527 A <** A o a** * ^ " ' * ♦ ^ " " " -c "' ^ aP * s »^'* ^ v * 3.* "£* A* l J»k' ^ <., '»< Ai ° <*>. A * v_\«H/^F, • "*>. .A » ,A & ^0 -7-, A* l$W: ^^ ^llSPr -a v "V «W & <£°* ++# J tfPtllll— , A o *b J>'%, -A °o * t^t** o° **«, " *r^f • a-" '- ^ A. *.ww * ^ V % . ' ' «- C\ ,0 V «> ,^ ^of ^0« 4 o t 0. .^^ ^ AT * 4- r*> 5 A* * l «?/r777^- ./V ^ V^ * o „ o o . u ' . , <£ • V o » . „ **b Cl* - 1 • o «^"i. * > - 5 ♦ * > 0° ** V *L!nL'* <^ .9 » ■ /\ If^f." ****** '-5 ma Jimencas n A515168 APR -9 1919 s*vQ I i * HILE the world combat was still going on, scareheads amazed us one day with the announcement that Germany's ultimate aim was the conquest of America. Statements and documents were produced to prove that the War Lords schemed to over- ride the opposition of Belgium, England and France, roll their armies into the sea, and reach across the intervening ocean to soil our fair shores with their bloody Hun hands. With this in mind, as we look back upon the war, it assumes new character. From this new point of view, it was a fight in defense of America. For the safety of our homes. For the honor of our women and the lives of our children. For the ideals of Freedom and Right that America typifies. Looked upon in this light, the tremendous sacrifices made by the Allies assume even greater proportions in our eyes. It was their bleeding but unyielding lines that gave us time to muster our strength. Europe's part in the Crusade is well known. Our obvious duty there is Reconstruction. But around the world are other nations who shared the burden. What of our duty to them ? We owe an enormous debt to all the people who participated in Fighting America's Fight. The Far East on The well known "East is East and West is West, and never the twain shall meet," is belied during the life- time of the man who said it. They have met on the battle-field of Liberty. Their presence there denotes a common cause. East and West are not so irretrievably dis- tinct as generations of ignorance and prejudice have led us to suppose. The guns were roaring so loud in Europe we did not hear the thunder clap that wrung Asia when China declared her entrance into the World Struggle. It was a tremendous thing Troops from Indo-China irawn up to be decorated theMfestern Front for the young Republic, trembling on its newly-tried legs, to cast off the pacific habit of generations and align itself against the foe who had left fear in his trail at the time of the Boxer troubles. German propa- ganda had terrified much of the East about the probable outcome of the war. But abandoning her policy of "proud isolation," China threw her weight against the forces of autoc- racy, to show the world that the Allied aims are her aims. The stan- dards of Democracy her standards. The ideals of Liberty her ideals. The Chinese Military Mission seeing the sights at Bapaume on the British Front Photographs — French Pictorial, Gilliams Chinas Mobili l Many of the men behind the men behind the guns were Chinese. About 200,000 of 'em. Recruited by the English and French from the hills of China, these husky, faith- ful, good-natured coolies were car- ried half-way around the globe to repair roads, dig trenches, unload ships and plow fields. They enlisted for from three to American soldiers are always broke on thirty dollars a month, but these Chinese ■were rich beyond dreams when they drew their twenty. They bought pink silk pa- jamas and bird cages and all the other luxuries of the newly rich Chinese laborers constructing a drainage course at an A merican aviation supply field in France &M-:~m & Photographs— French Pictorial, Gilliams, and Committee of Public Information ed Man Power five years. Many of them will stay through the period of recon- struction, to help clear up the mess and rewind all the barbed wire. Their contact with Western civilization— the wonder tales they take back to the East— will have momentous effect upon the de- mocracy that is in the making in China. Stevedoring in France. The town of Havre saw the Festival of the Dragon celebrated on the fifth day of the fifth moon. And on February 12, the Chi- nese Republic's Fourth of Julv, the coolies all went A.W.O. L. and painted Paris red After being whisked across the Pacific, across Ca- nada, and across the Atlantic, the imperturbable Oriental settles down on the dock at the French port of debarkation for a little soft music Lining up for "chow" at Port Said. In many cases food, cooks and kitchen utensils were brought from China. These men of a Chinese Labor Com- pany with the British forces in Egypt are ready for mess of lentils China vs. the A Chinese Red Cross Nurse in Siberia to take care of the soldiers of the A hied Expeditionary Force Because she was so much nearer than the rest of us, China could play a prompt and important part in the Siberian Campaign. There are Chinese troops with the Allied Expeditionary Force which has undertaken to show the Bolsheviki that their methods are all wrong. From the day of her entrance into the war, China worked to uproot the influence of Germans and Aus- trians in the Far East. All alien property was taken over, and the business of alien companies was stopped. China contributed $85,000 to the Red Cross, and over a million dollars to the United War Work Fund. The Mary Black Hospital in Soochow was closed in order that its entire staff might join the Shanghai Unit leaving for Vladivostok with supplies and equipment for a hospital of 150 beds Photographs — Gilliams, Red Cross Bolsheviki The war has taught peoples to know each other better. As one writer puts it: "You cannot work or fight for four years in a good cause side by side with your fellowman, be he white or yellow or brown, without dis- covering in him some unsuspected virtues, and making friendly allow- ance for the fact that he was born in a strange land." Was there ever a more opportune moment for missionary work? A Marine is a Marine — be he Chinese or American. And a "tin hat" — whether it's shaped like a derby or is built on Oriental lines — means business. This man is in Siberia to teach these truths to the lawless Bolsheviki of Chinese soldier who Siberia to bring law and order out of Reds and chaos. Japan's Snapj Japan's 57,000 sailors were "in it" almost from the start. They swept the South Seas, the Indian Ocean and the Pacific. A cruiser kept the Hun out of Honolulu. A patrol force joined the Allies in the Mediterranean. Troopships from Australia and New Zealand were convoyed by Japanese squadrons. A destroyer, the Kofu> was transferred to England, a submarine to Italy, and three battleships captured When this big gun "speaks" it talks Japanese, but the Russian Bolsheviki, Germans and Aus- trians who heard it got the meaning nevertheless With her superior military force, Japan captured the seaport Kiaochow, which was a German base in the East Photographs— International Film Service, Gilliams py Soldi lers in the Russo-Japanese war were returned to Russia. After a while the Japa- nese marines got restless and on April 4, 1918, they were landed at Vladi- vostok. Then the well-trained and "fit" little soldiers began to clamor for action, and during the summer of 1918 troops were sent to assist the Czecho-Slovaks in Siberia. Twenty thou- sand Japanese soldiers are in Russia now. r o maintain a division in Siberia costs fapan $3,500,000 the first month and >2,ooo,ooo for each succeeding month The Red Ore The Red Cross is an organization very close to the heart of the people in these days. And Japan and America have been drawn together by the co-operation of the two Red Cross societies. One out of every twenty-eight persons in Japan belongs to the Japanese Red Cross. They rolled over 100,000 bandages and 159,000 pieces of gauze. Made 13,000 tri- angular cloths. Sent large supplies Jap Red Cross Nurse in Siberia. What's that song about not wanting to get well ? The Japanese chapter of the American Red Cross gave over $80,000 to our second drive Photographs ~ Underwood er° Underwood. Giiliams, Red Cross ss in Japan of iodine, camphor and caffein to the Allies. Sent 10,000 pounds of tea to Italy. The society owns two hospital ships, the Hakuai Maru (Philanthropy) and the Kosai Maru (Humanity). The Japanese Red Cross offered 126 relief detachments of trained nurses and assistants, besides 197 physicians, 330 head nurses and 5,000 trained nurses with attendants. Dr. Frank Crane says: "Let us extend our hand, cordially and with- out reserve, to this valiant, high- minded and grave people. Now is the time to sow the seed of an eternal brotherhood." The pick of Japan's medical corps on their way to the front. The expedition is headed by Dr. Jiro Suzuki, Chief of the Japanese Red Cross The Same Uti Japan's participation in the war proved that, under the skin, they feel as we do about the rights of men, about the doctrines of humanity, about the establishment of Democracy throughout the world. Under the skin— which, after all, is only skin deep— they were animated by the same impulses which drove America into the struggle for World Freedom. Impulses of Right and Liberty and Progress. Under the skin, then, they look forward, as we do, to the establishment of the institutions which embody those impulses. One of those institutions is the Church. The Ideals that Japan fought for— though Japan could not identify them as such— were the Ideals of the New Testament. The war period has left the East in a frame of mind very sympathetic toward Christianity. That is the challenge of the Centenary. Apparently, the celebration of peace was as wild an affair in Tokyo as it was in New York, Paris or London Photographs — Press Illustrating Service, Underwood & Underwood, Gillu der the Skin General Kikuyo Otani and his chief of staff, Lieut.-Ceneral Mitsuya Yuhi, the leaders of the Japanese campaign in Siberia thm mis j£- **ml+ .4 Japanese bird man and his bird 1 wonder if Miss Butter- fly, as she packed Comfort Kits for the Japanesearmy, slipped in her name and address. I 'sped so. Girls are girls the world over. The Acid Tes Insidious whisperings had made the credulous world believe that the war would be a signal for England's colonies— particularly India-to renounce their allegiance. German strategists relied upon it. But they reckoned without appreciating India's brand of allegiance. Men of the Indian Labor Corps gave their sturdy strength to the less spectacular tasks of war. They dug miles of trenches in the shifting desert sands. They piled thirty million sandbags along the Suez Canal. These men from Manipur worked in France Sir Francis Younghusband pays a fine tribute to the 70,000 Indians who were thrown into the breach in Flanders when he says that without them "in all probability our brave little army would have been swept of the continent" t of India Over a million sons of India fought with the British flag. No conscription was necessary. They were a million volunteers. Next to England herself, India was the first part of the British Empire to reach the field of action. Her first offering was an army of seasoned troops, with an equipment of complete field and heavy artillery — a precious asset in those early months of fighting in Flanders. Food supplies, raw materials, manu- factured articles of cotton, wool, jute and leather, millions of money! That was India's answer to the whisperings of Germany and the call of Liberty! An Indian Sepoy visits the grave of two British airmen ■who were brought down in the desert by the enemy. The spot is marked by the propeller blades Indian Cavalry Photograph Gillia Punjabis From the Punjab and from all India they came, these picturesque warriors. Sikhs and Gurkhas were with the Canadians at Ypres. Pathans and Raj- puts died gloriously with the Anzacs at Gallipoli. They were Punjabis and Marathas who helped make the thrust at Salonica. "I never wish to command more loyal, braver and better soldiers. The Indian forces who are now helping to break up the Turkish Empire in Meso- potamia are making a contribution to the war which should never be for- gotten." So said General Smuts of the British War Cabinet. The Pied Piper of Punjab, wi'h an Indian regiment in Palestine Dugouts in the desert of Palestine are a strange setting in which to find an Indian Rifle Battalion in Puttees Great companies of Indian troops donned their "overseas" turbans and cleaned the Hun out of Africa. Others pursued the elusive Bolshevik in North China and Siberia. Far and wide. Through strange lands and strange experiences. They grew a century in those four years. They saw civilization at its worst and best. India's women came out of their seclusion to hear war news and do war work. This era will witness a new India. Will Christianity be a factor in her making? The photographer jotted down "123rd Outram Rifle — Sentry — Palestine front. ' ' Why say more? The man's vigilant figure tells the story of war-time India "Strike up the band" — liere comes an Indian regiment on the way to the trenches, Mesopotamia Photograph — Western Newspaper Union Berlin vi The Berlin-to-Bagdad scheme was re- versed by the splendid work of the Indian troops in the near East. Their victories, the consequent surrender of Bulgaria and collapse of Turkey— all these made the "way to Berlin" shorter. The campaigns in Mesopotamia, Pales- tine, Egypt and the Sinai peninsula read like fiction. Lieut. -Col. Woodwark said: "Our British and Indian armies in Mesopotamia and Palestine are performing the triple task of defeating the Turkish forces, of freeing the races hitherto subject to Ottoman abuse and misrule, meanwhile bringing under cultivation over 1,000 No, this is not a circus feat by a troupe of tumblers. They are Indian sappers removing electric fittings from Turk telephone lines in Mesopotamia A Pontoon Bridge in Mesopotamia a Bagdad square miles of hitherto unproductive land which now yields food for ourselves and our Allies, representing a saving in ship- ping of about 2,000,000 tons annually." And the brave men were fighting the heat, glare, dust, flies, thirst and loneliness of those desert regions. Malaria, typhus, dysentery, lack of medical supplies and of adequate transport made the job harder. But they stuck to it. And won! Bag- dad was taken. Jerusalem! The capture of the Holy City sent a thrill throughout all Christendom. And soldiers from India— Hindus and Mohammedans- made the capture possible! / don' l know whether the goat i to the commissary or the transport. But he's enjoying the Diala River in Mesopotamia as much as the Indian Sepoy "Camel Cavalry," and 7,500 miles of steel rails brought from India, made the crossing of the Sinai Desert possible. A party of the Bikanir Camel Corps "at ease" during the heat of the day. Si Siam was the sixteenth nation and the first absolute monarchy to join the Entente. The people were actuated by the same motives, the same principles of humanity, that stirred America. Siam had little to gain in entering the war. But— "President Wilson's message to Congress (asking for war) put in words what the Siamese had been thinking, and when that great message became known and under- stood in Siam, the place of the country in the war was fixed." I quote a prince of Siam, brother of the reigning king, who was a student in America when his country "got into it." Siam's move deprived Germany of her last important harbor of refuge in the Far East. Nine steamers were seized at once in Siamese waters. The country's excel- lent little navy patrolled her coast. Siam's declaration of war gave the Allies an unbroken favorable coastline from China to the Mediterranean Sea. "When you're a long, long way from home," the sad sea waves makeyou think of the happy days in dear old Bangkok, Siam. These men have just landed in Marseilles Photographs— French Pictorial Doughboys Her resources were turned over to the com- mon cause. One in- dividual contribution was the teak wood which went into some of Great Britain's new ships. "We have arrived safely overseas," they wrote home. What impressions did they convey in their letters? What lessons are they taking back to the East? He "can't gel 'em up" at the Siamese cantonment in the armory of St. Charles From Siam to Sci Photographs — French Pictorial The last lap of their long trip from the Far East. These troops are moving up to the front During Siam's neutrality Ger- many had main- tained centers of intrigue in the little kingdom. From there, secret agents were sent into Burma, to stir up trouble for the English, and into Indo-China to breed discord in the French colonies. With Siam's neutrality ended, one of Germany's last hot -beds of propaganda in the East was broken up. In September of 1917, an announcement was made that volun- teers were wanted to go to the western front. The following spring an aviation corps of five hundred trained men, fully equipped, was ready for active service. mnewhere in France Siam's contribution to the war, though modest in comparison with the enormity of the forces involved, voiced the spirit of her people. They were engaged in this great con- flict, not for gain, but to identify themselves with the forward movement of the world — to express their belief in the ideals of civilization. "So this is France." It seems to have made a hit with at least one soldier from Siam Food and Fighters The war was brought home to Africa very early in the game, for on August 4, 1914, the first shells fell on African soil during the bombardment of Bone and Philippeville in Algeria. And Africa rallied splendidly. "We stand prepared," wrote the Sultan of Morocco to the President of France, "to give you all the assistance you may require." The headmen of an important tribe in Tunis sent word to the Resident General, "The Pro- tectorate Government has loaded us with benefits for the past Moroccan machine gunners guarding a road These little pigs went to market — on the front line in France. North Africa contributed 20,000,000 cwt. of cereals, , besides 60,000 head of cattle from Algeria, 60,000 cwt. of wool and millions of eggs from Morocco Photographs — French Pictorial from North Africa 33 years, wherefore France has become our own country and the Tunisians are her sons." And by their glorious effort, North Africans more than "made good" these expressions of loyalty. The French government ex- tended conscription to both Arabs and Berbers, and the young men went by tens of thousands from the towns, the mountains, the plains and the Sahara. Economic participation was as vital as troops. And North Africa, once the storehouse of the Roman Empire, was the store- house of the Allies in this war. North African troops passing in review fore French officers Azemmour, Morocco Newly trained troops on their way to France Buddies from the It didn't take Africa long to get into step. The black troops were represented during the first months of the war by more than twenty-five battalions from Algeria, Morocco and Western Africa. It is estimated that half a million men from North Africa were in France, in regiments or factories. And they were always getting them- selves into citations. A division of Moorish Infantry was com- mended in army ord- ers for valor in en- gagements in which Zouaves, Colonials and Tirailleurs all performed their duty with m arvelous courage. They didn't care whether their job was to "work or fight." These Egyptian Labor Companies were glad to do their bit just back of the Western Front wsr' - |* r- This is the way they wash their clothes — in the Gar- onne at Bordeaux. "They" being Algerian riflemen Dark Continent The scouts of two regiments of Spahis were written into the clay's report for their conspicuous bravery. These are but two instances of the unfailing pluck and loyalty of these troops. A French Senator has said: "France in arms has numbered the native units and colonial contingents among the foremost of her striking forces. The new blood of these races has been shed unsparingly. From Paris to the frontier, a common grave is shared by our own offspring and our colonial sons, fair-skinned Gauls, black Africans, brown Berbers, yellow Asiatics, and swarthy West Indians." African artillerymen holding down a heavy French battery Moroccans on the Marne Photographs— Gilliams, French Pictorial, Newspaper Illustrations, London Afri ricas Bl OW c "South Africa has done yeoman service to the common cause, by clearing the Germans from that continent and by her contribution to the armies at the other fronts, a service which re- dounds to her own honor." I quote Lieut.-Col. Woodwark. of the British Army. The campaigning in Togo- land, Kamerun and German East Africa, in a jungle setting of real adventure, will make fascinating history when the tales are told. The Belgian seaplanes used on Lake Tanganyka caused quite a flutter in the heart of Africa. Photographs — Western Newspaper Union, Gilliams, Belgian Legation^ Bicycle Patrol of Belgians and Natives in German East Africa at Autocracy Liberia, the courageous little Republic, dared deport the Ger- mans who found themselves with- in her gates at the outbreak of hostilities, although the Germans held 75% of the commerce of Liberia. A "sub" threatened to shell Monrovia unless the inhab- itants would accede to degrading demands. The town, resolutely refusing, was only saved by the appearance of an English mer- chantman which aroused the sub's lust for prey. A trench mortar, and its "keepers" Just back of the British Western Front, the South African Negro Labor Companies do a war- dance to the tom-tom of Big Berthas and the rat-tat of machine guns Negro labor companies — not chain gang companies, but volunteers — were trans- ported in large numbers to Europe where their presence released combatants for the front. West Africa supplied French merchant shipping with native sailors and stokers. Altogether, Africa's was a sledge-hammer blow at Autocracy. Be-medaled hemes from Guadaloupe on their way into Africa to recruit negro troops The Failure What is the Jihad? The exploded Bogie Man of Christianity. It was to have been the Holy War of the Mohammedans, waged in the name of the Prophet, against all Christians. Any Moslem who ignored the call to arms would lose all chance of Heaven. A writer in 1914 stated that "every living follower of Mohammed" was waiting for the psycho- logical moment— and "that moment is when there shall be war in Europe." Before the year was over, the Great War broke out. And a little later, the Sultan, influenced by the Kaiser, announced that the hour had struck. The Jihad was on! Photographs — Western Newspaper Union. Gilliams. International Film War had a romantic setting in the Mesopotamian Campaign. Camels were ambulances; and Arabs, Moslem for ages, helped free Jerusalem! Mesopotamia Mounted Police in an ancient canal, helping the British against the Turks of the Jiha d But no one paid any attention to him. Indian Mohammedans were busy fighting for England. North African Mohammedans for France and Italy. The awful threat of the Prophet was forgotten. The Jihad was a fizzle. Why? Because more and more of the peoples of the world are feeling the pull of Christian civilization. Even among Moslems, the pull was stronger than the hope of Mohammed's Heaven. A new ndependent state of Hedjaz was born among the peoples of A rabia, eoples fired by the breath of Freedom and weary of the tagnation of the old Moslem regime. Two leaders of Hedjas are shown here, with the Allied officers who god-fathered the infant nation On the banks of the Auia, Palestine, these men of the Egyptian Labor Company — all Mohammedans, prob- ably — followed the double cross of the Union Jack. The village scribe is writing their letters home Fighters in t The day after Manila heard that America had entered the World War, the Filipino Veterans' Association offered its services unreservedly to the Governor General of the Islands. Do you know who the Filipino Veterans are? The men who fought in 1900 in the insurrection against the United States ! That's gratitude ! Gratitude for the al- truistic policy that America has pursued towards the adopted Islands. There were many voluntary enlistments of Filipinos in the Filipino school children helped dress French refugees and Belgian babies. The Junior Red Cross numbered 20,000 Photographs — Red Cross, Gdliams Philippine Scouts — tlie only body of Filipino soldiers to be federalized— parading for the Liberty Loan. The Philippines bought $10,000,000 worth the Philippines Army and Navy. A Philippine Division of 15,000 troops was about to be federalized when the armistice was signed. The Islands donated a "sub" and a destroyer to their mother country. The latter sails under the name Jose Rizal, the patriotic hero of the people. Filipino food helped win the war. The cocoanut industry stayed up nights to make cocoanut-oil butter- substitutes and to speed the cocoanut-shells- for-gas-masks work. All of which goes to prove that although the Filipino has only recently learned what Democracy is, he's "/or it." The Red Cross Chapter in the Philippines produced a total of 208,000 articles, valued at $30,800 It is unusual to see well-born Filipino girls parading, tin- veiled, in the streets of Manila. Yet here they are, doing the unheard-of for the Red Cross Carnival. Porto R Guava jelly was her most in- dividual donation. Of course, there were men and money given too. We read of the regiment that went from Porto Rico to guard the Big Ditch at Panama. Two early officers' training camps turned out 425 commissioned men. A third camp of 600 student officers followed. And money! They bought Liberty Bonds. In view of the fact that ordinary investments in the island yield 10% interest, the subscription to over five million Parade of Porto Rican Soldiers of the 375th Regiment Photographs — Underwood b° Underwood, Red Cross OS Bit dollars' worth of Liberty Bonds shows the united loyalty of the people. And they bought W. S. S's. The 1918 report of the Governor of Porto Rico announces the sale of $58,114 worth. And they gave $109,000 to the Red Cross. But the most picturesque part of Porto Rico's bit was the tons of jam. Volunteer workers, with donated sugar and the island's fine fruit, made thirty and a half tons of guava jelly to spread the doughboys' bread A bit of Porto Rico's railway lines recently constructed to facilitate troop movements Tons of sweetmeats for overseas ^Xt^^V'^tX^tV^tViMVXtXCV^iiVW^tVtlLtV^^VV^ America financed her share in the Big- Scrap so successfully that her war debts are comparatively small. But her debts of peace are tremendous. And they are debts of honor. The published notes exchanged between the Allies, the speeches of America's great men — all made clear to the world that we were engaged in a righteous war, in which greed and national aggrandizement never figured. The conquest of the foe was not the ultimate end, but a means to the realization of a great World Emancipation Plan. Subconsciously the Allies had been fighting for such an ideal from the start. The entrance of America into the war transformed the idea of World Democ- racy from a vague concept to a concrete promise. The men of America and of America's Allies were inspired with an indomitable Crusader's spirit by the thought that they were fighting for a holy thing — Lib- erty. The peoples from the far corners of the globe thrilled at the shoulder-to- shoulder contact with America. Were they not fighting — these far peoples — ofP to obtain for themselves the blessings of true democracy as enjoyed by Americans? And were not Americans fighting to help others to obtain those same blessings? Well, the Allies won! But the mere signing of the armistice has not estab- lished democratic institutions throughout the world. The Peace Table won't either. And yet the far peoples — of Africa and the East and the far Islands — look to America for the realization of that World Betterment Ideal. The big Fellow Feeling that helped win the war was but another expression of the Spirit of Christ. It is the Spirit of Christ that will bring freedom — political, economic and religious freedom — to all the peoples of the world. It is the Spirit of Christ that will fill the Methodist Centenary coffers to overflowing that brotherly love and peace and helpfulness and true democracy may be spread broadcast throughout the world. The Centenary program is a means by which America may pay to the far peoples her debts of of peace. ■ Vi^^Tl^%Y^^V^\^y^V^l\ ^X^\l^\lTX-^^ "IT Photograph— French Pictorial "At Eleven O clock the war stopped." These sailors are signalling the glad tidings, on the morning of that wonderful November eleventh, to the ships riding at anchor in the harbor of Brest. We won ! But the victory entails obligations. The war was fought for an ideal — exquisite, but frail, as are all ideals. The ideal of a world-wide, an inter- national, Christianity. Vaguely, every nation believes in it, hopes to achieve it. But World Democracy cannot become an estab- lished fact through treaties or through legislation. It will come only as a result of the conscious effort of every individual who believes in it. To many of the peoples who participated in the World Crusade, Christianity is but a name. They cannot apply it to internationalism till the Message is brought home to them. The Centenary plans to do just that. We owe it to the nations who helped win the war. YOU can further World Democracy by your Gift ^i- Qoit 90- 6.8 "Speaking to America, I know that I need not add anything to these facts; for you it is enough to know in order to will." ANDRE TARDIEU 5 &§s>g&a>»te£g&3»s^^ s 1 1 1 )'i GRAPHIC SERIES 1 I I 'Prepared by l 1 WORLD OUTLOOK ■Ai P for the I 1 CENTENARY COMMISSION OF THE BOARD I 1 1 1 OF FOREIGN MISSIONS OF THE METHODIST I EPISCOPAL CHURCH I 1 111 Fjfth Avenue New York City 1 1 f X 1 1 The Graphic Series embraces books on the following countries 1 ™ NORTH AFRICA I i I if S i CHINA • JAPAN • KOREA CENTRAL AFRICA MEXICO • MALAYSIA PHILIPPINES SOUTH AMERICA INDIA 1 RECONSTRUCTION i FIGHTING AMERICA'S FIGHT 1 1 1 Copyright, 1919, by World Outlook 1 I 1 l i 2 &^4PS«S^4?«^^ 5 o. ^"O J- *bv* *> '" ""O^ A^ s 'J' A ^X ^ <^ ~ <■ *H . « ■ v\ -J. v-< 4 o^ 4 o. ^,. A* A- vV"^ > ^ ' ^o-« ^^ .V^ >* "Ov a"* o j"» A' C. vT ' "Ov a'*' A^ V- • • s A u ^ ^ A* /Al?^/k % ^ ^ ^* A V "^ : ^i^° c'i^ A <. *??;T 4 .g^ ^b, -o . . « A * ^ • " 4 0, * "5 * * A v----'/ "v^^V°°* \'^V^ "v^v* "^ » " ° « ri> n^ o > o ^ ' . . * - A <". '»..* / A r ^, "bv* ..iSi^ ^ r^K *bv* ^ ** ** Sm a"^ D0BBS BROS. LIIRARY BINDINS 7 ft : *"? ST. AUGUSTINE .0^ Cy»- A LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 020 935 083 A