THE WILMINGTON DISPATCH,- FRIDAY AFTERNOON; APRIC I?', lgl'fcT?'!?? v 1EAQE HjREE. - ' r-r In !KT" "777"""""" " l SPORTS PSf? Ji-Vt t. . ti Mini li.. 'W, fife fV TP 1 8 $ . , IPC fafe rsf life . -. I --SECRET--)" v kwKS ' J NATIONAL LEAGUE. i scene from "The." Secret of the. Sto rm Country" at the Grand Today, and Tomorrow. "WHAT BRITISHER OR CANiMASf," ASKS "Cw. A COUNTRY swsrr vv Where Thy- Play Today. Chicago at St. Louis, cloudy. Brooklyn at New York, cloudy.. Boston at Philadelphia, clear. Pittsburgh at , Cincinnati, cloudy. AMERICAN LEAGUE. St. Ixuis at Chicago, clear. Detroit at Cleveland, cloudy. New York at Boston (2), cloudy. Philadelphia at 'Washington, clear. SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Mobile at New Orleans, cloudy. Atlanta at Chattanooga, clear. Little Rock at Memphis, cloudy. Birmingham at Nashville, cloudy. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Results Yesterday. Cincinnati 7, Pittsburgh 6. St Louis 4, Chicago 6. . New York-Brooklyn, wet grounds. Philadelphia-Boston, rain. T "WHO IS JUNE?" "Who Is June?" The question has been asked in big bold faced type millions of times dur ing the last two months in the adver Using pages of numerous magazines, of hundreds of newspapers until even the news gamins have begun - to query: "Who the deuce is June?" And all of thisinquisitiveness has been aroused by thousands of dolars in advertising expended in asking that little three-word question: "Who is June?" June is naturally the month that follows. May and precedes July. But in this case June is just a demure little country girl, motherless, fatherless. Born in sackcloth, June's later in- heri tan ce consists of a gingham gown in which she travels over the hills of Indiana. But over the shoulders of the frayed gingham dress is a cast of features and a .pair of eyes that command attention from all sources. June, although a product of Indi ana, is one of those puritanic maidens who might first have stepped on Ply- 3R- A.'lSBi TOMORROW j Norma Talmadge I New York.v . St. Louis . . Philadelphia Cincinnati. ... Boston.. .. . Pittsburgh.. . ; Chicago... Standing of the Clubs. Won. Lost PctJ m()uth Rock from the Mayflower. 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 2 1 1000 500 .500 667 500 332 For a long time June wasn't exact ly sure of who June was. She thought she did until she learned, that her dead father wasn't her father 'at all.n . L 11 1.1 f P- Antt as a result oi me reveiauuu it AMERICAN LEAGUE. , Results Yesterday. Chicago 5 St Louis 0. Cleveland 6, . Detroit 2. -Art I AO 11 (JU11C UO.U U4.CUJ.XUU. WUI 1 .1 J A1.-.4. V t,,..VatiiT own uruiiifcu auu luxi uw uuououu wasn't her husband, at all because he had been marriedrbefore. And so even June had to ask her self, "Who am I?" . In the end it all came out to very body's satisfaction and everybody was Boston-Philadelphia, rain. :WMhK.dH June came Into her own .,- "w Oh. yes. "Who is June ... . won. ijoai. rig. Boston. Cleveland....-.." New York.... .. Chicago.... .. .. St Louis.. Washington. Detroit. . . . 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 1 College Baseball. At Elon College. 3"; N. C. A. & M College, 9. BASEBALL GAME SATURDAY. Oh, yes, J.JJI I , J.--1.: TT Tr. -, in JjaeLro s pruuuvuuu, jlxu ucam the screen production destined to take its place witb the great "homey productions of the legitimate stage such as Denman's Thompson's "The Old Homestead." and "Way Down East" at the Grand Monday and Tues day. 1000 667 500 500 333 000 You can camouflage a gun or a battery in this war so that it cant be discovered, but after the war there won't be any camouflage clever enough to cover up a Britisher or Canadian of military age in the United States who has . not volun teered to fight," said CoL John S. Dennis of the British and Canadian Recruiting Mission today. "One of the classics of American literature is "THE MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY" by Edward Everett Hale, and the story which is full of tragedy and ; pathos describes the unhappy ; fate,, of a,, citizen -of the United States who lost that citizen ship and was never permitted for a moment to see his native land again. "There are 350,000 Britishers and Canadians in the United States, a volunteered for service in the war and they have also claimed exemp tion from the American draft be cause they are British subjects. If these men do not volunteer for the British or Canadian Army within sixty days after the Draft Conven tion is completed, they will be draft ed into the United States Army. They will then be in a very peculiar and unpleasant position they 'will be 'Men without a country. What will their reception be if they at tempt to go back to England or to Canada after the war is oyer? -- "Every one will know that they declined to do their duty by the United States until forced to do so, and that they refused to help their own kin in Canada and Great Britain in this titanic struggle for a civiliza very large number of whom have not i tion worth having. Great Britain, Canada, New Zealand, Australia South Africa, India and other Brit ish possessions have not hesitate to make great sacrifices, why shouU a Britisher or Canadian in thu country, living in the midst of plentj refuse to do his part? If these Britishers and Canadian, wait to be drafted they will not im prove the Allied fighting power at all, because each one who is drafted; in tiie United States will merelyj take the place of a citizen of thia country in the draft. In these days! it ..wilfebe -well for Britishers and1 Canadians in the United States to reed "The Man Without a Country" and to recall Scott's lines: "Breathes there the man with sou so dead, Who never to himself hath said, This ia my own, my native land Giants Expect to Play Soldier - Game Is Assured All. There will oe a Daseoau game staged at the Robert Strange Play grounds tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. The Giants, of the City i League, are expecting to meet the Fort Caswell team, composed of regu lars, but in event the soldier team Is prevented from coming through orders of Colonel Chase, prohibiting visitation of the city, the Giants will lock horns with another team from the league "THE SECRET OF' THE STORM COUNTRY." Norma Talmadge, who for some time has been one of the highest paid of motion picture stars, with weekly salary of four figures, and who now owns her own company and stu dio. has never had a bank account and never signed a check! No she doesn't keep .her money behind the clock or hidden under loose brick in the fireplace either. She simply turns over everything to mothei: just as she used to in the days when she was making eighteen dollars a week. She confessed it the other dav when she was asked to buy some boxes for a benefit. Secret of IN GRACE MILLER WHITE'S GREAT NOVEL "Ik The Storm Coimfary" The Sequel to "Tess of the Storm Country." Norman Talmadge, one of the greatest emotional actresses of tthe scteen, portrays a role in which mother love Is the supreme Isaue. With her depths of, feeling, her extraordinary mobility and the ease with which she can step from pathos to fun, she makes of Tessibel, the quatter's girl, one of the most compelling figures in fiction. Matinees 10c REGULAR PRICES. Nights f15c '111 be glad to take them if you will trust me," she said. "I have not enough money with me. "A check is as good as money,' it was suggested. Miss Talmadge shook her head witn a smile', "I never had a check book in all my . life," she" said, "and I've never had a bank account. But wait a minute". She went to the 'phone and askd mother to write out one for her and it transpired that mother had retain ed the habit of the eighteen dollar a week days, too, that of refusing daiurhter nnthine. Which Is more than a bank account will do. They refuse checks lots of times. ttia Sftp.ret of the Storm Coun- trv " at the Grand today and tomor row, furnishes this exquisite star with the greatest screen role she has ever portrayed, and as a sequel to tne in fmitable "Tess of the Storm Country,' made famous by Mary Plckford, should be the most popular attrac tion of the month. It is remarkable that inYhe course of thA Aisrhteenth century women most.lv euided the fates of Russia, while the male sovereigns could not hold their own, but usually died vio lent deaths. 1 n Allen & Kenna's Aviation Girls In Up-to-Date. "& MUSICAL "COMEDY Four Big Vaudeville Specialties MOLLIE KING 4n "THE MYS TERY OF THE DOjUBLE CROSS." I1 " - "i. . : ! - Men of the South, Can You Read This and Keep Back Your Lives and Your Money NOTHING DISQUIETING DECLARES k GENERAL A French Commander presses Confidence Present Situation m Ottawa, Ont., April 18 One of the foremost French generals who com manded the three French divisions in the heavy fighting previous to Aprl I declared unreservedly to Reuters correspondent with the French arm ies that there was nothing disquieting in the present battle situation, "but on the contrary, we have every pound for confidence both in Pic- irdy and Flanders." The correspon- NIAND WATER ROUTES AN IMPORTANT FACTOR They Will Play Big Part in Foreign Trade Folio w- irig the War tent's dispatch received by Reuters j day Cincinnati,, Ohio, April 19. Inland water transportation will be a factor in foreign trade development afte the war, declared Walter Parker, gen-1 eral manager of tne JNew uneans chamberof commerce and former as sistant commissioner for inland wa ter transportation of the United States Department of Commerce, in an addrels at the convention of the National Foreign Trade Council to- nearly a year ago. A cold, almost trutal reply, signed by , Baron von Stulpenzel, secretary to the Crown Princess, has just been received. It states briefly that the petition can not be taken into consideration by the Crown Princess. Missing Schooner Shows Up. A Canadian Atlantic Port, April 19. The schooner, Jean Campbell, 64 days from a Nova Scotian port with a cargo of flour, has arrived here af ter having been given up as lost. Rel atives of the crew have been wearing mourning. Tacoma has lifted the ban on tne employment of married women as teachers in the public schools. Agency here quotes tne Tencn gen eral as follows: "The course of this battle, like all hihers, was essentially the same. eh side would continue to ply blow and counter blow, endeavoring by 'eight of numbers or superior skill to find the weak points in the enemy's armor and each endeavoring to retain efficient reserves to turn the scale wn the decisive moment was reached. 'After four years we are only with- !? sight of this decisive point. The Germans have still got in France un--i reserved and fresh .divisions. lfle battle will proceed and the next Hock must be expected as soon as e flood pouring in through Beilleul H toward Hflzphrmiek is checked. He battle may continue a month or pore, but th Entente will continue PU! the enemv reserves are exhaust- r- and his numerical superiority rprn down to the vanishing-point. I QPTl Pill r- n Tn ttt4 1 1 m a American divisions." espionage act APPLIES TO WOMEN I. .U6W11, AyilL if. i 'USOTI tnrloir r-lrmA tV,a Kill OXtPTIfT- ? Provisions of the Espionage Act 2omen and requiring registration ''lfnmn It -icu euemy aliens. Want. RX : -T- I- D (y omi.s miners i dncii 'WiOr flnrflolrl won oclrori hv thfl ..operators In the Pocahontas field wVll"ginia to takP. hark 350 coal min- LalleSed to have been discharged One sure effect of the war," Mr. Parker added' ".will be that the world wilL be' more eflBcient in the generations td come than it has been in the past and inland water develop ment will play its .part. v"The world will need food, clothing and the materials of reconstruction. It will need ships in which to move such commodities. America has th ability both to produce and deliver. "Our need for and our will to own and operate a merchant fle-3t is the best of assurance that a way will be found to place our best marine on ec oucruic and comparative bas's. "But our ships wil be handicapped if we attempt to harden their service by high cost of transportatioi to and from oup home poit which arrives, and warehouses. If our t ouipetitora oerseas use low rosi Doai iranspor- U.tion for the ainmen of tm:v com merce between the interior and ship side, we will have to dox the sama tbing. In this xeorgan Nation, com modity handlers, as well as the gov ernment, must encourage and pro mote the use of waterways as well as the creation of dependable channels. FRIEND OF EDITH CAVELL IN PRISON Geneva, April 19. When Miss Edith Cavell ' was executed in Belgium by the Germans, a girl friend, Miss Julia Wyss, aged 20, of Geseva, was sentenced to 25 years penal service for the zaine offense. -She is fcow in a Prussian prison., ; A A petitlaa for a pifrdon signed iy : M nmra -rrrt a CP Tit i ft find -nrnrnrn di ucucioi na.o ,x the Crr.wtt Princess of Germany -V W1 "The women of France have so much more to fight for than the men said Dr. Esther Clawson Lovejoy, who re cently returned after spending months of arduous repatriate work at Evian, to a conference of Red Cross workers in Wilmington yesterday. The words fraught with a meaning that only first hand observation and actual experience could give stirred the souls of her hear" ers as perhaps they had not been be fore. "A man can only die," she explained, but those lObmen- many of them, must become the wards of the men they hate and mothers of children who may be made to fight against their own land. To die is easy compared to that." "The boys of 14 and over are kept by the Germans to help in the war against their native land, the speaker declared. The girls of 1 6 and over are kept also. The girls can become the mothers of a Hun who can fight against her own land. Mother love is stronger than love for country or anything else in the whole world. Axmother will give all for her children. Men cannot be ;s conquered but women can be through Sr " , their mother instinct. The Germans 7 f know this. 'Why do they keep these girls? They don't send them back. Is it to breed rt German army? "When the women return to France after having been in the hands of Ger- mans, they experience a strange inde- 4, scrbable joy when they reach their na ; T tive land again. It is' a joy unlike any- thing that people in Ainerica iiaye'j' r known. They have escaped from an f i ii . j. tt : unspeaKaoie ira&eayvf "1C i 'Marseillaise with tnw.ouls in heir in voices. No one can look at them with outhinking of them as blessed martyrs. They care nothing for worldly posses v" -sions. They have given their, all' for '."y their country, and they have returned" "They, speak of their boys who have been killed with a feeling of pride with their heads raised high, with a serene, happiness. But for the girls of .16. and over, who have been left behind, they Yr have only a look of despair, a feeling :j of indescribable pain." : ' ' Buyliberty Bonds and Keep Thesefonditions from OurCountry . . . if . o am m MMwmm LIBERTY . Space donated by The Banks of Wilmington 4-. f Y