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fgBB0NBH0lt8&MSSBS?Sm*mmm*m*mt*mm*am1mm*m^^ GIRLS t LEMON JUICE IS SKIN WHITENER < How To Molco o Creamy Beauty Lotion For a Fow Cents. The juice of two fresh lemons trained into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most remarkable lemon skin beautifier at about the cost one must pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold creams, a Care should be taken to strain the le- ; ^ mon juice through a fine cloth so no ' lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whitener and beautifier. Just try itl Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fra- 1 I ^ grant lemon lotion and massage it 1 I#*.' daily into the face, neck, arms and i hands. Adv. 1. No. 666 i This Is a prescription prepared especially < for MALARIA or CHILLS A FEVER. . Five or six doses will break any case, and If taken then as a toaic the Fever will not < return. It acts on the liver better than 1 Calomel and docs not gripe or sicken. 25c 1 i fthtrsl^^l I Thprp'c Ma Pin/ y iiiviv *J 11V A. 1U\ Like Home YOUR HOME kS IN TH1 If you are asked you ' STRONG FOR THE I ACTIONS SPEAK LOUD Patronize the local mere READ THE I B I I .1 ' "l SPEC To Rjea The Chesterfie This Guaranty " $15 r-m " S3.00 With Order, Blicensderfer Ma 709 Chestnut St. Write for C*l MUBDaEaBCfl Plan Your V ATTRACTIV TRIPS F 11 Tours From 1< 11 ^ | I Boston I I White Mountains ft II Quebec I I Montreal I I Lake Champlain f II Ausabel Chasm I M| St. Lawrence I The Thousand Islands I A Series of Ten-Day ? I Chaperoned Parties of Sele % II very highest class of ^5 11 pleasure comfortable and enj JtSr I J The Tours cover the most [> II cipal places of Scenic and His I | Greatest Country in the Worl j Write for Rates, Booklets m I GATTIS II Tourist Agents, Seaboa 11 RALEIGHy ' Winthrop College SCHOLARSHIP ENTRANCE Examination The examination for the award of meant scholarships in Winthrop Colege and for the admission of new itudents will be held at the County Uourt House on Friday, July 6 at ) a.m. Applicants must not be less han sixteen years of age. When scholarships are vacant after July 6 hey will be awarded to those making .he highest average at this examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for scholarships should write to Pres.de-nt Johsi3on for Scholarship ex iminution blanks. These blanks, properly filled out by the applicant, si; aid be filed with President John son by July 1st. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. The next session will :>pen September 19, 1017. For further information and catalogue, adilress The American merchant marine at present is our fastest growing infant ndustry. [S TOWN will declare that you're IOME. ER THAN WORDS hant iOME PAPER :ial | ders of ! Id Advertiser [ ;ed Machine [ .00 i I & 12.00 in 30 Days I I inufacturing Co. ! Philadelphia, Pa. j tnlogue M2 j j ^ j a cation Now I E SUMMER OR 1917 9 to 40 Dajs I es Included | Niagara Fall* Pacific Coast |j Atlantic City | Canadian Rockies H Lake Louise {y Vancouver | San Francisco 1 Yellowstone National Park y Salt Lake City ^ Colorado Rockies ? Los Angele " Fours to Atlantic City a ct and Limited Membership service, which makes travel for oyahle. ntlrartive routes and the printoric Interest throughout the fl and Descriptive Literature. TOURS j rd Air Line Railway. 1 - NORTH CAROLINA 1 Pagcland. Agerton, Brown; Agcrton, Jesse Thomas; Allegar, Russel; Anderson, Marion; Allen, Andrew Jackson; Allen, Harmon Wilioughby; Anderson, Edward Corbett; Anderson, Whitcford H.; Arant, Peter M.; Arant, Charles Walker; Arant, John Richard; Atkinson, Clayton Alexander; Atkinson, James Robert. Bess, Henry A.; Blakeney, Recce W.; Brewer, Charlie Richardson; Brewer, Ul.; Brock, Frank; Brock, May. Cayle, Charlie Parks; Catoe, WillHorace; Cato, Lonnie Lewis; Clark, Milton Chalmers; Clark, William Beni a m i n JM....... Deas, John Boston; Deacon, Hoyt WashinRton. EdRoworth, James Fred; Eubanks, Boyd B.; Evans, John Wesley; Evans, J esse Q.; Evans, Carl (\; Evans, Julius C.;; Evans, Thomas Arthur. Falks, John Gilbert; Fincher, Bundy Carrel; Fincher, Whiteford V.; Farkenburjf, Jake; Funderburk, Berton; Funderburk, Myon Madison. GathinRs, James Morris; GathinRs, Baxter Lee; GathinRs, William ManninR; GreRory, Lee M. Grooms, Willie; Grover, Edward Selatheal; Guin, William P. Hancock, Walter Edwin; Hunter, Jas. Roland. Jackson, James Thos.; Jenkins, C. Amos; Jenkins, Charley D.;; Jordan, Rufus; Jordan, W. AuRustus. KeminRton, B. EuRone; KemiiiRton, Geo. W.; KilloURh, Lewis J.; Kirkley, Dock; KniRht, Jesse James; KniRht, Alon/.o L.; KniRht, James Harley; KniRht, J. Arthur. Laney, Nivon Park; McFarland, Claud; ManRum, John Avery; Moree, Josenh: Marzc. Roln-rt Plvlor Milo^ Vester; Miles, Walter Lee; Mills, James Adams; Mills, Arthur Nero; Mollis, John Henry; Mullis, MeManaway; Muniro, James William; Myers, Luther; Myers, Robert. Nicholson, Henry John; Nicholson, Charley C. Parker, J. Curtis; Perritt, James A.; Pigg, Raymond Alexander; Pigg, Benjamin Franklin; Pigg, William Karl; Pigg, Clarence, Winford; Plyler, Bevin; Plyler, Vance; Price, Robert Riston; Price, Maurice. Redfearn, Juries D.; Riggins, J. Pearl; Rodgers, Ramon Lee; Rodgers, Walter D. Sanders, Willie DeWitt; Sanders, Raymond L.; Sandrs, Walter Thomas; Shearn, George H.; Smith, Robert Franklin; Smith, Cecil Ernest; Smith, Truly; Smith, Thomas Lutaer; Smith, Zeb Vanre; Smith, Clyde; Smith, Roy Lee; Smith, Oscar Lee; Smith, John Edgar; Smith, James Osmond; Starnes, Mac; Stewart, Kimp P.; Sutton, James Lacy; Sutton, Edw. Gilmer. Tadlock, Whiteford; Taylor, Columbus; Taylor, Frank; Terry, James Pearl; Terry, Edd. May; Tucker, Carl M.; Tucker, W. Otis; Turner. Robert Patrick; Turner, Samuel Henry; Vick, John Lucas. Wallace, Luther Thomas; Wallace, Jack; Wallace, James Franklin; Walters, Henry F.; Watford, Lewis Jesse; Watts, Guy L.; Williams, George; West, Benamin Franklin. (Colored) Blakeney, Mott; Bakeney, Carl; Blakeney, Frederick D.; Blakeney, Qulor; Blakeneyj, William; Blakeney, Dillon; Blakeney, James; Blakeney, Lewis; Blakeney, Howard. Boane, Duncan; Boyd, Harson B.; Brewer, Brutus C.; Brewer, Braines P. Chambers, David; Clyburn, Walter; Clyburn, Jake; Clyburn, William; Crawford, Thomas; Crofford, Andrew; Croflford, Jessie; Crofford, Lui ther. i Dargan, James; Edegworth, Joseph I Walker; Edgeworth, George Foster; I Evans, Andrew. Funderburk, James; Gathings, Robert O.; Gathings, Spofford J.; Gathings, John A. Harrington, John; Hubbard, Joe B.; Isom, Hampton. t e... i ?. e.? .? # <llill-D, vyi ua, liUtMUU I, Ul'UI^C. McComb, Wiliiiim; McManus, Odus; McManus, Harrison Wells; McManus; John A.; Massy, Wilson; Meadows, Townley; Miller, Richard; Miller, William; Mungo, Perry, j Redfearn, Roy;; Roheson, Emanuel; Robeson, Luther; Robertson, Tennie;; Rorie, Boye. Seegars, Lemboston; Seegars, Jesse; Sikes, Iirasco; Smith, C. Eliah; ,Sowed, Henry; Stacks, Eugene. | Tate, Georgie; Tate, David; Thompison, Whiteford. Ousley. Alexander, Jay Gould;; Baker, Roy C.; Barfield, John A.; Buss, James E.; Braddock, W. Franklin. Campbell, James I).; Clark, John ().; (dark, J. Alex.; Collins, Charles N. Dickson, Daniel; Euton, Henry C.; Hilton, John A. Gainey, Lawrence E.; Clainey, Isaac; Gainey, Arter It.; Griggs, W. Alfred; Griggs, William II.; Griggs, J. Ainer. Howie, Early F.; Huggins, Lide; Huggins, Charlie Lee. Isgelt, James I).; Johnson, Clarence A.; Johnson, J. Luther; Johnson, Lacoste L.; Jordan, Thomas M.; Jordan, W. Robert. Kelly, George W.; King, LeRoy. Sundy, William T.; Odom, Henry. Rhodes, Barney M.; Talbert, Festus M.; Teal, Brunson; Teal, Sandy A.; Henry. Waters, Alexander; Wilhelm, J. Guy; Wlks, Gussie H.; Winburn, James C.; Winburn, William McLendon; Winburn, Archie C. Yarber, Willie. tion List (Colored) Brunson, David; Campbell, Argen; Cuffie, Abe; Fountain, Griggs Jr. Hatcher, George; Hatcher, Will; Jackson, Manuel; Marine, Elyard; Mosely, Robert. Patrick. Baker, Lester J.; Boan, William E.; Boone, John B.; Brock, Henry B.; Brown, Clarence; Buie, Thomas S. Campbell, Quincy 11.; Clark, Sidney | B.; Crawford, William T.; Curry, l Henry. Davidson, W. Seab; Dickson, I Sandy; Driggers, Clarence S. i Gainey, Luther; Gainey, Peter; Gain1 ey, Luther; Gainey, John M.; Groom, , Walter llindrick, C. Roy; Hendrick, Adol, phus; Hodj?e, Charlie A.; Rutins, 1 Burdwin C.; Hunt, Clayton. I Ingram, James H.; Johnson, Luther C*.; Johnson James W.; Jones, John , W.; Jones, David; Jones, William W. I Ml Lean, Charlie LL; Outlaw, Cleveland. J Poison, Leon; Poison, Lovett P.; Purvis, Hossilk; Purvis, Sandy; Ruy! field, William A.; Rosloe, Winston I). Sellers, James P.; Smith, Earnest! L.; Smith, William R. Teal, Stephen W.; Thorrell, John I).; Tolson, Charlie A.; Tolson, John F.; Turnajje, James L. i Watford, Nelson S.; Wilkerson, Charlie C.; Wilkes, James W.; Williams, A. Jerome; Wright, (lainey. (Colored) Allen, Henry; Rlark, Wilson; Black, ! Clarence; Black, Harvey. Harper, Preston; Hudley, Boykin. Mclvor, Samuel; McLean, John W.; McQueen, Kurten; McQueen, Coy; McQueen, I.ijf. I Parsons, William; Powe, Henry; Powe, Arthur; Purvis, Howard. t RatlilT, James; Rati iff, George; : Rollings, Robert. Sellers, Duncan; Smith, Ellis. ! Williams, Dossier. Carnes,, Ellis J.; Counrtney, Low, is E.; Counrtney, James F. i Funderburk, Spoflford L.; Funderburk, J. Alexander; Funderburk, John E. A.; Funderburk, Leston F.; Funderburk, Osmond; Funderburk, Egbert H.; Funderburk, Robert N.; Funderburk, Harley A.; Funderburk, Her| ley A.; Funderburk, Coan A.; Fun| derburk, Herman C.; Funderburk, i Walter C.; Funderburk, Theron L.; i Funderburk, Angel W.; Funderburk, Leon B.; Funderburk, Preston VV.; Funderburk, John F.; Funderburk, Herman P.; Ferr, Daniel; Ferr, John M. GrifTin, Emsley. Hensby, A Leroy; TTickn, Walter L. Jackson, John; Jenkuis, Rolar d M. Kiker, William T.; McR.ic, William j T.; Mangum, Jesse J.; Mullis, Henry E.; Mullis, Julius C Parker, Alexander I.; Rollings, Thomas F.; Rape, We'.l; Rushing, i John L. Starnes, Charley II.; Staines, Had. Wallace, Walter I..; West, 1. .Shepherd. (Colored) Crawford, Leak; Funderburk. Kim is; r uniu'ruurK, rriinu; r umicr'Juri;, Ganson; Funderburk, John 1>. McManus, Otho; Paterson, John; Robinson, Buford; Robinson, William E.; Robinson, John; Robinson, Bundy; Richardson, Henry R.; Robinson, T. 'Mance; Robinsson, Rufns; Robinson, William. Sejjars, James; Threat, Augustus; Threat, Whiteford, John T.; Threat, John W. Snow Hill. Boan, Willie; Brock, Charlie. Campbell, John T.; Campbell, Mal. colm; Campbell, Kenneth; Sanford; .Campbell, J. Cleveland; (iason, Crawj ford S.; Crawford, Rufus; Curtis, James P. j Doris, Clyde; Doris, Cleland; Doris, , Henry B.; Doris, Ruben N.; Doris, Doris, A. May; Doris, Corey 11.; Duncan, Walter T. j Eddins, Oliver II.; (Joodale, Roland; Gri^ns, Chester. Moore, J. Gory; Rhine, Thomas J.; Rivers, Thomas L. Sellers, James; Smith, Henry K., Smith, A Clevelandfli Smith, James. Tarlton, William J.; Teal, Julian. (Colored > Bit tie, Wesley; Bowman, Sidney; Burch, Ben. (Telford, Harrison; I.i^s, Junius. Johnson, Juius; Johnosn, Willie; Johnson, Julius ('. McQueen, Henry; Newman, C'harlw. Pegues, Alex; Pegues, Charlie. Katliir, Jake; Rathe, .lames; Rivers, James W. Sellers, Will; Smith, Arthur; Sturtlivant, John; Wilson, Charlie. POINTS THE WAY The Statement Of 1 hi* Bennettsville Resident Will Interest Our Renders. Our neighboring town, Bennettsville points the way in the words of one of its most respeeted residents: Mrs. J. M. Genes, Powers, St., Bennettsville, S. ('., says: "I had dull pains across my back and kidneys. I felt tired in the morning1 and hnd headaches and dizzy spells. The kidney secretions caused me annoyance. I used Doan's Kidney Pills and they rid me of the trouble." Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pill?the same that i Mrs. Genes had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props.,. Buffalo, N. Y. Adv. WHAT WE ARE By CLARi The United States is at war against Germany for two fundamental reasons. For one thing, the present war from the beginning has been essentially a conflict between democracy and autocracy, and a nation, "conceived in liberty," as America was, cannot look uncaring upon the triumph of autocracy anywhere. In the second place, we are lighting for the maintenance of human rights on the high seas. The sea is the public road of all nations. No country has a right to make it unsafe for people to travel the high seas of water, just as no man has a right to make it unsafe for other men to travel our highways of earth. One of my good friends said," I am not in favor of fighting Germany until she comes within the three-mile limit of our Atlantic Coast." Such a policy would mean the surrender of undamental American rights and even human rights. Suppose two neighI 1 11 ?1 1 u HUTS snuuiu HL'l mail w ini i-uill Uiuv-I, and one shoud say to you and your neighbors, "If any one of you travels the public road passing by my house you do so at your peril, and I will dynamite without warning every wanon, automobile, or buggy ' see coming cm that road, regardless of whether I kill you, your innocent wives, your some and daughters, or babes suckling at the mother's breast. If such a threat were made, it is easy enough to imagine what you and your neighbors would do. If you lived in an organized, civilized community, you would have the man seized as a criminal, restrained from his purpose, and punished for any execution of his threat. On the other hand, if you lived in an uncivilized, frontier community, such as the "Wild West" was fifty years ago, you and the rest of the people would join together to fight that barbarian i until he respected the common rights of humanity. And then in recognition of a supreme need, you might 1 set up constables, courts, sheriffs. 1 and jails to prevent any such defiance of human rights in future.. I It is just such a threat against huI man rights that Germany has not only ] IllilUf II Li L llil?* L-nillLMl IIILO f A I'LT U 11< MI. i When she brutally sank the gallant ship Lusitania and sent to the l>ottont ! of the sea scores of non-combatant men and women, including mothers with little ones as innocent as those who prattle at your own fireside tonight?when Germany did this ! and a hundred other similar acts preI viously outlawed by the conscience of mankind, she dyed her Macbeth-hands with murderer's blood, which not all her science and skill and boasted "culj ture" can ever wipe out. | Now if the nations were properly I organized, there would be some sui 5?reme authority that would restrain and punish this murderer- nation, just as courts and sin-rids now punish murderer-individuals. Hut since we lac!: such a "league of nations to enforce peace" it is the inescapable duty of America to join in the voluntary ef. fort of other peoples to ko up against ' Germany until she renounces her 1 mudcrous threats and promises to abide by the standards which Christendom has established. And then there is one other thine," which all prood Americans hope in the final victory. Just as the outraged citizens in the frontier community, r.fier fijrhtinj; the outlaw, mi^ht set up orderly government to punish all individual offenders in future, so we [ nc?r?*? tnui tin- nations now alia* I I against Prussian brutality will not , rest until they have established a } "'League of Nations" whereby all the ' peoples of the earth will unite their | military and naval strength for the punishment of any individual nation J which ajrain breaks or threatens the i world's peace. Fx-President Taft is i head of a nation-wide organization j now working for the organization of such a League of .Nations, and President Wilson has eloquently pledged ail the powers of his t ollice to the accomplishment of tin' same end. Moreover, in France, in Knj^l.tnd, and in all the allied countries, men are inspired by the same hitfh vision. As the jjreat Frenchman recently visiting America, M. Viviani, declares hefore our own Mouse of Keprescntut ives: "And when by force we have at last imposed military victory, our labors will not be concluded. Our (task will be, I <|Uote from the noble words of President Wilson, 'to ortran ize the society of nations." . . . We will shatter the ponderous sword of militarism; we will establish guar antees for peaee; and then we can disappear from the world's slam- since we shall leave at the cost of our common immolation the noblest heritage future generations can possess." The allied nations now at war with us, in answering President Wilson', note last December, declared their sympathy for "a league of nations to insure peace and justice throughout the world." And Premier Lloyd (Jeorge of England, possibly tingreatest personal force on earth today, makes this prediction as to condition after the war: "The nations will band themselves together to punish the first peacebreaker who comes out. As to the armies of Europe, every weapon will be a sword of justice in the government of men; every arm will be a constabulary for peace." In other words, America is now , fighting "a war against war," a war ! to prevent forever hereafter such wars as that which now rages. But uwipFHnni^Hpivr' ' FIGHTING FOR :nce poe German ideal is militaristic. As a recent authority has declared "she subordinates the civil power to the military power; she glorifies war and believes it not only to be necessary once in awhile but to be legitimate instrument of policy." As a nation she has no patience with the ideal of a league , of nations executing judgment in ! righteousness. Such an ideal to her is eireminate. Flic has freed herself, she declares, from "the contemptible ( sin of weakness." Force is to betas a god. "The iron hand," or "the mailed list" is the familar phrase that | springs to any well informed mind when German p<dii\ is mentioned. ( Bismarck, well cal!?'d "the man of Iti.wwl I I .1 - I <- -. , ......... ...... ....... ITU- rcai miner j of modern (iermany. ami he has 1 'stamped the impre s of his warlike ^ and unseruplous nature upon every 1 feature of the nat A Inn^ list of 1 ! German philosophers and leaelu-rs 1 I have reiterated his vie\is until the ' ! German mind is thoroughly inocu- ' laied with them. \\'i liny in the dis- N passmnate years the i rly '.ut's. twen- 1 ty years atro, 1 *r. A. Lawrence Lowell, v now President of Harvard, correctly 5 described the tr. ml of (iermun thought when In- said; x "The Ktnperor . ind< j an ardent v believer in tie- io-m inoiiait hical tlieo- t ' ry which hits rei. nth .>o . voetit- ' iU (leriiUlliy i til tliat decries | I universal sulfr.m- pr- laiius tin- I military monari ii> tle-i. t t.\ form of en.. Uui. furnish > I ilivt one ot limit'. uf the tvu\ ' I the end of 11n- e.-> ?r\ i.-et iiitr ; \ j the principles and t the eon | elusions that I .v. I.. id., riously 1 I developed dttritic it luinilred i (years. '1 he fact t ever since the battle of S < . a profound i change has been < -M r the (Jeri man character. y. poet i- < leal, mystical l?-t..t i has jriven | way before the inn t ' ' orcn | ?iltr spirit of 111'- l'i . in- The unity ; | of the Fatherland v. <-fi 'lie ?Ir ainerfailed to acini : . was brouirh' I J about by means of the drill serjreant, I and hence the nat iu!.<| by bis 'methods." i I.ot lis consider. .r \nmple, tin- J teachings of one ty; .1! tii-riuan pbil- : osopher of recent , n -. Treat svhke. ; I.ike many o'lvi ii class, h preaches that war ary for tit" ; i elimination of \. . ; ami that ; the government i i i. pert no promises, no moralit . vA.n they stand in the way of ?. . . j. |,,t us ipiote ; I his exact word "Tile state In > no power to limit I n s own pov.-r; item-e no treaty when i it ! econn s inconvenient can he hindi inu; benee the very tu t ion of afhilr . | tion is absurd; hence war i jiart of ; tlie 1 )ivino order." In mattters of dillieuities with oilier >ro\ erniner t . lie declares, "it is ahIsurd to bluster about morality, or e*: peet the st ite to confront them with a catechism in her hand." i Nurtured on such teachings, is it s.ny wonder that (Jermany, \vi*hinir to drive throiiirh lledyputn contenru! ou.--.lyly dismissal the "inconvenient" j treaty as "a scrap of paper" and d ! dared that necessity was sufficient I excuse for her action? As a matter of fact, the modern I (icniiiin Kmpirc is built on fraud, 'i lie war with France in tin- 7n's by .men < niiiinyy established and en ; iehed itself was ! rough) <>11 I?y an ad .liti?'?I he and I'nvvcrv I?v llisaiarci. himself. Or 1ft u e.insider tin writings of another dermaa i?J i i 1? ?| ?1 j? ?*. Niet: sehe, whose views have so ireinen > lioiisly influeneed dermim thought ! . hese last thirty ve. rs. Kv? n toon I fiercely than Treitschke he glorified war, going even to tin- extent oT ?! } noun ring ( hi i- ' iaiiit y as a religion of ! I the weak; in his vi? w ; is lit only for 1 "shopkee ers, row . women, aad ling- i lishmen." llei\ is his da. true as I given in hi own vn rds: "Whai is good? All l!tat incre .ses ' the fee! i:g of power i ovvr itself, in ; I mall. What a. had? Ail that jn'oci1eds | front v estkni-ss. \ it happuies-. i ' he feel up. ,h; t power ii.eri a.s> ... that ' le.s.sianee is henig ovet'eotne. . I .%ot eontmil. > . t, h ii mote power! Not peai e at an; ; :.( . ! nt war! \ol v irtue, hut eil'ei- ae v! . . Tne i weak and the h tel. ' i i peri.di: that is the lirs' pru eh- of our lui ! inanity. ... 1 ant writoig tor the lords of the ear 'i . . ^ ou Is.y that a i,.h. 1 .nil hallows u r? j | I lall you a v ..m1 w r hallows eve ry cause!" There is your wild, intoxicated del ligation of war lit;.; dekication for ahU'h no r u.el Germany stands: .he loctmn t! a' st. nations must c; usli the weaker ins, i ?I "lory .n iic cru.-hiiij i. o ii ?imii man tv>i?*iii|ir in his ik I" :\ Nictzseh" hinia-ll* <loi s not hr: from the most irutal aviw.il i ' hi principles. What means life? In a-.- in "The Joyful | Wisdom," and 1 < answers: "To thrust . away from ii- everything tntit wants to die; to I < r tel and inexorable to- j wards everytl* u* that t;rows old and weak; to he murderers all the time." ' I,el as lie |e rfei tiy frank stud ad mil that the ?v< rare (iernnin in himind does not who'ly aeeept the doe t t ines of thesi \M :li rs. Nevertheless, one has onK to study Belgium and the l.usitania to see that Treiseiike and Niet/.sche .are the true cxponems of oflieial (iertnany. Not only ts it true that in no other nation has >u h a school of philosophers won popular approval, ami not only is it true that their brutal cave-man doctrines have been accepted and translated into action by the German government, . .i: maut i!sj uc. nowieJgo that vhe - - German people, though ordered as soldiers to execute these principles in ravaged Belgium or on pirate submarines, have not yet rebelled or 3 made one historic protest against a government so controlled. They have not differentiated themselves from their government. Force, then, is the German ideal: military force, and force seemingly unrestrained by moral scruples. Moreover, force is limited by no sense of the government's responsibility to the Treat masses of people. Over and ver again the Kaiser proclaims the medieval doctrine of the divine right >f kings; over and over again he dedares that he is anointed of God to rule Germany as he pleases. The American doctrine that the people lave a divine right to choose their >\vn rulers has no place in German bought. I.et us keep these facts in mind, '.here fore, all through the present A'ar. There is no excuse for any man luoting that somewhat repellant maxni, "My country right or wrong." America is right and she did right to ntcr the war. We cannot afford to ive in a world dominated?as the .vorld would be dominated if Gernany should win?by the doctrines ve have indicated. These doctrines ire: 1. Militarism.?German triumph vould threaten every country with var at any time, and make every union thereafter an armed camp. J. Autocracy Not only does the \aiser bold that he and not the peode should rule Germany, but he vould discourage democracy in other omit ries in order to keep its spirit Tom spreading to Ins eountry. It vas not without re con that the I'rcsibm summoned America to war with he battle-cry, "The world must be nude safe for democracy." '!. "The state can do no wronj?."? \'ot only would all diplomacy ami all iternat ional relations be thrown into haos by German victory, but the b-ils and principles nt* humanity nuld eli mire. If the dominating ;overninc;:ls of the world were to et on the 11. ory that promises mi^ht >e violated at will hen this observr.ee "becomes inconvenient," how or.ir indeed would or could private morality endure? How lony would ! be possibh to e force in business .mi in i?i iini.ir,\ mi.n in relations nil' urineiplcs < !" the s icrwIness of conrai-ts, and Jehovah", .torn hijrh doc: rine tliat In- who \ ai l dwell in his holy hill must he a man "who swear th to his own hurt and chunjreth "Hut what about our allies?" some one asks. "You say it is a war bew ee,i ih nnn-raey and autocracy, and yet is not our chief ally Great Brit,in itself a monarchy, jroverned by hint It is important, we think, hat the facts in this cast* be clearly tated. Knjrland, in fact, is probably a truer democracy that the United St: to itself. The kinp- is a mere figurehead. stripped of all real power, lie doesn't even write speeches or messages read in his name. The real "iiier of Unjjland is not Kinjr Georjre, ora to tin purjde, hut I loyd-(?eorp:e, he Welsh lad horn in poverty and ari d by hi- cobbler-uncle and made i'reinicr of Kn^kim! by the power of It - common people! Some Fnirlish.ii-n nlvocate the abolition of the injjship and substitution of a preside P as in our ease, but the suliieient iisiver is that nobody in Untfland ants to jrive a British rui r as much : ower as an American President has! A"al then there are our other allies France plorious in.mortal France! ill' land whicll e-lorifieil vi.hlimin.l and the things of the spirit as ' 'cmutny glorifies force and blood and ,.r! Some say ihui already the 'reach people have made sueh sacri? *, have offered via so many gal1111 s< its on '.lie hloo ly alters of this .r. ll;at they ean lie . or again be a rong nation; that they arc irre' i'ie ably .eu'enel. Yet even if that be true, she :s nevertheless immortal: and when men have fortrolt.cn Thern yla they will still remember glorious 1 lane" s'amling la-side theh e'aroeand throwing her own bleeding body against the advancing Hun and ; \ '.air tlie future o<" mank iul for a higher civili/ation than would ever have been possible but for her soifimmnlation I Moreover, it is our faith that Russia will yet justify the high hopes of her friends. We shall not be surprised to see established within her borders the most advanced democracy this world has yet seen a govornment intent upon establishing si more genuine < ijUality among all men than ii-i\ imiht nit ion iu?\v eniorees. And when that is done, we cannot hut believe that somelhig of the same leaven will begin its work among the CJern an people; ihat they will free themselves fr.?ni the hypnotic spell of a brutal autocracy unworthy of them, ami tli .t out of it all will come al last tile l'eali'/ati >n of the poet's dream of the tin: when "The war drum throbhetl no linger, and the battle flags wei\ furled In the Parliament of Mae. he Federation of the World!" It is in service to such a high and h ?Iy cause tha' Anr?riv.i today sumnions all her sons nr.d daughter* Millions will answer the call to the colors, hut to millions of others at home then1 op?*n up opportunities for patriotic effort hardly 1-ss de'inde ami no less teal, bet lit emhnttl" ' farmer think mi these things a.? he entreats the faithful ea?'n for its utmost yield of tood for l is home-land and its allies! bet ir > housewife think on these things as : ii does her part in conserving the na:;onV food supplies in her own h> ie! And let (Continued on i-s?, ;