ms W'i 'tV Sfjs H I 1 ' .'ii a V AV'W Irf. SM I". LA Wtng tijf2' 5Ss& Hedge PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANX crnua ir. k. curvrjs, rmiDn A A.rlM If, Ludlnaion, Vict President! Jotm . V- Martin. Betratarr and Treasureri Philip 8. It fr ,A,,,wtyn "-.wiiiiame, nn J. spurston, ' jjf r. H, Whtltr, Directors. " . '" EDITORIAL BOAnRi ! '"" EDITORIAL BOAnRl Ctaoi It. K. CoiTU, Chairman, i WHALET IMIter 1 .."f; ,.A r. n. iTJi-.i? V Wi l . ifV fOHM C. MAItTIN..anraI jlusjnese Manartr t? 'n fit "Si t Wi vjll pr 4W 85 Published 4allr at runtiq l.inon rulMlnr. , Independence Square, Philadelphia, Lapoae Csstbii,,,, Broad and Chestnut Street ATLiKTio OiTt., , .,.,., . .'rstj-lfiln Iliilldlna- Nw YoK. ,,,,,,...,, ,200 Metropolitan Tonrsr CTOIT....... ...,,...,403 Ford llull.llna . Lome,,., 100 Kullerton Uullitlnc Cancioe .,,...,,.,,.,..11102 Trlh HutUIng TfEWS DUHEAUB! WnmifOTO' TlcBiiD rttars nulMIn Niw Tokk lJLaaAU.,..,,,fh Tlnfi Ilulldinx BcatlH nuillD ...90 Ftledrlchstrass Loypom Ill'UlD ,. Marconi House. Htrand Pi Uvaiau ,,..32 Hue Louis e Orand HUnscniPTioK TEnits The ErtitiNO Ltnacn U eei-yed to eubecrlbera In Philadelphia and aurrnundlnff fowna at the fata of twelve. (IS) cent per week, payable to the carrier. .. Tir mall to point outside of Philadelphia, In the United Stales, Canada or United States poa eeailona, post free, fifty (C0 centa per month. Six (10) dollars per rear, payable In Mvance. To all fore Ian countrlea one (It) dollar per aonth. None Subscriber wishing" nddres charred Bust viva old aa well aa new address. UEH, MM WALNUT KEVSTO.NE, MAIN JM0 Rf Address all communications to Evening dgtr, Independence Square, I'MUultlnlita, t e VHTiBfD it Tin iiiitiiLriiu roKTorrics i sccond-clis UAir, UATiaa. FMUdtlphU, Mender, Auiuit , 1917 1 -' f' . "If It.. a1 TWMHnwWA" OUR FIRST LINE OF DEFENSE TN QUEPN'S HAUj Baturtjay Lloyd Qeorge In opo nontcnco swept nil lncl dentals asldo and showed beyond peratl Venture why tho United States 1b nnd iad to be a belligerent. "If EnBland had not gono into tho war with her wholo trcngth," ho said, "tho Monroe Doctrlno would have been treated as a 'scrap of paper' by Germany." The revelations of German purpose and German ambition now being made by Ambassador Gerard through the columns of tho Public Ledger remove all doubt. A mania had seized on tho war lords. By brute forco they had robbed Denmark, Austria and Prance In turn of fair pos sessions. Tho mailed fist had proved lt elf the greatest of all territory-grabbers. Bismarck and the men associated with him In the organization of modern Ger many did not dare go further. They had expanded Prussian Influence beyond their wildest hopes and they doubted if tho World would enduro further aggression. But the present Kaiser had a greater vision. Ho subsidized German Industries p.nd revolutionized the industrial status of the country. He Bent Gorman propa gandists into all parts of tho world. IIo read Mahan's book disclosing tho Influ ence of sea power on history, so ho had a naval league formed and began the crea tion of a great navy. Ho tried by every conceivable device to prevent England from keeping paco with this construction program, hoping to fool her as ho had fooled his neighbors in a military way, for they did not keep paco with his war preparations, being lulled Into a feeling of security, ''Then at last, believing that England had been persuaded to pursue a policy of neutrality, he throw his legions across Belgium and began tho brazen pro gram whldh ho believed would leave the Whole world hclpleis at his feet. The German war lords are far-seeing, Paris was 'but a way-station In their plans. yith It taken, they could cross the Chan nel and dump their veteran armies on de fenseless London. And after London! Ah, all South America under tho German yoke,' and, If tho United States objected, New York itself should bo a Teuton out post and tho Atlantic from pole to pole It German sea. Americans hoped that the program of devilry hod been definitely stopped at the Marne. They expected that the British army, growing In might, would overwhelm t In the second year. Not until this February did it finally dawn on all men that the attack on free Institutions was rooted deeper, that It dared challenge the Whole world and that already it Insisted on bringing the United States Into the conflict. The unrestricted U-boat cam paign ttos not merely a notlco to the United States to get off the seas; it was a notice also that forever after the United States should formulate Its foreign pol icy, according to German dictation. Had we yielded to German presumption In February, In another February a vic torious Germany would have announced her refusal to abide by the Monroe Poctrlne and militarism would havo established Its bases in the Western Hcmlaphere. We fight a .defepslye battje, even plough the scene of it Js in France. Civilization has annihilated distance; by so doing f has tipped overboard the natural defenses of America. A necessary complement for our' protection Is annlhlla ( tlon of militarism. Our first line of de fense has moved from t) Atlantic coast o the frontiers of France. This amazing fact is tha sober trutn. The nation would doubt It to Its perl. PROGRESS SQUEEZES OUT INCOMPETENTS fe ;, j PHILADELPHIA'S politicians and vot-K- era are no batter 'and no worse than ( ; prjtw York's brand. Human nature being ri T'fepictly the same in the two cities, it ( pwuld be' foolish, to say that the clean-up $1 political life in Manhattan meant tnat bad made great strides there r J; ; ?, "" Terk'haa In recent .years corns to realize that a vast municipal organism aim ply cannot bo run by men who would not be competent to run a business estab lishment employing several thousand men. The Tahimany Mayors havo been squeezed out of existence by tho mere growth and selftconsclous progress of a city whose business had become too inv portant to be trifled v'tti. Wo nro about to Bee the samn process here. Just as tt would bo Impossible to hand tho Baldwin Locomotive Works over in childish men who would np'polnt their relatlvps to Im portant posts n tho management, or change their minds i,pvnn tlrnps n week, so it will be Impossible In hand Philadel phia over to a new set of Iwnmpptcnts. not hlep wiirrn c Tim legend of French pxhaiiRtlnn, told with blustering giro by tho German Junker and with sympathetic pathos by not a few misinformed Americans, is shat tered to ncgllgthlo fragments by tho mag nificent phalanx of farts inarshalnd by High Commissioner Andro Tnidluii In his explicit and iiuthoiltnllvo letter to Sccrc tary Baker. Doubtless the Teuton mllltuty cIIiiub will tako siiltoblo tare tlint this complete expose of Its fuvoilte faliy talo does not reach tho deluded German pen. pie. Victorious glum alone will inaKo tho refutation convincing to tho Knisui's btib jeets. But In America It Is Instantly and hap pily inovltoblo that tho Ntory tint "Kinnce Is bled whlto"bu licntruffii til unheard Wo havo long thrilled nt French t mirage Wo havo tingled ut tho gloilous spctttirlo of Fronch prldo and Fiench devotion It Heomed, Imleid.all but Impossible that any nation could make such heroic Kaeiltlces without marked diminution of strength. M. Tardleu's letter, accurate, xpeolflc, brlst ling with mighty flguiiH almost dlnp.18 slonatcly assembled, shows that with it cur deep lovo for our first Ally wo had forgotten how to reckon with Fiance. Tho French lino today Is held by 3,000,. 000 men, a million more than weio main, talncd in tho field by the Republic at tho beginning of the war. On the western front Gencrul Petuln's aimles hold E71 kilometers, British troops hold 13S and Belgian twenty-beven. Since the battle of the Marne, tho percentage of Fiench casualties In proportion to the total num ber of men mobilized has decicaied from 6.41 to 1.28. In heavy nitlllciy In August, 1914, Franco had 300 guns. She now has CO00. Three years ugo tho capacity of tho "76's" was 13,000 shots a day Now It is 2C0.000. Bather incidentally M. Tar rtleu adds that Franco has completely re equipped and reaimed tho Belgian, Serbian and Greek armies. Wo havo uhvays known that Fianco was brulo. Wo Itain now through it re futable olllcfal sources that aftei three ycais of supei human btrlfo she is still mi perbly strong. Altogether Imincjbuubla l? now tho tribute which civilization must pay to a mliacle wot king nation thiough countlcsE ages. TAKING LIQUOIt OUT OF POLITICS WG ARK apparently about to see a na tional party which har maintained or ganization since 1872 go out of existence. The Prohibition amendment, passed by tho Senate and doubtless to bo passed by the House, when once reforrcd to tho States wll relieve ubout 250,000 "conbdence voters" of tho necessity of nominating presidential and congressional candidates. There can bo no excuse for demanding a Prohibition administration when tho Gov. eminent has granted tho supreme icquest of the Prohibition party tho submlbsion of tho "Eighteenth Amendment," Prohlbi tiqnlets will thus bo enabled to havo effectual opinions on great national Issues, as members of the Republican and Demo cratic parties, an Invigorating gain for responsible citizenship in geneial, nota bly clarifying tho political thought of tho nation. Congress was never the proper place for the Prohibition propaganda. Noth ing that was ever said In either chamber about temperance or abstlnenco could affect tho moral tone of the nation. If tho amendment had been passed foity flvo years ago, with nn lndeflnlto tlmo for ratification, we would be no nearer or farther from national prohibition than we are as things turned out. Tho Prohibi tionists simply used politics as a form ol advertisement. They put the nvetage voter in tho position of voting for liquor, and, while most men continued to voto for liquor, they could not go on doing so without considering whether or not they should drink as much of It nu before. Prohibition arguments awoke employers to tho realization that sober employes were the best kind to have. Thus tho "drys" were gaining social victories while suffering political defeats tho victories that count most. No friend of temperance can regret, however, that this tempting form of ad vertisement has been frustrated by Its own success, Tho Prohibitionists are driving themselves out of congressional affairs, ond must now put their whole effort whero it should always havo been exerted, In social education and local democratic legislation to give naturally "dry" communities the right to bo really "dry." Already there arc signs that they pee the change, as, for example, the $t,000,000 advertising campaign proposed by the Federal Council of tho Churches of Christ In America. Wo can expect to see much better work done for temper once, nopr that Prohibitionists need no longer be the allies of politicians who don't care a snap of their fingers about the mon questions nvolyed, and whose "yorjt for tie drys" has often done more to becloud and delay tho settlement of the Issue than to advance It. The surest auguries of peace are the guns of Hatg, The' Aufltrlana are making great progress In conquering Austria. The ways of diplomacy are mys terious. It made war on forty eight hours' notice. It may proyo as neat a juggler In unmaking it. i Th'tre is one thing a man should guard above all others, and that' is his health. Less work on a hot day means better work on a cool one. Down In South Carolina "Cole" pease is preaching that this Is an un- war-, avery ihm he' saakM a KLj "SIZjENCE of god. IS IMPRESSIVE" nil A Priest's Rebuke to a Bereaved Father nnd the Reflections of y a Man Who Knows War Ily HENRI HAZIN Blair Correspond! ol the Evening ledger in France. PA11I8, July IB. I STUNT a recent ovenlng In the company of a dozen tnfti if havo Fomcthlng of reputation In the arts and professions they follow. Tlioy ttcro painters, litterateurs, Journalists of International reputation, and a priest of tlin Ilomnn ruthollc Church, pnslor of ono of tlio most Important churches In Paris Home, with hlm, were devout Otliprs were of liberal vliiw. Ilul hey all knew each other, and, what Is more, Iked each other for the man In rsch of them respecting where dlfn'- rlnn with opinions. Tho war wns, of coiirfe, the nu'ii topic of convcraatlon, Its horrors, Its duration, Its heroisms, Its countless examples nf de votion nnd wicrlfloe, Its pretent phnse of union wlmrcln tlio Issuo Is narrowed down to a conflict between the human ruro with right on ono side. ng.ilnRt tlio Herman raco with wrong upon tho other. Ono man, who had lobt thrro sons, tlio last within a month tit r, my, suddenly re- pro tchid Providence for permitting rontlii ti.uico of a thrco jeani' mussacro with tlm IhBiio so clear, forte ihtlng that over tho bca wiro thousands of fntlieni nnd niothtis doomed, through this vurv rontltiunnre, to sorrowB tiny could not now fully undir Ktiind, and unking why tho triumph of right nnd JiiHtlre should tiitnll now grief and unborn mourning. Tho prleht, who had been silent lit Ilia main, sutlcluilj spake ns If lomlng out of ii reverie ialiig Jiift thcro words: 'The sllcnco of God Is hnprcsMvc and be yond our understanding" No rcpty was made, and presently the lit tle company illhperbed. "But God Has Spoken" On my way homo I thought of his words, trjlng to dissect llieli meaning, to fathom tho thought that gavo birth to them And suddenly It Hushed across my mind that If Ood was, or seemed to us who ieo In be fogged vision, apparently blltnt ns to Ills Almighty nlms, It wns becauso Ho had al ready i-pnken, and thnt wo had not or per haps would not understand Tor nre wo not dally unworthy of listen ing to Hlm7 Are wo silent enough, sincere ly prayerful enoqgh7 Are we. of sufficient faith Do wo not flippantly protest too much, unliumlily dlscourbe too much, llko too well tho sound of our own voices, wast ing our energy In bonorous nnd us-tless phra&e? Aro wo given enough to soli tude? Are wo sclf-didaetlc enough? Wo Ubten eagerly for tho echo of battle, and tho nearer echoes upon tho highways about us The least rumor, the flimsiest new pronunclamento, tho latest huo apd cry, mivliap hair Invented, occupies and agitates us Wo llvo In too Ilttlo Intimacy with ourselves, strangers to our medltntlons and our thoughts And thus, most of us have but a vaguo Idea of even tho stupen dous present In which wo aro living. Wo Ignore or condemn It as It mars nnd bruises our hopes and our desires. We have In ability to comprehend, Impotence hi taking sufllclcnt p ilns at breadth of understanding So that which conies haphazard to our dlbcernment wo note but In Its passing, superficially, as would a curious child In capable of reflection, a child nmuseJ nt a new toy, frightened at u new fear, without the capacity of probing as to tho why, tlio imans, the aim, tho end. Wo do not dlagnoso nor do wo suspect, perhaps, tho relations of things and events to each other, relations often obscurely and lengthily distant, jet In some measure trae'o ablo In reason or logic through effort and meditation. Hut tho facet satisfies us; tho outer crust spelling appearances s the sum nnd subbtunce of our dajs; wo nto mildly Interested or slightly diverted or offended; wo do not grasp Montaigne's meaning when ho spoke of "beallng himself within his library"; wo do not, In other words, "take tho tlmo born of desire ' to philosophize upon events, to traco their caubes as we can, to understand In part their Intents and consequences. Wo do not lntcnogato ourselves, nor truly obbervo Wo do not genuinely look about us, beneath us, nbovo us, nor In substanro ccerclbo the God-glvcn gift of thought to humans, tho highest of tho Almighty's blessings. How We Can Hear God's Voice Tor It is In our power at least to live in something of a twilight Instead of darkness. It is ours to choose. And most of us aro content w lth plalntlxonrralginiciit of this or that, suiting our fantasies nnd our desires, remaining In great proportion tho butts of error and Illusion. Out of tho latter at any rate we build Idols, as have tald ancient philosophers, we build In hope for good, a mirage created by ourbelves, a. mirage with nothing of logic or reason in its foundation, unsolld In Its construction nnd architecture, becauto It Is founded upon tho sands of ap pearances or hypothesis alone, Others do likewise, tell us of their dreams and wo add them to our own, because they aro pleaidng, or because they embody tho bum and substance of our hopes Wo lack tho humility or the sentiment or tho under standing of our own Inadequacy. Wo substi tute our petty alms and desires, our little combinations for and efforts for an under standing, however vague, of tho Inscrutable ways of God In Itself a lack of humility. I feel that In this partial diagnosis of tho priestly sentence Inciting this writing perhaps I lay clear something of tho unspoken thought behind It. For when this priest spoke of God's silence, tt waa neither In Intent of complaint nor aston ishment. Ho merely opened the gate through which Invitation to thought comet at the abklng, and rebuked those among us who. llko tho 'mass of our fellows, talk aloud, saying nothing. Ho but counseled a little reserve, a silence of meditation that would better fit us for Interpreting and comprehending tho silence of God, that; thus wo might be permitted approach Jo tho outer ridge of His meaning. Would the world bo better If this view of earthly things were common Instead of being most rar7 I think so; nnd 'In the thinking am reminded of liaclne's "Atha Ile," of Ahnor's complaint to Joab, tho high priest, upon the silence of the qod of Israel and of Josh's reply. We cannot all partake or smypathlzo with tho fath and the certitude of Jpab. Justice, liberty, conscience have their be lievers, too, and their faith Is as stable as that of the Christian. Let us combine them In one and keep them over green and bright before us, o supporting column for our patience, a staff to lean upon in these times that try men's souls. Ood's sllencaVJs only becauso we have not truly listened. God's triumph Is as sure as tomorrow's sun. We are but wealfllpgs, unable to understand. If we who know whjat this war s, and you who read, having it till to learn In personal eocrlflce, wll Jean upon Him, He will Jaad us to the end In volving victory and triumph for our pause of right, of Justice, of honor. If the path seems dark, if the way is full of thorns, It Is because His holy ways have bo prer scr)bpd. And we will see Its distant light beyond us, If, ear to tho ground, we llstep as He speaks, as He speaks constantly, as He nAB.Mnu id j'vcwtijij tu mi i.oi.ut wfl) luw; given iua uuru ana uut pw. Ml jr. Tom Daly's Column ' Tim VILLAGE rPEf (Continued from Saturday) Whenever it's a (Saturday an' half your u-orff to through An' some one call to tace lot out, pray uiat are you. to dot An' tf the caller has a car tvith only seats for tfto i'no wouldn't jump to ride In fo see what news Is newt Ohl Colonel Kolb's n baker man, W Colo nel Kolh's no loafer When thcr&s a decent road ahead an' h& his only "showfer," An' far across the shining hills his caun- tty home an' dinner Aro calltna him to speed It up. Who ti.uuhln't be a slnnert Who wouldn't say that holding on with fingertips prehensile it'ne tnora exhilarating than the frel of lllalsdcll pencltt An' If the thrill of riding ictlh the tempter overcame me An' made me chuck the work In hand, I unndcr who couVl blame ?ite. Tiin III on Out of tho heat Of tho brlck-wallPd street, To tho country toad And Home tho goad! i'olsrd on thn hill. With her heart n-thrlll, Awaiting her wings, The motor sings. Spread her wings vvldel And nlort, clear-eyed, Take tho vvas you know And let her got Dip to tho vnlo, Past the hedge-rows fail; 'Twlxt the fields of corn. Lift up your horn. This hill, tho next, Are of ruts unvoxed; Tnko thorn both on high ' And fly, man, fly! Slow down the paco For this awkward place. Now ahead; full play Avvnyl away! Sunset's to spill On tho highest hill But ii purer gold Its shadows hold. For thero wo turn Where the home lights burn, And our wild ride ends As night descends. If you'll ncnll last Saturday and think of It thii minute You'll readily agree with me the smile of Ood was in it. An' granting that you must admit, what logically follows, tt was a day to be abroad on happy hills an' hallows An' not to cat your heart out in an office close an' musty, Like grouches old an' crusty when you should be young an' lusty. Ohl better far to seek the beauty Nature Is i dealing Than try to pull a poem from the cob webs on the celling I IN THE AUGUST NIGHT The day Is done, with all the heat That swathed tho swooning city. Tho dusk that falls no cool and sweet Is doubly sweet with pity. To thoso the blazing sun oppressed, What tlmo ho played the hector, The night-wind comes from out tho west, A Ilebo bearing nectar. Impartially she gives to all A blessed draught ecstatic; The ennuyo in pleasure's hall, Tho sick child In the attic. She seeks the squalid haunts of sin, With gentle self abasement, Sho steals with inspiration In The poet's open casement. I watch tho pensive poet there, Beside his window dreaming. To him the night, bo calm and fair, With rhapsodies Is teeming. Up through tho fields of twinkling spheres His raptured soul Is winging, And In his fancy's flight ho hears The very heavens singing. Sing, poet! Sing the night-wind's song, And weave your fancies through It; Some heart, world-weary, In the throng Will beat responsive to It. Bo, when on such a Saturday but half yotr work is through An' soma ono calls to take you out, pray what arc you to dot An' tf the caller has a car with only seats for two, Who wouldn't jump to ride In It to see tchat news is newt mMm&V ssssssMratnTJ THE after-dinner or luncheon speaker who Bpouts geysers of statistics nnd of efllclency formulae for tho benefit of clvlo and commercial bodies might bo sur prised and shocked if some other statisti cian could lay before him figures showing what percentage of his hearers vvero helped n the least by his message. Tho business man who has learned a new cross-lots path to success doesn't go nround erecting finger-posts to any grout extent. But the bwt, collector we eyer knew 'put us wise to this trick sevetul days ago: 'A man who owed me a bunch of money would let me talk to him over the tele phone, hut when I went to his office he was ulways out. One day J telephoned to him from an offlco next door to his. He answered and I told him I was glad to catch hrn Jn his ofl)ce apd would he wait a minute? Then I hurried Into his build ing and when the attendant tried to bar my way I assured hm Mr, Slopay wca waiting to tak to mp. We'll go n to gether,' I said, 'and we'll 'find him with his ear to the phone.' I collected my money." THE LADY WITH THE GINGHAM APHON Says: "Days, d'ye mind, I don't speak to the neighbor woman next door bekase I'm too busyin' other days rm top good na, a....J tl A. J MMMa SesV.J.. . . tt y e p? a rv tmmq '...EEdlTi? W THE INSECT THE VOICE OP THE PEOPLE Teuton "Kultur" Philosophy and the Power of Prayer Amer ica's Potash Resources This Department Ii tree to all readers viho lolslt to express thilr opinions on subjects of current Interest. It is an open orum and the Evening Lcdair assumes no responsibility tor the tlcua ol Its eorrcspondents. Litters must be algiud by the name and addnss ol the turllcV, not niccsiartlv lor publication, but o a puaremtee 0 good Jaith. GERMAN MATERIALISM To the Editor of tha Evening Ledger: Sir In your Inspiring editorial on Satur day, entitled "In Prajer Is the Power of Many Army Corps," ou speak of the greedy materialism of tho alchemists who, catching a glimpse of tho wonders of chemistry, thought they could create untold wealth If only they could find the philos opher's stone, which would transmute all baser substances Into gold They made tho simo blunder that 'tho Germans aro now making, for they misin terpreted what I havo long believed to In a profound spiritual messago delivered by somo unidentified religious teacher of the early centuiles .This prophet, doubtlcs, dcclind that there was a formula wheh, If applied to the lllng of men, would trans form all those things which seem unwoithy Into the most precious nnd most-to-be-de-slrcd possessions of men IIo was using a metaphor In speaking of a spiritual con cept of life, a concept whuui raises tho humblest duties to tho rank of thoso which seem highest, becauso all alll'e aie neces sary to be done. George Herbert sensed tho snmo truth when, 300 jears ago, ho prayed that God would teach him to teo that whatever he did "to do it as for Thee." He continued: A servant with this clauee Mikea drudgery dllnc Wlui sweeps a room nu for Thy laws Mukca that un) th' action fine. This la the- fnmniia atonn 'that turnelli all In cold For thit which (Joti iloth touch and own Cannot for lees bo Bold, Hut the alchcmlstB sought for a mnterlal substance and to chango other materials Into something better. They missed tho spiritual significance of llfo and wcro un able to comprehend tho power of spiritual forces In llko manner, tho Germans of to day seem to think that 'kultur" Is a sort of phllotopher's stone that will chango tho world Into n acrmnn planet. Their God Is a German God nnd they are puffed up with the conceit of men who know ns littln of the forces that rulo tho world as the alchemists knew of tho constitution of matter. The permanent things nre lofty Ideals, nnd faith In them will transform this world In tlmo into a better plnco where such materialistic dreams as fill the German mind wl have no place. Tho Alllos are workers together -with God to hasten the day when faith shall triumph and tho pray, ers of the .righteous shall avail over the powers of darkness. G. W, D. Philadelphia, August 6, POTASH SUPPLY GUARANTEED To ie Editor of ths Evening Ledger: Sir In muklng this broad statement the writer is mindful of the apprehension and timidity of capital Investing In what s virtually an untried field, one over which has hovered tho scepter of German mopopoly of this Important salt slnco the famous mfnes at Strassfort were discovered In 1660. So deeply and adroitly has the German potash propaganda Inculcated on to the very fiber of our mapufacturfera and cap tallsts the futility of any other source, of poash that what little has been done to prove the absurdity of bucii erroneous state ments has been at a tremendous cost and sacrifice. But light Is breaking; our natural re sources, tremendous as they are, are, ever ready to band over to scientists, capital and husbands of industry not only great wealth to the pioneers, bu( a continuous and per manent flow Into tho wealth of our country through the ages to pome, and what Is in finitely greater to every true American, na tional Independence from the dictation of m raaMVifngwi Bpeaks of the exaggerated Idea of the value of potnh ns an e'-'-entlnl clement in artificial feitlllzer. The answer to this Is that Ger many used before tho war and her area Is less than tho State of Texas twice as much potash ns we did, and her average of wheat per acre was 31 2 bubhcls against 14 7 bushels per acre In America. And Ger man) 's Inciease In bushels per aero In ten jeais previous to the war was 47.8 per cent nnd Ameilca 15 7 p?r cent in ten years pre vloui to the war. The same conditions held good, nnd even more so regarding ro, oats, barley and pitatocs; In fact, the average Vleld of potatoes In Get many per aero pre vious to the war was J10 bushels. Hvery faimer knows that nn average of 100 bush els per aero Is tremendous on our broad acres Tho sam conditions held good In Hol land With an nrca cnual to that of New Jersey nnd Connecticut, sho used three times as much potash per aqo as these States and a total amount of one-seventh our entire consumption previous to tho war hhe produced crops tvvlco or thrlco as laige as tho nverago jleld of our farmers Thero Is no substitute for potash; It Is as Btaplo ns gold ; a component of animal, min eral and vegetable existence. Aa u plant food thero Is nothing to take Its place; It has a value In the way of nutrition to vege table llfo that Is Just as essential and Just ns Important as a well-balanced diet Is to tho sustcnanco of the human body. This article proceeds to deal with the "disappointing progress toward discovering new sources ot potash." Men of the highest scientific nttalnment, engineers of nblllty and success, havo given as their opinion that deposits of such magnltudp In one of our country's natural resources alone contains sufficient potash to Bupply America for generations anil commercially compete with German even in normal times without a tariff protection. However, If our statesmen would take tlio broad, sens ble view of tho Immense Im portance of potash as one of tho essentials to our national life and place a tariff on tho Importation of potash salts, it would bo but a llttjo while until our different national re sources would yield all the potash we could use And the great Increase of food from our broad acres Cauld feed tho world. And we, too, oiuld glvo employement to an army of laborers, as Germany does, to moro than 36,000 laborers In normal times In her potash Industry. This article further Implies that no mate rial success has" been obtained In thn pro duction of potash from alunlto. If any ono will tnko the troublo or oppor tunity to look up the reports filed with the State of Utah for 1916, which reports are under oath, nnd at the sanio time tho net profits are subjected to a State tax, will find tho report of n company that Is manu facturing potash from aluntte. Which re port is herein shovyn: Net proceeds for tho year 1916.. $70, 484.76 Gross Income 610,266.45 Cost of operation 539,781.V Net Income being J70.484.7C, arising from production of 2772 1-3 tons of potash. This report nhowB tho entire cost of Installation of plant and expenditures, and beyond ths (25 per ton profit, nnd without the separa tion of any by-product and Its added or prospective value. Therefore, nature onco aealn at I ho rail nnd behest of man s unlocking from hr bountiful resources another of her rich off springs, of which our broad land mothers more than any other apd on earth, Time will develop and conclusively dem. onstruto that It Is ttue In America, as U has been In Europe, that a large consumption ot fertilizer goes hand In hand with a highly developed and Intensive system of agricul. ture. . HOMr.lt C. BLOOM," M. p, Philadelphia, August 5. WANTS DATA DN MEDALS To f is Editor of the Evening Ledgtr; Sir I am obliged to you for your court eous reply to my Inquiry about the inscrip tion pn the Washington medal, but it leaves the original Inscription still a mystery. Your suggested explanation of the faulty Inscrip. tlon, poor Latin ty among Americans of a century ago, Is Just and pertlnppt, witness the motto ef the order of the Clnclnnntl, conspicuous on the notable Civil War mem prlal at the head of Boston Commons under the very nose of the sacred cpdftih. Bui that motto contains a somewhat pardonable solecism; this on the Washington medal contains with some good Latin Some words not only from Latin, but from any Intelllal, ble form. As soon as my health permits it t ever dpes, I shall be Interested In conralt "jZr'l.srJ "rrj moiiad. i won. SmaHIV " - i . -d.1- - rr-w i m ipueiu in rMorfl.. Alt AiflSei a..i.i ' . .."'? What Do You Knowt'-jg UU1Z. Sl Cltiiens of what State 1ib.t made tie ss Tlnlent resistance to the draft Uw ll dote? l What city la the capital of Bidcowtsat Who wns General Krdelll? What notion lm the natlonnl Itotueefl renenmiH cs taken on tne rood-e ouir What la the significance of the en --miiinKiKaie"T - fj nat is the ratlnr of a National i iiiuiH'iniir What is nn natrolnbe? What part of France Is called the MUtte Mho wrote "The Ancient Mariner"! 1 Who.salil "Ulille there Is life tlftnM boiio".' " ) Answers to Saturday's Qulx jl nr i luieci -Miner nnii i,rc ii nmiii I iiwwi to nuiitiite u Joint inptrm l t Four hundred and tnent nlrpIanH ' nt In battle on the "extern fra July. James R. Carllelil. former Secretary tf. iiirr.or, in urn i ri)s illrerior 0 i Indiana anil part of I(eiituck, Tlio river 7lrorz la on the Buio-flHi frontier. An ace limit of forty-five ! fviref Major (icnerul I'rrililnK for, , iiuuru loninianner rr' nerviie in n Detection of , niinffrf!t!ni? ;-nif rrotM of ti iHTMin of (ho I're-hU-'-t art no thief duties of the I :iHtd It ceiret service in times or peice. Ethel n.irrvmnrn -ml Vtirl VI aim eminent nclrexles, vvcre Lorn In fl M!-Illll, Tlif. treaty for the purchnee of tl'f Pi Wrrt. Indie Id the t'nltrd r-fatM Klcneil a jt-nr into InM Snt'irli'. llenJHinln 1'rniiMln mid ''Thno li 1 ClVM til, PMHfMittnl Hlir4i fnr tie tt n ;, little IriniHirnn .ifft deserve Bel Illiertj nor muetj." 10. The. chief lilstorlenl Minree of Illckeni'l Tnlo of ro titles" wux Cnrlile's 'f xrnicii Jif!oiition." A TRIUMPH OF NEPOTISMfl TiruuuiiN oxtcutlvii n Pennsyliamas Philadelphia havo never done Ml for their relatives aa Xhomas McKean, ' was elected Governor of tho Cornm wealth In 1802 McKean appointed j relative after another to lucrative P"'' else prevnlled upon his party to elect th At last, In 1800, t'lla nepotism bocaimf I chief political Issue of the pommunltJ In tho July of that year the florin appointed Dr George Buchanan, hli PPj clan, ns Hill s.claii at tho Lazaretto. Dn Buchanan had for seventeen year bMM ruiicn anu resident of Maryland, not an Ing In Pennsylvania until after the W ment was made. This was IntolerM The Aurora, under tho title. 'Trie H Famllv." unvH tha rnllnurln,? Hat of Pin connected by blood or marriage wl'H I famllv Of thrt Hntcrnni'uhn lipid OlflCf thft KtAtf Willi thn calarlntt nttAChlAI their positions; 1 Thomas McKean, Govcrpnr, ?5MJJ josepn u. "McKean (Bon). Attorney era, $5000; 'Tlminas McKeap. Jr. '3 private secretary, fpu; Tnomas iv Thompson (nenliew). Secretary of tin) S monwenlth, 25p; Andrew Pettlt im law), flour inspector, I6000; Andrew II ard (brother-ln-lavy of Pctttt), auctlOi 82E00' Dr. Dnnrira ItilnVinnan nf UllUH fson-ln-law), Lazaretto physlclap, t Wlllam McKonuan (brother-ln-UVfj Thompson), prothonotary of Wa'W'1'! COUntV. S1000- Andrnu. TTenderSOn (OeS of the Governor), prothonotary of lliuttj aon county, 1800; William maw (cousin of the Governor), brigadier b tor of Huntingdon County. (160! Huested rfnthnr.ln.lnw nl ThomP clerk In the Comptroller's offiCe. fl Joseph Heed (a nr relative of PttHJ Bayard), prothonotary of the PHP" Court, $2509, jifj Even before thin list was nubllshea, 1 Aurora was being sued by the Governofj inree nuei casep, and by Marquie ir T.pfnr ftiA ftlnBo A Titf th tiiihllsher 1 - i-ap wa- tfuj .fis I'ttrM-n sal the defendant In sixty or beventy wj BUltfl. and Wan lfAnlnir Hi. Mtv In A .64 rtant state of turnol wonderlnff wJilJ wQiua puu-iiim net. But w naa nii r frtf thft nnvaamnn a.eaa i. c-sii a-Arl InirV Ulll uuyPMUI WfB tlaPrf fill "'Jj out all the "frferfds pf the pw .1 office, as f,ar as possible, To eopolllMjJ vpiionems, ne appointed wiilism tpai; a PederflllRt. nhiar lutitli-a McKean added tn h'i unpopHttrH"! snemjing tpe annual dinner ' " Ceorge Society In Philadelphia, it WHi ;,p"v. .1" ,r'p Mng ' was urup. iw j Ilepubllcans." a fw days llf 'tiJ annum meeting, Bunpiea ins , toast: "WlllLam lHlt tha mmnun ! ....... ""rv"r ' "'?- -. " . .i "ywiw. fwwL'raoHiM mr