Neutrality? The crucifixion of public opinion . 22nd is the date of this atrocity, and inthe months that have elapsed since then the German privateerfleet has been living a life of the strictest retirement. It is not presumable, however, that any of the habitues ofBroadway, Sixth Avenue and Seventh Avenue, between 28thand 50th Streets, New York, the only people who ever read theEvening Telegram, is endowed with memory or with spiritenough to question any of the pink uns will be noticed that another Russian victory is achieved inthis issue. The result, presumably, was the usua


Neutrality? The crucifixion of public opinion . 22nd is the date of this atrocity, and inthe months that have elapsed since then the German privateerfleet has been living a life of the strictest retirement. It is not presumable, however, that any of the habitues ofBroadway, Sixth Avenue and Seventh Avenue, between 28thand 50th Streets, New York, the only people who ever read theEvening Telegram, is endowed with memory or with spiritenough to question any of the pink uns will be noticed that another Russian victory is achieved inthis issue. The result, presumably, was the usual advancetoward the rear. It states further that the Germans are in despair. Theyare, according to Mr. Bennett, using women as soldiers. If itwas German women who shortly after this won the battle atNeuve Chapelle, they are better fighters than the English suffra-gettes. These headlines are—as every New Yorker whose businesscalls him even occasionally to the Rialto knows—very mildexamples of the headline art as practised on Pinkyk CHAPTER LXVI Amerika Ueber Alles. The NEW YORKERSTAATS - ZEITUNG, Ameri-cas leading German paper, hasbeen waging a valiant campaignfor truth. Its English articlesin The War From Day toDay have attracted widespreadattention for their cleverness,lucidity, accurate and expertdiscussions about the war. That the German element ofour population has played aprominent part in promotingAmerican progress and civiliza-tion is denoted by the fact thatthis influential German news-paper has existed and flourishedin New York for four scoreyears. The recent celebration of itseightieth anniversary by theNew Yorker reveals a success founded on thepatronage of a large, thriving, capable, useful and progressivebody of German reading people. But for these patrons thepaper could not have become the prosperous disseminator ofnews or the powerful leader of opinion that it is. But it has deserved every particle of its prosperity, for ithas aimed t


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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectworldwar19141918