13 PODLIG LEDGEn COMPANY CYRUS It. M. CUP.TIS, Pusidiht. I 'Charles IT tudlnitlOTi.VicePrnildenti John d. Martin. ""'' nd Treasurer! rjilltp e. Collins, John B. Williams. Director! EDrroniAii BOAnDJ " Circs It. K Curtis, Chairman. P It. WtlAtEYv .nt..w. Executive Editor JOHN P MARTIN General Bmlneaa Manager Published daily at Pcbuo Licot Bulldlnr, Independence Square, Philadelphia. T.rton CitiTitAt,..,.,!.,. .Broad and Chestnut Strteta AtLiNTIo ClTI,. ,. .,,,..,. 1. ..I'rrj.ftnlon Dulldlnir Naif Toaff,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,170-A, Metropolitan Tower Drraon....... ..,.,...,R20 Kord Minding- Br. IOCIS . 409 atobt Democrat nulldlng CniCiOO..... .....1203 Tribune Bulldlnf NEWS DtntBAUS! WmOTO ntmiuu.i niirca Ilulldlnr New TonK ncRKiB. ...The rime Building InUx DtiBIAC. GO Frledrlchatraaas 1.0-ino BonriD..... ......... Marconi House, Strand Paaia BDiiO... 33 Hue Louis le Grand SUDSCntPTION TERMS Br carrier. lx t-enta per week. Iiy null, postpaid eutkld of Philadelphia, except where foreign pota;e Is required, one month, twenty-five cents! ono year, three dollars. All mall subscriptions payable In advance. Norton Subscribers wlahlnir address changed must give old as well as new address. BELL. MM WALNUT KF.YTONE. MAW 8009 Ct Aidrett oil communication to Evening Leaner, Independence Square, Philadelphia. nrroso at Tni rniT.Apm.rntA rosTornai is sicomb- CLASS UAIL UATTSS. THE AVEP.AOD NEV PAID DAIL-T CinCULA- TION OF" THE SVENIr3 LEDOEIl FOU JANUARY WAS 89.314 PBILADELriHA, THURSDAY. FEDnUAIlY 10. lilt Kings are Ilka stars they rise and act, they have The xcorship of the world, out no repose. j Shelley. That earthquake shock at Panama was not caused by a Gormnn bomb. The) witness called yesterday In tho Bran dels hearing seems literally to bo a Thorno In tho flesh. Wo have heard of combing tho seaB, but today comes tho news that tho Adriatic was tho scene of flvo brushes. This weather reminds us of Mark Twain's comment on tho climate of Now England. "It has none," he said; "all you get Is sam ples." Many other sensible women will Indorse Mrs. Edison's protest against tho Introduc tion o gowns the skirts of which stop short ft teen Inches from tho floor. The speaker before tho country Ufa con ference knew what he was talking about when ho srtld that tho homes were depending too much on tho schools to do their work. The "American gentleman" this spring .will -near a single-breasted, two-button sack suit, with draper over the hips N'ews re port. Perhaps ho will; but If drapery over tho hips Is to be the badge of tho American gentleman, wp know several men who will refuse to qualify. Justice Hughes Insists once more that he is entirely out of politics and announces that ho Is opposed to tho selection or Instruction of delegates in his interest. No ono doubts his sincerity And no one doubts, cither, that thero arc soveral other Republicans who aro anxious to have as many delegates as possible instructed to voto for them at Chicago. Tho suggestion that a naval academy bo established on tho Pacific coast was first made by the Evening Lkboer. Thero should be at least three great naval academies The Fensacola, .Flo., navy yard offers a splendid site for ono on tho Gulf coast. Public opin ion Is fixed in favor of. an adequate navy. An Increase in tho number of midshipmen at Annapolis will easo tho situation; but it will not solve tho problem of providing a diffident number of ofllcers This nation is not yet in tho humiliating position where It is necessary for school children to contributo their dimes to build a battleship. There have been ensca where women havo given their hair for tho national defense, and hcrpismhas seldom been lack ing in the press of a great necessity. But this nation Is confronted with no crisis in tho money supply, and tho dime-giving pro gram probably has more of sentimcntalism than of patriotism behind It Trolley poles hro not beautiful and they have been tolerated because they have been supposed to bo necessary. Minneapolis, how ever, discovered that if the trolley wires were supported by span wires attached to the buildings the poles could bo removed. Downtown Minneapolis Is almost free from disfiguration. The City Parks Association, which 1b attempting to bring about a simi lar Improvement here, has already secured the,promlso of the co-operation of President Mitten, of the Rapid Transit Company, and Is asking that tho owners of buildings In Chestnut and "Walnut streets consent to the attachment of the stay wires to their property. The advantages of an unencum bered curb line are so evident that no argu ment Is needed to convince the thoughtful. French strategists are unwilling to be lieve that a great offensive has been begun by Germany. The tremendous effort of the last few jdays at Vlmy is not precisely of the same kind as the puah in the Artols region made by the Allies last September, because the chief point of attack is that hlll crest which was partly won at that time. German command is obviously trying to regain a valuable post, and to reset its lines in the favorable positions they held be fore September. 80 far, it Is defensive. If tfcc report that 60,000 men were lost be taken With the usual discount, the price Is still enormous, and the gain cannot equal the advantage which the Anglo-French troops stood to win if they had gone over the crest anil dominated the Lens-Douai-Cajnbral railroad Jlnes. On the other hand, (f this bo actually a prelude to a large offensive, the cost might Justify Itself. Senator Hitchcock criticises the Clarke Philippine independence bill because It does not provide for the creation of any Independ ent government In the islands to take the plae$ of that which Is now acting under the supervision of American officers. He has prps8e4 to amend the bill by authorizing ife legislature of the islands to draft a con trfitutlon. When called upon to defend this preguisltlpr; he ingeniously told his colleagues t)mt he JW not i repose a separate constitu tioaal convontifiu a his 'purpose was sinutHy to econom ae tita and economize ma terial tar the material for statesmanship in tfc phHijppioe IfiUoAa le aWjnHy vry iMpHttA" If it is iw limited ajr mm H4 MfM thMitry f nature) rftuffignjMUty san EVENING LVEDGERPHTLADELPHIA THURSDAY, JPUV AntXOjlOl Senator Hitchcock favor turning the govern ment of the Islands over to a. people which does not contain statesmen enough to draft Iho laws and tlrnft a constitution without Using tho same men for both tasks? LITTLE; ENGLAND WINS OUT There nre inn Knglnnit. The renl I'mtlnnd In nchtlnn; In I'rnnrp nnd keep Ins 11 li nt month. 'I lie other r.iittlnud la hnvlnir hyMrrlr. 1 hr flRlitrrn nre ordi nary KnRllnhmrn "ilnlnit their lilt." the tnlkrra nre from I lip rnnka of the "beat men," the tlilnkern nnd iirofrxatonnl pn (rlota. rortiiiintely, the common people nre anvlng Hnalnnd. TP ONH wore to Judgo Ihiglaml by tho JL speeches and writings of her notable men, one could honestly say that iho panic which began In August, 19H, has developed Into downright hysterics. It Is easy to under stand why tho panic came England was un prepared for operations on l.ind. But after England's Roldiers were tested In tho Itres of tho furnace which (lamed nt Mons the panlr died away. As more men went Into tho field, as mora went Into tho training camps, England settled down to a grim business. Now, sinco that business hasn't been easy, thero nro frosh symptoms of fever. The In fected area Is an island. England herself is Uvlng across tho channel. The renl England Is screno. Tho truth that comes out of the whole un happy business is that tho "great minds" of England havo failed, desperately, discourng Ingly, entirely. The little minds, as they wcro called, havo assumed now burdens without complaint, tho cockney and tho loafer have been wrenched from their old lives nnd thrown Into a mad sea of unknown circum stances. They have struck out bravclv, while the minds upon whom England had de pended havo given a tcrrlblo exhibition of moral and mental disintegration Viscount Bryco stands calm as a mountain top be yond the storms Lloyd-George, known as a marvel of energy before, has forced hint self upon a reluctant England But the rest tho Shaws, Wellscs, Conan Doyles, the North- cltffes, tho editors of great organs of public opinion, the leaders of labor and ot ct.pl'al In what a piteous mess they have been' Whllo tho flippant nrlstocracy and tho undo pendablo commons havo fought and died, the great England has forgotten nil her "ancient wisdom nnd austere control"' Tommy At kins, looking back at the England he has loft behind, can say now. Ironically lcmcm berlng that Rudyard Kipling flrst said tho words for him: If England was what Enpland seems An not the England of our dreams, But only putty, brnBS nnd paint, 'Ow quick we'd chuck 'cr. But Bhe ain't! Mr. Kipling has been hit by tho war, di rectly and dearly; but ho Is ono of millions who do not say ns he hays, "at least three nations desiro grcodlli that Hip Teuton be killed in retail, since he cannot be killed in wholesale" The German must be used up. It Is a war of extermination for his species. there must be no German problem after the war, because there must be no Germans left to present a problem. Tho Germans are rats In a ditch. Shoot them and take pleasure in each individual you kill If you cannot shoot, starve, drown, stab and rejoice! That Is the tenor of Mr Kipling's message, and It has tho sinister undertone of bloodlust In every word. The cockney speakB for himself nowndays in his "a"im, cheerful way, but Mr. Kipling has spoken long enough for England for his words to hao significance. Unhappily, thero nro others James Bryce stood almost nlone among public men against reprisals A few days ago a ship captain was actually do- fended In tho press of a great nation for refusing to rescue1 drowning German avia tors. Worst of all has been the clamor of England's lofty minds for intervention by neutrals. Mr. Wells takes it on himself to assure us that we will tako a back seat on Judgment Day, and the press of England Is unclean with Its slanders about America. If this country Is to go Into tho war It must go of Its own accord, becauso our moral destiny forces us, not becauso England de mands And the loss of temper, tho puling plaints against tho whole world, tho refusal to admit that any single German may havo human eyes nnd cars, not devil's hoofs, aro signs that might point to n moral break down In England They point, happily for England, only to tho failure of her leading men, to the weakness of her pacifists, to tho pitiable. Inadequacy of her apologists. To tho man who lies In a nolsomo trench day after racking day, who creeps to outpost duty under tho quiet stars, the Germans aro not rats In a ditch. Ho Is a common man without tho advantages of a great mind, nnd he perversely thinks that tho Germans are poor blighters who must not get Into rnnge. Ho has more than suspicion that thero will be a great deal of suffering If, through some unhappy but necessary accident, Fritz or Otto does not return home. He may not know that a great deal of liberty Is being upheld, hut ho is upholding tho brotherhood of men while ho helps to destroy tho brother hood of nations. It Is vastly important that tho "tramp ling, drilling foolery In the heart ot Europe" bo destroyed forever. It Is necessory that tho arrogance and power of Germany's Inhuman officialdom bo crushed out, and that Ger many humiliate herself before the sacred pillar of human privileges. But that humilia tion cannot be wrought by a nation which grows hectic with hate, which Is unstrung and unhealthy and unwise. The mind of the English race Is all that. But the soul of England Is more pure today than it was in the soft peace of a year and a halt ago. GIVE US THIS AVIATION SCHOOL A MODERN army Is about as helpless with out airships as without rifles. The airship is Its eyes, and ears. It has made surprises Impossible on the battlefields of Europe. If the American army Is to be put In condition to hold Its own in any possible conflict, It must be equipped, not only with airships, but with men who know how to operate them. The Finance Committee of Councils, there fore, which has Just made a favorable re port upon the proposition to lease the olty lands at Esslngton to an aviation school, proved that it believed in preparedness and was willing to act upon Its belief. The men interested in the school are planning to spend $25,000 in equipping the place with hangars, a landing stage and a pier in order that young men willing to qualify for service in an aviation corps may recoivo their training in advance of a call to arms. The Government must do more than it has done in the way of encouraging aviation, but while it is getting ready and even after it has done what it can. there will be a, de mand for sueh instruction as privately man aged schools can give Beside, we may dis cover mat the airship has its uea in peace as well as la war. Then there will b de mand far as many aviator a all the schools fut. tura out Tom Daly's Column WIBTTEB. It's rather late for vAshcs now. Though once I'd plenty: It scant that I've forgotten how I utshed at tuentv Mi) hope were rather lofty then, A'o doubt, and sporty; Hut many thing tone down in men Who've rounded forty. 1 recollect I hoped for fame; To cut some capers. My fond hope now's to Keep my name Out of the papers. Few are my ithhci now. I Keep liul Ij or seven; The dearcit deal with Food and Bleep; The iLlldcit, Heaven Geo! He Knew Thos. E. Hill DEAH T. D (no lent dear because the Initials nro those nlBo of mv Bueetost and bent-bo-loed pipe), I have waited patiently or wna It procrnBtlmtely7 to have the last word nbout Thomas 12 Hill nnd his "Manual of Social and Business forms " Toward the end of the third quarter of tho nineteenth century Mr Hill came to my nnthe town, out West, nnd opened a school of penman slilli His specialty was flee hand nourishing; nntl he could limn you n Moating swan or a lljlng bird of bo Krneeful lines ns to make nature's ornithic contributions prem amateurish Hut flourish ns he might, Ids school did not; so, after a brief ndventurn In lmnl Journntlsin, he became a messenger, or purchaslnc ngent, goInK to ChlenBO each wccKdnj morning on the 0 2B accommodation nnd rcturnliur In the evening on the fl.lS, cnrrjlng a hugo Fatihol containing sueh small articles ns merrlinutii nnd other people of our town had commissioned him to buy for them In the blR city. Ileforo I forsot It let me say that Mr Hill wnw one of the few Thomases In town whom we did not call Tom. since, to ntqulro nn nlibrelnted nnme In thnso pnrts at that time, a man must have hair on Ids chest nnd ho not too formal Mr. Hill wa a dainty llttlo Just-so person with necr an exntle speck on his close-buttoned frock, his clenmltiB hlch hat or his smooth kid cloes To call him Tom would be like ofToilnB Felicia Hcmnns a chaw of plug tob icco The most d.ir Iiib of us tailed him Thomas 12 Coins and coming as purclinslnB agent, lie spent almost thieo hou s each day on tho trains. Others might Rlo thlH time to whist, to news papers, to Bosslp, hut Thomas 12 "at by himself and dclcil Into some oluine of hnpplly forBotten lore, (IIbbIub up arid noting down those facts and flBUrcs which we 3 to bo Incorporated !ti tho Great Compendium ho had in mind W.B H. (TO HE CONCLUDED) O! Very Similar The difference twlxt humor In books And that which we hear after meals; The former's as old na It looks. The latter ns ounB ns it feels. How Far Soulh Do Liars nourish, Jutld? Old Judd Lewis, of tlio Houston Tost, has been poctlcslly welcomliiB spilng nnd Bill Itcennn, of Cincinnati, writes from Dallas: "Came down this wn to escape the winter, but It c-ime with me Still I suppose one couldn't oblige these ltnspltnble Toxans who ad vertise 'spend-our-wInter-ln-sunny Texas' II ono il'dn't hac one's winter with ono to spend, could one?" Doctor Hamilton in Philadelphia Frldau, June 8, 17tJ The Quakers nre the richest nnd the people of prentest Interest In this Government, of them their House of Assembly is chiefly com posed They hao the character of an obstinate Btlff-iicckcd generation, nnd a perpetual plague to their Govoinoius The piesent Govornour, Mr Thomas, his fnllen upon a way to manaBO them better than an of Ills predecessors, did, nnd nt tho same time keep pretty much In their Bood craces, and share some of their favours. However, tho standing or falling of the Quakers In the House of Assembl depends upon their making sure tho interest of tho Palatines In this Province, who of Into havo turned so nu merous that the can sway the votes which way the please There Is no publlck magazine of arms, nor any method of defense elthor for city or Province in case of the Invasion of nn cnem , this Is owing to the obstln.ic) of the Qunkeia in mnln tnlnlng their principle of non-resistance It were pit, but, well, If they wcro put to a sharp trial to sco whether they would net as they profess frmijyjEYourlp Hint In Ye Itnaster nnd n HniKKUrt. lie's wiser than many Who, meeting Sco Touf Irst, His piirwo In his shoe first Will hide and pretend Ho has not a penny To Blve or to lend. l'or him trouble's brewing Who brngs of his ticker Or Wealth when In liquor, Yours creed, so they tellf Is "Whoso's worth doing is worth doing well" A. A. WERE you ever afraid of your matutinal bawth catching fire, my dear? I havo been all my life, A single great, grievous, flery thought, while you're In it and thero you areor, rather, aro not. But It's all right now, I taw the sign today. When you have one of these Incendiary thoughts, Just run doA-n here to "SMITH'S KIKE PROOF ItVTIIr)' Atlantic City. John Luther Long. Can't Say! We're Neulral Don't you think the National stomach Is the one that can cat Red herring, White onions nno Blue points without seeing things other than flags waving? F. p, pjtzer. ,NI A CHEEK KOU THE U. H.l UTILITY BOiH WASH SUITS Sinn on 7th above Chestnut. DELAM'AKE 18TH I.N THE U. S, I.AIJ.NIIUY IIUhlNKSS Headline Wilmington, Evenlnr Journal. Llkelydue to the public washing of a cer tain prorplnent family's linen, do ou think? No Name. What's Your Favorite Simile? She had a mouth that even a sheriff couldn't shut up, v. p, pjtzer. THE friends of the late Eugene Geary, the genial, big-hearted fellow who passed away last year, are to bring out a volume ot his verse shortly. Here's a sonnet of his; THH TRUE PHILOSOPHER. Along the railroad calmly doth he stray Dlrtct descendant of the line of Pan; The tootlmtome bill-board and tomato-can His vermiform appendix keep o. k. What schuol he epttnia from mortal cannot say The utagyrite or Phuo'g? 'Tla his wan InrHfltirvnc to thlngg observed of man Make Uf to him a rose-omtiroJdered way What' Ie-uUa to him or he to Hee UbaT He wags his beard ami does not dwell Oa batilea, spoils, intrigues apd things reoiotc. He climbs great heights and tievvr riaks bis. neck. And U. as tatakwy more advanced know well. Our only true phltoespaer the goat 4.' 4.4..U'.y:- PRIDE OF THE RURAL EMIGRANT No Need to Worry About How Things Are Going in Country. Back-homers Are Taking Care of Themselves Of the first experiences of tho rural J cm!, igrant, nftcr he has established him self In tho big city, is resentment. This may or may not become chronic, depending largely on his sense of humor which, Indeed, Is little moro than an appreciation of hu man nature. When he goes back home to attend tho fu neral of his father a representative of tho In telligence and culture of the Hub of the Uni verse bids him good-by with cheerful com miserations ovor the necessity of returning to "that God-forsaken country." Which is horribly bad manners, of course, but the rural emigrnnt has to got used to it. Tho flrst of the Three Loyalties is tho Loy alty of Homo and Native Place. Tho rural emigrant becomes a hyphenato nnd apolo gizes not. Rural and urban are two different civiliza tions, each with Its folkways and mores. Everybody ought to read about folkways and mores In tho books of Professor Sumner and Professor Keller. It might do some good, and then again It mightn't. Tit for Tat and Then Some Tho Brahmin despises tho civilization of the West. That is becauso ho is not of tho West. Tho Occidental looks down on tho civilization of tho Orlont. That Is becauso ho Is not of tho East. Each believes his own Is best, and you can't drive tho opinion out of hi in. Tho Englishman and the German each knows tho other In part and prophesies In part Tho Practical Man Is contemptuous of tho Man of Letters, and tho Man of Letters Is even worried nbout tho Practical Man. City and country are coming to understand each other better. Tho trouble with country lifo is tho lack of adequate organization. The need Is for tho rovltallzatlon of rural Institutions, for the adaptation of old Institutions to new conditions, for the development of institu tions to meet the oxlgcncles of a changing ordor. It Is exactly the same problem which tho city has faced and which It has not solved as yet. Abandoned Chtirchcs? Tako tho matter of churches. Experts havo been crying thnt the country church Is on Its last legs. They point to hundreds of abandoned churches. Thoy pessimistically de clare that religion and morality are dying out Tho fact Is that tho Attest of tho coun try churches aro surviving and growing into new strength and vigor. Economic prosper ity In any region means prosperous churches in that region. A central location and an nctlvo church mean the death of passlvo churches bcattered about at this crossroads and that and tho other. The mortality is great, but there aro more live and thriving churches in the country than ever before, and the total membership of country churches is on the increase. Tho country has heard the call of effi ciency. It Is building a new Boclal and eco nomic organization out of its own resources, by Its own efforts, on its own Initiative. This week's conference of rural lifers In Philadel phia Is full of signs of the times. The "rural exodus" has ceased Something Ilka an equilibrium between emigration and immigration is near at hand. But boys will Btill leave the farm. If sonB of lawyers, by the way, all became lawyers it would be pretty hard on tho legal profession. The country boys have gone out from the country. The most "truly rural" State of the Union contributes more native sons to "Who's Who," the dictionary of American notables, than any other State in proportion to population. It has been doing that for quite a while. And along with these "Who's Who-ors" good riddance of had farmers have gone the incapables, tho fellows who have foiled. City Jobs for them. And back there In the "truly rural" country, what? School attendance higher than anywhere else. Schools better,-, according to tho Sage Foundation, than those of three-fourths of the American States, Enterprise rampant. Economic and social organization going for ward, as the phrase is, by leaps and bounds. Farming methods never so scientific and effi cient. Farm values Increasing 15 to 25 per cent, In the last live years. The most truly rual State Is all the time going uphill, The evil of the "rural exodus" Is a myth. A Part for the Whole There are ao many common fallacies In discussion of "the country life problem" that merely to Hat them would occupy col umns of pe. The evils complained of are usually more apparent thai) real, others uthr Umpurar than permanent. Aban doned farina are an incident of a necessary readjjatmint Tb.s Department ot Agricul ture ef Massachusetts usad to issue, an an nual catalogue of afeaWcHieA urms, bu sow POSSIBLE r J I . lwJiSiiM , ,.,ciM & i .' , UilBHnHIV W'xl "U, w!?i V 7w ...... (j It can't find enough abandoned farms to make tho catalogue worth anybody's while. Ono common fallacy Is taking n part for a whole. For example, regarding tho statis tics of Illiteracy nmong mountain whites as representative of general rural conditions. Still another Is the acceptance of "The Old Homestead" and tho pictures of A. B. Frost as truo reflections of country life. Tho his torian who puts together a few Incidents and scenes and labels them "history" Is not nn historian. This, too, Is mistaking details for tho real thing. So, finally, tho rural emigrant gives up to his sense of humor, Hko tho man who kicked about tho Frost pictures as follows: "Your boost of Frost Is well received, for his pic tures are a frost, Indeed. It Is not necessary to criticise that they bo viewed through farmers' eyes. Ills farmer, any one can sec, Is a grouch and mean as ho can be. Besides, he sows with his loft hand grain for a mot ley chicken band, and lets hl3 wlfo lift, standing still, 10 gallons or moro of milk nnd swill for the razorbacks which rise to greet tho housewifo In her slippered feet noisy hogs and noisome moro 10 steps away from tho kitchen door Upon tho ground he feeds his cow hay that's carried from the mow. Two ponies, lastly, crowd tho scene instead of horses, big and clean, to pull and haul and plow tho furrow. It's a wonder Frost didn't draw a burro. Farming thus all would be lost, though plcturesquo It seems to Frost." Tho man who understands the nation knows what is going on in tho country as well as In tho town. Ho boasts of tho tower ing temples of trade, but ho does not forget tho automobiles that carry tho fnimers to market. Ho knows tho size of tho annual wheat crop; And brags about tho corn boys of Ohio, who add $20,000,000 a year to the wealth of tho Buckeye State; And remember that nobody really under stands any civilization unless he has been a part of It. Rural civilization has its trials and Its triumphs. Its hardships and rewards It has its own folkways and mores. Christ was a small-town man, whose way of speak ing was a folkway. R. II. BRIEF HISTORY OF HATS Have you a hat? Hats were first manufactured In EiiBland about 1510. In the reign of Queen Hllznbcth they superseded caps and other soft headscai According to tradition, a knowledge of felted hats and caps was Introduced Into Western Europe by the CrusadcrST' For several centuries In Great Britain the higher classes were distinguished by their black beaver hats. Not that that was their only distinction, but it was one. The common peoplo wore caps and bonnets, Beaver fur grew scarce, nnd In the early part of tho 19th century wool and beaver felt hats camo in. Tho silk hat was an Innovation of the mldccntury. Political nnd religious differences have been marked by the form of hats. A steeple hat, high and narrow, with n broad brim and devoid of ornament, was worn by the Puritan of the reign of Charles I At the snmo period the Cavalier woro a hat with a lower and broader crown with a feather stuck on ono side Tho Quaker hat, low in tho crown, plain and hav Ing a broad brim, dates from the middle of tho 17th century, when the sect originated. Gen tlemen of the 18th century wore the cocked hat. It was Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot, who introduced Into tho United States the wearing of the soft felt hat which has since become a favorite In the South and West. The flrst straw hats were of the palm leaf variety. They were flrst manufactured about 100 years ago. Philadelphia's hat manufactures are famous the world over. SOUTH AMERICA AND CHURCHES To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir As you. have spread the views of Mr. Yerkes before the public will you allow a short comment on the subject? Mr. Yerkes would probably wish that his views should be consid ered broad rather than high or low. What is sought by the Panama Conference is to endow Latin-America with the purely Yankee notion of Christianity, which means In every village of 1000 Inhabitants two, three, four or more costly buildings to house congregations that can hardly support them, hence a resort to all sorts ot en tertainments to poach on each other's pockets. Thoughtful men are seeking some way to over come this overrlchness of divinity, and at present the efforts have led only to the Idea ot union. Whenever the Idea of unity has come to be tho general thought the evil will mend Itself, Now any effort to extend this very real evil to Latin America Is deprecated on many grounds by not only High Churchmen, but by all except a small group within the church who unfortunately are Just now having their day of publicity, Whether Mr Yerkes belqngs to this group or has any hpecial grudge against Latin-America need not be considered. The question of endowing South America wth groups of church buildings, parish houses, entertainments or gymnasiums sup ported by North American money is not likely to materialize very greatly as soon as the sub ject has been threshed out in public. P. E. Philadelphia, February 8. AGRICULTURE AND PEACE To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir Agriculture as a basis for world peace Is but an optimistic Imaginary vision. With dif ferent languages, customs and sectarianism It would be Impossible in this age The eouitv of international law will compel peace Nations continue to add power to the balance fcldo of Justice Nations will no more heed rejueta than neighbors In a township In the Ur.iud Statea when the rich desire to buy estate a,ul live on them with tenantry iho tumiem, tra.de and professlo.ru! wiU benent Agriculture ts mostly controlled now by financial Institutions OEORUa CASH EL. PkiUiUlU. February i, jmm I w What Do You Know? Queries of general interest will le amwereifi In this column. Ten questions, the aiwiecria to which every well-informed person thotlii know, arc asked dally. QUIZ 1, There Is a grrnt deal of tnlk nliout bnlldlnj 0 trade with fctoulli Amerirn. About what I the population of South America? 2. lint .Tuntlce of the .Supreme Court nti tntl Herrelury of Htntc' si 3. 11 hat 1 mennf by n "Iluy Uerllin"? 4. 11 lint has been the thief crltlclum dlrtcWi nKiiiiiKt ine .uiumiimi court hlnce II tu: urKlllllzcu B. 11 hn fa rlialrmnn nf tho Nnys and Mrnj Ctn- imncc hi 111c jiuuno or itrprtsfiuQllvtlT (I. v lio innde the first Amcrlcnn (las? 7. A murrled mnii has nn Income of $3600. lib wife has an Independent liuome of $1009.' UIIHl I1C pa Illl IIIL'UIUO 111.' vB o. ti iiihi iff ine inrirer, jAniiKas uur, .mo.. Qr Kniisns Cltj. Knn.? 0. It hat Is the mnvlmum part of life Income tint IS a ipnii Minimi pu for reniT 10. Is (lie muRiietlc North Pole a Died point? Jlliaui:in lu ivsa'tuaia wuia j(T A Mnirf' i M Ar'rtriJ Awfn i.f Mlltt. 1. About 60. ConsplruouN military tiplolti la 3 J rKjin iiihi Ewuiu .iirii-M. uumniniMier-UHr riuer 01 inuin. 2. Mnety miles. 3. Klla ringg louiiB. I. Theodore Koonevelt, 5. Secretary of State under McKlnley and ItooM-'l veil, .minor nnu siuiesman. 0. r. T, Harnum. j 7. 4 II. C. 8. Key Wct.1 Is a little farther south than llrowoi-l V1IIC, ACT. 0. Itn)mond Polneare. in in mm otn mi Tnn.nu. in in..... n..UJ vH .v. ... .v.u, .,.,.... . .,.. tunc ... .V-Jl. VHWM tj 1017c Estimated nt J 10,000 In 1013, '.1l A Good Suggestion Editor of "What Do You Knoio"l thlnkut quiz corner an excellent thing to read. It li la ', Itself a sort ot-"up-to-date education" and In- i tcrcstlng. I hope you will continue it ahvari. Do you not think It nn advlsablo nlan also to publish eaoh day answers to tbJe preTlom (lav's questions? I hasten to assure you I 110 not too lazyto look them up. Neither are th questions too dlfllcult but If you don't kno2 somo of them that ends lt 'S Even If one had the time, he could hot flu! 3 certain row of the answers by merely con sulting school books, dictionaries, library books, "wise guvs," or reading the newspaper Also may we, tho readers, submit to )0U nowtj and then questions for our approval! ion might run "shy," you know Would Hko to know particularly If the flrat plan meets with your approval And don't till readers think it a good suggestion? J E T..JII. As a number of correspondents have mad the request, answers to questions will t printed regularly. Questions' from readers will Hiuoiy db consiaereu. Greatest Pennsylvania Altitude J7Hlor of "U'iat Do You Know" What is th M,-huf nltttiiria It. TV.nn.vlmtiljl. nnd If thtr0 n.r Cn.n ...t.nn , U n InnJ ......11 ..., vl.. KAA fftflt , WIIJ OLUID tVIICIC mo IU1IU UUCB ituv w -" - ,s uoovo trio sea level : w iuuui ..- s TUlitt Ifnnli T1ftnr,t Hnlintv. -which riSCfl tO aB: elevation of 3136 feet, is the highest point in tbUl rsinie. 'ine niBiiest point in rionoa i "-i Pleasant. Gadsden County, which is only JUI feet above the sea. Stevenson's Prayer PJtUfnt. nt vKttt nn Vnti Tehran" I heard ai rv.nn m.nlA CX,n.t.nDnna n..nlnc nHIUff 111 fUStl'.! Ing the other night. I cannot remember it UJ nnd I do not know the man who usea enough to feel like asking him for It. Can jros hfitn mA tn flnri iff WATLAND JEJIOBIAIi '-f Perhaps some reader can supply It. Plillnilnlnliln Pprlrvllrnls Editor of "What Do You Know" I made Uf assertion toaay mat mere aro 01 k "".','' i.ji t- -..uii.j i- nv.iin.l.l.u hut wan Ql puted by a man who said that there wajnotai. more than 100, Which Is rlgnw i-u'" Neither. There are 275. Biggest Cathedral KM!,,.- ll,, rn V-mi Vnin" What ! H largest cathedral In the world? I avilj!3 torn mat ine L.ainearai ot ot. juim " r' ,,m now bu)ldlng In New York, will be th;61"" when It It completed. CHURCHMAH m The Cathedral of St. John the Divine Bl one-half of the floor space Inclosed within BVi Peter's, in Rome. It la also exceeded W " by the Cathedrals In Seville ana juiuuu Pnv nf an Ai-mv DAlf-pr iui, j ..Tin.-, n- ir.. irnin"IIOW &Wl the pay of an officer In the American rw fleers? YOMJNTBBB. An American major general receives pOOO year, and an English officer of the " JJSi gets 16326. All American colonel receive g and an Enellsh colonel has a salary r.$ There are similar differences in the oi"J grades, T)a1!n,l.AtMl,a .Editor of "What Da You Know" "fl nuns. ,... n.L.lo. (".. In, . a'l In COnSUU . tionary for the meaning of a palindromle ?Wn Why did you not advise R- T Chew . 'gSBl' u. a. map? - - . Tf T)aq. ...III InnU at h ftdvtcS ftfa". l-l I oj .t--, ' i.i." i. I, J nnt 100k tJ w: wey, ey, the answer is tn the advice quite pi"". Editor of "What Do You Know" Are tM j mans citizens and do tney voter .nrjgLK1 In 1915 there were 2 134 InJi&P w"Jd" 74 OS J Indian Utlzeoa .An Indian ' ""f,7,)t tiona uud baa aesuowd the uu-t"J.rh. V imiuwii ituuitt aaa otmtQjvw ",wsp oi iiuuacut waa na v arjaeuonsu, w,. -- ia tuma and ajuutuad civMLjed doUun incrw frea U.W0 lo 1$S0 to 1 1.0 sr If ' 1