Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 294, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 December 1918 — AS OTHERS SEE THEM. [ARTICLE]
AS OTHERS SEE THEM.
The fate of the German imperial colors: The black has been abandoned, the white has been used, but the red is still there.—New York Sun. As we understand the Russian,situation, the difference between a Boldhevik and a bourgeois is about thirty rubles.-—Columbia Record. Soane persons have an idea that Woodtow Wilson and William Hohenzollern are playing ping-pong with aiu■ocracy. —New York Telegram. One trouble with government ownership of railroads is that it would also prove in all probability railroad ownership of government.—-Jackson-ville Times-Union. “What shall be done with Constantinople?” is one of the peace proberas. Travelers say a good hard rain on the streets would do well for a starter. —Kansas City Times. Some women are a bit disappointed because the war ended before they could finish knitting the mate to that sock they started when wq first joined out with the allies. —New York Morning Telegraph. A Topeka man has a theory that if all prohibition elections were held at night the country would never go dry. He says it is voting in the morning that puts territory into the prohibition column.—Kansas City Star.
