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Influenza Encyclopedia

Page  1 ï~~y, ' ro 'a a Idtiathe disei 1ee be.W* bt dus dalt of; Us t* make sacribt.t one thing it has Adeprived us of for K Wehotld be truly thankful 3s the Little Wththe' moution in Germany sewinglte tKa myWWY t ~ eooeft" nthat if waxita pae b ~A$~it e a "away od Kintg l erd of are times when we would like to coinOieaW *Ith S Douglas Huag Just to eon1.t~ilste him on the splendid way in which '~ A~tom" dre kicking the breeches off the We hope that In the November elections the eonse of the people to President Wilson's 1pa will. be- so emphatic that the Hon. Ted ~svelt will be compelled to close his mouth &go to work for a living. ~f Austria Is forced to pull out of the Sght be war can be brought to a speedy end by r-tklsg Geri any from the south. beRepublican leaders have moments of ip depression when they fear that the PresV#appeal to. the country will result in mak~'Cosigtess safe for DOmocracy. $ow that the Ilon. Max Dinkeispiel is td be ~nge of the Court of Appeals let us hope he will frown upon the dinky spiels of the ~ers...,,lit d'es, general manager of the Emerf~yleet Corporation, has ruled against sUand other sports among shipyard work-, Iam led to this,' he says, "by the coin*ji1uro=f the men thelselvea that they waste., hb time In. getting ready for athletic eutsad too much time in recovering from b~ain." The whole country is now conscious of Ifact that the war must be won by hard tandl hard blows and not by ping-pong acid "; - nititiy reasons," says the Cologne W E.EV C~dfotpel us to acceept President - ''d *t* eepa 04 - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ S,---- -'-m5 u p tuIe -impod.-her 0w" peace of tlolafe cA Rena.-:an Blu tsa,.gl sered notice on tome west 4 ze tWon s that her conditions to Unmania wr gentle as compared with the conditions of bumIllation she. nlEdnt to Impose,of them. Maximiflan Is Still her Chancellor, still ber spotsannn,. whether be Speake for the HlohenzoI~e~-m or' the German pleople.. ite declares thae,rmany will no' accept a peace of violence--that a proud people accutomied to victory cannolt submit to Such a peace. But the charm bas been broken. Whatever, they have been aetotned. to, the German people must have It indelibly impressed on their mludfq burned Into their souls that In this war they have, bees utterly defeated, militarily and in their political aspirations--or will be--and that Impression cannot be made lastingly deep unless the te she is compelled to accept are such as to leave her powerless to resume the w-ar, immediately or in the distant future. Surrender of her armies, denobfllsation, abandonment of all the territory she has of npled, concession of the territory she stole tram France, the pawn of some of her own most valuable territory as the guarantee of her goodl. faith and the elimination of the Hohe nollernthese are some of the donditlons which the American people desire Included hI the irreducible miimum of the nations who have defented her. When Germany broke the pea ee of Europe it was clear that this country had as vital an interest in the outcome as- any at the nation~s with which she' first went to war. If she had conquered Europe she would have come swaggering across the Atlantic to make us bow to Prussian ktiltor or meet her In comlbef. It Is to the interest of all the people of this republic that she should be forced to a peace Which will make her harmless for generations to, come. REOPENING TH4E CHURCHES. The health autbbrities have acted wisely is ordering the reopening of the churchcs. It will go far toward confirming their statement that the epidemic several days ago passed Its peak and Is now rapidly declining. Our own judgment was adverse to the Asspension of church services. Many other cities did riot go to this extreme in their campaign against the disease, but regulated the service, as might have been done here with equal re deemed essential to the. fulfilhnent of their ak; and we are glad to bear testimy to the Da U With-.VhIb thbflds of Ood-f a a tj~~l nthis Cmuh t att*~Ga it) ~ d sm WterIJ u essm IN t. a betr today In the little city iatf tested, at Leipeirby so e~ stin the aliethe CWteIWa V a fored 'os toward France: At Henna hefound has r berred by his eorier maroral1, Wee~ tia n, ine command of an army of -70,IO tiats and Bavarlans. Atgat t Ws ot fresh troops Napoleon c o uld oprpoin only soldiers- all weak and worn by battles forced ma rchu's. *4 n "sadoeo "This, then, is the ed! adoeo leon's of ficers, but the emperor onl y sa As he surveyed the potition of Wr ede's f he scornfully remna rked: "Alas, poor Wri made him a count, but I could not make general." Ul a thunderbolt Napoleon hurled hi~ column against the Bavarian flank. The test was bloody and pr ptraeted. and the F suffered severely, but Wreee was no neat strategy for Napoleon. Wrede, while trying to rally his troops. was severely w ed. His army was dispersed, and the F troops regained Mentz. Karl Philipp. Prince of Wrede. who so badly in the conflict with Napo'leon n century ago, had been the emperor's allyi campaigns against the Anstrians, Prussian Russians. After the retreat f romt Russia, c inig to be. offended by some insult whiel been offered to him, but more likely be he believed Napoleon was near the end c tether,. Wrcde returned to Munich and jI the anti-French party. He was largely it mental in bringing about the treaty why Bavaria joined the coalition agaiirst F-ranc Two days after Hanan the Frenc crosse Rhine, and ten days later the emperor w Paris. Even then he could have compp r by agreeing to confine his activities to Fr Yet he could not believe that Europe, s, cently prostrate beneath his feet, had pow hold him within such limits. While he da the hostile forces closed around him. Enghisi and Spanish armies, headed by\ ington, were on the frontier. Russia. P rt Bavaria, Sweden and the smaller German s were marching armies to the eastern 1)0 and were preparing to cross the Rhine. few allies remaining to France were f i and not to be trusted. France had been dra of all its mhen by successive levies of cons, tions, and the raw material for armies had exhausted- Well might the emperor sad that criass: "All Europe was marching wit a year ago, but how all Europe is marc against us." IHouse OfLords T HE first great popular desmoestratloc favor of the nholttflh of the Brltth H. of Lords was held in Hyde Park, Lont thirty-four years age, Oct. 28, 1814 Over hundred thousand persons attended the nr ftg, and every rlemunciatlaoe of the peetrS greeted with Wild ehedf& 'fThe Houseof TLords had i 4*n7 gIn 1707. The first Roman Catholic per toolk seat in the Loei in 1f21 and the. ret Jena poer t*a aitts~d in 186. The uovmnt thde a bolith n of thE House of Lowd has 4 sthcq the odetratioa of t ho radictasin i w - inl.t ed*1tM ubtedl$ 6b. tauo r ',r',j w"c rL 1 ' t fit( itY. F s* ' to t Y rb M ' AM 10/23/2006 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS NEWSPAPER R M

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