The New Republic, Volume 17Herbert David Croly Republic Publishing Company, 1918 - Periodicals |
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... fighting for a hundred years " he is " he going far too far . The enormous majority of his readers will contrast the greatness of Mr. Wilson's services to the cause of world democracy and his prodigious reputation abroad with the feeble ...
... fighting for a hundred years " he is " he going far too far . The enormous majority of his readers will contrast the greatness of Mr. Wilson's services to the cause of world democracy and his prodigious reputation abroad with the feeble ...
Page 3
... fighting his management of the politics of the war and of frustrating his plans for bringing it to a successful conclusion . If the President has erred , he has erred only in conniving for so long at the suppres- sion of a wholesome and ...
... fighting his management of the politics of the war and of frustrating his plans for bringing it to a successful conclusion . If the President has erred , he has erred only in conniving for so long at the suppres- sion of a wholesome and ...
Page 18
... fighting in the Argonne and on the Meuse are particularly interested in the event of this battle between the Scheldt and the Sambre , for for if all went well it might bring us out on the northeastern flank of the Germans who are fighting ...
... fighting in the Argonne and on the Meuse are particularly interested in the event of this battle between the Scheldt and the Sambre , for for if all went well it might bring us out on the northeastern flank of the Germans who are fighting ...
Page 23
... fighting men are in the trenches as well as behind the lines . The un- armed workers go about their duties under shell fire as coolly and as self - forgetfully as the telephone men of the Signal Corps who are fre- quently their ...
... fighting men are in the trenches as well as behind the lines . The un- armed workers go about their duties under shell fire as coolly and as self - forgetfully as the telephone men of the Signal Corps who are fre- quently their ...
Page 25
... of civilian aid and comfort than during the period of the peace negotiation and , subsequently , of demobilization . During this period the soldiers will no longer be fighting and preparing to fight . November 9 , 1918 26 THE NEW REPUBLIC.
... of civilian aid and comfort than during the period of the peace negotiation and , subsequently , of demobilization . During this period the soldiers will no longer be fighting and preparing to fight . November 9 , 1918 26 THE NEW REPUBLIC.
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Common terms and phrases
administration Allied Alsace-Lorraine ALVIN JOHNSON American armistice army Austria-Hungary autocracy Bolsheviki Bolshevism British cent Christian civil common Congress course demand demobilization democracy democratic economic enemies England Europe European fact fighting force France FRANCIS HACKETT freedom French future German hand HERBERT CROLY human industry interests issue Italy Jugo-Slavs labor land leaders League of Nations less liberal living Lloyd George Magyar matter means ment military million mind modern moral nature never officers opinion organized party Peace Conference perhaps PHILIP LITTELL Poland political present President Wilson principle problem programme reconstruction Republic Republican revolution Russia social Socialist society soldiers Soviet spirit territory thing TIFFANY & CO tion tional treaty United victory WALTER WEYL wheat whole women York