- - " WHAT IS LIBERTY? Do you think that you inherit liberty merely by be ing born. that it comes to you without effort just as you lniicnt eye-sight and your other natural possessions If so, you are making a great mistake. Liberty is something that cannot be had for nothing. That is why it was said in the old days: "Eternal vigilance is the price of Liberty.'* In these days LIBERTY BONDS ARE THE PRICE OF LIBERTY If you prefer American liberty to military au tocracy, then you must do your share to see that it is not overcome and trodden under foot by the enemy. If you cannot fight the enemy with gun and sword you can fic-ht them with your money by buying LIBERT Y B NDS so that America's brave soldiers will never lack anything that they need to he > them to win the war and preserve Liberty. Si Every LIBERTY BOND you buy is a blow struck in the cause oi LkOtrty. H V i3R r^" l RQNDS AND Bl IY THEM IS OW FROM ANY BANK • [UBSBTYLOANAiy^RTfc'SKiiNT [ p j has been coninhu.T-c by [ e First National Bank INDIANA \ as a oatridic contribution 7 ~ \tow6rds winntno the r / TRICKSTERS DUPE ENGLISH RAILROADS Show-Your-Ticket System Fails to Balk Crafty Brighton Travelers. British railroad officials have had so many cases of passengers beating their way since the railroads were taken over by the government that the rail road executive instituted a rule that every passenger, whether commuter or otherwise, should produce his ticket on all occasions when passing the barrk*. This action presented a great deal of legal business and stopped practically all fare jumping. Persons failing to produce their tickets had to pay wheth er they were the owners of a ticket or not, and the courts have maintained the action of the railroads even when the ticket had been produced in court. This system has up to the last few weeks worked satisfactorily, but the exodus of the foreign element from London to Brighton to avoid air-raid dangers has uncovered a system by which it could be beaten. The London and Brighton railroad has a system by which it issues plat form tickets to passengers wishing to see their friends off by train at a charge of two cents, and these charges being applicable to both the London and Brighton stations, the refugees from London have been working a scheme of buying a platform ticket, getting into the train and having a friend meet them on the platform of the station of their destination with a platform ticket bought at that end of the line. In this way they have been traveling 50 miles by train for a total expendi ture of four cents for platform tick ets, while the single fare works out at $1.50. To cope with this evasion of fare the railroad company has now instituted a ticket collection at a station en route and the local court funds have been increased by an enormous sum in fines, penalties averaging $lO being inflicted in all cases coming before the court. KNIT IN WORKHOUSE Many Men Sent There Are Forced to Labor. Fourscore men are sitting in a long white-plastered room, working as many of them never expected to work. On their broad striped black-and-white knees each man holds some unaccus tomed instruments. They are in the Stark county workhouse at Canton, O. Among the men in stripes are chick en thieves, wife deserters, habitual drunks, carriers of concealed weapons, assaulters and batterers of their fel low men (and women), and many other sorts of criminals. All, of theis are busy. "Say, bo," inquires Shifty Sam Smith, as he handles one of his bone needles as though he were harpooning a fish, " 'ow in the 'ell do y'u purl?" "Arsk me sumptin' easy, like crack in' a crib, or friskin' a rube or some other light work," replies Alabama i Gus. "Wot I want to know is, does the Constitution of these here United States say a man can be sentenced to embroidery work if he only puts a man to sleep and cops his roll?" "Their time might just as well be spent in knitting for the government as in any other way," Superintendent Boyer said. "They cannot fight for j their country, but they can knit." GIRL STEALS LONG RIDE Travels All the Way From Birming ham, Ala., to Chicago. Ethelyn McCord, nineteen years of age, "Countess of the Road," has ar rived in Chicago from Birmingham, Ala., in an express car. She said she had worked as a newspaper reporter on Gadsden and Birmingham, Ala., pa pers and was looking for newspaper work in Chicago. Miss McCord managed to keep her presence unknown until 42 miles out, when she simply "had to laugh" at a funny story one of the messengers re lated. When she told them how.far she had "got away with it" they took her to the dining car for refreshments. She said she had been very thirsty, but not especially hungry and had .slept little because the floor was too hard. SUBSTITUTE FOR COTTON Denver Man Finds Use for Common Wild Flower. A wild flower, grown in practically all sections of the country, will be the means of supplying munitions manu facturers with sufficient "guncotton" to keep Uncle Sam and his allies well equipped with fighting materials, ac | cording to Charles Goard, a Denver in ventor, and Beau Brummels need have no fear of a shortage in raw material for the making of men's clothing. Goard says he has discovered that the wild flower known to youths all over the land as "cat-tails" has a bulb containing nearly a pint of silklike floss that can be substituted for gun cotton in the manufacture of ammu nition, thus allowing the entire cotton crop to be used in the manufacture of clothing. ■ She Has 187 Descendants. Mrs. M. A. West, eighty-six years old, of Salt Lake City, became great-grandmother to her one-hundred and eighty-seventh descendant, when her grandson. A. Denny. . T r„ V r: e the father of a bouncing u-Uy Th baby and mother are repoi.cJ well. JOYOUS LIFE LED ON BRITISH FLEET More Smiles There Than Among Any Similar Group. NO PLACE FOR PESSIMIST Healthy, Happy, Wholesome Men Have Homes on Big Battle Fighter*— Theater Ship Goes From Vessel to Vessel and Home Talent of Visited Ship Is Given Opportunity to Enters tain Their Fellows. The British navy is DO place for a pessimist. There are probably more smiles to be seen on the faces of the men who make their homes on British war vessels than are to be found among any similar group of men in the world. This is especially true of the Grand Fleet, where the continual rou tine of the last three years might have been expected to develop some degree j of depression, but wluch, on the con trary. has brought together a great community of healthy, happy, whole some men. It was the privilege of the New York Sun's correspondent to live for several days aboard his majesty's battle crais er and to enter into the life and spirit of the men aboard this great fighting machine. Most of those who make their home in the wardroom had been stationed aboard the ship for two years, some of them for u much long er period, and in the whole lot there was not one case of the "blues," not one "wet blanket." From the bridge to the stokehold there was nothing but • contentment and v lllingness to serve uncomplainingly without the slightest trace of bitterness or regret over sacri fices made for the cause. Fleet Makes Thrilling Sight. There is nothing particularly thrill ing about going aboard a battle cruiser in the darkness of early evening, but to awaken in a comfortably furnished cabin, formerly the quarters of an ad miral, and to look th ough the porthole upon long lines of enormous gray ships riding at anchor upon a harbor glisten ing in the sunlight sufficient to give the thrill of a lifetime. Something in the atmosphere of the northern country where the Grand Fleet has its home gives health with every breath. On the surrounding shores of the harbor the Vikings of old spent their winters and assimilated the strength that made them the ter ror of their enemies, and on the same , shores almost every day may be seen ( the officers and men of the fleet taking their exercise., Parties of men In run ning clothes dash from small boats and play at hare and hounds with the same vim as they did in the early days of their youth. Others play golf on a i course laid out over the peat bogs and i enjoy It as much as if they were driving the bail over the finest green- I sward in the kingdom. Among the battleships are the usual comforts of a well-ordered home. The wardrooms have graphophones and billiard tables, and a weekly motion picture show is given on the decks. Home Talent Gets Opportunity. There is even a theater ship sop plied, which goes about from vessel to vessel. It anchors alongside and the talent of the visited ships produces a creditable performance. The theater ship is called the Gourka, and its periodic visitations are anticipated fev erishly by the crew of every shltf i° the fleet. Perhaps the happiest lot of any aboard the ships of the Grand Fleet are the midshipmen. They have all the energy and pentup enthusiasm of boys in preparatory school, and when they begin to enjoy themselves in their "gunroom" the racket can be heard in every nook and cranny of their ship. They take a stronger i&to their midst with a straightforwardness that is touching and they sing their songs in a manner to bring up memories of col lege fraternity houses and prep school dormitories. The same cheeriness that pervades the mess halls is to be found in the captain's quarters, where in bright comfort the skipper reads his books, arranges his program of work for the men and has his being in peaceful se clusion. There i" soi lething clean and wholesome and desirable about the life of the fleet, and records show that few men who have entered into the work have ever died of melancholia. PETAIN SHOWS MODESTY Autobiography Records Merely Date of Birth and Death . Modesty is one of the characteris tics of General Petain, commander in chief of the French armies operating in France. It is reported that after one of his brilliant successes on the western froot, which led to his ap ! pointment to supreme active com mand, he was asked by a military writer to furnish him with a few au tobiographic notes. The general cour teously replied with this laconic mes sage : "Petain, General of Division. Born April 24, 1856. Died ." Will Multiply Gasoline Output. Secretary of Interior Lane has au thorized the construction of a plant to utilize an invention of Frederick A. Kormann, a San Francisco chemist, whereby it is claimed the output of gasoline by the United States can be increased twelvefold.