THTC SUNDAY CITIZEN, A8HEV1LLE, N. C, DECEMBER 8, IMS. 12 or Christmas What Gift Could Be More Acceptable or More Appreciated Than a Pair of Correctly Fitted Glasses, Properly Adjusted v (Bf Frank II. S'inondft.) "Author fr'Th World War." "They Shall Not I'uss." (Copyright, ill. New Ynrk Tribune. fi . Inc.) I In several" previous articles I have . discussed various aspect and prob i lonur of ths forthcoming- peace coii area at Versa II leu. The great variety ' of question to be decided, territorial. financial and political, since a very .' larg portion of Europe la to be re , made, haa already served to confuse Ihe mass t observer, and this eon fusion haa not been lessened by the ad dition of tha supreme pusxle, which Vis the league of nations. j ! ,ivavu p...v,v, uuno.ri, j .'intend to deal, not with the problems ' which are to be submitted to the cte ; clsion of ' the congress, but to the equally Important question of the view .' of tha varioua European peoples, still n our associates against Germany, as it ; affect and will hereafter affect our influence' at Versailles- Such observa- lions a I bar make are based upon ", the comment of my French and Eng lish friend and ths reading of the -, various foreign Journal whlch-com to this country. i Singular Unanimity. In the beginning it must bs said that there 1 singular... unanimity r abroad in recognizing tha plain fact ;; that without America Germany could . not have been beaten. The war has ended In .KlJ because w supplied 1-2-3-4 FUEL SAVING Note them carefully, and see if they are offered la any other range than Allen's Frincess, the famous economy kitchen ranae. i. PATENTED MOT BLAST flM BOX, ADe prj fc- W I. mh-s-. ...I- fcuatlao which lb, tpaeaiblofual. I A8BT3TO3 OVERCOAT, i-L.-T" at-t tJaa the fuel grna. A ONE PIECE RANGE. Tha top 3 Zi fXE-?I Ranges" We are agent for Princess Ranges and would like to show you these points. Then compare Pnncese with any other range in town, and see for youraelf why It is the great saver of fuel. y f 7 Broadway. No. 25 Patton Avenue. S1M0NDS' REVIEW Foch with the necessary reserve available and prospective, to push this great offensive. In the spring the Germans won great initial successes, but the cost was so great that their mail power gave out at the precise moment when there was needed a great reserve to enforce victory. On July It the first American divisions entering t.he battle gave Foch the ad vantage of numbers at the decisive point. Thereafter he was always able to count upon a perfectly regular new contribution month by month. Only leas decisive waa our aid in material directions. In money and In supplies: while, small as our naval contribution was, measured by com parison with that of Britain, it was a precious aid at the moment when the submarine peril was at Its height. Europe, then, and particularly our British and French allies, feels to ward this country a gratitude which is spread over the whole population, and is nowhere more genuine and in tense than among the poorer classes, whose immediate sufferings were greatest and whoso gain through peace is swiftest in arriving. This is the foundation of the influence which we have today in Europe and the basis of the appeal our voice will have in conference. But along with gratitude, which would express Itself in a prompt com pliance with any request of ours made In our own interest, made for the Features that Insure e fast d nearly rmi,ntr bmsm H sin till far This hw the emltUmaaai MwrMfUM f fowl mmmibU. U mkU in m pi m. Thin w ao was mt thm . . IuImh M. I .L. a- I . V . , ' Ptli 'uaa. Thia faatun mml tint tfc a aBt. TH1 " "tal lw astes seal naslmum efflstanay f fwsa fwel. SAMPLE FURNITURE CO. The comfort and satisfaction of properly fitted glasses can only be realized by persons wearing them. A great many of us have friends and relatives who continue to wear ill-fitting, uncomfortable glasses, which should probably have been changed months or years ago. They really intend having them changed, but just keep putting it off. (Proper care of the eyes demands that those requiring glasses should have their eyes examined each year or so, if only for "Safety-first." Are they not worth it?) For those neglectful ones the only way to help is to "Thrust Comfort Upon Them." To do this give them a CREDIT SLIP on us entitling them to come in and have a properly fitted pair of glasses, absolutely guaranteed, which we will make up, at their convenience. This credit slip will make a most acceptable gift and you will be gratefully remembered each day for years to come. "Becoming Glasses Cost DR. safeguarding of any policy of ours, there la an unmistakable apprehen sion born of the suspicion that our great influence may be exerted to procure things of little real value to us and carrying a future menace to our associate. For example, it Is customary in America to say that we make war, not upon the German peo ple, but upon their rulers. We have always In certain official quarters made a clear distinction between the masses of the German people and ther rulers. But no such distinction exists in the minds of the French peo ple, and it has practically disappear ed from British minds Is Gorman -Thins;. The Frenchman does not see In his ruined villages, his ravaged fields, his murdered and dishonored women. evidence of the exclusive spirit of the Prussian or of the official caste. What haa been done Is, to his mind, a pe culiarly and characteristic German thing. He reasons, without excep tion, that the excesses and crimes which have been committed on his territory and against his brethren have been the lasting expression In deed of what the German is, not the high born German, not the prince or the baron, but the German of all classes. For the Frenchman, therefore. there Is the realisation of what the German Is, what he has always been, emphasized by the events of recent twtoa as mesh wash ss mc. fee! to Jo twa Jae a sews in whkk retains the a rha.Mos ail tha aet. Phon 2741. J. C. years, but illustrated by all German history. And In the Frenchman' mind' the German will not change easily, probably never. In any event, a new form of government will not transform million of. men who yes terday, and for years past, conducted themselves in the spirit of barbarism on French soil. When peace, does come Franc will still find herself with an open fron tier toward the Germans. It will be a better frontier, easier to defend, In cluding 1,600,000 people of Alsacs Iorralne who desire to be Freycn, but It will be a frontier marching with the German lands. - i And the emotion which I find among Frenchmen is not one of pas sion toward the German. I have walked through many villages which had been wantonly destroyed by Ger man troops with every attendant atrocity and my French guide have shown no passion. They have aald, simply and Invariably. "This is what they 'did." Ask the French why and the answer is the same: "We do not know, but they always do." Do Hot Trust Han. Now. as nearly as I can measure the feeling of the French people whom i know, there I no thought of partitioning Germany or of destroy ing It. All recognize that under some form of government the Germans will continue where they have been for centuries. There 1 no desire to take German territory, but there Is a vast, an immeasurable amazement at the American assumption that the Ger man will be transformed by a change In government, or that it will be pos sible to trust and deal with the Ger man who under the empire was, a methodical murderer and Incendiary when he lives under a republic, so cialist or bolsheviM. The French have had many treaties with the Germans. But all have been violated when there wa4 gain for the German. Belgium was only one cai For torty-seven years the French have been bullied, badgered. Insult d. victimized. And this has been done not by a class, but by a race, Therefore, the Frenchman finds It dif ficult to understand why the Amerl oan, living three thousand miles away, should now undertake to teach hrm about the German and regulate his relations with this neighbor through a league of nations. And I suspect that the French emotion Is rery generally shared by Pershing's army, to Judge from the letter of the soldiers on the front. The Frenchman's feeling about the league of nations, so far as it deal with his relations WKh the German, Is the feeling that certain border com munities have manifested when re mote metropolitan districts undertook to tell them how to' get on with the red Indian. In France for four years the German has been engaged, In the periods between battle, In murder, loot and arson. If the Frenchman now shows htmself skeptical about the league of nations tt is because he can not understand how one can safely associate In any International organi sation with a nation all of whose peo ple sanction, most of whom defend and many of whom practice methods which are to be described only, as German. T do not think Mr. Wilson league of nations will arouse any great en thusiasm m Francs, because It I founded upon the idea of the- moral as well a tbe Intellectual and physi cal equaMty between nations. I find amassment in the minds of French friends at ths idea that we should ex pect them, want them, to Join with the Germans in a league of nations. I find apprehension lest we should seek to compel them to enter such a league against their own better Judg ment. I find It among the very Frenchmen who are most sincerely grateful for American aid and frank est In expressing their conviction that without that aid tbe war would have been lost. Nothing Mors Than Incident. Every sensible Frenchman recog nizes that this war is probably noth ing more than an inoldent in Euro pean history. He does not see any J sign of a change- In the German ap petite, In the German ambition: be sees that Germany changed her" tone, but only after her defeat waa toe un mistakable to be further concealed from the mass of the German peo ple. He has been flrhtlns; ths Ger man ami he" has a pretty shrewd notion of the enemy. He haa rasas ared him mentally as well as payst- DENISON (EYE-STRAIN SPECIALIST) OF THE WAR cally, and he does not find any prom ise In a league of nations which in cludes Germany, and he recognizes that unless the league of nations in oulde Germany it Is nothing more nor less than another alliance of the old sort. Looking now to my English ac quaintances, I am frank to say that I find in this quarter very little more enthusiasm for a league of nations of the sort which Mr. Wilson seems to advocate. There is the same grati tude, for At lerican aid that the French show. There Is the same un qualified praise of what we have done, praise generous beyond measure. There is. beyond this, a certain In articulate satisfaction that after a century and more of mutual misun derstanding and Intellectual and sym pathetic separation a world war has supplied the opportunity for the two branches of the English-speaking race to draw near to each other. And again, for any request America should make for herself In the peace congreen, I am' satisfied there would be quite as prompt a British support as a French Indorsement. I feel sure that both the British and the French would be glad to sacrifice some por tion of their own Interests If by that sacrifice the could please Asnerica or prove their gratitude. ; But, Just as the French : are apprehensive, the British are disturbed, and their dis quiet grows out of the reported pur pose of America, at, the peace con ference, to seek to transfer from Britain .to some international body the mastery of the seas, the power which, in British hands, has Just- saved the world . and . prevented the downfall of the British' empire So Hesitancy. If we should ask the British to as sociate with us in a league made up Of America and Britain, with France and Italy as lesser partners, to regu late the oceans, to police them, I do not think there would be the smallest hesitancy on the British part, for ths British would trust us to play the game fairly, to mean what our words seemed to mean when we spoke them to hold to our pledges when we had given them. But, again, the danger seems to be that we shall advocate the admission of the German into that association, the German who has just desisted from submarine murdering because he encountered a higher law of necessity than the one he invoked when he started his ruthless sea slaughter. It Is very difficult to put down clearly the Impressions I gather from those of our associated nations with whom I dlsouss the question of a league of nations, but the upshot of my impressions Is that neither tne British nor the French regard tne proposal with . any real enthusiasm, not because they have selfish ambi tions which would be Interfered with, not because they have vindictive pas sions which they mean to gratify, but solely and simply because four years or war with tne German nave taught them certain bitter lesson and aroused enduring anxieties. The Eng lishman was almost childlike in hi faith In the validity of documents Ilk the treaty guaranteeing the neutrality of Bela-lura. The British ministry which was in power in the period Just preceding the war will be neia up to scorn for centuries to come because of the extent to which It trusted the surance of German public men. England was caught unawares be cause she trusted Germany. France had the lesser trust, the better knowl edge, but France sees a reason why the written guarantees which Ger many gave before 114 and violated then would have a different character If Germany should make them all over asraln. The difficulty with the' league or nations laea is irar rts dssis must be International trust. And It fc not possible and will not be possible in. our lifetime to restore confidence In Germany among the nations who have had in the present terrible years a full realisation of the German methods and ths German spirit. Accordingly. when the United States goes to Europe to impose a league of nations upon the world, if it does undertake this task, it will find itself instantly confronted by the friendly but not less determined op position of the masse of the nations which nave suffered at German hands In the present war. In direct contra vention of German pledges before tha war broke out. A league of nations which was made up of races seeking the same enlightened goals by similar No More Next courses, having the same regard for honor, good faith, humanity, that is not a difficult thing to arrange. But for four years for four and forty years the German has URed the same words to mean a totally different thing, and who on the top of this earth can believe him today, when he uses words which In other mouths might mean honorable things, but In his mouth may mean anything? Concerted Effort. In the early part of this war a concerted and purposeful effort was made in this country to establish the idea that all the Kuropean nations were equally responsible for this war and were all seeking selfish ends. It took a long time to uproot this Idea; there are traces left of It even now and signs which point to a new effort to exploit this view. But in the main we know better now and we shall know still more exactly when our two million soldiers come home, bringing with them their own Judgment upon the German as he is and as he is like ly to remain for a long time to come. But. either all the European nations are equally criminal nations, In which case It may be our holy, if somewhat rlflky mission, to compel them to lay aside their evil ways and under our supreme and enlightened directing enroll in a new international oreanl- jratlon, leaving their guns and their sticks at the door, or else there Is a difference between nations and therefore an impossibility that these nations with different Ideals and moral codes should ever, or at least should while their differences exist, associate on such terms. Our European 'allies are prepared to make almost any sacrifice that we may ask, their .gratitude is unmis takable; but there, is one thing that, they can not do for us; they can' not see things as they are not because We do; they can not see the German as he isn't because a portion of our pub lic, who have not encountered him in this war and in Europe insist upon seeing him their own way. And sines the French and the British do see the mi Op1 OUT tSftt r . . tin Wart Report aad pries list. Isaes at svsiy ebang In tha Far Market, nmathiiur mere than SMnhr aaOMthlnr to near It la tha adruk .i 11 . frissdsadatsn seat t the and aeenrate aiarket qiiotattoas. -8a swalattt tmt" la raeairad b BQBfbeas ef thosaada of trapsen and Fur shippers all ever North America. Maver was a-rkn ametstanMnta ox (acta puMiahod in 0b aknarrl Mtaasr and this eharaetar ef aemwaejr and reliability Kaa domonrtrstad that rock Information is ab-otaulr manual to the sneeaaaful trap par sad For abipper. Tea ahoald read '8b ftahrrl iqMB-warant yoar naMsaaaxantHas Mat. . FiUiMtlmAk Gasssw NO Wmd Mml it A T ONCg m;r m v a ls?ll MAusria avc. - cmicaco. u.s.a. CALL TO ARMS M k NT ONE King of Reconstructive ionics Builds up the nerves and' Sexual Blood A Bullder-un-f the entire body. MKES YOU FEEL GOOD ALL: OVF!V' We take all chances Full Treatment. No Benefit, .10 Cost FORV MEN AJfD WQleTEN- j.T:, -. jsrM--XoJlar All Druggtshs Door to Bon Marche. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmma German In the same, way 'and nbV'liv any other, we had better give up rv lnj? to impose our view. Tor ih dn'tns this we Khali make enemies of nor friends with.out In the least succeed ing In -making friends ef our enemies. Will Agree to Anything. The peace congress has to deal with Germany, as the court of law deals wfth a criminal.' It has to punish the criminal nation for Its crimes. The punishment consists in compelling uim nation to mane reparation money and in kind for wanton structlon and to restore stolen- pro Inces. tQ make German i- nay one quarter, of the costs of. the.' war, tha ws r which she precipitated' for selfish profit, will be to put her in a state of poverty for decades to cctoie. it, lj addition, the nations eh, has wrong ed, either collectively- or separately, boycott German industries, and there are millions of people who will do this personally in any case,' then Ger man industry will be practically ruined. ' To escape the Just sentence. th equitable consequences of her crimes,' Germany, whether socialistic or Hoh enxollern, will agree to anything: she will use every effort to maneuver around the league of nations discus-, sions in such shape as to escape pay ment we are seeing evidences of thl -purpose every day. But If she make' promises, will she keep them? Anil If-she doesn't, then the French and the; British may have it nil to do. iigain, and we perhaps ws shall v. nit three years before coming tp their! aid In our quarrel. -next time, . v4 did this time. V':, 7 The weakest league of nations, th is,, the form whTcft; : cai'is 'lt pro. tectipn agslnst eyofc':w'fll;','b,f sii.li clentiy strong'- for . Us. -VflVe' can rum I risks which no other' 'jrresf nation can thirik of running. ..but have wa V C T IB II witli to surJ me Jitsiii- -iv nn oilier natrons far greater immediate 'dangers tc render their means of defense cause-we, Immune from those 'lam grs ourselves, have decided that (CONTINUED MEXT SUNDAY.) OH A . . tin ; . iuiv. tw'- (0 MfsaaC, baraabUndSeearatlUrkal Debt read to raitabl avrrat information Wei System and rodocs Rich, Red i r