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M, Br mall to points outside of rhlladelpnla. In ';& Mm United States. Canada, or United mates po ' toM ma Vt ( . Mil ?'. I 1 v kl mt -w :m? W3?iI!p"IOI,B posiaas xree. nrxy nui cenis per monin. (L'VBHa flAI riollara n., wif. naiaht In arfvanpf, f;it?l ' To all foreltn countries one (11) dollar per LVf-lj; fconth. ?i t. None Subscribers wlshlnr address chanted "iiK vMat ve old as well as new address. rfe'' 1 BELL. M WALNI.T KEYSTONE. MAIN 3000 P Aftdrest oil eommunlcotlons to vfn(na" fuble Lttotr, Initptndtnce Bnuare, Philadelphia, Member of the Associated Press 5fi3J - TAB ASBOCtATED PRESS is exclu- t$$t w dpofchM credited to it or not iAheruite credited In th paper, and alto y-i. toed I new ptibtbned (Aereln. SCS 'ill Mkl, f ,flffMMtAM O .MVJll 1. S"jHe nereln are nUo reserved rMM.lpSIt, Sslurdar. Auiuit 31, 1118 r I A CALIPH IN BORROWED PLUMES j TMWYOR SMITH, golfing merrily at ' Shawnee-on-Delaware wherever that may be makes It appear that Senator Vare was chaffing us the other day when he played Caliph before a delegation of ', real estate men and promised a reduced or at least a fixed tax rate. There Is a Suspicion even that Senator Ed was chaffing; himself, since the Mayor, from the alattiMaaiaaak DWa aa mm TaI neaa, - f.n aiu wi Dimniidruii-icionnic, u-iouic-i Rr tlia, TrnrM thaf nil th. lnrrtlv nrnmlaa which seemed to express the beneficence of Senator Ed were, In fact, merely repre sentative of Intentions and plans formu lated months ago In the Maor's office. Mr. Smith promises to cut down the city's expenditures by playing Lord High Executloneer to Senator Ed's Caliph. He will reduce the personnel of all the mu nicipal departments to the very bone. A reduced tax rate, he informs us, is a cer tainty of the near future. How shall we Interpret the elastic term "bone"? Can it be that In trimming downward and stopping when he reaches the bone the Mayor will therefore stop When he reaches some of Senator Ed's beet friends? Tf. rtn thft nthar hilnri Iha Snnalnr'a WPti ...... 14 'friends are to be fired, what Is to be done IT m4W All u- ..... ...M r,i... ui, wiui au wic iiavie iuuiji ai iuy mm.- These dajs of the shrinking dollar, with s,reductlon of almost one-half of Its former Mrchaslna rjower. seriouslv Incline orif to doubt the virtue of too much modesty. THE DEFEAT OF MISS RANKIN ffe Lri6S JEANNETTE RANKIN was de l'Jr tested for the Republican senatorial 'luitWnlna tlon in Montana, not because she :A1m . Woman, hut hprnnsA Rhn 1 nut nf , annpathy with the purposes and ideals of jp; ths voters of the State. k t " Hrie votea against the declaration of war fcavnd she is in sympathy with the I. W. W., -j tin organization a hundred of the leaders of which have recently been convicted of interfering with the efforts of the Govern ment to raise money and armies for the prosecution of the war. Montana Republicans are to be con 1 cratulated on their manifestation nf na. , w j. c.i wjv.o, w cjchtllB, llllo alllQi, nilU IS awvusiiy ii nut uuiiouiuuHiy pro-uerman. fa o mailer nai me w earner man says, H way be safely prophesied that the first auto-less day tomorrow will not be a fine & Sunday along the best-paved turnpikes KrNvATaTus-eyeo constables will be enabled vlrtu- F mlye in ahlil tm shnn C a. ' -- " A CRISIS FOR SPANISH HONOR WdH? Ml,ttl,n rf tV,A . mI.I 1.. .t. I'rtzf ' dw.wv.um w n ncn 1.1101a III IIIO . lial ta,ein4tatl, kaIvaH nnli, V... U& .WU.I ..V. KiSrmUslon of King Alfonso's people or bv W-KB" j ......... ... . . wsr. t ine nuns promise to exempt Span .Wish vessels from submarine attack has i :ban broken within a week. Furthermore. ST'inTo pledge was violated In the face of K?1 Spain's threat to commandeer a Teuton fcfcjilnterned ship for each one of her mer- PjjS-chantmen destroyed. Naturally the pirates ir"Objected to this program and promised to iljll behave. Naturally, also, they had no such P. Intention. ? Tne opanisn eieamsnip rusa nas Been &' awnk and Madrid is now confronted with KJ-.the problem of knuckling down or exe iAFfeutlna; the threat, the Justice of which has jpTKise) meaning for the German mind. The s Issue between a long suffering neutral na- daCllt. ?.r- " - 'si Spanish honor Is extremely sensitive. Ir-lt,'win bo made a mockery if it succumbs SwRlalthls instance to the characteristic lies y$rii the German Foreign Office. , yfty It easily conceivable that the very p'.f;jatBg princess whom Prince Rupprecht is , i-a laUKa) aw, ms uw a. ..no mvo, u, ncr com- IMtriots since the war, a victim of Luxem- iic SOLDIERS AT HOME SK a United States coast guard .killed a man who was found acting OVMMtousiy on me ucean uiy Deacn ne :. jlHlie) more than his plain duty under Qffetrcumatftnces, and it will be regret- IS , if he should be subjected to any of ffHa -annoyances or a civil investigation, ed all tne tacts are as stated. '.coast guard was an officer of the fitment engaged In duty directly as- tated with the work of war. The vlc- f .. tile pistol, refused to surrender or Jm questioned when he was caught VMff strangely on forbidden ground. lMLhe attacked the man who ques- 'hiss m tne name or the Govern- t'The guard would have been Jus- 1 In shooting him even before the a is that la these times all rso behave as to be abpve ,wfioarea;trt above sua- it fcWfia.' .1 WJfcfi 1l-"Jh- V FORCE TO THE UTMOST The Man-Power of the Nation Is Now at the Dispotal of the Prenident for Win ning the War T! HE first thins? to bo noted in connec tion with the passage of the man power bill is the enthusiastic willingness, when it came to n final showdown, ot both Houses of Congress to place nt the disposal of the Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Nnvy of the United States virtually the whole man-power of the nation. Congress wascady to pass such n bill weeks ago, but the Secretary of War said it was not necessary. He urged post ponement. And Congicss took a recess on the strength of the assurances from Secretary Baker. But within two or three weeks the War Department changed its mind and asked that the recess bo aban doned in order that a bill might be passed as quickly as possible cmpovveiing the President to draft all eligible males be tween 'the ages of eighteen and forty-five, inclusive. This Congress has now done. Theie were only two negative votes in the House and only one negative vote in the Senate on the bill in its regular foim, and the Senator who was opposed, as soon as he discoveied that he was alone, asked that he be allowed to withdraw his vote and be recorded as not voting. The dif ferences between the House and the Son ate bills were quickly ndjusted, and the bill went to the President with all the essential provisions in it and with some troublesome provisions, inserted by the Senate, eliminated, especially the nnti strike amendment, which this newspaper opposed from its inception as unneces sary and pernicious. The significance of all this ought not to be lost on the executive heads in Washington. The Congress, representing the people of the nation, is more ready than the War Department to use force to the utmost to win the war. And the nation stands behind the Congress. The bill, as it was passed, opens the reservoir of military power, to be drawn upon to whatever extent may be neces sary. It puts complete discretion in the hands of the President as to the number of men to be called, as to the order in which he shall call the men of different ages and as to the assignment of them to the army or to the navy. Under the power thus conferred the President may take from his office a man managing a large busi ness and put him in the army as a pri vate. He may take a professional man a lawyer or a doctor and set him to driv ing a teamof mules in the commissary department, or he may take the presi dent of a college or the principal of a high school and make him a headquarters clerk. But such men need fear no such action on the part of Mr. Wilson. The power that he has had to be inclusive. It will be exercised with discretion and judgment in such a way as to utilize to the best advantage all the fighting ability and technical skill that we have in order to make the most efficient fighting machine of which we are capable. And if men are engaged in occupations necessary to the conduct of the war, whether it be agriculture, or other form of industry or occupation, they may be exempted en tirely from the draft or they may be drafted for limited military service. The industries of the country aie prop erly safeguarded. The responsibility rests on the President, who is the commander-in-chief of all the national foices, and who must take into consideration all the problems, industrial as well as military, connected with the raising of an army and its maintenance in the field. The Constitution contemplated the ex ercise of such powers by the President, and the Congress has merely followed the letter and the logic of that docu ment in prescribing the way in which the army shall bp laised. If we need an army of 5,000,000 men it can now be raised without further legislation, and if we need an army of 10,000,000 men there are eligibles enough between the ages of eighteen and forty five to fill its ranks. The spirit with which our men are fighting in France already has encour aged our allies. They will be heaitcned still more when they learn the extent to which we havo committed our man power to the great task laid upon it. The selection of a pro-Ally Premier in Holland suggets that that little country is fully alive to the significance of Halg and Foch's war communiques THE VIEWS OF A PATRIOT CARDINAL GIBBONS, who is a man of '-' clear vision, able to see through all the sophistications of chop logic, has written of the labor situation in the following words: Just as it Is the duty of those who are called to fight to fight hravely and to allow their patriotism to be the Inspiring principle of their courage, so It Is neces sary that those who work should work In the same strenuous and patriotic manner. Those workingmen who accept tho Car dinal as their guide will doubtless give serious thought to this pregnant sentence when they are tempted to lay down their tools. The American war bill yesterday was our biggest on record, But as Uncle Sam is now getting something for his money it ought to be positively n. pleasure to pay up. DON CAMERON AND THE BOSS SYSTEM JAMES DONALD CAMERON, who died yesterday at the age of elghty-flve years. Inherited the Republican leadership In Pennsylvania from his father, Simon Cameron. Both father and son served ns United States Senator and each was Sec retary of War, the elder In the Cabinet of Lincoln at the beginning of his term and the younger in the Cabinet of Grant at the end of, his term. Cameron was a -"boss" before that "WMslif EVENING PUBLIC LEDGERr term was applied opprobrlously to politi cal leaders. He handed his power over to his son when he got weary with using It, and Matthew Stanley Quay, who was brought up In tho Cameron school, suc ceeded the son when ho was ready to re tire. And when Quay died Senator Pen rose, an apprentice who had learned his trade In the political shop of Quay, where tho Cameron tiadltlons controlled, suc ceeded to nil the honors and emoluments of tho political dj nasty. There aro few States In which there has been such a succession ot leaders believ ing In the same political methods and maintaining theli supremicy for so many enrs. But this distinction Is not one of which thoughtful Pennsvlvanlans are proud, Even In the davs of Simon Cam eron's greatest power thcio were men who denounced his Ideals and his methods. Nowadays wo do not find many persons who defend the svstem. AVhcn they Bpeak of It at all they apologlro for it as perhaps n necessary evil. Somo day they may leave off all mitigating adjectives and ndmlt that It is nn evil. Strange as It mn eem, liquidating John Barlejcorn Is cssentlilly a ilrv business THE HIGH COST OF TALKING rpHOSE who loathe the thought of gov crnment ownership, wno fear and dis trust theories of Federal control over In dustries and public utilities, havo suddenly found a potent friend in Postmaster Gen eral Burleon. They have had reason to feel that Mr. McAdoo was one of their stnnchest allies, since railroad travel Is swiftly becoming almost painful. But Mr. Burleson's unheralded announcement that the user of a telephone must hereafter pay tho costs of Installation a charge that may range from $2 to $15 per instru ment must be regarded as a triumph of achievement by those who want to see tho theory of Government ownership dis credited In the old days If trains were late or poorly equipped, If thf lnllroads made ticket bujing difficult and raised fares and substituted cheap pine cages for the usual agieenble appearing ticket offices, thei public would have blared agalist soulless corporations and tho newspapers would have cffeivesced like Congressmen with sarcastic comment. But had the telephone companies expressed an Intention to clap an additional Installation ta on to the hill of everj one who cmploved their serv lco a tornado of abuse would have gone up all over the land and Congress and the Senate would have waned with each other for the prlv ilege of lending the orchestrated diapason of woe. The country would have clamored for Government ownership! It Is plain, of course, that the Govern ment Is facing difficult and new conditions in Its administration of the wires and the railroads. But the corporations lecognlzed one Important principle which the Govern ment seems utterly to disregard They tried to make life amiable upon their rall- ' V roads and In the avenues touched by their wires. The telephone companies realized that every new subscriber would add something to the pioflts derived from the rest of the sjstem. Even body benefltej by the expansion of telephone service Just as life was made pleasanter and business was helped by Improving railway service. It is when Mr. McAdoo and Mr. Burleson seem unable to recognize the value of graciousness in the public service that they aro open to criticism. Now we aie Invited by inference (to talk less and help win the war. And there is nothing elte to do because there is no one left to whom we can complain The Senate, passing ConKresalonat Rprnrtl, the prohibition rider Dense Copy without a vote In order that the mem bers might not ' be embarrassed at the next elections," didn't present a spectacle likely to be Inspiring in das when all men are asked to be brave VVhdt we should like to know Is the number of Senators who went Immediately after the vote to Baltimore, which has been the fount of cheer for all Washington since I'ennsjlvanla avenue be came as the Sahara Now that General Rum The First is actually defeated Kutlilessnesi It must be said that he can boast an appalling number of casualties on the other side. Now we know that nut Hades Isn't Hlndenburg la really dead An official dis patch from Germany sa he Is calm. "Parisians seek reasons for German re treat," declares a headline. But they prob ably won't worry about them quite so much as the actual participants in that retrograde mov ement The daring British who made the highly destructive housetop raid on Mannheim seem to have turned the gospel of rooflessness to good account. Those Main Line physicians who are planning to increase their fees to $5 a islt doubtless think that they will make Just as much money with about one-half the work. The French were at the gates of Ham last night and they are likely to carve' the Germans out of it before tonight. Bad Nauhelm very neatly describes the place where Wllhelm and Ferdinand have been meeting for their Jatest sympathy-fest. Some strikes nowadays are perfectly, good ones. We allude to the Foch-Halg variety. The Hun may still believe he's all to the mustard, but without Ham, which he now stands to lose, the notion lacks charm. It is axiomatic that ovstera will go down much more easily this fall If they don't go up. Germany's "will to win" seems to have (been Ilka most other will a forecast of flflSTfli .tjj.i j- . -, uj . u. i Jr-PHnlADELPHlA, SATUBDATS AU' - P CAMPHOR BALLS Meditations on 0)steri "ll" WALKED down a little street that runs a modest course through the middle of the afternoon, scooped between high and rather grimy walls so that a coolness and a shadow aro upon It. It Is a homely Httld channel, frequented by laundry wagons taking away great piles of soiled linen from the rear of a large hotel, and little barefoot urchins pushing carts full of kindling wood picked up from the,lltter of splintered packing cases. On one sldo of the street Is a big power-house where tho drone and murmur of vast dy namos croon a soft undertone to the dls tnnt clang and zooming of the trolleys. Bejond that Is the Btnge door of a bur lesque theatre, and a faint sweetness of grcaso paint drifts to tie nose down a dark, mysterious passageway. a "ITTE WALKED down this little street, ' noticing tho Tor Rent sign on a sa loon at the corner and the pyramided boxes of green and yellow apples on a fruit stand, and It seemed to us that there was nn unmistakable breath of autumn in the nlr. Out beyond, where the street widens and floods Itself again with sun, there was heat and shimmer and the glit tering plate-glass windows of Jewelry deal ers, but In tho narrower strip of alley we felt a premonitory tang of future frost. At the end of August -the sunlight gets ellower, more oblique; It loses the pale and deadly glare of earlier days. It is shallower, more colorful, but weaker of impact. Shall we say it has lost Its punch? AND then we saw a little ovster cafe, . well known to mahy loveis of good cheer, that has been furbishing Itself for the Jolly davs to come. No one knows jet whether the U-boats have frightened the oysters, whether the fat bivalves will be leaner and scarcer than in the good old days; no one knows whether there will' even be enough of them to last out until nest Easter; but in the mejntlme we all live In hope. And one thing Is certain the oyster season begins on Monday. The little cafe has repainted Its white front so that It shines hospitably; and the sill and the cellar trapdoor where the barrels go in, and the shutters and the awning poles in front, are all a sticky, glistening green. The white marble step, hollowed by thousands of eager feet In a million lunch time forays, has been scrubbed and sandsoaped. And next Monday morning, bright and early, out goes the traditional red and green sign of the R, rnHE "poor patient ojster," as Keats calls him (or her, for thero aro lady ojsters, too, did you know?) is not only a sessile bivalve mollusk, but a traditional svmbolof autumn and winter cheer. Even if Mr. Hoover counts out the' little round crack eis In twos and threes, we hope there will be enough of the thoughtful and innocent shellfish to go around. When the cold winds begin to harp and whlnney at street corners and wives go seeking among cam phor balla for our last j ear's overcoats, you will be glad to resume jour acquaint ance with a bowl of steaming bivalves, Rwimming in milk with little clots of j-el-low butter twilling on the surface of the broth. An oj-ster stew, a glass of light beer and a corncob pipe will keep youi blue cjes blue to any weather, as a jounj poet of our acquaintance puts it. Some one vviltes to us from Biowns Mills In the Pines to ask the address of that magazine, "Love, Courtship and Mar riage," which is Farmington, Mich. Pining away, evidentlj. Our correspondent adds that the maga zine "must be something entirely new." No, dear friend, not new, but (liko all such enterprises) the oldest thing In the world. In these days when so manj ladles have abandoned the charming frailties of their sex, we are pi and to state that this news paper boasts in its women's department two delightful joung lady editors who aro afraid of mice and thundei storms. Pei haps thej' are the only two left In Phila delphia? In any case, that disposes of ,the old tradition that the women's pages of news papers are edited by elderly bearded men stained with nicotine. Have you ever noticed the little glass cylinders of paper drinking cups that are often found in hotels and railway stations? They have a slot for the Insertion of a coin, and by this slot is the following in scription: Insert penny or nickel. These naive machines are made bj' the Infllvidual Drinking Cup Company, ot New York, and we think that only a New Yoiker would be bo profligate as to put in a nickel when a penny would do. Cer tainly no Philadelphlan would fall for that. Have jou ever met a man who could define or describe the colors known to our wives as beige and taupe? We be lieve that beige is the color of Senator J. Ham Lewis's whiskers, but we are not sure. That German retreat specialist seems to be In his element. It is a consoling thought, as we sit and gloom over our typewriter keys, that at the same Instant some poor German hu morist on a Berlin paper is trying to spade out a merry quip about the Hlndenburg line. Geman morale must be kept up sat any expense even at the expense of the truth. Speaking of humorists, Captain Frank lin P. Adams, the well known wit, is now doing confidential work In Department G-2-B at Pershing's headquarters In France. G-2-B, we presume, stands for Giving it to the Boches. The American Press Humorists at their recent conven tion sent a message of friendliness to F. P. A., to which he replies: It's a grand game to be in, and It Is worth the privation of bathing In a split of Marne water to know, at first hand, that nothing In the world can keep us from walloping the bochej or, as we uncouth warriors, in our slangy way, call him, the enemy. If Harry Lauder really wants to alt In Parliament, as a news Item says, he cer tainly will be elected. We can't Imagine any constituency that could resist him. BOCRATEB. t-t, f a. " tWNttyA ri V A Twri QTyviaiHi-... sv 7 OUR SUPfcR-GUN speaks " rt-8 ' ;..;s: f?M 1 tf?5 ? P . t&esa' s?rS''?l imsSh? M '"'il,!S81p -i THE REAL GASOLINE MARTYRS They Are the Relatives and Casual Acquaintances of Motorcar Owners Who Will Be Deprived of Their Free Sunday Ride r By SIMEON STRUNSKY A LEAGUE of Relatives, Friends and Casual Acquaintances of Automobile Owners East o the Mississippi Is In process of organization for the purpose of protesting ngalnst the fuel administration's restriction on the use of gasoline on Sundays On the basis of 4,000,000 motorcars In the eastern United States the membership of the new league mav be estimated at anv where from 35 000.000 to 50,000.000 souls In rpturn the fuel ndmlnlstiator can count on the sup port of about 4,000,000 people cast of the Mississippi, that is to say, the automobile On behalf of the League of Friends. Rela tives and Casual Acquaintances, etc, the fol lowing brief has heen presented: .First. This being a war for democracy, the interests ot the majority should pre vail For every automobile owner who will save about $1 98 worth of gas on Sundaj-. five relatives, friends and casual acquaint ances will bo deprived of a much needed holiday In the great open. Second It follows from the preceding that every Sunday the automobile relieves the strain on the railroads to the extort of five comparative stranger's Third. It follows from the preceding that the railway fare saved by the comparative strangers may be Invested In war-savings stamps. Tourth Apother gain for the A. S S ensues from food economy practiced by said five comparative strangers, since the automobile owner usually pays for dinner at the roadhouse. Fifth To win the war we must have perfect unity at home. Disagreeable neigh bors have developed the most lovable qualities with the arrival of one's machine from tho factory. Families have been re 'unlted by the purchase of a machine; ono member of the family attending to the purchaso and the others brothers-in-law, cousins, nephews by marriage, etc at- tending to the reuniting Sixth Technical skill will help to win the war. Every automobile owner be comes a center of Instruction in gas-engine principles : the leasf we can do with a host is to display an Intelligent Interest In the way the one-man top Is operated by press ing the adjustable dingus on the carbu retor. Motor guests never weary of in quiring Into the slightest details of auto mobile construction except when taking in gas; at Mich times they become absorbed In the scenery until due paj-ment has been made. Signed by the All-East-Misslsslpplan Con gress of Soviets of Cousins, Uncles, Brothers-in-law, Neighbors. Club Mem bers, Fellow Commuters and Associated Golfers and Bowlers of Private Automobile Owners of the United States of America. EXTRACT from Die Weser Zeltung: "The straits to which the American people have been reduced may be gathered from the following, a rescript by their food dictator; petrol majr not be used In any soft of food preparations, except , at- Sunday dinner; but even then It may not be used in sauces dr salad dressing or on Plum pudding or as a surrogate for alcoholic drinks.'" THE large and growing class of cltlrens who havp taken to imitating the White House epistolary style are herewith re minded that by going back to "May I" for "'May I not" they will lose nothing In clears n'eas and contribute their 15 per cent to the conservation of white paper. - ffrpHOU shalt not kill" Is among the orlg i Inal Ten Commandments. Last Sunday a visiting clergyman In New York offered a substitute Decalogue of his own. specifying within the limits of a single commandment no less than three classes of Germans who must be court-martialed and shot as soon as practicable. The other nine commandments maintain sf high level of vlndicttveness on the part of this visiting Jehovah. On fhe other hand, It must be admitted that the original Tables of the Law would occupy only one fifth the epace devoted by the New York Times of Monday to the new revelation. " . m ." .. I V.ii ' l- A TJ f "t,.r)J r "j . j ' 7v i .;-. "-j -, -w' fv "' "" 'i"y iv,r Vi " : .W, ,vmv-' - , OUR SUPER-GUN SPEAKS A aij a published amid sheets of flame and the noise of a mountain In travail, but It must have been a fair imitation when the assembled Presbyterians "were stirred to frequent and enthusiastic applause." A competent observer has suggested that the frequency with which Germany and her Kaiser are being consigned to' hell by our clergymen Is largely due to the fact that only In times like these can a clergyman tell people to go to hell with proprlet-. There Is also the pathetic desire to show that a minister of tho Gospel can see red with the worst of us. I T HAS not j'et been determined whether the military critics know more about the strategy of the Hlndenburg line than Gen eral Foch does What is certain Is that the field marshals and commander-in-chief write ever so much belter than the war correspond ents; and perhaps we might throw in edi torial writers. Take Pershing's general order to the Americans who fought on the Marne: "In conjunction with our allies, j-ou counter attacked. The Allies gained a brilliant vic tory that marks the turning point of the war. You did more than to give to the Allies tho support to which, ns a nation, our faith was pledged. You proved that our altruism, our pacific spirit, and our sense of Justice have not blunted our virility or our courage." Of course, It Is Just possible that nome former newspaperman now on Pershing's staff Is the author: but just possible Some body in the scribbling line must be the real author of "Lafaj'ette, nous volla!" one of the poor spotlight phrases nf the war wished upon Pershing, and by him not denied be cause otherwise engaged In making cruel and pertinent remarks about the fuselage on the De Haviland 4, INCIDENTALLY, what does Pershing meap by lefenlng to "our allies" when he knows that they are not our allies? We are only lending them food and money and bor rowing from them aeroplanes and guns; we are only fighting bj- ,thelr side, and we are only going to make peace together; but they are not our allies. Pershing should have said, "In conjunction with the nations of the Entente, whose commander-in-chief is our commander-ln chief," and sternly repressed any attempt to wink on the part of his adjutant-stenographer. AUTHORS of the new school of auto biographical fiction can easily save the 15 per cent of white paper required under the, new regulations by beginning their story four j-ears after the- hero's birth Instead of seven jears before. SirpHE chemical works north of Roeux are JL again In our possession,' wrote Field Marshal Halg last Monday, Without doubt the most tragic chemical works In the whole history of chemistry; a ciuclble of flame and blood arid flesh stewing In an atmosphere ot ' poison gas ar.a smoxe cioua, during the bit ter months of, last autumn 'at the tip of the Hlndenburg llrta; and' now again. There are war Industries and war Industries, The bulk of them are anywhere from 50 to 6000 miles. behind the battleljne; only to a few has fallen the marvelous advertising advantages of meeting the war face to face. There are tho chemical works at Roeux, t There Is ,tne famous licorice factory at Kut-el-Amara, whose fall probably meant the fall of the Turkish rule In Mesopotamia. There was a certain fatal brewery In Flanders, at Gav relle, I think, around which flowed a more ominous compound than malt and hops. There was a certain brickyard, near Notre Dame de Lorette, If ,1 'remember correctly. And there was the ferryman's house on the Yser, whose only rival In history will be the ferryman of the Styx. PROHIBITION has been postponed till July 1, 1919, In order to save $900,000,000 In liquor taxes required by the forthcoming revenue bill. This common sense, making the devl dlsgoE ore shooting him. Only a fool wom i demon that. golden egg w .-x-ee ,"l- V . "Ml THE GARDEN THERE were many flowers In my mother's garden, t -1 Sword-leaved gladiolus, taller far than I, Sticky-leaved petunias, pink and purple flaring, Velvet-painted pansles staring at the sky; - Scentless portulacas crowded down the borders, White and scarlet-petaled, satin-rose and gold, Clustered sweet alyssum, lacy white and scented, Sprays of gray-green lavender to keep till you were old; In my mother's garden were green-leaved hiding places, Nooks between the lilacs oh! a pleasant place to play; Still my heart can hide there, still my. eyes' can dream It, Though the long years lie between and , I am far away; When the world Is hard now, when the city's clanging Tires my ears and tires my heart and dust lies everywhere, I can dream the peace still of the soft wind's shining, I can be a child still and hide my. heart from care. Lord, If still that garden blossoms In the sunlight, Grant that children laugh there now among its green and gold, Grant that little hearts still hide Its rnem-i orled sweetness, Locking one bright dream away for light when they are old! t Margaret Wlddemer, In "The Old Road to Paradise." A Quarler-Crown Prince A facetious London journalist has nick named the Kaiser's unfortunate offspring the Half-Crown Prince, if he had ever traveled on this side of the Atlantic he would have known that the name Is unsuitable. A half crown is worth twice as much as thirty cents. Montreal Star. WhatJDo You Know? QUIZ 1. Who Is president of the American Federation of Labor? z. What Is at rhea? j S. What Is tha meaning of the word ulnlate? 4. Where Is the Alhambra? 5. Who aald, "There waa nerer ret philosopher that conld endure the toothache patiently"? , What la the capital of Kentucky? 1. What neoflle Inrented the gam ot nareheil? S. What la the natlie State-of William O Mc Adoo? 0. Who painted the. "Slatlne. Madanna" and m-hatk III that ak1af.hBaf ajt nlatt-llsaaS, ! data!) 10, Is New York officially rated as a State era commonncaiinT , t Answers to Yeifjerday's Quit 1, President Wilson .Is commander-in-chief of the army and nary of the United States. S. Pallmnaeat la wrltlnar material an whleTa earlier writing haa been erased to make, room for new or on which new script cot-I era an old one. ' 3. Spain is ruled by it Bourbon royal house which first came Into power In that country la Jiw. . , 4. nasals Is a dish popular In Scotland, and consists or heart, lanes and liver. t aheap H knlljtfl In ma.w iwllh anae. Aatmaal. ata iTi C Tknn.a. I. It, klf Im.h .! n iM.lnal V1tH w. . ..w....- -r-,"'l -;",- -r" "" ". ; port me Irani iiiaoai, 0, The constellation of the Dip tha Great Bear and Char! iper lsal lea's Wi a tallee- 1, Edwin Forrest, one of the most celebrated"1 f A maaaHoan 4mm area! I M m aaraaaa kAian In 'aateaatt- adalphla. 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