PiWlWWIP8' ?V Ss!p!rpi &ri -f Vi'' 5 " ' -- -r!' 10 EVEfrlffff UEPaSB PHPADEHPHtA:, TUESDAY. 'APBIIi IX T910. xw rwwwii"iiisig i I tUULld LEOGEtt COMPANY oxnVs H. k. cuims, riB!. ChsrtfB.tudlngltm,Vic6Pre9iant John C. Mwtln, wretsry nrt Treasurer; ThUlp S. Collins, John B. jwm,Uiw, Directors. x EOtTOnrAt. BOAIIDI . Cnvr II. It CtxTis, Chairman. I. Tt. WIIAIjBY 1 1 , ,j . i .i.Tltor jfOHrf.CMAnTIN. ..,.,. .general Bualnsss Msntgtr Published dutlf (it rrfiua Lttnn BulMlnr, Independence Bqaafe, Philadelphia. tmnm CuSTlfc..n.n,it3road nnd Chestnut Streets AMMKtio Crti.i.. rYs-tnton BuUilna New "VosK.. ........... ,,,200 Metropolitan Tower IKTotT. ...... ..... .1.823 Ford Rulldlrit T IiOCU... ......... .409 Gloftc-Uemeernt llullrtlnc CHtcUoo.......... ....... .....1202 Xrltmns Building , kews Btmruust WmttlKiTOK tlonmui.... Tilsit Building Kmr yosie BcsBttJ........ The Ttmts Bulldln Basils BCHMC.... ,,,,,,..., ...00 Krl!rlclistrs8.? JrfJKMiit Hiiukiu. ............. Mnrconl House, Btrand FAUt Beano, ..... ,. ,.... 32 Buo Louis la Grand . BynscniPTioH tehms By carrier, six cents per week:. By rall, postratI erctstde of Philadelphia, except where foreign posts; J required, ono month, twenty-five emits) one. year, three dollars. All mall aubsorlptlons payabls in advance. Nortes Subscribers -wishing address changed; must give old as well as now address. BEtt. 1000 WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN J009 - - ? ' AMrtts oil communications to Evening Ltigcr, tndcptndencG Square, rMladclfhta. t. -rirai i i - i i , , ) fcJntBtOjiTiriBfninrEtriiiA rosTomcs as second- L1SS JtAlt. 1UTTEB. TUB AVfcrtAClB NET PAID DAILY CmCUIA- TIOM OP Tlin EVEN1KO LEDOEB FOB MAItCH WAS 110,121. PHILADELPHIA. TUWDAY, AH1IL 11, 1916. What the superior man seeks is in htmsclf; tchat tho ordinary man seeks is in others. Confucius. If wo continuo to drlvo Villa southward, first, thing wo know ho'U bo Invading our territory again In tho Canal Zone. "Buy, Ship, Soil via Philadelphia" may not bo bo high sounding as "Mnneto Philadelphia," but It means business Just tho samo. An imitation Burbnnk now announces an Improved Georgia watermelon. But how Is It posslblo to lmprovo a Georgia watermelon? How can wo expect to capturo Villa while such eminent "getters" ns Roosevelt, Bryan and 'William A. Sunday aro In tho Hat of slackers? "Wouldn't tho Republicans in Congress bo a llttlo moro than human If they forboro to poke fun at tho Democrats for taking sugar oft tho free list? A thirty-day truce has bcon signed In China. At tho end of that tlmo tho govern mental "now you sco it, now you don't" will begin all over again. Tho Russian Government's reported order for 10,000,000 brass rings makes us wonder whother they think this uffalr they havo on their hands Is a war or a morry-go-round. Doctor "Walto has discovered that thoro Is a difference between confessing guilt to tho newspapers of Now York and pleading guilty in tho courts of tho same State. He decided not to. It will bo quito a disappointment to those who expect tho war to end by exhaustion of men to learn that only 681,437 Germans havo been killed, according to British -sources of information. ler Governor Stuart comes back from giles without a Roosevcltlan dis covery of new and strango birds. Ho may find Pennsylvania a moro fertile field for re search In this line Just now. Baron Astor of I lever has been assessed $280,000 in addition to the $1,450,000 ho has already paid the British Government. It will bo recalled that Baron Astor of Hever left this country and became an Englishman of hla own free will. "Not tho least terrifying page for the Eng lish to read in "Hlndenburg's March into Lon don," tho latest German book of prophetlo fiction, Is that which says the Invaders will treat the conquered Islanders with true Ger man benevolence. That non-magnetic ship on which some Car negie Investigators have circumnavigated the globe will not be In demand by candidates for the presidency this year. They want something which will bo drawn Irresistibly by the magnet in Washington. There Is more Joy among English inventors oyer tho capture of that new Fokker plane, Germany's latest contribution to aerial eel ence, than over tho loss of a hundred ma .chines with their pilots. Men and machines are cheap compared with ideas. My! TVon't old Robert W. Chambers be mad when he hears about Meredith Nichol son's appointment as Assistant Secretary of "War? As a writer of best sellers air, Cham bers Is vastly superior to Mr. Nicholson. ' He has not, however, progressed with the years, for his early work alone entitles him to con sideration as a serious writer or thinker. Mr, Nicholson, after years of money-makers, at lost attempted a novel of dally life In the Middle "West, and wrote entertainingly on socla) an literary problems. As for tho "Wap Oftlee, that is entirely another matter, Mr. Chambers has written the better stories of lave and arms and the man. The decision pf the Storthing to amend the law so that women will have the right to sit la the Norwegian Council of State, or Cab inet, a another step forward In tho hard earned advance of the suffragists. No new group. Is thus added to tho ranks of women kwho fifive the vote, but every victory of this hind, no matter whore It Is gained, will havo its effect In this and every other country in L- ."which equal suffrage rights are not granted to Bn women. Suffrage is Jn the realm, of Inter- jjcuioijiji potmes it js never merely a local istnie, la this campaign an argument that holds good Jn Norway, or China, or TJmbuc oo, cfm be used with equal effect in Massa chusetts, Iowa or Pennsylvania, Tha battle about Verdun began tthl3 week with what appears. In the ordinary strategy of vmr, a. serious setback for the French. The evacuation pf a salient which bent the enemy's line and which they had beet holding at; tremendous cost was certainly unpalatable to. ihfl Srpnc! pommand, and the efforts to ex plain t by French critics are, not entirely satls .fitetery, A bitter retort cama Jn the swiftly f ol Jowtaf news of a recoup and of another stum f)UttS bios put In the way of the advancing CJcrnwns. The Eethlncourt salient on, the W at the Meuse was a sharp angle on both n-l3, rf which the Hermans 'un4 heavily. i'Tfer ihty tfouid crush in the sides or sur. re- wtf b ofn tack of tM Pf ! tb FrHsh. , .t4w. Imme Hman artiyej-? po t, IffCS. Mi fcjf lUiifri vh to attade, Star t&u German wers repulsed. But It Is not to be supposed that cither tho withdrawn! from Bethlncourt or the repulse of tha Invaders which followed can havo nny vital effect on the entire battle. Both wero nibbles, and the French system of defense has been since February 21 to allow such nibbles a tem porary satisfaction. Each Gorman advance Is discounted by tho murderous artillery which still command? overy position leading to tho city of Verdun. When those positions havo fallen tho German oblectlve will bo gained, and not till then. Whother they will fall before another action elsewhere on tho front Is propared Is tho question which tho German high command must determine. UNDEMOCRATIC EDUCATION Tho sehoothnuse Is betnjr swept clean. Some rnbbMi Is itolnir out. Home preelons stun Is lielnu destroyed. In the change the polltlrnl nnrposo of American education Is belna- forotlen. A system of etlncntton ,1s forethadovreil In these reforms which will create a class distinction between mechanics nnd cultured persons. It Is ttnilemocrntlo nnd un-Ameilcan and nnnecessnry, THE common, domestic broom is an lnstru m'ont for tho sweeping together nnd, with tho help of a dustpan, for tho disposal of rubbish. No housewife, howovor pleased sho may bo with a now broom, fancies that It Is Just tho thing for smashing pictures, tearing down drnperlos, or gouging tho oyos out of tho Apollo Bolvedero In tho front parlor. Not In tho wildest flights of her fancy does she imagino that sho will go riding on tho broom over tho housetops. Tho excluslvo reforming broom Is a horso of another color. On It serious thinkers can rldo to Armageddon and remako tho world. Tho latest Is tho schoolhouso vacuum cleaner, highly sclontlllc, guaranteed. 11 comes under tho patronngo of tho Rockefeller Foundation and tho Inventor Is Dr. Abraham Flexnor. A llttlo resentment has beon manifested on ac count of tho very superiority of tho mechan ism. But with tho abundant enthusiasm of good Americans tho Flexnor plan has been halted ns tho salvation of tho educational problem. It ought to bo fairly nppatcnt, aftor nearly a century of experiment, that the Informing reason for tho American system of education Is not that tt makes scholars, nor proficient technical experts, nor business men, but simply good citizens. Tho public school is In actual fact tho basis of our political sys tem because that system presupposes the in telligence of every citizen. It is also tho fundamental of our social system, becauso it offers a democratic springboard, from which overy man may start, to finish his course In necordanco with his abilities and desires. Wo pay a heavy price for that equality of opportunity, for tho universal basis of our existence. It Is true that boys who will grow up to deal in bricks aro taught a great deal about tho beauty of Parian marble. It is' true that you can span tho Delaware with a suspension bridge even if you do not know that Washington! ever crossed that stream. But It is equally true that the man who has looked on u picturo of the Parthenon will build a bettor house, though It bo of brick. And It is more Important that tho man who builds tho brltlgo will vote moro honestly and more Intelligently If ho knows why Wash ington once Rtood, with hopo and resolution in his heart, where his brldgo now stands. Tho loss of cultural studies, of the habits and traditions of civilization, would bo deso lating to American life, but It would not ap proximate tho loss to American democracy. No resourceful person, giftod with a senso of history, honestly can hopo to cling to our present elementary nnd secondary systems of education, in nil' their details, forever. No ono questions the value of criticism and the benefits of change. But it Is seriously a question for tho American people to deter mine whether they havo not been led natray, Into methods and programs foreign to their very life. Has not something crept in which will corrupt the entire spirit of a democratic country? Let no man bo docelved. If the modern school Is to put Its chief emphasis on science; If actual contacts and practical tests are to be tho burden of our education, there will inevitably grow up a class which will be dis tinct in its habits of mind, superior in Its ability to think, becauso It will cherish and preserve wh.it others discard. Behind every plan for "bringing tho school Into closer con tact with life" by which wo mean "moro Immedlato relutlons with commorco and In dustry and business" thero lurks tho danger of class distinctions. You cannot hold tho boy's face to the grindstone of mean fact and expect tho man to walk, head erect, In the presence of great Ideas. You cannot train a man to be a mechanic, giving him no ink ling of other things beyond, giving him no training in the processes of thought, and ex pect him to sit In counsel with the mastering Intelligence of men accustomed to the use of the mind. It might be thought that there Is a con spiracy afoot to separate In tha United States the workers and the masters. If there is, It is not the fault of our pseudo-aristocrats. It is the fault of our practical men, who are so bent on immediate results, on the cash In hand, that they are. forcing another, and a superior, education on those who see greater things see tho future of America as a great International power, see education as a prepa ration not for business, but for life. The old system of education gives every citizen at least a chance to Join this class of supermen. The new forbids It. It may sound like a vague abstraction, but the situation Is the most seri ous problem In the social existence of the United States. RUBBING IT IN THE events of the past weeks have mado a certain poncjuston inescapable. It Is that Germany's U-boat campaign is what It 13 In contempt and defiance pf the United States. The propf pf that has been somewhat dla torted. by conflicting accounts, but essentially it remains sound. When Germany temporarily gave up her submarine activity in deference to the views of this country, critics of tha Ad ministration gave t out hat Germany, ha4 yielded only because England had destroyed all the German submarines. Now we know that England did nothing of the sort and is incapable of protecting her commerce from whatever U-boats Germany has built or may build. The resumption of torpedoing vessels with out warning now is a direct answer to the United States, Germany found that she could not do without that weapon, not even for us. Her pledges are waste paper and her denials, as in the Sussex case, sound strangely un convincing from her lips. Day by day tha danger to this country and to every neutral country increases. It to clear now that tha German menace to the rights of noncorabat, iBta pn tha seas pannot pa met; by reason pp justice. It is for the Government of tins gouatry to aaviaacoteggya, Tom Daly's Column ALCOHAUIj. Wlno la n mocker and that's all And wlno Is mado of alcohaul So Alcohaul Is Just a sin Unless to wash tho baby In Or in tho perkolater use To mako tho coffeo that It brows And whiskey, too, Is made of it And so no whlskoy can bo fit To drink and put Inside of you If to yourself you would bo truo For alcohaul will make you wild And foolish with your soul defiled. And what la moro It makes your breath Ltko something that Is stalo In death! THM New York Sun, snys It. If. If., editorially laments movlng-plcturo English and gives theso horrible examples: "Neither mother nor I wcro frco to net as we doBlred." "I didn't expect to find her hero. 1 only camo to sco you." "Thero Is no man In alt the world as good ns you." All of which makes us wonder what the Sun would say had It seen a supposedly very fine movie, In which a (or nn) European prince travel ing In this country receives this, telegram: "Tho King Is seriously 111. Return at onoo. "Sec to King." Tim VXDYIXO PAST I've kissed a hundred girls since von, Ohloc, I've sicorn to many I'd bo true, Ohloc; Hut the kiss that 1 remember Was our oivn make, lalt December, And your Utile nose was blue, Ohloct Your kiss vHU haunt me when I'm old, Ghloc, Altho' your hair's no longer gold, Chloe; For I never shall forget (Nat, I dream I feci it yet), Ooshl your Uttte nose was cold, Ohloat WILI, LOU. LOST A lnther nnllet. with Arthur Gray burnt on tho back. Kindly return, etc. Classified Ad. Sir: I'm suro you'll sympathize .with Mr. Gray. It's bad enough to get lost, but to bo burnt on the back Is sort of henptng conln of fire; still If Mr. Gray means that ho and tho wallot got lost together, thero's samo compensation In that. McManus. The Anagram Contest O, I All SUCURB AND THE FITTEST Of all tho nations that are; They pllo up their armaments higher And drown In the carnage of war; Rut nature intrenched me In oceans And Bet mo from rivals afar; My hosts nre tho hearts of my people And they shall defend mo from scar; My arms nre my master mechanics. Who will keep mo as fair as a star. O, I AM SECURE AND THE FITTEST Of all of the nations that nre. D. P. F. ANSWERS TO SATURDAY'S Deep In It. I see; call on T. n. Presidential Elec tion. In It near ten years, pet Eastern Penitentiary. To iiulet run Tourniquet. ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S Con T. D., llomus' ally Tom Daly's Column. George Bernard Shaw Says THERE has come Info my hands from a quarter It was not meant to reach a certain address "To the Men and Women of the Irish Race In Amer ica." which Is so typical of tho stuff which gives Its title to this article ("Irish Nonsense About Ireland",) that I feel moved, In tho Interests of my unfortunate countrymen In Ireland, to offer America a pleco of my mind concerning It. As an Irishman I have been familiar with Irish patriotic rhetoric all my life. Personally I have had no ute for It, because I always wanted to get things done and not to let myself go for the satisfaction of my temper and tho encour agement of my already excessive national self conceit. I hae seen It going out of fashion with the greatest relief. When something like an Irish national theatre waB established in Abbey street, Dublin, and a genuine Irish drama began to germinate, I enjoyed the new Irish plays because the heroes always brought down the house by declaring that they were sick of Ireland, by expressing an almost savage boredom at the expense of the old patriots who were usually the fools of the piece when they were not the villains, and, gen erally, by damning the romantlo Old Ireland up hill and down dale In the most exhilarating fashion. In New York Times. IT VEYER COULD HAPPEN. "As pretty as her picture," she By ail her friends is known; And yet, of course, she couldn't be As pretty as her oxon. Overheard at a Fire O'clock Tea "TVE received 85 per cent, of them already." X "Well, what about the other 85 per cent.?" "He was speaking In some foreign tongue that I couldn't understand at all. Oh, I caught a word here and there, such a 'Deo vojente' of course, I know that was French!" "I'l meet you In a quarter of an hour." "Let's see, that's only 15 minutes, Isn't t?"' Hugh Merr, THE Racquet Club, beyond peradventure, has the most varlecj assprfment pf athletes, active and mosgpack, to be found under ons roof in this or any other city. They have heavy-weights, middle-weights, welter-weights and so on down N tlneat, an4 they havo one who is in a class all by himself. His real monicker doesn'f matter; ha Is known, atl jetlcally as "The Battling BJrdseBd." COY THING, "And hast thou ever loved leforef He asked; "I pray thee, speak!" She pushed. Her sweet eyes sought the floor; fjfte answered.; "3ot this week." A Grouch. Beauti(ul Snoyr She snowdrop pf Spring Fail today frppt the skies. Kind is April to bring The snowdrops of Bpring, An4 from heaven t the thing Is the biggest surprise. The snowdrops of Spring Fall todayNrqm the skies, Anna, Grahan. i ' 5p I wtt tHjv'Vi .jS'&p v-MliwwwtleiU.yVsW ''-' JJ!' ,h',a,.,. .. - , - . - i,v.TA51'wc;;;r .. ' .. UM-tlS "" ' ,.--IV"',HH, . r'jAlI.S-n.111 r-. -- itT. . , .'.V,p'TH' - ... . -' . . . .. ....;,. "i.. ... -..--,-,. . ,-t----.- nub!wiM!n.,. HOLLAND'S H.OLD ON INDEPENDENCE The Little Kingdom, Unlike Belgium, Is Prepared, if Need Be, to Fight Off Both Sides in the Great War at the Samo Time THE rising of Dutch wrath against Ger many over tho sinking of several vessels has divided opinion Into two oxtromo views on tho question, "Will Holland enter tho war?" Ono sldo argues that tho Dutch havo sufforcd nearly as much as tho Belgians, havo as much to fear from Fnn-Gcrmanlc aspira tions, and will naturally taku their placo among tho Allies. Tho other represents Hol land as greedily nursing its German market, so immensely lucrative now nnd under tho economic alliance with Germnny In tho past, and so promising in tho future whether Ger many wins or loses. In a word, the Dutch are represented either ns heroes or as misers. Tho mistake in both cases Is natural, No nation lias developed in such an even balance Insistence upon libeity of tho dle-In-tho-last-dltch typo nnd tho canny clutch on riches. It is truo that the Dutch havo often seemed to need tho stimulus of fear of financial loss to mnko them fight, but this docs not ex plain their unconquerablo tenacity In war. The man who Is all merchant does not fight to tha last ditch. He makes terms. Tho lovo of wealth has given Holland fatty degeneration of tho soul In moro than ono period, but tho best proof of lndcllblo Dutch manhood Is that the llttlo patch of country at the mouth of tho Rhine, composed of mud and silt brought down by the rivers from tho highlands of Gormany through tho centuries, has never yielded Its nationality In tho 200 years of Prussian expansion. Champions of Liberty Tho Dutch aro classed as a Germanic peo ple in the samo sense as tho English are. Racially they are probably closer to tho Eng lish than to tho Germans, If any one still cares to speculato about racial affinities after tho dismal explosion of tho Pnn-Gernianlsts' theory of where "Teuton England's" sympa thies would He. But from Krlesland, tho northern province of the Netherlands, comes our English speech. In Frleslajid today they bay "como here," "go on," "back," "on board." They construct sentences as the English speaking peoples do. They pronounce "bread," "butter," "water" and "cheese," fundamentals on which a man can go a long way without feeling faint, pretty much as wo do. Rut the greatest bond between the English speaking peoples and tho Dutch Is the free Institutions which both have been ready to hold to tho last drop of blood. The great war of the pygmy against tho giant, In which the pygmy won the war against Spain at the height of Spanish power was not a religious war, though the Spanish Inquisition played so Important a part in it. It was a war for local self-government, against "taxation with out representation." Following that the Dutch for 215 years maintained n republic to the loathing of all the autocratic monarehs of Europe. One "William of Orange stopped the Spanish monarchy's menace to Europe In the sixteenth century. Another William of Orango broke the Stuart autocracy In England a century later nnd was at tho barao time King of England and President of the Dutch Re public. Ha formed an alliance which under mined and led to the, defeat of the ambitions of Louis XIV of France, the Kaiser of his day. In no other individual could tho spirit of Dutch national character be studied to better advantage than In the Ufa of AVilllam III, Dutch King of England. For he not only carried personal heroism to the point of lead ing his, troops (he was wounded more than once), but he also freed the activities of tha commercial classes of England, which there after were to govern that country, Effects of Too Much Success In fact, in the JSth century the spreading trade of England robbed! the Dutch of the commercial supremacy they had gained, At tha same time the dulling effects of wealth had their effect on the governing classes, Luxury, extravagance and loose morals pre vailed, Ft, pidgy faces appeared on the canvases pf portrait painters instead of the strong, serious faces of the earlier heroic time, The office of stadtholder, or "president," became hereditary In tha House of Orange and thus paved tha way fpr monarchy, But all this did pot taint the sprt of the people at large. Tha Pqtclj were the first to salute the American flag In 1776, and materially aided the American Revolution with Joans aggre gating 14,OQO,QO0. Four of our original 1? States wero Prat settled by Dutchmen, and tha principles fpr which "Washington fought stirred the sympathy of Holland. Today the Dutch are a fundamentally demo cratic people. They govern themselves. The great point about the so-called "self-control of the Dutch Government' In not getting into the war has been that tbere nQ government could pptke up the people's minds tee them. ! Jwu ' ? . wj g land 6tt-0eKaaarP&oi at IMS that ! They understood clearly At th t!m of Eng. r rn rt in "rn T t T r? 1 r Tr i Tn itfiitii'-f On I If Tr it m ht , NHj j? ? v iiilliH ...-4? J KrH3iBc,K:nT.:Ey'ifluiii .iwm.uiPidsrflsc.xwj Eyrriit-L".ijaruJJWr"nTt.. "4-s.iif.ii.. i .T"w-'r7-'."'.it33iHLjaar33Mi;K.-ir.r,rvE,.j-:r. -t:.,.. . -::- ui.."m-.- ....... , '.,, yilHUII litiia.lt !Z..UZL"ZTr7JMl!J.1 JUg, LTSSr -Woi.-.rB.'Tri'Vl .L.tIU-3T'..a. ... .. r sssssasisssssssm -'isnsffird? v .,,.4j,i.Hj;H-Mwufumufy - STILL DOING BUSINESS AT THE OLD STAND -.! J .v JL-,M..iri,r-" ..si,"'"WXy5.. .UiisjssHWWIS"!,- -wPJSr7. ! - ". gWKSsss,,.. XZCZvr:?ZZ ' .- -, ..... -a:...-,.---, .,.'i-rJ,-Vj'.-iia.l-T!'iM ' .V'"-- - ,- "t,aACjftw - v - '' - "":. .rr. '-ta. ... I. .Ulnf- '...''I g "'- t-?Lw.K .--. -S.fi. 'H-ij frul jut Jl'Vl:w.lV'vft. - .uIr,,' - .r... .!...-.. ,-... ... .. . . ,'ir.'.J.. 1l...i.... ' --'-jr, ii" JN.I ., i ,,d - - . -a in. .-4, . - ,.. ... .... ... ....v, ., U.M.....I..I , .- ...,. rrr - --! -r-.-, ..,, 1 - Vjr-,ss::c had ns much to fear from England us fiom Germany, seeing that tho rlvnlry between Ger many and England was economic. This fear was demonstrated to havo been well founded when, In 1910, the Dutch consldeicd fortifying tho mouth of the Scheldt. This could only bo considered as a defenso against England, nnd tho proposal aroused a storm of wrath In England and Belgium. Tho Dutch had pros pered through their economic alliance with Germany, said tho English, and now they wore oboying Gorman orders to mako tho tlver mouth Impregnable. English newspapers wont so far as to threaten tho Dutch East Indies, tho richest colony In tho world. Long boforo that tho alliance botween England and .Inpan had beon a sourco of uneasiness to Holland, for tho Japanese look with envious oyes upon Java nnd Borneo. "Within tho last fortnight Yusabuio Take koshl, former Minister of Education of Japan, has published an nrticle seriously discussing tho advisability of Jopancso occupation of tho Dutch East Indies. "Wo Japanese," ho says, "must devote our attention to tho islands of tho Pacific. Our licet has. In consequenco of tho war with Ger many, taken possession of Island groups like tho Caroline and Marshall Islands. But theso are mere rocks. Wo cannot be proud of our possessions In tho Pacific until wo havo Java and Sumatra." Such presumption tho Dutch consider tho xllrcct result of the Anglo-Japanese alliance. Prepared Against Both Sides So the Nothertunders have dono what Bel glum did not do prepared defenses against both English and Germans. The chief system of defense, tho Inundation of part of tho coun try, Is not so much a defense against Germany as It Is a plan to make fighting of any kind Imposslblo In that part of the lowlands. Hol land refused to bo a cockpit. And history proved her fears Justified. The suggestions Df a posslblo Allied raid at tho heart of Germany through a sympathetic Netherlands came from English sources. So we have the remarkable spectacle of a llttlo nation with 500,000 men under nrms ready to fight off both sides at once. Splen didly as Belgium has acted, what would not have been tho effect on the history of tho great war If the Belgian guns had been turned simultaneously against Germany and France? Could tho other neutral countries havo resisted bucIi nn appealing situation and withheld their armed support of sucbslncero neutrals? FOR PEACE OR WAR It has long been evident, though the fact has not yet made Its due impression, that In dustrialism Is the modern training school for war or peace. It is there that men are actually thinking of one another lm terms of war or peace. It Is there that they learn to organize for or ngalnst one another. The lockout and the Btrlka are distinctly warlike measures. Arbi tration Is a term of war, the most advanced term looking toward peace, but still presupposing a state of warfare. Co-operation, In some one of Its manifold forms, Is the only distinctive term of peaco. It Is such, not simply because jt Im plies sympathetic action, but because It educates all concerned In "those sobrieties on which democracy must at last rest." Ah we recall how many persons are In the training school of In dustrialism, how early they enter It and how long they remain in It, and how various and how Influential are the experiences through which they pass, we can see how far back the peace movement must reach in its educative work. What can we hope to accomplish In the training of our diplomats for carrying out tha policy of universal peace, if we cannot train our captains of industry, in the ranks both of cap ital and of labor, to think and to act in the terms of peace? William J. Tucker, In the Atlantic. . ANOTHER WAR MYSTERY We observe that the Germans are using liquid fire against the French. What we want to know Is, how do the North Carolina moonshiners man age to 'get the stuff to the Germans through that blockade? Houston Post, A JOKE ON MARK St- Louis, burglars stole a statue of Mark Twain. How Mark would have enjoyed that! Detroit Free Press, NATIONAL POINT OP VIEW Mr, Taft has certainly done more than his share, even as an ex-Presdept, in educating Americans Ih the duty of preparedpesa. New York Sun. i The man who "makes the selling of hats an exercise In transcendental philosophy" may be an anwlng person, but lie Is groping in the rght direction. Taxorga Tribune. The Congress of the UniUd States, at work upon a program oi legislation for preparedness, may read into the dispatches front The Hague a meaning for America as plain as day. The Netherlands s rertYt byt the United States Is not. Cleveland Paln Dealer,. It s fortunate on many accounts that fn th press pf other matters the Japanese war scare has been forgotten. If the war In Europe is tg be credited wtb no ofher service, It has at least distracted American attention from a lot pf Imaginary troubles n tho. Qrlent,i-Dea Mens Register. Mr. Hughes Is in a position In which ha can not directly let the people know what he thinks on tb subjects cpncernlng which a candidate's thoughts ought to be known to the peopI. But if his name is to jro before the Republican cgn,. vsatwn H ought to go pmctdsd by jn announce rowt, wfdOndirecily If m4 be, but with au thority, el what fcf Wmm S youM, do,s CMcas Sribuas, ''- -mm - - . ..-..pa.. ww-rtieflrfSJ' r. ......... vir3vcSSu3s?.. -v- .JJTr-'-:--,"-r -.,j :T-?r-! ' -e-sflr- . . TJV-1C: -r; jJki'jJ". N.ilwg - urt.roi.-fr7 J..nr -i i-mJe. - v-. i -n . .r .. .-a .".z Mn . .. iui..Tuiiw'iii.Trn"riin - - - .i .,-JjJ,Ainr"-.T." ...?r...,i-iijrr r JOwf-v-i" -x:- What Do You Know? Queries of general interest will be answered in this column. Ten questions, tho answers to which every well-Informed person should know, aro asked dally. QUIZ Who Is Wnrren O. Hnrcllnc? I. 2. In whnt Kcnrrul direction from Paris Is Verdun? 3. Whnt three nations took pnrt in the parti tion of Poland? A. Ilns America n "nntlnnnt flower"? IT, llnw many children illd Napoleon I hnve by his two wives? 0. Whnt Is the negro population of thn United State-.? Whnt proportion of this Is In the South? 7. Whnt nre "Mucwamps" nnil whnt Is the origin of tho word? 8. Whnt net of (he popalarp storied the French Itotoliitlnn unil whnt ilnj- Is celebrated In rrnnce to roniiiirmoriite It? D. At nlinut whnt rnte lrn snuml travel? 10. To whnt nation iIoch the Island of Gunm be long? Answers to Yesterday's Questions 1. Dm Id Gnrrlrk, nn KmrIIkIi nrtor.. who was horn In 1717 mill died In 1770. 2. The ronsnllilntlon of the towns In thn county with the city took placo In 181! 1. 3. The I'eiilaiii fonnril nn asHoclatlou In New York In 18fi7 ulth the purpose oif over- thronlnc Kngllsli clomlnntlon In Ireland. I. Jeriisulem. r,. King Alexander nnil Queen Draca of Serliln. 0. Kmplre State, Jersey lllne .State, Illue Hen State. 7. It Is n rlter In Colombia, which hits been considered ns pnrt of u proposed cannl to connect the Atlantlo nnil 1'ncMe Oceans. "I'yrrhlo victory" Is a too costly victory, 8. A the allusion lielug to tlue ilctory of I'jrrlum oer the liomnns. In which ills losses were greutcr thuti hs enemy's. 0. Constantinople. 10, No. Wilson received R,'-'03,O19 witesj Tnft, 3,481,050; ltoosevelt, i,110,307. The majority of all others combined over Wilson una 2,l30,!i0i. Medical Celebrities Editor of "What Do You Know" Can you mention five doctors who were medical celebrities In the world from olden times until the present century who aia widely known and are the best appreciated In medical science? Tell also their nationality. I know only these: BaccclII, Itnllan; Olsen, Swede; Jacoby, American; Barrere, French; Hippocrates, Greek. What was the great est' work of some of tho moderns? P. A. S. HcrophiluB. Greek; Rhazes, Arabian; Leon! cenus, Italian; Fuchs, German; Harvey, English; Hoeiliaave, Dutch. The 10th century was one. of epoch-making discoveries. Laennec Invented the btethoscope, and thereby Instituted a com plete revolution In the methods of physical diag nosis; Vlrchow founded modern cellular pathol ogy; Pasteur, by his studies In fermentation and putrefaction, prepared the way for the germ theory of disease; Lister gave to surgery the antiseptic treatment of wounds. Owen Meredith Editor of "What Do You Know" "Will you kindly tell me tli'e name of the poet who wrote the following lines: "There Is a pleasure born of every pain, The grave of all things hath Its violet." ANON. The line is, "There is a pleasure that la born ot pain." It is from Owen Meredith's "The Wan derer," Book I, Prologue. Where Cents Are Coined Editor of "What Po You Know" I noticed re cently in your column the fctatement that the Philadelphia Mint is the only ope coining cents and "nickels," Although the case for many years, x since 1909 the Denver and San Francisco Mints, at least, have also coined them. I inclose a rubbing of a cent from the Denver Mint, showing the letter D the Denver Mint mark Just below the date. When the mint mark occurs on the "Buffalo nickel" It is Just beneath the words "Five Cents." COLLECTOR. Cost of Stock Exchange Seats Editor of "What Da You Know" Will you kindly Inform me as to the cost of membership in the Stock Exchanges of Baltimore and Cin cinnati, the New Orleans Cotton Exchange and the Philadelphia Stock Exchange? What Is thej record high price for a seat on tho New York Stock Exchange? A. E T, The cost of membership In the Baltimore Ex change Is about ?360Q; Cincinnati, 12300; In the New Orleans Cotton Exchange, 12000, and In tha Philadelphia Stock Exchange, $3900. The high est price paid for a New York Exchange seat was J95.00Q, in 1905 and 1906, JJght-ankled Youth Editor of "What Do You A-nou't Will you please let me know who wrote the line, "Where art thou gone, llghtanke4 Youth V Is it In a poem too lopg for you to publish? M. M. It Is the first Una of "Where Youth Goes," ,by Walter Savaso Landor, Here Is the poem: Where art thou gone, llght-ankled Youth? WJth wings on either shoulder, And smile that pever left thy mouth Until the hours grew colder, Then some one seems to whisper near That thou and I must part; I doubted It, I felt nu fear, No weight uppn the heart. If aught befell t, Love was by And rolled H P again; So If thsra ever was a flgh. 'Twas not a sigh ot ralo, I may not call thea back, but thou Returneth when fhu hand Of gentle Sleep waves o'er my brow His bappy-eresUd wand Then smiling eyes bsnd ever mini, rriien Una once pressed Invite; jA'&s.ifmt w Wt w wi ;'"' j -41 t s'.i :-M 'A -i-, t.' gefe