' i "'' ! r TZgÜch, Omsk Tribtt, ipp n 1 M' L4 V c ft will be remernbered that tb prupbet i'.aabm rode an sm hieb perslsted In tetstifyltig to tbe Troth title Haalam wa dolng hl beut In behalf ot tbe Lle. Let u imagine raodrr Unalarn und hl s anawer Ine. with rnore or I, ss irregulär alter nation. cerialn questions botit, the present War. Tbe reader ia lest to guess hieb anawora ar glven by the recreant prophet and blch by the ata insplred by God, Oueation: Who atarted thla War? Answer: Tb Kaiser. O. How do we know that? A. Well, everyone know he la the yiu LordI O. How dld b get that title? A. By ome Engllsbtnan deliber " ate mia-translatlon of the title "Krlgesberr," wblch Ia merely tbe rame aa any constitutional ruler'a title of "Commander-ln-Chlef." Q. Btit ia Ihere no other proof that tbe Kaiser is a War-Lord? A. Ob yea, hia record showa it 0 What la hl record? A. For twenty-sive years he bas ruled a nation armed and able to cruah any enemy lndividually; bat he ha never struck. He baa earriea on the pollcy of hia predecessor to tbe reBult that: peace baa reignea tn zen tral Europe for forty-three year. a longer perlod thau ever betöre aince the breaking of the .fax Komana. During that tinie Germany haa glven the world a cherlshed example of hu man capabilitiea In all tbe way of peace in the arts, clence, cholar- hip, phlloscphy, local governrnent, efficlent täte aoclalism, inanufac turea, commerce, personal .freedom, personal intelligence, personal health and capacity. Q. We must Inevitably conclude, then, must we not. that the ruler of a nation ao busy wlth continual trl nmphs of Peace would naturally plunge hia nation into a wanton and unnecessary war? A. Ob, Inevitably. , Q. What cerroboration is tbere for thia view? A. Tbe fact that he bas kept the peace so Ions, while a war of triumpb wculd have been what we call a "einen:" the fact- that If be atarted tbia war. be atarted lt wben the odds against bim almost abut out the poa sible Vision of success; the fact, final : ly. that lndividually he haa no powet at all to throw bis enlightened, crlti I caU independent and atubbom people Into war. Q. But he ha vast power, haa he not? A. Oh, yes, slightly less tban fte President of the United Statea. Q. How eise do we know that the Kaiser started tbe war? A. Why. everyone know he wanta to rule all Europe and then grab America and tbe rest of tbe world. Q. Haa he,' or any one for bim, ever said so or hlnted ao? A. No, but the newspapers and Wlnston Churchill teil tis so. Q. It aeema very plausible, doesn't ft? A. Decidedly-a nation of ome 60,000,000 people, hemmed In the cen ter of Europe, would have, aa any one can aee, what American Slang calls "a health? chance" to conquer the world. Q. How eise do we know thU tbe Kaiser staried the war? ' A. Well, he begged the Czar to re- frain from rnobilizing, and aasured him (having taken the trouble to get the assorance from Austria) that Aus tria would not Beize any of the terri tory of Servia. He assured tbe Eng ' lish that if they remained neutral, he vonld not use hia navy in a way to threaten the Dorth coaät of France or do'anything that England could con aider dangeroua to her interests. Für tbermore, we know that the Kalaer atarted the war because tbe Czar be gan to threaten Germany with bis dar baroua millions, and because French aviatora aailed over Germany and dropped bombs Into Coblena and Nu rembnrg before war was declared, and because the French minister Delcasse, whoae occupation Is making war on Germany, bad gone to St Petersburg beg pardon, Petrograd -montiis ago to discuss joint action against Ger many, and because three or four years ago Gen. Joffre was inade com-mander-in-chief of the French armies with the unconcealed purpose of leäd ing them against Germany, and be cause France recently tnafe a loan to Russia wbich was sed for the aole purpose of building railroads to tbe oorders of Prussia railroads of no use except to convey troops'We know that the Kaiser atarted tbe war, fin Ny, because France has spent-forty-three yeara of nintermittent brooding on the re-capture of Alsace-Lorralne and oa Revesge.' . 7 ' Q. France deserves the sympatby of the world In her ambitio to re capture Alsace-Lorraioe, doe Ehe nr.t? ' . ' A. Ob, yesf . : ... ; Q. Teil' US just why? - ' A. Well, axouple of hnndred years & po her King Louis XI, tbe most limrtleas, ambltious and absolute eN' t.eror-.-Jnce,;Attlla-, tore 'tbes prov iii'-os, amid Äame and murder, from tbe bleedinir aide of Germany. The peopls are aü German in blood to tbts (S.iy. Für many yf-ars after Louis Rtole tuem. they cherished batred of jVanc. and tue French-, Gradually thy beeame resigned and peaceful, ut nelther honored nor reßpected by tbe French, nor prosperous, nor ea- M Fn?.HI -,J1 u thuslasticaHy Callic. Wben Germany bad tnade a ruonkey of France in a few weeka of war In 1870, Elsass Lothrlngen (thelr real namea) wer tkn by Cermany. both aa a most obvlou mliltary nceslty and aa Just recovery of atolen property. Q. But the people have lutTored terrlbly, have they not? A. Oh, of courne; they have been given a constitution, large autonomy an honorable place In the Concert of German itatea, liberal lawa. peace and unprecedented proaporlty. Under thla bock In treatment they have become so reconciled to thelr German kindred that hi apite of forty yeara of tfreneb Intrigue, they are now being ahot dy tbe French for helpln thelr Germa defenders and decelving th French invadera. Q. But waan't there a terrible lncl dent at Zabern? A. Oh, frigbtfuL An old cobbler, drunk wlth the Impodence Of French Intrigue, inaulted the army till youn lieutenant lost iila teniper and bit bim with hia aword. In tb tub- geotient riotina the governrnent acted wlth creat reatralnt. and rernoved the offending troopa. All tbia was horrl- ble to tbe French. who two year ago at Casablanca, turned tbe atotnacha of strong Spanish aoldiera by the un mentionable atrocltlea on tbe Moors; and to the Engliah, who, on July 26tb of thla jer, lirst ran away from body of Irish volunteera with clubbed riflea, and later kllled three and wounded aixty eitiiens, chlefly women and cbiidren. in Dublin, and to tbe Rusaians, who? record Ia too re splendent to need Illumination here. Q. Waa there any other aus for tbia war? A. Oh yes, Austriä'a bullylng at- tack on Servia. Q. Tbia waa quite nnwarranted, waa it not? A. Quite. The Serviana are & aort of innocent child-like people, very much like Jobnny, who "pushed Grapdmother Into. the lake, Just to see how big a gplaeb ehe would Wake." or like Jimmy, who wbimsically Jabbed a knlfe In aister Sally." They delight In assassinatlons. whenever they can get the expensea oaid by ItUKsia, and they malntain so- cieties for the study of this sport, and kor the purpose of drawing down tbe Uopecks from Russla. Just aa tbe German governrnent fester athletics, the Servian authorities encourag thelr child like citlxens in tbis gentle exercise of assasslnatlon, turning out large batchea of bombs in the royal arsenal at Kragojevata. Having a nat ural antipathy to Civilisation, they look upon it aa a duty, not to aay pleasure. to Intrigue by all methods including the bomb and pistol for the break-up and destruction of Austria Hungary. Tbeir conduct In tbis re spect haa been no worse tban if the Mexicans, paid and encouraged by Brazil, Chili and the Argentine, bould amuse themselves, by practicing tbeir well known sports In the border states of our country? and tbe Lervia as sassinatlon of the Archduke and hl wife was quite like a Mexlcan as sas sinatlon of our vice-President and hl wife. Every one knows that we would make no fus about little things of that sort. 80, If Mexicans wer con stantly stirring up revolt in Texas and California, wbich we rescued from Mexican barbarism, they would be do ing only what the Servlans hav done In Bosnia and Herzegovina, wbich Austria protected from the Turk, and raised to prosperity and peace. Q. It Ia highly credible, I lt not, that the Servian governrnent and people would have united In assassi nation and defiance without any aa aurance from Rassia that Russia would back tbem np? A. Oh, highly credlbU5i Q. Russia is unselslshly1 lnterested in the Establishment of a great South Slav Empire, la she not? A. Undoubtedly. Every fact known to us, and every line of reasoning prov it.. For lnstance, Russia for longr yeara bas encouraged Pan slav ism. wbich means the union of all Slav under the Czar and the Pro curator of the Holy Synod of tbe Sus sia Church. This proves that he desired tbe erection of a etrong, proud, lndependent rlval Slav täte. Then, again, Russia' ambition of am bitions ia to posses Constantinople. and as a great South Slav Empire would forever bar her from that, It 1 truite elear, that eha is fostering a great South Slav Empire. Q. Let s bange th ubject again. Mentiön another aus of war. A. Why, Germany' - vlolatlon of the neutrality of Belgium! Q. Th! arbused borror In the breast of Englishmen and French men, dld lt not? ' A. Assurediy. It wa outrageous. Why, nearly two year ago England bad ordered her troops In Ireland to be ready to all for Antwern to trike at Germkny. Thirty motor-car füll of French offleer rushed Int Lei- giunj before war etarted. French ol diers were In tbe fort at Liege and Namur. The forts ' of Belgium "were direeted a defense against Germany enly; ' Events have showa that tbe English plan hinged on landing troops, not in France, but in Belgiurii, and tbe French tacücs have shown that they expected to hava thelr whoie, force free to trike at AIsace-Lorraine, by reason of th EngHßh and Beigians Holding their "northwestern frontier. Oh yes, the German vlolaHba of Xel- giaa neutrality was dreadful. SW ' Y u By nn Xriali-Linorlcuii. Q'. But Germany, Instead of dein inipolite enough to strikt first wbn she found hk'r nilghbor reacbln for tbi'lr hl? pocket, hould hav calmly waited till tb French wer before ßtraasburg, tbe Belglan and Engllsb tbreatening Aachen and Cologne. tbe Russlans operatlng from Danxlg against Berlin, hould b cot? A. Yes. Every Frencbman, Briton and Russinn tblnk 10. Q. , What Ia England' attltude to wrd tbl war? A. Goodn nti, h la dreadfully opposed to It, yon know. Oh dcar me, yes! Q, How do we know that? A. Well, wben tbe first really great German ocean-llner was launched, the leadlng English newspaper ssld: "Ger many wüst be destroyed." It Ia no torlou that German hav been deftly taklng th world market away from tbe English, wherever they eornpete, wbich ia a beastly thlng, y know, es pecially wben th beggar do It by being rnore tboro, working barder, us- ing rnore braln and leaa haugbtiness, rnore busines kill and friendliness and les rurn, bible and "erpedltion ary forces." The best nnbiased writ er, ay that tbl I tbe causa of the war: reason conßrrn lt: tbe gloatinc of tbe English day by day, a report of tbe capture and slnking of German sbips come In, make it ure. Fur ther more, a a political corollary of her mercantlle pollcy, England ha alway destroyed her greatest rlval, deliberately and ruthlessty. She de- stroyed Spain by the ald of pirates and fortunate hurrlcane; Napoleonlc France by Inciting the rest of Europe against Napoleon: Russia by tbe ald of Turkey and Japan. Now lt i Ger many' turn. Q. But England t flgbting for Lib erty, Progresa, EnlSghtenment, DerTfoc- raey, Altmism, and all. that ort of thlng, yon know, isn't she? A. Oh, certainly. to be ure. She alway figbts for tbem. You'd think she'd aebieve thern someüme! Q. Wbat example .hav we of Brit- Ish freedom, etc., etc.? A. Well, there' Irehnd. Superlor Civilisation gradually worn down by seven Centurie of murder, pillage, ar son, bribery, polsoning; culture rooted ont by Imposition of allen language, Iaws. ducatlon, dress, customs, etc.. ander penalty of death (cultnre recedt- ly revived, tbanks to German schal, ars): population ent in half by farnlne while English oidier took plenüful crops out of tb land; rnanufactures rulned by law forbidding thern In o many words; Constitution ravished by bribery and force; pollticlans corrupt ed; tyranny continuing to-day aa much as ever, a blt ander cover. Then there is Indla. Occupied by fooling the In dians and kickin g out the dcarly-be-loved French. Order reatored by means of risles, taxation, tbe ruln ot lndustry, farnlne (countless millions dying under English rule In vast ex ces over numbers dying from like causea In many centuries preceding). And Egypt. Occupied under olemn pledge to get out again almost Imme diately. Hand of the lock topped somehow, so the Briton find himself eompelled to tay and gather great wealtb, not to mention being so very convenient to Suez, by wbich means he can Instantly threaten and InZure the cornrnerc not only of Germany, but of dear France and Russia too. Frequent hanging of Egyptian helps to relieve the bore of it all. Farther down, South Africa. Conquered by the unfilnehing British heroism whieb kept right on desplte the neer of tbe world wbich saw lt vast armies ronted by about 80,000 active cavalry men sharpshooters; finally pacisled by concentration of Boer women and cbii dren In camp where, aecording to British admlsslon, U.OOO dled ot star vatwn and disease; aecording to Boer and Irish aecounts, over 20,000; which ever way you look at lt, undenlably one of the finest triumpb of English altruisra, Or Scotland, a brave fool Ish people duped into a loyalty wbich I costing tbem their natlonality, land and language, as they go over-sea by the core of thousand yearly, leav ing their native hill ta the grouse who are grown to be bot (sometimes) by the spindling scions of tbe pill-and-puffery "nobility." Or anywber that English Capital goe, aa in the Puta- mayo district of Peru, where th Pe- ruvian employees of English director were quite unmolested by aid direc tor in tbeir ystem'of driving each Indian captive to the limit till in a few montha death was certain, with lashing, maiming. etö all along the way, regardless of ex or age, till an Irish man exposed thi hell to the world. Or take England herseif. Square mile after aquare mil of slum wbich represent the lntensest and most contlnuou misery the ut rnost degradation the most appalling failure of civllization, to be found any where. Rural population disappear Ing. bealth and atrengtn ditto. Re maining rural Population divlded be twee landlord who live on tb rest. farmers whose political minds have been ossifled into nobbish toryisrn for Centurie, and laborer who dar not raise a voice in publie affair. A tory party of Bourhon folly, a "Liberal" party existing for the big manufactur er and ruied by the Rothschilds, Las oon and Samuclsss tbrtt ecret par ty fund. , Nowbers eise, indeed, as they boast,' does liberty flourish a In England and her posssssions, thank God! Q. But thesse Gennans, who are they? A. Ob. "Kordes; ".brutal legions;" murderers-." "mobs;" "barbarian," Q. How öo we know tblaf 0 r A. W!l. they ars th parent stock from wbich all mdrn Civilisation bas growa. Tbfir blood and braln saved tb d-caylng Roman world in the tlni of tbe Chao of Nation." Thy rnada Spuln wben Spaln wa great, Franc wben Franc wa great. Lorn bardy and Tuscany In the lienals sanc. and England hrelf. They bullt a new, dlutlnrt, solid rlvlllzatlon In tbe north of Europe, Thy drew out of thernselve all tbe qualitl that manklndiss yet sbown Hielt capable of; they took unto thrmselve all the qualltit of past agf that wer useful and spirational. They iteadlsd the Church. They excelled In early man ofacture and honest eraftsman-blp They achleved r?l freedom In thelr splendid eitles. They founded unlver sltie, and producd aeboiar. They hav glvea th world some of Its-great- et pbilosopher, poef and drarna- tista. Sine they achleved national unity. so great ha become thnir pre- eminence in scUnre and educatlon that all tb world Is under thelr tut pl age in these brauche of human study and endeavor. They hav contributed very many Million of Immigrant to tbe United State, and their blood is now In th velns of all but a majnrlty of American. To look at thelr bis tory, to regard thelr Institution, to study thelr book or attend thelr uni versale, to rneet tbem in thelr own land, and wltnest thelr peace, pros perity, genlailty. good llvlng, love for tb arta and rererenca for sebolar ship; to attend tbeir operss, to meet tbem in busines in America, to end your cbiidren to chool wlth their cbiidren, to e their alfectlonate home-Iife, t do your Kanking with them. ta buy your beer, ice-cream, candies, grocerie and delicatesaen from them why, you'd tblnk they were a civiiiaed, splendid people. But not o! The English teil ns. and the American pres echoe, of Course, that they are a Korde of barbarians, single minded on putting out the light of the world. Q. There is a lot of proof, of Course, of th Charge against tbem? A. Oh. a lot! Tbousands ot news papers ay it is true. Boy in thelr 'teens made aKdavit. Lots of people know other people who hav heard from other people that they know other people who hav een these atrocltie. The very fact that every tory of crueity. wbich an inimical cribbler could find In hl Memory or in historie of savage time and cllme, ha been brought forward, rtould prov the reracUv of the charges. Arent toriea of old men being hung up by tbeir thnmbs with slow Srea under their feet, and cbii dren having their band cut off. and women being brutally and quite need lessiy eparated from tbeir habe aren't these classlcs? So, of Course, th German soldlers, who are the sntne sort of people whom you meet by the hundreds. your German-American fei- low citizens of Course they have com- mitted these classio atrocltie. The papera ay so. If you want fürt her proof, there is the aMdavit of flve em inent American newspaper men, that no such atrocities could be verlned by thern on tbe actual cenes. There Is th testimony of hundred of return ing American. Mrs. Benjamin Har- rison. College professor and presi denta, and such like. to the restraint and Company of th German army. There ar tb peetne refutationa of specin stories wbich have appeared in even our antlGerman papers. There are the repeated and official German dental. There are Inherent probabilitie and cornmon-sense, If they count. There are tbe record of the difkerent races th record of Walloon and French, English and Russians, to put against tbe record of German. There are even the warn Inga of Englisbmen like Lord Roberts, Lord Gladstone, Lord Selbourne and Jerome K. Jerorne, that German atroo Ity tale are probably false and ficti tiou. , Q. The German use dum-dum bul let and the Allie d not, Isn't that lt? ' ' A. To be ure. Tbe report of tb AUies speak ot th exceptlonaUy cl'ean, small hole made by German bullet, and tberefor Charge that they are expansive rnissile. The Germans, on tbe other band, have so proofs except the capture ot large quantitle of dum-dum from the very Person and bodie of the Allled troops, and the sigbt of such wound as an American newspaperman ha described as be ing made by hunüng bullet, such a would be used gainst avage beast. Z. It 1 barbarou for the German to strew mine In th open sea, i lt not? A. ÖbTvery; Of Course, lt count nothing that tb German ornclaliy deny that they have done any such thlng. Tbe English fishing fleet sailed all over the North Sea for' week without Btriking a tnlne, so they must hav been there. On th othrtr band, the story that German warihlp bad captured fiftee Lshiug vessels i ob vlously untrue; the mine must have risen up out of th ea and towed those hing koat to Germany. Of Course, If those two English ruisers. wbich first wer unk, bad bee-t unk by submarines or torpedoes, England could not whimper and queal to the world about German barbarUies; so, while her fishing fleet 1 captured by war sbips, her crulser must be blown up by mine! Wben German naval vlctorle becarae too frequent, how- ever, th Engllt.it bad to abandon tbe pretence, and adrnit that three cruis- er were destroyed by one submarine. Q. What i to be ald about tbe German use of Zeppelin? tu- lt II a foul crime. BWlM Q Why? A. ltora tb otbet nation hav no .cppellns! Q. Any other reaion? A. Yes. Non-comliatant ha tav In frtifl.'d cltl wlthin the area of war miist wih to b kllled; and If they Protest against bnlng kllled bv bomb, from the sky, 1t is obvlou that they bav a prefwrence for death by tne n.rnpp rnetbod. Now lt la certain ly monstrou for th German to deny inese ptor people last wlshe! Q. Wben troop hav, wob dlfTi cult vlctnry In fuir fight wlth enemy troops, and wben they therenpon 00 cupy a clty; and wbca th non-corn-batant cltlxen there oon begin to snipe" thera from Windows, roofs, cellar, eornr and every convenient sKuming place; In view of the fact that International law and th rnle of clvlllxed warfar permlt the drastlc punishment of such towns and such poople; what hould tbe tnvadlng army aor A. Welt, If they bappeo to be French. English, Russia. Belglan Senian. or any of that ort. and if w could concelve of, ny of thee capturing a German town, and of Ger man citlzen doing any nlping. tbe conqueror hould, of courae, punish the Germa barbarians by Indiscrlm Inate shootlng, looting and burnlng. But If It bappens that German cap ture an enemy', town.-they hould. of Course, stand around happlly. and per mit tbe inhabitants to use them a tar get. They hould, doubtless, stand as still as possible so as to facllltate good alra. They mlgbt ei jb line up In long rows to facllltate. the use of mitrail- leuse by these very progressive snip- ers. vve undrstand thst Lord Cow dray and Sir Lionel Garden wer very Indignant that tbe American marine did not act tbus t Vera Cruz, and doubtless they will shar in the Eng lish regret that the German did not act thu at Louvaln. Instead the Ger man, carefully protectlng the Cathe- dral and Town Hall and great p le in res, burned one-tifth of the city, put ting an end to snlplng and avolding much future bloodshed. Q. What is the crowning crlrae of the Germans? A. That they have been winnlnr. Q. But there have been many French and English uccesse, hav there not? A. Not exactly. There hav been some Nigger-Moor-Arah suceesses, and some Hindu-Tartar uccesse, but we anaot recall any uccesse by Eng lish or French troop with the excep tion of tbeir Strategie retreata. What ever suceesses have bea achleved under th tri-eoior of La Franc along tbe Alsace-Lorralne border must be attributed to the Afrlcan savage who hav been brought ther by the French. ince the Frencli report thernselve give these "dashlng Tur kos," etc., the Credit Tb attack, wbich, ince the early day of Sep tember, is tbreatening tbe Germans' right flank, is being delivered cbiefly by Sepoys. Ghurkas, Slkbs. and other pleasant denlzens of Indla, by Rus sians, and by tbe earne Tnrko and Senegalese, who, aecording to Amer ican eyd-wltnesses, return from the battle with the ears, noses, fingers and even heads of German oldier. Q. Let üs get tbl, right. I it ao- tuaiiy true that in tbe very midst of tbe fielda of Europe, among the eitle that represent all tbe treasure of eiv- illzation, among the towns that hei ter the peaccful farniiy life of tne white race; wild Arabs, cruel Moors, savage Senegalese, black negroes, fe- roclous and heartles Hindu ar be Ing brought? A. It is all quite true. These things are being done by Francs and Eng land, wblch ar also now tbe bosdm friends of tbe Cossack and the Tar tan and the nerveless, heartless, con- scienceless little yellow man of Japan. Q. Are there any rnore avages who could possibly be brought Into Europe to flght for freedom, Civilisa tion end demoeraey against the Ger man barbarians? A. if there are, the Allie will find them and bring thern to Europe. Q. All tb! augur wall for the fu ture 0t European clvillzation and the dorninance of the Whlt Race, doe lt not? A. Tbere are ome things too erl- OU to be facetlous about, - Q. What do the American people tblnk about thi use of all the eav- ?? of the four quarter of tbe giobe to flght White Men in tb Whlt Man' bome? A. The rnasse of the American people can bardiy be said to have done any thinking about thi war a yet. They are Just now beginning to sicken of tbe falseboods shouted at them by the Anglo-American pres, and, very soon, we hope they will be gin to think. ' Q. Can tbe use of negro and half negro troop by France be compared with the us of American negro regi ment, dy the United States? A. Not at all. -Tte negroes in the Union Army in the Civil War bad been meliorated and advanced toward civ- ilizatioll by contact with Southern civ-s llization at its best as well as . lt worst They were uplifted from av agsry, furthermore, by the Inspirlng knowledge that they were ögbting for thelr own freedom; and they were under the corarnand of calrn Amer ican offleer who bad . rnore sorrow thau hatred in their beart. The ne gro troop In the American army to day ar men lang in contact wlth wi.it American Civilisation is all it 4I Fo ahosr. But tbe black men In the French rrny ar avagc; kuowliig whlie clvUUstlon only thru :u brutal mllliary organlzatlon: transported to Europe , mt tnrcnarles snd turned loose oa a so whom thelr white offlerr bav bnen tatight tu bat venotnously for forty years. Q. Why do tbe English lov the Hindus? A. W must discrlmlnat In our re ply to that. Tb English do not loVe th mild Hindus whom they kick bout nd tax and weat and kill by farnlne; they do not lov the educated Hindus who asplre to rld thelr Und of the English nd rais thelr countrymen to rnuniiood. Uit aixty year ago the English dlscovered that th Hindu soidicr wa a totally callon. heart less, bloodtblrsly murderer, -speclally apt t tbe aiauKhter of women and cbiidren. Whetber the Memory of these fact, bas anythlng to do wlth tne Engllnh Importatlon of Hind troops Into whlt men'a Europe, I lest to you. You bav three guesse Of courae, as the English have shown In South Africa and elscwhere, it makes a diiierenc WHOSE women and chlldren I Q. Well. It I dreadful for the Ger- man, to hav any dealing wlth the Turks, Is it not? A. Oh, dreadful. Of Course, lt v.-s dilTerent wben England used to be the firm ally of th Turks. Q. Explaln how dreadful the Turks are. A. Well, they ar white men. They have been a European power for many centuries. They are ald by ome, who bav consldered tbeir achleve- ments and tbeir diMcultles, to be one of tbe great construct.lv race. They are admltted by all who' know them to b innately human and kindly, They were rellgiously tolerant long before the Christian vations. Thelr clvillzation ha run to eed. and thelr naturai klndliness and tolerance. In tolerahly xasperated by tbe intrlgu ing and plotting of Inferior people who happened to be Christians, has sometimes changed to a decided fero ity In punishlng the trouble-maker Tbereupon Professional English hu manitarlans. seeing a Chance to divert attentlon from Ireland. Indla and such places; and Balkan Committees run from th Forcign Office In Downing Street; and Macedonlan Committees run from Athens; and Armenian Com mittees suhsidized dy Russia. all these have added a few thousand per rent to the Turkish reprisala and trans- formed tbem to dreadful atrocities. ' Q. Well, wlth whom hould Amer ican syrnpatbize? A. Oh. with the Allles. of conrse, Dear me, yes, can you doubt It? Are we not Anglo-Saxons? The rnore tban seventy per cent. of us, who are Ger mans, Irish. Austrian Slav, and per- secuted Jews from Russia, must not interfere with Angio-Saxon unity, y'know. Dldn't England do her' best to preserve that unity at the bäyonet's point In 1776? Öidn't he do her best to restore It by boldlng up our sbips and stealtng our sallors till 1814? Didn't she frive for our unity by fittlng out very many war vesseis, nnanclng, omeering, manning and arm Ing tbem, to destroy our commerce, In 1860-64? Don't the column of her newspapers and periodicals, so füll of Insults toward us, how how she ioves US? Then, again, must we not how that the American spirlt of falr-play i equal to the English by Iding with the seven nation wbich have Zumped on tbe two? Must we not how our love of frankness and honesty by sld Ing with the nation wbich deliberately put a ring around Germany, wbich plotted her overtbrow merely because she wa a commercial rlval. wblch harbored Insane batred of her for for ty years. and wbich yet pretend that Germany atarted the war rierely be cause be strnck without waiting for their knives to enter her vital? Must we not Ide wlth th alliance wbich Include tbe Moor, the Arab, the Ne gro, the . Hindu, the Cossack, the Apache and th Hooligan? Must we not preker tbe clvillzation of Omsk and Tompsk. of Warsaw and Kish ineff, of the knout and the pogrom and the hopelessly corrupt and enslaving Russlan church must we not preser tnese to the clvillzation of uremburg and Municb, Dresden, Berlin, Bay reuth, Oberammergau. Vienna, Buda Pesth nd Prague Bremen and Ham burg B,)nn and Heidelberg Ooethe and Schiller, Wagner and 'Strauss, and a thousand cholars and leaders of thougbt; the civjlization of lndus try, peace and intelligence? Oh, sure ly, we American must -preser hatred and jealousy and deception to imple honesty and traightforwardnessj wo must prefef tbe Hooligan and the Apache, tbe dup ot the English man- ufacturer and th Insanely revengeful dürre of Delcasse. to tbe lndustrious, sober-mtndcd German; we must pre ser the mougrel horde of nigger and half niggers. Hindu and Tartar. to th pure stock of th white race. the civllizing Teuton; we must prefer the cowards who band togetber In over wheiming number before they dare attack tbeir victim! w must prefer th quealer wh began to whlmper and call the German namea the Min ute the Germans began to wblp them; we must prefer the liar who din our ear wlth absurd torie whlch reli able American oa tbe ground prompt ly deny. Ob yes, these must b our preferenee. ' . - The newspaper teil u 0. But Have tbe Newspaper Read Our Hearts, Our Minds, Our Consclence Ccrrectlyt Aulhorshfp snd Authcritics. The uthor of this pmphlt mt ren,ln anonym till th end of th War. At that tim anyo es I m bi nanie fr"in tlie frulilUhcr lltigh II. Mtrrn, l7Clminl'r St., Isw Vork. Autbor and puldisher vouch that vt-ry lan-nient brln can In vurt find. It is i,i"tl at ny one nio nn ut to bav evry ourr and a uthor Hy t band. Th followlng reOrence cover much of th ground. A te dstAll of Gsrmsn hlstory nd political, oclul and rulliiral rondi tlons, any publie llhrary ratalog. For a ilwp study r, I Chsinhcrlaln "Foundation of the ISlh Century." On t Kaiser' Powri Read tb Gcrrnnn Constitution. Who Strutk First? Read th Am-r-Iran ncanpMpt-r up to Au. Ist, 1914; Whlt papers, pl,lli!d by N. Y. Times; Count Von llernstorff In N. Y, Time Au. 0; ktters in N. Y. Time Hept. 13; let ter front Germsn oMcer. Washington Stur, Kept. 6; lctter In N. Y. Times Aug. 30, heflded -Russia' Early War Moves." quotlng Russlsn kpsper; Dr. Dernburg In N. Y. Sun Oct 11; Kahier speecn reportea in papers Au. 4 and 6; German tat ment of French aggresslon, Waalilng ton Post, Aug. 4; many articie, in Fatherland and Caellc American. On Alsace-Lorraln: Rtad hlstory of liuls XIV and Napoleon, and Mun steiberg' "Tbe War and America," 0 Lervl: Report of Carnegie', International Commission to lnvestl gate the Balkan W'ars; Alex. Konta in N. Y. Tribune Aug. 8; Dr. Geo. Bar- , telrna, Washington Post Aug. 12; ar ticie by Father Schwertner In Rosary Magaxln for August; Emlly G. Hutnl Ings in Recdy'B Mlrror (St. Louis) Aug. 14. Pan-Slavlrn: The Fatherland; , ar ticie by' Austrian Diplomatist, N. Y. Sun Oet. II. Beialan Neutrality: Articie by Pro fessor Burgess In Vital Isue; articie in Fatherland; quotatlon from English army oMcer' letter In Gaell Ameri can, Augut 20: German olstclal tat- J ments in all American papers. j England' Attitüde.' The Gaell American (185 William St., N. Y ) th White Papers; Prof. Kloane, N. Y. Times Hept. 20; Cupnt Von Bernstorfs, N. Y. Times Aug. 30; Dr. Dernburg, N. Y. Sun Oct. 11; Wm. Ilayard Haie. N. Y.jJournal Sept. 1: German Chan cellor, Washington Times of Sept. 33; letter In London Nation Aug. 15 (N. Y. Sun Oct. 11); letter of Shacnuis O'Sheel, Washington Times Aug. 8; B. L. Frazier, Washington Post Aug. 18; Kuno Franke, N. Y. Time Aug. 23; The War and America by Mun sterberg; letter by F. C. Knieger, N. Y. Kvenlng Post. Aug. 6; Emlly G. Hutchings, Heedy'a Mlrror, Aug. 14; Statements of Kler Hardie and Ram say McDonald reported In English and American papers; Euglaud's Joy over destruction of German commerce and determinatlon to crusb Germany, re ported In N. Y. Times Aug. 1. Wash ington Post Sept. 1 and 16; Washing ton Times Sept. 12, 14, 28., English and Irish hlstory. American and other refutatioti of German atrocity talca, Beigian and Russlan atrocities, French and Eng- y lish use of dum dums, Louvaia; Y. T Sun Sept 5. 17; N. Y. Times Aüg.16. 23, 30; Sept. , 20, 27; Oct. 11; N. Y. World Sept. 1, IC; Oct. 9. 10: Wash ington Poet Aug. 19, 21, 26, 29; Sept. 2, 7, 8, 11, 14, 19; Washington Star Sept. 5, 18; Oct. 12; Washington Times Aug. 15, 16, 28, 29; Sept. 20, 23; Oct 14; The Vital lasue Sept. 21; Statements of Lord Roberts, Tha In- dependent, Oct. 10, Clvllian Kölner and Non-comba- tant in Citiet wlthin war area: Read ' hlstory of America occupation of Vera Cruz, and any bock on interna tional mllitary law. Nota totally un provefl nature of charges, even those ,' of French and Belglan governments. Turco and Senegalese: Readlng notlces and plctures in all papers; , Washington Post Sept. 16; Washing- ' ton Times Sept. 12, and especlally Washington Post Oct. 17, American ' ( phyaielan' personal expsrienea " Turco savagery. Beim GrasdoZtor". '.,; j Es gibt nicht dielr solch Spezia. iitHTT iin.i ti tf hti Ht t-ntfh ff r..t K uiv wfc-väuui ivikv ttjl CU J urzfr Zeit ein besondeiks ffach da. I tutt ycrnuiyi. - !. r L Der .Grasdoktor' ist auf ba's'oe naukste mit den Gesundheits Zu ianden bon Gräsern und ihrer Aer besserung oder Erhaliung . vertraut. Er icnn z. jö. aus ttn ersten Blick agen, ob der Nasen ror dem tauk oder auch aus dem Heufeld an einem Anfall von .Blut . Armut" oder vielleicht nur an einer leichten ' Be 'iimmung leidet: ob das GraS eine Bereicherung feines Blutes oder nur eine Massnge braucht, ob es über Haupt zu voller Gesundheit und Kraft wiederhergestellt werden kann oder ohne weiteres mit Stumpf und Ctiel au gerissen werden-sollte. Kein gewöhnlicher stenner der Land, und (Lartenwissenschaft ist n diesen Ge genftand auch nur annähernd so tief eingedrungen. Wahrscheinlich der bedeutendste Grasdoktor" in den Wer. Staaten . ist derzeit Professor Frank Lancson f Scribnkr. der es bereits zu einem nternationalen Nus. gebracht hat. Sein amtlicher Titel ist .Aarostolo gist", was aber nichts anderes be deutet, als die obige Bezeichnung. Er hat In Washington das erste Bärs für Agrostologie bezriindet. welckes die Welt kennt; und in den letzten paar Jahren hat er oerschiedene Aus . eiiungcn des amerikan, cken Acker bau Departments hier und ans wärts geleitet. Beiläufig bemerkt. teht er schon feit 3fl Safiren mit diesem Department in der einen oder andern Eigenschaft in Verbindung. us oer Panama . Pactsic Wett , ausstellung in San . ZZranzisko . aber ( wuo er jern HaujM:k vorführen. r $ )