Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 28, 1920, Page 5, Image 5
. .-...,-.- ...,..Ef --.ue' 11 -n" v" f 0 THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1920. HuraaneHead Urges Home For Kiddies i i in 1 1 Shelter For Offspring I of Di Yorced and'k Impoverished Parents Is Urged, by Sec retary of Local. Society. A home for good children of bad parents; '" F ; ;' V " v' That is a forward-Iookine institu tioii for Omaha . advocated vester day by V, W, Bradley, secreteary of ..me .Nebraska Humane society, at the 44th annual meeting of the American Humane association at the Hotel rontcnclle. "Hiere are many good, bright i ' it !rcu of divorced parents or be luh0 i to impoverished parents who arc wn "n the mercy of the public, Mr. IT..,- ,y said, "bnrely such children slKrt.dit't be dumped among the incorriibles ol Kiver view home. 1 "I believe it behooves the local hu mane society to establish a home for such children. I also believe the society should have an officer on the streets at all times keeping a weather eye on bad boys and girls. Ihey call her a 'policewoman' in some cities. I don t like that name. I vould call her a 'street mother.' Fight Over Insurance. The t!iird day of the meeting ope-cJ with delegates apparently h'.pciessly split over a resolution which would place the organization on ' record against the writing of children s insurance. Debate on the floor was hot. Advocates declared that such insurance threatened to stimulate child homicide and, tha$ a large majority of those who 'took out such insurance, quoted to be 10 cents a week, carried it a few years, dropped it and left no one except ing the insurance company any bet ter off financially. Certain mem bers declared the organization should maintain a "hands off" policy and de bate was silenced when a motion to pigeon hole the resolution carried. Then the American dog had his day. The child welfare papers and discussion ended when the resolution , was tabled and the dogs and cats and birds and other tnimJrls were, sole topics of discussion. ' Pound is Commended. The management of the Omaha dog pound by the humane society was commended by Police Commis sioner J. D. Ringer. Dr. H. Gifford, Omaha specialist and lover of birds, spoke on "The Preservation of Wiljd Life." : . r "The time has come when people who are interested in out-of-door life should consider the necessity of some drastic legislation for total sup pression of the destruction of harm less birds and beasts," he said. "As a result of the so-called sport, the birds and animals commonly classi fied as game are rat idly approaching extinction." - " ! How far a driver should gd in driving a lame horse, loading a, wagon and beating a horse, was' dis cussed by H. K. Horton, New York, general manager of the American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. ' . Feeding, financing. locating, build- ing, killing and burying dogs in a dog pound were discussed by Na thaniel J. Walker, secretary of the American Humane association, Al bany, N. Y. Twenty years ago there were only three ciie& in America which ha institutions of animal shelter and now practically every progressive community in America has such an institution, Mrs. V. A. E. Dustin, secretary of the .Cleveland 'Animal Protective league, told the delegates. There was no session this after noon. Delegates visited the stock yards and packing plants. Man Hits Two Cars To Avoid Crash With x Woman, Autoist Swerving his car to avoid a col lision with another automobile driv en by an unidentified woman, O, R. Prints, 3521 Jones street, steered his machine into two automobiles parked on Thirty-sixth ' street at Fa mam yesterday afternoon. The two cars belonged to J. W. Schroeder, manager of the Black stone hotel, and VV. E. Lovely, at torney. Peters Trust building. Pirntz was arrested for reckless driving. He told police the woman saw a collision was almost inevitable and threw her hands in the air, neglect ing her steering wheel, and the car crashed into the curbing.' She re fused to give him her name, he said, and drove on. r Richard Had Bette Be , v. Careful With ThaUAx When Gaynell Ponder, negress, 1121 Davenport street, pondered a while in Justice of the Peace Collins' court about what action the law Would allow her to take if her htts- bandt Richard, chased her again with a tomahawk, Justice Collins advised her: I "Remember, GayneH,you can de fend .your life; at any costs." "Km!, Ueiis jes de words Anve been rarin ta heah," was the retort. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days ' DrugRlsts refund money 'if PAZO OINT MENT f alia.-1 cure Renins. Biina, Bisect ing or Protruding Piles, Instantly relieve Itchlna Piles, and you 'can (ret restful aleep after, first application. 60c. Senator Thomas Denounces Pact As Infamous Work Democratic Solon 'of Colorado Says Reparation Commission Given Too Much Power by Treaty. Denver, Oct. '2?. Declaring that "the peace treaty itself and not, the league of nations" is the greatest reason why; the United States should not ratify itf Senator Thomas of Colorado in a campaign address here last night asserted the Versailles doc ument gives the reparations com mittee more power than the German kaiser, Ivan the Terrible of Russia or the Caesars ever had. "As long as I am in the United Slates senate I will never, vote to ratify it," he declared in asking sup port jn his campaign as a "nation alist" candidate for. the senate seat he now holds as a democrat. "The platforms of both major par tits are silent, practically, on the treaty 'and both are ready to accept it with some reservations," he said. "It is not a treaty at all. Every treaty is a contract and the pact of Versailles has failed in that regard." The senator charged that the United States is directly violating its promise to- Germany made before the armistice, in demanding indemni ties which" he declared were indefin ite and "such as Germany never can pry." -v "Some say .Germany hfd no busi ness forcina this war on civilization Pioneer Stock Grower Dies at Dorchester, Neb John H. Willis Dies at the Home of His Daughter Following Illness. John II. Willis. 89, Dorchester. Neb., one of the oldest residents of Nebraska, died at the home oi his daughter, Mrs. C. F. August, in Dor chester at 12:30 Tuesday night.. He had been ill for several months. Mr. Willis was born in Yorkshire, England. He came to America in 1867, settled in Omaha, and for two years . worked in the Union Pacific shops here. He then took a home stead near Dorchester and has lived either on his land or in Dorchester since that time. , He met his wife and married her in Nebraska. She was Ellen Cather ine Argles, of Toronto, Canada. Un til he retired several years ago Mr. Willis was known as one of the largest stock raisers and farmers in the state. i " , He is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Alice Stockdale of Omaha; Mrs. August of Dorchester and Mrs. R. A. Gortner of Minneapolis, and fiirrt enn e T. T-Tarrv Willie rt T ir coin and Ernest E. Willis of Dor chester. " v - John H. Willis. Funeral services will be held 1 Dorchester at 2 this afternoon. and that the indemnities are only its just dues," he continued. "I1 agree to that, provided we, had not con tracted to the contrary beforehand." He said the treaty was inconsist ent even with the idea of a tempor ary neace and that the refceiver for the German empire, the reparations committee, can never serve equita bly." . ... "No enduring peace, he said, "can grow out of conditions which give such a body' more power than the kaiser had at the crisis of his rule, than that of Ivan the Terrible' of Russia and of the Caesars." V Final Word Issued Electors by Leaders (Continued from l'age One.) soul of America to .an . impractical and menacing idea which is already discounted, even in those . foreign capitals which pretend , a Wilson league enthusiasm. They are pre pared, for a society of nations grounded in justice. They are op posed to a Wilson league founded upon force." I reminded Mr. H3ys that Gov- j ernor Cox now hints he would ac j.cept the Lodge reservations, if again voted by the senate. I know, he replied, the demo cratic candidate is. squirming in the presence of impending disastrous defeat, in the presence of convincing evidence that the, people are over whelmingly opposed to the Wilson league. Squirm though these Wil sonians may with their belated toleration of life-saving reservations they cannot disguise the fact that article 10 is, in truth and in fact, the heart of the) covenant and that, un der this infamous contract, we can ultimately escape 'An absolutely compelling moral obligation' (Wil son's own phrase,) to participate in all the future foreign wars of all the world only by pleading a technical legal right. s Dishonor Un-American. "The American people will never consent to be put in an equivocal position where to preserve irfeir own constitutional self determination they must choose the humiliating al ternative of dishonoring their sacredly pledged ' word. Such abominable subterfuge is completely un-American. "The American people know that the Wilson party has kept them out of peace for two hectic years, despite the pretense of monopoly of pacific aspirations, and they are fully aware that the Wilson, league would prove similarly counterfeit in 'keeping them put of war' in the years to come. .'.--' "It has taken a long while to find out exactly what the treaty 'lets us in for' as a former secretary of state was quoted as putting it, but there is no doubt in my mind that at last the people know and reajize its full purpose. I hope that every voter ":ll reflect, before he marks his Fal lot, upon the full meaning of ihe president's phrase: 'An abso lutely compelling moral obligation.'" Bee want ads are business getters. ADVERTISEMENT GREAT FOR ECZEMA AND OLDSORES I Guarantee My Ointment, Says Peterson Erery Box of It. v ' , , , ' 1 "If you ' art responsible for the health of your family," aaya Peterson, of Buffalo, "I want you to set a large 60 cent box of Peteraon'a Ointment today. . "Remember, I atand back of every box. Every druggist guarantees to refund the purchase price if Peteraon'a Ointment doesn't do all I claim. "I guarantee it for eeaema. old aorea. running" aoree, aalt rheum, ulcers, aora nipples, broken breasts, itching akin, akin diseases, blind, bleeding and itching pilea aa well aa for chafing, burns, scalds cuts, bruises and launburn." "I had SO running aorea on my leg for II years, was in three different hospitals. Amputation, was advised. Skin grafting was tried. I was cured by using Peter son's Ointment." Mrs. F. E. Root, 287 Michigan Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Mail or ders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. Sherman & McConnell Drug Company will supply you. 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