rtf ,'r.... EVENING LEDGEB-PHILADELPHXA:, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1917 , 12 '? UAJSTRATSo Leunfn5,sti1CEiiBcr PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CttlUS II. K. CURTIS, FiraitttXT Charles If, Ludtntton, Vice President! John f. Martin secretary ana Treasurer) rniiip . i;onin, John Jl. . Williams John J. Spurgeon, v ii. wnaier, Director! EDITOniAL COXnDl Cries II. K. CcaTti, Chairman. II. WliALET Editor JOHN C. MAnTIN..Oneral Business Manager .Published dally tt Pcntto I.ispnr.n PulMlng, j't Independence Square. Philadelphia, Lcnai CvTit,.., Broad and Chestnut Street! Atlantic Citt Preas-lnlon Bulldlnc New Tear..... ........ 200 Metropolitan Tower Dmoit., .....40.1 Ford Hulldlns- Ht. L.ocij...i ...100R ruilerton Hulldlng Cnioaoo 1202 Irftuite Dulldlng NEWS DUnEAUSl Wisni.vaioN BCBKIU, N. H, Cor, I'ennsyUanta Mr. and 14th St. Nair ToaK Dusts".,, The rime building lojnox Dcaaau Marconi House. Rtrand tans Beat".... 32 .lua Louis lo Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS The Etikino Litnnin It nerved to eubscrlbers Is Philadelphia and surrounding tnwnt at the rate ot twelve (12) centa per week, payable 1o the carrier. Br mall to point outside ot Philadelphia. In the United States. Canada or United mates pos nesslona. posters free, fifty (SO) cents per month. Six (10) dollars per year, payable In advance. To all foreign countries one 01) dollar per month. Nonca Subscribers mlshlnr addrcM chanced must civ old as well a new address. BELL. JOOO WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN J0O0 aTMcfdroj nil rommvnlmfiotn (o Evening Lt&otr, Indeptndcnce BQuart, PMladetphla. - , ,. , , , ivtibed it Tnx rnn-apgirnu rHToricx as ISCUSfc-CLAiS UAll MaTTna Philadelphia. Thuridi;, October 15, 1917 NO PEACE FOR KAISERISM rpiIE persistence of pcuce talk is at once ominous nnd heartening. It is omi nous because much of It originates in sources unfriendly to democracy and is devised to strengthen tho hands of paci fists and Inveigle American public opinion Into demanding a cessation of the enor mous expenditure and preparation now under way. The prodigious machinery of American lam is being brought Into play with mar velous rapidity. It was not dreamed in Germany that this nation would do any thing more than conduct passive warfare. Teutonic secret agents were unanimous In reportlns that American public opin ion4 would never peirnlt conscription, would never countenance transporta tion of an army to France, would never indorse huge loans to foreign nations, would neve. , in fact, allow an thing more than a pretense ot belllger ency. For our honor's sake wo would appear to fight, but for our pocket's sake we would do nothing to hasten tho termination of the conflict and the dis continuance of the enormous profits re sulting from war business. That wa3 the German view, and It is a view still held by a very largo part of the German public. The German Government, on tho other hand, is fully Informed and has begun to reallzo the colossal blunder com mltted by forcing this country Into the war. It is disconcerted by the tremen dous influence ot President Wilson In Russia, an influence which has unques tionably saved tho new Republic and given hope of Its power to ride the storm. It la amazed, too, by the very apparent effect of the Wilson notes on the German mind. It requires no rigorous analysis to show that tho growth of independence throughout Germany has been mamea and progressive for the last six months. More depressing still to the junkers is the increasing disaffection of Austria. And the enormous prestige of America throughout the Balkans Is a factor of really great Importance. To be arrayed against the fabulously rich Giant ot tho West, holder of that Garden of Hcsperldes whence so many Immigrants returned with tales of wealth and gold to prove them, was something more than Hun garian or Bulgarian. had bargained for When fighting the Kaiser's battles. Add to these moral factors, at last so well appreciated by the junker mind, the appalling prodigality of American prepa ration and It is easy to understand tho nervousness ot Berlin and the frantic efforts of the military class to avoid the approaching hurricane. It was all very well to belittle this country and laugh at its military power, but our armies have grown magically, with all tho expe rience of France, England and Italy avail able as an aid In training, and there is no more efficient body of troops in tho world than Pershing's force In France. The British army is now invincible." Winn. Lloyd George. That Is being proved every day. But there was vlrttf ally no British army three years ago. There was no American rray a year ago, but there Is one now and others are on - the way. The American navy has taken half the terror out of the submarine cam palgn, not because It is more efficient than other navies, but It added numbers to, efficiency. We are about to give the Allies complete dominance of the air. So In the three arms, aerial, naval and mili tary, we supply decisive power, and we back it by a moral ascer.Iancy that in. .'' -ereases day by day, week by week, and &k evidenced In the accession of nation after nation to the common cause. It, all comes down to this: The Kaiser U Whipped and ho knows It. His dynasty k.c5tVji"ln danger, his autocratic dreams are wfj ........ ....... i..- .. . .. f JX' "WltnQUv lunner iwu, ma ucapuusm in 'M the edge of ruin, an Imperial Germany no longer a possibility and the whole ructure of destructive domination of the Is about to topple over. The men- of neace la the menace of a peace $,. iMW these desirable and blood-bought 'Yr iaaltsi have been accomplished. We MMrW ay Mtrl the war , fc at government that provoked tt. Our mis slon is th mission we had In Cuba, only on a Grander scale. The heartening ftaturo of peaco talk, on the other hand, Is the testimony It offers of tho approaching dissolution of Teutonic alliances. We look for revolu tionary developments to the south of Ger many beforo the winter breaks. Our entrance Into tho struggle was not a bat tle, but It Is becoming more nnd more apparent that It was civilization's Gettys burg in this superwar. "INSIDE HISTORY" HEN Mr. Trainer, at the recent iron- V git hearing, volunteered tho Informa tion that appropriations for rapid transit were hold up under orders from "above," which orders were that Director Taylor should not get $30,000,000 nor a single dollar more than public opinion could bo persuaded to accept, he did not state the entire proposition. As a. matter of fact, the men "higher up" did not Intend to lot the transit de partment have a nickel. They put through an ordinance with a Joker In It, relying on Director Taylor to recommend that Mayor Blankonburg veto tho aforesaid oidlnunce. Mr. Taylor, however, was far sighted enough to know that work must be begun and the city be dedicated to the plan or it would be another genera tion before rapid transit could be got. He saw a way to get around the Joker, and he amazed obstructionists by accept ing tho ordinance and Betting the money. The protagonists of backwardness had been a little too slick. Of course. It Mr. Taylor had got tho $30,000,000 ho then wnnted, at least $15,000,000 would ultimately havo been saved to the city, for construction prices were at a low level. VOLUNTEERS! N OT a few of these letters havo been torn to shreds by nngry recipients: Dear Sir A Voluntary Contribution to the Republican Central Campaign Com mittee for the necessary expenses to conduct a successful campaign will be much appreciated. Yours very truly. Harry C. Hanslcy, Chairman. Check should bo drawn to the order of Thomas F. Watson, treasurer. The capital "V" In Voluntary is for some reason very suspicious to those who have been called upon to volunteer. They say It looks more like selective conscrip tion. Many of them have mado inroads upon their Incomes to buy Liberty Bonds. And why, many of them want to know, should they be asked to buy Slavery Bonds? A REAL MAN A REAL man created a mild sensation In a restaurant last night. "Take away the wheat bread; I didn't ask for tt," ho observed In tones loud enough to be heard half way across tho room. It Is not necessary to be violent about It, but some ono has to break the Ice. When every waiter and hoadwalter has heard that Rort of talk a few times res taurant managers will get over the timid ity with which they are asking patrons if they would like to try graham rolls and corn muffins. Don't ask them what they want. Give them what they ought to have. NATURALIZED HEROES 0 F SIXTY-SEVEN men who died for their country on the transport An tilles, at least thirty-two were of foreign birth. Parents of many of the others were doubtless foreigners. Two had next of kin living In Germany. Kleber, Swartzberg, Robin, Erlksen, Igholm. Llaret, Llarst, Mlchlelc, Doufers, Rod riguez our new Roll of Honor has not the Anglo-Saxon sound of the names of tho Valley Forge heroes. The man with tho foreign name does not feel at home In other countries. Here ho actually boasts of his alien origin, and native Americans have a peculiar sym pathy for Immigrants who quickly adapt themselves to our customs. If tho prin ciples of 1770 and 1789 could have been Intrusted only to native Colonial stock for perpetuation, they would have been discarded, for that part of our population fell into tho minority long ago. Our Im migrants could have voted America Inside out and perhaps have given us a Eu ropean form of government, Jf they had wanted to. That they did not do so Is a fundamental source of American pride. Our melting pot really melts and fuses men, but It does not produce a fear ful and Incongruous new citizen. It turns out tho samo old type, with Washington and Lincoln as the patterns, though tho name may originate anywhere from Jut land to Jerusalem. If we could save enough whisky for two years, why can't we save enough sugar for two months? About the most the "Republican" faction will do is to assist In the election of the District Attorney. The Germans are having a great tlmo In tho Baltic. Never mind. Tho Alabama finally met the Kearsarge. Congress, with tho rest of Wash ington, will be dry this coming winter; but that is no reason why it should be dull. The exit of the flve-cent cigar Is a sad blow to the politician who always used It for a cheap bribe. He will now havo to pay the price. Many a good voto has been lost by a bad cigar. It Is not news for a witness to testify that the police "deviled" him. The police and the devil seem to have been in cahoots for many months. The thing is to find the chief devil. Lloyd George's announcement that twice as many submarines have been sunk In the last ten months aa were sent to the bottom In 1816 readily explains why German sailors have balked at going on U-boat service. French Cabinets are unstable, not because their country is In doubt about fighting on, but because It Is unanimous for fiffht t0 finish. It Is when men are tremendously In aarnett about reach- lap ; pwa Mif IHm tiw t4C HOME GARDENS HELP THE ALLIES Enough to Feed 2,300,000 Sol diers a Year Raised in Them Last Summer By CHARLES LATHROP PACK President the National Emergency rood Garden Commission. THIS is tho tlmo for stock taking In con nection with the food situation. We hao had a growing reason which broke all records and was generally beyond ex pectations. Tho work ot gardening, ot canning and of drying vegetables and fruits has been under way In the land, from Mnino to California and from tho Lakes to the Gulf, and has justified all belief as to success. It Is Important to consider what this means. It means 1.160,000 acres of city and town land undor cultivation the post season for tho first tlmo. Urban and suburbnn America bocamo a vast garden as tho result of tho Impulse given to tho nation by the National Emergency Food Garden Commission. Our natton-wlde sur vey located nearly 3,000.000 such gardens. This Is only a beginning. What shall tho harvest bo next year? In our one year of cxporlence It lo con servatlo to state that by the planting of gardens the nation's food supply has been Increased to tho extent of more than $360, 000,000. Next year wo will do even better. We will then hae more war gardens and tho average production will bo larger. With a better knowledge thero will bo fewer failures Any Inventory of the food situation must leckon this great garden frultfulncss as a vital fnctor. Ab Us first duty, already ac complished, It has been of great value In keeping down tho coBt of living for tho peo ple of America. Household expenses havo been bad enough as It Is. That they would havo been far worse without this garden crop Is obvious. The significance of this planting doe3 not end with the summer Eeason. Tho war gar dens will oxert their Influence on the cost of living during tho winter months. Tho In dividual citizen has realized that the over supply of tho growing season must bo trans lated Into terms of abundance for the win ter. This realization has brought about such activity In household conservation as America has never before known. Food saving and food conserving nro becoming national characteristics. From a wasteful nation America Is being transformed Into a nation alert to the needs of the future. Tho keynote of this new national spirit has been that nothing should bo allowed to go to waste that nothing useful should bo thrown away. Cost of Feeding the Soldiers War has made Uncle Sam tho biggest buyer of food In this country. Tho board till, for his soldiers will soon be at least $1,000,000 a day We are to have 2,300,000 or more men under arms shortly, according to Secretary Baker. At forty cents a day food cost per man It will bo seen what that means. I am told that the reserve stock of food stuffs at each camp Is worth $125,000, and there are thlrty-threo camps In the country today. This nr-ans that food valued nt $4,125,000 Is taken out of the regular chan nels of trade production and consumption. These figures give but a small Idea of the need of food co-'servat'nn on the pirt of the Individual at this t'n-- rnd the need will be greater next year. Tho National Fmer gency Food Garden Commission urges every soldier of the soil to promote himself at once to a colonel of conservation and to make plans for gardening and for conserving gar den food In 1918 ns never before. The glass-jar manufacturers of this country havo delivered during tho season of 1917 about 119,000.000 glass jars. A survey of the household supply of Jars used for canning and preserving In some twenty typical towns throughout the country showed that the housewives of America In 1917 used but ono new Jar to over three and one-quarter old glass jars which were already on hand. Thus, you sec that In conservative terms the home women of our country put up nearly 500,000.000 quart jars of vegetables and fruits, certain ly three times what had been accomplished In any season before. Next year, profiting by their experience of this year, they will can, I believe, millions more, and more will bo needed. The commission is, of course, gratified at tho success of Its work In behalf of food thrift, and congratulates all who have had a part In this patriotic effort. This war will be won In large part by fighting with food. Wo will do our duty In this hour of trial, and wo have no greater duty than the production and conservation of food. This war Is as much our war as It is the war of Europe, and unless we can keep the soldiers and tho women and chil dren of our Allies fed, tho western line of defense may be thrown back toward the Atlantic seaboard, and It Is well within possibility that In that case we would seo tho enemy's army on our shores. Danger of Starving Our Allies To prevent this disaster calls for the best effort of every American household. You cannot starve Germany, Ambassador Gerard has told us so, and from tho avail able evidence I believe he Is right ; but we will starve our allies If we are so short sighted, small and mean and unpatriotlo as not to deserve the name of Americans. This must not be! It will not be! The town or city farmer who can raise cen half of his winter supply of vege tables Is able, as a result, to accomplish much as a constructive citizen. In other words, we must make a big drive to pro duce food in this country as near tho point of consumption as possible, rout tho middle man and tho cold-storage man and help the railroads Id the tremendous transpor tation problem that confronts them while tho country is at war. Glass jars and all other containers must be conserved this winter and the manu facturers must next year be prepared to meet tho largest demand for them the country has even seen. To win the final victory in the great war America must feed not only herself and her fighting forces, but she must help to feed tho people of England, France, Italy and Russia. To do this with the highest measure of efficiency Is the real problem. THE WAR GLOBE Herrmann, the famous conjurer, Took rabbits from a hat, And omelets, eggs and peeping- chicks, All In a manner pat; And Hindu necromancers oft Have thrilled the laymen's anal, Producing living goldfish from An empty crystal bowl. But Uncle Sam can beit them all. And show them something new And far more wonderful than what These wizards used to do. Into a globe ot glass before' You kno what he's about He puts "? PC XT m annr .safca ., Tom Daly's Column WIBE VP There was a won in our toum TVVio thought that he was wise; lie Jumped in (rode and got himself In debt up to his eves. But when he saw Ms error, With all his might and main lie scraped some cash together And Jumped in trade again. And note this man of our town Is REALLY TRULY WISE. "I'm making money noto," sais he, "Because I advertise." Babes in the Air If 'ever you wero waited upon In a Rlker A Hegcman drug storo by an oblig ing red-haired chap with a pronounced English accent, you probably mado up your mind that Froderlc Carr for very likely It was, Indeed, ho mado an ideal drug clerk. But only a llttlo more than six months ago ho ceased to bo that, and now comes a letter from him upon tho stationery of the Royal Flying Corps, Waddlngton, Lincoln, England, which will drop a bomb upon somo of your notions about flying nnd filers. This eighteen-year-old lad's letter comes through qulto uncensored and was written without an eye to publication being Just a boy's natural recital of his day'a work for tho benefit of one of his cronies left behind. Hero aro some ex cerpts: I smoke a good deal now between fifteen and twenty cigarettes a day but I must cut It out when I get to France, as wo fly ory high thero nnd young chaps have a knack ot fainting when up high, especially when they smoke much. You would think a chap would have to keep himself lit and healthy when flying, but I was never more out of form In my life. I go to bed at about midnight nnd get up about 9. Don't do a stroke of work all dny. Once in a while I do a llttlo flying, but If it were not for the fact that the linn gars aro about ono nnd a hn.f miles from tho mess and we have to walk down there to report twice a day, I believe I would rot qulto away. And everybody else Is tho same. We are In the British army, but aro the most twoldierly peoplo conceivable. Everything Is beautifully lax and wo all enjoy life lmmense.y. I havo turned out to be, much to my sur prise, a "stunt merchant." I have "looped." "spun," "rolled," "Immelmanned," "split tailed" and "splralcd" everything but fly upside down. A D. H. 4 won't fly upside down the engine will stop. All pilots beforo they go to France do these stunt" as part of their flying. There's really not much In them. No pleasure, any way. It's much nicer to watch a machine stunting than to stunt one yourself. There's a complete lack of feeling In flying, which really bores ono sometimes. Since I left Canada several hundred moro pilots have arrived from there. Some of the chaps here aro nothing more than little boys. Nine out ot ten are under twenty years My roommate's brother has Just Jotned and he Is Just ov-.- Blxtecn. I'm sure there are many of these here who aro that age, but, of course, they always give In their age at eighteen or nineteen. In order to bo accepted It's a funny thing after you've been watching a two-ton bun with a few hundred horsepower engine, dolrg nil kinds of stunts up In the air. to seo an ob ject :il;e a teddy bear climb out of tho cock pit, and. on d'vestlng Itself of Its numer ous skins, turn out to bo some kid who had just left school to Join tho R. F. C. You'd swear that some of them wero Just babes-ln-arms. Not me, of course, for I havo grown a little yellow mustache, so peoplo can see at once that I am an cldorly per ion who doesn't treat life as a Joko. Hero's a sample ot tho wholesome quality In Edgar A. Guest's now book, Just Folks": WIIEX XELLWS ON THE JOB The bright spots In mv life arc when the servant quits the place, Although that grim disturbance brings a frown to Keltic's face; The week between the oW girl's reign and entry of the neto Is one that's filled with happiness and comfort through and through. The cfiarm of living's lack again a charm that servants rob I Wee the home, I like the meals, when Xcllte's on the Job. There's something in a servant's ways, hoicever fine they be. That has a colrf and distant fottcTi and frets the soul of me. The old homo itcver looks so well, as in that week or two That we are servantlcss and Xell has all the work to do. There is a sense of comfort then that makes my pulses throb And home is as it ought to be when, Nellie's on the Job. Think not that I'd deny her help or grudge the servant's pay; When one departs we try to get another right aivay; I merely state the simple fact that no such Joys I've known As In those few brief days at fiome when we've been left alone. There is a gentleness that seems to soothe Hits selfish elf And, oh, I like to eat those meals that Nellie gets herself 1 You cannot' buy the gentle touch that mother gives the place; No servant girl can do the work with Just the proper grace. And though you hired the queen of cooks to fashion your croquettes. Her vicals would not compare with those your loving comrade gets; So, though the maid has quit again, and she Is moved to sob, The old home's at Its finest now, for Nellie's on the Job. BONO: LLOYD OEOIiQE The gentle dove may pipe Ills lay, And yet, till horrors cease, The gentle lay he pipes away Is not the pipe of peace. Tho progressive citizens of the thriv ing metropolis of New Wilson, Oklahoma, so O. MIgh Informs us, publish the ad ot the city's industries and resources on their letterheads on the other side. Among other "permanent Improve ments" Is discovered: 'Three churches Methodist, BupUst and Christian.' IT VBUALLY WORKS IIo stood upon his feet; The trolley car was packed. Since she had got his seat, He stood upon his feet. She'd worked a scheme quite neat HI notice to Wrer. jPBW1er' t PeWj "ER-R-R, y.id ml mil s OUR ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS IN NEED Superintendent Martin's Appeal Seconded by Journal of Education SMALIj tho elementary schools continue to wear tho old clothes of high school boya and girls? That Is a question that has been raised and that cannot be suppressed. In tho Philadelphia Kvenino Ledoeb. September 12, Superintendent A. S. Martin, of Norrlstown, Pa., had an article on "Ine qualities of Expenditure In the Publlo School System," It Is tho ablest presenta tion of comparative cost of elementary and high schools that we have seen. It presents with great thoroughness the facts as they appear officially for New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Baltimore. As usual, a city that Is hard hit yells at the umpire. We are grateful for the study. It Is of Inestimable service. We think it silly for any city to whlno at facts. When every player muffs tho ball It makes mighty llttlo difference which muffs tho most. On the other hand, we have no Interest in any effort to show that tho city high schools In those six cities get too much for buildings, equipment, supervision and teaching, but we are Intensely grateful to Superintendent A. S. Martin for giving re- nowed and definite emphasis to the vicious neglect of the elementary school buildings, oquipment nnd teaching. Far be It from us to object to all the high schoolB get, but we protest against the elementary schools wearing out to a finish the old clothes buildings, equipment and grounds which tho high schools cast oft. The next great problem In American edu cation is to magnify, dignify and Intensify the elementary school. The Junior high Bchool has taken tho two upper grades away from the elementary school. In this we rejoice. In thts we have had a large part. That was tho problem until It was achieved. But it has left the elementary school In a worse plight than before. It virtually removes all hope In most cities of having any men In elementary schools. This la no argument for or against men principals. We merely state a fact. It Is a condition and not a theory that con fronts the elementary school or tno ruture. We recently heard a prominent business man who Is much Interested In education say: "I w-as the youngest of three boys nnd I hated school until I got to college because I always used tho books my broth ers had mado very much second-hand." One of tho great sayings of John II. Francis, now ot Columbus, Is: "The ele mentary schools must bo mado as spec tacular as high schools beforo they can c-ef rmhllc attention." Everywhere we hear It said as an argu ment for the Junior 'high school that the elementary school necd3 "the old building." Denver has taken one of her very old buildings and has made It absolutely as up to date as though It were new. It can bo dona anywhere. Pass the slogan along the line all along tho line: "No more old clothes for elementary schools." Th kindergarten and the primary school are full of "pep." They are spirited, have games and ail sorm in iun, ro one nears of "drill" boring before the fourth grade, but it Is about all one does hear In the fourth, fifth and sixth grades. These are the very boys and girls to make school ana community games, picnics and pageants wildly successful. ...... Those are years ln which teachers and supervisors putter, nag and boss most ex cruciatingly. The burden of the song of the teacher In this grade Is all too apt to be, "You'll not get promoted." Let the thwe elementary grades hav a place, a purpose, a mlBslon, a message all their own. Let no teacher be better equipped or better paid than th elementary teacher. Boston Journal of Education. f The article referred to, entitled "Inequal ities of Expenditures In the Publlo School System," I on of several on 4utln! problem by A, b. riin. or smw, m (Pf,-" ? . ..swwji xssssfssms&mrmi A. kML XimSm v''ni. ...1 -iJn t .Ol zttfflwhMMQ!&Mi atUaeUe mi DIDN'T YOU SAY SOMETHING?" mmMmMMwmmswzss&Mimiis&tfT-rnmi me, a m&BBBBBB&T5M T 1 1 H I I i iirfs!iavwsrft?.a -viin rrmB vs i am sv-t (.. h;&h. hi ia'-:.-nt-. r :mxsrjfimf.rsojriTZ w vin-. . v -viajTMMflWi . 'AMWii'sc,,! m - ipi.im .' lU'-.mmj jni- -a av I - " - - - - ii.; i.r r ,s:iiv'i it 'i.-,i.-r rr Y5HHU PW wmmm$ i r mmBmWB8rr:?Tr: , wmlWm '-JJ-W TrMftTTTI Mk ? J f F . a. "" TyRM dmSStoiiaw mSiTzSSn mm, w m mil in educational circles and aroused consider able controversy. Tho above reprint from tho Journal of Education is typical of one phase of comment upon Mr. Martin's views on elementary Bchool needs. VOICE OP THE PEOPLE Small Mine Owner's Protest Vares and tho Unions Tho To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir In the Evenino Ledger of October 24 I note this news Item: "A dozen men representing various labor bodies allied with tho Central Labor Union today met in the otTlce of W. Freeland Kendrlck, Receiver of Taxes, and gave as surances of their cupport of the Republican 'fifty-fifty' ticket. They wero led by John A Phillips, first vice president of the State Foderatlon of Labor and first vice president of the Philadelphia local of the Typographi cal Union; former St-te Senator Richard V. Farley and Patrick P. Conway, n lawyer, representing tho Hatters' Union. The dele gation was received by Receiver of Taxes Kendrlck, Register of Wills James B. Shee han and Registration Commissioner Fred erick J Shoyer, candidate for City Treas urer on the 'fifty-fifty' ticket. In giving their Indorsement of tho 'fifty-fifty' candi dates the labor men were at tho same time seeking to repudiate the action of Frank Fecncy and his faction in tho Central Labor Union, who recently Indorsed tho Town Meeting party ticket." Mr. Phillips does not represent any po litical stand or the Typographical Union, as many of its members will tell you. He is Bpeaklng only for himself, and many members of the union bitterly resent his plunge Into politics, it is not a question of hl standing for the Vares. It would be tho same if he backed the other sldo, A Typographical Union leader cannot com mit tho members to a political faction or party. UNION MEMBER. Philadelphia, October 24. THE SMALL COAL OPERATOR To the' Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir May I, through you, express my great thanks to Mr. W. Hayden McFadden for his very able letter on tho soft-coal situation In tho Evenino Ledoer? I am one of tho unfortunate small operators, who surely have had scant recognition. Months ago I wrote to Mr. Garfield, after the $2-at-the-mlno's-mouth rate was pro claimed, asking If mines oft tho railroad could not get pay for hauling. I have latoly received what is evidently a btock letter, from which I quote the answer I got: "Where coal Is hauled In wagons to a railroad to be sold to that railroad for its own consumption a reasonable charge, rep resenting tho cost of wagon haulage, may be added. In nil other cases the price on board cars must bo the price for coal at the mouth of the mine." If this Is not discriminating in favor ot the railroads, what Is? Is It tho policy ot the Government to crush the small oper ators? Why not go for information to Secretary of Labor WliBon, who was all his youth a soft-coal miner surely he would not bo too lenient to the mine owner. Before tho recent raise In miners' pay we paid $1.50 a ton to the miner and hauled three mlle3 to the nearest railroad. Can you see anything but bankruptcy for us at tJU'i $2 price with no haulage added unless we "sell to that railroad for its own consumption," said railroad having Its own coal and not wanting ours? What can we do? Ou.mlne has only been open a year or two. I 'see no danger of our becoming "coal barons" at present. SMALL MINE OWNER. Philadelphia, October 24. WHAT SOLDIERS READ It was on a Long Island train between Camp Mills and New York city that a cer tain commuter was given a new insight Into the sort of books some soldiers read. He was a kindly faced gentleman, with tor-tolsa-ahell glasses, and he smiled affably at the stalwart youth In olive drab who sat down beside mm. "Would you like something to read, young man?" he asked, as he proffered him a newspaper with the sport page out Thanks, Just the same," replied the sol dier, "but I always carry something to read with me." He took from his pocket three small leather-bound volumes, on which appeared the following titles: "Hamlet," by William Bhakespeare: "pnerson on Friendship" and "Recollections of Lincoln," by Walt whitman. aswai l uveal oc Ms Jot," 1 mmssjn irFrfllLMSi Sii K. to it) tf f ;W W-, yiWiM Sfca What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. Explain the expression "stockholders tt record," Z. Name the five lartest rttles la the wirll nnd Mate their populations. 3. About how old wna Thomas Jefferson whta he wrote the Declaration of Independence? 4. The Insignia on medlenl officers' uniform Is a rrprenentatlon of the cadaceus. De fine caduceus. B. Whnt does the army slant "dor-robber" mean? 8. Dr. Bernardino Machado Is Frcsllent tt a J-.uropeun republic. Name It. 7. Who nominates the archbishops and bbhoM ot the Church of Knxlond? 8. About what Is the relative strentih tt the parties In the House of Commons si present? 0. What was the orlcln ot the word "ldiU"f 10. What Is a rucksack? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Vocnnclei in the United Htatee Senate caa be temporarily filled br Uorernor'i ap pointment until the next general 1m. tlon or the (ioternor mar set a oar ftr n npeclnl election. . "Dread cards": In some belligerent coai trles. notably Germany, the food tbsrt nae has made It necessary to Issue cares to Permit persona to buy bread, the ee Jcct being- to. present tome from baylat more than others. 3. About ,88,000.000 men are nnder arms In cluding nailcn), 10,(100,000 for the Cea trul Powers nnd 27,500.000 for the Allies, 4, Durban An Indian ruler's court! poktlt jetee of Indian I'rlnre or of llrttlnh Hlsg In hl rupaclty of Kmpcror of India. B. The Mnhnmmednn religion prohibits tat pk. torlul representation of human belnn. 8, Nonconformists) British denominations ort- siue or tue cnunn or .England, 7. "Casus belli"! A reason or eieaM f . HOT. ' 8. Gondolas light flat-bottomed boat, with esbla amidships and high point at each tsi, worked by one onr at stern! ui4 n Venetian canals. 0. Commodore Terry won the battle of tsi Krle. 10. Arthur waa President between Osrflell tat Cleveland. OUR LAND OF IDEALS FOR my part I have never doubted tilt America would Intervene sooner or later In this war, and I was Bure, as I kept W Ing, that It would not be through selfish In terests, through material purposes or fila, that she would Intervene: It would b IJ reason of some great principle. I have said here to tho Franco-Amerlcaa committee, on returning from a voyatt somo years ago, "America Is a country of Idealism applause! : It Is tho land of tht Ideal" applause. Because Americans liivi had to clear a new continent, to strurile for their existence, we have come to be lieve that they wore men with selfish In terests, occupied before all with material Interests. What a mistake 1 Ho who nM lived in America realizes that there la 89 country In tho world where money mewl less. It Is only necessary to seo how the spend It, how they give It and for wt they earn It, They earn it and they K M ,. I .,.- .1 .. .una. ivt..A r-nftf IllSI .Fflmi!tf&rt' lor it oiuy mai nicy iimy (, .-. .-- , they have made every effort possible. Montr Jtl over there, l saw, was a cerumi. ;;. ficlency. Cries of "Very goodl Very good. J Whoever has lived in America knows tnat high ideals, moral and religious, havs tnj firBt place over there. Whoever has stuoiea American literature and philosophy Knoi that tho American soul Is impregnated " Idealism and een with mysticism, woo ever has studied American history Ww that abstract and general thougnti w morality and Justice have always held nw place. It is upon pure ideals and pu thoughts that the American nat on i wm ,. .ii. .,.i i io narhnnR thn only nationally r,vT...,r:,ii, '.. hu built ni setously and freely. .For eJlwwK J f Dy rorce or circuniamuu-, w "- :,i,11ii!i v. by a series of events that th. ont'tutlM .1.1 .t., nation determlnou. . " On only It. the history of tr world J a nation built upon nslderatlons jww Ideal that was the day when the n was founded which was to ,. beW $ American nation and the American nU Ity. Those who left England to , wn MJ colonise America were not drawn uXatehTght7f- was not to enrich themjelTM. ir wu I In order to find ease; it was on ly i o a ..InnlulO ITstllPrMII V Blkl - brty of thought "-"SErffaiW United States were Xoundd. 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