Tägliche Omaha Tribüne. (Omaha, Nebr.) 1912-1926, June 12, 1915, Page 3, Image 3

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The American Cilizcn's Real Duty.
V, Ii4v l'.f f n a fr.-t-.i Üt,
N!iii I -ff
Mj i, ri
Gi ntl'-nif n:
1 ii! k yi'ni l' '!irnntinilf
fmÜfiii l n.e ,,! fi'n'ir r4(n- of
The ;ieclarr ,,! I am
Vl)"!'y Oltt t,( s l-.j.it i) v tl;C
l,niUl, ! Vi,r ntnl '.v.'i ii') (uijnit
ilKiblc km I' of vv.tri 're ".' li'f
inany is conluct.iii, i, ! whuli li.u
ciilimnsi'ril in the vmIiiik of rres
i,!,N Vil"ti' n"tr U Gcrniaü
tlovcrninrnt.
The Aii'niii:i fpf.lr mum art a
a min torlay I s'ipiHii! ! tiic I're
iilciit'n t)".siti. ii. In'li.'.iil of t;iii(.l',n
liy the l'rcsidi'nt, ywi are S'jwing
tue seed o iliäCf rd anion tiie Ocr-man-Amcricaii
jh-oji!.
1 am of Gcrniitti parcnL- je, but I
do not allow tliis f.ict to tvarp my
vicv.s from what I bfliev to bc the
path of fairncss and jtistu-e.
The first duty eis every citizen is
loyalty to the Uiiitcii Stetes and
support of its Executive Olficcrs.
Vcry truly yours,
Xütlian Locscr.
We publiah the kil:r, mainly be
cause of itä last sentence, claiming
"the first duty of every c.iüz' is
, support of hs JExecutive Of
fice." ' If that were äo, than every
National Presidontial Campaign is a
national crime against the Executive
of the U. S., who 15 critieized, at
tackcdi and opposed, cither for his
own reclection, or for the elcction of
the succts&or he indorses. That
disposes oi the sweepinj? con
' tention, that it is the duty of every
citizen to support the Executive of
sicers of the U. S. under all circum
stances. But some met con'cnd, that it is
the duty to support the Executive
in everything pertainirg to forcign
politics. They say so, when the
Executive does wh;;t they wish him
to do. Mr. Roosevch who, having
been the Executive ollicer of the U.
S. for seven ycais, and therefore
should know what the duty towards
that office is h.'js, as the private cit
izen he now is, critieized the Mex
ican politics of Mr. Wüson in the
most bitter manner. He is, however,
with him for England.
One may contend Col. Roosevelt
ghould not be followcd. Rather Mr.
Taft, who had statcd repeatedly, and
only a very sliort while ago, that "it
is the duty of every citizen to up-,
liii'l th !'rrtilftt In f..f-in
t-it, I - ; i hi" rts.i y lu.iw i,mc
ti ituf, !,.! n il j nct ii!,,." Ami
Mr. T(t dul to Ute put v. . 't
rrfcrenr ty tlie prf ndc rit' tii-utr.il-ity
poliiy.
WUyf ütfcmie Mr. Taft .heu
PfeM'b'tit, KfivcriHfd I,y the C'ii'lr
n'fn'4 üüitt inent. ent' tcl tntn hy ,!r.
M.iKinlry and Mr. Chaitibctl.ini, vf
wlnrh we rcjd o nun h in l'rnf,
l'shcr' "Patt-(Jrrinanism" and in
"t'an-Amrrifanism." An rnlinly
uni'on.Htitutiotial inttrunient, nrn r;it-iiii-i'
tre ity . hi-, Iy the
L'. S. Scnatr. .So hm Col. Koosevclt
been covertied by tbii cret ,n""i
iiieiit. He "tonk" tho l'aiiauia
Can.il tmder it. Mr. kwfvclt and
Mr. fast Will to see the U. S. live
up to ihi.i seertt and iiticonslitu
tional docunirnt, and try to h.,v?
Mr. VVihon live up to it. shty know
t hi 9 document. Ihe American sov
ereign peoplc do not know it. It
has been kept from thein. But they
are cooly told; "It is your duty to
support the President in all f ereign
matters. He knows things you do
not know." They are therehy led
to believ the President has in
formation about daily happenings in
the international Situation, on which
he decides each casc as it comes up.
We are led to bclicve he is un
hampered and nnsliackled, free to do
as ht sees fit, ai'ter weighing tho
circumstaiiccs. We are led in a
false direction. II c is not. That
McKinley-Chambcrlain agreemrnt
governs what he does, It demands
and promises that in casc of war tlie
U. S. follow the British attitude
towards rights of bclligcrents and
neutrals. and niake it their own.
This agreement is against the U.
S. Constttution. It is against the
American spirit of independence, it
makes our shipping and our trad
dependent from England's every
whim and will, and makes us subject
to England in war-tirne.
And when we knoW that, who will
say, "it is the duty of every citizen
to support the Executive in this
casc?"
It is his duty so oppos as nuich
as possible, by all legal rneans a
cottrse he considers, dangerous,
against Americas best intcrests, and
fraught with the dangers of an ttn
necessary war.
The American citizens duty is to
uphold the Executive when right,
tut to use hi influence to set the
Government right, if ht considers
its ways wronK And to do that be
töre it is too lale.
j Eltorll-"Chlcg Tribune", Junt 3rd, 1915.
AUÜHITIO CARRIERS.
The American government, we
trust, seea tno need of acceptlng the
fact that eea law must be progres
nlvely modlfled to . couform to the
cot"ie of mechanlcal developintint,
It would requlre a wlse Btatesman
to ay where our intorests l!o, but
one of ordlnarily perceptlve Intel,
llgence caa see that condltions have
changed and that law miist 'be modl
fled to meet the change.
We thlnk it U the deslre of Amerl
cana to deal with all peoplcs as
fairly as prejudice will permlt. The
force of prejudice has to be conceded,
anr it will warp the thought; but
so far as it can be recogni.ed as
a faotor It la thu far mlnlmlzed.
What we must graut the Gerruan
lf we are to malntaln a Position
morally defenslble lg the rlght to
Btop the shipment of ammunitioa by
s.ny means at their dliposal It
would be hldeous lnjustlce if we
were to assert on one hand the right
of American manufacturerg to Bell
any contraband that a jmrehaser
could come for and then deny the
Germans their rlght of stopplng
eueb Bhlpment.
If anjffblng Beems plaln and clear
In thU war it is the fact that the
3 ?clnlon will rest with the foroea
aole to eupply thenisnlveg with the
most ammunltlon. Whh.'hever force
can get the most Shells will wln,
It is not a questlon of men. It is
a Qtiestlon of explosives. ,
By our rlghtful iuslstence that
American manisfactuierB may eil
whatever a purchasur wlslm to buy
wevhaTe put ouniolves In the Po
sition pt becoming a dnclding fartor
in the war. We must not, dls'ectly
or iijdlfect.ly, andainipt, guarantee
th 5Uverof tbe ammunlUoat
' That would be a Bin against inter
national fair deallog. Boats carryins
explosives must not have the pro
tectlon of passengers for whose
securlty this government holds Its elf
responslble, We must admlt that a
submarine cannot conform to sea
law formulated before submarines
were used. A change das been made
by mechanlcg,
The United States must meet Ger
many fairly on this questlon. Wo
have no rlght to say that Germany
shall deprlve herseif of the use of
hör only eflectlve sea weapon In
preventlng the delivery of ammunl
tlon which may be the decldlng
factor In the war.
Wcmust recognlze that the move
tnent of mllitary supplles of this
character is a mllitary movement.
In easlly demonstrable fact It is a
more dangerous mllitary movement
than that of ending a reglmeut of
troons. IIo one would deny the rlght
of a submarine to sink a transport,
and if we are to malntaln 'the
morallty of our Position we muss,
not lnslst upon the acceptanee of
principlos of International law which
governed betöre the mechanlcal
change made by tfce submarine.
Als der nun ziemlich ausgestor
bette Mops nach Europa kam, war kr
ein lebhaftes Zwerghündchen, ba
die Damen im Pompador" unierzu'
bringen Pflegten.
Cicero hatdie berühmten Ne
den gegen Serres nie gehalten, son
dein nur niedergeschrieben nachdcm
Verres schon freiwillig in die Ber
bannung gezogen war.
Goethe verfügt in seinen Wer
ken über einen Wortschatz von 14,000
Worten.
Ar o Wa IIo Imt h Sornsip Mml
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li'jni'il k U (r 1.1 t lüif'i'u .
1 .- ! ;.t ,'.. r .! i i r !!,,:.-
Ii ). I turn, lind 1 a litfnniii 'l I
ti,(ip...t,
' I i!i tint I. rri tny fji in front
I'r'iil-iu l.üot,' :,t I'k,,k, r
I t'l.i'r, ',,, I tttti uuntlllnu lu t it
fccrp I r"t Inr Infiirtiiiillun. Thu
ölU.iiisB ihn' in t hm 1 thu couiitry
t, öll tlie A 1 11t, luit It t vntlitti
, KriMiii iit. Iilinliriif lliln K'ivi'niiiii'itt
to rs(t-t fr'ttln cialtns of th
ASüfS.
" Ue fnli-rrj Intn the awnti' -tit
In IS'.iT, h. it McKin y was I'r rl
fli'M of ihi; L'nifrrd KuitpH, liy tlit;
tnrnis of th undur! undlng e wcrn
lo he ü 1 v i n cci-tain rlghta la America,
which I liavp (nit.i)inHi In my boolj
"IVii-Gcrniiinlstii," and further out
Iltteil In "l'iin-Anifrlr.'snlsm,"
''When thu Kpanlsii-American War
broke out Kngland llved up to hr
liart of th agreftiumt by seelng to
!t that we were not iuterfered with
"In Schradcr'a artlcle, wrlttcn for
Tb Fatherland", he bases his con-
cluslons iargely on Usher's 'Pan-Gar-
manlsm; which was puhllshed in
1913. Professor I'sher funnerly was
Professor of history nt Harvard and
there loaraed the Beeret of the al
liance fr in President Eliot, aecording
t'j enraaer.
Washington and the Allles.
In the Sc York "Times" of May
Professor Usher prints a communica
tton which that paper beaJed "Mr.
Usher ßrauds a Tale," in which the
Professor, either gauging his ut-
torances by the influence of sectlonal
riews on the causes of the war, or
r.cting on a hlnt from Washington,
seeks to minlmlze the slgnlncance
of the Statements in bis book. "Pan-
Germanlsm," quoted iu "The Father
land", and declares "I do not know
of a presont existing understanding
between the Allles and the United
States hostlle to Germany." But
quite evldently the letter to the
"Times", which la dated May 3, was
written afier the miaehlef had been
created. The sum and substance of
the letter to the "Times" Is a denlal
that his Information was derived
from Professor Eliot. As this was
advanced in the nature of a theory
rather than an assertion, it leaves the
maln ract that there has been an
understanding between Washington
and the Allles with regard to Ger
many intact as vouched for by the
St. Louis "Star". STbis understanding,
aecording to Professor Usher as set
forth in his "Pau-Germanlsm," em
braces the followlng four clauses:
1. That in 1891 there was a secret
understanding between this country.
bogland, irance and Russla, that in
case of a war brought on by Ger
many, the United Utes would do
Its best to asslst its three allles.
2. That certain event lead to the
probablllty that the Spanish-Amerlcan
War was created in. erder to permit
the United States to take possesslon
of Spalns colonlal poasesslons.
3. That England possesses threo
immensely powerful allles France,
KiiBsia ana tue United States, which
he speaks of as the "coalition."
4. That the United States was not
permltted by England and France to
build the Panama Canal tinttl they
were persuaded of tho dangers of
Pan-Germanism.
"Our Common Enemy."
Mr. Ushor's Statements and the
tatements , of Colouial Secretary
Chamberlaln speak for themselves.
These Statements are conslrmed by
various Incldents. The American
people have not forgotten the speech
of Commander Simms, U. 8, N., at
a Lord Mayor's banquet in London
during a vlsit of an Atuerican naval
quiuiron to England undor President
Taft, in which he deelared that the
American havy would be so und ßght
ing side by slde with the EngUsh
navy in the next war agalntf ths
common enemy.
For this iudiscretion in bctvaying
! tato secrets Slmms was temporarily
üqiiulehed, ybut soon afior vas
(nt.niHt.ed with a higher command
than he had held before.
üur preseut Ambassador to ths
Court Of St. JaniPH. Mr Pb-i. rinrl
barely atrived in England before he
mano a peecn in wnicn he em
phasized the dose tlos between Eng
land and the United States and glori
sied the ldea of n world ruled Jolntly
by England and the United States.
The sneech was dellvfirod ur Snutti.
(.mpton whea the Mayflower moau-i
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lit tl.i t .., .ii i f i. .) . i i rf .'.1
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ijl il iH!. I ' f !!:! Il'll, t 1 l!
ti-' l.'f.'di Hilf t lll ni..f l'f 4.1. rl
S"I r lil.-bf I i ,-,, i!fiJ l.1 litt
t i 'i'i i1. i! I! fxr,iii'I'tit fcf tht Uri'.tf' l
H'iitm ih. !,!!. to M!;'l. U"futrt
to whomf V hy, to Crt tintmn
6H lor wtuld Interfere. If thii It
to b cur tt.tucl w mutt an July
4 pull down the Ameru..in flsg from
tht Whit Moose nd C-ipitol, to 1
not to i'm lo glv.it ever our pjst
vlctorift In an unntutr.il manner."
Tlie a lll: nct will! Ktiflaurl I In
thu als ! Wen lik Roosevelt,. Eliot,
B.1C011, Hsrvcy, Gardner, Page nd
Lodge aro tuor Ktiglisli than Anier
hau. Tln-y luiow that Pruftisoi'
I'iiliur h tulil thu truth; that, wrlt
ten or verbal, ' the cnnipact, if yim
pleas," Is In force toduy. There is
In th President's Cabinet not a
tingle American of German descent,
but there are two members born
under tho Engllsh Crown: Erankllu
Knifiht Lane, Secretury of the In
torlor, a native of Canada; William
Bauchop ilson, Secretary of the
Dfiiarment of Labor, born in
Llantyre, Scotland. The daughter
of the Secretary of State, who ha
the direction of tlie forelgn affairs
of the country in his hand, la niar
rlcd to an English anny captaln.
Bold Eoast of Unneutral ity.
"We are boldly told, on every hand,
that the adr;iinistratlon Is for Eng
land and her Allies. The events
slnce the war begatt have proved the
accuraey of the Statement. Those
who atlect to discredit Professor
Usher's assertions dumand that the
United States shall disregard the
policy laid down by the founders
of this government and do what is
already an accotnplislied fact. Tbus
George Louis Beer, in the May iesue
of the "Forum", writes:
, "The only practlcal method is to
embody the existing cordial feelings
between England and the United
States In a more or less formal
alllance, so that the two countries
can bring their jolnt influence and
pressure to bear wherever their
commoa Interests and polltical prin
ciples may be jeopardlzed."
"The President of the United
States may be neutral, but the people
of the United States are with us in
this flght. They are our allles!"
This was said (aecording to the
New York "World" of April 28 last)
by Sir Herbert Beerbolun Tre on
the stage of Drury Laue Theatre in
the presence of the Queen of England
and the American Ambassador, aa
well as a huge audlence which in
cluded many members of tho royal
faniiiy and nobillty of the bigheat
rank.
"His words were followed," the
'World" London conespondent as
sures us, "by a tremendous outburst
of applause, during which many
people turncd and looked pointedly
at Ambassador Page."
Mr. Page sat imiiassively In his
box, we are told; but It needs no
proof of Mr. Page's sentlments. We
know where his heatt Is; but we do
not know all.
If this is a republic and not an
oligarchy, tho people demaud that
Uns country shall remaln untram
melcd by polltical alliances with
forelgn powers. When we built the
Panama Canal, under th favor and
enly by permlsslon of England and
France, Roosevelt betrayed the
American people. From the day that
agreement was entered lato the
people of tho United , States ur
reudered their sovereignty and their
doom was conslrmed by Wllson when
ne declaied that It was a duty for
the United States to furnish artna
to the A.lies. "Were this latter true,
then the neutral would no longer be
a freo 'state, no longer sovereign."
Prof. John W. Burgc3s,
It Is slgnlficant that the United
States is tiie only neutral country
that has not placed aa embargo on
tho export of artns, and has done
nothliig to ebock tho flood of In.
eendlary literature that is belng em
through the niails abnut alleged Ger
man atrociticH. Tho Swiss föderal
councll reeently exchidud from the
mails the German translatlon of the
noturious Erench report of alleged
German barbaritles, which, despite
ineir vuiganty ana ooscene charac
ter, enjoy the prlvilege pf the Amer
ican niails in deflance of Proteste
ßled with the Postmaster-General.
iThe Fatherland.).
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Marktberichte.
I r-":' f;
'Kitivif !l -
-'s , ,',,,.
: ' f
-t ur
!n ;t tr; t ;t iv r ?,
r'; n'M'i'M.'it
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!.,.". a itit! ?f-f.f.l tiift ir.l
m" 1.11 .! iv:t f il.i.'.t.'ti in:5 l ii ,
I.ut! i:t Huhns vi l-ki ,''. i'c
iiiill.' in:) t i'ritf.-Si-ii, ni'i-r (''Hu.
nvu:t ' ?'i' flliMilv.'i timrcii. witrd,'
i'j i.'! !.',!'. i'. ..',!,. f : ,!!' ii
tV.'tirnrt u h'iMiihi'lit. TLiva per
tVnl'dit' Hi-lvni'ii.biit.l i'l dir. our
iiiif ii'u-bor'!!! ;u lu'!i'!:i, ft.if; (Yc
llüt'ti'it l'iuVri'it v.Hurl mit in'ii
tralcn v'niici'ru nnh! j'.ori'ii, oirr
die Ärinng..-i'frsll,tedf,il:t'it iü'er
diesen 'i'nukt war em ttiü'l.md nicht
der Beurtheilung, aver de- Prinzips.
der iiiiteriii :li. iK'Ars an 'vef;
iTitsliinit siericiileken :,'ote miei un
sere MciiicriiHii aiiidriicklich daraus
hin, das; er amerikanische Handel
mit neiilriilen .ändern nicht iiter
bimdl'it werden dürfe. Es besteht
nun lein Zweifel darüber, dnk nn
sere Ne,iieruni auf dieser erde
rung besieiien wird, und dies ist an
der Tachc wichtig das Tatuin der
-)lotc ist nur nebensächlich. Mein
Pewesiarnud, eine solche Nete an
ttroszbritaiiiiieii zu richten, war nicht
etwa der, dasz Tcutschland ein iRecht
hatte, dies zu verlangen, sendern
weil ich bestrebt war, es für Teutsch
land so leicht als möglich zu -machen,
die Forderungen der Ver. Ttaaten
anzuuekmen und die Anwendung
von llVooten gegen Handelsschiffe
?u beenden. Es giebt keinen Änmd
dafür, dafz irgend ein TeutschÄme.
ruancr bii Absichten des Präsiden,
ten in dieser Cache in Zweifel zic
Ken könnte. Ich bin sicher, das; je.
der Einzelne nach einiger Ueberlc
gnng ' sich klarmacht, daß unsere
Pflicht, dem Verlust von Leben vor
zubcugen, desgleichen einem Han
delsoerlust, mit Geld ausgeglichen
werden kann, aber keine zwischen
den Ver. Staaten und Teutschland
getroffenen Vereinbarungen können
diejenigen ins Leben zurückrufen,
die mit der Lusitania" untergingen
und Krieg würde noch verwerfli.
chcr sein, da ein solcher noch eine un.
geheure Zahl von Todten hinzufü
gen würde.
Viertens hoffe ich, das; Teutsch,
land die gestellten Forderungen oh
ne Bedingungen genehmigen wird.'
Es kann den Ver. Staaten zntran
cn, das; sie es bei jeder nur mögli
chcn Gelegenheit gerecht beliaudeln
werden.. Je grosunüthigcr Teutsch
land in dieser Frage handelt, desto
grösier wird der daraus zu erwach.
sende Ruhm sein. Teutschland hat
gerade zeht eine Frage aufgeworfen,
die seht eingehend geprüft wird,
nämlich, ob nicht die Einführung
von U.Bootcn eine Aenderung des
Prisenrechtes nöthig macht.
TeiitschlandS Ctcllung unhnltbar.
Die anscheinend von Tcutschland
eingenommene Ctellnng, das; es be
rechtigt ist, Nichtkämpfende mit
untergehen zu lassen, weil sie mit
Konterbande reisen, ist eine unhalt
bare Auffassung: das höchste, was es
in Bezug auf Letzteres verlangen
konnte, war, mit Rücksicht auf die
neue Waffe auch die Einführung
neuer Regeln zu verlangen, die
Passagiere ton zu beanstandender
Ladung fernzuhalten.
Wenn die Anwendung der Unter
sceboote eine Abänderung des Blo
ckadcrechtes in der Weise rechtfertigt,
dasz die Absnerruugslinien weiter
nach dem offenen Meere aus Furcht
vor Unterseebooten verlegt würd,
könnte es dann nicht auch möglich
sein, ein Verbot znr Beförderung von
Passagieren mit Schissen, die Kon
terbande oder Munition befördern,
zu erlassen ? Es würde nur eine ge.
ring Aenderung der chlffsgesetz'
gebung hierfür bedürfen, und krieg,
führende Mächte würden damit auch
noch von der unnöthigcn Vergröke
rung der ' Nüntrabandc.Lilte abge
1K t. :vnm!!.n I1 V'x
jtrvH. ii k:,' '.iiüd.--.'e.ii'Ze,, nir -.".'-
, M!."t!R I tu t d 'tt rv'itl'.-.niiti'U CM,
11. :t .1 Y.'t ;';,id'.it!ltti tutdet tmt
1 (''. U,;,lt i,",,' i . -,it ,v r f.'in
'.':f iiifj der (VühMÖt'dv' fehlen
,llu
( ''Iruii'.ifii mcr,i il :''it,!!i!n!tal
fiiidi't iiiu!) t'ii'.e ivinetiiidiiHtltdif
Pro! e d'r Ht i rnidiotc tuut Crn.ihii,
Eoiinul Pliitl; und Lincoln unter
fiecic- L'.'ituii.i s:,Nt, 'Xie einher
k'i'ii Lincoln werden per Automobil
liier riiitriien. Es wird also mor
gen im i'i,n des Oinaba Mnsikorr'
ein: lel'lhitt nigeben. und wird man
mit den Vorarbeiten für da gresze
Jünger fest ein gut Ttück weiterkoitt
men.
Teutsche linger erhcbkn Protest.
Eincinnnti, ., 12. Juni. Als
Resultat einer Konferenz der Bcam.
ten des Nordaincrikanifchcn Sänger
buudes hat dieser durch seinen Prä
sideuten Eharlcö &. Schmidt int In.
teresse der Anfrechterhaltung der gu
ten Beziehungen mit Deutschland
dem Präsidenten Wilson die folgende
Tepesche zugeschickt:
Der Nordamerikanische Sänger,
bund, die älteste Vereinigung von
Gesangvereinen in den Ver. Staa
ten, im Jahre 1849 gegründet und
161 Vereine zählend, die in dem Gc
biet zwischen den Großen Seen, dem
mexikanischen Golf, dem Mississippi
und den Allcgchnies wohnen, erlaubt
sich ganz crgebenst, Ihnen zur Ec.
wägung zu unterbreiten, daß es nach
unserer Ansicht cm Zerschmettern der
nobelsten Ideale unserer amerikani
schen Bürgerschaft wäre, wenn die
schwebenden Unterhandlungen mit
Deutschland, das es nie hat fehlen
lassen an Beweisen treuer Freund,
schuft für unser Land, zu einem of
fcnen Bruch der jetzigen Beziehungen
führen würde.
Wir bitten Sie, den großen Kum
mcr zu erwägen, der für Millionen
Bewohner beider Länder, die durch
die Bande des Blutes mit einander
verknüpft find, unausbleiblich ist,
sollte eine solche Kalamität eintreten.
Mit der Versicherung der größten
Achtung, Charles G. Schmidt, Prä
sident."
Der Deutsch.Amerikanische Stadt
verband hat seinen Präsidenten John
chwaab angewiejen, dem Präsiden
ten Wilson telegraphisch die Ve
schlüsse zu übermitteln, die der
Stadtvcrband gegen die Waffen
ausfuhr angenommen hat. Dcrar
tigc Beschlüsse find von fast allen
Verbanden im taate Ohio ange
nommcn worden.
r r-
"r i, .'s.
halten, wenn sie 'eine solche, wie jetzt
Truppen, mit besonderen Trans'
portschiffen befördern müßten.
Persönlich würde ich wünschen.
daß die Anwendung von Unterfec
Booten ganz aufgegeben wird, gc
nan so wie ich dies bezüglich der
Verwendung von Aeroplancn und
Zeppelinen als Bombenwerfcr möch
tc, doch bin ich nicht sanguinisch ge
nug, zu hoffen, daß irgendein wirk
sames ttriegsinstrumcnt während der
Tauer des Krieges aufgegeben wird.
Obige Anregungen find Allen von
deutscher Geburt und Abkunft ergc
bcnst unterbreitet und im gleichen
Geiste auch den naturalisierten Bür
gern aus anderen Ländern empfoh
len. Für die naturalisierten Bür
ger ist unser Land das Adoptivvatcr.
land, aber vielleicht ist es seinem
Herzen theurer, als manchem Hierge
borenen."
B. F. Wurn, deutscher Opti
ker. Augen untersucht für Vril.
len. 413 5 Brandeis Gebäude.
Es bezahlt sich, in den ttlas.
sifizirtcn Anzeigen" der Tribüne zu
arnioncircil.
,'! r:,!!.!, ! ?' i:J l j
I I'l
H''-r. Z'i'.uZk !,-'! l r
H.s!,u.r !'.: Z-i 1'.
cnt (es $evtS. '
!"!!,,' jni Ixitt " TrH
ll'uifi'tni &Mt '-.to-H
.'ii'-mlich g!!!ö i-iZ gut-
8 i'tl.
ilttlie. Tlartt fest liö ni.'driarr.
('inte U h'fie
,'iinnlid) gute Hi gute, Z75
Mittelmäßige $ 1.0':i
2 Unsers und Feeder!, I'.'arkt fest
bi stärker.
kiite bis beste $7.50 R.10.
Ziemlich gute bis gute Z7.l0
7.5,0. Mittelmäßige ?!'..00 7.0.
Ttock Heiiers $(1.CKJ 7.00.
Steck Hübe $5.75-6.75.
Ttock .Ucilber $0.508.50.
Vccil Kälber $8.0010.50.
Bulls, Ttags aisiv., ?5. 50 7.25.
Stock Bulls. Z5.007.00.
-chweine Zufuhr 8,700. Markt
5 10 niedriger. Shippers meist
fest.
Durchschnittspreis 57.25 7.40.
Höchster .Preis 57.55.
Tchafe Zufuhr 1,000. Markt fest
bis rark.
Tnrchschnittspreis 10.3.j 10.75.
Höchster Preis $10.70.
Frühling-Lämmer $10.00 1 1 .75.
Mutterschafe, gute bis beste $5.50
6.10.
Chicago MarktSericbt.
Rindvieh Zufichr 15,000. Markt
fest.
Jährlinge $9.35.
Schweine Zufuhr 18,000. Markt
10 niedriger als Donnerstag.
Durchschnittspreis $7.457.70.
Höchster Preis $7.90.
Schafe Zufuhr 13,000. Markt fest.
Lämmer, $11. 50.
Gcschor. Lämmer $10.65.
Wollkämmer $11.40.
Colorado Lämmer $11.50. '
Frühling.Lämmcr $12.00.
, Kansas Eity Marktbericht.
Nindvich Zufuhr 200. ' Markt
normal.
Jährlinge $8.90.
Oklahoma $8.35.
Kühe, Markt niedriger.
Stockers, Markt flau.
Feeders, Markt fest.
Kälber, Markt sest.
Schweine Zufuhr 3.000
fest bis 5 höher. Schluß schwach.
Durchschnittspreis $7.657.80.
Höchster Preis $7.85.
Schafe Zufuhr 200. Markt nc
minal.
Lämmer $11.60.
St. Joseph Marktbericht.
Rindvieh Zufuhr 200, Markt
nominal.
Jährlinge, $8.90.
Schweine Zufuhr 5,000. Markt
einige leicht bis fest, andere 10 nie.
drigcr.
Durchschnittspreis $7.457.65.
Höchster Preis $7.75.
Schafe Zusuhr 200. Markt fest.
Lämmer, höchster Preis $11.00.
Omaha bjctrcidcmarkt.
Turkcy Weizen
Nr. 2. llliL112
Nr. 3. 111 UNz
Weizen
Nr. 2. IIO13 111
Nr. 3. 109i2110'2
Nr. 4. 106109
Weißer Frühjahrsmessen
Nr. 2. 100110
Duram Weizen
Nr. 2. 112113
Nr. 3. 111112
Weißes Korn
Nr. 2. 691269
Nr. 3. 09146912
Nr. 4, 68y2 69
Nr. 5. 081468
Nr. 6. 68 68 12
Gelbes Korn '
Nr. 2. 6834-09
Nr. 3. 6869
,Sfc 4. 67-C.,;'
Markt