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About Tägliche Omaha Tribüne. (Omaha, Nebr.) 1912-1926 | View Entire Issue (May 30, 1916)
Omaha Tribüne, Tienötn 30. Mai 101(5. ZtUt 3. r Sprecht vor in kr Gastwirtschaft Von Oslo Vorsatz . 1512 Howard Str. Gute Ware, reelle Bedienung Defiance Stärke ' atrk ll-n tiltrtl, kinci fit klebt nicht am (5is,n K' (otit'UB f Irff rnt. Bür yiii-"f In Hl mmtAt. 1 Un, Vcke . 1-4 nubr Hrft tut aitN lt. 3 -Dtd -ultn -crrlrt erhallilch DEFIANCE STARCH CO , Ora.h. N.b. RLDOIPH II. BREMERS 2tutA)tt Rechtöanwalt eiOKedin Bldg. OMAHA Phon Doug. 1950 HENRY FRAHM MALERMEISTER PAPILLION, . . NEB. vn' in unifuam topntrnt an I rforolfur. HutottioMtt unb oatrt VacTtrirn ine i i"itulftdt. Vril "i ,. tbtlt -antl-rt rftnn MiTrt j&W&fo ' . 1 I Wt chr kki ut durch -nie Pt, In rn Btflf rtnel mu- gort utoM-Mli t tmtitn. Rch lni vlan rann ffrtnrt et llttr. JStn ee ch M tat, tchntt, et I toi ort: BttU, tttlin eti tiit lt, mti tch Im gort tut Jrel ttfonaen tann." Auto A-snc-, 425 S. 13. SL Orniht, Mes. Häkclbuch No. 4. rlT?VrWS.fr tu. , y - V' ' v Vj. ' V. ti 'i' ' i i -" V, ? 's-' ' J w y. . r W . f. IV t i jv- 1(1-11 rVf' f5..r.'.,V. 1. I I yil l f..': VII f V, f , ilU.J!V(.l ,' J -,i.,iL ''4 k ;j a!uuutL r r nnsA h Die neuestm und originellstcnMu. ster in Spitzen, Babykäppchen, Ein sähen und dergleichen werden alle in diesem Buche gezeigt. Ale Häkclstichc, welche gewöhn lich gebraucht werden, sind darin enthalten und erklärt. Die Muster finb groß und die Anweisungen klar l iri"B um I IL- sBr ' L yE-sr i jts t9tuwmm -fV-S. f t miM ' t ' fj'V KTji ' I tf','l ' ' ' ' 'g tvy ' 5 - ,v; rAWIfwuMa- i,oiv.l;..': :'"( , l titJiTm ,V A U, i -i -''"'--.t--!-'- VJ r v . v.' U ' 4 " - "k l w ' ' . 1Z UNd deutlich. Ein jeder kann. UNd.dut brutal 'economic lavery doe not ,-wcnn auch erst ein Anfänger, ein Meister im Häkeln werden beim Gc brauch dieses Buches. Jedes Muster ist abgebildet und erklärt in der einfachsten Weise, so das ein jeder ohne Ausnahme schöne Häkelarbeiten anfertigen kann. Wenn Sie auch noch so viele Bücher ha den, dieses übertrifft alle bisher da gewesene. Zu 11c per Buch. Zu bestellen durch die Oinuha Tribüne", 1311 Howard Str., Omaha. Nebr. ' Musterbuch für alle Arte von HSKl arbeiten. Buch Nr. 1, wie unten gezeigt, cnt. hält Anweisungen und wunderschöne Illustrationen .für alle Arten von Filet Häkelarbeiten und Kreuz stichcn. Jede ffrau wetteifert, daö Keuche in Mustern zu bekommen. Machen Sie Häkelarbeit? ' Senden Sie direkt für dieses Buch, welcheb das reichbaltigste und billigste Mu sterblich ist. Es erreicht eher den Zweck., als Bücher von 255 Cts. Ueber 200 Muster abgebildet pmmvr riLT CROCHET Ä CRCSSTITCH SPSLYOKES .lurATeo-. TUJL- C KiaTDUCTK IVIILUJ t 4 . -- r ' UiK vgrsxiz- Z bestelle durch Omaha Tribüne. 131 1 Howard Omaha, Neb, cn ci k jt r t ' Beruft Euch bei Einkaufen auf die .Tribüne". oisr grhl&.'x1 wtj&j& , i j By RUPEHT BEAUMONT, Montgornery, J1b,1 (Contlntied.) To thmk, lor an instant, that Britain'i cmraiiie no ine war was causeu ty ine'rnnnths lielore it broke out. The inltu violation of ßclgian neutrahty, is to'.cntial newspapers talkcd war from lyOö, exhiliit cras ignorance o turopean politic. Ihcre would have Leen no islavie ttaclt on Austria- btit lor the machinationt k the ßritish cabinet A powcrful ngine may be itationary. 1t Las grtat potential energy. A toiich may et it in motion. The blav and the Tcu tnn faced eath other in the lialkan. iThey would still be kacin each othtr, expectant, alert, ready, but that iome cne et them in njotion. Wbo? Ai juith and cabinet. VVhat ior( tnglish fiavaüjm and tlic "balance k power." ,The fear ot Gcrmany approaching the rhannel, and cstabltshing a naval baue at Antwerp, led to the Englih treaty with ßelgium, bvhich ßelgium was to be considerrd a öetcndfncy ot England in case of a war with Germany, and of which the Gcrman govemment tnust have been aware. The bare fact of the exitence of the treaty made Bclgium a belligerent. The invasion of ßelgium by Germany was sine tncendiary mater ial in the band, ai such consummate politician a Asquith and Lloyd-George to et tha peoplc in a fighting f ranie of mind, and to beguilc the American,, "ßut Germany struck first." Did the Czar stop mobiliiing when the Kaiser begged him sain and again to recon sider hi decistons? MÜHILIZATIÜN 15 vvak. it you see a man puttinij dynarnite undrr your house do you wait until the explosion before takine action? (ierrnany was to delude hersclf into ancied ccunty until the Russian Kordes hould trample her Civilisation und foot. Let America follow that policy II it pieases. oermania armed and traincd was ready. Knowing the awful sacrisice about to be demanded of her he wa calm. Lnvoking the aid of God m a nghteous causc she drew the sword without malice and without fear. There was no escape. Treaties with France and Kussia bad long before pledged England without being supported by a Plebiscite. It is well known in America that England and Russia have divided Asia betwecn them. The division of Pcrsia at the time Shuster was expellcd frbm that eountrv taueht Americans that, simply because Shuster happened to ne an American citizen. And did you ooticc How quickiy talk about the Kus nan occupation of Tabriz subsidcd? Df Course England would support Kus ia, otherwise Kussia would heed Ger nany speak. The Arrangement with ihe French, by which France would toncentrate it fieet in the Meditcrran tan and the English watch the North jea, wa also made without the consent of the English people.- These treaties meant tnat untain must go to war hould Kussia ever force the Balkan question, and they were entered into because of English jealousy of Germaa progres in obtammg a proper iwre under conditions of peace and in fair competition, of the shipping and trade of the world. A seat in the light: a place in the sun When that Moment arrives where American trade ha, expanded to suc cessfully compete with ßritish trade. we mavexpect England to sie the war dogj on us. There are several reasons why England hould seek to involve America in her hatred and quarreis. She is naturally anxious to drag as many nations in her wake a possiblc. Evcry little helps. American money tied up in London mcans American support. 1s America could be brought to break ; with Germany, all those German ships . could be seized, to the crippling of Oer l man commerce; and English-tnade arti , des would come into vogue instead of things "made in Germany." It would I take years for the German merchants ' to get back to the point where they tand at present as regards the Ameri can market. England of Course would expect to take' Germany's place in the market, just as she took America place when she destroyed the merchant marine of the United States, she kind of government a country is supposed to have is not always an Index to the real character of that government. No one would ay Mexico has a republican form of government. Augustu pre- c " V exist there as it does in some repub lics. The President of the United State has more power than many a King. England i called a Commonwealth, ha a King, and is rulcd by oligarchs, I hould ay parliarnentary government is at an end when a nation may be led to the shamble of war by an Oligarchie cabinet, when members of that cabinet ean make "undebated Statements to a bewildcred and entirely s ignorant House," when in neither "the decisions nor in the policy which led to the decis ions was there the smallcst exercise of Rny control by the people of their rep fesentativeji." Arthur Ponsonb', M. P.) f'oor old England. Inheriting the ideal of personal liberty from their German ancestors, the no ble fight the king and each other, par liament i formed and the king and the parliament fight each other, civil war bring the Puritans to the front, the king loses hi functions which are as umed by a cabinet, the nobles lose all their prerogative, wealth alone is pow erful through the Operation of rotten politic. How farcical it seems that the aristöcraey whose ambition have deso lated France agatn and again hould now be without politteal power except tnrougn hoodwinking the common peo ple, and also allied with French repub licani?, which - it fought Napoleon twenty years to crush. The pendulum Swing back lid forth. now to despot ism, now to anarchy. The ßritish have never learned that Liberty mean the right. of ie masse to live like human beings n the enjoyment.of equal op portunity, -jiat the government which doe not look after the welfare of the lowcr orders is no government at all, that folitkal liberty is utterly and ab solutcly worthiess unless aecompanied by econovfic liberty. The German have arrived farther in a few decades than the ßritish have in centurics. Why? Because work not scientifically directed wastes time, energy, and Material. And if, in maintaining the line of golden commerce to all parts of the earth for tue major benelit of the great mer I chants. the olicarch rln tint- k;. , "Slave tlieir own people, may we ex. pect them to respect the right, of other n,Sikm..mL In alllw their hislory have they everf Thi war wai decided upon by the British cabinet when the military and naval conversa- tion led to the nttitual placing of the French and ßritish lleet. The Ad mir alty, under Churchill, was governcd by war conditions three years before Au gust of 19U, When war carae, evcry rrason, exceft the right oncs, were publishcd, to how Tllh, PEOPLE how they had gotten into it. Author who enjoyed no circulation of repute in their own country, were drnKffd out and their look old by the Million in Eng land, while aid book were recom mrnded to the American ai good read ing. ' The alient and actual causc of the war are today hidden from the ßritish people, and will not be revealed to them until England get rid of As quith, Grey, Churchill, and Lloyd George. And if the English masses don't know the causc of the war, why should their aristöcraey attempt to teach Mit It's the English governmrn tal machinery that has tloodcd America with lies about the war and it causes. To shape American opinion they have given us a part of the news, yellow headlinc flare the iniquitics of Ger many and the endearing kindnes of England, the Assodated Press eems to act as an organ of the ßritish eensor. Alarmiit tories teil what the ßritish would like to ce happen. Syria is ready to revolt against the cruel Ttirk, the 1 urks want a separate peace, Spam is straining at the leash to join the Allie, Bohemians ympathizing with the Rus sinn have been shot in Prague, Social ist have been executcd in Berlin, the Hungarian Dit is aliout to ever rela tions with Vienna, the United States is solidly lined up against Germany, the "Poles" petition the Washington gov ernment to prevent the use of asphyx iating gases by the Gcrmans, and so on, ad tiauscnm. Thcn we read the "Atro cious Atrocity Stories." These are best disposed of by quoting an editorial from the London "Herald," a labor paper: "They were at one and the ame time a Stimulus to recruiting and the grati fication of that particular species of lustful insanity which in time of peace takes its pleasuros in other and eqnal ly infamous, form, ßut when it was discovered that these storie were not only incapablc of proof, but that the vast majority of them were capable of disproof ; when there wa a provoking absence of handless children, searched the mongefs ever so hard, there was a rcaction to decent silence, but not for Inng. Thi time the stories concern .themselvcs with a wholesäle outraging of nun and school-girls," as the Eng lish used to do in France during their former wars, or in India where it was convenient. "Make but your lie infa mous and vile enough, and it will be believed. So mueh was proved up to the hilt in the earlier series of tories; so much is being proved in the latter. As before every town and village hei tered handless children, so now every convent is supposed to harbor outraged and pregnant nun. Yet not one soli tary case of either infamy ha been produced that could survive the easiest scrutiny, and not one will be produced. It is not the brave men at the front who invent these stories of malicious vililicatioiv Soldiers always respect the enemy in uniform. It is the pol troons at Korne whose purses are being dcpleted by the war. who, had they re ceivcd military training would have learned to be accurate in thought and to teil the truth. There i not one sin ele order issued by the German raili tary in Bclgium but what can find its raison d'etre in the principles laid down in General Orders No. 100, Adjutant General s Oslice, Washington, V. C. 186.?, and which instructions were i sued, without modification, for the gov ernment of the armies of the United States during the war with Spain in lay. Ihe vile calummations and mis representations ernanating from Lon don sources are not worthy of a noble people; they disclose the depths of moral perversity to which commercial ism is capable of descending when it is the chief worship, aim, and authority in a state. The epithets employed in the English press today give a distinct shock to an unprejudiced person taught to beheve in English justice and love of fair play. Let one recollect that such utterances are not tne expression ot tne nation. she are rather the ravings of the plutoerats who have that nation in its gnp, and will soon be compelled to conscript the workman to bis bench as well as the soldicr to bis gun. Some of the alarmist storie should deal with Biitish affairs. Why not in- timate that England does not dare to use the Europcan troops she has in India for fear of a revolt in the land of the durbar, that English workmen are so thoroughly discontented with the con- trolhng caste they would rise against it if they could, that Welch eoal miners are almost in a state of insurrection? The tmrest in the Sudan, the hatred of all the small neutral nations for the mistress of the seas, the historic enmi ty of Ireland, the endles bickerings be twecn the ßritish commanding: gencrals the dissatisfaction the French feel with the military policy of the British, the Russian complaint that bis screams for hclp were only answered by the Ger mans, the cause of the rise of food prices in Great Britain, the silent re cruiting going on in the United States. migiit be made the Subjects of interest ing monographs, nime of them reflect- ing Credit on the ßritish cabinet. England has for years boasted of hav ing her navy as a mean of controlling Europe. Now her people ask, "Why the army?" They can't grasp the idea of an armada hidden away for afety. That army will never be recruited to the s;re the cabinet wants it until con scriplion is reso-ted to, for the war is Cot populär enough v itli the middle dass to obtain the requisite numher of volunteers. Primarily her policy is to fight to the last Frenchman. VVhat childlike faith in the ability of the Slav hordes to overrun Germany. Her tra- ditional policy, copied from Carthage, of paying gold for men to shed their blood that her commerce and trade may pro per is not to be abandoned. Unless the virus of teutonphobia leave the vein of England' allie, the British paymas tcr will tay on the job until all the na tion are totally exhausted. England get .wU vom tb&m ml feacol-ll onie, and t,e her native Indian troops, but she i not going to drain England fr the actual ,htin, She will let the other nation exhnutt thenielvc, withhold her force both by land and ca, and when the war is endt-d tand in a Position to dictatc term to wastcd Europe a the dominant power, if he can. She ha enjoyed the plunder of a score of nations ,y paying her gold to mercenaries to do the bloody work, on the commcrciul nrinciple that evcry man has hi price, Following closcly in the footktep of Carthage, whole nation are thrown a acritice to her god of gold. Witncs the ßoer repubbe. A Carthage wa conquered for the good of civilization, o England will be. The strängest thing of the whole war is that Frenchmen can be so blind to ßritish purposes. Perhaps the French gencral a well as tl.e Russian autoerats are on the London pension list. Fifty years from now American school children will be punished for not knowing the date on which the English army saved France. Why all these notes from the American government to Germany, and none to England? Why our delicaey in dealing with the English and our harsh nes to Germany? Are the Washington authorities under the control of Great Britain? On the right of neutrals much might be aid. Dnes England re spect the right of Chile, Argentina, the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, or the United States? She is holding up millions of dollar worth of good belonging to each of these coun trie, and cover the case with the doc trine of occasionat contraband. Noth ing is safe from her because she own, the eas which American and other vessels may only traver through her courtesy. A f cw notes to England, wordcd in the same severe phraseology as the notes to Germany, would bring ßritannia to her senses regarding Southern cotton and Chicago beef. They would incidentally hclp other neutrals to obtain the f reedom of the eas. The Carthagenians in Italy so equip ped themsclve with captured Roman arm that they looked like Roman troops. The Romans were not nlcased. They had not been overjoyed when Pyr- rhus brought In war-elcphants uito line at Hcraclea, The Chevalier. Bay ard declared that any soldicr caught with a musket ou'ght to be nut to death, Hand rrenades were at tirst looked upon as highly barbarous, yet whole regiments were atterward proud to be known as Grenadiers. As scicncc invents super lor weapons not only nmst formations change, but opinion and laws with reference to the use of the new weap ons must change. The sub-marine is one of the tatest of the new weapons. There is, in international law as made the controlling ihfluence of the domi nant sea power,: specitic rulcs for 4he search aod seiztire of contraband car- gocs and belligerent vessels. Life is to be safe-guarded. When the German government gave noticc of tlic subma rine blockade, a jeer of dcrisiotis went up from England. How can a sub marine halt an ooean-uner and search ner, when de.tfoyer ,and cruisers friendly to the f liner ' are svvarming about in evcry direction Impossible. It takes a submarine about - minutes to ubmerge, in which time a destroyer can go over 160 yards, lependuig upon the types of vessels under consideration. The enveiope ot a submarine is easily penetrai;ie by tne proiectile lrom a three-inch gun, which fire twenty-four shots a minute and carries five miles. So the British looked upon the subma rine blockade as a farce But they for got that the cause of thi blockade was English violation of international law, The British blockade of Germany is not a true blockade, but rather an embargo directed against the United States. The ßritish could look with cornplacency on their own attempt to starve the civil population of Germany, breaking all laws of civilized war and reverting to the barbarous practiecs of the middle ages, but could not understand the just retaliation of Germany in avoiding the usual procedtire of the right of search. England has only to thank hersclf for making the German submarines effec tive, for retaliation will always follow barbarism in war. That a neutral power like the United States should seek to shteld British vessels from attack, by permitting American citizens to sail un der the British flag, is shocking. It is true American citizens have the actual right linder international law to take passage on a belligerent ship; but they have not the moral right to exercise their actual right under the strained relations and disordered conditions of war, when such action might dra? thi country into diiliculoes easily avoidable. The American government ouglit, in de fense before the world of its high moral ideals, to prohibit any American citizen from embarking on board any slnp not flying a neutral füg, if said vesscl is bound for the zone of war. If our peo ple must go abroad, let them travel under the stars and stripes, on steamers not carrying contraband. Americans have no more salety making a voyage under the British flag, than they would have journeying from Calais to Beifort in the Allied trencl.es. The false prac- tices of the English in using neutral flags, in arming merchant vessels, in contemptuous and insolent overlord- shin of the seas, has put the submarine blockade on to stay during the contin uance of the war, or until England shall herseif rescind her infamous Orders in Council. The submarine will finally bring Britamria to her knecs and end the war, 1 If we wish to "lead submarine war- farc into more humane channels," let u take the matter up with England. Certainly the presence of Americans on board will not act as Insurance for the freightage of munitions for the Allie, when the presence of Americans does not insuie delivery ot wheat to the women and children of Germany. Per haps the British Adrniralty will revoke its order for merchant ships to attack and ram submarines on sight. Perhaps the United States will arrange to have German commissioners work in con- junction with American customs ofii cials to examine ships sailing for Eu rope, to the end that vessels not carry ing munitions, armaments, or troops, may be exempt from attack by German submarines. The British government ! maintains like commissioners in various neutral countries to pass upon cargqes Muu4ior aeutrai ooru The ubmarine warare wa tooked ution in England a joke until the 'Liuitaiiia" went down, thcn the howl that arose bad in it a note of terror and diead a well at of rage, The "Lu itnia" wa conktructed under uper vision of oHicer of the Royal Navy, wa on the hst of the ßrilith Adrniralty at an auxihary cruiscr, ubsidited by the ßritish government. VVhctlier it had it gun or not is irnrnatcrial, the German government not being upposed to know if ßritish war-ship carry their cannon with them all the time. There might have been in the hold enough gun to equip a doren auxihary crun- er. A well claim a soldicr to be non- combatant because he happens to have hi pistol inside hi shirt. As a matter of fact only one torpedo hit the "Lusi tania," and the rapid sink!? of the ship wa due to the explosion of the enor mou quantity of munition, of war the vessel carried. ' Tf the presence of One "neutral" American wh fancies to voy age on such a ship could opcule to ren der aid h'ip immune from attack, then any ßritish ship loaded with enough munition to destroy the entire German army cottld insure its sufety by the sim ple expedient of carryipg an American, because he, forsooth, has a right under international law to take passage. There is no difference betwecn the Washington and Berlin government that cannot be arnicably adjusted. Amer. ica has told Germany she would. in the diplomatic way, try to prevent England from a further abuse of naval war farc; If America' note to England is not satisfactory, it may be repeated. On England's attitude alone depends the German modrsicarion of submarine war fare. ; Under the rulcs of international law the United States has the right to man facture and seil munitions to which ever of the belligerents she pieases. She breaks no law txecpt in permitting Eng lish and allied experts, having cßicial Status with their governments, to super intend in this country the Output. The question is one of morals, only. Condi tions are such, .that to seil munitions to tlic Allie, is equivalent to taking a very important part in the war for the Allies and against Germany, while apparcntly being ncutrcl. Without doubt the in flux of gold, even in the form of Ameri can securities, is very gratifying to American manufacturers, but why not make money honestly by devcloping South American trade? The talk of the moralization of the American people has led us to believe our people to be actu ated by the highest ethical laws, which belicf the present Situation does not warrant. The gold reeeived is stained with blood. All our govcrnmcntal war proclamations for decades have abound ed in phrases about "morality" and "hu manity," Have the munition makers and dealers a grast in Washington? What embargocs have been placed in Nicr.rägiu ar.d Mexico were for the benefit cf the sidc we wanted to see win. Humanity and morality have noth ing to do witli our Manipulation and sale of explosives. The law allov.s it, so take your. pound of .tVsh, and the blood tliat goes with it. Kill the Tcu tons in dense naasses because the law allows it. However, History will reeord our condtirt its vile chicancry, and ac- :usc es of obliquity of vision, moral Vision. We are doing the ma:;.mtim of damage to Germany and its allies, and a state of war de facto could not be worsc for them. The only safe plan to follow, to main- tain absolute neutral, ty, is to place an embargo upon all munitions so as to utterly prevent their exportation. Jo patriotic American will engage in the dirty business, much less think the bless- ir.gs of God fall upon him through an atmosnhere highly charged with moral. ity. And the Germans would be in the last stages of drivcling idiocy if they did not try to sink every load of Amer ican-made war matenal, regardless ot conditions due to international law. If the moral law is above international law, it should act to place an embargo on the exportation of munitions made in America; if the laws governing the struggle of a nation for existence come before international law, they should act to sustain the German submarine warfare to the last Moment. Were the case reversed and America attacked by the whole world in arm, we would use every rneans now known to science, and new rneans yet to be invented, to keep our enernies from obtaining munitions, regardless of international law. The f uss about Americans having a light to sail safely under the British flag is straining at a gnat. and the seil ing of munitions to the Allies is swal lowing a camel. The moral Code that permits os to in- jure the Germans without declaring war was derived from the English, and is part of our inheritance from the Puri tans. It was the greatest calamity that ever befeil North America when the Puritans settled in Massachusetts. From the Puritans we have procured the great American idea of making every thing as disagreeable as hades for every body, the taking of our pleasures sadly lest joy should be Indicative of in, the mouthing of a meaningless optimism that is gynonymous with hypoerisy. Puritanism leads our people to acts of moral turpitude that would make a White Mountain Apache shudder. When Attila invaded France in 451, he obtained unobstructed passage of the Kinne tnrougn tne mviiauon ana ata oi a Frankish king. Had Attila conquered at Chälons, the chief who solicited his aid against the Roman and Visigothic forces would have gone down in in tory a the real author of the destruc tion of Greco-Roman civilization, the traitor within the gates. See how his tory repeats itself. For purposes of her own England brings the noble Japanese into European quarreis, and he, while Europe is engaged in weakening itself in what a cosmopolite might term this civil war, is stcadily mcreasing bis power and trength against the time when it may be needcd in Conflict with the white racc. England launches a war to crush the highest civilization the world has ever known, and her honor- able ally, the Japanese, seizes China for the purpose of training the Mongolian race in military art and science. tng lish and American newspapers were filled with clamor about the invasion of ßelgium, which was unavoidable, but did anyone speak twice when Japan oc- tf.4.ctiS4itli.!i.i!St &Ji&.lM. uijiiom.it au tue world over laugb ac uü? Thut why can not the Japan- smile will, the other? While America ttrainuig at the gnat and wallowing the caimi, Japan it buy preparing the Million of China for future military' serviie. The dav will come when the Mongolian must be fought again in de fense of our Civilisation, but the place may be the Pacific toast of the United State instead of the Campi Catalau nici tretching about the good city of Chälons, The ignorant will deride the thought, yet vyhen Attila and Aetiti fought, the arm wiridcd by the comba tant were practically equal; and why, then, when 'the yellow race again has arm and training equal to that of the white race, cannot the Conflict come again? It will, and when it doe let us thank England for her alliance with the Japanese as a means of bringing it on. The clever Japanese is well pleased with the turn ot affairs. He sitcceeds almost kVyond bis "sendest dreams, emerging from a diflicult Situation with eclat. Hi alliance with England per niits him to dominate China with im punity, and to prepare for the future ir repressible Conflict with America. Through the influence of those United States capitalists who are more English than American in sentiment, who are well pleased with the prosits on muni tions and British war loan, England proceeds to involve us in an apparent entente cordiale. Apprehending an cleventh bour return to wisdom on the part of the deluded Americans, no Jap anese forces are cnt to Europe. Why not? The esoteric believe the Japanese army and navy are being held at honte to be used against . United States de fense in case of need, England will defend Canada by mean of Japanese expeditions to Manila, Honolulu, Seat tle, San Francisco, and Panama. The Tagalog is waiting for the Signal to rise. The mine is now laid in Hawaii. The military arrangement of Panama, our key to the Pacific coast of South America, as well as plan of many of our forts and soundings of our harbors, are already known to the honorable Allie. Mexico and Columbia yield a little assistance cit passant. With regu lär forces hardly numbering two army corps, and an unpaid Organized Militia Subject in many state to reproachful and derisive epithets. we are given ove: to slaughter bound band and foot. When you see your dead heaped in trenches. and your cities in flames, thin": of the English decentralization theories you have absorbed, one effect of which is to caure you to scorn your own sol diers, and thank England for lettin? down the drawbridgc for the free ad Mission of the Mongolian to prosperot:s America r.nd exhausted Europe, God pitnish England by speedily fulfilling the destiny of the United States in re gard to Canada. NOTE: I shall be glad to reeeive, from friendly readers, any Suggestion in rclation to the foregoing remarks, UUPERT BEAUMONT, . Mcntgomery, Alabama. 4 Sei Leben für seine Feinde. Gcdeitkilntt für einen deutsche i Held. fi Mr'iv ' In einem Berliner - Blatt lese wir: ? Obwohl die beiderseiiig?n Schützengräben an der Aisne an der Stelle, an welcher daZ zte Rhein. Infanterieregiment lag, sehr nah?, stellenweise nur wenige Meter ent fernt voneinander lagen, so bewiesen unsere Leute doch, daß der frische, fröhliche Angriffsgeist selbst imStel wngskrieg nicht eingeschlafen war. Und konnten auch größere Unterneh mungen nicht vorgenommen werden, da sie nicht in den taktischen Rah men paßten, so -fanden doch häufig wagemutige Patrouillengänge statt, die gute Erkundigungen heimbrach ten. Die Franzosen waren in bic fern Punkte zurückhaltender und wag ten sich nur selten aus. ihren Grä ben. Am 15. März d. I. hatte je doch eine ihrer Patrouillen versucht, sich der deutschen Stellung zu nä Hern; das Feuer unserer Sappenpo sten hatte sie zurückgetrieben, wäh rend ein verwundeter Franzose vor dem deutschen Graben liegen geblie ben war. Er vermochte nicht mehr in die eigene Linie zurückzukriechen, sondern suchte Deckung in einem Eranatloch vor den Geschossen. Man hörte fein Stöhnen und Wimmern im Graben. Da es gefährlich schien, ihn bei Tage zu bergen, so war schon Befehl gegeben, ihn zur Nacht zeit hereinzuholen. Aber feinStöh nen wollte nicht verstummen. , Im Graben stand an . der Brustwehr, ein junger deutscher Offizier, der Leut nant Schenk. Zu Kriegsbeginn aus dem Kadettenkorps überwiesen, führ te er schon monatelang mit gutem Erfolg seine Kompagnie. Der rief nun plötzlich: .Ich kann den Jammer nicht mehr anhören, dem Manne muß geholfen werden!' Schon war er aus dem Graben und näherte sich dem Franzosen, ge folgt vom Unteroffizier Borchert, ei nem bewährten Patromllenführer, Sie erreichen den Verwundeten, he ben ihn auf und tragen ihn zum Graben. Da setzt drüben starkes Feuer ein: Infanterie und auch Maschinengewehrs euer, und von meh reren Schüssen durch den Kopf ge troffen, sinkt der. junge Held zu Bo! den, ein Opfer feiner Nächstenliebe. Er stirbt den schönsten, schnellen Soldatentod. Tags darauf bestat ten ihn die Kameraden, und mit Recht sagt der Pfarrer: .Er hat nicht nur sein Leben gelassen für seine Brüder, sondern sogar, für seine Feinde!" mM&$4fyftf DaS ist ein kleiner Zügaüsd'em Leben deutscher .Barbaren". Wenn man dagegen in eroberten Stellun gen sieht, wie die Franzofen die Lei chen in die Deckungen eingebaut haben, so fragnian sich, wer bier jm&ifc- ' " Kociizei.s ufttf Graclülsrungs-Ga- schenke Verkauf Beginnt heute. Hunderte der passendste nGe schenke werden während dieses Verkaufs zu ungeliörteit Prei sei: offeriert. Untenstehend sind Beschreibungen einiger aus unserem großen !ager herausgegriffener Artikel. Be achten Sie die Preise, (sine grofze Auswahl passender Hochzeito und (raduie rungö'(cschenke. 20.100 Diamant Ring, völlig blauwciß, für die liebliche Gra ?ri $20.00 Außergewöhnlicher Diamant ring, garantiert blauwciß: Tif. sann in echter hübscher Gold fassung: Vcr- CM QC saus preis Px-ii Extragtitc Uhr, 17 Jnwelen, beliebiges Fabrikat, Goldfül hing, 20 Jahre garantiert. Die richtige Uhr für den jun- Mann .... $1 175 Schönste Ariuband.Uhr, kann auf beide Artcngetragen wer den.das beliebteste (beschenk für das junge rrc ffräulein J Neu konstruierte Rubinringe, viele vorzügliche Muster für den jungen C Tti. Mann P0, D Mahagonikastcn schönes l5a roline Muster enthaltend 6 Messer. C Gabeln. 6 Teelöf. sei, 6 Eßlöffel. 1 Buttermesser. 1 Zuckerlöffel. Preis in die sem Ver. 1 7C kauf .... P 1 1 O Lterlingssilber Graduierungs S':!!':4...... 89c Herrcn.Lcdergürtel mit schöner Schnalle. Verkaufs- i J preis. Stück .... ZJ I C Der neue Liberty Tamenring, Verkaufspreis r f Stück OUC Sterlingssilber Ql-r Hutnadeln, Stück J 2C Wir haben die Preise von Sterliiigssilbev nicht erhöht u., haben die beste Auswahl aller neuen Muster von schönenHoch. zeitsg'eschenken aus Sterlings silber. At the Sign of the Crown. Up the olden Stairs. BR00E6AAR0 BROS. 16. und Tonglas. 3513 KRUG THEATER W.W. Sole.rittkl Höchst nspeklakl tf,odK: 45 MINUTES FROM BROADWAY Nächslk Wochk: '. ' UNCEE TOIvl'S CABIN (Etonbort Siütf-iu IV. 'w Wand,lbiUn,Prri,k 1 V-IC Rtitlolilt tiftarn illlllchali ALYCE THEATER Papillion, Nebr. Erstklassige Wnndelbilder. Täglich Aenderung des Programms. Matinees: Samstag und Sonntag nachmittags. Eintritt 5e nnd 10c. Broadway Produktionen jeden Don nerstag Abend, Eintritt 10e u. 15c RUGS AS alte Teppichen aemacht .Rag Rügt- eine kpkziIIlU kvpichk crdkn gintn,-l PERRY.RUG FACTORY 2422Curnipg. Tel. Red 2343 MIMWDW ttmp'&Mmmm i Ts.titi i$tttiSy II i lH VV yUhww' 'tor-tl-JÄ 1 ..k. At... ?, . f JR William Straberff Deutachor Advokat ßfamnet 950-954, Omaha Ssläcna Sanl'Gebaube. Tel. Douglas 962 Omaha, 2&8 DR. KARRER der aufmerksame Zahnarzt. Die beste Kronen, u. Brücken arbeit. Füllungen, die halten. Erhalten Sie Fhre?Zähne bei Mimmalkosten. . Erstklassige Arbeit" ist daS Motto dieser Office. Besuchen Sie mich und stellen Sie mit anderen Vergleiche an. Tel. Dougs. 4081. . Offi: 482 Braudels Bldg.