( 1 " - mm B-hWV . T '; 1 r $?&& 'wm w.wz. v 'Wtossa. , V h 'f Sfc !u BBJB3.-k.? .ur?..;Ar'M"Nt:Z - 'i v f i W.i . f J..V1. '".'. " -T - iS '.... s". y t ii .''i s EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1918 ', K uW vriiw m w ttblTtCQCC EVENING TELEGRAPH f FWtlLIC LEDGER COMPANY THUS H. it CUnTiar PDiiT H. Ludlngton. Vice Presldenti Jnhn C Mgrtary and Treasurer: Philip S. Collins, '.(Williams. John J. Spurgeon, Directors. so ii n I. i ' ' i i ", a?T EDiToniAL noAHD: r. x,ctcs ir. K cons, chairman B.p.MlLET. . .( w. .Editor 'C.''MAnTlN.. ..Qcneral lluetness Manager 3aiAL ' ' i ' ' i ' ' ' ' , ' Motioned dally at Penile Lrwnto Uulldlns. j innepenaence square, i-nuaticipma. Ml CXJNTJuL....lroad and Chestnut Streets ndiCm. Prra-tlnioi Multiline . KOSK.. .2011 Metropolitan Tower tn.i 'ord lluildlne inns rullerton lluildlne , ..1SIW Tribune Uulldlnc otas.. koo.'iJ. ifr r ft-ty. NEWS DimuAua: f(S;,Vo, jf.'-E. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. nnd 14th, St. PAijWOfoK IlBkEAf Ilic Sun Uullitinc .ftJVipo: Bcarjtu London 2 l"-.tv''Vi' , sunscniPTioN Tnmis -v'lfha'Knu.'iKn PeaLm I-edoe!! Is scrvej to Times nub- flttsjcrtfiOTa ' in Philadelphia and surrounding towns ji-sk mo rate 01 twelve ti.i icnn i"'r ivet'ii. i'ojuuw Pj'iRKimair to' points putsldo of I'hlladelphla. In 4.ttii uniiea Misiest (.nnnnn. or i nueu .-.ihicj. i-- TM-tafncrn fr. flftv (Mil rnti twr month. i dollari per ar, panblo In n.Uance. It fnlfn .nnntrlau .ma l!tl I ilnll.ir rif-r -;wf ..-to . all m'ii' Nnrtrn-54uhiirrllw.rn wlnhlnir stldress chanced KJffe -TaaXJ E&Xiust Kc old as well as new tiddrcss. MrTMTf gffi Btl,I,.,JXI0 VAL-MT kM.TCrE. MAIN 3000 17 JE?" Atfrfrcss all commnutcnffoin to ;rcjilrti; 'tibHo f?AAted5'i Jidrpewdfjicc A'auure, l'hlladclliltta. n Mernbcr of the Associated Press , JTltB ASSOCIATED PliCSS is exclu- !tCrty eritHIed fo J.'io tisc for republication .&). J7 on iervj atspaicicj ciraura io u or :iot E3jfJkertc(8 credited In tiM pojicr, and aso ..iin lialits of renublicatlcn of special d(u- Kf pafehes herein 'are also leseri-ed. rt Phlldlplili. BVdnnd.y. Julr 31. 1918 ' -, : 'MORE TROUBLE IN THE AIR tTtRlTEUS who nrf never hanny unless lit S.V.V they' are sail and other who believe It Ctlibl . li .. ...lit Un .... nnl tlirnltrVl a HI1U Ui ll LTU III Jlll. U"'lh kfcJiwmieft aouse ot tne Anminisirnimn are ?aKln confusing tho public mind with rlls- B !.-.i ..ll , . .1.- .! I CULLTUKCU UUIUUTPIH UDUUl llli: ici"i"t S failure of the Havlland type ot battle- (,V plahe In trials nt the front. ,jf Tho Havlland plane Is the type now In fr cnirintltv- nrndnptlnn. Tf It hnd develnned serious defects the situation would have F . been'seHous enouch. It Is noticeable that the ' .'.faults attributed to the machine have not ".been described or defined. General 1'er- pL. ahlne lias cabled askltm that a great num- kf uu UL lllv iiuviiuiui jiuu iiuiu tie i uizvu Kjf to 'iTrAnce In Aucust. This would indl- iffi MAfA fViflf at tti ntllfn 1 rtnfrtnl a ii'Vilnli m is, :""" """ -"--. .r a, liiuvc utrun revealed in ai'iiuu ii.iiiie prac tlceTvera pf a superficial nature and that ihe necessary changes already have been made ? The Liberty motor, America's contrlb.i tlon'to tho science of war aviation, is now Iooked"'upon as the best In tho world. The faults 'of, the Havlland plane, therefore, could not1 be with the eimine. . -s 'Some- of the men who were so eager to jtart a ficht In the trouble zone downtown ." could vflnd better uses fothelr energy In the "army, w: ; - - - W'V - AUGUST miMB''tvas when Aueust lav In the cal- Mt sndar's doldrums. Deeds may have ben"drearrfed. but verv few wprn ee. iWcuted'''lh, tfie languors of that vacation k"saeason. Generals Humldltv and Hent held h rMHna)v Kven now they mill sum mdJrBBel? battalions, but their demands to.Btack.' activities are iiulto unheeded. :Buch orders have been futile since 191 -J. Then the Hun struck and sought to . rush. "France bent, but did not break, llritain espoused liberty. Actions to establish ftee dom', opposing ones' to assert tyranny raged for three subsequent Aui?'Mt. Their magnitude, unmeasured by prece dent, must yet palo before what inav in- K1 deejlbe the most terrific mont'.. in history. luf Neither5 liberty nor oppression was ever Bu BuiJcruiy uruieu. tV j .C fc.vj-u.0 UUJB l.CIIUll M11U11 UegtllS ss tomorrow was namen irom the autlior SjSf of a world peace, Octavius Caesar, called Augustus. If not, as civilians view him today",' entirely a model ruler, ho at least eaVedt many things which right-thinking humanity still cherishes and some of Wtych It seeks to retain. In Tils- time, too, tho menace came from - the East. He crushed Antony, Infatuated with, standards of Oriental despotism. He preserved, certain republican institutions, to whosfc. principles, more liberally applied, wo still adhere. Ho established order and .,a world peace . , Regnant with .associations Is the name ofvAugust. Pregnant with deeds will be this summer of 101S. The orlflamme of heroism, and It Is to be hoped of triumph, has replaced the lotus. Germany finds Constantinople lncon tant? J ' , THE M VYOR ON WAR tXTATEIt, murmurs Major Smith in what " hej, means to bo a gay and good natured yet grave appeal for Its consena tlorj, will jiot win the war. And-jet. in thJj',.tOJft pf tho formal uppeal directed to .alpsorts ot people, the lifted forefinger of Mr.. Smith s apparent and there Is an im ipUcatton that if we do not be careful with the water the Kaiser may yet be king of the worjd. It Is tho Mayor's characteristic fault to 'bo Indefinite. It pains him, though he kftk ""doeaa'f jfix'aetly &ay so, to see little chil- pvW are" '" ,;1B icnuHieiH uisincis spraying B;frft.. i r'"- ' w rr H . tv 4IJ M(Utl(i4 ill) n"-3 svs 5'" . u.iu.iiiun iu luuuuiuciurers anu Wt "householders suggests a lot of new slo jr5ts'an.' TVe may be asked to go bathless S $ aiyl crush iho Hun! Endure heat pros-y- .fr-Uotu all ye little children of tho uoor r7Cni ,ieI' to make tho wtW Bafp for Eii";dfeocracy I 5RTiater not wln tne war' Xe,thef FAfjllWlHitalK.. Ana before the World is finally iJito.'fiae for democracy there must be pjmj. iiumo in ineiuuus oi municipal afstratlon in America. Meanwhile Smith Isn't a convincing pleader irl conservation, Had ho been frank he Pt'ps Wl Jiave ueeii more ei I'-'SW'lrejV' the Mayor f-jkiirwe', haVen't been wise. tlirtht have been more effective. might have said. We, have been stew, fearful, stupid at times and lneffl- f-y We new years agq that there j;j d erjougn, water to o around. ive -considered the matter for years Vet we do not know what" to suggest. tjiave been too busy1 looking after our tQ. tliltiK deeply .about the water r.,;t la your patriotic- duty to en- ttyjttroke. If you will do this we j:-tq-jsparo, no sounding phrase to I ,W,'fpr civilization!," M,like this would have rune t fs)iWfl-lWBknbw-BisilnCr 1U 1 i I lltl "t-.... '.ti'l " T- -" ,JP B isjM 'i'Vcy-c "CALL THE MARINES!" .That Is the Plaint With Whtcl Ciy Hall Atones for a Vanishing Police Force ji WAS plain more than a year ago that tho forces of everyday discipline fn Philadelphia were to be put to a new test. All sorts of now people from every part of the country drifted In cap;cr tides to the war industries. Tho city was called upon to absorb thousands of men who had never been accustomed to the restrictions of life in a crowded com munity. To nny one who could think at all it was apparent that friction and irri tation were inevitable that there would bo discomfort in many quarters and that tact and vifrilnnce would be necessary to ease the situation and establish new balances. In the face of such circumstances City Councils and the city administration airily abandoned the Police Department to processes of disintegration. It is idle, therefore, to talk of "race riots" as if such phenomena wore inevitable and natural. In tho trouble down town race antipathies were incidental. FipMs and shootings followed naturally upon end less triumphs of bad management in municipal afTairs. A riot doesn't begin as a riot. .1 fire doesn't become a eonflagration until it ins hnd time to develop. If the police had been able to act swiftly there could have been vo spread of the disorder that now is likely to engender so mueh per manent dislike in vanoui neighborhoods. But the Police Department is falling to pieces. Captain Mills did his best under the circumstances with an inadequate force of men. He has held what remains of the force together with difficulty. Many of the best men in the various districts have resigned the service to find the living wages which Councils refused to grant them. The municipality, in its relations with the police, has proved the most backward employer on lecord. While every privately conducted business revised its wage schedules to meet the imperative needs of the time, the city left the police to be squeezed on the one hand by politicians and on the other by rising costs of living. Mr. Gaffney, the direct ing genius of the Finance Committee of Councils, who answered tho logical wage demands of the police with platitudes; the Mayor, who pollyannaed and talked of patriotism to hide his confusion; tho members of Councils themselves and the people at large, who permitted an es sential public service to be disrupted, nre morally responsible for the riots and the killings in the downtown section. Every big industry recently estab lished in or near Philadelphia has per ceived the danger which the city itself J has refused to recognize, and has taken pain, to increase its police guard. -The Mayor seems content to "call in the ma rines." When vice fj-ot beyond his con trol because of corruption in the Police Department he called the marines. jVoie, having pet mitt cd the Police Department to drift to chaos, he again calls the ma rines to settle a minor outbreak among disorderly men who might have been rounded up and jailed in an hour if the police force was adequately organized with men of the required type. No qualified workman in any industry is .asked to work nowadays for the wages paid by the city to even the best of its policemen. The most capable men ht-e been quitting the force in droves. Those of the better type who remain retain their places largely because they do not wish to lose their rights under the police pension system. The wonder is that tho trouble wasn't even more serious. Mr. Gaffney and the Mayor alike told the truth recently when they said in an swer to repeated appeals that there was no money with which to increase the pay of policemen. There isn't any money r.vailable. But Mr. Gaffney and the Mayor did not provide for increases when there was time to do so. The Hungarian newspaper Magjga roszaka reports that deaths In Budapest ex ceed births. The tlieoiy that some of tho fatalities came from lockjaw seems tenable. GARY SCHOOLS ICIU" it not for the war the plans for '" th he Introduction of tlarj schools Into the public educational sjsteni of Phila delphia doubtless would have held tho eager attention of must 'of tho citizenry. There would have ben meetings and speeches and. perhaps, public celebrations v hen the experiment began in a small way. And if we did not have so many other things to be concerned about, the news that an extensive trial of the (iarj sjstem must be postponed would be al most sad enoush for the tolling of mourn ful bells. .Fo In this case the war delays a boon that has been watched for in vain through centuries. Tho Gary system Is devised to make study pleasant. . It Is a system for the painless acquisition of knowledge. It eliminates rod, rush or routine. Your Gary child goes eagerly to school. He Isn't harassed by rules of iron and the shadows of abstract truths which his soul detests. Everybody who ever went to an elementary school has felt that there was something tho matter with it some thing terribly wrong somewhere. This was tho conviction lpherited from early .youth by the captains of Industry who built the city ot Gary, Ind and set up a school system unhampered by any of the rules of tradition. Being wise men, they knew that all children are alive with interest and curiosity. They felt that knowledge packed into- a little -sirl or a little boy llko potatoes In a barrel isn't likely to bo .of much service. The Gary system, therefore, is devised to make knowledge Interesting, and.lt doesn't ask any pupil to pass sunny days In a bleak room with the hated company of dry formulae. Gary children learn. It appears, and they have a good time 'in a pleasant en vironment where they are almost their own bosses, Ifnld a gracious idea.' And though the' nyirteiu s a, whole 'is still. 'a'B'vnrlm-iir I (ji .'rljiM-Au..-1 Ing to read tho announcement iof Dr. Al bcrt'II. Rtiub, associate superintendent of Kchools, that we shall be unnble to give it a thorough trial beforo next year. Tho extension of the Gary plan from the one Philadelphia school. In which it Is now being tried will bo delayed till Kcbruarj', 1919, because of a war shortage of mate rial and monej". The humane men who want1 to see education robbed of Its terrors will have one moro reason, therefore, to detest a much-hated Emperor of a far countrj. As a mutter of, fact, the dermans ought really bo friendly to tho policy of "Pan- Turkey." They do continually in lctlmlzlng of that country. their FROM JEERS TO TEARS rpillJ chief of the German naval staff, Admiral von HoltzendorfT, plaintively laments thnt American transports do not mil according to a public time schedule, that they have a fondness for fog banks nnd an altogether too whimsical way of .selecting their ports of arrival anywhere I'ctwpen Scotland nnd the Mediterranean. We'ie sorry we can't be more open about this business, but the Hun himself began the hole-and-corner variety of warfare, and It we have bettered the instruction he has only himself to blame. Two years ngo this verj- naval ofilcer prophesied that unrestricted submarine warfare would biing England to her knees within six months. Fnlluie to make good -that forecast was followed by the predlc tlon that U-boats would prevent tho trans portation of America's army. Today the admiral Is almost chastened and entirely apologetic In his admission that "very little prospect of success is offered by the special employment of submarines against Ameri can transpotts." Confession nf this lctory of bona fide sr.v power, jointly wielded by tho United States and niltain, ncr piracy is still more specifUally analyzed In facts marshaled by Sir Uric Geildes, First Lord of the British Admit alt, and Assistant Secretary of the Navy rtooseeIt. They have disclosed that but one convoyed vessel in two hundred falls a victim to the German predatory campaign, milling that as America con tinues her stride of naval construction the percentage of loss will be greatly reduced. I'p to the present we must thank Btltannla for two-thirds of the protection to our ships. Am this ratio goes down many more opportunities will be provided for offensive war on the U-boats. America is hustling on a gigantic scale to make this possible. Hog Island's first ship will bo launched next Monday. Some fifty huccessors nre promised before Jan uary, and soon after that they are expected to dip Into tho Delaware nt the rate of one a day. For tho country as a wholo a little more than that, rate of production was established with the fortnight ending July 23, when fifteen vessels were launched. It may be predicted that all these com ponents, present and to come, of the hugest nrmada In history will be just as wilj as their older sisters in puzzling with their devious and cloudy courses the plrato chieftains. In another half year tho tear ful Von Holtzendorff will be bewailing the great superfluity iff foe ships as well as foe ports. The fashion In which Ger many's Jeers have turned to jeremiads may not precisely appeal to her limited sense of humor, but our Joy in the metamorpho sis is altcddy becoming justifiably ex quisite. Philadelphia heat sufferers are entitled to anj satisfaction they may derive from the neus that Arizona thermometers have lately been registering 106 degrees in l'hoen! We alwaj's Knew It was a fire-bird McLEMORE IN DRYDOCK. ' JKFF McI.EMOHE, who has Just been defeated In tho Democratic primaries r for Congressman in the Seventh Texas District, had had his way some eighteen months ngo vessels flying the Stars and Stripes might be, as they In fact still are, safely plying between Albany and New York, Philadelphia and Wilmington, Mem phis and New Orleans. San Francisco nnd Sacramento and Buffalo and Duluth. But not a spoonful of brine would have en crusted our shy flotillas. The resolution which this spineless rep resentative fathered In Congress was tantamount to an acceptance of Berlin's arrogant U-boat decree nnd virtually with held from Americans tho free use of tho seven seas. Following the richly deserved defeat of his policy have come some of America's most glorious days upon the ocean and an unparalleled development of our fleet both In trade and war undertaken In the righteous cause of freedom. Tho folly of McLemoio's act has been trium phantly proved by tho success of the counter course. The penalty for his en deavors ho has Just paid in a eompleto political failure George Sjh ester Vle Hnw It Work reck, poet laureato of t h e Bcrmanlacs I n America, who was secretly endowed by Bern storff, confessed j'esterdaj" that the Kaiser spent $50,000,000 for propaganda in America and "got 'nothing." What the Kaiser didn't get for his expenditures his soldiers are get ting now in France. Tho fuel administra Wlnnlng tlon has canceled the the War order under .which street lights were ex tinguished on Market and Broad streets to "save fuel." Tho half-dark streets were considered dangerous. The fuel administra tion required two days to learn what almost any one could have told It in two minutes. Bear Admiral Wilson, Kaeh to now commanding our Ills Own squadron off the French coast, is said to be the handsomest rrfan In the United States navj'. But every mother and sweet heart of one of our tars may be permitted to havo her own preference. Perhaps the Czecho- .More Power Slovaks are going to to Them I . be the dark horses of the eastern situation. They seem to have a habit of getting over the ground and doing something when they get there. Archangel pops into ths news only dcca jffiay, ,but Urf awav. They're Getting It CORNCOBS A Message for Boonvllle WHEN" corncob pipes we"nt up, from a nickel to six cents smoking traditions tottered. That was a year or .more ago, but one can still recall tho indignation written on the faces of nlcotlne-soakcd gaffers who had been buying cobs at a Jitney ever since Washington used one to keep warm at Valley Forgo. If the Kaiser wants a proof of our determination to Win the war, let him ponder that the price of Missouri meerschaums went up 20 per cent nnd there was no insurrection. Yesterday we went out to buy our an nual corncob, and wero agreeably sur prised to learn that the price Is still six cents; hut our friend tho tobacconist stld thnt it mny go up again soon. We took the treasure, gleaming yellow with fresh' varnish, back to our kennel, and we are smoking It as we set down these words. A corncob Is Badly hot and raw until It Is well sooted, but the ultimate flavor is. worth the persecution. Tho corncob pipes we always buy come from Boonvllle, Mo., and wo don't see why we shouldn't b'low a little whiff of affec tion and gratitude toward that excellent town. Moreover, Boonvllle celebrates Its centennial this year: It was founded In ISIS. If the map Is to be believed. It Is on the southern bank of the Missouil Klver, which is there spanned by a very fine bridge; It Is reached by two railroads (Missouri Paciilc and M., K. and T.) nnd stands on a bluff 100 feet above the water. According to the two works of reference neatest to our desk, its population Is either 4252 or 4377. Perhaps tho former census omits tho 123 men of the town who are so benighted as to smoke briars or days. Delightful town ot Boonvllle, seat of Cooper County, ou nre well named. How great. a boon you have conferred upon a troubled world! Long after more ambi tious towns have faded In tho memory of man your quiet and soothing gift to hu manity will make jour name blessed. I like to Imagine your shady streets, drows ing in the summer sun, and the rural philosophers sitting on the verandas of jour hotels or on tho benches of Haiiey Park ("comprising fifteen acres" New In ternational Encyclopedia), looking out an oss the brown river and puffing clouds of sweet gray leek. Down by the livery stable on Main street (there must be a livery stable on Main street) I can see the old creaky, cane-bottomed chairs (with seats punctured by too much phllosoph) tilted against the sycamore trees, ready for the afternoon gossip and shag tobacco. I can Imagine the small boys of Boonvllle flbhlng for catfish from the piers of the bridge or bathing down by tho steamboat dock (If there Is one), and yearning for tho day when they, too, will be grown up and old enough to smoke corncobs. What Is the subtle magic of a corncob pipe? It Is never as sweet or as mellow as a well-seasoned briar, and yet It has n fascination all Its own. It is equally dear to those who work hard and thdse who loaf with intensity. When you put your nose to the blackened mouth of the hot cob its odor is i;ulte different from that fragrance of tho crusted wooden bowl. There Is n. faint bitterness in it, a sour, plaintive aroma. It Is a pipe that seems to call aloud for the accompaniment of beer and earnest argument on factional political matters. It Is also the pipe for solitary vigils of hard and concentrated work, it is tho pipe that a man keeps in the drawer of his desk for savage hours of extra toll after the stenographer has powdered her nose and gone home. A corncob pipe Is a humble badge of philosophy, an evidence of tolerance and even humor. It requires patience and good cheer, for it is slow to "break In." Those who meditate bestial and brutal de signs against the weak and Innocent do not smoke It. Probably Hlndenburg never saw one. Missouri's reputation for In credulity may bo due to the corncob habit. One who is accustomed to consider an argument over a burning nest of tobacco, with the smoke fuming upward In a placid haze, will not accept any dogma too Immediately. a There Is a singular affinity among those who smoke corncobs. A Missouri meer schaum whoso bowl is browned and whose fiber stem Is frayed and stringy with biting betrays a meditative and reason able owner. He will havo pondered all aspects of life nnd be equally ready to denounce any of them, but without bitter ness. If you see a man on a street cor ner smoking a cob it will be safe to ask him to watch the baby a minute while you slip around tho corner. You would even bo safe In asking him to lend you a five, Ho will be safe, too, because he won't have it. Think, therefore, of the charm ot a .town where corncob p!p6s are the chief Indus try. Think of them stacked up in bright yellow piles In the warehouse. Think of the warm sun and the wholesome sweet ness of broad acres that have grown into the pith of tho cob. Think of the bright eyed Missouri maidens who have turned and scooped and varnished and packed them. Think of the airy streets and wide pavements of Boonvllle, and. tho corner drug stores with their shining soda foun tains and grape-juice bottles. Think of sitting out on that bluff on a warm eve ning, watching the broad shimmer of the river slipping down from the sunset, and smoking a berene pipe while the local flappers walk In 'the coolness wearing crisp, swaying gingham dresses. That's the kind of town we like to think about, Why They Wanted It The cause of the trouble between Ger many and Turkey is said to be the Ger man demand for the cruiser Hamldleh. Probably Berlin thought it was something to eat. "Children are called upon to deny them selves the pleasure of bathing In water from the fire hydrants." -Mayor Smith. A city that lies between two of the finest rivers in the country and can't pump up enough water to keep its chil dren cool in the dog days had better hunt for a new administration. i The village pf Cohan lies just east of Fere and is right on Pershing's road to the Vesle.'Even if, our men; dpn'tkiKi,' J how to w'i'W;tJw.Ar"W THE GOWNSMAN How the Submarines Helped the Red Cross THK Gownsman is settled, for tho nonce, land creature that he is, on the edge of tho sea which laps and swishes Idly a dozen yards away from him as ho writes. Before him, soma half mile off, rises n bank It would be called a cliff were there much stone in it on the brow of which is a comely brown lighthouse, from the neighborhood of which you may look out past a promontory or two to left and right to the open sea. To his right, as ho sits here, pen In hand, there Is a picturesque little fresh-water pond In which frogs croak by moonlight and terns noisily rear their broods all daj To his left lies a stretch of sea, bounded by the coast line, a dozen miles away, a stretch of water which the sun gilds and the moon silvers, which clouds make dapple gray and which alternate strips of white sand and bottom grass streak with blue and purple.. This shining stretch of water Is tho thoroughfare, north and south, of those who go down to the sea In ships. TO THK left, once more, and back of your sedentary penman, lies the harbor down here they used to call It "the Hole" extending back to little wooded hills and to the small, gray town with Its square church tower, painted as white as a lighthouse, and Its rival dark'splre symbols of how freemen may differ in the form of their theology, however the spirit thereof may be at one. Pretentious luxury has surged in even here to destroy tho proportions of things. There Is a "villa" across the harbor which Is nearly as largo as tho Seamen's Hospital on the opposite side, nnd far moro carefully calcu lated to give pause to the roving eye. A wooded shore, as nature wooded It, seen across a little water may seem a forested height, but let some disproportionate man walk along the water's edge, and behold I we know that tho trees In our forest are only scrubby bushes and our height has fallen to tho dead level of things which we know. The pretentious luxury of men In their efforts to control, improve and alter nature changes her Just and sweet proportions to bizarre imaginings of their own, and villas, bunga lows, "cottages" swollen Into mansions and r,nrierint structures dwarf tho landscape. ,a string of wooden Incongruities on a bright tnreatt oi sana. THE harbor has been quiet but for the oc casional punk-a-punk of a fisherman's boat going out or coming Inl a sheet of blue sea under a summer sky but for the flitting of the white sail "of a catboat and the four tall masts of that laggard schooner out there, which appears to have forgotten that there Is work to do In the world. Even our busy little patrol boat, with Its gun perked up bharp against the horizon, US circling, sig naling ant. bustle, can only be dimly seen, far out in the mist, lying to, prow to the wind. And now gradually the harbor begins to fill. Tug after tug comes In, each with his string ot barges and, tooting his whistle. Is answered in higher, shriller key, barge after barge, as they swing to anchor in groups or one after tlfe other. The tug, after hover ing about to' see his charges safe, makes ffcst at a pier close by, tug siding up to tug until there are seven big stacks leisurely smoking In line, their day's work completed. Now larger craft begin to gather, schooners of three, and four masts, each furling sail as she conies up Into the wind, topsails, jibs and mainsails in turn, coming to anchor In care fully selected remoteness. We had seen a strange, larger steamer In tow In the morn ing, going north. She rode perilously high out of the water for anything but calm weather, listed oddly and was evidently sadly in need of paint. There could be no mistake about It ; here she was headed back, straight In, and she passed us to an anchor age far up toward the town. STILL bigger craft are now coming In, Ocean-going colliers, ships ot burden, built light at the ends and wide to store away large cargoes, inree, me, signt, a dozen ot them, some Ingeniously camouflaged but It becomes the Gownsman not to say how so that they looked dubiously like some)hlng elseIt becomes the Gownsman, fortunately, not to tell what else. There was a fine, lithe passenger ship whose tasteful garniture of red and white told her confidence In her heels, and there was an odd-looking boat the masts ot which were placed In pairs sapparently at the edge of the Vessel and con nected over-decks with a span, -It was said. tnat ine was yuicnmn mviwui iBargiy ,1 but, we Wui4w!HriirM.rt,. M .GETTING SORE? larger boats anchored further out, except for our huge, pnlntless stcanier In tow. It ap pears that slje.Is a stfanger'to salt Water and halls from out Michigan waj', being con ducted somewhere to be made fit to do some thing for the nation. High out of tho water, shabby, her list Is to starboard, not to port. AVlio can sa-, oh ye carpers of Boston, that the Middle West Is not doing her part? w HAT could It all be about, this hetero- llttle harbor, somewhere In America? And now rumor began to lly. But the Gownsman will not repeat unlikely rumors, especially as the reallt', as all now know, turned out to bo oven more "unlikely" than tho rumors. Our valiant enemy, the Ineffable exponent of efficiency, had sent a submarine 4000 miles, It appears, to shell an American tug and. to send to Davy Jones two empty towboats and a third filled with s'tone I From tho staging of this deed of derring-do It may be surmised that it had a deep ulterior purpose which could have been none other than the terrify ing of the summer boarder. But It takes a great deal to terrify the American brand of summer boarder and even more to frighten an American boy of ten. Tho boarders rocked In their chairs on porches, fanning away the files and mosquitoes, wearily waiting for the valorous gunners to hit something. An hour and a half of German diligence nt length accomplished this difficult feat. Tho il.rce barges were finally sunk, the tug set on fire, the iron crosses achieved. As for tho Ameri can boy, he waved his little American flag with the shrapnel falling about him and until daddy called him off. All this was just over your Gownsman's horizon. Had he been pretornaturally forewarned ho might have listened to the Teutonic popguns. FROM our harbor full we had not noticed It, but one of the tugs had slipped away. And next day we were summoned to the porches by a sudden pandemonium of whis tles broken loose, pipings of tugs, deep fog horns of tho larger vessels and puny whis tling from even the barges, all saluting two tugs In stately progress down the harbor, lashed side to side, the rescuer, spick and span, the rescued, battered, but not limping, with holes from bhell and Ehrapnel In stack, deck and sides, her wooden superstructure burned away nnd most of her paint scorched off, hut untouched below the waterllno and nt her masthead proudly floating Old Glorj'. She Is now tied up at tho wharf for Inspec tion and Incidentally Is earning money for the Bed Cross from patriots and curiosity seekers, sometimes combined in one person. The sun shines through into her coal bunk ers, but her engines were almost untouched. Three brave men who were injured on her are recovering from their wounds, nnd rumor even reports that the wreckers are already raising the submerged stone barges. THE Gownsman noticed three little gamins on the street one day. The eldest was about twelve, the second ten, tho third was a mere baby. The big boy, we will assume for good reason, cuffed number two. We will assume that ho stood In loco parentis to him ; possibly ho was both mother and father. Number two thereupon looked nt number one ruefull-, measuring his slzo; and forthwith turned to the baby and passed on the cuff with Interest. But you can't whip the big boy by beating the baby ; and even the baby won't cry! f READERS' VIEWPOINT Concerning Democrats To the Editor of the Evening Public Ledger: Sir I read jour editorial headed "Bonnl well," and. If you please, I would llko to remark that the Judge Is not depending on the "prominent Democrats" to elect hlm It is the humble Democrats who know him well, and whom he tinows well, that will elect Bonnlwell as sure as Well, you'll see by the time November rolls around Just how It will-happen. In the meantime, while tho weather Is hot, let us try to keep cool, even If we do find otrfer things besides the weather to tan talize us., JOHN J, FLEMING, Philadelphia, duly 29. ITI.W1I Nrrtl a r.nni( Ei..' ' ' - . -,. iu'- n '" " yif", .wbw'm .wwsirsKS'ysv?'" LINES TO A HOWITZER By Grantland Rice Lieutenant, 115th Field Artillery, A. E. F. FT1ILT up your long, black, ugly snoutR 'And let It lift'agalnst the' sky. For when you bark jour message out We hear the roar of Freedom's cry; We've dono with qulbblo and debate. Here's where the Hun line looms In view, And out beyond the call of fate We've turned tho answer back to you. No one might call you, at your best, . A thing of beauty, pal of mine; " f Your low, srjuat form Is hardly blest " With any grace that's near divine; You'io not an ornament for home, You'd never mako an artist cheer, ' But wheresoever I may roam ' I only hope that you are near. M You're stupid-looking If they "will A trifle dull and all of that; But when they want some distant hill Turned Into level ground or fiat ,' Or'when they want some Hun-bred crew - Ground Into sausage, near or far, My little bet goe3 down on you Against whatever odds there are. x You may be sullen, as they say, ?, A lop-eared grouch, or even worse, But when they need an open way, i Before the doughboys start to curse; . Or where, beyond the massing men They need some one to sjam the lid. We know we'll get the answer when We turn and say "Go to It, kid." j CopirfffM, 1918, b The Tribune Association. , Breaches That Fail Since wool disappeared from Germany, efficiency makes breeches out of gahda. Brooklyn Times. propa- What Do You Know? QUIZ 1, Who 'was the CheTaller de Saint (leorge? 2, What, In a military aense, Is a lino ot com-, munleattonsT 5. Where la Cnmp flreenet 4. Who la George- Sylvester VlereckT IS. Name the author of "The Gold Bag," 6. Where Is Jaulgonne? 7. What Is-the "Koelnlsehe Zeltung"T 8. Whtf la General ManglnT 0. Who wrote the text of tho Declaration ot Independence? , 10. Who said! "I hare made ten people dls- . contented and one ungrateful." Answeri to Yesterday's Qulr ' I. Gownsmam on wose illUneUri profea- .? atonal, official or scholastic hailt la 1", gown, aa a Judge, lawjer, dlilne or mem- ', ber of a unlterslty. . t. General Gouraud. a one-armed French (en- ffi eral. who has been In command of the r brigaded pollua and Yankees In tho Mam. f. , Alsne offensive of the Allies. In tho see "; tor eaat of Ithetms. ' , i VS. Author of "Swiss Family Itoblnaon"! Pastor ,1 Wtsa Uolmnn Rudolf Vji MI-UK). , f 4, Munchausen taiei a "laii". aiory. a pwco or braggadocio or a vutnclorlous recital of u pergonal exploit. From Baron Miv t ehausen. the chief character In a plctor esauo notcl by Rudolph Hasp. S, Doctor Ton Hussarek Is the former Minister ot Public Education o( Austria. .He has been reported aa the successor ot Doctor Ton Pejdler as Premier. 0. Service, flagi a flag consisting of a ato Held with a deep red border, eesblaaoaed with as many blue stars aa toe family or' corporation tiling It has reprnentatlre In the military sen Ice. ot the United BUte. 7 The Queen of Italy la named Elena. Bhj Is . the daughter of King Mrneuta, of Mon tenegro. 8. Montgomery Is the capital and nlrmlnghaaa ,tho. largest Hy of Alabama. 0. An American Infantry dliiikm constats ot about za.uuu men. inclining rompatants and auBBkmentary.anlU.' according to'shon moat recent plana fat new dlvlaMaa la a) ,,' Kv vi .ft" ,' .;-M r 1 1 tt f t vwn i timm itU dMM4iCJIi? nY-SPH,-J v WCV.? v. -,,v , ". -j u ..' .j. iit't '?.i- i-r , -.'j. " 4&L