8 EVByiNft TJEDftEB PHILADELPHIA, fHUESDAY, MAB'OH II. 1918: ""' 'in i i ; ' ' n i in mi ii i '.'"! i ii i i i i ..- , . , , ii n i .i .-.. ,1; fetftltf tig gl3g fttbQM rUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY pYftus h. k cuntis, rtiDNT. fbartesrll. nndlntn, Vlte Prenldrnti John C Morlln. K.tfti,', i! Triirtf rnillp 8 Collins, John H. BDITOn!Al40AUDI CiBtl II. K. Ctistis, Chalrmtn. P H. WltAtBT Etecutlvs Idllof 40IINC MAhTIN. General nutlntM Munnger t'ubiinhul daiir At rtnuo i.KMiitu rtuiuitur, lnlpndsnc Square, Philadelphia. l.tiir.n CsvTSit. , , Broad and Chentnut Bl.nts AtUntii) Cur Pros-Union nulldlnn KW Yt 170.A, Metropolitan Tower Chicago ,,.. . BIT Home Ini-urance Hulldlnif totPOK 8 Waterloo riace, Tall Jlall, q. W. News bureaus i TtUHisoTOM; ttVKtw The rd( HulMlnir fcJ.l.i0.". no" Th rime llulldlnn feyi'L0"0 '' "0 KMei)rlfhtrae4 fcfJ'.'f'lLfS?'"0 ....mil Mall Ban, S. W. Pau Bemtr .. ., ,,.,..,.32 lluo Louis la Grand sunscnirrioN terms . .r.?r".rl,Ii,PJ'.t NtT "' n" n "" Ptpald iutald of Philadelphia, except where foralan postais la required, Dailt Oii.t, one month, lwentyflve cental Ri'.Ti ONtT' onf Mr ,,,r' dollars. All mall auh trlptlona pajable In adance. nr.u, aooo walnut KKYSTOF, MAIN 3000 ' Addrzsa latt contmuiticnlloii.i to Evening l.titltr, tntlegcndtncr Square, riilladelphln. x.MiaiED ir th rmt.ADtt.rniA rosTojricn ab second CUSS )IAII. UATTKB. riiiMUEi.rjiiA, TininsnAY. maiich n. iis. The bankrupt in virtue Is not abashed at being called crooked. Cured Into Helplessness CAnrtANSCA may submit until ho Is weary, and Zapata submit, nnd Villa submit, nnd Obregon and all the others submit, but whilo tho ono Is busy making his promises to tho United States tho others nro merrily shoot ing the defenseless nnd pillaging right nnd left There Is no Government In Mexico, where fore' there Is no responsibility. There Is no authority capable of protecting American or any other interests. Tho capital Is an alter nate prize of war, now sacked by ono bandit and now by another. A second dose of "watchful waiting" is tho cure, says Washington; but when the condi tion of tho patient, after previous treatment of the same kind is considered, ordinary peo ple are likely to think it a case of Jeb Haw kins all over again. Jeb was addicted to drink. When his wlfo heard him coming tho first thing Bho did was to hide tho rifle and soquestrate the china. Then she extracted a quart bottle of extract of alcohol from its concealment, filled a big glass with the stuff and set It on tho dining table, after which she went Into tho kitchen and bolted the door. "When Jeb's just got enough in him to navigate," Bho confided to a friend, "like as not he'd tear up the house and me, too. But about flvo minutes after ho swallows my offering he's limp as a rag and anybody could put him to bed." With a little moro "watchful waiting" there will not bo any thing left In Mexico but tho mountains nnd the trees, and what was the nation will bo limp enough for oven a lecturer to handle with Impunity. The Apparition of the Eitel Friedrich THE Gorman cruiser Eltel Friedrich might almost have dropped from the skies into the hnrbor of Newport News without causing more astonishment than she produced when she steamed In yesterday. Her whereabouts has been unknown for weeks. She was with the German squadron at tho Falkland Is lands, but escaped, and she has been reported as oft the const of Peru. But she has steamed ground tho continent of South America and has got as far north as Chesapeake Bay without any word of her movements reach ing this country. That sho has been active is proved by tho presence on board of 326 prisoners, being the otllcers and crews of the ships she has sunk. She Is in need of coal and provisions, and must also be repaired. But where did she get tho coal and provisions to maintain her since sho was lust heard from and where has she been operating? These questions are not all fully an swered at present. They form n. romance of the sea which! the officers could tell if they wished. Some day the story will bo written, not only of tho work tills ship has done, but of the achievements of tho other German commerce destroyers, and It will be absorbing reading, even though told without any of the artifices of literature. The Germans may not control the sea, but they seem to be at home on It. A Joke That Is No Joke Many a business man borrows his brains from his stenographer. THIS sentence from the humorous column of the Boston Post is not a Joke. It is the solemn truth, and In its 10 words there Is a probable explanation of the new woman movement. The capable woman who goes Into a business oftlce and discovers that she has more brains, more Initiative, more fore sight and more judgment than the average man With whom she works begins to think. She does not think very long before she de cides that she will not consent to play a sub ordinate part In the work of the world, but will at once begin to demand that she be put on an economic and political equality with the meJi, And what a woman wants she usually gets. Bring the Two Cities Together CA.MDEN and Philadelphia are not "a cen tury behind the times" because there is neither tunnel nor bridge connecting the two cities, but both Philadelphia and Camden are seriously handicapped by the absence of so otaviousiy necessary a convenience. The com prehensive transit plans of Director Taylor provide for a tube. It Is noy merely a ques tion of how long the two cities must wait for the Improvement they desire, for that they 3111 ultimately have it is as certain as any thing human ever is. America's Debt to the Foreign-born AtJKHMAN immigrant boy landed in this country between BO nnd 60 years ago. He found work in a cigar factory In Brooklyn. J g. T. Stranahan, who was long known as the first citizen In that community, smoked u special brand of cigars made Jn the factory where this boy worked. The lad was se. lected to take a, box of the cigars to Mr, Stranahan's house every week. This distin guished citizen was honored during his fife by the erection of a statute pf him in Brooklyn' greatest park. The. boy, with the energy and thrift of lite raws, saved his money, engaged In the leather toirejnesn and built up one of the biggest leather Rouses In the country. He was In twwted In good government. He aligned himself with the reformers, and in due time Urn iecome the most available candidate for th MywUy of the city to run against the nuipiM of the ftra Melaughlin machine. C km iriuinphantltJrfw:, Thi a dinner tts glvwn JJ fceftM. 4 among the m neat t th bmd tabl wa the mma, JLS- a SsfajMfciWr ta w&mh &f I 1h I of cigars dvcry week When It camo his turn to speak the Mayor-elect faced Air, Btrann han, and with simple modesty told the story of -the cigars. "And now," Mild he, "I And myself the guest ot honor nt this dinner, nnd sealed nt the Rnme, table with you " Then ho turned to the other diners, nnd with a thrill In his voice, remarked, "Uentle men, that Is what America means to mel" This man was Chnrles A, Behlercn, who has Just died nt the nge of 73 years. Is It any wonder that a man to whom America meant so much should have done his best to keep Its government clean and honest In order thnt the faith of other lmmlgrnrjt boys In the purity of democratic Institutions might bo preserved? Say what wo may nbout tho prob lem of tho foreign born, If It had not beon for their activity In tho great reform movements In tho cities nnd the nation nt large, progress would have been much slower. firing the Olympic Games to Philadelphia THE Olympic games for 1910 haves been awarded to tho United States They should bo held in riilladelphln, nnd they will bo If tho prompt action of tho business in terests of tho community menus nnythlng. Thero mo ninny excellent sites for tho kind of stadium necessary. Excellent plans have nltcndy been completed. Only the financial part of tho problem Is unsolved, nnd to It consideration must bo directed. It has been pointed out over nnd over again that n great stadium would be self-biipport- Ing from tho beginning. In additional seats for the At my nnd Navy gnme nlono moio than 150,000 annually would bo realized, a large part of which would doubtless be avail able for Interest and nmorllzntlou payments. Thero nro innumerable other purposes to which tho plant could bo put pageants, open-door theatrlral presentations, spring games, world series contests, etc. Philadelphia has been for n long lime the athletic capital of tho nation. To retain Its suprcmncy tho city must be provided with tho best posslblo facilities. To provide those facilities Is to make a good Investment, tho kind of Investment which they can afford to makes and cannot nfford not to make. With splendid Initiative n committee of business men has already cabled to tho In ternational Olympic Committee offering this city ns tho proper place for the gnmes. An acceptance of the Invitation will make tho construction of an ndequnle stadium abso lutely Imperative. The situation Is decidedly hopeful. The Slnkinp of the William P. Fryc THE sinking of the William P. Frye was not an net of war against tho United States, but against the Allies. Tills Is tlin fundamental proposition with which all con sideration of tho case must start. If a mistake was made and If wheat were not contraband of wnr, even though destined for British ports, Germany has no defenso when a demand for reparation Is made by tho United Stntes. We mutt assume that Germany will recognize Its obligations under International law in this case until the con trary Is proved. Hut this does not affect in any way the obligation of tho Stalo Department in In sist that tCparntlon bo made to the full ex tent of the righteous clnlms of the owners of the ship nnd ot tho caigo. The affair contains no threat of war and becomes at once a diplomatic incident. The Human Side of Politics MEN are human beings before they are politicians. Tho machine leaders never make the mistake of appealing for votes on grounds of abstract Justice and they never seek to secure the adoption of theories. They nro Intensely practical and prudently human. This is the secret of their ascend ance Tho laic Charles B. Qulgley, the leader of tho 10th Ward, was a flno specimen of the type. The 10th Ward runs between Arch and Vine streets, from 7th street to the Schuyl kill Ttlver. It contains nearly 5000 voters, and almost every ono of them supports the Republican ticket. Or, perhaps it would be truer to say that they ail support tho Qulgley ticket. This man was a friend to those in need whether they were deserving or not. He is credited m Ith securing the dis charge of (-cores of men accused of petty crimes, nnd In return the men hnvo voted as he directed. Ho paid conl hills, staved off the rent collector, looked after the under taker whenever ho was needed, nnd acted ns a sort of feudal lord In tho piotection of his retainers. Ho had a glad hand and a hearty smile for his followers, even If thoy wore dirty out si do and inside. Qulgley was a valuable man to tho Organ ization, nnd the Organization took caro of him as ho took caro of tho voters, and re formers found it impossible to weaken his hold in the ward. He was not a philanthropist, but a very common sort of man who knew how to carry his point by getting Into human toucli with the voters nnd keeping in touch with thorn. He paid the price and ho got the goods. Any other man who Is willing to pay tho price can get what ha wants. It is not necessary to deal with crooks and blacklegs to reform city politics. But It is important that the men who think moro of honest govoiiiimnt than of their personal profit should also re member that a friendly smile, a companion able manner, and the treatment of even tho humblest voters ns equals will win more votes for a cause than the most elaborately argued thesis on tho advantages of a uni cameral Council can ever win for legislative refnrm in this or Jn nny other town. The units in the political game are human beings, and not ivory figures on a chess board. If the reformers will cut this sen tence out and paste It In their hats and read it every .morning from now until the next election there will be better government here than there has ever been before. Even with the Jitney one must have the Jit, The guns in Europe cannot shoot too often for the powder factories of the United States. Carranza has struck Villa a fearful finan cial Wow by seeing to it that the prize fight la held somewhere else. In the Dardanelles, as elsewhere, the vic tory depends a good deal on who happens to control the cables. Jf Carranza meets the United Stajsp halt way he'll be as surrounded with water as he Is with enemlas. When the Governor attends the hearings on the child labor bill -in Harrlsburg an expert wlU be present. Loeal option In working n Minuwou to the entire sattefactioa of the temperance peo )!. The towns whkh have dtetded that they want to abfiUsb tli saloon have ordrad U abolished, aad the dry we to the gtatu ir selrs& ELECTION DAY ' INTERREHAUTE Year Under Nero Culminates In m Orgy of Fraud and Thuggery at the Polls Hands of Esau Manacled. By IRWIN L. GORDON V. BS VEnYTHING fnvoiod the Organisation in erro Haute. Roberts and Fairbanks cared not for I lie storm of complaints from prop erty holders when tho abnormal street Im provement assessments were made. With the nrroganco of n czar Roberts ordered the properties sold when tho owner could not pay tho excessive tribute. Tho Organization was planning more grabs buildings intiM bo erected, moro streets must bo paved. A flno park must be placed In tho middle of 2d street before somo 160 houses of ill famo where the women could sit on summer evenings. A band conceit was planned for ono night n week during spring and summer. This would attract men Into tho lair. Dlstegnrdlng public sentiment, believing itself Impervious' to attack and absolutely secure In the citadel of politics and liquor, tho Organisation continued Its work of plun der. Roberts, however, always n good cap tain, knew that his piratical boat nover could weather tho ntorm should nn honest Judge be elected tn the circuit bench. No Honest Judge Would. Do The citizens of Terre Hnuto wetc planning to run Chnrles Pulllnm, an'nblo lawer, for the position. Fairbanks nnd Roberts wanted to throw Judge Fortune from tho bench, ns ho was too dangerous nftor tho previous ear's episode. Ell H. Redman, a Roberts- I'nlrbnnks lieutenant, a man with scarcely nny legal training, who had failed to securo a license to practice law In Illinois, was chosen ns their candidate. Rodman's son, Hilton, was a notorious Tenderloin charac ter, who had been arrested with Roberts after tho Mayoralty scandal and who had been mixed up with tho pollco for years. Father nnd son arc now under indictment. Judge Fortune thought ho had sufficient power to fight Roberts nnd Fairbanks to secure tho nomination Inst spring. Ho ran against Redman, but, lacking the support of the Organization, was snowed under. Pul llnm secured tho Republican nnd Progressive nominations In addition, a Congressman must 1)0 elected ntid a United States Senator Representative Moss -was up for le-electlon nnd Shlvcly was the Taggart candidate for United States Senator. Tho situation In Terre Hnuto resolved itself down to this: A United States Senator must bo elected who would repicsent Taggart and Fairbanks; n Congressman must bo elected In the 5th District who would represent Tng gnrt nnd Fairbanks, and a Judge must bo elected tn the circuit bench In Tone Hnuto who would choke the paving suits, who would let off the ciooks at the wink of Rob erts and who would not lift his hand to slop the flow of Fairbanks beer In the largest Tenderloin In the Middle West. Voters From the Cemeteries The gang set to work first a "slush fund" was lalsed. This wns done In Pennsylvania. Tribute was encted from every saloonkeeper In Torre Hnute. This was done in Pennsyl vania, Tribute was exacted from civic nnd State organizations. This wns done In Penn sylvania. When the registration days came the Or ganization sent out orders, ns they did In Philadelphia, to get every available man on the lists. Cheap lodging houses were packed, saloons registered enormous numbers, while the houses of 111 repute, vacant lots and cemeteries gave up their votors. More thnn 1!500 fraudulent names were placed on tho lists. This was exactly the number fiaudu lwitly registered In Unlontown, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, where Stnte Repub lican Chairman Crow Is political lender. No ono, however, has been punished In Fayette County. In other wnnls, n direct ninllel to the inctlcs of the Philadelphia Organization was drawn In Tci ro Haute only not ho many were registered. The foielgn nnd tho negro voters wero whipped Into line as thoy nio In South Philadelphia. Along the liver fiont wards tho same conditions prevailed tho thugs, strong-arm men nnd dlssoluto char acters got in their work. The pollco department made great prepara tions for tho election. Nugent was- appointed bagman, according to his own confession and that of his associates. Ho visited nil the saloons nnd gambling Joints. More than 56000 was secured from the Tenderloin sa loons. Chief of Police Holler let it be known that nny place that did not "come across" would be "closed" There were no refusals nmong the (saloonkeepers and gamblers. The highest single assessment was $500 made against the Shay Brothers, who operate the largest gambling establishment In the city. This pince is still open. One crap game alono has a backing of $1000 house money. Scoies of men wore sworn In ns deputy policemen, These wero toughs from Taylor vlllo, a small settlement ncrdss the Wabash, who terrorized the citizens on election day. One Foot in Each Camp Ono of the clever moves made In tho pre election tight was tho bi-partisan deal ar ranged with tho Progressives. Nugent was a red hot Progressive. That is to say, he was chief of the "Progressive Department of Democratlo Headquarters." He not only col. lected money for the party, but so Ingra tiated himself Into the ranks that he could tell hlsr chief every move of the opposition, As the Republican party had been third In the 191! election, they had no representation on tho election board Democrats and Pro gressives nlone remained, A large number of these Progressives became strong Roberts Democrats. Thus the Roberts. Fairbanks machine was tri-partlsan. Election day, November 3, came at last. Then began the fight to elect the Democratlo ticket, to get through the machine liquor candidates. The Government contends that more than 2500 fraudulent votes were cast. Many of the men who have pleaded guilty Informed the writer that the numbfr was nearer SSW, Having the full protection of the poljce the repeaters worked at-will,' The only ehecks upon them were the women watchers at the polls. Killed at the Polling Booth In several precincts the duly qualified elec tlon aflters were prevented from takim? their seata, Theae men complained to the Superior Court Judge Marshal wra BenJ la the polling place Shote were fired at these men In one Tendarioin preempt a fight eeuiT4 wun th Qrgasteattan men attempted to tfciow muJ b heimt Progressive. Ha wa Jumped on, kicked and nearly killed by tho thugs. Firing a revolver through his pocket, ho killed one of the Organization men. This case It still pending. Universal public senti ment favors the man who fired tho shot. Tho Sheriff, Dennis Shea, operated tho strong-arm forces from the City Hail. It there was troublo In nnv precinct he dis patched men to thnt point. Citizens wero beaten one minister was slugged, whllo scores of duly qualified otcrs weio not al lowed to cist their votes. In Terro Haute both election machines and ballotboxcs are used. In tho foreign sections a plan wns ndopted which carried tho Demo cratic vote with flying colors. A foreigner who could not rend would nppenr. He would be assisted the election officer would simply pun ine uenmcrntic lever, snould the man happen to wte In n placo wliero ballots were used,-his ballot would be marked for him. In a number ot cases men appeared at tho polls and wero informed that their voto had already been cast. Thero was absolutely no redress for this. Citizens stormed City Hall, were received kindly by the. Mayor, the Sheriff and the Chief of Police' but nothing was done. All tho saloons in tho Tenderloin were open during the day. That Is to fcay, tho side doors were open. Beer was freely distributed In alleys near the polling places. In short, with the exception of tho flagrant thuggery, the last election in Terro Hnuto, upon which the Government is basing Its conspiracy case, was In no wise different from the elections which have tnken plnco in Philadelphia for the past 13 years. Ever since the political ascendancy of John E. I.nmb, the Quay of Terre Haute, tho citizens knew that fraudulent work wont on during election mit they never could catch tho "men higher up." And Philadelphia? Is this not true in Philadelphia? The Com mittee of Seventy in this city has prosecuted 560 cases of election fiaud. Of this number 113 convictions have been obtained. Not n blngle politician of prominence has ever been Implicated. Do these men repeat at their own volition? The Committee of Seventy still has 44 cases of election violation which have not been tried. Would the tactics adopted in Terre Haute do anything toward Improving condi tions in Philadelphia? The result of that election in Terre Haute may become more far-reaching than any other In the country It has become a na tional issue, As far ns local conditions wero concerned the Democratic senatorial candi date received nn enormous majority, tho Congressman was olected, but the Roberts Fairbanks candidate for Judge Ell II. Red man recelvedjmjyjijmajorlty of 10 votes, FULDA'S GERMANWA'R POEM England Charged With Drawing an Eighth Enemy, the Lie, Into Service. Since the beginning of the war the Germans have Miown a hatred for the English mora pronounced than against the other Allies. This was evidenced in the now famous "Haszgeaang gegen Kngland" (Song pf Hatred Toward Eng land) by Ernest I.lssauer. Probably the next most vitriolic of the many German war poems recently published is the one tn which Ludwlg Fulda, dramatist, novelist and noet. chareef the English with drawing an eighth enamy, the "? Jnto B"vlee W'nyt the Germans, Much of the effectiveness of the original depends .upon the vere form. A translation preserving this v rse form made by Burton Rascoe, s presented herewith: A league of seven to make us yield, You called against us In the field; You needed yet one more ally To give tho combine greater weight As Number Eight: The Me. And as wo pour out to the light. And fearlesuly contest Uo right! While ypu are battling desp'rately. . That coiled serpent, born of fear. Brings up your rear; The Lie, And among the people who knew us not, Who're alien -to our Ian4 and thought, With whom we 'haVjg,.no,tle, With blinded hate' Is credited i Where'er 'Ha read. The tie. As fast as one cuts off Its head A dozen more grow In its stead; A million vessels could not dry Tour slouch of speen to menace us, And a ot pua, 'The Wt. goon will the polished German plow O'e Wood-drained nelda dig ftrtile rows Jj&atU now hMtlle fcky; i!n,funM wut renwe th stain. Wl to mm SO NEAR AND YET- TUB mystery of tho huge, quaintly deco rated bowls or vases sent to tho museum of the University of Pennsylvania many months ago from tho fastnesses of tho Upper Amazon by Dr. AVilllnm C. Farrabce has been solved at last. They are used by tho Conebo Indians for making chlcl, tho native wine, drunk almost exclusively at Iho "coming out" parties ot the young women. This informa tion was contained In a recent letter from Doctor Fnrrabee, written Just before ho and his party left tho Inst outpost of civilization a second time and started up the slopes of tho Andes in a hunt for" moro villages of hitherto unknown races of Indians. Thero probably will bo no further message from the explorers for months. Comparatively few Phlladelphlans know the extent of tho ethnological and archae ological woik under way, and the impoitance of tho results so far achieved by the scien tists conducting tho explorations for the Musoum of tho University of Pennsylvania. No fower than five expeditions are now busy in as many corners of tho earth. Twenty-five or thirty years ago museums were hardly more than curio exhibitions. Specimens of the craft and nrt of tho ancients picked up hero and thero by trav elers wero displayed with a bare description of whero they were found, and little effort was made to get at the real significance of such objects. The study of the races of men who lived and flourished when the world was young was confined almost solely to old manuscript records. Bits of baked clay with cuneiform Inscriptions, of which llieie nro hundreds at tlio University Museum, at tracted the attention only of a few scholars. But the methods of science in ethnology and archaeology have been changed of late years. Nearly every spot In tho world whore races, since wiped out, nre known to have lived In ancient times Is being explored and studied, Ono of tho University Museum expeditions Is that which is at work In the Caribbean Archipelago, The others are the expedition to Siberia, headed by Doctor Fisher; the Kgyptian expedition, financed by Eckley B. Coxe, Jr., president of the ruseum (tho fifth, by the way, sent into land of the Pharaohs by Mr. Coxe); the Amazon expedition, in charge of Doctor Farrabeo, and that ot Dr. C. W. Bishop, to Japan nnd China, which haa just reached the field. Extinct Americans Mr. George C. Heye, a wealthy New York business man who pursues ethnology as an avocation with all the ardor pf the great est scientists, is In charge of the Carib bean explorers. For years he hns baen Btudylng the extinct races ot the Americas and nearby islands, and his collection of objects from these lands Is one of the most comprehensive In the world. Most of his specimens are deposited with the University Museum. .Vhe present expedition Is now making a second and more thorough explora tion of Cuba, excellent results having been attained In the first. A branch party Bent out by Mr, Heye Is at work among the smaller Islands for traces of the. Arowak Indians, a race exterminated within 35 years after the arrival of the Spaniards, So far little is known of these Indians, but the expedition is meeting with marked success, and undoubtedly will make some important ethnological discoveries. Waiting for Winter in Siberia Material additions to our knowledge of the romantic, If eometlmea bloody, history of tht Mongols, the Tartara and the Huns, and the early atocKa from which they sprang, may be made by the expedition which has gone vinto the Siberian wastes, a journey to which attacaes some of the heroic glamour ot a dash to the North Pole. Doctor Fisher and his party were last heard from In October. Until that month they had been waiting on the outskirts of a Siberian morass, 13 feet deep In summer. It is Impassable save in the winter months. Beneath this swamp, now frozen over and being traversed by the party, is supposed to be about 50 feet of ce It was In this country, near tho Arctic circle and west of the tna, that Russian explorers noma years ago discovered tt mammoth with flesh still preserved. It had been fr.7.n (nm the lea is tha gtaslal period, and may hay .. - - "' -"M ? nuva 1 ,- ,r..,.. ,.j ",:: uj ..., uvea w,witt sears ago. The xkeia.n., . "wn'i NEW EXPLORATIONS OF THE P'ASTJ Discoveries of Live Interest Are Being Made by the Museum of m University of Pennsylvania A Story of Five Expeditions Into Little Known Regions of the Earth. By WILLIAM A. McGARRY on exhibition nt St. Petersburg, or PeiiR Kind, ns the Russians have it. m mi. i.-- i . ,, . . .Si iiiu iiuue ruevs munca are ueucvca lOrtir'i tlllrl flirtlf nrtirln 1 tl.l nrtH, r 1. .......ijTCil heretofore no systematic effort has fcS mado to trace their early history by exofinS tloil In iht rnfrtnn T io t1irt lntanAAi iV t Doctor Fisher to remain until forcefl outtfil llie spring thaws of 191G, should the ducoitrl Ics warrant so long n stay. When tliepirtfl wns last nenra irom it had just starttail penetrate the region nlonir the bank oftST Yonesel River. All supplies are carred?Wl Tinck nillm.lla nt Dln,1rva TtTn tl.A. .. iPi . .......w u. ui.uj,.t, .,w miiiiii nvuHj expected from Doctor Fisher until thf H5 pcuuion returns to civilization Where the War Was a Help Curiously enough the war in Europs hsi cure., ui in. incuse uenenc 10 me expioreri 111 Egjpt. Austrian and German selmlllli wero conductlnc dic-clnir nncrntlons nriflrtr the start of the war, and the English ffl wero active. Tho demand for expert riffvi diggers was greater than the supply, gogf dilllcultv hnrl hpi ovnniHnnpoH t Vi pifrnlr sylvanla Museum workers, but when ho!tl ties started tho German, Austrian and En llsh activities were suspended, and slncata time the American explorations have Ifta. going forward with great rapidity. The IS portanco of this work Is perhaps beat, stanced by the discovery bv one of the Mfi vlous museum expeditions of a section w clay tablet containing the earliest lilstorM! me noou Known to bo existent This is wit on exhibition at the museum The Amazon cxnedltion lias bean In tail field almost two years working nearym storied land of tho Ancient Incas, about tjjL-J only South American race of olden tlmtiMy which much was known prior to Doctor Fujfl rabee'B work, Hla party bus penetrate! twl country on the borders of tho Gulanas M Brazil and at last accounts was 35W nJMl ujj mo Amazon on the eastern slope 01 uti Andes. M Present-day potters may learn sometliM! new of their craft as the result of &. rjedltlon. whlnli lmo .fnirA.i r,.nm Hia .tut against obstacles. For a time It was hPT up by the Impossibility of getting cash, djiL to the collapse of international exclupiy when the war started. About a hundrH specimens of pottery of varying site to1 been sent back by Doctor Farrabee. Jm They aro tho work of the Conebo IndltWi a race without traditions or the sHsMga. knowledge of its root men who have. SB other art, but who make wonderful vaiMjLl a secret clay. Thero is no kiln in the u States large enough to bake the plSSOi these bowls, according to pottery expert" h3 have Inspected them at the museum, but Wm .iiuoi. iciimruauie race UDOUi mem u tai- their makers have no potter's wheel. B of these pots are as thin as paper. The Urn est, three feet high and as many In dlameSra are not more than half an inch thick. full description of the Conebo Indians not yet been written by Doctor Farrabfe, ; It Is being awaited with deep Interest atj! museum. Actual work In China will not be tai by the Bishop expedition for at least a S'J The Interim will be spent in Japan exaaa Ing collections of ancient Chinese urt.'a tained; by the princes of the Land of Wja Doctor Bishop expects to learn from ttj3B collections wherA in nnnHnof il flparchjic fl,fr.n (lm-l mlml 1 . L . Jt . A expedition is necullar in that so UttJewf Known of the Chinese art that the exft does not know exactly what he is !oogg ior. ENLARGE THE COMMITTEE, Tl To f Mltor ef A Evtnlno Ltdgerr Sir You ask If a one-legged mat can eigni limes in -terre Haute, how many a two-legged man can ota In PhllatW The answer Is, until the Committee of PWS caicnes mm. But when one looks at a wn marching to tho polls one wonders what! can oo among so many. ' CORRUPT. BUT NOT CONTHKW Philadelphia, March 11 THE PLACE FOR ADJECTIVE From th Nw Vorlf Kvtnlar Sun The Honorable "Vie" Mural 1,,,J area behind him. nlanu to edit hJS VN saner Willi an "adtactlvclftaa BOtUty tfr r A ESfTlS t5'a