The Story of The American Legion by George Seay Wheat
page 23 of 314 (07%)
page 23 of 314 (07%)
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After the adjournment of the afternoon session on that day, members
of the committees closeted themselves and started work on their special functions, while those who were to pass on the committee's actions, the "hoi polloi" were here and there in groups, in the "Y" huts or in boulevard cafes discussing the real meaning of the gathering. A colonel in the Officers' Club said there must be no disagreement on this or that question; a private in the Bal Tabarin told his buddies the same thing. And so it came to pass that on the following day in the Cirque de Paris, where the final meetings were held, the delegates formally gathered, sensed the gossip of the clubs and boulevards, and acted accordingly. One of the things done was to endorse the action of the temporary committee in appointing itself and in calling the caucus. Another was to adopt a tentative constitution. It is in reality little more than a preamble, but it gave a working basis, expressing enough and yet not too much. Newspaper men have told me that the Sermon on the Mount is the finest bit of reporting in the history of writing because it tells a long story succinctly. Lieutenant Colonel Buxton and his committee on constitutions are certainly entitled to credit of the same type--for they tell a great deal in a few lines. [Illustration: Henry D. Lindsley Temporary Chairman, who presided at St. Louis] [Illustration: The Paris Caucus This gathering had no time for official photographers. A half hour before a session began one slipped in and took this picture with more |
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