About Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 26, 1917)
8 Full Text of Secretary McAdoo’s Speech AWAKENED AMERICA IN WAR TO FINISH. M ADOD TELLS CITY Secretary of Treasury De clares People Realize We Must Strik Now or Never to Win Victory Over Despotism •This is our time to strike and to strike hard, to settle despotism for ever. Let us see it to a finish!” With these words. William G. McAdoo sounded the keynote of his Liberty d*> address at a banquet at the Piedmont Driving club shortly after noon Wednes day. The banquet in honor of the secretary of the treasury was given by the offi .-ers and directors of the Atlanta fed eral reserve bank. More, than a hun dred representative bankers and busi ness men of the southeast attended the oanquet and heard Mr. McAdoo drlre home his mesasge to the south. A similar speech wil be made by Mr. McAdoo at S o'clock Wednesday night at the auditorium-armory, when thou sands of Atlantians are expected to gather in a great rally to mark the climax Liberty day. In his address Mr. McAdoo declared his confident belief that America is j awake To the war at last and that, lag-1 ging though it may be. the second Liber ty load will not fail. He drew a vivid ' picture of the terrible consequences to . America if the war is lost, lie showed ’ where our prosperity, our very life, de- j pended on our entering the war when , we did. He paid his respects to the premature pacifists by declaring that peace now would mean only that at some other time we should have to •fight it out. probably alone and when the sacrifices would be infinitely great- ! er than now.” And he concdluded his address with a stirring appeal to the people of the south to buy bonds now.: •win the Avar and bring peace as soon as possible Mr. McAdoo’s speech in full follows: I After traversing thirty states in every section of this country, not only in the first Liberty bond cam paign. bu\in this campaign. I feel competent to say that if there are those who believe that America is not awake, that the spirit of democ racy and of patriotism is not preg nant in this land, they are very bad ly mistaken. The American people know that they are in a great wat for self-preservation, for the pro tection of their vital rights as well as for the vindication of the demo cratic principle throughout the world. WE FIGHT FOB WO SELFISH ENDS It is very true that we fight tor altruistic purposes. We fight for our ideals. It is true. also, that we fight for no selfish end. We seek no territory that belongs to another nation. We seek not to conquer any | other peoples and make them sub jects of this great republic. But. while we are fighting for these i ideals, and it well to restate them as often as possible. America fights for something more proximate than that —she fights for certain essen tial rights of her people, rights that involve, their very life, and the integrity of their institutions, rights which have been challenged «nd rights which have been disre garded by the g; eatest military despot of ali times. Before this war broke out in Europe, it had been recognized ev erywhere throughout the civilized world that no merchant ship should be sunk by an enemy war vessel, unless the lives of the passengers, the unarmed and defenseless men. women and children, had first been secured. So inflexible is that rule, t has never been disregarded by any civilized nation until the Ger man kaiser essayed (o violate it. Why is the rule so immutable? i Why is it that an infraction of it -hocks humanity? I can illustrate it better by bringing it tyome to you in this’ way: Suppose land I am go:ng to suppose a very Im possible easel that a German arn\jr • had successfully invaded the 4 United States and had captured an i • American city. Suppose that the -I population was standing upon the streets. looking with horror and anxiety upon the invading host, and wondering what their fate was to « be. old men. young men. women. • 'hiidren. babies, all unarmed and u making no effort to redfet. Sup »* pose that the commander of that regiment had ordered it to halt and to fire .nto those unarmed peo- ; pie. Many would have been killed. . others would have been wounded, others would have fled and would have been able to save their lives. Why?. Because they were on land. Some of the wounded undoubtedly would have recovered, their lives would have been saved, because they could have been taken to hos pitals and nursed back to life again. PICTURE or GERMAN RUTKLEB3NEBS AT SEA But as horrible as that would be. and an shocking an offense against humanity and civilization as that would be. can you compare ft with sinking a ship at sea with unarmed and defenseless men. women and children upon it? That crime pales ; into insignificance as compared with the horror of such a sinking at sea. Can you picture to yourself tha terror of such a scene—a great iluer moving along swiftly across the waters, with no evidence of danger ahead. with a happy com pany of people, when all of a sud den an explosion from an unseen I Catarrhal Cough Mr. W. & Brown. R. F. D. No. 4, < Box 82, Rogersville, Tennessee, Any ORC “I feel It my duty to recommend Suffering with Peruna to all sufferers of catarrh or C*f n rrk in w cough. In the year 1909, I took a * aLar / rn “ severe case of the la grippe. I then Any form jEjKSgSg took A bad cough. I had taken all > mi kinds of cough remedies but got DO 1 Will relief. I then decided to try Peruna. A 4viu> them I used five bottles. After taking five Advise aueul bottles my cough stopped and my take catarrh was cured. My average —. weight was 115 and now I weigh JnCrUIISI ÜB4. Any one suffering with ca- . tarrh in any form I will advlee them to Those who object to liquid modi* take Fenina." « « an procure Peruna Tablets. source, the ship shivers from stem to stem, and begins to settle In the water. The horrified people rush to the decks and attempt to get off In the lifboats. but there is no escape. Suddenly the great bulk disappears beneath the waves, and men. women and children are thrown into the water. There is no land upon which they can escape. There is no means of saving their lives. A few mo ments of agonizing shrieks, then silence. Every vestige of life ob literated "without a trace." That is what has been done by this mil itary despot repeatedly since this war broke out. in defiance not only of treaty obligations with this gov ernment. but in contravention of every law of humanity and every mandate md dictate of Internation al law. * It is undoubtedly true that with in the past three years this nation was frequently on the verge of war. because of those infractions of the kaiser, those aggressions upon out rights. But each time our great peace-loving president, with an earnest desire to maintain peace and to strictly observe the obliga tions of neutrality, which we had always observed upon our part, first demanded that these aggres sions upon our rights be stopped. And each time the kaiser promised that he would not repeat this of fense. and just as frequently as he made the promises, he disregarded them. WHAT EME COULD BE EXPECTED OF QEBMINY What else could be expec led of a nation that would tear up a treaty with Belgium and denounce it as a mere scrap of paper? But the cli max came when on the 31st day of January last, we received notice from the kaiser that on and after that date, no American ship and no American citizen should be permit ted* to enter a zone of the high seas about five hundred miles in width, surrounding the great na tions of Britain, Belgium. France and Italy. He undertook to say. to America that she should not sail her ships upon the high seas. One other nation told us that in eigh teen hundred and twelve (1812). What was the answer? Weak as we were at that time, and powerful as the nation was which then chal lenged our rights, we went to war and vindicated America’s right to the freedom of the seas. We vindicated America's right to the freedom of the seas, a right We have maintained inviolate up to this time, and a right we never intend to surrender at the order of any alien despot. I care not under what flag he claims to sail. Why is that right so essential to America's life and security as a nation? It is because we have al ways produced more than we can consume at home. And the very prosperitv of our people, their very life, in fact, de pends upon their ability at all times to sell that surplus in the open markets of the world. Unless we have the unrestricted and unmolest * ed freedom of the seas in the peaceful pursuit of commerce, there would be ruin in this land from one end to the other. This nation could never be prosperous without it. MEBCHANT SHIPS HUGGED POBTS WHEW WAK BEGAN I can Illustrate that to you by what happened immediately upon the outbreak of the war in August. 1914. The first act was. of course, to paralyze shipping every where. Every German, every Brit ish. every French ship scurried to the first friendly port, and re fused to go out. There were Ger man. British and French raiders at sea, and naturally the merchant vessels did not want to take any chances. Our own vessels, and there were very few of them at that time, were also refusing to sail. They did not know just what the conditions were going to be. they did not want to risk any of the uncertainties of the situation. The cotton crop of the south was just maturing, and was about to be mar keted. We produce each year in this country something like twelve million to fifteen million bates of cotton, and at least seven million bales of that cotton must find a market in foreign countries, prin • ipally in Great Britain, France and Belgium, so that with the conges tion of shipping and the inability to get transportation across the high seas, the effect upon the cot ton market was just the same, as the result of that declaration of war. as if by some superior force our own ships had been deprived of the right to sail the high seas, and to carry that cotton to friend ly markets of the nations with which we were at peace. ONLY BELIEF AT THAT TIME WAS DEPOSIT OF U. S. FUNDS And I endeavored, as secretary of the treasury to give some relief. The only relief I could offer was to deposit government funds, to the extent that they were available in the banks of the south, asking them, in turn, to lend those moneys upon as favorable terms as possi ble to all farmers they could reach, to enable them to carry their cot ton until normal conditions could be restored. But the first effect of the shipping congestion was to In duce every man who owned cotton, and every bank which was carrying cotton as collateral, and every mer chant who had loaned money to the farmer upon the security of his crop, to try to sell cotton quickly, because each wanted to get rid of it before the slump came. In other words, the demoralization which comes from the inability to market the surplus in foreign countries arises from the attempt to sell great quantities of a staple, be It cotton or grain, or whatever else, in the home market when there is not enough demand there to absorb it, and. of course, prices decline, they go down below the cost of produc tion In the case ip point, cotton went M low as five cents a pound, and It brought disaster upon the south. The losses during that time amounted to hundreds of millions of THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1917. | ' I* < > » ■ loaf • I <i SB? k Affing PheA Hon. 1-7. G. McAdoo Secretary of Treasury dollars to the people of the south. { losses they could ill afford to bear. iX'ow. if we were to be denied the right to ship our products of our I mines, and of the surplus manufac tures of our great plants in this country, exactly condition i would be repeated, the same effect would be produced in every line of production in this country. EXPORTS FOR YEAR ENDING JUNE, 1917 Take the fiscal year ended June 30, 1917; in that year we exported to Great Britain, to I’cance, to Bel , gium and to Italy, three billion, four | hundred million dollars of American products. One billion, two hun dred million dollars of that repre sented the products of American farms, their grain, their live stock and other things that they pro- . duced. And It was because of our ability to move these products across the ocean and to sell them in those other markets of the world, that the general price level of those I 1 commodities in this country was maintained and prosperity came to the American farmer to an unusual degree. The same thing applies to our manufactures, and that is why labor is also concerned in this great question. If our manufacturers can not sell their surplus product, they, of course, must reduce capacity, and limit production to what we con sume here at home, and that means that labor would be unemployed. If we should be unable to sell our surplus products to the four greaf nations I have named, we would have demoralization of prices in this land, and disaster would visit every farm and every factory and every business house in America. It is perfectly clear what the kaiser's purpose was. He had been led to believe by disloyal people in this country that America never would fight, that we were a mate [ rial people, that any transgression I of our rights would he met only by protests, that he could go as far as he pleased, and so he determin ed that he would put America to this supreme test, and he has got ten gn answer he never expected. He expected a craven submission, and he kenvy that if we gave that there would be a weakening of the j economic situation tn America and discord and discontent among its people which would serve the end he had in view. He would accom plish. If we had submitted to that order, by one stroke of his pen in his palace in Berlin, more destruc tion upon American farms, in Am erican factories, and in American business houses and to American interests all over this land than he could accomplish with all the arm ies and navies of the German em Pl re. I WE CAUGHT THE KAISER WITH THE GOODS What was the other thing he had in mind? About tlhe 17th day of January, fourteen days before he or dered America off the high seas, he sent through his foreign secretary a dispatch to Mexico. We did not get this dispatch until sometime the next month, but we got It. and it is authentic, we caught the kai ser with the goods and his foreign secretary had to admit it. What did he say to Mexico? He said if Mexico would make war upon the United States, the German govern ment would finance the undertak ing. and that Mexico and Germany would together. dictate terms of peace to the United States. And , what was the reward that Mexico was to receive? The kaiser prom ised to hand over the great states of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona That was the bait the German kai i ser held out to Mexico, if she would make war upon us. So long as there is a gallant American heart under a tfkhaki uniform or a blue jacket, I would like to see any for eign despot tear three stars from the American flag. That was not all of it. There is Japan, our great neighbor of the Pacific, our friend. now making ■common cause with us In this great struggle for liberty and world de mocracy. Japan was at war with Germany, so the kaiser could not approach her directly, and—this is another evidence of that superior intelligence of the German diplo matic service—he suggested that Mexico approach Japan and suggest that Japan make common cause with Germany and Mexico, so that If Japan had done that we would have been attacked upon the Paci fist coast, we would have been at tacked upon the southern border, and. Nn the meantime, what would have happened to our great part- ners in this fight for universal de mocracy—Great Britain, Belgium. France and Italy? With their sup plies cut off. who can say how long they could, have held out. and this lustful military despot. Ithe kaiser, whose eyes are upon the whole earth, whose dream® transcend even those of Alexander the Great and Hannibal and Caesar would have come into what ho has been trying to get all these years, domination of the world except free America. WOULD HAVE FORCED US TO WAB AGAINST MEXICO And then what would have been the next step? The United States would have t>een at war, as 'the kaiser hoped, with Mexico and Ja pan: we would have been weakened by the internal dissensions and economic lo.sea sustained by craven submission to the kaiser’s order and the kaiser would'have come to rich America to satisfy Ins covetous heart. He would hate made us pay more in indemnities to secure pea.ee, and then upon whatever terms he might have been gracious enough to give vs that) we will have to pay in ten years to arm the manhood of this great nation. vindicate It? honor, and defeat the kaiser. And these alleged peace so ietles in this country, these so-called truth societies, which' for seVerai years have been making efforts co put embargoes on our exports to the friendly powers of Great Britain. Belgium, • I’rance and Italy, which the German khiser finally ordered us to do —these societies were mere ly German wolves masquerading in uie hides of American traitors. Some man has said, or is alleged to have said, that America had no justification for this war with Ger man:.'. If there be an American, or any man in this laiyd. whether he is an American or not, who, know ing this record, says that we did not have justification for war with Germany, the yellow blood flows in his veins—he hasn't any red blood in him. Non that we are in this war, what must we do? The first duty of the hour is to organize and mar shal the might of this nation so that it will be irresistible and to as sert that might where it will tell. Having decided to fight, we are not afraid to fight. The first thing to do is to raise the money to carry cm this great war. You cannot fight wars without money. Fortunately the American people have the ma terial resources, they have the wealth, and great as this operation is. we are able to put it through. We have to raise something like eighteen billions of dollars this fis cal year. WHAT WE NEED IS TO HAVE EVERYBODY FULL TOGETHEB It is a staggering sum of mon ey when you think about it, and yet it is not so great for America, as compared with our resources, it is not a great sum. All we need is to have everybody pull together. It is a glorious thing that already the spirit of nationality, the spirit of unity, Is triumphant in this great land of ours. There must be no politics, no peisonal ambitions, no selfish interests while this war lasts, because we must subordinate everything of that sort to the su ; preme interests of the nation. So the government is Imposing four billions of taxation upon our people for this fiscal year. The re maining fourteen billions ought to be raised by the sale of bonds. At the present time it is the intention to raise that much by bond issues. The congress might alter that plan, it might impose more taxes at the next session and reduce the amount of bonds to be offered, but as it stands today, we shall have to raise fourteen billions by the sale of bonds. To whom? To you, the American people, which is security enough if mortgage upon the honor of the American people, which is ■ security enough if there was noth ing else back of them. But when, in addition to that, we have three hundred billions of wealth of Am erica as security for these bonds, no patriot should think one minute about the security of the invest ment that is offered to him. The government is not asking the peo ple to give it something, it is not asking them to make a contribution, it is simply asking them to lend their surplus money to the govern ment, and the government proposes The Story of the World’s Greatest War 1; Beautifully Illustrated in Colors, and Containing Maps of AU H the War Fronts, Showing the Territory Gained by the LK Allies to April Ist, 1917. I I iKwH • This illustrated chart, 10 inches wide by 15 inches long, trffh I'• I ‘j fr*S' dozens of photographs made in the War districts, and maps of all the IM ft warring nations, is filled with information that is necessary if you are * t 0 keep posted on the progress of this great war. i c.ueatestWajr ; CONTENTS lIE J A—r- ‘ ; Wilson’s Message to Congress Wilson’s Proclamation of War. Map of the World Map of the United States 11ZiraX F : wWw ■' Map of Europe Map of Western Battle Grounds |( *1 > Map of Eastern Battle Front Map of Mexico 1.- KWSajjiHj * JSBKJ 1 : v And other maps of England, France, Belgium, Germany, Russia, rtaty, Pai Greece, Turkey, all the Balkan States, Norway and Sweeden, the North Sea, As * at ’ c Turkey, Japan, China, and Korea. Also photos of the pSySPr : leaders of the Great War, Battleships,/Submarines, Big Guns, Torpe- Litl A'?! 'LL i" does, besides many photos of camp and trench life in Europe. | I *fcWrir' We will reat c^art to you if you will send F[. 'Ti y r us Si.oo for 12 months' subscription to The Semi-Weekly IdLDi A-' Journal. THE SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, Atlanta. Ga. . Enclosed find >I.OO for The Semi-Weekly Journal -1- months. Send me ibi t pnt this matter off. as na»e «iy the Bflg War Chart FREE. , few honored et thee. charts, but aend year .. eubeeription or renewal today and get yo* Name « ropy of thia war story at once. • p. oR. F- nstate 1 to pay them 4 per cent interest on it. Who is the government in this great democracy of ours? It is not an intangible, separate thing from the people. CONGRESSMEN YOUB SERVANTS AND NOT YOUR MASTERS The government of the United States is the people of the United I States. Your president is not your master, and your representatives at : Washington are not your masters— they are your servants. When you i lend money, you lend it to your selves and your servants at Wash • ington use it for you. The security is you. yourselves. In lending money to your government, you are serving yourselves, you are making your own rights and property safe And you are making your -country safe for the future. I want all. men arid women alike to buy these | bonds and buy them quickly. Do | • not waste any time about it. Take advantage of this great privilege I your government gives you because it is a great privilege and an op- ■ portunity to buy a bond of the Unit ed States government bearing 4 per cent interest and exempt from , taxation. . ‘ . 1 want to tell what this money is ft> be used for. We have in train- I . iug now in this country a magnif • ie.ent army of the finest manhood of this nation. I was at Camp Lewis, \Vashington. the other day, where I had the privilege of speak ing to 35,000 of them assembled on the pa...de grounds. It was a thrill ing sight, and It made my heart swell with renewed pride to be an American citzen. There were mar ita’ed t'nd hosts of democracy, the sons of farmers, the sons of mer chants. the sons of lawyers, the sons of ministers, the sons of la boring men, the sons of every kind and character of America's citizen ship. a truely democratic army, col lected from all parts of this count try. Every community In this great | land has been affected by the se lective draft law. What is the least we can do for these brave young mer:? THE SOLDIER GIVES MORE, GETS LESS THAN INVESTOR We cannot assure them the safe ty of their principal, as we can as sure you of the safety of* your principal when you buy a govern ment bond. What is a soldier’s principal? It is his life. He does not ask the government to give hint security. He does not ask the gov ernment to guarantee him safety. He expects to die, if. necessary. But he has a right to ask the civilian population to do this much for him —to arm him with the best gun that American money and ingenuity can devise, a gun that will shoot faster and further than any gun yet made, and to give him the best bayonet that can be forged by America’s skill and brawn—bayonets long enough to reach to Berlin so that when the i sureme moment comes and he finds himself in the death grapple with an enemy, he will be able to Calomel Users! Listen To Me! I Guarantee Dodson's Liver Tone Your druggist gives back your money if it doesn’t liven your liver and* bowels and straighten you up without making you sick. cgn: calomel makes you sick. It’s horrible! Take a dose of the dangerous drug tonight and tomorrow you may lose j a day's work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. I Calomel, when 'it conies into contact | with sour bile, crashes into it, breaking i it up. This is when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. If you are slug gish and “all knocked out." if your ■ liver is torpid and bowels constipated ' or you have headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if breath is bad or stomach I sour, just try a spoonful of harmless Dodson’s Liver Tone tonight. Here’s my guarantee—Go to any drug ' store and get a bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone for a few cents. Take a spoonful and j strike a blow for liberty, destroy his enemy and save himself. That is the only chance he nas for his life. That is all we can do for him. Isn’t he entitled to that? When you think of these glorious fellows who must go out and face death for ue, of th® sacrifice they have to make, not only of their lives, but in many cases of their health, perhaps impaired forever, or marred forever to such a degree that life will not be very happy for them if they come back —when you think of that, and then think of what is being asked of us who stay at home, what an Insignificant thing in comparison we do for them, no matter if we do the utmost in our power, we cannot, in a measure do for them what they are doing for us—we can fight at home to pro duce the tilings that will make them the stronger for the fight, and so, when you buy a |SO bond, with your principal safe beyond question, and producing an income, just remember that you are giving some gallant • boy the best gun in the world—the only thing that may save his life. Can you do less than that? This fight must be fought to a finish. HOW LIBERTY BOND MONEY WILL BE SPENT The money derived from the sale of Liberty bonds will be used to equip our men so that it can be fought to a successful finish. Eight billion one hundred million dollars will be expended upon our splendid armies: one billion five hundred million will be expended upon our navy for additional craft to sail the prohibited waters in which the kaiser s undersea assassins operate; i seven hundred)and fifty million dol lars to build a great air fleet, man ned by courageous American pilots, 1 to carry the stars and stripes In ; the air, as we have always carried them upon land and sea; one bll- I lion, five hundred million dollars, or thereabouts, to build a great ' merchant marine, to protect the line of communication between France and America so that our gallant soldiers may never have their base of supplies imperiled, and also to carry the commerce of America, in defiance of the German kaiser. These are some of the uses to which these moneys are to be put. and having provided these funds and equipped our gallant men, on which this fight to a fin ish; let us now listen to those anemic peace advocates who inop portunely talk of peace at this time, when there can be no peace 1 until this issue Is settled right. God knows I want peace as much as any jnan, but J do not want a peace, a premature and immature peace, which would only postpone the time when we would have to fight it out again, probably alone, and when the sacrifices would be infinitely greater than now. This Is our time to strike and strike hard and settle despotism forever. Let us see it to a finish. SOME OF PEACE ADVOCATES nr FAY OF THE KAISER Some of these peace advocates are merely deluded and simple people. Others, and I say it delib erately, are in the pay of the Ger man kaiser, we cannot tolerate men who make arguments at this time which encourage the. German kaiser if It doesn’t straighten you right up and make you feel fine and vigorous 1 want you to go back to the store and get your money. Dodson’s Liver Tone is destroying the sale of calomel because it is real liver medicine; entirely vege table, therefore it cannot salivate or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dod son’s Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work and clean your bowels of that sour bile and constipated waste which is clogging your system and mak ing you feel miserable. I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone will keep your entire family feeling fine for month.®. Give it to your children. It is harmless; doesn’t gripe and they like its pleasant taste. —(Advt.) to fight harder. Rather let the kaiser be discouraged by the knowl edge that wo are going to fight to the death. The arguments of those peace advocates will stab our gal lant boys, in the back while they are fighting German bullets in the front. Ido not believe in compro mising with anemic or deluded American citizens, to the detriment of our country, any more than I be lieve In compromising with the ene mies of our country. If we go forw’ard with resolution, if we let the kaiser understand that America is inflexible in her purpose to restore peace to the world upon the stable bases of justice and right, so that hereafter the weakest nation on earth shall share equally with the most powerful, be protect ed in the exercise of Its just rights so that the will of people shall find free expression, as the will of the people of this great republic Is permitted free expression, If we go forward with that spirit, under the leadership of that indomitable and courageous and far-seeing states man. Woodrow Wilson, we shall end this thing forever, and America’s liberties will never be imperiled again. GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT! 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