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About Tägliche Omaha Tribüne. (Omaha, Nebr.) 1912-1926 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1919)
Seits .7-Tägliche Omaha Tribune-Dionstag, bcn 16. September '1019. War Insluenced Gerrnan Müsse Favorably. fertign Corrcspondent Of Kew York Evening Pest: Says Quaüty ls Higher Than Forrnerly. , l Cenr Sacrchinpcr, Forcen Correspöndent of the New York Evening Post, writing from Tlie Hague, contributes to his paper an article on the developmciU of Gerrnan music durinf tht period ci the war. Bearinß in mind the aßitation carned on agamst Ger rnan music on the one hand, and the Isolation peculiar to Ger niany during the past five years, he writes, in part, as follows: " On the vvhole, the influence of the war on German music, thoiiRh negative, appeara td me to haye been favorable. It has put a stop partly at leäst to that indiscriminate mass pro duction, that "dumping" of musical niedioerities cdmmonly known as "Kapellmeistermusik" as devoid of Inspiration as it was technically opulent. Durinß the war pcople listened to music purely for enjoyment, diversion, ,or Spiritual solace. In order to Kt out of it what they needed they turped mors and more to the classics, familiär and beloved. Even Wagner was not as much of a favorite in these years; of emotional experiences, it seems, there were cnougli in real life. It is obvious that Ist ! their tllbl IWJf Wfch.ll flkiiUt CLttlVi Ul IV Lri 4 JiJ tfI-rMi MO lir1 nrtf m ii pirnna m t fln mrinu rrit r l in iJ V V VJI llUk .O4 to listen to the labored lucubra- tions of the contempor.ary Pro fessors. And so it happened that there was less opportunity for hearings of new works, which tiaturally resulted in less production. Add to this the unfavorable conditions for work and the reduction in the ranks of the musicians themselves, and the small output is easily ex plained. People who . wrote mtrsic during the war were those who could not help themselves, in other words the true com posers. And even these worked m'ore conscientiously than be fore: for themselves rather than for the public (which for the present at least did not exist), A Unique Stiuation . ' tThe reduction in quantity, thertfore, brought with it an im provement in quaüty. The Ger man composer üau au eppor- nniMr n oft ih prrrr . nf hi ways, As Felix .VVeingartner put it, he was able to "take a long breath," to regenerate him self in the spirit of the great classics. It is in their spirit that he will try to work, tut with the use of all the modern means which the' period just closed has developed. In all the countries outside Germany the war has had thte result of nationalizing music developing it in a characterlstic sense independent frorn the for r'gn influence. This was, more .in anything eise, a revolt Linst German dominatiön. Kut rmany has nothing to revolt v pinst except itself, which - tyd amöunt to denationaliza- J i. And. tn finme extent. this happened. German com- cia, eveu uunii4 uie war, ve leamed from the French.j tim the Ruseians and from' the :M! . J.i 1 . jiiidns. xiieir uuesi prouue ins are less antogonistic tp Jfse , schools than those of'ear ? Ir years; they are not alto - ther strangprs to French.im " 1 sessionism, Kussian color and ijilian melody. One of their 'ist successful young symphon- J .4UUUtlUU . .J ' I pupil of Puctini ; their ' most 'injired musical dramatist, Franz . threker, born in Monaco, is an rchestral Impressionist of the -st water. JVirtually no new names have seared on. the horizon in-Ger ny, so faf as creative musical ; ftivity is concerned. Of the b?g ? t. .11 ..... il. . I '.." I hv hirth a H unrrarisin 1 ti v.ii Miunn du uver tue wurm .jJy one IZeger has gone. t'he war seems to have been 1 rticularly considerate of music v choosing its victims.) The t Strauss, d'Albert, Ilumper ' fnck, VVeingartner. Bruch, itzner, Klose, Schillings, Kienzl are all til! working in their Jrniliar manner. Strauss has .itshed two operas during the pf, "Die Frau ohne Schatten" fd another one, a comic opera, which the title is not yet own. He has also recon- ucted bis "Ariadne auf Naxos" fi ljas written a dramatic pro tu for it which takes the fice of Mnlii-re's "Bourgeois Intilhommc," to which the fjcra was originally an inter Izzo. But the Moüi-re comedy i also been more cornpletely Jeitti with music, so that it irnishes a separate entertain-'-nt in the Hofiriannsthal- s Vauss version. Of a!I thce .trk only the new "Ariadne" . has been produceij Tlie olhcrs were not deemed appropriate as war-time productions. After thirteen years interval Strauss has gone back to 6ong-writing once more, having produeed two sets of lyrics -"Three Songs of Ophelia" from "Hamlet", and "Three Songs" from Goethe's "Westöstlichcr Divan." In these Strauss reveals himself in a new guise the refleCtive musiCal philosopher. In the sirst he pic tures Ophelia's rriadness in broad strokes ; the second is accepted by connoisscurs as a sort of per sonal confessiod. New Compositions. . . , . D'Albert's ' "Tote Augen," which he finished in the early part of the war, is already a regulär number of the German operatic rdpertoire. Since then he has written a brutal,' out wardly effective musical mclo drama, "The Steer of Oüvera," and is at work on still another opera. Hurnperdinck, too, has recovered from bis illness suffi ciently to ' write another opera, "Gaudeamus," which from - all aecounts is a very feeble äfter math to bis earlier works". Both Pfitzner and Schillings have produeed new operas in the war, and both on Italian Sub jects. - . Bruch and Klose, both pre eminently choral composers, have each produeed a masterpiece in bis particular medium. The Veteran Bruch, at the agc of eighty-two, still docs him'self füll justice with the "Trauerfeier für Mignon," recently produeed in Berlin. The words are taken from Goethe's "Wilhelm Klei ster." Friedrich Klose's . "Der Sonne Geist," also recently pro dueed,. is the favorite festival composition of today. Otfiers who have won new laureis in this field are Hugo Kaun, with "Mutter Erde," Heinrich Zöllner with "Baltenlied" and Kienzl with "Ortara," all names familiär in America. Others, similarly familiär, who have gone on pro ducifg ' in the Symphonie and choral, field through the war are Georg, Schumann, Siegrntmd von Hausegger . and . Nikolaus von Rcznicek, whose F minor sym phony was recently produeed. ' Of the "ultra-moderns," Ar nold Schönberg is without doubt the most famous or infamous-- ntme abroad. He seems to have produeed nothing new. and the most recent works of the period before the war are frankly looKea upon as ireaKs. jniusi cians, even the most liberal, bhake their heads over the mystery how a great talent could disintegrate in , this Strange manner. Among the names of instru mental composers coming to the front the most prominent are Ewald Straesser, Georg Gohler and Erwin Lendvai named in the order of their age, the first heilig born in 1867, the second in ' 1874, and the third in 1882. All three have written synphonies. chamber music and choral works. and Lendvai has produeed an opera, "Elgar." Younger -than any of them is Erich Korngold whose precocity astonished the world seyeral years ago. Korn gold is nbw twenty-two and bis recent productions seem to jus tify the highest expectations. He receijtly turned to the stage with two 6hort operas and has once more astonished the crittes. The sirst, - "Violanta," is a short Italian tragedy, with intensely dramatic music, a style that combines the best of Puccini's manner with the . technique of Strauss. More Productive in Opera Than in Absolute Music. One of the few generalities which one rnay per mit oneself in connection with this Subject is that German composers have been . more productive in the operatic field than in the domain of absolute music. And apparent ly the most remarkable successes have been achieved in this field. Aside from Korngold, who shows all the earmarks of genius, only one of the recent figures is ac cepted without reservation, and that is Franz Schreker, almost exclusively a musical dramatist People do not hesitate to . pro nounce Schreker's name in con junction with Wagner's in fact, he is quite generally regarded as the legitimste successor of the rnaster of Bayreuth. Schreker, like Korngold, is a Viennese, therefore in reality an Austrian, But, politica! obstades notwith s tan ding, the Germans have an nexed Gerrnan Austria in their miods. Musically the Combina tion, without doubt, will result in tlie tail wagging the dog, for the centre of musical values has long , since shilted to the south. , A number of other operatic successes are recordcd in Ger many during the war. I will incntion bnlv the most Import ant.. Ma öbcrleithner, a Ger man Bohemian, produeed two, "Lavalliere" another "biog-raphy"--in Vienna in 1918, and "Gaecilie," a semi-mystical modern dream concerning a young rnijsician, in Hamburg in 4919. Siegfried Wagner had a The War And Tlie Population Of Germany LOSS OF FIVE AND A HALF MILLION PERSÖNS A FACT; SINKING BIRTH RATE AND RISING DEATH RATE FORESEEN. . , The effects of the war on the Population of Germany are noted in some of their more serious aspects in an article appearing in The Reconsttüction Supplement. "The entire rcsults of the war äs regards population movement," is one of the conclusions, "cannot -be grasped in their entire sig nificance. To the loss, once and for all, of more than 5,500,000 persons must be added a lang period of sinking birth rate änd rising m'ortality." The arguments and conclusions of the writer of the article are set forth thus; , The Copenhagcn Society for the investigation of the social effects of the war issued its first report in March. This dealt with Germany, and is based on sta tistics of the population move ment in the German Empire to the end of 19b, in the Kangdom' of Saxony birth statistics to the end of 1917, and in towns bf over 15,000 inhabitants to Octo ber, 1918, as well as on State ments in the German press. The concluding chapter of the report sums up the effects of the war on the population as follows: 1. The" German people suf fered by diminution in birth s and .mcrease'of rnortality a total loss of approxirnately 5,600,000 souis. Consequently, there is a down ward movement in the develop nient of the population figures. The num'bcr of inhabitants has sunk from 67.800.000 to about 65.100.000: 'of these ZZ.900.000 are fcmalös and only 31,200,000 rnales. " 2. Of the total losses approx iniatcly ' 3,500,000 werecaused by the diminution in birth?, änd about 2,100,000 by the increase of rnortality. Proportion of Age and Number of Sexes Altered. 3. The 'proportion of the age and number of the sexes has been cornpletely altered. 'so every thousand persons of the male sex there are now 1,086 in stead of 1,024 fem'ales. In the age Class of from 20 to 50 years the proportion, instead of being 1,000 to 1,005, äs now 1,000 to 1,155, and in the class from 20 to 30 years of age, which is par ticülarly important from the marriage point of view, the pro portion is far more unfavorable. The youngest in this class, those born between May,' 1915, and July, 1919, are onc-third to one half behind the, normal peace 5gures. 4. The increase of rnortality has, in consequence of the great numbers (about 1,800,000) killed in the war, chiefly affectea the strongest and most effective m'embers of the male class. The number of men of military age has sunk from about 14,000,000 to 12,000,000, that is to say, by 13 per cent. Then again. hun dreds and thousands of the sur vivors are more or less severely incapacitated. . In this way the best labor of the German nation has to a large extent been ruined. 'S. The civil population has also suffered severely from mal nutrition nd overwork. The poorer sections of the town popu lation have suffered the worst. Pr isoners of War; Diminution of Birth s Rate. , 6. Dcmobilization lasted two or three months; äfter its con clusion large bodies of troops rc mained.undcr arms. There were over 800,000 German soldiers at the end of February, 1919, prl soners of war, and it cannot yet be known v.hen they will be re Icased. Birth;, in this transition Tti3 filiddle Glass Between Ttieiüllstones, From The Ne l'ew forces tend so stjongly to produce social consciousness as a grievance. Kot so many years ago one might have scarched the world and föund( nobody who woud admit that he was of t?7e middle class. The term was an epithet, used in de rision. , Ai the middle dass was real populär succiss with hls "Sonnenilammen," a story of the crusades. Marco Frank, a new man with a penchant for Puccihi, broughZ out bis "Eroica" in the Vienna Volksopcr ; Bernhard Sekles produeed bis colorful "Scheherazäde" in Munich and elsewhere. - A young composer named Graencr made bis operatic dbut with "Das letzte Aben teuer Don Juans" in Munich, and Franz Schmidt' "Xotre Dame" is new in the rtfpcrtoire of the Berlin Opera. It is based on Victor Hugo's book. period, will, therefore, be still more diminished. : 7. The great loss among men of ir.ärriageable; age will make itself feit after-, the, complete restoration of peace conditions and the return of the prisoners. About 1 .800.000 mtn feil during the war. If the lösses of the civil population äre-taken Intö atConnt, and the fact that many tho,ihands of soldiers will return in enfeebled health, the lo of marriageable men m'av cleafl be eJtimated at 2,500,000. It iä iikely, therefore, that the bihli iate will renia:n for some iinve aster the war 20 per Cent, lewer than the peae figures. The r-umber of marriages will sin' the precedent of previous war, i? in guide, for this last war (iinrs from all tthers. 8. The health conditiot.s of ihe popuiatfon have detcriorated iihintnsely throueh want of fooi and over-work. The poorer hard working sections ' of the r:orIe mave suffered the. most. Tuber- cu'osis ha, made- - terrible :. gross it las increased by over 50 per cent and the rnortality i'mong the entire population after the war will for some time be much higher than.it was in the last peace year. This result is only too probable since ,it will be some time before food conditions become normal again. , - 9. It m'ust also not be for gotten that the German people are faeed with' economic dissi culties dearness, want of raw material, unemployment, short agc of ' transpört' facilitics which affect greatiy 'the popula- tion probiern, for the more dissi cijlt the economic conditions, the trore expensive will be the un bringing of children, and the greater the wish ,tö limit the s&niilieS artifidally. ' Sinking Birth "Rate and Rising Mortality to be Added to Loss of- Life. ,.The entire results of the was as regards population movement cannot, therefore. be grasped in their entire signincance. To the loss. once and for all, of more than 5,500,000 persons must be added a long period of sinking birth rate and of risinjr rnortality. There is no illusion on these pomts in the circle of German economists. The German Society for Population Questions, which was founded during the war, and which convprises numerous poli ticians.and men of scienec. held a meting in O.tober, 1915. The President, sptakuisr about the effects of the war on the birth rate, said that there could be little prospect of an increase in birth rate after the war. The disablcd men would not care to take on themselves the responsi- bilitiea ot a family, and the in creasca power of the'woman to tarn money would deier her from matrim'ony. Various other so cietieS csrr.e to the same con clusion, showing conclusively that, if the war lasted long, chil dren and fathers" would both be lacking, as the losses affected those who belonged to the mar riageable dass first and foremost. This unparallelcd loss of man power places the German people face to face with social-political probiern? of the most difficult nature. Nothing cau be done by small schernes. The only means of improving the Situation is a cfrefully planned policy based on the broadest principles. The politician, the economist and the physician ' must work togtther teward one object. w York Times. . ' vaguely süpposed to be respect ablc, respectability itself went out of fashion. Today all this is altered. People write to the papers to say that they a of the middle clas3, and they say it with an air of one who, after all, i otnebody, Yet nobody has definc the middle 'class, even the sociologists and econ omists, whose business such things are. , ' In England, Mr. W. H. Mal lock gave a few stray ; thoughts to the Subject and concluded that it was middle class .to have an inconve of some $730. Professor II. R. Seager deposed that in America the figure would have to be raised to $1,500. It was the way of the eider sociolo- ?;ists to write as if the deterniin ng factor is always rnoney. -. Our comrnön sense knows bet ter. Tlie middle class is dis .inguished from the class on its cne hand by the faCt that it works, not with its body, but With its mind. It is distin guished from the class on its other hand by the fact that, having no sumeient Capital to retire upon, it has to work. The middle dass man is a brain vvorker who is obliged to work or go under. And he is obliged so con form to current Standards of respectability, physically as well as rnentally and rnorally. In the nineteenth Century the incörne Standard had at least a shädoW of jus'tification, " för wages and salaries still rnain lained some desinite relationship to the charactek- of work done and Services rendered: ; Today we have clianged all that, and with one notable result. A large group of people among us have become class consuous those, namely, Who do ' , Professional work " for less than the pay of a hand laborer, Mentally and rnorally they ' have two strong props of character the fact thät the instrurnent of their labor is the mind, and the fact that they are urged on by neecssify to use it. ,,. ' " - Two uttcrances of late throw some light on middle clas Prob lems. The .War Department announces that, since the ärmis- tice, 1,260 öfficers ofthe regularj army. have, resigned their com missions to go into civil life. It is true that a considerablö num ber of resignations . is normally to be expecled at the dose ot any war; the prospect of fürther service .and glory is not great. Some of the resignatjons, no doubt. come from among those who found regulär Commission at our entrance into the war. REPATRIATIHG THEMMPEISONERS OF WAR From The New York Sun. Repatriation of the German prisoners of war now held in captivity which has been decided on by the international military authoritics in Paris, without re gard ! to the ratificaton 'of the peace treaty, is the most sensible thing which could be done with thenv The 48,000 prisoners held by , the American army are in France; consequently we do not feel the desirability of getting rid of them as we should if they were in this country. But civil ians and military men alike in France anef Great B ritain are anxious to dear out the prison camps and get- rid Qf the bürden imposed by their maintenance, and the taxpayers of this country are paying large sums to keep our prisoners. f The labor of th prisoners, while it was useful during the wär, is not the kind of labor that is now needed. The cost of feed in, quartering and guarding them is high. Their presence disturbs the course of life in the High Time To Gultivate GoorJ Will. . Papers like the Brooklyn Eagle and Jhe Springsield Republican bid us lay aside our war wrath. The. British editor who recently recsmmended bis fellow editors to stop writing of "Huns" änd "Boches" did so on the score of politenes, and The Eagle insists "we can allow-no one to exceed us in politeness." The Repub lican finds it time to begin culti vating good will: "Now that the war has been won, the prime need is to get rid as quickly as possible of the war-spirit. We shall not have a happy or a tranquil world till the sifrplus stock of hatred has been scrapped along with the reserves of T. N .T. and' poison gas. In war hatred has no doubt a func tion, but even in wartime it is a terrible cerrosive, and if not carefully eliminated when war is dver it is a festering poison. It tends, m'oreover, to spread. Everywhere in Europa we may see Symptoms Of violcnce, un reason, acrimony, and suspicion which are doing harrn and which can not be cured .till , the bitter nCZS inscparablc from a great var subside. , "At best this ls a slow. process, But when all deductions are made the fact remains that an alarmingly large proportion' of the best trained men in the army are ,going into civil life. Many of them state the rcason frankly. They are no longer able to live on their army pay in the manner which they owe it to themselves as men to live and to the nation as öfficers. If the country were again to face a critical danger, it would have to meet it with a service that is" weakened in the precise point whcre it should "be strongest weakened in its resources of pro fessionally trained and expe rienced soldiers. The other utterance is front President Lowell of 'Harvard, who was speaking on behalf of a fund to raise the pay of College Professors. The cry is identical with that which Comes from the army. "What a professor wants is not a fortune, but enough to live cornfortably in the scale of life in which a professor onght to live ;he wants tö educate bis children as he was educated him self, and he wants to provide for bis old age." Universities are the most enduring institutions the. world has founded, outlast ihg dynasties and kingdoms ; and the reason is that they "con tribute to the highest in civiliza tion," contribute "something that is eternal." If America ia to be cqual to the great task which has been thrust upon her by the war, it must be by intellectual and spiritual leadership as well as by its material resources. Concrctely, the questioit is whether our leadership is to be like that of Carthage in the an cient world, which perished and lest behind "no idea of value, no enduring Institution," or whether, like Greece, we shall add to the comnion heritage of the mind, or like Rome, to the heritage of laiv and institutions. These are only two of the losses from which the nation would suffer if its middle. dass were really ground td pulp the loss of defensive strength in war, and the loss of intellectual and spiritual leadership at all times. Really, it is something respectable to belong.. to the middle dass. At least, it should be. ' districts where they are confined and renders the re-establishment of normal relations more difficult than it would be were they senk home. - . These men are needed in Ger many, and the longer they are held as prisoners the less easy it will be for them to take up tlie new parts they, must play in the fnture. Their labor is needed for the upbuilding of the German republic, needed by the Allied and Associated Powers, which expect the Germans to pay great sums in reparation, needed by the world, which requires that every man capable of productive labor shall get to work as ßoon äs he can. As the army comm'anders in-dorse-the plan for the immediate restoration of German prisoners of war to their homes nobody need worry about the military phase of their release. They can safcly be repatriated, and the sooner they get home the better it will be for everybody. btft this is a reason the more why it should begin at once. It is a process to be helped on rather than retarded. Fortunate ly --there are points of contact where healing will be rapid. During the war neutrals were roughly used by both sides, and were treatcd with some con tumely; it can now be seen to be ä fortunate thing that a few states weje able to remain neutral during the period of slow reconciliation, their Services will be of value. It is fortunate, too, that the greater part of the belligerents have but.a limited stock of animosity. In some cases an old send has been erased by the destruction of one party to it. New quarreis in plenty have sprung from the disruptien of tue Ilapsburg Dual Monarchy, but hatred for .Austria-IIungary is a thing of the past. It is highly probable, also, that the general hatred inspired by the Germany of William II. will dis appear much more rapidly than is now realized. Most Ameri cans would find it difficult long to retain anjrn'osity against a well-bchaved and thoroughly dernoeratie Germany," fSriitfi tt-ndgr Irrdtel flut kUdNl? (Haronba Erriiiii, ruititt ilinllcr.Jlut nmiutt, Dtt ßrüliie tliatutbellitutU in stamai, I tat aunu Zbk ven tut. o tteuifit: mn txiAU toxi Ktnellftf liuifl von 4ronllitfn ftcar.fbeltrn bet a Ofll. 6 (fltlflfliiflM. l'ehft un iifttn. ü'ül elftem brtlldinen üViiiriülmutm. com Sim-nbDtunnfii tn BfWrftft im roiOcn schall föfll anflfipentet wltflt rt m 'ünHer.ttn on JifiirnlnWi. ifltiftimn'lmn un Unfiprcn fonilUnindltn flniuni'i'nt tin fl(tiMrnrn in sicher ßtlle. Man lchrelb um liiftittl flOrnbnm t ftnurdft (Barant Cprinn ;! RELIABLC EETECTiVE BUREAU M ftaJfctatt P;ianflf fuilbinn, 15. un tartut etu Cmnhn. Krdr. ra.rklhl lemil 20." Ctt Hkschil!r nur nutrlrifpgc kKkl,NPlI,Istk I . I!iqre . Slachl'Tklcphon: C!ar ißS Wf. towttlrtt, 9!a4t'Zefi0on: Solfai 881t . SWiWMWÄÄÄSWWÄMWWIÄM William Siernbetg Deutscher Advokat Zimmer 050.95, Omälza National Aank-Kebäude. Tel. Douglas 062. Omaha, Ncbr. MÄlSÄWÄlÄiÄÄÄiSÄöNMlÄiÄÄiAiMISIW RUTH FLYNN Ulavker- und Gesangslehrerin Absolvierte im Iah 1911' daS Chieago'et Musical Col. -lege mU höchsten Ehren und erhielt - golöeni Anerkenn ungsmedaille. , , ' Zimmer 14, Valdridge Block 20. und Farnam BESj ttlaffifizierte Anzeigen! Vcrlangl Weiblich. Eine Haushälterin, ini ' mittleren Wer, aus der Farm; muk deutsch sprechen können. Zwei in Familie Anfragen find zu richten vn die Omaha Tribüne, Boz L. ' tf Au verlausen. . Lot mit , 7Zimmer Haus. " rno dem. Zu - erfragen 1007 Süd 17. Arche. Tel. Tnlcr 2240 W. . 94540 GnteZ ?agcr von künstliche Haarzvvscn (hair sw'tches) zu ver kaufen Detlef Hair Parlors. 2s)2 Baird Bld. Margaret Guilston, Eigenth. 'tf Farm zn verkaufen. Eigentümer wünscht seine Farm von über 800 Acker. 3 Meilen nord west von Odell, Ncbr., zu verkaufen. "Schulhaus auf dem Lande. Gute und groszc Gebäude.;, fnebenoes Wasser. H. 'O. VeZmann, Odell, Nebraska. 9-049 Ncntfarm gesucht. ' Deutscher. Farmer, 32 ahre alt. kuckt eine ??arm üu rcnten für 1920. Briefe erwünscht, Guido Schollcr. Betgraöc, ccbraska. Kost und Logis. Das preiswürdigste Esten ve! Peter Rnmp. Deutsche Küche. 1603 Dodae Strahe. 2. Stck. tf Möbliertes Zimmer mit fepara tcm Einaang," mit oder ohne Kost. 2623 Lake Street. 1. Stock. . C. 'laumann. tf Bücher. 'Auswahl: Ohne Lehrer Englisch. Wörtetb"icher. Briefsteller, Geptz. büchcr, Gedichte, Kochbücher, Do! mct ,er, Liederbuch, Svrachmeister, Bewerbung sbricfe, Amerikanisches Bürgerrecht Gesetzbuch, WelchäftZ briefstr5er. Elektrizität. Doktorbuch, Amcrikakisllier Geflügelzüchter, Gar. tenbuch. -.isbau, , Milchwirtschaft, Päckcrrcze.'tkucher, Migenieur, Ma schinisknduch. Deutsch-Amerikanische Kalender. Schreibt für Gratisprg spekte. Sharles Kassmcycr Publishing Co., 205, Fast -In. Str., New Aork. N- f). GlöZ bringende Tranringe bei Bro degaards, 1L. und Douglas Str. Möbel-Ncparatnr. Oniaha Furnitur? Nepoir WorkL; 2905 Farnam St. Telephon? Har ncy 1""?. Adolph KarauS. Besitzer. Monumente und Marksteine. C-WoSYne Mos'iimenk? u. Mark steine. Bratke & Co.. 4Hlsi Süd i" Strosse Zel South 2'-570. tf Advokakk. H. bischer, deutscher ReetSanwalt und Notar. Grundukie aeprütt. Zimmer 1418 First National Bank Building. Clektrilche. -Eebranchte elektrische Vlttoxtt.--Tel. Douglak 2019, Le ßrca & lSisö. 116 Eüö. 13. ßir;