiug Com munity of the world." So! it may be ijtK'itioncd whether the end sought can be rcached by mcasures of that kind with any degree of safety in times of war. Forbid Warships the Sea. The other alternative would be to forbid the high seas to men-of-war of any nation whatsoever, to relegate them to the territorial waters and permit only auch small cjuisers as are necessary to avoid privateering. If that should be done the world as it is divided now would come to a permanent peace. The safety of the countries would rest on their home defense, no danger of Invasion need be anticipaed by any nation, every nation could tlevelop frecly its peace ful intercourse without being afraid at any time of being foreed and stopped by a snperior power, the enormous outlay for naval nrmament could be nsed for peaceful purposes, and if, as a necessary consequence of such a mearfurc, battleships, cruisers and submarines should become use less and have to be ''sscrapped," "scrap" them! Would it not be bet ter to destroy this Investment than to coutinually threaten and impair the peace, the dcvclopment and the freedom of mankind? Ter Nährwert des Kriegsbrotes. Verschiedenen Gerüchten gegenüber, als ob öas neue in Deutschland ge setzlich vorgeschriebene Ltartosselbret dem Normulbrot an Nählvert erheb lich nachstehe, betont Prof. Albu. daß. da es sich nur um eine geringfügige prozentuale Vermischung, der biöheri gen Brotmehlsorten mit den neuen Zusätzen handelt, die Einbuße an Htährivert und Ausnutzung in 'MiU lichleit ganz unwesentlich sei. Nimmt man an, daß ein schwer arbeitender Btensch täglich etwa 400 Gramm Schwarzbrot genichi. so würde er da mit etwa 24 Gramm Eiweißsubsianz aufnehmen. Enthalt dieses Ärot 2J Prozent Kartoffelmehl, so verringert sich der EimeiMhalt der Ärotnahl ning des Tages um höchstens den fu.isttn Teil, d. h. um etwa 5 Äramm. Daö ist wiederum kiium et zwanzigste Teil der gesamten Ei. ! i- . , rocrö menge der iasliujcn Nahrung et lies erwachsenen 'enjüM. Keiv wenn nun auch noch die Ausnutzung der Nährstoffe des ciricsselbrotes um einige Prozent schlechter anzunehmen ist als beim Roggenbrot, ist, der Verlust an Nährnoffci jedenfalls so, gering, dah eine Beeinträchtigung der Äolksernährung nicht zu befürchten lW - '""cy l)lltitt)tlicy ves Ge,qmac!es sind die Veränderungen so UNbedeu tertb, bnfe die Mehrzahl der Esser die. Beimischung von 20 Prozent Kartof. selmehl kaum oder nicht unangenehn? tm: tterritory of other orlnton psrts of th, wotU Is a es Omaha ii ti u ti ti ii u M s Samstag, den 30. Januar 1915 Hoher Preis für da Kostüm, da die harten Zeiten am betten kennzeichnet Eintritt 23 Cents jH Einladungen von den Mitgliedern zu r j iinw!wimfTTnm?HTlF71?F'rr?T"' mAhZk äitiilmiUULi4d<ii.li4am Au (?öunkil Blufft. Xi'n ü'ciiiiilniitncn bc3 arf Ki'mmisjärö v. (4. ist cö nt'liiiiiU'tt, dif 2tn'itiiifcitnt zwischrn bfiii ioaxb und den mir der ,Niif(amM)slUii!tfl bei l'iiijouri ?y I n llirrä bcauitrnatfit N?iifrii,i5a,ie' tclllfn zi, (djiditt-ii. Xio Vase Vit'w Putf i'Ittrti'fti'Utctt pn'tchirtfi, slc ,ic das willliirliche gälten von Hau bnt inncrlinlb bei Parkes, die ju .liip.Nappiiig" verwandt wnrbfN. T'e JUiMicrim. vcN'lid'tcte sich, in ;Jnf unft f it ite städiiichcn ätieiben mestr zu fäslcrt. Am Iol'.tcn Xonitrrftstd fand ritte itH'rfominlititsi bf5 tadtrathÄ sowie miariiiieuer BiirM statt, in der die yMiiipenbiflfVit eines neuen latlilianses erörtert würbe. Tie Ztinmiilng ber Nebuer nxir bein orschlaiie günstig, boch kW nian feine beslinniiten Entschlüsse, da nmn sich nicht einigen konnte, wie mnn bas nöthige Velb am besten aufbringen tonnte ,id nicht geneigt war, die an sich fcfint hohen Steuern noch anzuschrauben. ,v euer Versammlung der Beamten ber .Zirle.Hans Trug Co. wnrben alle letztinhrigen Veaniten wiedergewählt. An Stelle bes ver. 'torbenen B. (reer von Thnrman irat ?. I. Ranmond von Tes Mai. ueö. R. H. Tollen und Carl Ball waren am letzten Freitag (Geschäfte halber in der Ttaöt. Charles Schmidt von Avoea war letzten Tonnerftag im Court Hans. ,"yrau Louis Pittnmnn und ra Piltmann, beibe ans Hancock, statteten am letzten Freitag Conncil Bluffs einen Besuch ab. Tns Brod ist teurer geworden; balb müssen "auch wir jlriegsbrod essen, Nnn und auch bie Eier wieder gestiegen. Tas Tuizend frische Eier kostet 4ö Cents und babei niujz man noch froh sein, daß man iibcrhcntpt welche bekommt. Tie frischen" Uiihlhaus Eier sind zwar billiger, kosten nur o" Cents, boch sinbet iiian keine anständige Henne, welche bereit ist, bie Beranttvortung für deren Geburt auf sich z nehmen. ' Polte vier Momt lang war Enteit Mittage der freiste Mensch der Welt, und pfiff auf allen Zwang unter dem seine weniger glücklichen Mitmenschen seufzen, nachdem er aus der Erziehungsanslalt zu Eldora ausgekniffen war. Leiber hatte die Polizei keinen Sinn für Humor, als er in einen Frachtwagen der North. Western Bahn einbrach, nnb sandte 'ihn zur Bervollkominming seiner Studien unter Bewachung von Staatsagi'nt S. C. Bial wieber zu rück nach Eldora. 3 einem gros;en Erfolg ge staltete sich ber am letzten Tonncr stag von ben jübischen Bereinen im Auditorium gegebene Tanz. Tie Musikkapelle des Herrn A. Smith sorgte siir die Tanzmusik. Ter lle berschusz soll zum Bau eines neuen Tempels beitragen. Ter sieben Meilen nördlich von Missouri Valley wohnhafte Farmer Fred Anwerter erklärte Konkurs. Tie Schulden beläusen sich auf $1813.50, die Deckung auf $711,), ' George Efcher, I. . Erle wine, Ed. Mier und O. E. Brant? wurden am Tonnerftag Morgen we gen Friedenoslörung verhaftet. Ihr Fall kam am Freitag zur Berhand liing. Tie Pharisäer sind wieber fleißig an ber Arbeit, uns vor dem Ver derben z bewahren. Eine Unzahl neuer radikaler (esehesvorschläge in Bezug ans den Ketränkevcrkauf wur den dem Hans und Senat nnterbrci tet. Tie wichtigsten von ihnen sind: Borschlag zur Aufhebung des Mulet Gesetzes Borschlag, den Prozentsatz der Stinlmen für die Wirthfchasts Petition in ben größeren Städten von 5t auf C0 Prozent zu erhöhen, die Anzahl der Wirthschaften herab zusetzen indem je ein Saloem auf 2.000 Einwohner kommt anstatt auf 1,000, Borschlag, alle Städte unter 1,000 Einwohnern trocken" zu ma chen, nnb zur Einführung beS 7 Uhr Schlusses, Rickter Walter C. Nov.es von New Aork wurde zum Massenver nalter der Rock Island Bahn er nannt. In Betracht kommt nnr das im taate Iowa gelegene Eigen thuin der Bahn. n n m usiKverems ßÄ ,rVV ß XIA) .,.,..'.,x k , . . v Hll E vi"7 i,. . ' ' 1. Tttttschcs Hauö Offizielle Ankkndigung Sonntag, den 31. Januar 1915 Ball des Ooiaiia Plattdeutschen Verein Sonntag, den 6. Februar 1915 Ball des Deutschen Damen-Vereins In Vorbereitung: Großer Preis-Maskeball am 20. fitituv -Z" , "is :'J - $ Händler in " "- ' f I f ' i I i : J ' . v j s.: - - Erste Klasse Haar-Waaren ! Zöpfe von anZgekämintem Hsr verfertigt 1t. ToulaS 2fiT0 i.'.."- ' ! ..'. ';'ift' s . ' j . k : l&f l. .tOfd u ' l ."u rj-rj, ' Mzk'ilkr ? ' tr t ? !l i- ! UUJ är j.jiJIK- 'ff V f 9 lf ir-T, ' t tt'v tjs i' 1 mmn nzm . 14. und Harnsy S!rassc 0MAHÄ, NEB. Ecke 16. nd ffsrnam Str. 3. Stock Parts Blsik. jf VSHIIf3IlllItlIlI113IISIit!IIIiailI31SllllIIIII tIS liriKII3KIlIlIlIIIIII13IIIIXIIII.lIIIIIIIItllln Neberzeugött Sie sich selbst! i S .. t rv i ES füj Y l$ i f Upiioty Ub-fi( F ' lli (lh VT& i Es ist nach echt p . mm i VZ . - , sÄJ- M- hisEiaE? !".'.??,!'!' 1 ' Im,.il rpiiii!!i"MMiinuiiiiiiiiiiiM!niiiinu!iiii:iiiiiiiiniiiii!!ii!iiii;ifi:i!!ii!iiiuiiuiiiii!!;i3 haben. m w a "" w im r w MIiM kAhiUiAkiäai4 r.,-.;-,, I ,11 K i . i 4 'll'Ui i ! r m .jjf :. li .. Fein gewellte Zöpfe $3.50 1 Extra fein gewellte Zöpfe . $5.00 j , SfiampooTng Haarfrisur Manlcurlng j Perrücken n-.d Zöpfe auf Beitclluhj ge- I macht Privataufträge in HsjtrU oder Wohnungen I aufgeführt I Ulir'ftttn nnb Jobs aus Bestellung gemacht f fiair Dresslng ' Partor 1522 tou&la 2,tt., Cm ab j rney Hotel Chas. C. Sorenscn, ElgcnÜi. 11. und llarney Str., Omaha Europäischer Platt Raten von $1.00 aufwärts. Alle Zimmer nach außen feuersicher u. modern. Cenlral gelegen. Erstklassiges Cafe und Lutte! In Verbindung DRS, MACH & MACH Zahnärzte Best auZgestattete zahnärztliche Of pee im mittleren Westen. Hochgradig fte Arbeit zu mäßigen Preisen. Psr zellansüllungen gerade wie die Zahne. Alle Instrumente sorgfältig sterilisirt nach der Behandlun del Patienten. oo oas fjiemont ES PILSENER u. HOFBRAU i nicht das beste Vier ist an öikinhkit, Güte . GeZchMltZ! Sz a altdeutscher Methode gebraut und deshalb Klar, Perlend, Erfrischend! s - Fragt immer danach. Haltet eine Kiste daheim Ü FREUONT -BREWING GO, I FREMONT, NEE 1 I