-iJ'giJSiiSSA''i , ,..- .v r- . -.. . , .,., ..A... , i I., i ii ii iwii.ii.wmh. ..,.,. i ii i CSt R&r KraPtJ till BTfri If !" l,y.. r mf' PCr tf ' VT. ' Ifi' . 3t. ml , . L iWtelEDCEtf COMPANY a,nea mi. loicuninon, viea I'rrniurm: jnnn x . rforcrriary ana-irea.iirpr; i-niup w. v-oiunii. wunani.. lonn a. Bpurtrcun. mrcciorp. bditoiiiaij euaud: .'Jif Cites If. K. Crtns. Chairman .TibE.sMir.Er Editor C. JIAIITIN. . . .Q t nt ral Buslnta. Manager atltahtl dally at FeBLlo T.edoeb ftulldlnc. vre Independence. Rciuare, Philadelphia. M,i;tsTRii.. ...uroia una inrninut Dirreia KTTn ClTT. . j. ......... .frf.r7HAiL ntlllrittiEr ' To 200 Metropolitan Tower oir.-.i 403 Konl Tliillrilnc Utll.. 100R Fullertou llulldlne Blr-tAn. inn" VWh.mK 11. ,11, 'I. v ''iiP NEWS BUBEAU3 : if l.rN. E. Cor. rtnniylvanla, ,Av. und 1 1th St "wiWiYoik 1IUUD... The Sun llulldlnr Lonhom liriniu..., London Time SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Etbnixo PcKLtn LEiKiKit In nrrveri tn nub MX l ',Kilberi, In Philadelphia and surrounding: towns LA-Vftthe rata nf twlvji Ml!, rnta rw-r u-tlt. nnvnhln tyjjZLx lh carrier, W?t'M-' Br malt ro points outside of Philadelphia, In !f j.' .'ulAni tiAlt k irak frku flrtw f Tlrt . nantai nar t.imitli Hfjmx f5) dollars per year, payable In advance. MO i ail -xorrisn countries one ii i aoaar pr . ,;Mtut .rs old as -well as new address. SWW - - fc&BEtX, 3000 VALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 3000 ftCir-4rf(frc all communication to Evening rubiio &JCM k Ledfftrt Independence Square, Philadelphia, SECOND CL1KB HAtU MiTTEl.. k Philadelphia., Salurdar. May 18, 10B CANT THIS BE STOWED? " CIEVGRAL hundred mlnerH ktf been i.Aj ..W inlf.n from IIia nnti-;i-'l( rot-In, t tiv ll)it ?,teAt1'" ..-- -.... .. ..v. .- j fVSffiaraft within a dav or two. 9.-'it.r. . ,.....,.. .. . ..... .... At. .t & Aiito 19 n. luniani.. vu laiinui in tin; iJfS tyfar wltJ-out coal and we cannot set coal l&iVWlthour miners. The ISngllsh learned this '. iarly p the war and they had to send over Vv!w i ... . ..... t ii una la h. itiiniHKi;. lie cuiiiiul 111 i uu WLi""! France and sort out of their urn'lcs fcKthoUsands of miners who hut! ln-cn put In vwk -.. wo Knew of (ho blunder tho Knciisn FAjV'madQ and we were warned u?aitist it, but wfKr'thoae in authority seem tu liavo Icnoted J.i. ' t tlin ,nv.ln.v 1 It la about time a system was worUeil out for excmptlns'from the draft the men T(iAnEaKd in occupations necessary to the conduct or me war. At present mere Tho commandant of the 1?otm Navy J Tard has ordered the otlKers to hulute tha . yebwomen, but not in the New Testaimnt Uffi manner. SANCTITY OK THE "GROWLER" AND OTHER THINGS 'W-. XTE: !IIi BONNEU has made u remark which convinces us that one-half the A'V'a.nrnAn ,n ,n V nritt hnvi t ho nthpf liilf fcrv;r "" : . 1st .dtinks. The Iietall L.iquor Ueulerb vs- ijWj ''ui;inuuji iuo ut'uutu iiiut iiit-pi iuja l fcf""oJvv J" eoweauay iib infiTiucs -win tea si: m'iuiik VtW i. i Bfrntuijua iiquui a in uuih, unt iiiul n win Sj-Xy protect the sanctity- of tho "growler." t&ffiVTh prowler? Don't you know what Rnt . -Vi a - T Id tiA ..... tUn l.imlrnl . I,a r r Ji ub lr la iiiu t,aii iitu unv,i i, itiv w-jSoIah. the paiL the pitcher or what you will g"vthat .the honest housewife (according to dvjut; Conner; xaK-'s to me suie-uoor oi a SSjijaJoonof an evening to be tilled with beer. sw.- - T,,'xn cannv woman ureases tne nsto or DHpntlif. can or bucket no that the barkeeper MJ "1"" Ab 1HI tlUlll, UUl lilVaOi tSV li(.'l trnnA mnnaiirn 1t l)mtnni c-n-u 1n.f If , Duvw l.Wfca 4 . 1UMIH.l OUJkl LIIIIV. 1 (,vino women are not to do perrntttcu to set iiMthetr beer in this way they will sit in the j saci: rooms of the saloons and be demoral- ; ' lised, So the growler trade must he pro tected In the interests of womanly Irtue! 5 PerhaDS he is ritht. But lie Is an nvrmi-f fjr ud must know. tr"-' " Creel says he was only joking, hut t, L.nsress aoes not yet tee tne point of his i" '. -- " -. TROUBLES OF THE AIR MAIL (rTfVBYIOUSIA' the new air mail service is experiencing some trouble in adjusting ijJiiflUeu?. to schedule and in overcoming the fRsjcBOVet dlfllcultles of an experimental serv- CTfvff.. ClkHtA .. 4 V... ....11 .ln.n l.n.... I.n..n iw. uiiq ui. Lite iiiau ituiita iiuu ucun B., Two have had to drop in the course the Journey between hero and New P.SSjyorlc. Their letters were shipped by tall. HS-jJrhe record of the air mall service doesn't PivSMtarmonlze so far with the notions of the w-eWerage man, who knows of aviation gVf&Through his reading about the amazingly ,jSflfcient work of the air fighters In Hurope. v.,4919.'(tmVLCl Ul liL.V 1IIT IIICIQ 111 lC till Lft-yaBrvice have done extraordinarily well. it-Odd its it may sound, they face dilliculties i& unknown to the war aviators. Because .' 'fV.kta.a.f.at'i . 11a... a..a. il.lnl.h, l.a.tl . a.rtrl si.ucfi uuursc ilea yvei liii-ii uuiil ui viiu BfAj populated regions they are forced to fly ut gsreat height. This U necessary because ,m forced descent in or near a town or city often involves disaster. The aviator who JiV"flti nvaf. Hiittt.iiit fnnimilnlllpit milat rn , ."VW ... wu.. ,. vu. ........ ...ww ...uuv r &5k i.lt' 1 . .(.! t. .. ...... 1. ..11 ..nn... K"VrlU5ll -Hi uruer iiiui. lie niuy uc ttutu iu tudai 4TiAll UPCIl UUUIIkiy 111 VcWC Ul IIUUIHC, ittl ItT.-!! A..I..A..n V.n.... tUt.. I.lnj.nn. In tt.nl. .' fUill aviaiuia ituc tttta itiiiut ttttt.c tit 1111:11 Ijfvork over strange country and on routes $thfarhtliar to them. BO There is no doubt that tho new air mall Ejirvce will be valuable. Inspiring and ef- Mclent. The postal filers are the pioneers ftf a, service that is sure to be expanded SftMr' 'n a 'ew 3"cars ' accommodate pas V .eneera as well as mail matter. And best 'ttCall, it Is giving a real excuse for trying toeut, our army fliers both men and ma- -; ??ehineg. g7 iv? 'j. Some one is hunting for America s rjilkddest boy. There have been times when ' t' e President thought he could name tne SP- wrst one it the limit wero raised to Include f who wear Ions trousers. m . nft i ut itAVt. la uii j-international contest now on In tho iiipyards oi Great Britain and America ltreo spectacular as a. race or a yacht- $&$ 6ut jt-is more exciting just now. ('present America nqias tne rivetera ror a woriiman in tne uaitimore Uie Bethlehem Shipbuilding Cor- n drove 4S7E rivets In nlno hours areday, beating Tuesday's record of nan in Scotland! by 353 rivets. i ia real sport There is no trickery Mt, Th,e rivet has to be driyen home !Mded or it 'does pot count. And the i at- which the men are playing is ; of beating 'jhe German submarines. Baltimore yard 'holds tbo prize for tb'?ment. It has besri competing with r ioomestic plants where the rivalry ay Keen, novt mat. it nas lateen on, rnatlonal character the' lovern of vol, ek)U ari .likely to watch for the rfn'week to week with as much an (he baseball fans scan '-he dj;.Bvcry afternoon for tha ro- r;5wt E-lfffW 5r-.lii:of v tlOTBi1 t.wPBs ay - SbgJtrti L&CM ; ihM ' -WKi L 'liMt ' 'am TUESDAY'S PRIMARIES , Who the Caiulldaico Are and 'What They Stand For Issues of the Campaign N0J MINAT10NS for State odiccs and onpfcss are to be mudc nt the pri- have nlirndy been held in the private oflices of the party nr.d factionnl lend ers and candidates to be voted for have been nnmed. We no longer attempt to delude ourselves into bclievinp; that the untrummeled electorate Roes to tho polls and out of its wisdom selects the best candidates, regardless of the will of the party organizations. The primary in use is an expensive and cumbersome way of making nominations, which often deprives an unconupted and militant minority of the power of forcing from a majority better nominations than il would give if left to itself. The Democrats will be virtually re stricted in their choice of candidates for the governorship to GulTey and Honni well. Votes may he cast for other men, but they will he too few to affect the result. Honniwell is frankly the candi date of the liquor interests. He is opposed to the ratification of the prohibi tion amendment to the Federal Constitu tion and he is seeking support among those who believe as he does. He may be nominated, for no one knows the senti ment of tho rank and file of the Demo cratic party in the State on the subject of national prohibition and no on knows what support ho will get from the old bipartisan gang which wishes to keep solid with the liquor men. Mr. GufTcy fe.vors the amendment. He hopes to draw to his support the bet ter element of his party. He is one of the reorganizes who broke up the alliance between the Republican State machine and the Democratic organiza tion. Mr. Guffey is a real Democrat, who believes in a straight-out fight. Hi nomination would mean that the party had set out to fight its own battles with out dickers with the Republicans. The contest on the Republican side is between Mr. Sproul and Mr. O'Xeil for the governorship and between Mr. Bcidlc man and Mr. Scott for the lieutenant governorship. It would be incorrect to say that it is between Sproul and Rcidlo man on the one hand and O'Ncil and Scott on tho other, for some supporters of Sproul are also working for Scott. All the Republican candidates profess to favor the prohibition amendment, but Mr. Scott voted against its ratification by Congress when it went on its final passage last December. Congressman Vare also voted against it. Scott and the Varcs were anti-amendmontists in December and are pro-admondmentists in May. Mr. O'Neil is squarely opposed to the liquor business. He is anti Pcnrose as well, for he does not relish the relationship that has existed between the brewers and distillers and tho Pen rose organization. If nominated he will continue the Brumbaugh policies, for he has announced that if elected he would make Francis Sliunk Brown his Attor ney General. This would mean the con tinued dominance of the Vare influence in the Executive Mansion. Mr. O'Neil is undoubtedly popular in the western and central part of the State, where there is jealousy of the influence of all the Phila delphia leaders. Mr. Sproul. so far as he is tied up with factionalism, is attached to the Penrose wing of the party. He has had long experience in tho State Senate. He is a man of lnrge business affairs and of undoubted executive ability. The local Vare leaders are said to bo working for his nomination, expecting perhaps that they will find him as amenable to their control as Brumbaugh as Governor and Smith in the Mayor's office. We know, however, what Mr. Sproul has been as Senator and can judge from that what he would be as Governor. His friends say he would be his own master in Har risburg. His enemies say he would be the agent of Penrose. He might attempt to play Penrose against the Vures and hold them both at bay. That remains to be seen. Penrose at any rate is willing to trust him and is throwing his great influence in favor of the Chester states man. The voters will make a grave mistake if they allow their attention to be dis tracted from the legislative candidates by the fight for the governorship. Tho Governor cannot pass or defeat the pro hibition amendment. That must be acted upon by the General Assembly. The voters will blunder also if they fail to recognize that there are other issues besides the liquor question involved in the election. That is important, but it is a single question. It is more impor tant for the Commonwealth that a Legislature be elected which favors economy and efficiency and will take steps to reform the State Constitution than that we have a Legislature which favors prohibition, will continue the old practices, ignore thj demand for a reform of the fundamental law and the correction of the evils of government in the large cities. A gang of workmen at Hog Island has set 101 tons of steel In eight hours; but what is Colonel Bogey's score? LOAFERS WORK, when you stop to think of it, is rather hard to defluo intelligently. Labor is not always useful In proportion to the degree of energy required in its per formance, A burglar works hard. If de voted toll was In Itself admirable the man who cracks a safe should be esteemed in any division of society. On the other hand, poets do not work, nor do captains of-industry engage in the arduous manual labor' which s the commonly accepted symbol of simple virtue. It Is dlfllcult to define and tabulate the qualities that make a, loafer, .Councils aren't dismayed, however, by ueh abstract p&uvm oi one of Mi the fash ionable questions of the hour. Councils have approved tho Bourse's suggestion for an nuti-loaflng law and u bill to mako loafing a crime Is now actually in tho bands of ono of tho committees. Antl-loadng laws havo been signed In New York, In New Jcisey and In Marland. It is said that countless lnrurahlo Idlers are drifting to Philadelphia idlers rich and poor, young and old for refuge. The cuinunities that bne already passed l.iwi against Idleness lmn religiously ic fralned from all efforts to define work, t'sually the provision is that all persons between tvcnU-onr and llfty who ate not engaged III "iceognlsTd. systematic and use ful rniplo.viuciit" lire candidates for the police court mi matter what their prestlgo or their social estate may he. Cut wouldn't on iintl-lnallmr bill crcalo havoc in Councils themselves'.' Wouldn't It ilesolale the political wing of tho Mnrulii Culldlng" Jim Si'hvwib Mill I in I will bf moving dn.v for Mr. us wi'll us r.tr the suet't Indies lm tltilllile lillllle-s lllfll GOOD USE FOR FREDERICK SKNATOI! CAM gi ess to oi iler A M. INCUR has aslicil Con- that the statue of Fred erick the Ci'eiit In Washington Iw melted anil I in ned into war tiinleri.il. We do not Know what Cmuics will do about it. but there would bu a surt i.f poetic justice In using the stnlue, which the Kaiser gave In Aineilin as p.ul of his prn-Cerman propa ganda, for carrving tho propaganda against K.'iIm'I'imu. til eat Caesar, dead mid turned to clay, slopped a hole to keep the wind away, and the great Frederick, molded Into guns, may well be used to stop a raid and chuck I ho Huns. Some of Mr Peolt's ruppnrtii- me s.iv Inc they ;ne for him Iwiiun1 he !- no vvors-c than neldleinaii. KERENSKY'S MISSION Nn ANM.it', spei'ltli' ml' ANNorNCK.MKNT of Ktrenskj's Isslou to America has iicconi- pained the report that lie will arrive in this country on Moiida or Tuesday. Cut he undoubtedly comes In the interest of a tree Itussla. As such he deserves a hearty welcome and a icspcclfiil hcrlnp. Cven though he represents no one but himself, lie Is equipped bv knowledge and experience to give the State Department information which It can get nowhere ct."e so well. Amciicu is svnipatlictic with the aspira tions of the Russians. It Is hoping that the nation ran organize Itself to icsisl the Cernian plans of absorption In time to keep the Ceiman armies busy on the eastern front. It is hoping, too, that leaders will arise Willi a sense of their re sponsibilities to established and orderly .so ciety and organize a government which will conserve the libel lies and lerources of the nation. The men In tho iiiiddlo at present have not pioved themselves to In., men of this type. The sufliiigtsts now i nil him (Ileal Scott. Slneki is who have mmikIiI draft hn munily in the slilpj .nils aie not Hading the timber theie very tall. Vin-lc -.un will spend I3.iliin.non for new housis in Camden. This is one vvi of relieving the pressnie on tin ferrh's. living ltneluilor wiites to Hit e-.Iaor of Rome that Amern'.L will si ml I n.iinii.nnii soldii'rs t" Kilinpt' if n ssiii.v. and Ihe c.- Mavtn is apprnprlatfly heartened. It tnok about a work to Kvl 1'al i olniati AiH'ibui'h la jail Now that nMau. uit Ufp,)fr who in ho asaultftl oukIu to bo al lowed to do business uthoul fuithcr moles tation. THE CHAFFING DISH Thoughts in a Thunderstorm Marathon 13 a great place for thunder storms. Whenever there's all electrical dis till banco in the neighborhood It conies and camps out on our hill. We don't care for thunderstorms. When the lightning gets so filundly we always wonder whether anything personal is In tended. And lightning is so hast, don't j 011 think'.' When we see those big purplu clouds piling up over our bean patch, and those unpleasant .vcllow and gieon ribs of light ning Muckering down In that careless and irresponsible manner, all the ill-assorted in formation we half remember about thunder storms comes into our mind. We remember hearing of so many cows struck by lightning that we get u hit wor ned about the baby's milk In the icebos. So we hun down and make the infant drink all the milk and sneak out and put the bottles on the next-door neighbor's back pinch. Then we recall that milk turns sour in a thunderstorm and are afraid to tell our wife what we havo done. tlenerally our wife is out calling or away .somewheru elte during a thunder stoim, and we have to bear the peril alone. We put all the umbrellas In the cellar. We take our new penknife, out of our pocket and put It In an old rubber boot in the cupboaid. We have recently had some new fillings put in our teeth, and we have an idea they attract the lightning- That worries us greatly. Wo hide our safety razor under the bathtub. Then we go down to the kitchen to as sure the cook that there Is absolutely no danger. These must bo anxious days for Kills Parker Butler, the well-known author of "Pigs Is Pigs." The 1918 issue of "Who's Who" will (toon bo out and we hope it will list him correctly. The 1917 edition had him down as Alice Parker Butler. We wonder why they didn't call his famous story "Sows. Is Sows." A spare box of matches is Just as impor tant for a man as a spare tiro for an auto-1 mobile. Deck Mottoes Dear Socrates My desk motto- comes from Mark Twain. It Is this: To be good Is noble; to leach others to be coot) is nobler still, and less (rouble. GEOFFREY. Evidently the "petroleum peace" in Ru mania has lubricated Herman propaganda In Mexico. Carranza i's now trying to stir up an oil war. He may find those Tamplco old fields Carrancid; SOCRATES. GVYNEMER THE ACE OF ACES I Wv Christopher Morlry IN Till: dingy hall of a dismantled depart ment store on Market street lies a little brown bird with outspiend wings. It seems to strain upwunl. eager to launch itself Into tlie tlcnti blue air. above the gloom and con finement of flint eiowilnl sluice. Us tall Is slrlptd with the Immortal colors of France. On Its hotly Is painted a led i-iork. It is ona of the fninons Clgogne csearlrllle It is tltiy neiners plane. It Is the I'iriiJ- f'nrcs. WHAT could Minnies the tenderness, tho shnplltit.v. the masculine feeling In those two brief words I'lritj- rharlcn! "Old rlmvlr.1." the llllle brown plane (so gallant and so small) In which iluvnenier won tvven-lv-t'wo of his lirty-three ollli-i.il triumphs. What a slory that little brown bird he called 11 affectionately his "cuckoo" could tell If It could Hpeiik! Never again will it see Uie riimilhir IlKure, lull, pale and thin, with the burning blink e.i es. iliiynemer. the A f Aces, the Idol of Fiance, the heroic btiv who snared w high Into the heaven of Klorv tlnil one dn.v lie tllsappentcd and never ciine bad, 1 iuj nciiier ls gone There Is a legend In l-'i.inee that his plane lldes the air still Ficnch childieii s-ipilnt into the sky 10 sen that hnaghnii.v black speck. He whoso soul was lll,n a Maine hovels fin ever in tho azure of 11 nov -i Gi:uRiii:s Ceeeiubir ill VM'I.MKK. born in Palls J I. It!' I, of a hlstriile soldier fimiilv. has entered the ranks of the proudest chivalry of earth, the w allium of 1- riince. J11 his youth his passionate fury of combat, his in iieiunii- ii'ivuus vitality, there was an echo of the veiy pulse of France. His life spoke to the lieart of the nation. Honoilng him, she honoietl her own Instincts, her own trui st Ideals. II- was her eaglet, her Imp of glory. TT WAS when he t luunini t Krihs. the son of a vvell-k luiinmiil Willi .lean iioit 11 Ficnch automobile engu r. that his vocation began In show ilself i he IWO hnv s IIM'il til wall' In the Champs F.l.vsees, wing with each oilier to lilcntlt'v the make ami power of the curs that passed When the scholars m.Vle expeditions with their teachers In see engi neering factories, iliurges was alwa.vs linger ing behind lo ask tpiestlons of the workmen when the nlhtrs had bet 11 lined up for the return trip, lie wanted to see and touch and untli.i-staiid 1 vi 1 v Hung. 1 me day an airplane Hew ovtr the m hool nrd. Years afterward he told his father or the incident: "I don't know what happened in me. 1 felt an eiutilliiii si pinfoiiud it was almost religious, Vttu nni'-t believe me when I till joii 'c ioi 1,1 be an avialor." And one ttf bis schoolfellows savs: " hen evtr an implant- happentd to tly over that part of the cit he tollowtil It with his ejes and lenialnetl watching the sky lung after 11 had ihsappt ared." HIS fatht r. however, discouraged the idea. Aviation was. not a caicer, he told hhn , If was niilv a sport Which was liw licfmc the war. And tin 11 ileorges admitted his great seen t, that as a schoolhoj he had been up in an airplane He had persuaded a flier at I'orhcriiilieti, mar his home In Compiegne, to take ltl 1 11 up. I'louched behind the pilot, his arms clutched tightly imind the man's body, he hail tasted the gkuy of the air. WHHN the war broke out (leorges was with his patents at Itlarritz. For the inoiut-nt his old ilicnms wete forgotten. Ills onl thought was to m-i-vc In any possible wa. l!ul he was twice rejrcKd for military service. He was Indeed too trail for the in fantr.v. He was In disp.iir and w-amleted in mournful htondingH about the sandy beaches. Then one day a plane landed on the seashoic He rushed up to the aviator and asked how he could get into the air service. The man fold 111 in to go to the living Held at P.m. He did so the net tla, anil his earne-am ss and glowing dark e.ves prevailed upon the ciimtnander. on November J1 he was eni plnvci as an appi entice mechanician. In duty oveialls he cleaned the engines, studied the machines In detail and. as one of the tlieis said, would ciurv 11 Inn ket of water across the field Willi enthusiasm If the pilot would only nnswir a tmestlon hi return. In January, CUB, he licc.inie a pupil pilot and made his first ascent in Fchruuiy. Gl'YNK.MKR was born for the air. and with his Hist lllght began a new life. His letters home, brief, witty. Intoxicated with the passion of the sky, show how every energv of ids soul ami brain were con centered In tins magnificent gymnastic and jugglery with duith. He found It "folleincnt aiiiusant" madly amusing. i if his first lllght he wrote tn his father, 'i was not a hit nervous: It was quite comic I enjo.ved it 1 iiormniisly, hut I'm glad mother wasn't there 1 don't think I established a reputa tion for caution." No man was evu- mine ntttrly absorbed in any task than (iu.v iieiuer in his burning zeal to eonipier the air. He inuld not 1011 ceive that what delightid hhn could tumble am one else In June, lDIf,, M.nt to join an active escadillle (The Stoiks) on duty near his home, (oinplcgnc, he made Ii bis custom every day to "teassure" his mother and sis ters of his safety anil progress by pei form ing the most fantastic evolutions ovi r the house. Most of his letters wci e of this tenor: "Ycsterdaj 11101 nlng about n o'clock 1 did some twirls over the house, about 17111J Haters up. Hid ou see nie? I punished the motor for live minutes so .vnu'd he sure to hear me." This strain of laughing boyish ness was characteristic. After a hard duel he would come down exulting cr the .wounds In his plane, and could not lest until lie had showed eaeli lent of fracture to his companions. On July 1!). 1 9 1 S, ho brought down his first Iloche ; but bo had to wait six months for his next one and also for his new plane, a Xlcupnrt. When he got It he pei formed outrageous loops and spirals our the home roof lo "consecrate It." ON'K could go 011 for many pages recount lug anecdotes of this cavalier or the sk.v Henry llordeaux. In his just published "Vie lleroinue rie Cuynemer." tells the story with infinite charm and tenderness, 'lids boy, scaicely bearded, was possessed of an al most maniac joy and fury In his airy com bats. Ills nervous, electric temperament was unappeasable. His face, departing for ac tion, was "terrible." Kven returning from a successful duel his countenance ne,ver lost its savage hunger and eagerness. After he was wounded at Verdun he was afraid that his nerve had been shaken, sp 011 his next Might he determined to test hhnself. He "commanded himself" not to lire at his Boche. lie elided round the enemy flier (who fired 000 shots at hhn) without pulling the trigger of his mitrailleuse. This was to batlsfy himself that his spirit was Intact. ON SEI'TEMBKIt 11. 1917. this king 0 the air flew into the Flanders sky and never returned. His comrade, Lieutenant Ilozou Vcrduraz, last saw him engaged with a Her man plane, about 10 o'clock that morning. Apparently he was killed by a bullet through the head over Poelcapelle, but neither his body nor his plane was ever found. That territory was under very heavy bombardment at the time, and the village of Poelcapelle was shortly afterward retaken by the Brit ish. As Henry Bordeaux says, he accepted nothing from the enemy, not even a wooden cross. His name was carved on the wall of the Tantheon In Paris, and there can be no finer epitaph than his last citation: "A legendary hero, fallen in tho full heaven of glory after three years of ar dent fighting. He will remain the purest symbol of the qualities of bis race: In domitable tenacity, ferocious energy, sub lime courage." FRANCE could have done us no greater honor than lend us the V(eux Charles. Of all her gracious and noble gestures of affection, this was the finest. Think what that little brown hawk of the sky means to her. On those wings the darling of France outrode death and laughed In air above the roofs of Compiegne, swooping and spinning to "reassure" his mother. Vfex Charles, Vtcux Charles, I think your wings must quiver for tha blue sky ot France. JU. THE FEMALE AFTER SPECIE hi War-Fund Solicitation She Is More Deadly Than the Male By SIMEON STRUNSKY I WENT stiaight to the man who Is re sponsible for filling up these pages with tvpe, took his piotTcni! cigarette, and under cover of the snioke-iioiitl wan over the ti cliches and Into his fori most positions be fine lie knew- 11. "It wouldn't Incommode .von In the least, would it, now." I said, "if my article railed lo turn up this week'.'" The attack had t.een laicfully prepared and delivered with irresistible pathos. A big hole In his make-up suddenly confronted hhn. I lonlideiitly expected hhn to lose his morale and say ' kamerad, Kamerad'" Hut lie re tired d'oggtdly to positions piepared In advance-die has hundreds of them and threw in the first installment of his army of maneu ver. "Theie's a leasun, 1 suppose?" he said "Colonel." I said, "the reason Is fnlr and wanner with thunder showers at night. There Is a haze over the top of the Equitable Build ing. The straw hats are blossoming like mad. The grass in the park across the way Is ridiculously green. Ilefore the incubators in the windows of the horticultural stores the multitude swirls hither and thither, and the women gasp over the darling little watering cans, and strong men tuin pale at Hie low price of California piliet The Indira In the subway have put on their fins. The classified columns are full of furnished apartments to let and bungalows right over the water; the kind ou leap out of the windows of, ou know, and right Into the waves, at the risk of . breaking our neck. The orators In City Hall squaie quote from the llieek Testament. Trousers will be worn rather snug around the leg The news bovs aie diving into the municipal fountain. There weie people for dinner last night, and afar that I sat up writing poetry. I haven't a carttldgo 111 mv head. It is spring, Hiigadii'i- Ceneial." HE C.M.I.lUi up another battalion of the army of reserve. "Have a cigarette," lie said "Thev are pretty good. A fellow came In with a pen-and-ink sketch, 'Grapefruit Stand bv Moonlight.' I didn't buy the sketch, hut lie forgot bis cigarettes on tin) able. What am I to put in place of your stuff at a riav's notice?" I chased hhn all the way up the ridge and hair wav down the reverse slope. "Put in something about the Red Cross." I said. "How?" he said, fanning a salient. "Ceneral of Division," f said, "It's the easiest thing in the world. "Tell the people who are hovering before the hat-storo win dows that it rains just as heavily on No Man's Land as It does on the best $5 Panama. Tell the people In the touring cars that things are much less comfortable on the stretchers in the bnvaux. Itcmlnd the people In the bungalows that there is less air around the operating tables In the dugouts." I saw his line wavering, but he called up his camouflage corps. "f:o on. go on." he said, and I thought there was a grim smile in his eye. "Ask the people," I said, "why on earth It should be necessary to formulate any argu ments for tha Red Cross. That's all." My shock attack bad him groggy for a mo inept. He had evidently been prepared for a sustained bombardment. "That's fine," ho said, "as far as It goes. We need another thousand words." "There's war stamps," I said. He counter-attacked fiercely. "I was Just thinking about that," he said. "You mean?" T7lli;iiD MARSHAL," I tald, "It's rather V interesting about war stamps. They make life easy for us parents. You know how we used to He awake nights thinking of how to save up for the children. It Isn't any longer necessary. They attend to the thrift. All I do now Is lie awake nights thinking of xvhat will hapuen to the butcher's bill after the young ones get through being thrifty for the week." He countered bravely while re-enforcements were rushing up. "There Is a good deal In what you say," he remarked, "though not, quite enough." "Harold, you know, has reformed," I said, "He no longer demands a nickel for runnlne errands to the drug store. All lie wants Is a thrift Btamp. He Is constantly volunteering for drug-store service. He has Btocked up with peroxide and tooth powder till the autumn offensive of 1921, He has no preju dices against the grocer, either. He skips down with a dollar bill and brlngf lack a box ot soda crackers and ninety cents' "I'M GIVING THE KAISER A TONGUE-LASHING! worlh of tlnifl stamp: i. At the rate he Is going if shall soon no woitn ii,nvii " thrift stamps, provided I can keep the fam ily lu food. The great problem, however, is to pi event the cook from leaving. Harold is pretty geneiallv ill the kitchen trying to sell the cook thrift stamps. The other day we found the girl In tears lie had been tr.vlug lo sell lit r a LJhertv Bond. He suc cieded. She said she had never been In a place wheie she had been so much put upon. Then, are tho-e who say that in the ( Intervals between selling stnmps to Maggie, Harold visits the icebox, where the bananas ate Hut I don't know " He advanced under cover of darkness. "Have ou another cigarette?" he said. "And Harold's small lister?" "Versailles Council, give ear." T said. Im parting a lighter touch lo the horrors of war. "The reinale out for specie is moie deadly than the male. Harold's small sister comes nround after her suilper and says she knows a new dance. She Insists on my being very comfortable in the armchair and not reading while sht' dances. It Isn't very good danc ing, but It isn't v"i bad It Isn't as good as Pavlowa. but it's better than the Brahma putra Elbow li.iuce. The performance lasts from one minute and a half to three minutes. When It is over.' she announces that the price of ndtnlssinii is twenty-five cents one thrift stiimo. When I tell her that I am connected with the press, she says nothing doing and demands the war tax one nickel In cash, twice the legal rate I think Mr. MeVdoo ought to know about It" lirt tr'ed a flank move. "Harold and the little one are all you have?" he said. "That is all, Generalissimo." f made answer. "I thought vnu might tell me something about the others, if you had them." ho re marked, somewhat inconsequentially. I thought. And then, suddenly, "Havo a cigar''" So he was bringing un ids heavy guns. "Now there's the shipbuilding program." he remarked. "f wonder if ou've ever thought about It?" "Vot a thought." 1 told Mm. His face grew sad For a moment, f Im agine, he contemplated some sort of sapping opei-atlon, hut gave it up. "Well," he said, "f Imagine we have almost enough fir this week. Retter luck- nex't time. Ludendorff." I don't quite know whal hn mean! but what's the odds so long as 1 reached mv objective? (Cnnvrlulit) Forceful Language There is just ono kind of peace talk that Is useful now. and that Is the voice of the cannon discharging explosive shells in the German trenches. New Haven Union. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. l!nv iimii DfrnnrrMr rrrrllent! hut there lirtti lu tin liiht Hfty car i? 3, Niime tlie author nf Nutr'Hia"? 3. Wtutt were (lie tlilrtrrn Orlttlnnl M;itrs? 4. Which U thf l.iiou Mute? A. What U the iiitlmiul flower of Trance? 0. H1i.it U the capital of Ohio? 7, Uhat it ii hiTKftuit major? K. Wlm I U mrunt liy the Initial. "K. of IV? 0. What U the urlcht of the nuine of Kentuckj? 10. Who nun tlmenul? Answers to Yettcrtlay'g Quiz 1.. MohofkM a iirototiure of "hooHKuni,' uho In fected London In the- eUhtrenth century. 2. llorldn c-ome from a Spanish word, mean Inc 'land of flouerit" 3. JtyneM U tha numt frenurut tUen name of the I'reiildentN of the United Mate. VOId (ilnrr U u nouulnr term of u (Tret Ion ap plied to the Amerlran flair 5. rrorrnlnet In elrthlr mrtliulncir the daughter of C'ereM, Hhit ua uhdurteil hy Pluto and, an hU wltt, was iiueen of the lower redom. C. JteMon!lble tnlnlntrrt n eablnet whose pro gram and polM-let, mutt lime the Indorse ment of h parliamentary majority. The roternuient retires on Hit ftdicrit tote rec Utereri aialnM u iltHl party polio. Kns land ha a "reunonnlble ministry," 7, "Tom Kiwjrr"! k story of American life by Mark Twain. S, He thy lion (Mm. V.llzabeth t'laynoole), who, according: to tradition made the timt Amer lran flag. Is hurled In Mount Morlah Ceme tery, Philadelphia. 0. 1 la nurd VnU entity h In Cambridge, Mar, 1U. Jonkherr J, Loudon U l'orrJgu Minister at Holla ud. ivdtit'aM!' THE HARPOONER SUSPECTS By Strplwn W. Memlor THE the HE nautical-looking old man who spears c scraps of paper and cigar-stubs In our square dropped his bag of waste on tho end of my bench and sat down with n brief nod of greeting. It was a lino afternoon. My polito observation to that clfect btought foi th only a surly grunt and I turned avvny to the company of my pipe. There was no wind stirring. A blue pulf of smoke, gently impelled from the corner of my mouth, found its way past the nose of the ex-car-fcrrymali, and watch ing him sidelong I saw him onltf and fumble in liis pockets. The ancient black pipo ap peared. The Harpooner shifted his weight uneasily and fidgeted tho pipe about in Ills hands while I smoked on with deep and obvious content. At last he cleared his throat. "Let's see." he muttered, "what did you say was the name o' that terbaccerV" I swung around. "Angelica," I replied, genially. "Here, till her up." HE PA thin iU'IvED the tobacco ill with a horny, imb and thanked mo quite civilly. "Now," f said, when tho black pipe was drawing, "tell mo what has spoiled your day." Ho took a pulf or two in silence. "Well," he said finally, "things ain't what they used to be." "No," said I seriously. "L's mlxin' In with all these different Alleys an' funiners," be went on. "We generally used to manage to fight our own wars, without callin' in fellers thut couldn't even talk American." rp.KE these here, now, Blue Uevils. ; I seen 'cm pullln' up in front of In dependence Hall in automobiles with them littlo soldier-girls drlvin" 'em. First I thought they was sailors, from the caps they had on, but then when they got up closo I saw the gold-braid trumpets sewed on their clothes an' I guessed right off they must helong to some fire department. Only, as 1 told Kelly, the cop, I'd hate to have that bunch workln' on a tiro around my house. "'Fire,' lie sajs, 'them ain't firemen. Them's Alpine Chauffeurs!' .(TTTELL, o' " up, but : com se ho knew, so I shut they sure was a bloodthirsty lookln' gang. I guess maybe they keep 'cm to run the tanks. "Anyhow, they all marched in the Hall with their flogs an' the band played first the 'Marseillaise' and then tho 'Star Span gled Banner," un" before you could get your hat on aguln they started 'Aineiicu.' I got tired Just stnndln' still, but you know them, now, little Motor Mess'nger Maids kep' their hands up to their foreheads salutln' tho whole time, an' never winked a eyelash. "By V by tho Blue Devil Chauffeurs come out, laughln' an' Jabberln' in their lun- , guage, an' wavin' to the girls in tho crowd. Somebody says they've all been wounded an' got medals for bravery an' so they're tukln' their vacation over., here. "Well, maybo so. Maybe them female tarn o' shunters Is what soldiers wear In Paris, France, but It looks funny to me. You never can tell much about these furrin'-talkln' fellers. An' say" he leaned closer und lowered his voice "how about ', them mustaches, huh? Borne of 'em looked mighty like tills hero Hludonburger to me."s With an emphatic nod tho Harpooner ' picked up his sack: and strode away in the direction of a trespassing cigar-stub- jr. ' .U- , ,'TC & ,"w ,v m i4v v" .',- ft - "ii V u ii KS-& .Jv if '3'-! ;.' s,.. -, rf& r.V ft-ttitr-'. V.4I -f1.- tHi .vrth' . no y'i