w ,' v K-r -. u M f&PS&t ?sr s to hi' ih Baj ' F frt. for i US KS KPrii ysL ffi rv . it BKVfc, S Kutntna ttubuc AeDqer fc tHB EVENING TELEGRAPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY '';. CTKUB H. K.. CURTIS, rIirNT ,' Cnarlei H, Ludlnston, Vice President: Jnhn C ; Martin, Betretaryand Treasurer: Philips. Collins, j John B. Williams. John J. Spurgeon, Directors, - .-.- & ja. Djuiuuiitoti . r.uuur . f - . T'; JOHN C MARTIN.. ..general Business Manacer 'rff; Published dally at rrsuo I.ttxiER IJu lie. rwvs .. maepcnnenco pquare, i-nuaaeipniu '':" ', Wees Cintiil Iiro;d and Chestnut streets t ,-' , f-liu vjiiikm .rr-sff-union jiuuuing "'SiC,w ToK - 2" Metrcolltan Tower ft'-0e puTjotT 403 Ford Hulldlne lil&i bt. .uoois ....iiioh Fullerton ilulldlnc Y'-- giiugo 1Z02 Tribune IlulWlni F Er ' " VRTTCI TITTTlWltTfl. iAjMe Vll1iiWAf T)fair iS N. B. Cor. Pennsylvania Ae. and 14th St. S , l You Sckuu The Sun Uulldlne '- 4wOMPON bciuii - London Times t!X. suBscnjruoN tehus tm ctixinq i'cblio l,idom Is served to sub 5 jf erlbera In Philadelphia and surrounding towns sw ,nB 04 iwfive ii-; cents per week, payaoie " to the carrier. ji . By mall to points outside of Philadelphia. In the. united States. Canada, or United Males po aesalons, postage free, fitly (30) cents per month. tx (IS) dollars per year, payable In advance. To all foreign countrUa ono ($1) dollar per month. Notics Subscribers wishing; address changed Inust tlv old as well an new address. BILL, JWO WALNUT KE STONE, MAIN 3000 Vt Addresa all communications to Evening rublto Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia. gj . Member of the Associated Press f " " THE ASSOCIATED PRESS is exclu- r9 . vtveiv emmcn io inn use jor repuoiicaion an news aispatcies crruirea io it or nut Mgrtette credited In this paper, and also the local news published therein. will rtolifs of republication of special dis pettchts fitrein are alsq reserved. Philadelphia. ThanJiy. Aotu.t 32. 1918 CITY HALL NONESSENTIALS "NCE more the City Hall clerks nre '-' complalnlns of the Inadequacy of their pay and are asklnpr their friertds to use Influence to get their salaries raised. If the departments In tho City Hall were undermanned these clerks might cet some sympathy, but a quarter of them could leave and get Jobs at much better pay doing war work without interfering t all with the efficiency of the depart ments. This would leave money emueh to increase the salary of the clerks really needed. Such a simple solution does not seem to have occurred to the clerks nor to f.e ward leaders. It ought to be made plain, however, that a man holding down a useless Job In the City Hall is shirking his duty In the Industrial crisis which the summoning of men to the army has caused. The Kaioer has granted the Crown Prince a six months' leave of absence. This will bring him back to the front In time to get licked again when we begin our final spring drive. THE END OF VARDAMAN tT0 "WHAT extent the defeat of Senator " Vardaman for renomination was due to the President's letter of condemnation and to what extent It was due to the de creasing personal popularity of the man himself It would be useless to conjecture. The reassuring fact is that Vardaman Is defeated. Of course, his defeat will be regarded as a condemnation for his anti war activities and for his attempts to ob- uct the plans of the Administration, whether It is or not, and Mississippi will be reckoned among the loyal States,, It did not take this primary election to prove that the nation Is committed -wholeheartedly to the war. Every time there has been a test pro-Germans and pacifists have been condemned. The moral effect of these accumulating verdicts Is likely to be manifested in a changed attitude on thfe part of some of the obstructing Congress men who think that they catf'win' popu larity by making trouble. Germany seems to have adjusted her war movement" artistically to the seasons On March 21 It was spring. In September It will be fall. PINCHING THE GERMAN SALIENT TT LOOKS as though the evacuation of - pyun -were oniy a matter or time, ana J54iknot A very long time, either. The French Kg now ;bpld Blerancourt and Lasslgny, doml- ? naungisoyon irom,-a-8hallow arch of 'faj higher ground. Their advance along the SS? TaIIeyof the Olse is presumably retarded jj&r by the wooded region of Ourscarap. ai me same time waig is striking heavily along the Ancre north of Albert. This is only some thirty miles northwest of Noyon, and If the English should get through to Bapaume the whole Sommo Valley .from Bray to Peronne will be In danger. The Kaiser may have to rely ;$. rather heavily on that "retreat specialist" he Is said to have called in and St. Quen tin may again have the dubious honor of being the headquarters of the Great In fernal Staff beforo frost sets in. , What we are expecting to see in the jjt . ' course of tho next few weeks (or days) Is , very viprgus onensive on the part of V Amertnon trnnna atAnn tv. T- , .ny ltsJ)lows struck northward across the Ais : ; - - ne v'wouia render the whole German salient in vVPicardy, additionally uncomfortnhln tnr ""the Kaiser's command, however skiii,i it nttfJf ---. .....u fc KW')"11" De oacKwara tactics. i-, . ' le Munitions have been made at the Frank- J&ft ford Arsenal for a hundred years, but neer jifefQr. a better cause than now. r R - UASUALUfcS AMUWJ THE KINGS rjCVRDINAND, King of Bulgaria, is re--' ported to be dying, presumably of :!worry. The Czar of Russia fell not lnnir ; ftiiot a lonely and ignoble figure, before a Ei, t'rjng squaa or peasants. Francis Joseph oi.Ausirm uieu neany iwo years ago. The war killed him. He died a broken-hearted md "disillusioned o'ld man. King Con- '-mrtantlne of Greece Is out of a job and j;ex!Ie in Switzerland. These four men, th Kaiser vllhelm of Germany, figured prominently in the conspiracies that baated in the war. Only Wilhelm re- lAalns alive and well. Tet all the- signs M omens of "the hour show plainly that ' Hi accumulated hatred and detestation of ation is gathering for the stroke that Inake his throne vacant. ITbase kings offended the conscience of ad. They, roused forces beside which and cannon are trivial. They 't, escape. H doubt the existence of a law of , you, mmnu pur to observe the pep THE ISSUES OF 1920 They Are Llleely to Cut Across Old Tarty Lines and Make tho Result of the Election Uncertain TTNDER normal conditions the voters have usually decided by the middle of n presidential term whether they wish to retain in power the pnrty of tho President The defeat of Mr. Cleveland for re-election after his first term was virtunlly certain before he had been in oflke two years. Likewise it was ad mitted to be impossible to le-elcct Mr. Harrison. But conditions at present are not nor mal. No ono knows what is to happen between now and the assembling of tho presidential conventions in 1920. While some tentative issues arc framing them selves, the nation as a whole is suspend ing j'udgment on them until it knows more about them. Of one thing we can be certain, and that is that prognostica tion about the alignment of the voters in 1920 is pretty dangeious business. One man's guess is as good as another's, because nobody knows anything about it. The Paris interview of Senator Lewis, printed in this newspaper yesterday, set ting forth what the Illinoiian thinks will be the issues in tho next presidential campaign is interesting chiefly because it epitomizes tho opinion of many men who have been giving sonic thought to the matter. But the Senator would doubtless be tho first to admit that ho is only guessing and that events may put an entirely different complexion on the whole situation. Nevertheless, it serves a good purpose, because it will set tho voters to thinking and may assist them in forming opinions which they can express at the polls when the time comes. Whatever else may happen, it is doubtless true that the for eign policy of tho country will play a much larger part in the presidential cam paign than ever before. We are now taking part in a great foieign war and we are hoping that within a little moic than a year we shall be represented at the council table of the nations negotiat ing a peace treaty which shall remove tho pretexts for more wars in the imme diate future. We are playing a great part in the world now. We must decide whether we are to assume the responsi bilities after the war which our partici pation ir. it has placed on our fchoulders. Senator Lewis thinks that the decision will come in the form of the acceptance or rejection of the policy of entering into alliances, offensive and defensive, with other nations. Peihaps ho is right. There has already been gossip in the London dispatches about a possible alli ance between this country and Great Britain. The Senator thinks that the Democratic candidate for the presidency will come from the West, and that tho West will be opposed to any change in our historical policy. As to the domestic issues the Senator places government ownership of rail roads and telephones and government in surance first. These issues will cut across the old party lines and make fore casting about their indorsement or re jection exceedingly difficult. Theie aie small groups of thinkers committed to both sides of these .luestions, but the great mass of voters aie open-minded. They are willing to be shown, and they will judge by the outcome of the experi ment now making. - We think, however, that Mr. Lewis has guessed wrong when he says that the tariff has disappeared from politics and has become merely "s matter of inter national bookkeeping." All the signs in dicate that it is likely to become one of the most pressing questions in interna tional politics and so will react on na tional politics. Theie is involved in it the after-the-war commercial relations between the Germans and the nations of the Entente no'w fighting them. Are we to allow the commercial penetration of Germany in the future as it has been per mitted in the past, or are we to defend our own maikets? will be the question which the English, above all, must an swer, and which will be put to the states men of Fiance and America. Our Demo cratic friends cannot whistle the tariff down the winds quite so easily as Mr. Lewis seems to wish. It is not too soon for all of us to begin to consider the future and how we are to face the problem of adjusting ourselves to the new world which will come out of the war. The new Ludendorff drive Is Kild to bo intended to drive the reluctant German youths into the army. MINSTRELSY rpHE death of Hughey Dougherty by no means terminates the Influence of minstrelsy, of which for more than half" a century the Philadelphia comedian was a gleeful exponent. Burnt cork art after the "classic" pattern, with Its pom pous interlocutors anjl irroetcnt "end men," Is disappearing. Yet even today its salutary spiiit nbides in tho land of its creation and tho mode of thinking it en gendered saves ua from many a pitfall of fatuous error. The prime Intent of minstrelsy was, of course, sheer fun. But it was fun of a singularly bold and racy sort; fun which behind all its satiric extravagance was essentially keen and discerning. The fol lies of oratorical flapdoodle, the absurdi ties of fashion and snobbery, the self satisfaction of the shallow politician all forms of provincial conceit In our na tional life were the game of the graceless "minstrel moke," Ills weapon was laughter. By its em. ployment he fostered in us a habit of humorous yet immensely helpful self examination that is today perhaps more profusely cultivated in this country than anywhere else in the world. "Air. Bones-" or "Mr. Tambo" burlesqued the stump speech and thereafter much of i the windy EVENING- PUBLIC LEDGER at ourselves, which Kipling declares bids us even "mock our hurrying soul." Tho mental attitude, however, is, like minstrelsy, not cynical. It Is wholesome, stimulating In Its sunny keenness! Thero Is In tho American character something markedly congenial to this type of self critical humor, but minstrelsy tilled a fer tile soil with raro success. Tho delicious Dougherty would prob ably hnxe been appalled on being called a philosopher. None the less tho humblest funmnkcr, alert to pcrcclvo humanity's foibles, is In a sense entitled to bo so do scribed. Sound truth often lay at the core of the last mliiMticl's wildest so-called "nonsense." Hughey Dougherty was a tonic like tho characteristically American form of footllght foolery ho 60 long adorned. PRUNES AND PRISMS I s SOUGHT Immortality Hero and there I sent my rockets Into tho air: I gave my name A hostage to Ink, I dined a critic And bought him drink. I SPURNED the weariness Of tho flesh; Denied fatigue, and v Began afresh If men knew all. how They would laugh! I even planned My epitaph. . . . AND then one night When Hie duk w as thin I heard the nursery Rites begin: I heard the tender Soothlngs said Over a crib, and A small sweet head. mHEN In a Hash -"- It came to mo That there was my Immortality. Salted Peanuts suggests that tho army inulo will have something to say about the capture-of Bra. Curlotm how a habit will grow on one een a habit of working. How a Woman Heads a Magazine On thoe raro occasions when wo do not rido in the smoking car wo like to amuse ourself watching how a woman reads a magazljie. She sits down, rocks to and fro on the plush with a graceful teetering motion to be ship she's comfortable and then looks at the ioer. If It has a baby on it or a soldier in uniform she examines it care fully, and may even say to her compan ion: "iMi't that sweet? It looks like , don't ou think?" Then with her right hand she spins tho pages past rapidly, just to see that every thing is all right and to mako sure that the advertisements haven't been left out. Half-way through her quick eye makes a mental note of an attractive ad that catches her fancy and she turns back, to see it. She looks at It gravely. From her philosophic profile as she studies it you would imagine it was a serious article on the Singlo Tax (which, by the way, she imagines to mean a le y on bachelors). Then she turns back to the last page and begins to run through the advertise ments, backwards. It occurs to her that fall Is coming and she will soon need an autumn hat. She makes a mental note of this. (Women, by the way, never make tcrltfen memoranda of really important things. In fact, they neer make written memoranda of anything) She instinctively rejects any advertise ments dealing with masculine affairs. One of the wonderful things about a woman's mind is that she knows instantly and with out consideration what is relevant and Im portant. Suddenly It occurs to her that there may be a story by her favorite author In the magazine and she rapidly runs over tho fiction pages, but only glancing at the Illustrations. This saves her the trouble of reading them. She has a sort of dis trust of tho table of contents and would rather find out for herself what the Issue contains. She reads Che captions under the Illus trations nnd finding ono that sounds In teresting she turns to see who wrote the story. If It is a name she never saw be fore she feels convinced it is not worth reading. Probabl she is right. She finds a little poem which the despair ing editor stuck into the middle of a page as a decoration. She thinks It Is rather cute, and surreptitiously withdrawing a small hairpin she slits it out and puts It Into her little bag, where there are already six others of Hie same sort. Just then tho conductor comes around for her ticket, and looking up she sees that Mrs. AVIne sap, three seats ahead, has a new bonnet. The magazine slips quietly Into the ciack at the back of the plush seat. German U-hoat officer said to have at tended Bioadway theatre last week. Head ltn. If there are any plays running on Broadway good enough to lure a U-boat captain all the way from Nantucket Shoals, New York must hae turned up some new playwrights. Tho man who says he saw a U-boat captain in a New York saloon must have made a mistake. Surely he saw tho Ger man In the Brooklyn subway, where he had gone to get some tips for new fright fulness. If Jack Burroughs, Tom ErKson, Hank Ford and those other Irresponsible boys on that fishing trip keep on playing jouthful pranks some country. sherlff will arrest them as draft evaders. How It Will Look to Berlin Before you do anything these days you, should be sure to think whether It could possibly give aid and comfort to the enemy. The Ford-Edison-Burroughs fish ing escapade is sure to be reported thus in tho Berlin papers: . American magnates, terrified at Oerman Victories, take to the woods in panic, food" shortage America compeiit them; - PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 722, Adventures at Eddystone By ROY HELTON II. Inside the Shop ONE hangs his brass check on the section board and proceeds down through the long rooms past piles of sawed walnut boards and long racks of half-finished gun stocks into his own shop, where, stripping off his once comely outer garments, he bangs his hat on the nail, nods to the boss and moves over to his machine. The early men are nlready at work. Here, and there one hears tho rip and growl of the cutting blades, a deafening crash thnt fills one'rf ears from morning till night and lingers ovor Saturdays and Sundays In heavy ear-filling "murmurs, like tho sound of tho sea. II-OOK about tho room at my fellow work men, their bare muscular arms, their hMry chests, their tense faces. They are n splendid lot. Not ono of all the workmen I came In contact with failed to reveal somehow an inner kindliness, a silent sympathy with a new man on tho Job. They said little or nothing Tho worklngman has no time to acquire the habit of talk. His feelings nre as remote from his lips as the feelings of the folk of the southern mountains. These men In my room, save "ono or two, were experts on a laborious and difficult task. They wero very well paid for very hard and skillful work. Their methods wero direct Courtesy In , tho clean-hand, down town pence was almost unknown men work ing at the fever heat of piece work in a great rnunitlon plant have little time to give or take thanks. Hut beneath this hard, silent surface of tilings was something, to my way of thinking, far finer than all the social graces of Fifth avenue. I HAD no word of welcome from any man In the shop, save the boss, and jet these fellows, speeding up to the highest point of endurance on piecework, hae stopped and broken their stride of production not to talk, but to do things to show mo tho right way, to run through ,a bit of my work fdr me, while their own was waiting I come out of that shop profoundly Im pressed with tho Inner fineness of impulse In the man who works with his hands rerhaps I was fortunate in my shop, perhaps theio Is a certain humanizing influence in the crooked grain of walnut and birch that I might not find in the characters of men whose 11 es are spent on the predictable sub stance of chilled steel. But I do not be lieve it. RIOHT next to mo woiked a tall, quiet, up-State Dutchman. Ho said little or nothing, took his business seriously n-id alwas had a wild burst of temper when nnj thing broke down. Ono morning his belt got cranky He came over and sore Io the boss that the wop upstairs who bad fi.ed it for him ought to be boiled in oil and be made to swallow whole a jard or two of that same rotten strap. A few minutes later I was roused from my task by a tiemendous rattle and crash Tho offending belt had parted and, having colled up about a pulley, was milling around with its loose end to the danger of all beholders. The Dutchman, venturing In too cloo, recehed a sharp crack on the side of his face. With a wild and startling burst of profanity he snatched at tho end of that broken belt and by main force, against all tho pull of the wheels,' ripped it out of tho bowels of the machino and hurled It wildly across the room. A grave, important little inspector was bend ing over a pile of gun stocks. The coiling belt hit him over the ear nnd wrapped around his neck. There was a frantic scream and a long moment of universal laughter. I milE next morning, when a belt broke over f -L me nnd came rattllnir down on mv he.iil. I understood the Dutchman's rage. I car ried the fragments up to the belt man and at his benoh saw tho first and only evidences of the hunger for beauty In all that great Plant. The beltman was a little smiling Polander, with largo mustache Over his locker was a wooden frame frfr an alaim clock. Carefully patted on to Its rough front was a postcard picture of Norma Talmadge. In front of the locker was another work of art a calendar picture of a mother and child standing expectantly by a tall draped window. I looked on the beltman with n new respect and interest. Promlnentlv on his locker was a written sign: "No 'belts taken out of here onlest by order of (Pol lack) beltman." I hasten to add that the word Pollack was clearly the word of an other and a hostile hand. IT WOULD he Impossible to tell. In a few words, of tho many curious and pleasing personalities 1 encountered in that one small shop Among them would surely be included the boy inspector, with an appetite surpassing that of the Fat Hoy In Plcku Ids ; ho began eating at 9 ID and finished bis enormous lunch nt 4 4 5. Every ten minutes during tho day he would approach me to make certain or the time. How many sandwiches, boxes of saidlnes, tolls of cake that liov consumes in the course of a week I should be afraid to print. ' Then there was Oold Tooth, a fine, tall, smiling figure of a man, who was famous In tho shop for a wonderful, resplendent upper incisor, which the boys swear to mo he takes out eery lunchtlme and sticks in again when the meal is over. It was darkly hinted that ho was afraid he'd wear it out if h6 used it for chewing some aer he has dedi cated the gold tooth to the sacred uses of tobacco. It is a pretty sentiment that I think Barrie might readily understand. THE rirate was another first-class figure. He was a gigantic New Englander, who did piodigies of labor, but spent his spare time eating sandwiches and exchanging sweet nothings with the littlo jailer gal who had the sweeping up of our floors. His nioir. I name arose from the great blue bandanna imnuKercniei: mat ne wrapped around his grizzled hair, giving him all tho appearance of a dime novel buccaneer or a gunner's mate on Old Ironsides. Neer gunner's mate worked harder to win a war than this tre mendous man toiling at his profiling ma chine. And finally the Mechanical Wonder the prize of the lot, whoso job Is to adjust ma chinery, but who also takes on the Job of cheering up chronlo grouches, composing quarrels and salving down everybody In his thin cheek was always a generous' wad of sliced plug. His brimless black hat hov ered on the back of his head. He was always moving in tho direction of trouble and also always smiling. To him both par ties of a dispute Invariably confided their troubles". Without such men I don't see how Industry could eer get along. They are the buffers between system and humanity, THE Adjuster once confided to me that his personal dream was pf a Job where every week he could move Into a new factory and learn all the Inwardness of every- new ma chine. I suspect he would also Just as quickly learn the men who worked tho ma chines. He was a storehouse of human and mechanical Information. How to make your .heart beat "regular" when you BO up to an army doctor. How to tell which way a belt ought to run. How many men here owned their houses, and which ono had a cottage at tho shore. Before I left the place I found that I too had succumbed to his charms and that the Adjuster knew all my private business Oh enviable man, who can master both men and machinery I Beneath whose humble and sometimes Ill-washed exterior lurks the creat treasure of an inquiring and a sympathetic soul, Tiie New York World has collected subscrip tions aggregating more Go RIotr on Statues man jso.ooo for a memorial to the late Mayor Mltc&el. It i. to be hoped that this will not be expended on a statue or aoumiui inspiration but rather for a civil service scholarship or in some manner whWi twlil promote the,w;, , ' ymi i ....) . i-l. ii - 11 T ,, M GRADUALLY SOAKING IN , . J .' An- '' ,i 'A v r -j, tJ? i .. ,. f. -r i'- , vVf'M-"'".'". i A. -im Ui' ..; V:L" ijF f JL. tKJ0 J $ j, , r- 3 THE READER'S THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS It Now Exists Among the Allies Fighting Germany To the Editor o the Evening Public Ledger: Sir Under Nje headline, "The League of Nations," Mr. Konkle expresses an aspiration that is quite prevalent among the nations comprising our allies What views are held by our enemies we do not know, except that three years or so ago, when our Piesidcnt ad anced such a proposition, tho German Kaiser offered to become the head of it with Prus sia. It looked to him that his ambitions for world-wide rule were being easily accom plished. The reason I mention that Illus tration Is because it brings out the funda mental question. It is all well and good Tor Mr. Konkle to see the analogy between a I-eague of Na tions and the founatlon' of our nation. Mr. II. O. Webs in "Th'e Fourth Year" makes the same analogy. But the analogy Is. we are sorry to observe, extremely superficial It does not reach the underlying fact. I think It would help Mr. Wells In his thinking if he would concentrate tho penetrating quality of his Imagination upon our Civil War. It Is not a pleasant subject to discuss, nnd tho hard work and fighting underneath it are not especially good food for dreamers. Hut the Civil War was the most necessaty and terrible conflict that the world has seen up to the present crisis. Mr. Wells should study tho Civil War and decido whether or not the present United States of America is due to the formal document known as tho Constitution or whether the Union Is not tho result of conquest between those who held the view of a League of Nations and those who held to the ideal of a single nation. If the serious fact of the Civil War does not gle a sounder basis, to the think ing of Mr. Wells It may help him to under stand the underlying principle of our na tion to observe that It has the Just right and duty to lay an Income tax and enforce n beneficent draft directly on the Individual. Our nation is no League of Nations, or If that dreamlike view should be entertained It Is not at all the League of Nations that Mr. Wells is dreaming about. If a nation like that of the United States Is In contemplation, then It Is necessary for the electorate of each nation to under stand the personal and private, the Individ ual, needs of The individuals in every other nation. For example, the rights of an In dividual In Rhode Island would be the sub ject of decision by a Hindu In Bombay. I respectfully suggest that I have no desire that my personal rights should bo voted upon by an Individual so remote and different. But that Is exactly what happena-ln America. By my vote I help decide the regulation of tho private citizen In the Kentucky moun tains. A single nation formed from all of the world, based on the theory of our own nation, is impossible. As homogeneous as are the peoplo of the United States, there Is a friction at times, and there is no public clamor that our electorate be extended to the four winds of heaven. There is no analogy worth while consider ing of the kind Mr. Wells dreams of. The Hague Court could have furnished what was desired, except for one fact. The extension of the Jurisdiction and the consent neces sary to give It foundation was explicitly and categorically refused by Germany. And in 1911 Serbia offered to submit the remaining question with Austria to the Hague Court, but Austria refused. It was the desire of all of the nations except the Central Powers to extend and clarlfyHhe operations of interna tional law. That is the whole meaning of the present war. It Is an effort to bring Ger many under the domain of International law, and on the part of Germany It Is a desire to establish its claim to be above that law. Until Germany is willing to come under the law of nations there can be no peace. It Is precisely our Civil War in that aspect of the question. But Mr. Wells occupies the position of the fiabby-mlnded people who asked during our war why tho parties could not compromise. Tho"outcome of this war Is the whole cen ter of a wise man's attention. If the" Central Powers could win, all of the dreamlngwould be useless. All laws regulating your con duct and mind would be made by the Junkers of Berlin. For .there Is Where the power a on ber;1"! knee, w' could I would ream", aim f 1918 T is VIEWPOINT Ing League of Nations, solving together their refatlons to one another and to the enemy. It Is an accomplished fact, operating smooth ly and with a just co-operation. It Is a league of rivals In a common service. It has under Its temporary Juilsdlction a wide ex tent of the earth's surface. It has a stu pendous task confronting it When that Is accomplished It may be thought useful to make the formal Constitution or treaty which will recognize a union already cemented. It will not be a union formulated by dreamers w ho see an analogy, but It will be formulated by those who hae fought side by side to the victorious end. H. F. HARRIS. Philadelphia, August 20. The Destroyer's Crew To the Editor of the Evening Public Ledger: Sir Much has been written in prose and verse about the army, and rightly so; but for some reason or other the poor old navy never comes In for much credit. Saint Bar bara, our patron, doesn't seem to have much influence with the literary muses. Occasion ally one sees something in the press that would Indicate that the guardians of the sea aro not wholly forgotten : but olive drab seems to have more of a hold on tie popular fancy than dees navy blue. Consequently when I do see something about the navy that ssjfms to have the divine spark I feel as though It ought to be pub lished on the billboards of the world. The Inclosed Is a bit I copied from the magazine Our Navy, a publication which Is ceitalnly too little known In civilian life, for it Is ex tremely Interesting and entertaining, both to seaman and landsman: The Destroyer's Crew They needn't climb at their sleeping time To a hammock that sways and bumps; They leap, kerplunk ! in a cozy bunk That quivers and bucks and jumps. They hear the sound of the seas that pound On the half-Inch plates of steel, And close their eyes to the lullabies Of the creaking sides and keel. They're a lusty crowd that Is vastly proud Of the slim black craft they drive. Of the roaring flues and the humming crews That make her a thing alive. They love the lunge of her surging plunge And the jnurk of her smoke-screen, too, As they sail the seas In their dungarees, A grimy destroyer's crew. There's a roll and pitch and a heave and hltah To the nautical gait they take, For they're used to the cant of the decks aslant As the white-toothed combers break On the plates that thrum like a beaten drum To the thrill of the turbine's might. As the knife-bow leaps through the yeasty deeps With the speed of a shell in flight. Oh, their scorn is quick for the crews who stick To a battleship's steady floor, For they love the lurch of their own frail perch At thirty-five knots or more. They don't get much of the drills and such That the, battleship jackles do. But sail the seas In their dungarees, A grimy destroyer's crew. t Unfortunately the poem Is anonymous, which is to be regretted ; for to me. at .least, it Is a real literary gem. If you think It worthy of a place In the columns of the Evenino Pirauo Ledorr I should certainly appreciate your putting It there ; -and'I am sure that many other sailers would be glad to see It In a "non6ectarlanv paper, for It seems to breathe the real spirit of the navy, PAUL H. MYRICK, Yeoman, Second Class, U. S. N, R. F, Philadelphia, August 19. t A Tribute From Our Allies To the Editor of the Evening Public Ledger: Sir Le Figaro of July 20, 1918, give's the following as an extract from.Le Gaulols of same date': -The Americans ' All accounts arrlvlnr from the field of battle show them playing with danger, as though they grudged not havlnr braved It sooneO A French general hesitated to send his men to a particularly exposed position, "Take ours," offered his Ameri can colleague; "we still have 15,000,000." I uuperD woras, because, tney . wonasrruuy Interfere! th hrtadlfi --"' " t rr VZ.LU-. - : - - , -tt" -- ? i. 4 f '4M STUBBY JONES, EXEMPT 0 CONGRESSMEN unsmiling, Who call stern duty king! When taxes you are piling, Pass by one precious thing. Go tax the 'palaces awheel The Midas family owns. But do not tax the pushmobile That's run by. Stubby Jones! O Solons of the Senate! ' O financiers profound! Tax tales by Arnold Bennett; Tax pomes by Ezra Pound; Tax beer and beans and veils and veal; Tax Coney ice-cream cones; But do not tax the pushmobile That's run by Stubby. Jones! Tax patriotic ballads; Tax all the wartime plays; Tax syllabub and salads; Tax aces-full-on-treys; Tax every gambling Wall street deal O'er which the sucker groans; But do not tax the pushmobile That's run by. Stubby Jones! Tax hat and glove and panty; Tax undershirt and sock; Tax pots at penny-ante; v Tax grandma's eight-day clock; Tax sealing-wax and orange peel; Tax spooning on ths phones; But do not tax the pushmobile That's run by Stubby Jones! John O'Keefe, in the New York World. If you see a young man walking about the streets with an air of conscious pride you may safely conclude he is one of those who became of age since June 5 and will register for the draft on Saturda'y. There are 2000 of them almost enough to make a regiment. The plan to house Gloucester shipyard workers -at Atlantic City this winter is enthusiastically Indorsed by every shore landlord who sees profit In letting rooms i 'usually vacant In the cold weather. What Is fame? A Pennsylvania farmer Is said to have heard of John Burroughs, but to be ignorant of the identity of the other members of that famous Ashing party camping' out this week. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. Where Is Lake Balkalr 2. What la a ohllaUllitf 3. What la the nationality of Mturlce SUeter- 4. What Is the derUatlen ef the word Friday'? 8. What Ktate dots Senator Vardaman repre sent? 8. Who aald "Difference of opinion makes horta rat"t . . . T. What is a kermis t ' , 5. VI hat rifted rouns American poet was klUod In action last week? 0. What Is the aerond larrest cltr In Maryland? 10, What Is another name for a mou t h-orrunf ' Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Baku, recently reached by British expedi tionary tore, la a port on the western shore of tho Caspian Boa. , t, Franklin D. Roosevelt Is Assistant Secretary of the Nary. S. Montpeller Is the capital of Vermont. 4, Truffles nre fund, uad especially in France, to lend savor to food. Their taste Is some what more delicate than that of mush- . rooms, -ironies grow unaor me srouna r (j f ana axe rooiva up r pigs. 8. The Missouri compromise was an act passed by Conrrrss In J MO. permlttlnc the en trance Into the Union ef Missouri so a stare State, but prohibiting In all the rest of the Iultlana Territory. Irlnr north of latitude M.80, the line formln the south ern boundary of Missouri. To counter paianc) ids admission oi laissoun a sUts mate, name was aumiitea as a State at the same time. I. Charles Bernadotte. one of Napoleon's pcroaaviir. ono ok napoieon-a aaa founded the present royal house swVi; n. ,- 7. Graver Cleveland aereatea James a. tar President 8, , The "Hotel do VUle" Is the cltr French tewBS. noted .Ami T ? Sl c hauk 7. ViV "ePgrpjJJA im ' m in pojiHOHMiiKa18ywtoa1-. ?. - A EOE'3e 'WHn "J .i!..i.r. . A V : v