Foreign-born Americans and their children; our duty and opportunity for God and country from the standpoint of the Episcopal church . CHOIR OF CZECH BOYSIn our Church of the Atonement, Westfield, Massachusetts. ..Zij A CZECH SOKOLA gymmastic class of a typical Czech Sokol see, replied the poor woman, my oldman is working at the munition plant,and the two boys are with our UnitedStates Army fighting in France, and allthe rest of the family are out sellingLiberty bonds. So it is that everyCzech in America, though rightly glory-ing in the reborn republic of Czecho-slovakia, is always a true Ameri
Foreign-born Americans and their children; our duty and opportunity for God and country from the standpoint of the Episcopal church . CHOIR OF CZECH BOYSIn our Church of the Atonement, Westfield, Massachusetts. ..Zij A CZECH SOKOLA gymmastic class of a typical Czech Sokol see, replied the poor woman, my oldman is working at the munition plant,and the two boys are with our UnitedStates Army fighting in France, and allthe rest of the family are out sellingLiberty bonds. So it is that everyCzech in America, though rightly glory-ing in the reborn republic of Czecho-slovakia, is always a true Americanpatriot. Also, our Czech neighbors are an up-right and morally clean people, shy andunassuming, but absorbingly interestingand companionable when you havegained their confidence. The children aremiost fascinating. The family life is happyand centered about the mother. Notonly the children, w^hen they go towork, bring home their money to themother, but the men give over their en-tire wages to her. She settles the weeklybill, pays off the mortgage on the houseand puts the balance in the SavingsBank. A girl of a Czech family, six-teen or seventeen years old, is inpartnership witih her mother, workingwit
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectamerica, bookyear1921