This four-sheet design promotes the political journal L’Ordre, of which The New York Times wrote, “There is considerable comment... about L’Ordre, which was born on Dec. 24, the night before Christmas. This is principally due to the fact that its director is one of the most famous journalists in France, Emil Buré, who once made the old Eclair a success. In his prospectus he shows that he will seek for support among those Frenchmen who have no use for the political combination of Radicals and Socialists known as the ‘Cartel.’ M. Buré, who was a keen disciple of the late Georges Clemenceau, is believed by many to have inherited from the dead ‘Tiger,’ at least the journalistic part of his skin, for in his prospectus he writes: ‘Disorder reigns at the present time, hence a choice must be made and be made quickly: either let us have Fascism or Bolshevism. Either would bring us tranquility. Above all things let us have order. This means liberty, security, prosperity.’ M. Buré was among the last to see Clemenceau alive, and the ‘Tiger’ is reported to have approved of the title of the paper and to have promised to write for it” (January 12, 1930, p. 61).
Imp. Andre Ruffenach, Paris
This work will ship from Lambertville, New Jersey.