Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, October 04, 1917, Image 3

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, OCTOBER 4,
GERMANY’S DIABOLICAL
METHODS OF WARFARE
Told by Ambassador Gerard
in a Recent Speech.
Merciful Norwegians Held Up to
Public Scorn in Newspapers.
“In that Scandinavian part of Ger­
many seven people, before the war,,
were not allowed to gather together
and were not allowed to have Danish
servants. And when the Norwegian
explorer—Norwegian as you know is
similar to Danish—Amundsen, want­
ed to give lectures about his polar ex­
periences in that part of Germany,
they refused to allow him to speak in
Norwegian. And so you have a popu­
lation there that is just as entirely
hostile to the Germans because the
Germans have been forcing and op­
pressing them since 1866, at it was at
the time they were incorporated in
Prussia.
“You know that we have been faced
in this war with a problem none of
our allies have had to face. We have
among us a great number of citizens
of German birth or German descent,
and I am thankful to say that the
great, the vast majority of those of
our fellow citizens have and will
prove themselves loyal American cit-
izens. (Applause.)
1917.
derstand.
“A German working man, the most
skilled working man, before the war
earned less than 12 a day for a long
period of work. I have seen German
masters encourage the work of wom­
en in the fields because, of course,
the more people you have at work the
cheaper the labor is. And these wom­
en working in the fields from long be­
fore sunrise until after sunset—and
that is a long time in summer in a
country as far north as the middle of
Hudson Bay—are working for about
32 to 48 cents a day.
make the greatest sacrifice of all, and
allow treason to lift its snaky head
here at home? (Cries of No, No, No.)
‘And then we have got the Ameri­
can pacifists. I do not know what
they want. I wish somebody would
feed them some red meat. They con­
sort with socialists, and I have notic­
ed in the papers recently that some of
our farmers have been going to Min­
nesota and other places and getting
very chummy with the socialists. And
coming from the city of New York, I
want to tell the farmers one thing,
and that is that a farmer here in the
northwest with 40 acres of land, a
house and an automobile, looks to a
New York socialist just as an English
duke does t4> a tramp by the roadside.
(Applause and laughter.) And it
won’t be very long before the social­
ists make the proposal to the farmers
that they should at least have the
automobile. (Laughter.)
“And some of these pacifists won­
der how we got in this war. 1 do not
know how we could have kept out of
war. The efforts that President Wil­
son made to keep the peace will shine
like silver on the book of history.
(Applause.)
“There was not any insult that we
did not swallow. Why. they took the
American flag on the Kaiser’s birth­
day in 1916 they draped it in mourn­
ing and put it in a great wreath which,
by the way I found out is not paid for
yet, that some of our own people liv­
ing in Germany bought, and they put
this on the most prominent place in
Berlin, the statute of Frederick the
Great on Unter den Linden, with a
great banner on it marked, ‘Wilson
and his press are not America.’ And
the German authorities left that to re­
main there for two months until I
told them I would go and take it
down myself as a souvenir. That is
the sort of thing that went on all over
Germany.
“How long do you suppose I would
have been allowed to remain in Ger­
many if I had done one one-thou­
sandth of the things that Von Bern-
storff did in Washington? They would
have given me my passports in 24
hours, in four hours, in four minutes.
nian military party, the Germany au­
tocracy, that rules the country have a
deep and bitter hatred against Amer­
ica.
“Von Tirpitz, who has imposed his
policy* on the Germans in this sub­
marine war, came out openly and said
‘We must hold the coast of F'landers
in order to make war on England and
America.’ He came out in an inter­
view in the most conservative paper
in Germany and said: ‘We will
through this submarine war bring the
English to their knees, and before
making peace with them we will take
their fleet, we will add the English
fleet to our fleet and we will sail with
the combined fleet to America and we
will make these fat, cowardly money-
grubbers pay the entire .expense of
the war.’
“That is the German opinion of you.
They think that you are so lost to all
sense of honor that you will stand
anything from them; that you will
stand up like a German recruit and be
struck in the face with a whip by a
German drill sergeant.
“There was no way of keeping out
of the war. if we had lain down then,
if we had let Germany override us,
we would have had no existence
among the nations. Any nation on the
Pacific or anywhere else would have
thought that they could come over
here and do what they pleased with
us. 1 believe in peace. 1 did every­
thing in Germany to keep the peace.
But peace, like everything else, is
worth nothing at all if it has to be
either bought or kept at the price of
honor. (Applause.)
"We are not going to have an easy
war. It is going to last a long time
before we make the Germans liberal­
ize themselves. We do not fear much
from a country freed from the yoke of
autocracy. They won’t go to war for
conquest. They won’t face the agony
again in order that a few stuffy Prus­
sian generals may have their faces on
medals or a few German merchants
sell a few more bills of goods. We
need not fear a free and liberal Ger­
many, But we have to keep on with
this fight until we can make peace
with such a Germany. (Applause.)
Ex-Ambassador Gerard has done *ork for their German masters.
I
the United States a great service in L. ?,°^’ thl',k what tl,a‘ ,,,cans: think
---- o- ■
what
it
means
if
you
would
come
publishing a series of articles in re­
Police Drive Workmen Back When
home
tonight
and
found
that
your
gard to the war, and showing the
Trying to Meet at Night.
methods that Germany is using in the wile had disappeared, your daughter,
“1 was staying at the country place
ne!^16 °|r K yelrS 0,d’ had disaP-
conduct of the same. Mr. Gerard peared. and no one could tell you
of a count in Hungary and 1 saw a
number of women working as garden­
came West and made a number of
‘ h.aPPe,led to them except
ers on his place, these barefooted
interesting speeches, and for the in­ t. at the neighbors would say that a
women going about with their rakes,
formation of our readers we give be­ He of German soldiers had came in­
tending to the rose bushes, and so
to the street and carried them off.
low the speech he made at Spokane, xnow , those women, and those young
forth, and I said, ‘How much do you
Wash, last week.
pay these women a day?’ ‘Twenty
girls were taken and sent off to
cents.’ That is what they get. And
villages
I have been living for nearly four lonely tarin houses, lonely
for that you go to the house and they
years in ‘he capital of one of the cen­ to live with the German troops and
get down on their knees and kiss
tral empires and for that reason I work in the fields.
----- o----
your hand.
----- o----- •
feel quite at home speaking in the
Encouraging Kaiser Here Means In-
“People that have come from those
capital of one of the most beautiful Chancellor Avoids Blame, Saying
directly Killing U. S. Troops.
countries have forgotten what an op­
centra! empires that the sun ever
Outrages Were Military Necessity.
"But
nut there is no use attempting to portunity we have given them here.
shone upon. (Applaus.)
"When I learned about this, without conceal the fact that a small number The time we were fighting for our lib­
“You know it is rather hard for you
to realize here, in the center of this waiting for orders from home, I pro­ of Americans, a small number of Irish, erty in 177 6 the princes of Germany
tested to the chancellor in the name a small number of Germans, or peo­ were selling their subjects as slaves
great Inland Empire, the magnitude
to be sent over here and shot by pur
of this awful war that has come upon ot humanity, and because the Ameri­ ple of German descent, are doing
and you know that the word
the earth—just as it was hard for me cans told me that they feared that the what they can to prolong this war by ‘ farmers,
Hessian’ means a person in politics
to realize in Berlin that there could carrying out of this order would drive giving to the Germans the idea that that you can buy.
old men and the boys in the we arc not a united nation. Now, re­
be any place in the world free from the
“That is the history of German lib­
French towns to raise against the member that from the very com­
war, cruelty, ambition and treachery.
Germans, and then there would be a mencement of the war the Germans erty. It does not exist for the work­
burning anl slaughter such as there filled our country with their spies, ing man. 1 have seen them try to meet
Line of Dead Would Reach Twice was in the Belgian town of Louvain, with their paid propaganda. I saw the since the war, come creeping out of
and the chancellor said he couldn’t other day where Von Bernstoff had their cellars where they live in Berlin,
Acroaa Entire United States.
“When I was coming through the help it, that it was done by the mili­ asked for 150,000 to bribe members and the police would not allow them
state of Montana they asked me to tary. He promised, though, he would of congress with. I suppose Le got it. to get together. And remember that
speak at one of the stations, and I speak to the emperor and that no The Germans have believed that in is going to be one of the great ob­
was trying to think of something that more would be taken, and it wasn’t this country people of German de­ stacles to peace, because the German
would bring home to the people the noA1 a montl’ afterward that the 20,- scent or German birth would rise people have had nothing to do with
bringing on this war, nothing to say
sire of this war. Do you know’ that 000 women and girls, or what was against our government.
“It is a belief that was initially ex­ about the conduct of the war.
if you took the bodies of the men that left of them, were returned to their
“And if Germany is defeated, or,
have been killed in battle in this war homes, after the pope and President pressed to me once when I was talk­
rather, if it does not win the war, if it
and put them head touching heel that
___ \\ ilson and the king of Spain used ing with the under secretary of for­ does not conquor the world, as the
they would reach from New York to their best officers and pleaded with eign affairs, discussing the question autocracy promises the people, the
San Francisco, and then you could the Germans to act in a humane way of the Lusitania. He saia ‘Your coun­ people are going-to come back from
----- o-----
try does not dare to do anything to
make another line from San Francis­ and send them back.
Germany. You do not dare to take their mud and dirt of the trenches Wishes Reservists . Would rise to See
I
told
about
this
once,
speaking
in
Any Nation that Fears War Won't
co back to New York and another
any stand »gainst us because we have and say to the government "You are
one from New York out again as far New York, and the German papers in your country 500,000 German re­ a nice sort of government and we are
How High They Would Hang.
Keep Its Liberty Long.
as Denver, and that without counting said that it wasn’t true, that they had servists, trained soldiers, who will going to overthrow you and put you
“We allow the German press in this
“Wc do not fear this war. Any na­
not
sent
them
back
because
the
pope
the countless people that have been
country to abuse our own government tion that fears war won't keep its Jib-
and the president and the king of rise up in arms against your govern­ out." (Applause.)
destroyed outside of actual battle.
“That is why the German govern­ day after day, and yet before the erty long. (Applause.) We are send­
ment if it dares to make
a move
Spain
had
asked
for
it,
but
they
had
“The whole nation of the Armenians
ment wants to make peace now or go commencement of the war, before we ing out our young men, and some of
against Germany.’
wiped out by the Turks! I know that been sent because they didn’t need
“That was the officially expressed on and take any chance rather than had broken relations with Germany, them have got to die in Europe. And
them
any
more
for
the
harvest,
and
when the news got out to the world
belief of the German autocracy. I make a peace that is not a German Americans were abused if they dared that reminds me that some people
that the Turks were in process of de­ to the German mind that appeared as told him, what you may have heard peace, not a peace which they can to use their own language in the say, ‘Why are we lighting this war in
if
they
were
catching
me
in
a
fearful
stroying the Armenians, President
before, and that might be so, but we claim is a victorious peace for their street. Americans were not allowed to Europe? Why don’t we simply defend
Wilson asked me to protest to the lie, and as if they were showing what have five hundred and one thousand autocratic government.
come back into Germany—1 know of ourselves in America?’ Well, if you
splendid
people
of
civilization
they
Germans because of the acts of their
lamp posts here, and that is where German People so Disciplined They numerous instances—because the Ger­ see a man across the street who, with
are.
That
is
what
German
rule
and
allies. The Germans said it was none
man spies reported that they had two men on his side, is fighting with
Believe Kaiser Sent by God.
they would be the next morning.
of their business; they couldn’t in­ German domination mean.
"We are sending out our young men spoken against Germany. And yet we two or three other people, and he
“But the Germans have not yet been
fluence the Turks; it was a political
Germans, Bailing with Anger Starved disabused of the idea of that revolu­ in the army, every one of them with a allow a German newspaper to exist calls out to you and says, ‘Wait until
measure on the part of the Turks dnd
tion, and these people who are en­ chance to be an officer, every one of day after day, trying to divide our I finish with these people and then 1
and Slew Prisoners.
they must be allowed to do what they,
couraging the Germans in that belief them, as Napoleon said of the French people, trying to give the Germans am coming over to get after you’,
pleased.
“It is part of my business, because are prolonging the war, are indirectly troops after the rebellion, going out the belief that, after all, those reserv­ don’t you think it is the part of the
o-----
I represented the interests of Great killing our soldiers who are going to with the baton of a marshal in his ists will arise. Well, I wish those re­ most ordinary prudence to cross the
Lemberg Residents Lucky, Year Ago Britain, to visit the prison camps of fight, because as long as the Germans knapsack. But this is not true of Ger­ servists would rise, only if we could street and take a hand while you have
Germany, and when I tell you the can cherish that belief they will try many. No matter how brave the men show the Germans how high we could got somebody else with you? (Ap­
to Find Even Dog to Eat.
number of prisoners that will give to continue the war.
in the army they cannot become offi­ hang them. (Applause and cheers.)
plause.)
“I suppose it won’t be until the end you some idea of the magnitude of
“The Germans filled our country for
cers. And so I cannot understand why
—
—
o
-----
"As I say some of our splendid
of the war that we learn of the har- the war. In the various hostile coun­
years
with
spies
and
propagandists.
any
man
of
German
descent
who
left
young men will fall in Europe. We are
rors endured by the Polish nation. tries at war today there are held as Popular Legislation Impossible Un­ Germany and came to America should I liey used their bribeesmen right and all going to pay great taxes. But I da
der Present German System.
More than a year ago the people in prisoners of war over 4,000,000 men.
be in favor of the kaiser. (Applause.) left. They tried to excite Mexico and not think any of us in America fear
the great town of Lemberg, in Galicia In Germany there are nearly 2,000,-
"It is a good thing in life to make
"They talk over there about their Japan against us. The unburied bodies either one of these things. A great
deemed themselves fortunate if they 000 prisoners of war, and the Ger­ up your mind to what
you want. A God-given kaiser. When President of our women and children are float­ philosopher has said that every man
could find a dog to eat in the street. mans used these prisoners to carry on man who knows exactly what he Wilson spoke in one of his notes of ing on the seas of the world, and yet living was condemned to die. And I
The Serbians have been nearly wiped their industrial life. They are sent out wants is going to be far more of a the government of Germany as the there are Americans who want to think it says in the Bible, ‘What shall
out as a nation, and I hope it will to work as slaves in the factories, success in live than the man who is mouthpiece of the people one of the know why we are at war. Why, with it profit a man if he gain the whole
never be our fate to come under the mines, and to till the fields; they are doubtful about his own wishes. Now, conservative newspapers said: “Our the best will in all the world we could world and lose his own soul.’
control of the Germans. (Loud Ap­ given hardly anything to eat, and in I would like to know what these pro­ kaiser is not a mouthpiece of the peo­ not have kept out of it.
“We are going to win the war. We
plause.)
the first days of the war when the Germans, whether Irish or Germans ple; is our God-given king.’
“At that time when I went to see are going Io force Prussia down, and
“The Germans said they invaded Germans were boiling with anger be­ or Americans, in this country want.
“How did he become to be their the kaiser in 1916 the Germans she will go down as soon as she
Belgium for stategic reasons. One of cause Great Britian had come in the Do they want to see this country con­ God-given king? The Hohenzollerns agreed to stand by a rule of internat­ knows this country is unitedly, effci-
lAe/■!*?• reasons was the extraction of war, there is no question but what quered by Germany? Do they think were first counts, and they took a ional law as old as the hills. That is, ciently and wholly in the war. (Ap-
40,000,000 francs a month, which wounded
prisoners
were
killed, that if the Germans should conquer mortgage on Brandenburg, and they that a merchant ship shall not he plause ami loud cheers.) And it is
they have had to pay to the German wounded prisoners starved, mistreat­ this country that their lot would be foreclosed that mortgage just 500 sunk without notice and without put­ your pari here at home to down this
government since the commencement ed on their way to the prison camps, any better? That they will be put in years ago. Now, if I had a farm and 1 ting the passengers and crew in traitorism, to drag these snakes out
of the war. The men of Belgium were and in many of these camps their as dukes or counts to rule us? I do had to put a mortgage on it, and the safety. They agreed to that formally of their holes, these misguided politi­
not know that Benedict Arnold had man that held the mortgage fore­ May 4, 1916. They kept that pledge, cians that think they are going to win
seized in their towns and carried off treatment was not much better.
as slaves to work for the Germans to
“We are going to celebrate before such a good time after he went to closed it I do not think that I would more or less to the late autumn, and I votes. Why. there isn’t .any one of
make ammunition that was to be used long the 400th anniversary of Martin live with the enemy.
think that he was sent by God. (Ap­ came over here to tell the people that them that will ever be elected keeper
"What are these people driving at? plause.) But they have managed so to I thought they were going to break of the dog pound again. (Applause
against their own fathers, brothers Luther, celebrate the time when he
• nd sons fighting for the Belgian nailed his thesis to the door of the They came here for some reason. We train the people over there and so their pledge and start what they and cheers.) From the mere stand­
army.
church at Wittenberg. Wittenberg did not send over and pay their fares discipline them that they actually be­ themselves called their rutsless sub­ point of the devil, from the mere
‘I talked with Belgians who escap­ was one of the places where the Ger­ to bring them to America. They came lieve that there is a sort of gentle­ marine war.
politician's standpoint, they never
ed from the place where they were mans had a prison camp. In that here because they have in this country man’s agreement with the almighty.
■
o—
made a greater mistake. Back up our
an
opportunity
they
never
had
in
(Laughter.)
working in Berlin and came into my camp they had Russian, French, Eng­
Given Four Hours' Notice of Ruthless men bv stamping out t his sedition, and
Germany,
because
the
man,
no
matter
lish
and
Belgians.
The
Russian
sol
­
"And they talk about not commenc­
embassy to tell me how they had been
then I tell you it won’t be long before
Submarine War.
seized, taken from their towns with- diers brought typhus fever—not ty­ how poor he is, no matter who he is, ing this war; that they wanted peace.
we hear of the Stars ami Stripes go­
“
When
1
went
back
to
Germany
born
in
this
country,
can
aspire
to
the
I met in the hall of the Davenport
?ut.?. chance to say goodby to their phoid, but typhus—one of the worst
ing down VJnter den Linden in Berlin.
about
Christmas
time
of
1916
every
highest
office
in
the
gift
ot
the
peo
­
last night a gentleman who said he
families, without a chance to pack up diseases mankind suffered from.
(Long applause and cheers.)”
“The British medical officers who ple. That is something that cannot did not mind my using his name. He one of them, from the chancellor
any necessaries, and dragged off to
happen
in
Germany.
down,
said,
‘
Oh,
no,
we
are
going
to
was born in Germany. His name is
Germany. They were kept in cattle had been captured with their men
Notice to Creditors.
“Out in Kentucky the governor's Dietz. He lives in Seattle, and he is a keep our pledges; don't believe that
■
o---------
cars, starved, told they wouldn’t get said, ‘You must not shut our men up
standing,
wjs
house,
which
is
still
wc
are
going
to
break
our
pledges
shoe manufacturer. He told me that
anything to eat until they worked for with the Russians or they will get the
In the County Court of the State
built,
of
course,
by
mechanics
from
we
are
going
to
stand
by
them.
’
he left Germany after he was 4 0 years
their captors, and when they still re­ typhus fever,’ and the German com­
of Oregon, For the County of Tilla­
"And then, on the 31st of January, mook:—In the matter of the estate
fused the German soldiers cainc in mander of that camp said. You have the vicinity, and three of the me­ old. He said that when he was at
chanics
that
worked
on
that
house
as
1917,
the
foreign
minister
wrote
me
a
school in Berlin in Heimstragse the
and beat them on the heads with the got to learn to know your allies,’and
of Charles A. Seamon, late of the
butt-end of their rifles and kicked so he put in the same enclosure the . mechanics lived to occupy it as gov­ head of public instruction came to see letter and said, ‘I’leace come over to county of Tillamook, Deceased.
ernors
of
Kentucky.
That
is
some
­
sec
me
at
6
o
’
clock
tonight.
’
He
sent
them with their heavy boots until the French and the Belgians and the thing that cannot happen in Germany. them one day and made a speech to
Notice is hereby given that the un­
the boys in which he said: ‘We can me the letter at 4 o’clock. When I dersigned has, in the above entitled
Belgians consented to work. When I British with the Russians, and he
went
over
to
the
foreign
office
at
6
----- o-----
conquer
France when we please.
•old Cardinal Farley, the head of the thereby killed them—killed a number
proceeding, filed his Final Account
o'clock he then notified me that at 12
Catholic church in the cast, about this of the French and British and Bel­ Call Pacifists Treacherous and Mask­ There is only one nation that stand«
as Administrator for the Estate
o
’
clock
that
night
they
were
going
to
in the way of our extending Prussian
which was of Charles A. Seamon,
when I was there last summer, he gians just as certainly as if he had
ed German Helpers.
arms over the world and that nation commence to sink boats without no­
•aid: ‘You have to go back to the time stood them against a wall and had
“But the Germans have no liberty. is England.' And he said how many of tice, no matter what nation, no mat­ late of the County of Tillamook, De­
of the Medes and Persians to find a them shot.
Their voting is a sham. The rcichstag you will volunteer to fight England ter under what flag, on that part of ceased, and that the Court has ap­
----- o-----
people so cruel that they have carried
that you read about has no power. It when the time comes?’
the ocean which the Germans had pointed Saturday, the Third Day of
November, 1917, at Ten o'clock in
off the men of the conquered nation Forced to Liar on Thin Soups for
is nothing but a debating society, be­ Every One Now in America it Either marked off for themselves.
the forenoon, for the hearing of Ob­
•* work for them as their bond
Two and One-Half Years.
cause over the rcichstag stands the
"What
time
was
there
given
to
us
American or a Traitor.
•laves.’
jections to such Final Account and
the
bundesrath,
"In that camp they kept dogs, these higher chamber,
“Now, that is the sort of thing that for negotiation there? 'I'hat English the settlement thereof.
-■ o------
“
German police dogs that were trained which is appointed by the ruling prin- has been going on in every school in writer Bernard
Shaw, when he spoke
S. M. Batterson,
Seized Women and Girls Return to to go in and bite the prisoners. They ces of Germany, and they are not po-
Germany for years—bringing the peo­ of the ultimatum of 4 8 hours sent to
Administrator
were practically starved, a little piece ing to allow any popular legislation ple up from the time that they we?e Servia by Austria at the beginning
their Homes Physical Wrecks.
Johnson K Handley,
soup made of potatoes to go through.
children into the belief that they have of the war, said that it was not a lie­ Robert II. McGrath,
‘I went down to the great genera! of bread, some
- • • * •••■* ---- *
I
As the president of the German- a chosen mission to conquer the cent time in which to ask a man to
headquarters, as they call it, where with some kind of little meat in it is
Attorneys for the Administrator.
American alliance in New York said, world, and impose what they call kul- pay his hotel bill. Well, the four hours
the Kaiser resides in northern France all those prisoners have had to eat for
the Germany that we know and loved
*• the end of April, 1916, at the time inorc than two and a half years for has disappeared. And that is true. It tur on every nation of the world. I . notice that they gave me at a time
MERCHANT'S WIFE ADVISES
when I went to settle with him direc­ some of them. Of course, for the j has disappeared beneath a pile of can not understand why there should when they knew that it took me two
TILLAMOOK WOMEN.
be even one person of German de­ days to cable to Washington and two
tly what we called in diplomatic lan- British prisoners we managed to get Prussian helmets.
It
disappeared
ttiage the Sussex question, this whole packages which were sent from Eng- when Prussia conquered the rest of scent in this country who is lifting ■lays to get an answer back was
“I had stomach trouble so bad I
hardly a decent time to ask a man to
land and which contained the food on
his voice in favor of that system.
submarine question.
Germany in 1866. And that is whv I
could cat nothing but toast, fruit, and
“Of course they had a right to sym­ pay for a soda water.
'At that time, when I was motering which thev lived, but the Russians cannot understand why any man from
"But, seriously, therewas no chance hot water. Everything else soured
•bout the country, I saw a lot of ar.d the Belgians are being starved to Bavaria, or Hesse, or Hesse-Darms­ pathize at the beginning of this war
death,
reduced
to
such
a
point
that
for
negotiations. They thought that and formed gas. Dieting did no good.
with
any
side
that
they
pleased
and
women and girls who didn't look like
tadt should be in favor of these Prus- the American people are to be con­ you had all sunk so low that you I Was miserable until I tried buck­
thev
can
’
t
resist
any
disease.
peasants working in the fields. I said
"You know that here in the north­ : sians who conquered this '•onntry as gratulated on the tact and the kind­ would stand any blow in the face that thorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed
to the German officer, ‘They are very
west
we have a great Scandinavian 1 late as 1866.
ness which they displayed toward the Germans chose to give you. And in Adler-i ka. ONE SPOONFUL
■ice looking peasants you have work­
"Take the great light of German their brother citizens of Germany de­ they have a hate against America, benefitted me INSTANTLY." Be­
population.
I
am
very
glad
to
see
in
fig in the fields in this vicinity.’ He
literature, Goethe, whom the Ger-I
hate, cause Adlcr-i-ka empties BOTH large
replied: ‘Oh, well, the peasants here the last few days that the Swedes are mans are so fond of quoting. He said: I scent, and how they helped them to which is only excelled by one
holding meetings through the north­
climb quietly on the band wagon and that is the hate against the Ger- and small intestine, it relieves ANY
dress very well.”
man-Amcrican, because the German- CASE constipation, sour stomach or
,0 ! ’The Prussian is born a brute and after we declared war. (Applause.)
'But that afternoon I met the mem- west and proclaiming their
i civilization will make him ferocious.' | "But in legal parlance there is what American has disappointed them in gas and prevents appendicitis. It has
the
United
States
(applause)
The
king
hers of the American commission
¡And we have seen in this war that j
QUICK EST action of anything we
who are feeding northern France and of Sweden is in favor of Germany. I , mere scientific education and attain- is called a time of repentance, and that rising.
ever sold. J. S. Lamar, druggist.
suppose
that
is
because
he
has
got
a
.
now that we have been nearly six
•o ■ -
they told me the secret of these peas-
i
ment
have
not
kept
the
Prussian
from
I
German wife (Laughter) But he is
months at war that time of repent­
■■ts working in the field. The Ger-
becoming a ferocious creature that ance has gone by. (Loud Applause.) Would Make Cowardly Money Grub
mans Wanted volunteers to work in not a Swede; he is descended from ; Goethe predicted he would become.
bers in U. S Pay For War.
BLACKBERRIES WANTED
the fields of northern France. They one of the adventurous and traitorous | "In 1819, when we we enjoying And the time has come when every
------ o------
“In October, 1915, I saw the kaiser,
marshals of Napoleon who was f,ec'. I
I
man
in
America
must
declare
himself
®o not give the products of these ed king of Sweden about 1810. and full liberty in this country, the peas­
I am buying all the blackberries
and he stood with his face a few inch­
either
an
American
or
a
trator.
(Pro
­
nelds to the population; they take it
ants in the grand duchy bordering on
I can get for the Forest Grove
es from mine, and he said, ‘I shall
‘or their own army, and the popula­ the aristocrats in Sweden are for the Berlin were serfs, were slaves; and longed applause and cheers.)
Fruit Canners Ass’n, and will Pay
Germans,
and
the
officers
of
the
army
Shall we Sacrifice our Sons And Then stand no nonsense from America after
tion is fed with the food which you
the
German
working
man
today
is
you 8%C. per lb. caah, for them
this war.’ Well, that means that you,
Tolerate Treason at Home?
but the people are not for Germany.
a*ve sent from America. They only They
I will run my auto truck and
know how Germany has treated not much better off. Why any work- j “You are sending out your sons and out here in Spokane, when this war is
got 14 when then called for volun­
ing
man,
why
an
American
farmer
gather up your berries, phone me
Scandinavian population in that
your brother» and your busbands and over, you have to look out. (Laugh­
teers in the great industrial town of the
should
consort
with
these
pacifists,
and make arrangements for pick­
part of Prussia where Danes live,
your sweethearts to fight on the bat- ter) The kaiser won’t stand any non­
Edie, and so they gave an order that which was taken by Prussia from these ma’ked’nd’"afc‘’"o,is^;1^’ tiefield,
Hander.
Are yog , going sense from you. (Laughter). But it
• '• •• of . —
J
ing. Both Phones.
•hey were to seize the women and
of Germany, is more than 1 can un- to allow them
.
/
Smith "The Calf Man."
to go forth, perhaps to means more. It means that the Ger-
girls and send them out forcibly to Denmark in