Contents
| I. | The Arch-Criminal | [11] | |
| 1. | The Kaiser's Hatred of the United States. | ||
| 2. | The Kaiser's Character Revealed in His Choosing the Sultan for His friend. | ||
| 3. | Pershing's Charges versus the Kaiser. | ||
| 4. | Who Taught the Kaiser That a Treaty Is a Scrap of Paper? | ||
| 5. | The Plot of the Kaiser. | ||
| II. | The Judas Among Nations | [31] | |
| 1. | The Original Plot of the Members of the Potsdam Gang. | ||
| 2. | The Berlin Schemers and Their Plot. | ||
| 3. | German Superiority a Myth That Has Exploded. | ||
| 4. | German Intrigues. | ||
| 5. | German Burglars Loaded with Loot Are the More Easily Captured. | ||
| 6. | Germans Who Hide Behind the Screen. | ||
| 7. | Must German Men Be Exterminated? | ||
| III. | The Black Soul of the Hun | [60] | |
| 1. | German Barbarism Not Barbarism to the German. | ||
| 2. | The German "Science of Lying." | ||
| 3. | The Malignity of the German Spies. | ||
| 4. | The Cancer in the Body-Politic of Germany. | ||
| 5. | Polygamy and the Collapse of the Family in Germany. | ||
| 6. | The Red-Hot Swords in Sister Julie's Eyes. | ||
| 7. | The Hidden Dynamite: The Hun's Destruction of Cathedrals. | ||
| 8. | The German Sniper Who Hid Behind the Crucifix. | ||
| 9. | The Ruined Studio. | ||
| 10. | Was This Murder Justified? | ||
| IV. | In France the Immortal! | [98] | |
| 1. | The Glory of the French Soldier's Heroism. | ||
| 2. | Why the Hun Cannot Defeat the Frenchman. | ||
| 3. | "I Am Only His Wife." | ||
| 4. | A Soldier's Funeral in Paris. | ||
| 5. | The Old Book-Lover of Louvain. | ||
| 6. | A Vision of Judgment in Martyred Gerbéviller. | ||
| 7. | The Return of the Refugees. | ||
| 8. | An American Knight in France. | ||
| 9. | An American Soldier's Grave in France. | ||
| 10. | "These Flowers, Sir, I Will Lay Them Upon My Son's Grave." | ||
| 11. | The Courage of Clemenceau. | ||
| V. | Our British Allies | [132] | |
| 1. | "Gott Strafe England"—"And Scotland." | ||
| 2. | "England Must Not Starve." | ||
| 3. | German-Americans Who Vilify England. | ||
| 4. | British vs. American Girls in Munition Factories. | ||
| 5. | The Wolves' Den on Vimy Ridge. | ||
| 6. | "Why Did You Leave Us in Hell for Two Years?" | ||
| 7. | "This War Will End Within Forty Years." | ||
| 8. | "Why Are We Outmanned By the Germans?" | ||
| VI. | "Over Here" | [164] | |
| 1. | The Redemption of a Slacker. | ||
| 2. | Slackers versus Heroes. | ||
| 3. | German Stupidity in Avoiding the Draft. | ||
| 4. | "I'm Working Now for Uncle Sam." | ||
| 5. | The German Farmer's Debt to the United States. | ||
| 6. | "Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth" Is an Ungrateful Immigrant. | ||
| 7. | In Praise of Our Secret Service. | ||
Publisher's Explanatory Note
These brief articles are sparks struck as it were from the anvil of events. They were written on trains, in hotels, in the intervals between public addresses. During the past year beginning October 1, 1917, Dr. Hillis, in addition to his work in Plymouth Church, and as President of The Plymouth Institute, has visited no less than one hundred and sixty-two cities, and made some four hundred addresses on "The National Crisis," "How Germany Lost Her Soul," "The Philosophy of the German Atrocities," and "The Pan-German Empire Plot," the substance of these lectures and addresses being given in the book, "German Atrocities," heretofore published. These articles are illustrative of and supplementary to the principles stated in that volume.
While consenting to publication, the author was not afforded opportunity for full revision of this second volume, being again called over-seas just as this book was being put into type. This will account for the form in which the material appears.