Show Speaking of the duties that college graduates owe to the country the Baltimore Bal-timore Sun says Many thousands of bright educated wellmeaning young men are graduated gradu-ated every year from the colleges of the country and they would soon leaven i the whole lump if all should be deeply impressed with the necessity of discharging dis-charging their full duty as citizens to the end that free institutions may be perpetuated They are threatened now p ech1 ftegu I not by anarchists or socialists but by false theories of government by selfish I schemes of Individuals and combinations combina-tions who seek to use government authority au-thority for their private benefit and by the corrupt use of money in controlling legislatures and courts The college I graduates are under special obligations because of their learning to combat false theories of government and lead i f 17hb mc in the warfare against corruption In politics They have been given many talents and will be called to account for the proper use of them And no matter what distinction they may win I in some chosen profession they will not render an altogether satisfactory account unless they can show that they have properly discharged their public duties and have labored not for I themselves alone but for the welfare I of their country i I Too much Is expected of the influence J I influ-ence of college graduates In politics I When they enter politics they usually I I succumb to it at least more often than they raise its standard The eel ere graduate as a moral force In politics poli-tics has come to be a good deal of a fetich the same as the old college education edu-cation has i |