Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 22, 1921, Page 4, Image 4

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    !
J. S. Indemnity
: 30 Bill ions if
J Germany Won
f Original Draft of Ex-Kaiser's
Peace Tornw Unearthed
i i Drawn Prior to Araerica'a
h Entry Into Wan
By GEORGE SELDES.
CMcm TrlrfVn Cabt. C.pxrlght, 1MI,
SI. Berlin, April 2l,-(By Wirtlcs..!
" (--What would 'have happened had
"'Germany been victorious? How
much Indemnity ; would France and
' England have had to pay? What
' would be America's punishment tor
furnishing the allies with arms?
- These Questions which have gamed
T, renewed international importance on
' account of Germany's refusal to sub
limit to the entente's present terms
;, tan now be answered.
V From thoroughly reliable sources
I learned that the original draft ot
"' the ex-kaiser's peace terms tor the
ii allies, made in 1917, just before
t America became a factor in the war
?. and Germany apparently was vic-
V torious on land and sea, has been un
."' earthed. The most amazing among
r the 12 points of the ex-Vaiser's own
terms was that the United States was
'i to be forced to pay Germany $30,-
000,000,000.
j; ; U. S. to Pay $30,000,000,000.
I!:' The question of indemnity was
;;' Vsolved by the cx-kaiser iu one short
;' paragraph reading thus: .
't "Great Britain will pav $.W,000,-
000,000, France wifl pay $40,000,000,
" 000 and the invited States will pay
;. tto.000,000.000." . . .
I rn,. ,iti(l in the. onsinal
' : f.erman manuscript, not niarks.J
. . francs or pounds.
Here are some of the most import
ant of the cx-kaiser's terms:
, "In addition to indemnity, the
allies must deliver enormous quail
' titles of raw materials to lestore
; German industry. America must
furnish its shave. 1
"Malta and t'yprus must become
German naval bases. The Azores
' islands wilt be taken from Portugal
; for naval bases.
; "Courland will be annexed to Ger
"V manv as crown lands.
"The whole Russian empire is to
I ' be divided into a series of independ
' ent states, furnishing buffer states
I for Germany.
i! France to Give up Briey.
i "France is to give up the entire
i Briey iron basin to Germany." (This
, noint is explained as making up for
' the famous German error in the
! peace terms after the war of 1370
when the boundary fixed included
m only a small part of the Briey basin.
V w hcreas, h was later discovered that
, W per cent of the iron remained in
, Trench possession.) '
l Two other pointy deal with minor
'!. changes in the French boundary.
It was proposed that one of the
ex-kaiser's sons become king of
.Tvoununia: (the ex-kaiser' first draft
Sf. mentioned Prince Joachim, the
. xoungest son and the late kaiserin's
favorite, who recently committed
suicide.) It is understood the e
, kaiser's advisers objected to this
clause, claiming Prince Joachim was
ignorant of diplomatic affairs. It
0 was suggested that Joachim's wife
could make up for his ignorance.
Later it was decided that Prince
"( 'Oscar' would get the Roumanian
throne. -
Iowa Congressman Urges
! " Ellis Island Investigation
Washington, April 21. Investiga
tion by the hose immigration com
mittee of conditions at Ellis Island
! was urged in the house by Repre
sentative Dowell, republican, IoAva,
Ht read a letter from Governor
Kendall of Iowa, recommending a
rigid( inquiry and declaring he was
convinced the situation at the im
migration station was deplorable.
The governor charged that Mrs.
Lucia Leo, wife of Frank Leo, Dcs
Moines, died as a result of exposure
and neglect to which she was sub
jected on her arrival from Europe,
The letter said she was detained at
Ellis Island 10 days and "no provi
sion made for her comfort or jcon
venience." President Asked to Probe
Southern Railway Strike
Washincton, April 21. Invcstifta
tion of conditions on the Missouri
' and Northern Arkansas railway,
where a strike has been in progress
sine February, was asked of Prcsi
: dent Harding by representatives of
i; the seven leading railway employes'
;.' unions. The president was under-
"UQod to have been told that the road
jf had declined to abide by an award
. t of the railway labor board and that
1 provisions of the transportation act
-were not being enforced.
V ORKAT WESTERN ALWAYS
;, "When traveling to St. Paul, Min
aeapolis, Mason City or Ft. Dodge
J; yon can invariably depend on the
Great Western to bring you there 6a
. 1-4ime. Aolid stcet trains over a safe
" . l roadbed, v free from jolts and jars
, Grat Western makes traveling a
-,i- pleasure every mile brings a smile.
Tkket office. 1416 Dodge St Phone
Douglas 16S4 Adv.
Ycu Czn Save Many a
Do!!:r en Bed Room
Furniture Ssturday at
Un Outfitting Co.
SI Emkruce Bed, Mat
tresses. Springs- Chiffo
niers, Dresners, Suites.
If you have been wanting to fit
op an extra room to rent out or
nousecleaiung disclose the need
of a itew Dvesser, Mattress or
Sprint", yoa eaa secure it at a
stibataritial saving Saturday at
the Union Outfitting Company.
In addition to individual pieces
in every wanted wood and finish
then are complete suite, in all
an entire floor ef furniture to
choose from, on Easy-to-Paj?
Items. ". "-'..-- " . . .... -
5 v Advertisement
Wilson Was First Sponsor of Unity of
Command for Allied Forces Says Daniels
; In Describing- President's Efforts in War
rBEaillKNT WILSON AS aaaTUlT- IU
I? uTf!LY ,d II. InirtJd lht amwti-M ton
1 iT'dM n"ri P"IT forth ml '
By JOSFPHUS
Fwbw tMraUrr
1121. i loh r. 0MI. CwrtaM
R..... tut throvahatU lurwt. All
MrlVii.T CVi.( t ihrih.ul Iiiwm. M
I!?. Il.t. i..Sl.; U..yt.rU.
m ... i.ii a. lAha v. unit, minim
lutM. latlatlM '
ABTICII
President Wilson never left my
House conference, during the war
itself in my mind that the world
it trained a great eaucaior inu cuccuuve.
It was President Wilson, who,, before we entered the war, law
that the only hope of the allies lay in achieving unity of command
It was President Wilson who advocated this policy when we gained
the right to a voice in th military councils of those who were fighting
tHe l7 "wa PPsUl'ent Wilson who resisted the strong urging of some
of his American advisers, and of the British and French military authori
ties to permit our American soldiers to be jused merely as replacement
troops for the allied armies.
It was President Wilson who in
sisted that the American forces
must be organized as American
army units, under American com
mand, and who sustained General
Pershing in carrying this policy in
to effect at the earliest possible no
nicnt.
It was President Wilson who con
tended that America must be in
position on land and water to carry
the war through to victory, even if
the allies were forced to abandon
it.
Stay Through Till Victory.
This extreme possibility he en
visaged, and when we entered the
war he had resolved in his soul tmt
whatever might befall Great Brit
ain, France, Italy or Japan, the
United States would . stick until
autocracy was beaten. It was this
resolute purpose which made his
leadership so inspiring to those of
us who served with him through
days which were always anxious and
not infrequently discouraging.
In matters affecting the navy he
was as wise and as forceful as m
military matters.
He.saw at oi;ce the vital import
ance of making egsess for the U
boat difficult it not impossible. If
it was not practicable to go mto
the rat holes and kill all the rats,
the same end might be attained by
slopping the holes up. or failing even
that, bv setting traps so thickly
around the holes that rats attempting
to get by would run serious peril
of being caught.
Wilson's Genius in War.
Newton Baker could tell many an
incident to illustrate the almost in
spired genius of Woodrow Wilson in
dealing with army problems. I have
no doubt he will some day. Nat
urally I am mote familiar with his
gift of strategy as displayed in the
solving of naval problems. Before
I relate some, incidents from my own
experience which throw light upon
this phase of the former president's
many sided character. I want to out
line more fully the general situation
and circumstances which form the
basis for the assertions I have made
concerning his military leadership in
the opening paragraphs of this ar
ticle.
Almost immediately following our ,
declaration of war we began hear
ing from Great Britain and France
suggestions . as to the wise course
W - . - U . . .1 kfttn
lor US lO pursue ui sutu aumu
as we might, be able to give.
' Obviously we had no ready-made,
trained and disciplined army to send
overseas, at least not of such strength
as to be a considerable factor in the
situation. It was not unnatural, nor
wholly unreasonable that the allies
should suggest the best plan for us
to follow would be to place such
forces as we could raise, under allied
command, 'where association with
the trained and veteran troops of
France and Great Britain, they
would find support and learn more
readily the lessons that the fighting
man must know.
President Vetoes Plan.
Admiral Sims, together with some
other Americans, were inclined to
agree with the allies that this plan
was the one we should adopt.
But not so the president He dis
missed the proposal as -soon -as -he
heard of it General Pershing was
equally emphatic in repudiating it
If General Pershing had recommendr
ed it, I believe President Wilson
would have been tempted most
strongly to, recall him. The presi
dent believed America could raise
and train an expeditionary force big
enough and quickly enough to take
its equal place in the field with the
Ong, Nebraska, February 9, 1921.
Bankers Life Insurance Co.,
Lincoln, Nebraska. . v ;
; Dear Sirs: This will acknowledge the receipt of
your check for $319.62, the full surplus on my One
Thousand Dollar Twenty Payment Life Policy that ma
tures today. This" gives me all of my premium money
back except $263.00 and I have my policy fully paid up,
which will be entitled to annual cash dividends. Your
Agency Director, W. G. Gooden, delivered me the
above mentioned check and policy the day my twenty
years were up. And I want to thank you for such
prompt service. I will be glad to recommend all young
men and women to start a Bankers Life policy while
young.
Very truly,
' L. JOSIE RUDD SW ANSON. .
winud aiofrlc to b In t patltlm on lu 4
wurt 1 OMUilaed amortoan rm unit.
ltt. P"wr. "Cn.h lh. rj.ujiejjj.
DANIELS.
Nmy.
Hht mtntt. iMln.K ' .
ntrUtlM .r . otSI.
. - ...
.
ottice, and l never leu tne i0
years, without the reflection shaping
bad lost a great military leader when
veteran armies and do its full share
to bring victory. He had faith in
American capacity, and he knew that
Americans would never fight so well
under alien leadership as they would
under the command of their Own of
ficers. But this determination on the pres
ident's part to keep the American
forces independent neither prevented
the use of Amrican troops in the
brigades of British and French
armies during the days while our
strength and assembling, nor the
strong urging of America to give the
independent armies of the allied and
associated powers the unified com
mand which was essential to their ef
fective co-operation and co-ordination
.
Put Foch at Head.
As soon as our strength in France
had reached proportions which the
president felt gave us just right to
speak, he joined with Lloyd George
in putting through the plan Jo make
General Foch the head of the allied
and associated armies. "
The president followed the devel
opment of the military and naval
strategy of the contending nations
with keenest and most critical inter
est before we entered the war.
I recall his saying to me on one
occasion:
"Daniels, why don t the British
'convoy their merchant ships, and
thus protect them from the sub
ma'rinesj" .
He came back to this question fre
quently. He could not see the wis
dom of the British plan of dispersion,
although there were some able Ameri
can naval officers who approved it
To hfm it seemed a false' strategy.
This opinion became a conviction
with him as the sinkings continued
and the situation grew daily more
serious.
Strongly Favors Convoy.
"This theory of reducing the dan
ger by sailing ships separately, has
been demonstrated to be wrong," he
would say. "Why now, with their
distressing experience, do they hesi
tate to adopt the convoy system?"
Finally the convoy system was
adopted. It took the American ex
peditionary force to France without
the loss of a man. on an American
transport through enemy action. It
justified in the eyes of the naval au
thorities of three great- nations the
wisdom of the scholarly idealist,
whose geniua for practical sug
gestion never ceased to be cause for
wonder and admiration on the part
of those who were closely associated
with him.
His brilliant mind gave further
evidence of its gift for .strategy in
his contention from the day we en
tered the war that the only way to
beat the U-boat warfare of Germany
was to bar the U-boats from access
to waters traversed by allied shipping.
He was willing to run tremendous
risks and to suffer heavy losses if
there were a possibility of destroy
ing the U-boat nests.
Speaking to the officers and crew
of the Pennsylvania, he said; .
"We are. hunting hornets all ovef
the farm and letting the nest alone.
None of as know .how to go to the
nest and crush it, and yet I despair
of hunting for hornets all over the
sea when. I know where the nest is,
and I know that the nest is breeding
hornets as fast as I can find them.
I am willing, for my part and I know
you are willing, for I know the stuff
you ,arc made of I am willing to
sacrifice balf the navy of Great Brit
ain and we. together have to crush
the nest because if we crush it $he
war is won." - .
The British admiralty, however,
was inclined to be exceedingly cau
Assets $18,600,000.00
If interested in an agency or policy
Tiir UKE: OMAHA,
tions, and the president's proposals
failed to evoke the response he had
reason to hope for.
"Every time ,we have suggested
anything to 'the British admiralty,"
he said, talking on the deck of the
Pennsylvania in the summer of 1917,
"the reply has come back that vir
tually amounts to this: That it
had never been done in that way.
I felt like saying, 'Well, nothing was
ever done so systematically as noth
ing is being done now.' Therefore
I should like to see something uit
usual happen, something that never
has been done before. There is no
other way to win."
It was on this occasion that lie
invited the youngest as well as the
oldest officers, in the navy to sug
gest to him possible ways of doing
the big and bold and unprecedented
thing that might bring victory.
"I am not saying," he declared,
"that 1 do not expect tle admirals
to tell us what to do, but 1 am say
ing that I want the youngest and
mTERTOWN
Smart in Appearance
JLow LIUJN
COLLAR.
UNITCO SHIRT ANO COLLAR CO . ALSO
AOV KRT1SEMENT.
Are You Weak, Worn or Worried?
Is Your Blood Thin and Watery
So that it makes you nervous, sleepless or easily fatigued?
Don't wait until you collapse but commence to fortify
your starring blood with iron today. How to do it
If you r undergoing STRAIN, STRESS OR TROUBLE, don't forget that
it is probtblv tapping the iron from, your blood and that your RED BLOOD
CORPUSCLES ara likely DYING B THE MILL10NS.v
WHEN YOU FEEL THE FIRST WARNING SYMPTOMS when you cora
oieuca to loso your strength or vitality, don't sleep well at night, are highly
nerrous or irritable) get the "bines" easily; when your eyes begin to lose their
lustre or brilliancy and the lids ara paio inside (a most important symptom) then
is the time you should act; and not wait until you go dotto in a state of com
plete nervous prostration or physical collapse. -
A New York physician says that MORE THAN ONE-HALF THE POPU
LATION OF AMERICA PERISHES BEFORE MIDDLE AGE and that oo
of the tfbief contributory causes of this terrible waste of human Ufa is the devita
lizing weakness brought on by lack of iron in tha blood.
THERE ARB SO, 000, 000, 000, 000 RJED
BLOOD CORPUSCLES IN YOUR BLOOD
AND EACH ONE MUST HAVE IRON.
When your blood la starving for iron
no mere tonic nor stimulant caa put you
right. You must hav iron. To get iroa you
must cat the huska. of grains and the peela
and skins of fruita and vegetables as our
forefathers did or take a little organie iron
from time to time and oat mora such iron
containing foods as spinach and apple.
But be sur th iroa you take is organie
iron and not metallic or mineral iron which
people usually take. Metallic iron ia iron
just as it comes from th action of strong
acids on small piece of iron and i there
fore an entirely different thing from er
ganic iron. Organie iron i like the iron in
your blood and lik the iron in spinach
lentils and apples." It may be had from,
your druggist under th nam of Nuxated
Iron. ' " x
Nuxated Iron represents organie iron ia
such a highly condensed form that on
Total cash
Aad a
,
contract write Home Office, Lincoln, Neb.
FRIDAY, 'APRIL 22, 1921,
most modest youngster in the service
to tell us what we ought to do, if
he knows what it is.""" j
"Please leave out of your vocabu
lary, the word 'prudent,' " he said
to tne naval officers. "Do not stop
to think about what is prudent for
a moment. Do the thing that, is
audacious to the utmost point' of
tisk and daring, because that is ex
actly what the other side does uot
understand." .
The president had sized up cor
rectly the enemy mind rigid, con
ventional, .regimented. , In . order to
surprise and bewilder him it was
necessary only to do the thing that
was daringly irregular, contrary to
established rules.
Soon after the president made his
hornet nest speech, Admiral Mayo,
commauder-in-chief of all the vessels
afloat on both sides of the Atlantic,
was dispatched to Europe with in
structions to convince the British ad
miralty of the overshadowing neces
sity of constructing the North sea
barrage.
Failing the possibility- of pers.uad
ing the British admiralty to join in
a combined attack upon the hornets'
nests, the president proposed the
stretching of a screen that would
catch the horuets before they scat
tered along the' British and French
coasts and-the lanes of ocean traffic.
I have told the story of this re-
MAACRS Of LION SHIRTS. TROV. N V?
ADVERTISEMENT.
"Vioae of it is estimated to be approximately
equivalent (in organic iron content) to
eating half a quart of spinach, en quart of
greea vegetable or half a dozen apples.
It's lik taking extract of beef instead of
eating pounds of meat.
If yon are not strong or well you owe
it to yourself to make th following test:
See bow long you can work or how far
you can walk without becoming; tired.
Nest take two five-grain tablet of or.
dinary Nuxated Iron three times per day
after meals for two week. Then teat your
strength again and see now much you
nave gained.
Over 4,000,000 people annually are using
NUXATED IBON. It will not injur the
teeth nor disturb th stomach. Your money
will be refunded by the manufacturers if
you do not obtain perfectly satisfactory
results.
Bewar of substitutes. Always look for
the word NUXAT&D on every package and
the letters N. L on- every tablet Sold by
all druggist in tablet form only.
,
I
v. . V I , I
TWENTY PAYMENT LIFE POLICY
Matured ia th
OLD LINE BANKERS LIFE INSURANCE
COMPANY
of Lincoln, Nebraska ,
Nam ef iaaured . , . . . L. Joaie Rudol Swan son
Resideac . .Ong, Nebraska
Amount of policy. ............. .$1,000.00
Total premium paid. ............. $582.00
SETTLEMENT
paid Mr. Swansoa. $319.62
Paid-Up Participating Policy
for $1,000.00
maftabTe ..achievement in another of
the articles in this series. The pres
ident warmly approved the navy's
plans for the northern mine barrage,
which did so much to shatter .:.e
morale of the German navy, whose
mutiny marked the beginning of the
enemy's collapse.
During the-war years the president
iften came unannounced to the Navy
department to consult, suggest and,
I think, frequently with 'the desire
to encourage and stimulate. This
latter service was invaluable to -us.
When he could not come because of
pressure of affairs, he would send
us a typewritten query, or memo
randum, bearing the initials "V. VV."
Those "W. XV." notes never had a
spare word, and they showed, the
same: clearness and vision which
John Hav tells us Lincoln had when
e would go over to see Stanton in
the dark days of the civil war.
Fsesident Wilson's interest was
neither perfunctory nor official. He
Really Made to Walk On
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WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS
Paxton & Gallagher Company
.10th Street Viaduct Omaha. Neb.
llMlSBIsaSSiaiiKgiyayEtteMia j i a if I II t Ifffr aT
POLITICAL ADTKRTISE.MKNT
Vote
Wo Go
1
E
had the keenest tiaval instinct. He
was born with it. When Thomas
Woodrow Wilson was a boy before
he dropped the "Thomas" he chose
for himself a naval career.
fllis boyhood was spent on the
banks of a river, and he loved boat
ing next to books, or at times even
more than books, lie had a pen
chant for sailing; he loved sea tales,
and his ambition was to follow Jones
and Farragut and Dewey.
Thomas Woodrow's father, a
scholarly Presbyterian preacher of
the old school, vetoed the naval ca
reer. When the chance came to go
to Annapolis, he said in substance:
"No; you are not meant for the sea,
my son; letters, books, statesman
ship for, you."
It is not recorded that Thomas
Woodrow replied: "Aye, aye, sir,"
with nautical brevity and cheerful
ness, but certain it is that he accept
ed his father's decree. The navy
lost an officer who would have de
SOLD BY
MAX ROSENSTEIN, 2223 Leaenworth,
OMAHA
ROTH A KULA, SILVER CREEK, NEB.
LAUSEN i McDANIEL, WOOD LAKE,
NEB.
WORKINGMEN'S COMMERCIAL CO ,
ROCK SPRINGS, WYO.
POI.ITtOAL ADVERTISE MKT
for
For Re-Election
As
City
Go
mmissioner
County Commissioner Douglas County. 1906-08
City and County Treasurer, 1912-16
City Commissioner, 1918-21
. -
He Made a Success In Every Office
Re-Elect Ure
CITY COMMISSIONER
Election May
stroyed many 'precedents and won
many victories, when . his father
snatched him from the topsail and
sent him -down below to the study
of languages and political economy.
(Another article by former Secretary
Daniels will he printed tomorrow.)
Charges 'Against Landis
In House Will Be Dropped
Washiugton, April 21. Impeach-
-ment charges against Federal Judge
Landis of Chicago, growing out of
his acceptance of the post of supreme
arbitrator of base ball, will be
dropped in the house unless new
charges are made on the floor, Rep
resentative Dyer, republican, chair
man of the subcommittee in charge
of the matter, announced today. The
charge were filed by Representative
Welty. democrat, of Ohio at the last
session but is not a member of the
present house.
POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
3d
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