WPPWV lJSpS$r f Vl " t !... .-.- k,. 'v-f .mv. : . Ma.i- M'tie! '( i Ki'Stfr tei m mm H. f m imi in ,J.MmliM 1 1 Public ed$i THE EVENING TELEGRAPH Vf PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY -J rrrntis w if nmna. prinT rtfli II. Lndtncton, vlre rresMenti John C. irtln,8eeretery and Treasurer: Philips Collins, nn k. Williams, jonn J. Bpurgeon, Directors. EDtTORtAt,U0Anli 'cnroa II, K, ccbtis. unairman ,'ATtD E. BMU.BT .Editor H JOHN C. MAP.TW.t.. general Business Msnsser y Pnbllahfd dally at Public l.nouMi ilulldlnv. Independence Square, Philadelphia. XJNd CavntiL....Iiroad and Chestnut Streets 1 a -! ATLANTIC CITT, Press tnfoii nulldlnc 206 Metropolitan Tower ilFB son ...J............401 Ford llulldlnr . Ixicis, 1008 Fullerton Uulldlnff ft' ,mnMaa.i4,.m ,1202 Tribune Bulldlnc W, NEWS PUREAUS: , l'.A-- N. E. Cor. 1'ennsvlvanla A and 14th Fit iNw Tobk Beaut)... .., ...The Sun llulldlnc vmuohpoh uuiMU.... .... . jjonuon jimrs jrsrf subscription Tenuis fSfiylS" The ElKNixn Penile I.eixixb la served to aub I 'j-Aecrlbera In Philadelphia and aurroundlnc towns I JKXfcBt ! rate or iweite iiaj cents per ween, payaDie , to the carrier, ., ISiKX Bv mall to nolnta outside of Philadelphia. In r,VF the United States. Canata. or Unlte.1 Mates p"- m-'(IIOI,i postace free, luty tfioi cents per month. CiMia 61 ($8) dollars per year, payable in adance. i -v . To forelen countries one HI) dollar per i tAJV V Month. VtJ?iJf.s Noiicb Subscribers wlahlnir address chanced fviTiL nnai aire oia ils wen as new aaaress. r; ' fcv&r Bli.1.1,, 3W0 WAMUl KESTONF, MA1V 3000 -! rtvL, rT Address all communication to Ktenino ruoixc V$VtF ijTUtfrrj inuii'iiutt np ii(aun j iuiiii.i"itui Member of the Associated Press wPifK tlrej cipd to the use or icpubllcatlon Wf- f " eics dispatches credited to it or not KS$P o'Acnc8 credited in this paper, and also tV'.p- ,jIW rights of republication of ipecial dls MifflZir patches herein arc also rcscricd. &,"' rhll.dtlnhi.. alurdr. Srnlrmbrr 7. 1911 "HELL DEVIL OF THE MARINES" 'IT1HOMAS S. 1JUTLEK, senior nenubllcan EW member of the Naal Affairs Commit- Jt?!tj teo of tho liouso of Itcnrescntatles, be- iongs 10 tuo urcca ot jigniin iuhki'i. ('Aft wnen tno republicans control the uouse &V-m, Mr. Butler will becomn chairman of his ,l!fti onmmltfpo. Ills son, Smedley D. Butler, has Inherited thii flcrhtintr snlrlt nf hts nnnostors. He has r4i? 1un In ITrotipo nnw jiltVi tlio tnarlnra nrnv. WTSVW - ' lg(ft.that he has conscientious Fcruriles 5-. -w rtst not flirhMnB" th nbnmlnntlnn knnun kiss !&- u: : ;,, i r . ----- - vk pfiFZ 1 f russian militarism, anu no nas oeen r .jr-flehtlnff to such cocl rjurnop that h has m-S fien promoted to a colonelcy. He Is known lw. s the "Hell devil of the marines " It waa P.ifJ likclv. therefore, that It was the Germans t fyho camo In contact with him and his men . who named the marines devil hounds. t K corps and deseres tho promotion uhlch has come to him, i-, AiidL trtitu. iuiL .uwjiiife am auuui nut- Tllft TljatAf t A j-t T7 tlllvaw W1 r-tA4tl Tl l f ,jr1 am a ijik uiucii uuqk EeniH iu ime nau uiiio j!t .j,i foundation In truth, after all. Tho names r.. of tha Hun sea murderers are all lriterest- CSjAh Ingly Inscribed therein WORTH THINKING ABOUT AS It occurred to any one that the currency sjstem of the United States '? i is on such a. sound basis that with all the atoStUlflnitnMnir nf thft nnr Tihlph hn Vion nun. $2fessary E'a haa not sone to a premium fe&ljS&f This Is one of the astounding facts which jfoVYcTrttl attract the attention of tho financial .wnisionan ot tnis epocn. uur paper cur- hii rency and our cold are. interchangeable. jVjA' gold dollar wlU buy no more than a mW i paoer dollar. It has not been necessary SLif.vF i 4a nnan a r!ntil Ttnnm In ItTall ).( tnv IfttJ'f, -transactions in the yellow metal. There IwrJ" dally quotations of the fluctuations pjWt- tinJiqe vaiue 01 paper currency as com PWed with cold, The reason for1 this lies In the fact that tha financial resources h.in heen marie tp' hioblle and that we aro on a gold standard, iVw vmi;a iiicuiis iiiui. uiu creuii. oi me uov- .'.r icrnmeni is Deninu every aoiiar or cur. -JlWT ..... .... ... X "ranw tailA1 nnrl nn nnn nnhia lin oln rajs w"- - "- " " .- iK'j hllltv of the Government or its credit. A sympathetic tjpeetter might easily TAJ 'make it the Groan Trince." THE CLUD CURFEW AN ECONOMY In addition to coal savinc ;xXXwill necessarily result from the fuel administration's order that Philadelphia's wtiVt v. .:.;. j r " . .. ".p- '" ry-v'10 w "o conserved. And there is gas V-nd gas. KtMl Less because It is SDeclficaliv enomnus jjivtban because Its peculiar persistence Is 'rm'vroot against any mask of een the wearlest Indifference, the late-evenlns club P&tiw l " oc"' LJC,OU8lV deplored. According to the new deal. ' '-hortly t0 made effective, the bore who sijinaiaiB on tuning one just wnat bach is 3.-T-4lal..1.,... nl.n.. 1 .1 yaJ. wmiinHB uuuui, nucru me American army h 'Uj111 slnKe an1 whete tho ramifications of Loathe German secret service extend, will be S StAMrtM.aiA.1 in An . IU. . .1 .. ? i ":ai . m iiiu v cry time mat "-$ fcla gas works have been wont tn nm of K ,j&rUU speed. The social charms of club life hSH(ft0'yr t0 be abbreviated at tho shank of the jgr "venlng, will be missed; but practical ad- - 2rf Vintages of the new plan will naturally . trnnlA rrtmnltnnA 11,Amn.ll. 1...1. . . if rv ..r- w "v.smui toui painoiic -yAnd cheerful. As for the elimination of f j5r'aseouB babble, the foreshadowed release .v ffwut command tho enthusiastic indorso- mt of hitherto meok and helpless vlc- P 1 'Hertllng says the KaUer's crown and siy nave oetn statccd. HamburB-steaked. M In extra email pieces, Is the prospect. If mm 'us nis way, '5f I 1 AID FROM THE ANDES WHENCE that South American friend- ; map tor tno United States Is not merely jca.1 or merary is constantly at hand. latest practical display of this spirit irom Peru, which has Just ratified arceinent with the American Govern- Mt permitting the use of the Interned uan.shlpa In the harbor of Callao. f L VrlfTan1v ttiAaA iu.,,1. HA it.. - - aha T,ln. wblrh fnrmi"lw r,A,it t.. .fWIJTanclsco and Ilambure by way of 'v" ,ne WMt and cast coasts of South ica. They art excellent ships, well to either transport or cargo Jfcirally. our country will be glad to jlhUaft of them, but Americans have a t'to satisfaction still more keen over tnerous np!rlt of co-operation manl J,the Andean republic. Tho sub- support of tha Lima Government r added to the benefits of which we already been the recipient from Itio i.'fontevldeo and La Pas. Jt Is to reaiuto mat m pursuit or. ' k PsruvlaB bite Jb equally as , .- 1 i.. 1 1 11 - .i. I.-- 1 1 THE NEW DRAFT .lis Mran!n)t la the Country nnrl to the Man IVt Tlilrlyono TTSUALLY, when a man has passed thirty-one, his roots arc sunk pretty deep. His niche has just begun to wear smooth. The tasks to which he gnvc him self, his yeais nntl his enthusiasms aio well under way, perhaps half completed. His habits and associations arc fixed. When such a man is turned off sud denly nt right angles from all this nnd shifted to a far and 'Unfamiliar plane of existence ha is likely to experience n sort of hardship that is unknown to those who are subjected to a similar change during tho period of happy irresponsi bility that is the best of youth. The further a mnn has progressed tovard forty-five tho greater will bo his sacri fice, therefore, when he is called to mili tary service. Many, favored by circumstance?, will be able to join gladly in the big ad venture. And many will feel that they are at the end of their world forced to leave tasks and ambitions unprotected and unrealized, like a half built house, open to wind nnd weather. In the lives of a great many men more than thirty one arc bubtle bonds that chain them to the familiar existence ties that are mighty because of the very tenderness that the eais have given them. Tho now draft lnw, which will become effective with tho general registration on Thuisday, involves for the diaft boards, therofoic, an altogether new set of ic sponsibilitics. And.it luings tho nation close to the peak and climax of its spir itual relation to the war. Some consciousness of the subtle fac tors that may be involved in the cases of new eligibles doubtless prompted the Wai Department to leave the way to' ex emption open for those who can state adequate reasons clearly. Wide discre tion has been given the draft boards probably for this same reason. The best reasons for exemption aie not always the obvious ones. It is to the everlasting glory of innumerable young men and innumerable young women that many of the youthful soldiers who plunged into tho war at the outset were newly mar ried. They neither sought nor wished exemption. But they had one advantage over many of he men in the new draft. They had the jcars on their side. They didn't face the prospect of beginning life all over again a little late. It must seem, therefore, that men "touching forty" will be justified if they feel less reluctance in seeking exemption for cause than men were accustomed to feel in the early stages of the selective seiv ice. The new man-power law is nothing more or less than an imperative measure of self-defense. It 'is wisely conceived and it will be wisely administered. Re garded without emotion, it may be said to represent tho settled purpose of the nation to assure its safety, now and in the futuic, at any cost. Americans are accustomed to the lealization that the interests of the individual are, in the present hour, secondary to the interests of the republic. And it is worth remem bering that no sacrifice that any man may make now is comparable to the sac rifices that would inevitably be imposed upon him were the war to be lost to the Allies. It is by processes like those that will begin on Thursday that we shall, one day or another, realize something of the cost of the war to those who have fought it for U3 as well as. for themselves. In England all men up to fifty-five have been drafted. In France almost every man, woman and child has worked some how at the war for three years. So far, in America, the war has been but an incident to most persons. Now we are making faster time than any of the nations allied with us. And the unity of America has been an inspiiation to the world. We are actually beginning to be unselfish. Here and there you will find furtive profiteers. There are politicians who still squabble and plot among them selves for their own interests. They will be dealt with later on. The rest of the country is prepared to make sacrifices. It rests with the diaft boards in the present instance to make this general task a shade easier for the individual. It will be no easy thing for the boards to pass wisely upon the claims for exemp tion, which are sure to be numerous in the cases of older men. Tho War De partment has announced its own exemp tions in classes of men considered indis pensable to the nation's strength and its interests. The draft boaids will have to go deeper. They will be led, doubtless, to a contemplation of many of the remote and poignant concerns of life, to a judg ment of potentialities, plans and ambi tions. And if they have wisdom and dis cernment the new draft law will be freed of its only sting. The average American father may take comfort In tho fact that even the most over zealous slacker hunters are barred from con ducting a pa-fald. PATIENCE IT IS said that food will win the war. Mr. Schwab says ships will win it. Others hold that wool will win, some put their fahh In money and a few believe that guns are the Important thing. Now and then you will meet .persons who stem to be assured that victory will be won by talk. All of these factors are secondary. It is patience the rarest and the most dim cult of virtues that Is. winning and will win tho war. Kitchener was patient or England would now be In ruins. At the beginning the armchair population In England clamored to have tho whole army- tent to France. Kitchener refused. Disaster spread out ward from Germany over Belgium and down through France, and It rolled over the small British forces placed (here and yet Kitchener would not b shaken. The crowd stripped him of all .lavowand. !! .. .i . nw win . he kept the British army In England. H was driven Into solitude. And out of that solltudo after a year rolled tho great army of England, and the mob saw, after Kltch oner was dend, that It was built upon the essential foundation of tho small army that they wanted sent to Trance. "When roch was mndo generalissimo everybody waited for him to do sensa tional things. Tho Germans tried and tiled again to tempt him. Hut( ho fell back, took his punishment and kept quiet. lomltm and I'arla grumbled sorao moro nnd I'och lot his men fall back again. Ho had the strength to wait a strength far greater than tho strength that Is re quired for action. President Wilson wns patient. And his patlcnco gave the causes to which wo are pledged time to maturo and become visible and commanding nnd fully understand able. , All great men have been pitiont. They have nlwns known that hasto doesn't make for fpeed and that nothing violent endures. Some Hun lies are delicious. Such Is the one whereby the word "flecl" Is applied to the collection of stationary warships tied up nt Kiel. LABOR'S WAR PROFITS SOME Sonntors aio beginning to study the now revenue bill to discover whether it makes a proper levy on the war profits of labor as well as on thoso of capltnl. No one In tills pait ot the country doubts that labor Is innkliig war profits. Workmen arc iccclvinir $S, $10 and $20 a tin, according to common report. Bos rc getting n man's pnj. Gills nro receiv ing foi clerical work as much money as used lo be paid to heads of departments Such rates of pay have seemed to be necessary in order lo get tho work done that has been done. Those who have left permanent employment to accept positions that from the very nature of the case must be temporary aro taking risks in serving their country To assumo that they will not continue to fcerve If by pijlng their proper sharo of tho war ta to which they aro liable is a gratuitous Insult. The unmarried man or unmarried woman with no de pendents who receives $2500 a year Is liable to an income tax of $90. And tho managers of the wni industries who aro receiving $1000 and $5000 a jear or more are liable to a ta in proportion. They nre going to make out their in como tax report as carefully and as hon estly as any person not engaged In war work. And if wo mistake not they will pay the tax much more cheerfully than it will bo paid hi the men whoso incomes havo not been Increased by the abnormal industrial conditions that have brought sudden prosperity to a large group of wor thy citizens. Judging from the prevailing reports from Washington, the "perfect thirty sixes" are too precious to be taken first. Thirty-five and a fraction, however, means imminent army sen ice. FOCH REVEALS HIS PURPOSE rpHE need for "expert" interpretation ot -- Terdlnand Foch's war plans bcems hardly urgent at this moment. Tho great marshal himself has revealed his major design In a characteristically compact and luminous sentence. "We shall continue." ho Informs the Tarls Municipal Council, "to pursue tho enemy implacably." Here is a flash of frankness sufficient to embarrass the most pedantic mystery mon ger. Some of these. It may be noted, are in Germany, and they havo fretted pain fully In their efforts to discover the foe's intent. While It can lnrdly be conceived that Foch's disclosure will soothe the feel ings of a Ludendorff or a Hlndenburg, it is at least emphatic enough to relieve their cutioslty. In its large aspect the generalissimo's plan is one of transparent simplicity. Its authenticity Is dally supported by the irre futable argument of the imp. The latest ono reveals the armies of freedom eleven miles from Lille. Pursuit Is unmistakably as continuous as it is "Implacable." Terryltes taking We Could Do passage across tho With One Delaware at Market street may be exon erated of disloyalty if they render wistfully and even enviously over the speed with which the Germans aro sahioto have thrown 000 bridges over the AtsffHT ' War correspondents Iln, Hal who have been ob serving the gradual break-up of the Hun lines say the German army commanders are all nt sea. That Is moro than jou can say for the officers of the KaUer's navy. "Permanent waves" are more fashionable than over. Tho Foch Hut the 1-acta Aro llald variety is especially popular just now. Some persons consider it even moro effectlvo than a "switch" About this time of It Is I J ear, when a man's vacation is over and done with and ho stops in front of the window of a sporting goods store and looks at the, winged wobblers and the crab wlgglera and the rods and reels and mees kits and enameled waterproof fly-casting lines, and thinks that It's fifty weeks to the next vaca tion Oh, ain't It a sad and Inglorious feeling! Captain Steffanssoneays a submarine could travel under the lea to the North Pole. The observation should be suggestive to those wondering where to put the KaUer and how to get him there It takes a keen Phlladelphlan to detect any perceptible change In transit conditions on the streets on which the P. It. T. has abandoned the phantom trolley service,, once supposedly conducted there. The report that Berllnera caught clrculat. Ing the- dismal truth about their conduct of the war will bo punished suggests that the police In tho Hun capital need entertain few fears ot oerwork. A. Mitchell Palmer's request for "a real Democrat" In Pennsylvania betrays a pathetic confidence in a book called "Tho Age of Fable." Hlndenburg U begging the Oermana to besalm. There Is no impossible task that tha Hun Government vsa nor. wtHtMnto im- 1 , , " '""" ' t THE CHAFFING DISH ' What We Are Fighting FRANCIS CABLIN, tho Now York poet, tolls us that the following quotation1 has been faithfully copied from a, letter writ ten by a sergeant of Company. A 120th M G. B'n, N. Y.: We havo seen another bit of German Kulltir whllo wo wero in the trenches. When two lieutenants were captured by I ho Germans ono of them was murdered, and his legs were doubled up and tied to his nock and his arm's were tied to 'Ms body In such a way that wh$n our men camo to talto him away and saw the way he was tied they would cut tho rope around his neck and explode the bombs that had licen placed tinder his armpits and knee caps and kill the whole hunch of them; ''but a Trench soldier who was with them saw tho way ho was tied and went ahead ijnd cut the ropo 'In such a war that the bombs did not explode, thus saving them from being blown to pieces. Tho new chief of the German naval staff, Captain I.cvetzow, has been ap pointed on the strength of his victorious operations against Ocsel Island. It must be a sad blow lo tho captain to learn that his victory was so poorly press-agented that moSt ot us didn't even know It had happened. It pleaes us very much to see our fel low etcnlng paper, La Rnon (Itcason), of Buenos Aires, inserting adveitlsements In United Stales pipers. Somo of us aie beginning to rcslbo that North and South America nrp going to be very much close friends In future, nnd tho moro wo can learn nbout each other tho better. When we get to Buenos Aires (wo shall, somo da) wo will know what paper to buy. We notlco In tho window of a Chestnut street grogshop tho following idgns dls placd: Alt Pilicncr nnd Bat'orlmt Jfnrch J?rrt( They don't seem to glvo nny one a qualm, but It seems t(nfalr to poor old .sourkraut, that had to change Its namo to Liberty cabbage Now that the Rhine cities aro protest ing against air raids, many people are remarking that Rhino whine was always j ellow. A Threat When a haircut Is a dollar and a shave Is fifty cents In all tho barber shops around the town, I'll become a Bolshevik or patWrn after Hindoo gents, Who bind a gaudy turban "round their crown. My autoscrape wll help me to remove the downy growth Which at Intervals appears upon my chin; ' But for cutting oft my tresses, I will take a mighty oath That the barber will get little of my tin. Tor developing a bald spot, I might kneel me down and pray For the time when It's ,too late for herplclde; Or I could purchase hairpins and then Imitate the way That the ladles make a bun upon each side. If I could muster courage up, I'd shave my wool all off. And my dome just like a billiard ball would be; But probably In winter I would generate a cough, Then a doctor'd take my coin away from me. t , v But of this I'm mighty certain? that no barber will get fat. If It costs a bono to hear him bellow "next" I would rather let It grow and hide it underneath my hat, ' For a dollar Is a dollar, that's my textl H. E. R. SOOT. Meet Mr. EiUhemius! One of the things that keep Phlladel phlans humble in the presence of New Yorkers Is that we havo no Louis M. Ells hemius. V This engaging gentleman, who keeps his name before tho public in the correspond ence columns of the New York Sun, signs himself "Supremo Spirit of the Spheres," and It seems to us that In that capacity he ought to be moro widely Known. In case these words ever meet his piercing eye In its earthward declension we Would be glad to tell him that the narrow alley of the Chaffing Dish Is always at his dis posal. Surely a Supreme Spirit of the Spheres should not be parochial; we humblo ones of Philadelphia may be un winnowed chaff, but we would be glad to feel the whirlwind of his mighty vans. Mr. Eilshemlus Is more than a Supreme Spirit. He is a poet, by his own confes sion; and a singularly sage poet In that (so far as we know) he never admits the public to the perusal of nny of his rhythms. Ho is an artist, an Inventor, and he freely admits that about tho year 186S he wrote a flf(ecn-pago poem on the ocarjna, long vanished Instrument, which, like all his other compositions, has never been ap proached. "The poem has no equal," says Louts, "in any works of our poets or those of the English. They cannot reach the supreme quality In It." We are a little touchy for the reputa tion of our own Dove Dulcet, of Obesity, N, J., the home of the mosquito muzzle; and that Is why we would welcome a showdown on the part of the Supreme Spirit. If bis stuff is really better than Dove's, of course there will be nothing to do but hand Mr. Dulcet his passports; his humiliation will (in diplomatic language) have assumed the character of an accom plished fact; but until we have 'tangibly examined some of the output of Mr. Eils hemlus we must reserve our judgment. ' There is one thing that bothers us about Mr. Eilshemlus, however, and we may as well say It. Does he come'under the pro visions of the new draft and what chance does he stand of being called to mortal colors? He speaks glibly of the year 188S. when he was already writing poems. But a Supreme Spherical Spirit might begin very young. Frankly, now, is he under forty-five, and has he dependents, other than hia poems? It Mr. Eilshemlus considers that his supremacy extends as far as this we should be very glad to have the 'Issue between Mmself and "Mr. Dulcet aettled by. honorftMb iWttMi coiawni v fA- ' ' ' ' J ''' ' ' "YUST YOU DARE TELL ME YOU PLANNED THIS TdO!" j SOLDIER JOURNALISM To the Reporters in Khaki the Hun Continues to Be a Merely Humorous Phenomenon IV YOUR adversary continues to laugh at you In a fight It Is the part of wis dom to wigwag for the lodgo brothers or jour next of kin. Some of the dismay that Is spreading like an epidemic In Germany may be explainable by this axiom. It may bo that the bocho has been reading the newspapers and periodicals issued regu larly by our soldiers in Franco. Blithe contempt fo.- tho enemy, gay good humor and a disdain of any passion so common place as bitterness characterize the Jour nalism of the American expeditionary force. And some of the best humor of the war was written by reporters in khaki who functioned light-heartedly amid the fire hnd smoke of the recent Ithelms Soissons advance for the Stars and Stripes, the official Journal of the 1,500,000 soldiers now abroad. THE Stars nnd Stripes, with a staff that works for the most part In or Imme diately behind the lines, is without ques tion one of the best edited newspapers In the English language. The men who write for it write with ease. They have none of tho ponderous mannerisms which some newspapers still cherish ras. Inheritances from the sixties, when an editorial article was deemed unworthy unless it resounded 1 like a speech. In the Stars and Stripes not long ago the editors announced that the big-lcaguo baseball scores would no longer be printed. This t was at the time when tjio men abroad were disgusted with tho evasions otisome of the players on this side, who were seemingly afraid of mllW tary service. Tho soldier-editors' para graph wasn't abusive. It was quietly In sulting. It had all the effect of a cigarette butt flipped Into a man's face. THE account In the Stars nnd Stripes of the part plajcd by tho American troops in the recent drive Is gayly written. It reveals an unbcllevablo panorama of guns and smoke and moving cannon and soldiers and a glittering welter of Huns privates, colonels, majors, counts moving nlwavs backward to the prisoners' cages. And to the waters the boche, even "the bocho in a colonel's uniform, before whom the ordinary Hun soldier would Instantly goose-step or click his heels, Is never any. thing but funny. TOWARD the end of the vivid narrative tho unnamed soldier reporter writes: You can never make a safe Judgment as to the morale of nn army from the morale of prisoners, for when any man falls Into the hands of an enemy he feels as though the world were coming to an end.' So It Is quite humanly comprehensi ble that when the mighty Count von Wendel gave stately recognition ot the fact that those Americans had surrounded him he radiated the Impression that the Will mu ctuicr UUIIIQ IU ll .u ...wyw f might as well Btop gracefully Instead of petering out. i v ' The Count, who was 'formerly aide-decamp of Crown Prince Rupprecht of Ba varia, and whom we found as a lieutenant colonel commanding the Third Bavarian lnfant.ry had taken refuge in a quarry along with 200 Germans of various ranks. His cave was surrounded . early In the day and the unswerving Yankeo Infantry passed by, leaving only enough to guard the entrances to the quarry and take oc casional pot shots Into It. '.All day the In vested 200 held out, and then toward sun down they surrendered. The did not shout "Kamerad 1 Kamerad !' not they. They surrendered In the good' old-fash-lonsd way, following a fashion almost for- a-nt In Ihla death ne vlnrv war " xs. For. at auadowji the Count 'aentoutl A ""S ' ( ' ' " " " ." rT. emerged, followed by an Imposing com pany. . ,t He seemed a little offended at some thing. Possibly he was faintly surprised not to find General Pershing waiting out side on n milk white charger. Certainly he was vocal with Indignation because no motorcar awaited him The American officers expressed the!r ro gret nay, their grief that none was available, and tho last seen in that neigh borhood of the former aide of tho Crown Prince Rupprecht he was hiking with the rest of the 200 hiking fifteen kilometers, to the rear. F: URTHER along the report continues: ' One burly and brlBtllng exemplar of German militarism with captain s knots on his shoulders and an Iron Cross on his chest was Included In a recent bag of prisoners. He was Indignant, to say the least,-at the time of his capture, and tho mood Intensified as he was marched back to tho Intelligence officer. Ho hadn't heard the questioning officer speak more than five words of German before he burst Into the conversation "Do jou allow privates to call officers by their first names in this array?" he de manded withering!-. "Why?" asked the officer. "Well, this pig," said the boche, "called me Heinle every time he addressed me." A lanky private was called to take a captured German artillery officer to regi mental headquarters. He had progressed about half a mile when the American no ticed that his charge was tearing up some papers he evidently didn't want to get Into American hands and scattering the pieces along tbo road "Ain't jou the cute cuss," said tho American. "Now jou just go back and pick them all up." The officer may not have understood the instructions, but he did the gestures which accompanied them. He spent the next half hour painstakingly gathering the frag ments of a map, which when pasted to , gether showed all the boche artillery posi tions In his sector. An American medical Officer, up to his neck In work, was imnresslnir all avall- abfo men Into service to carry wounded YankeeH to a dressing station. German prisoners were used for this work. One man In tho' Hun uniform rebelled "I am an officer," said he coldly. "Officer hell!" said the American, dou bling his fist. The German helped to carry the litter. milE Stars and Stripes and the other ably written soldier publications that keep up the community spirit among our soldiers in France are not .clover by acci dent. Some of the cleverest men who left newspaper work In America for the serv ice are on the different staffs. , , r " t The Yankee Spirit From a boy's letter: "Believe me, mother, a great battle is a wonderful thing. Whens I got started I was In the first wave I only thought of one thing, that we had 'to go to a certain point, and that It certain figures In familiar gray-green uniforms'' got In aur way we had to kill them,. Bullets and shells did not worry me at all.," Gorgeous picture of the will In action, of the, man oblivious to everything on earth but his own goal, ot the soldier's pride or craftsmanship I Bul lets .were nothing. 1 tuns w ere almost noth ingmerely things that got In the way. New York Tribune. , A Cyclone on the Way The attention ot the German great general staff is once more to bo called to the ex prefslve lines that Ian Hay quoted as sung by the attacking British a couple of years ago; We licked you on the Marne, We licked yeu on the AUne ; ' ' A vi T" avo 911 inn VjJ vtm. TttW '& ' tj - ' ' '-' ' y H fiL d To a Soldier in a Hospital lOURAGE came to you with your boy- jl J hood's grace F - I ur anient lire and llmo. i Each day new dangers steeled you to the teat, A AU i iutr, iu i;uuiu, 10 uvviiii. VWlth every breath. . .., J. l So when you went to play another, game You could not but bo, bravo; , . An Empire's team, a rougher football field. The end perhaps your grave. What matter? On the winning of a goat You staked jour soul - A xes, jou wore courage as j'ou wore your ,1 youtn, With, carelessness and Joy, " But In what Spartan school of discipline Did you get patience, boy? . ., . How did you learn to bear this long-drawn pain And not complain? " l Restless w Ith throbbing hopes, with thwarted alms. . . , Impulsive as a colt. How do you lie here month by weary month ,.l Helpless and not reolt7 What joy can these monotonous days afford J ncre in a wara; r Yet you arc merry as the birds In spring. Or feign the gaycty. Lest those who dress and tend your wound each day v Should guess the agony. ,. ,, , Lest they should suffer this the only .fear you let araw near. , g. I ' ,t tjl i!sia vKaoerl nVi 1 1 Aannhir tin mrrrlt 4m ItMAtral VIIOJUV.OIU jmiuoui;iij aio.0 miUK,uv 411 uuwn ' And argument this trufh. Jf 1 ?1 That man In greater than his pain, but yonf': Have learnt it in your youth, , . e You know the wisdom taught 'by Calvary1' " At twentj'-three. ' ' J, Death would have found you brave, but - braver still u i Your face each lagging day, v . $ A merrj' stoic, patient, chivalrous, ' A, Divinely kind an1 gay. '. ' Tou bear vour knowledge llrhtlv. arraduata Of unkind fate. - j . & Tho latest to complain, '" ,TJIJ Unmindful that j-ou teach, you 'taught Tnea1 this' ' 1 ii ? Vff In jour'long'flght with pain: s tA "J! Since God made, man so good here standa.i my creed God's good Indeed .W y, W.fM. LETTS. J A' Later Paris Fashion Note V? From this time on the Germans wllb-riet"? h narmlttefl tn hmA nnrlrftta nn their f f-Anc V4 I In France.' Houston Post. j ji What Do You Know? v.1 ' QUIZ '. r Uhat well-known fabrlo derives If a from the town of Cambral. In he nha I. Tiller Juatlra of tha United St.tM - J What la Neapolitan ire cream? , What la a neap tide? Who was fsancho rnu? What la Jhe meaolns of ''a la carta"? Who wrote "Gulllrer'a Traiels"? What la the real name ef Ana tola Fl the noted French wnterT Who Is the present British Ambassador ' tha United rilatesT ' i Hew many full moons are there In s ttKtJi j. Answers to Yeiterrlav'a Onlz -jS ' . ' :3-d l'pnaa;nea is to principal lanaaasa at 4 ill. . Tho birthday of Ijlfaretle. hern an..S! ber 6. f 157, was celebrated In America teroar. 1 Senator Sherman la from Illlnals. 1j Illdaln. meaning- a Spanish asntlemaa.B) compression of the two words 'hUe mav vi vimwu,! Sir John n Waneli eAtnmandeH tha troopw la the first battle ot the Man. Irishmen are called Milesians afteriMUeatasui a, raouioua npanisn amr. wnsits aesaa jsay said to hate conquered the Jeofail IB, about ltetB, O. TCtiV ahrl3",S Sett ef twe aatrai siVifc. 'V! '. Jt - 2flcrL' Lfe. "Wj; 4-- "y J -', -.- n&i; &&M,