ffl ifr EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-rHlLADULPHIA, THURSDAY,' APRIL 25, 1918 - J r wj"' 11 t i y r t $. p ! K K v V . M Stating Hublc Sebsev TUBL1C LEDGER COMPANY i crnus it. k. cunns, rmimst , U-Ctiatlea It I.udlnffton, Vl President! John C. Inrtln. Sjerretarr and Treasurer! Philip H. Collins, ahn n. Williams. John J. apurgeon, Director. KDITOMAI. HOAllDt Ciioa It It Ccatis. Chairman -PAV1DC. SMILEY... .Editor JOltlt C MAirmf... .General Business Manager Published daily- at Teat to T.tnora liulMlnr. Independence Square, Philadelphia. I.aran CR-.T.ii...,..llroad and Chestnut Htreels Aturtio Citt. rma-Vnim nulldlnr Nw Tnait 200 Metropolitan Tower DrrsoiT. ..,.....,,.... 403 Vonl Uulldlnu St. Logii.... lOOH Fullerton llu d n Cmcioo...................l202 Tribune Uullduvr NKWH llUllEAUS! N. K. Cor. Pennsylvan a Ave ard th St. Kaw Yornc ltunK.0 The Him Uuidn; LoMDo.f Uciuu I.ondon Times Huusciuraox tumms The Ctknino Prat to I.rnnin l served to sub ecrlbsra In Philadelphia, and surrounding tciwni at tha rat of twelve (12) centa per wesk. pajaMe , . Vr mall to' (feints outside of. Vh,l5?1,3hL"u,Jl nth United mates. Canada, or United tMe rya- fesslons. pota tree, fifty (50) cetita If r mo nth. Bit (0 dollar, per year, Payable In advance. To all foreign countries ono (1) dollar Pr Notice Subscriber vrishlnB address changed mutt Elvo old as well a new address. BELL, 108b TTALMJT KEYSTOM'. MAIN M0 J3Airfjali eommunlcillrtin oFi,nff'l PMo Ledger. Independence Haunt. l"hi'.dr"Mn iHTEiiD at Tna aMiruDKiriui fiaT ontca is SECOND CtASS MAIL MATTKIt. rhltadelphla. Thundar. April JS. tl m - r AMERICANS AT SEICHKI'I.EY BT GRADUAL intimution the War De partmoiit permits 11 to lie known that tho most Important engagement In which Americans liavo so far actively partici pated on the western front occurred at Selcheproy und that there wero approxi mately 200 casualties tho largest num itr so far recorded for ono day. Who theso soldiers wero wo aro not told. A force of some dimensions was cut off. Tho men died at their guns. Through such reports as thcho America will finally come to realize something of the dimensions of tho war. Our loss to fur ma: be counted In hundreds. The Allies have lost millions. The German communique tells more than our own reports. "Tho Americans fought tenaciously." They "resisted fiercely to the last man." In hand-to-hand fighting thoy "displayed amazing courage and endur ance." Tho Americans stood Immovable ns long as they could swing a gun-butt or pull a trigger. "fhen they died. Even tho French and British, used lo ' epic heroism In regions where a man must be bravo or perish, praUe the men of Selcheprey. And yet tho Government murt plead to sell Us war bonds In tho peace at 'home' Considering how offensive a German can a be, Isn't It surprising that his offensives are usually to futile? SENATOR SHERMAN PERFORMS SENATOR SHERMAN, in his hysterical tirade against tho Administration's for- Fclgn policy. and In his araignment of a t large group of tho President's aides as "pestilential sedltlonists," is in no danger of being taken seriously In any place out- slde the limits of his own Ivied ego. The Federal Government and Congress havo admitted the right of labor to or- Tganlze. Mr. Burleson forbids this right to employes of the PostoOlco Department. Yet the Senator from Illinois perceives Mr. "BurlesOn as u "red." Secretary li.iker Is a "red Socialist" In the eyes of Senator Sherman. And the President, from the' viewpoint of Illinois, Is playing with fire in his amicable attitude toward the Rus sian revolutionary government. The Senator seems not yet to have learned what Is known to all tho rest of tthe world that the Bolshevlkl, with nil their red flags and their whiskers, their faults and their wild hopes, didn't start the revolution. Russia was crumbling under the alns of tho recent dynasty and nil the foundations of government wero rotted out by corruption and pro-Germanism in high quarters, while tho Russian masses were still lighting magnificently. The suc cessive revolutions have merely repre sented the forlorn hopes of the people t more or, less vainly assembled In desperate groping aspirations for decent govern ment. In Europe months ago there were states men who talked like Senator Sherman. Their utterances wero the best sort of ammunition for German prcpatandUts In Russia. The world now admits that the American llcy In Russia was the only eane and constructive policy. One wonders occasionally whether Sen ators of Mr. Sherman's type ever read anything but the whims of their con stituents, Did Admiral Bowles change his own . mind about tho seizure of occupied homes or did Mr. Schwab change It for him? KNIGHTS A-WING AIR-FIGHTERS over tho west front are .forever doing things that balllo the faltering Imaginations of tho ground below. Captain Baron von RIchthofen. killed in tJ action, has been burled by Allied fliers with all the honors of war. Ordinarily be should have been hated. He was the reigning king of German airmen and was credited with seventy-eight aerial vlctorleJ? But he was not hated by his adversaries. rt When he was brought dgwn dead in No Man's Land a lieutenant of the British air service risked his life to carry the body in for burial. RIchthofen, It seems, was a restless tighter, but clean. "He never killed an 5eneuiy mien ue uuu mm com, kay tlioso . who fought htm. If ho had an adveranrv at a hopeless disadvantage, RIchthofen was accustomed to force him down and to land, beside him. Thnlmn1nr:ili sntmlu smofied cigarettes together and flow away, waving their hands I f- What have the airmen learned In the if high places where they may travel free from the hates and the horrors jvjth which the German mind has cumbered the earth? The flying men of all services seem to have a code of their ownr much like that Of RIchthofen, It Js dtfllcult to believe that this German ace fought In the sme Dailies as the German armies that have (Wiled every foot of the territory they con QUred and slaughtered women and chil dren even after they "had, them cold."' f Jt possible to perceive life mpre clearly H Use VPPer air. tc Hjtow how vain war ambition reallyi are? If Jt Is. then tints shouty, Jrn -,to fly. This, ,.parK of WE AHE FIGHTING A CON SPIRACY, NOT A NATION "IDEFORE ono can decide whether the United States should declare war on Bulgaria and Turkey one should fret clearly in his mind what we are fighting; against. Wo declared war first against "Tho Imperial Government of Germany." Then wc declared war on tho Austro-Hungnrian Government Hut as n matter of fact we are not making war on this Govern ment or on thnt, but on a conspiracy in which is included Bulgaria and Turkey as well as Germany and Austria Hungary. We cannot soy that we have no quar rel with Turkey or that we nro on friendly relations with Bulgaria, because the facts arc against it. The?e two nations nre just as much our enemies ns is Germany. Thoy are part of the con spiracy. They arc in the league to extend German domination over the world. Their troops ale fighting tho armies of tho Entente Allies. They nvc giving nil the aid and comfort possible to our enemies. This is so evident that no high school pupil can fail to see it if his attention is attracted to the matter. No one in Washington is ignorant of it, though there has been n disposition in the Senate to indulge in sophistical discussion ubnut the friendly relations between the United States and the allies of our enemies. Senator Knox, leading those who want to fnco tho issue squarely, has had the courage to ofTer a resolution directing the Committee on Foreign Relations to ask the President why n declaration of war against these two ullies of Germany is r.ot desirable. There must be enough clear-thinking men in tho Sonata lo pass the tesolution. It did not need the discussion on it to infoim us that the Bulgarian minister in Washington is in a position to get infor mation about what we aro doing. He is not charged with being it spy. He is not n spy, but is tho honored guest of the Government of the United States. His mail is guaranteed free passage to Europe under the ordinary safeguards for tho correspondence of diplomatic agents. It is his duty to inform his Gov ernment what is going on here. He would be unfit for his office if he did not give his Government all tho infoimntion which he thought would be in any way useful to it in its prosecution of the war against the Entente Allies, which means in the war ngainst us. To say that wo are not one of the Entente Allies is merely to quibble. It was at our suggestion that a supreme commander of the Allied nrmies was appointed. Our forces are acting under the orders of this supreme commander. We have given up the theory that wo must act along pnrallcl lines in co-operation with the forces of other nations which guided us at the time our troops helped put down the Boxer uprising in China. Wo have accepted the new responsibilities that go along with the obligation to fight with England nnd France for the same cause. Wo are entertaining here the ngents of our actual enemies and we shall con tinue to entertain them so long ns we refrnin from declaring war on both Turkey and Bulgnria and neglect to hand their passports to the ministers of theso two countries. It may be assumed that the President hud some reasons for delaying to ask Congress to make this declaration of war. But those reasons must have ceased to be valid. When the Senate passes tho Knox resolution the nation expects tho President to reply to it with a request for a declaration of war. The Germans nre finding poor pickings in Vicardy. BIG MEN NEEDED THERE is no finer way of helping for the man over draft age who can leave his family for six months or more and can afford lo pay his own way. than tho war work of the Y. M. C. A. In France. This work requires men of bodily and mental vigor, who have had keen busi ness experience, who do not know what "office hours" are und who aro accustomed to mingling with men of all classes. A former assistant editor of one of the largest magazines In this country, who Is now with the Y. M. C. A. In France, writes to us as follows: "This thing over hero is much more won derful than we ever dreamed. It's one of the great things of tho war. We need men and better men. This Is no Job for the conventional Y. M. ('. A. secretary. Please rub that In. We want the biggest men we ran get, and we want to get all tho men that can't carry a rifle and want to get In this thing. For those who want to servo In the war and be right In sound of the guns here's tho way to do it. Tell everybody you know to come over. Mako jourself a recruiting otllcer. You can do a great Job over there In recruiting tha light kind of people among your friends." It will rain on Monday. How do we know? Why, circus parade, of course. DECLINE OF THE LIE IN POLITICS IF SUPERFICIAL' observation and the luminous hunch may be relied upon the time has come to wake tho sleeping bells and to swing them wide In Joyous utter ance. From afar a voice comes upon the wind. It Is tho voice of Allegheny Coun ty's own J. Denny O'Nell. In measured syllables, loud and shrill, it Informs the Auditor General a Mr. Snyder, If mem ory serves that no lies may bo told at the pending investigation Into the affairs of the State Highway Commission, a service which Mr. O'Nell adorns at the top. The He is to be cursed out of politics, evicted from Its ancient hearthstone, deprived of Its old, old home or else Mr. O'Nell Is babbling, as they say, through his kelly. It will not do to dismiss the phenomenon lightly nor to assume that this O'Nell, witched by the stained glass salntllnesa of his chief patron, believes himself already dead and running for office in Paradise. Mr. O'Nell Is an orlglnal-mlnded man. And the He Is surely going out of fashion. It has acquired a. bad name In business. Even women are beginning to tro of it. In politics and In the ambassadorial serv ice, of the Hun the lie still parslsts In all Iht) grandeur of its original cute. To ! .' 'ht'itecHnsh.fctt Yet anything Is possible In .hcoe wild and changing days, Politics is tho ancient sanctuary of the lie. Tills Is because of the politicians them selves, who started tho fashion by lying feverishly about their own virtues. One entering political life especially If ho odged In by the back door Invariably wont heavily laden with lies ood and bad, black and white, horizontal and perpendic ular, fast and slow; lies for offense and de fense; high-speed lies and low-flying, slow moving lies devised mainly for purposes of detitructloiu There were falsehoods that might be draped upon tho personality of a friend to mako him beautiful to see and others that, when properly and deftly usod, could mako almost any man of an opposing party seem a blood brother to tho person most eminent In Hades. Ono prac ticed lying In a loud, clear voice, and when ho was able to toss a. falsehood oft Into tho air while looking an audience bang In tho eyes with a virtuous expression, then he was assured of a. fighting chance in tho lower circles of public life. It Is to bo assumed that the high faith which Mr. O'Nell seems to have In his day nnd generation nnd his assumption that tho lie Is to bo put out of politics like a sinister cat into tho night aro In spired by a. soulful determination to re frain from using tho lie against any ono eh-c. We can only wait and fee. 1'rcpnrr to look your last upon friend oyster. Only a wrek more. If thn iclous driven out of this city take refuge across the river Jersey Juitlc will Iimo an opportunity to Hnc up to IM reputation. Young men who read General Barnett's appeal for 40,000 men for the marine corp should remember that tho corp Is Kenerally admitted to be the driest military body In tho world. Since T. II. Iirs determined tn campaign against the German language press It ncem) appropriate that his Initials should stand for "treat 'cm rough." The Ilolshevlk government seems to ba surprised thnt thi Oennans are murdering civilians In Husnla. Is It Ignorant of the his tory of Belgium? Xow that they are to employ women on the Camden trolley car, any one who flirts with the motor girl will flirt, simultaneously, with sudden death. It is natural to supposo that tho York street oyster house which the police havo Just suppressed at. a disorderly resort might very properly have been called a stew. Now (hat circus tlmo Tul, Tut I Is here Is It proper to ask whether you would upcak of a ringmaster's profanity as clrcusi words? SINCE YOU INSIST Spend Spend your your dollars 5 ' and ' suspend the the Hun Hun O O O O Wear half-soled trousers and BUY MORE LIBERTY BONDS Don't M-e- BE BE C ' proud hcIf- (patch) 1'' con- i your sclous ss's pate'1 IF WE HAVE TO CHOOSE between half-soled trousers or a HALF SOLD Liberty Loan we prefer the former. Keep your spine erect and no ono will divine tho truth.Thut Is what Mr. McAdoes.Darn your trousers and damn the Knlser and never mind your rags. Do not be afraid TO BE HUY FRAYED. MORS! XXXXXX X X X X X X. xxxx-x xxxxx The compositor who tailored theso half-soled trousers put h! hole soul Into tho Job. Hut, h moan, they would look more inodtfh If ho had had a sewing machine Instead of tho llnotpse. Mr. and Mrs. Dove Dulcet are shortly to celebrate their golden wedding anni versary. This does not mean that they have been married fifty years. They have u different way of measuring the epochs of connubial Joy. They sy they will soon have been married fifty cooks. They are now on their forty-ninth. When she leaves the celebration will take- place. Any gifts for tho occasion may be forwarded In care of Socrites. DESK MOTTOES My favorite motto, which I keep under the glass pane on my desk. Is this: liven the Boss U human KATHARINE CALORY. "God tells us to lovo our enemies, but Ho can't expect us to love Ills enemies." HARRY LAUDER. We have yet to hear of a good con scientious objection against buying Liberty Bonds. Have you DONE YOUR UTMOST? Contributed br Sine You In,U( as an expression of ramnlrte tllsnut fur the alma and mirpvses af the Imperial (jtrinao (Jov ernment. The Balloon Peddler WHO Is the mat. on Chestnut street With colored toy balloons? I see hli with his ulry freight On sunny afternoons A peddler of such lovely goods The heart leaps to behold His mass of bubbles, red and green And blue and pink and go'.J. T7K)R sure that noble peddler man " Hath antic merchandise. His toys that float and swim In air Attract my eager eyes. Perhaps he is a changeling prince Bewitched through magia moons To tempt us solemn busy folk With meaningless balloons. BEWAnE, oh, valiant merchantman, Tread cautious on the pave I ' Lest come day comes some realist, Some haggard soul and grave, A puritan efflclentlst Who deems thy toys a, sin He'll ata.lt thfce madly from behind And t i DOES THE KAISER LOVE TREES? By Walter Prichard Eaton AMONG the many "truisms" which aren't AX truo at nil nono can be further from the truth than the saying that a man's handr are subdued to the material he works In. by which I take It Is meant that a butcher will 1 a cruel sort of customer and a maker of chorolnte creams a sentimentalist. I have known many butchers (not mere aellcrn of meat, but bulchera In the good old sense, men who bought, killed and dressed the ani mals (hey sold), nnd most of them were large, red-faced, Jovial men, who supported tho locnl ball team and were towers of merry Inspiration at tho "traders' picnics." On the other hand, I once knew a thug and a ruf fian who worked In a candy factory. BUT tho grentest variance from the truth I have found to bo In the case of pro fessional tree-trimmers, Matters are bad enough In our town when the chauffeurs of the rich summer residents arrive. These men are loud-mouthed, dishonest, lewd, laiy and rvcrnlly undesirable. But you arc not entirely surprised at that. They are eco nomic parastteK. performing no useful or necessary function In life; they havo too much idleness; they have too many tempta tions to graft And they deal with machin ery. But what I enn't explain Is. why the trte-trlmtnors, who come upon us once In no often to rare for our public shade trees, our prltnte grounds nnd orchards, are even worse than tho chauffeurs, so thnt we even havo to quarantine our young girls, to say nothing: of locking up all our portable possessions while they are In town. The tree-trimmer Is not a parnslte. He Is a hard worker In a dangerous occupation, nnd what he does Is of tho utmost benefit to society. Further more, his wutk Is up nniong the green branches of tile most beautiful things God has caused lo grow upon tho earth, his ob ject constantly to mako them healthier and more benutlful. Why should the professional tree-trimmer become a thug? I CANNOT answer. It may be due to the human conditions of Uboi in the tree-trim-mlng Industry. I.Ike the members of the 1. W. W., ho Is an itinerant laborer, to a great extent, and perhaps the real trouble lies with his employer, with society, hs It generally does w Ith the I. AV W. h fact tho I'nlted States Government Idealisations have clearly demonstrated. I'm not going to try to answer. In fart, but only to point out that when a man Is trimming his own trees. In his own orchard, provided, of course, that ho has lenrned how to do it properly, ho Is engaged in iim of tho most healthful anil one of the most delightful occupations known to man. If your snw is (harp and jou keep It oiled to prevent vexa tious binding, and If you have een an ouncn of Imagination ti make of each tree a bit of nn architectural problem, you can Hpend two hours In ten minutes up nn old apple tree and resent the call to dinner. There stands the old treo before you, at jou approach It with ladder and tools. It was planted long years ago, perhaps a hun dred, in our eastern country. In Washington or Oregon an apple tree, after twenty years. Is too tall to plik und has to he cut clown. When It wns planted men knew little about pruning and leas about pests. Probably they had no pests tn speak of. But now the twisted old et ernn shows many n painful s.-ar of wrong pruning In Its middle and later years ; scale and disease have weakened It; It is full of holes and dead wood. Yet it Is alive, sturdily allie, and sprouting suckers with magnificent 1 itullty. What shall ou do to It? Shall you head It ruthlessly down to make fruit-picking easier, or shall jou treat It rather as a shade tree, an ornament and ornamental it certainly Is with Its leaning trunk and gnarled, spreading branches and tall, arched crown. After all, you decide why not lit It be a tree, tall hh It HUea. So jou walk all around It carefullj-. studying Its shape and making up your mind what limbs to leave for the truo outline, what suckers promise best as future bearing wood, at what points to pruno ruthlessly to admit air anil light. When theso points are stttled you climb up and begin. YOU saw with jour right arm and your left arm; jou saw right side up and up side down; you balance on tho swaying edge of nothing to use your long-handled pruning shears In the top tracing of twigs. Dead wood goes crashing down to the ground. Off como the stubs left by tha Ignorant farmers of n past generation, who did more harm than good whenever they pruned a tree. Suckers, or "water hpouts," are removed and are tugged reluctantly out from the foliago with which they linxe sprouted, often whip ping you annojingly In the face Good limbs of fresh, pungent green wood hae to come out. too. Up and down and round nbout you climb and cut till at last the tree is revealed in Its naked architectural bones, mottled with white cuts which jou have got to cover with tin or lead paint, and Using from a ragged mound of wood and brush on the dead grass beneath BEFORE you start hauling this slash away or get jour paint nnd pot to cover the scars you fill your pipe and contemplato jour work. You see, In imagination, the vigor of the old tieo now going Into those sound, shapely limbs which jou liao left, clothing them with a richer green and a redder fruit than they have known for a generation. You feel something like an archi tect who has renovated and lestorcd an old house, or a doctor who has patched up a cripple. You feel, also, the delicious physi cal weariness of a man who has done a healthful daj-'s work In tha open. Then, you remove the slash or stait In on the next tree. It fceeins incredible to me that anybody can prune trees well without coming to lou them, and It seems even more Incredible that anybody can love trees and remain an undesirable citizen. So, after all, I cat back to my first contradiction and end with a paradox. It may even be that the Kaiser Js an expert orchardist! Place aux Dames! DIl CHARLES WHARTON STORK, tha genial magtster cantandl of Philadelphia poets, has had the gracious thought to Issue a ladles' number of hit, magaxlne, Contem porary Verse. With much Justice he says that while our poets male may lag andly be--hind their English brothers In plenitude of tone and trill, the women singers of this coun try are u choir second to none. Jor Is thli saying born of gallantry alone. The worst thing for poets Is to praise them too highly. Days of buffets and nights of fasting aia excellent medicine for the muBe. Yet Doctor Stork, In the vulgar phrase, has "said some thing" In his gleeful comment on the high excellence of our fair rhymesters, We con gratulate with him upon the fact. Emily Dickinson was the first American woman poet to capture our heart, and next to her we would throw down gage of battle In behalf of Miss Llzette Woodworth Reese, who contributes to Doctor Stork's current number this delicious little picture: :iln Hanging Clothes The maid Is out In the soft April light, Our store of linen hanging up to dry i On clump of box, on the small grass there lla Bits of thin lace, and broidery blossom-white. And something makes tall Ellen air or look Or else but that most ancient, simple thing, Hanging the clothes upon a day In spring, Like to a Greek girl cut out an old book. Tha wet white flaps; a tune Just come to mind. The sound brims the still rooms. Our flags are out, Blue by the box, blue by the kitchen stair; Bttwlxt the twain she trips across the wind. Her warm hair blown all cloudy-wise about, Slim as the flags, and every whit as fair. Still waiting for Oarabed. These must be nervous days for tha Swarthmore eels mograplf. SDtaklng of street-cleaning contractors. it k Mft'.t, sua' thaw tar 4nnt0,lyfaf Mil "BUT DOND'T fc-ixtottfizilKn"' , fits Sf tBTi TTrrfiMlslirTrnTT I rl 1i M sSSrsBLSaawW Mi ! JeWJPW1 lit JSyKSKI . fCiV:. , MMZ TT-shsmir'T.-;.rii-J . si.i'a' rauaiii) fMrjAfu MK.mr DON'T CRY TILL HE GOES IV omen, Says One, Must Also Be Brpve in War Evening Ledger Readers Discuss Municipal JVages and the Grocer's Sad Lot What Women Can Do To the Editor of the Kvealnp l'ullic l.tdo" Sir I am writing this with tho hope that It may help other women as I hae been helped. My first Idea of military life was obtained at the time of my only brother's graduation from est Point Bonie yenrs ago. I was greatly Impressed with the soldiers, not In war sense, but merely admiration. Immediately after graduation my brother, now a captain, whom 1 shall call Jack, was sent to Honolulu. Three jears later he was allowed his first furlough Ho was then sent to Mexico at the time of tho Melcan trouble. Fortunately that didn't amount to much. His next post was Teas. The Texas papers wroto columns about him and of the mutiny and riot that arose between the blacks and whites. Jack was considered tho hero. He came home last month for his farewell before leaving for "over there." I went home to Join tho family reunion. I asked him of the terrible night of the Hot and if he wasn't afraid. He said, "When danger eonies a true soldier never shirks, but does his duty. If j-ou're going to got it jou get It. It's far better to die a true soldier for the eauta than to live and be a slacker a disgrace to the countrj-." Then he told of his dear friend, another captain who was killed on the night of tha riot. He said the dying captain's last words were. "Go sen my mother and tell her not to worry." Jack stopped at Virginia, his dead friend's home, and saw his mother. She told Jack that this sou made a total of three that she had lost, two In France, and she still had a fourth and only son left, In France. Yet Jack said she never broke down while she w,aa talking to him, except that she seemed to have a far-off gaze at times ; once or twice she blinked hard, but that's all, and when she bade Jack good-by she smiled. "Slio's some woman. That's tho kind of women we men want. It Isn't going to the theatre for us, but ciylntc won't do any good." I know of another lady whose huband had been killed. She i;ald the leul meaning of the war had not been brought home to her until she lecelved word of her husband's death. Now all of her time Is devoted to war-relief work. Young girls- should be made to realize that we are actually at war and try to help the soldiers, not to fall In love with the sol diers and sailors. It Is up to us women to keep up the moral standing of the men If we want to win this war. Go In for Red Cross work all jou can, und above all, when you bid hlni good-bj-, no matter If j-our heart seems to be bursting nnd the tears seem to choke jou, hold back the tears until you reach home ; hold up j-our head and smile. II L Philadelphia. April 24. , Water Bureau Wages To the Editor of the Evening l'ullic Ledger, Sr We are wasting a lot of hot-air tall: on the police department and Public Safety Department, but not one word Is said about other departments or the salaries city .em ployes are getting In some of these depatt inentB. The question of salary seems foreign to the prevailing vice question In our city, but It la a fact nevertheless that the city Is paying Its help about the lowest wages that are being paid anywhere, On January 1 the Water Bureau raised Its men from 900 to J1000 a jear, which included oilers, firemen and engineers. Oilers and firemen are averaging )20 per week, engineers about 127 a weelc, and yet this Is no salary whatever for a man with a, family the way living Is at present. So much comes off every payment for the pen sion; then there are assessments, which is a thing that was revived again after Mayor Blankenburg had put a stop to It. Now, with alt this handsome salary, at the end of the year I find myself already In debt to the amount of j:G7, and In all likelihood I will be required to buy a Liberty Bond. Now how am I going to buy Liberty Bonds and keep my family on the handsome salary of (1000 a year? I do not mean to be un patriotic, but I cannot see my family suffer, so therefore I am getting Into debt head over heals through tha wonderful raise we received in the Water Byrt,u on January u These positions come tieUr.tka ha4io f awiiii )-, yt fivs.'B ieHrnvHt LET ME INFLUENCE YOUR DECISION!" t . -5.w.--ii f J (!, I J m 5s;V?f- paying for the same kind of work. Whj can not city employes benefit In the present high wage scale the same as those of other con cerns? No working man or mechanic can begin to live on less than J12Q0 the way living Is now. Does the city know this or doesn't it care a rap for Its employes? Men are leaving the Water Bureau every day and going where they can get a living wage. We are ready to do our bit. but we want something to do It "with. WATER BIT.KAU. Philadelphia, Apill 24. Sad Lot of the Grocer 7"o the Editor of the Evening PuWc Ledger: Sir The lot of the average retail gtocer Is not nn enviable one at the present time. He Is being imide tho "goat" for many of the unpleasant complications of the food sltuntlon. In fact, the public Is being edu cated to believe thnt the average grocer Is waxing fat on excessive waitlme profits. It Is a familiar practice of the real thief lo throw suspicion on the Innocent bjstaud er to divert the chase In another direction, und the grocer has to suffer If the retail grocer makes an ertor In selling Hour with out rho propr substitutes, he faces a fine of $5u00 or the closing up of his business. Were he to commit burglary or second-degree murder his punishment would scarcely be so severe. He Is expected to sell sugar, eggs nnd butter at a margin of about 8 to 10 per cent, whllo tho best authorities agree that tho overhead cost of doing business Is at least 15 per cent for tho average grocer. If ho Innocently or willfully forgets to complj- with some of tho technical points of tho pure-food law, he faces a heavy line. As a patriot he Is expected, If he has bought goods at a low price, to continue selling them at that price, even though It will cot him more money to replace these goods than he will get from the salo of them However, if he has bought goods at a high price and tho market drops, he Is unpatriotic and a profiteer If he doesn't at once drop ills prices, no matter what the Iors. Unlimited competition keeps bin margin of profit so low that competent authorities esti mate at least 75 per cent of the grocers fall In business sooner or later. Every time ho advunccs prices to meet market advances he is looked upon us a robber, but when ho lowcis prices for market declines he gets no thanks. If his customers meet with mis fortune, they expect him to carry them along, and too often forget him when the sun of prosperity shines again. Whllo retail grocers are faljing by tha thousands every year we note that the meat trust, oil trust, tobacco trust, sugar trust and all the other trusts are getting fatter each j-ear from excessive profits with no In terference from governmental authorities who aro so busily engaged In running duwri tome luckless, Insignificant grocer for some technical violation of the food rules that they have no time to Investigate the gigantic offenders who, through their absolute control of the necessaries of life, arbitrarily fix their prices at such a point as to give them tens of millions of excessive profits each year. The farmer, the wage-earner, the profes sional man aie all getting at leaBt 100 per cent more for their produce or services than prior to the war and their patriotism is un questioned, but the grocer is compelled to do business under costly war conditions on the same or a less margin of profit as before the war. He surely Is tho "goat " Ashland, Pa.. April 24. aROCEIt. The unfortunate Oer man citizen who was robbed of his llfe'a A Kaiser In Our Midst? savings by a plok pocktt at City Hall now knows exactly how It feels to live In Germany these days. The Kaiser may be That May VxpUIn It Intent on slowly ex- . . terminating his peo ple In order to Insure his own safety in Germany after the war. Undesirables are said $ liata Like Ham to be flocking to New . ,' . York , atoe rlc ,orw ts.ssnep rrwsa vaaaM-fifs. m 3 fBSMMpr , fjsjsjsjsjsjsjSL, ffU M ECONOMY FOR MEN By Elsie Duncan Yale (M, Mother must economize the txit ' " that alio Is able, To cut tho cost of living down on clothlnrl and on table; But why should she monopolize this pleu-l ant task? No, rather Let some of this frugality be practiced tot I bj Father! QO, Daddy, don't discard jour socki, lor that would be quite silly. Trim off the tops for wristlets vrartn to. wear when days aro chilly; Don't throw your old suspendersout, for it would bo far smarter To cut them up with greatest care to malt a stylish garter. rTIHE threadbare coat that long has but' J our patient form adorning 4 Will make a very useful vest to wear on; Sunday morning; ! While from your daughter's tlbbon bowl you'll cut. if you are thrift-. Some neckties that for business wear uH leally very nifty! "VOUR di ess-suit coat is all worn out anil. - looks quite "on Its uppers"? Twill make a good Tuxedo, then, to wtarJ to Httlu suppers. Don't thtow your old cigar-ends out, buts chop them up so neatly, To make an economic smoke and fill yourl pipe completolj'. rpiIESE many little helpful hints with! - best Intent we'te giving So Father, too, may help reduce this awnilj cost of living: For theie nre many, many ways a husbanol who Is clever May save a penny here and theie If he wljl but endeavoi. - TODAY'S JJSELESS QUESTION Why don't the tailors make ash-colored suits, on which tobacco clndera could be dropped without leaving a stain? What Do You Know? - QUIZ I. Mho Mas Madame Keianiler? 5. Who said. "I have hod wealth. rs kfl ixixeri but, If thrr ere all I sad. atwj wrtrt'iira 1 wauw u . S. Name tha author af "A Fable for OWm. 5. What l the nam of the Slshummedsa sawwj bok? 0, Where Js '.rtbratttt ", Who faunded Oeorsla? s. Where S4 the I'roinl.ed lJinJ? V. Who l Vlre Admiral von t'aprUef 10, What Is meant itr "the lion's shsrt . Answers to Yesterday's QuU I, MaasacliuHtll U railed "the Bar Btaia." ' 3, Robert llfownlnf. Ilrltim poi. oeua," 3. Kkunk rabba '"I ai.M rail, iai" Ill.tZT Zl tm War. S,nu 01 cna iniilliaa .-!-.- SJ'J statea when railed far war atnlj. Jl . Hotbed, and eold-frames ;r flased J a framed boi, usuallr. with siopiu '"U Thi hotbed has a Mil law aier as' S ni're, tuVUld-fraina has aar rich '""Jl 0. Kobln Iloodt it medieval ' "X letfnd wee lea a nana si ""' r- and rabbera. with, headquarters Iff wold forest, stealing .from tha lie helping tha poor and distress". 111 KrJsrr.au.r,inrrJfr wrv 0. I.U of Wlrttl eanntr af ICB aattth at Mai l, i, is is f airm """ 'tA t .. ,.. ill"! tel an earlr spring piaai -" a raHt-anapta iirawnun wi"-. .mil the Constitution (Artlil H. WJ.!' J. I'mldent Is i-omniander-ln-chlef ' , -.. . it tn , iim-a a, inw. . m Mail attars. ." at.antj-sUta. 1 OOifTMs. y 1a. . ,r . ' -. , 1 -1 ' ' ""' v 'v iM. vlmm , tmjm1 HwFV ' i