16 TBll LIftU IOGULUT JlACIAZIIBA PRIZE FOR EVERY BOY AND GIRLEvery boy and cUI who ameSs fifty ccnts for ONE NEW lubac:riber will receive, onrequest, one of the foUowing boob: ."Wenden PhilJipo" "Now and Then" "Shoot to Kill"For the amount of FIVE NEW subscribers we will send. oneo! the following fine novele:"Looking Backward" "The Sea Wolf" "The Son of the WoIr' "The Jungle""Call of the Wild" "Daughter of the Snows" "Little Broth~r of the Rich""The Sale of an Appetite" "Evolution of Man" liThe Iron Heel"For TEN NEW subscriben either of theae:UForgings of the New" :'Love of Life" "The Spy"------For FIFTEEN NEW subscribers aent in within one year we will present thesebeautiful Itory books.I"The Money Changers" . "Mother': "Lost Face" "Revolution" "Martin Eden"-------Every book on the above lilts is highly entertaining and instructive. NOWLET US SEE WHAT YOU CAN DO FOR US AND FOR YOURSELVES.Vol .... ".N.,.8W rite name and address of yourself and that of subscriber plainly and do not forgetto write City or Post Office and the State.and STATE WHAT BOOK YOU DESIRE.Little Socialist <strong>Magazine</strong>15 SPRUCE STREET, NEW YORKEvery Mother and Fatber sbould read :Bebel's MasterpieceWOMAN AND SOCIALISM510 Pages, Elegantly Bound. Postag. Prepaid $1.50The Sexual Question as viewed by Church, St.t., Sd .. ce •• d P.th.I."in tb. PAST, PRESENT and FUTURE.SOCIALIST LITERATURE CO..5 Spl"Uce St ... et, New YorkliTHE GREATEST GENERA.L OF ALL."~' f'O'" tile Pai,,,i., IIr EDGA.R BUNDY, R. I.Dui,oed 10 .id tile H .... of ;ntern.lio .. , ubiUa,iOOl b, ,1Io.,io, Duth .. Ib, 0,1, ylctor ill the .... 01 tbe .. orld.~~~ o~~~~ o~~~atar-_b~?By ARTHUR LAYCOCK.Gin IDe • l11li,1\at I ••, blue a.a,At .... wlao.. J ae' er met before this day;Yea, e'ea at u. wbose face I lCUCe caD see,He, alar oil, • tboouud ,ani. fro. ....Mad weft? ,.. 'tis, lor both of .. poor loolsFor at. &lid IDa, both of ...... 1, tools.Gin m.. pa,TIaat Iae "1 fire at meU .... « .e ,eb. For tIoal-let fate d. uee!He', b.t • Wet, • dot gPO_ cutll', crust,&.t' .ow 'tis ae ot •• aut bite ~e dust.QUrnI? Not ae; lIe'er .t the maa before jWe're _ply feoIs ucI tools, I M, oace .ore.Arm both 01 .. ,That each .a, .hoot at eacb.At .... e-bis holDe aad mine-tbe panolll preach:uAll ae. are brothers." Tbat I dOD't dear.s.t if 'til 10, thea I would uk rou-wbyWe.MaId be faced DOW, .tra.a.cer, friead lad me,Ha.,., ItO qaarrel? 'Ca use 'tis fool. we be.Gin IDe mr .iebl!Thai', riPl!Mate, &in me be band 1AI Iut w. ucIenlaDd ;G ...., ba,ODeII, .words, ClnnOD, aad all hell'. toob,nese DO IDea Deed wben humu reasoD rule •.n, tao.e is tBae ; .. u ed th, fatherla.ad,Mille doable safe, while true to Riebl we .tud.HeD' • .,eab ODI,- Vice, Ambition, Greedn,lott ud aiDe i from these we'D DOW be freed!~~ o~~~~ . o~~~ .
The German Emperor oncecalled the Soci&lists j'FatheriandsleSsrascals."Fatherlandsless we are, all workersare, but it is not the workerswho have made themselves so.The capitaHst class, by makingthe workers propertyless, has madethem fatherlandsless.The workers have no country.This is no more your countrythan the shop you work in is yourshop or the factory you work in .iilour factory. You are simply employedhere, that is aU.I f you can find no one who willgive you a job you may be arrestedunder the vagrancy law. If you livein the South you may be run in asn vag. just the same as if you liveill the North. YOlt may breathehere, provided .some one will giveyou the privilege to stand on hi sland.\Ve had come to the end of May,whell the eyes of the whole continentturned toward Richmond. Onthe 3' st, Johnston assaulted theFederals, who had been advancedto Se\'en Pines. It was so near thatthe first guns sent our hearts intoour mouths, like a sudden loudknocking at ,one's door at night.The women left in Richmondhad, with few exceptions, husbands.fathers, sons and brothers inthe fight. I have never seen a finerexhibition of calm courage thanthey showed in this baptism of fire.No one wept or moaned aloud.All went about their tasks of preparingfor the wounded, makingbandages, scraping lint, improvisingbeds. Night brought a lull in thefrightful cannonading. We threwourselves dressed upon our beds toget a little rest before the morrow.TO YOUNG BOCIALlITB' XAGAZIB'IIPATRIOTISMSy RALPH 1.0RNGOLD.Horrors of Civil WarBy Mu. BURTON HARRISON.During the night began theghastly procession of woundedurought in from the field. Every\{'hicle the city could produce supplementedthe military ambulances.M any slightly wounded men, soblack with gunpowder as to be unrerognizable,came limping in onf~l. All next day women withwhite faces flitted bare-headedthrough the streets and hospitals,looking for their own.Churches and lecture-rooms werethrown open for volunteer ladies!'e'wing and filling the rough bedscalled for by the surgeons. Therewas not enough of anything to meetthe sudden appalling call of manyMrong men stricken unto deadi.Hearing that my cousin, ReginaldHyde, was reported wounded, twoof us girls volunteered to help his:Many who so proudly talk abouttheir country do not even own avlot to be buried in.I can imagine Morgan being patriotic,or Rockefeller, or \Veyerhauser,but why a workingman, nomatter to what country he belongs,shoul.d be pa,triotic is morethan r can see.Some <strong>Socialists</strong> say they believein fighting in a "iar, provided it isa defensive war.I do not believe in any war.Supposing the Gennans wouldlake America. 'What is it to you?You would l1'3ve an old-age pensionwhen you got old and a sickbenefit when you got sick.You would have the right to boycott,which you do not have now,and you could ride on the railroadsfcor about one-haH the price you arepaying now.Domination by the German capitalistscould not be any worse thandomination by American capitalists-indeedit would be better.That conditions are somewhat betterfor the working class in Amer·ica than in some European countriesis by no means due to oursuperior laws, but is rather in spiteof these laws.The resources of 'this nation areso immense and its population,when compared with the populationof Europe, relatively so scarce thatour law makers have not been ablet'o grind down the working class asmuch as they would like to.God knows they and t heir masters,the capitalists, have made agood enough job of it.Let Rockefeller I and Morganfight their own battles.Th.~ workingmen of the worldhave but one common enemy-thecapitalist class of the world.mother to search for him throughthe lower hospitals.We tramped down Maine streetthrough the hot sun over burningpavements, from one scene of horror to another, bringin,g up finallyat the St. Charles hotel, a large, oldbuilding. What a sight met oureyes ! Men in every stage of mutilation,lying waiting for thesurgeons upon bare boards withhaversacks or anny blankets, ornothing beneath their he~ds .Some gave up the weary ghostas we passed them by. All weresuffering keenly, and needing ordi·nary attention. Bending down overLandaged faces stiff with blood andthick with flies, nothing did we see(lr hear of the object of our search,who, I am glad to say, arrived laterat his mother's home, to be nursedby her to a speedy recovery.TBlt YOUNG BOClALl8T8' XAGAZIlfEt - t-!- . ·· I'" r~ - f1r',; ~- -JUN'I:.B, J. R. LOWBLL.And what is so rare as a day in<strong>June</strong>?Then, if ever, come perfect days;Then Heaven tries earth if it bein tune, ~And over it softlv her warm earlays: .Whether we look, or whether w .:listen,"Ve hear life murmur, or see itglisten;Every clod feels a stir of might,An instinct within it that reachesand tower's,Boy Scouts' of America aretaught and are expected to killfather, "mother, brother, sister or