Monday, Dec. 03, 1923

Having perused well the chronicle of the week, the Vigilant Patriot views with alarm:

Japan. She is charged with a massacre of Koreans. (P. 12.)

The morning that reveals one eminent statesman kicked out of bed by another. (P. 7.)

A new religion. (P. 11.) Un-American dirt. (P. 18.)

The King of England fighting the King of France. (P. 10.)

A common meeting jug for the Fitzgeralds. (P. 16.)

C. Bascom Slemp. He is having his first unpleasantness. (P. 22.)

The addition of zebra to the menu of the French Navy. (P. 10.)

Fundamentalists who suspect that missionaries are too modern. (P. 17.)

Commercialization of the word -''Quaker." (P. 17.)

The arrival of the yellow taxi-peril in London. (P. 9.)

A cracking--followed by a crackling. (P. 13.)

Medics who know not Medicine. (P. 20.)

Storm signals still flying at Manila. (P. 2.)

H. G. Wells, putting ideas into the heads of college boys. (P. 8.)

The ceaseless courage of a Sengalese unsupported by other powers. (P. 25.)

Anything unthinkable in the name of the law. (P. 27.)

Business still bothered by mind and matter. (P. 26.)