The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, September 02, 1923, HOME EDITION, Page 4-A, Image 4

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    British in
^Deadlock
on Policy
Lloyd George Sees No Agree
ment Among Cabinet Mem
Iters for Action Over
Ruhr Invasion.
Tories in Predicament
—v—
By DAVID I.I.OYD GKORGK.
Unrulnil. Sept, 1.—The pen and ink
joust is to he suspended for a fort
night whilst tile tlgures of British un
employment are leaping upwards.
When the exhausted British knights
have been reinvigornted hy French
waters they will once .more charge
full tilt at the French champion—
at least they will have made up their
minds by then whether they will shiv
er another fountain pen against his
blotting pad. This is the advice pon
derously and pompously tendered
them In/ Inspired articles.
So far the French nation is jubi
lant that 51. Poincare has scored
heavily on points. He is a defter
penman and. moreover, lie does not
delegate his draughtsmanship to a
committee of ministers all holding
irreconcilable views as to how to pro
ceed. when to proceed, and whither
to proceed, and among whom there
Is no agreement except on one point,
—that no one quite knows what ac
tion to propose. Up to this last re.
ply they cherished the vain delusion
that the French could be shelled out
of tlie Ruhr by repronches which vert
both querulous an^l apologetic. Thaf.
is not the way to shift continentai
statesmanship from its purpose.
Tories Must Support French.
The French foreign office is better
informed as to cabinet divisions in
this country than are tlie British
public. It knows that the prime
minister and the foreign secretary
dare nof take measures which will
hamper French action in the Ruhr.
- When tlie Tory (lie-hnrds placed co
operation with France in the fore
-‘ front of their program they honestly
f' meant it. For them It was not a
; mere maneuver to unhorse the c-oali
• tion. They cannot therefore support
an attitude of resistance to trench
pressure on Germany. A refusal to
ioin France in squeezing Germany
is to them a continuation of the evil
l of the coalition they overthrew, with
E the help of Mr. Stanley Baldwin and
j l,ord Curzon. They will not tol
g erate it.
■ That explains the importance of
s British diplomacy in a situation
; which is so critical to our existence
2* is a great commercial people. The
'•abinet can agree on wordy notes.
■' They.are hopelessly divided ns to oe
i tton. They have therefore dispersed
p far and w ide to. search for fortuitous
e guidance hither and thither—some in
jj the tranquility of their Kijglish conn
J try homes, some in the healjiiR
i springs of France, some 1n tlie niisis
l of the Scottish moorlands. Mayhap
one of them will bring home a policy
; acceptable to his colleagues.
4 It is all very humiliating to the
e'lYfphe that raised 10,000.000 men and
spent 10,000,000.000 pounds ef its
treasure to win the war. The net re
s stilt of the voluminous eorrespond
j ence on which our rulers have con
• ' centrated month* of anxious wisdom
ADVERTISK.MKNT.
Iowa Physician Makes
Startling Offer to
Catarrh Sufferer*
Found Treatment \\ liicli Healed His
Own Catarrh and Now Offers To
Send It Free to Sufferers
Anywhere.
Davenport, Towa.—Dr. W. O Cof
fee, Suite 1303 St. James Hotel Bldg.,
this city, one of the most widely
, known physicians and surgeons In
■ tho central west, announces that he
frtmd a treatment which completely
healed him of catarrh in the bead
and nose, deafness and head noises
after many years of suffering. He
then gave the treatment to a num
ber of other sufferers and they state
that they also were completely
healed. The Doctor is so proud of
his achievement and , so confident
that his treatment will bring other
suffers the same freedom it gave
him. that he is offering to send
a 10 days' supply absolutely free to
any reader of this paper who writes
him. Dr. Coffee has specialized on
eye, ear, nose and throat diseases
for more than thirty-five years and
1s honored and respected by count
less thousands. If you suffer from
nose, head or throat catarrh, catarrh
»1 deafness or head noises, send him
lour name and address today.
ADVERTISEMENT.
ASK YOUR
NEIGHBOR
Women Tell Each Other HowThey
Have Been Helped by Lydia E.
PBukhara's Vegetable Compound
Perrysburg, 0. — “I took Lydia E.
Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound be
cause 1 suiierea
with pains in my
sides all the time.
1 can’t remember
juslhowlonglsuf
fered, but it was
for some time. One
day 1 was talking
with a lady I met
on a car, and I told
her how I was feel
ing and she said
she had been just
like I was with
pains and nervous troubles, and sho
took the Vegetable Compound, and
it cured her. So then I went and got
some, and I certainly recommend it
for it is good. Whenever I see any
woman who is sick I try to get her
to take Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegeta
ble Compound.”—Mrs. Ada Frick,
Route 3, Perrysburg, Ohio.
In nearly every neighborhood in
every town and city in this country
there are women who have been
helped by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound in the treatment of
ailments peculiar to their sex, and
they take pleasure in passing the
good word along to other ‘women.
Therefore, if you are troubled in this
way.whynot give Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound a fair trial.
and unwearying hesitancy la that the
allies whom we saved from destruc
tion refuse to move on inch out of
iheir road to secure our friendly com
panionship They are marching reso
lutely in one direction whilst we are
shambling along in another.
Entente at Odds.
We have traveled long distances
from each other since January last,
and we are now altogether out of
sight of the position we held in com
mon when we met the Germans'at
Cannes early last year. The entente
has never been more cordial than it
was then—it has never been more
promising of hopeful partnership for
the peace of the world. We were on
tlie point of securing an amicable and
businesslike arrangement with Ger
many for the payment of reparations
and of conclud'ng an agreement foi
protecting the frontiers of France and
Belgium against the possibility of fu
ture invasion.
From these starting points it was
proposed that Britain, France. Italy
and Belgium should advance together
I to a general settlement of European
problems in the east and west—poli
tical. financial, rnconomic and trans
port. This we had agreed to do and
with tlie unity and good will which
then ^prevailed, could have accom
plished.
But M. Poincare had no use for
tlie dove of peace. He wanted to
fly his falcon. He had trained ifnd
bred it in the French farmyard, and
there it has brought down many a
(domestic bird successfully. When his
chance came he flew it at the wound
ed German eagle. Tt is poor sport,
and somewhnt cruel, but It evidently
gives great joy to Frenchmen of a
sort. The best are ashamed of it,
but their voices are drowned in the
clamor of the unthinking. If the
helpless bird is torn to pieces there
is nothing in that for the French
or Belgian larders.
Quite unintentionally the hawk has
brought down the entente also. It
may not be dead, but tt has made its
last flight. Henceforth international
arrangements will lie on a less exclu
sive basis. France is Irrevocably com
mitted to the exploitation of the Ruhr
by force. That is what pay or stay
means.
Ruhr Policy Impossible.
To that policy the majority in this
country is detydtely opposed. If the
die-hards in the cabinet were by an>
chance to win. and either Mr. Bald
win surrendered or resigned in favor
of a Poincarist administration in this
country, neither he nor any possible
successor could carry the country
along into the Ruhr venture. Some
of those around the prime minister
who have so suddenly assumed pro
French sentiments ns the shortest cut
to higher altitudes than those to
•which they have yet succeeded in
climbing, know full wail that, al
though they may use the die-hards
for their own ends, if they succeeded
in their somewhat sinister purpose
they could not carry out the die-hard
policy.
They are therefore endeavoring to
provide for contingencies by negotiat
ing on their own a fresh understand
ing with France. But British pre
miers are not appointed at Itambouil
let, nor do they draw their authority
from yuai D'Orsa.v. Whatever may
he thought of Mr. Bonar Raw or of
Mr. Stanley Baldwin by political par
tisans, no one suggests that they
derived their promotion from other
than purely British sources.
Soured on Conferences.
But for a fortnight nothing is to
happen—except the spread of unem
ployment in Britain, and of despair
in Germany. At the end of the fort
night will there be a surrejoinder to
M, Foincare's rejoinder? Or will
there be another conference? Both
M. Poincare and the present parlia
mentary regime in Britain came into
power on the cry of "enough of these
eternal conferences. Ret us return to
the good old diplomatic methods that
prevailed before the war”—and they
might add, "which helped to make it
possible.”
Nevertheless. Mr. Bonar Raw's ad
ministration during its short tenure
of six months participated in four
European conferences, and M. Poin
care during his 18 months' official
career has found it necessary to par
ticipate directly in five conferences
and directly and indirectly In eight.
The French press is urging him on
to add another to the record, which al
ready beats that of M. Briand in the
matter of "joyriding.” the contemp
tuous die-hard name for international
conferences during tlie coalition days.
It is a suspicious circumstance that
those who were once resentful and
scornful of conferences should now he
clamoring for one, both here and in
France. The reason is scarcely con
cealed by ardent advocates of-the re
sumption of "picnic diplomacy.” At
the old conferences, so it is con
tended, France was invariably forced
to give way. Now it can, and will,
command the situation.
Britain Holds Mark.
There is a new note of confidence
ringing through French dispatches
and echoed in the French press.
France must get what it wants;
Brllaiii must lake what it is given.
The French share of reparations
must first be assured—debts due to
Britain can come out of what Is left,
it is rather greedy, but characteristic
of the British, that they should ex
pect to be paid what is owing to
them!
With their smug and hypocritical
Puritan temperament aUd outlook
they insist that contract* should be
respected! France, for the sake Of
the entente, will make a concession
eypn to British cupidity and Phar
isaism. It will permit the British em
pire to collect—not the whole of what
is due it, hut a much reduced claim
out of Germany once the French de
mand for reimratlons is cashed, or n*
good as cashed! To me this is a new
France. During my yenr* of discus
sion with French statesmen I never
heard this voice. I had ttfree or four
talks with M. Poincare, and t never
heard hiip speak In tiles* supercilious
tones. Jinpunlty lias developed them
since to tljeir present pitch of
stridency.
French Minimum Terms.
Belgium I* to suggest a meeting of
premier*. When it comes the French
minimum terms are to he rigid and
unequivocal. Here they are:
Frunce must be paid its Irreduci
ble minimum of I'l.ilOO.OOO.OOO
in respect of reporalions, wlmtever
happens to anyone else.
Belgium is also to have its prior
ity of 1100,000,000.
A* Germany cannot raise these
huge sums Immediately, France and
Itclgiuni are to hold the Itulir until
they are paid.
Hints have been thrown out by
more conciliatory French journals
ilial the. French government might
consider an eurlv retirement from the
Homes of Comfort I
—- —-—i
•
The * e c r e t 'of
your success lies
in owning your
own home.
This beautiful and cozy bungalow
is 24 by 26 feet exclusive of sunroom.
It can be built easily on a 40-foot lot.
It is pleasingly different—a divine
tlve home wherever placed. A 27
inch water table extends around the
house with stucco above up to the
belt course and shingles In the gables.
In the interior .you will find features
which are possessed usually by only
the more expensive homes. The liv
ing room is exceedingly large, light
anti open. It has a beamed ceiling
Ttuhr if payment of reparations were
made the subject of an international
guarantee. That implies Britain and
America becoming sureties for the
payment of the German indemnity.
As to the rest, France and Bel
gium have no objection, subject to
the above conditions, to Great Bri
tain collectcing £700,000,000, 1. e.,
about 23 per cent of its international
claims, debts and reparations, from
Germany. Hut this muniflcient con
cession is to be made on the distinct
understanding that It foregoes en
tirely the remaining 77 per cent of its
bonds.
The allies and Germany between
them owe Great Britain £3.000,000.000.
Thl French and Belgium governments
are willing thnt Great Britain should
collect £700.000,000 of that amount
from Germany, providing the remain
ing £2,300,000.000 is forever conceled
—and always provided ^ that the
£1,400,000,000 due to France and Bel
gium has been satisfactorily guar
anteed.
Germany Must Recede.
These handsome terms can only
be propounded If Germany first of all
withdraws all passive resistance In
the Ruhr. That is an essential pre
liminary-.
The French government has stated
these teems with such precision and
emphasis, and repeated them with
such undeviating insistence, thaf any
departure from them on the French
side seems impossible. Hope of a
conference rests entirely on confi
dence In a British surrender. There
is a dismal "joyride” In prospect for
the British prime minister and ids
foreign secretary. Is it conceivable
they can contemplate such a capitula
tion? I do not see how the present
government, after all it has said and
written, can so far submit to French
dictation as to make it likely that
and a fireplace. On either aid* of
the French doors leading to the iun
room, flooded with light. A wide arch
leads to the dining room. The cham
bers are shut off with doors from
the rest of the interior. This bunga
low la amply Insulated In all outside
walls and celling.
Complete working drawings for this
home can be procured from Grove
Hlbbard company, 624 Sunderland
building. Fifteenth and Harney
streets. Omaha.
further discussions would lead to an
agreement.
What Is the alternative? Herr
Stresemann can alone answer that
question. It is not yet clear what he
means to do. Perhaps he is feeling
his way to a decision.
Florence Field Addition
to Be Placed on Market
Th# largest addition of lots ever
platted In Omaha. 1.100 lots In Flor
ence Field, will be placed on the mar
ket this month, according to Charles
W. Martin A Co.
Florence Field comprises more than
lOO acres, a portion of the old Parker
estate. It adjoins Mlnne I.usa on the
north and lies on both eldes of Thir
tieth street. The west portion of the
addition was occupied by the Fort
Omaha balloon school daring the war.
Contract Made for First
House in Florence Field
I.arry T. Finn, who about a year
ago sold his home In Minna Busa
and moved to California, then later
returned to Omaha, hae contracted
for a new brick and stucco bungalow
to be built In Florence Field at a
coat of 18.500 to be built on ^'hit
man street west of Thirtieth.
Mr. Finn's house will be the first
lo be erected in Florence Field.
Granite Being Placed
oil Aquila Court Building
Granite Is being set and Bedford
stone blocks aro now being laid on
the new JSOO.OOO Aquila Court build
ing which Cook Bros, of Chicago,
are erecting on Howard street, be
tween Sixteenth and Seventeenth.
, •< UHB -M. ct
Let Us Build
Your Home
for You
'T'HE advice we give
A you free—will be of
great value to you—as
well as the service we
will give you.
AtTST ATUjg
4956 %4 4956
/ \
# Each New Home %
+ We Build \
• Biings Another *
* “Builders of Coed Hemes’' ■
I
• 4|
1
Sunderland U A 15th and
Building *»V Harney i
.. - I
Want Ads Reveal
Oddities of Life
There Is a portion of the newspa
per which, while not given as prom
inent place as the hews of the day,
is found replete with matter which
may bring a laugh and never falls to
arouse Interests. This 1s the want
ad section.
What food for thought Is encom
passed In a few cryptic wprds. Read
ing that someone has a player piano
for sale which will be swapped for
anything meeting the offerer's fancy,
one may wonder whether the ad .was
Inserted by a person with rheuma
tism or by an irate father whose
daughter spends more time with the
more or less musical Instrument than
she does with the supper dishes.
Another, evidently a woman,
wishes to swap an electric vacuum
cleaner for a mahogany rocking
chair. ITow come? Has she moved
into a house where gas is the only
lighting agent? Has she moved to
an apartment hotel where such a
contrivance Is not reeded, or have
hardwood, polished floors been In
stalled?
The announcement of a man that
he wishes to sell a baby carriage
which has never been used Is apt to
cause the average reader to specu
late on the probable cause of the of
fer.
It might be, although It Is hoped
this Is not the true cause, that the
lltle one was called away before St
could take its place in the busy
marts of the world, or the real rea
son for offering the baby carriage
for sale, might be—twins.
New Manager Is Named for
Burgess-Nash Barber Shop
Charles Crtaci.
In ths new location of the Burgess
Nash barber shop, several changes
have been made. Including the ap
pointment of Charles Criscl as man
ager. After 14 years experience In
Omaha, he succeeds Paul Cost&nzo,
manager of the mezzanine floor bar
ber shop. Mr. Crisci has been with
the Burgess-Nash company for the
past four years.
Under the new management, the
barber shop, which is conveniently lo
cated on the main floor, next the
men s clothng section, will include a
completely equipped smoking room,
and a men's wash room. A special
feature Is the reception room In
which mothers who bring boys for a
hair cut "just like dad's'’ may wait.
More Prizes for Title Winners
Beauty may be getting all the good
things in sight In Russell Cole's pic
ture, but there are still $10 in prizes
at The Omaha Bee for wits. The per
son who submits the best title will
receive $6. the next five will get $1
each.
Rules.
Write your title, your name and
address nn a postcard and address it
to the Title Contest Editor, The Oma
ha Bee.
Each contestant may submit as
many titles as he wishes, but each
title must be written oil a separate
postcard.
No title may contain more than II
words.
The contest closes Wednesday at
midnight.
Bedford Johnston Company
Announces Week's Sales
Bedford Johnston company, real
tors, announce the sale of more than
$25,000 worth of real estate in the
last two weeks.
The firm’s list of sales Includes
that of the Kingeboro apartments at
Twenty fifth and Podge streets, to
an Omaha Investor, for $76,000.
Morton Meadows House
Moved to Building Line
This picture shows a house being
moved by George T. Morton.at Forty
third and Poppleton avenue in order
to obtain the uniform building line
for Morton Meadows addition. This
addition was developed by Mr. Mor
ion this year. It lies immediately
west of the Field rlub.
The house was moved hack 30 feet
from the foundation shown on the
left onto a new foundation built by
Morton.
It 1* worth the expense, Mr. Mor
ton said, not to have one house out
of line.
The huildlnk lines in Morton Mead
ows are 40 feet hark from the lot
lines.
The buiidtntr at the sxtreme left
of the picture is a new $t».jOO
house under eoMiruction in Morton
Meadows.
Health
One of the moil important feature* of the N$*bil
Standard Furnace i* the healthful moitt heat it
give*. Unlike the ordinary hot air *y*tem, the
Neabit I urna e keep* the warm air fnont and
clean, due to iti extra large humidifier in which
many gallon* of water are evaporated each day.
F.ronomical a* well a* healthy burning lei*
coal and giving more w-aimth.
A*k your dealer to expi|in thoroughly the many
advantage* of the Ne»bit I urnace.
-r-.r_
Strono healthy child
ren require the clean,
moist warmth from a
Netbif Furnace.
The Radiator le extra
large with at Iraet 30
per cent more heating
• urfare than the ordi
nary furnace radiator.
THE STANDARD FURNACE A SUPPLY CO.
Omaha, Nebr. Siouk City. Iowa
I -ast Week’s Contest.
Contestants to last week's "air
mall" picture were entered from five
states: Nebraska. Iowa, Kansas, Mis
souri and Illinois. Winners are as
follows:
First Prize.
"A Holdup of the Air Mail Deliv
ery,” Grace Nelson, 1307 Ninth street,
Aurora, Neb. •
Second Prizes.
"Concern on Both Sides as Interest
Bearing Note Approaches Maturity,”
Maebelle Holz, 2751 North Forty-fifth
street, Omaha.
“Your Missive for the Miss May Go
Amiss, Mister," J. W. Adams, R. F.
D„ Omaha.
“A Branch of Knowledge She Took
No Note Of," Mrs. Arthur Lee, At
lantic. Ia.
‘Dangerous Mrs. Twist Hangar and
Landing Field,” E. Finske, Bayard.
Neb.
•'From a Staff Correspondent,” C.
L. Stewart, Geneva, Neb.
Honorable Mention.
"The Man Higher Cp Will Meet the
Power Behind the Thrown,” C. B. Nel
son. Atlantic, la.
"Extending Her an Invitation," R.
T. Mills. Grinnell, Ia.
"A Branch of the Air Mail DeliA^
ery.’* Stanley Chllaon. Omaha. Neb.
"A Missive to the Miss Misses th*
Missus.' Mrs. E. J. Mc-sted, Fajrbury,
Neb.
"The Note Was Due, But She
Couldn't Meet It." Harry Sherwood,
Atlantic, la.
"Reading a VersAFrom Her Favor
ite Chap," R. E. Mills. Grinnell. Ia.
"Literature and Belle's letters," Lu
cile Nordquest, Geneva, Neb.
"Intercepting a Forward Pass.” L.
G. Wise. South Omaha.
"Right to the Point. But Poorly
Punctuated,” Mrs. Arthur Lee, At
lantic. Ia.
“Try Night Air Mail Next Time,1
Thomas N. Crosby. Omaha.
"Rural Free Delivery Special," Mrs.
C. Basten, Kearney. Neb.
"Twenty Years Ago; a Love Affair
at Brownell Hall," Rev. Fr. Ilaj ward,
Omaha.
—of Sunderland's
dependable face brick *'
A drive through Omaha’s residence sfctioua
quickly convinces one that the most beautiful
homes are those of face brick. That they are
built for permanence goes w ithout saying. A
verv large percentage of these homes are built
of si NDERLAXD’S dependable face
BRICK because Omahs’a most exacting con
tractors use this material. They KNOW its
quality and they realize the value of its beauty.
To the architects, contractors, build
ers, owners and prospective ow ners of
Omaha property we extend an Invita
tion to visit onr beautiful display
rooms. AH manner of face brick
combinations are built up here to help
you with your selections.
‘ Confer With Sunderland Before You Build"
Face Brick — Fire Brick — Hollow Tile
Sunderland
Brothers Company
Entire 3d Floor Telepboss 1
Sunderland Bldg., ATlantta fl
16th at Harney. 3700