Tägliche Omaha Tribüne. (Omaha, Nebr.) 1912-1926, April 11, 1919, Page 4, Image 4

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    Solle T-TagliSze Omaya TrZbuno-Frclwg, den IT. HJJrfT 1919.
:Ci( UC)c Omaha Tribüne
RIBUXB PCEUSHINQ ÜO-VAL. J. PUTER. PwMat
'Tti des Tageblatts: Durch dea Träger, ptt Woche 12H Eentsz
die Post, bei BorkLbezahlng, ptt Jahr ZllX)? sech Monate $3.00;
i Monate fiJOO,
' S; ic3 Z2o5jckUüttZ td LorauÄeMuvg $2.00 da? Jahr.
,74309 ilowtrtf Str.
IcIfphoBi
V Molnw, 1a Bruch
Rntered ti eeond-clast mattet llmrcj) 14, 1913, tt th postoük es
faha, Nebraska, andet th act f Conjrres, läareh S, 1879.
Omaha, Neb., Freitag, de II. April 1919.
wessen ciga?
-i er Gang der Ereignisse läszt rs als sicher erscheinen, da wir eine Z
',? der Nationen bekommen werden. Wenn es nicht Wilsons Liga ist, wird
Lenines Liga sein. LenineZ Liga macht raschen Fortschritt. Si-umfaßt
! '-eits Rußland und Ungarn. Sie niacht rasenden Fortschritt in Böhmen.
' Rttmänien und in Polen. Sie ist in Teutschland zeitweilig mit Hilfe
- n Maschinengewehren niedergekämpft worden; die Frage nt icdoch noch
t- H erledigt. Ein Friede in Paris,
' :'.U5 entuiufcht, indem er ihr nicht
er mlZreichende CicherheitZmaszregeln
rer Kriege zu verhüten, wird die Basis einer bolschewistischen Propaganda
' ldm. die noch die wildem Träume
'. :t übertreffen mag.
Jeder Versuch, den Präsidenten in
: '. die Hände. Alle Lermche, die vierzehn Punkte, die von allen Krieg,
' ..senden als Friedensbasis angenommen wurden, zu mißachten, sind Was
!t auf die Mühle der Bolfchcwisten TaZ sind die klaren und nicht miM.
i erstehenden Tatsachen, die sich aus
'"aris ergeben. Während die Diplomatie unschlüssig hm und hcrschwankt,
i lischt und kniZcrt, handelt das Volschewikitum.
So schreibt eine Jeitung, die weder dcZ krasicn Radikalismus, noch
j c5 Pro.GcrmanismuI angeklagt werden kann. Sa schreibt eine der gröfz.
r.x und einflußreichsten Zeitungen des Landes, die in New Aork erschei.
Z zzide 'Zeitung The World".
Grunö- und Ecksteine des Zluslanöhanöels
Die Leiter des amerikanischen Gefchästslebens auf den verschiedenste,?
fKlkkn sind dabei, die Quadern für den geplanten großen AuZlandhandel
t Vereimgten'Staaten zu behauen. Ende des Monats wird in Chicago
's National Forcign Trade.Eondcntion stattfinden, auf der alle mit einer
csira&cn Exportbewegung zusammenhängenden Probleme gründlich bespro
. -vx Werden sollen. Ta wird über die Notwendigkeit eines großen Exports.
,'er die dazu nötige Handelsflotte, über die finanzielle Ausrüstung der
Nation für die Erportkampagne, über die Arbeiterinteressen am Ausland.
: anbei, über die Tarifsrage, und viele andere verwandte Tinge gesprochen
t'crfcn.-
AuZ dem Programm der auf drei Tage berechneten Konferenz läßt sich
krschen, daß die mnerikanisckze Gcsehiiftswclt von der Notwendigkeit vergrö
"rrtcr Absatzmärkte und verbesserter Exporhncthoden für Industrie und
Handel Amerikas heute mehr überzeugt ist. als früher.
Soweit die Speziakfragen in Betracht kommen, wird es auf der Konfe.
; :rj nicht an sachverständiger Beleuchtung fehlen. Fragt sich nur noch, ob
i -an auch für gründliche Beleuchtung des grundlegenden Problems sorgen
5'ird: wie Europa, das Haupt.Abfatzland für Amerika, fo schnell als möglich
t-i einem kauffähigen Kontinent gemacht werden kann. Die schönste Lösung
k-..:r anderm Fragen hilft offenbar wenig, wenn die europäischen Länder
i zerrüttet find, daß an eine größere Einfuhr nicht gedacht werden kann.
, Wie Europa wieder einigermaßen ruhigen und sicheren Verhältnissen
si.izegengeführt werden kann, Zas ist der Punkt, auf den es hauptsächlich an.
Umtnt und den die amerikanische Geschäftswelt besonders studieren muß,
t -enn sie nicht Enttäuschungen erleben will. Der Krieg hat Zustände gcschaf.
-.n, die energisch gebessert werden müssen. Er hat Abgründe der nationalen
''orhchunz aufgewühlt, die erst wieder engefüllt werden müssen, ehe sich ein
schaftsvcrkehr über die europäischen Gebiete bewegen kann. 'In dem
Europa, wie es heute ist, ist viel Zündstoff für Unruhen und weitere Kämpfe
Wfzchäuft. Wenn die Fricdens-Konferenz es fertig bringt, damit aufzuI
i "unten, dann wird das Wl helfen. Aber Amerika sollte sich klar weroen,
X !Z es feinen besonderen Teil zur Heilung der Wcltschäden und der euro.
Z Aschen Zerfahrenheit beitragen kann, indem es den bisher allzu sehr im
2 Zwange befindlichen Tendenzen der Zerklüftung die kräftige Aktion zum
Zusammenbringen aller Nationen entgegensetzt. Das wäre die beste Mcdi
. ' i für den Wirrwarr, öer uverau zu leyen ut. er igan uai me aoern
, ,c Welt lange genug durchpulst. , Friede und Gedeihen ist nur möglich,
'.-enn.oir überall mir Menschen sehen und alle Ucberhcbung und nationale
'.'ersucht fallen lassen.
Worte öer Anerkennung
jr Einige Bemerkungen, die der Kommandeur der 27. Division, General.
r'xot O'Nyan, gelegentlich einer Vcwillkommnung durch die Vronxcr Ge.
irbekanuner äußerte, werden von unseren Lesern mit besonderem Fntcr.
r " entgegen genommm werden. .Eine Liste der Gefallenen, der braven
T'ctcn unserer Division, würde sich fast wie ein Adreßbuch der Stadt Berlin
; erklärte er. Der Prozentsatz deutscher Namen unter den Männern,
' .e d?s höchste Opfer brachten, war erstaunenswert. Bei der Zerschmcttc.
urag der großen Hindenburg-Linie zeigte sich der Prozentsatz besonders be
i r.äcvü, und das war eine ebenso große Ucbcrraschung für den Feind, wie
s rcre Kmnpstaktik und Kampffähigkeit." Auf der anderen Seite ließ' Ge.
i aal O'Nyan den deutschen Truppcit die Gerechtigkeit widerfahren, daß er
,.-.iaüe?te, soweit unsere Wirksamkeit inbctracht kam, war der Feind
Kampfs fair", und er wurde auch von uns fcör" behandelt." Gmeral
:'rl?an hat eil tapferer Soldat gesprochen.
Ans Iowa
StsrS nf dem Balznznz.
ül-enandoah, , Ja. Frau Eliza
f i. & , . .....CI,.
.'muvvi, tiisc jiuu van wrviu)i
" l:3 '50 Jahren, wurde als Leiche
,:t Bohnzi; genommen. Sie starb
? J?it, als der Zug die Station
-crton verließ und wie angenom
wird am GerMlaa. Sie kam
; - Ark.msas und soll zvei Neffen
: fcoben. 2öeiteres konnte zur
r nicht in Erfahning gebracht
.::n. .,
'.fü?ai..i-, UrU Selbstmord,
t-ia. V. ?S. A. LewiS,
. rcr der V.itcvia Bank, wurde
,'uf 'dcr Weide unweit seiner
' t nng rcfuiidcit. Er hatte eine
.' w.mde im !opfe. Die Csro
'"r?. l",..'?, den Sachverhalt
' vSäc, ta:n n?ch längerer Un
zu Urr. Befund, daß Lc
' :') das Lilien genommen habe.
, -r r.r 2'.'ant von l0 Fahren
' ! ;iclbl ei-' Frau und vier
r. Er war Kassierer seit 22
- .z iii'd fi-flerr die Bücher der
" ;,i (dem Zustande sein. Die
: Uz Tat würd? nicht etmit
Sf drch lg'gsi derlikttnt.
X-.Ti, Za., 5- Äpril An.
er. i-u-z Wann,
(Mika. Mebruka.
OOca: 407-6tU Ar.
der die große Masse deö europäischen
die Hoffnung auf eine Welt gibt, in
getroffen sind, um die Tragödie wei
LenineS und TrotzkyZ dor drei Mond.
Mihkrcdit zu bringen, arbeitet ihnen
dem Stillstand der Verhandlungen in
rqaüt den Unrat in seinem Hosraum
zuiammengerecht, um oenieiven zu
r-orbrennen. Er forderte leinen iün
geren Bruder auf, die 5lerosinkanne
zu holen, um, durch, Aufgießen des
selben den Unrat besser zum bren
nen zu bringen. Der jüngere Bru
der bramte leoom aus er enen eine
Kanne mit Gasolin. Es erfolgte
ein Erplosion, wodurch der Knabe
derart verletzt wurde, dag man we
nig Hoffnung hat auf dessen Ge
nesung.
M Jahre alt nh pflanzt Kartoffel.
Fontanelle, 5. , April. Kaptain
Burton Freeman feierte lchte Woche
seinen 90. Geburtstag dadurch, daß
er Kartoffel Pflanzte und andere
Gartenarbeit verrichtete. Er ist cm
Veteran des Bürgerkrieges. Er nahm
TrÄ an her rfifslrfrt Sind Nun. Er
erfreute sich stets einer guten Ge
lunoyeir.
TkanZssckretär resigniert.
TeS Moincs, Fa.. 5. April.
William S. Allen hat scini: Nefig
Nation als Staatssekretär von
Jcwa eingesandt: dieselbe soll am
1. Juli in Kraft treten. Senator
Arney, Mitglied des SenatZ-Aus
schusic? für Tepsrtmcnmzcsen. gab
diele Erklärung ab. nochdcin er die
Zustand? im Automcb-l Teparte
ment deö TtaLt'ckretärö untersucht
(aUe.
IILES .
0ur Boys in France and in Gerrnany.
(RALPH PULITZER'S STARTUNG 0BSERVATI0NS WITH
THE AMERICAN ARMY OF OCCUPATION.)
(Eontinueä
Marriage Banns Pronounccd.
Besides these instances of of-
offenses against good taste and
national sensibilitics whichearne
linder my personal observation
I luve been told by American
ofsicers of numerous cases in
which Americans who tvere at
tracted by respectable French
girls bad become engaged to
them, bad bad the first banns
published, and then, alter hav-
ingr made the most of the lati-
tude which an engaged couple
occasionally permits itself in
France (and possibly not in
France alone) bad rejoined their
command in distant billets lcav
ing: the girl in the lurch.
There are, too, in the A. E
F., as in any drall army, a cer
tain nuraber of members of the
criminal ckss. They vere the
first ta become members of the
army of men absent
without
leave which has grown to such
disturbing proportiotis sihee the
armistice. These men gravitate
to the larger cities and especial
ly to Paris, where it is exceed
ingly difficult to run them down.
They have been plying their old
crooked trades of the pick
pocket, the ,auto thief and the
burglar, and while the number
of these actual criminals is
probably very small yet the
stories of their exploits, which
are carefully censored out of the
French Press, become exagger
ated as they run from mouth to
mouth into an American crime
wave.-
These ,then, Jlr. Ptrlitzer in
sists, are the respective griev
ances of four men and of the
French which have so sadlysap
ped the wholehearted loving
kindness with, which they first
greeted, each other. "I have de
liberatcly laid greater stress on
the French contentions than np
on our own, not because I per
sonaüy believe that they have
the better case, not because,
with our sympathies natural'y .
behind our own men, and with
these men returning in their j
hundreds of thousands to p!ead
their own cause. the French con-
tentions must be stressed is our
public is to realize that there is
any other side of the shield at
all."
American Army Makes Itself at
Home on Enemy Soil.
There is no use trying to
blink the astonishing fact, Mr:
Pulitzer declares, that the
American Army of Occupation,
as it made itself at hörne in its
new billets in uermany, feit, as
'if it had lest an allen and un
sympathetic country for a fa
miliär and congenial land. And
this ' seemed to hold good as
much with the doughboy of old
American stock as with him of
German .extraction.
From the beginning of -my
visit to the occupied zone to its
end it was the same story with
out a single dissenting voicc.
i When I stepped off the train
at Treves and asked a mifitary
policemanfor the best hotel he
gaped at me in amazement.
"GeeP , he muttered. "You
sure got my goat! You're the
first American in "civilians
clothes I've seen in. over a year.
It sure looks good to see oneof
you guys again!" This was a
pleasant tribute to my having
the good fortune to be the first
American in mufti to follow the
army into Gerrnany.
With this claim on bis friend
jiness, I asked him how he lik
ed it in Treves.
"Geel This is a swell town.
Lome change from France! This
reminds me of my own hörne
town. It's so dean and order
If. They wash the streets, four
times a day, and the houses are
the same way. They aiVt no
dirt and they ain't no smells.
Give me Gerrnany every timel"
I walked abenit through the
broad, spotless etreets of the
residential uarter arnid rowsof
ma,sive, .prosperous looking
houses, each of individual arch
itectural design, many standing
in their own grass plots, many
esthetically bideous, but all
k-)kin solid, substantial and
affluently modern. Numbers !
them might rnake an artjst
writlie, but they were the man
ions tf a doughboy' dreams.
krom hst weck.)
Amazing Multitudes of Children
Swarm in the Streets
of Treves.
Then I walked through the
shopping district, with its broad
streets, still pick and span, its
German policemen and Amer
ican M. P. directing traffic in
perfect concert. its neat electric
cars clanging by, its shop Win
dows all brilliantly lighted and
füll of rather pathetic offerings
to the Christmas shoppers.' One
of these Windows was given
over cntircly to leather goods,
and in the centre was one cyno
sure a satchel ostentatiously
marked: "This article is of gen
uine , leather."
Other Windows werc filled
entirely with Christmas tree de
corations, Imitation icicles and
snow showers, little Christmas
angeis and all wanner of tinscl
and gewgaws. Ilere and there
a couple of children would cross
the street lugging a Christmas
tree hörne between them. The
whole .atmosphere was saturat-
ed with a kind of Naive senti-
ment not to be found in France,
whose appeal to the doughboy
far from hörne I could well ima-
gine.
And the children! They romp-
ed along the street in perfeedy
amazing multitudes, startling
me at-rVrst with the unexpected
clatter of the wooden soles at
tached to their imitation leather
uppers. Pink cheeked and chub-
by, they gave no signs of mal-
nutntion. As they swarm ed bv
I thonght at first that the schoöl
of a whole district bad just let
them out round the corner, but
I -soon found that everv block
was the same. Many of the civil
ians vojuntarily stepped off the
sidewalk to make way for my
foreign looking and therefore
victorious clothes.
Cut the children fearlessly
played tag arotind the grinning
doughboys' legs the insidious
ltlle propagandists!
Uncensored Comparisons.
After I had reeeived the samc
replies to my queetion from a
dozen soldiers, without hesita-
tion or qualification, it struck
me that perhaps the explanation
or this unammous preference
for Gerrnany was that the men
were unfairly comparing two ut-
rly .incomparaUe tuations-
life in a comfortable modern
city untouched by war with the
inevitable filth and exposure and
boredom of the trenches or front
bület in France. I put this
question to the ' next soldiers
with .whom I spoke. They all
answered approximately to the
same effect as the first one, who
said:
"Not on your life! I was '
quartered in a French city 100 ,
miles from the front and I'm i
comparing this town to that one,
and there am t snything to it.
Their streets were dirty and
their houses were disgusting
and their habits were dirty, and
they putme in mind of greasers
mors than snything eise, and
they soaked the life out of us.
And look at these people here,
how nice they run their town.
They're what I call a self-re-specting
bunch!"
When I arrived at the Station
ta take the train from Treves
to Coblcnz I found the German
railway officials still in füll
charge of the train Operation.
The Station master and train de
spatcher were stalking about
in their imposing looking un!
forms with a military carriage
which they made no effort to
conceal. I asked one M. P. on
duty there what timc the train
lest. He told me and added,
'And you'd better be on the
train on time. This äsn't France
and these birdsend their train 5
out on the dot!"'
"Didn't Raise the Prices."
When I reached Cobjenz it
was. late, at night and a Y. M.
C. A. man kindly -volunteered
to guide me to a good hotel.
I thought I rnight get a dif
ferent point of view from the
first American I had met who
was not a soldier. But, no, it
was tlie oft repeated tale; the
boys were all crazy about it
here, they , couldn't get over
how clean and neat it was; and
the German treated them right;
they didn't raise the prices on
them, they were orderly and
gave no trouble,' they were good
natured and obüging, they seem
ed so glad to be.under us in
tead of the French that they
were glad to da aaything they
posing superior American poli
tical institutions oft the rest of
the world.
Feudal barons are not so much
worse than beef barons, or Ho-
henzollern and . Ilapsburg kings
than railway and kerosene Kings
that he.can oller a Substitution
of one for the other. a a con
tribution to the emancipation o
the human race, The most con-
vincing demoeratie asset he has
to ßhow is himsclf; and he may
feel some delicaey about harp
ing on it.
Morcover, what has just been
said about the formal win-the-
war coalitions of Europe is
equally true about the virtual
win-the-war coalition which
Stands behind Mr. Wilson.
Senator Lodge is hardly more
of a demoeratie in foreign af
fairs than Lord Curzon; and the
latest American elections have
gone Mr. Lodge's way.
Will Need Rare Force of Char
acter.
President Wilson will need
that rare and mystical force of
character that acts on the "evid
ence of things unseen" in the
face of a very depressing mass of
contrary evidence of things very
glanngly visible.
He has made an enormous im-
pression in Europe as a- great
man; in America he seems to be
regarded merely as the figure
head of bis political party. The
Prophet is not without honor
save in bis own country.
In Europe even bis opponents
know he is in a class by him
seif, and has become the banner
bearer of the reserves of con
science and honor which the po
pulär spoutings of M. Clemen
ceau and Mr. Lloyd George
could not rouse; but sometimes
a surprisea face is seen ''here
when this is admitted, and it is
always the face of an American,
"and quite as likely an Amer
ican Democrat as an American
liepublican.
Thus we Jiave the curious
spectacle of an American states
man going into a European Con
ference with a tremendpus Eu
ropean moral backing, and a re
latively fecble American one.
When he asked for an expres
sion of American svipport it
was deliberately denied to him.
He could not ask for an expres
sion of European support, but it
has, been volunteered to him by
every available rneans.
Europe has earned the same
right to 6ay "our Wilson" as
Gerrnany earned to say "unser
Shakespeare."
Europe Halls Hirn as Godsend.
All Europe hails him as a god
send; half America groans un
der him as an afflictron. It can
not be helped; no man can be
great and populär at the same
time before bis dcath, excepV'ai
a distance; but there are times
when the neighbors of illustrious
men are in danger of making
thcmselves ridiculous by the fa
miliarity which expresses itself
in the old forfnula, "Woodrow
Wilson a great man! .Why, I
knew bis falber!"
Rightly or wrorigly, Europe is
deeply impressed by Wilson, and
is not impressed at all by the
thousands of doubtless prodig
iously able American ward
bosses who know themselvcs to
be greatly superior to him; and
that fact must be accepted for
the moment unless American
demoeraey wishes to be set
down as a political failre which
has accidentally produced a
greater individual success than
it is capable of appreciating.
Mr. Shaw further points out
that without a Leaguc between
the United States, Great Btitain,
France and Gerrnany,. there can
be no peace in the world and
consequently n League of Ka
tions in the sense now contem
plated. i
Anything short of this would
be simply. the present offensive
and defensive alliance made per
manent. Ey the acccptance of
the fourteen points ,and the ac
ccptance of an armistice (vir
tually a surrender) on their ba
sis, these four countries have
coneented to the League in prin
ciples. And it is clcar that when the
League is once forrned and be
lieved to be -genuine, Belgium,
Holland, 'Dcnmark, Norway and
Swcden will join it automati
cally.
Whether Italy, Spain and
Greece would commit them
tlves at once, or turn over the
possibility of a separate League
with South America, need not
be too curiously considered; for
they would' certainly not hold
aloof wjth any purpoe of re
viving tlie wars of religion
aainst the new cryta!lization
of the Protestant north. They
wo'.tld be friendly.
Frankly, cn the' score of an un-
dcniable heterogeneity of tem
perament, the Combination
might be tnore workable with
out tnem. ine nortnern Com
bination would be strong enough
to begin with; and enough is
enough.
The danger of biting off more
than we can chew is very ob-
vious; superfluous strength
would be dcarly purchasedat
the cost of a great inercase of
friction.
Our naval policy, Mr. Shaw,
asserts., presages a new war,
unless America and Great Bri
tain agree on sea force s and
forswear rivalry. If we nder
stand Mr. Shaw correctly, he
insists no less than we do upon
a desinition of the "Freedom of
the Seas." acceptable to all the
world. The first battleship Mr.
Daniels builds in the absence of
a League of Nations, he insists.
will begin an anti-Amcrican rno
vement in England, compared
to which the anti-Gcrman one
will seem a lovers' quarrel. Re-
capitulating bis argument, Mr.
Shaw says: . "
l. As far as the planning of
the war and the preparations
for it are concerned, the parties
enter the Peace Conference on
equal terms morally. ,
All of them obeyed, more ot
less intelligently ,the instinct of
elf preservation, and were un-
der the necessity of securing it
by military force because there
was no international law in exi-
tence to take its place.
2. The war was decided bv
naval blockade ,which proved
that the British Empire has mi-
itant powers of starvation and
ruin at present possessed by no
other State.
3. Though France .through
M. demenceau, has expressed
confidence in this state of
things. . the United States, .
through .Admiral Badger and
Mr. Daniels, have declared un-
equivocally that unless the Si
tuation is changed by the esta-
lishment of a League of Ka
tions, the United States must
build a fleet capable of , copin?
with arly existing naväl arma
ment. v
War If, League Falls.
As a chnihr resolution on
the part of the German Empire
was the first step loward the
present "war, this declaration
may be taken as the first step
toward the next war unless and
until the League of Nations be
cornes an established fact.
5. The League of Nations
must begin as a Combination of
States with settled responsible
governments of the modern de
moeratie type and will dilfer
from an alliance by having a
joint legislature and tribunal for
enacting and administcring a
body of international and super
national law. '
The present alliance presents1
so obvious a nucleus for such a
League that it must at once
anticipate its attitude and accept
most of its moral responsibili
ties. ' r
G. As republican federations
of the North American type will
be eligible as constituents of the
League of Nations without ques
tion, wl.ereas monarchies will
have to satisfy the League that
their governments are really re
sponsible, the League, without
directly imposing any form of
government, or denying to any
nation its right of self-dctermi-nation,
must, by the rnere fact
of its existence and the condi
tions of admission to it, act as
a high premium on federal re
publicanism and responsible go
vernment, and as a veto on au
toeraey. Gerrnany Must Be Settled.
7. Gerrnany can not be ad
mitted to the League until she
has a settled government of the
type desiderated; but the League
cannot seriously ensure peace in
Europe until Gerrnany is ad-
mitted.
.8 Pending the admission of
Gerrnany to the League. the Al
liance will be dominated by tbo
initiative of France and Ialy:
and as this Situation will lead to
a rapprochement between the
English-speaking allies and Ger
rnany, it is important that the
campaign of hafred against
Gerrnany, which ha now erved
its turn, should be discontinued
in England and America.
9. Disarmament (including
nominal abolitioa of conscrip
tion) is possible as regards land
force s, but delusive.
Naval and aerial armaments
must be balance and morally
controlled by the League of Na
tions. .The production of high
explosives and artillery on a
threatening scale, and the equip
ment of submarine ve-sels with
torpedo tubes should be made an
offen against upernational
law; but the League cannot
make war physically impossiblo,
and should not try to.
10. The üifluencc of party
politics and balance of power
diplomacy on the Peace Confe
rence is producing a reactionary
Combination of the present Eu
ropean war governments with
the American Republican Oppo
sition against the American De
moeratie Government ahd tlie
European Oppositions; and as,
in view of the eloctoral weakness
of the latter, Mr. Wilson, as a
Great Man, Standing for a Great
ldea, must depend on sheer in
tellectual and moral stiperiority
without repeard to clection
figures, it is important that
America should wake up to this
Situation, and not leave her Pre
sident in the position of a pro
phet with less honor in bis own
tountry than in Europe, on
fthich he has made a tremen
lous Impression.
Wclchki StrTgnSrtrn crrllft 0)fl One
WdMHbSttt?
Sl'nfons epclnoa, bcutle üiinllfr-lliit
Jiiiltnlt. die flrüfiie SJoturliPiluiKlIt tn
Kanws, (It aä Min A,chr !, Itic a
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litno von ftrenilAcit nnir.riicilPii bet itisl
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Ulssier- und
Gefangslehrerm
Wsolvierte im Jahre 1311
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lege mit höchsten Ehren und
erhielt goldene Anerken
nungsmedaille. ,.
Zimmer 14
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mnkä
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kuriert
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