The Survey October 1916-March 1917 . navies a power for ordermerely, not an instrument of aggression orof selfish violence. These are American principles, Americanpolicies. We can stand for no others. Andthey are also the prihciples and policies offorward-looking men and women every-where, of every modern nation, of everyenlightened community. They are the prin-ciples of mankind and must prevail. The Singer Mary Carolyn Davies SHE sang a song of beauty, while I spokeOf wrongs to be righted;She lit a lamp of hoping while I told Of lamps to be took the hardened hands of those who rea
The Survey October 1916-March 1917 . navies a power for ordermerely, not an instrument of aggression orof selfish violence. These are American principles, Americanpolicies. We can stand for no others. Andthey are also the prihciples and policies offorward-looking men and women every-where, of every modern nation, of everyenlightened community. They are the prin-ciples of mankind and must prevail. The Singer Mary Carolyn Davies SHE sang a song of beauty, while I spokeOf wrongs to be righted;She lit a lamp of hoping while I told Of lamps to be took the hardened hands of those who readHer little book of loveliness and ledThe hopeless to where hope and beauty made men quite forget to hate or to only talked of beauty to be sought, Of rights to be wrested;I sang of wars that must be found and fought, And shrill I led men past all struggling and all strife,Bejond the darkness, into freer is bought by blows, I said. But sheKnew unarmed beauty was enough to make men FAMINE IN BELGIUM BRINGSHOOVER HOME HERBERT C. HOOVER, chair-man of the American Commissionfor Relief in Belgium, whose magnificentachievement in organizing the supplyand distribution of the American giftsto Belgium and of the contributionsmade to that country by the allied gov-ernments has been described in the Sur-vey by Ernest P. Bicknell [September2, 1916], returned last Sunday to NewYork to start a new campaign for rais-ing funds. This has been made necessary by thefact, he says, that the economic situa-tion in Belgium and in the North ofFrance is now much worse than it hasbeen since the beginning of the classes of the population whichwere self-supporting when we startedoperations have since fallen into diredistress through the gradual exhaustionof their resources. The industries of thecountry have practically come to a stand-still. Savings are used up. Returnsfrom every form of investment have di-minished or ceased altogether. The im
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