AFTER THE WAR.
TO THE EDITOR. —Whatever is “ Britisher " thinking about when he writes as he, did in your is-suo of the 6th. Does he ask the Empire, when this struggle is over, to hold out the glad hand of friendship to a. nation such as the Germans? Has he forgotten the lessons of the hideous and ghastly crimes that the Germans have IKu-potrated on •innocent men, women, and children for more than a. year past? Would ho have ns shake by the hand and treat as an equal men who outrage our mothers and sistois? “ Britisher ’’ says our proposed boycott—and it must come—would he an injury to the Germa-n workman 1 Heavens above, what next 1 Does he not yet understand that the German ■workman is hand in hand with the Kaiser all the time, and glories in all that is done by him. No, sir, we must ban. the whole race. T am just as British as “ Britisher,” but there's a limit to our well-known jiowers of forgiveness. \Ve deserve to he conquered and overrun by these people if we attempt in any way whatever to bolster up Ka.iser.isni again, and that is, m a. nutshell, exactly what your correspondent asks the Empire to do.—l am, etc., Joitx Bull axd Co. October 8.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 15929, 8 October 1915, Page 4
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215AFTER THE WAR. Evening Star, Issue 15929, 8 October 1915, Page 4
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