Iowa Heritage Digital Collections
State Library of Iowa

I Swear to Avenge Your Father and Kicking Up the Dust on the Western Front

Title

I Swear to Avenge Your Father and Kicking Up the Dust on the Western Front

Description

This newspaper contains a World War I drawing and photograph and some advertisements.

Source

Sunday Chicago Herald and Examiner Pictorial Gravurr Section, Sunday, Novembe 3, 1918

Publisher

State Library of Iowa

Date

1918

Contributor

Ankeny Area Historical Society, Ankeny, Iowa

Rights

U.S. and international copyright laws protect this digital image. Commercial use or distribution of the image is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder. For permission to use the digital image, please contact the Ankeny Area Historical Society

Format

pdf

Type

document

Identifier

08/46/61

Coverage

World War I

Original Format

Newspaper article

Repository

Ankeny Area Historical Society Museum

Contact information.

Ankeny Area Historical Society - phone 515-965-5795

File Name

Avenge_Father_Combined2OCR.pdf

Digital item created

2017-02-09

Digital item modified

2017-03-27

Transcription

"I Swear to Avenge Your Father!": America's Vow--From, the Original Drawing by Lucien
Kicking Up the Dust on the Western Front: An early morning snapshot of a Canadian gun pounding the enemy's lines with a continuous hail of shells.. The camera has "caught" the gun the moment it was at full recoil. The man in the foregounds is adjusting fused on the shells, and judging from the dust and smoke in this picture, he is kept pretty busy. (Candadian Official Photo from Underwood and Underwood.)
PEACE terms will be dictated by the nation that keeps
strongest the longest. And the United States wtll be
that nation. It yook the Kaiser fifth years to build his famous War Machine. In less than two, Mr. Wilson has uilt a better one. "One industry after another has been taken over by the President; and, one by one, the men who used to run them for themselves have gone to Washington to run them for you."
SCHWAB, Davison, Garfield, Baruch, Ford, Edison, Hurley--and the entire army of
$1-a-Year Men- head the greatest organization the world has ever seen. No Treasury could hire, no King command, their services.
If you have been swayed by partisan criticism-if you
have ever feared that the United States was not doing
gloriously its whole duty-read "The Great Experiment."
"Now, the war is ending will you junk the greatest industrial organization in history? Will you give up your factory
and discharge your $1-a-year man? ''
·JF you are not interested in great public problems you
won't want Hearst's this month or any other. But if
you really prefer to be patriotic-to keep in touch with
your own Government-don't fail to read "The Great
Experiment" in the November number of Hearst's
M A G A Z INE