Newspaper Page Text
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English Writer Warrs of Revolu
. ' ' '
tion if President's Terms Are
Not Accepted.
*
By ARNOLD BENNETT,
One of the Foremost Writers on Pub.
lic Opinion in Great Britain
LONDON, JYan. 22 According 1o
fGreat Britain's official statements, she
‘#tands for trying the ex-Kaiser, muk
Ing Germiany pay, clearing all Ger
mans out of Britaln and a better
Britain for ali
You will notice that a better Bri
gain for all runs last
The two mai items of the mreat
and statesmaniile cheme are
trying the Kalser and making Gep
'W)fln} pay the whole cost of the war
wWith the expulsion of all Germansg as
s good third by ‘
* You will digscover, as soon as the
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J e —————
o Nowadays when the doctor 18 try
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¥ & rew question to aek, “How's .\»fifir
v teeth?” Becauge it is being realized
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S Amsuspected and without causing pain
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urry to a reliable dentist and have
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ngecumn You ean have this done at
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The others, aceording to the rules, are to be published one §
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on the Sunday following a recapitulation of the entire list will §
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Following this a coupon will be printed in all the Hearst :
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the contest, - <
coalition actually et to work, that
the conlition doe nos in fact tand
for thesc fir ideal It i A 8 certain
' inything can be In international
politic that the Kalser will not be
tried He may be punished, and I
hope he will, hbut he will not I::- gen
ulnely tried The 18ading codlition
ists know a vell as anybody, and
thi always did Mow, that he ean
not e genutinel tried
Further, it is absolutely certain that
1l Germans will not 'be expelled fTh
Britain Nor half of them, nor a
quarter of_them, nor a tenth of them,
And the leading eoalitionists know
this too ‘
Thirdly, it is abhsolutely ce .z:qinth:n(‘
Germany will not pay the whole .:.4(1
of the wat Avd the leading coall-|
tionists were always well aware le.l
by DI
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AEARST'S SUNDAY AMEKiGAN — 4 Newspaper Tor Feople W hno PR b DUnirh . amidh -vk
thére was never any hope of com
pelling her to do so.
Despite the fantastie calculations of
our coalitionist financiers, it will take
Germany all her time to pay for the
mere civil damage she has done in
the countries aclually invaded by her
and for the ships she has unlawfully
and wantonly sunk, \
In international politics what does
our coalition stand for?
~ Nobody hut the high “priests of
‘wire-pulling ¢an positively tell. Ney
crthelefs, by n process of reasoning
one may perhaps arrive at some
ugeful copelusion,
That prosess of reasoning must be
«in by a guestion: Why has the Pres
ldent of the United States come to
lurope? In doing so he has broken a
frecedent that has never before been
broken In.the whole Mstory of his
country,
Moreover, /it is “eredibly reported
that he came to Europe with his jaw
set, full of tremendous determination,
and armed with an ultimatum.
Surely this historiec journey and
this stern attitude are very strange,
seeing that only a few months ago
the fourteen points of a peace basis
epunelated by him were, with one
doubtful exception, warmly acclaimed
by the whole world as just and prop
er and desirable and the omly firm
foundation for a lasting concord 'of
nations! @t
Surely there was no need for ‘!m
to leave Ameyica in order to insist on
points which everybody was gager to
accept! Wi
| Why? '
~ Then why did he come?
The sole credible answer to the
quentlnnt that, after the overwhelm
ing Allied victery, the Allies zlere no
longer 80 ready as before to accept
his fourteen points of even-handed
Justice, and that little by little, under
the influence of the selfish passions
aroused by conquest, some of the Al
lies have ahowr"-lm\p of an intention
to throw over some of the essentlu!
fourteen points,
1f this is not so, if the President is
not afraid for the safety of his four
dteen points, then his wisit is mean
‘ingless, But the President is not a
man addictad to meaningless #ets,
~ The Fourteen Points, .
And one may reason further,
One may ftairly argue, from Mr.
Wileon's pregence in Europe, that not
merely have some of the Allies aban
doned mmeé'g the essential fourteen
points, but t Great Britain herseif
fourteen points—those very points
upon the faith of which Germany lai
down her arms.
For, If the United States and Great
Britain stood absolutely shoulder to
Shoulder about the peace. terms, there
would be no cause for either the
United States or Great Britain to
woryy. The rest of the world would
‘fall Intg line and trowble wounld be
eliminated. ¢ ’
* Here 1 reach the last link of fay
chain of reasoning, - which is that]
since the coalition represents @Great
Britain, the coalition does not stand
for President Wilson's fourteen
points,
. My reasoming may be wrong,
I hope it is; for I am convineced
that if the President fails to get all
Fhis main points at the peace confer
ence and retires baffled, revolution
throughout Europe will bé*the out
come, |
“The fourteen points are the only
possible bulwark against revolution
and general sanguinary idioey.
And ‘as aIP coalitionists are not ut
terly blind, and as. no cc;.ulluonlsti
really wants revolution, T trust that
even If the coliation is now faithless
to the ‘fourteen points (g 8 I suspect
it to be) it will before ‘many weeks
are ovep discover powerful reasons
for amending its way and persuading
other allieg to dd likewise, |
You m:, ask: Why nho:lld Presi-.
dent Wilson, representing the United
States, have a sounder notion than
the Huropean Allies of what the basis
of peace ought to he? . |
The Buropean Allies are, after all,
more experienced in international
polm? than any grotp of men in
Ameriga. You may say that the ar
gument that President Wilson is an
exceptionally great man is not a good
argument, He may or may not be.
And, in any ecuse, great men have
often proved very wrong.
If Germany Had Won, |
I agree with you, ’ |
I wauld notv invite Eurdpe to bow
to Rresident Wilson's views luurvl)”
because he may be a great man., But,
frst, I would remind you once murt-'
that a short wlile ago we were 6- |
thusiastic for President Wilson's views
(with one eXception that has yet to
be cleared \IA\).
And, second, T would ‘urge that the
real reason for listening to America
is not that America is especially the
receptaclie of eternal wisdom, or thull
American eitizens are archangels to
whom gelfish motives are unknown.
I do not imagine that Americans
are a bit less human and self-seeking
than our poor European selves, \{N
I suspeet that if the United States
were situated in Eurepe, Americans
would display exactly the same Jack
of vision and the same narrow ego
tistic astingts as Furopean countries
are now likely to do.
No! Tha real reason for listening to
Amerfen. is that she happens to he
tisinterested, and is,.therefsre, a bet:
ter judlge of the vast problems before
vs than as Kuropean nation—for no
European is distinterested, X
I do not coneur with those who as~
sert that the United™ States entered
the war exclusively from an unselfish
desire to pea_justice estahlished, .
She, of eourse, had such a desire;
but she had an interest,
It was decidedly her interest that
Germany should net win, If Gérmany
bad won the United State wnnld'
without question have been fhn next
object of Germany's gragious military
attentions, and she ‘would have beenl
s cstireiveingr el iy
\
f SEVENTY-TWO NORTH BROAD n
-0 & :
Bsvt s s B 4 » s b " i
s = & ;.0...1. gy $i
e R 2 E
Morrison Says- Employers Dis
charge Men, Rehiring Them
at Pre-War Pay.
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Jan, 25—Frank
Morrison, secretary of the American
Federation of Labor, told the Interna
tlonal News Service that ever since
the armfistice was signed employers
“in various parts of the country have
been discharging their workers and
rehiring them at prewar wages, pro
forced to prepare on a huge scale ac
cordingly.
But now that Germany is broken,
she United States has no interest
whatever sgve the interest of lasting
and universal peace,
She i 8 not afraid for her frontiers
No members of her race are sub-
Jects of other countries. Buffer statea
mean nothing to her. She has no old
scoresy to wipe out, And emphatical
ly she does not want a penny from
anybody toward her war costs,
That is why President Wilson
should be listened to, and why his ad
vice should. be followed by all Furo
pean pations,
All whe plume themselves upon pos
session of common sense should re
member daily and hourly that Allied
Kurope today is full of the notions of
arnexations without consulting the
pecple to be annexed, ofscohscription,
of armaments, of secret diplomacy, of
strategic frontiers, of balance of pow
er and of punishments by means of
overwhelming indemnities and by
means of commercial ostracism. That
is to say, AlMed Europe is full of.
suspicion and of revenge and of scorn
of a league of nations, |
These things, howeyer much they
may appeal to our momentary feel
ings, can only lead to more war, Presu‘
ident Wilson saw that, and all these
things are ruled out by his fourteen
points, which are based on Ihe idea of
calm justice, backed by faith ard gond‘
will, It is therefore the duty of every
citizen who believes in “the ultimate
efficacy of faith and good will to sup
port firmly the attitude of President
Wilson, . :
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pihde i oINS Rk b <
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[. F . C - ;
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! Enliven Bait |
Ԥ nliven Bait |
) (By International News Service.) ‘
; INSTED, CONN., Jan, 25—
\X} How Kerney Haywood suc- ‘
‘ ceeds in catching 'blf strings 5
‘ of fish threugh the ice when ¢
( others fishing \ln the samegwaters ‘
7 and using the same kind of bait fail
{ has long been a puzzle to local fish- ¢
! ermen. ] |
‘$ Movel by the prospects of a dry ¢,
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of his success. In the pail of water
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¢ little John Barleycorn. The spirits ‘
| make his bait more lively than
shiners and chubs_used by others, 5
‘( Haywood explained, and . the- pike,
‘§ bass and perch can not h‘lp but ‘be ¢
‘ attracted. g
/ -
} moting tUnrest, 1.-W..W.-ism and Bola
shevism.”
l Whether or not he believed this is
the result of a concerted movement or
;c;mspiracy. Morrison would not say.
. “T have information from the heads
of several international unions,” More
rison said, “that employerg in various
parts of the country are discharging
their interest not 1o aid this element.”
reapply for'work at the prewar scale.
' “This is done in an effort to get
cheap labor.
"It creates a condition among work
erg in which the I. W, W, and Bol
shevists receive sympathetic consider--
ation,
"It is to be regretted that large em
ployers can not realize that it is to
their interest not to aid this elemen.”
Horrison paced the flogr of his office
in the American Federation of Labor
Building when he made this statement
public, and plainly showed his ebneern
~over possibilities of unrest in the
country because.of this alleged ac
tion.
He did not attempt to hedge or
evade the issue in the dangers attend
ant upon the action of the employers
in“what he termed “an attempt to
gain cheap labor.”
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R e RRIS TR R. o
Every Reader of Today’s Sunda '
, ‘ \. By
; \
American Should Read The Atlanta
Georgian Every Day. SR
\ -
- ' 5
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ALL THE Readers of The Atlagnta Georgian are followers ,of the world events. Cor- |
o respondents, photographers and interviewers, speed by boat and train te the re- }
motest parts of the earth that ALQ the news may come QUICKLY, ACCURATELY,
: NEWS ' COMPLETELY to The Atlanta Georgian. 3
‘ l -~ Exclusive Washington Dispatches :
The South’s beloved John Temple Gra\;s writes regularly from Washington on ‘wll important political and eco
nomic developments, in addition to The Georgian’s regular staff of corresp6bndents, -
5 L L \ . ' \’
Market ‘and Financial News -
" The Georgian's Market and Financial Page publishes last-minut'e reports on markets and stocks ACCURATELY
AND COMPLETE, and @& daily digest by Victor Barron giving the last’ word on/the trend of activities, in addition to
afithoritative articles by Broadan Wall, Boersianer and others.
————-———\.—____’____.____
W " -
. “Timely Topics of Today” By ARTHUR BRISBANE
The most discussed editorial column in America. Philosoph‘,\'. history.'new& To read ‘this feature is tp keep
abreast of the world's progress. A
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i : SOCIAL LIFE
Polly Peuchtfie and her assistants compile all the society news nf the day in a manner so complete, aufthentic
and fnterestmg as to be complimented by the entire State.
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THE DAILY GEORGIAN, 20-22 E. Alabama St.. ATLANTA GEADATA
-~
WASBHINGTON, Jan. 25.—Four Georgia
men are named in today's casualty list.
The list contains 228 nawmes bringing the
total casualtjes reported to date up ‘to
20345,
The tabulation follows
KHed in aclion, including 381 at &ea,
30,749, died of wounds, 12,763; died of
d)srafln 18,474, died from accident and
other “causes, 2,595; wounded in action,
137,067; miesing in action, 12,727;: total to
date, 214,345
Todays’' list .follows
Killed in action, 33; died from accident
and other causes, 10; died of disease, 60;
wounded severely, 125
KILLED IN ACTION,
NIXON, Horatio R..., Hermitage, Tenn.
WARD, Ross R. V. Dadeville, Ala.
WOLF, George W.Berketoy Springs, W, Va,
DIED FROM ACCIDENT AND OTHER
CAUSES,
ANDERSON, Bert y Williamaen, 8. C
DIED OF DISEASE. -
J.\(‘Kh‘é\\‘ Cpl. Wm. F.. Mt, Juliet, Tenn.
BURDELL, Abraham ......Nichals, Ga.
(Mrs. Addie Burdell.) .
HUGHES, &eofl Kingston Springs, Tenn.
SMYTH. Wm. W :Valley Head, Ala.
WILLIAMSON, Watsen . Newington, Ga.,
(Crawford Williamson.)
WOUNDED SEVERELY.
BLANTON, Roland G oo LORITneY,. 8. O
BRYANT, Thomsas L .. Liberty, S C
CREEKMORE, Floyd H Harriman, Tehn
DREWRY, Fred 11... - Griffin, Ga.
« (J. W. Drewry, 252 W. Taylor Bt.)
DUKE, John D.............Dick50n, Tenn
FOX, Joe F.............7YLa5ca55a5, Tenn.
FOX, Ray 8..,. ivssesSeviervidle, Tenn
GADDY, Henry W.T#....,.Garlahd, N. C
GAFFNEY, Gordon A.....Auburndale, Ala.
CRANT, Jake et .. .Bamter, 8. O,
GREER, Willls C....... Nashville, Tenn
HYMAN, Bora G...... Hyman, 8. C
JACKSON, O. K....,..Chattanooga, Tenn
ekttt et
eeile,, DIABETES
@,ADQ Can be CURED.,
FREE. informa
tion telling of a
47, v timple treatment
for Diabetes
77 I B\ Without drugs or
‘o NERP R\ dieting, Write
owm AW today for book-
AT let.
lADO-1-MINERAL CO., 418 Grand Theater Bidg., Columbus, 0.
tH
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mation can not be reached by
any other remedy.
A bottle of HYOMEI costs
only 60 cents, but to relieve
catarrh or stubborn eeugh
and colds the HYOMEI in
» haler should also ke used ar
least four times a @y. o
Jacobs’ Pharmacy Co. and
druggists everywhere sell for
§1.1% what is eallgd the HYO
MEI outfit which consist§ of
a hard rubber pocket inhal
er, a bottle of HYOMEI and
_ Simple instructions for use,
but if .y6u already possess a
HYOMEI inhaler, you can
purchase a bottle of HYO
MEI for only 60 cents. J ),
For catarrh, coughs, colds,
sore throat, asthma ang
croup: HYOMEI is guaran
teed, or money back. It kills
the germs and soothes and
heals the sore-and inflamed
membrance.—Advertisement.
JONES, €Carson_........Deer Lodge, Tepn.
BRYEN, Paal ¥..¥%... 0. .(g‘glnvllh. 8:.
(Mrs. Naney Rlancke Bryan.)
MERRICK, James McL., Wilington, N, C.
l’lll“l‘i.z«'dwurd B Aoand, Al
SHPEPHARD, James W.........8Etna; N, C,
CRAFT, Jesse F¥..,.......Ha1eyvi11e, Ala.
inie et 5
LUNATIC TURNS ROBBER,
WAUKEGAN, ILL., Jam,. 26—Artested
attempting to rob L. F. Huntley's summer
home. here, Joseph Opraus was found to
be an éscaped inmate of the Dunning Tn
sane Asylum. Hé had donned weiring ap
parel belonging to the Huntley’s and was
comfortably partaking of choice viands in
the kitchem when taken in custody. »
g ettt et
Mexican White Sapphires 75¢
s a 2 Solid Gold Filled Tiffahy
- Rings for ladies, or Tooth
LN\ » - Rings for gents, set with
e P N 83-4-karat Mexican white
\Q-\ ‘4./ sapphire, guaranteed for
o e 10 years,s regular $2 value
—A% R for Ts¢ Mexican white
7y o sapphires are 32-facet cut,
//l‘l\\\ they are the most wonder«
ful discovery of this cen
tury, they have no faise backing and show a biue
white sparkling fire like a genuine dhde, they
offer with this advertisement, 75c postpald; with
out advertisement, $2. \ >
Mexican Diamond Co., Dept. 25, 335 Market Street,
Philadelphia.
Send Tor our big bargain catalogue.
/# : v
: , l]‘ ‘ll
: 3 .
‘ D 0
v v o
l: o i
¥ )
' .
Lift Off Corns
- . g ——
\ With the Fingers -
: I Doesn’t hurt abit! Just a drop
: . of Freezone.on a sore, touchy corn
A stops that corn from hurting, then
\ shortly you lift that bothersome
corn right out, root and all. No
; “ pain, no soreness. You'll laugh.
f : Hard corns, soft corns, corns between
S .\ the toes and painful calluses on bottom of
—~ %\ feet loosen right up and fall off.” Truly
‘( oy { | magic! Corns and calluses are peedless.
_ ib2 ¢ [ Don’t keep them! 5
%\ ; Freezone is the remarkable ether discovery of
— \; a Cincinnati gemius. Try it! No humbug!
? i A jb‘ Tiny Bottles of Freezone cost only a few cents
> ; . —at Drug Storee
Want it for nothing? =
SSO to $75 wouldn't buy o
a better suit. We will
make it to your meas- 4
ure from the finest
fabric and in any style ",
vou select and it A
won't cost you a 'fi"c AN NN
o 3 AN 451fl fi
centif you will rep- NG ”'nf I\\“
reserit_us in your Jilll %'P:IJL LA
town. Your spare i I,m&p \M
time is al we want, r [ ,m”’ il gl
Agents Wanted //78H l ‘lrw‘ i
No experience, [/l [ i ?
no money needed: Jil gt 1 i .
Orders come easy, [ il i Il
Our handsome [ ,‘M[{' el |1
styles and qunality & il i | 1 -
and low pricés get £ ;Jv‘{m I o
the business. ANNEAS : i
Extras Are Free. =\
Noextra charge of any kind. .\ B\t
WRITE TODAY ("
Your name on a postal will Ll
bring dozens of beautiful cloth samples, style book and sash.
Yons from which to choose your sult. All free and posthald
AMERICAN WOOLENMILLS CO., Dept. jgiChicage