Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 29, 1919, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
THE BEE! OMAHA. MONDAY, DECEMBER "29. -
INDUSTRY BOARD
MAKES REPORT
OF .WINDINGS
Tentative Recommendations
for Establishment of Ma
, chinery to Prevent
Labor Disputes.
' (I'onttntitd From Faeje One.)
propose to do away with the ulti
mate right to strike, to discharge,
o to. maintain the closed or the
open shop." .
Nine Memoers in xouy.
High Prices of Clothing
Laid to Public Demand
for Cloth of Fine Wool
i - -7
"If One Would Consent," Manufacturer Says. "To
Wear" Good, Substantial, Durable Clothes Made
of the' Coarser WoolsClothing Could be Pur
chased at Considerably Lower Prices Than Those
Which Now Prevail."
Boston, Dec 28. The insistence
of the public upon cloth made from
fine wools is a large factor m the
n.ont hirh nrires of clothinsf. ac-
I r..A.,r. William i. Wood, oresi-
The national industrial tribunal dent of the American Woolen com-
r....t.A k,f (h rnnffwnff. would
r.uggtanu -
consist of nine members appointed
by the president, three each repre
senting the employers, employes
' and the public. The tribunal would,
in general, be a board of appeal,
whose decisions must be unanimous,
but provision was made for public
majority and minority reports in
cases where no agreement was pos
sible. Industrial regiens, probably 12 in
number, conforming to the federal
reserve svstem, would be outlined
and a regional chairman appointed
tor each by the president. Vice
chairmen would be named by the
'tribunal, if the work in any region
required it
Panels of employers and em
ployes for each region would be
prepared by the secretary of com
merce and the secretary of labor,
c. f.- ...:.u
respectively, alter coniereuccs wmi
the employers and workers of that
legion. Each panel, approved by
the president, would be classified by
, industries among the employers and
by industries, with sub-classification
' into crafts, among the employes.
; T.nts won Id be cast to determine the
order of names in each panel.
When a dispute arose in any re
gion, the chairman would request
each side to submit it to a regional
UnarH f aHiiistment. consisting of
the chairman, one representative
ihosen bv each side, and two un
challenged members of each panel.
Appointment of representatives of
both sides to any dispute would con
stitute an acreement to continue the
status that existed when the trouble
arose. Decisions of such regional
boards would have to be unanimous
i . - .11 V a r.frrn
or me qucsuun wuum u.
by unanimous vote to an umpire,
. v,-hnc derision would be tinai, or to
the nationa: triDunai.
Regional Inquiry Board.
pany. Mr. vvooa, wno rcLcimj
charged that some of the merchants
in Lawrence were demanding exces
sive prices, for necessaries and were
in the habit of raising prices with
every increase in wages in the com
pany's mills here, gave out a state
ment in response to a request for his
views upon the high cost of cloth
ing. "If you would consent," was his
conclusion, "to. wear good, substan
tial, durable clothes made of the
coarser wools, clothing could be pur
chased at considerably lower prices
than those which now prevail."
His statement in part follows:
"1: is generally thought that the
cost ot cloth is the Controlling factor
in the cost of clothing, but the fact
is that the cloth , cost is less than
half the cost of a completed suit,
and other iactors contribute quite as
much to the price of clothing.
"In the last five years the price of
cloth in the ordinary suit of clothes
has advanced no more, indeed, has
rdvanced a little less than the cost
of labor and other materials that go
into the making ot tne suit. ne
following figures show this, which I
have from a manufacturer and mer
chant of clothing of the highest
. : : Dir rtn
prominence 111 ,
-The cost in 1919 of the cloth for
a suit of clothes of a yard is $U.o.
The corresponding cost in 1914 was
$4.53, showing an increase in the cost
of cloth of $9.09. The 1919 cost of
making this suit is $14.47. The corre
sponding cost in 1914 was $4.48,
showing an increase in the cost of
making $9.49. . 1 , , .
"These figures show that cloth
contributes slightly less than labor
and other materials to the increased
cost of clothing. Therefore, to your
question why pricen of clothing con
ffhmit the coun-
I111UC BU iftll ..'o - -
try the reply is because the cost ot
, Refusal by any side to. a contro- j 1 y h d ther materials
xersy to submit to. adjustment would Urtor "a not continw so
. result in the constitution of a re- ,ni
gional board of inquiry, consisting
of the. chairman, two mcmucu i
1 --A Um .rrCOnta tTVC or
eacn pa,nci - . v
'. . ither side that agreed to adjust-
ment If the other side consented
to adjustment before the inquiry
was completed, the board of inquiry
.iould become a board of adjust
ment by appointment of the remain
ing member. Otherwise, the board
Ot inquiry wuuiu .iu..uS,. -
pute and make, pudiic us hihu8
the benefit of the public. ,
"-fn the presentation of evidence,
statement declared,
''each side shall have the right to
present its position through repre
sentatives of its own choosing.
V All the rwoperly constituted boards
WOUia UHVC :lt "6 " -
vitnems, examine them under oatn,
and to require the production of pa
. pers pertinent to the case.
. Existing means of adjustment and
conciliation, whether federal or state,
or established under mutual agree
ments of workers and employers in
. ?.ny industry, .woum oi u,c ans...
, -r .L. ...et.m ell cy-
oy me crciiu" u j"v
gested br'the conference. .
With regard to ououc uminca, ."
.conference made th following state-
. Difficulties Presented.
"The plan here proposed presents
" greater difficulties in application to
certain public utilities than to com
' ;titive indusrty. The continuous
operation of public utilities is vital
vssted is employed in public use, so
i the labor engaged in public serv
'Cf ; and the withdrawal of either
v ith the result of suspending service
nukes the people the real victim.
' "The conference believes that a
. plan of tribunals or boards of ad
- lustment and inquiry should be ap
rlied to public utilities, out in the
, . . . " F .L . Iam turn n Kj.
aaapiaiion oi wc v,a" " i"""
,' lems present themselves. First, goy
' ornmental regulation of public utili
ties is now usually confined to rates
Sind services. The conference con
siders that there must be some
merging of responsibility for regu-
latton of rates and services and the
..itl.m.nt r.( najpt and conditions
of labor. Such co-ordination would
fiive areater security to tne public,
.mninvrt anH to eitiolover. Sec
ond, is the problem whether some
: method can be arrived at that will
' Hvert all danger of interruption to
service. These matters require fur
ther consideration before concrete
proposals are put forward."
- After declaring that the govern
ment could not permit its functions,
" conducted in the interests of all the
'people, to be interrupted by con
certed cessation of work, the con
ference further affirmed that gov
ernment employes concerned with
the administration of justice or the
maintenance of public safety or pub
lic order should not be permitted, to
affiliate with any organization which
authorized the use of the strike. An
essential part of the application of
these principles, it was added, was
the establishment of tribunals to
remedy promptly any grievances
submitted by government workers.
Improved Legislation.
"Legislation of the ration, the
state and the municipalities." the
conference said, "should be im
proved to prevent delay in hearings
. and to enable speedy action when
there are grievances."
When President Wilson sum
nf which
Secretary Wilson is chairman and
, Herbert Hoover vice chairman, it
wee vnrcc1v 4nift th riffht to
:. consider any existing industrial dis
putes, which was the question which
wrecked the first industrial confer-
lliorh.
Heaw Taxes Required
that there is a
shortage of cloth and clothing in the
markets of the worm, wnn.ii -
U'.trU nrires" he as
ways uicaua r; , r ,
serted that almost every material and
every process involved n the manu-
r 1 -. 1. ! a nav ft
tacture oi ciouuug
heavy tax, both state and federal.
Air. wooa cuuuuucu. ft
t viA9atir rliinnor fhc war. ana
Jill a ----a -
to a greater extent since, there has
developed a curivusijr uiouiv...
cloth made from the finer
and more expensive woois. reopie
win iiyj iw"5v' " J , .
the coarser and consequently cheap
er grades, ajthough clothing made
from these woors is both serviceable
and sound. Before the war the de-
i (x. .use hnr crranes oi cioin
!11 CL H U U4 VUVWW O " 1
was chieny-x-indeea aimosr exclus
ively from the more fastidious in
taste, but now everybody demands
the finer clothes and nobody will
take anything else.
Good But No Sale.
"We recently made up a sample of
cloth in which coarse wool was used
in warp only. The appearance of
the sample was but slightly differ
ent from that made of finer wools.
It had in a marked degree the
cYtft.ftb enft pvtnr rf fine wnnl
T.o ftnc i3q rrtnciiprahtv 1ee than
the fabric made of the finer grades.
. . . j i
As a Ciotn it was gooa, strong ana
cvrvirrahlc Hefnr th( war ir wotilH
have sold readily, but we were ab
solutely unaDie to put it on tne mar
ket.
"Our sales agencies told us that
there was no demand for it, people
ufliiU tint hnv it that customer, in-
ctct An fini etnnnth soft fahrirc
and that, accordingly, the manufac-
p . i si s
turers ot ciotning wouia not ouy
this cloth if we made it up in quan-
t . i i j i . , i
my, oecause tney co-uiq nor sen
clothes made from it.
$5 on Cost of Suit.
"Tft. ft ,i r- cMO-rrattftM tViat wllpn n n-
nle were complainingr so of high
' . . 1 X t- t J 1
prices mis cioin mai. wuuiu nidKc a
At ff AVArif rt rsr mnrm in th ("net
of a suit ought to sell readily, the re-
i . . i & e l .1 . i. .L.
piy was pj 11: mc tuai ut mc
plnth fnr a suit rvf clothe did not
count at all these days, that the peo-
1 J J .U 1 L J U
pie uemuiiueu inc ui-i auu wuuiu
put up with no other
"Nor it thic all Whil rtiinnir thp
war the supply of coarse wools has
rm:iinH aKrtnt ctatinnarv thrp is
now a shortage "in the world's supply
. - 1 . ftnn nArt aia
ot nner woois 01 auoui uu,uuu,uvi
pounds.
The action ot our own govern
ment has still further contributed to
keep the prices up.
, ijuring tne war, agents 01 our
government purchased from , the
RritUVi trMrprnmont enme 100(1011000
......it... CJ- ' ' .v-.. uv...v - " " 1 '
pounds of Australian wool. When
the armistice came they released or
transferred two-thirds of this wool
nsrl. M tlii Rriticti fffivprnmpnt Th
one-third which our government held
(V , 1 li 1.:
tney onerea oniy in nmueu quaiui
ties, the keen competition for which
carried it to tremendously high
prices. Recently the government sold
some of this wool in Boston at $2.75
d pound.
"I am not criticizing government
officials. They doubtlessly felt all
right in returning this wool to Eng
land and getting the highest price
possible for the wools they have on
hand. '
.Profiteerfnt in WooL
"They are selling these wools at
prices far in excess of what they
paid and therefore, making a profit
for the government which I atsume
they think highly creditable to them
selves. But when you put the ques
tion why our people have tu pay
such high prices for fine clothing
which they insist on having, you
must not forget that one of the rea
sons for it is that the government is
holding the wool which it bought at
war prices for a profiit."
King Pin of Poison
Drink Band Is Caught
(Continued Tnm PS One.)
rhicooee. Mass. The arrests were
made at the request of the district
attorney t Westheld, Mass,, who
telegraphed that the men are
"wanted for homicide in Massachusetts."
Two barrels of a compound De
lieved to contain wood alcohol were
confiscated in a barn on the out
skirts of the city. According to the
police, four barrels of liquor were
shipped from the barn to Lhicopee,
Mass., where a large number have
died from drinking a wood alcohol
mixture. The six men held are al
leged to have been the owners of
the liquor stored in the barn. They
chargd $1,00 for the four barrels
sent to Chicopee, it is said. --
Warnings to Be Issued.
Chicago, Dec. 28. Employers
were asked today by Coroner Hoff
man to address their worKers ai
noon tomorrow and warn them
against wood alcohol and other
questionable substitutes for whisky.
The coroner and memoers oi ms
staff wi.ll make a tour ot industrial
plants tomorrow, issuing warnings
against poisonous liquors..
Another man. was reported dead
today as the result of drinking wood
alcohol. Chicago's total of Christ
mas poisonings to date number nine,
or 35 since June.
First Death Since Christmas.
Cleveland. O.. Dec. 28. The first
frnm alcohol Since
rvi-;etfvif)e ivtipn tpvpral cases were
admitted to hospitals occurred to
day. Une new case was reponcu.
A man found unconscious in a
hotel was taken to a hospital where
nhvsieians sav his chances for re-
'l
covery are slight.
Today s deatn orings rne ioiai
L... 1 .ft 1 C
since iuvcuiuci x w
Cause of 20 Deaths.
A..rr,,c3 Crx tw. 28. Beverages
containing wood alcohol or other
poisonous ingredients have caused
th death of aooroximately 20 per
sons in Augusta and Richmond
counties during tne pasi joui
.a. .1.. ftnrnnpr nf. Richmond
lliuuiiia, uv .vv... -
county announced tonight. Most of
r
CANARY BIRDS
FOR SALE
Mit MeG
v 1411 Vmton St.
PhoM Done. 787? Onaka,
1
Former Playmates Greeted Pershing
!At Boyhood Home-"Uncle Jack" to Boys
When Gen. John J. fersmng visiteo nis cinnpiace ar jbcicuc, mu., m w Ri
of the little town and the crowd was swelled by the inhabitants of nearby communities. Playmates of the
general and acquaintances of his boyhood days flocked around him to discuss old times.
ToD-.,'Neohews" of General Pershing, right to Left: Austin Cross, Glenn Mclntire, Harold Wilson,
Eugene Cross. . w V. w w ttartne r t wll
Bottom L,acieae acquaintances oi me general, riRui i , .
F. S. Kuhn. Standing: O. H. Holmes and Fred Anderson, a returned soldier, who served seven months in
France.
.. f c
wh . nn snecitic reierences
to recent industrial troubles were
made, several recommendations anu
statements of the conference re
flected the experience of the steel
strike and tne Boston ponce sinnc.
ni,.r mamh.n nf the conference
are Martin H. Glynn, Thomas W.
Gregory, Kichard nooker, araniey
if inn- Vomiioi w. Mri an. nenrv ivi.
Robinson, Julius Rosenwald, Oscar
S. Straus, Henry C. Stuart, F. W.
Taussig, William O. Thompson,
Henry J. Waters, George W. Wick-
.,.V,.,ft .nil Hnrpfl D YoIIHI. With
Dr. Henry R. Seager as executive
secretary,
the victims were negroes, the state
ment said.
Another Victim.
Easton, Pa.,-Dec. 28. "Whisky"
containing wood alcohol claimed an
other victim tonight when a shoe
merchant died in a hospital shortly
after being admitted, totally blind.
The police arrested a former police
man and his wife.
Three deaths have occurred here
and one in Battle Creek, Mich., from
the same cause in the last two
weeks.
Three More Deaths.
Newark. N. J., Dec. 28. Three
more deaths from wood alcohol poi
soning, making a total of nine here
in the last three weeks, have been
reported to the police.
Women Seriously 111.
Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 28. One
man is dead and two women are in
a critical condition' tonight as the
result of drinking a wood alcohol
concoction. Two women were found
unconscious in a room which also
contained two one-gallon jugs in
which a small quantity of a color
less liquor remained.
Charges Ambassador
To Spain Hampered
U. S. Work in War
Washington. Dec. 28. Statements
made by Rear Admiral Decker,
former naval attache at Madrid, to
the effect that he and his assistants
were instrumental in preventing
Spain trom joining the central pow
ers during the enemy offensive of
March, 1918, and hat his work was
hampered by the American ambas-
during ne congressional investiga-
firtri nf triA awarH nf naval rtcrnra.
tions, Representative Lufkin, repub
lican, Massachusetts, of the house
naval committee, sain.
Rar Admiral T)rlfpr's statements
were contained in a letter to Secre-
trr i larttAic cftinr rnrth tn rea-
the navy cross for which he was re
cently recommended Dy secretary
Daniels.
TVi lttr rnnliinc til firt inti.
matinnc nf frirtinn amnncr Amer-
. ii. . i , (V : . 1
ican'aipiomaiic iui navai urnciiiis i
r i i ' .i ,
Mannn niinni, inp war
Mr. mtkin said tnat memoers oi
.1.. ft ftft-i in 1 1 nn naval affaire frnm
the house and senate with whom, he
. i 1 " j T, A.I -" 1 T.U1.
naa aiscussea ivear uiwiin i-c.iv-r'c
Utter ViaH YnrnpH themselves
as in full agreement with his opin-
. i . i .... i - .1 A
ion mar tne statements ueseivcu
congressional investigation.
Former Omaha Salesman
Charged With Non-Support
f"riari; n1v. former hnnd sales
man here, was arrested yesterday by
umana aeieciives on a wjiuui
hv tii former wife, charg
ing nonpayment of alimony Foley
gave, his address at Central police
station as Seventh and Mynster
streets, council niuas.
ysiw x ii " r
1 jsmjmj
rrayer Arouna uie vvunu
Will Usher in the New Year
t ml It
111 d lllUUbctllU Uctll uagco,
Interchurch World Movement of North America, Will -Start
Appeal to Almighty God From New York to"
Hasten That "Kingdom Where Justice, Mercy ana
Love Shall Rule the Hearts and Hands of Men."
,ead Flies in Ireland
. On the Sabbath Day
(Continued From Fas One.)
morrow. Lieutenant Boast was only
20 years of age and he was men
tioned in Saturday's court circular
as having been invited to dinewith
Field Marshal Viscount French,
lord lieutenant and governor gen
eral of Ireland, on Saturday eve-
nincr ' On Sundav he had bid fare
well to bis parents who had been
paying him a visit.
There was great excitement in tne
city when the newspapers an
nounced the occurrence. Crowds
visited the scene during the after
noon.
. No Raid Intended.
In the absence of all official in
formation, the theory late tonight
is that no raid against the Viceregal
Inrio-p was. intended. It is sUDOOsed
that an isolated shot was fired when
Lieutenant Boast and two privates
went to investigate. It is not
thought that they reached the per
son who fired the shot and became
involved in a struggle with a pas
serby, who, with the lieutenant, was
killed.
It is reported that the dead civil
ian was a laborer who had oeen
treated at a Dublin hospital and was
walking home through the park. He
wore bandages on his lace, tne po
lice say.
No official report has been maae
by the police on the occurrence
which will be explained at the mili
tary inquest. The military officials
refer all inquirers to the police.
The name of the civilian killed is
said to be Laurence Carey, who re
s.irleH at I.nran. near Phoenix nark.
According to one version of the or
igin of the struggle, Carey ignored
the challenge to halt, and when the
?olHipr annrnarherl Carev seized
Boast, whereupon the soldiers fired
their pistols, killing Carey, mis
version does not state who shot
Boast.
Rnact ftpcrnri a a Hrnmmpr hnv in
the Lancashire regiment and won his
commission for conspicuous service
m the war.
' Lieutenant Boast Killed.
TW 28 A rfisnatrh to
the Exchange Telegraph from Dubr
lin says that the officer killed in the
attack cn the viceregal loage in
Phoenix nark was Lieutenant Boast.
The member of the attacking party
killed was dressed in an old uni
form of a private in the British
rmy. His body is reported to have
iceii riddled with bullets.
The Exchange Teletrrauh's corre-
cnnnHint savs it is understood that
sniping at the lodge continued for
only a few minutes and that tne tir
ing took place trom the main roaa
at a distance of nearly a quarter of
a mile from the lodge.
Several Untoward Incidents.
Several untoward incidents are re
ported from Ireland by the Sunday
Evening Telegram. A daring at
tempt was made to assassinate a
constable at Ballybofey, County
Donegal. The assailant fired 1 pistol
from the street at the constable, who
was sitting with his family in a bed-
i
WHISKY FLOORS
DRY LECTURER
DURING TALK
Falls Off Soap Box and Police
Inquiry Shows Reform
Talker Old Offender.
New York, Dec. 28. Martin Con
roy, 45, a temperance lecturer and
missionary, was before Magistrate
Levine in the West Side 'court on a
charge of public intoxication. Con
roy said he was married and has
four children.
He was arrested when he fell off
his soap box at Fifty-eighth street
and Sixth avenue, where, according
to Policeman Pointing, he was ad
monishing a crowd of 50 or more
who gathered about him, "to beware
of the awful curse of drink."
It was while delivering an ora
tion which contained, among other
passages: "Oh, cursed be the man
who drinks! Oh, cursed be the
man who touches red liquor," that
he lost his own equilibrium.
Admits Drinking.
Someone iA the crowd motioned
to Patrolman Pointing; and the po
liceman, thinking the man ill, sum
moned. Dr. Stokes of Bellevue hos
pital, who told the officer the mis
sionary was intoxicated.
I was drinking, your honor, ne
told Magistrate Levine, when ar
raigned in court.
You were drinking? incredible,
said the magistrate.
But, judge, continued the pris
oner, "I am a missionary. Yes, it s
all true, and if you will turn me
loose, judge, I II never drink again.
I have a wife and four children over
on the port side of Manhattan."
Tenth Arrest, Claim.
Magistrate Levine decided to let
the missionary go and had ordered
his finger prints taken. When Ed
ward Spector, finger print expert,
reported that Conroy had been pre
viously convicted nine times for the
same offense, there vy-as gloom on
the missionary's face.
"Well. I suppose, said the magis
trate, "a missionary can get drunk
as well as anybody else. The next
time you get drunk, do so over in
Brooklyn.
"Thank you, in the name of the
Lord, judge," said Conroy. And the
entire court room, including the
magistrate, chorused "Amen!"
room. Nobody was injured, but the
bullet struck a bed in which was
a sleeping infant.
A band of men raided a farmer's
house at Victoria bridge and carried
off rifles. At Killarney a constable
was shot and wounded Christmas
eve, while assisting other constables
to quell a rough and tumble fight
between soldiers and civilians.
It is reported that 20,000 rounds
of . ammunition have been stolen
from the Dangarvan railway station.
The consignment, it is believed, was
inteuded for the military authorities.
New's Defense Hopes
To Prove He Planned
To Wed Dead Fiance
Los Angeles, Cal., Dec. 28. Ef
forts will be made Monday on the
rpcumntinn nf'th trial of Harrv
New, alleged murderer of nis fiance
f-reda Lesser, to prove he had per
fected plans for their marriage a
few hours before her death, it was
announced by New's attorneys.
It was stated that witnesres would
be called to show New had bor-
rnuipH rnrinev with which to DUT-
chase a marriage license and to pay
his and Miss Lesser s rauroaa tare
to Fresno, Cal., where the defense
alleges Nw intended he and his
bride-to-be should start housekeep
ing.
Attorneys for the accused said this
tpetimnnv wonlH be offered in an at
tempt to refute claims of the state
that New had decided several weeKs
before he is alleged to have killed
Mice T.psser Inlv 5. last, he would
not marry her and had deliberately
planned her deatn.
Lecompte Davis, leading counsel
for New, said the defense would
complete presentation of its case by
Wednesday afternoon.
Want Death Sentence
Imposed on German
Here to Be Set Aside
Washington, Dec. 28. Recom
mendation will be made to President
Wilson bv the Department oi Jus
tir tnat 'the rnyrtmartial sentence
of death imposed some 14 months
ago on Lathor Witsctie, tormer
German naval officer, for plotting
against the United States, be set
aiiHp anH that the officer be tried for
violation of the espionage law by a
federal cour, it was stated by a high
official of the department.
Mrs. P. Koopman Dies
Suddenly in Home Circle
Mrs. T. Koopiran. 65 years old,
died Sunday at the home of het son-in-law,
Andrew B. Rcss. 651 South
Nineteenth avenue. She had been in
unusually good health and was sit
ting talkiiifr to members of the fam
ily, when suddenly she fell from her
chair dead. She had been a resident
of Omaha for over 37 ytars, and had
a family of 10 children, seven of
whom survive, Mrs. William Kunold,
Mrs. K. Van Vlier. Mrs. D. Ehlers,
Mrs. E. Vernon and Ben Koopman,
aM of Omaha: W. J. Koopman and
Peter Koopman of Blair. The hus
band died three years ago; a son,
Henry, one vear afto, and a daughter,
Mrs. Doi?. Ross, six weeks ago. The
funeral will be held Tuesday after
noon at 2 from the Castelar Presby
terian church of which she was a
charter member. The remains are at
the home of her daughter. Mrs. Will
iam Kunold, 2902 South Twentieth
street. '
A Tickle Ii the Beginning
of throat rold or painful cough. HAYES'
HEALING HONEY Stopi the Tickle by
Healing the Throat. 36c per bottle.
With "the prayer around the
world" the. New Year will be ush
ered inv In a thousand tongues it
will be spoken at watch-night serv
ices in near and distant 'places; in
the great cities of the western world
no less than in distant villages on
eastern hills. It will be heard by
the kneeling woman in a New York
pew, by the barefoot Igroot head
hunter, by Chinese converts with
bowed heads, by Hindu women lis
tening reverently with their arms
folded'crosswise on their breasts, by
Persian, Japanese, Syrian, Russ, in
deed by all the peoples of the world.
From New York, its starting
point, the prayer has bfen sent
around the world by the Interchurch
World Movement of North Amer
ica, a movement to bring about
Protestant co-operation. By tele
graph it has been sent to the great
denominations of this country; by
cable it has gone to England and the
east. Thus it has been dispatched
to every mission center everywhere
and from evety mission center It
has gone on again in the language of
the country to every Protestant
mission station near and far.
First of Its Kind.
This prayer is the first ever to be
sent around the world, the first ever
to be translated into a thousand
languages and spoken' simultaneous
ly in countless places. With one
voice, though in many tongues, it
calls for "the elevation of justice and
of brotherhood" and appeals for the
hastening of that kingdom where
justice, mercy and love shall rule the
hearts and hands of men."
To Mexico City and Montevideo,
the prayer was cabled for South and
Central America; to Shanghai also,
and from there' it was relayed to
Japan, the Philippines, Malaysia and
Oceania, to Lahore, India, for dis
tribution throughout India and the
surrounding countries; to Recht,
Persia; and to Beirut, Syria for the
Levant. To Cairo for the northern
stretches of Africa; to Bolobo for
the darkest places of the Congo; to
Durban for South Africa for the
Zulu and the Boer. To Uppasala,
Sweden, and Zurich, Switzerland, for
all the countries of Europe. From
each of these mission centers it was
sent out to the but stations every
where, and the missionaries will re
ceive it in th- language of the peo
ple of their districts, and in every
protestant mission station, great or
small, it will be spoken at special
night-watch services on New Year's
eve. ,
And when merrymakers' are
thronging through the Boulevard
des Italiens, Paris, or streaming
along the Strand, or pressing along
the lighted sidewalks of Broadway,
or trudging through the Bund in
Shanghai, waiting for the ringing of
the New Year in churches and in
chapels, some of them made of
marble and some of them made of
mud, Christian people of the white
race, and the yellow race, and the
black race, will be hearing the
prayer that went around the world.
The prayer for guidance to-replenish
a devastated earth' and stay the
unrest of perplexed peoples.
A Watch-Night Prayer.
Almighty God, Father of all man
kind, at the end of a year in which
malice has so often thwarted love,
we join the prayers of all Thy chil
dren around the world for peace, the
elevation of justice and brotherhood.
Thou Creator, possessor of all
things, who didst make the earth for
the races of men and didst set
bounds for their habitation, forgive
us our greed as we repent of our
s'n, and restore to all hearts the
recognition of the transcendent right
of human life to live.
Open our eyes, we beseech Thee,
to the dignity of labor, the sacred
ness of human service, and the priv
ileges of production, that nation may
join nation and man may join man
Canadian Wheat Board
, Increases Price of Grain
Winnipeg, Man., Dec. 28. Effec
tive Sunday, the, Canadian wheat
board has ordered that the price of
Manitoba wheat to mills in Canada
be raised from $2.30 per bushel to
$2.80 per bushel in store at terminal
elevators at Fort William or 'Port
Arthur. Another regulation in
creased the i maximum wholesale
price of government standard spring
wheat flour from $10.90 per barrel
to $13.15 f. o. b. cars Montreal.
James Stewart, chairman of the
board, stated today that in order
that the consuming public, may have
advantage of the supply of cheaper
flour in the United States, parmits
will be issued for import of the
American product.
No Soap Better
For Your Skin
Than Cuticura
justly in honest .work to replenish a -.
devastated earth.
Quicken the sympathy of hearts
made dull by reports and sights of
suffering, incomprehensible and
needless.
Call us again that we may bow
before the eternal laws of creation,
putting aside malice, envy, covetous
ness and brutality, to enter into the
peace of the sons of the Most High.
Hasten by Thy gracious provi
dence and by the .consecreated ef- .
forts of Thy children the coming of
justice, mercy and love shall rule the
hearts and hands of men.
Create in us, O Lord, clean hearts,
p.nd renew right spirits for the com- ,
ing year.
This we ask in the spirit of Jesus
Christ, our only hone. Amen!
For Colds or
influenza and as a
Preventative
Take
"Laxative
Bromo
Quinine
Taniewr
Be sure you get the Genuine '
Look for this signature
on the box. 30c
SECT'Y TUCKER
GAINED 25 LBS.
ON 5 BOTTLE
0
A S THMA
Dr. Kinsman Asthma Remedy
give inrtant relief. 2i Tea", of auccua.
oOe. at all druroiats. Avoid all eubatitutee.
Trial TraatmantTvlaUed Free. Write to Dr.
1 F. G. Kiniman, Hunt Block, Ausrutfa. Maine
Coughs Grow Better
urprialngly soon, throat inflammation di9
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Lag atop, wbea you uae reliable, time-tested
P IS
Popular Official of K. C. Auto
Ass'n Feels Like New Man
Since Taking Tanlac.
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dition when I began taking Tanlac
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ter condition. I continued taking
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! never troubled with constipation
and never become dizzy any more.
j As I said, several members of my
! family have taken Tanlac and in
! every instance it has proved itself
to be a remarnanie medicine ana t
has given entire satisfaction. I keep
it in my home all the time ns a'.!
family medicine and never expect.!
to be without it again, and I never ;
mias an opportunity to tell others !
about what a great medicine it is.",'!
Tanlac is sold in Omaha at all j
Sherman & McOonnell Drug Com-',!
pany's stores, Harvard Pharmacy.:
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rest and Meany Drug Company inl
South Omaha and the leading drug- ;
gist in each city and town through
out the state of Nebraska. Adv. .;
Fistula-Pay When Cured?
A mild system of treatment that cores Piles. Pistols and
other Recta 1 DUesaes In a short time, without a severe sur. , .
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and testimonial! ot more than 1000 prominent people who have been PwenUyowed. ..
DR. C. R. TARRY 240 Building OMAHA, NEBRASKA -