Newspaper Page Text
When William Comes Marching Hdmé‘
Yy ach vviiiam womes varching
Lopyrignt, 1916, 3 o » 5
: . &oty by the Star Company. Great Britaln Rights Reserved.
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- — il . - & e - P A LR # r{:‘ oF F ”A" 7/
y ENEER HE allies, England especially,
,‘ are haughty in discussing
' peace.
4G’ They tell the world that
k\ 4 Germany must be beaten to her
L e knees, the German Empire dis
membered and made a thing of the past before
ANy peace can come.
We are not writing to discuss the justice of the
allies’ views, or the justice of the German views,
whiohuyththfmmmemhghnd
must cease to rule the ocean, and in that manner
the entire world.
We write simply to call the attention of Ameri.
cans to a possibility highly important to them.
There is no use, no hope, in talking to the nations
at war,
: 5 -89
Europe is weak, thin and white from loss of
blood.
A:hum«fnlmwnndeonldpm
vide men in tens of millions indifferent to death,
requiring only able leadership to make civiliza
tion, such as we know it, & thing of the past.
Germany is & nation surrounded by epemies.
cut off from food supplies, threatened with
extermination or deepest humiliation as the only
price of peace.
Germany is now in Constantinople, AND CAN
LEAD THE ASIATIC MILLIONS.
Prom Consiantinople to the Central Empires
Germany has a road cleared through the Balkans.
munlutmhnmdayumnyn
the part of the allies to break that road.
Let the hordes of Asia once start westward, and
all that European civilization has accomplished in
ten centuries might become a thing of the past in
ten months.
. . .
l'hmhnlaunq-n,htmy
bave plenty of officers, plenty of fighters of
marvelous execulive power to LEAD and train
the Asiatics.
llch-‘hhu‘hhdhulhl(nt.m
because of misrule, for her rule has been benef.
mmummmmw
despise any ruler from another land.
mmummmmu
march, if she will show the way and provide the
Jeadership .
. . .
mmumunmumm
about The atroclonsness of turming Astic
A Horrible Picture for Civilization—Let the Allies Have It in Mind.
Five Million Asiatics, Led by a Hundred Thousand Germans, Pouring Into
Europe Through Constantinople and the Balkans Would Make a Black Picture
in Civilization’s History. Asia, German Led, May Destroy Civilization in Europe.
America Should Be Prepared for Her Task—Ready to Defend Civilization Here.
barbarians loose upon Europe’s civilization, upon
the women and the children.
This war has proved that there is no step that
m-m»m-mmmumm
will help bring victory.
m:dmmw.mmmdwm
remember, when England was a
-muwanofwmmmmmwu
States a little more than one hundred years b
oudhhtmmutmhm:&
the red Indisns with weapons that they might
.‘l'::had.me:h‘::m' hite
using savages w
“Mhnmmmmyhu
o.day. England was not menaced by a foe over.
flnflhmhfl. She was not shut in from
thu:.. & vicetim of carefully planned starva
N 8
'hlurmwommumu\\
Astatics M:M.uunmflmha
Are not at this planning use, wou
be childish folly.
hl&wfim:“nmhtndwn'm
recognised on either Starvation deliberatel
m-um-m-mm.:.m.{
%mmmm_m
i GTO cO MURDER IS THE RULE.
There is no right, there sno wrong, but thers
o‘zhhmMM
common sefise should make the allies, who
feel that they have Germany less, realize
mmnmmu%m
ummmmmm
successfully carry out.
* . .
hmmm»m
donlhbnnhummummdm
weapons. Cannon, , rifles, dynamite in
e st b e
Are not or
m#mw‘:nmnu e
mmmmm&m
German officers, and its crowd of Aaced
men eager for murder and plunder.
These hordes from Asia will not come as in the
days of Attila, on foot and on horseback, slowly,
wearily, driving their flocks before them, depend
sw‘mlwfinduw
energy and power imm.
Burope in ships and by rail, net tpears,
Copyrlght,‘ 1916, by the Star Company. Great Britain Rights Reserved.
huuu‘dnh.htmmrm.ud
rapid fire guns. . o
This is the that the allies and the
MM&uhMM
uuummmuw-mmm
able peace pref 1o the last desperate effort
10 starve and crush Germany on the part of the
allies, and the last desperate effort to crush
Europe with Asia on the part of the Germans.
France and England have already brought to
lltm“nmbnl‘.m Black men and
-.m‘:mu the French and the
flags, bringing home the ears and the
heads of Germans as of their valor.,
The Prench and the mm?
disciplined savages, men AR control.
UNDISGIPLINED. swvages, ~ border. mntons
savages, A
uncontrollable.
g @ 9
It will do the allies no good 1o say when it is
mmmumwampm
mean the destruction of Oermany as well as the
destruction of the rest of European eivilization
It“th-numu:&:‘npdbmm|
1o Samson that when he dmnthru.n
of the tempile he would be crushed by the falling
lohtvh.hthmwm,
mu—-mmmwm
well-led floods of Astatics would become
when native leaders would overthrow
the Germans, and Western Europe witness the
mmum-whmm
m‘tluztunmmmn
burst in thousands yu::rlul-‘uy
must use the weapons at h
The world needs peace. Every Buropean coun
try needs it. Germany needs it
mmn&mmnmu
ror of Asiatic attacks needs pesce.
B A .4
'omhuumul&mvuu
Europe will do. Our protests are worthless and
wzmmhymmm .
we oan carefully consider WHA
Here we have another civilisation. another
world ruled by white men and white thought
It s our business 1o prepare this country for
Editorial Section Hearst’s Sunday American, Aflanta, January 2, 1916
atlack from every source, from the nations of
hmpo.fro-mm-nolupn.udil
necessary from the whole of Europe overrun by
mmmummww.u
moftnwthmuuoumuhnbuuz
back the floods of Asia.
Only & union of the Germans and the Asiaties
could make Asiatic invasion sucoessful
mutm"-flmymmumw
Ouumtltuc-mmm. We have men
‘oiwul.wiuh-mhmn.-uof
ntelligence.
;:hnmm.
shall we be found PRE
nun“:x{m‘?roflnonrown
or shall_we ‘ound peaceful, ruising,
creatures, as the were found when the
lnfl:- poured black mases in upon
'ondflnu;wnd-nndmw
%?uuu-.mwlmnron
w.dnu' lflphnhoflhmn.:‘out:
sides of us & fghting ground where
enough ships, little, u the
m.u%m.mhmr“a‘b;nm
water, with peed
Mhm“fl'lmnwahx
ON THIS TERRITORY. -
S 5 8
u‘l\t duty s PREPARATION of the right
We should have an army of & quarter of »
million men st least — not an army of idlers and
thu?htnmy of workers,
Rol by Goannd o
men
mumummumm
THEIR LIVING FIVE AND ONE HALF DAYS
A WEEK WORKING FOR THE GOVERNMENT
‘OF THE UNITED STATES ON ROADS
CANALS. IRRIGATING DESERTS AND
I et o ik
. ve ar navy in
mmmnflu,tmo l:y"
Five hundred or a thousand grest ships owned
and built by the people should carry the freight
of the United Btates in times of peace,
On shore they conld have their great guns, and
their gunners wuudfi.
Fast boats on the and rivers, provided
with torpedo tubes in the bow, should the
mails and the mnm—m-l%i
ING-—in time of peace, and in time of war take
off the passengers and the mails, take in a supply
or;b ao“' R Dq::’mm of Aeronautics
o Government
could bring to the an-m. lm‘
the flying machines. machines also
eu‘nthettuvin(min:'::mhfium
spying out the forest , protecting the
property — ready in time of war to meet the in.
coming fleet with a rain of dynamite, at the
same time signaling the submarines and guiding
them to their prey.
2 =
The Post Office of the United States should
be a great engine of defense.
Instead of having thousands upon thousands
of nmh.:c‘kh hmk-:‘ -down, miserable auto.
mobiles wagons, hired atjrandom, the Gov
ernment should a mfifln’ equipment
of m»m machines. These should
carry the mails in the big cities; smaller, swifter
machines should carry the mails in'the country.
All of these machines in time of need could have
the mail box removed and substitute for it rapid
fire guns and a few good fighters,
- - -
The defonse of the United States SHOULD
BE AS OREAT AS THE WEALTH OF THE
UNITED STATES : < <d
Our energies on the ocean, carrying of our
trade. should represent the greatest navy in the
world,
The work of our Oov{orumn-tb.:. of
roads, the draining of swamps, :
of our desert land —should keep busy the )
army of rumuc soldiers that the world has ever
seen, well :ud. fighting ta“mlfi}
m JO . ’\;’a
The United States should be able to say:
-~mznmwmummx
“"Let the hatred of those white men blinded
murder lead to their extinction by the
men of Asia if they must,
“But we shall be mmfi
men trained, with and weapons to main.
tain civilization on the earth, and to do here in
the West what Europe did when civilisation van.
" tion ;
"o fem e it
from the of the Middle Agm
came civiliration to Western Europe. [
To day Western Europe's civilisation s
ened with extinetion. v
“h‘:.th duty of the vm-llu-u:' » men
u1.m..1‘ lh‘.“ ’ .
did for the civilization of the whole world whe