Newspaper Page Text
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PAGE TWO
THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1920.
The Dalton Citizen
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
8 8HOPE
8 Mi>C,\MY
. Editor
AuocUto Editor
Official Organ of the United States Circuit and District
OMrta Northwestern division. Northern District of Georgia
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF WHITFIELD COUNTY
Terms of Snhscilptlon
One Year
Hz Months
Months
11.50
.75
•AO
Payable in Advance
Advertising Rates on Application.
Entered at the Dalton. Ga., postoflice for transmission
tbrongh the mails m second-class matter.
DALTON, GA., THURSDAY. DECEMBER 23, 1920.
We ought to have that new.hotel next year.
Times are not one-half
politicians.
as bad off as are the
Christmas spirit is in the air, while Christmas
spirits are in the mountains.
Pessimism never accomplished anything worth
while. Cheerfulness and enthusiasm are the dis
tinguishing marks of success.
Shut Out the Undesirables.
Senator Overman has a resolution whiijh pro
vides for closing our doors against foreign im
migration for a period of five years. If this coun
try cares anything about employment for its own
first, it will be well to stop the influx somewhere
some time. But when the doors are closed, the
desirable foreigner, if there be such, would re
main at llome and the undesirable, the outlaw and
the lomb thrower, would continue to come the
stowaway route as he comes now. Those who
dodge regulations laid down under the law al
ready far outnumber that class which seeks to
come fully, in accord with restrictions.—Cordele
Dispatch.
Which goes to show that laws do not always re
strain those who are meant to be restrained. A
criminal cares nothing for law. He prefers to break
it. and then boast of it.
There ought to be found a way to keep foreign
scum out of this country, while at the same time no
desirable foreigner should be denied the privilege of
entering.
And, too, there should be found a way to more
quickly get rid of undesirable aliens already in this
country, who. like Ludwig Martens/seek to over
throw or sovetize this nation.
There are entirely too many foreign radicals al
ready over here. They toil not. neither do they spin.
They agitate and encourage all forms of lawlessness.
Idleness produces the criminals who are now in the
midst of a regular carnival of crime the country over,
and wherever the larger number of these low-browed
aliens is found there is where crime is most prev
alent and most vicious and most difficult to restrain.
If the immigration laws which now exist were
pfoperly enforced the gates at Ellis Island would
not stand wide open all the time. And if they can
not be enforced and officials lax''.in their work will
not do their duty, then it will be well enough for
congress to shut and bar the gates, and keep them
that way until the hinges have had opportunity to
rust for several years.
Maybe the reason Lenine and Trotzsky want to
abolish money in Russia is because they have it ah.
and are ag'in anybody else having'any.
Philosophizing. -
Editor John H. Jones, of the LaGrauge Reporter.
\
is a versatile man. His main business is running
a newspaper, which has for its purpose the boosting
of La Grange and Troup county.
* But when he becomes reflective he also becomes
a philosopher, and his philosophy carries him into
the contemplative fields of psychic phenomena. He
has come to the conclusion that the soul of man, or
whatever else it may be called, that directs his
thoughts and inclinations, skips occasionally.
Hear him:
When we come face to face with the realiza
tion that we can sit for an hour in a hotel lobby,
lost in a view of passing people whom we don t
know from Adam’s house cat. and yet grow nerv
ous after sitting for only a few minutes in the
privacy of our home with no company but our
own mental reflections, then we know that some
thing has been overlooked in the cultivation of
our mental process. A man ought to know enough
to make his mental reflections sufficiently inter
esting to keep him at home sometimes. Measure
yourself as you please, gentle reader.
Which of course is interesting.
“A man ought to know enough *to make his mental
reflections sufficiently interesting to keep him at home
sometimes,” says the LaGrange editor.
And may we not right here suggest that it is
man’s mental reflections that carry him away from
home to where he can forget himself? The average
man cannot endure a very long siege of introspection.
He needs action and likes to see action. Silent brood
ing will bring him misery, or make of him a hope
less ascetic, and if the latter, those about him will
be made miserable. The day of stern austerity has
gone; it passed away with the puritanism that foster
ed the ducking stool, the whipping post and witch
craft. »
But man should think, not about himself, but seri
ously about the problems that encompass him. And
then he should play and work. The well-rounded char
acter cannot be developed in a groove. A man with
only one idea is not far removed from a lunatic, and
yet he may do something,, or produce something, that
will revolutionize the world, either for good or bad.
But nothing yet worth while has ever been ac
complished by silent brooding or prolonged introspec
tion. It takes wholesome thinking to do that
Taking Bread from the Starving-
Who would believe that a government professing
the high ideals that this one'does would permit its
postoflice department to take bread from the mouths
of the starving children of Europe?
But if the statements set forth by Editor W. T.
Anderson, of the Macon Telegraph, are true (and we
have every reason to believe they are) then that is
exactly what this government is doing.
Postmaster-general Burleson, a man universally
hated in this country, is authority for the statement
that his department has made five millions of dollars
in foreign exchange, and it develops that this consists
of money orders sold for .the purpose of transmitting
money to foreign countries for which exorbitant rates
have been charged. It is well enough for the post-
office department to issue these money orders and to
charge enough for doing so to clear Itself, but to levy
a tribute is simply indefensible.
The Citizen takes pleasure in reproducing a front
page editorial by Mr. Anderson, which appeared in
Tlhe Macon Telegraph of Tuesday, December 21st.
This editorial is most informative and puts before the
public information it should have, whether it enjoys it
or not. By reading it carefully you will see that
the banks of this country are making remittances to
Europe at par in order to help feed the starving
millions in those unfortunate countries, whereas our
own “benevolent" government, through its postoffice
department, levies a pirate’s charge for doing the
same thing.
Subjoined is the Telegraph’s editorial:
As taxpayers, every citizen of the United '
States naturally likes (o see the Federal Govern
ment, especially at this time, make all the profit
it can out of the various enterprises in which it
is interested or is operating. Logically, the more
revenue the government earns, the less taxes it
will have to collect—perhaps.
But at this Christmas season, there has come '
to our attention a situation that the public should
know About, despite any effect the exposure of
it may have upon the revenues of, in the in
stance. our penurious and reprehensible Uncle
Sam.
People in the United States have been remitting
large and small sums to the starving people of
Europe—the poorest, most distressed, hungriest
creatures the World has ever known. As a mat
ter of course, the postoffice in each city was the
natural place to^jrhich to apply for money orders
by which to transmit these funds to Europe.
Many Macon people have been sending money
especially to French orphans, the poor little tots
whose fathers lost their lives in defense of the
freedom of the world. I must relate a personal
experience in order to make the statements’stick
and stand out as incontrovertible facts.
I have been foolish enough to buy money orders
at the Macon postoffice for a French orphan. I
couldn’t understand the way my government
had figured the number of francs sold to me for
five or ten dollars which I have remitted peri
odically.
I read a few days ago - where Mr. Burleson, our
unesteemed Postmaster-General, had reported to
the government that his department had made five
millions of dollars in “foreign exchange.” In
vestigation developed that this meant money
orders. And as I had been buying money orders,
yesterday I made a test. With five dollars I
went to the postoffice and bought a money order
for 65 francs. With another five dollars I went
to the Citizens and Southern Bank and bought a
check on the Guaranty Trust Company’s Par(s
bank for 83.3 francs. The postoffice charged a
10-cent fee for its 65 francs, and the hank charged
no fee, taking it. as a part of its work toward
helping the helpless by making remittances at
par. Other -hanks do the same thing.
The difference between the two transactions
was 1 Si/„ francs, which are now worth 6 cents
each, or -$1.10. of which my government, under
Mr. Burleson’s management, big and generous
that I have always believed it to be, has been
robbing my French ward on each remittance.
Tli£re are approximately five millions of such
dollars in the United States Treasury—filthy,
dirty, ill-gotten gains. And yet they put Ponzi
in the penitentiary.
Mr. Itnrleson justifies his operations because
in 1879 there was held an international money-
order convention at which a schedule of differ
ences in money was made up for all the countries.
But all of the other countries have abandoned the
schedule, revising their exchange on a basis of.
market values of the respective monies. The •
United States has not, because it is profitable not
to do so—that’s the only reason. If the scale had
been against ns. as it has been in the other coun
tries. we would have revised the schedule in a
minute.
That five millions of dollars should be taken
out of the United States Treasury and sent to the
starving and suffering people of Europe, from
whom it was withheld.
And postoffice foreign money orders should be
avoided as a plague. The policy of our govern
ment is not only villainous—it is damnable.
It is now reported that Dempsey’s hearing is af
fected. Suppose that’s the reason he could not hear
lj’ncle Sam calling him for service.
The fact that Burleson won’t be postmaster-gen
eral after March 4th takes a great deal of the sting
out of the defeat that recently overtook us demo
crats.
If old Santa Claus will carry away the Dalton
depot the people of the city as a whole will rise up
and call him blessed. And, by the way it wouldn’t
increase his load very much.
Those editors who, a re concerning themselves about
whether the old Lardy Felton is a Watson democrat
or a Harding republican are giving too much atten
tion to a very unimportant personage.
Biffem-Herring Chit’lin Controversy.
It must be that eating chit’lins is a matter of
education and not a question of taste.
John L. Herring, of The Tifton Gazette, thinks
the prejudice (if that’s what it is) against chit’lins
has been created by its enemies. In other words,
these internal delicacies have nearly always been
strung out in the presence of an unfriendly and irrev
erent gentry, who have sought to make it appear that
because a grain of com now and then is found im
bedded in them, they are not viewed from a sanitary
standpoint, entirely above suspicion.
But. nevertheless, they have defenders everywhere,
and when you find a chit’lin defender you have dis
covered a game fighter, with a strong appetite and a
stronger stomach. They will affirm, and fight you
if you,take issue with them, that the elongated and
lowly chit’lin, properly prepared, is a feast within
itself fit for a Lucullus.
Editor Herring made out a gtrong (smelling) case
for the defense, and did it well. It was serious—
almost scientific—thoroughly hygenic, and classic in
construction. It was also convincing, until the irrev
erent BUI Biffem, of the Savannah Press, took out
after him. Like a keen-scented hound on a traU,
Biffem, scenting the aroma from Herring’s chit’lin pot
pursued the contents relentlessly as well as remorse
lessly.
Hear him:
John Herring, brilliant editor of The Tifton
Gazette, comes to the defense of the offensive
chit’lin in his excellent newspaper. It would
be a defense if it were possible to defend the
thiugs at all. He puts up about the best plea
for the chit’lin we have ever read. He almost
makes one want to see somebody (preferably an
enemy) eat ’em. But he tells us that the only
way they can be'eaten is to douse them thor
oughly with pepper sauce—the more pep the bet
ter. No doubt, John is right, as far as he goes.
But he left out other ingredients for chit’lin
dressing. He didn’t mention unslacked lime, nor
bevo or a dash of creosote and a sprinkling of
commercial guano, as being some of t.he disiu
fectants needed to make a palatable sauce to
make these representatives of the department of
the interior of a departed Georgia swine ready
for human consumption. John is also consider
ate of the rest of the household. He is ag’in
fryin’ these “innards.” He says they should be
cooked in an open pot over a simmering fire in
the backyard, when all the neighbors have gone
to church and the men of the family are off in
the back lot cutting wood. No doubt a chit’lin
string cooked far from the habitat of man and
buried uneaten under four or five feet of mother
earth might serve its true purpose. It ought to
make good fertilizer.
And did this put Herring out of business? It did
not. He came back and charged that Bill Biffem is
a regular chit’lin hound, and that for some purpose
or reason he is playing like he doesn’t eat ’em. Her
ring almost intimates that Biffem eats ’em raw, or
alive, as the case may be.
Texas marketed the biggest cotton crop in her his
tory, and realized on an average thirty cents a pound
for it The crop was in early and marketed early.
And the calamity howler was told to go to b 1.
Of all the fool things now being agitated by the
fool agitators is the forty-four hour week for the
printing industry. The rank and file of workers are
not in sympathy with the movement because the
great majority of them are not grafters.
Christmas!
As the 25th of December approaches the desire to
give surges through the heart of man, and it should,
for nearly two thousand years ago the world received
its greatest love present, the infant Jesus.
The wise men of ancient time followed the star
in the East and came unto the Holy Child bringing
gold, frankincense and myrrh. The wise men of
modern* time do likewise, opening their hearts and
purses to share with the unfortunate their love and
their means, for only in this way can the Christmas
season have its fullest meaning and the Christ-spirit
abound.
Christmas can never be a matter of snowdrifts
and sleighbells; of Yule-logs and turkey dinners, of
bayberry candles, holly and mistletoe. It is some
thing more enduring than these things. It is not
merely home-comings and heart-happiness, but some
thing even dearer. Christmas to us seems to mean
giving, not only on the 25th of December, but all the
year all those gifts that will tend to bring “Peace
on earth, good will to men.”
Everybody can now wear overalls. They are
going down every day.—Greensboro Herald-
Journal.
At that rate they ought to soon be off.
We care not> what course others may pursue,
but as for us, sink or swim, live or die, survive
or perish, we are not going to eat any chitlins
if we know it.—Macon Telegraph. .
How about a perfectly delicious mess of angle
worms?
It is difficult to say, when a young hopeful
spends three months’ meager salary on a Christ
mas gift for a blushing damsel, whether he is in
love or merely a lunatic. We might say damfool,
but dignity forbids.—LaGrange Reporter.
And the “blushing damsel” who will accept such
a gift belongs in the same class.
At any rate, King Constantine bears the proud
distinction of being the only kicked out king, who
has succeeded in coming back.—Rome Tribune-
Herald.
Which must 'be most cheering Christmas news to
his brother-in-law, Bill Hohenzollern, who is now saw
ing wood in Holland.
Congressman Billy Mason ups and cables the
League of Nations to go ahead and recognize
Ireland. But, maybe, Billy couldn’t figure just
how else he could get that much advertising for
that amount of money.—Columbus Enquirer-Sun.
He might write another testimonial for use as a
patent medicine advertisement.
CHEERY
LAYS
« for DREARY DAYS
BY JAMES WELLS: °
Writer of Newipaper Ve.se, Hvmn o
and Popular Song Lyric.
. , “A Night Before Christmas”
The night before Christmas, while eveX
A merr >- old elf down the chimney tops C rat
With bundles of toys for girts and for boys ’
And candies and goodies and such Christmas ’
To the top of each root would his l jlldw ,
prance, 1
In Santa Claus’ absence, each reindeer w.
While Santa below, with great bundles
Joys,
tea®
"ulddancj
would
go.
And gifts on each girl and each boy would best,.
As Santa down each ruddy chimney would cr*>,
In each kiddie’s face he would solemnly peer. R
And laugh with delight at the wonderful sight
night.
The kiddies would find at the end of the
Each stocking he found at the chimney sid» h
With toys were soon filled from the pack he' U L?* i
A dolly, a wagon, or cars that would run 1
And candies and fruits to aid in the fun.
When yon meet the editor on the street give
him all the information you can in the way of
news. People die, get married, elope and do
many other things and never a word of the hap
pening is given the editor. He isn’t a mind read
er. and will appreciate all the news given him
or sent in by friends.—Greensboro Herald-Journal.
That’s good advice. Many complain at their
guests not being mentioned as visitors. The paper
cannot always know about who is going and coming.
It won’t take but a moment of your time to tell ns.
“At the present price of cowhides there isn’t a
man in Chicago of sufficient strength to carry
enough of them across Michigan boulevard to buy
himself a good pair of shoes.” C. H. Hyde (get
that na me I) to Id members of the Farmer’s Mar
ket Committee of Illinois at their meeting in the
Windy City Friday. Do you know the answer?
'Neither do we.—Macon Telegraph.
We are no Hawkshaw, but maybe he means that
no man can carry enough hides to pay for a $6.00
pair of shoes marked $23.00, with no market at all
for hides.
strong
i siaaii
Without doubt. Gordon Lee is the strongest
member of the Georgia delegation in Congress.—
Dalton Citizen. Them’s our sentiments. It has
also been often demonstrated that he’s an awfully
strong candidate before the people.—Rome Tri
bune-Herald.
He is strong with the people because they like a
working congressman. He is now a member of the
two most important committees in the house, namely,
appropriations and agriculture. It would take a new
man ten years to catch up with Gordon Lee. The
people are wise in keeping him on the job.
Johnny Spencer, of The Macon Telegraph, has
about decided to take that dad-blamed telephone out
of his green and gold sanctum. That’s good news.
We may now look to see those excellent paragraphs
thoroughly finished. A telephone that always rings
at the wrong time is no gentleman.
The fellow who is running around talking hard
times is doing his full part in making them worse.
And by the way, what’s the matter with the times,
any way? They are a little disquieting by compari
son only with the joy-riding days that have happily
passed. Think of the' dark days of 1914-1915. and
then smile, d n yon!
With war debts to pay and interest on Liberty
bonds and the redemption of Thrift stamps, it will
be interesting to watch the republicans meet the
situation; Will they repeal any of the present tax
laws? If so some other kind will have to take their
places. In our opinion it will be some years yet
before -business is relieved of the present tax system
to any very noticeable extent
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ ♦
♦
H
CLIPPINGS AND COMMENTS
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ ♦♦♦
“Held Up at Gasoline Station.”—Headline,
that news?—Macon Telegraph.
Nope. It is an every minute occurrence.
Is
If our neighbor, Robert Loveman, of Dalton,
had been in Rome last night and thought it was
raining daffodils, we wonld give him the medal
for poetic imagination.--Rome News.
We have already had it awarded to him up here,
but he states he can use two medals just as well
as one. So send it along.
The Dalton Citizen laments the fact that by
failing to get The Chattanooga Times since the
war it hasn’t been getting as much about “Bill
Bryan” as it did. Our neighbor will admit that,
although we may have bad a monopoly of “Bryan”
we did occasionally butt in on its preserves with a
paragraph al>out the late Judge Fite.—Chatta
nooga Times.
The above paragraph leads us to believe the
Times puts a construction on our remarks we did
not mean. What we were trying to say was that
The Commoner, which used to come to this office reg
ularly. was full of Bill Bryan—that and nothing more.
The truth of the business is The -Citizen and The
Times are in thorough accord as to W. J. B.
So. this merry old elf worked all the night
With the aid of his reindeers so swift and » “
That each girl and each boy might not mi,- s
toy, *
Or all of the goodies which bring Christum* j oy
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Tbe Star of Bethlehem.
Lo, in the east a star appears
Of wondrous beauty, saining bright
And wise men, three, essayed to search
And found the meaning of its light.
They followed 1 in its beacon light
Lntii they to a manger came
Where lay the Prince of Peace, but come
To save the world from sin and shame.
Ah, wise men, three, how could’st thou know
On that great pilgrimage of thiue
That millions in the years to come
Would prostrate worship at that shrine'/
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
An Early Shopper.
He bought his gifts at l A. M.
On Christmas eve, did Burley;
And so, I think he took the prize
For Christmas shopping early.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Christmas Spirits.
The Christmas spirit's iu the air,
We feel and see and hear it;
But lacking is the olden “tang”
Of ljquid Christmas* spirit.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ *.♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦,!
EXCHANGE OPINION
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦
tide
A Christinas Prayer.
Through your soul may the Christmas
A vast sweetness of good will flow.'
Flooding with peace and glad content
The deeps that bitterness have held;
Its waves of fragrance washing o’er
The grey, cold stones of loneliness.
And rough places where thorns have grown.
The Christmas tide into yonr soul
A lifting flood of brothership,
For all God’s children may it flow
’Till senseless pride and selfishness y
Beneath its bright waves lie forgot;
And sweet wisdom of love rules all
The thoughts and intents of vour life.
JESSE BAXTER SMITH.
Still a Democrat.
They carried California, they slaughtered us in Maine
The echoes shout their victory from Halifax to Spain.
They made a hole in Louisian’, they dented Tennessee,
They knocked ’em cold in old Mizzoo: but thev never
routed me;
They smashed our dreams to smithereens, our- hopes
to a cocked hat,
But here is one they couldn’t turn. I’M STILL A
DEMOCRAT.
Twas ten thousand votes for Harding, and two hun
dred votes for Cox,
I bet*’em all my ready cash, likewise mv shoes and
SOCKS,
And as returns kept piling in. I knew I’se out o’ luck.
But'stilH 1 claimed I’ll ol’ New York, and yelled for
old Kaintuck.
Tt’s now the morning after, my claimer’s busted flat.
-But cashless, shoeless, sockless, folks, I’M STILL A
DEMOCRAT. -
White county went republican, and Joe and Otis fell
T Ante Ulrn 4-li n . , ’
> where it’s gone to, but here’s something for
mates,
Looks like the whole darn conntrv had comnletelv starts - The Allied soldiers ended upon tb
gone to—well! * of Germany, the militarist. Ordinarily, the final
ties of the war would have been fought on
® 01 1- In the next war there may not lie a Mr. ,
^ victorious armies as they cry. “On
lin!—and the new Berlin would be Washington-^
The world is offering the- United States goven
a chance to save 93 cents on the dollar in the i
of all its expenses. Wonld it not be good
for us to accept? If not then we. the world/
Prussia, should secure a kaiser and do the J 00
pletely.—Macon Telegraph.
gone to—well!
dun
yoi
W *gate^ y time comes to shuffle off. and try the pearly
An is °that?” Pe * er hears my knock, and hollers “Who
ri1 boy- throw wide the gates, HERE
COMES A DEMOCRAT.”
—Contributed by W. A. R.
The New Prussia.
The people all over the country are demanding 11
5k X re J? uc ^ on - Senator Walsh, democrat, has shorn |
way k° obtain it. His method is notsj
difficult one; instead, it is being made easy just i
oj the fact that all the other large nations are eantl
estly working to adopt it. If the people of this com-I
try, or let us rather say if the people's congress it-l
j«:ts it, then there is no sympathy to l-e extendesl
those who plead for a substantial tax decrease. I
Senator Walsh has introduced a resolution for the!
appointment of an American representative on
disarmament committee of the League of Nations. H-J
does not think It necessary for any country to belonl
to the League to send a representative- to the dsl
armament discussions, if it should be extended cl
invitation as has the United States. The simple facj
that the nations of the earth are engaged in
appears to be a united effort to reduce armameml
no matter under what auspices that, effort is rate?!
place, is enough reason for every important uarial
of the globe to encourage the attempt by a sul-stai|
tial show of participation.
. The American army and navy are calling for i|
billion dollars of the taxpayers' money. If our imaafil
are in Rockefeller shape, then let us go ahead all
tease the world for a few centuries longer, while
children and grandchildren are being educated B|
higher ideals and a fuller measure of that so wr
termed commqn sense- Incidentally, however. i*J
national wallet is as flat as a pancake just now#!
the rest of the world is sitting up in the iworhouse f
An opportunity is staring us in the face to 3*1
not only one billion dollars but manv billions.
other nations are anxious to readjust their affairs «|
a sensible basis and destroy the possibility ofi
great conflict like that through which they havejfll
passed. It Is exceedingly hard for them to undersell
the attitude of - America in the matter, and our rscsig
refusal to send a representative to the disarmafflSl
discussions doubtless bred no little suspicion on
of other countries, espeeiallv Japan, from
the remark has been elicited that she will consul
battleships and keep on increasing the Mikado's
mg forces until the United States reaches a turn 3|
the lane.
Are we to toe the most backward of nations
most militaristic and aggressive? We are rap®|
becoming the new Prussia of the world. To as *T
do not seein so, nor did the Germans perhaps r PI
they were doing anything but proper and right >
building up a huge military machine that the
states came to.fear and therefore abhor. If our n™|
and navy fought to make democracy safe in the
we are not acting very consistently in forcing all 'I
tions to become militaristic by setting such an eJ "j
pie ourselves. We are causing new munitions fact#*!
to rise, new war chemical laboratories to he eaq
lished. new war inventions to be invented. gn*J
armies to' be raised, larger navies to be built all e-l
the whole world, and new militaristic schemes t-'
born in Germany and here Central European
Jn faet. we are paving the wav for widespread ^
Itarism so rapidly that a fear has crept into p
hearts of other peoples and a suspicion created I
is bringing the folks beyond the seas—the plain 1
of whom Mr. Wilson once spoke—to hate us.
We have sympathized deeplv with the Be^
and the inhabitants of northern France where
Prussian heel of war sank so deeply into the a'/J
breast. It has been said -that bread cast
the water -will return again. Perhaps so. The
world war will be fought on American soil—a®* ||
is our principal concern why there should B 1 ’.
another world conflict. The last war was hut a%
to the one of the future—if it comes—as it
fought from -the air with chemicals that will en
and poison the inhabitants of entire cities.
But why is America to be the next battle#
Because the militaristic nation is the target after.