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YOU ARE REQUIRED TO READ THE COPYRIGHT NOTICE AT THIS LINK BEFORE YOU READ THE FOLLOWING WORK, THAT IS AVAILABLE SOLELY FOR PRIVATE STUDY, SCHOLARSHIP OR RESEARCH PURSUANT TO 17 U.S.C. SECTION 107 AND 108.  IN THE EVENT THAT THE LIBRARY DETERMINES THAT UNLAWFUL COPYING OF THIS WORK HAS OCCURRED, THE LIBRARY HAS THE RIGHT TO BLOCK THE I.P. ADDRESS AT WHICH THE UNLAWFUL COPYING APPEARED TO HAVE OCCURRED. THANK YOU FOR RESPECTING THE RIGHTS OF COPYRIGHT OWNERS.

by Edward Mandell House

A Story of Tomorrow
1920-1935

“No war of classes, no hostility to existing wealth, no wanton or unjust violation of the rights of property, but a constant disposition to ameliorate the condition of the classes least favored by fortune.”
-- Mazzini.

This book is dedicated to the unhappy many who have lived and died lacking opportunity, because, in the starting, the world-wide social structure was wrongly begun.

"In the nineteenth century, the great headquarters of international terrorism was London. The defense of the empire required operations which the public decorum of the Victorian era could not openly avow. The main vehicle for British terrorist operations in Europe was Giuseppe Mazzini and his phalanx of organizations starting from Young Italy: Young Germany, Young France, Young Poland, Young Turkey, Young America. Mazzini was a paid agent of the British Admiralty, and received his funding through Admiralty official James Stansfeld. Mazzini’s terrorism was directed against what the British called “the arbitrary powers”: Prussia, Russia, and Austria. Each of these had a large population of oppressed nationalities, and Mazzini created a terrorist group for each one of them, often promising the same territory to two or more of his national sections. The important thing was that rulers and officials be assassinated, and bombs thrown. The net effect of all this can be gauged by the complaint of an Austrian about Mazzini’s operations in Italy: Mazzini aimed at making Italy turbulent, he lamented, which was bad for Austria, but without making Italy strong, which might be bad for the British. Mazzini operated out of London during his entire career, which simply means that he was officially sanctioned, as were anarchists like Bakunin and a whole tribe of nihilists. Mazzini worked well for Europe – including the Ottoman Empire, and the Americas. For other parts of the world, the Admiralty had specialized operations."

-- "9/11 Synthetic Terrorism Made in USA," by Webster Griffin Tarpley


"And for those readers who are wondering if Colonel Edward Mandell House, Woodrow Wilson's mysterious confidant, is going to enter the story, the answer is Yes! He does, but not yet.

The clue is that young Edward Mandell House went to school at Hopkins Grammar School, New Haven, Connecticut. House knew The Order from school days. In fact one of House's closest classmates at Hopkins Grammar School was member Arthur Twining Hadley ('76), who went on to become President of Yale University (1899 to 1921). And it was Theodore Roosevelt who surfaced Hadley's hidden philosophy: "Years later Theodore Roosevelt would term Arthur Hadley his fellow anarchist and say that if their true views were known, they would be so misunderstood that they would both lose their jobs as President of the United States and President of Yale."

House's novel, Philip Dru, was written in New Haven, Connecticut and in those days House was closer to the Taft segment of The Order than Woodrow Wilson. In fact House, as we shall see later, was The Order's messenger boy. House was also something of a joker because part of the story of The Order is encoded within Philip Dru!

-- America's Secret Establishment -- An Introduction to Skull and Bones, by Antony C. Sutton

America's Secret Establishment -- An Introduction to the Order of Skull and Bones, by Antony C. Sutton

Table of Contents

  1. Graduation Day
  2. The Vision of Philip Dru
  3. Lost in the Desert
  4. The Supremacy of Mind
  5. The Tragedy of the Turners
  6. The Prophet of a New Day
  7. The Winning of a Medal
  8. The Story of the Levinskys
  9. Philip Begins a New Career
  10. Gloria Decides to Proselyte the Rich
  11. Selwyn Plots with Thor
  12. Selwyn Seeks a Candidate
  13. Dru and Selwyn Meet
  14. The Making of a President
  15. The Exultant Conspirators
  16. The Exposure
  17. Selwyn and Thor Defend Themselves
  18. Gloria's Work Bears Fruit
  19. War Clouds Hover
  20. Civil War Begins
  21. Upon the Eye of Battle
  22. The Battle of Elma
  23. Elma's Aftermath
  24. Uncrowned Heroes
  25. The Administrators of the Republic
  26. Dru Outlines His Intentions
  27. A New Era At Washington
  28. An International Crisis
  29. The Reform of the Judiciary
  30. A New Code of Laws
  31. The Question of Taxation
  32. A Federal Incorporation Act
  33. The Railroad Problem
  34. Selwyn's Story
  35. Selwyn's Story, Continued
  36. Selwyn's Story, Continued
  37. The Cotton Corner
  38. Universal Suffrage
  39. A Negative Government
  40. A Departure in Battleships
  41. The New National Constitution
  42. New State Constitutions
  43. The Rule of the Bosses
  44. One Cause of the High Cost of Living
  45. Burial Reform
  46. The Wise Disposition of a Fortune
  47. The Wise Disposition of a Fortune, Continued
  48. An International Coalition
  49. Uneven Odds
  50. The Broadening of the Monroe Doctrine
  51. The Battle of La Tuna
  52. The Unity of the Northern Half of the Western Hemisphere Under the New Republic
  53. The Effacement of Philip Dru