Monday, Jun. 18, 1923
Having perused well the chronicle of the week, the Vigilant Patriot views with alarm:
The insidious suggestion that Charles Evans Hughes is Secretary of Propaganda. (P. 2.)
The 200,000 Italians in Italy whom Mussolini regards as 200,000 too many. (P. 10.)
William Randolph Hearst, " The Great Eliminator." (P. 6.)
The loss of foreign trade as seen by the Department of Commerce. (P. 2.)
The million-dollar joyride -if all that is said is true. (P. 4.)
Camelots du Roi. The French do not consider them a joke. (P. 9.)
John T. Adams and Frank A. Munsey. There's a secret between them, (P. 6.)
French politicians who are in no more hurry to sign the Washington Naval Agreements than the Germans are to pay their debts. (P. 9.)
The lowering birthrate of native American stock. (P. 19.)
Friends of Communist editors in Italy who, when they find a Fascist bathing in a fountain, kill him like a dog. (P. 9 & 10.)
Olga Petrova, dignified but not ritzy. (P. 17.)
The hopeless postponement of Lloyd George's debut as a jazz-dancer. (P. 8.)
Faster funerals demanded in Paris, (P. 9.)
The rain goddess of Rhodesia, who still demands human sacrifices. (P. 19.)
The new Italians. Their music is so profoundly serious. (P. 13.)
That play wherein the winds of religion blow across the mountains of psychoanalysis. (P. 14.)
A college prexy who provides modern languages " to enable a student to read a menu card intelligently" (P. 19.)