THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JULY; 19. 1918. PATRIOTIC DUTY EMPHASIZED BY COL. ROOSEVELT i Former President Given Most Enthusiastic Reception by New York G. 0. P. Convention. (Continued From Pace One.) came known generally about the tall s before he delivered his address and plans for a prolonged demonstration, with stampeding potentialities, vftrt quickly changed. The colonel was received warmly . as he strode down one of the main aisles with bands playing "The Star Spangled Banner" and the crowd on foot cheering. These reached their height when he declared that "the sinking of the Lusitania was the fir ing on Sumter of this war," and that if the United States had declared war at that time, "we would have had a couple of 'million men across seas months ago, Russia would never have broken and the war wouldrfave been over jiow." J; , Loyal Idealism Essential. The colonel adhered closely to his prepared speech, except on one or two occasions, notably when he ap pealed to his hearers to perfect their ideal of citizenship. At no time did he refer to the reported death in France of his son, Quentin, but his audience felt he had this keenly in mind when he said: "In this great world crisis, perhaps he greatest in the history of the world during the christian era, where the events of the next few years will profoundly influence for good or. for ill our children and our children's children for generations; surely in this great crisis where we are making sacrifices and making ready for sacrifices on a scale never before known; surely when we are rendering such fealty to the idealism on the part of young men sent abroad to die, surely we have a right to ask and to expect a loyal idealism in life from the men and the women who stay at home. "Our young men have gone to the other side very many of them to give up in. their joyous prime all !he glory and all the beauty of life lor the prize of death in battle for a lofty ideal. Now, while they are defending you, can't we men and women at home make up- our minds to try and insist, in public and private on a loftier idealism here at home? I am asking for an idealism which shall find expression beside the hearthstone and in the family and in the councils of the state and na tion, i "And I ask you to see that when Ihose who have gone abroad to en dure every species of hardship, to risk their lives, to give their lives when those of them who live to come home, that they shall come home ' to a nation which we by our actions have made a nation they can be proud to have fought for and to have died for." - Roosevelt's Address. Colonel Roosevelt's address fol lows: "The two prime purposes of the American people at this time, having precedence of all others, are: First, to insist upon the absolute and thor oughgoing Americanization of our entire citizenship; and, second, to win the war, to win it as speedily as possi ble, and to end it by the peace of overwhelming victory, a peace which shall guarantee to ous, and to our al lies and to-all the well behaved na tions of the civilized world, lasting relief from the threat and horror of German world domination. "As regards Americanism, we must insist that there be in this country but one nationality, the American na tionality. There must be no perpe tuation in this country of separate na tional groups, with their separate lan guages and special loyalties to alien overseas flags. There can be no 50-50 . Antericanism in this country. There is room here only for 100 per cent Americanism, only for those who k are Americans and nothing else. "We must have loyalty to only one flag, the American flag; and it is dis- loyal to the American flag to try to be loyal to any other, whether that other is a foreign flag or the black and red flags which symbolize either , anarchy or else treacherous hostility o all for which this nation stands. Only One Language. "There is room in this country for but one language, the language of the Declaration of Independence, of Washington's farewell address, and of Lincoln's Gettysburg speech and second inaugural; the English, lang uage. Americanism transcends every party consideration. No man who is not a 100 per cent American is en-J titled to the support of any party whieh is itself entitled to be consid ered an American party. "This is one side of Americanism. The other and equally important side is to insist that every man who shows himself to be a 100 per cent American, wholehearted and single minded in his loyalty to this country, no matter what his birthplace, na tional origin or creed, be treated as on a full and exact equality with jvery other good American. The bulk 3f American citizens in whole or in ?art of German blood (and I am my self in part of German blood) are ab solntely loyal. They have furnished is large and as gallant a proportion sf the fighting men of our army and navy as any other element; and of course, it is the fighting men who meet and furnish the highest test of sound American-citizenship at this time." Colonel Roosevelt advocated urii . versal obligatory military training in the field for a period at least of six months for all our young men be tween the ages of 19 and 21 years. He als.0 said that women should at once have the vote in the nation at large. He cautioned that government owner ship should be avoided wherever pos sible. "These, in brief outline, are the tasks of rebuilding and of upbuilding which are before us when peace comes," Roosevelt said in closing, "but the prime needs now are the neeeds of war. We must insist that this whole country be unified, nation alized and Americanized.' i By Daddy In Uncle am's Service tS;Z CHAPTER V. The Man at the Old Mill. (Pessy. made Invisible by Camouflafe Perfume, visits an army camp. Ben and Bill Dalton throw Into a river a German spy who tries to get them to desert They are warned by their captain that they are liable to punishment for letting the spy escape.; GENERAL SWALLOW quickly introduced his companion to Peggy. "This is Miss Purple Swallow," he twittered, looking at her very proud ly. 'iSome day I hope she will -come to our own Birdland to live." "I hope so too," responded Peggy, who at the very first glance felt that she liked the young lady Swallow. Then she turned to the trouble of Ben and Bill. "We are looking for a 'jitney driver who is a German spy Ben and Bill threw him into the river, and we think he is somewhere in the swamp now. I am wondering whether you know the Birds around here well enough to ask them to help find him." "To be sure I do," answered Miss Purple Swallow. "And they'd do anything for her. Anybody would," gallantly added General Swallow, looking at her fondly. "There's a flock of Red-Winged Blackbirds resorting along the river," continued Miss Purple Swallow, ignoring General Swallow's compli ment. "No human could be in the swamp without their knowing it. We'll report in a jiffy." "Meet us on the edge of the swamp," Ailed out Peggy as Miss Purple Swallow and General Swallow took wing. ' "Were you talking to those Birds?" asked Ben, who had been watching the Swallows very intently. "Of cours. I 'was," replied Peggy. "They'll have all the Birds in the swamp looking for the spy within a minute." "Say, that's a splendid idea," ex claimed Bill. "Wouldn't it be great if we could train birds to be army scouts and sentinels." "You have Human Birds for scouts in France," answered Peggy, think ing of the aviators. As they tramped toward the swamp Ben and Bill explained why the dis favor of the captain was such a se rious matter. "We have perfect records as sol diers and have earned promotions," said Ben. "This kills our chance to becoming noncommissioned officers." "Just because we lost our tempers and pitched that spy into the river instead of into the guardhouse," groaned Bill. They reached the edge of the swamp just as the Swallows -me flying back. "We've found him," they shrilled loudly. "A man in xiue suit, all wet and muddy." "That's himl" declared Peggy. "He is down in the old mill beside the river," twittered General Swal- Life Story of Man Who Bought N. Y, for Kaiser (Continued From Fata One.) the work at the school. They not only built their own houses and school buildings, but took care of them. Each boy was required to make his own bed, clean his own room or his part" of the dormitory, even wash his own clothes. The gen eral policing and cleaning up of buildings and grounds was assigned to the boys, each boy being in turn placed in command of other boys to perform specified parts of this work. Except for the Chinese cooks and one fireman in the central heating plant and power house, all the labor of the school proper was performed by the boys. They also did the bulk of the agricultural labor on the 200 acre farm under the direction of a farm manager. One of the educational ideas which Dr. Rumely brought from Germany and put into effect at Interlaken was that of taking groups of boys out on long tramps over the country side. Sometimes these pilgrimages would cover only a couple of days, sometimes longer periods. With Dr. Rumely and about 40 boys from In teflaken school I went on one of these walking trips. v - Took a Fifteen Mile Tramp. We tramped from Interlaken one Saturday afternoon to a point on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan, about 15 miles distant, where we camped for the night amid the sand dunes, and the next ' day, after a plunge in the lake, tramped back to the school. As we marched along the dusty roadside -Dr. Rumely talked enthuiastically about his tramns around Germany with parties of Ger. man schoolboys. On this, and other occasions too, he told me of his dream of the development in America of a class of great landed proprietors who would be the leaders and rulers of America. These boys, or most of them," he said, "will inherit fortunes arfd the control of great enterprises. If they are early given training in the funda mentals of agriculture and the habit ,of outdoor life, are -taught to work witn tneir nands, and so be able later to direct intelligently the wofk of others, who labor with their hands, many of them will buy large tracts of land and put it under cultivation with modern methods of scientific agricul ture. American men of wealth are al ready beginning to turn their eyes back to' the land. It is to hese me.i that we must look for leadership and I hope to see the fathers of ma.iy- cf my boys here buying great farms for them and starting them on a solid foundation. Day of Small Farmer Over. "The day of the 6mall farmer is about over. Modern agriculture is a big business operation and must be financed by men of wealth." If this sounds like strange Joctrinc for a socialist, remember that Dr. Rumely's socialism is the German state socialism, the scheme of things under which a ruling class founded upon the landed estates and control ling the wealth and capital of the na tion provides, through its servants, the scholars and intellectuals, r.n ex actly measured modicum of comfort and happiness for the individ'ials of the lower classes, whom it trains from I Blackbirds saw the soldiers throw him into the river and they followed him to the old mill." Peggy quickly interpreted the Birds' message. "I know that mill," exclaimed Ben. "the fishing is mighty good there." Quickly they made their way down a grassy lane that led across the swamp to the mill. The soldiers swung along at such a pace that Peggy couldn't keep up with them. "You walk awful fast," she panted. "Can't you fly, Invisible Fairy?" asked Ben in surprise. "Not today," answered Peggy. "Then I'll carry you. Where are you?" He felt around blindly for her. and Peggy ran into his arms. He tossed her to his shoulders, where she clung to his rifle as they hurried along. The lane led thruogh heavy under growth until it came to the clearing in which the mill stood. At the edge of the clearing the soldiers halted. "Maybe he is armed," suggested Ben. "We'd better go carefully." "I'll run ahead and see," volunteered Peggy. "No, no, he may hurt you," objected Bill. "But he can't see me," laughed Peggy. "I ll be safe." "That's so," agreed Ben, carefully dropping her to the ground. "But if anything should go wrong, just shout, and we'll be there in a second." Peggy ran to the mill very confident ly. If she hadn't been hidden by Camouflage Perfume she might have beeni scared, it was so deserted and spooky looking. "He is in the little room at the side," said General Swallow. Peggy crept up to the door and looked in. There was a man sitting on a box lacing his shoes. His clothes were wet and on the coat was the badge of a 'jitney' driver. A board sqeaked under Peggy's weight, and the man looked up quickly. To Peggy's aston ishment it wasn't the "jitney" driver at all. This was a very unhappy look ing boy no older than Ben and Bill. Simple S'mo'fr Complete the letters of Simon's sign- they will spell the names of animals (cat tribe). (Answer to previous puzzle SCOTT) childhood to the occupations of the artisan and the peasant. This sort of socialism does not question the right of the rich to rule the poor, of the strong to dictate to the weak. It is the socialism that comes with its at in its hand beg ging the rich and all powerful rulers of the state to grant as a privilege the things that are every human be ing's right. It was on one of these hikes with Dr. Rumely and the boys of the Inter laken school that Dr. Rumely ex pressed himself to me on the subject of German military efficiency . Saw Value in Boys' Walks. "There is wonderful educational value," he said, "for boys in tramps about the country like this. My friend, Harrington Emerson, the efficiency engineer, told me that his whole career was shaped by a trip, when a boy, with his father in the wake of Von Moltke's army. What impressed him was the thoroughness and com pleteness which the German plans for the advance on Paris had been de veloped and carried out " At one time the Interlaken school had nearly 150 students. The list f its patrons who sent their boys there to be educated reads like a sec tion of the directory of directors. Through these boys Dr. Rumely came in contact with many of the parents, men of large affairs, many of whom were greatly impressed with the bril liancy of the young pedagogue's mind, his enthusiasm and his energy. (To Be Continued.) American Wounded Attended Carefully On Journey to Paris Paris, July 18. Hundreds of Ameri can regulars and national guards men were injured on the Marne front and are being nursed in the Paris hos pitals, and having their wants looked after by American women. .The soldiers receive surgical atten tion on the way from the front, their wounds being dressed three or four times during the journey. German Papers Denounce Use of Shotguns by U. S. The Hague, July 18. German news papers received here are raising quite a pother over a story received in Ger. many from .Switzerland that a large number of American troops have been supplied with sawed-off shotguns for close fighting. The Cologne Gazette, in comment ing on the report, denounces Amer ica s barbarism and assumes that tomahawks and scalping knives will soon appear on the American front. I he newspapers warn the German troops that the Americans are not honorable wairiors." The VVeser Zeitung says the bar barous shotguns have been served out not because they are likely to be ef fective, but because the ill-trained Americans cannot use' rifles and are badly supplied with machine guns. General March Decorated Washington, July 18.-King George has awarded the knight's grand cross of the distinguished British Or der of St Michael and St. George to G(eni,P7t0n-C March. ch'ef f staff of the American army, adventure eacn week. ad ending Saturday. "That's not the man," she whis pered to General Swallow. "Then it must be the fellow in the front room," he answered, leading the way to another door. Peggy, ventured inside, moving very cautiously. Over at one side she saw a soldier. As she entered he turned around. It was the spy. Peggy had almost expected this when she found that there were two men in the mill. "I d advise you to get awav the minute it grows dark," called the spy to tne Doy. "I just hat' to go," the young fel low called back in a voice that quivered. "I wouldn't do it if father didn t need me so badly.' "And I wouldn't help you if I didn't think tt was my duty, replied the spy, grinning evilly to himself. Peggy understood what had hap pened. The spy had come across the young soldier and had persuaded him to desert, just as lie had tried to per suade Ben and Bill. "If they catch me, they'll do some thing terrible," called the bov. "They'll think vou were drowned while fishing and not look for you," answerea tne spy, rtriding over to the window. He glanced out, and what he saw caused him to jump back, shut the door quickly, and shoot the heavy Dar into Place. u "Get out of sight," he called softly. .IIVI6 aic SU1U1C1 3 tUIlUUK. He returned to the window and cau tiously looked out. It s those two young chaps who threw me into the river," he muttered savagely. "I'll fix them if they come mis way. rte drew a heavy pistol from' its holster, and held it ready for instant use. ' Peggy ran to the door. She must get outside to warn Ben and Bill. But she couldn't budge the heavy, rusty bar. She was a prisoner. Through the window she saw Bill and Ben ad vance toward the mill. The spy raised his pistol menacingly. (Tomorrow It will be told how Peggy helps to capture the spy.) Ambassador Walter Page , Returns to London Post London, July 18. Walter Hines Page, American ambassador, has re turned to his duty after a leave of absence of two months. Mr. Page's health had been badly impaired. The vacation has fully restored his health. Good Cars are being used more and more for business purposes. As a result they are being treated more and more as a business propo sition. Equipment is purchased with ex treme care and judgment. Values are studied. Mileage records are kept care fully. That is why sales of United States Tires are Increasing with such rapidity. They have demonstrated not only unusual long-mileage qualities but far greater reliability. ' They make your car more useful. OMAHA and Douglas Sts. 9th BLOCKS ENEMY'S "STEAM ROLLER"! (Continoed From Page One.) hind the German line, and this fire continued right on through the early phases of the battle- The enmy opened about midnight with intense fire of masses guns. At 4:17 the enemy advanced and we met him with every cannon and machine gun at our command. You know the re suit. "The encmy waves failed to reach our main defense positions almost everywhere. I dislike speaking of the enemy losses, but we kttow of one division that left half its effectives on the ground, and it is certain that density of concentration and attack caused the Germans to suffer enor mously every where even before com ing forward. Thir failure to attain our line in many places is ample proof." The officer pointed out the position of the American unit on the map and told me its name. I afterward learned that American troops bore the brunt of the enemy's weight on fpflljWIJ'ffl Ban li,Uii. &i5iiiitttMtnmmiTmmitiTimifinmrmimniirtmmiiiiH!mii,ptira,fHi,m,,n, The New j Beautiful in Design Thoroughly Modern Mechanically Right The quality of this car is apparent in its beautiful lines and perfected mechanism; and the little details show it, too. Notice: the fine, hand-applied finish (24 operations) the "Sherardized" (non-rustable) bright parts the accurately-fitted, smooth-closing doors the simple, convenient device fdr holding doori ajar the good hardware throughout the combination robe-and-hand rail the. "two-range" carburetor a wonderful saver of gasoline and help to power and speed the carefully worked-out, comfortable seat positions the French-plaited upholstery, soft and deep the reaj foot-rest in the tonneau the mahogany glove-bo in the back of the front seat the quality or the accessories the neat, protected speedometer-drive the oil-cups instead of grease-cups throughout the accessibility of all parts the beautiful color-optiont Studebaker Blue or Maroon It is little details like these that prove a car, and show the sincerity of its makers. , Price - $1J85M f e. k. Detroit The Bonney-Yager Auto Co. m Studebaker 2550-54 Farnam St. Tires and Good They give a bigger return on your Investment. There is a United States Tire built especially to fit your particular driving conditions. - That it one great advantage In choos ing United States Tires. You have a variety of treads types from which to choose, but the quality and values are always up to United States standards. Any United States Sales and Service depot dealer will cheerfully aid you in your tire selection. United States Tires are Good Tires BRANCH this limited sector, acquitting them selves in the highest manner. A group of the enemy broke into this position, but none left it alive. No more positions were entered. Ameri can troops were beginning to gain a real reputation among the seasoned French troops for their counter at tacking ability. French officers and men have unbounded confidence in the doughboys at all times and when action calls for the counter attack and dash necessary for this operation, the youthful Americans will get a chance more and more throughout the remainder of the war. "As storm troops your men are great, but defensive fighting finds them yet a little unseasoned," was the way one French officer put it to me today. "Americans are not yet ableto see the importance of occa sionally retreating and are inclined to stand their ground against any num ber of the enemy rather than to fall back. This spirit is magnificent- but hardly prudent when faced with over whelming numbers of the enemy." Arrives in France Washington, July 18. Representa tive Royal C. Johnson of Aberdeen. S. D., a second lieutenant of infantry, lias landed in France, a cablegram from him received here today an nounced. fllWrVIIHIIWeW" milk!!,,! wmwimmmMmam LIGHT-SIX r-3 Distributors Omaha, Neb. m Business and Phone Tyler 840 "I'M NEVER GOING TO BE WITHOUT II" SAYS OMAHA LADY Mrs. Buck Says She Will AN ways Have A Bottle Of ' Tanlac In Her House. "When my husband saw how much good Tanlac was doing me he started i to taklno1 it. ton.- and now wn think so much of this wonderful medicine that I m never going to be without a bottle of it in the house," recently said Mrs. FlnrniB 'Riiilr. nf Twenty-second street, wife of a well- Known contractor ana Duuaer who is now with the Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Comnanv an a car builder. "Several months ago," she contin-' ued, "my health began to fail, and it wasn't loner before I waa in n had. ly run-down condition. I was troubl ed witn constipation, had no appetits and what little I forced down would often SOUr on mv Ktnmnph and dis. tress me for hours afterwards. Then at times I would have such a misery in my left side that I could hardln stand it, I felt tired and worn out all the time and seldom knew what a good night's rest was. Before this trouble enme on I had always en- ' Joyed such good health that this un usual condition worried me night and day, and I felt that if I didn't find something soon to straighten me out I might have a breakdown of my system. "Everybody seemed to be talking; about Tanlac and the good it was doing them, so I decided to try it, too, and I am sure glad I did, for before I had used up half my first bottle I was feeling a whole lot befc. ter. In fact my appetite picked np right from the start, and I am eat ing now like any healthy person and never have the least touch of in digestion. My food is nourishing me and I am getting stronger and better every day 1 live. That awful pain in my side is completely gone, mv constipation has been relieved. 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