Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1939 Page: 2 of 4
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GRAHAM DAILY REPORTER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER J. IMA
if human beings, abhorring war and
entirely capable of getting along
with their neighbors. Wars are al-
ways between governments, moti-
vated by personal selfishness or
ideologies. But at the same time
peoples are regimented by rulers,
especially by dictatorial rulers, and
the people fight the wars. Also
where the people permit themselves
to be led by dictatorial and aggres-
sive rule, they themselves are at
fault, for no ruler can long surviva
the determined urged of a people
to be rid of him by force or per-
suasion.
The Graham Daily
Reporter
Commendably Simple
itared as seoond-daae malt mat-
at the postofftce tn Graham,
a. under act of Congress <tf
ih *. 187*.
I felt
lime one
• a, ohm
on the '
Front oo
unhappy
attitude
miiit .11
I ition of civil liberty is a positive
i1 rood. There is as much different
hero as there is between the Russian
invasion and the German invasion
of Poland; yet Mr. Lloyd George
’ himself insists that the British Gov-
ernment should regard the two in-
vasions from different standpoints.
If it can do that, it can certainly
I regard the Polish dictatorship as
j quite different front the German
| ilictatoi'vhip.
| The (hnraeter of the late Polish
i Government, however, is now alto-
j -"ether irrelevant. It was on the
invasion of Poland that Great Brit-
ain at last took her stand against
j the spread of totalitarianism; and
1 the fact that she has taken a stand
I :s what counts. H she WHIP U lit1
' toxy complete enough to enable her
I to dictate terms, the question of the
' restoration of Poland may again
assume importance; but in the mean-
time Mr. Lloyd George, in attack-
I ing the post-Pilsudski regime, is
I flogging the deadest of dead horses.
Wftoe of Publication, 616 Oak Street
Graham, Texas
However, Chamberlain it- much ,
closer to the facts of the case today
than was the idealist, Wilson, in '
1917. For Germany was more united
for the World War then is the ca/te
now when the traditional upper and
middle classes have been replaced by !
the Nazis, largely the have nots of
yesterday who hav^ wrested both '
power and possessions from the Ger- j
many whose control has been grad- 1
ttally usurped by them:— Hitler* and ‘
1 Is inn Tluupeig uie merely Na*|
poleon and his Generals all over |
again. So Chamberlain’s position is
soundly taken. .
It is this fact that suggests Eu-
rope faces bo short war, but a repe-
tition under a different set of cir-
sumstances of the Napoleonic Wars.
The struggle may be broken by tem-
porary peace or armistice, but it
cannot end until one side or the oth-
n revived in er has completely broken the direct-
an expression mg force to which it is opposed. In
iakin at least to that phrase coined the long run, the force of ideology
lly Woodrow Wilson in 1917 when may compel our own alignment with
I in his war message to Congress he the Franco-British front, which un-
| declared that the United States was questionably today represents the
I not making war on the German peo- closest approximation to our own
I pie but on its rulers. Chamberlain theories of democracy as wall as of
( insisted that the Franco-British right and wrong.—Dallas News,
front is presented not against the
| Germans but against Hitlerism and
I that the abdication of the Fuehrer
! must be a prerequisite to any move
b’N j for peace. This harks still further
passed by the last session of^ the heck to the first fifteen years of
legislature unconstitutional is“. ob |the Nineteenth Century when it was
I
Negro <
.
White.-
distinctio
MmMtTISINC, RATES WILL, HR
«TVEN UPON APPLICATION
IB Cards oT
me, Iwi
in t'M
steadily,
MlH
BRITAIN VS. HITLERISM
Subscription Rates
When
apart h<
his hail
hia side!
quieter,
Neville Chamberh
Parliament Tuesday
The plan for this onc-ntrry
house is excellent. Both balh-
room and kitchen are located
in the rear of the home, with
plumbing centralised; the two
bedrooms each hive light entry
on two sides as well as com-
plete privacy. The modern
trend toward joining the living
room and dining alcove is car-
ried out here in conformance
with good space-saving re-
quirements. A traditional yet
simple exterior completes this
well-designed home which was
boilt in Ohio with the aid of a
mortgage of 14,400 insured by
the Federal Housing Adminis-
tration. This homo wan valued
by FHA officials at 6&.350.
Dmmcj Alcove. Hitchcm
Bid Room
TAX REMISSION DECISION
Beware Coughs
from common colds
That Hang On
Livinc Room
Floor.- Plan
hibit error. For there is seldom
if ever any cause for war between
peoples, in the main the same sort
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Omit Colds, Bronchitis
Mr. 17 Knowltt ""■enjr'sp*'*.
ygxtr a Minors,
vmtr a Cturt..
And He Never Limps When He’* Asleep
,5 bL’WrliP
i I
( Does Hr >
STUTTER Like
, "THAT All , .
\~TME T:me7
or*/Vfcetf
. HETRUtSv
POLAND WAS MERELY THE
POINT OF RESISTANCE
Baltimore Sun: The attack on the
Into Polish Government by David
Uevd Let.rye has, like ail Mr. Lloyd
George's attacks, a certain basis of
truth: but—again like a great many
of the fijtry Welshman's headlong
assaults — its justification doesn’t
stand up any too well under analy-
tical criticism. Poland, says Mr.
Lloyd George was no democracy and
Great Britain ought not to fight to
restore the regime that collapsed
this month; to this he adds a num-
ber of epithets, based on the al-
leged incompetence and cowardice
ef the government, but these have
little to do with the real point at
DANN DUNN — Secret Operative No. 48. Keep Up With Hia Adventures Daily In This Paper.
vr», MI'LL HAVE TO
PACE A CHIME or MURDER"
AMD THEM THERE'S ANOTHER
LCTTl* MATTIR -
FOR HIM TO /
CLEAR UP** | WWAT I* I
RCw lZ vXzr )sc THIS .1
POR HOMS • r~--'SANHOH. CM ??
V WHAT A PLEASANT
It is incontestably true that Po-
land, under the leadership of the
late Marshal Pilsudski, did aWay
with democratic institutions, includ-
ing the civil liberty which English-
men regard as their deareet posses-
sion. but it is a grotesque miseon-
option of thf situation to aininu
that Great Britain is fighting to ro-
store the Polish distatorship for
Great Britain ia fight to prevent
the spread of a political philosophy
which seems to threaten the British
stay of life, and Poland ia merely
the point at which she chose to
make her stand. Perhaps that was
not the best point. As a matter of
termal logic « stand in defense of
Chechoslovakia would have been
I
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Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1939, newspaper, October 5, 1939; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1116507/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Library of Graham.