Tägliche Omaha Tribüne. (Omaha, Nebr.) 1912-1926, November 03, 1916, Page 2, Image 2

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Soito 2-TSglichc Omaha Tribüne-Freitag, den 3. November 1916.
Politische Aazeiffk.
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1 Alle guten Bürger f
Er sollten interessiert fein im Charakter der Mitglieder der j
Omaha Schulbehörde j
2 Solche Männer müssen iiber allen Tadel crl.nteit sein, das !
Ansehen ilirer Mitbürger flenieijeit und ihre Tatkraft i:t der von
S ihnen gewählten Lebem-ftellima. bewiesen haben.
B Nachstehende Leute werden allen diesen ?lnsprüchen gerecht: J
Francis A. Brogan,
Necktanwnlt.
John Brkins,
Präsident Omaba Van &
Storage Co.
SattHitl Burns, Jnn.,
BuntS-Brinker Co.. Makler.
Krans (?. Klarf,
Eeschästsleiter der 05un C. Dar.
ton Hinterlassenschaft.
5 Männer nnd Flauen von Cuiülia! 5
Ctiimnt für diese Männer und haltet unsere -äinlen von r
der Politik ferne.
Alle weiblichen Tlenerznhler und solche, die 5iinder im sä'nl- E
Ej Pflichtigen Alter baben, tonnen ohne Negistranon wählen.
ClizadetK Hindin,, E
j . Gh. Women's Com.
E Matthcw A. Hall.
E Ch. Men'S Com. 2
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Stimmt für 1
1 Charles P. Moriarty f
1 Demokratischer Uandidat für
1 Clerk des Distrikt-Gerichtes.
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AW. .A JTfeMi
i Charles P. Moriarty, deniokratischer
j Kandidat für Clerk des Distrikt-Gerichtes,
E ist feit dem Jahre 1888 in Omaha ansässig
V und genoß seine Schulbildung in den öf-
E fentllchen Schulen dieser Stadt. Wah-
1 rend der Amtszeit des Herrn Frank 9s. I
Broadwell diente er als Hilfsclerk des 1
Distrikt-Gerichtes. Seine Erfahrung i 11 1
diesem Amt macht ihn für die von ihm
i jetzt angestrebte Stelle besonders wün-
1 schenswert. Herr Moriarty war für meh-
rere Jahre reisender Auditor für Swift 1
& Company, die bekannte Schlachthaus-
1 firma in Süd-Omaha. Er ist jetzt ein
Mitglied der Omaha Getreidebörse und ß
- in geschäftlicher Verbindung mit der 1
' Welsh Gram Company. Herr Moriarty
1 ist ein Bruder des verstorbenen Frank I. I
1 Moriarty, der für lange Jahre Kassierer 1
1 der Packers National Bank in Süd-Omaha 1
H war, und ein Schwiegersohn von John ,.
1 Nush, einem Omaha Pionier, früher -D
County-Schatzmeistcr nnd vor Jahren ß
D Prüfer der National-Banken. Herrn -
- Moriarty's Familie ist bekannt durch ihre
1 rege Tätigkeit beim Aufbau von Süd- -D
Omaha. Seine Fähigkeiten und Erfah-
rung, sowie seine bekannte Rechtschaffen-
heit empfehlen ihn bestens für die Er-
wählung zum Clerk des Distrikt-Gerichtes.
S Er hat das volle Vertrauen seiner Bekannten nd einen
E xroße Frenndeskreis, die ihm bei der bevorstehenden Wahl -
E ihre volle Unterstützung gedeihen lasse werde. B
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Znni Woliia (fsr HlicliEit Scfiulen Cniilia's ,
II;
Wersänmt nicht f ;
Dr. E. Holovtchiner 1
Mitglied des Schnlrate?,
in der Wahl am 7 November Mieder z erwählen. ' f 1
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Cr ist nicht auf einer
TiTnst. Er huldigt praktischen Idealen. Er hat viel Gutes
erreicht und wird mehr erreichen, wenn wieder erwählt.
Er ist ein bewährter Freund des
Deutschunterrichts.
we 9 wm WV lT ?G
Politische Anzeigen.
William ttrtd,
Eeschästsleiter der (5Ia, Robin
son, Co., iehlniiidler.
b'Iinrlks C. Tnlmciae,
Präsident Columbia Fener
l'ersiäiening.
Waren B. !k)arficld,
einischtwarenbäudler.
Arthur Wrlls,
NechlHaiNvalt.
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'Qf f)Wf WV IW? WW VW WMUWW ?v W
10 THE AMERICAN GITIZENS 0F GERMAN
My Fricnds:
Since 1882 wlicn I helped to
arrange the lirst "Gernian Day,"
which was celebrated on ücto
ber 6th, 1833, I have served
you conscientiously without rc
muneration of any kind, and I
hope that in retum sor my !a-
bors I have wem your aliection
and respect, which to mc is the
highest reward obtainablc.
Tliuuj,rh frequently tempted to
enter politics I have scrupulous
ly dcclined to do so, because I
did not wish to appear as hav
ing prosited by my altruistic
labors. For the last sixtecn
ycars, since von have elected
ine president of the National
German American Alli.mce, 1
have even refrained from pu
b'icly endorsing any candidate,
because the National German
American Alliance is an incor
porated non-political. non-sectar-ian
bodv, prohibitcd by its
Charter and its by-laws to entcr
politics and its ofsicers and
Board of Dirtctors would be
liable to imprisonment and
heavy pecuniary i'mes should
the National German American
Alliance expend even one cent
for the election of any sederal
candidate.
This appeal (for the printinp
and distribution of which 1
have paid, and for which I am
solcly liable) is, therefore, only
the opinion of a native Amer-
ican who feels that it would be
a cowardly shrinking of bis duty
as a citizen it he withheld his
opinion at this critical Moment.
The reason5 why 1 cannot
support President Wilson for
re-election have been so tersely
and well stated by a prominent
native American Attorney ot
l'.altimore, in a pamphlet entitl-
cd "Wantcd A Man for
President," that I quote the
artiele for your beneiit:
"Whcn in August, 1914, war
was declarcd between the na-
lions of F.urope an opportun ity
was presented to America to
seize the rcins of commercial
supremaey and drive aliead of
its sorc-pressed competitor.
"The vsorld lay, an open sield,
ahead of us. It was ours for
the cultivation. The war was
no concern of ours. ThougK we
might deplore it and extend
cur sympathy and aid to ils
victims, it did not beconie us
to take ?ides and throw stones.
"We bad been on friendly and
intimate terms with all the war-
ring people, our logical course
was to continue so. We were
strong enough to say to each:
'As much as we regret your
quarreis and cnmities we shaü
not be a party thereto. As we
have dealt in "the past, so shall
ve continue in the future. Our
intercoursc and our dealings
shall not abate; wheat and
wares you shall freeiy have, but
not weapons of wurde r and de-
strtiction.' Thus had a true
hunianity spoken.
"Then we sliould have begun
to make and market our pro-
ducts throughout the world
particularly opening the great
gates of South America to
those goods that Europe could
no longer deliver.
"Then we might have had a
prosperity that would have been
last in g and profitable beyond
the day of oursclves and unto
our children and children's
children.
"Instead, our mills and our
factories were pushed to their
utmost in making the infernal
paraphernalia of war. For a
briek epace we have, an un
healthy prosperity-a Cainursed
prosperity carrying with it a
bäte and fury that will later
wreak its vengeance upon our
children and children's children.
"Had we had a man in the
Presidentiat chair at the Capi-
tal one true to the traditions
of Washington and jeffersön
this -would not have been,
"As it is, in all things,-Wil-
gon, like an ass between two
bundles of hay, has hesitated
and faltered. Surrounded by
weaklings and nien of little
strength, he has, in the egotism
born of his coneeit, aloneunder
taken to decide the events that
have so mis-shaped the destiny
of a Nation. ;
"With him, as with Hamlet,
the 'native hue of resolutton is
sicklied o'er by the pale cast
of thougbt, and enterprises of
great pith and moment with
this regard their currents turn
awry, and lose the name of ac
tion.' By fits and Starts he
acts. Today of this opinion,
tomorrow of that, certain never,
"As proof'of the impartiality
and evenness of his conduct it
has been offered that he has
been criticised and condemned
from every side. True he has.
But only to a bromidiaj-ruinded
individual lacking memory and
the power of deduction would
this appear convincing. Kot so
to any reasoninsr beinc who
has followed the l'rcsidential
windings and workines.
"From Vera Cruz to Fcrsh
incr's adventures in search of
Villa the erstwhile good and
now wholly villainous, W'ilson's
course has been uncertain and
contradictory. A firm band in
the beginning and our troops
would not todav be needcd on
the border.
"Any one dariug to qucstion
his course or challenge his con
duct at once beconies a public
tnerny. For in the coneeit and
irnagination of his niind He is
The State.
"This mental state is well
evidenced in his attack upon
the German-Americans. ith-
cut proof or justification otlier
than the irrcsponsible charges
rif :i servile iiro-Hntisll oress
he stiginatized them as plottcrs
and traitors. And though he
had at his Service the entire
United States Sccrct Service
Department, aided by the wide-ly-rainified
Britibh Spy System
in this country. he has been un
able to connect any nuniber of
individuals or any group or or
ganization of German-Americans
with such plotting.
"Further, with a weakling's
:ry against those whom he
has wronged, he foreed a plank
into the Deniucratic platform
repeating his übel and endeavor
mg thereout to make an issue!
"And the Deniocrats supincly
permitted him to do so. As in
the logic of the matter every
candidate is pledged to support
the President and the party
platform, so every a Spirant for
ofsice upon the Dt-mocratic side,
eo ipso, is particeps criminis to
a baseless libel upon a dass of
citizenry whose sn ff rage he
seeks. What answer may he
reasonably expect at the polls?
"Well might Wilson be liken
ed to the Tyrant Pisistratns,
who 'having wounded himsell
for the purpose, drove in that
condition itito the market place,
and endeavored to inflame the
minds of the people, by telliug
them his enemies had laid in
wait for him, and treated him
in that manner on aecount of
bis patriotism. Upon this the
multitude loudly expressed their
Indignation ; but S-olon came up
and aecosted him: 'Son of Ilip
poerates, you act Homer's Liys
ses but very indifferently, for
he wounded himself to deceive
his enemies, but you have done
it to itnpose upon your coun
trymen." Notwithstanding this,
the rabble were ready to take
up arms for him.'
"Truly the German-American
can say t!,at if anyone in this
land has done aught 'subversive
of the nation's unity and in
tegrity, and as destructive of
its welfare,' or who has by in
timidation cakulated 'to divide
our people into antagonistic
groups and thus to destroy that
compiete agreement and solidar
ity of the people and that unity
of sentiment and national pur
pose so essential to the per
petuity of the nation and its
free i'nstitutions' it has been
WOODROW WILSON.
"K. A. M. S."
No self-respecting American
of German birth c. extraction
can vote for President Wilson!
What, as American patriots, are
we to do? It has been suggest
ed by seyeral of our newspapers
that German-Americans - should
entirely refrain from voting at
the next presidential election.
Such a course would he child
ish and unpatriotic. We certain
ly as nianly men cannot poui
and sulk like puntshed children 1
It is the duty of every Amer
ican citizen not only fearlessly
to express his corrvictions, .but
it is also a sacred trust, impos
ed upon, him as a free American
citixen, that he should vote at
every ; primary and regulär elec
tion.. Others have suggested that
we concentrate our vote on a
certain minority party (which
has not the slightest chance of
winning). This practically
means the throwing awayofour
votes.' t
After much anxious thought,
I. have. therefore. decided to
cast my vote for Hughe, and
Fairbanks. The Istter has come
forward in a manly defense of
the much maligned "hyphenate
and the following declaration of
Mr. Hughes rings ot trueAmer
icanism:
I have a great Vision, my
fellow citizens, of America, for
the future. It is not an Amer
tea ruled now by this force,
now bx that force; it is not an
BIRTH 0R EXTRACTIOfl.
America given over to civil war j
it is not an America where pu
blic ofsice is tnere'.y ruled foi
advantage; it is an America et
sicient, it is an America pre
pared, it is an America main
taining the rights of American
Ieople on land and sea without
fear or favor throughout the
world. It is an America that
has no secret understanding, no
covert intrigues, it is an Amer
ica with no ttnstated purpose,
it is an America Standing four
square toward all nations, firm
and prepared, intent on peace
and demanding its just rights
be recognized as to lives, pro
perty and commerce.
"The America that I see m
the future is an America that
knows bow to manage its great
activitics without being wastc
ful and extravagant. It is an
America that knows how to
spend public monies honestly as
well as to appropriate them. It
is an America that has patriot
ism. in every bureau of the Ad
ministration as weil as in anv
appropriation for military opera
tions. It is an America where
all the people abandon dass
antagonisrn, though having their
neecssary differences which they
peaceably adjust. It is an
America which, having no dass
antagonisrn, feels knit together
in a splendid national unitv, in
one great love of country, with
one unswerving loyal ty trans
cending all differences of racc
and creed, with a people inspir
ed by the ideals of Washington
and Lincoln. It is an Ainersca
sirst. an America efsicient."
That is he prornis.es to stand
solely for a strong pro-American
administration ! An administra
tion which abroad, on land ot
sea, protects our rights with
out fear or favor of any nation
An administration that in out
hlessed country recognized
neither racial nor religious like
or dislikes, one that governs
impartially for the benesit oi
all without malice to any and
with truth and justice to all
Thus again uniting a nation
which has been badly disrupted
bv an unwie course.
The Qucstion of the Hour i
not what is good for the Cetv
tral Powers or what is good f"i
the Allies, but as patriotic
American?, of every racial ex
traction, we must solve, in r
spirit of mutual respect and
brotherly nffection, Avhat is best
for our own beloved country
What is sorely and imperative
ly needed js a strong govern
ment that will be w'ely con
cerned w ith a firnv unwavering
pro-American policy.
. C. j. Hexamer.
2h Militärpslickt ber französischen
Familie.
, Ta olle bisher geplanten Mcißnnh
inen gegen dcis in Fmnlieich strk
verbreitete Zweit inder - System oller,
wie man es seit einiger Zeit nennt,
das System des einzigen Sohnes"
die Zustimmung größerer Kreise nicht
zu gewinnen rermochten, macht im
Figaro" Charles Lavaud folgencen
Lorschlttg: ,Ta die Franzosen unbe
dingt veianiaht werden müssen, dem
Lande mehr Kinder zu schenken,
wäre es am besten, in der Weife vor
zugehen, daß man das Opfer der
Bürger nach der Zahl der Famiüen
Mitglieder vermindert. , Die militari
sche Dienstpflicht sollte 'auf den ein
zigen Söhnen' am schwersten lasten
und sich in abnehmender Weise aus
eine größere Zahl von Geschwistern
verteilen. Darum sollte nicht, wie
bisher, die Militärpflicht sich auf den
einzelnen Mann beziehen, sondern
auf die ganze Familie. Jede franko
fische Familie wäre demnach zu 6
Tiensijahren verpflichtet. Jstnur ein
Sohn vorhanden, so muß er ganz
allein die 6 Jahr abdienen. Jedes
hinzukommende Kind aber nimmt
einen Teil dieser Last auf sich. Zwei
Brüder z. 53. brauchen nur jeder 3
Jahre dienen, bei 3 Brüdern genügt
für jeden einzelnen eine zweijährige
Dienstzeit. Auch die Töchter muffen
in der gleichen Weise gerechnet wer
den. Wenn also ein Sohn und zwei
Töchter vorhanden sind, biaucht der
Sohn nur 2 Jahre zu dienen, di die
zukünftige Mutterschaft dieser Töch
ter 4 Dienstjahre wert ist."
. vi
Immer höflich. Räuber
(nachdem er einen Herrn in seine
Höhle geschleppt und bis auf Hemd
ausgeplündert hat): Möchten Sie
nicht 'n bißchen oblegen?"
Anderk genommen. Wie
kommt's nur, daß die Gäste an der
table d'hote so traurige Gesichter rna
chen?"
Es herrscht ja Wetnzwang!' '
Für unsere Feldbraunen' in
Mexiko wurde unlangsi eine Tonne
Chokoladen Candy und Vz Ton
nett Stangen Sandy bestellt.
Politische Anzeigen.
,HcKK?W
2 hfnry C
rJ JkJhA Am A t A H . Ta
i republikanischer Kandidat fiir
milNTV ÄTT0PNFV !l
i
VVVil i
j Magney war Inhaber
4 'dieses Amtes für 10 Jahre.
t 8 Jahre als Hilfs-County.
znwalt und 4 Jahre als
Tountyanwalt.
10 Zahre ist lange
0 genug.
Stimmt für
ZNurphy.
4 5 Jahre Ttadtanwalt von
0 ?i'id.Omaha und verwaltete
ö ilS solcher sein Amt drsser.
4 ils irgendeiner seiner Vor
5 länger.
2 Ich bitte Sie Persönlich
T4 xwx Ihre Unterstützung.
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RICHTER ALBERT J. CORNISH
Kandidat fiir -
Nichter des Obergerichtes. Z
Richter Cornish diente 21 Jahre als Tistrikrrichter in Lincoln. -
2 Seine Fähigkeit, Unparteilichkeit und Redlichkeit sind bewiesen durch
die siinfErwählunacn.zuin Tistriktgericht don feiten seiner Nachbarn. -
5 Richter Cornish ist im besten Mannesalter, wachsam, arbeitö. h,
tZ . .. i et fr 4. ;ri r. i , f.;... li.i.r- . '
s zrcuotg uno Iitcnicuiia) uno iZ! oeianni iu.gcn najrcuicnen r;-
Lntscheiduiigcit, die stets vom Obergericht anerkannt wurden.
. m'r.i ... . ... t.r rv..i .c. . -SV
; t.tCl JUKim IHW Qi (j.t). -w"v.. .vw.jv.i.tiUiUJ WT
s über die Fähigkeit des Richter Cornish. E
Redaktionelle Zlnsichten Über UichterCornish
S Vernein !ttitr rnal: E
I Richter Cornish wird von seinen Nachbarn als bedeutender ü
- Nann geehrt. Es ist deren Ansicht, daß die Stimmgcbcr nicht.
veitcr für einen Mann für das Obcrgcriäzt zu suchen haben." . ' "
the Lincoln Taily Star: ' -ti
i "..Er (Richter Cornish) war Distriktrichter dieses County's für
1 iber 20 Jahre. Seine Ehrlichkeit und Fähigkeit wurde nie be ;"
z weifelt. Seine Entscheidungen fanden mehr Anerkennung bei den - i
- jäheren Gerichtshöfen, als die der meisten Richter." -
Ehe Lincol Zrode Nevirw: -
..Falls er erwählt wird, hat da Obergericht einen der fähigsten
luristen des Staates als Mitglied auszuweisen. Er ist ein Mann ' .
ß ' mittleren Alters, dem eine lmigjährige erfolgreiche Erfahrmig im Z
'xi..l?i'tvkt nif fCrnf ei ffdfif . 13
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Verücksichiigt Bei Einkäufen die
macht sie darauf cmfmcr.saml
A
Politische Anzkine.
. V
MI IRPHY 2
Am A A VAA
James H. Gradßock l
Architekt
demokratischer Kandidat 5
für
Staats- ,Y
Repräsentant
ersucht um Ihre Unterst,, vung B
am
Wahltag, 7. NoTCinber
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