The Post-search light. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1915-current, October 17, 1918, Image 3
The Enemy Is Watching
By NEWTON D. BAKER, Secretary of^War ",
The supreme moments of our struggle with
Germany have now come.
We have carried our first armies across three
thousand miles of ocean and joined the issue
of battle with the military power of a nation
that has been for forty years preparing its
plans and its weapons for its present attempt
to dominate the world. We have had to put
forth an immense effort and spend a fabulous
sum in order to make, in so short a time, an
adequate beginning for our gigantic task.
But it is only our beginning. We must follow
it with greater energy and support it with
increasing power. Men, munitions, ships and
supplies must go to Europe in a larger and larger
stream. We must redouble our blows and add
constantly to the strength of those blows, if
our initial effort is not to be wasted.
This Means That Our Fourth Liberty Loan Must Be Larger
Than Its Predecessors, More Enthusiastically Sup
ported and More Quickly Than Ever Subscribed
The enemy is watching anxiously for the
first sign that we are faltering.
Our Government Loans should go “over the
top” as eagerly as our soldiers do, in order- to
carry with them the terror of furious attack.
Our dollars must rain upon the enemy as over*
whelmingly as our hail of bullets or our storm
of shells.
We are fighting for the liberty of the world,
for the triumph of our ideals of democracy and
self-govermrient over the last great advocate of
force upholding injustice. We are buying with
our Liberty Loans the security and joy of our
people for generations to come. No price could
be too high to pay for such a victory—no cost
too great for such a purchase.
Lend the Way Our Boys Fight—To Your Very Utm
This Space Contributed to Winning the War by
Bainbridge State Bank. The Citizens Bank. First National Bank. Bainbridge Grocery Co. $££
Bainbridge Commission Co. Maddox Grocery Co. Callahan Grocery Co.