ij "mfwauwwtf miw'.' vm ::,i-im.Bu.iiJ'mui!-'-" Jihj j M w 10 itttttttgi iUilgeE pinion t.P.nrcr.n company , 'JStttttS II. It CURTIS, ruriiDiNT WirUsXH, Ludlngton Vice Prcriflent j John 1ft. Hisrun,ie:reinry una 'irensurer: i-niup Tls,aTollti B Williams, John J. Spurseon, I", SflHvHy, atrectors ftbrroniAij hoAno CioH K. Ccntu, Chairman. tH. -WllKVBt. ...... . . . EMor ,&ttN C. MAETIK acnerjit Buslncis Manner S. i Poilfune! iIMIt at rtiino il.nnom Tlulldlng. I Independence Square, Philadelphia fawiBii C"rt. ...nronj mid Cluvsinut Street) htfUNttq Citt I'itji 1r.ton nulldlnu J." Tronic. .. 20(1 Metropolitan Tower PartaSf, pill i-orl Hull line: Jfc. JNOOIft...... 400 Olob-h'mprrat llulldln: cmcioo.., i. 1204 rrt&uite uullding NEWS BURIUU8 : sitmorof Bent-Ac... . Itlffrs Pulltlng aw TOUR umusAt.. TIIO Times nulltllhK jmtui Bean!) 01) Frledrlclmtramn yHPOW BC(iU l Btniuc... MatTonl tlnuiio Firm 1 82 lttm l.ouls lo (.Ira ml subscription TnitMg fi 'KtMiiKO Liroorn It nerved I to dnh(frltiri Philadelphia and surrounding' towns nt th y Wall lo points outsldci of Philadelphia In united fllnte, Canada or Tilled suites poi pns, poatasa freo, thirty-tile (115) cent month Ono (ID dollar fur three month pur (l dollata per year, pnjaklo In ml- alt foreign coun.rle ono (fl) dollar tier ties Subierlbers wlshlni? mllreat change! give oia as well as new atiures) it, aooa vfalmut kfystotf, maiv jooo tT Addm all eommuntcnltwu In Eis-Mlntf tttdetr, liitptndence Square, Philadelphia. nsao it the rniunnftm wtorricn 13 aDCOND-CLASS Mill. 1UITTRR -HE AVERAGE NET TAID DAIt.T Cllt (ULATION OF THE EVENISO I.EDaUR for, nrxr.Miir.n was no sin Philadelphia, Monday. January " 19JT Magazine editors havo ono thins to bo thankful for tho scarcity ot vvlilto paper will forco a. shortago on spilng poetry. And now Congress thinks that Sam uel Untormyer also holds It In rontcmtit. Well, ho haa had Intimate relations -with It and ought to know something about it. Tor sheer ability to nmarc Heir ernhard'a calm remaik tint Germiny will require tho Allies to pay only cloven nnd a quarter billion dollais Indemnity -rurpasses the feats of nn t alder. Firemen who stand nt the top of ladder, both literally and Aginatively, elve on an averago of $T a day. Illin ois of chalr-leanors In other city do ' menta, who aro at tho bottom of tho iSer of efficiency, get ?S a day fm dlnff through tho cigar smoko of their ces. There Is to bo true JelTorsonlan city In tho President's becond in Uon. He will bo escoitcd to tho by a .cavalrv tioop as Jerfoison escorted by a. militia rominny. .let on walked from his lodging, but Mr. on, will ride. The other differences 'be thoso which aio incidental to tho nee In size of tho nation In ISO I in 1917. One of the silliest suggestions that ome out of "Washington in many a is that tho name of tho Danish West es be changed to tho Dewey Islands. ' yould be much moie llttlng to call the d-locked sea, on which Manila is situ- .ed, Dewey Bay Why does not soma ne propose that v,e honor tho memory Farragut by naming Tinlcum Island him? Representative Mooro lias reminded House -that there aro seenty seven isylvanla town3 ilth postolilco re ts In excess of ?10 000 a jciir not pro. ed with Federal buildings, vthilo tho )lio buildings bill is (Hied with appro .atlons for postotnees In southern towns hlch do a much smaller postal business. Jut what can Republican Pennsylvania xpect from a Congress dominated by louthcrn Democrats'' No doubt British niii I'repoli avia tors occasionally come to giicf. as Bishop and Robertson did in Melco, but when nrmy aviators are counted by tie thou vndfl, as abroad, instead of by the half zen, as here, the percentage of failure illght In the one caso aud enormous In other, One or two accidents inn dis i the American air sen Ice. If wo I had a, hundred aeroplanes for tho 'suit of Villa his chances of escapo Uld have been Inflniteslnial Jf the ntry could not have kept up with the scouts, tho scouts could Imo Ixmbell scattered tho bandits It taKei Euro 1 Qovernments- only a few vceks to jt the military methods, of tr-or foes er thirty months of ocuervatlon it Is certain that even our prepi edness ocatea have come to belleie that aero nes should bo used as lighting chines. The New York American defends nator Owen's proposition that the 'prerno Court has no authority .0 de re an act of Congress urconst.tut'onal. itea In support of Its pos'tion the opin sa at Alexander Hamilton, feeral jibers of the constitutional conven a flid Thomas Jeffersor., and mmarks 4 the Judicial opinions whlc'i stab led the power of the Supreme Court to erpret and enforce the Constitution re the work of Chief Jus 'Ice Job.. Mar Jl. It is Interesting n this connection quote these two sentecces f'r.n the face which Jefferson wrote to Ms par Tientary manual' X Am aware that authorities can ittcn & produced In opposition to tha lules 'hjch I lay down as parliamentary, !ti itUntlon to dates will gnrall re ;9Y ISelr weight 58 vjewa of Hamilton Jefferson nnd mcinbk-a of the constitutional convsn Hr expressed while the Constitu "Swfrft, formatlv"e s,tage Te opln 8SlSdf Justice Marshall ooaeurred y y! jjpLleagues, wro handtx) down ti,aatwn had adopted the Consti a Toting tha powe.a of Cukgraa iffTBtfrrrHfr AS the gapien-a Court -fk'?i4fi "Ux U ciseu in l-.i,v anj .jJ cJ lexical wted f-Jaa eiwu. Chlf Justice, noting with full knowledge of the views of Hamilton Jcfferton nnd tho test, formulated tho arguments which cl.irllled tho thinking of -ho nation and justified tho Supremo Couit In ni-serting its light to decldo when Congrfjs ex cecded Us powcis "An attcn'lon to dates," lo use Jefferson's apt words, will rcmoo tho weight of tho opinions which tho American cites to tho contrary WHO THREW THE MONKEY WRENCH? WlinN' tho President heard tho gossip that ho lnil tnjd tho Senate Steering Committee ho would elo tho water pnwpt leiso bills ho denounced It ns nit nttempt to "throw ti monkey wrench into the leglslatho machinery" On tho sumo day ho smit to tho Senate the nomination of Hoctoi Ornyson to the rank of le-tr ndmlral. Jumping him over tho heads of moio than ft hundred other medical ofllcers, most of whom had been in tlie seivico twieo ns long. Tho ical purpose of tho Preslilent'n rnnferonco with tho Scnalo StecrlnR Commlttco was to urgo giciter dlllgonro In the passing of the hills on his legisla tive piogram Cpngress will adjoin 11 live weeks from next Saturday. In this short Intcnnl it must pass fifteen npproprla Hon bills. In nddltlon. tho following measures must either bo approved or left to tho tender mercies of tho next Con Kress, In whlrh tho balance of power will bo held bv three or four Independent Representatives: A bill or bills for Increasing tho rotoniio. Bills to solvo tho railroad labor problems. A corrupt practices measure. A bill to permit domestic corpora tions to maintain collect! 0 foreign selling agencies, which will In effect 1epe.1l tho Sherman antitrust net so far ns It rcstilcts combinations to promoto foreign trade. A water nnd mlneinl land lenRlng bill A Porto RIcnn citizenship hill. All these measures aro loganled as Im poit.int. Tho ieontlo and tho inlhoxl lnbot measures aro lmpoiallo. Those two aio contentious In tho highest degree and cannot bo passed without long le Into. Much tlmo will bo consumed bv tho routine (onsldeiatlon of tho fifteen supplv bills. Vet -when tho legislate o pingiam Is In this eiitlcal condition tho Piosldont has mado the eticmely contentious pio motion ot Doctor Oinjson, consltloia tlon of which Is likclv to interrupt tho logular business for no ono Knows how long. It looks ns It snmo ono had icillj thrown a monkev wioneli Into tho leg lslatho machlnoiy and that it was not tho man who staUecl tho gossip about tho icnson fot tho President's islt to the Cupitol Di:XATIONALIZINO THK OASHS A OLAXCn at tho "ill j" chart, which Is " now llko n map of Ainbia, with the gicat contial deceit In wlilto nnd tho few black moist spots clustering only about the big cities, mnkes It hard to think ot piohlliltlon as an unsettled question, wor thy of national piomlnenre Tho alldation of tho WobbKonjon act, which pioteetH llio "drv ' Stales fiom "liquor impoitntlons fiom "wot" neigh boilioods nearby or distant, will naturally tend to kill tho liquor Issuo in tho West and South. Why should a Kansas Miter foigot all about tho tariff nnd oerj thing elso in ordei to stop liquor sales In I'onn syUnnia, now that no Pennsjlwinia liquor can possibly reach Kansas'' WHY STATES SI'MT TICKETS .TT'AXSAS uent for Wilson b 37,000 on - tho samo day it elected a Republican Uooiuor by 1C0 000 This is why If this Legislature will get dnun to business this afternoon , keep down to business eery day for tho next few weeks, restilct tho number of its em ploes to the minimum; refrain from placing polities ellmlnite log-ro' ing; abstain from pork ; Mel: out the praft ers. maintain a strkt regard for econ omy: guard against the Innoeent-'ook-lug Jokers tho lobby will have ready to slip into bills, transact all business In tho open; enact tho legislation tint wo hae promised tho people, but mako as few laws ns possible; refrain from legislation in behalf of special Interests of any sort; straighten out sumo of tlio worst tangles of our complicated code, and then adjourn promptly anil go home, the people of Kansas will rUe up and call It ble -. il Oovernor Cappei thus expressed him self in his message. Ho is n. Republican, but that Is not tho reason ho was elected Ho was elected becatiso Kunsas has learned that In Stato politics thero me no Republicans nnd Democrats. THE WAK A CLEAREST. HOUSE TOR DEMOCRACY TUG problem before German statesman ship Is to offiet tho faorable effect which tho Hntento's candor In stating terms had upon neutrals, Tho most obvious rejoinder for Berlin Is to a&k, Why Is no mention made of the fate of German colonies? Do tho Allies propose to keep them? Tho lan guage ot tho entente noto undoubtedly Implies that the colonies are to be re turned. Eery other territorial claim Is set down; the colonies are ignored, as If with the Implication that their integrity is assured in tho sweeping phrase that it lias neer been tho Allies' design "to encompass tha extermination of the Ger man peoples and their political disappear ance." The colonies were German soil and the undisputed stamping ground of Getman peoples beforo the vtar. They should be glen back Just as Hanover should be given back If it wero taken. But no one is sure that the British Gov ernment intends to ghe them back, and It is here that Berlin can apply the spur to extract more British candor. The colonies can be considered the earnest of Indemnity. If a defeated Ger many could pay only half the Indemnity demanded, she might be asked to pay the rest in colonies. But if that is the idea it ought to be made plain now, so that the world may have time to est! mate tho money alue of these vast lands, if, indeed, a money value can be placed upon subject peoples and their homes. Tit subject is Important, because the sentiment is growlux that the war must pay few ttwtf, BWMUjly by becoming' the cferka mm tit (kPcacy the last of Uw Mat Witrs staggpAe the Ut word in EVENING TJEDGER-PHILADEImA; MONDAY, JAmiABY 22, 1917 Tom Daly's Column WASN'T it splendid tho way overybody helped? In onoot his poems, Hllalro Belloc sajs- from qulot homea and flrt bitlnnlnir Out to the undiscovered ends. , There'a nothing ivorth the wear of wlnnlm Hut laughter and tha !oo nf friend'. Sometimes, It would appeir, It Is ncc- cssaiy to go almost to "the undiscovered ends" beforo tho truth of that strikes homo. In tho first dajs of convalescence from n sudden and scrloiw Illness wo tent tied It and honeo wo offers A CAM) O' Tit AX KB A card 0' thanki, loin; oicrttue, t mini imlllc, dear Jrlctuh, to )att irm flocked to mr rii rfcHihalps sake Ami 011 ;otiMctM uei p7crticd ie tnkd MV labors and to sec them through. Wttat shall I sa)f I wish t knev) What u-offe la u c. I'm ildmtiltrlnt; J'hciol It's Hard to icrttctilthoHl a break-" A card ' thanks. tf hand'Claspi could be " lit lieu Of language 1 vould 7oi how true 3lV love 71(1 hi 7?M0dM shako To write It, nnd thtie ffjorm )naUe Jy throat, nnd taut old heart strings, too, Ache hartl () thanl.! nvnur TIM!: wo go to Atlintlc City, It Kcoms, Kotilothlng happens to us that lends us to suggest a needed Improve niont. for Instance, tho stationery shops along tho llonrdunlk. should keep in slock ready-made signs, reading. I AM QUITI2 SANK MY HAT IILPAV DOWN ON THIJ nKACII Tito sign should bo of a size to nt Into one's overcoat pocket, so that one might whip It out Instantly nnd hold It con splcuously bofoio one's rlicst as one ran, bareheaded to the nciicst flight of steps lending benrhward ALSO, hnlng been burned several times, wo Insist that hotels nnd rcstnu units should bo compelled to adopt n uni form standard of horsepower for their horseradish. I'arodcmenlia Jack an 1 Jill ran up a till Much btpRPt thin theM rerknnel Jnck ffll down h blew tho town. With .1111 a dim tloe Hccon 1 AlOlfelfS Ilo (dmlrnl pwel represented the Amerl enna who are proudly eiaer to Msht for the honor nn I vltnt lnterpn of their country, anl therefore the tvpB whlth nhove all othprs thle country at this tlnio needs Ho w ta Intnpaultt nf wronUnK captive women anl chll dren, nnd there was not a touch of Uhreck!Ich kett about him He wn equally lucapihle of ftuhmlltln? to wroni: tre-xtment b the stroncest and of lnllUtlnc wronK trenttnent on tho weik Kooseelt Interview ?sew Vnrk Tribune Possibly we m ly look for this sort of thing at icgiihr intervals lt in antic ipate a few: The moment he lieird ot the ilesth of John W I'nilei seller tho famous mer chant rolonel Roosevelt called the new sin per olllces upon the telephone nnil reluctantlj granted this statement of his views- llio decensed was .1 great merchant because ho was a true American citizen He bold goods, lie did not write notes Hut If ho lmd linil occasion to write notes or ilollver ultlniita to unspeak able foreign t) rants he would hnvo nieiiit what he slid Hi) was no plne loss cxeeutlvo like some we mlgbt name, who would be missed less than lie will be" Tlio news of the elopement ot T Rock) ilee Pellet's grandson anil the cnfcterl 1 waitress lmd Feared) reached tho novvtpiper olllces when this state ment, marked "p 1 01 omit," was re ceived from Colonel Roosevelt: "falnco j on nsk me, I sty to jou frankly that 1 am neither shocked nor stirpilsed young Feller secnis to bo a man of spirit a man of ac tion and men nf action, mind ou are wlnt this country needs Deeds only and not words, weasel words, can lift our honor from the mire Into which tho heel of the, eonard In high olllce, vh is too proud to fight, has ground It " Utopia East ot tho Sun and West of the Moon And North of the Polar Star, j Under tho bowl of tho Great Horn Spoon And over tho Golden Car. There are the bounds of tho Land o' Boon That many have sought afar Host of tho Sun and West'of the Moon And Noith of tho Polar Star. ARTHUR GUITL'RMAN. Frce Verse Declining a Teed That Had a Price In llio winter of 1895 a dinner was given for Stephen Crane, whose "Black Riders," tho best of the free verse up to that tlmo and .since had just been pub lished. By n curious chance tho present writer found and after tvventj one jears' sequestration in nn old desk this accept anco nnd declination from Hajden Car ruth, the -well known, by somo, art critic, written in the manner of good old Ste phen Crane. One may noto the color scheme of Carruth's uplifting verso: GRIKF I saw a Man leading an Invitation Anon ho chortled like a bullfrog Like a bill-bedasted green bullfrog It was a Dinner Invitation Which accounted for tha pink chortle of tha MAN "They will have Grub," quoth the Man "Better 'jet, sweetly red wines and the green of mint ' "I will go'" His pink Chortle died on his white lips Ills ashy hand bought his black pocket A gray wail burst from his dry, parched, brown throat, Like the scarlet yowl of a yellow tomcat, A ding busted yellow as midnight Tom Cat ' The man didn't tme the rice! (Which accounted for the gray wall ) I left him cursing the railroad company With great, jagged crimson curses. TAB. Ten Greatest Toms I.awaon, - and Jerry. -ahaulc. -at -boy yone Tom . tlw Piscr'a ion. -royrot. uranuana nice, in cut sportllfht, Say, Grant, I metcha coupla years ago in the New York Evening Mali office, when Frank Adams was writing pieces there. He interdueed me to you, but I 9mm you must 0 fcrt me. I wM of aift yon a CfcjyUaag card, but ksow your athires & ---' fSS-'3 ?i-'-aaJ yf!l THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE Colonel Roosevelt's Return to Republicanism A Defense of the Turk Concerning the Celebration of the Birth day Anniversaries of Famous Men Tills Department Is Jrrc In all readers Mho uisli l rj-ires their oiiinloits on mUnM ; riirrcnf hilerrsf It Is ml oucn forum mil the icnliio l.nlotr assumes no rcsponsltilMli for brt slciird til the name unit addrcva of the iirflrr. not tircrssariy for publication. Out as a auaiantcc of flood filth IN DEFENSE OF TURKEY To the Editor 0 the Eicnina S.cdgct Sir Many persons, no doubt, have rc.ul Mr Wlsnoskls note to the Rvfmno I.rnaun stating that "tho allied demand tl at Turkey ho pushed oft the map ought to be praised and nppl.iuded by every lover of clvlllzitlon" I Imo greitly been nmused by his statements Ihls Is what 1 answer Mr WlsnoM prlmum I wish to say that Mr Wls noskls v ews are absolutely prejudiced local and extremelj Ignorant The fact that tho Turks in tho twelfth century tried to overrun Hurope Is not to be taken as a lust for conquest but as r. religious enter prise, vl7, tho Turks, being Mobammednns nnd in greater numbers than the Christians at that time thought that they were the adherents of tho only and real religion. Mo hammedanism and that the so-called Christians were the infidels In this enterprise the Turks did not succeed, nnd tho world was entirely enveloped by the thought of Chriitlanlty Please tell me, then, why should this offense bo Imputed to the discredit of tho Turks when tho civ ilized Spaniards actmlly killed men. Women and children whoso religious beliefs did not coincide with theirs Yet Spain now, in the cjes of tho lover of civilization Is a nation that Is clean and worthy and de serving of remaining upon tho face of tho earth I will take another nation; one which we all know, hence It is needless to mention the name Th's nation Is comprised of various sects of people Very many mil lions of these people, acting In the ees of the Government Justly, have burned others homes, murdered people, tortured to death mothers, polluted daughters and perpetrated the most Incredible atrocities Why' Be cause they aro fond of seeing the other people's blood This nation is at all times honored highly, Its causo Is upheld at every instance and its dally report of tha war stricken Ktirope Is placed at the top of other nations Why? Because the people wish to regard that nation In the light of honesty, tranquillity and Integrity Secundum et deniquo. Above I have spoken of quondam days I will now speak of tho future nnd present Turkey In Its present state is not the plague spot of Ruropo the cause of many shameful wars, etc, but on the contrary the victim of these struggles, as we know. Mr Wlsnoskl Is not the only one at present whose thoughts are so ehement against Turkey I, therefore, appeal to every reader to ponder over carefully both sides of the con troversy, and see whether or not many graver offenses have not been committed by other nations, which are not repeatedly referred to because these nations are omnip otent, while Turkey Is, depressed and ham pered by the biased world HARRY ROSENBIAJM Philadelphia, January 19 ROOSEVELT'S REPUBLICANISM To the Editor of the Evening ledger: Sir I notice in the news dispatches that Theodore Roosevelt, In commenting on tha stand taken by George W Perkins and other Progressives on the action of the executive committee ot the Republican Na tions Committee, says- "I heartily approve of what Messrs Perkins and Colby have done I think they have rendered a 'great service to the American people and to the Republican party " We are all glad to know that Mr Roose velt has finally been "snaked out" This Is his first kindly reference to the Republican party in years He made some great speeches In the last presidential campaign for Mr Hughes and gave loyal support to hi. rjindldacy. but not once, that I can re call, did he refer to or name the Republican party It is a pleasure to realize that Mr Roosevelt has returned to the Repub lican party and that he makes loyalty to that party synonymous with duty to tho American people. There never was any good reason for Mr Roosevelt and others leaving the Republican party The proper thing for any one to do is to remain la hU natty and try to reform It If reforraa. Uon U necessary As well might a cltl rn leave his Government because soma of Us fWJf were net wiwHy sUfaoory Ija hiiS. W Wliff Tawdore Roescvglt atnJ all "OH, SLUSH!" r... ,v.s1c.,?..iorJ.3ft-n'.i.i.',-A,.r,; Ju j ?!'fe ): ' Ml?$ 'iwBmmfflmm ,,.-'-"'- ,.:" -c-. S' ' ' ? i other prodlgil sons hack Into the Repub lican pirty, nnd trtibt tint the will liehivc themselves and provn themselves worths members again of the great pirt of Lin coln and Grant Harrison, Blaine and Jit Klnley "rnlted wo stand divided wo fill' Reading, I'a Januarj ID B It PATRIOTIC ANNIVERSARIES To the Editot of the hicnlng l.cdgci Sir We heartily thank jmi for the In terest that.jou have bhoun in tho celebra tion of Franklin's birthday In our letter of January 4 wo called' our attention to tho two fnst-appronchlng nnnlvcrsirle celebrations of which wo desired) to hive Intensified namely, Henjnmln rranklin sand Lincoln s blithdas Wo took up this sub ject with the Franklin Institute, rhilosopht cal Society, I'nlverblty ot I'ennsjlvunla, Temple University and the Treo Libraries There were many notablo fentures that were not brought out In the publicity such as tlio observance by the hotels with tlsg and picture display and menu card decorations Wo again want to think ou for the notice, and desire to tako this means of thanking tho Poor Richard Club for Us every assistance In developing this notablo feature I beg leave to stato that we havo alrend corresponded with the Union Leaguo and the Lincoln Club concerning the proper observance for Lincoln's Blrthdaj, nnd have made nrrangemen's with the Superin tendent of Public Schools to havo addresses mado In tho eight high schools, nnd other general observances In proper keeping with tho Lincoln Birthday celebration Wo are now interesting the people who recognize the celebration of Washington's Birthday, asking them to Intensify their observance on this occasion DAVID B PROVAN, President OEORGK W B HICKS Secretary ot the Philadelphia Committee Philadelphia, January 19 FRIENDLY WARNING Mr Whitman must 'realize that thero Is a danger to his hopes for future prefer ment in too Intimate association with the State political machinery If he wants an object lesson Ip what may happen to a candidate for presidential honors with the New York situation in his unques tioned control, he might read prontably the "Life and Times ot David B Hill" Prov idence Journal AND SWORE "BY THE ETERNAL" What has become of the old-fashioned President who used to talk of hanging somebody as high as Raman? Toledo Blade. PASTORAL There's a lltle lone house on top of a hill, And a crooked road leading down, Past the fields below and a little old mill, And on to a llttlo old town And a little old woman watts all alone, In the little old house and gray, And, her little old ear to the telephone, She hears what the neighbors say Her little old roan to town has gone On his little sturdy old legs, He hiked away at the little old dawn, With a little old dozen eggs. He took the fruit of the little old hen. To the little old town, so far, To trade 'em on but he'll come again In a little old motorcar 1 And tha little old woman and the little old man Will rest their little old legs, For they can afford, a car, they can. For little old eggs Is eggs! Chicago News. SAM LOYD'S PUZZLE TWO personal pronouns. If you take And Join them in due order, An herb will name without mistake. That scents the garden border Answer to Saturday's Puzzle gAI. Tioy. Wltbam, g,H, Perth. .Lten den and Aaea, . . , ' ?.. ! What Do You Know? Querien of oenerrxl intrmt witl be ansu.erd (ti this column Ten Questions, the answer 3 to which txcrv well tnjomicit ptno ahount knoic, are asked daily, . QUIZ 1. VVIuit Is ti foreeu-lle - Mimit what Is Hie pnpulition of Jnpan? I IV lint Is viilliiniliroMi.' I. V lin vrnto Woods" 'Uultlen. nr, life In Ihe who Is fl. As it result of (lie ilrltli of Denes mm rtutkiiu: niiKir or the nm,' fl Vtluro Is Atllnuhtmip Vitliiiinl Purli? " Ulinl wis llio chief derict nf lidernl uni- irilinent dlirlnB tin- Vim rll nil Kelnliitlnn nnd until I In- niloiilliiii nf tlio ( nnsiltii- Inn." fl Wi'it l Hie lirnper lirontinel lllon of linn".' (If "ireil."; " S,'!.'r ,".11"' I" hiiorrcil In Ihls sentence! Nelllier he nor hhe lire here " 10 .Vl.nnl ulnt Is Hi,. . f (he Prolillilllnn vote fur President llsii illj st. Answers lo estcrdaj's Qui? Dentil till rt till. Is 271, feel lielnu sen leu I mid the lowest I'nlnt In North mer Icil. rile (iispliii s, ( , nn feet i-n the Deqil e i (llt-stlne) IJno feet lie'"' frii Iriil. The Desert of snlmri Is nil feet hi low he) It id "The III ilk Dors,, (ninlri" uus Die n line Uien tu the Inhhtl-ts uln In m old d ijn used In iniikn b lie nt Nrn Vorl. Mule's uuilliil "Irnrkless trol'eis" nn lllrrullv wluil the, ilium liniilles, tin. ulucls arr rulilii r-Ilred. The iihlihs nn- propelled hv the pole-unil- lire sislriii "The (,nle ( ilj of (he South" Is Xlluull The (llv nf Siiillx" Is SUI I ke tils o. 0. The Hrst itt lie Vmerlniii linn nmrles wns Prime .li mine linn nurte (Itlne nf West liliii liil Niimilriiii ! hrnllirr ului iiiur '.o... ' ,,,,elll I'llttrrsnn ul llilllmnre In lKHI I heir win ns Irriinii Nupiilron Iliiiilluirte, whose miii ( liurles mis serre lury nf the Nun mid Vtlnrnpj denenil. 7. The MinriiKiinii mini route iniiientlnn u sinned Viisust B, ION. ,j the I piled stiles mill MiiiriiRiiiu (miernineuts. 11 nr nits m the liiltnl states exclusive priiprlclnrj i-IUiIm for the iniislriiithin and iilierntlou r mi Inti nur lull riiuiil hy n NlriiniEiiii mule the lenw- nr rrrtiiln ls inds nnil the rlelit l esliihllsli it nuv it hilse on the diilf nf Ion-eel 8. thurrli nrnperti Is 'eiiipt from Itmitlon In this state iirntldid II Is used ejilu- hlielj fur rrllelnus mid rduriitliiiinl pur. post s nnil not for huslness purpnsrs 0 IlenJ iniln rrnnUlln. Horn. HIIOi died, 1700 0. The Vutrlnn I'lnperor's wife Is the I in. press Itll, Roger Williams D Ii K Roger Williams was the founder ot the State of Rhode Island Ho was born In London In either 1001 oi 1C05 Ho refused to Join tho congregation at Boston because the people would not make piibllo decla ration of their repentance for having been In communion with the rniircli of Knglnnd Hanlshed from the Massachusetts li iy col ony in 1CJ5. ho escaped to the shores of Nnrraginsett Bay, accompanied bv- a few I of the adherents of the extreme Puritanism wnicn no auvocateu; no purchased land of the Indians nnd founded tho city of Provl denco in 103C. Sith Pennsylvania Infantry Editor of "What Do Voti Knoxo" Allow me to correct jour statement that the Sec ond Pennsylvania Artillery is the only Philadelphia, unit left on the border There Is one, other unit from Philadelphia down theie, u leglment which has been com mended time nnd again bj (ieneral Clement a reglmont which lias taken ever thing that has come Its way without n murmur In that Cod forsaken country I iefer to the Sixth Pennsylvania Infantry, of Philadel phia, Colonel Thomas Riddle Rills com manding. Tho headquarters of the Sixth Is at Forty-ilrst street and Mantua avenue 1 think that there are a few people In Phila delphia who know that the Sixth conies from Philadelphia, so I tako this means of correcting jou SBRGRANT r C SUMMRRriULD Company Jl, Sixth Pennsylvania Infantry (Because only four companies of the Sixth coma from Philadelphia und because the regiment Is the Infantry unit In an army division, the Sixth was not included However, It should have been, as the Phila delphia squadron of cavalry was mentioned as coining home ) Skating in Park CHESTER Whenever there is skating on the Falrmount Park lakes the Bveninq Ledoek prints that fact In Its news columns You can find out also by calling the Electrical Bureau on tha telephone and then asking for Woodford guardhouse To reach Centennial (Memorial) and Concourse Lakes from Broad street station take a Darius subway-surface car (route iti hj the iuwy, )Utaj o at ffmty-toiuth street asd ParkjbJ avemui To jeaoh J?rl&a rt wjd PMfci3 aviau HAS MR. WILSON TORPEDOED WAR? John Burils's Opinion of tho President's Note Not Popular in England Determination to Humble Germany By GILBERT VIVIAN, SELDES Special Correspondence ot the Fieitlni; Ltdoet, London jnn s THM afternoon on which President Wil son r "peace note" wai published here I wis nt the NntlonM Liberal Club, the cen ter of Liberal opinion in Lngland nnd home of the lest violent pacifists To mv host there came the Right Hon John Hums tho first workingmm who ever held Cabi net rank In Lngland nnd ono of the two who leslgned when tho Cabinet declared for wni In August, 1914 Blank, ' ho said, catching his arm ns he spoke tho name, "Wilson has torpedoed the war ' The nert morning Mrs Rowe. who was leid-lilacklng my fireplace, turned for a mlnuto nnd said npologctlcally, "I see your President Wilson Is trjlng to mnke peace What Is ho doing that for?" I told her that I dldn t know, I supposed he wnnlod peace for tho good of tho world Mrs Rowe kept nt her work for a min ute Then she ha Id bltterlj, 'Id rather have in man out there In Trance threu voir? moro thin for us to have ri patched-up pence A pitched-up peace " To bn sure 1 rec ognized the phrase f had seen It where .Airs Howe had seen It, on every placard and In every henilllne But placards have no hiisbinds In Krnnce nnd no children to cuimn.l K, ifnlin. ...., .....i , . .... George Onl she spolee with a IJttlo moro passion than tho present Prima Minister nnd a little more slmpl) than tho preceding nuv- .-ino iiuin c nut nnout a "Knockout "It's not a gimo for us," she told me an ulin .llrln'l .ill il. n rn...n.. lilt. . .. ,. I - d . ..w ....... . .,.,, nm viciiumin 11UII3, wniell proves lint nhe Is n soldier's wife Mio did not talk nboiil Mlttol Luropa or ot tho rlgliln of smill nationalities She talked hlch nnout ner cmiurcti. a son and a diughter And flic give mo the Allies' terms of peace Restitution, Reparation, Retribution .Slnco the President h note wns published perhaps a hundred American newspaper! havo been quoted here all wondering why tho tonus of peace are not made public in dellnllo nnd prcciso words At tho same time the general terms have been harden ing perceptibl Mr Asnuith slid ' restitu tion", Mr Llod George without the Billlol tnlnlng, Mid moie erudelv reparation" Religious Russia spoke of "retribution ' but the Inrdcst blow came in the English trans Iitlon of the repl to German, where the h'renrh word "sanctions" was translated "penalties ' Lxnctl what John Burns's terms are I do not know , he wants peace, piobibl not nt nil price but thero are a Lumber of persons who wnnt It now Mrs Rovvo does not want it now because she wants it lo Inst, she wants guarantees and she wints vktoi l'rom papers and letters, which come here It seems tint In the United States people nio censing lo believe that there Is any thing serious In this war The no longer think that theie Is a deep division between the Entente nnd Germanic I'ovvers they think flint tho differences can be adjusted and that theie Is no longei nny need for continuing the slaughter There Is also a suggestion that the British people will be gin to think the same way ns soon as Ger in in offers of peace become moderate and definite Tlio exact opposite seems to be the case Evcept for the professional pacifists, 1 have not met a man or woman who knows of any mnn nr woman who has yielded nn Inch of giound to Germin proposals. Tho fact Is that, whatever tho British people thought nt the beginning of the war. the irn rcali7ltig more and more, ever dn. that time Is something between them and Ger man which cannot be compromised The wni began over Belgium, to be sure There was never an jingo spit It In the people, no nutter whit the press vv.n saying But vcr gradually tho real reatons of the con lllet began to becomo common knowledge Intelligent peoplo ma decide that there can bo no solution In the field or that It would bo bettci to leave German and Austria In tact But the great mass of people be lieve that German has done an "unspeak able wi one" this was Mrs Rowe one flight of rhetoric nnd she seemed a little unccitnlii of It when she said the words. And they think that what they are doing is an unspeakable right They never sneak of it at an rate But they think of It, night and day. Life goes on almost as umhI getting harder and harder, of course, and with more and more ' men whose stay in Trance Is ended But they are not Hlnching And the men come back nnd tell them that In another six months It will be over Atop a bus last night a Canadian, still In training, told me he was going out next week "I'm a machine-gunner," he said, "and I guos It's coming to me A lot of chaps can get killed In six months, ehr Ho wns afraid of it, every soldier is until the last minute "But then It'll bo done right I wouldn't go home now, I can tell ou, with all thi3 to do over again" Germany Must Be Humbled The terms of peace are definite enough for tho average Briton He knows what ho Is fighting for and he Is not concerned with territorial questions He expects the Allies to pool their demands at the end and to adjust them But one demand they will not adjust, because It is the Bame for all That Is that Germany shall not rule over central Europe To them and to their people the war is the simplest, as It Is the grandest, thing In the world They do not see that Germm, actual or potential ruler over everything from Berlin to Bagdad, will necessarily bo satisfied with what she has Nor do they see why they should allow the Serbs and the Croatlans In Hun gary and the Rumanians and the Slovenes and the Lithuanians and the other subject races of Hungary to become the subject nations of the new German Empire They really believe that they are fighting for the liberty of Europe The things which were only words in 1011 ore terrible actualities now That Is wh the people of England can not understand the United States They haven t heard both sides as frequently or as persuasively as tha United States has heard them, they are perhaps blinded by war But they wonder that It should be so hard for the llbert-lovlngpeopleontheother side ot the Atlantic Ocean to understand the struggle of the liberty-loving people on this tide It hurts them, and In their re sentment they say man sharp things But the will not be deterred from the object of their war They are in dreadful earnest, and they have a moral purpose which grows fiercer ever day If Mrs Rowe had heard Mr John Burns bay that Wilson noto has torpedoed this war she would have told him that it was a greater crime than the Lusitania And 1 should not like to see Mrs Rowe If her man falls in France and the Entente make a peace which leaves Germany intact. I am afraid it would not be a pleasant experience and that I might lose some of my trust In the blessings of peace HER JEWELS There was a reminiscence in an incident at Willssden Police Court yesterday of the story of" the Roman matron who when asked to produce her Jewels, brought for ward her family of young children. A boy of ten was sent to a home, having been found guilty of theft, and his mother In termed the magistrate that he was one of eleven children. Without meaning to be in the least un kind the magistrate remarked "You will not tolas one among go many " Ttw wsjpiaau reply souad4 almost Ilk a riuK- "I lia not one to sar, sir," she gali as sbe left the oiwwt Larolun GbreiUeU. ,-, fan&m mm ftllffiil X 1