.1 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA. FRIDAY, ,T0NE 28, 191$ a. l$ublic ffebqcc C CEDGER COMPANY It H K. CURTIS. Pnr.sinBST I. (.Wllnrton. Vlr. Pr, pl.l.-m John C retary and Troaeurer; Philip S. Collins, iioama. jnnn j. spursron. Directors. EDITORIAL BOARD Cram H. K. CrsTis. Chairman i . BMILET Bailor ' C. MARTIN General IVuBln. -i Manager Shed dally at Pcai.lc I.neoBu Hulloine. hMenenriVn.-,' Sciu.r,. Phi l:.lrh.fn.i Cb.ntbai. Broad and Cheatnul Streets I Cltt Pmt-fnion Bulldlnc spaa 2H1 Metropolitan Tower 4".T r oim HIIIHIWIS HWIB Fullerton llull.llna 1102 TrlftMar Bulldlnc NEWS ROIUtn: ON "I FJI 1. Cor. !'i nnM'.:in::i Av and 1 l!h St roiH BtuKit . 'I'll.. Si... Ilulldlns avnr.i i I.onlon 1 I SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Utssino Pl'BUc I.r.poBB la aerved to aub ra In Philadelphia and aurroundlns tuwna l rate of twelve (121 cent per week. pajaMe arrier. all to point out'l.lr of Philadelphia. In M Ptatea ( ana. in. or t'niten siHlea inm DOftaae free. flft 1 "01 tent? per month. dottara per vear. payable In advance Tail forelrn rountrpa one tail dollar iter -Suberrlhera wlablnn aiMreB chanced i old an well aa new nddreaa. WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 3000 ' idlfrmii all rmnniwttlrnr'iow., fo Erryii.io Public jm9r, Indrprmtnrr 8'iunrr, Phitntl'-llna. AT TUB PlUI.AnBiriHA roar orrlrB AS BTONP CI.ASK MAIL MATTBB rkllaaelphU. Friday. Jane 21. Kll INTERESTING BIT UNIMPORTANT ILOTD (JKOKCK sins (hat the Entente II Allies are fighting for the principle tltr which Ireland has been snuggling. He) has also sa.it! that hi (iovernment Would stand or fall on his plan for home Imle and Irish omisciiption. Bat consrrlptlon has been abandoned Ad home rule is not so near as when the wr began The British Premier's statement!) on the Irish question are alums interesting, but Unfortunately they haw i as.- 1 i.. n. mi porunt. The "Watch on the Rhine" will he Hik ing leas regularly when that American sector te Alsace is pushed forward. END THE FARCE THE nonpartisan Judiciary primary law has not produced the results which its ivocates anticipated. Tin- KepYolirans ttOVe voted to put lOpuhlii'an :.iw. "il the bench and the Democrats haw vole.! tor Democratic lawyers. And litis tar. When two Supreme Court .Indies are to be elected, no yoter may .-as! Ills hall..! for inare than one under tite provisions of the Constitution. This means in all proba. Mlity a Republican and a Democrat will fee elected. And they would haw been elected Just the same if we hud no mm Mitlsan primary law yi'The State Bar Association has referred DD Its committee on law reform a resoltt- demanding the repeal of the law, and Instructed Hampton I,, Carson, its chuii tBttn, to prepare a bill dealing witji the abject for presentation to the next Gen 'oral Assembly. It is not known whether Mr Carson Will attempt to remedy the palpable de lete In the law as it stands or will draft , general repeal bill. But none but the ItorUts will be grieved if his bill is one repeal the exist inn ait. 1 lie fane has sued long enough for every practical r-fe realize that it is a farce. The River Chlantl la probably doing overflowing on its own account in Italy flow. VON HERTLING FIXES THE BEAMS! Chancellor vox hkkti.im; toils V the Reichstag that "the responsibility jfer the continuation and immeasurable fJCOlongation of the terrible war" reits en deUlrely on the enemy Powers, "for it goes Without saying that there , an be no que lost of lessening our energetic defense or star will or of shaking "ur confidence in fctory" Just so. If the Entente Allies wile sur- laader to the Hermans there can be peace sjatorrow. If tiicy would only stop ttght- "faaar Rarnunv would be delighted. But ri, does not she stop gluing and end the Bar if he is so anxious for peace'.' She . Ma have It whenever she is willing to alt that she is licked. ultra your old shoes" runs a new afl of the leather men. Excellent advice ufer those Uernians who conteinplat arch- ' tV to Paris. CAKES AND KINGS THE amiable intent of the cablegram announcing King (leorge and Queen ary's consumption of one order each of lean buckwheat cakes is entirely evl- 1 It was pleasant to record that Brit monarchs visited the Eagle Hut In T IjHaVin and there did eat of the food pro "fllad for our soldiers. - Unquestionably the English censor was flighted to pass the dispatch and it's ten to one he never bad a qualm about its au thenticity. With the least training In the ' (toties of American gastronomy, however, f suspicions would have'been aroused. A row of Americans, asserted this report, "were devouring sand and pancakes." Here is loose lan- lndeed, arid sufficiently insulting to any self-respecting griddled disk of beat batter flop back into the tire tJAajaruet! Pancakes ate aliens and have been branded as such. The real breakfast table, where, if the t cake does not daily reign su it at least ever remains a glorious Itnows not these foreign "pasties." apted with eggs, ruthlessly folded d efTeminlzed with Jelly, the French ut a dessert, nut a staple. The I but pitifully thin Herman variety, with lemon juice, is a monstrosity, i empire of its origin. incakes whst King George was taste, far better had he imitated tor Alfred and let his breakfast llbtleas politeness restrained him. state of the case and of his ta is revealed by the damaging he declined a second portion. masquerading products of Eagle ry must have been pancakes. Indigenous bupkwheat master- ily soft, softly crisp, born of nucleus, with proper aet a wintertime, be- . sajensr. , shining with syrup, is en misinformed ! nwn notwrtously A SCHWAB OF COAL MINING NEEDED Unless He Is Found There Is Grave Danger of a l oa! 1 amine Next Winter st Bsrl si Lsst Year's AITHAT is imperatively needed to tin " tangle the anthracite muddle is a man big- enough for the job. There is coal enough in the ground. All that is necessary to get it out is expert skill to mine it and sufficient crude labor to load it in the trucks in the min and run it through the breakers. Then an intelligent method of distribu tion will send it where it is needed when it is needed. The work of building ships was lag ging a few months ago in spite of the fact that we had the steel and the ship yards and a generou,s supply of skilled and unskilled labor. Nobody seemed to know what to do. But Mr. Schwab was called in and he soon arranged for a system of producinp the kind of steel needed for the ships in sufficient amounts and for the distribution of the different kinds and shapes to the shipyards in the order in which it was needed. The solu tion of the problem was so simple that only a man of Mr. Schwab's directness of mind could think of it. Mr. Garfield, president of Williams College, who has been in charge of the fuel administration for more than a year, may be a very good academic administrator, but he has balled up the whole coal business from the beginning. He told us last year thnt he would re duce the price on anthracite to the con sumers and provide sufficient coal, but he neither provided the coal nor reduced the price. His method of price fixing, intended to stimulate production, put a damper on it. He is doing nothing now, so far as is known, to prevent the draining of the mining region of its supply of crude labor and skilled miners. A thousand mine workers left the region yesterday, drafted into the army. The workers, many of them, were glad to go. They were anxious to fight for the cause of liberty. This is to their credit. It is to the everlasting discredit of whoever is responsible for the drafting of these men that they have not been convinced that they arc fighting the Germans just as effectively working in the mines as they will be carrying a gun in France. Every breaker boy, every man who loads a truck in the mines, every engi neer at the power stations, every miner is helping to win the war, for he is doing necessary work to keep the munition factories running and to provide heat for cooking the food for the workers in all the various industries of the country, almost every one of which is essential to the equipment and maintenance of the fighting army on the other side. If the mine workers had had the situa tion explained to them as it has been explained to the workers in the shipyards they would insist that they be allowed to remain at their work and they would handle coal in the same spirit as the trench digger in one of the shipyards, who said to himself every time he lifted a shovelful of earth that the grave for the Kaiser was so much' nearer dug. But the essential character of their work has not been pointed out to the men in the mines. The provost marshal general has not even had them exempted from the draft as essential war workers. This could be done with a stroke of the pen, if any one had the nerve to do it. The district draft boards in this State have put some of the miners in a de ferred classification when they have asked for it. But the initiative has had to be. taken by those miners themselves, who realized the importance of their work. This is the season when the coal must be got out of the earth, but virtually every mine is short-handed. The Lacka wanna Coal Company, for example, re ports that it needs more than 600 miners and more than 2000 laborers. But it cannot get them. The men it needs have been sent to France, are in the training camps or on the way there. And a large number of the coal yards in this city are empty, with not a ton to supply their customers. More than 130,000 tons less than the normal demand has been shipped to this city in the last three months. And much of the coal mined is being sent to New England and the Middle West. Coal is needed in those regions, but their shortage last winter did not approach the shortage of this city at the door of the coal region. Mr. Lewis, the local coal administrator, is exerting him self to get coal. But he can accomplish little sj long as the Federal Govern ment is depleting the labor supply in the mining region and so long as Mr. Gar field complacently reports that the situa tion is well in hand. There is no need of a fuel shortage next winter. There are men in the coun try big enough to find a way to prevent it, but they are not in authority in the fuel administration. If the President will make inquiries among the coal operators he can discover the man capa ble of doing for the fuel production and distribution what Mr. Schwab has done and is doing for ships. Will he do it? The t pidendc of cold whhh is said to have held up the Cerman drive seems to have settled In the feet WHEN YOU WRITE WIS HAVE said it before, and we shall continue to aay it, the kind of letters to write to our men in France are letters full of cheery, encouraging and hopeful gossip about home affairs. When the good news of the Tuckahoe launching at Camden was cabled to France the Stars and Stripes, the A. E. F. weekly newspaper, said editorially, "TBat is the kind of news we like to hear from tbe States cheery njtra, heartening news. news of the big things being done with pep and hustle." t When you sit down tonight to write to your husband, brother, son or friend over there tell him how many war-savings stamps you have. Tel him there's another Liberty Eoan coming along In the fall. Tell him that nearly one hundred ships will be launched on the Fourth Tell him President Wilson Is preparing an answer to Von Hertllng and Von Kuehlmann that will add one more stone to. the absolute solidarity that unites the Allies until Prus sian militarism Is crushed. Tell him of the new draft of twenty-one yearlings. Tell him the P-boat raid over here was a flivver. Tell him every citizen of Phila delphia eats more food In a week than a German sees In a month. Tell him you have ordered your coal and you are going to keep after Garfield to see that you get It Most of the thlrers you are worrying about probably won't happen anyway. There will be plenty of food and plenty of hard knocks for the Huns. And then, when you have told him all that, go out and buy a package of 1Mb favorite tobacco and send It to him. Then you can look your service flag in the face without a blush. If one regards Ike Deutsch as a pawn, his request for a "lone trial" seems only natural SENSIBLE MR. BENSON ALLAN L. BENSON, who ran for the presidency on the Socialist ticket In 1916, has formally withdrawn from the party on the ground that It Is now con trolled by leaders devoid of Americanism and by "ait anarchistic syndicalist mi nority." There was no other course open to a thoroughgoing American who Is loyally supporting the Government In Its prosecu tion of the war. "It's easy to under A f lire stand. Mr. T a m b o. or Kill ( IMS why our doctors have been so eager to go to the front "What makes you say that, Mr. Middleman?" "Why. because I've Just seen ail Oermany described as 'patience per sonified.' " The Plave now takes It Roue to Ilia Its place among the Orrsalon other gallant rivers to which we all owe gratitude the Marne, the ise. the Aisne. And the Plave seems to have a shrewd idea of tactics , it has done some excellent "Infil tration" on its own account The news that American troops have taken "the last strip of Belleau wood" sug gests that by this time they should have enough timber to build a mighty fine struc ture of defense. I SINCEYOUMSIST The Tryst ACCORDING to tradition The place where sweethearts meet Is meadowland and hillside. And not the city street. Love lingers when you say ii By lake and moonlight glow: The poets all O. K. it It may be better so! AND yet I keep my trystlng In the department stores: I always wait for Emma At the revolving doors It might dismay tbe poets. And yet It's wholly true My heart leaps when I know It's My Emma, pushing through: IT MAY be more romantic By brook or waterfall, Yet better meet on pavements Than never meet at all: I want no moon beguiling. No dark and bouldered shore, When I see Emma smiling And twirling through the door! THE HUSBAND'S DAY ( As Imagined by His Wifel Gets to office at 9 a. m. Kinds his desk dusted and mall opened by beautiful fair-haired stenographer, and a vase of flowers on It. 9:30 u. m. The Boss calls him in to con gratulate him on the fine work he has been doing. 10 a. m. Dictates letters to beautiful fair haired stenographer; active, ambitious office hoy goes errands for him. 11 a. m. Conference with heads of de partments; his opinion! are listened to with respect. 12:30 An out-of-town customer calls him up and they go to lunch at a roof gar den. They match for the check and husband pays it, $3.50. 2:30 Returns to the office; signs letters that have been typed in his absence. 3:30 Receives telegram from rival firm offering him position at twice his present salary; shows it to beautiful fair-haired stenographer; she says how much she will miss him. 4 Decides to stay if Boss will give both him and stenographer a raise and post pone putting in dictating machines. 4:30 Boss raises his salary and fires beau tiful stenographer. 5 Home with box of chocolates for beautiful dark-haired wife. We suppose that the anthem of the sugar administration will be "The Watch on the Saccharine." General Crowder did well to appoint a young woman to pick out the capsules in the draft lottery for men of twenty-one. Young women have always been experts In conscription. "People in Paris don't worry as much about German names as we do in Phila delphia. We notice that the telephone number of the Stara and Stripes, the A. E. F. newspaper in France, la "Gutenberg 1295." An American battery in France has named two of its guns "Betsy Ross" and "Elsie Jams," which shows a genial choice in heroines. When they are looking over the list of American ladles who might be so honored we hope, they will remember Julia Ward Howe. if they do name a gun after Julia Ward Howe it ought to be a big one. Might we, with apologies, call it Julia Ward How itxer? AHOCRATE8. READERS' VIEWPORT J The Man Who Can! Go To ihr F.thtav of the Evening Public Ledger: Sir Your editorial pag- Is oftentimes a heart Ilft-Mener The linen addreftaed to "Twenty-one" ought to be an inspiration to eejry youth of that age, although It in too MM to hope they will be. If every young man to whom they are addreneed would pre serve them until hip return to civil life he would have a more sensitive appreciation and a corresponding gratitude to their writer. The story about the V. M. C A. hut the other evening makes the man who cannot go realise what he Is missing In the line of service. The man who cannot go' How many of them there are, pulsing with desire but de nied, for one reason or other, the privilege of serving. For myself, being beyond the draft age and having failed to make th navy and a hospital corps, there was left a branch of service where a too thorough physical examination was not required and In which service I Anally secured an ap pointment. But a long and wearisome Illness had depicted me financially and there were left a few (terns which honor demanded should be satisfied before going to Franco. Heing somewhat Idealistic and believing that men ns a general proposition were likewise. I felt thnt I should have no difficulty In set tling my affairs satisfactorily. So In my too young trustfulness I sought out mn who live In the civic glare as being broad gauge and public spirited and to them I stated my trouble. Alas! Although I offered a very generous allotment from tbe expense money allowed me desiring nothing for my self but a place to sleep and enough to eat -and to turn over life insurance In case I passed out before the very small, amount re quired to settle my obligations should be repaid. I very quickly learned that the aver age man has but one ideal, money and power. The press carried the story a few weeks Hgo of a youth who was exposed as a faker nfter a short but thrilling career as a Per shing veteran. He had been received with open arms, showered with attention and kind ness, openly referred to in public before thousands as a credit and an inspiration to our youth aU because he claimed to have done something And the man with a dean record and decent aspirations who wants to do something, and whose record presupposes that be will do It if given the chance, la treated with contemptuous Indifference. How v-lstfully, nay, with what unspeak able anguish a man sees a fine and dear desire go glimmering Into oblivion, conscious that it cannot be realized and that for him there is nothing but the long years ahead and the stigma of inactivity during the greatest period of human history. And so there nm times when your edi torial page always interesting Is a heart lightener, and cheers a man with the knowl edge that even an editor can sometimes be ni idealist (he Is generall too academic or too cynical), for ideals are the most fascinat ing things in the world, perhaps because, while so strong and soul stirring, they are often so elusive and must be pursued and fought for and sometimes died for. DISILLUSIONED. Philadelphia, June 25. 1 rphtiiip. Printers To fie Editor of the gfV0fllfl0 Public hedger ; Sir On .June 15, lfl 8. 4081 journeymen members of the International Typographical I'nion and 056 apprentices were in the army and navy forces of the I'nited States and Canada, Peventy-flve of our members have fallen in buttle in France or have died in military camps in America. To' the widows, orphans, fathers, mothers or other relatives of these men this International- union has paid mortuary benefits amounting to Itl.fBO. During the last twelve months this Interna tional union has pnld $354. 0DO to 1500 old age pensioners. In the same period this union has paid mortuary benefits amounting to $312,400. The total expense for the maintenance and for improvements at the Union Printers Home at Colorado Springs last year was $167,000. 4 This union has invested $.,0.000 in each of the three Liberty Loans $90,000 in all. Our subordinate organizations and individual members have invested more than $3,000,000 in these securities. Our strike expenses for the last twelve months were but I1XIT. The gross earnings of our members amounted to more than $71,000,000 for the year for 02,000 members, and the Insignifi cant amount expended for strike purposes reflects our determination to give full pa triotic support to the (governments under which we live In the terrific responsibilities which now confront us all. The officers of this International union are volunteers in the army for the preserva tion of Industrial pence for the duration of the war at least, and we will do our level best to give full effect to tl)e earnest recom mendations made by President Wilson in his proclamation creating the national war labor board There should be no Btrikes or lockouts during the war. This International union neither solicits nor accepts contributions to its benefit funda. Kvery dollar expended for these purposes Is paid by members of this .organization In the form of regular dues and assessments. M. tt. SCOTT, President International Typographical Union. Indianapolis, June 20. At Last! One day some American military auto trucks were disembarked at a certain port In France. As they stood on the quay a group of British Tommies contemplated them. "A-t-1-a-s." spelled one, regarding the cryptic letters in large capitals on the aide of the huge vehicle. "Atlas. That's Ha bloomln name, I suppose," said he. "L S," said another warrior, fixing hla eye on a second inscription. "So they've come !" Then, picking up a niece of chalk which lay hard by. he added the letter T to the firHt legend, and behold the proclamation read, "At last"! We who were told the story should have laughed. But we could not. We well knew how, for more than two years of heroic stress, the inanSvho wielded the bit of chalk, with legions of his grim, gay brothers, had watched and waited for the people of our land to wake and rise and stand beside him In the break-up of the woild. No doubt there had been good reason for delay. But we felt conscious that these men we had come among had waited long, not quite understanding, but still strong in their faith that in the end we would see clearly and take our place "At laat !" In one stroke of the piece of chalk was written a pean, swift, triumphant America and Britain, America and France had clasped hands and sworn to suffer and endure until the end. E. H. Sothem, In Scribner's Magazine. One of Kerensky's aides has arrived in Washington and another in ParlB presum ably to discover whether they can rind any aids for Hussla. The Belgian minister says that his coun try is bled to death ; but the world will see to it that Germany does not get the corpse. Representative Kitehln wants the new rone poatal rates to go Into effect before the sentiment of the country has had time to express Itself. The Clermans are using convicts in their Iront-lme attacking force. This is one way to get rid of them. If the dealers have no place to empty the coal and release the cars, as ordered by the fuel administration, our cellar Is at their aervlce. The French for a bill ia "addition" Somehow the word seems fully Americanized nowadays 'Wirtsohaftekrleg," Uermany's name for economic warfare, sounds very dreadful, but Its meaning will be still more dire should civilisation ever conduct It agalnat the out law nation. Is It possible that Providence sent us the recant spell of cool weather Juat to remind us te be sure to get nest winter's . coeJ Is before Ha too late? 'YOU The Ghost at Chateau Du Mont By Lieutenant Leon Archibald British Royal Engineers IN AN area of the British front honored by the presence of our division in the earlier stages of the war. on the one promi nent feature of the landscape and In close proximity to the firing line, was situated a handsome old French chateau; which for the sake nC convenience may be called "Chateau du Mont." The censor, In this instance, deems it advisable to withhold the name by which It was known on French ordnance maps, Just to be on the safe side. FOR months and months the Chateau du Mont had been weathering the rane of battle, when one day, for tactical reasons. It was considered necessary to erase It from the landscape. The removal of this flna old pile was by no means decided upon rashly, nor In haste. Kvery conceivable plan had been considered whereby It might he left to grace its beautiful Rrounds, but to no avail. The only action which could correct a very grave evil was to level the structure to the ground, thereby removing from the German artillerymen a highly valuable "aiming mark"; as. on account of its nearness to the front line and prominent situation, the German gunners could get "direct sights" on it, and, by carefully observing their "bursts." then switch on to adjacent targets with unerring precision In "timing" and "range." . Chateau du Mont must be razed, and our instructions with regard to the matjer were designed to accomplish this desirable result, and in due time the ihlng was done. THE demolition was to take place at 2 a. m. on a certain night, and about dusk if the same night I proceeded to the chateau In company with my section ser geant and about a dozen sappers. The "blowing up" was to be done with gun cotton, and the several hundred pounds of this commodity with accessories were moved to the scene In a "G. S." (general service) wagon, drawn by two mules of highly uncertain temperament. AFTER a careful examination of the rather spacious and elegant structure we decided where best to place the "charges" to achieve the greatest results. Ry midnight each of the twenty odd pack ages of destruction had been prepared, laid and connected, so that all that remained to add one more gaping wound to an already horribly mutilated countryside was to push down the handle of an "exploder." Two hours still remained before our night's work could be completed, and this time, to a large extent, was made use of by the men In tours of exploration. In the building things stood pretty much as they had been left on the hurried departure of the owners. The wing nearest the enemy had suffered considerably from the ravages of shell Are great gaping holes and shrapnel-pocked paneling, together with maimed and broken furnishings stand ing out In strong contrast to the elegance in other and more fortunate regions of the structure. These Journeys of exploration and Investigation were, to a certain extent, being combined with not altogether illegiti mate acts of pillage, as it did seem a pity to see the "G. 8." wagon return empty when all this stuff was to be blown up, anyway. Little knlck-knacka, such aa the rand piano, the dining room table and the kitchen range, were being gathered up, when, all of a audden, the riot started. ONE of my sappers, Higgins by name, and a gentleman who on more than one occasion had stimulated other proceedings with no mean portion of zest, had In his wanderings located the linen closet. Select ing a nice, large, white sheet, he then donned his gas helmet; and, with the sheet loosely draped about his generous frame, he sortled forth. As he entered the upper hall, Haynes, one of his mates who was slightly nervously Inclined, was Just emerging from mademoiselle's boudoir accompanied by a generous portion of that young Intfy's be- me nail wee ARE A FINE-LOOKING if 7W J? S.I YrBBBBBVaeAarr ". .f- XVam. ViY-im, Jew.TSSA.llfir seTif l-'U WaCSaWaBMaWeWWi ' i . 1 a yard from him, and with a wild yell Haynes Jumped. It Is difficult to say whether Haynes or some of hlH Impedimenta reached the bottom of the stairs first, but they all arrived In time to lnterfei e seriously with a heavily laden procession emanating from the drawing room, headed by my ser geant, bearing a largo plate-glass mirror In a beautiful golden frame. Stopping only long enough to collect his own legs from the heap of oontuslon and get slightly singed by the sulphurous1 atmosphere sur rounding the pile. Haynes kept right on with his endeavors to get away from the vicinity of that region of prowling phan toms. For the sake of his honor and his country he was willing to face Germans, and thousands of them, together with every Item of frightfulness they could devise, but a weird looking ghost in a deserted French chateau was a different matter a very different matter, in fact. IKTTING himself out on the balcony, J Higgins next proceeded, and still in his ghostly raiment, to crawl down over the vines of the front porch to the main entrance, where a grand effect might be ex pected to follow his spectacular entrance Into the front hall. Tied to a tree on the lawn were the two mules, and by the light of a distant star shell they were afforded a sight of the porch-climbing phantom. One look at the horriUle apparition they took, and then they weighed anchor and went anywhere, as long us they were putting space between them and that specter. They made four complete circuits of the chateau In their endeavors to find an exit, ami each time they selected a new route through the green house, and otherwise materially assisted with the alterations to the shrubbery and grounds which the Hun shelling had so nicely commenced months before. The Instigator of this mad marathon, after the fourth circuit had been effected, became aware that perhaps he was in some way connected with the riotous merry-go-round, for at each sight of him the mules seemed feverishly anxious to clip a few seconds from the time of the previous lap, and Just when the ser geant arrived on the scene, followed by a determined-looking handful of sappers with fixed bayonets, and Intent on selling their lives as dearly as possible to what was undoubtedly a horde of looters headed by the Crown Prince himself, the ghost of Chateau du Mont was tucking the last traces of a white sheet Into the slimy depths of a shell hole. On the Taxing of Cats Sympathy naturally goes out to the person who prooses a tax on cats. There sneaks seal without knowledge. A tax on cats would be a great loss to the Government. Only dear old ladles with kind hearts and stall fed, unnatural cats would pay such a tax. and there are not enough such dear old ladles to count. There are cats, of course, millions of cats, but cats do not pay taxes. And most cats have no owners to pay taxes for them. An owned cat Is a rarity, and would be still more rare if cats were taxed. If the (iovernment desires to get rid of cats, the way to do it Is to offer a bounty on eat aKIns. but It seems scarcely worth while. A cat, left to Itself, la self-supporting. Leave the canary bird cage open and the cat will do (he rest Ab a matter of fact, the cat is a problem that has never been solved. It is one of the eternal mysteries like woman, and which came first, the bird or the egg. The Egyp tians had tbe good sense not to meddle with eats, and our Government ought to be as wise aa ancient Egypt. Chicago News. Mistakes of Science Prussian diplomacy proceeds on the theory that a new victim Is born every minute. Washington Star. Like "Nut" Steak Can't Mr. Burbank give ua a vegetable chop? Chicago News. See Mr. Hoever uaed t be a triangle or pu ' ate ie new BIRD!" 'JMaVf vlR W V KM UK ?. ! St. -4 . 111 mm h If ' " lY .tf Klrh In THE WEEKLY CHEER Once n week the Berlin populace Is per mitted to gsther in front of the imperial pal ace and cheer Home member of the royal family. News Item. VOHAT do you cheer for, German " friends ? Why the applauding? Odd and odder That Prussian hynotism lends Such joy to being cannon fodder. WHAT do you cheer for? For the hell :" That fouls and bloodies earth's green acres ? For oozing brain and charnel smell, For shattered homes and village break- tlTHY do you cheer? For those great VV chiefs Who have consistently deceived you ? Who are the cause of all your griefs, Who starved and bullied and bereaved you? THY do you cheer? For stunted T youth ? For bitter gas that rends and smirches? For earth that has forgotten Truth, For blackened orchards, broken churches ? fXTHY do you chser? To see earth " strain And stumble in her happy spinning? Against such vast arrears of pain Can mercy even make beginning? 1I7HY do you cheer? For women's " tears, For torture, bitterness and famine? These hardly seem a cause for cheers When one takes leisure to examine. AND if there be, in some far place, An all -attentive ear for hearing The tragic voices of our race, Saddest must sound your loyal cheer ing. , CHRISTOPHER MORLEY. How It Seems to Margaret Delant! Margaret Deland. who went to Paris to engage In war work after the death of her husband, writes homo; "Over In America we thought vv-e knew Bomethlng about the war and the conditions In France, but when you get here the difference is as the differ ence between studying the laws of electricity and being struck by lightning. I have been struck by lightning. The only way In which I can keep sane and steady Is to look very, vary closely at my own immediate little trivial foolish Job writing or working In the canteen, for If I dare to lift my eyes to the black horizons, I lose my balance." What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. Who are In rammaml sf the Austrteas ea the Italian front? t. What la the ranltul of Delaware? t. Who wea "Chinese" (lerden? 4. Wha aula. "n a men advanres In life he seta uliat la lietter than admiration- Junamar., to eatlmut tliluaa at their true valuva"? t. Wha la Karon Ehendea C. Naaae the author of "Ode to a Mshtlnsale." 1. What Is a hesraaonyT 5. What It the mnat Important nmnufarturlne and aeeead larseat eltr la Huasarrf a. When and what nu, the Pealaauler Wart 10. Who were the haddiireea? Anawera to Yesterday's Quiz I. (emnlesiie: An Important rallnra, and annpb' city of the .tlllra In the realon v he re the IMrard end rhsmnasne fr- Join and uhout fnrlr-nva Bailee front Tnrla. 3. Dr. W. W. Comfort l new orealdeat ef llaverford College. S. Narrow -saute rallrnitd: line In which the dlatanrr between the ralla 1- leaa than the ataadard same ef 4 feel ' laehee. 4. oloiiel V., VI. Hente la uauall, anaMerril 1're.ltleiit Wlleaa'a rloaest , oiinMratlol ad- Sir Walter Heell urate The Tallaman noie, or ine t reeaeti ruaadea and Kirhnrd '. ae I. inn. a. Joan ef Art-; The national heroine ef Frenee. 1. "I.a lirahaneonee" ("," nremtuaeed aefl) le the natlenal air ef llrlclum. 1. Jamea Mmllt-an w.ia the fourth I'reeldcnt ef the I niud state. B. AradfHiir. Ill a oel'rf rlalor, nana. awMra tTee" erAfe?'" ". U .he reetl- r. mr&lVLr at ' $) Rnllln awssHaawaBBwl ntwH I