JT EVENING EEDGER-PHIEADELPHIA, SATTTEDAY, ODTOBEB 2, 1915; ii K r.r. 9urotng jfi& Htfrjrr fUBUC LKD6ER COMPANY $B QTItn K. K. CPMTlH. pMeiMXT. . UMMwm. Tic Prwlnt t John C. Martin; eaa TTMMortr: ramp b. nmi, jonn a. Mrstlera. aorroftiAL. roaiidi CttW K. K. Cnni, Chairman. kUrr.......... .... Extonttr Bdlter 0. MAKTIM. t . Oaneral BaaliMte Uumr all at rmuo Lmn Bulldlnc, io Stuara, PhiladalpMa. OWMli.iiiiMMiBNtl ant Chaitnnt 8trta C,.,,,,,,.....,,...rr-I7ti(n Building xtMoiM I"- Metropolitan Tower ,. .raw rora giuuaina ....k..t.. in wot utmocrat uuuainr ...................... .1S03 Trltnin nulldlnc I Waterloo ric, rll Mall, 8. W. NEWS BUREAUS I JMSjimniia MWUT Tha rent Iruliain Nav,Vouc Miui .........Th rttnrt DulMInc wmh.i ....,.. ....co rriMncntra Bnaaatr a all Mall Eart. 8. W. 8........ nz Hue ivouu la arana 0UB8CMPTION terms r carrier. Dint OntT. fix eenta, Br nn, poarpatl tatatot t rhlladalphla, except ftnn foretsn poitar raselr, Diiit Oklt, ma month, twantr-flre oanti Xmtlt OstT, en yar, thra dollar. All mail aub aariatlpm parabla In kdranca. nenoa sutwcrlAara wUMns adartta chanraa mutt eld aa wall aa new addrata. walnut KETST0HI. MAW lM .m f 6A 17 jioarrta on rommioartiM to evrntng . wiufui, innrpfrnKucf DUWIlIt 4 nihhkiboiwi at ths nm.icn.niu roTorrtca is eiooi euii Mia uinn TUB AVERAGE NET PAID DAILT CIRCULA TION OF THE EVENINO LEDOBR TOR AUGUST WAS (B.alS. mrLABELTHtA. 9ATURDAT. OCTOBEn I. Ml. -f jnfcjngn tcTw complain that he it ignorant rvbmo no never nau an opportunity tu got, an education thereby confettet that money ipent on tending Mm to college would ftovo been waited. IGURES TO SCORCH THE DONKEY'S HIDE N EJMFTY dinner pall la an argument C -which no political orator has yet been o tojrefuto or to strengthen. The most dls- rWlng condition that confronts the Dcmo- llcl strategists who aro preparing for tho filsri next year Is that thero were moro Bn dinner palls in the winter of 1914-15 2.' there wcro In 1812. They are awaro tho dinner pall problem Is relatod to savings bank deposit question, and that Jlllng off In the amount of the savings of plain people means a falling off In sup- f. of the party In power. he effect of two years and a half of Dem- rtlc rule can bo read In the business of savings banks In Philadelphia, the Scp Htper reports of which havo Just been made 'flic. Take tho Philadelphia Saving Fund ort as typical. Thero was credited to Its josltora on September 7 the sum of $121, ,000, whereas on November 2 of last year depositors had (117,308,000. There Is here apparent Increase of J3.800.000, but the ercst on the deposits amounts to about 00,000, leaving only $300,000 for additional Ings. tmpare this with the figures for tho iar periods of 1911 and 1912, and it will n that the total Increase In tho amounts the t0 the dePs,trs then was $6,052,000. 8hreC the Interest credits and there photoplinet increase In deposits from the " tjjtaigg of the people of J2.842.000, or bank68 as much as in the current year, embrrts of the other banks show similar cultle Acedures carry their own comment on Trlanx of business meddling and tariff short Cyjg tn0 conflux 0f affairs too big Next stery of amateur theorists. Sunle '"H i she wf 'A OILING FOR THEIR COUNTRY play fr Plekforj'S Tommy Atkins fought for tho prim Hjj. ,. meaning Queen Victoria, and relncar . ar . ,M, mother? a day ho French soldiers oyal family to defend, and they Into Ui a Pa'tfy shilling. The peace pay day It a dny" That has been raised to rn rac the Chamber of Deputies. Even Paul Any is not an Inducement to a man yJS-s fam,1y a"3 faco death. French mor' fighting not for pay, but for France, ataJne thinks of this thrilling fact he is "n'to conclude that the system of unl w. service In the army has certain ad Lges that can be found under no other px! of preparing for national defense. MBA BLAMES THE WRONG MEN '-CTOR DUMBA, who was once the Aus trian Ambassador to the United States, i4 the reporters who met him on his val. In New York on his way home as were responsible for his predicament. 'aid that he hoped he might never see ,iaer one, and charged them with "mix ,Ug Mb all up" and never getting what he NU right. It he has .sot yet discovered it, the rest of I know that reporters are not responsible Mm retirement. They did not write any isajtKiut stirring up trouble in the steel " Sethtehem and the Middle West, y west about their legitimate bust pith a conscientious and discreet ef my which even diplomatists might envy. r JRRAK, FRANKLIN AND CELLINI MNOAXIK FRANKLIN were alive and MM k acquainted with all the facts, he & Matae, a fascinating volume out of 3er f'lNisaw'a autobiography which a Bos rrfHher ot works of pure literature Is .. -iSTiWst; wKh thJte brilliant young singer m asuie. mui make a denrhtful tale tke rte C a Ctrl from tbe position J"e 'CteneinaijtvT when she was 17 or U Bll ' te a row donna at M with the rial wwiM at aer feet With the creative the aramatlo InsUnot he Ol J eBMatrtleM xiake a more Interesting mat M Mim rm.r herself will telL He AblleaJUT -j-j .. , ... . ever tbe baseball career of , jpr aer short period of self fWzg dictation from a school wMle ehe was learning the AMislo. He would tell of her fat the Castle Square Theatre In i "MpPM d heavy operas were torture at the hands 'IA niiaJin 1 .lls.. II. M .(. V ! 3 " T "" fmi uintouun Ol odae whJ paid M cents for the best tSfi Uw JMuae, Tie wou!4 paint the back "SsV f saaall 4as4a in his somberest ' vwla a4ev that tae brilliant fmltlnn fu AJin by oontaaat. Her life affords " JRf enough ter a aatondld romance of t, iip to m mmm wetar sIm a? isa wim itiHairn imimnmnw M eas va w she flanaet gat a vtmm istea to rVftwiTa 'Sv.rtir V . - t (Mrftoratloo sit;. .t tMI"""""ia , I -Vi- iii jmm J--BtoeA sf (Una. la ' tSt WW1 "JHHIK SVHMMBt iSnammmmmu sList. announce that she will make the attempt with her own hand, unassisted by the con venient trained writer to put her desultory recollections In shape to print. Aa writing autobiography Is the relaxa tion of age rather than the avocation of youth, and comes when the career has been so nearly completed that little of Interest can happen In the future, there Is a certain ele ment of pathos In Miss Farrar's determina tion to toll tho story of her life. She Is a prima donna at tt, and she Is not likely to be anything more all the rest of tho years of her life; such are tho penalties of early success. Benjamin Franklin had much to tell of what he did and thought long years after he had reached Miss Farrar's ago, and his autobiography Is a classic. Bcnvenuto Cel lini did not begin to wrtto his autobiography till he was 58, and ho shaved his head to do It and betook himself to a monastery for two years until the work was finished. Ho was a musician In his youth, an Miss Farrar is. Ah no ono knows what is in tho lap of time, Miss Farrar 28 years from now may be able to produce a book that will live along with the groat Italian artist's autobiography. THE PLEDGE OF CIVIC DUTY CITIZENS of Philadelphia whose con sciences aro not squaro with the spirit of tho oath of the Athenian youth on ad mission to tho suffrage, when they enst their votes at tho November election have no right at tho polls. They do not belong to a de mocracy, thoso who are too boss-ridden to subscribe to tho following text: We will never bring dlsgraco to this, our city, by any act of dishonesty or coward ice, nor ever desert our suffering com rades In the ranks. We will fight for the Ideals nnd sacred things of the city, both alone and with many; wo will revere and obey tho city's laws and do our best to Incite a like respect and reverence In those who are prone to annul or set them at naught; wo will strive unceasingly to quicken the public sense of civic duty. Thus, In all these ways, we will transmit this city, not only not tho less, but greater, better nnd more beautiful than It was trans mitted to us. Hero In this pledge Is a miniature treatlso In authentic patriotism, an evangel of clvlo duty. It sets briefly but substantially tho standards of real democracy; It states tho obligations that rest on tho citizen of a republic w'ho would not bo guilty of ln clvlcism. To live for one's city, to bo alive for it, that is the Ideal to bo allvo to Its needs. Its Interests. For tho living, facing the massed and controlled ballots of graft and political mlsrulo, not the bullets of alien foe, can win the. great victory of a city redeemed permanently; can, by following tho code of civic conduct Insplrlngly set forth In tho Athenian Oath, gain and securo gen uinely democratic government. How many cltlzena of Philadelphia on No vember 2 will desert their comrades In the ranks who four years ago started Philadel phia on the road to municipal decency? How many will by their ballots Incite rev cronco for what Is right and just, and ad minister stinging rebuke to those above them who havo been prone to annul or set nt naught lofty civic Ideals, turning to private endB what should be for the common weal? How many will fight In the simple, easy way, constitutionally provided, for tho Ideals and sacred things of Philadelphia? IN DARK MANHATTAN THE New York Times has been having a laugh at the expenso of Senator Hughes, of New Jersey, and all because the Senator annqunccd that he could seo no reason why "If a woman is to be taxed on a basis of equality with a man, she should not be given an equal vote with him as to how her money Is to be expended by public servants." This seems very funny to the Times, which wants to know, "What has taxation got to do with tho matter?" Haven't they heard about the Revolutionary War In New York yet? WORDS IN CHAINS THERE is no bondago more galling than that of custom; and It is inescapable also. Words, which by nature have a wide lati tude of real and metaphorical meaning, are fettered to a single significance by the cus tom of using them more commonly in one way than in another. When it was announced that a distin guished preacher had been sued for breach of promise every one at ail Interested In the case immediately assumed that he had de clined to marry a woman whom ho had agreed to make his wife. As he had a wlfo already, there were the elements of a scandal In the report But It seems that the min ister is not accused of breaking his promlso to marry, but his promise to pay certain sums of money in a business contract. "Breach of promise," however, Is chained eo securely to tho post of a single meaning that It connotes but one idea in tho popular mind. Elope is another word that is not free. It means merely to run away, but only poople who run away to marry surreptitiously aro allowed to elope. Notoriety is simply the state of being known. A notorious man, however, is a man of bad reputation. Sug gestlvcness likewise means merely having the ability to suggest, but it is used In a bad sense. And criticism, however much it would like to describe friendly as well aa hostile comment, ilnds Itself unable to convey any meaning save that of fault finding. The number of such slaves might be multiplied Indefinitely to prove that words are but symbols that mean what we agree they shall mean, and not what their ancestry would justify us In supposing that they do mean. Ultimatums are a dru In the market in Bulgaria. The Allies, like Paul Jones in a tight place, are announcing that they have only just begun to flint Borne new tales win come out of Bagdad when tbe British soldiers fighting the Turks In that region get home. One thing Is established, at any rate; the Allies' oerreeponaents can take more trenches in the dlepktchee than the Germans can. George Sylvester Viereck, the. editor of the Fatherland, has, at least joined the ranks of the belligerents, He was married this week. Chief of Police Clark, of Darby, made a record of C0-S0 for efficiency Thursday night, for ha stood guard over staUn automo bile yVhlle the thief iM away aad stole a better one. a i i i ' '..' i in. K kU the mam) tar MtnltiOM d IBBBi""' "a .? imiiiry va.Hpsenaii aew w raw fmniw nvw mm mm q tm,- m SBaMS m sjr annss r-, am u i UMaT Bftl WafflBWil,ra 1 uUN I lmtntm.mm Til"- ' ?5 . aMkYrui'OM'r. VA, ' s ".'. ': THE WEST AGAIN DRIVE OR NIBBLE? Tho Background of the News of tho Fighting- in Chnmpngno nnd' Around LensA Week of Great Importanco By FRANK H. SIMONDS IN FEBRUARY the official reports suddenly began to talk of fighting on that llttlo known front between the city of Rhelms and tho Argonne. Day after day the cables talked moro and more of the desperate fighting about villages little known, and even for tho possession of farmhouses, which acquired as evil famo as that of Chateau of Hougomont at Waterloo. The object of the French effort was llttlo appreciated; tho fact that 260,000 men were fighting on either side was not re vealed until many days after tho effort had ended In practical failure, desplto Incidental gains. But far at the other end of the lino, In March, there suddenly broke out that British effort which Instantly filled tho press nnd tho Imagination of tho world. After a sudden bombardment a largo British forco struck tho German linos between La Bassco and LUIc, broke through, won clear, and then some one blundered, tho dash to tho Aubers Ridge, which Is tho key to Llllo, did not come off; tho victory turned out to bo the advance of a mllo on a four-mile front at a cost to Britain of moro than sho paid In her own blood for Waterloo. "The Million Myth" tate In April the Germans, using poison gas for the first time, suddenly crashed through the lino at the point where French and Canadian troops touched, overwhelmed the French, outflanked the Canadians, rolloi up the whole British front and almost reached Ypres. They failed, but the extent of their temporary success disclosed to them and to tho observing everywhere the plain fact that Kitchener's million was a myth, that British munitions were Inadequate, that the spring drive was never to come. Finally, In May, the last bid for a spring gain was made. The French, under Foch, the brilliant strategist who had won sucb ronown nt the Marno, after a bombardment in which 300,000 shells were used In a brief time, swept east north of Arras, took a num ber of villages, crowned the Lorette Heights, and were almost at the suburbs of Lens. But again a British failure came to mar the pos sibility of a major success. The 750,000 Mark After this camo the great munition scandal In England. At last the truth was known, and England, six months too late, began to mobilize her Industries. But the spring had passed, the drive was Impossible, and Ger many had turned east to dispose of Russia. This she never could have dono had Kitch ener's million been ready or British supplies of munitions comparablo with French. From Juno to late September the war in tho west has been a war of outposts and snipers, save for an occasional French dash In the Vosges. Meantime, British ammunition was accumu lating and British troops on tho Continent Increasing, until they havo now passed the 760,000 mark. Turning now to the geography of the . western front it Is simplest to bogln by dividing this whole front Into a few sectors and discussing these in Vrn. These sectors are Ypres, Arras, Alsne, Champagne, Ar gonne, Verdun, Lorraine and Vosges. Of theso only the first four are interesting at the moment To-begin with the Ypres sector: This ex tends from the North Sea at Nleuport to tho canal at La Bassee. On the west any offensive operation Is Impossible because of the Inundated districts, which the Belgians flooded to check tho Germans In the Battle of the Yser. About Ypres the Germans have' crowded the British down hill and hold all the slopes. To the east, In a wldo circle, tho forts of Lille, dismantled by the French and rebuilt by the Germans, close the road. To the south the Aubers Ridge, east of Neuve Chapelle, and the works at La Bassee, offer obstacles that have blocked all attack. In tho narrow gap between the Yser and the Lys, east of Ypres, It is conceivable that the British might make an advance, but they would encounter a number of fortified lines and their efforts would not menace the main position of the Germans In France, which Is tho first objective. To attack Llllo is impossible, because tho French would opposo a bombardment destroying the town. Hence the operations between the sea and the La Bassee Canal have been of little moment since tho British failed at the Au bers Ridge In the spring. An Attractive Battleground But to the south from the La Bassee Canal to the Somme River, on a front of perhaps 40 miles, with Arras as the central point Is an attractive place for an attack, and here things are happening. In May and June the French cleared the Lorette heights and pushed east to within four miles of the Important railroad and mining town of Lens, around which tbe Franco-British forces are trying to throw a noose. The Allies are striving for control of the main highway, from La Bassee to Lens and Arras, which the Germans use for reinforcing their lines. It would win Lens, the most important railroad centre from Lille to the Olse, on the German front Behind Lens there is no really good stand ing point regard being had to railroad com munications, until Doual an Cambral are reached. If tho Allied advance could be pushed to this point then the vhole western side of the German elbow 1 France and Belgium would be threatened, because the French would be almost in sight of the lines which supply the Germans far to the south along the Olse, the upper Bosune and the lower Alsne. The possession of Lens would give the Al lies control of one of the most Important trunk lines from Paris to the north by Amiens, Arras and Lens. Here, then, is a front which offers local and ultimate possi bilities which are patent when the map is consulted. There is no considerable natural, obstacle to hinder the advance and the dominating heights are already la French hands. A German Gibraltar From the Somme to the forts of Rhelms, that is at tbe elbow of the German position, the line of the Teutons seems impregnable. It rests upon that range of hills, the Cham pagne bills of the geography, whlcfc rise jt to the west of the Olse and face west from Noyon north. Beyond the OUe they continue east, north ot the Also to Xerry-aM-Bac. Tkeoc the 0aaa posHfen eyUndi U tha Obasapajro plala across the eswtem forts tt yiisian This position ww atrondr ror- tMs4 ftp Fiene la cm fmm. km mm wpaantiM tm fM emm "SUPPOSE waJSBWfcMWasKAy'--!iMsj.la''w '"sVr ,fry1Jt.e a s 4BSBL?OfltdSBSBBSBSBw snl sV fassss?BsCBBSBlSsaBBSBSBSM-aB?Y'33lBsK xjffik JIssBBSBBfj Baajsl MsTBi4JyssyBsae them and rebuilt them. Back of these hills threo trunk linos reach north to Belgium, whllo a cross line mokes It easy to rush troops from east to west Here the Allied pursuit of tho Germans was held up after the Marne. Here the Allies wcro repulsed In tho battle of tho Alsne, and later In the French offensive north of Solssons. This position seems Im pregnable, and against It the French have directed no serious attack since last winter. The best evidence points to the permanent abandonment by the Allies of any hope of storming this position and to the belief that the Germans can only be turned out of It East of the Rhelms forts and between them and tho Argonne Is a SO-mlle front, which offors the attacker the best oppor tunity to bo found on the whole western front Thero are no natural obstacles, the country Is fairly flat sparsely popuUted, thus removing tho objection that French artillery must destroy French cities. Could tho French push north from their lino about Bouatn six miles, that Is from the point which they hold when the present drive began, they would cut tho Challerange Bazancourt Railroad, which supplies the whole German front from Rhelms to the Ar gonne. They would Insert a wedge between tho Argonne and Rhelms armies and they would threaten the flank of each. Another successful push and tho Germans would be compelled to quit the Rhelms forts, and the Crown Prince would have to give up his year-long struggle In tho Argonne and be tween the Meuse and the Moselle for Ver dun. East of this Champagne plain, where the Republican army defeated the Prussians at Valmy, and Attlla's host was crushed, is the long rldgo of the Argonne, a dozen miles wide, covered by dense forests and penetrat ed by few roads. In this the Crown Prince has been fighting for months trying to get six miles south to cut the Paris-Verdun Rail road at St Menehould and Isolate Verdun from the west The country here precludes any great drive, as his operation has shown. Eastward the trenches In front of the forts of Verdun, the heights of the Meuse and Woevre offer serious obstacles, and there Is small chance of any major success, because to the east lie the permanent forts of Metz, barring the road Into Germany. For pres ent purposes the Vosges and Lorraine fronts may also be disregarded. Another Polish Salient Now with this hasty glimpse of the geog raphy of the front in mind, it is clear that the Arras and Champagne fronts are the only points that offer real promise of profit, local or ultimate. A local success In the Arras sector would win Lens, it might clear the Germans out of La Bassee and it would threaten the whole German position south of the Sommo, because It would toko the Allies ciose to the main railroads on which they depend. Exactly in the same fashion a local suc cess In the Champagne sector would relieve the stricken city of Rhelms, Imperil the flank of the Crown Prince, fighting to Isolate Verdun, and It might be puBhed far enough north, that is to the Alsne, about Rethel, to menace the Eastern trunk line which sup ports the German position in the Alsne sector. Recall the Polish campaign of the Ger mans and the point will be clear. Hlnden burg and Mackensen were striking at the two ends of the Russian position, which extended In a wide curve from the East Prussian to the Gallclan frontiers. They had been halted in a frontal attack at the middle of the curve before Warsaw. In August they attempted to turn the Russians, out of Poland by converging at tacks, which were directed at the railway lines behind the Warsaw front. The Brit IN PRAISE OF COLLEENS To tt Sdltor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Ellen Adair, In todays Issue ot the Kyih. Ino Ledges, pays to the Irish colleen a trib. ute as deserved as It is evidently sincere. Ireland, despite long centuries of studied wrong and cruel neglect. Is the very home of optim ism and no heart Is made the lighter and tha more cheerful by it than that of the typical col leen who, of all others, sees good in every thing and in whom even sorrow is tinged with humor. I am a steady raader of Ellen Adair and ad mire her writings much. They disclose sound philosophy, deep reasoning and good common tenae, and a most refreshing relief from the tedious platitudes paraded in other newspapers I could name. J, Philadelphia, October L THE MOVIE CENSORSHIP To' (as Bditor of the Bvening ledger: Sir I must disagree absolutely with you in your declaration that the city is placed in an Intolerable poaitlon because of the action ot the courts of Allegheny. County In upholding the authority of the Fennsylvaala Btate Board of Motion Picture Censors. Authority must rest somewhere, and whea'a censor board 1 mad beetote In power, rwpooslbllity rests heavily upon tae members and te least eugxetlnsj of Itsaeawty ar doable . deallag is beatau-ebtne. X am eeavtaeed tat tae Naaayhranta UU Aeardef Omni j gf BN .tegttyj aW.fWHi.TW jweUea matm Hfciew seeuM ha 'm n, ajitfuYil -!-" ft THIS HADN'T DRIFTED ish and French In Arras sector, tho French in Champagne are making a converging at tack wholly similar. A progress of a score of miles on either front might compel the Germans to straighten their lines, as Mack ensen's success at Lublin forced the Russians to abandon Warsaw. Such an operation would mean the retreat to the Belgium frontier and the 1ms of all but a thin strip of the French territory now held. Take any map of the war districts of Belgium and northern France and1 from Ar ras draw a line east from the Champagne draw another north. Before they meet about Namur they will cut all the railroad lines, which maintain the Germans In France. Long before any armies had covered the ground indicated by these lines the Ger mans would havo retreated to escape en velopment as the Russians retired, first from Warsaw and then from Brest-Lltovsk. There is not the smallest prospect that the Ger mans will be enveloped, but the threat would be sufficient if carried forward a few miles to clear most of France. Looking Down From the mils Looking now to what has been accom plished, It will be seen that the British In their first attack pushed east south of La Bassee, until they cut the La Bossce-Arras highway and dominated Lens from Hill No. 70, which Is a mile north of the city and two miles south of Loos, which the British also captured. At the same time the French pushod east, south of Lens, and cut the Lens-Arras highway three miles south of Lens. This town Is then more than half surrounded by allied troops, who hold the hills commanding It If the positions taken can be held against tho German counter attacks Its evacuation Is assured. To the north La Bassee has been trans formed Into a second salient because the British were already east of It on the north, and their advance to the Lens-La Bassee highway to the south has drawn a semi circle about this town. But the half circle is wider, and the Germans aro less likely to withdraw hero if no more ground Is lost by them. But their hold has been gravely weakened. Further successes will mean a German retreat both from Lens and La Bas see and a general allied advance toward the Lllle-Douai-St. Quentln Railroad. If the Allies ever get astride this road, be tween Doual and Cambral, German with drawal from France Is next to inevitablo. If they pass It north of Doual the evacua tion of Lille Is likely to follow, becauso In both cases German lines of communication will be gravely Imperiled. If the French are stopped now to the south and the British to the north of Lens, nnd this .own falls, the Allies will still have token a long forward movement toward the railroads, possession of which Is vital to German resistance in France, not merely at tho points assailed, but far to tho south along the Alsne front In the same fashion In the Champagne sector tho French have stepped out of their lines and covered half tho dlstanee to the Challerange-Bazancourt Railroad, which is within two miles and a half of their present front One more push and they will be astride of this railroad and in the rear of the Germans, who are holding the forts north and east of Rhelms. They will also bo on the flank of tho Germans with tho Crown Prince In the Argonne. Such a sain held will end the attack upon both Rhelms and Verdun. The present gain held will threaten both German operations and make the use of the railroad exceedingly difficult But until the French are ablo to roach S railroad their operation will haveTs Im mediate value than that of the British abou any Mm he may submit ah.n ,- . SSoXh TZ 'm'im board's decision woufd t'0n of . a nsor would bring thS elro plcurilnCflnnU,l0.n ant State into a chaotta condition! .It.ry ,n thl Philadelphia, SeptembTT ZWBnL. AFTER THE WAR To the Editor o the evening Ledger Sir-Henry Ford, tha automobli. .-. - Ban? & tsfsrS " Pny has dealings take any part n? bii ?" then he will withdraw evVnt h."Ld ,oan deposit with them. y Wnt be ha on When nations are in desperation i,. consider the future. QiUy the Dreaan 7 never considering. r " Preent Is worth If Americans were jut one-half as nr.rii, and far seeing as the Enirllah thLFil ,lcal would be a blessing, The aSage K, . veator has seen enough of thla war ?5 iLi?" Wm to . something "of whit lT to folliL The day of claaa and caste In Brltato 2 a?3 ing to a close. Both poMIcal 2.LW MY WAYl" FARTHEST NORTH SCHOOL I It Is Situated at Point Barrow, Alaska's Nearest Approach to the Pole Somebody should do for the points of tht compass what Foe did for the alphabet when he figured out In "The Gold Bug" the com. paratlve frequency of the lotters os they oo- ' cur in ordinary writing. I mean the names of the four principal directions when used to designate the four quarters of the globe, as Kipling used two of them: For East is East and West is West Which word Is the oftenest used In ordi nary speaking and writing "East" "West," "North" or "South" 7 "North" suggests bleakness and bitter cold, but in all probability It would not be found last In such a comparison as has been sug gested. A Peary and a Cook and a Stef ana son bring the word. Into common use, and every spell of hot 'weather does the same thing. But we seldom speak of the schools of the far North. The schools of Alaska ore serving as social centres to an extent hardly to he rivaled In the rest of the American States. Another Interesting fact about them Is that the pupils never have to be sent home because of the scorching heat The Farthest North school In the Western hemisphere Is located at Point Barrow, which is Alaska's nearest approach to the Pole. There are 77 schools In Alaska, with an enrolment of S683 and on average attendance of 1797. Some are on the frozen ocean, in touch with the mainland only once or twice year. For eight months all of them, ex- cept those on the southern coast are reached only by frozen trails. The work of the teacher is necessarily one of self-denial and hardship. There has lately been a remarkable In crease In the use of English among the Eski mo population, every church service now In cluding responsive reading from the English text of the Bible, In which a large percentage of the congregation joins. Generally the Es kimo youths are quick to learn. They read well, always with the spirit though not al ways with the understanding. But they are eager for the, explanations and Interpreta tions which frequently require patience and ingenuity. The pupils are good at arithme tic, and some ore rapid in mental work. They have a strong natural Instinct for imitation, which stands them in good stead in writing and map making, and they are surprisingly good In spelling and composi tion, while all the children above the first grade keep diaries throughout the term. Practically the entire population totally ab stains from drink, so that the problem of drunkenness hardly enters at alt But there is, on the contrary, a vast use of tobacco among children as well as adults, and tho most Inveterate users of It are women, who, once In the grip of the habit, are more of slaves to it than the men. On the other hand, the district bathtub Is a delight al most to the point of dissipation. One of the teachers says that it Is a special feature of the school life in his district "It Is no tmr common Bight to see four boys in a tub at a time." They are so In love with good, warm waler that it i' difficult at times to prevent them, taking two baths a day. Bad housing Is largely responsible for tuberculosis and many other diseases. There, are all-night dances In crowded, lll-ventl-lated rooms. Business knowledge is being' extended. Furs can be sold through agen cies or by mall, and the Esklbo is quick to take advantage of the chance. The pur chase of reindeer has helped the whole com mercial life, and every one Is eager to be come an owner, this being specially true of tho boys who go to camps in summer, learn ing the habits and traits of the deer as well as helping with the care and herding. . NATIONAL POINT OP VD3W .Nf,..SneJ!n'1!vllual or bank- wHt he compelled to subscribe to the Franco-British loan. It Is pre-eminently a voluntary matter all around. JinaV"?110". Hberty "Hld or his neu trality jeopardlzed.-Clevelana Plain Dealen It Is fashionable nowadays to say "no" to the .U!'lVen V "Utt, ar'nk"l time when .J,.W.?,...5c.Bln of mollycoddilshness. Men who Srtnv .r,, ?M. of u' and those who do Times tY d,lln't Washington .J',1! kII""1' that the dlpleroatlo service n ,.! re.mv from the "pap" clasalBca t ??' JrJ ved Xr0.m Wwure at domsetla poll. iSli - Lpromo.t,on.Jlnd "'motions be based 1 Jnn """"i1- Tbat ta the flrst reform In Press? PrPar1ne Prosram.-arand Rapjds History will one day do luatlea tn tha m. cuYni'nS' '"$ &Chbm i-Jf V0Ja ?n?,nf over here hats in hand to th.r.wW.h,at T tebfl the debtor natli. tne largest sum of money ever raiaad bv aay Bt P,:rnM6a out" - &HoSa2 " n . Th awry mak. . - ., . ,. y- M Is ae Btae IT ff mjfiK .set -a aT WIMJ lt "He aH 2aaT S", aW " aSisaaZ' "" w wmissiiM Cat I s w I vJ . f