oka, My Dear: [To think of yon with a decoration! he day the now* came was the Broadest of my whole life. I am JMkially happy for oar little daoahJW and your mother, itowt.that I do not keenly appreciate a lMrPlp'tflcance of the honor which ' 'gpw>* my own sacrifice In airing yon VWtmt conn try appear rery trivial, flat have yon thought what It will (mMn to our children, dear? They TWW carry It all throngh their llree, I had their children's children will rerlyance It. Barely It; will be an In ICz*!l? gooa ufirn a spiena'a i And to your old mother it Is all she J has dreamed (or you since babyhood jni true. Her love and prayers. iBKnllm upward through earthlness 101 human uncertainty toward the sun, land now bright fulfilment! Tour letter was brtef;'do write us latt about It. As soon as 1 could eolllect myself after reading, I hastened over to ask Brooke Thomas what the pasus with the Crols-de Guerre stands vlBK.And then I went to your mothler. * She cried a little, but her cheeks S fituhed the color of autu.-fip roses her eyes were like scars. We UP**00 dearest! t Wothlng of surprising Interest Is IfJatepenlng here, excepting possibly llMCc. people are dropping into a new wftftttde toward the war. The first |\excitement has died and thej arc re) "larding it with quiet acceptance and i^WWing In to do what they can to Every man, woman and child And than I went to your mother. f^jfurnH to have something to do. It recalls the words of a' writer in a "Wtifa'sifiin article 1 read recently. He Km that Anyone who tries to tell ' Americana we're in a way to be beatV pn will hare to light u? to u... haven't heard It talked of much, L'hnt I continually am wondering what >tte world will be like when the war J* over. Can we look toward the fu?lure without fear of Hetty and Ruth growing np Into social and moral {Conditions which may follow this up;pettlog of long-eatabllshed living? hfojM course the pariah nation will be Tghirrnri as are all unclean things, ^till I wonder if spiritual pestilence may not creep over its border, insidgnaly carrying on destruction so blatJnntly begun. I have read that tbe gfpUTlage bond is no longer more than ? phrase in Germany; that what it ntwda: for has been abolished offlf dally. Babylon fell and Berlin will [-{OP- But when our generation is gone and the next Is old and edges of HBjhtfulnesa are beginning to dull, 3guy not such evil assume indepen-1 GERMAN "EJ By KARL BALI have broken faith with the laxvs of ii". Mitu slain as they the crying babes one ^.Ripped up our treaties and scarred the h WgGjtt hosts went forth to the south and SV sea became o watery hell for those flams ran red and Europe bowed I gS^t joined our force with the swinish i Kd of this we ask you now to grip BE stretch it forth from the broken lot Hjjgn the dying hills of our latest kills holy soil where Armenia groans i HL the ocean depths where our victi Sin Russian steppes where the fetngt jB$m%olkan towns where the Bulgar i Wam all of this we ask you now to eta DKADLY DOPE Wjfcn Billing np MUP tor tIM Han. Powder tnd ftssl &nd T. N. T., tooj I Soldier's Wife dence of origin and, gathering potency with time, apread itself in Tsrioss gmiaea? It seems to me that we should plan a campaign of education to offset such possibilities. Considering after-tho-war America in terms of Betty and Bath. I am praying erery day that' we shall not develop depression of viewpoint. The i ivv " 1 y t vk, te Tfif ' : ? Frequently he passes the Auxiliary as I am leaving and insists upon my riding home. sight of 6ur heroes, blinded, crippled many of them, might tend to canse sadness despite plans for an independent future and excellence of mechanical limbs and devices the Government is providing. I know disabled soldiers of the past, getting on as best they could, really are past. Still I feel that much of the work of successful reconstruction is dependent upon us women. We shall educate ourselves to be strong and patient and tender enough to give our broken men neither tears nor the sympathy which saddens, but true understandlne - to insDlre ambition and courage. For their scars shall be the mark of the only real American aristocracy?heroism. This is rather a lecture, isn't it, John dear? Bnt these things have been on my mind and I so much have wanted to talk them over with you. I am surprised that you know Mr Ballard go slightly. As you write, it was merely an office association, but he some way has given me the Impression that you were specially friendly. Doubtless he merely feels good-will toward a soldier's family. He has a splendid new* car and, passing on his way home, has dropped into the habit of taking Betty and Ruth for a little drive on the Boulevard. Frequently he passes the Auxiliary as I am leaving and Insists upon my riding home. It didn't seem quite proper at first, bnt as I had no definite excuse and as he seemed so impersonal and really kind i have accepted frequently. You see 1 dutifnlly am telling you all my adventures. I hope It will be rostful to read something about home'. Rettv remains rather worn out. and I think I shall send her Into the country soon. If your mother will go, I shall send Ruth also. I'd like to be with them, but there Is the Auxiliary. Then, too. I feel nearer to you here among our household lares and penatcs. The kiddies send love to Favver. Bettle has written a "letter" which I am enclosing, and Ruth, with her hand carefully guided, made the crosses at the bottom of the page. With air my love, dear. Your HOPE. 1IENDSH/P" WIN THOMAS man, who welcomed us to his fold, ies as the Vjmdals did of old, I the women left behind, ands with which the script was sujned. north and ravaged tall and writ, tip oh iu breast; before our awful might; Turk and reveled in his sight. our hand again; ids where we have heaped our slain, where the embers still glow red, among her myriad dead. t ms sleep in long, unnumbered rows, d wolf growls and the biasing brand burned at our most high command, sp our bloody hand! " MAIL IT TODAY Erery soldier reader of Trench and * ' ND CAMP " t "I rejoice to see that America is ready i as prolonged as necessary."?Marsh; "To stop short of victory is to compromis ?Lloyd George. "To our comrades who have fallen we ow maintaining the reputation which t Major General Menoher to the Rainl "Never in this war have we seen keener i intelligent, highminded men."?An J to American troops. "tfhe Hun is on therun. Now is the tim Davison, head of the American Red ( "A visit to the American front line trenc simism."?Captain Bruce Bairnsfatl WIPING GERMANY OF attil' nJ JUU Lll lL| MM ror an effort as great and v''/B al Joffre. 1 > * the future of mankind." j| e the sacred obligation of hey died to establish."? R bow Division. jjjS ' Jft. jr braver soldiers or more Australian officer's tribute tT Jr\ e to hit hard."?Henry P. hes is a sure cure for pesler, of the British Army. JmAws r Trie MAP. gjfji ' MII 11^^