Article clipped from Quincy Daily Herald

■Defy League and Occupy 400 Square Miles Bulgarian Territory.(By Universal Service)Berlin, Oct. 24.—Defying the League of Nations the Greek artillery opened a bombardment on Petrich, according to reports from Sofia which state further that Greek troups have assumed the offensive with two battalions moving up the right flank of the Stauma toward Petrich and another moving toward Petrovo.Sofia claims that the Greeks have occupied more than 400 square iniies of Bulgarian territory. More jjrnn 6,000 refugees from Petrich have jammed the road to Svet-rivratch.ON CAILLAUXSix Ministers Opiosc French Fi-nanco Minister Remaining in Cabinet.(F.y Universal Service)Paris, Oct. 25.—Joseph Caillaux’s dread of becoming France's financial Mussolini threatens to become needless Monday when the cabinet will meet and decide to hand in their resignations to President Bo-merue. Leading bankers are exerting pressure on the government to oust Caiilaux. Six ministers including Briand and Demonzie, are opposing Caillaux's remaining in the cabinet.The opposition reached the point where Caillaux’s opponents are willing to precipitate a cabinet crisis for the purpose of reorganizing a ministry that will be Cail-iaux-less. The evening newspaperssaw It.Child of Ghetto.Born in the London slums she fought her way out and. as a girl, carae to America. In Cleveland she became a cigar maker and there her struggle, for economic freedom began. She studied and educated herself in literature and the arts. Coming to New York she went on the staff of a Jewish newspaper. She made some little renutation as a writer and became engaged in settlement work, trying to find freedom for other children of the ghetto.It was there that slum girl met the millionaire, James Graham Phelps Stokes, a man of socialistic and humanitarian tendencies. He had interested himself in settlement work. The romance, ending in marriage, attracted national attention.But Mrs. Stokes' struggle went on—freedom in art expression, and 1 then the feminist movement and j suffraee. then in labor matters, and j when tlie w*ar came she. brought j herself to the edge of a prison sen- • tence demanding “freedom of j speech'* for pacifists and eonseien- j tious obectors. She had cast her lot on the radical side and there was more than a little scandal at • the time. 1With the war, she says, she and Stokes became “friendly enemies.This marital break brought her to her latest battle for the “freedom of love.Customs vs. Love.Love is always justified. she affirms. Even if mistaken and short-lived. The prevailing social customs degrade love and sanctions the unwholesome and degrading and destructive relationship of a man and woman living together without love. Such a condition— even with the henefi tof a justice of the peace—violates the very best that is in man and woman.During its existence love ennobles the natures of men and wo-, men experiencing it and those who go on without it destroy in themselves those elements most worthnrpRPrvinE.*’ \Mrs. Rose Pastor StokesGREEKS START REAL WARFARE;ous: the husband and . wife who continue to life together when love has died, or the man and woman who live In love outside of wedlock?Mr. Stokes and I halt; been little more than friends during a great portion of our marriage,” she relates. “We had such profound differences of opinion that both of us suffered from the domestic and erso.nal: situations that developed. Ranted to be freed, even wJten T fed pnder thVsam6*3700f. \ begged Im to give me my freedom The whole life of Mrs. Stokes has been a fight for freedom as she
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Quincy Daily Herald

Quincy, Illinois, US

Sun, Oct 25, 1925

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MA, USA 02 Mar 2020

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