Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 23, 1918, Page 10, Image 10

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THE-BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, JULY
Oaa ah iik ft Air a
UU UmAIIAI5UY5
START TO BERLIN
VIA CAMP DODGE
: TThdusands Line Farnam Street
to. Cheer Goodby to Gate ;
City Lads on Way to
... Camp. ,
i
Omaha and Douglas county selec
tive service men, numbering nearly
900, were, sent on their way to Camp
Ijodge, la., Monday morning with
cheerful "goodbys" from thousands of
Omahans. There were no tears of
sorrow, just a trinkling, little glad
tome "goodby" sob, and the boys
faded away into the Union, station
.where they entrained.
..kh along the Tne of march frOtn
he court house to the depot, shortly
before noon, parents, wives and sweet
hearts, brothers, sisters and friends,
stood shouting a brave admonition to
''take care of yourself. Jim," and then
turned proudly about, each feeling
that he or she was doing the- in-
' dividual bit necessary to check the
Hun in his wild dream of world
domination.'
. Answers Roll Call.
The men answered roll call at the
various draft boards at 10 o'clock.
Tlhere were none tardy, the strict
discipline of army life having already
been cheerfully adhered to. bach
: of the six divisions, including that of
Douglas county - outside of Omaha,
were given final instructions, then all
the men were taken to an early noon
luncheon, some to the Chamber oT
Commerce and others to tne uni
: vritv rluh. i - , ; : ;. ; ;
During the luncheon short talks
were made by prominent Umaha men
Superintendent of Schools Beveridge
gave the men of the Fifth district a
rousing sendoff address, just an ap
petizer for the luncheon and tor tne
work in hand." Great cheers fol
lowed mention of the important work
all were to take part in, showing that
each individual was fully aware of the
many great opportunities now af
forded to "lick the hun, and lick him
now." Representatives of the Cham-
ber of Commerce extended best
, wishes toN" the boys , in . short . ad
Ul '
- Mayor Makes Talk.
The entire contingent then assem
bled at the court house, where Mayor
Jii Smith stepped in add in a cheer
ful manner admonished the men to
: take care of their health, mental and
physical, and to do his best for Uncle
." Sam. ' :
"Those left behind," the mayor said
in closing, : "are now privileged to
wear the service1 star of. their country,-
an - honor too great ' to be
described in words, It is a proud mo
ment, indeed, for yoii mothers and
fathers, especially, to so' .see that
brave lad of yours off tor tni service
of hi country No greater hotter, can
be yours that to wear that, service
star, a precious bit far more valuable
than the most expensive diamond in
Hhc world," , ,: ,v,
- ' March to Depot.. .
. Following the mayor's short talk,
each division was lined up on Farnam
street and began the march to the
depot Great crowds forged, around
the depot, but none but the men leav
ing were allowed within its confines.
The train bearing the men left short
ly after ribon. - r , ,,.,
Omaha's contingent this tirn was
one of the biggest sent forth. In it
were many professional and business
men, young men, 'tis true, but there
were many who have already met suc
cess in, the business world. ; Among
the business men who left were the
following: ( , ' . . . , , ,
Elmer S. Redick, brother of Judge
W. A. Redick and O. C. Redick. alt
of whom have played an important
part in Omaha's growth and prosper
ity. Mr. Redick was in charge of the
Fifth division. , .
:.,V.Sta Athlete, Goes.
Oruaha lost one of its star athletes
when John B. Lichtenwallner. ir.: noil
of Dr. John B. Lichtenwallner, sr.,
5001 Cass street, left with the selects.
Lichtenwallner was a star foot ball
tackle for three years at Bellevue col
lege and ranked as one of the. leading
linemen of the state colleges.1 After
leaving Bellevue he entered the Uni
versity of Nebraska medical schooUn
umaha. Kecently he has held a post
tion with the' United States National
: bank. : ' - : ; . -y ;
Among those going to camp were
six Bee men, Leonard Weber, manag
er of the Bee engraving department;
btanley Smith of the press room; Ed
mund Larson, in charce of forw'un
advertising; Anthony C. Ostronic.of
the composing room; A. D. Hurley
i me composing room,1 and Cecil
Lehr, also of the comoosin? room.
Harry Watts, formerlv in chare f
the movie department of the Bee.
later manager of the Strand and still
later manager of a Des Moines movie
bouse, left for Camp Dodge with the
rest in an effort? to reduce his waist
measure. , . j
George Beckman, of the Bankers
Realty Investment company, although
cf German descent and rejected by
the navy, into which he tried to en-
list, was in the tine of march.' I
Wifo in Uniform.
. When Harry Luttbeg, motion pic
ture man, marched to the depot he was
accompanied down Farnam street by
bis wife in a Women's Service league
eniform. She will do her bit in the
women's branch of the service while
ber husband is at the front
S. V. Leonard is the last son of W.
5. Leonard, formerly of the Be. to
tar, (- A-i.1 ' .
.....t ,u, ,,. j-inuiucr son is ' at
( ready across the pond. ' . ;
- One of the Douglas county contin
gent was Merle Swan, a son of John
I. Swan, well known horticulturalist,
business man and prominent poli
tician of Nemaha county.
Other prominent Omahans ' who
were in the line of march were: 1
Harry A. Dudley, assistant man.
ager of Farrelt & Co., where he had
been employed for more than six
years. -.. '. ' -
Leo B; Ryan, "the insurance man,1?
connected with ' the Mithen com-
. pany. . . ' ,..'...,
Irving Sorcnson, manager and
owner" of the Helen and Alma apart
ments. .-. , -v
Richard Murphy, head of the Hugh
Murphy Construction company, and
son of the late Hugh Murphy.
Paul V. Shirley, son of M. F. Shir
ley, Omaha contractor. ..
: , Golf Pros Called. ;
Two golf professionals were
Life
Story
of
r-
'Copyright, lilt,
(A wriM of article (ketcbing tba
career of Or. Edward A. Rumely. who
baa beea arretted on a chart of bav
ins bought tb New York Evening Mall
with money fnrnibed bj the Ciermaa
government and of having used It (or
Oerroaa propaganda.)
By FRANK STOCKB RIDGE
(Former Managing Editor of tb Evening
Hail.)
The European war had been raging
for about 6ix weeks when one af
ternoon I cannot fix the date any
more closely than it was some time
in September, 1914 tthe telephone
in my Chicago office jingled.
"Hello 1 Hello 1 This is Rumely
speaking, from La Pprte. There's a
matter. I want your advice on. I'm
coming to Chicago. Dine with me
at .the Union League club at six
thirty!" .
That was the . message over the
telephone, and I promised to meet
him.
Dr. Rumely ordered the dinner;
it was more like a banquet. Had
he been entertaining the German am
bassador he .could not have given
more care to the selection of the
rrjenu or the volume and quality of
the food. He ordered a bottle of
wine and would have bought cocktails
and cordials too, if I had cared for
them. Out of tourtesy to my host I
ate rather more than was my wont.
Over the dinner table he talked rap
idly, interestingly and cheerfully
about commonplace topics, telling me
of things that he was doing at the
Interlaken School, with an occasional
excursion into the realms of phils
ophy and science. After we had
dined. he invited me to his room on
an upper floor.
Asks About War.
"What do you think of the war?"
he demanded, abruptly, as we seated
ourselves.
I had been doing a great deal of
thinking about the war and my an
swer was as abrupt as his inquiry.
"I think this country lias got to
get into it sooner or later, and the
sooner the better," I replied.
My positiveness seemed to take him
aback for a moment. . "Why do you
think that?" he demanded.
"Because it's our war, and we can't
hold up our headsvafter it's over if
we let England and France and Rus
sia fight our battle for us. As it
stands now, we get all the benefit
and take none of the risk. We are
a first class nation now; we will sink
to the position of a second class
power if we do not take a hand in
the destruction of Germany!"
Dr. Rumely. drew a long breath.
Then he. leaned forward, pointed his
forefinger at me, and with the most
impressive emphasis exclaimed:
, . Says Huns -Will Win. ,
"Germany is going to win this
war!". ' -. '
Then God help America!" I
ejaculated. "If that is true, we shall
have to begin preparing now to fight
for all we have and are." : .. '
Dr. Rumely smiled indulgently, as
though.' I were one of his pupils in
need ,of instruction. ' ,
"I see you do not understand the
War better than most Americans do,"
he said soothingly. -"I
understand that it is a war be
chosen to" leave in this contingent,
one, of whom, Thomas . Leachers,
Field club, was unable to leave this
month' br reason of the fact that he
broke his arm several weeks ago and
will not be able to enteT the army
tintil August. John Shearman, pro
fessional at Seymour "Lake club, was
one of the men who left,. - '
Among th6se who, left were sev
eral prominent bowlers of ; Omaha.
Among them were Leo Kieny, Har
old Fiegenschuh. Harry Dudley, A.
Leatherbarry, II. Masilla, Harvey
Huntington, son of "Dad" Hunting
ton, and Anton Ostronic.
: "Dutch", Platr, well known Omaha
athlete and . former member of the
Creighton university foot ball team,
where be won great honors in the
gridiron world, also left with the
Fifth division.
M. J. Peasinger, head of the West
ern Umbrella Co., and brother of
Charles Peasinger, candidate for mu
nicipal judge, was also a. member of
the filth division. ,
Clair M. Murphy, former manager
of the street car advertising in Omaha,
was called trom Pittsburg, to go in
this contingent. He had recently been
in the officers' training camp at Camp
Oval, near Pittsburg, but as it was not
a regular army camp he was inducted
into the service here and left Monday.
Corporal Leet.
"Billy" Lee a wealthy young
Omahan who has figured in many
newspaper, items concerning, among
other things, a trip into the divorce
court, was one of the Fifth division
MOTOR
Btautifuf in Design
Thoroughly Modern
Mtckanicafly Right
THE intermediately located transmission villi
which all the new Series 19 Studehaker Motor
Cars are equipped combines the best transmis
1 sion principles known to science. It is the evolu.
j tion of Studebalter's long experience together with
the genius of some of the ablest engineers in the
automobile industry. ,
The Bonney-Yager Auto Co.
. Studabakar Distributor '
25501-54 Farnam St. ... Omaha, Nab.
EDWARD A. RUM ELY
Man Who Bought the New York Mail for the Kaiser
V. a an" Canada, the N. T. Berald C. All
tween two opposing civilizations that
cannot both exist on one planetT I
retorted, with considerable heat. "It
is not a war of governments, it is a
war of gods. It is a war between the
god of brass and iron that the Ger
mans worshrp and the spiritual God
who rules the hearts and the aspira
tions of free men. It must be settled,
here and now whether the material
istic conception of life or the spir
itual shall triumph. That is why I
say it is our war'
Dr. Rumel 'smiled, patronizingly.
"Gerniany will win," he repeated, ut
tering the words slowly and with
unction, as though the thought were
pleasing to him. "Nothing can ' -feat
her. She has been preparing for
this war for 40 years. Germany has
been cramped and crowded in and
kept from expanding by jealous ene
mies. Now Germany is greater tl.an
her enemies, and she will expand and
take her place as the great power of
Europe. .Nothing can stop her."
Has Teuton Letters.
He drew a mass of papers from
his inside pocket. There were let
ters with German postage stamps
upon them and other documents in
the German language. '
"I have many friends on the other
side," he said. "Some of them are
men in high position." He mentioned
several names and titles which were
unfamiliar to me and which I do not
remember. One of them, only, has
stuck in my memory, because of later
association, the name of Dr. von
Schulze-Gaevernitz. "I have the most
important and confidential informa
tion here," he said, indicating the doc
uments. "I am really surprised .hat
you do no't understand the German
situation better than you do. Let
me tell you why Germany will win
why it is of highest importance for
Germany to win."
"I shall be very glad to hear the
German defense," I replied, smiling.
I cannot attempt, writing solely
from memory, to give a detailed, ver
batim report of Dr. Rumely's ex
planation of the German war aims and
objects and the German point of
view. The substance of what he dis
closed that night in the Union League
club, in Chicago, however, has re
mained indelibly in the recesses of my
mind. Event after event, revelation
after revelation, in the course of
four years of war, has added its con
firmation of the accuracy of the in
formation he then and there laid be
fore me. German objectives that
were obscure or doubtful even to the
well informed until two or three years
later, he pointed out on that night in
September, 1914. Events that have
occurred within the last few weeks
prove that as long ago as that night
I am speaking of he was irt the con
fidence of men who shared 'the in
nermost secrets of the German au
thorities. , ' :
Has Advance Information.
It wis only a few months ago that
President Wilson first made clear to
the world Germany's purpose to
establish an empire of Mitteleuropa.
Dr. Rumely described this purpose in
detail to me three years before. In
deed, he disclosed this purpose, of an'
to leave. "Billy" was appointed tem
porary corporal over the division
while drilling Saturday, and in his
usual characteristic manner injected a
little of the unusual into the duties by
drilling all the men into a drug store
on the line of march and "setting 'em
UP.", V .:,,'. - .
RoyStaeey, manager of the Beselin
base ball team of the Greater Omaha
league, represented the base ball fra
ternity of Omaha.
Julius Festner, formerly, an officer
in the national guard, was again sum
moned to the service' of his country
and left with (he contingent as a pri
vate. U. S. Discounts Reported Pact
Berlin Claims With Finland
Washington, July 22. A report
that Germany and Finland had come
to defiiJite conclusion reached the
State department today, but the in
formation was not regarded, as au
thentic ,
The report said that the Germans
had 80,000 troops in Finland. The
Germans are making strong effort to
get control of the railroad south from
Kola at Kem, used by the allied forces
which recently were reported moving
south.
German Commander Resigns.
Amsterdam, July 22. General von
Francois, commander of the Seventh
army corps on the western front, has
resigned, according, to - the Lokal
CARS
right raevred.)'
empire stretching from the Belgian
coast on the North Sea to the Per
sian Gulf, as the real and principal ob
jective of the Oerman government
He did not attribute the war to Rus
sian mobilization, as was the fashion
at that time among the apologists for
the Germans, but boldly and frankly
declared that Germany had merely
been, waitinir for the time to come
when she could realize her dream of
the "freedom of the seas" and" "a free
route to India.
"Germany will never give up Bel
gium," he declared.
"Then it was only a 'scrap of pa
per?"' I interposed. The suggestiot
seemed to anger him.
"You are just another American
idealist!" he exclaimed. "America
must learn that the weak cannot ob
struct the progress of the strong.
When a nation achieves the greatness
of Germany, it is her right to take
what she reauires. Belgium could
have saved herself by merely letting
the German army through. Now Bel
gium must take the consequences that
always come to the weak when they
get in the, way ot the strong.
' He wcrr on to explain that Bel
gium was part German, anyway that
one of the two races that make up the
Belgian people had been proved by
German scientists to be of Teutonic
origin, and therefore part of Ger
many. I have heard the same argu
ment since from other German
sources, though for the life of me I
cannot remember, nor can anyone but
a German, whether it is the Flemings
or the . Walloons that Oermany
claims as subjects of the kaiser.
Route to India.
Then he told of the project for a
ucuudil cilipiic iuii nuuiusiie un
man commerce a direct route overland
to India. The people of India, he said,
were ready to rise in revolt against
their British rulers; the Irish were al.
ready in rebellion. (The Ulster "ris
ing" of 1914 was still fresh in every
body's mind.) The British could do
nothing they were a decadent race,
an ease loving people, addicted to de
basing vices, without power of co-ordination
or effective organization and
without farseeing leaders. It was but
a few weeks ago that an English libel
suit disclosed the existence of the
"Black Book" of the Prince of Wied.
containing the names of 40,000 Eng
lish men and women who, the Ger
mans charged, were degenerates of
the lowest type. Dr. Kumley, not only
on this occasion but several other
times, long before there was any pub
lic disclosures of these charges, made
exactly identical assertions to me, on
one occasion even naming some of
the men highest in the British gov
ernment and army.
.LissaUcr's "Hymn of Hate" had
not yet been written. "Gott strafe
England" had not yet become the Ger
man battle cry. But through all of
Dr, Rumely's explanation of the Ger
man purpose in the war ran the
thread of hatred of and contempt for
England that has since become the
domiant note in all German utter
ances. For France he had nothing
but pity. Poor France! She had beep
standing still .while Germany had
forged ahead. That was her crime
she was not "progressive."
To Be Continued.
Anzciger. The emperor has refused
to accept the resignation and has
given him an honorary appointment
in one of the guard regiments..
Alkali Makes Soap ,
Bad For Washing Hair
; Most soaps and prepared shampoos
contain too . much alkali, which is
very injurious, as it dries the scalp
and makes the hair brittle.
The best thing to use is just plain
mulsif ied cocoanut oil, - for this is
pure and entirely, greaseless. It's
very cheap, and beats the most ex
pensive soaps or anything else all to
pieces. You can get this at any drug
store and a few ounces will last the
whole family for months.
Simply moisten the hair with wat
er and rub it in, about a teaspoonful
is all that is required. It makes an
abundance of rich creamy lather,
cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out
easily. ' The hair dries quickly and
evenly, and is soft, fresh looking,
bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to han
dle. Besides, it loosens and takes
out every particle of dust, dirt and
dandruff. Adv.
FOR SALE
Modern, fully equipped
Dental Office
Best county seat town in
Western Nebraska; center
of winter wheat district.
Established 5 years.
Sell for less than invoice.
Want to Join U. S. Marines.
DR. GLENN BLISS,
Sidney, Neb.
CUTICURA HEALS
MOTHER'S HANDS
Would Itch ami Burn Dread
. fully. " Swollen and
; Cracked Open.
"My mother's hands were terrible.
Little red spots appeared that would
itch and bum dreadfully,
and when she would do ber
washing she could hardly
stand the suffering? Her
hands were swollen and
were bard, and they would
craca ojn and bleed.
''CutkuraSoap andOint
ment were recommended and when she
used a quarter of bos of Cuticura
Ointment and a quarter of a cake of
Soap ber hands were healed." (Signed)
Mrs. A. Deurloo, - S29 Ionia Ave.,
N. W., Grand Rapida, Mich. -
Most skin troubles might be preven
ted by using Cuticura Soap and Oint
ment for every -day toilet purposes.
to ImI tn to 'IUO. Aidnm pMt-eart:
"OMtam, Deft- X. BMtM." gold mnnrhw.
Sm Sc. Omiwnt aod 60. .Tdeqa tta.
Man With $400 in Pocket
Killed by .Train at Elkliorn
Dressed in the clothes of a tramp,
but with a bank book showing de
posits of $400 in a Grand Island bank
in his pocket, a man aged about 10
was killed by a Union Pacific train
at Elkhorn Sunday rrforning. His
body was picked up several hours
later. The skull was crusheed and
both legs were broken.
The bank book was made out to
Thomas Sams, and showed that $400
had been deposited on June 17. Th
JEFFER
m
S3
B9
Jefferis for Congress Boosters Club
A Page From the Membership Roll of the Club.
W. F. Gurley.
Gus A. Renze.
Paul Byerly.
E. M. F. Leflang.
VV. J. Connell.
Ed Simon.
Charles Leslie.
Charles W. Pearsall.
. J. J. Boucher.
Alfio Garrotto.
A. J. (Tony) Donahoc.
Jas. T. Wachob.
Oliver I. Lewis.
Joseph Barker.
Edward L. Bradley.
R. P. MorsmanT
B. E. Wilcox.
Ernest Ruff.
H. H. VerMehren.
I. Sibbernsen.
Joseph P. Uvick.
C. W. Fields.
M. A. Hall.
II. Rotholz.
J. P. McGrath.
Grant W. Williams.
J. De F. Richards.
A. A. McClure.
Carl E. Flodman.
Clyde C. Sundblad.
Martin L. Sugarman.
Wm. B. Whitehorn.
Sam W. Scott.
Frank E. Ston.
J. M. McDowell.
T. J. Bruner.
John Norberg.
Harry Asher.
John W. Battin.
E. A. Higgins.
G. H. Conant.
Lee L. Hamlin.
Frank T. B. Martin.
A. H. Murdock.
I. G. Baright.
F. J. Stack.
R. W. Bryant.
Wm. F. Mack. .
C. O. Perkins.
William Deverese."
J. E. Yost.
Haven T. Andrews.
W, D. Eckv
Henry Rix.
G. B. Dake.
M. C. Paulsen.
David Shanahan, jr.
T. J. Shanahan.
N. Brodsky.
O. C. Homann.
J. Wood".
R, E. Smith.
A. W. Hawkins.
J. Howard Martin.
H. L. M. Williams.
Jas. C. Wrath.
Jas. A. Kubat. ,
M. Sherman.
I. A. Halmaster.
Rufus E. Harris.
R. C. Hanchett
C P. Richardson.
A. C. Heicke.
Harry Mclnturff.
Robert Yost.
William Cullinane
WnVHeff linger.
F. J. Clancy.
H. R. Koll. 1
J. J. Rogers.
G. E. Long.
Wm. Bush.
Frank Slama.
W. Koch.
Payton A. Blacken?
A. A. William,
W. N. Dutten.
Robert E. Gilmore.
J.' B. Massey.
Thos. F. Doyle.
L. R. Sabine.
Wilson Kelso.
E. N. Graves.
mi
i3
m
m3
i-.?5
II
m
s3
m
-3 '
dead man is about five leet six inches
in height, weighs: about 150 -pounds
and-is partly bald. The body is now
at the undertaking rooms of Johnson
& Swanson. ;
Secretary Roosevelt of .
Navy Arrives in France
Washineton. Tulv 22 Th si-rfc.il
of Assistant Secretary of the Navy
Roosevelt in France was announced
j today by the Navy department.
wr. Kooseveit mane the trip on a
destroyer, to inspect ana co-ordinate
waaamMMmummmmmmmammmamm
FOR CONGRESS
1 Nt-w-.oo fc
!' Ca',' -v ,; V
ptfiiif tiipitifil
J. H. Millard.
Louis N. Bostwick.
W. H. Hatteroth.
George M. Tunison.
J. V. Chizek.
Thomas W. Hazen.
John R. Webster.
H. C. Brome.
Joseph N. Morrow.
W. J. Fawcett.
John C. Wharton.
Nathan Bernstein.
Frank A. Shotwell.
Nelson C. Pratt'
Isador Zeigler.'
A. W. Mangold.
Herbert H. Neale.
E. R. Wilson.
. Thomas J. Lynch.
David L. Shanahan.
John Rush.
Randall K. Brown. . "
J. Clarke Coit. .
John B. Shanahan.
Henry F. Wulf.
Ben S. Baker.
Charles E. Black.
E. H. Mangold.
J. P. Haynes.
Herman Aye.
Edward J. Malone.
S. B. Letovsky.
Jas. C. Lindsay, '
Frank Mahoney.
William Gardner,
t James H. Adams.,
James E. Hammond.
" Byrn G. Burbank.
Dr. E. Holovtchinen
Julius Kasper. '
S. Sugarman.
Glen C. Wharton.
Jos. B. Doyle.
E. M. Robinson.
F. J. Elias..
Lewis M. Whitehead.
C. W.Martin.
H. K. Mansfield.
W. J. Cattin; ?
Wallace Peak.
Joseph Houghton.
T. W. Baumer.
J. L. Hoskin. '
. W. F. Van Burgh.
G. A. Rodman.
John Steriy ,
Chas. Anderson. . .
Geo. L. Garlect
Leon R. Howard. ,
G. P. Taylor.
Marvin S. Beem.
Otto H. Leptin.
L. Jay.
W. H. Baumer.
A. E. Griffin.
S. C. Hindman.
J. M. Leach.
F. L. HowelL
W. I. Sturges.
E. H. Davies.
, Laurena Grunlund.'
N. E. Rpbb.
L. R. Cremer.
Junes. Houston.
Joe Ziskovsky.
W. E. Whitten.
Chas. Wright
John Kaiser.
Lee Smith..
D. Stanich.
H. Smith.
Harry Wilson. ,
Geo. Eggleston.
J. H. Magher. ...
Pat Dinger.
T. J. Green.
John Cocan.
M. J. Coakley.
W. C. Florkee.
M. M. Green.
Jos. Nixon.
Vincent H. Aeck.
C. D. Borger. ..
E. A. Benson.
Norris Brown.
Roy N. Towle.
Frank S. Howell.
Thomas Falconer.
W. S. Jardine.
Geo. H. Thummel.
Robert Cowell.
Dean Noyes.
Rome Miller.
Charles Unitt.
Irvington F. Baxter.
Dan O. Whitney.
Sam K. Greenleaf. 1
.11. I. Plumb.
' Lee S. Estelle.
B. F. Thomas.
A. C. Troup.
C. H. T.' Riepen.
Charles H. Anderso:
Alfred Sorensen.
J. E. Robinson.
Sam Osborne.
Joseph' P. McGrath.
Z.- P. Hedges.
G. A. Eckles.
Charles Battelle.
Henry F. Meyers.
Joseph Crow.
T. T. Murphy.
W. F. Wappich.
Arthur R. Wells.
Ben J. Stone.
Fred G. Witte.
W. W. Slabaugh.
- J. Sutphen.
Jay D. Foster.
A. C. Scott.
W. A. Foster.
W, M. Burton. ,
. John W. Cooper.
W. C. Sundblad.
Thos. J. Hefton.
D. D.'Moore.
J. B. Rahm.
. Ed M. Robinson.
,' George N. Mecham.
J.? L. Bubat.
H. E.'Fernandes.
B. i Kvenild.
Wm. J. Hahn.
F. A. Kettlehut
W. E. Stanley.
R. E. Newcomer.
J.' A.. Pearson.
A. O. Anderson.
Edward Quinn.
W. F. Gerke.
Tom Bergrot.
C J. Vlach.
C. H. Hinzie.
W. W. Watt.
Dan F. O'Brien.
C. R, Gowen.
J. C. Rosse.
Wm. Posposhil.
P. J. Hermansky.
L. Sobeslavsky.
H. H. North.
S. Rix.
R. J. Hanson..
W. H. Peaks.
E. Grover.
John J. Sterrett
Frank Brown.
Clark J. Fouts.
John J. Barnes.
Jas. Carlovic.
F. 'E. Brady.
Frank Stinad.
John J. Newton.
Mike Stipanek.
Phil Nagel.
Thos, P. Peterson.
F. Rowe.
D. W. Kelley.
. O: J. Fossard.
W. H. Downey. "
Andrew Murphy.
Peter Procopio.
J. W. . Welch. .
C. V. Hannon.
Frank O. Rourke.
the naval administration on the other "
side of the Atlantic, "
During Mr. Roosevelt's absence
the office of assistant secretary wiH
be in charge of D. McL. Howes, Mr.
Roosevelt's assistant.
Vote for the. author of the
Honest Election Law.
N. P. DODGE for Congress!
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W. R. Adair.
Carl E. Herring.
Fred Schamel.
Arthur P. Guiou.
Harry B. Zimman.
W. Farnam Smith.
Harry S. Byrne.
George F. West
Howard H. Baldrige.
John L. Kennedy.
Victor Rosewater.
Willis C. Crosby.
P. J, Langdon.
James C. Kinsler.
Yale C. Holland.
W. E. Rhoades.
Thomas Lynch. N
John T. Yates.
Charles R. Courtney.
Hyman Cohn.
John F. Stout
O. D. Kiplinger.
Matthew M. McGrath.
Peter Procbplo.
C. S. Elgutter. .
A. G. Pinkertor.
Harry O. Palmer.
Joseph B. Fradenberg.
J. C. McClure.
Louis Harris.
Tom Kelly.
C. H. Kubat.
Ed F- Brailey.
John S. Helgren.
Frank J. Norton.
Fred B. Cherniss.
M. L. Learned.
C. F. Weller.
John W. Parish.
Ross L. Shotwell.
E. T. Swobe.
Joseph Mallison.
W. J. Traver.
Fred W. Shotwell.
Calvin H. Taylor.
A. S. Ritchie.
E. C. Thompson.
W. B. Tagg.
John Volz.
George Hart
A. L. Timms.
L. D. Miller.
Corliss F. Copper.
C. W. Taylor.
Wm. E. Nielsen.
John Shanahan.
A. J. Pszanowski.
Otto Mummet -C.
H. Thomsen.
Chas. A. Bothwell.
Frank E. Overholt. -
C. N. Saltzgiver.
J. J. Ranutka.
F. M. Collins.
D. M. Wisdom.
Floyd G. Hensman.
Martin Dergan, jr.
W. J. Humpert
A. Rasmussen.
B. E. Johnston.
C. H. Weeks.
J. W. Lewis.
John R. Byerly.
Ed Laer.
Dan Casey..
Jas. Whitten.
W. Casburn.
F.Elmore.
T. J. Mullaly. .
O. Rapp.
Harry Morin.
Jerry Sullivan. .
C. F. Beteke. .'
John "Hurley.
E. F. McGinn.
C. R. Weir.
M. G. Pfeiferv
M. J. Garvey.
W. T. Hansen,
J. P. Glasgow.
T. J. McShane.
W. F.: Crosby..
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