6i8 



HISTORY OF THE MONTH IN 



CARICATURE. 



Oh, wad some Power the giftie gie us 

 To see oursels as ithers see us. — Burns. 



Norman Lindsay cruelly sets forth in 

 the BnUethi what many an arm-aching- 

 or bed-ridden vaccinated man is think- 

 ing" to-day — however unjustly. The 

 newspapers have certainly manufactured 

 an unnecessary scare by w'hich the 

 doctors have naturally benehtea, but, un- 

 like the great armament firms at home 

 who are behind the war scaremongers 

 of the newspapers, the medicos are cer- 

 tainly innocent in the matter. 



European cartoonists are very busy 

 with the revelations of the direct con- 



.S /■ ntpllc iss im us.] [ M unicli. 



THE TEMPL.E OF PATRIOTISM. 



The People : " The last pfennig for the Father- 

 land." 



The Contractors : " We are the Fatherland." 



nection between the makers of war 

 material, the press, and the Governments. 

 Shnplictssiruus, than which there is no 

 cleverer or more satirical paper any- 

 where, not excepting Australia, shows 

 the people cheerfully giving their last 

 farthing for what they believe is the 

 Fatherland's needs, which coin goes 

 direct into the coffers of the armament 

 hrms. Der Wakre Jacob depicts Herr 

 Liebknecht as a white lad}' suddenly 

 disturbing the armament contractors as 

 they count up their ill-gotten gains. 



The German Armament contractors were in the J^e Daily News and Leader has put 



midst of calculating the profits which would ij^ • , ii- • r • 



accrue to them from the new programme, when the rLmpire under ail obligation of gratl- 



suddenly a light appeared and the White Lady f,,J„ u,, iU„ .,„*- „1„ <- 1 UK 1 J 



passed through the room. tude by the articles It has published, 



Der M'ahre Jacob.'] 



THE WHITE ]j.\DY. 



[Stuttgart. 



