pM!!g"w'liwi'gPJji HWgWFjppPf t zirvm9F' -" ' 34&& - EVENING LEDGERPHJIADEL'PHIA SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1914. SATURDAY EVENING REVIEW OF THE WEEK'S EVENTS HERE. THERE AND EVERYWHERE H H 1 L i-f : !' ; ? r '.! JM - THE WEEK IN WASHINGTON Happenings in the National Capi tal of Legislative, Political nml Diplomatic Interest. The Mexican situation assumed n rad ically new phase this week by reason of the "convention of genet ata." at which the adherents of Villa and t'arratua threshed out their difference1! In debate Instead of resorting to the sword. The following deflnlto facts have appeared. General Carrnnzi has resigned, and his successor as Provisional President will bo named on October 20 Villa has won Ills point that the representatives of Zapata be admitted to the conference ahd the Imitation to them to attend the convention has been renewed. According to the present outlook, the thrcatpned bloodshed between the arloils Mexican factions has heen averted, and the Ad ministration Is now optimistic, over tho prospect of a peiocful settlement It Is generally hellerd In Washington that the elimination of nrraiiza from the sit uation will strength the Constitutionalist party greatlv, since he has noer been tegarded as n stiong man. It Is prob able that f'arraii7a'a reslBnation ns Pro visional Tresldrnt w III be promptly fol lowed by the announcement of his can didacy for the presidency at the coming election, but It Is not believed he lias any real chance of being elected. President Wilson signed the Clayton nntl-trust meaMire Thursday, thus plac ing upon the statute books tho omnibus bill which carries prartlmllv the whole of the comprehensive pmgr.im of trust legislation to which the Democratic party had pledged Itself Tho I'tesldent addressed a lptter to Gov ernor Martin II OH nn. of Now York, In dorsing th Governor s administration and cvpresslng the hope that ho would be re elected This action places tho Admin istration squarely behind the organiza tion elements In New York Stato which hud been opposed by the Independent Democracy, headed by Mayor Mltchel, Assistant Secretaij of the Navv Roose velt, Dudley Field Matone and others It was also announced that the Presi dent will, In the near future, address a letter to Representative t'nderwood re viewing the achletments of the present Congress and calling upon the nation to give its work a vote of nppiovnt Tho Jones bill granting a laigcr meas ure of loeil self-government to the Phil ippine Islands passed the House nf Rep resentatives on a strictlv pnitv vote Tho Alaska coal land l--lnir bill, tho passage of which wis doomed impentlve NEUTRAL? owing to the nature of the sttuatlon now existing In Alaska, passed the Senate and Is now In conference preliminary to Its final passage The .shutting off of Alaska's usuol coil supplv from British Columbia, this having been diverted to Gre.it Britain would b-lng great suffer ing and privation to Alaska if she were not permitted to mine her own coal. J Plerpont Morgan visited Washington this week on business regarding the pos sible purchase or lease by the Govern ment of the Copper River Railroad In Alaska, which ha3 firm owns. Mr. Mor Kan Is anxious to dispose of bis road Tiefore the Governmnt-owned line Ii Alaska Is built. Secretary of tho In terior Lane took the proposal nnder ad visement. Ecuador and Sweden tdgned with the United States peae treaties of the tvpe which Mr ilrvan has evolved, and a note was addressed to the belligerent nations of Europe by the Secretary of State con taining resolutions which were adopted by the Pan-American conference and xvhlch urge an early peace. Democratic leaders in Congress are now freely predicting that the session will not close until a week or two before De cember. COMMERCE AND FINANCE The most optimistic news In the world of commerce and finance during the last week iv as the assertion of Sir George Falsh former editor of the London Stat ist, who arrived in New York yesterday from London, that with the end of the British moratorium, which expires within three weeks, the London SwK Exchange Would reopen and that the opening of the New York Stock Exchang would fol low Sir George said that he could not eee any reason for heavy liquidation from abroad He further said that ther was e. large amount of gold In London at the present time. Sir George Is the finan cial adviser of the British Treasury. Tho Toronto Stock Exchange opened lor business Thursday on modified rules lor trading Transactions must be mad lor cash only The Montreal Stock Ex change wt'l reopen on the tun rules. On Wednesday the Boston and -ew York curb markets opened for business, but because of a misunderstanding of roles the latter closed at noon on Thursday Brokers are still allowed to conduoi busi ness over the counter and by telephone. , and thev can buy and sell stooks under j tld a share without the transactions hav- Intr to go through the special committee. The Committee of Ftv on Unlisted Se curities In New York mads tho same ruling Money markets both In tile city and New York workd more easily this week. Call loana In New York could be had for T per cent, as compared with S per oent. 1m t week. Comnjerrlal paper rates wer a it ealr In tbls city good nam c-merctal paper changed hands at H pe- 'rt . th J-west l"r roaiy weeks. If ! T-a-i-tins we-e notvarge, however MiSl i Ii lng held In Washington yesterday, de elded to Issuo n call for the payment of the first Installment of member banks to the capital stock of the 12 regional re serve banks, payable on November 2 This first payment will be one-sixth of tho subscription of the banks It Is expected that the banks will be In actual opera tion bv Nov ember 15. The Tederal Reserve Hank of Philadelphia opened temporary offices In the Lafayette Building yester day The Department of Commerce Issued preliminary figures showing that the bal ance of trade Is again growing In our favor llxports exceeded Imports by $6, 0?4,S23 In September, as against an ex cess of Imports In August amounting to ilM0il,36i? For the nine months to Septem ber 30 the excess of exports over Imports was f5T,ST2 91fi, compared with $10rt,0J7,0S7 In 1113. Tho Imports In September were $131 204.2C7. compared with JlTt.mi.813 last ar; nine months' Imports Jl.iflfl.Srto.Mn. compared with $l,32?.62i.071 In 1913. Septem ber exports $lSB,lS,7rx, against 2H,2iO,000 in me same monm or net vpar, nine months' cxpoits $1,467,63"!, H6, against 11, 733,422,16s In 1913 VARIOUS TOPICS The Jones Phlllnnlnr. Mil t,ui, i, been under consideration In tho House of Representatives for some time, has at tracted llttte nttentlon In the newspa pers 1'ow people know what Mr. Jones and his friends purpose doing In the Phil Ippincs. and they have doubled bo often on their own tracks that they hardly know themselves what they nro trying to do. Rut ono tiling Is clear, and that Is that thev are bent on upsetting the es tablished order under which tho peoplo of the Islnnds have made such encour aging social nnd economic progress. One of the loading features of the bill Is the subtltutlnn nf an electeil Senate for the nppolntlve Philippine commission as the upper branch of the Insular Legislature Rut what would be the practical advan tage of such a change? The elective lower house has made a great deal of trouble recently for the Governor Gpn enl by careless and factious legislation, nnd the commission has had to undo tho lower body's many blunders of commis sion and omission. Why destroy the value of the Legislature as a training school In government by making both branches elective and both considerably more Irre sponsible than at present? New York Tribune. The Philippine bill booked to pass he House at Washington todav extends to the natives of the lslindo an Increasing share In their government nnd fulfils the Democratic pledge of Independence "as soon as a stable government can be es tablished." This event Is accompanied From the Nw Tork Tribune. NOT MUCH by cable reports of a demonstration of over &).m0 Filipinos at Manila In joyous celebration of the flrst anniversary of Ooernor General Harrison's administra tion. What evidence could be mom conclu sive of disaster than this great native demonstration of confidence In American pledges and growing satisfaction with the Administration and Its purposes? New York World There was a case In a Chicago court the other day which Involved a family squabhle The complainant lived next door to his mother and on the other side was his mother-in-law, who were always quarjeling on the son's account The son wanted it stopped In some way; and the Court, seeing no other way, ordered tho son to move to another house, four miles distant, from the two mothers This, the eon proceeded to do, and now thefe Is peace In the neighborhood There Is no son there to quarrel about This Is not exactly law. hut tt Is splendid common sense.. The man might have Insisted upon having an Injunction or a decree of some kind, but the Judge didn't see how that would Mttle the matter, so he ordered the son to roovw away from the prox imity of the mothers, and thus Insure their peace and hh own. It often hap pens that the best settlement of a case Is not don according to law, bnt accord ing to common t-ense Ohio State Jour nal. The Supreme rourt of Montana sounds a strong note and one of which this na tion may well heed In denying the valid ity of th mllltla to try and sentence citizens accused of crime To check riots eoldlers may arrest rioters, but until there Is a complete and long standing breakdown of the civil courts they should not be allowed to try offenders And when such breakdown occurs we may as well throw the constitution upon the bonfire and bid the dictator enter. Grand Baplds Press. If this newspaper detred to preach a permon It could ask no better teit than the performance of a certain base bJl club now In the ptrbllo eye. Ifere was . club that stayed at the bottom until It had been forgotten by the. publto and the season was nearly half over But it never quit fighting So after a bad start and a lot of failures, it came to the front with a rush merely by plugging away and never giving up. Thre aro a lot of young fellows and middle-aged fellows, too. who have fallen Into a rut and become discouraged, who would do well to consider carefully their own possibilities to the light of what the Boston Braves accomplished this season after all the sharps had set them down as failures. Kansas City Times. Harvard has to lose the Wiener future of two certs cr upwards but it rogH c--'er on - Captain Mi-r te dg- 9 rt- I- Po'tr Injp'HenUa. Doctor of "Wfti imi i , Kwlr3?: sRJ JRf I $ I n mm i Wm III I ill I wfl Imw I III If I w ml II HI ( W fir If M Ls ' FORECASTS OF FALL ELECTIONS Political Issues nnd Prospects in the Nation as Viewed From Many Different Angles. Taking the country as a whole, what are the chances of the Progressives In tho senatorial contests this fn!17 In 21 of the 32 States holding elections, they have, according to the latest tabulation, candidates, while seven of the remaining 11 aio Southern States In which not even tho Republicans have thought It worth i while to name men The outlook cannot be enlled bright In any quarter. Although tho Pennsylvania Progiesslvcs ape main taining thnt a vote for Pnlmer Is a vote for Pentose, and those of Illinois thnt a voto for Sherman Is n vote for Sullivan, the Independents In these States will be well advised to vote for the old party opponents of the two bosses They In evitably have the best chance of winning In California, Trancls J. Heney has a strong following, hut he can scarcely do more than so split the old Republican voto as to elect the Democratic nominee, cx-"Iayor Phelan, of Son Francisco In a doren other States, ns Colorado, lown, Indiana and Connecticut, the Progressive candidacy Is looked upon merely ns stiengthening Democratic hopes of suc cess, or as absolutely guaranteeing It. In THah. the Democratic-Progressive fusion candidate, J. H Moyle, Is a Democrat The Progressives are undoubtedly proud of the fact that In so many States they have been able to bring their party Into the field, but it Is altogether Improbable that the present party alignment Democrats to 43 Republicans will he al tered by tho choice of Progressive Sena tors New York Evening Post If Roger Sullivan succeeds In being elected t'nlted Statps Senator from Illi nois, It will be a success achieved In the face of a redoubtable rebellion In his own party and against the better judgment of a great majorltv of progressive Demo crats the country over. Seldom has a regular party candidate faced so strong a hostile demonstration among his own partisans Cleveland Plain Dealer. The argument has been advanced that tho best Interests of the country demand the re-election of a Congress In political sympathy with President Wilson more than It demands the election of a Con gress avowedlv hostile to the public offi cial. To this the Hartford Courant takes exception It sav s "Instead of being sound and disinterested public advlco to say that the next Congress should be sat isfactory to President Wilson without re gard to whether It Is good for the coun try or not, Is nothing more than a per sonal plea. It does not rise even to the dignity of a straightforward partisan plea " There need be no doubt about what haB happened to Mr. Bryan's one-term plank In tho Democratic platform. It Is deader than a doornail, and the Woodrow Wilson candidacy for 191B Is responsible for Its untimely ending New York Evening Mall. "Ry comparison Mr Cleveland looks like a befogged and hopeless amateur." Tho Washington Star toshes this remark off airily, as a sort of Incident to a dis cussion of Mr. Wilson's command of the political situation, and as If It were a matter so universally conceded as not to be worth elaborating. The honorable aspiration to be chosen Governor of Massachusetts lies between two men, and no more It lies between David I. Walsh, who holds that office now and who Is named again by tho Democratic paj-ty, and Samuel W. Mc Call, the Republican nominee. , , . The only man whose candldaoy serlouely af feots the two who atone really contest for the leadership Is Mr. Walker. The cure of this evil rests with the Republican vo ters of Massachusetts and with those progressives who cannot stomach this dog-ln-the-manger b u s I n e s a. Lowell (Mass.) Courier-Citizen. Precisely at a time when the people and opposition parties are quite non-partisan , on account of the war. President Wilson and his associates are more partisan and , more "regular" than at any other time ) since the Democrats assumed office In every State, not excepting New York and Illinois, President Wilson Is either openly I or tacitly supporting the Democratic can dtdates for State office as well as na tlonal Irrespective of their race, color or previous condition of yervttude, St Paul Pioneer Press. PENNSYLVANIA POLITICS In a statement Issued by Rolland S Morris, chairman of the Democratic State Committee, he brought worry to the minds of Penrose workers hy giving de tailed proof that the antl-Penrose regis tratlon In Philadelphia has reached the highest mark In the hlBtory of the move ment for clean politics In PermsylTanta. Mr Morris pointed out that M.CJO voters have registered against Penrose, where as in the years of reform victory In Philadelphia there has never Been an in dlcated strength In th primary or on the books of more than 60 000 Mr Morris also pointed out that the Increase In reg istration over 1913 was in the Independent strongholds of the city Tb Democratic State Committee met In Harrisburg and drew up plans for meeting in Crawford, Montgomery and ' Lycoming Counties. The meetings were t addressed by Vance C McCormlck, Dam ocratlc candidate for Governor; A. Mitchell Palmer candidate for Senator and Prof William Draper Lawlj. Con gressiran Palmer cn-Uded the week'tj campaign In AlUxma. , Franklin TV. EbotweP. prorelneat' R- AN ATTACK ON UNCLE Idont Taft, writing f om Nebraska, vig orously denounced the candidacy of Sen ator Penrose, saying that "Penrose Is a menace to the party nnd to the country, and should bo defeated " Tho American Federation of Labor de nounced Penrose ns a foe of labor In a report on his record sent to President Samuel Gompers It wns shown that out of 27 votes on labor reforms Penrose voted twice In f tvor of labor, seven times In opposition and on 11 occnslons ho dodged. At the convention of the Now Jersey Liquor Dealers' Protective League at Atlantic City Penrose wns roferred to ns the over-ready and ever-fnlthful sup porter of the liquor trlfllc In the countty at lnrge Even mention of the Senatoi's name met with loud applause Senator Penrose was declared to be the greatest friend of the liquor dealers In Pennsyl vania In their attempt to stem the anti saloon tide In the State In one of his most vigorous addresses of the campaign at, Altoona, Doctor Brumbaugh nailed the He that he was opposed to local option "I stand com mitted to tho passage of a local option law," said Doctor Brumbaugh, "giving to the people of the several jsjuntles nf this State the light to decide for them selves whether or not the licenses for the sale of liquor shall be granted In their county." In a letter to the Republican Slate Committee Doctor Brumbaugh Informed the committee that ho will accept no money from Its fund for use In his cam paign. He cleared himself completely of any association with the liquor Interests, and said thnt his campaign wns support ed by contributions from persoml friends. "My hands are clean of tho liquor back ers' taint," said Doctor Brumbaugh. ANENT THE WAR On the subject of the destruction of works of art In war, the Journal of tho American Instltuto of Architects tnk.-s a singular position It asks whv art should be exempted nny more than tho other prized things nf life from the ravages and barbarities of war Faced by mil lions of bereft families, weeping women, fatherless children, why mourn over oup cnthedral or university library, more or less' Ono understands the underlying motive of these questions. The thought Is to mnke war appear of merciless In humanity, ns that Is the only way In which It can be swept from the earth "The one task before the world Is to abolish the possibility of war, and to no nobler end could art be con fcrrated " The good intent of this seems to us more apparent than Its clear reasoning. It may be magnificent. but It is hardly art. New York Evening Post. l If a country Is bound to have a king, obvlonslj that Is the only condition on which It can afford to have him. "The king who thinks he owns the countj-y, the king who assumes to rule by a title superior to the public will Is at best nn expensive luxury nnd at worst a positive public danger. Public ownership of kings hnH mnde great strides In Europe slnco the beginning of the nineteenth century But the work Is not vet complete. There still remain a few royal houses to be brought into line rn3 made to know thtlr proper plsces Chicago Herald An Interesting statement Is that of Charles Edward Russell, the writer on sociological nnd economic topics, who after returning from Europe nnd a study of war conditions declares old-world civilization is becoming extinct, nnd tho hope of the race Is turning to the United States. And the longer the conflict lasts, he sas, the greater will be the apprecia tion hy the European masses of the bless ings nf peace and liberty In America. The, Red Cros3 will help the Christmas Ship because Its officials recognize the fact that both are born of the same spirit of service to unfortunate humanity. Chicago Herald -From the St. Louts Poft-Dlspatch. SAM ON MATTERS OF BUSINESS Editorial Comment, Critical and " Suggestive, on Various Phases of the Pockctbook Question. It la about time political parties stopped hoodwinking the people. They all pass resolutions favoring economy nnd re trenchment, and yet they keep on In creasing tho appropriations. Wo don't think that politics has much to do with It. for all kinds of politics do the same thing. It Is a distorted human nature that does tho devilment. It Is so easy to tpend somebody else's money. One can always find reasons for It. There are some legislators who would vote to spend $100,000 to extract sunbeams from cucum bers If some garrulous fellow would set up the clgnrs. They are dend easy, and such men should never he trusted with spending the people's money. We believe It would bo a good rule In electing a member nf the Legislature, State or na tional, and City Council, too, to select tho most stubborn man. Ohio State Journal. W. D. Boyce ndvlses American manu facturers "to do business everlastingly on the square" He says South Amer icans are not used to such treatment, but they will like it once the.v find It Is genuine, and it Is vitally necessary to establish confidence In our honesty and friendliness, "becauso tho people of the United States have been lied about by evoiv European salesman for a cen tury." Springfield Union.' One of tho objectlonnble paragraphs of the tariff bill that survived criticism 1ms lain dormant, but Is now galvanized Into life by the announced enforcement of an executive order. The hunger of the Department of Commerce is to be snted with the trade secrets of lmport pip, and treasury agents are to be per mitted nnd empoweied to glut their cu riosity with nil manner of details ns to the bargaining hy which American deal eis get advantageous prices In foreign mantels. jone of tills Information I essential to the proper valuation of mer cnnnoise tor the fixing of the duty. It Is valuable, however, to the business rlvnls of houses that ore able to buy abroad cheaper than others New York Evening Mall. The one market that is nlvvnys open to Americans Is tho homo market. Nn now organization has to be created to take advantage, of It No special credit nirangements, no flnnnclal help, no new means of transportation need be estab lished. All producers have to do Is as crtaln the demand, como forward with the supply nnd let the buying public know they are ready. New York Sun. Uncle Sam's unique dally newspaper, the Dally Consular nnd Trade neports, was never moro nbsorblngly Interesting than right now. It Is a day-by-day guide to opportunity In the field of foreign commerce; and the careful study of its contents ought to bo of great assistance to every manufacturer or exporter with thoughts; of entering the foielgn fields. Washington Times Probably economic conditions will never bo so highly Improved that men and women will not find It better to provide for the future as well as for the present and to put away something for a rainy day, Just as our forefathers and fore, mothers have found It necessary to do In past ages. All that parents and friends can do to hold up the arms and th credit of tho unfortunate and all mat tne most iinerai pniianthropy or government Itself can do will always be something less than Ii required to keep an Improvident and extravagant person prosperous nnd content. The rest must r i the New Toik Worl4. be done, by the Individual himself. Gal veston News. A straight tip on the best way i do business came from Iceland to Chicago last week. Tho process Is extremely simple. It Is to go ahead and do It. Ice land wanted a new market for herring, Correspondence first addressed to the Chicago Chamber of Commorce disclosed the fact that there was a market here. Whereupon a deal wns closed nnd the shipment made. Last week It arrived In this city 32 cars of Iceland herring. This ship will take back a return cargo of grain, flour and other ortlctes. Chicago Herald. Tho business community trusts the bankers It gives them Its money, It leans on them and goes to them for counsel. Confidence Is an honor which the bankers are bound to repay In help-fulness.-Nevv York Evening World. IN PHILADELPHIA Educational circles were Interested In two Important announcements! ono by Doctor Jacobs, Acting Superintendent of Schools, that 17,000 pupils are on half time: tho other that a school for glrla similar to Glrard College will bo founded. The money for this school tins been pro vided In the will of the Into Robert N. Carson, who died In 1907. Litigation over the will has Just ended. Mayor Blankonburg made a request to Councils that drdlnnnccs be prepared so that there will be no delay In getting results from the $11,300,000 municipal loan If It be passed by tho people The Mnyor'a deslro for hnsto Is to provide employment for tho poor. In advising Councils to go slowly. City Solicitor Rjnn pointed out that a short cut might result In tying up the loan bv court action. Many Philadelphia women attended tho convention of the Pennsjlvnnln Federa tion of Women's Clubs nt Pittsburgh. An encouraging report was mido by tho Board of Revision of Taxes, showing the vnlue of the city's taxable property to have Increased $52,000,000 This will glvo the city an Increased borrowing ca pacity of $3,500,000. Argentine's new $7,000,000 dreadnought, the Moreno, sailed from tho Now York Shipbuilding Company's yards nt Cam den for tho trial trip and gun test. The Rcmedlnl Loan Compnny, pattern ed after tho Russell Sage Foundation of New York, opened offices this week nnd will operate along seml-phllanthroplc lines. All pedestrians ore Interested In tho ordinance Introduced In Councils provid ing for the slowing down of nutolsts to ANOTHER eight miles an hour at street crossings. Tho present regulation make3 the speed limit 20 miles an hour, with no provision for crossings. Director Cooke this week repeated his statements that the Philadelphia Elec tric Company's rates are too high. Tho question Is to be taken up by the Public Bcrvlce Commission at public hearings beginning next Monday. EDITORIAL BREVITIES Personally and without committing the paper In any way, shape or form, we nre thinking seriously of coming out for Hank Gowds for Governor, If not for still higher honors Ohio State Journnl. From the standpoint of the anti-Im-perlallsta, perhaps the Philippine bill means well, but for all practical purposes they must themselves admit that It does not mean much. Boston Transcript. How proud we would all have been of General Funston if he had burned Vera Cruz and dragged out and killed women and children because a few snipers fired from the housetops I Columbia State. At the moment, the most unklndest Cut of all eeems to be Culebra New York World. A moving picture of the United States Senate has been taken. The country would not object to a film of the entlra Congress if the moving were toward home. Troy Times. If you wish to see a real good moving picture, keep your ey on the Presiden tial chair of Mexico. Milwaukee Journal A New York hotel sues a woman for , a $5000 board bill. Those New York hotels Insist on having ineir dius paia every week Rochester Post-Express "Made In America" means the manu facture of goods here, Instead of shipping our raw material abroad and bringing It back again In a finished state. Los An geles Express. The effective order for General Funs ton to get out of Vera Cruz will come from Washington, not from Mexico City Milwaukee Sentinel The Iron Cross Is the proudest deco ration In the world." states an old Ger man veteran to the papers. What's the matter with the Red Cross? Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Is Europe to become anglicized, ger manlzed or civilized?" asked the Baitl. mow American Thus far It has become only brutalized and d-morallz 1 aid Is fast becoming pauperized Tha ii'tit outcome can only be surmised. Kansas WS??W PROSPERITY "cSyS COURSE OF TIIE EUROPEAN WAR The Most Significant Events ol tho Week, as Kelatetl to the General Situation. Wnr operations of tho week were marked by strong offensive movement by both Allies nnd Germans. In the west em zono terrific fighting chnracterli.a attack and eounter-nttnek on tho vast shifting battlejlne, which now, probably Is moro thnh EO0 miles long, extending from VoBges to tho English Channel in tho East, tho Germans move steadily against tho Russians, whllo tho Czar liutled Intgo forces against his foe Tim Russians, forced to defend their own city of Warsaw, appeared more on tha dclcnslvo than at nny previous period of 1. 1 1 U Uli Advantage, to nny npprcciablo degree hns not been with either side, but h Allies appear to havo mode a brilliant stroke In extending their lines to tha Channel, thus cutting oft tho German at tempt to flank their left wing, Tho fall of Antwerp released a largs. force of German troops and these forces Immediately advanced west and south west toward the coast. Bruges was oo cupled and tho march to Ostend was re sumed. This German advance menaced not only tho Belgian nnd French coasts but England ns well, as It was believed tho seaports would form valuable bases fur nn Invasion of Britain. Belgian und British troops, united with n French force, captured Ypres and fought their way to the coast, apparently bljcklng any flanking move. Violent fighting wns resumed along tho Meuse nnd tho French Invaded Alsace and Lor! rnlua In East Prussia tho lUtsslnns nuccecded In pushing across tho frontier and captttr. Ing poets near Lyck. They also reported ooctipntlon of that city, which was denied In a Berlin statomont. Tho Germans ngatn crossed Into Poland and, In several dnyn' novoro fighting nt Wlrballen, in the Huwalkl province, forced the Czar's troops to retreat southward. Tho Russian offensive ngalnst Gallel nnd Crnoow has turned Into n defense of homo territory. A week of movements of Russlnn armies, veiled In secrecy through strict censorship, brought the Czar's main force into Poland to face tho Combined Austro-Oerman Invasion of that country. Tho Invading force, con sisting of four armies, has moved on a 800-mtle battle front, extending from Lodz to Przemysl. In tho North the advance came within 10 miles of Warsaw, tho objective, but -From the Jersey Journal. SIEGE was pushy hack to the bases at Lodz and Klelce. In the South the Austrian contingent brought relief to Przemysl. Fighting has been contlnous west of the Vistula for eight days Both Berlin nnd Petrograd claim success In the tklrmishes, and the former denies lifting the siege at Prze mysl Naval engagements of the week were decidedly favorable to Germany, the dendly work of Its submarines being the feature of operations. The Pallada, a Russian cruiser with 574 men, was sunk by submarines In the Baltic Sea. On Trlday the BrltUh Admiralty admitted loss of the British light cruiser Hawka In the North Sen. A submarine darted out from the German coast nnd sank ths Hawke, with almost tho entire, comple ment of tOO men Indications were that Qermany soon would make a naval sor tie and test Its powers. Great Britain expects a great sea fight A revolution led by Colonel Mnrltz at the head of a force of South African Boers gave Great Britain considerable uneasiness on Wednesday, hut late re ports Indicated thnt Premier Botha, dis patching a small army, had, In a largs measure, succeeded In quelling the dis turbance. Marttz was aided by the South African German troops, and together they planned to form an Independent Re public. MUDDLED MEXICO As time goes by it becomes plainer that the peaceful elimination of Carranza as a presidential possibility should be viewed with approval by this country At no time has Carranza evinced any apprecla. tlon of the disinterested efforts of the United States to bring peace to Mexico Everything he does shows a thinly dis guised opinion that this country Is offi ciously Interfering Chicago Herald President Wilson ought to be, well satis fled with the new piovlsional President of Mexico. Antonio Vlllareal to whom Car ranza Is about to relinquish the reins of government, for Vlllareal Is one of the original supporters of Madero, and has been a Maderlsta through all the fighting He is, moreover, an Idealist and radical of the Madero type In a sense, this adjustment puts Mexico back where It was when Madero took charge of ths Government New York Mall. It la not of vital consequence what man Is at the head of the Mexican Govern ment The Important things aro the man's political principles la he thor oughly Inoculated against an attack of the despot disease? Does ha see that it Diaz and Huerta could not maintain a Government based merely en force, h cannnt? It H bv rrnr-"n sej-gn a"d g""4 jnnral C-"'' tl t-at Ht'n H ti b-j te- d"va. ratb-r tan bv brilliant auslltlt lio JCeAtra Beufffc ftdl &U J l tHF-Jit -'fiCA.jdUV jwfrlieA-nA iftHoaats txltnX&.X-E-4r A SHORT JJ? E AND A MERRY ONE, PM.WiB ,1-ir U-few Xojk Globe, rB