notice, mail the magazine, and it will be placed in the hands of our soldiers or sailors destined to proceed overseas. NO WRAPPING-NO ADDRESS. A. S. BURLESON, Postmaster-General. 93 A CAMOUFLAGED ROAD Painted by Edw. V. Brewer for Cream of Wheat Co. Copyright 1918 by Cream of Wheat Co. "NONE BUT THE BRAVE DESERVE THE FARE." Westclox - the trade-mark on the dials of good alarm clocks easily un Yderstand why good alarm clocks are harder to get than they used to be. The war has made them scarce. Uncle Sam had to draw heavily upon his metal-power just as upon his man-power. Less steel and brass were available for clock-making. At the same time, the war has taught folks the value of punctuality. Good alarm clocks are more in demand than ever before. Westclox alarms are particularly popular. Their good timekeeping makes people want them. The same Westclox construction that made Big Ben such a favorite is back of that faithful service. While this shortage exists, it will pay you to take good care of your Westclox alarm. Careful treatment will make it last longer. Western Clock Co. - makers of Westclox Big Ben Baby Ben Pocket Ben America Lookout Ironclad Bingo Sleep-Meter La Salle, Ill., U. S. A. Factories at Peru, Ill. TERMS: $4.00 a year, in advance; six months, $2.25; three months, $1.50; single copy, 10 cents; postage to Canada, 85 cents a year; other foreign postage, $2.00 a year. BACK NUMBERS, not over three months old, 25 cents each; over three months old, $1.00 each. QUARTERLY INDEXES will be sent free to subscribers who apply for them. RECEIPT of payment is shown in about two weeks by date on address label; date of expiration includes the month named on the label. CAUTION: If date is not properly extended after each payment, notify publishers promptly. Instructions for RENEWAL, DISCONTINUANCE, or CHANGE OF ADDRESS should be sent two weeks before the date they are to go into effect. Both old and new addresses must always be given. PRESENTATION COPIES: Many persons subscribe for friends. Those who desire to renew such subscriptions must do so before expiration. THE LITERARY DIGEST is published weekly by the Funk & Wagnalls Entered as second-class matter, March 24, 1890, at the Post-office at Get finest books at lower prices than any dealer can offer, by becoming a Life Member of Library Association tages secured by expert Overstocks," "Remain"Bankruptcy Stocks," To multiply our already large purchasing capacity we are offering you the privilege of becoming a Life Member of this Association with out spending a cent for dues or initiation fee. Simply avail yourself of our remarkable offer of the lowest prices ever quoted on fine books. Every book brand-new, best fiction, gift volumes, juveniles, etc., included. No defective or second-hand books. Tell us your book desires-we can meet them. We send no agents. NOTE THESE PRICES Publisher's price $1.50. 55c MEMOIRS OF NAPOLEON, by his private secretary. 3 vols. Illustrated from famous paintings. Publisher's price $4.50. Our Price........ $1.18 THE ROAD IN TUSCANY. 2 vols. Ideal gift set. Most entertainingly written of travel works. Over 230 illustrations. De Luxe Buckram binding. Pub lisher's price $8.00. $2.75 Early HISTORY OF PARIS. lisher's price $45. $14.80 Our Price..... Our new list includes hundreds of other timely book bargains-cholce STAMMER If you stammer attend no stammering school till you get my big new FREE book and special rate. Largest and most successful school in the world curing all forms of defective speech by advanced natural method. Write today. North-Western School for Stammerers, Inc., 2324 Grand Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. PUBLIC OPINION (New York) combined with THE LITERARY DIGEST Published by Funk & Wagnalls Company (Adam W. Wagnalls, Pres.; Wilfred J. Funk, Vice-Pres.; Robert J. Cuddihy, Treas.; William Neisel, Sec'y), 354-360 Fourth Ave., New York Vol. LIX, No. 9 New York, November 30, 1918 Whole Number 1493 G TOPICS OF THE - DAY SHALL WE GO WITHOUT TO FEED GERMANY? ERMANY HAS ENOUGH FOOD, according to some estimates, to last two-thirds of the time to the next harvest, and workmen along the frontier are reported in cable dispatches as saying that "food-conditions are exaggerated in the press. . . obviously to appeal to the Entente sympathies." German harvests. fed the population all through not even of its clumsiness." To many observers this "propaganda" is important as the opening gun of Germany's fight for a victory at the peace table. All our late full-Germans, pro-Germans, and pacifists are expected to come out of hiding forthwith and "show mercy to the defeated." "They will come," predicts the Kansas City Star, "bearing bouquets, asking permission to offer consolation to the prisoner and to leave tracts and flowers in the cell. . . . Heaven spare us now from mush!" On the basis of a summary of the best available information in the case, the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle agrees that the German superdiplomats are resorting "to their old tricks to pull the wool over the eyes of the 'stupid Yankees."" Official advices from Washington and Paris, as this and several other papers point out, indicate that "it is untrue that Germany is starving." She "reaped a harvest only three months ago, and cleared Belgium and northern France of everything." Besides, "she has requisitioned supplies from Roumania and the Ukraine." "Germany has the nerve of a pirate," cries a French editor, "to raise the cry of hunger after robbing us and Belgium." Considering the general food-situation, no less than the resolution adopted at Versailles pledging aid to the Central Powers, our editors agree almost en masse on the "nerve" shown by Dr. Solf's appeals to President Wilson "to save Germany from starvation," and by the German women's use of the government-controlled wireless to send similar appeals to Mrs. Wilson and Jane Addams. "These are they," comments the New York Times, in amazement rather than in anger, after a brief recapitulation of the German attitude toward hunger, deportation, and infanticide in other nations, "who, on the very day of their surrender, begin to use the exposition of their own deprivations as a plea for the mercy they have never shown for the help they have never given!" There is a "peculiar shamelessness" in this attitude, the writer continues: Keep On TIMELY ADVICE FROM THE FOOD ADMINISTRATION. "A strange lack of pride and dignity, an amazingly childish |