'.-' v M'! J 'J T. "A. & ras. 4. iSi rnihsi public He&ger i.tW-lEVENING TELEGRAPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTttUS 111 K. UUIITI8, I'RCHICICNT flM II. taidlniton. Vice President: John C. Secretary and Treasurer, Philips. Collins, , Williams, John J. Spumeon, Directors. jji f F.DtTOniAIi HOARD. ru' Ctihth II. K CcnTis. Chairman fgfip E. BMILET Editor tti C MARTIN . .General Business Manager B'SjiWnbllKhul dally at PiMJc l.r.tar.n liulldinj. jwoJrwiont Ckntral liroaj nnd Chestnut Streets 35j'rl"1!'T'o City. jVrsj-t'nfon Hull. line kWU&WiolT.,.. i .'.'..!... inn Kord Hulldlr.s f.t'BtAiXJUts,, nb Kullerton llalldliiK IfCHlCiUOtf . . K'lIU Tribune llulldtnir l news nrnEAi'8. iSTS?'- N. E. Cor Pennsylvania Ave. and 14th St IVNBW.'YoaK BcnCAU The Sim r.ulldinc KSl'tSoKbOs BVKKkV London rimes ii?Iti "" BunscnlPTioN- tkums KKSttThY Etkniko rcai.li.' LKtiorn Is served to sub- Lvi7rtnirs in i-nuaaeipnia ana surrounding towns u7.Wt'thA rati nt lw1va 111 rn(a !. weel; ,iiiv.ililr .vto'the carrier. '.iS,u law Tnnfl tn nnlnta mitl.1a nf lbUn.lnlnSIn In h "United States Canada or t'nlteil suites w"glons postage free fifty dm cents per month. 't;M fllll riftllnr tier vuuP nnvnl.ln In nrk'linm V si".'To all foreign countries one 11 1 ilollur 'per ',Svonth. .j-VTaNoTICfc Subscribers wishlnc address chanced S -fftust give, old as weil as new address. ..BELL. 3000 WALM.T KEYSTONE. M.M.N 1000 I JiVt-'tdclrras ttp cm m,ih mentions to hvtuitto 'i Ls: .mLrdgtr, lndcp- nh nrr Square. ViulailrlithU llt-llc SSL C" Jg, Yj- Member of the Associated I SW! iAVUK AsRfU 1 iTKll 1'HKStS i rcss is cxcln- 'MijfiftwelV entitle l to thr use lur republication MfVl o nctcs dispatches credited tn .1 or uot fffH'-Olhetc!si' credttet' In tlts paper, ami also S'JfC local licitK published tliririu. iY i lt.-fW TIUI'IS tn I rj)ttuiivuiiun llj apt t iu, iia- f paicncs, nereis aie mio reserves. Fhilsdelphls. Wi-diif.d... July 1. 1519 IORE SMOKE THAN. F1UE 'MpOLOXEL KASr.y-rt.MlTH win. i ln i!& Si! tisatins; fir iii ift-lioard .s.-.inJals lit es- -5S MStttlnS t'ir ill in-nnaru .si'.lliJJis neiu. 1?' ftVit-ti-nnnhiic 1-. ,s t.'lsk- In llip richt snirit. In tfi tie llrst plac-f. lit- ilrnws .. -harp lltio lip- tm ttt'en discrepancies In tin- rulliiK f the IgS -.different draft l.u.ird.--, with apparent In- Justice arlsina: from errors of .ludcinent. and I'Mv- nctual Injustice and fnvorltlsni arising p" from deliberate rrookedness. v. ,The membeiH t'f tho draft boards have. firs' 0 ru'e Justified the conlldenre that was :. reoosed in thnm They have Riven faithful -' 7"..l , -.--. - service. If two or three scoundrels were .appointed no one should be surprised. The ;cptirts arc afte.- them nnd they will be punished. ;,i But no one up'Icps that thpre have been Wholesale frauds, because no onn believes jjV ihiit there is nn riplibenite attempt 01. the ;part of a consldpraule number of people jftf avoid the draft and to shirk duty in Xhfs nreat crisis. 1,1-ri establishing a half-mile dry zone about the munitions Plants the Government iirltty' have wished to assure the tvoikers a lo healthful exercise. GERMANY AND THE FOURTH w l-j&f.mHE Fo fourth f July is a day dedicated r-'.fo a' tt theory of Rnvernment founded on ,'f ttio collective intelligence and co-operation &Ll rii f.Sanu tiisuernniciiL ui an ine t-.-ujit. it i Sfitnterestins on this tourth of July, theie- ffsffore. to consider the reason recently riven ifejffor the shortage of clothes in Germany. iwhere they are being buried and even marrifcd in garments made or paper. W One observer succests that them is no Iflvool available for clothing In Germany F54''bfcause the Government has taken all the .-.wool in sichk In order to null it over the fetjyeof the people. St'-"" " " And Grover Cleveland Bergdoll wears fi' 'the name of a President of thf United States : g, WUKrv AiNll I'lLsllliiNO mTtT7! fa V.fip1 tn l-ni Trtil n, r.nrt fjf. tion are necessary hefore it can be put t ..nut of the. wav. It Isn't surnrisinir that iJKlr..- ., j -, , ....... .... , w . wl3 nrait uuarus caurgeu vviui aic emorce & tnent of the work-or-flght rule in this and ,"( 'ither cities should operate constantly amid 4 chorus of groans. Loafers are the , hardest worked people in the world, though , ,they never can get others to agree with ii- them. Ik ff Aside from all this, tho hoards which P have to decide between essential and non- ..- essential employments should be regarded KSliJ-vUri reverence. They face the most dif- llr, .'.flcult question ever raised in the world. tW$ Wovk Is like morals. It is susceptible of L-gp-yarlous definitions in various localities. 'Mi llfrt ft rt MIC tinnftenrl nnmls n vn i.p-.a 'S-t' AiiniiD -TH-ta rlrn-J Kni.eln i-(U U n -. i. IV- dr-flght order to enforce may yet be com- illEA' ,.01.,4 tn rn.n .Vila AV.nA....n ...!. :n .1 1.1.- iS-iL -pICI.lCU 1.VJ J.VIIC 1.1110 UU3LU1U IIUI.11 111 Ilt'ldS .-.jyliere they have not yet even thought of &l venturing. a . " Germany has carried the fight to the ,' ljlnnlsh and still the war refuses to tnd. FIENDISHNESS WITH QUALMS flHOULD the German flovcrnmpnt n-r.i- pjp Je,arn the truth concerning the sinking l??jJr-f.he hospital ship Llandovery Castle, it ISjsftf Jfj quite likely to be appalled. Repugnance mXS-n 9? horrors will, of course, not prompt this pfe je?llnK' The whole dastardly policy of wS "weltmacht" Is grounded in outrace. nut x'.'.ifi y executing his infamies the German ffit ffnker brooks no "Ifs." The crimo coni-y-. "rnitted with a qualm is a deed of weakness. 'and there are significant signs that the K 'conduct of the U-boat commander who attacked the brightly lighted mercy craft 1 ,was faintly colored with this human IkSjjjVpia fiend who sank the Llandovery fa&fd&tte Is an outlaw alone with a conscience Ue to tho gospel of his employers and tt.too weak to do aught than insult nltyi kt'S The restaurant patron struggling to have Kw order correctly filled knows distressingly . tea much about "defective service tanslp " .in-' . (THE HUN AND THE PRISONER rTjijw ljumane treatment of prisoners of f J,war has always been a point of honor en? civilized nations. Bvfdenee, accumulating In ghastly repc- hi has convinced England and America jjV.Germany's treatment of Engllsli- Icing captives has been the blackest ,on .the already foul record of tho Mji" Government. Unspeakable cruelty joatnsome uesraaaiion nave oeen in ted. ill cold blood on thousands of Eng i?prisoners. Prisoners of other na nUty, Russian and French and Belgian, 'WWllft Utterly miserable in their filthy iuar- jurr,' havebeen treated with comparative tttbtttlness. kl v.. A'..i.t b. i.nAit.iA iA t.i.. .tAH ftC.rtYUUlU W 111JU04IU1C iui 1111a jiauuji illate in kind upon German prisoners iotnto But we will retaliate and JjtfMpn? in France. & ?. . J v Vi jfeji?; "-. .F ' X 1 ,.... , TING FOR VIIAT WE A HE FIGHTING Dcfrcnilants of the Men Who Sought Free dom in America Have Taken Arms to Make the Whole Worlil Free fpiIE thoughts suggested on the eve of tho celebration of the Fourth of July, this year, arc more inspiring thnn those which have been provoked by the anni scrvary within the recollection of any man now living. We had been at war only thvec months last year at this time and we had only begun to prepare to get ready. This year we have an army of more than two million men nnd we have sent about n million of them to France. They are crossing the ocean in convoyed fleets carrying eighty thousand on each trip, an achievement in the transport of troops so much greater than anything which has hitherto been accomplished that there is nothing to compare with it. Now, who are thepe men that are going abroad to fight the German peril? This nation was founded by lovers of liberty who fled the oppression of the old world that they might find a place in which to be free. For more than three hundred years there has been a continuous procession of selective Ameri cans moving westward across the At lantic, attracted bv the ideal on which this land was first populated. Men of every race have come here, drawn by the magnet cf freedom. This has been and is "the free heart's hope and home." The men who are sailing eastward in the convoyed transports are the descend ants of the men who sailed westward a generation or two generations or ten generations ago. The liberty which thei'- ancestors sought here, as well as the liberty which has grown up in Europe, fertilised by the example of America, is imperiled. We did not realize at first that the war threatened the freedom of the world. Yo thought it was a quarrel among the European States. F.ut as the months went b;- it was forced upon us that Ger many was seeking, not the punishment of the Powers which had interfered with her colonial dreams, hut was fighting to control the whole earth. 77int ire decided that ice muxt tight if trc imuld retniu those r'ghtu and priritegc for the sake of trhich our rr.t'of.s foir tip their roots from the eld world and trmist plnvtcd them to a more congenial clime. We have ceased to doubt the purposes of Germany. We know now that as long ago as the winter of lftr.M" the Kaiser called together the great business men of his country and promised to divide up the world with them in return for their financial support in the war which was to end with a victory in 101"i. We know that he promised to give to the great steel king of Germany thirty thousand acres of mineral land in Australia and lend him money to develop it, and that ho promised to him also the privilege of joining a syndicate which was to CNploit Canada and that he promised to other men the riches of India and of France. And wo know that he told the American ambassador that when he had disposed of his European enemies he would turn his attention to America. The proof is indisputable thai this tear was begun as the result of a great plot to plunder the world for the benefit of Germany, and to do it at the point of the sword. Admiral Mahan years ago warned us against disarmament because, in his opin ion the yellow races, when they awak ened from their lethargy, would develop great military strength. And these races which have not, inspired by greed for the possessions of the Euro pean races which have, would move west ward and plunder and ravage and destroy all that centuries of civilization had built up. And the Kaiser, to blind Europe to the purposes for which his military machine was being built, talked much about the yellow peril. But those predatory raids which Mahan foresaw as coming from the Orient have started from the center of Europe, and the yellow peril, held up as a bugaboo by tho Kaiser, has become in reality the Teutonic peril. The greed of the Germans has been excited by the possessions of the other races and they are straining every nerve to loot the riches of the world. There is not a soldier who does not know what he is fighting for.' It is a war for democracy in the broadest and fullest meaning of that term. The triumph of the Teutonic ideal would mean the triumph of autocracy, govern ment by a class for the benefit of that class, instead of government resting on the broad base of the people's will. It is a war for the triumph of Christian principles, which is only another way of saying that it i3 a war for democracy. There, is only one Ruler of the world and He docs not sit on a German throne. We arc all equal before Him. Greed and oppression, brutality and bestiality must not be permitted to triumph. The world has been progress ing toward the light for nearly two thousand years. It has moved more rapidly in the last hundred years than in all the preceding centuries We are righting to prevent Germany from turn ing back the hands on the clock and .reviving all the abhorrent practices and policies which the conscience of civiliza tion has condemned. ice had not gone to war on these issues the very stones of the field would have cried out "Shamet" and we would have deserved the fate which the Teu tons held in store for us. We would have sold our birthright and would have betrayed the trust which our ancestors reposed in us. Tomorrow is Independence Day in America. It is to be celebrated also in W V UaT, -. yr,3A,. -tf &&3!&Za&& i-.iii t...i-v' .rHtKujpvajviajsx!taiittissvmifss. : ' ' - L France and Jn Brazil and In Uruguay, where it has been officially proclaimed a national holiday. Tho day on which the war ends with victory for tho causo of right should be celebrated ns Freedom Day In every nation which has fought for the right, and the day should he kept as a perpetual memorial to the men who have died that the world might be free. The old slogan 'Tour years more for Grover" only Is a decided understatement with respect to what draft-dodging Mcrgdoll will get when he Is caught. MOTHERS OF DEMOCRACY THE Senate has consented to tho incor poration under a national charter of the Mothers of Democracy, composed of women kin of the fighting men, In spite of the fact that It had decided to chnrter no more corporations during tho war. It made an exception In favor of the mothers on the ground that their organization was not commercial. The House will doubtless agree with thp Senate. So far from being commercial, this com pany of women is doing work which could not he bought for gold. It is extending human sympathy to the families of the men who have gone to Prance. The other ilav a poor mother who had been to the station to bid gooif-by to her son found a bouquet of flowers at her homo when she returned, sent there by the Mothers of Democracy here. The discovery that other women had thought of her moved her to tears. When n poor mother says a kindly and helpful word to a rich woman whose -mi is away they will all discover that they aip sisters under the skin and the name of the organization' will be more than tnipty words. Tho headline "Houf 1'lin'ks Cabinet Talks" does not moan that their One KpmulnltiK Prlvllcp.' Colonel K. M. Is be having in characteristic fashion, but t.ithrr that Congressmen, ns usual, are jealous of nni one else's loquacity. "Tell the world nf Thej Will jour unmatched prowess in shipluillil- ' "ays the Kim l gency Kir el Corporation ffri't to I'luladilphlit. We w II Ut the - toll It -lui It is ihrering to learn that under th" new labor 1 tiling ticket speculators have no mi the sidewalk. Where Ii rhe.v lt? standing not even Strange as it may seem, the IM.Onn Au. tt inn reserves who failed to "bolster up" the line made things pretty soft for the Italian victors. There are -ome Germans in Krance who vull have reason to be glad when the fifth nf July arrives If they happen to he alive anil able to reason. After all. the establishment "f 'he new anti-honze zone atnund the Frankfnrd Arse nal onl carries out the historic injunction "Keep your powder dry" in logical stvle. Would ymi speak of the Independence Uav orator who talks nbnut his mvn patrlot-i-m as a fiiurtlmfjuli.tr'.' To some men who aren't hrave and hate m-l the current challenge of the draft hoaids means work or flight PUNK Who knows seems to have lost clauses. where Trotsky is? He vanished to the home of I'ndouhtrdly thirty epert masseurs are rubbing down Karl Hosner and grooming him for the task of taking notes of the Kaiser's answer to President 'Wilson's In dependence Day speech. The casp of writer's cramp that Shake speare is said to have had will be nothing to that of Karl Rosner if he has to steno graph the Kaiser much longer. Judas Iscarlot should have been a U-boat captain The best kind of fireworks for homp con sumption are. thrift stamps. Xo one will cct lockjaw from licking them. The city of, Florence has bestowed its "freedom" upon President Wilson. Now we wait for the freedom of St. Helena to be granted to the Kaiser. Our Own Cannon Cracker x When we celebrate of Jul.i tho Fourth we will not behave as In days gone by, For this year's fire works are all in one, The great big cannon cracker under the Hun. The fuse is sizzling, and Hill's Invited to stick down his face and see It it's lighted. "Father and mother are In a safe place," wires one of the Czar's daughters. We hope for their own sakes that they are no where near a lied Cross sign, or some Hun will be sure to get them. The Right Kind of Fireworks Try lighting the fuse of a War-Savings Stamp, It never gave any one lockjaw or cramp: It injures no children, won't blister or singe. And explodes in a way that will make Wllhelm cringe. Don't make Mr. McAdoo get a sore throat, But buy up his stickers and snare VU helm's goat: Each one of these stamps Is as good as a Bond, And helps to put Wllhelm Behind the Beyond. Poor Trotsky! hunsry look. He has the Lenine and SOCRATES', ...'' 3a wl. " sfa"'-Ytt ' i " , " 9 -'Sir" .' .-l!lt&Bi.iit. - . ? ' V A, .&. v ,. T-vaawz-rJt-rjioaRj i-i ' . t r , 5vieKia :eaPSlSL8.''' &9 .& tA?.'tfK .ftaMMr.jra.jL-y jaL'afci.''ftr'nvj"" '! ,' ..ii&JWHrwm. .... ' 1 r , rhnntnv I The Shipyard ClfWtcy (Apologia to Rudyard Kipling) fpiIE Liner she's a lady, an' so becomin' rave. ( The Man o' War's 'or 'usband that gives 'cr watchful care. But, oh, the little cargo boats about to take their dip, They've got to hustle for themselves on cv'ry bloomin' trip. Slidin' down the ways, Yankee, shoutin' for tltcir'lotids, Smilin' at the Delaware, Frisco, Hamp ton Roach. Every spar for liberty, cv'ry rivet tmc For the game of games, Yankee, played upon the blue. The Liner she's a lady, an favored toffs that stride Upon her spotless tenkwood decks know well that close beside The Man o' War, 'er 'usband, is primed for a surprise. But, oh, the little cargo boats, uncon- voyed, bear supplies. The Liner she's a lady. Her route is what the fleet An' that consolin Man o' War decides to be discreet. But, oh, the little cargo boats that have to take their chance Are just as brave as Private Jones or any chap in France. The Liner she's a lady an' was before the war Dolled up for rich excursionists and took 'em by the score. But, oh, our little cargo boats are free from nomories To cheer 'em as they plow the waves of Hun-infested seas. Tho Liner she's a lady, an' if she wasn't made Ten shots to one her steel would go into the cargo trade. Tho Man o' War's a corker, but can't watcli cv'ry place, An' cargo boats are kind o' proud to run a fearless race. H'rii'ii'ii' tn be born, Yankee, 'angin 'round the yard Gloucester, Kristin!, Camden Town youtli is fightin' hard For the enmin' cliristenin' an' tlte bot tle's flow, 'Ear tli-e little cargo boats pan tin' quick to go! II. T. CRAVEN. Would Tirpitz Knoiv Her? EVEN Tirpitz wouldn't recognize the Lev ialhnn nee Vaterland If he could see her now. We saw her one day at Atlantlcport, that beautiful city that empties Into tho subway. I T HAD been mining hard, the peculiar kites in the narrow, cavernous streets of Atlantlcport. Benton upon by wind and dictation and motion-picture 111ms, harassed b.v the hot dog fumes from Co come, we nearly gave It away from Atlanticbeach, bleached by peroxide and bullied by hall boys. (J friends, what a climate! In other words, it had been raining hard, and In the afternoon a soft, misty fog sprawled over the harbor, an opalescent ngueness tinctured with dissolved sun light and vibrating with the rapid leaps of home-bound commuters. We were on a ferryboat, wondering who threw all the rubbish into tho river, when suddenly there loomed up out of the mist a gigantic profile, the most thrilling profile we know: that of an ocean ship. Stately, with the most graceful progress known to man, that of a home-bound -vessel entering port, she moved toward her berth. T .IIE11E is no word of motion delicate enough, smooth enough, to express that fluent gliding advancement of a great vessel as she slips to her waiting pier. It is a growth so Imperceptible, so full of satisfaction to the eye that the heart throbs as one watches. Keats's phrase, "a gradual swim," is perhaps near to It. It Is the ro mantic perfection of gentle transition. Now sho Is here, and now again she is not here, and yet the eye can hardly discern her passage. She comes to her home proudly, and yet sadly ns she thinks of the bruised hearts to whom she is a symbol. AND what . from th a sight sho was as sho grew tho mist, took firm outline. leaned over our ferryboat and passed us like a dream. Her sides were festooned ami striped with zigzags and mottllngs of blue and black and fish-belly white. Along her stern curves were painted three par allel false sterns, so that even a few fur longs away, in tho mistiness of the after noon, one, could hardly swear where she ended. Her three great funnel.s. leaning backward In their proper rake, were thrown out of gear by a quaint black ver tical stripe on the middle stack, so that from a distance she seemed (when her gray colors faded Into the haze) a vastly smaller one funnel vessel, headed tho other way. From her cutwater rose a saw-tooth black diagonal, rising starkly up her sheer and counter. This, as the ferry drew off, made her seem like a destroyer of low freeboard. As we watched her she seemed to dissolve and blend with the afternoon, taking on quaint and various shapes, PART of the illusion, of course, was due to the particular atmospheric condi tion of the afternoon: the bluish dissol vent haze, the westering sun tobogganing down on a long slant, refracting among the soft vapors of the bay. And part of the illusion may have lain In the trustful heart of the visitor who expects marvels from the magic 'city of Cabarablan Nights, and perhaps stiffens them. with his own qui nine drops of imagination. ind yet, so marvelous was the sight, so fantastic and stirring ns the greatest of all ships drew tho mantels of mist around her and gravely swept on to her dock, that we did what wo have always vowed we would never do. Wo used a word that we have sworn an oath 'against and that had not crossed our lips for six months. "Yes," we said to our companion, "that's camouflage," C. D. M. Mm fe ItM ".""' HiM 'ZaiSMfiEMiWL f,JI'WJiaiB. : : ., ' ' - ' - "HE ERE, i. .-v-iii."; :ir.'0 !ii, .w-.--i -X Y j rS ' ri iff lU3l?St5-IjU2tiWHiiOi.JS,',,?S,ii 't.7i"e.WSKlW"!M.r:fiWf h :: '.- 'q.-'i.'l-rI"F?-'ii KriHF'V stfegwi:SL THE GOWNSMAN ""PATRIOTISM," said ilre'.lip, "Is a khid "" of provincialism indulged In by people of small minds," and this great mill, who is 'the only German poet who has ilscn to worl I standing, pilled himself on being a cosmopolitan, not on being a German. Giictbo was a man of genius and recog nized his own wherever ho found it; for example, Faust in Marlowe's "mighty line," for Marlowe had made the Faust story two hundred years before Goethe was born. Goethe excrclred to the full the most conspicuous of German talents, an ability to exploit the ideas, thought i an.l Inventiveness of other people, iiut Goethe was likewise a man of discernment. It was he who told his Boswell, Akermann, in words of late often quoted, "The Prussians are by nature ba"barians; civilization makes them ferocious." THE reader to have nol may perhaps no so Keen as loticed a certain fine careless ness, an easy abandon in the passages Just quoted from Goethe. This U the offhand manner of your Gownsman, who happens to be writing more than a hundred mlle3 north of that temple of accuracy, the Bos ton Public Library, and who ia compelled, therefore, to emulate, If ho does not de liberately appropriate to his use, the pose of a certain Harvard professor, who was constrained, such was the congenita! pre cision of his mind, willfully to misquote nnd. so to say, disaccuratize his statements lest he should seem to smack in the class room too much of the oil of the study and wear too obviously the laurels of his learn ing. This by the way. PATRIOTISM Is one of the large, hu mane, primitive instincts. There Is a value In the personal possession of charac teristics possessed by no other man. Sach trHlts arc great feeders nf human vaiicty and human vailety is .mi inordinate gotii-- mandizer. But it is the large, the gen eral traits that most ally us with our kind, for these are they by which hii manity is recognizable within us and with out which all our fine personal Idiosyn crasies aro naught. Patriotism Is as prim itive as self-defense that put ft club Into the hand of tho cavo man. as primal ns tho sense of woman that makes tho wor shiper, as originally inherent ns mother love and often as sweet and sacrificing. TO LOVE one's country is a generous impulse, because it smites self in the larger Idea of tho clan, the tribe or tho nation. It has In It tho elements of faith, without which fovv things human can sub sist long; and It has this love of coun try, the willingness to give for others, to sacrifice, If need be, life that that larger idea, that finer ideal may stand in times to come for the benefit of those who are yet to be. A thing that so Involves the imagination is precious beyond tho price of rubies, for in patriotism is involved the very essence of heroism and renuncia tion. BUT patriotism can flourish only In the atmosphere of freedom. Thoro is a popular German poem about a grenadier of Napoleon. This noble puppet the grenadier, not the emperor did some thing or other that was brave, something that ho had to do, and, having reported to headquarters, fell dead nt the emperor's feet, happy to die in the imperial presence. This is what the German has in the way of patriotism, the faith of a serf for his feud. Fealty to a sovereign prince ia not patriotism, especially when to bo other, wise than faithful can mean only ruin, "', .V -JH". " -rt &4i 4-..V & mmm.:'. & im. -m?v ,.', ..Am. ,';L',T,il...A.r:i-i i -n.,: ,,..-.. . -- - PROFITEER'! NICE DOGGIE!!" , - Jiirl ilE!S2fIi8n '" "":'"-5"f't":'v"J"""i'iTV fc$pw5L c',i !-. s yrf?iflk-r,.a The spaniel fidelity that fawns for favors a-id trembles at the displeasure of a human providence, booted and spurred, knout In hand, is not patriotism. The patriot Is the freeman who gives of his own act his fortunes, his life, his nil for on abstraction called tho state, In which he embodies, according lo the power of his imagination, all tli.u Is worth living for In this world and hoping for in the world to come. A man's patriotism is the ex predion of himself. To die for one's country is truly sweet and decorous (as the old Latin proverb has in, for thus to di- ii to expiess the soul of r. noble devo tion to piiuciple. "PATRIOTISM is not a little like the wor--1- ship of God. Untuned and sounded on a siao'u'iie I stiiug, patriotism may fall into meie lip-service or substitute for the true God a superstitious worship of tinsel idols. Think of the disparity between the strong-eyed Goddess of American Liberty and the mail-clad Germtinii, with drawn sword, chiefly Intent on guarding it stolen Rhino for stolen it was once if wo go .back far enough after German example In matters of theft. Look rather on the vision of our own wide, fruitful, prosperous domain, the land of promise and possibility, the land or importunity, welcoming nil, giving to all. hoping for all, vast, Inde finable, bright with the glory of the past and with the vision of the future. With nil our nhorH'iimlngh, with all the things that we wish were otherwise, think of what it mean-, to be free, to grumble at whatever you choose to grumble about, to lejmce in whatever delights you, to pur sue your way unileterred by precedence, undismased hy tyranny, unperturbed by that damnable divinity which doth hedge a king, ospeolilly a Hohenzollern In his own nrtillolal country and which ho would feign plant tn hedge In the rest of tho vv oiid. rpHINK of waxing patriotic over a para. -- noiac with a withered arm, masquerad ing In foity uniforms, each gaudier than the last, a pinchbeck Napoleon, served by a graded bureaucracy, each layer tho tyrants of tho next below! Do you won der at the superstition, the Idolatry, the blasphemy practiced under the law of this Mahomet, who megaphones to a disgusted world. "Hohenzollernlsm, Pan-Prussianlsm of the Sword! " -youR unregenerato Gownsman, dear -- reader, is apt lo snicker when people aro sentimental. But there Is a time for sentiment, for feeling, for that expanse of heart and uplifting of mind which comes when u man thinks with his fellow men in the open sunshine or under the stars. It Is not sentimental to bo madly n lovo when "the inexpressive she" Is Incom parable. And our "inexpressive she," our groat, tender, kind motherland Is incom parable; not becauso she is better than all other lands though It la right that wo should think ho without boasting but be cause she is ours and wo are what she has made us. TyrEN are as the various metals some "- common but useful in commerce; some rarer," capable of employment in tho highai- organisms of life; some precious, to be wrought by the cunning hand Into works of art and beauty. It is not the least of the many blessings which aie America's that we can take what bullion wo may to our mint of men and stamp before Jong upon it and indelibly tne imago of bur incomparable Gcddess of Liberty. is. .r j-& r'.'iVFV'V' mr OUR OWN FOURTH OF JULY PARADE The following floats will he exhibited: Garabed Glragosslan using free energy lo shave himself Lenine and Trotsky walking the ties The Cities of the Rhine protesting, In the name of humanity, against air raids , U-bqat Captains, prostrated by having missed a hospital ship Austrian Army Chiefs planning a backward offensive German Statisticians, learning how to multiply the number cf prisoners Town-planning Committee of Hell, arguing which street tn name after tho Kaiser Posse of Russian Envoys, explaining competitive solutions of Russia's troubles McAdoo, recovering from Liberty Loan soro throat by a .poultice of thrift stamps Hlndenburg, convalescing from a serious "victory" Citizens of Berlin, smoking chopped bark, eating turnips and wearing paper clothes, waiting with a sledge hammer for the Kaiser to come back from France SOCRATES. Lost Laurels Another thing that would have been con blileieil Impossible four or five years ago ii that Turkey could possibly get Into any company that would be bad for her morally.. Ohio State Journal. "Some" Splash! With the launching of 100 American ships on July 1 the Minute Men of Concord who tired the shot heard round the world will have to give way for a time to Schwab's shipbuilders, who will start the splash heard round the world. Ba'timoro News, What Do You Knoiv? QUIZ 1. Where l Trinity C'ollnce (America)? 8. Willi h In the 'utmeir State? 3. What Is the Chance-Clans Trocess? I. Wii.it N the Code Napoleon? 5. Identlfv "The KnlsM Without Fear acd Without Itrnroni'li." (I. Nume the loinposer of "Atdn." 7. What nreat opera vvns "written to order," fur u Mieiiul occasion? S. When ui'il what Is llracuatlon Dai? I), W'ho Is Count Mlin Tarouca? 10, Wliu nuh' "A treaty Is Hie uromlae of o nation"? Answers lo Yesterday's Quiz 1. t'artnrniiliy Is the srlenro and art of map maklne S. tiriuul Duke Nicholas Nicrmluletllcli, recently reported proclaimed (lar of Kussla. Is niemlier of the iiniierliil houae. a cousin of the ex-Cznr. uml the son of the es.L'ziir' ureat-mirle. He was the Itusslan ren frallnslmo In the first ears of the war and later won brilliant wrtorlei In the Cau casus. 3. The sunix "vltrh" In Itusslan names has the, force of "win of." und Is added to tho inline of the Individual's father. 4. SuftUt A letter, syllable, or Billables added to words to modify the lueuiiine of tho 5. Armistice! A temporary truce or suspension of hoktilltlei by ngrrrment. It may be 'nartlrulur." applied only to u section ot the theatre of w.ar, or "neneral." 0. Mostnvvi The. ancient capital of Russia, to which the llolsheilkl trsnhferred the seat or corrrnmrnt. Is on the Moskwa, and about too miles southeast of Tetroxrad. 7. Curnellun uud while lire the colors of Cornell A Tale of Two Cities"! One of the unurrkii. toricai novels or i nanes iitcitenst period Is that of the French Kevolutlon. 0, Sacramento is the capital of California. 10. ,lsusinauon nas never ennngea tue 5 fl V,UAV nf the nurld." sntd hy Itelilumfn nlavafl (I-oril Ileaconsflelil) oil receiving the MWeV of the murder of 1'resldcnt Uoculn. h.k. 'L mm;fr- .-;..'. ,n .l-L . .',.' J ?i''.T. V" x ! Bibit&ftS&lL t A '' .& 7 K-l .'i -'VSSl 7 .3 7 jff .iOi m&. j "Ki&wzzwmi !S?-H , .J! v . T . . '.n.'-., .'&' rt '('? w ysMvriMix.v -wmm- '?-;. 'mwmm ws?:. &m