11. The Courage of Clemenceau.
V. OUR BRITISH ALLIES 132
1. "Gott Strafe England"--"And
Scotland."
2. "England Must Not Starve."
3. German-Americans Who Vilify
England.
4. British vs. American Girls in
Munition Factories.
5. The Wolves' Den on Vimy Ridge.
6. "Why Did You Leave Us in
Hell for Two Years?"
7. "This War Will End Within
Forty Years."
8. "Why Are We Outmanned By
the Germans?"
VI. "OVER HERE" 164
1. The Redemption of a Slacker.
2. Slackers versus Heroes.
3. German Stupidity in Avoiding the
Draft.
4. "I'm Working Now for Uncle
Sam."
5. The German Farmer's Debt to the
United States.
6. "Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth"
Is an Ungrateful Immigrant.
7. In Praise of Our Secret Service.
Publisher's Explanatory Note
These brief articles are sparks struck as it were from the anvil of
events. They were written on trains, in hotels, in the intervals between
public addresses. During the past year beginning October 1, 1917, Dr.
Hillis, in addition to his work in Plymouth Church, and as President of
The Plymouth Institute, has visited no less than one hundred and
sixty-two cities, and made some four hundred addresses on "The National
Crisis," "How Germany Lost Her Soul," "The Philosophy of the German
Atrocities," and "The Pan-German Empire Plot," the substance of these
lectures and addresses being given in the book, "German Atrocities,"
heretofore published. These articles are illustrative of and
supplementary to the principles stated in that volume.
While consenting to publication, the author was not afforded opportunity
for full revision of this second volume, being again called over-seas
just as this book was being put into type. This will account for the
form in which the material appears.
THE ARCH-CRIMINAL
I
1. The Kaiser's Hatred of the United States
It is a proverb that things done in secret soon or late are published
from the housetops.
Certainly everything that was hidden as to the plots of the Potsdam gang
is, little by little, now being revealed.
Nothing illustrates this fact better than that volume published in
Leipsic in 1907, called "Reminiscences of Ten Years in the German
Embassy in Washington, D. C."
When that ag
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