WELLS CALLS THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS \ - _ ■ CONTEMPTIBLE ■ ■ —- 1 I - ~ Blind Alley for Good Intentions Heterogenous Nature of Mem ber States Makes Surren der of Nationalism Im possible, Briton Says. Power Unjustly Divided By II. G. WELLS. Author of "Outlines of History.” Special Cubic IHaputcb to The Onmlm Hcc. London, Oct. 20.—I opened this series of articles with an attack on the existing league of nations ut Geneva. This attack provoked a very considerable correspondence in reply. Hardly anyone was disposed to de fend the league as perfect or satisfac tory, but it was urged that it was a beginning, a germ, a young thing .UIVFRTISKMFNT HEW THRILL FOR TIRED MER Lack of Vitality, Energy, Forcefulness and Self-Confidence Corrected in Mnny Instances Within 21 Hours By a New Stimu lator Said to Be Pre ferable to Gland Treatment. Many a tiled business man would give all he possesses to learn^the se cret of marvelous vitality apparently possessed by many native African tribes. Scientists exploring the Jungles and observing the native customs found that before festive occasions and cere monials requiring great vigor the na tives invariably ate of the bark of a certain tree. This seemingly was re sponsible for the unusual vigor dis played by even the oldest of the tribe. I After careful experiments it was found that an extract could be made from th* bark of the tree and that this extract seemed to produce the same stimulating effects on civi lized man as on the wildest savage. It has since been used very widely by prominent scientists with great success In cases of lowered vitality, lost energy, and insomia induced by introspection. Fortuately this extract has been Im ported to America and may now be ob tained in convenient tablet form In tom binatlmv with other proven stimulators. One tablet may b# taken after meals and within 21 hours a surprising in crease in ^vigor and vitality is usually 6h*crved. \ t To mocure tha genuine article you ahould ask Beaton Drug Company for Re B- Id Tabs, and if your local druggist cannot supply you write to Re-Bild t,n horatories. Kansas City. Mo. Ra-BIld Tabs are not expensive and at- sold On a positive guarantee of quick results or your money back. that might accumulate power and prestige, that Its intentions were ad mirable, that it embodied and sus tained an ideal and that if it were de stroyed there would be nothing tci stand between the nations at all. 1 was reproached because—after an ad vocacy of world unity for a qunrter of a century—I refused to recognize this r>°°r diplomatic changeling as the birth of fny desires. it is perhaps desirable that I should answer these criticisms and state a little more explicitly why X think this affair at Geneva is worse than no league of mankind at ail. I do not think It can ever develop into a serviceable organ for world civiliza tion because X think that It was planned from the outset upon the wrong lines and that it is as reason able to support it in the hope of Us growing to meet the world's needs as it would be to buy a broken-down perambulator in the hope thaV it would presently develop Into a much needed automobile. League Malformed. The Geneva league of nations is a start. I admit, hut it Is a start tu the wrong direction and before we can get upon the way to any real collective organization of world af fairs we have to retrace our steps to the stairting point before there was any league. The league is malformed In such a way that it can never hope to grow straight and strong. One primary fault In the structure of this existing league Is its complete abandonment to the idea of nationnl sovereignty in its lntenaest and most mischievous form. Any little bundle of human being*, however small, il literate and unimportant, provided only that it was n law unto itself hnd waved a flag about and insisted upon a cantankerous Independence. wAs re garded as a possible unit by the ped ants who devised the league. Any body of people, however numer ous. intelligent and significant in hu man affairs, provided it had grouped Itself into any other larger political aggregation, ceased on the other hand to be anything hut a merged partici pator tn the league's affairs. Injustice to Scotland. So, Abyssinia, in which there are probably not. 200 people* fcapable of understanding the rudiments of world politics, could be considered seriously as a member of this absurd associft tion, while Scotland, the best educated country in Europe, was not to appear except as a button or collar stud so to speak, upon the figure of the Brit ish representative. The manifest consequences of such a preposterous recognition of separ atism, the Inevitable feebleness and disingenuousness of a league bi>d*d upon such ideas, were pointed out as early as May, 1918, In a memorandum insued by the official propaganda or ganization of the British government at Crewe House. Crewe House was rather a thorn in the side of the dear old British foreign office; in 1918 It was asking for a definition of allied war aims and all sorts of inconven ient, honest questions. The memorandum was treated ac cording to the best diplomatic pre cedents. Although we were making it the basis of - extravagant promises to Germany it was never communi cated as it should have been to the French and Italians. At the end of the war the promises of Crewe House dropped out of the victorious picture. The reasoning and the warnings of this memorandum were entirely ig nored by the hasty gentlemen at Ver sailles who threw together the Ge neva league of nations. States Iiose Sovereignty. These gentlemen seem to have been profoundly Influenced by an infantile analogy between a sovereign state and an individual man. This Is the age of democracy; and the league, most marveloui formula! was "to make the world safe for democracy." Modern democracy is taken to mean so much political equality between adult and Hdult as may be achieved by giving each Individual a vote. What more easy or—if you think it out—more fallacious, than to trans fer this idea to sovereign states and give each of them a vote In a won derful congress of mankind? But one sovereign state Is not like another sovereign state as one Indi vidual man is like another; the dif ference between this sovereign state and that is far profounder, profound er even than the difference between nilmals of different classes. The dif ference In structure. complexity, function and destiny for example be tween the organization known as the United States of America and that known as Nicaragua Is a difference as wide as that between the whole plant of a great Industrial district and a small domestic mangle. But in the original covenant of league both were treated as Individuals differing only a little in size, gnd importance. Liberia, Belgium, France. Haiti, and the Hejaz were all to be—and they are!—citizens in this marvelous re public of states. Held in Contempt. It is like treating a jar of pickles, an opera house, a battleship, a bun die of sugar cane nnd a small trav eling bag as equivalent things. Any old thing with a flag In it*— that is the rule. Can you expect the debates and divisions of a body so constituted to have any restraining Influence up on the policies and practices of the great powers? It is treated with open contempt In France and Italy and there is a sort of support for it in Oreat Britain it is largely because there Is a feeling that with 'Lord Balfour and Ijnrd Robert Cecil to the fore and with its British foreign of fice secretary and So forth its proce dure can he manipulated in the lr^ tcrests of the—I won't say British, for that is too good a word to use— the "Anglican" empire. Now m£ case is that this constitu tion of the league, is for the reasons I have stated, bad beyond all patch ing. There is, I hold, ho need at alt to base the thing we need upon a sham parliament of a miscellany of sovereign states big or little, civilised or savage. What civilisation needs are open, efficient and authoritative controls of certain universal interests, controls representing the great mass of civilized people and their common world Interests. For all practical end* it would be infinitely better to let Liberia, Ilayti, the Hejaz and the like go hang. Such little, such parochial states ought to learn to combine up with kindred organizations—or hold their peace in world affairs. Not one of them contains as many people educated up to Idea* of world policy as—let us say, any outlying suburb of Amsterdam. If half a dozen of the bigger political systems of the world, nr even two or three, 'could get together to sustain a com mon monetary standard, a common transport control, a common law court, a tariff union, a mutual de fence system and a common guarantee of disarmament, they would achieve something beyond the uttermost pos sibilities of this Oeneva affair. So much political coalescence on the part—to take an example boldly—of the United States, the Rritlsh system, Holland and the Scandinavian coun tries wouuld form a nucleus so large and Influential that upon It, the rest of the world, however fiercely nation alist at heart, would In the end be obliged to crystallze. I believe all these countries I have named and Latin America and Spain and Portugal to boot, could pool their Jotelgn policies—for that la what any genuine league of nations means— without encountering Insuperable dlf ficultics. The world barrier would be tariffs, but I do not believe that would be an Invincible barrier Such a club of civilized people would very speeedlly have all the rest of the world on Its waiting list. And I do not see why its achievement should be any more difficult than or indeed nearly as difficult as bolstering up this Ineffective pretence, the present league of nations World Court Easier. I contend that Instead ot there being no alternative to the league of nations, ‘the way Would open quite naturally to such alternative*, directly It was cleared out of the way. It would for Instance—If only on account of the United States—be mufh easier to set up a great International court of justice with proper sanctions, with out the league than with It. It is not as though the present league had accumulated any honor or prestige during its four years of life In Geneva. In the case of the Polish attack on Russia. In the case of the Greek aggressions on Turkey, in re gard to the occupation of the Ruhr, the murderous bombardment of Corfu and the stealing of the Greek de posit by the council of ambassadors to bribe the Italians to evacute Corfu. It has shown Itself-trivial, useless and I ridiculous. It Is either silent before such out rages or it speaks with a quavering voice and nobody listens. It Is a1 blind alley -for good Intentions. It 1s a weedy dump for all the weaknesses of European liberalism. Its past is contemptible and the briefer Its fu ture the better for mankind. (Copyright. 1 • 23. > Widow of Pastor Dies. Franklin, Neb.. Oct. JO —Mrs. Car rie L>. Knapp, 81, widow of the late Rev. George W. Knapp of this place, died at Jennings, La. She came to Nebraska C8 years ago with her hus band, wlio later held pastorates at Aurora. Salem, Grant, Ogallala, Hay Springs. Riverton and Franklin. Sh* is survived by a son. George, ot Ver don, and two daughters, Mrs. Cher.sy O. Jones. Brookline, Mass., and Mr*. Frederick W. Leavitt, Jennings, La. Funeral services wers held here yes terday. | New Low Prices Make Hudson | | World’s Outstanding Motor Value g = These are the lowest prices of all time on the ' §§ EE Hudson Super-Six. They make both the Sedan • 3 3 and the Coach the most outstanding values in the sss EE ^ world. More than 70,000 Coaches are in service. i £3 EE With aluminum Jbody, by a famous builder, the 3 < Hudson Sedan gives custom-built quality with a : == / price advantage of hundreds of dollars over cars of s 3 comparable fineness and chassis quality. =£ EE So/tf and Serviced by ss I KILLY MOTOR CAR CO. 1 e= /IT lantic 7461 2060-62 Farnam Street Omaha, Neb. =3 Custom Built Quality at Quantity Price = Like Father, Like Son; Old Cafe Reopened by Second Generation Gastronomic Landmark at .Hotel Loyal Is Now Mod ern Coffee Shop. Years ago, when Herman Cohn operated the old Hotel Loyal cafe. It tvas a gastronomic landmark of Omaha Now his son. Loyal Cohn, has opened the Hotel Loyal coffee shop, with several members of th# old Loyal cafe staff Gustave Wleland. chef, famous In the olden days for his cookery, has complete charge of the kitchen and bakery. Three of his original cooks are with him again In the coffee shop. The establishment has been com pletely refurnished at a cost of about 110,000, The kitchen equipment Is of the finest, with huge coal ranges, sttamers, jacketed kettles, and a built-in oven. Chairs and tables In the coffee room proper are finished In silver gray. The shop makes a specialty of Its roll* and pastry. It uses a special blend of coffee, put up In Individual packages for Its exclusive use. The shop Is open from 7 In the morning until 8 at night, and le at I • • "' -mtr. • /y/ ^ trading many of the customers who formerly patronized the old Hotel Loyal cafe in the days of Mr Cohn's father. Tourist Has Close Call When Train Strikes Auto Columbus, Neb., Oct. 20.—J. H. Sterling Dixon, III., tourist, had » narrow escape from death here when a Union Pacific switch engine cross lng tho Lincoln highway on a sld lng caught the rear of his car just as tne driver swung suddenly up the track in an effort to escape the lo comotive. The front end of the automobile was crushed against a telephone pole, the rear end partially demolished and the running board on the front of the locomotive and several steel rods were: broken. Sterling was unhurt. Hog Cholera Is Reported eiNar West Point, eNb. 'Vest t'olnt. N“i> Oct. 2u—H | cholera has been doing considerable i devastation among the herds of many 1 farmers over the county during the 'ast few weeks, 'tost every farmer in the county has vaccinated or Is planning to do so. One fanner near j Wisner is reported t> hire lost so! head There are also heavy losses west of the river. The southwest parts of the county are the hardest hlt'_I Sol Hess directs "The Nebbs.” an 'ogive feature in The Evening. Bee. Total of 39 Caseg Listed for Trial at Pawnee City Pawnee City, Neb., Oct. 20.—Die trict court open* in Pawnee City Monday with 33 civil case* and four criminal case* on the docket. The Jury has been summoned to appear Tuesday morning. Judge Raper wfll lie in charge of the session. Among the civil cases are 14 foreclosures, five suits on promissory notes, two divorce cases and one breach of promise suit. There la a perpetual Sabbath day upon the earth. The Greeks observe Mondays; the Persians, Tuesday; the, ' Asoyrians, Wednesday; the Egypt ians, Thursdays; the Turks, Friday; the Jews. Saturday, and the Chris tians, Sunday. _ or - MOTHER:- Fletcher’s Castoria is especially prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation Wind Colic To Sweeten Stomach Flatulency Diarrhea Regulate Bowels Aids in the assimilation of Food, promoting Cheerfulness, Rest, and Natural Sleep without Opiates _ To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven directionyon each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it. THE UNIVERSAL CAR Tkwskdan - • J Changes featured in the new Ford Sedan make it a better looking, roomier car. A higher radiator with a trim apron at its base lends dignity befitting a closed car. The higher hood and enlarged cowl curving grace fully to the dash give a stylish sweep to its body lines, and afford additional leg room for occupants of the front seat. S All body fittings—window regulators, door grips, door latch levers, door lock, dome light—are finished in nickel. The upholstery carries a fine dark line on a soft brown background that does not easily show dust or dirt. Silk window curtains to harmonize for the three rear windows enhance the style of the car and add to the comfort of its passengers. See the other new Ford body styles at your nearest dealers showrobm. These cars can be obtained through the Ford ff'eekly Purchase Plan. .Sec an}j oj the folloh'ing Authorized Ford Dealers: IN OMAHA Universal Motor Qo. Galbreath Motor Co. Adkins Motor Co. C. E. Paulson Motor Co McCaffrey Motor Co. Sample-Hart Motor Co. Hannan-Odell-Van Brunt, Inc. IN COUNCIL BLUFFS Parmer Motor Co. 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