19 ?ffi& 1&W 1 ......... . g . . . . ...... 1 . rUBUC LKDC.CT COMPANY cnim m, at. cchtm, issrs.i . nburtm. ImiUti eM Tjreeesji-erl rWtte S, OoinSi. Jphtibr wnnasss. Ph twittm. . X. x - crssa a. K. Ctn Cheimee. WHAlAsT.4-.b.....- .TMHor JOIIH C. MARTIN.. .Oesteral hUndiittMHT PwMaafcSi Sjtr tit resile l.imlMi nilll4ln, run rjw "." ! Hadelphl. AT'llfTR t&: Bl. ...... .40 Glofre-Bcwocrnt HulMInc - . - - 1-(US -jrtewn 4JUii""a KKWS BDRHAt'Sl Jlcimc. ....Tilers TtulUInf Teeer BvsAC .TV."'. ,'u.IIJln tnutl.t, ....... 33 nu lrnls 1 arand tOBScntrrioN teams r earrter. etx cento r wk. Dr mall. mtMld outshW of PhtlaAslpble. except whyra iemSsn eta U require... na month, twenty Sm ea ono year, three dollars. AU malt enWetltfloria paral'le In adranee. arvrtcs--RubscrlKrs wUhlti address changed Saw. Stve old as well as nw address. BBtU m KAVSVT KtYSTONn, MAI IMS Kr 4Mir9 nil mnmiiilMttmt to Krrnfno Ltietr, IndtptnOtnat Btuart, rhttadtlphki. n at Tim rmt.ipn.rnu roToirtc a StCO.ND-CUSS UilL tunn. THE AVERAhB NBT PAID DAHr CHt CULATtOM 01 TllH EVCNINO I.KDQEn ron snrTnMBKK was tit.oos rMl.J-tplil.. S.l.rJir. Oclsbsr 31, 1916. Marriage may often be a itormy lake, but celibacy it almost alwayt a muddy horstpond, Thomas Love Peacock. If his words wcro chocolate, Sec retary Baker would get greater pleasure tot eating them. Thero Is a legend to tho effect that Mrs. O'Lcary's cow started tho great Chi cago flre. Another O'Leary's bull seems to havo caused somewhat of a conflagration. Ono of tho hardest blows Mr. Hughes has yet given to tho President was contained In his statement that ho would call about him the ablest Cabinet tho country could furnish. Rooms for 1200 Philadelphia Re publicans have been engaged In Wash ington for March 3 nnd 4, This will havo as much effect on tho voting In Novem ber as tho report that the Democrats are betting oven money on 'Wilson. Dean Holmes of the Stato College, who says that 375,000 school teachers are as happy rls tho married women, may be right, but ho doubtless knows of somo school teachers who wou'd willingly say Tcs" If the right man asked them. Hard times will not bo a frequent ocourrenco In Argentina so long as she produces great-hearted Btatcsmon like Doctor Irlgoycn, President of the Repub lic, who has turned his $100,000 salary back Into the treasury. That flno exam ple was set, by tho way, by tho First President of tho United States. Those Philadelphia exporters who refuse to bo bluffed Into withdrawing fhelr support from tho new Philadelphia Sotlth American steamship lino aro show ing tho kind of spirit that will mako tho Delawaro as nearly supremo as a river highway for International trade as It now is as a shipbuilding center. Ho kept us. out, etc., etc., must be amended. Ho iays now we'll have to get Into the next world war. Why? If, after this war, England unjustly assails Ger many, let us say, and all tho rest of Europe pitches in, Just why would wo bavo to take sides? Mr. Wilson told his audience at Shadow Lawn two weeks ajo that America would only fight in a fight that was America's. But much may have happoned In two weeks which oannot be divulged. It Is necessary to be In a fighting mood sometimes. "Unneutral" is a bit strong as a de scription of the action of American ves sels in. saving, tho lives of persons or dered into small boats by submarine commanders off our coast. Lord Bcres ford said the rescues, aiding and abet ting tho Germans, constituted a "shock ing state of affairs." But this shocking state lasted only one day. No ono will complain that American ships wero lucky enough to bo of service in saving noncombatants, Tho U-53 for somo rea son stopped sinking ships, There have been several reports that she has been sunk. Undoubtedly a repetition of hor tactics should draw a statement from this Government that its warships are not to be counted on to supply tho salvage service which nubmcrsiblca cannot pro vide for noncombatants, tratton'B fssttcy, hut rsfrtfw. 'Mexicans on the American side of the border. It there Is "not th slightest political significance ' Im his statement, why mnke it? Mexicans who crtws the Itlo fJramla to plot with bandits south of the river can bo clasil fled as bandits or worso than bandits. Such mon could nl be said to bo "In co operation" with bandits they are ban dits themselves. Tho Ucoroiary meant to Imply American "enemies." If he did not, why warn tho Mexican bandits in the border towns? Why not arrest them or drive them back Into Mexico? It an English Cabinet oflleer wanted to warn England against spies, would ho say "enemies of the Asqulth Government aro in co-operation with Germany"? Not if ho waited to hold his Job. PROPAGANDA, PROPERTY AND PROPS IF A man has somo scheme to revolu tionize tho world, whether it be Blnglo tax, socialism or birth control, his bcllot that he Is tho victim of a p:ot to sup press him grows In proportion to tho un popularity of his message. Tho news papers somehow or'othcr won't hand over to him their first pages. It's all so slm plo to him. Just look at ill Tax the land and not tho buildings, nnd, presto, nil will bo well. Give tho Government the railroads and tho wheat Holds, nnd there you.arei And while you're giving the Government all posslblo power, why, Just lake away some of Its power to stop speeches and tracts on little things like birth control, inciting to riot, etc. There's tho rub. Tho propagandists haven't any tenmwork. Whllo they're putting ono big prop under tho Govern ment they're pulling out another. Yet tho whole mass of their emphatic, pur poses Is lupipod as Radicalism, .whether its parts rcfuto each other or not. On the snmo shelf In tho radical bookshop ypu will find a treatlsa proving that tho home, the family and tho children aro imperiled by property rights, and another proving that tho homo, tho family and tho children nren't good things to -havo, and that divorce nnd nil other decentral izing llbortarlanlsms should havo full play. It recalls tho liberal-minded Duke In Chesterton's play, "Magic." who gave his contribution to the movement to closo tho salbons and tho samo amount to the movement to keep tho saloons open. All radicals do not want to lot things happen. Many of them want thin; stopped. Tho radicals of various now froedom twists talk as If tho good great men of tho world always fight to set something frco. But what most great men havo fought for is to stop some thing. Tho first French Ropubllc. very clearly fought to stop tho monarchy, and whllo It dethroned ono god It pitilessly forced knees to bend to another, Reason. What Is it that is. to bo sot free dirt, dust, greed, smoke, disease, lawless de sires? They'ro freo now. Somo new teachor will worry becauso tho youth are not allowed to read her book on sox and not mind n. bit that a saloon gapes at every corner to let tho youth go as far as they like. About a million men will vote for tho Socialist candidate next month. Yet they talk ns If thoy wcro being suppressed by a conspiracy of silence on the part of tho newspapers. If a million men all used one kind of razor, that razor's sale would grow. Uso Is adver tisement. So Is belief. Tho nmazlng thing Is that tho Socialist vote has not grown more rapidly, slnco Socialists aro so much more enthusiastic about tholr party than tho plncld Democrats and 'Re nubllcans are about" theirs. Tho Bnmo Is true of thoso who wish to propagate daring thoughts about sex becauso they have not the gumption to propagate families. Tho mere fact that they are suppressed Is tho best advertisement they could hope for. Tho point Is that peop!o and wo havo only tho one kind, of peo ple In the only world we know of are not deeply Interested in theso things. They aro even contont to let property mosey along under tho old rules. What peoplo aro Interested In Is the props. Touch the acid of sudden change to the delicate skin of their private lives nnd they cry for laws laws for decency, laws for Justice, laws for religion, laws for their property. We aro all mlserablo bromides and fools, but we nro the only "we" there Is., Tom Daly's Column TltE VlhhAOH rOET Whenever U'l.a Saturday tt tccma thcro arc a JcMo ' Who look Jor thCte remarks of mine to leant tehat' nctct li new, An' ttnee It's Thuredav morrino now 'teat out here In Bt. Lou, I've pot to oc,t a tun tic on an' ruth my poem through. , I'm tUtlno In mv modctl roomStB, the J'tonfer' UVicn suddenly into mv brain thlt fear- tome notion canlcrt: "Buppoaeoh, heaven! what a thought! tnppote It thould Acalt 27ij city has no Chcttmit ttrcct an' hence no new at alll" 1 ttruaale to the telephone. A calm, tccc( voice av, "WellT" An' then Into her pearly, car mv horrid fear I tell. "Bay, listen!" she at length replies, "the fast mall leaves at noon, do If you'vo got some stuff to send you'd better tcrlle it soon, Instead o' icasllil' so much time a-standln' there and gasstn' "It'Tial's fiaff Oh, yes, I know you're queer, but J might say In passln' You ain't the first I ever met; kca often get a guest nut. An' ansiccrln' your question, 'Have we pot a street called Chcstnutf Yjm bet we have Bay! looka here, don't kid me, man, dog-gone UI You're not? An' honest, didn't y' know that thts hotel Is on UT That's what It 1st Why 1 yon lift your window an' look out You'll learn much more about the street fian enn fcfl obout Except (you might not tioflce it) that there's a store qutte handy WTiere pent may purchase candy that is positively dandy." I hurried to the window then, and what she said was true, For there below was Chestnut ttrcet spread out before my view! Bo, when It comes a Baturday, let this In form the few That very much the sort o' fotks that we're accustomed to, Including cute an' pretty girls, are here In old St. Lou; An' even here on Chestnut street, the same old news Is new. Tom Daly, of the Philadelphia Even ino LBnoRn. will bo the principal speaker at the City Club noon dinner today. Ho will deliver a short nddress, entitled "The Confessions of a .Sky . light." William Mnrion needy will render tho Introductory remarks. SL Louis Globo-Dcmocrnt. Wo know it! We'd havo been willing to bet somo reporter or compositor would fall through that "styllte" of Hill Rccdy's. REV. FORREST E. DAGER, of St. Paul's Church, at Broad and Venan go, is an ardent l7aakvaltonlte. His friend and neighbor, II. Lv Dobson, re cently presented him with n set of verses dealing with tho coming of vnrlous folk to the pearly gate, and hero aro three stanzas: Thn came on with eairer countenance ahlntnir. Ilia vigorous atep rinsing 'salnat heaven' wallas No fear In hla eyea nor auitht of replnln 'Tkpi this well-loved pnator of dear old Saint Paul's. With Jubilant amllo he told of tho Plaaaure Which lightened life's burden ant turmoil and nnlae; "Hut bt of them all. the Joy beyond meaaure, Waa Juit to so nahlns with aome of my boya." "Enouehl" cried Saint Teter, with eyea brlshtly glowing In fond recollection of dallies bluet And he threw wide the Date, heaven'a glorlea ahowing "For X my dear friend, waa a flaherman, too. Professor Muenstorberg Informs us hat. "without German Kultur no nation will be able to play a. rolo in tho great drama that is to take place after the war," The war, it seems, is Just one of these little curtain raisers, not great Arama There is entirely too much Im jAli fat this ubiquitous bromide about Wtor tho war," There is not much dif fnc betwoen conditions during; and after a gret war.. Horror, cannot be rung site th stage by pressing the peace but 'ton. Tsn years of our reconstruction was net much better than four years of war, nor much worse. And when it comes to taisia, tns troubls with reconstruction periods la that there is not drama enough, but eolf uiKKnnet tragedies, a riot bar, tarration there Injustice and anlserx eysrywhsws .os a 4ull level. A layer of J3tmn Kaltur. uniformly ap plied to Hhmhh atees sot jsciinsst gpawUlag. Kumaniana will b more. Rumanian than sww, Bilians " &&, after gtv- ? msr uwir n ur taw jmrjtuv - hih. w tHBBlnf QarasajM. PPBMMpHaJF Bachelor (Maid) Bereavements TO RDWAKD Too long my tender heart you've bled; Spoak up my silent, six years steady; Oh, dearest Ed, you're almost wod, And ready Is qulto near to Eddie. IONA HART. TO EUNEST Honest, Ernest, Thou who churnest Female feelings of tho sternest, If my love thou but returnest I don't caro liow quick thou spurnest Bachelor Hall, where thou sojournest. What caro I. how much thou earnest, Or how little. If thou learnest All my visions are in earnest? SALLY. flBV WsWsT BhHsT sfl w" J'P '"WIWBjf JpsB V t sV" rtfttH ha Vb nsssiwqr fern on w MtMft It wwttf MWB that ts Wertmrr heso tvtitjr of an aosMssw bit of Kaesaias of ths AdaaUUstra- WUnr toward Muloo art "to Villa or other bandits to altak on ua before "Rele W" as) Oi t 'as XiWa.1 Mrs sis WHY LAMB IS DEAR , ! ... ! THE woman who pays thirty cents n pound for a log of lamb is moro In terested than the farmers or tho woolen mill owners In tho efforts making in this State to encourage sheep raising. It was agreed at tho meoting In Har rlsburg this week that sheep raising could not prospor until better laws wpro passed for tho protection of tho animals from dogs. If sheep raising cannot prosper, the prlco of lamb ond mutton will continue to rise until only tho rich can afford to eat it. There aro fowor sheop In tho country today than thoro were six yoars ago, though the population has increased 8,000,000 in that time. Tho rapid rise in the value of sheep is due to the Increased demand. In 1890, when the country had only 03.000,000 population, there were 44,300,000 sheep on the farms valued at; about $2.20 a head. Tho population in creased to 02,000.000 in 1910, or nearly fifty per cent, but tho numbor of sheep increased to only 67,C00,000, or less than thirty per cent This tlioitngo in the supply mode the sheep worth M a head. At tho beginning of tho present year the number of sheep had fallen to 49,100,000, worth tS-lS each, while tho estimated population of the country )s 100,000,000, When therfwero 44,300,000 sheep to jtced 8,W,e irtopie lamb waa cheap. When there are 4,IQ0,000 sheep to feed 100, 0,(Xtf peel lamb Is. dear, vary thwe a dec kills a sheep en a PeBssylyaata. farm or on a farm la any uf tfc :sfstojw JKats whr W.wlif of jyWtf to wtfeateBj frha weaHa sasll Mhi ' A4M HHssWIMsbI IMflsfcUsW Intf T nil wfr wool 'wttab mmm olatntar. But th. ,rft ot u4 an, HMre deeply InUieeted In, cheaper meat, The Bt&U Department- of Agriculture will have the aaotinaent of tho whole Omb inoawoaKfc fcahina it In IU afforta to pro- tot Bo mnmV rtummrm u. u wm "I ALWAYS SAID THAT REPUBLICAN TICKET WAS A FROST!1' ;rn ;l&isli8lj:; BUS PP ,til il .f aiii f llMsVilHllHlllfflw BvrfB!snsssssWKiDMsssssffissi fclfbrQ!Jii'& wMmmMuyfmi mssssm i.u.L.r--'.3;ii. r.'Hr-?n?r iiGiwisBsBSBSasKSBi f -. "oui i riHs la 'uwwwi ,i h ., -i uijc. ? . 'ij-t'tiwiii.' & i li'ifiw I'lk'i'iOTir. unasHPsassanssv wi. m v i isKMa wj riiL-A ys-itr-" i Jtrj r. : m '" 4 .11 '-l:il-,' ',,u, ' the Northeast Cor .) KhM( Stair xix r O'V1, look d0wn u, u7,lttu quicks ' V"" 'Wrnl ! It's hard to do the Terr bwt , My mnthtra ntM is. . a And A-i.'"JL l . " unuies seen her curled i ner , But let me grow to Booster ftri And keen mv..i ..jr'cr.Hrea"a 1 r ...,... uuponca rrora the n.S?lIf"K .iB?At?'b'' M authority that arS.", spring. We miv r,nf i,. I "!nM. H oglst, but wo've been sniessinr .J?' thine for sever.) ..rt,.Kue",lnr weeks. f !Sla5:'iL !cJ2?'? a toi the depot tho other day t0 .. to Colonel Sam llmrv ,: " . ' to Oklahoma to hu.t i,n . -.l...,? fectly Unsuspecting territory wltliMe fill YriMt ra1.l,ul..i ... "" air. srVaV; Tn - ' VLU, "?"" ' unusua n "h.u'S riSL " suggested that If 8am were biiet fc?1 Jaws or Indiana nil h. ,. 7. r ,.((! cm tho suit and'they'd be scared u, The Jackson. Mich., Press la for this statement Unable to obtain men to aid v,u. i hnrvoallno VrA tr.." ?,a Ing near Pukwans, 3. D., eniaSfl """ u"r oi me nelghb Kum, wno Bnocxea all of hie grain crops. If Fred hns any more small sraW -that need shocking let him brine vT ami wo ii take 'em for a walk ud Wn i nllA In Man. ai.- m1 . T H "w 1 ..- ... .,., , micro we went s days ago about the time all the mm hood girls were out for an tT yjfc5:JX:TJjttr f. 'nlnxJuet I "V "'"i ." " Li:.' ca"on?.froS ........,,K uui iiusuuurnicu inenaa. "Is Bally much of a colfarr "Well, 'I don't know that I'd aa'i nil of lmf hiil . - j ..'."' A lr,.B. ... .- . . v i.iuiiiuuu. uuuiuo pave invenM patented a combination bathtub and I This should prove useful. Yet It mi. rather distressing to the careful tri If ho should turn In the water lf. moving hla clothing from the trunk, the other hand, attemnt to bath i. i clothing without turning on the inter. ' GITTELS0N SOLOIST WITH 0RCI Young Vi61inist Proves Claim to Consideration Thfl Orient as a Background ENGLAND NOT YET 'READY FOR PEACE Europe Must Be Freed from the Menace of a Commerce Used as a Pretext for Espionage And tho British Want " Control Of th.e Sea, i By GILBERT VIVIAN SELDES ho A Ghost Tears ago maybe twenty-five I lived In a small town, and that town had its famous character. Ho was very old, he was very rich, had foUBht all through the Civil War and had been a daredevil, cour ageous, but a severe and heartless com mander, 116 lived on raw whisky and little else, but he carried ,hls liquor well, Ills noso was large naturally, and Its size had been increased enormously. Its smooth ness entirely eliminated nnd Its color gor geously enriched by tho drink he had con sumed. His whiskers were gray, rather than white, notwithstanding his great age, and he was proud of their great Bite, and curled and brushed them carefully. Ills eyes wero iindlmmed, though tho lids had sagged a bit under his enormous eyebrows, ills hat was always a large gray felt, tilted a bit; his collar low, and his tlo of the flowing sort commonly worn by .artists, His frock coat was always with him and always open, showing his white waistcoat; his trousers always uncrossed, always full and always a black and white check. He had no family, living alone except for his housekeeper, who was generally supposed to bo no better than she should bethough I am Inclined to think the matter unwar ranted scandal. He drove two horses, so old that we were told they had been In the war with him. as had his ncgrq coachman. It was said that at each election he led the darky to the polls and made him vote the utrnlcht Itepubllcan ticket at tho point of a pistol. but I think that must have been a boy's tale, We were terribly afraid of him. We always crossed the street when we passed his house, and It we saw him coming we hid behind hedges or ran away. He never did anything to us; perhaps It waa. his flery aspect pr the huge walking stick be carried that frightened us those and the stories' we had heard ot him. He sled, and we all 'stood round the chttrefc api were terribly plesssd that some one had licked the eld raaoal at last. Ana. yesterday I met him walking down Chestnut sqrset. H, H. H, I12H to show th rMiB 1 w'PjIBw' 'ffla wasjw is ... -- 80- MANY people' seem to have t)tat aim a saUttw fW '"htborW man to bVi;eeal tat In Feafta," that the jafc prUhlr fttitW Wr this. Ufa. WRat U a MmT r-Nearaauw luAdHs. Take, the word "Humbug" from a d(o tUmary; hreatha Into it the hraath of lifer Viva U a suit of clothes, a soft felt ha a eaaa. also paahace ofe. teftiM.. i 9HHnaaFN? . "mrr - LONDON, Oct. 13. The 'fact that Eng land will not be able to throttle dermany after tho war Is one of the most compelling reasons for continuing the war until that process will be unnecessary, T am balked by tho fact that tho men In England who say the most Important things are the men whoso names must not bo given. But, even If tho following were not said by a man widely known ns a scholar arid historian, and now mnklng a fine name for himself In another Held, It would be worth thinking about. We wero talking about a "war after the war" when he said: "It's all rubbish. There has never been a peace in Europe which was not a peace. When this peace comes the war will not be continued. That is why it must mean some thing when pence does come. Germany will have to see that England was not trying to encircle her' with enemies. And the rest of Europe must be free of the menace of a commerce which Is only a pretext for In terference and espionage, and must be freo of the threat of militarism, That Is all. As for war after the war, it Is a contra diction in terms. It Blmply won't happen." He went so far as to believe that thero would not even be a reform of the present system or Tree trade. How about tho man In the street? To bo sure, he couldn't insist with any effect on peace being made today, but If he wanted It badly enough he could give the Minister for War and the Secretary for State and nil the other "guns" a very unpleasant quarter of an hour. The truth Is that he doesn't count beyond ten. The man who counts Is the man at the front, and by a paradox which Isn't so strange as It sounds, the man who counts Is the moat unaccountable per son In .England today. He doesn't talk about war as a whole. He talks, about his little bit. But If there Is one thing sure, it Is that he wants to see It through. If he has children, or younger brohcrs, or friends not in service now, he wants, pas sionately and fiercely, that this thing shall not come to them. He will be the greatest force for world peace for a generation to come. FOn PEACE THAT WILIj LAST There are others who are not to be for gotten. What do they think who lost their nearest loved or their familiar friends, their closest ties with life,' since the war began? It must be remembered that the number has grown disproportionately since July, 'What they think Is certain to be Bad. nut It Is not necessarily, a factor for peace, in many cases tnere is resentment, In many such a. numbness of feeling that thore la no thought ot tho war at all, Hut the inspiring thing can be found, for ex ample, in the letters written by simple folk to the nurses who have tho sorrowful duty ot announcing a son's death. Simple folk who h4ve not been Jingoes, who are not Intereatjed In foregn trade, who havo never heard of the balance of power. They are not putting pretentious notices In the Times. They have nothing to hope for as consolation, Hut they write that they can bear their loss because they know that it means peace In-the end which shall last. It Is not to tho British empire that they give their sons, but to the world. In a fine way they, too, are thinking of the bal ance In the, ledger book. They have put in so much of a priceless store. They 'know that they will never get It back, Hut they know tnat wnen tne dooks are made up there will be something priceless on the other side. nut lii-hlnd thla Acaulaoaanca. which passes beyond patriotism, there is a feeling of connoenoe wmen caunui aw uvt'rciiinai- ad, It is not trust In Mr Dewcias Halg, nor in the fleet, nor in the man en land or on sea, but trust In the faetoHes which sre all over England, pn which the Ministry of Mdnltlons spend J6,e0,M a day, whloh are not only kplng pace with the expend)' Ure.on the Pontine, but aK actually laying ly a surplus and wndlatf munitions to Brlt alja's Allies. It l set th amount, nor Is K the number; wMoh imwasee the Briton. H hi the taat. tWM th w has at Ust oetne U a at wham ftttliif genius can, kaput, Ipto lT Re hMaT this Job. W known It for centuries, la which he built up tfcs solid tradition of an industrial and an urineer)ng country. Not Wellington but SShenson ls winning the war, "And l- tknusrn the people f Oreat Britain Ufk nbOMt the victor of Waterloo, taey know that they owe their ealwnyen to tne man reausaa tnat wstajr janaw m tiurnaa H$yhat7 Do You Know? homo. Ho has heard that the French couldn't understand why ho was so slow getting to tho work In hand. Now he Is going te make good his reputation. . We nro Aja tho habit of picturing Eng land either as a stolid farmer or as a bull dog. Wo lalk of the bulldog's grip. But when wo seo It in action wo hardly recog nize It. , This is a proud bulldog. He flew at tho invader nnd took a hold which was nearly shaken off at Mons. .Many times later hjs pip relaxed a bit nnd the gray clad leg nlmost was snatched nway from his Jaws, Onco. at the Dardanelles, there was a terrifying moment when the bulldog seemed to be kicked unconscious. Those tilings nro not forgotten. If there are to no some vlclbUs snaps, some added worry ing of tho Invader, It will not bo hard to seo the reason why. A TWENTY-ONE-INCII QUNT "We havo a. twenty-one-inch gun with a projectile weighing one ton, and standing six feet high," said a man who has prob ably never been In n munition factory in his life. I did not ask hltn how he knew. Every body In England knows a great many things which no one Is supposed to know, and most of It Isn't so. What I asked was, "Why flro that gun If It Isn't absolutely necessary?" He threw mo a fantastlo pic ture of a Zeppelin, brought down two days before near London. "It'll stop this,, for ever,". he said, and' he meant It. You can hardly talk peace ngalmit the noise of Zep pelin bombs. You couldn't read n peace speech by the light of tho antl-Zepp sky sweepers. The saddest mix-up In psychology so far fs tho Herman belief that sho can terrify England Into making peace. All of the things mentioned so far, tho desire to take nway Germany's power for peace or war, the determination to restore England to her former rank nnd prestige, the stirring of England's power and her pride, the Question of the moral and mn- terlal expense book, tho belief that tho war will actually end with a real peace and the commence in j-.ngiana s new methods of warfare, are behind the Cabinet, and the Cabinet Is lucky because It wants certain things which It cannot get without Ger many not oply defeated, but brought to her senses by a good long look in tho face of annihilation. The things I havo mentioned, are none of them olllclal. They are what Drltons aro deeply thinking and quite freely saying, In many cases. They are making It smooth sailing for the rulers ot the En tente's destiny. They nre making-It likely that the terms of ponce will be interesting, CONTROL OP THE SEA The only things England wants, apart from the doslres bf her Allies, are peace and tho sea. Sho wants few crises and no wars. She wants peace to settle domestic affairs and peace to restore her shattered industrial system, (Not physically shattered, nor even weakened. Out dislocated.) And she wants the sea because, from this time on, her em pire is going to be something much more real than it has been in the past, and the sea is her traffic lane, from one dominion to another. It la not slmnlv a. nucmtlnn nt blockading England, or cutting off her wheat supply, ii is n question or a tnreat ever being made against the unity of the em pire. The sea must bo England's. Just bow that is going to be. expressed In the treaty of peace does not matter. But If the war ends with England top dog, it will be clearly understood that she was not beaten in the Jutland battler and hai no Intention ot being beaten. And the sea Is esfentlally the home of a defensive arm,' hot aggres sive. - It Is a long way home, this ofifetng Germany on land to teach her that she ean-f not have the sea. but H has to he dons. What guarantees JOmhahd will give her Al lies and the, neutrals who go :down lib the sea in ships that she will not hat tyw Mr for unfair and vneteaa purges sb, U1 he seen. She has tradition and rewitlens In whtoh the Unite Wntes Is enr -. oemed. L ut bar Allies are ton gtasetui to Mm prithih aentfjuit now $ "arnsWii H the laat degree a, treenem. - - ; i i '' ii pi UT Wjuo Actsmv TAiWAJtt . During Mr. WUsno's neUtioal aoatro) of the national Democrtlo parry there has not been' the slightest evident that he sought to control the power ot Twart. Sulllven or lammaoy. In tact, hi Indiana practically all th 'national patrenaga was thrown to the Taggsrt machine. a. Wil son OMKje It clear In bis Io4tUWnUS po lltioal speech that he was M wen WMIKal WJpuerlM ot etntral Mtrtnt will be oaaieertd .tfi'tMa column. Ten oucjtfon. the anatcert to UMcn every icelMnormra perton ansuld Know, or aket daliv. . QUIZ 1. What waa the orlaln of the expreialon "Mrlet nrrmintablllty" In American pol ttlca and illslomacrT 2. It la reported that the aearctlr of Iridium la beroralns n aerloua proposition. What are IU iiaea? S. What la the "one-term plank"? ' A. What are "rack renta"T S. What la (he rncklns of' wine? S. Alinut lintv tntili rnnt ! nftil ilftllr In a larre office hultdlne, aay. of fifteen eto rleaT On n lurce ocean lncr? 7. What has been the' chief fauna of the vlr-j tual eitlnctlon of (he buffalo, encroach ment on fcedlnc crounda or alaufbterT 8. What la mead? 0. What la a koralwad? 10. What Is' a nominal price? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1, Dootlecslnrs Illicit sale of liquor In no licence territory I In primitive communi ties bottles hare been concealed In Ions boota. S. Electoral Toles are onlr split when the toI la terr elosei certain electoral . candi dates are unpopular with a few hundred eltliens. nnd their failure to tote for them mar yield one or two electoral votes to the opposition. S. Esyptlan fellahs: peasants, virtually aerfa. 4. TrlumTlrate! a tovcrnment controlled - by three men. B, mountain alckneaai caused by rarefied air nt altitudes. 0. Elector of Hanover and of other States! a Clerman prince who waa entitled to aharo In the election of Kmperor. 7. Pant-American Unlont Its purpose la to bind the repuhllca of the Western Hemisphere tosethrr In amity and commerce. , 5. Moonllditersl perpetrators of outrares on Irish tenant. 0. Dred Kcott case! Bcott. a alaTe,k sned for his freedom because his master had taken him to free anlli Nupreme Coart decided no hesro could lirlns suit and that the Missouri Compromise had been unconstitutional. Oklahoma has 117,000 ot the S00.O0O Indiana. 10, Bond Dealers C. Ij. a. As for "the way bond dealers get In on the ground floor to make a profit when they resell bonds," syndicates are usually formed by bankers, who take all the bonds from a corporation and guarantee to pay the Issuers a certain amount. Then they take the-lssue over and figure their profit and fix a prlco at which It Is sold to the public. Hankers who engage In these transactions gain 'recognition through hav ing earned the confidence ot the; public and of other business 'men. Every undertaking requires good character and known ability, and the same rule applies to theso transac tions. A person whom you describe as hav ing limited capital could buy the. bonds and sell them agaln It he was nbta to do so. If he acquires enough capital to become a broker he can acquire recognition In prder to deal In bonds orily through gaining pub lic confidence, Information which you seek on this matter should be available at the offices of reputable brokers, Information about bond Issues about to bo placed on the market almost always appears In the news papers and notices are posted In brokers' offices. HAD ENOUGH OF "WILSON When the question of national leader ship came before the country four- years ago the. Dally News strongly advised the Democratic party to make Woodrow WIJ son Its candidate tor President. The' argu ments persistently advanced on his behalf by this, newspaper are known to have con tributed in no Inconsiderable degree to Mr, Wilson's nomination by the Baltimore con vention. In she succeeding campaign the 'Dally News lieartlly supported Mr, Wilson's .011 dldacjr Many of his actions as, rreeident have received Its full, approval,. However, certain characteristics ot this remarkable Chief Bxeeutlve of the nation, obataoterie ties elearly revealed by hla cKttolal oaursa, have led him Into actions that appear te the Dally News subversive of nonular mv. ernment and even of the foundations of puttito oraer aim amieiy. Therefore, K believes that the interest of the -republic require the retirement of Mr. Wilson from -the presMeaey at, the enl ot hi present term gf'onVn. Mr V&M If a soheterir eatist who Man U thing, teg personal sUs4ar4s wMaa ajrWMsa to no moeliaeaUons other than tlMM resulting frees ate coonrrned policy m osjortunlanv "Do the easiest thing ana make a virtue of it,;' 'might be um accept en skoho "( inui nVnantly plausible Prtaldent Chicago '&.' " AAiTpERCWALbwyx, Near that most of us havo egroytad the , there are canals on tuts ess wan: It is pleasant to be able to con Mr. Stokowskl In a double way for Ms 1 cert'ln the Academy yesterday, for tk I gram was balanced with exquisite 1 nnd variegated with a scholarly contrasts. Besides, It was a coiwert! which the orchestra's playing la sh ' instances measured up to the demises 1 the composers. That ts a rarity. When K I added that a young virtuoso of quality was the sololsU the reader Justly conclude that it was a notW alon. in it dullness nan no part. The season before last Frank xfttfc played in the same building In'vrWehJ appeared yesterday. Ho was thes al ing youngster, showing In his work training and giving his auditors hope, I appreciation of sentiment and his s put a curb on It before It became 1 taltty, that here was a violinist whe j day would "arrive." That he has ' Is no longer a matter of debate. precocious and clever "wunderklna" h grown to the height of an imports J subtle artist. He has a luscious lessteej Itv trinf ta Infromient PTPnt with taakj pf players; his bowing and flngerW'il sure and delicate, and the lrloka',1'! craft double-stopping and ths ! with him a book well memorliesl essentially a romantic violinist, ana who realized this must have woadst4 1 he chose such a substantial, often-heaes 1 certo ns the Brahms InD, pis slnftej ing. But ho came through It trailing of glory, and rousing In that great' 1 the elation of local nrlde which eiortsul cule when voiced In the rural prejs. which, after all Is so human an His instrument either was not In tht-J possible form, or his staccato Is a labored, for first Impressions were setj But when he extracted from th,nret moving sadness and the pure m M.vlfr mmrt nn nil with r cadenza, faultlessly done, It wariwt 1 that every one present was glad him a Fhiladelnhlan and a man ot I It has been said that a violinist. 1 and is endured, as much through,! sonallty as his art. so Mr. UltteM tlon should ba safe. He Is free fectation and, unless ho falls Into thti of being always "most musical, most 1 choly," ho will remain so. we sh to hear htm Dlay the big Tsch concerto, for he has an excellent tlon of the soloist's place; ns obtrude or star" himself at the of orchestral unity, nnd he was ' by support of the finest from Mr.' skis men. Their playing through the aft cmiallv inanlrltlno-. Thla writer 1 few of the Orchestra's concerts of, I ton venra. Ha has. never heard I sonnel to better advantage than t J The old raggedness In tne nrssai K-ln.- y-mAIit i thars fa IndlVldllSa coherence In all Its divisions. as all. Its old dramatic sense IS richer than ever. In the "Anaere ture, cheery nnd bubbling snatch, 1 this el.m.nl nt nlftorlal fltnSM I well, atoning for what to some is I or appropriateness in mo uiw, "Scheherasado" suite, which .took nf if nvmnhnnv. Mr. HtOKOWSKI what he has often made so well.'. gorgeous score, laden wjtn ine nnH tinrtinrln clamor of the afmii nil h maelo of SPtcy 1 breathing lands ; from It came thej tumult of tne sea ano '"."". vninr nt vouna rjrlnces. and the 1 seductiveness of young Dr,n?ff,ll a Tevei oi, rnymo, . ""j and taste. It summoncu vr ,nn1 otni-Ull ffhnttCtf. ' That is how Mr, 3tokowskl pk.fi ' Korsakow, T OLLIE'S .CREDULITY "I believe that Ohio will giro majority of lW.eou." ys -"-j bf XentneKy. we iruat "" of erenumy wilt not result is oo . uiaiiB, at that famous .1 nrlainer" swindle. Boston Irxi OLD HOUSES pbafA bm a-hosts In all old Who Jennie waver . Them are kwara in oka heueee Wka never eeaae "-.. im ua sasathera rocking la Om ejs-jnhers sbove. Thnre nre W of ! " A ana inner evvry ?-, A-ewarm about the sitting Acramble on ths stair, - ! Ana where the Hre shines Y ku w InsrlA lUMlKa Bit eld ladles with their snlltl And grsnatsthere " and whan vou leave sn old Y.u may think that . tat the cheaaf se
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers