6 ;1 SUPERIORITY OF GER BOMBS DISTRESSES BIRSKY AN ZAPP THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTXAXD, T MARCH 2G, 1916. " HE D Congress, They Think, Ought to Take Into Account Their Explosive Transcendence By Montague Glass. Illustrations by Brings, Cdpyright, 1916, the Tribune Association (The New York Tribune.)' sky. the PART I. "ELL. you got to give them credit." Louis Bir- ne real estater, said the day before the McLemore reso lution was tabled. "They ain't throw ing no bluffs. Zapp. They're scared to death and they admit" it. Their idea is that if Germany kills any more Americans that Germany would go to war with us, y'understand, so Senator Gore and this here McLemon wants to make a motion that if Germany kills any more Americans it should be reck oned as suicide and not murder, and if the policy ain't been in force one year, understand me, the insurance company wouldn't got to pay." The insurance companies owns them fellers. Barnett Zapp. the waist manufacturer, commented. "The insurance companies is got nothing to do with it, Zapp." Birsky retorted. "You are like a whole lot of people. Zapp. You are always will ing to abuse a Senator. You should ought to be careful what you say about them fellers. They're honest, even if they would be cowards. Not that I don't think them poor Sclilemeils is right at that Why should the whole country go to war just because a couple of Americans gets killed?" "A couple ain't much. Zapp agreed, "aber how many Americans is Germany entitled to kill before we get mad enough to fight? j "She ain't told us yet. Birsky said. ' "Who ain't told us?" Zapp in cruired. . "Germany," Birsky replied. ' "Aber why should Germany tell us?" Zapp asked. "Ain't America a big enough country to know what to do without asking Germany first?" "Seemingly not," Birsky replied. That's the whole trouble betwee Mr. Wilson and Congress, Zapp. Mr. Wil son claims like you do, that America should act according to American law, and Congress says we should act ac cording to German law which Germany makes since the war started." "Well, what are we, anyway," Zapp asked, "Americans or Germans?" "Really and truly, we are Ameri can with a handful of Germans." Birsky said. "Then it seems to me that the Ger mans in Congress is making an awful Ceschrei for only a handful," Zapp commented. "Sure, I know." Birsky replied, "hut the German element in Congress is like saffron in the soup. Zapp. A little pinch, y'understand, will turn a whole gallon yellow. In fact. Zapp, the way some Congressmen is behav ing, you would think that if America goes to work and gets an American ship sunk on her by Germany and there happens to be a couple of German Americans drowned on it. y'understand, Milwaukee, Hoboken, St. Louis,' Cin cinnati and the Hamburg and Knick erbocker avenue sections of Brooklyn would declare war on the United States. Furthermore, if there's some particular the choice perfectos ; because them Americans which has got business important enough to make them risk a trip to Europe in these times is the best stock of the country. Take A. G. Vanderblit, Charles Frohman and Lin don Bates, and a lot of other Ameri cans who went down on the Lusitania, and they was perfectos and invincibles worth a couple of thousand such stogies and rough smokers as we got in Con gress today, Zapp." "That's all right, too, Birsky," Zapp "D "SO THAT THEY COTT.Tl WALK AROVJTD LOOKING I.IKJ3 THEY'D COMB DOWN WITH H RIGHT'S DISEASE." Irishmen sunk on the same boat. Sena tor O'Gorman would give up his American citizenship and become a naturalized Milwaukeean, while if Coll soil huelen an Italioner or so would be killed, y'understand. Mulberry Bend wouldn't even bother to call back her ambassador before her corpse of fly ing machines would begin dropping on the Fifth avenue retail district bombs filled with garlic, salami, Parmesan cheese, tabble dote red wine and other strong Italian explosives. I tell you, Zapp, when it comes to this here Ger man submarine proposition, the United States of America ain't no more united that the United Cigar Stores of Amer ica would be if its salesmen was in viting its competitors to walk right in and help themselves to the stock, in commented. "You can call Congress saffron, stogies and any other vegetable from lemons to onions, Birsky, aber if they can keep America out of this war I am satisfied. War to a country is Tike lawsuits to a business man, Bir sky. They eat him up mil expenses, y'understand, and nine times out of ten it don't'make no difference if he-wins or loses, he is broke anyhow." "Did I say he wasn't?" Birsky con tinued. "But if a business man lets it be known that he would do anything rather than go into a lawsuit, y'under-" stand, his customers would claim short ages before they unpacked the goods; his traveling salesmen would sell his samples on him; his bookkeeper would take taxicab rides mil the petty cash ; his competitors would steal his designs; his foreman would pad the payroll, and finally when it is seen that he wouldn't do nothing about it, the small fry gets busy. One of the button-iole makers claims an unlawful discharge and sues him in a Municipal Court that the boss hired him for a term of one year at twelve dollars a week in front of two disinterested witnesses with a twenty five per cent interest in . tlie verdict. When the foreman gets fired he brings a five thousand dollar action for libel on account of being called a dirty crook, also acts as witness in three thousand dollar suits against the boss by opera tors which alleges personal injuries from falling downstairs, and they got no dif ficulty in proving that the stairs was de fective on account they made em so with a hatchet the day before the acci dent. And that's the " way - it goes, Zapp. Nobody has got so many law suits as the business man who would do anything to avoid a lawsuit. And if a feller claims to be long-suffering, Zapp. there's plenty people would oblige him that way." PART II. ID YOU ever hear the like. Zapp?" Louis Birsky ex claimed the morning after the McLemore resolution was f tabled. "We must got to go to war because a couple dudes in New York ain't satisfied to buy their clothes where their fathers made their money, y'understand, but must take a trip over to London and buy English clothes, so that they could walk around looking like they'd come down with B right's disease that day after the last fitting and lost twenty five pounds weight before the suit was delivered. Honestly, Zapp, it's a Milzv-ah to submarine such fellers, and this here McLemon, instead of warn ing them not to travel on English boats, should be requested them to do so as a favor to their families and the New York custom tailoring business. Sena tor O'Gorman was right, Zapp. We are living in America, not England." "Aber I thought you said the day before yesterday that O'Gorman thought this was Ireland instead of America," Zapp said. "Evidencely you changed your mind, Birsky." "Supposing I did," Birsky retorted; "a feller which claims he never changes his mind might just so well boast that he never changes his collar, Zapp. I ain't like some people which never read ' nothing but the letters in their morning mail, Zapp. I open once in a while a newspaper, Zapp. and when I read the speeches which some of them Con gressmen made it, I admit I am mis taken in them fellers. They know what they are talking about, Zapp, and why should I go to work and put myself in a position where some one is liable to schencle me a gallon or so of liquid fire? Maybe you like such things, Zapp. Might you would enjoy sitting in a trench somewheres around Coney Island with nothing but the United States Navy such as it is between you and a couple million German soldiers carrying bombs, and the things inside of them bombs that's going to hurt you least is sulphuric acid and red hot rusty nails. "Listen, Birsky," Zapp reassured "Schmooes, Birsky!" Zapp said. "Right now you could be as strong and healthy as Jeff Willard even, and long before the United States goes to war your friends would be sitting around your front parlor, and some of 'em says you left, a will and others says you didn't and anyhow the estate was eaten up by the doctors bills from such a lingering sickness. There's more expensive ways of dying than in the trenches, Birsky. But, anyhow, Birsky, if we should got to go to war and we "SCRAMBLED OATS WHICH WAS him; "them fellers in Congress is alarmists." "Sure, I know alarmists!" Birsky said. "You can say that! You've got a floating kidney and gall stones, Zapp. but everybody ain't so lucky as you. I got examined for additional insurance in the I. O. M. A. last week, and the doctor said I would pass for ten years younger than I am. OO-ee ! My poor wife!" , "What are you talking nonsense, Birsky?" Zapp said. "If the worser comes to the worst, they wouldn't take you for a soldier. You are too old." "What do you mean too old?" Birsky retorted. "At my age Napoleon Bonaparte selig was fighting the bat tle of Waterloo nebich, and General Grant olav hasholom was older yet when he had his troubles in 1861. So what show do I stand?" SWEPT IP FR03I THE DECKS." needed it men so badly that they asked an alter Bocher like you to fight, y'understand, you wouldn't be talking this way.- You would want to fight. It's like if you and me was arguing whether champanyer wine is good for the human body, y'understand, you would tell me it is poison already ; aber if I wasAo say to you: 'Come, Birsky, we will drink a bottle champanyer wine together," the chances is that a feller which makes a god out of his stomach the way you do would get away with a couple quarts at my expense, even if you would got from it Magenbesch tverden for a month afterwards." Birsky flipped the fingers of both hands derisively. "For all the stomach trouble people would get from you blowing 'em to champanyer wine, Zapp." he said, "the soda mint manufacturers might just so well go into the ammunition business and be done with it." "Well, there you got the whole thing in a nutshell," declared Zapp, who was beginning to think he had gone a little too far in the statement of his hypothetical case. He therefore changed the conversation. "The trou ble with Americans is not that they shouldn't ought to travel across the ocean, but that they shouldn't ought to manufacture ammunition for them fel lers in Europe; and it don't make no difference that Congress couldn't pass a law to prevent em from doing it; Americans should ought to be decent enough to stop it without being told." "Why should they stop it?" Birsky said. "They ain't doing no harm." "What do you mean they ain't do ing no harm?" Zapp asked. "Why, you take a feller which used to was in the art needlework business and is now manufacturing shrapnel, y'understand." Birsky explained, "and' when they fire one of his bombs some wheres in France, and it bursts over the First Brandenburger Schutzen Corpse, the chances is a hundred to one that nothing drops out of it but two and six-twelfth dozen dotted Swiss doolies that the feller has had on hand since 1902 and couldn't dispose of other wise. It's the same way with a break fast food manufacturer which is now making up 13 14 -inch shells. The Eng lish super-dreadnought Lord Rothschild fires a whole broadside of them shells at the German battle cruiser Prinz Wil helm Franz Heinrich August 1 1 , y'un derstand, and not only there ain't a German sailor wounded, y'understand, but for the rest of the war them poor fellows is living on Scrambled Oats which was swept up from the decks the day after the battle, and which the breakfast food manufacturer tried his best and couldn't even give away in every pure food show from Eastport, Maine, to San Diego after an advertis ing campaign costing $100,000." "Then if that's the kind of bombs they're using in this war, Birsky," Zapp said, "why, should you worry?" "I'm speaking from American bombs," Birsky said. "German bombs is different, Zapp. When a Zeppeliner drops one of them bombs on a babies hospital in mistake for a dockyard, Zapp, he's confident that it was made back home in Germany by a regular bombmaker, and not a feller which used to was in the ladies" neckwear manufacturing and couldn't make a success of it. Because, you can say what you please about the Germans, Zapp, commercially speaking they're as honest as the day." - -J??' "''"T' . MMM"M"'MM'""'''M"' h 1 ' 1 1 1 wiy liMlbJMr WXJ