If ! I 6 Evening ggjjjg dinger PUIILIC LEDGER COMPANY ij VHl W II 1 l'Vl(il. 4'MBIDaTT. f tSarfM If f-ndlntlon.VlrPrcIdfili John C Martin, i Ejcrpinry arm Traeurers rnilip H -mirra, jonn . 2JlHH!iJPlr!Tirr" . .. BDITOtUAL- HOAhD! CiUM tl. K. CtJina, Chairman. P. ft, WMALBr EUpculIra Editor 'l'Tf ' MAn'3 anrl Iuliw Manager 5 Fubllehed tfatrjr aj t'usLto I.icnkii nulldlng, , , rti'lfpftfUnce equate, fblladelphlti. 3rMiii CRTr. Broad and Cheitnut fltreeta Ati.jktio Ornt .....rri-Unlon Bulldln. Sw V 1TO-A. Mtrannlllan Tower f, Pwnmrf . . . . - 850 Ford IlulMlnn &- rStfmftn . iGrW TflhuM Utiltilln B-esijoit i Waterloo hace, Tall Mall, 8. W. - newo ntnn.u8: f. WAaiils-otox ttiitMO , Th Tot! nulldtne OETT IHK UI7R1UB... 'in9 MM fUMUinC ,,BratiN ntresati , 00 Frledrlc-hstrima TiSIS nvaJus 32 rtil I.oiiln l Grand ii - BunscrtiPTioK TnnMs 1- ttjr carrier. DjIiu OnLt, alx crnta. Itjf mall. polpald eutalda of riilladrlphla. except where forln poUK , 1 reqtilrM, IjAlfct 0.-JI.T, nna month, twentr-flre rental S "JJAitT Ott.Y, ono year three dollar. All mall aub- ,--. 'fcrlf,tli)n payable In adtance. i Xcrtiru Buboerlbers ulahlnit addrtas chang-ed mini , five old us well aa nw addreaa, "BftLL, 0K -WAtNirr KF.YSTONE. MAI! I0M ? CT Addrm ntt i-mmunlAaflona fo Ki-fnfittf Lrdffer, lndcpendtnre Square, thiladelpfttn. s.vijmto at Tim rnti.AneT.rnt roTorrtc la atcoND cuts mail iiinta. THE AVEltAOE NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA TION OP THn KVENINO LEDCIEP. FOP. JUNE WAS 01,8.17. V rnlLADF.U'llfA, SAHJIinAV, JULY' 10, 191B. . (" 'Jhe man who pities himself Is one of tho lr! most pitiable of objects. Action on Transltl TTwiTII nil tho cnlliUBiassm 01 mo uny ""'"VV ministration behind It. Director Tay- f ,1 ior'fl transit plan has forBetl ahead throuKh 'the obstructions and trlcltcrlea ot -ounciis, 'has received tho Mayor's npprovnland now ',; fiwalt- only tho prompt and favorablo action t of. the Pennsylvania Public Servlco Commls- : on. Of Buelt notion, not only ndlrmatlve, '"'But Immediate, there can bo no doubt. The Y?ieed Is 80 great that not a sizable clement of -..-Philadelphia's Wo hut fools It and responds to it. Tho only emotion besides enthusiasm bo far evoked has been shame that tho city should have been held back so lone. There B must bo- no more delay. - An accident ot tho calendar adds to the s 'necessity for prompt action on tho part of "tho commission. Unless tho hearing two iiwc-k- henco results In tho prompt lssuo "of a certificate of public convonlenco, work cannot bo started on September 13, as now planned. And unless work Is then begun, tho . digging of tho Broad street subway will not havo proceeded far enough by tho tlmo frost comes as to bo carried on below tho surface during the winter months. Action Is still tho keynote to the success of tho transit plan. f-. Three-meals-n-clay or Bust TTTHAT'S to hecomo of our three squaro W meals a day? A llttlo while ago It was tho president emeritus of Harvard University Who declared that wo cat too much. Now It's a manufacturer-philanthropist, Henry -Pord, of Detroit. And after him tho Surgeon General of the Navy, who approves tho Ford theory. A heresy trial Is In order. After all, maybe there's something good In heresy. Tho rich eat too much, wo aro told. 4Eho Poor eat too llttlo. Hero Is a clear caso jjhefe tho rich would loso nothing by giving L Xo tho poor. They'd loso only gout and dys pepsia and similar things that hardly add to ithe pleasures of wealth. "" The whole subject, however, Is puzzling. '"Sor instance, we aro told that eating too much leads to drink alcoholic drink. Yet ff""for a long time we have heard that too little i to- eat Is the great cause of Intemperance J aJcoholic- ' .Again, for instance, Henry Ford work- best oh an empty stomach. An army, Jt is said, i rnarches on lt3 stomach; but, If possible, not I on an empty one. Now what's for the good I -ot tho Industrial army? f Doubtless tho overeating evil Is principally --? matter of how much and not how often. I So tnero are hopes that tho right to three ' ruluaro meals a day will be preserved and, In I certain cases, established. J I Suffrage's Infinite Variety "QHAICESPEARE provisioned tho Buffraglst f O when he wroto of tho effects of age and ', . custom on "her Infinite variety," Every day , brings a fresh Ingenuity of campaigning and I rfer cleverness of argument. Tho latest In- "volves the caro of babies during balloting. In Denver Dr. Anna Shaw has seen a voting - -neighbor or even a candidate tending tho baby carriage while mother goes Inside tho ballot booth to vote. "A man cannot take his Job with him when ho votoa," says Doctor Shaw. "A woman's Job Is to care for her baby, and she can take It with her to the polls. Therefore, she is better qualified to ' vote than the man, on that argument." Such t o fresh Unit cheerful faculty for turning arguments as old as this about "neglecting woman's -work" Into pro-suffrage material alono deserves the ballot Three Cheers and a Tiger t LO, THE American farmer! He Is still I holding his own in the scale of Impor tance. This year, with the old of the ele ments, he Is more than holding his own. It's partly due to the war, of course, and partly, ,.as the Department ot Agriculture modestly 'i4uKgats, to Its own good advice. All the -principal crops this season, according to offl- 9. vial Dredlctlon. will exceed the outnut of "record-breaking years. The acreage Is also a record-breaker. The farmer's golden era 1316. He seized an opportunity. Everybody's glad. Americans aro to have ugh, and to spare .of the produats of the ll-the materials whetewlth .'we aro fed and tfjed. A vrntr ago an embargo on grains seemed syllable as a, treasure of selfprotectlon, t now we can, tie generous as wen as inae- l&dmt and ktu the change. Watchful Waiting Wltfr a Difference OUT of Washington eemeft the iiewu that ojie-half of tn period allotted "to Mexico tut brsLclfis up and. acting civilized has al-ri-Hdy expired. This unoffloial Information la Mia Bret bint this country Uas relYA that the PreeMent tea t a time limit. In the M0 to the Amerieaa People" in which be 4slared the new pone, he eatd that utt- "le the rival chtele eoqld accommodate their -f Bfrence "wtiJt a yery short time" the i MMrim- Givrmao would be oooetralned i.. AJecidUs what omb stould be employed fe m VniitA 8ttee to edr to help -lexloo ve JMei 4 erve her lieople." p fcixtj, ilmjm t$t grate may be He n..ugh -iPTTl 10. WL EVENING LEPGER-PHILADBLFHIA, SATURDAY, JULY 10, 191Sy it wasn't obvious long ago that Villa and Carrania and tho rest of the gang-warriors cannot cdmposo their differences. Bitter ono mles do Indeed becomo bosom friends over night," but over night they becoma bitter ene mlos again. Tho times aro calling Joudiy, down in Mexico, for tho great man who, oh Carlylo said, falls to appear even when tho times ore calling their loudest, In Washington It is common talk that tho President, If Mexico is still at war next month, will act in tx way that will as tonish tho country on the north of tho Wo arnndo and tho country on tho south. Yet nlrcndy war has censed In Mexico! it is not war, though it might Indeed be described by Sherman's short but fnmous word. So thcro in nothing surprising In tho Wash ington report that Mexico's last chanco to turn over a new leaf is already dated. Evi dently tho President, means business. This is "watchful watting" now, but "watchful waiting" with a difference! A Test for Councils IS COUNCILS for or ogalnst Philadelphia? Tho Chamber ot COmnlerco puts it up squarely to our legislator-vacationists. Tho chamber Invites tho Republican convontlon and makes tho needed assuranco of funds and accommodations. It Is for Councils to complote tho good work at Its first meeting In September by taking tho convontlon hall project out of plcklo and starting building operations. Whether or not It falls Into step with tho Chamber of Commerce and tito rest of tho city In so evident a movo for rhlladel phla'o good Wilt show tho people, beyond any political protestations, whero tho Inter ests of Councils He. Is It for a bigger, better city? Is It for i city In every way nn ex pression of national life, a city to head tho country now as In 177G? Or Is It for that spirit In public affairs which rhymes "vil lage" and "pillage" with such fatal facility? Play No Tricks With tho Milk Supply THE testimony of local milk dealers before tho Intorstato Commerce Commission makes an Interesting gloss to tho proposal of President Underwood, of tho Erie Railroad, to advance freight rates 20 per cent, covering passenger reductions to n cent a mllo. Milk is a typical caso whero such nn adjustment would work Incalculable hardship. As It stands, far slighter Increases put In force recently havo brought very largo losses to dealers handling milk In tho most hygienic way, shipment In bottles. It may bo that wit nesses exaggerate their case when they say that there Is only 14-lOOths of a cent profit In a quart of milk. But It is certainly truo that modorn cities must depend on trans portation for tholr milk supply; that vast quantities of good and quickly delivered milk nro a necessity; and that In such circum stances increased rates, either for all or for smaller dealers shipping bottled milk In lesser quantities, mean a really dangerous deprivation to the public, as well as financial disaster to tho milk dealers. Manifestly If thero Is to bo any readjust ment of freight rates, milk Is a case whero rates should go down. Tho Federal Govern ment encourages education by special postal rates for newspapers, magazines, books and such matter. Tho tlmo may come when n constructive sense of public needs will extend policies of this nature to things that aro as essential to tho body as reading to tho mind. No Party of a Lone Law HOBSON got little npplauso for his now prohibition party. Tho members of the Atlantic City convention who havo backed Eugeno W. Chafin in his fights for Presi dent aro perfectly satisfied with their pres ent organization. Tho remainder of Hob son's audlenco had other and sounder rea sons for looking on his proposal ns Ill-advised and meaningless. History and sound thinking bear them out. It Is not alono a question of diverting great masses of constructive human energy Into tho propaganda of a single and a very limited Idea, the enactment of a lono law. It Is not that attempts to create American parties on single Issues havo been few, far between and profitless. Tho fallacy of creat ing a great national party of one-Idea la founded on a mora philosophic basts. Or ganizations that bind men to n. common work for a common end aro only healthful and profitable when back of them lies a broad attitude toward life, not a narrow attitude toward a single lssuo of a slnglo age. A party must havo a philosophic bias that cor responds with mental and temperamental tendencies In men and In tho complex social life that they evolvo. Out of that bias, mak ing It something better, will and must spring a practical program and Immediate meas ures. Tho cry for a great party of prohibition haB no Buch social power and purpose behind It. But, narrow as it Is, It means one thing, one valuable, unescapablo thing. It Is a warning to corrupt liquor Interests In this and every other State. Jt they Una up the vicious strength of their gangs and their money bags against attempts to solve the problem by local option they court still worse disaster. Hobson la rushing the mental gTOwlor again. It la perfectly evident Just what Uncle Sam has taken out ot Sayyllle. Ex-aovernor Blease, of South Carolina, has Joined Doctor Cook's vindication party. Is Unole Sam going to Join his Mexican cousins In reverence for the word "manana"? When it comes to retreating, there la evi dently a bear that ultimately balks like a man. , I ; "' Since the submarine sank the Amain, gon dpllng in the canals of Venice is taking on a new Qharm of danger. Another swindler tries to take the sickness-, aura for 1ub imprisonment. But perhaps Deeter W11ob won't prescribe it. In one respect New York undeubterjjy has. the edge on Philadelphia. It produaes three or fur times as many oriialnals to the square mile. Chariea Sumner Bird refuses to run for the RepubUoan and PragrecMive nehilnatlona In Masaaobtwetts; poeaJWy bwms he suspaets ibe mult might be kUttftg one IMrd with two etesee- Anybody without 8 mat fud of Informa tion mX$ht eiMet the n who named the new deetroM ttonyiilb of zpolytW PW tn. rEw tb WW iW4 tmm tar SUottaaute MARS TAKES TO THE WATERWAGON Ho Finds That Ho Cannot Fight If Ho Gets Drunk Necessity Is the Mother of Sobriety, tho Twin Brother of Invention. By WARHEN GRAHAM PARTRIDGE THE waterwngon has been exceeding the Rpced limits of late. Indeed, It is going so fast that wo must chango tho name and call It "tho buzwagon" or the hydroplane, Tho European war has been tho giant to deal John Barloycorn n solar-plexus blow which has proved rl terrific knockout. Tho prohibi tion of tho liquor traffic has achieved moro astouhdlng victories In tho last fow months than during the preceding 1000 years. All nations nro stirred by this widespread rovival In tempcranco sentiment and In tern poranco legislation, Russia startled the world by her sudden and drastic abolition of tho liquor traffic. It was a war measure. Vodka-drlnklng had becomo tho national habit. Tito Stato capitalized this almost uni versal thirst for vodka, and from tho de generacy of tho peopto built up a colossal Government monopoly, which brought hun dreds of millions ot dollars every year Into the national treasury. Tho temperance people got tho car of tho Czar, of tho Grand Duko In command of tho army and of othors high In nuthorlty, and tho unexpected happoned. It seemed llko n thunderbolt from a clear sky. Vodka and other Intoxicants wcro absolutely prohibited throughout Russia. It was- an arbitrary measure of an autocracy. But the very cx Istcnco of tho nation was nt stako In this unparalleled war. Tho nation and tho Indi viduals must make any sacrifice, however great, for tho lifo of tho empire. A Better Russia Without Vodka What nro tho results nt this hour7 But a rojuvenatod Russia nppcarod on tho map of Europe. The sleeping giant had awakened from tho stupor of vodka and other Intoxi cants; and tho nntlons discovered that sober and temperate Russian officers and soldiers were tho peers of any soldiers on earth. It was an Immenso prlco for tho Government to pay, for tho rovenuo from vodka and tho liquor traffic was $500,000,000 annually. And Russia was in tremendous need of monoy to equip tho armies. Today, In splto of tho extraordinary expenses of tho war and tho disastrous effects upon all forms of busi ness, tho roports from Potrograd dectaro that savings banks show an increaso of deposits, tho people nro prospering ns nOvcr before and thero la a revival In business, especially In tho salo of groceries, meats, clothing, housefurnlshlngH and all useful articles. A nation has been redeemed. But again tho world felt tho thrills when England tackled tho liquor traffic. Hero again tho great war precipitated tho fight. And tho onslaught came from an unexpected quarter. It was tho visitation of a deputa tion from tho Shipbuilding Employers' Asso ciation to Chancellor David Lloyd. George thnt started tho conflagration. These ship builders had a red-hot messago to deliver. Hero was a great nation engaged In tho death grip of tho greatest war In the history of tho world; and tho shipbuilders told tho Chancellor that England's supremo defense, her overwhelming sea power, was being menaced by the curso of strong drink. These shipbuilders stated that tho public houses or saloons In tho neighborhood of the shipyards havo averaged a 40 per cent. In crease in tho salo of Intoxicating liquors dur ing tho war. Tho liquor men saw that the war gavo them a chanco to get rich. They did not offer themselves as volunteers to do fond tho country in tho hour of her dire peril. But In their greed they saw that work in tho shipyards was abundant, that wages were unusually high and that they could reap a big financial harvest. And what was tho rosult of tho conspiracy and avarice of tho liquor dealers? There was an Industrial chaos In tho shipbuilding trades. In ono shipyard tho riveters havo been working on an average only 40 hours a week and In another yard only 3G hours a week. The saloons have occupied tho re mainder of their time. Drink England's Worst Foo One Instance among othors was cited. A big battleship needing Immediate repairs camo Into a largo shipyard. She had been busy In tho dangerous work of patrol In tho North Sea. It was necessary for her to re turn nt tho earliest posslblo moment to her Important post of duty. She was put Into tho drydock nt onco. Yot sho lay untouched for ono entire day, because no riveters coulfl be secured to work on her. Thoy wero drink ing and carousing In grogshops nearby. No wonder that the patriotic Chancellor, after hearing these reports from the ship builders, exclaimed: "Wo aro fighting Ger many, Austria and drink, and so far as I can see, tho greatest of these deadly foes is drink. I have tho greatest conviction, based on accumulating evidence, that nothing but root-and-branch methods would bo of the slightest avail In dealing with the evil. I believe it la the general feeling that If wo are to settle with German militarism wo must first of all settlo with liquor." This tidal wave of prohibition Is spreading to the British provinces. Saskatchewan, Canada, has taken action looking toward the abolition ot the liquor traffio throughout the war. Montreal has enthusiastically approved of tho stand taken by King George on the liquor question in Great Britain. And Pre mier Clarke, of New Brunswick, 'according to the latest dispatches, states that his Gov ernment is considering the prohibition of the sale of Intoxicants, Premier Murray, of Nova Scotia, takes the same stand. And the Prov ince of Ontario has a powerful temperance conviction, and is likely to line up with the forces of temperance. France has joined England and Russia, and has prohibited the sale of absinthe. It was a question of Bejf-defense. France yearly consumed 5,0,OOQ gallons of the bev erage. These great nations in the hour of tbir titanic fight for self-existence Join the forces of prohibition or temperance for- the reasons of effleieney, health, ecgnorolp strength and fighting power. PREPARED FOR FLIGHT if torn tha houltn Chronicle. In the lobbies of the Government Dapart HjanU, according to Keseeln Bey's "Hvll of the Hast," stand auonnouu poxee covered with cow htdr and ituddled with huge copper nails, Iq three are preserved all Ottoman oftielal docu m)its packed ready to be transported at a mo ment's notice, when the long-pfetthefded Sitting frem the capital takes plase. PHILOSOPHY FROMALBAMV FToea Um Albaw JewnaMWas. Bam' pajr). The hes femedy for a availed head U en tittiB ( ta (UlKereaee that the death t a really Important dOac't uuia ,. mmmwivLm mlk w san :tfaHH :BaraJ...vV7V wrraaKv. rs&Br6 m vitfw rrtH-tw .M4 4 irr i . rr-wxii.M'-iici a. iu , 'iASiWWSi' WTJVWr7 IS GOLF A GAME OR MEDICINE? Books About It Are Intended Only for Those Who Take It as a Prescription The Rest Pursue the Immoral Pill for the Fun There Is in the Sport. By WALTER PRICHARD EATON r M GETTING a bit weary of tho E-unK that Is written nbout tho gamo of golf. Golf Is a lino game; nobody enjoys it moro or has moro respect for it than I have. My wlfo is aa desolate a golf widow from May to November ns oxtsts In the land. I am sec retary of my club and also tho club handl capper and B0 por cent, of tho Greens Com mittee; in other words tho club doormat. Golf takes up moro of my tlmo than I can afford to glvo It, and I'm ono of those bugs who puts himself to sleep planning out how It will bo posslblo for him tho next day to do tho course In even fours. Nevertheless I believe that about nlno tonths of the stuff written about the gamo Is blither. Somobody has written a whole book colled "Tho Mystery of Golf." This book, which was first issued in a special edition of moderato size, was later oxpanded by Its author Into a profound treatlso on psychol ogy, birth control, international law, differ ential calculus and applied agriculture, and put on the general market. Bunk About Golf Mystery Now, there Isn't" any particular mystery to golf, any more than there is to hitting a baseball, driving a nail or buttoning your boots. If you had nover buttoned your boots before you'd take an hour or moro to get tho Job done, no doubt. Simply your muscles have acquired tho boot buttoning habit. If you had never driven a nail In your life you you wouldn't laugh so much when you saw your wlfo trying to perform tho feat. It you had nover faced a pitcher it la doubtful If you'd line out a two-bagger over second. It Is doubtful if you do, anyway! All golf consists of, when you come to think of it, Is hitting a ball with a club in n- defin ite direction with the greatest percentage of clean shotB. Tho kind of shots vary, from tho long drlvo or the pitch and putt; but the fact romatns that tho object la to propel a ball by hitting It with a club to a doflnlto place. That Is also tepnls and baseball, and bil liards, and squash, and oven driving nails. DllTeronco Between Vou and Ty Cobb Now between twp men of equal age and with tho same degree of practice there will exist a tremendous' difference in ability to hit a baseball. One man fdhs four times out of five, Ty Cobb hits the ball with per fect confidence four times out of five, and half of thoso tlmoa puts it where he wants to put it for a safe hit. In tennis the dif ference between you or me and Blllle Lamed or R. Non-U Williams, 2d, isn't that wo can't hit a ball Just as hard as thoy can when we do hit it, but that they can hit it fair more or less every time and put it where they want to put it. But do we, therefore, make a "mystery" out of baseball or of tonnls and write pon derous tomes of pseudo-psychology and mag azine articles full of subtle analysis? We certainly do not. We Blmply admit tjtat Ty Cobb has got a better batting eyo than w have, that Blllle Lamed la a better tennis playpr, and sensibly let it go at that. I have played golf since 1898. I have played tennis since I was old enough to look over the net Instead of through it.' I have played football and baseball, squash and billiards, handball and tlddledywlnks, I never was a ''dub" at any of these games npr was I ever a champion. I've always trotted along somewhere in Class B (or C it the field was fast), and tho reason 1b that my body and brain are built in such o. way that they are capable of just such a degree of muscular co-ordinattpn and no more. I don't say I wasn't bUr at some games than at others. Questions of speed, en durance, even teraperamento. enter In, of course. I had a roommate once who could trim the life out of rne nt tehnls, while t could trim him at golf. To equalize pur win nings we had to resort to squash. But even in that case habit was an important factor. He learned tennis when young by plsylng with experts, and a fine Btroke was ingrained lu his muscles. On the other hand, I learned golf under better auspices and got tha or thodox Bwing habituated. Squash we took up together, and, being about equal in natu ral BpeeA and athletic knack, we played St on even terms. How Boys Become Experts Soma years ago I helped teach two young sters to Play golf. Both of them are now ranking ptaysra and fce won big umra jet. One, to tM, Is 4a.8ww eow petltor 1 iiattoaal events. But before I Ua1 v-tyta? with tlthat ot them a mouth "AHEM!" i VAiL ho was beating mo. Thero wasn't any mys tery nbout It. Neither boy took homo books about tho psychology of golf and studied out Its "mystorles." Both of them tho minute they had clubs In tholr hands Instinctively responded to tho muscular demand. They felt tho swing of tho club, their fingers sensed the proper "timing" for tho stroke, their muscles told them how much strength to use to propel tho ball a certain dlstanco on an approach. When tho practlco which Is es sential for any gamo had given them proper familiarity with their clubs and with tho roll of a ball anybody with half nn oye could havo seen that they wero born golf players. As a matter of fact both of them would havo been almost equally good at tennis, and ono of them at least was ono of tho best preparatory school baseball players of his day. They aro natural athletes at any sport which demanded tho correct co-ordination of cyo and body in hitting a ball with somo kind o'f a club. Why Thero Aro Golf Dubs The real truth of -tho matter Is that when' a man Is a dub at tennis he usually quits' tho game. Nobody wants to play with him, anyhow, becauso tennis Is a game of give and take and a ono-sldcd match Is small sport. If he Is a dub at baseball he doesn't got much chanco to play. No team wants him, And so It goes. Tlion, too, In tho more violent sports too much physical exertion Is required to keep men at them after tho zest of youth has passed. But golf, poor old golf, Is taken up by everybody, from boys In knickerbockers to tottering octogenarians, quite irrespective of whether they havo any natural aptltudo for hitting a ball or not, and they can always find partners, alwnys go poking and foozling happily along. They can't hit out 250-yard drives, thoy can't depend on tholr brassies, they can't push up a mashle to tho pin, they can't gauge their putts and thoy declare that golf Is a mystery; thoy write books about It, they poro over magazlna articles telling how to "concentrate," how to keep the eye on the boll, how to keep the head down, how to fol low through, and ao on, and so forth. Most of them never stop to reflect that they couldn't hit a home run off Christie Mathowson nor place a railroad service into the corners of the service court, nor control a Lawford to the deep base lino, nor lay a bunt wher they wanted to, nor take a squash hall neatly off tho side wall, nor do a hun dred and ono other things which require that Instructive mental and muscular co-ordination that characterizes tho born athlete. Moreover, they couldn't do any of thcBe things If they studied them as hard as they study golf and practiced them Just as much. Simply the athletic Instinct isn't in them. A Gamo Without Morals The pathetic feature of a golf course really is the vast number or people upon 'It who are trying to bq athletes when nature never built them that way. This is truly a terrible thought! It takes away hope. How many of us would keep on playing golf if it weren't for hope? About once a year I play our course under 80. That 79 (for 79 is about rb far under 80 a? I ever go) la to me as a pillar ot fire and a cloud Of smoke, urging me on across the swales and hazards year after year toward the promised land of the First Sixteen. If there be a mystery in golf it Is this power it pos eesses to delude, to cheat, to inspire false hope. Because it lacks the direct physical contest against a. living opponent which ten nis, say, possesses, we deluded devotees never seem to discover certainly never admit our Inherent limitations, but go right on chasing the will o' the wisp of even fours Just aa if real athletic ability was in us. It la In reality a highly Immoral game. "But think of the wholesome exercise!" somebody exclaims. More bunk I Nobody ever does think of the exercise. A person who playa any game "for the exercise" hasn't the first notion of what the game is about. It wouldn't be a game any more it would bo medicine. I must end thla now, aa there's a foursome waiting for me. MIDNIGHT SUN IN ALASKA ITorn tha -award Alaaka) Cutaway. So many peopto have said that they hive seen the midnight aun In Alavka that seme one rauet have seen it. although the very great BMtJerfty of residents ot the Territory must ad mit never having laid eyes oa it There Is qe roan, at leat, who auyed up all night at Fwi Yukost, the point where toe Yukon Uvu touch the Arotio Circle, to u the Milt ea, ad he n it and h didn't e it Tfcat la. at 4aitit. accordiu to hi watch, ta mm hWfyJSSfatfMui lyMfVdS-. .'7rm 4M AlMt 4ty ehono resplondently over the fiats of the grcit river and everything socmed to be nne until later when tho sun went out of sight for hour,'. Whether It was tho sun that miscalculated th. tlmo or tho watch canuot be tola, but eiDo. rlencss llko this havo led many people to M Hove that there Is no tlmo when the sun U vioibie alt night In Alaska. Many people ear they navo scon it nt mianignt irom tno run tw. hind Dawson on tho 21st nnd 22d of this month,' but could thero not be some misinke? i course, 'in tho moro northerly part of Alai! the now dav bcclns to break at mldnlnht. 0 servation has led to tho belief that the darketi Doriod Is botwoen 11:15 p. m. and midnight. Yestorday was the longest day of tho year." but, unfortunatoly, It wns also tho darkest Ini months. Somo say this dato la the longest, and our ehancea of seelnc a mldnlcht sun ara' mighty slim. It might bo worth eaylng for thai benefit of tho many now arrivals Hero that at this dato along tho Yukon River there is no part of tho 24 hours whon reading a newspaper by daylight is not perfectly easy. DEMOCRACY: DOES IT WORK?. A Survey of Society Shows That Thcro Ii Friction in Spots From the Living- Church. Tho world will nover bo content to test democracy by theory. The question that ttll! InnvnMhlir ha nabcd In. T)rAH If wnrlf? J Now it will "work" only to tho extent thaSj uie rantt nnu iuo oi ins peujJio ivro uum iu aa.j simllate tho American ideal of world-service. It Is nothing to us that perhaps wo can con ouer other nations: we don't want to conquer. them. It is nothing to us that wo aro rich ania can bulla tho greatest army ana navy tna& me world has ever seen; we don't want to bull! thnm. Tho American Ideal is one ot service tq hul manlty. Thero have, indeed, been blots In tjj realization of tho American Ideal. Wo hafl dealt urTfuath- with tho Indian. Wo have en slaved and often debauched the negro, and theij given him a pretense of citizenship without fitting him to exercise its duties. Wo have neglected Alaska. We have been unsympathetic and overbearing In dealing with our Latin American neighbors and have too often earned, tho dislike, If not hatred, which they feel fori us. Wo havo permitted abuses among our own people We havo allowed, and In many of our' States still allow, unrestricted child labor. Wo have been Blow to gtvo adequate protection to the laborer and particularly to women in In dustry. We have allowed the natural resourcej of our land to be used selfishly for the benefit of the few Instead of for the common good dm the whole. Wo have allowed slums to bo. created In our cities and have been IndlfferenJ to the "submerged tenth" probably, In a larcer nronortlon than that whoso lives in lived in slum degradation. We havo not fconl a way to adjust a minimum wage to the nf llvlnff. nor to dvfl emnlovmnnt to nil honestly seek it. We havo such dlsgustlr.t; revelations of venality in high, places as navi been given to us most recently by grand in Indiana, but which are confined to no, one locality or Stato. These aro tho discrepancies between the American ideal and American prat-i tlce, and the elevation of practice toward ideal Is very Blow Indeed, Is fraught with constant opposition from our own citizens, Is attended with many backward steps and false rnovei And. through all this mass of failures an abuses, tho world is peering back of the high flown utterances of American Fourth-of-Juh orators and la asking, sometimes flippantly; sometimes longingly, sometimes sneerinsly. does it work? Well, fellow Americans, does It? DEFENSE FOR WHOSE HOMES? To the Editor ot Evenina Ledaer: Sir- I recently read In a window of the antlfl suffrage headquarters In West Philadelphia, j placard bearing the legend, "For Home DJ fense." 1 believe the headquarters are nff closed, the occupants probably having flitti away to a more congenial clime, . If not considered Impertinent, I -would "' in Via tnfnrmArT Vi, Via AHtfmfttiln 1nrils reSDOnil .etble for the motto which homes are referred! to tnose in town, with closed shutters; ip winter apartments at Tho Breakers at FW Beach, their cottaees at Bar Harbor or tbeU mldseason palaces on the Main Line? Also Just what way the peace and happiness of thfc various domiciles are jeopardized? - WORKER FOR WOMAN SUFFRAGE; FMiaaeiphia, July s. NIEMAND ZU IIAUSE Twaa on a summer's evening. Old Caspar's work was done, And he, within a picture show, Was roaring at the fun. Beside him eat fair WUbelmlne, Who giggled in her glee. Likewise her brother Peterkln, And the whole family! Spokane Spokesman Revtej . - THE NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW? On the whole wa may be thankful that Morgan la about the only American grand da icgarceu as worm gunning ior. urew Press. The suicide of Holt is regrettable In tha : tijat tno jaw, ana not nimseir, ougnt w , decreed his punishment. Cincinnati Corninef Tribune. At no time in our national history has ' bert greater need for the charity wnicn prew intelligently ana witnout nai su all reasonable allowances for differing points. Springfield Republican. When peace again settles over Iesl? 8. uwejy nai wo name j ua cf. will b Rlaeed above that of tlie otner nH llharfitnra nf fxleo end that none 1 ton nrauil to honor his memory MUsrt New. Holding no brief for either "high ' or tariff thaoriu. but lut look (ill at the far b tliav can now be ascertained, the conclude that the eauee of the c'1? tiotiil incem which produced the Trf UBfertunata dohIUob on ttyst d W!U Half WiPC eiase a4 wr.-CWtw , aid. liiliilF