Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 07, 1918, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 7, 1918.
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
FOUNDED BY EDWARD EOSE WATER
I
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tk AMOtlttfd Praia, or whir Tb Hal II I nmnbtr. la ueliuMlr
antltltd 10 Ins use for publication of all naws dnixIcbM cndited
to It or not otherwise credited In this papar. and tin the IomJ
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dispatches art also rewned.
OFFICES
Chicago Psopls'l Ou Balldtn. Omaha The Boo Bldf.
Now Tort 1K Fifth An. South Omh 2318 N 8t
HI. Louis New B'k of Com more. Council Bluffs 14 N. Mala St
Washtnfton 1311 U St. Llaooln Littlo Building.
OCTOBER CIRCULATION
Daily 68,570 Sunday 60,405
A nr i clrculitlou foe the month subscribed and sworn to by
. B. Rigin, Clrculitlon Maniftr.
Subscribers leaving the city should have Th Be mailed
to thorn. Addrca changed as often aa requested.
THE BEE'S SERVICE FLAG
American people do not like to be bossed.
The men at home have voted as the boys
abroad are shooting.
Andrew's victory over Shallenberger shows
they can come back.
Champ Clark may not have been beaten, but
he got an awful scare.
Bre'r Edgar Howard can now retire on his
laurels. He has earned his rest.
Somebody seems to have put something into
the flivver candidate's carburetor.
A
Our democratic friends are welcome to what
crumbs' of comfort they can find.
- If that's the way it works, Mike Clark will
keep his hat on when he goes to bed.
'. ) Come on, now, Mr. Kaiser Wilhelml "Un
conditional surrender" is the ultimatum.
,:' "Despite the high price of poultry, we just
couldn't refrain from trotting out the roosters.
, The sun will get a chance to shine in Wash
ington after March 4, when "Jimham" Lewis
retires.
1 ; No, the subjects of the kaiser will not be
permitted to vote in Nebraska for the next pres
idential election.
Who wants to serve in the coming Nebraska
constitutional convention? Hear all the law
i yers speak out at once.
Nebraska will show a really impressive line
in the next house at Washington. And its loy-
I alty will not be questioned.
Old John Barleycorn drew another black
eye in Ohio, but Missouri sticks to the wet
1 VnlniYin with tri hniirhon conservatism.
Why, sure. The local democratic organ
asks us to forget politics now. We'd want to
forget 'em, too, if the tables were reversed.
, The democratic senator from Nebraska
spent his leisure time campaigning in Delaware,
with the result that the republicans won a victory.
"Big Jeff" brings this congressional district
back into the republican fold after 12 years of
continuous democratic representation. Some
achievement!
"Fjne words butter no parsnips," and the
British, French and Belgian governments are
not inclined to make peace on generalities. They
want some definite covenants written into the
agreement.
Indictment in federal court for sedition
seems to have won for "Vic" Berger a return to
congress by the socialists of Milwaukee. Maybe
that section, will later be included in the terms
of the armistice.
" ;The rotten re-districting gerrymander is the
'only thing that saves the democratic control of
, the county board. The sooner that piece of
political chicanery is blotted off the "statute
books, the better.
The next edict in the editorial sanctum of
the Hyphenated to replace the old order against
using the words "Hun" or "Boche" in its col-
unjns will probably be one barring all reference
.by name to Rosewater.
; While Kansas was very good to the news
paper men, selecting one to be- United States
senator and another governor, Nebraska hon
ored the guild by choosing one to be governor,
another lieutenant governor, another secretary
" of state and another to be railway commissioner,
while the legislature will contain quite a sprink
ling of quill drivers. The next session of the
State Press association might be called to order
at Lincoln in January.
Thrift of Soldiers Overseas
lit
There are many solicitous people back
, home who ask, now and then, what we do with
"our money.
While we can't, of course, account for every
sou received and every sou exoended we ran
vgive them a fair sample of what the army does
with its spare cash, taking our figures from
" those compiled for a certain division, served by
nve canteens, miring tne montn or August.
. In four out of the five huts patronized the
men sent home more money than they spent on
themselves for canteen supplies. In the fifth
hut the amount of merchandise sales was only
a smau percentage larger tnan tne amount of
remittances sent home.
; '.Taking the five huts as a whole, 125,000 more
, francs were sent home than were spent at the
counter.
One c the huts, whose business in all de
; partmentr as the biggest of the five, reported
that its pirons sent to America almost three
times as ffuch money as it received for sales.
' .; These figures are typical of the sound com-
mon sense of the American soldier. Neither
'tight-fisted nor ultra-lavish, he doesn't stint
himself on necessities, and yet he manages to
remember generously his folks at home. Stars
and Stripes, France,
"BIG JEFF'S" BIG VICTORY.
This Omaha district will be represented in
the next congress by Albert W. Jefferis, suc
cessful republican nominee. The simple state
ment of the fact, however, does not convey the
full meaning of the victory.
"Big Jeff's" majority over his democratic
opponent will be approximately 600. Con
gressman Lobeck was re-elected for his fourth
term two years ago by a majority of 8,332. To
overcome such a lead and defeat a candidate
entrenched in power and office and backed by
the personal endorsement of President Wilson
in addition to all the forces of the democratic
machine obviously required a man with excep
tional ability, popularity and strength.
If disposed to take seriously the fool edi
torial put out by Senator Hitchcock's paper as
a last desperate plea for Lobeck, we might hail
the election of Jefferis wholly as a feather in
the cap of The Bee and its editor. We are not
so vain-glorious and are content to reprint the
W. H. outburst on this page to let our readers
see what lengths the frenzied opposition went
to. The victory of Jefferis should, however,
teach the futility of a campaign of deliberate
lying and faking such as the democrats waged.
To Mr. Jefferis we offer congratulations to
Congressman Lobeck respectful sympathy. Lo
beck, we concede, has done the best he could,
but we know Jefferis can and will do better,
and the voters of this district plainly by their
verdict share the opinion.
Republican Victory Complete.
As an outcome of the voting on Tuesday the
republican party is restored to the control of
the lower house of congress, and apparently
in the senate. This was forecasted months
ago because of the erratic course of the
democrats in connection with the war program,
but is made the more impressive by reason of
the personal appeal of the president to the vot
ers. Americans instinctively resent being dic
tated to, and especially do they hold an aver
sion to making partisanship a test of loyalty.
That Missouri has elected a republican to the
senate and three to the house is an evidence of
how that appeal reacted.
In Nebraska the victory is complete. The
entire republican state ticket lias been elected by
such majorities as add weight to the rebuke ad
ministered the Hitchcock-Neville machine,
whose control of state affairs for the last six
years has been notorious and exasperating. A
solid republican delegation from Nebraska will
sit in the next house, the first in many years, a
further proof of dissatisfaction created by the
democratic overlords.
To S. R. McKelvie and those who were as
sociated with him on the republican state ticket
The Bee extends its warmest congratulations.
They conducted a campaign of a character for
which they need never make apology, and en
dured such a deluge of abuse and misrepresenta
tion as seldom is visited on candidates. The
vote of confidence given them by the people is
their best vindication.
Success in election brings responsibility,
from which the republican party has never with
drawn. Its sound and progressive statesman
ship affords the best possible" guaranty for the
future of the country under its guidance. Full
steam ahead!
Results in Douglas County.
Republicans must feel great gratification at
the election results in Douglas county. The
defeat of W. G. Shriver by "Mike" Endres for
the office of treasurer is the only break in the
county ticket. Sheriff Clark has been returned
by a handsome majority, a testimonial of appre
ciation from the people, who honor him for the
faithful administration of his office under trjying
conditions. Frank Dewey and Harry Pearce
were looked upon as certain winners from the
outset, and while they are congratulated on
winning, their return to office carries nothing
of surprise.
Abel Shotwell's election to the important
office of county, attorney means a reorganiza
tion of the personnel as well as the practices
that have prevailed there for so long. "Lou"
Adams was another who had been conceded
election, although the democrats did their ut
most to hamper him. His return assures the
taxpayers of faithful service in the office of
county engineer.
As a result of the disgraceful rearrangement
of the county commissioner districts the demo
crats retain control of the county board.
A mixed delegation will be sent to the legis
lature, although the republicans will predomi
nate in both branches. Much satisfaction by
the voters in expressing their preference is re
flected in this. Altogether, the Douglas county
republicans have a right to feel good over the
result.
As to Specific Terms.
A sentence in the note from Mr. Lansing to
the Swiss minister, asking him to notify the
German government that the Entente Allies and
the United States have agreed as to terms on
which Germany may have an armistice chal
lenges attention. This is to the effect that,
while England, France and Italy accept Presi
dent Wilson's principles for peace, they hold
different views as to their interpretation and
reserve the right to apply them to their own
satisfaction. Mr. Lansing's note does not say
so precisely, but the inference is plain that the
president assents to the views of the other gov
ernments. '
Principally, the differences arise over free
dom of the seas and the, matter of indemnity.
Some dispute was in progress between the gov
ernments of the United States and Great Britain
as to rules governing ocean commerce, arising
under the London convention, which was far
from accommodation when this country entered
the war. These points naturally will be pre
sented to the peace council, although they may
be referred to a later conference.
Indemnity w'ill present a more difficult phase
of the general problem. One of the most ob
vious phases of this arises through the dissolu
tion of the responsible governments of the cen
tral empires. Austria already has gone to
pieces, and our president has recognized new
nations arising from the wreck. It is possible
that Germany may also be resolved into its in
dependent states and a new federation formed.
In such event the matter of apportioning the
damage will be delicate indeed.
As peace approaches details of its esablish
ment become clearer, and necessity for wise
deliberation more imperative.
i A V
Right in the Spotlight.
Maj. Gen. Charles G. Treat, U. S.
A., who is leading the American
troops in the Italian drive, always
has been a popular officer, popular
as commander at Fort Myer, Va.,
popular at the War college, popular
as a member of the general staff.
He was born in Maine but was ap
pointed to West Point from Wis
consin, graduating in 1892. As a
second lieutenant of artillery he
served on frontier garrison duty
and as adjutant-general, Light Ar
tillery brigade, he saw service in
the Santiago campaign. He was
made a colonel' in 1911 and assigned
to the War college. In 1914 he was
a member of the general staff. In
1915 he was raised to brigadier
general and assigned the command
of the First Hawaiian brigade. In
August of last year he was nominat
ed by the president to be a major
general and some months later wss
sent to the front.
One Year Ago Today in the War.
Gaza taken by the British expedi
tion in Palestine.
King George proclaimed January
6 as a day for prayer and thanks
giving. American War Mission, headed
by Colonel House, arrived itv Eu
rope for interallied conference.
In Omaha 30 Years Ago Today.
The will of Charles J.' Ryan was
filed with the county court.
As a consequence of Harrison's
election, George Mills will win
about $7,000.
Two hundred days will in future
constitute the working year of a
public school teacher and lost time
will be calculated on. that basis.
A few cases of small pox were
reported to be in the city.
At a meeting of the school board,
on motion of Morris Morrison, it
was decided to advertise for bids
for, the plumbing of the Mason
street school.
The committee on buildings and
property reported having rented the
Guild house of St. John's church for
school room purposes in connection
with Long school at a rental of $55
per month.
The Day We Celebrate.
Nels A. Lundgren, real estate and
insurance, born 1867.
John W. Hughes of the Omaha
National bank, born 1882.
Samuel Corneer, treasurer of the
Union Fuel company, born 1860.
W. P. Stnbbs, ex-governor of
Kansas, born in Indiana 60 years
ago.
Charlotte Crabtree (Lotta), cele
brated actress, now retired, born in
New York City 71 years ago. .
This Day in History.
1868 Opening of the railway
bridge across the Mississippi river
at Quincy, 111.
1878 Remains of the late A. T.
Stewart, millionaire merchant, mys
teriously stolen from the vault in
St. Mark's churchyard, New York
City.
1915 Russians extended offensive
west of Riga and south of Dvinsk.
1916 American steamship Colum
bian sunk by German submarine off
coast of Spain.
Timely Jottings and Reminders.
Fifteen hundred and sixtieth day
of the great war. ,
The annual meeting of the Metho
dist Foreign Mission board is
scheduled to open today in New
York City.
Lord Reading and the governor
general of Canada have been invit
ed to be special guests of. the City
of Philadelphia today for the cele
bration of Wi'liam Penn day, the
236th anniversary of the landing of
William Penn on the spot which
became the "City of Brotherly
Love."
Storyette of the Day.
" 'Ow are you terday, Mrs.
Jones?" said Mrs. Muggins from the
corner house. "I'm very sorry to
'ear of the death of your husband."
"Yes, dead and buried 'e is, too,"
said the widow, drying her eys
with the corner of her apron. "Eh!
bless 'im. I gev 'im a good funeral;
'e 'ad sixty followers." .
'"Ow did yer manage to feed all
them?" gasped Mrs. Muggins.
"Well, ter tell yer the 'o'nest
truth, Mrs. Muggins, I couldn't get
food no 'ow, an' I didn't like to
seem mean, 'cos 'Enery, bless Sim,
was well insured. W'en we come
back from the cemetery I ups an'
I tell 'em to go home for their tea,
an' then come back 'ere. So to
show 'em it wasn't meanness, I took
'en all to the 'Ippedrome and paid
for 'em. Poor 'Enery, it was a
grand funeral, but none too good
for 'im, bless "im!" London Tit
Bits. CENTER SHOTS
WashlnKton Post: There may be
a statute of limitations on reparation
for wrongs done by conquest, but
Denmark does- not believe that it
would apply to the theft of Schles-wiff-Holstein.
New York World: History may
or may not record the name of Wil
liam Hohenzollern, hereditary presi
dent of the German republic. But
it will apparently be necessary first
to set the republic.
Kansas City Star: Hapsburg kings
have generally been supposed to be a
little behind' the times, but it must
be said this one shows an enterpris
ing disposition to cut in ahead of
his Hohenzollern neighbor.
Brooklyn Eagle: "Eddie" Ricken
backer, the former automobile
racer, who has downed 22 airplanes,
is proving that a man wfth plenty
of nerve can inflict as many casual
ties In the air as on the banked
track.
New York Herald: Some six
months ago one of the most distin
guished of our chemists told a con
gress of specialists in this city that
America would soon have a gas that
would be 10 times as effective as
that used by the Germans. This
prediction has come true. And so
the barbarians who took up the gas
are perishing by the gas. ;
Hitchcock's Fool Editorial
World-Herald, Nov. 2.
Lobeck or Jefferis?
Woodrow Wilson vs. Dr. Victor Rosewater.
That is the issue in the election of a con
gressman from the Second Nebraska district,
embracing Douglas, Washington and Sarpy
counties. The candidates are Charles O. Lo
beck, who for eight years has served the people
of the district faithfully and well, and Albert
W. Jefferis, the man whom Doctor Rosewater
has been trying for 10 years to land in Wash
ington as his personal representative.
It is idle for republicans to hold up their
hands in holy horror and prate about the "dic
tation" of a president who asks that men be
elected who will aid him in winning the war.
and bringing about a just and honorable peace.
It is idle for republicans to belittle Congress
man Lobeck by calling him a "messenger boy."
For the outstanding fact of Albert W. Jef
feris' candidacy is that, if elected, he will be
Doctor Victor Rosewater's messenger boy.
Jefferis has been Rosewater's man for the
last dozen years. Rosewater thrust him into
the congressional primary in 1908, when Thomas
W. Blackburn and Charles L. Saunders were
already candidates, and then, as now, with
Rosewatey's backing, he won the nomination.
Then, as will be now, he went down to deserved
defeat.
When President Wilson urged, as he has, the
re-election of Congressman Lobeck, he simply
indorsed a record that, in itself, justified such
action by the voters of the Second district. Uni
formly back of every war measure, uniformly
found working for every measure in the inter
ests of the nation or the welfare of the people
whom he represents, Charles O. Lobeck need
ask no more than an intelligent and fair ap
praisal of his record by the voters who will pass
upon his candidacy next Tuesday. At each of
three elections Congressman Lobeck has sub
mitted an account of his stewardship and each
time he has been voted the continued confidence
of his district, until, in 1916, he was elected by
over 8,000 majority in a total vote of only 43,000.
What does A. W. Jefferis offer in place of
this record? He submits a vast amount of fine
sounding verbiage about standing behind our
boys in the trenches something which Con
gressman Lobeck has been doing since the war
began, while Jefferis was canvassing the diswict
after his political scalp. He submits a mass of
abusive calumny, unsupported by fact or argu
ment, unworthy the attention of intelligent men.
Further than that, he submits the indorse
ment of Doctor Victor Rosewater.
Voters of the Second Nebraska district: Re
publicans who are now cringing under the whip
of party regularity told you the truth about
Jefferis in the primary campaign. They told
you he was the candidate of the Rosewater
Dennison partnership, the same partnership that
tried to "put over" Jefferis in 1908, Baldridge in
1912 and Baker in 1916, the same partnership
that deserted and sacrificed Blackburn in 1914
because he would not do Doctor Rosewater's
bidding.
Which will you have the man who supports
Woodrow Wilson and whom Woodrow Wilson
wants, or the man who supports Victor Rose
water and whom Victor Rosewater wants?
War and Religious Unity
A striking manifestation of the inclination
of the leaders of men to forget all petty sec
tarian differences and make common cause for
good is the "United War Work Campaign" of
November 11 to 18, for which the Y. M. C. A.,
the Y. W. C. A., the National Catholic War
Council of the Knights of Columbus, the Jewish
Welfare Board, the War Camp Community
Service, the American Library association and
the Salvation Army are joining forces. The
times of peace may have left leisure and room
fop- zealots -to be scrupulous about lines of de
marcation between denominations. The fires
of war have burned away the fence rails. The
landscape is cleared of many obstructions. Many
things are plainly seen in a clear, fresh sunlight
which has power to dispel even the acrid smoke
of battle.
In the "odium theologicum" of the days
when the world was not fighting for its life, and
hence men had space'to grow bitterly eloquent
over doctrinal minutiae, there were foolish and
needless battles among the good. Now the
time has come for -the latter unitedly to make
their goodness valid against the serried forces
of evil rampant in the world against the mon
strous and menacing .shape of militarism and
against degeneracy and moral perversion mas
querading as culture.
The seven banded organizations whom this
coming campaign unites will emerge from their
corporate effort as "members one of another,"
having reached a basis of understanding which
their future endeavor cannot ignore. They have
realized the strength of union, they have found
the real delight of communal sympathetic ac
tion, they have successfully tested the efficacy
and economy of pooling their effort and they
will not return to the old expensive variance
that wasted time and money and engendered
friction. There is to be newly and truly a
United States in i charity as in politics. The
common denominator has been discevered once
for always. War work is accomplishing what
decades of peace talk could not have attained.
Philadelphia Ledger.
1 Some Biblical Prophecies
The Hebrew prophets were hard (on the
whole) on Judah, the Jews of our day. To
Israel, however, the northern tribe, are more
often foretold restoration, power, and glory;
and thev ar. flip Rritisli That th noma nt th
renewed Jewish power was to be changed is
1 '.. TT 1 f 1 f .. ...
snown in nosea i, y-iu, ana isaian xxvui, n,
and lxv, 15. The Lion and the Unicorn come
in Numhero. rviv 1-0 That FnorlanH nA It.
offshoots are rightly the leader in Zionism is
I 1 TT 1 4 i mi . . . a
proveu oy nosea i, n. ine cnosen people shall
dwell in the isles of the sea, Isaiah, xxiv, 15.
There shall be colonies, as see Micah v, 8. They
shall become "a company of nations," Genesis
xxxv, 11. The British control of Gibraltar,
Malta, Singapore and Heligoland is foretold in
Genesis xxii, 17, and Genesis xxiv, 60, but as far
as I know there is nothing about Lord Salis
bury's cession of Heligoland to Germany. The
United States comes in. Genesis, xlviii, 19: "He
also shall become a people, and he also shall be
great; but truly his younger brother shall be
greater than he." Also Ezekiel xvii, 3: "A
great eagle, with great wings, long-winged, full
of feathers, which had divers colors, came into
Lebanon, and took the Jiighest branch of the
cedar." Norman Hapgood in Leslies.
People and Eventc
Forget the worry. Consider the upheaval in
map foundries and be happy.
The dream of Mittel Europa retains its orig
inal substance, with a few bridgeheads displaced.
Striking waiters in New York hotels wish
they hadn t. A flock of women took over the
vacated jobs, lending fresh animation to dining
room decorations.
Round trip tickets on the Hamburg-Bagdad
through line hereafter will bear the allied stamp.
The new management will not be responsible
for inconvenience enroute.
Just as the lights of approaching peace glow
around the world, profiteers down Texas way
are shortening their reach. The Square Deal
association of San Antonio decided the time had
arrived to stop gouging soldiers in the neigh
boring cantonments. The profiteers had better
than a year of padded prices and are so gorged
that reduced hauls are welcome.
Iowa authorities add a new indictment to the
list filed against bootleggers. Peddlers of red
eye are charged with hiding in barns and like
combustible resorts and fattening the fire losses
of the state, which are swelling amazingly.
Whether they stand in for an insurance split
does not appear in the charges. Doubtless the
fire sleuths reason that firewater and fire insur
ance are allies in the business. .
3V
7 .vr i.
Xow's His Chance.
Omaha, Nov. 6. To the Editor of
The Bee: Now that the election re
turns indicate that McKelvie is elect
ed governor and Keith Neville will
be out of a job, and the returns from
the front indicate that the war is
about over, and there is no percep
tible dancer in that direction, it
might be a pood idea if Neville,
would now enlist in the service of
our country and exhibit that patri
otism talked about by President Wil
son, which he Faid was lacking
among the republicans.
B. W. JEWELL.
The First Battle of the Maine."
Omaha, Nov. 6. To the Editor of
The Bee: The first battle of the
Marne has been fought and won.
Notice has been served upon autoc
racy that it can no more find a bed
ding ground in America than in Eu
rope. Never again will any occu
pant of the White House accuse
those who politically disagree with
him of disloyalty.
The precedent will never become
established that it is one. of the du
ties of the chief executive to line up
a co-ordinate branch of the govern
ment and talk to them like a labor
boss abusing a lot of longshoremen
or a finicky school teacher scolding
her pupils.
The American people have em
phatically declared against the suc
cession of a "crown prince" who ac
quires the title either by consanguin
ity or affinity. They have served no
tice that they prefer to choose their
own officials rather than to be rep
resented by an "unelected, unap
polnted and unconfirmed personal
representative."
"Rubber stamp" politicians will go
into the discard and political "ma
chines" into the junk pile. It serves
notice that those candidates who are
pronounced "unclean" by their
former political associates may not
aspire to the highest gift in the office
of the people of Nebraska. Never
again will deluded republican voters
of a republican city elect a demo
cratic mayor by the farce of a "non
partisan" ticket, to have him prosti
tute the power and title of his office
to furnish "grease" for the demo
cratic "machine."
The second battle of the Marne
will be fought in ia20, when the
final doom of autocracy in America
will be sealed and the American na
tion come again into its own. The
"wedge" driven into the north from
south of the Mason and Dixon line
will be eliminated. No longer will
14 of the old rebel states, which con
tain less than one-fifth of the popu
lation, pay less than one-seventh of
the taxes, and contribute less than
one-fifth of the funds necessary to
carry on the war. be permitted to
control the destinies of the nation
at home or abroad by depriving a
majority of its electors of the right
of franchise by reason of color.
Never again will the government
be put in the hands of those who
will fix the maximum price of the
wheat grown by the farmers of the
north, while the cotton of the south
is permitted to sell for five times its
former price.
In 1920 those will be put on guard
About Peace Treaties
As a rule formal ratification of a
peace treaty is expected and neces
sary to make it valid.
Peace treaties are usually written
by hand throfighont, sealed with
many seals and bound with green
silk ribbon.
The rulers of the signatory powers
don't atfix their signatures or seals
to peace treaties entered Into by
them. This important formality Is
carried out by specially accredited
peace commissioners.
Each nation entering into a peace
agreement is bound by all of the
terms agreed upon by its peace
commissioners, provided It cannot be
shown that such commissioners did
not expressly violate the instructions
given them'.
The effect of a peace treaty is to
put an end not only to a war, but
also to all complaints relating to the
subject for -which war was under
taken. A new war can be under
taken for similar causes of com
plaint, but not for the same. The
peace is an oblivion or amnesty of
all past difficulties.
Latin originally was the language
in which all peace treaties Involving
Christian powers were written. Later
French was generally adopted as the
language for such agreements, but
nowadays 1. is customary for copies
of the treaty to be prepared In the
language of each of the signatory
powers. ,
Each signatory power is given an
original copy of the peace treaty. In
addition, it is customary to make
and sign several copies of the treaty
for convenience. The original cop
ies are kept locked up in the arch
ives of the different countries, while
the certified copies are used for
printing from and for reference.
Peace treaties are not written
straight across the page, or pages,
like ordinary documents. They are
written in parallel columns, each col
umn being in the anguage of one
of the signatory powers. The text
of each of these columns is an exact
translation of the text of all the
other columns, and the utmost care
is taken in the eelection of words
that will convey identical shades of
meaning.
who can pronounce the words "un
conditional surrender" without gag
ging in remembrance of the time
when they were delivered by Grant
to Lee at Appomattox.
C. F. McGREW.
NOT
The DIET
During
and After
The Old Reliable
Round Package
INFLUENZA
MCWt Mi ) S
IKlotrlliick's
Malted Milk
Very Nutritious, Digestible
The REAL tood Drink. Instantly prepared.
Made by the ORIGIN A I Horlick process and
from carefully selected materials.
Used successfully over Vi century.
Endorsed by physicians everywhere.
Specify HOrlicIi'S The Original
Others Are Imitations
Why tfW
aeon & i
XI
lamim
is 5upretne
To maintain t& arcK of the soundinq-
board PERMANENTLY that was th.
objtacU which piano maker could not
surmount
Th patient genius o? one man
tolwd the problem in the Tension
Resonator of the Mason Hamlin
Thl wonderful device gives a
tone of Imperishable beauty to the
Mason & Hamlin the worlds
finest piano baj none
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you fJOW.
UiaC-st priced
Pianos for Christmas Can Be Selected NOW praised
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&4
V IM
1513-1515 Douglas Street
a 1" IJ w M A it 1 m --w-v X.
"To help maka strong, keen,
red-blooded Americans there
is nothing in my experience
which I have found so valu
able aa onrnnic iron Nuxated
Iron," says Dr. James Francis Sullivan,
formerly physician of Bi'llevue Hospital
(Outdoor Dept.), New York, and the
Westchester County Hospital. Nuxated
Iron often increases the strength and
endurance of weak, nervoui, run-down
people in two weeks' time. It is now be
ing used bv over three million
people annually, including such men as
Hon. Leslie M. Shaw, formerly Secre
tary ot the
Treasury and
ex -Gov ernor
'of Iowa ; for.
mer United
States Senator and Vice-Presidential nomi.
nee, Charles A. Towne; General John
L. Clem (Retired), the drummer boy
of Shiloh, who was sergeant in the United
States Army when only 12 years of age;
also United States Judge G. W. Atkin
on of the Court of Claims of Wash
ington, and others. Nuxated Iron is
dispensed by all good druggists every
where. Adv.
"Keep the
Home Fires
Burning"
"Oh, Frenchy"
"K-K-K-Katy"
and many other very pop
ular Victor Records just
received. Hear them
Thursday.
No. 18462.
I'm Sorry I Made You Cry.
Price 85c.
No. 18496.
I'm Always Chasing Rain
bows. Price 85c.
No. 1850S. &
We Don't Want the Bacon 9
All We Want Is a Piece
of the Rhine. I
I Make your Victrola new I
9 again with
I "SMILES" 1
No. 45155. I
Mickel's
15th and Harney. D. 19731
BEATON DRUG CO., Omaha, Neb.
FLU EPIDEMIC
SPREADING OVER
CIVILIZED WORLD
Germ Eludes Bacteriologists
and Health Authorities
Are Baffled.
The Influenza epidemic continues
unabated. Its ravages are not can
fined to this city or state or even to
the United States, and cable reports
indicate that it is rapidly spreading;
over the civilized world. It has baf
fled medical skill to an unusual ex
tent and has claimed more victims
perhaps than any other epidemic in
a score of years. The germ has elud
ed the Bacteriologists and' medical
men now agree that the best cure in
prevention.
The surest prevention Is to build
up the bodily powers of resistance
and to get the system in the best
physical condition possible. It is
now universally agreed that it is
possible to perfect the powers of re
sistance of the human system so
that it can throw off almost any in
fection not excepting Spanish in
fluenza.
It has been discovered that per
sons who are weak and rundown are
the earliest victims, and if you find
yourself tired or weak and losingr
flesh, or if you are in a generally
rundown condition and below your
normal weight, this warning should
be heeded promptly.
If you are in this condition noth
ing on earth will build you up and
strengthen you like Tanlac, which
contains the most powerful tonic
properties known to science. As a
reconstructive tonic and system
builder it is without an equal and
contains the very elements needed
by the system to give you ftehting
strength to ward off the Influenza
"mi. This is a statement of facts
-nd is supported by the recognized
'ithorities and reference works, in-TT-"d
States Dispensa
tory and the Encyclopoeda Brittan
nica and leading textbooks used in
the school of medicine. This state
ment is further proven by the fact
that millions of persons who have
actually taken Tanlac have testi
fied to its extraordinary merit as a
medicine, and" by the fact that Tan
lac is today having the greatest sale
of any tonic on the American mar
ket, over Eleven Million bottles hav
ing been sold within the past three
years.
Tanlac is also the ideal strength
ening tonic for persons who are suf
fering from the after-effects of In
fluenza, Grippe or Bronchial trou
bles and hundreds of thousands are
using it daily with the most gratify
ing results.
In connection with the Tanlao
treatment it is necessary to keep
the bowels open by taking Tanlac
Laxative Tablets, samples of which
are included with every bottle of
Tanlac.
Tanlac is sold in Omaha by all
Sherman & McConnell Drug Com
pany's stores. Harvard Pharmacy
and West End Pharmacy under the
personal direction of a special Tan
lac representative. Also Forrest
and Meany Drug Company in South
Omaha and the leading druggist in
each city and town throughout the
state of Nebraska-AdTa v .