THE UNION OF THE UNION OF LANDSJU \1 IM&L 4 lifTHE UNION OF HANDS. THE UNION OF STATES W : THE FLAG OF THE NONE CAN SEVER! UNION FOREVER! The Flag, God Bless It! tßy REAR ADMIRAL. MEADE in the In dependent In 1898.] THE star spangled banner of the United States of America, may God bless it forever and forever! Look at it as in the early sunlight it kisses the morning breeze with its beautiful folds, look at it and tell me if it be not the one true rallying mark for all bonest hearts of whatever an cestry, creed or belief who own alle giance to this mighty republic! Look at its beautiful colors as they gleam in the splendor of the rising sun, the white symbolic of purity and honor, the red typical of the blood which has been shed and which wili continue to be freely shed in defense of the inte grity and perpetuity of American in stitutions, and the «blue, its shining silvery stars representing the great caitopy of heaven, under which the soldier of the republic on the land toils on the weary march or bivouacs in the silence of the night, or the sailor on the broad expanse of the ocean keeps his weary watch and vigil, that the citizens of the republic may rest secure while "He who watches over his true Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps." Loyalty to the colors! Loyalty to the flag of the nation! That is the creed of the American sailor and soldier and. I hope and believe, the universal re ligion of the land. And the nation will cease to be great should the evil day ever come when there are found dissenters to this creed. * * J The Fourth ol July. J * * * J O stars of Freedom's banner * J bright * That clustered shine in field of blue, "¥■ From faint, far depths of heav- £ * en's height * J Your constellated fires you £ J drew! £ J From starry ways of ages down * Fou bring the light of old re- * nown! + * * *- Greece first your dawn-bright + * radiance knew £ *- When Freedom's star rose o'er + J the deep, £ *• And Athens' glory full orbed + £ grew * * When Parthenon crowned the * u Acropolis steep. * » The fame of Greece then bright- -* J. ly shone £ *• With splendor since through ages -* J known. X * * 1 But kindled by Promethean fire £ ? O'er other lands rose Free- * jt dom's stars. $ * Vnquenched by blood, they still + J aspire £ * Where far. beyond the old •* J world bars + They rose above the new world -fc J bright £ *■ And blent as one their kindred * J light. * * * A 4s * Long may these stars undimmed * T still shine £ jf In Freedom's glorious galaxy! J Long may our land still be the £ ! shrine To all the world of Liberty, * Whose statue stands at Free- -* dom's gates * And for the coming million* * waits! * —E. T. Sudduth ♦» New York * World. J 4c ************************** Our Everlasting Reliance. What constitutes the bulwark of our liberty and independence? It is not onr frowning battlements, our bris tling seacoasts, our army and our navy. These are not our reliance against tyranny. All of. these may be turned against us without making us weaker for the struggle. Our reliance is in the love of liberty which God has planted in us.—Lincoln. A skeptic Is a man who wouldn't trust the wheel of fortune until he had equipped it with a nonskid tire.—Phila delphia Record. JUW4 A JULY 4 PROPHECY. Sixty-nine Years Ago an Enthusiast Predicted Downfall of Thrones. "The Fourth of July will be cele brated with great enthusiasm. Pa triotism has received uew impulses by the glories of our war with Mexico and the revolutions among the rotte:» and tottering thrones of Europe." Thus sixty-nine years ago a writer in a New York periodical voiced his patriotism. It was July 4, 1848. He wrote thus: "The Mexican war has been glorious, not so much on account of its vic tories and conquests as for the exhi bition of patriotism and heroic valor and devotion from one end of the country to the other. It has shown the power cf a popular government and taught both the monarchies and the people of other lands that thrones and aristocracies and large standing armies are not necessary to a great and powerful nation. The right of self government is shown to be con nected with the power of maintain ing it." Buttermilk For Erysipelas. A communication by Arnold in the Practitioner recommends hpttermilk highly as an application for erysipelas. Whatever the stage of the disease, he says, the spread of the infection is im mediately checked, the pain disappears and the whole morbid process is im mediately checked when buttermilk is used locally. World's Oldest Investment. The oldest investment security cm earth is the real estate mortgage. We know that money was loaned on mort gages in ancient Babylon in the time of King Hamurabi, 4,000 years ago, and that some 2,500 years ago the great Babylonian banking house of the Egibi family invested large sums in mort gages on both city and farm property, the mortgages being recorded on bricks, which have been preserved in the safe ty deposit vaults of those times—great earthenware jars buried in the earth preserved until the archaeologists in our own day and age dug them up to show us when, where and how mortgages originated. INDEPENDENCE SQUARE. Declaration's Birthplace Associated With Nation's History. Independence square, the most famous square in Philadelphia, at one time was known as the Statehouse gardens, the resort of fashionable city people. As soon as the news of the battle of Lexington and Concord reached Phila delphia more than 8,000 of the citizens assembled in Independence square "to associate for the purpose of defending with arms their property, liberty and lives," and it was from here that the first state quota was mustered into service for the army of the Revolution. In May, 1776, an immense meeting was held, notwithstanding a heavy rain, to consider the authority of the people and to form a new government. All during the civil war Independ ence square continued to be the meeting place of town folk to decide upon the measures necessary to be taken to defend the state, and here the people thronged to celebrate the fall of Richmond and mourn for Lincoln. Effect of Plant Foods. Potash aids in the formation of starch in the grain, strengthens the stalk and encourages healthy growth. Nitrogen hastens stalk and leaf growth, lengthens the season of growth and gives the plant a quick start Phosphoric acid helps fill the grain, improves the quality and hastens ma turity.—New York Sun. Singapore motion picture theaters have cheaper seats behind the screens for poorer class natives. A Quaint Introduction. Clarence King, the ethnologist, once wrote from San Francisco to John Hay the following letter of Introduc tion: "My Dear John—My friend, Hor ace F. Cutter, In the next geological period will go east It would be a ca tastrophe if he did not know you. Lest I should not be there to expose Mr. Cutter's alias, I take this opportunity to divulge to you that the police are di vided in opinion as to whether he is Socrates or Don Quixote. I know bet ter; he is both." The Declaration Then and Now [By PRESIDENT WILSON, in an ad dress in Philadelphia.] HAVE you ever read the Declara tion of Independence? When you have heard It read have you attended to its sentences? The Declaration of Independence was a document preliminary to war. It involved a vital piece of business, not a piece of rhetoric. And if you will get further down In the reading than its preliminary passages, where it quotes about the rights of men, you will see that it is a very specific body of declarations concerning the busi ness of the day—the business of revo lution. the business of 1776. The Declaration of Independence does not mean anything to us merely in its general statements unless we can append to it a similarly specific body of particulars as to what we con sider our liberty to consist of. Liberty does not consist in mere gen eral declarations as to the rights of man. It consists in the translation of those declarations into definite action. Therefore we ought to ask our selves. What is there in it for us? There's nothing in it for us unless we can translate it into terms of our own condition and of our own lives. The task to which we have to ad dress ourselves is a proof that we are worthy of the men who drew this great Declaration. ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥*¥*¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ The Day We Celebrate, t * t * Today is the day, the glorious * * Fourth, * jf The day of our birth as a na- * tion; * * The dap born in darkness, in * J danger and gloom, - *• And signed with its blood's con- J secration; £ *• The day when a people rose up * J as a whole £ *■ For their independence to bat- n * e > * The day when the world heard -* the first faintest sounds * J Of Tyranny's coming death rat ? tie. *• * + 'Tis the day when the spirit of J Liberty stood * J - And threw down the gage of defiance •¥■ * To the law that the many were £ I thralls to the few * J And had no part in the alliance £ Of power and riches which ruled ■* J o'er the land; £ *• The day kings and princes that £ J banished + *• From this free land over the * J ocean and brought *- Again Freedom's dream which ■* * had vanished. ' ? "* J 'Tis the day when the grandest #• proclaiming teas made + j Which ever this world did awaken * To the right and the might of 'J humanity's self, -fc * That fate from long years had £ J forsaken. v Then on this day, Liberty's birth- J day, resolve * ]£ That ne'er from its birthright * * we'll sever, * £ But stand by the nation, the *• freest on earth, * J And its star spangled banner for- * ever! * * —Baltimore American. * ************************** July 4 Dinner Favors. For July 4 dinner table favors there are all kinds of popguns, some which shoot out red, white and blue confetti. In places where there is no objection confetti, graceful multicolored serpen tines, may also be used. Tiny cannon tied with the national colors and smaT bugles similarly decorated make deco rative favors. Small eagles may alsc be obtained. Garden designers should forget styles and design for comfort and pleasure only. They would then avoid many very serious errors that are now quite common. An Episode Of Mexico By F. A. MITCHEL « —HI During the presidency of Diaa of the republic of Mexico I went there with a stock of goods rfnd opened a 6*ore In the state of Durango. For awhile I did very well. Mexico had long been at peace with herself, foreign capital had come In to develop the country, and it looked as though her prosperity would continue. The first wreck of my hopes was the revolution that displaced Diaz and placed Madero at the head of the Mexi can government. But this was nothing to the accession of Huerta and the tur moil during his administration and fall. The Mexican people, especially those who su. ported Huerta, believing that, their troubles came largely from the re fusal of the United States government to recognize him as president of Mexico, turned more bitter than ever against Americans. I had made a number of friends among Mexicans and was permitted to continue my business without molesta tion. This was all very well so long as I remained in the location of my home and business. But I ras fond of sketching, and I intended as soon as I could get out of Mexico with my capital to go north and study art. The Sierra Madre mountains are not far from my home, and I desired*to take as many sketches as possible away with me of the fine landscapes there. One evening after sketching during the day I went to a house devoted to the entertainment of strangers to pass the night. The place corresponded to the old American tavern of former days. It was not especially clean, and the persons it contained were of a low grade. About 10 o'clock at night I was sit ting in the dining room reading a news paper. I had gone there for the pur pose, since a lamp swung over the ta ble gave the only light that enabled me to read comfortably. I was seated di rectly under it, with my back to an open door, when, hearing a faint creak of a floor board in my rear, I raised my eyes from my paper. They lighted on a shadow cast on a wall before me. The shadow was not cast by the light over my head, but by one back of the object that produced it It was not very dis tinct, but sufficiently so for me to dis tinguish it as the shadow of a man. The head covering was plainly a som brero. The owner and shoulders came next The left arm was lowered, and since the shadow of the right arm was simply a lump I Surmised that it was raised and pointed in my direction. It required only a fraction of a sec ond for me to see in this shadow what is called in art a foreshortened arm. I believed also that the hand dratained a weapon. That It was a pistol and not a knife was evident, since it, too, was foreshortened. Had it been a knife it would Ijave been held in a dif ferent grip, which would have produc ed a shadow. I would have seen some evidence of a blade. In short, a man was standing in a passage behind me and about to shoot me. Expecting to be Immediately killed, I was paralyzed. I had not even the power to duck un der the table. Naturally my eyes were glued to the evidence of my danger. Suddenly I saw an increase of the area of the shadow. On either side, just below the shoulders, a protuber anpe appeared momentarily, then merg ed/Into the main bulk. The right arm was lowered and hung at an angle with the body. Now I could see that it was an arm and there was a shadow of what It was plain was a pistol barrel. When we are in danger our faculties become greatly sharpened. I question if they do not become rather instinct. I reasoned out the change is this wise: Some one had come up behind the man who was about to kill me and thrown a pair of arms about him. What should I do now? I always carried a revolver on my sketching tours, but it was at my hip, under my coat If I turned now to defend myself while my ene my's weapon was lowered I might be too late, whereas if I sat still, pre tending to be ignorant of what was go ing on behind me, I might be saved. This consideration flashed through my brain within a fraction of a sec ond. I had scarcely conceded it when I saw the shadow of the arm drawn, up to its former position. Evidently the man who had been interrupted was intending to proceed as before the in terruption. Then there was a commotion in the outline of the shadow. I Judged it to express a s-vuggle between two per sons. The ivht arm shadow appeared and was grasped near the wrist by a hand. Now was my time to act. I made four mover instantaneously—l drew my pistol, i rose, I turned, and I cov ered my enexy. A Mexican stood before me strug gling with c Toman, who maintained a firm grip of his right wrist. At my movement both stood still. "Drop that weapon," I said. The man replied by an effort to wrench his wrist from the woman. 1 tried to quiet him by putting a bullet a few Inches from his head, but he con tinued to struggle, and the woman held on. In another moment I saw his hand with the pistol in it extended on his right. I put a ball in the hand, and the pistol dropped on the floor. Darting forward, I picked it up. "Gringo!" hissed the man. I asked him why he wished to kill me, and he said that he hated gringos. This was the only reason he gave. I had been saved from being murdered by the woman who kept the bouse. Some Climate! It is a natural law in California, es pecially in the southern part of the state, that folks grow young instead of old. Every time a rose fades in this sweet land its color finds its way into the cheeks of some visitor from the east who has come here to seek the health which only a clime like this can give.—-Los Angeles Times. Upa and Downs. > M Did she really fall in lova with aa aviator?" "No. She merely took him up far a lark." "Oh!" "Then he took her up." "I see —in his machine." "The man she had been going wills for two years dropped her." "Served her right." "Her spirits fell. She stated the casa to the aviator. He went right up i» the air, and she hasn't seen him since."— Exchange. A Japanese Qet Rich Quick Call. A broker In Tokyo, wishing to stimu late speculation among the English speaking residents, composed a great handbook at great pains and, printings it by some mimeographlc means on a large sheet of paper reproducing hand writing, scattered it broadcast. The paper read: 'To the Wideawake Public.—One who want to make money why not try Stock business at such rare extraordinary chance? Even a fool, his pocket is swelling up every day. Why? Because he is daring it blindly. Awaiting your order. More or less yours faithfully. Okino Yonesaburo."—East and Went News. First Calculating Machine. The first calculating machine was in*- vented and constructed by Blaise Pas cal, a Frenchman, in 1042, in which year he was but nineteen years of age. It was made by him with the aid of one workman and was presented to the chancellor of France. During the rev olution it was fotmd in a junk shop at Bordeaux and at present is the prop erty of M. Bougouln of that city. All of the four simple mathematical opera tions can be made with it 0 Life Expectancy. According to the public health serv ice, life expectancy during Infancy and childhood has increased because of the more intelligent care of babiea and young children, but life expectancy aft er the age of forty is less now than it was thirty years ago, because those who have arrived at years of discretion do not exercise discretion for {hero selves and take sufficient exercise to overcome modern conditions. Many more people are engaged in sedentary occupations than formerly, which de prives them of natural assistance af forded by physical exercise In eliminat ing through the skin and lungs the waste products of the body.— Collier's Weekly.