EVEttlKG LEDGR-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1S16; s ftflittC JLfcDGElt COMPANY u oSrntjs it. it. ctm-ns, r-atsiDsr. flisrleaU kuillnttorf.VlcerreMdenti John O Martin, fmt,rjr nl Treasurer, rnillp B. Colltna, John II. William Director. " i' ,p i i i KBITOItl AX, BOARD! trkc H. K.VCrnin, Chairman. K i, WltALEr EecuUr Editor tfri-..... - &r C. MARTIN General Duelneea ilanaser IfuislUhed dally at rtat.io Ltoosa CullJInr, Independence Square, Philadelphia. Lew Cjjtrait, Broad and Chettnut Streets Artistic Ctu. ....rrttfVnle Dull'Jlsir Naw ToaK 170-A, Metropolitan Tower CHicioo 817 Home Insurance nulldlrr UiMJO.N , . . .8 Waterloo Flaca, rail Mall. B. YT, KinrsDUnEAuai Hmltaeert Bt-atia The TdtHof Rolldlnr wiaRiitoTon iiuaatu . . . .Tn JJI .-Ml vxnr Tome DtRtiU. . . The Timet liulldlnr fttun IIBBWO. ............ BO Frledrlchetrama inpon uiiiic ,,2 ran n Kaeti . vr. tV.au Bttsap. , ,. . .82 nm iula U Qrand suucn-rnoN terms Br farrier, BiitT Onlt, alx centa. By mall, peetpald eutetde or, Philadelphia, accept where foreign poetast ! required, Daili Omlt, one month, IttentyflTe oentej XJAIX.T ur fcrlptlone Dli.T Oklt. one year, three dolltre. All mall eub- n parable In advance. BFXlaOOO WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 3008 W" -A4 Art tt all cemtimnleattoni ie tuning Ltiger, ItidtptnStnei Stuart, Fhtlaittphta. airmxp at tat rnuiftctrau roSTorric le eacoxs- CUia llilL MtT7tt. I'lllLAUKLI'lllA. TUESDAY. FEUHUAIIV V, 1918. So sure to icnd lour money tloiclyi that's the only tcay iou can earn it. By Its Products Shall It Be Known "PHILADELPHIA can best advertise Its JTproducts by letting its products advertise Philadelphia. Publicity Is the most powerful weapon known to modern trade. Inertia cannot stand before it. It Is a Juggernaut to stand-stlll-lsm. But of what us Is a 42-contlmetcr gun If the right kind of ammunition Is not put Into It? The aim must be right, the shell of the proper calibre, if a target is to be hit. The average man la Interested In knowing that Philadelphia is one of the greatest man ufacturing centres of the world; ho is more Interested In knowing that soma particular firm n Philadelphia manufactures the article he wants, and manufactures It bettor than anybody else. The world does not como to see n. collection of manufacturing plants; It conies In myriad groups of buyers, each ono of which has a specific factory as Its goal. The worth-whllo publicity that a city gets Is the aggregate of the publicity given Us unit products. The name of a Arm becomes a household word throughout the nation, and the name of the city in which it thrives goes With It. There are cities of 60,000 or more population In tho United States which are scarcely known outside of their own States, but there Is not ono city of even lO.Ootf inhabi tants In the United States that Is not known all over the Union If there Is even one Arm In It that advertises generally. The prosperity of the factories -which it already has aro the magnets which attract to any city other factories. The success of a great automobile company brings to tho vicinity other automobile factories which wish to share that prosperity. And the measure of bigness" Js prosperity. 'To have the largest population In tho world Is not half so Important as to have the best-housed and highest-earning population. The manufacturers of Philadelphia must nationalise their trade names, and by so dolnrr they will confer the greatest publicity possible on the city. Their own Increase In business will bo reflected in the progress of the community. They make Philadelphia known by making themselves Ttno'wn, The ""World's-Greatest-Workshop" gathering tonight Is evidence of a comprehensive pur pose. Its keynote is publicity, and that means publicity of the right kind. Information ' keeps business moving. The Governor Firm for Good Homing DOCTOR BRUMBAUGH meant what he said when he declared for decent housing- in his Inaugural address. A correspondent of the Evening Ledger yesterday asked him this question; Governor, do you favor housing legislation that would require a window In evtry room, that would g-lve each peraon plenty of air and light, clean homes and the facilities of sCwerugo and running water In every house and flat to keep It clean, and that would prohibit the garbage piles and the commu nity hydrants and outhouaes in the alums? "t do," answered the Governor. If this does' not mean a veto of any bill In tended to take the teeth out of the present bousing law, then words have acquired a new signification, and black Is white, filth to cleanliness and decency is indecency. The families condemned by poverty to live In cheap quarters are looking with hope toward Harrisburg that they may not be condemned also to disease and death. Lone Heroism of the Explorer IT TOOK more sheer courage for Sir Ernest Shackleton to set out on his South Polar expedition than It did for his fellow Engtlsh men to cross the Channel to fight the Ger mans. Tho lone heroism of the explorer Is one of the most splendid manifestations of tho human spirit. Over the trackless and - frigid wastes he tol3 his way, beset on every , hand by Death. When he moves. Death follows, and when he camps. Death pitches his own tent on the same spot. And he fights single-handed, knowing that although the chances favor the escape of the aoldler, they are nearly all against his own victory over the forces that would bear him dawn. If any Englishman In this gre-it war braves . tithe of the dangers which Shackleton will confront he will receive all the distinguished service orders that have been established, twin qeaerye wiern, 100. Heal Jim Crow Laws for tho Odorous " "NTBW ENGLAND Is living- up to Its repu- J, 1 tatjon. as the leader In moral reforms, for -th Great and. General Court of Massachu setts, la now seriously considering a bill which itrtftibita smoking la waiting rooms. Darks '' swi4 playgrounds, jn the public rooms pf hotels tpa upon ths parts of all vehicles open, to the twmmon one of all travelers. It Is proposed to subject the person guilty of a third offense t n fine of not leas' than 125 and to Impris onment for 10 4ays. Sueh a punishment fits the crime. But the Msstmehusetta Legislature should not stop h ti& refutation of smoking in its effort praiwt tfte puuup against annoyance, or m o wjiam trie rrosTance. of a good gf delightful vgll feel tht they are the of uHj4t ciawtminaLson. Onions on t fik f (ether are, mush more, ejfsn- t Jjy tbaa the amen et to- few W A ft musk is naussatler VMlUeMes: ttt sm, whlctr lve no mmt- PmcMx w tk banda for an hour ur t, teiw teem knin to take away tke , ,.tn! aerwl1 e '4in ift.i to lc at ,, . if jjsftst !t.3a iib tJfeoexi wbt fc4 i:.4r4.,ti ?J!d t coSat strictly to compartments act apart for their Users, ahd' progressive New England 1st ex peeled to show the South how to puss real Jim Crow laws, Arranging for special parka for users of musU and caters" of onions, and special cars on the trains for men who wash with perfumed aoaps, and so on down the Hat. And, to complete the good work, they should also arrange for separate accommo dations for the good pooplo who never use a bathtub. Hut It Is well to pause before pur suing the subject further. Make Your Councilman Fight D O NOT pormlt yourself and your city to be betrayed. When the transit ordinances are brought to a vote, few Councilmen, however subservi ent to secret masters, wltl dare vote against them. The fight, therefore, is to get the ordinances reported. They are pigeon-holed 'In the Fi nance Committee. The chairman of that committee Is John P. Connelly. But a chairman never yet domi nated a committee that refused to bo dom inated. Put It up to your representative on that committee. Pledge him to demand that tho ordinances be reported at the next meeting or Councils. Pledgo him to exert to tho utter most his efforts to forco a vote. Demand that he desert the chairman It tho chairman de serts the city. Put it up to him. Let him know that ho must take a stand, that he can not be neutral. Tho way to be for transit Is to be for It. Thero Is a man on the Finance Committee who says "The Evening Ledger thinks it's got something on me." A newspaper usually "has something" on any man who deals in treason, and It Is tho generally accepted view In Philadelphia that men who viciously and greedily hold up tho transit program are traitors. They will be treated as traitors usually are treated. They will be driven out of-public life and held up to tho scorn and contempt of the community unless they back track quickly, get in line with public opinion and quit sorving special Interests. Find out why your Councilman is not fight ing heartily for rapid transit. Find out why your representative on Finance Committee Is letting himself be led by the noso among the buxzards and made a co-partner in the vil lainous Infamy that has been nnd Is afoot. Playing Politics With Child Lahor Bills PUBLIC sentiment here is demanding an adequate child labor law. The people in control In HarrlBburg are apparently plan ning to pass only such a law ns will please the exploiters of child labor. They have the votes and they have the audacity to disre gard the demand of the humane people of the Commonwealth. But they ought to un derstand, even If considerations of humanity will not move them, that It Is bad politics to leave the children at the mercy of those un scrupulous men who wish to take advantage of the poverty of their parents and put tho young at work when they should be at play. Progressive legislation on this subject Is cer tain and the political party which holds back will suffer the consequences of its folly. Haven for Progressive Polygamists PHILADELPHIA Is rapidly assuming the place once held by Reno as a resort for those seeking a divorce, unless reports to that effect are exaggerated. The lax laws of the Commonwealth certainly make It about as easy to dissolve the marriage tie here as In Nevada. Residence for only ono year Is required and divorce is granted for personal abuse or for conduct rendering life burden some, as well as for desertion extending over a period of two years. The trials are held before a referee or a master, in the privacy of a lawyer's office, and when tho decree 1 granted by the court It can be done so quietly that no one will ever discover It unless he Is on the watch. All the circumstances conspire to make this city a happy haven for those who wish to practice polygamy progressively, or to ex periment with trial marriages, or to play fast and loose with the affections of others. And Pennsylvania Is not a frontier State, with loose moral standards and an Imper fectly organized society. It Is one of the oldest Commonwealths in the Union, and was rounded by men of the strictest Integrity and the nicest sense of social honor. There Is no justification In expedience or in necessity for a continuance of the lax di vorce laws on the statute books. Before the matter assumes the proportions of a national scandal the General Assembly Bhould under take the revision of the laws so as to accord with the high standards of the people of the Commonwealth. Mr. "Wilson Needs a Rest IT IS more Important that the President should be In San Francisco ihan In Wash ington next 'March. He is needed at the Panama-Pacific fair. If the slide In the Pan ama Canal is not removed In time for him to make the trip by water and bless the great ditch with his presence, all the States be tween the Atlantlo and the Pacific through which he must pass to reach the Golden Gate will be delighted to see htm. And the time la about ripe, anyway, for him to round the circle as a preliminary to 1919. Waahlpgton can very well spare him in March, and it can spare Congress, too. That body has been in session almost continuously for the last two years and the country is looking for a little relief. But If the new Congress Is called together early in the spring to complete the work which the present Con gress will leave undone, the prospect for re lief will go glimmering. Mr, Wilson and the country both need a rest, and the country will be mightily pleased if Mr. Wilson will take what he needs. Of course, every friend of the Administra tion Insists that It Is the war which makes th bread line so long. Now la the time for those who insist that the flag; ahall never be hauled down to de mand that the Lusitanla become an Ameri can ship- These tattooing- tools at the Unverslty Mu seum will some In handy when it is nesessary to mark (be Councilmen for idenUDeatJen to prevent the pupislmiit of the innocent with the guilty. In the last month for wfaleh the jSule vital statistics hkve been compiled, there were l,VA moi hrtui tky death, an luUUaiwn tktt tho tuttjw are uttlt loyal to r't f U jBotin or t . .,. k - . cxMt Frogmaiv !. SEEING ROME WITH MR. BERNARD SHAW Humanizing Antiquity ns tho British Ploy wright Docs It in"Audroclcs and tho Lion" Humor and Inspiration Instead of Romance. nr KENNETH MACGOWAN ONE of these days a playwright Is going to astonish Us with a realistic King Arthur, with Launcelot and Guinevere dono in the terms of a modern problem play. There will be bravery, courage, high daring, love, all- effacing passion. But thero will bo the touch of reality In It, too. There will bo n host of the interesting commonplaces of that life! tho people of the play will havo tho every day Interests of their time. And against all that, tho power and beauty of tho story will stand out all tho sharper. When playwrights do this with every scene In tho Old World from Ramcses to the Revo lution, and from Attlo Greece to attic Grub street, then Wo shall rovlvlfy romance as well as antiquity. Tho very obvious reason why wo havo nl ways written of our ancestors in the tedious old vein of stiff phrases' and crushed rose leaves Is because thoy never taught us better. Not that they didn't write comedies about the things of tho day, but they wroto of the public things, not the everyday things. Arls tophanos lampooned Socrates nnd tho philos ophers, Joshed the lawyers, sneered nt tho politicians and tho militarists, and Moliero lampooned the "learned" professions that knew nothing. But those wore all transitory things that pass with tho passing of time and como ngaln In now garb today. Thoy were too ephemeral and not ephemeral enough. When tho elder men wroto of tho Individual llfo of their people they wrote only of fervid moments of great love and great faith and great trial. We have never written of the true, everyday life of tho Old World, because the Old World Itself never wroto of It for us. And In the faco of the grubbing scientific trend of today wo have tired of their ro mance and heroics. Seeing Antiquity With Shaw Just when tho costume piece, the historical drama and classic play havo gone absolutely dead, so far as the publla Is concerned, the scientists of the museums have reawakened antiquity for us by giving up a little time from tho official affairs of the Queen of Sheba for the furbelows of her handmaidens. And now a playwright who would like to call him self a scientist, too, Is discovered doing the same thing for tho theatre In a very delight ful and irresponsible way. It Is not John Masefleld, though that poet has experimented most nobly with It In his prose piny of Roman politics, "Pompey, the Great." It Is that most popular of English playwrights, who has four plays on view in Philadelphia this week "Pygmalion," "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets," "The Admirable Bashvltlo" and "The Doctor's Dilemma" while a fifth, "An drocles and the Lion," furnishes New York with the text upon which this homily Is based. Shaw has always been rather fond of lay ing hands on the romantic past and subduing it to the imago of what it may have been. "The Dark Lady" shows Shakespeare pick ing up llttlo phrases here and thero. "The Devil's Disciple" furnishes a prosaic Revolu tionist of '76. "Caesar and Cleopatra" gives tho Roman general the mental Infirmities to ward baldness and such that Momrasen nar rates. All this, of course, with a mixture of levity nnd tho greatly grave which reality very likely contained and which Aristophanes delighted to fling, all a-leap. Into his Attic comedies. "Androcles" goes farther into the Arlsto phanlc, as well the antiquarian, than any thing Shaw has done. Into the familiar story of the man who pulled a thorn from a lion's paw In the forest and was saved from death In the Coliseum by the fortunate fact that the same lion had been delegated to eat him, the playwright has flung the gravest reflec tions on God and tho most amusing of de tails concerning tho everyday life "behind tho scenes" at the Coliseum. "Behind the Scenes" at the Colueum It Is surely possible, oven absurdly likely, that the "Editor," or custodian of the gladia tors, animals and martyrs, had a "call boy" to announce what "act." as we should say, was next on the program. And It Is equally prob ablo that If he entered quondam "greenroom" to announce, "No. G, Retarlus versus Sccu tor," those gentlemen would primp up In mirrors fixed for that purpose Just Inside the doors. No doubt these "professionals" quar reled among themselves and had their pri vate Jealousies for the centre of the stage. And If Lavlnla, a Christian, who was also a Patrician, talked with the Editor and othei prospective martyrs about the Intimate de tails of the "profession," the scene might have run something very like this: LavlnlaWlll they really kill one another? Splntho Yes, If the people turn down their thumbs. The Editor You know nothing about It. The people Indeed! Do jou suppose we would kill a man worth perhaps 50 talents to pleasa the riffraff? I should like to catch any of my men at It. Lavlnla Then Is nobody ever killed except us poor Christians? The Editor-It the Vestal Virgins turn down their thumbs, that's another matter. They're ladles of rank. Lavlnla Does the Emperor ever Interfere? The Editor Oh, yes; he turns his thumb up fast enough If the Vestal Virgins want to have one of his pet fighting men killed. Androcles But don't they ever Just only pretend to kill one another? Why shouldn't you pretend to die, and get dragged out as It you were dead; then get up and go home, like an actor? The Editor Bee here. )OU want to know too much. There will be no pretending about the new lion; let that be enough for you. He's hungry. The harsh reality of being a Christian when all the world was Pagan had its humors. Such religious forerunners were the laughing stock of the average people then Just as much as any political forerunner today. An drocles' wife, Megaera, looked on bis Chris tianity as quite as disreputable as we once thought the political program of populism which ao many States have not accepted. When Shaw has finished with the lion In the forest and Androcles has performed his historic piece of chiropody, they both repair to a square in Rome, where some soldiers are marshaling martyrs that they have brought up from the provinces. Here, in the shadow of the Coliseum, the patrician cap tain has some advice for the men in regard to their bearing toward th very cheerful Christians, who have enlivened their march with those qualities of hearty humanity which the early Church commended. The Captain (speaking stlfTly and cru cially) You will remind your men. Centu rion, that we are now enuring Home. You will Instruct them one Inside th gates of Ituroe tney are n tee presence of the Em peror Xou will msue them understand that ike Lax dt!p!Lne of th march cannot tie) perMUted here You wilt instruct them to "FOR Impress on tlicm particularly that there must be ntt end to the profnnlty and blasphemy of singing Christian hymns on the march. I havo to reprimand you. Centurion, for not only allowing this, but actually doing It yourself. Tho Centurion (apologetic) The men march better, captain. Captain No doubt. For that reason an exception Is mnde in the case of the march cnlled "Onward, Christian Soldiers." This may be suns, except when marching through the forum or within hearing of the Emperor's palace; but the words must be altered to "Throw Them to the Lions." (The Christians burst Into shrieks of un controllable laughter, to the great scandal of the Centurion.) Centurion Sllpncel Sllen - n - n - n - nee! TVhere'n your behavior? Is that the way to listen to an ofllcer? (To the Captain.) That's what we have to put up with from these Christians every day, sir. They're always laughing- and Joking- something scandalous. They'e no religion; that's how It Is. Shaw's "Muscular Christian" Hot upon tho heels of such plausible fool ing follows the scene In the Coliseum. There we see the Christians waiting their end, and there wo meet the terror of the giant Fer rovlus, who quails beforo' tho warlike trum pet calling to combat. Ho is a "muscular Christian"; he tries to "fear God more than man." But he really fears himself. Tho proving of Fcrrovlus' fears makes a climax almost as important ns tho recog nition of Androcles by the lion. For out in the arena he feels his blood surge to battle, ho "sees red" and slays his six armed as sailants. A flguro of warring Europe, he cries in agony: "In my youth I worshiped Mars, the god of war. I turned from him to serve the Christian God; but today the Christian God forsook me; and Mars over came me and took back his own. The Chris tian God Is not yet. He will come when Mars nnd I are dust; but meanwhile I must servo tho gods' that ure, not tho God that will be. Until then I nccept service In the Guard, Caesar." An Inspiring Christianity Theologians may doubt tho Christianity of much of "Androcles." But thoy must admit the nobility of the faith of Lavlnla, even as they decry its modernity, Its Identity with tho rather mystic belief of Shaw himself In a Godhead that man will some day achieve. It Is thus that the Captain will again argue with the Christian girl after she has been set free by the emperor as a reward for the bravery of Ferrovlus: The Captain You have nothing left now but your faith In this craze of yours, this Christianity. Are your Christian fairy sto ries any truer than our stories about Jupiter nnd Diana, In which, I may tell you, I be lieve no more than the Emperor does, or any educated man In Rome? Lavinla Captain, all that seems nothing to me now. I'll not Bay that death Is a ter rible thing; but I will say that It Is so real a thing that when It comes close, all the Imaginary things all the stories, as you call them fade Into mere dreams beside that Inexorable reality. I know now that I am not dying for stories or dreams. The Captain Are you then going to die for nothing? Lavlnla Yes, that is the wonderful thing. It Is since all the stories and dreams have gone that I have now no doubt at all that I must die for something greater than dreams or stories. The Captain But for what? Lavlnla I don't know. If it were for any thing small enough to know, It would be too small to die for, I think I'm going to die for God, Nothing else Is real enough to die for. The Uaptalu-What Is God? Lavlnla When wa-know that, Captain, we shall be gods ourselves. All this "fable play" of Shaw's may not be true to its age, though every weekr the scien tists in the museums give us mere and more hints of just this sort of prosalo quality in the old life. With its pantomime lion oh, a wonderful Uonl-rlt may be a hodge-podge of tragedy and burlesque. But it is all bound lessly plausible, human and inspiriting-, As Granville Barker's able companyoct the play at Wallack's, with no waits and the action brought right down to the audience upon an apron stage, it is the best entertainment or the theatrical season. They Kill, But Not in Hatred From the New York Times. Much has been heard and read of late about th hate, bitter or malignant, according to the point Of View, held by one nation, usually Ger many, against another, usually England. And manifestation or expressions of this feeling have, of court, been by no means infrequent. One notices, however, that most. If not all, of them com from others than the officers and men who are in the field, where they have a chance to learn in the most convincing way that courage in pattte, readiness to eaerine life and to endure tortures well plvh Intolerable, and disciplined devotion tp military duty as formulated la military order, are th exclusive possession of no one people, but are qualities displayed In about equal measure, by them all. Heform nt Priioa From Hi LculavUls Courier Journal. Prison refoiea is 4 o4 toutg. but penmiai reform ia keen out of prison ve44 hard- fj 'I .j iiv. yr '-'. .- " - T2.t.-'... w.- 'eia WHAT WE ARE ABOUT TO RECEIVE ROMANCE OF FAMOUS FOREIGN LEGION Ou the Battlefields of France This and Adventurers of Fresh Glory to liy EDGAR MELS. A soldier of the Lesion Lay dylnc in Algiers. THE poem has It. Tho Legion oo O d'l d'Etrangcrs, that hodge-podge of inter national castoffs, most of whom left their na tive lands becauso they had to that con glomeration of humans whoso hops of social reinstatement has died, and who seek glory on tho field of battle to square accounts with tho civilization they offended that 9S00 is back in the fray nnd on French soil! Composed of Alsatians, French, Germans, Eurasians, Levantines, Russians, Greeks, Swiss, Austrlans nnd yes, Americans minus perhaps tho Germans and Austrlans, It Is battling for Its adopted land, France. And such superb soldiers as theso drifters, these outcasts, make! Even as the Mohammedan seeks Paradise through death on tho field of battle; as. the Japanese seeks the Samurai heaven; ns tho Norsemen nnd A'iklngs sought Valhalla, so the legionnaire asks death in tho hell of shot and shell, In the roar of guns and the screeching of whortllng bombs. And if thoy die thus, they will simply up hold the traditions of their corps. They will fall even as their comrades in arms fell be fore them, for a more honorable military rec ord than that of the Legion It would be dim cult to resurrect from the musty pages of his tory. Elghty-four years ago last Thursday the Foreign Legion popularly so called was organized by France. Since then its mem bers have won enough glory, havo shed enough blood, have suffered enough to re deem any and all pasts thoy may have sought to forget and live down. One French general after another was sent to Algiers to subdue Abd-el-Kadcr. One after another returned to La Bello France In dis grace. At last camo Bugcaud. Making the Foreign Legion a nucleus, ho collected a con siderable army for those days, and after sev eral campaigns crushed Kader, captured him and sent him to exile in Smyrna, where he died In 1883. But it is not only in the years nay, gen erations of struggles with tho Arabs, that the legionnaires most distinguished themselves. Wherever they fought, there glory was theirs. Queen Isabella rented tho Legion to help subdue the Carllst revolt in Spain, where it lent tremendous aid to the hard-pressed-Marshal O'Donnel. In the Crimea, its members fought and bled. In tho days of the Ill-fated Maximilian in Mexico they upheld the honor of France. At SIdl-bel-Abbes. In the hinterland of Oran, are tlje barracks of the Legion, baked in the heat of tho desert sun, cooled by the evening-breezes, redolent with spice and laden with the perfume of date palm groves often overwhelmed by terrific sandstorms from be yond tho oases. There live the main forces of the legionnaires. There they "heel-ball" their black belts; there they clean their accoutre ments. And when leave of absence comes they drift into Oran, into the gambling hells and resorts which abound there, seeking for getfulness of the past. For among them are men of many sorts professors, physicians, bankers, writers, aye, even princes. Carefree they are so far as re sponsibilities are concerned, although their pay is only 17 centimes (3H cents) a day. The Legion Marches Forth And when the call comes they march forth, arrayed in loose red trousers, blue blouses, double-breasted black tunics -with 'red fac ings, -wearing red-fringed green epaulettes, with a blue woolen cummerbund around the waist. On their heads rests red kepis on which flare the seven-flatned trrenade, the' honored badge of the Legion. Carbines, short' words and vlcipus knives aro tfieJr arma inent. They carry their accoutrement, their small tents, thatr cooking utensils on their backs. The terms of enlistment are not surrounded by red tape. No questions are asked. Real names are seldom furnished they are lost In the past, rhyalcal conditions beinff up to the standard, they aro muttered In, and tho Legion has gained new recruits. It is all ao simple, this entering the) Legion of Lost Hopes and Undying Memories, this effacing one's self from civilization. In time of peace the Ufe qf the legionnaire of today is not onerous. He Is fairly welt fed, fairly well treated But It was different In tho. days eon by He was an abjwt "" " " "" "7 " -"- "" " '' sKvt t Ms oor. treated wore than tat prove a -ii.(Mi. euKto, overworked a Fighting Agglomeration of OutcatS Many Nationalities Is Adding Its Brilliant Record. His life was of no value to himself or te Ei superior, and was sacrificed with lavish f$? com. A German enlisted In the Foreign W glon In the carlv fifties of the lui t$ tury. Ho had run away from tho Unlveiill of Berlin, In which ho had been an umrilEtf student, and which in subsequent years US stowed a degree of doctor of philosophr cjj him. His treatment as a private, as reltWF to the writer, was brutal In the extruMl Menial tasks, short rations, curses and Won were his portion. But he endured, as eniurf ho had to, until one day he was advanctdu Cnmnral nnd thn tn av.trAiT. '- Onn ilnv rnmn Iha aivIai. n tv, jai recruits, culled from the four corners of tft globe, most of whom had never har) a funis' their hands, ncrosfl n. nO-mllft atretah r desert, to Oran. The sergant and a corponT ! of Swiss past were placed In charge of thsu yet unformed regiment. At daybreak tbtf' stared for their destination, each man lades Ylfl,t ffnrvt Tn . en ......JI ...-. l ...I... ,iuiu ,u iu ou jjuuuua ui uui-uuirciugnu ' 1S A Struggle in the Desert r Through tho torrid sands they marcW and ns tho sun rose in the heavens one sw after another dropped in his tracks. Iffl desert was taking Its toll. Knowinr tiff marauding Kabyles were in the vicinity word to this effect having come from thil Sahels, a ridge of hills between SldMtJJ Abbes and Oran, the sergeant did his utaatl to keep the stragglers within sight of ttjjf main body. f At noon they rested, worn and P! Drowsy from the heat, exhausted from tM, march, weary In spirit and discouraged Wj the unusual exertions, the men dropped r the hot sand and slept. Pickets were post and the regimental cooks prepared the fflHl That eaten, the march was resumed. f Far In tho undulating distance, thWV the great heat waves that rolled upward li the sun that caused them, arose a duitclsrf tiny, scarcely visible. Slowly It grew first; then -with Increasing rapidity. The , perlenced eye of the sergeant saw it. A nfrlafo n .. A At. m... -. 4....1 (rttA I w.uv.d UIIU HID 1MT2I1 .VCLC7 IVIiUCU " j. Bauare. bmrcairein the rnnlrf. the serfl'V and the corporal at the two corners fac.fi the oncoming: sand cloud the Kabyles. Soon the tribesman were upon the IW band. Flourishing: their ancient rifles, xUiU4 like mad at the legionnaires, shoutlnj tnijL .v.- ..,, K.O 1IUO. Ul ..U.OC...W. vr'a ward What happened within the next few !; utes no pen can relate. Hoarse crlti, 7jjL of anger shrieks of dying and woundedg terrlfio hand-to-hand struggles superbuBUi efforts to stem the tide of battle-then; broken front a retreat for a few ydtj re-tormation of the decimated square ano- When the sergeant recovered conscloua it -was In the military hospital at Oran, tf; days later. He and the corporal were tHj only ones found alive by a rescuing part' a; French ravalm unl mie ubn sounds i' battle reached Oran. With consclouioi came a captain's commission, and sutgg quently, the secretaryship to Marshal P sier, commanaer-in-cbier of the jrrencn wj2tm a r-6K- da. . MESSAGE FKOM nOJJE With travel-stained feet Stands the Jonescm youth One hour long In the library booth, Bending, homesick. All the while Over a blessed Newspaper file. Homely, old paper, Lookis to me; Banal and trite, It seems to be; But watch Ms eyes scan it. Up and down, Blessed old paper From the blessed home town. Type Is shabby. And ink s poor, Has 'a colored supplement For a lure; Gives advice to girls And hints on dress. Steers new married couples To happiness; Yet In the trite sheet A vista lies Of the Somewhere Els To those homesick eyes. Of the Somewhere Else WiUJ its mmoriin t TO Uie lOAMOM youtn , Win tke travl-tira -a jf. St. Harttiwta tii Nv x-"