Newspaper Page Text
I‘l ]
’ N S ——— L——
S ———————
e e —
e ——————————————————
;31X SRE M y -
44 3 : “—_fi———_ ¥
- PR ! - RGy e
3 i Y
% \ .|&) vSR “
) - 2> - N LW
b i y%gY e’ i ——— R
4 s e Ry,
-. y g.4AOSI eRS > . e 9
:A} 2 e, A ’ < PR l{:n-,’,0,‘,;- o Covyrigl AT
%7) y R Pt Iyl 7GI ght, 1915
~ ‘ e - T —_— ¥
.: ] [ s Tt S PRI Star C e ———
ei : f ”"e\ v, | P - i *-v?‘-':: s "ri.’ /’,‘//‘../‘ '\'?’3‘-:' P q Camhpany, ;
. R . iy, /3PR0074 Zz ST Great :
b; p . > OGP gaoe 7 S Britain
) i ¢v4Gik 2gS . 2 -.'—,‘:x,'c‘—_,\ Rights R
3 -S e e «l’u”.—'w-.-/-f:::'z?‘ 7e - \ leserved
: iy = D iR NIR s \ .
‘ . L RS “ s 744 ,’7"f—“'-'-‘:i;.""r"« 7z SO R—g ey
X- . i -; B I zffl’f,’”i;’;y AR B‘-""?.-‘9«' //"S, AANS SN LeS SR
; g)i ! g SEY By XA 73 28 7Mx4 K """""’" RO evN ) N ‘::Q"-““‘ .‘:‘.'V:&"":‘“ % -“——M_
| gield ¥ReN SN NG —_—
* .4RNoIRT S.S\ O R - SRR Aiy T 3
x ¢ ) - . ; ""-'.4‘;;«7‘,:.’,: :,';.' 5 -l’f,"f ";;;’:'o“?:{:'}:3's&‘%\\;\\% \\ N INN ARy '-.-.v,:; .-;:«-;’;‘,Jn."g;:g»‘i;,;f;.;‘w y ’
; v 3 RIAL/4PkROXA .GSR o m 5
e R p;|ii ei e /,12',-.;.{',,3&:;;;:::-.;@» NA o -Rl :':’-"*'\“-'.‘Il"~~33~:3;;=-§ e
v: e 2eAeygLkTRS o;O L e S
2, : S It AN S O )Bs PR >
i ’ Nv N Feaal -——:—‘:‘:&“&S S \;\~ NS OO s 0 ?‘.-.;;_,::.:ZrQ PR ¥ % T
% - =Aes™\S-2 >—FA e e — e
= #= RS :—""“"fiflm RRR S g ':‘—-'.a S ———/ >—oo e R P
.! ) ’ .B-~ . o>OT: ST o A eTR
/ , ese S N e
Wbl tg ¥ Pty S . ‘.“ff‘_"’—l;;_jfi___, e~ LN e c‘*::-\\ RS iSteo T74L 7/ =———— e
’¢,Y&Bv7 Pe. e SN -c-.\\\‘-.sr:‘-:r,s*}-» sR%t AR I - — ——— e -
;<aß R >BBAN Te N ~‘~'}--*~‘\‘~;-.‘?~_lel‘».-€:~‘~::’— —— RS gTSA2 ) - iX=t—— ‘ =
[->Bo,TNG PotP P s \Q\\\i}\\, RRs- Sy T BoR TS S2NA A e g S I’:7-—;«_____;._"l— 3
)43, é . |4Sih, Ne o ~.’—“:-*-‘.':'--"-’.~‘~r--"-‘-“.?l'.ssii‘ AN .S\‘?v-l\;‘ es w Smmers ‘\\\\‘\;“'-‘--7!’ SBS 5P =;s=§'3:‘:‘: XeL - < \ ey % —
gSN aty »_.g.“....-- b e NRN —a —_— — oSR e 2 e s &; gt > ! - 2 —
‘ p A%‘ el -&‘ 4% -.5-,._,“‘.;.:.._,:,._: SRt e ’-.‘\’\‘“§ NRs =S - _:‘;‘{% e o “'fi‘j"fi’-’&z"""?’ 7" P #%}' — T
o"..AR oRt PRI ey eeR RS o -"3'-‘:\l-s.\‘!‘*» 3Ave —e 2 :-:.-_\¢;‘~ e - -\= e —
3 v2ikTßi B¥Mo N R ~PRAEUI LN—\~e <ee R A - -, & ——— Q —
MY W£sßa b \ Wby SeRB, RNt B USRS R »:s‘;¢3:\‘{§">»'? RN :Se S — Sees s s- \ / —————— —_—
GgT2DR RS S e SishEee Se== R SSy _——
P -gL2 b MRS STR AN R ~.:::‘~s-~~»;;'—‘-: eo —— T- s - .e — -- S -
eB:TLRG g‘rb O g .".\ RN e gregiiive: ‘s"3;l“:\"s“\\‘\ > \\‘\‘“c.t_‘\ :;fi—"‘» -eoR4 =1 Sy ——— =—— -~
s siSR GR e b SRR e==ST se — iS = . _——————
iIRD, 1 SNiIRYIBTeMg esPR e == :‘f‘*"‘? SYs iS e R TLE KT —_—— SS — ve =
?7ltstß ST BYo FNEL RM¥’ s ¥'\ iy EREESS Be X S -«.S-f:‘—:‘:-’.:-;?-.:r —— ePP PKL A(=S p e — P ——————
gt 1 SIS TSgWTRS,ANRARTBGyTe T=Ri,eee — S — R s — =——i ST -
Rl 2 -._..., IR TN RN TA i eSN ST P, S i o o 53;:‘-. REEK R~ = . e== — T»:-?:é;_f--.
RSy & Soaraion Ro8" .R 0 AR Se, _‘_n_: TR ONbooW'~— gLRe e v I ___._—,-:-_ =eRS 2 SRR g - o~ - o——=—— ie —
GBS 20 e ~‘* R R R(. e O Ao, NS AA P ;’——*—‘:’;.'.—_‘-.5&1‘:‘%?;:5-9—.3‘ ALK /’? eSN ——— —— = - —_—— e s— — 3
NRBT eR AR OGO N RS 3\RR eT S see M T ~m‘..-:,‘f,—_:-,—_»,q,-=‘:; R \Q;:fi,{g;} —=Sa SSee e——
e R SRR AN SR pSRSTO Ney = e O -et -=~Re2-e =RLe a e £ PSS S e e — —~— B —
s RSty SRNS,SNSN RASs R s R o\'R~RL .\ g = ie R —-'T_;’r'_,o_\:—:fl“f'—' ;“:"2 - e (ot —e—e ee e e
S(SN DD WEER AN h, iey vV R\ S PR ek e SReSBe Ay 3e = :J»—‘.‘\:?";---“‘,l ::,v_x-.'sé-fi:‘:?:oj:»..,é\i.,\ et =g e —— e
R/‘ i s . R D). &@ \ \,\ i e NN, B S > S BEN G St B Bt oR AR N Teas = e === ——— S ——— =
SR vSA O ~ g - ; \)g N S s-~= e e s~ "e o S —js _“" ‘_?“— e.,PRS<‘— —S—— —— e —
/'“< :-.3.-...-.;.'5'-.;-,'-."--:-::'.r;::.-'. — . x> = N\ A\ \EE AR % St e eSgeo ey SR fi"'u:;‘:‘\-‘\:‘?‘ff:& = "-:»i' e ee — —_—
GYe, ST ORI, '-'.:::.‘-L‘f..'"l—.‘,‘- ~ S—-% iy X e oyl gsd o et gSPP=ga5 SR L X ettt T3e=ole iee ™ — e
e FRa ST N ; =_— &« )T T G == :"-‘"«-‘—"“:_'i‘ SgST T ‘-"—'f'-f“"’—“’—’::"""":—"":; Re e .
AeT O T gis TLT = . B —t—et > — =e-2-g 3-X Ry -
70 ge 5 } * 4 e eeg=itASSet AR See T et
TR TN SVs R . \*»&: 7 B e =Teey——iLgS ieesv R e = e
x;fi ~‘,"a--' - = K\E;:J .x> NS ===eSee eeSo T S 3 ‘“"""’*.._;-——-,:—-—_;%_:
eSVTAN S" ¢ AR M SR e = 3 EE———— e =
FH AR et eDN = - SRR We,igYe see S e SeEEsw
Ae m — ———— AN eePABSYiIR ST == s— —=
T-s 35 e ""‘-‘.‘.:-:-.&.-;:; ], SN =" 7AN ~ ro “‘ b ";—_;:’-;‘ i, 000 o> =Sk IsS== >e e =
L “‘r e](o SR S YR vT e E \'s: TR seß="-g -Se — ey '~i
e= e NN SN e~ BSos N= e =
SpanyE e raa e I N\ AN -\\\\ oy A*o -P = 3 N
pRgB .3 & | \\ T P" ~ e »SR SRR e ————
sst G e AN Vil )= .— L rtase
"*L’"‘:"‘fif-«' =oetTy Sl — ‘ { \ \ 3al W GRS \3-ee T 2 ==
PT ) R 111 A dast] = . — - ~;.)*,,/” bl s
SByg% g BCAEe 3s, / ) LY/ 'ARPF\ 3SR = i
,".—;,/" eL ; T /) I/ \ Wl o W\ >g z 7
oo . = ~>7‘ B 1 \ \ V. o / AR -LN 5T i
RRB sS ) / Y A / W\ AN := 2 o
-l 5. B~J - | /// A 2 sae \R’i =b Z .
- _*,"‘l;"_’-‘ 5, TNy , \Wy 7 9 Vo LA \\X o- 5 ;\,.,45;:: =
-4, P 2 g ~ s ¥ \ \ = .; =
sLypr>3 Ty ) S J AR BT W\ (e -Z S
eE2& e. . st P-,AN =R =
TX = = —_—— =iy -1 g ffi’;',",;i’ii; cal \. \ \ ~;\\ XN\\ ==Ta 7, - ’./jv/_:j;/‘/.
PAT £ s < / AR \AR R —_— : P X
= o —_— ~ S 3 11% .1;«.;-:7,' AR \NNRN \ C—? -L S
s=s2] —/ ¢ = - 2 & A ben ey [W\'\NN \< = 2
R / Ve o J..0a...v R\\\ <— 7
e ’ ' ToR\NN TR =
= = ~ N = UARe\ :\ \ N= =
b = < 2 iARB 1 \ W\ N‘- .- =
v-)Ne -Z§ f 1 "',“ XXX o ’c‘f,.".l;r_‘f» :‘.-;‘3‘. "y 3\\SN.X “<2 - - ///4,1,,/
e— - i e..L F- ¢ 1 No A «,4;,,-,;,-.-,‘:--'_;,4..-'.l 3X \ \>"y =
=T “=-// %> H < o ~gfiffi" A ;.'..r',-,‘,.“_r,, N, ¥{& . =
.= S o <= = | OO " "4"‘.':"."." Bt \.¥ AMg NZ= =
-- - e ~ - }ks fi/, ¢ ;)-::,y' Aooy < N ¢\ NE‘N ==
¢g. — - A " ASy ,‘dr, s -N\& N\ - =
= — “ %’.&”‘ o\: <R N NZR De, = Z
.- R i - <il . y 1 S 7 ,“.1_ (‘,;',v_‘:g.,._',f \-\LRI B~ %v s 7
~ - i o ~_.-e-.z'-i_’_:;'."_ .R TR eANPPeg -5\ 7
-~ ~ - | % ,:':,,.-,,‘,-.7-,-'.3'--‘---* R N=-3 2As {‘- .f\£— vUI
4 \ — < TA S e Koscs \\N=.<2 C-A . a 0
\\ > .;‘»’,,-,';‘-'-‘-7_:"".‘—'; o P ‘.',-_t'.’,,;.mf',".';'."'. PR ¥ &=e L . A2h o-iy < ]
\ ——IN g r _--,'9’.'-."'»":25.'.":1‘- eA = -"";*,'.,'{'}’.:’-'";-‘ ‘-( WA t NN\ _— ———— =~ ?*Olih=s i. kg
'.'.-,-»-:'..-'_&'4:'. RPRE g \ \ ——— :i7N Yv ‘
\ -4«5?,::;333_?33:5;};"1""."—‘".'“"{"""' - .A:‘,-"';'.‘_. s, ~-_,',:’.'- L;- (VL / ™ A ‘.f" —ey5VS >y ¥ :'s o -
TPR R A ety tg AAR 5 ‘}\ fi =WAA *g 3
. , -:z'-:-.-;s'-ff.'.".’:"""wz'.’s‘.'-;',:'.i-'--;;.-...a-f*,'?;-w 3gik4T X v A ¢ it/ IV |Ny
’ By e e -',1...’H1,;.~-.- TP AT TGy o L —_—— v Y- ’
o ‘' (. LA PO AR eM'T g L IpREG . 3 de{S =A »
P Ny §"- :g;,.-;,::ge,fl_,.,g;:-._j;-,.;,-_.:-m‘,._,/_,:-;.'_:..-.;-~_";;.)._;-,,.,..-...-,,,._-,-,-.,;., oet3{.\iy—|\ Ss{3 Wt
" X e ’:‘;";‘}/’, {,v,,)}fé'.fv,f; (i iR Tio! hi A\ === 5= Sl \F‘ =& L ~=t7h TN
> e Atk AR eSA § \ — ———— e-1S -< o
-' et A ff;’?‘fl vg'l"‘ oStARRNI X\‘ a 0 —=eS|} 1§ " 4 -fl. g
¢ » RAL e -v;..f.‘t,‘,,;;;oi"&'-.-‘-":‘.im'-"f.fil-""-ff.-.-f'-:':"v.'-:f- \h2 A v " e~ == >[l| 2it
& 9% 2=SKXSV!PR TAP\ 4 i &."Ty— %L.~— ‘
, (%a) o A Mvmfr:':'" i Yo = —iy
» oy Lo TARevAy sl 4 -s¥ {2 =. 2 N
. 7L 6“*:'-':'""‘ *,%-.r.;. :{{,’-,'"",";ifl};v'"fi.j};x}{;.ss‘?,".':"./’.‘.»"%:.‘.. 7 \'r;" g‘}vf"‘ A 4 o ~dBT £2 5 3
~' LA Ayt 1 7 "x'.. TR L .ry,-...‘, oy VB i 2 al fy= v 7 o e
| Yo Pt o ERIH IART TAN y9ee o/ Bi} e
SeYiRLIA sAL o \ VW /) <
, , sy ;?f:*w,‘;a PN % v, £ 5 ¢oo
z . ¢ eA R ;‘..’A" iz, SYo 4otey ‘ =
N W\ KA AL o 5 :i ,'.'."f"';’.’ 3 L") ity TUHR NTN ¥Yx - e
¥ FA - v "-"'}"'r BYAAIR L O fl)z’}, N K)ot 3-X X =
! Y . 34% (IR Mgy Vi ¥ \ { 11ty A - =
} {e - 7""WAAR s 7 » S "";g;n},, i " [il“’-‘ >ARW\T ¥> —
a - ) (R egt7iF !A W B "(1 SN =. — e
e 8 ¢A A 7 3 &, 2 o .0t AN Y 1 i P \ rSNT ——
AT N’ 7 ¢ 7o) VO < J 1 =
; R (Al ~ok -PR b~v Z =
; 3 : B\ Oit ] ‘ : 0> el 2, \ \\\ 3L 7l 1y =
f [ i W \PAI AT .i A/ %.‘,}\, Ot \ » \ '=)
4 og ‘ X yRO N \A e
-t ] \\\ . 10 J 4 v/ 1 s .‘-"‘.-“.}' S\ R . 2 L\ 4-’ — s
a { R . @Yr Nv/ ~ NS| "N 2 \\a - A~
\ (TRERA Y | g 2(T < / L NSo Y \ \«RX —\ - ~ .~ e
» : y¢lA=) A-- i » o\\ X 3 S \‘\_‘\ ot \-‘ Ao
r, .io)IR!”eN/"Y|i =NBNTS> W (Y i
v 7 ’i.,'1.,‘.,‘ )U Z . J o N\ ¢ I‘..?\ ¥x=2 N e ‘\\‘. J .
3 -At VAR | e / i { b o ULy N|A TR 7
TR WL v ii 4 oA NS:i e! S
e PAR)NIi,. R;P g e ~
i Yso < 4 L, A4NS Y L7,X. .
= A; TR ‘f,"s"."»"~”/\" \ \ ) A"7 e~ S
; A.%L SO G )v. 7 . < N{‘ s»~P . S
: f"/ 2 i "lk x\ ‘)’ 4 N < : X " S o ‘“'&s 2~0"‘ : )"‘ A'l - .
» |W ' § wal {/ : ¥ XDt %/7\ No O =
¥ / / CR A\ \ely i Yk « # i\ Too { -
-i AN LR /) |(R / XWy<7 N /) =oL W
\ ‘)\_\ 4| 4 = » 11 A
o - ’’ \ ‘ Y g .| i \\. RS N <i t \/flfi fi‘_x._ /,’.“’
7] o . . - v Nghdg -A~= o
¥Pb ’ r A .'8 - S
J i =Y \ \‘:‘fl/q“ Tw
4/ » %
4 Ls T g % 3 -
&- - -
- - : 31
¢ ,11/ 7/ =' T .y
4 /4 4— - ‘/ :’ -5 —4‘ X.‘
¥e< - -
/ ¢ .\ /‘ - . < >
Sl PR Y&5 R -
3 % Y - :—i";
é,: & MAN:
S
**Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and
1t doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we
know that when He shall appear we shall be like
Him; for we shall see Him as He is.”
: L. John, iii., 2.
HERE is one kind of war that honors
e B men engaged in it. That war will
iifi ‘?L continue hundreds of centuries
© @q hence, when the miserable wars of
3 murder, of man against man, shall
. have been forgotten.
The good war is the war against
Nature's power—against deserts, swamps, poisonous
reptiles, disease germs and even the vast spaces that
separate our planet from knowledge of the real
universe,
In the beginning man, with a sharp flint fastened
at the end of a stick, fought wild beasts and snakes
—fighting his brother at the same tine.
Later man ventured out upon the sea, braving
the waves and the mystery of the ocean. The
Phoenicians, Jews, were the first to venture out of
sight of land; that was real courage and rea! war.
To-day men kill, fight their brothers, murder
children, committing every crime in the name of
glory. But they have risen steadily to a higher
plane of war against the real enemy—Nature's
power. Those capable of understanding progress
and history can see, even through the smcke of
battle and beyond the statistics of murder, a day
when the earth shall know no war except the honor
able war of mind against brute matter.
e & @
During the ages while men have been building
monuments of bronze and marble to murderers,
marking boundaries of battlefields, teaching children
in schools that history is made up of battle, blood
and war dates, the real and honorable war for which
man was intended has gone on.
Italian peasants, living on the slope of Vesuvius
and defying death, have fought the war to which
they are the common soldiers.
The scientists who riske ' their lives descending
into the craters of volcanos to study and warn the
people have been officers in the war,
A great battle for humanity was won when,
ages ago, primitive savages with irrigating ditches
brouncht water from a distance to their fields.
It Is the War of Man Against the Forces of Nature. Galveston Is the Bat
tlefield To-day.
Egypt, Where the Nile Was Congquered; Holland, Where Dikes Were Built by
Men, Controlling the Sea; the Terraced Hills of China, Venice Built on the Marsh
---All Those Are Conquests of the Real and Only Good War. :
The Chinese, with their terraced hillsides pre
serving the soil and defeating the destructive
effects of rain, were warriors more admirable than
any Waterloo murderer.
The men that established Venice on the swamps
and marshes are the ancestors of the oldest noble
line in Europe, older than any Hapsburg or other
royalty.
They were men fleeing to the swamps to escape
the ‘‘justice’' that meant torture. There, where it
was thought no man could live, where none could
follow, they built huts on sticks at first, and finally
the most beautiful city in the world, and the earth's
great commercial empire. That was war worth
while. \
e & ¢
While Venice was still a salt marsh breeding
mosquitoes in the Adriatic, while England was the
home of savages where no Roman had ever been
for tin or slaves, before Italy or Greece was heard
of except as a mild climate for bandits, savages and
cannibals, the Egyptians, controlled by priests that
were engineers and used the name of God to compel
obedience, were fighting the great war against the
force of Nature,
They measured the rise of the water, distributed
and utilized the flow of wet mud that meant crops
and ife. Because they understood the war against
water, the control of the great Nile River, they vuilt
an old and wonderful civilization with its wealth of
monuments and palaces all based on the river mud.
& & @
Real battles of the world were fought and won
by the men who lived at the mouth of the Tigris and
Euphrates. While the men “‘high up'’ raided and
murdered each other the little people were kept
working as common soldiers in the real war
* cditorial and @ity Cife Section of Hearst's Sunday American, Htlénta, September 1915
The’ brutality of man, his love of murder, his
hatred of useful work, are illustrated in the story of
one old king. After conquering and killing he
wanted to do something useful. He wanted to divide
the waters of a great river that they might fertilize
many acres of land, instead of washing soil out to
be lost. But he dared not insult the men of his
army by saying that he wanted them to do USEFUL
WORK. His favorite war horse had been drowned
in the rushing water. He told the soldiers that that
must not happen again, and they agreed with him.
8o he set them to work digging many narrow canals
to carry the water in many different directions. And
they worked heartily that there might be no more
accidents to the horse on which the king rode to his
murders, They would not have worked if the king
had explained to them that he was using them to
make lands fertile and life happier.
Kings were necessary in those days, for usually
they were the most intelligent and thus became
leaders. They were useful then, as they are vilely
detrimental now.
e & @
History, as it is usually written, tells only of the
battles in which one bandit leader of savages or
king of a great nation murdered others to get their
property. In days to come all such matters will be
grouped briefly under one heading, and history will
deal with the real war of the world—man's fight
against cold and heat, floods, earthquakes, fire and
lightning, superstition and IGNORANCE, the worst
smemy of all,
Children will be taught that the day when a man
brought the lightning down to the earth to be used
by man was far more important than the date of the
taking of Constantinople or the battle of Waterloo
They will be taught to celebrate the day when
Atilla was defeated and slain, ‘ because it was a
battle, but because it meant t¥ European intelli
gence then held back Asiatic_barbarism.
They will learn that the day when Columbus sailed
to conquer the ocean saw the beginning of the great
est victory in our history.
They will look with reverence not at the fort of
Gibraltar, but at the dikes of Holland, which stand
for man’s conquest of the ocean; at the Suez and
the Panama canals, which are monuments to man's
dominion over the earth,
Very small will seem the battles of crowned mur
derers, the ‘‘glory’’ of uniformed cutthroats eager
for conquest. Those soldiers that defend-d their
land and their brothers against unprovoked attack
will be honored as brave men, and all others looked
upon as criminals, whose deeds are no more im.
portant to humanity or worthy of respect than the
records of the prison death house.
“a s 08
More and more men will realize and pay tribute
to the glory of those engaged in the real ."ar.
The battle and the victory of San Francisco will
be honored, and children told how the courage of
man rose above isaster, conquered earthquake and
fire, rebuilt the great city, and added to it with in.
credible rapidity another city of wonder, of beauty
and of education—the great Exposition,
Children studying the map of the United States
will have pointed out to them as a glorious battle.
fleld the place where stands the city of Galveston.
They will be told how the men of that city fought
courageously against the ocean's power, building
their great sea wall and robufldlns it, holding Nature
in check, defying her in spite of death and storm.
e & @
Long a7o the ancient writer told us:
“He that is slow to anger Is better than the
mighty; and he that ruleth his spirit than he that
taketh a city.”-——Proverbs xvi., 32.
The farmer who digs a ditch to drain a swamp
that breeds malaria, or to make the wet spots in his
field fertile, is a better man and more useful infinite
ly than nine-tenths of all the heroes that history de
scribes.
The doctor who does his work fighting pestilence
in the hospitals, risking and suffering death in his
experiments with the yellow fever, smallpox and
diseases more dreadful, stands far above the famous
d’Auvergne, who continued shouting to warn his
comrades while the Englishmen drove their bayonets
into his body. He, too, was brave, for he was de
fending his brothers, and the French do well to
honor him. But his courage was not that of the
man who without hope of glory gives his life to sci
ence, and it was infinitely below that of the mother
who goes patiently and without complaint through a
life of toil and poverty for the sake of her children.
e& o :
There are many glorious battlefields on the sur.
face on this globe, but they are not the fields where
men have fallen murdering each other,
There is but one glorious war, and it will go on
through the ages, through thousands and millions
of centuries—the war of man to make the earth his
own; to change the deserts into gardens, the swamps
into fertile lands, the forests into beautiful w
and humanity into a race of brothers. -
"It hath not yet been shown what we shall be,"
indeed. We shall be the rulers of this earth, and
the earth a habitation worthy of thinking men,
worthy of an intelligence able to fight against
Nature,
And the war will not stop here. It will not be ooz
fined to the earth. It will spread out into space;
will conquer the great distances that separate u
from older planets in our solar system. o
We shall talk with them, learn from them, g
children learn from their elders. We shall “"h.
mean, superstitious, shivering, terror.stricken ores.
tures, crouching before the lightning and the
thunder, walking in degrading fear of hell-fire or of
the next flood.
But we shall be MEN, real conquerors of the earth,
possessing real knowledge. Then ‘‘ye shall know
the truth, and the truth shall make you fres **