M -' r , Y" Pstwafcias "''HJIILIO LEDGER COMPANY ? 'crwm . k. ccnrtB, pmudmt CtertM IT. loidtriton. Vice PreeMrntl John Jirtln,.Sortry and Treasurer! I'lilllp H. ytHjWiJnhn n. Williams, John J. Spurireon, It. Whiler. mutton. 'EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, lOlT' v,ii .n 'rt HDIT01UAI. HOARD! I Ptsna Vf. T. titi P1iImiii b'JV H. WltALET '. .'. niiiof .MHN f. VAI1TTV. .fl.n.Hl llitsln. If.n.MP - .1 k mi).,-i...i j ... .'.!-. ' -im - - I -A-uuii9nti oauy hi runwo e.aisjaH jcuiicunc. itif.l ndei Independence Sauart, l'hlladelcbla, T.DOM CaSTtuf....Tlrnail aril tfhratnut Htreeta .' ATl.inilo Cm.. I'rtti-Vnlon Ijulkllni. inn -juts aietn .401 1-Oel Metropolitan Tower rioiT , ,. ,4U1 row imiMlnjr Loon ......,,,t0iH KuUerton llullcllna Ut I? U W, -G " .1202 7rieun UullJIne N"EWS nUKEAt'P! w.ihnotos llvmiu met liaildloc Klir Ton IluiiiD Tha Timet Ilutldlns MDOrt Sctuii .Marronl lions. Itranrl Faaia BCBltiti....,.,. ,.?,2 Hue Ioul .a Urand flUBaCItttTIO.V TUKM9 Tha Etnisj I.Kiir.n la served t auuacMbon In I'hlladalnhl. and aurroundlna town" at tha rat of twelve (12J canti ver weak, payablt tt tha carrier. tV tntlt fn Ywilnls nut.M. .if 1 'Mtn.lftlttMa If. tho United Htatts, Canada or United mates po- a !. ma roanth. a vaa to all voataaa free, a fly lam itnts pr St (Sdl dollan Mr .war. fayaUa lu fnrelen rannte(M nti fall rinUsr fee Nome Subscribers wlsl-in addreai chanced ytiMt siva old ai well a new address. JEli, 10-30 VALMJT U.Y3TOM', MAIN J000 cp ' Wddrea ttU communication to J.'rrnfwj ledger. Inttprndtnc Square, J'ilfailcfjiMa. rmrtsD at Tim rninnrtviM votomc as HCOSD-CLASS Mil I. UAnJl l'k.l.dtlpMi. VWdnnd... September! 1917 LEWIS VERSUS LEWIS tK'f Vu' r r. fN MAY 23, speaking In opposition to " the acceptance by tlio city of the Tay lor lease, Mr. William Draper Lewis, us reported In the Evening Llhoek on that date, said: The lease given the 1. It. T. absolute control for the next fifty youi.s of the lines constructed by the cltj. There Is no real i ecapture clause. Tt ue, them Is what is designated u recapture clause; but this clause it drafted on tho as sumption that tho city should not tako back its property without at the same tima buying the property of tho P. It. T. Thii is fundamentally wrong. Tha right of tho city to recapturu its own property should not bo saddled with the condition that the city tako over tho property of tho lei-.ee. Tho P. It. T. has a monopoly of the trect railway uuslne.su In Philadelphia. It has not the money to provide transit facilities needed by tho people. Tho city is willing to pledge its own credit to borrow tho money necessary to con struct theso facilities. If It wishes to litre the P. It. T. to opcutto the city's high-speed lines it should retain tho right to terminate the contract and take back its property at any tlmo after reasonable notice to the company. The recapturo clause as diawn would bo unsound, therefore, even if it pro vided that tho city should buy, when It desired to recapture its own property, the facilities operated by tho P. R. T., and it would still bo iitiboirml even If the constitutional provision limiting tho borrowing capacity of the city did not make it Impossible- for tho city ever to liavo enough borrowing capacity to exercl.se Its right of recapture. Mr. Lewis then went on to. discuss prob able incur: ences of debt in : elation to tho city's borrowing capjeily, and continued: In elthor case, the pioposod recap turo clauso Is Ineffective. This, how ever, is not its fundamental defect. Us fundamental defect li that It prevents the cltu from taking the operation of its own property into 1M ottMi hands until it buys all the property belonging to the lessee. The Smith-Mitten lease. Article XXX, tinder tho caption, "Itlght of Recapture Reserved to tho City," says: Tn addition to the light reserved by tho city under Section Eleventh of the 1907 Contract to purchase all tho prop erty, leaseholds unci franchises of tho Company on or after July 1, 1957, tho City shall have the right nt any time between July 1, 1927, and July 1, 1957, upon giving tho Company six months' notice of its Intention o to do, to termi nate this Contract, recapture its own property and acquire all the Company's property, leaseholds and franchises by paying to tho Company at tho date named in the said notice an amount equal to the amount which has been paid in upon all its capital stock out standing at the time of the purchaso and recapture, together with (a) any dividends on new capital htock unpaid under Article XXII, Paragraph 1, Item A, and (b) an amount equal to any un paid portion of dividends in each je.ir at tho rato of one million five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) per year from tho date upon which this Con tract shall becomo effective to the date of recapture; etc, etc. In other words, the caption, "Right of Recapture Reserved to tho City," appears to be fatally misleading. No right of re capture of its own lines alone is reserved to the city. It can recapture its own lines only by purchasing at the same tlmo the entire property of the P. R, T. Apparently a condition which Mr. Lewis on May 25 declared to be "fundamentally wrong," using the words, "Its (the recap ture clause's) fundamental defect is that It prevents the city from taking tho operation of Its own property Into its own hands until it buys all tho property be. longing to the lessee," ceased to be n "fundamental defect" on August 17, when "Mr. Lewis stamped the Smith-Mitten lease .'llh hbe nnnroval nnrl annenrerl nu li v3 apecial sponsor. V No .matter1 how hateful In operation the v proposed lease nilght be to the people, no L,v(nauer now ratal w tue puouo interest. k Sfiijao- process under the sun could tho p of jihe company'on the city's lines be '; .... it Ing that hidden In the Intrlcacjes of tho leaso which Mr. Lewis spoiifois Is it firm and binding contract for the city to pur chaso the propci ty of the P. It. T, at tho expense of tha riders) Tills lcnso Involve tho handling of more than two and one-half billions of dollars, whotoforv it l.s i-tntlttt that no fnndamonlul error llnd thilr way into it. Wu uw .Mr. Lewis. In the interests of clarity, to eNpinln the apparent nntngu. nlsm between his piesent position and that occupied b him In May, fm the dirfeiciiccs nppvur to be Irreconcilable. aussiA must iik iiti:i: IT IH reported from Washington Unit "IlU'iIii holds and piubably will con tinue to ungago tho most nations tlumnlit of the Piesldfint. H will go the limit ir. trying to piuvent tho disruption of the uvw demount!." Wo do not doubt it This w.i.' will havj been wuith all its cost to Immunity If out of It theto emoigos u strong, font.ird-looklng, prugresslvp litis. la, freed forever fiont the Htllllng In fluences of CzMidum. cm think of notnlng moia likely tu "make tho vvoild safe for deinooiucy" thuu the uclilovo ment of fuo Institutions by n people who inhabit eight and oiu-hulf million mtuuro miles of torrltory, i.tretchlng over two continent. These people are uneduiuti'd. Detnoc lacy villi educate them and thiough edu cation establish them .is tin impenetrable burlier to autocracy In iVnti il Cut ope or an where else. It is a tremendous task for a people who have been giuuml down for centuries to Unci theiiisulVLS Men have to le.u-u how to enjoy llbeitv. Hut If tho Pteaident cm mold tho destiny of Russia at this time unci hold hur true to her dreams, despite nil cal'imltles, ho will accomplish something the hum in ruco can never forget. It Is not just u, matter of winning this war. Wo cm do that without tho aid of Russia, at tho tost of heavier s.u-Ullce. Rut u victory would be but half a victory If u frco Rus. sla were not part of It. HIT TIIK MAKK ADVICES from Germany Indicate that XA.U10 President's nolo hus lilt tho mark. It has strengthened Liberals ntul given a decided Impetus to tho movement toward democratization. The Hermans bellevo In puro thought, if not In puro thoughts, and tho purity of the Presi dent's thinking is not less evident than the purity of his lanmiivo .a.' atrl I s 1 mm), unless "inJ ho company by default 5! ,i ' s i' JSvaltltfully to observe, keep, and fulfill" ,itir WiatIons made It possible for the sXUCtto "apply or a cancellation of the i una ihi uib oniraci; 01 wnicn it Jaa;aiqurtr wVcan find )M prtmB awwlirafcr,a reeapture by UriT Sr ? ?' HMlpTh TIIK WAR'S MIRIIT-IIAVE-UKENS SIDE by sido with the history of tho war will some day bo the mimmoth volumo of Its "mlght-lmve-bccns." On tilts fascinating subject by no means all the returns are et In. Wo know, of com so, how nearly Englanl missed vic tory at tlalllpoll and how Italy's cntianco into the war was wrongly timed, nor mally has a whole set of conditional clauses by which she explains her failure at the .Marne Eleutheilos VcnUelci1- of (iiccce, also contributes bis quota of hypotheses. He insists tli.it if tho pro-German 'King Con Btfintinc had uol arbitrarily vetoed 11 plan of Hellenic intervention on tho side of the Allies in February, 1915, Constan tinople could hnvo bueu captured from tho Turks, who had not then prepared their Htiong Gullipoll defense-', tho sub sequent near-e.-u.tern victories of the Central Powers would lmvo been Impos sible and pcilutps tho war would have been shortened by a je.tr. Dwelling on tho chance thus mts-.ed Is bitter bu-Iness. Consideration of it be comes particularly painful villi the knowledge that tho Allies did not full to dethrone King "Tlno" at a latet date. Thut they hesitated to do so in that ciitl cal February was perhaps partly duo to the Russian LVar'.s disinclination to upset reigning European princes. . Tho democratization of tin- Allies' cause now makes such fc-ais seem me dieval. It was the old nonsense about kings that withheld tho hand of liberty. Venizelos was woith a whole Una of for eign monarchs imposed on Hellas, mother of republics. Tho Entente knows that now to its cost. Perhaps the best way to modify tho pain of the "might-have-beens" is to adopt Dret Harte's philo sophical amendment, "It Is, but it liadn't ought to be " 'Otiwaid with The dvll! Coil." The Kaiser. Can't wo get Mr. Hoover to lis. the prlco of gas? If Mr. Mltchel were Muvor of Phil, adelphla ho could not be re-elected. Yet we suspect that all communi ties ale qulto willing to let negro regi ments light for them. .This Idea that nil of our big guns have been shipped to Prance is entirely wrong. The Colonel l.s still on this side. 1'nclo Sam hus changed tho advice of Punch a little. It now leads: "Ad vice to slnckers about to marry, Don't." The mailed fist Is going to rein state Constantino if he lives long enough, but tho former King has no present plans for Christmas dinner In Athens. Apparently Senator McXlchol Is not afraid to build subways at present prices. Xelthcr was ho afraid that City Hall would tumble down on his head. Tho Germans nt Lens want to know why lu the dickens the Canadians didn't stny at home. Just wait until Perchlng'b boys begin going over the top. The McLemore resolution adopted by tho House yesterday was not n dis graceful one, It merely provided for nn Investigation of the defective ammunl. tlon scandal. In a recent news report, dated from "a Pacific port," occurred the statement that "the Mayor of Ban Francisco re ceived tho envoys," This censorship business is perfectly baffling. v The valor of tlfex pcrmans does not appear to have been tested severely at Riga. The Russiapn iust left. It was much t(ie Mme way when Napoleon went to Mmcciw; j but, my, what tf-diffare iWitwwHct ..- a - . - iJ ?L V J A GREAT CITY PUT UP AT AUCTION; HOW MUCH IS BID FOR PITTSBURGH? Two Political Tigers of Philadelphia in Close Rivalry for the Rich Pickings to Be Pound in Vice-Ridden Municipality n "BIDS-BURGH" 77ifs ii the tccond of a series of flut nrtMet I ; ci staff tcprcsentaUvo of the Uveninii Ledger who has made a trrtoiM study of political conditions in Pitts burgh, trl. ich air cilmott nlthoul prvicdcnt in Ilia history of the Comviottweallh, lly SAMUEL McCOY "riulNU, uuIiik How much am I vJ urfureil? "This lmndsoiuo propct t, consisting of foity-ono nquuiu mites of torrltory. tight hunch ud million dollars' worth of tiiMiblo H-al estate, now offero 1 foi loaso for u poilod of four youra! "How much um I olTured Thu leaso catilos with It tho dNpu,ul of $l,00O.OU() of annual levenue. the appointment of OOdll cltv umplovus, thu control of unlim ited forms of 1 uvuiiu'j! "Miliums lu It. gentlemen, millions! What do 1 he.u ! What do I hum 1 WhuddTheui .' "The big gentleman with the black mustacho has made his offer: now. vvhadd'l'hear fiont tho Uttlci gentlc-ni'tn.' Going, going, 11 nd " It is tho voice of tho auctioneer of a i-tu-enl city, the clt of Plttsbuigh. Hut. ultlioitgli he shouts thut the propot ty !k "going," he cannot ptonounco the woid "gone" until September l!'. Tho sulo husti'l yet been made. The bidding ot the local scekeis after the 1 out! ni of this staggeringly valuable property Is complicated this car by tho entiuuc-e. the noWeless eiitiance, of two veteran blddeis from PhiludelphU. When they packed their grips for Pitts buigh tho two left over thing In their homo city suiono and quiet. Tho two tlgeis of Phlludolphlu, acknowledging thut they had come to a temporary dead lock In their n?ht for supremacy lu Phil adelphia, hud lain down side by side ana were put ring thioatlly. No one foiosces a icciudcsncuco of their quauol beforo the campaign for a new Muyor of I'hlla delphla, in tlio fall of 191S. Thu two ban smoothed their Jowls and como to a com- piomlso In selecting a. "fifty-ltflj" slate for the city olllclals to bo elected this November. Outward harmony In Philadel phia was safo for another ear. Tigers to Divide Spoil Hut their yellow eyes had been lest less, nevertheless They simply could not mako their ees behave. And, shifting them fiom spot to spot, they rested lov ingly at last upon a city 350 miles to tho west of the Delaware, fiom which was wafted tho tantalizing odor that tells of good hunting. lly daylight tho two tlgeis of Philadel phia uio to bo found llng pcaceubly side by side. Hut by night each has been slip ping on noiseless paws thiough the stieets of Plttsbuigh. Tho game has been marked for the kill. Tho date for the killing hus been set. Rut bow will the hI.iIii carcass be divided? Plttsbuigh itself, tho oidiuaiy popula tlon, tli ct is, which guos to woik In tho nioiniug uud woriles over the auny draft and sci.ipes to pay the groceiy bills and behaves Itself on weekdays us well as Sun days und has a good uveiage time raising a family this Pittsburgh, which Includes u light goodly number of voters, has scarcely lecelved an Inkling as yet that two gentlemen living in Philadelphia have any especial concern in tho Plttsbuigh mayoralty campaign. You do not heat tlio names of either Varp or Penrose men tioned by tho man on tho stieet. To the staid Plttsbuigher the light Is still be tween Its home glow 11 politicians. Only tho pi oft ssloiial political observer has come to 11 legalization of tho lnteiest, which the Plttsbuigh light has to th political batons of the eastern cltv. Afiaiil of Doctor Kerr I talked with one such man, nioio lnfoimatlvo than reticent, who forgot for tho moment tho pioverblal silence of his profession. "Anybody who thinks that tho mayor alty light in Pittsburgh has only a local slgnlllcnnco has his eyes shut," bald ho. "Although William A. Magee, appointed Public S01 vice Commissioner by Gov ernor Brumbaugh, who has, for tho lust two ears, usod the weight of his ofllco to strengthen tho Vaie machine, reslgnea as commissioner two weeks ago and an nounced his candidacy for the mayoralty, and although It was lumored that ho would do this two weeks beforo ho ac tually resigned fiom tho Public Service Commission, I was Informed of the plan in Philadelphia in Philadelphia, notice informed by two of the Penrose muchlno leaders themselves that Magee would en ter tho race. And this information camo to me neither two weeks ugo nor one month ago, but thieo months ugo at a tlmo when It was still generally believed that Commissioner Magee would support Dr.'James P. Kerr, chairman of the Pitts burgh Council, for the mayoralty. "It was then that tho Penrose crowd doclded they could take no chances with Doctor Kerr, an Independent. As between Doctor Kerr, who would ceitalnly be against them In the city primaries and who would also bo against them nt the elections, uud Mr. Magee who would certainly bo counted upon to be with them at the elections, there was no choice. "Commissioner Mugee's promises of sup port to Kerr wero broken or avoided In a most ingenious manner. Like tho ulti matum sent to Serbia, a 'request' was made upon Doctor Kerr by Mr. Muget that certain Magoe followers be 'taken care of In the event of Kerr's election Ono of them was to be mado head of th Department of Public Safety. Doctor Kerr refused to Momach the suggestion. Mr. Magee then considered himself absolved of his promise of support to Kerr and en tered the race himself!" In.tho politics of the Stae, It Is of little consequence to the Penrose or the Varo camp who Is elected Mayor of Pitts burgh, so far as today's situation Is con cerned. Rut of the greatest consequence to both camps' is the question: Will Sena tor Peuroso sway the dovernor elected In 1918 or will ho be dominated bjtiio Vares and their counselor, Francis Shunk Brown? And t.he answ4- to that question hangs . ftft'oa the iclatlve strength displayed, at thV ajea- on this vh polls ill Plttsbuigh on September 19 by K. V. Uubcock, thu first Peuroso choice for thu muyorulty, und by W, A, Magee, the Vnru appointee tu tlw Public Service Commission. If tho iltuns of Pittsburgh did not know thut their votes on September 19 wero of vital slgnlllcancu to Phllndclphlu, lliuy ought to know It by tills time. For 1111 opuu attack on the Punrose machine oiitw-unlly 11 violent attack, 110 matter what tho undurgi ounci alliances of the two fuc-tlcii s may be- was mado by the Vine candidate lu beginning Ills cumpalgn last week "I 11111 opposed," said Mr Mugi-e tin equivocally, "to thut ulll ince of solfUh Intel osts which Is culled PeiiroicnUni, which ccintiols the Republican ptrty In tlio Stuto und which, through such cou ncil, is dominating Pittsburgh." On tho same day on which Mr. Maitec made that speech, I talkoel with E, V Rabcock, tlio Ponrowo candidate. "Thoro Isn't a uoubt about It," tald he, leaning forwatcl to ino cotillduntlall, "tho Ma gee crowd will lmvo a lot of mono tc spend for this election. Aten't they gettln' help and succor fiom tlio Kusl? You but your life!" Now theso uto tho stralglit-fiom the shouldor interchanges which establish thn lmpnitanco of Pittsburgh's muyorulty lluht in tho futuro of tho State legtme. The Vico Question Hut what of tho local fight? Is thorc ono In leallty? It's oasy enough for vvould-bo reformers to set up a cry that thero Is "vico" In an gioat city. Tlio vico may oxl3t. but to get legal evidence of vice is "some thing else again." Tho wholosale arrest of alleged offenders in this city n year ago, tlio pondoious examination con ducted by tho Grand Jury, and tho result ing llasco, when nono of tho persons caught In tho raid could bs hold because of tho lack of proper evidence, Is stll. flesh hi Philadelphia's momoi. Hus Pittsburgh nnv leal "undeiworld" of alarming proportions, or are the rumors of such a vicious body moroly rumors? IJsten to tho lcmarks mado by Judge J. MoI Carpenter, a Republican, of the Quni ter Sessions Court, In Pittsburgh lust week. He is talking to tlio tlrund Jury, which convenes tills mouth, befoio tho pilmarles: It is rurtcuth loported that theie mo a number of social clubs In Pitts burgh (others tlinn Judge Carpenter estimated the number of theso clubs to bo no fewer thuu 1000) conducted under their churteis for the llimnclnl gain of one man or a small number of mon. When any club is so conducted It becouu-s a inonuce, a public nuisance, sink of inquity und a bleeder of crime. You will, ut tho piopc-r tlmo, investigate these it-ports carefully vlth the assist anca of those who have made com plaint, the Dlstsict Attorney and per sons acting untlei lilts authoiity und dlicction, Including tho chief of the county detectives, and ulso tho con stables of tho vailous dlstilcts in which theso clubs are said to exist. And then, ufter tills vigorous chut go to the Grand Jury, theie follows a sontenco whoso second word provokes a recollec tion of tho humorists of "Wlts'-burgh." "You may bo able to ascertain the truth or falsity of tho rumors so persistently cli ciliated," said Judge Carpenter. N- What "assistance" can tho Giand Juiy count upon to establish acxeptablo evi dence? That of the District Attorney? Two days after Judge Carpenter's in structions of last week that officer was peremptorily summoned before the Judge and informed that the Judge meant what ho said. Abandoning hope of assistance in that quarter, the Judgo personally in structed a deputy sheriff to closeone no torious club of tho type which' brought out the Court's denunciation. Big Revenues From Clubs Nor is tho "assistance" of the chief of county detectives and Ms force anything but doubtful. Repeated instances of the arrest of county detectives by the city police when tho county detectives were attempting to obtain evidence have been published. Ono Pittsburgh business man said to me last wtok that if he were to undertake a pilvate investigation of the "one-man clubs" It would cost him not less than $100,000 to obtain Incon trovertible evidence. Although wealthy, he didn't have that much money to spend. Operating under charter as "social clubs,'' which can sell liquor to their "members" only when tholr charter con tains such express permission from the Attorney General, It Is alleged that a license clause has been written Into the chartor of a thousand clubs with official connivance. The charge has been brought beforo tho offenso committee of tho Allegheny County Uar Association that the business of rewriting theso char ters has been dispensed to friendly attor neys, the privilege of sailing dliitlllen liquors to the clubs dispensed to one liquor house, tho privilege of selling beer to a bottling concern, and the privilege of installed slot machines for gambling to another syndicate. The revenue collected from the "one-man clubs" by the leaders of the underworld, in return for protec tion from tho city administration. Is estl mated at a half million dollars annually. It might worry borne of those Inteicstca in the continued collection of these rev enues, some of those who smile at the idea of any accomplishment by tho Grand Jury, to know that tho Grand Jury Is pot the only body to whom ovjdence against the "one-man clubs" has been pr will be presented. In a certain guarded office which I ontered In Pittsburgh last week thero are reposing threo little blankbooks, bound In black oilcloth, which, I respect fully submit, are loaded with "dynamite" sufficient to rock Pittsburgh on its sup. porting hills,- How- much Is bid for nids-burgh? The third article oij the Pittsburgh polit. leaf alltiafloii, "Three Leaders In Pitts- ourans ujtaf Moyor,iy campaign," taUi pupo. Tomorrow, .u tjiiTTV. &. WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT? 7 frm &$? tytfm nrEi.fl52L-A - 1pltt)iHSVl. Qv ""' "-tX - ' J DISTRIBUTING THE WAR COSTS Business Men Talk Plainly to Congressmen About Loans and Taxes M.'Mal c orresvondrncr of the 'irnirtff Lidvtr V ASIHNUTO.V, Sept 4 EXPIU'.T financiers talk about bonds and ta.seu with moie gusto than tho average business niun who Is now coming to Con gress with bis grievances. And tho more thn grievances the better Congress undci Hands the extent of the burden which both Ileio Is the grlevanco and Fuggcstlon of a New- York publisher: "Wo would state that the suggested pub lishers' tax of 5 per cent on advertising would increaso our taxes by more than $ij000, and In connection with other tuxe, Federal and State, would likely cat up our entire profits. "We would favor a higher corporation In come) tax rate." And a St Louis chemical eompati ex presses itself llko this: "Why should the successful business man who can make a better proiit than his bss talented competitor und who is a moie vicl uablo e-ltlren than his competitor, be pun ished for this, while the farmer and the professional man who may make ten times hs inueb Fo-called 'excess profit' go scot free? No Just man can say 'that this is right." This concern thinks the whole levenue bonds rind taxes impose upon a nation As a rule, the expert financier argues for bonds should be raised by uniform tax on sales to put tho burden on tho futuia generations of mcichandlse The Farmer Also Kicks Evidently It Is hard to please those who re 10 be taxed tor war necessities. Eveiy bodv Is patriotic, but very few lire going to be satisfied with the war-tax levy, or tho.'ie additional levies' which must be made heie.ifter for war expenses mid to pay Inteiest on our loans Already the -car rilll of the Vnlted States is nearly eqiml tn thai nf Great Urltaln. and If the Allies continue to make demands upon us It will not bo loin? beforo tho United States will have spent more than any one of the bel ligerent nations of Europe It Is iot manufacturers alouo or busi ness men who are complaining. Tho grain miser Is not quite satisfied with his $2 per bushel rate, Ra contends that he is to bo taxed to tho extent of the difference between 12 per bushel and what grain will actually bring. There have been some grain states men In Washington recently who havo tulkod very plainly to some cotton states men about the freedom of cotton from taxes and from tho export embarai which per tnlns to other commodities. It is not cer tain but that sooner or later cotton will havo to pay something or will have to bo restricted by embargo, since It Is now openly charged that cotton Is going Into Germany and Is supplying ammunition with which to shoot up American soldiers. That the fanner has been touched by the Snnato suggestion to tax farmerj' prot'its Is evidenced by resolutions that have rccently been coming to Washington in considerable numbers Take tlio resolutions of the Wil mington Co-operative Truck Glowers' As soclatlon of North Carolina. They start out with tha customary declaiatton of patriot- ui n.m u wnercBB" wnieh declares that they "ask no Immunity or release us farm- ine oiu-iima uemocrat considers that as unfair to the man In the trenches, w ho must help pay tho debt after his lighting l.s done. He also argues that this method of dis tributing the war cost means that those who are making money out of tho war will bo relieved of a Jujt proportion of tho taxes and will have no Interest in bringing the wur to a close It Is so much easier to l--sua bonds than to levy and collect taxes that It Is not necessar to explain why tho effort is being made to popularize) the bond system, It Ins takon more than threo months to pass a $2 000,000,000 tax Mil, whereas the tlrst $7,000,000,000 bond bill passed In 11 das liven tho legislators would rather take the path of least resistance In matters of this kind, which accounts in part for the moderately generous reception of the ncc and larger bond bill of the Ad ministration. Everybody knows that what is borrowed on bonds has to be paid some day, just as taxes aro paid today. Tha difference is that Instead of paying tho obligation now It Is passsd on to other generations of tax payers to pay, principal and Interest and "Interest" on theso new Government obll gitlons Is going to rnako the business man of next year and the year after next and theicafter sit up and take notice. Business Mon Complain Listen for a moment to a few sample complaints, not about tho loan bills which are passing the burden along, but about the $2,000,000,000 tax bill, which has given tho Senate such trouble and which Is onl about one-eighth tho olio of tho aggregate of loans thus far authorized or contem plated by this Congress. Says ono manufacturer i. ten you again and again that if a tax is placed directly on our product It will f ers aml Patilotle Americans troni our full not simply disturb our prof.t. but It will eat our capital and compel us to go to the wall, "We aro not alor.e losing tho best men In our sales and manufacturing department who are going Into tha draft In addition to those who have volunteered beforo, but our mediocre help Is now- receiving nny where from 80 per cent to 120 per cent more than It received two years ago, and there Isn't a raw material that we use that lias not advanced more thun 60 per cent. Take glucose, foi which wo paid 2H cents, and for which we now pay OH cents: tako sugar, for which we paid 6 cents and for which we now pa 8 15 cents, "I certainly cannot understand the Ad ministration, "It might be a good thing to follow up tho fashion and vie with England in piling up an Impossible rational debt, but how they are going to get the country to carry such u debt when they tax the minor In dustries out of existence, is moie than I can understand " That letter camo from Now York. Hero Is another from a large lion manufacturer near Philadelphia. He complains that the Governrnont threatens "to boss ever thing, from tlio salt on our food to the coal we cook It with." "The Civil War, as 1 remember It," says this writer, ''placed the country in a great deal worse position than the war In Europe does, yet we did not then have commissions to suporvUe everybody and everything. We are not only creutlng an army to fight, but a greater one to supervise. If a man should be taken suddenly 111 with colic, apparently he would have to obtain the Government's permission to obtain a stim ulant for his relief, and thot would go hard with the Irish, Joking aside, you are giving us too many commissions. Lawyers to build ships and poaalbty to direct our army la France? experts to regulate prices all except labor, which seenia to be given a free hand.sso long ss It votes right The share of ths burdens of taxation with which to( support our Government," but they sub mit that, whereas, "farming involves the hardest labor, exposure to weather condl tloiis, sunshine and lain, and the greatest of sacrifices In muscle and brawn," there fore t would be better for the Government to iiilse revenue by taxing Inheritances, the contention being that every dollar earned by the farmer Is earned by tho sweat of his !Zl wh1el", Inheritances' reprel!erit neither dollars nor cents, labor nor Invest ment." So that every man seems to huva his ax to grind on this war-tax question. And l..,a5 to bo la'si"i. remember, Is only 2 000,000.000 approximately, wherea the loans In existence and contemplated. If levied as taxes, will amount to eight times ?t,,i.!mlC.t . V.1 thl" ""nation it niay bo ?htennai ,8 .Bencra-' Btock ot "ny n the Un ted States, according to the last circulation statement of tha TreaBuiy De- partment. was not quite $5 600,000,000 J. HAMPTON JlOOlill. A CLEAN BETRAYAL What ought to prove tho finishing btroke to the wi etched rapid transit lease scheme now before Councils Is given this morning by A. Merrltt Taylor. '""ruing In addition to ull of the other InlqultUn vvjilch this lease covers, Mr. Taylor chanrea that it binds the c'ty to buy the property leaseholds and franchises of the Rapid Transit Company, and that the stockhold ers In the end would receive approximately $C0 a share. Furthermore, the patrons of the lines will have to shoulder the city's full Interest charge on the debt to be Incurred for rapid transit development and repay the entire cost of the system, Besides this, the Illegal elght-cent ex change ticket Ib made a permanent fixture, with the certainty of an Increase of the uva-uciei enrv iu dijc vaults. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. ,lmiil linn in my election elhlslons are then In riilliccle.plilR? 1 2. Italian and llritKh inonltni-N ra-e fehtllUf' I'dIi. Where anil whit Is l'ol? .!. About Iioh f:cr Is the Ilka rric'nn. vhlrk the Cierinuntc have Jctttt euiiturecl. frta l'etrnicracl? I. M-iere eurtliqtinke la reported In Uoiota, Where Is thin elt? a. vvhjit U the nine jurul irl snoxin a "net Ink". ". 'J he artificial hnrliorn of Afbrucite katt (Mend hiiTe heen created hy the ew fetriictlon of heme ntone moles. What tcrec moles? . .. Him lire the tlcllantra. ho IS the woii pronounced, and from whit fainoua pt- socle In American hMory tloete the ornil- .. l. on lilke lla inline? K. What, specifically, la meant by "the Mi-lntleiti or wealth"? .! )!"? F'"!' vomiin aa horn at Domnmit lu. What Is the IIDeral iueunuir of "(.tutus nt ante helium"? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz I. "Vonwierts" d'omards) la the leadlntfto .. . ""I'"' "enspnper of Clc mi.in.v. s . S. The Interiiiitlnnul Socialist contcrcnf til Stockholm had been postponed ue ml limes and was lo meet September U a has been dee Ided to postpone it a ah. .!. Ceiime II. VIetlellan uat Vlajor of W Jork. Ills father was the Chll Hil Beneral. "Little vine," nho failed as M ' (he .Army of the 1'otomuc and hi linnllj dismissed. , i. The (rolvcle Cuerre" (Cross of War) hi , , I reneli dernratloil. 5. Hal-oil Rhondela is the Ilrlllsh food di Iro.ler. II. Jeiilje lljlin Is Taiiiinuii) candidate In Vlujor of .ev lork. -, 7. ".sorrntlc lrony"i An Imitation of the in itot or .Socrates, which wus tn prelen I II- iinriitlre In order to draw from Ills fit lorcilor n dlspla of supposed knonlecW. s. V etiliiconih j u niibterraneiui leuutirt' orlalnnlly that under the huslllra of ' sehusliin. near Home. uipord Inirrtal ... I'taee of Peter and I'mil. , U. The most Illiterate countries of Iluropa tn those in the east and southeast of tul continent Kus.la, llulcarla, Greece, If . ..i"1."" a.SerWa. "s 10. Mississippi will celebrate tier one hundred unnlieraary of statehood In Decent THE MISCHIANZA "TO OXE who seriously tries to "unal 1 stand Philadelphia" and the effeet c( Its rich and colorful history and tradltloal upon Its present social llfo can go ttt without studying that curious and slgnlll; cant phenomenon known as "The Mtf c-hlunza," of May 18, 1778. For It Is ' exaggeration to suy that the forces whldl mado that famous fete possible arc stM at work In the Philadelphia of today. t)J Any one who has read Weir Mltchell'i "Hugh Wynne" and "The Ited City" H1 remember that theie was a strong Top element lu the Philadelphia ot Itev olutlot ary times. "Ciadlo of Liberty" this city did Indeed become on July 1, 1776, and It ever will lemaln tho spiritual capital of woild democracy. Hut In splto of nay, because of this fact, the reactionary op' position held Its bend high and predict! the dtre punishment of Its rebel fello townsmen. The "Tory ladles" were not going to give lip lightly tho social pre-eral-nenco they were born to In favor of a.lot of upstart, middle-class republicans. It might not have been so bad if the treason able Declaration had been formulated in Boston or New York. But to make Fhtla delphla the seat of anarchy and rebellion was u crime against the future social ant financial standing of a proud and priri teged class. And on September 27, 1777, little mom than a year ufter we were pledging, our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor, the redcoats of Sir William Howe enur4 Philadelphia and proceeded to attempt W wipe out ull vestiges of the meanlnj and purpose of the great Declaration. Tbf Tory bellep found the English ofneerse con fident of victory, and Incidentally xio) dancers. All that winter Washington and his men starved and froze at Valley J"oi-: and all whiter the festivities In Phtladelpnla continued. Il was a scandal to the gooi people of Philadelphia, the middle-class fott whose sons wero fighting In the rebel armfi and whose descendants have made Phila delphia what It Is, But these good peoP1' always found It hard to express their opin ion : fear of tho redcoats wbb In the air; an so, to all Intents and purposes, Howe found the city apparently as loyal to the KJIng W London more so, In fact, for already tin English opposition was working to end tin war and let America have justice. These Philadelphia Tories can easily " blamed too much. Independence was a art Idea. It needed time to sink In. It seemfd hopeless and unnecessary to man' T&jf liked Sir William Howe. He and hbi 0 cers were giving society the time of, M life. There were Iota of good marrtffSf planned or schemed for. PhlladelphUVdam having their eyes on Kngllali estates, Bo when the lirlttah Government denly decided that Howe wa'e a ranlCfalht and must be Called home at nnm. 'nil Ti tna icsjw iji ueirayui or the people, and oeiMJVqaa. upj in 'anger and de; tney win oe uounei nana and f oot. and- sold' " QcMavWMtwfc'-N' . , 1 ...ir ,in,ua . nail? . a u m. KTaaia m .m. .. - - ',.,i,M..s(a.H. .. . . eviracer x, M.MWP, 'tyl.jf :ziima, ;-. North a golngito pay the piper for all this put unless they take step to kukjL, jJtoial: WHWTlaienC kuetaaM' jt ,ttten by Counclj.'ra'lfjjQBg