I don't know the lengths, but when the brake shoe is touching the drum, the lever in the middle (at the former cross-over shaft) should be leaning rearwards only a tiny bit just to compensate for some wear. If the lever points forward or rearward too much, you loose some leverage force and the brake feels soft. The closer to 90 degree from the pivot point to the rod you can get it at the moment of braking, the stronger the leverage and force you can put on the brake. That goes for the rear wheel lever as well, but I think it is no splines on that, just one fixed position?
What I can see on pics there is 3 clevises on the rods and they have about 1/4 to 1/2 inch of spare thread at the ends for wear adjustment.
The middle lever might have 2 hole options for the rear rod and gets the most leverage force from the pedal if it is in the upper hole, closer to the shaft. You can brake harder that way. You might need that on occations...