, f&F " sSsiaas i iMwm VnmiNV a?v sa wf " . . r mtm m. tcctnm, pwMt H. X.MIMMa.',yiei trasMsni! jonn . aratarr 0 Traaaurari i-nuip Traa, John IBBWWll rhttssa. J.. Stnirgaon. P. " BlMTCmlAIi board; ,1 Crass X. K. Ccins, Chairman. feMfttAUET Suitor C. MARTIN... General Duslneee Manager t!yMtohd fell? 'at Ftiuo Liwsa Building, t v; independence Square, Philadelphia. M t-lSTHi,,...liroaa ana vneainut mmu mo .cm. ...... ..A. . ., imo uuuaing famte. MM afstronolltan Tower fSffll t til .SOS front Building t;,etH,;...;...4V Qlcbt-Drmocrat Building IOW0..W......f..H02 Trious Building yi1 NBW8BUREAU8: immm BCauc, ... bisks suiiaing Tobk Btiuo ....Tha Tlmae Building IK Bosun..,....., ....00 Prledrlchatrass an BvixAU Marconi House, strand Bubud.. ...32 nua Louis la Grand ftv SOBaCRIl?TION TERMS f Ta Eranmo taoora la served to vubaerlbara ; taiFhlladelpbla and, aurroundln towna at tha . tmta of twslre (121 canta par week. Darabla ',tlo tha earrlar. ... ....... L". Mr nail o pointa ouiarae or i-nnaasipnia, in noli Tftam vrojtana un . , v . . Had Btatse wanaaa or unuea mates poa- fJw!9-.wAf . t ree, nny tou; cents par lara par ysar, payable In bty min bix ivo; aoi i.it ! -as f To all foreign, eotmtrlea ona (ill dollar per '"it N(WInjRnHairttMi wlaVln AAmm .t,ana.A Ky"sttat artva old aa wall aa naw address. toi nt" m0 waihct keystone, main iooo jit Wf ddrete ait communications to Evening I'i r- Ledger, Independence Sonars, Philadelphia. mD at TBI rniUDnrnu roarornca it aacoND'CLAas uiil umn, SIOD AVERAOE NET PAID DAILY CIR CULATION OP THE EVEN1NO LEDGER FOR TEBRUARY WAS St.tTt Prospective bridegrooms who viewed the gorgeous gowns at the Fashion Show need not hesitate on ac count of slim purses. Sometimes one can marry a modiste. Mr. Gerard, we are gratified to J learn, really did say that he would "sit W PMlid.lphl., StlarJij. Mirth 17. 1917 U . --.-- W" I " Jifv I .. 1 M -v In Berlin till (what Sherman said war IVti . Waal from over" rnthnr thnn nan Ameri. r sains detained, and is proud of It. Considering what It costs In time, Money and effort to elect a President of the' United States, It might be good sense not to Insist that he challenge pneumonia to deadly conflict by being inaugurated In the open air on March 4. St. Patrick's Day "celebrators may at least take comfort In the fact that a , flag of their favorite hue means freedom in one quarter of the globe, since the Teen standard of the Prophet now flies ever the Independent kingdom of Arabia. The efforts of Bourbons to con- 'fine Hiram Johnson's activities to what . . ......... . .. u-i - are Known as "joko committees or me h&j Senate should gladden progressives of. y.f uuiu panics. Duppressing uic iuunrr ?-Oovernor of Caftfornla Is a good deal Jy like sitting on a tack In order to liic'e i.?Kifrom view. ' (tufa , 1 ti' r . . . ... M war Is harvest time for grafters. :. (7llAn iha ntfjintlArL rt rtatrtntv (a M. ncted toward saying the nation tho little fellows with mean souls and itching palms get busy In the twilight and line their pockets. It Is a wise citizen ,who keeps one eye on local affairs even while aiming his gun with the other.1 So many architectural eyesores mar the city's streets that genuine regret must greet the announcement of the pass. lng of the graceful Roberts mansion at the northwest corner of Nineteenth and Walnut streets, to make way for a mod ern apartment house. Nothing like com pensation for the loss of the still more picturesque Lipplncott house has yet been made, and from an artistic stand point Philadelphia can ill afford to lose many such landmarks of local color that for years gave to the city Its distinctive character. Mr. Cahvell's project of a model municipal farm on the city's 1000 acres at Byberry and the utilization of all tillable land In the city Is a patriotic en deavor In its aspect of preparedness for twar. But 'it is,,more than that. It is breaking ground for a system toward Which there are already tendencies in all parts of the country, tho establishment of food supplies near centers of popula tion to act as a lever against high prices. (What was done In New York by public spirited citizens who dumped cheap food on the market in the recent crisis can be done systematically by the cities them- elveft- Thft cttv fnrmn nt Via fitfm-a nHii ' act as a constant regulator of market prices. The mere fact of their establish, tnent, in increasing total acreage, will in Itself put a big crimp in the middleman's ft Profits. riv, a, i ' When the Czar of Russia visited ' jthe English coast In his yacht In 1909 a oclallst rose In Parliament with the cry, "Don't let the tyrant landr The same War was expressed when King Edward's encircling alliance" aligned the Czar with the western democracies in 1914. S',t Would reactionary Russia infect Eng- i.;)ana and France with imperialism and i(awtocrattc tendencies? That fear now Afk t... t..frVM. T I. -n. . ... , ;;v wf m iruaiu, ii ib nuura inai is CTOK moral and geographic Isolation of the fvjswlln Caesars grows apace. It, is some- pjBln that in Its prow 6f ' war. It" is not' fo L '.?fthat the freeing of Ru .'X.'vahLna? that in Ita nramlna la rnwtar than skt? .:.' :,r . . ' ior men wno ao not future may say It, t kt t&fl A 'Blf.CUI.Ia tnsa aka.t iL. laiojJttalafljifl i war. It la more than so i fWMa t-ifi nignunare or a trl- ivtrate) of ty ran U Kaiser, Cr and rvsj "Pf"! ?ri "0 ireemg or rmmmrm me imperial, arch- flif)l;itfJ:aavtklaks ''notfeeaW' Uptake enarretlo v : r.' in.-'. - . mm tpiinwaa javawn streets, .aaak '-'-i---i i... r.,.,. -n , t,, mm &mmz Eiatms pua wa. -a anaiuilia sajtl:arm U. BSirjKMs' oc f ii TKJBT,,M'BiMfrT'l ft sfry tsy ar tsv jOkM Csnnsll, . tha XIhwy Burssu, win bs.in a position to organize drastlo rrW&surei for securing the publlo from iha menace of disease-bearing duat and filth. Thla offlctat.'a hands have been tied chiefly through lack of co-operation by other departments. He Is a holdover frcm the Blankenburg administration, an efficient and disinterested publlo servant and one who could win for himself a great reputation In a regime devoted strictly to publlo service. ABOLISH THE "AVERAGE" 11TATOR SMITH has done well to reject ''" the counsels of City. Hall "Inexperts" who advised him that a Convention Hall to seat 6000 would bo large enough be cause an almost Inoredlble reason be cause the average convention held In the city has not attracted more than BOO to 1000 delegates. Of course the 20,000-slze conventions at which presidential candidates are nomi nated are not average, because they only happen once In four years. But they hup pen. And Philadelphia doesn't get them. Tho "average" convention, for that mat ter, Is probably of fewer than 000 dele gates, counting all the little affairs that bring but twenty-five or fifty delegates to the city. It Is precisely for exceptional occasions that a Convention Hall Is built. And when It Is built In a city that In rap Idly doubling Its population, It should bo built with the Idea that tho exceptions of today are to bo the average of tomorrow. AVo move to abolish the present "aver age" of public meetings. We move to Inaugurate the exception as the rule. Wo know now who Invented that saying that "the exception proves the rule." It was a man who was always looking forward. 'RED SUNDAY" AND AFTER LINKING the tragic episode of "Red J Sunday" with the present Russian revolution Is decidedly more Indicative of the familiar human weakness for com pleted stories than of clear vision of the new crisis. Twelve years ago, when the Czar's Cos sacks ruthlessly charged Father Gapon'a petitioning worklngmen before the Win ter Palace, the sense of historical fitness was quickened by the prospect of a. Rus sian birth of liberty. Emancipation through blood and travail stirred the popular Imagination. The common, but treacherous, bromldlom about history repeating Itself was drafted Into Immediate service. The liberal world fully expected a re-enactment of the French Revolution throughout tho Slavic empire. But subsequent events failed to Justify any such formal and "classic" reading of history. The revolt of 1905 was sternly repressed, and today that event, although doubtless exerting a certain Imaginative Influence on the minds of the present revolutionists. Is revealed as an isolated fact, not as the real prelude to a great drama of liberalism. History Is frequently more freakish than conventional, abounding In unfin ished tales and unresolved chords. Olive Schrelner, In "The Story of an African Farm," sensed this characteristic In life Itself when she refused to Identify one particular mysterious personage in her vivid tale with another being of some what similar qualities. Our existence, she declared In effect, is full of unrelated facts. Why not record them and, above all, why seek for perfect dovetailing of Incidents? "Red Sunday," Indeed, may become a day of sacred memories to Russian liber als, but the fact remains that the genuine and successful revolution has been ac complished largely by a class that hardly had existence twelve years ago. It Is un questionably the growth 6f the new Slavic industrialism and commercialism that is mainly responsible for the miracle In Petrograd. Since the Japanese war i Russia has entered tho modern business world, and, supported by the vast army, It Is modern business men who have re solved on so breath-taklnp a measure as universal suffrage in what was once the most Invulnerable stronghold of autoc racy. It seems Inevitable that Russia will at last be free, but she has taken her own way to break her chains, regardless of many precedents, regardless of tho most carefully drawn historical horoscopes. PRESIDENT GRATZ SIMON GRATZ, president of the Board of Revision of Taxes nnd fnr mnnv years an earnest supporter of Senator Penrose and his Organization, seems des tined to play an Important part In the struggle between those who would leave unchanged and those who would reorgan ize the school system. There is little doubt that we are in for a long struggle. The Gowlng case is the climactic situa tion In a sequence of events that have long been verging on the Intolerable. Mr. Gratz, In addition to his $6000 of fice, Is vice president and perhaps the most Influential member of the Board of Education, a position with no emolume'nt. Appointment to both offices comes from the Board of Judges. It is understood that his political prestige, of long stand ing, makes it easy for him to have his way much of the' time. It is not sug gested here that Mr. Gratz is a -dual of ficeholder in the usual sense of the phrase, nor that members of the Board of Education should not follow other pur suits, for, receiving no pay, they natu rally remain In business. But it would be advisable in the future not to em barrass a man, who, like Mr. Gratz, must needs be closely in touch with political life, with work so nonpolltlcal and non .partisan In character as that of the school board. Dr. Edward Martin and Doctor Garber are the logical leaders In a reform of the system which will make such flascoes as the appointment of a high school princi pal without consulting the Superintend ent Impossible. They should carry the Sght straight 'to the tribunal of publlo enialoiL rathW than try to reform fmm -"-- -., K, ' ' la a body, which would hays re- long, ago If It was const!- HOW MUCH IS A DOLLAR WORTH?. Austrians Are Paying $1.88 for It, While in Spain It Can Be Bought for 89 Cents MR. COMMON PEOPLE walks Into the corner grocery store. He orders one dozen eggs, one pound of butter and a half peck of potatoes. For these he tenders, a dollar bill In payment. The grocer adds up the prices of these articles and Mr. Common People Is told that ho owes 1.14. He digs out the addi tional fourteen cents, picks up his packages and goes home. Mr. Common People has learned that the dollar bill will not go as far as It did some years ago. Thereforo Mr. Com mon People wonders If the dollar has depreciated In value. He gives Derlous con sideration to this point He recalls that (lie dollar. In addition to being a direct promise of tho Government to pay one, remembers that the standard of value of all tho great .world Powers, China nnd a few smaller countries being tho only exceptions, Is gold. In this con nection ho recallB that ho has read In the newspapers from time to time of tho largo amount of gold which has come Into the United KtnteH since the beginning of the European war. the United States now holding a third of tho world's supply of the yellow metal. Therefore he decides that the dollar Is worth Just ns much now as It ever was. This leads him to the conclusion that the purchasing value of tho dollar Is not so great as It was Borne years ago, and In this ho Is cdrrect. Without leading himself Into any lengthy thought on tho subject he Just runs ocr tho conditions na they have developed, especially since the out break of hostilities abroad. He discovers that demand, because of the war, has been very largo. He concludes that with tho lnw of supply and demand the natural trend of prices Is upward. He finds that the American farmer. In addition to feeding him, Is also keeping a large part of the rest of the world In food, Dollars in Terms of Other Money He knows what happened to the dollar which ho gave to the grocer a fow minutes ago, but he wonders what the value of that same dollar would bo In some of tlio capi tals of other nations. The more he thinks of It tho more Interested ho becom J. Finally he sharpens a stub of a pencil, gets an encyclopedia which contains the par value of foreign coins In American money, looks up the present rates of foreign ex change and proceeds to find out how the American dollar stands abroad After a few minutes of figuring he sits up with a look of amazement on his face, for what he has learned Is startling to him. The value of the American dollar In the capitals of the principal warring nations, he has found, Is high Tho dollar, according to his way of figuring, Is worth more Jn Vienna than anywhere else on the faco of the globe. It Is worth $1.83 there, In Russia $1,81, In Italy Jl 41, In Germany (1.40 and In France $1.13. In London, where ho has compared tho value of the $5 bill with pound sterling, he ascertains that It Is worth J5.10, or. In other words, each American dollar Is worth $1.02. This Is all very well so far as the war ring nations are concerned, but what of the value of the dollar In neutral countries? A few minutes of calculation will disclose that In Spain It Is worth only 89 cents, In Sweden, Norway and Denmark 90 cents. In Switzerland 97 cents and In Hol land 99 cents. Mr. Common People now has the valua tion of the American dollar In foreign countries arranged In table form. And this Is how the table looks, the first column giving the par alue of the foreign coin In American money, the second column the value now and the third column the worth of the American dollar In foreign countries; 'rr(nt Equlv aluo. alent. h1uo. .L'OL'tl .'J3SJ . m.-ni .1031) Auatrlan kronen ., German mark French franc Italian lire Kusslan rubl .linn f,3 .17(1-1 1.40 .11011 .1HH4 1.1.1 1.41 1.N1 5.10 ,1111 .07 .Hit .90 .011 .00 S14II .HMO Kncllsh aterllnc li.Hiif:.'. S4.7r.r. Netherlands irullder JOL'O .-1018 Switzerland franc 1030 .1088 Spanish peseta 1030 .'J127 Swedish kroner "J0SO .20H7 Danish kroner 'JUNK ,'J7i Norwegian kroner ".'080 ,i'07O What has caused the appreciation In value In some countries and tho depreciation of others? For a satisfactory explanation of this It Is necessary to understand the first principles of foreign exchange. Foreign ex change, as the name Indicates, represents trade between two countries. In early times this trade consisted of a direct ex change of commodities. A ship would leave one country with goods which would be exchanged In some foreign port, the goods obtained In this foreign country being taken home. How Foreign Exchange Works Sometimes gold would be taken for the goods In the hold and somotimes gold would be carried by the ship for the payment of goods bought. Because of attacks by pirates In those early days some other arrangement had to be deWsed for the settlement of debts, and, "necessity being the mother of Invention," the foreign exchange bill was devised. Foreign exchange works on the principle of the payment of one debt by the cancellation of another. In other words, foreign exchange Is simply a form of credit A typical foreign exchange transaction would work out as follows: A Is an im porter In Philadelphia. He has bought goods from an exporter In England, He does not settle his debt by tho shipment of gold. Instead, he goes to a foreign ex change dealer and buys a bill from him. This bill Is drawn on an Importer In. Eng land who owes an exporter In the United States, and Instead of the Englishman ship ping gold to the exporter In the United States he simply pays tho English ex porter who has sold goods to tho'Phlladel phlan, thus canceling the Philadelphia im porter's debt to the Englishman. Whenever the exports of one country to another exceed the Imports from the latter nation, the former Is said to have a favor able balance of trade. The latter nation, in other words, owes the former money. This Is the condition we In the United States now find ourselves. The war In Europe has cut down the export trade of all the nations, bel ligerent as well as neutral, and In order to pay their debts In the United States the for eign countries have been compelled to do one of two things either make a settlement by the shipment of gold or float a loan In the United States. Both of these methods have been used. Loans to the amount of more than two billion dollars have been- ar ranged here, and In addition about as much gold has come In. It can be very readily understood, there fore, that the value of the money of foreign belligerent countries should fall beloW par as represented by the money by the United States. And this Is exactly what has hapr pened. It Is the reason for the American dollar being worth so much in the bellig erent countries. But why has the American dollar de clined In the moneys of neutrals? This Is another story, Here we again have the law of supply and demand The crippling of the trade of the belligerents by the war has resulted In a greater demand for exchange through neutral countries, especially by the Central Powers. Securities 'which were owned In Germany, say, have been sent to the United States to be sold on our Stock Exchanges. Payment for these was made through some neutral coiintry, say Spain or Sweden. The demand for exchange, on the neutral, it will be seen, exceeds the supply, and what is the natural result7 Why, the money of the neutral, as measured In terms of the American dollar, advances. (p, w, jr. A SOCIAL ERROR It is said to be regardad as a social error THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE Mobilizing the Food Supply. Lansing's News Reports. Pictures of Players Thts Department free to all rra'rr ic'io u Ml to express their opinions on subjrc!' of current interest. It (s nit open forum, ami the Eieninp Ledger asiumes no rcs;;on?lolHti for the tints of its correspondents. Letters must be sinned bu the name pud address of the tirtter, not ncecssarllii for Trtibllcallon. but as a guarantee of good faith. MOBILIZING FOOD SUPPLY To the Editor of the Evcnlnp Ledger: Sir What Is the United States doing In tho face of Uie present crisis about food economy? Our naval, military, ammunition and Industrial resources have been thor oughly organized. Our financial resources, greater than the combined financial re sources of cither set of belligerents, are more thoroughly and effectively mobilized than ever before, thanks to the working of the Federal Resere banks. Wo know the value of every one of our military units In men and guns, of every naval unit In ships, speed and gunpower; wo know what Indus trial establishments are available In case of emergency, and what each Is capable of accomplishing; we know the capacity of every shipbuilding yard In the country to a ton, but here we oro facing not only a national but a world crisis with tho. cost of foodstuffs higher than ever before ; higher, In fact, than In some of the countries that havo been at war for thirty months, and as yet there has been no mobilization of bur food resources, no warning note has been soundedr demanding rigid cconomv. Two Important steps, which will doubtless suggest themselves to most people who have given the subject a thought, must be taken at once. One Is the mobilization of nil avallab'o foodBtuffs In tho country, and the other Is to nppolnt a conservation noaru, whose business It will be to find out what the Central Empires found out long ago and what England has recently found out, namely, tho relatlvo values as food of the foodstuffs now available or later to become available, so that through this board the public can ho thoroughly instructed and waste annihilated ns far as possible. The United States will be looked to not only to supply her own population with food, but will also bo expected to provldo a surplus for the Allies as well. We need an awakening on this subject. England, wide awakd to tho emergency, Is cultivating every avallab'o foot of ground, Public parkB and private lawns which havo lain fallow for centuries are going under tho plow. We have a big country. Our re sources for 'food production are virtually limitless at all seasons of the year. But our confidence In our capabilities Is our greatest danger. The present emergency demands intelligent superviaiuu mm unci; tIon- Philadelphia, March 12. E. S. It. LANSING'S NEWS REPORTS To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir As an American citizen, with some sense of fair play and some regard for the dignity and honor of our country, I must protest against the Department of State being made a news bureau for the Allies. Yesterday the department announced that a Turkish army was being trapped in Meso potamia and later that Its information In dicated 'that more than fifty Cerman sub marines had been captured since January 1. Surely the dissemination of such news does not come wltbln the province of the depart ment, and Its gratuitous publication Is any thing but fair. JAY. Philadelphia, March 14. PICTURES OF PLAYERS To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: gir it was with a large degree of In terest that I read a criticism upon some of the pictures contained In the Illustrated section of tho Evenino Ledoeb, and also a, denunciation of "the theatrical cult." Tho latter Judgment I think very' unfair. Although some plays aro certainly not what we would want our children to se,e, we cannot classify all plays under one head, or those who take part In them. Ilke every other profession, some who participate in the theatrical work are decent and respec table, while others are not. Personally, I have a. close friend on the i nAnHA In TOMIa,fAlntilA M,.v'no "?. "''?""r. tzi r ?- I1H' H'llK A S' ' r'A.LIllVyn. of refinement know him. There aro many others like him, and would It not ho unfair to classify all who take up tho stngo as their vocation ns per sons having bad reputations? In regard to tho question of some of the pictures nppenrlng In the Illustrated sec tion helpg a trifle Immodest, I ngreo with what has already been said. Tho Evenino Ledoeh Is certainly a home paper, and Is It not best to keep questionable pictures out, whether some may approve or not? Philadelphia, March 15. R. H. PRIMARIES BY MAIL With only one dissenting vote, the Idaho House has passed a bill which provides for the holding of primary elections by mall. If tho Senate agrees to It and the measure becomes a law, there will be wide Interest In future primary -elections In Idaho. Speaker Allred Is father of tho bill. He proposes to reduce the cost of primary elections and to Increase tho vote. He calculates that under his plan the latest primary election In Idaho would have cost $13,840. Its actual cost to the counties nnd candidates was $112,220. Oregon Dally Journal. GLUCK AND STRAUSS An Almost Perfect Program by the Orchestra, With Kindler as Soloist Constant Irruptions of late-comers nnd another "event" were the sole blots on yes terday's performance by the Philadelphia Orchestra In the Academy of MubIc. For so perfect nn afternoon one was In the mood to demand perfection of program, and one got It. almost. That "nlmnul" min the ever-present, the too-ever-present Ttlch nrd Strauss. But who cares what comes after such preliminaries to "The Life of a Hero," as the suite from Gluck's operas arranged with such quick Insight and muslcianly feeling by Felix Mottl nnd the d Albert concerto for violoncello? Why must Gluck be relegated In our musical lives to a stray performance of Orfeo" now and then? Any one who heard yesterday that suite in which charm and awe aro blent to an Issue of such beauty will echo the question. And how beautifully It was all played I How serene and yet how trenchant was the chorus of blessed spirits, with its holy simplicity brought out In string, reed and horn 1 How like a rarlfied "comic relief were the Jocose airs, with their aspect of delicate revelry and light feet! But, more than all. how Gluck does Burvlve! He has seen the white brides of Helicon dance with de light. He has looked Into the netherlands .f.th1.8plrlt- And hls vlsln Is still true, still able to Impress Its clairvoyant quality on the Jaded modern mind. Very critical observers havo written that Mr. Stokowskl succeeds or falls as a poet. We, who think him oven more Important than that, usually find In his failures a something elusive that may be, and often Is. greater than the successes of others. The Gluck-d Albert-Strauss program was well proportioned and magnificently Interpreted "utla be2 BS!d' " may be eatlro o fow Gluck with Strauss, but It Is also good sense. The "Heldenleben" has received no grander treatment at any other conductor's hands these several seasons. Being music of great nervous force and considerable cere bral grasp (also no heart), It cannot always hold its auditors to the end. First because like much of the composer's work, it Is egotistically prolix, and second, because it Is such an old tale in the ears of Philadel phlans. No concertgoer would wish Richard banished from his henrlno- -n.,f ..,. (purely as an example) Doctor Muck di vides his local Beason In the proportion of Beethoven, one; Schumann, one; Strauss, six, even tho moBt ardent StraUsslan may R tett,.W.i1? n.ot' ior a change, at any rate, "Macbeth," Instead of the bromldloms? Mr. Kindler playing d'Albert is a com bination to right any artistic grievance. It would take.no very Inflamed imagination to dub this musician the Stokowskl of the cello. He has the same warmth and richness of emotion, the same sense of lusty poetry In what he does aa his con ductor. On the Bame platform their team work Is well-nigh flawless. Yesterday the solo artist was concentrated, though with out agitation, and he played in his prlmest fashion. His bold and sure technique was not his only card. Through the maies of the brilliant concerto he passed with unerr ing tread, making the ascending and de scending shifts ot melody clean snd fine, turning a tremolo with ease and aniandor. snd producing that shadowy semblance of the human voice which Is the giry of his and gentility by all who TXTViof T Vnn Trnn'm"? MfTW rJj ; '. I Queries of general Merest tclll oe anacered n this column. Ten Questions, the cniwers to uhich even well-Informed person should know, are asked daily. QUIZ 1. Who a the reient ot Russia? 2. About when was "Trenunre Island" written and who Is the author? What l the "Von Tlrpltz element"? What does It udrocate? Abont when did 8t. ratrick lire? Why are airships aueh dangerous foes for NUbmurlnes? Who la Michael V. Rodzlanko? What Is meant bj the "Mease sector" In war dispatches? 8. What nnd where la the Champa . Elrseea, and how Is it pronounced? B. Wbr la the threatening nation-wide railroad strike called a "progressive strike"? 10 What la the so-called German "wall in the Hest"? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. The first amendment to the Constitution provide that Congress shall malt no law prohlbltlnc the freedom ot rellslon, speech and the press. X, The "open-door" poller In China Is one that sires all nations tree and equal access for commerce. 3. Vice Admiral von Capelle Is the German brcretary of the Navy. 4. Wood Is treated with rreosote to preserre it tram decay. 5. I.and'a Knd is England's most westerly cape. In Cornwall County. 0. Glnseppe Verdi (1813-1001) was a great Ital ian musical composer. 7. The Colombian treaty would give Colombia S?S.OOO,000 as recompense for American seizure of I'anama during the Roosevelt administration. R. Till, earwn of taaAmtuftm of the steamship Algonquin was valued at $2, BOO 0,000 by the onuers. 9. Corfu Is a Greek island in the Mediter ranean. 10, Fairbanks la Alaska's largest city In point V CD. of population, which waa 8541 in ivw. Florida J. A. B. Florida's area Is about 68,680 square miles, of which about 4440 Bquare miles Is water. Twenty-one States and Alaska are larger than Florida. Both Penn sylvania (45,126 square miles and New York (49,204 square miles) are smaller than Florida. The wealthiest State In the value of property subject to the general property tax Is New York, with $11,38!!, 137,127. Florida ranks sixth from the last, with $285,860,875. New Mexico, with $84,- 086,518, Is the least wealthy. Others be low Florida In this respect are Wyoming, Utah, Nevada and Vermont. Florida ranks twelfth among the States In the smallness of Its State debt- In 1915 this was $601,567, or $.71 per capita. New York had tho greatest debt, $125,461,557, or $12.73 per capita. MassachusettB's debt was $84, 700,601, or $23.62 per capjta. New York's sinking fund assets'-were $34,487,679 and MaBsachusetts's $38,263,061. Parts of Speech X. Y. Z. The parte of speech are reck oned as eight noun, adjective, pronoun, verb, adverb, preposition, conjunction and interjection. Iron and Steel HEADER To make wrought Iron (steel) out ot cast Iron or Iron ore various Ingre dients are added while the molten maBs Is subjected to great heat In various professes that result In various kinds of steel. The Ingredients which Impart malleability, toughness, hardness ana other qualities to the iron are manganese, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, sulphur and silicon. Further additions ot foreign materials are made for the so-called alloy steels, of which nickel Bteel and cobalt steel are examples. Borne of the , Ingredients that In various combination make special steels are tung sten, molybdenum, chromium and vana dium. NORTHCLIFFE ADVISES US There Is some form of preparedness which can be quickly attained and for which the American temperament Is entirely suitable Two of the successes of the war have been the aeroplane and the destroyer, The American airmen with the French and Brit, lsh armies have proved that this Individual form of fighting is particularly suited your people. If you start air schools In localities as free from wind and gales as possible, you can quickly train flying men Some ot the beat of ours are mere boys from seventeen to twenty-two, You could easily set models of1 the latest British an French aeroplanes, and with your unrlvalad E ;fomfiai?Tc mrfCYrrrvj.- tin riuiiAltli FOETi Whenever U'a o Saturday ant Afr.J you've oat to nMu ;ov -... on o bit of green. For in these parlout momenta (ttU discreet of iou 1 To keep a guarded eve upon eaeK J Tou cannot oe too careful ichat tou an' what vou do, It lou'd avoid tha a,Mf. .. '41 knack innn'M hnt .!. w ,,uv ualvcru; me moment mat vou put it onu,i.--1our tcorfc is through To sally forth on Chestnut street (a J wu 7iciv a new. Tet, one nevercan tell! and thourbi """"'' "uuiH.ou umi nothing ft be admitted to this colyum today tl wore no glimmer of green, we are mi.; of the experience of a friend of our. ..... .v,w ou.uo lcn years ago DA FIQHTIN' IRISHMAN Irishman he mak' me seeckl He ees gat excite' bo queeck An; 'so queeck for flghtln', too. An', baysides, you newa know How you gona please heem. So W'ata deuce you gona doT W'en I work een tranch wan day Irish boss ho com' an' say: "Evra wan een deesa tranch, I no care eef ho ees French, Anglalce, Dago, Dootch or wat Evra one he musta gat I.eetla pleca green to show For da San Patricio. Does ees Irish feasta day. Go an' gat som' green!" he say. "An" eef you no do eet, too, I gon' poncha head on your So I gat som' green to show For da San Patricio, Blmeby, 'nudder Irishman He ees com' where I am stan, An' he growl at me an' say: "Wat you wearln' dat for, eh? Mebbe so you theenk you be Gooda Irishman like me. Green is Jus' for Irishman, No for dumb Eyetallanl Tak' eet off!" ho say. an', myl He ees ponch me een' da eye! Irishman he mak' me seeckl He ees gat excite' bo queeck, An' so queeck for flghtln', too, An, baysides, you newa know How you gona please heem. So Wata deuce you gona do? "Hurrah, and again hurrah, for Tedfljf I says jaarso wenry wntterson In ivouisvuie courier-journal, comment! upon Roosevelt's sharp reply to Bry Invitation to a Joint debate upon pra.1 paredness. He continues: There Is lust ona criticism in m.v. ' such n. reply. It Is an act of unUlrMM.j IW LUIIIVUID WCItUM.,. SIII1U1U WIIQ till tlTO" i masculine advocates ot peace at any erics. I There was no aort ot doubt that Bentalct I Arnoln wns n nnrmnl mal. Tf Ia- ku" 1 temper, his sense of proportion, his honor and ona thing and another, but hs did -: nt any time give tha Impression that, hm : Mamma Arnold graduated him Iron tin 1 neuier garment o( uaoynooa into DTKCQM she dldn t know what she r: hKji. is to the Bryan-La Follette-Stone-Worlti-Vsr. ' daman crowd, one cannot be so sure. Thitr classification seems to have been arrived it upon snap Judgment. , On the other hand, isn't theiunwonM Bllence issuing from Oyster Bay sines taw expolt of the "little band of willful rata somewhat significant? We are rittWl inept in political comment, but we lit out that of the twelve unspeakable Sent-I tors at least six were Progressives. Try as we may, we can't keep trie on out! We've got to tell a story about Qr- trude O'Reilly, of our morning ancestor,! and It goes like this: Miss O'Reilly been lecturing at Montclalr upon "Irish Wlr and Humor," and afterward a gushlni coa-l gratulatress splashed her with compliment,! but finally drenched her with this: "But I'm so sorry the audience yruat larger. You see. though, most of our pwjl come from South Orahge, where you rTI that other lecture a month ago and us probably heard you then." Add Famou3 Triplets Green, Orange nnd White. Kelly and Burke and Shea. Allen, Larkln, O'Brien. And, (once again) the Shamrock,. It may not bo amiss to recall the wlB tlclsm credited to the late Archblsl Ryan although we're sure somebody l write In to prove It of greater antlqult dealing with what constitutes treason I Ireland. Tho prelate and Blaine, so version hath it. were sitting side by i at a banquet and they fell to discuss the Land League situation. Blaine sin dismissed the whole matter with u I natlent gesture. "What they'ro doing In Ireland la. l son!" said he. "Ah!" said the Archbishop. In Ireland Is reason because of tbe sentee." A fresh green sign of spring at S and Callowhtll: SUMMER. SAUSAGES FOR SAIJ5 M THE TWO DEBORABB Tn nnmithfnn'.t lone olace of sleep a mtl lit.? n!rnrown. 1 Has " Deborah' Clanton" carven deefti Upon a slanting atone. Across two dreaming centuries I feel vour smile on me, Fair Deborah, with morning eye And hair's night mystery. The lure of your soft Celtic tongutjj .entrances ununuit- y .Almost it seems that you are VOWJ Again and blithely fair. The loveliness we wot not of Lost in the grasses low As Jewels from tle lap of Love, IXow tenderly you throw Into the cradle of the maid Heir of your faith end name The dreaming laby, unafraid, Bmtles at the passing flame. In Ballyshene's green place of IM A led is overgrown, f m.-i ?.. ,. .Mit Tin the stone. ADA FOSTER MURB1 . -iM Evergreen Irish Proverb! ru i..... u. xr.. n Via Rnueaklng 1 v, ., v" " -J - V'...7i.;.u' H0al -mere is no reeK in vne oi""- r(j . . iMAtt I threw a Btone in tne turnw --, Ti PI T hit. ni the PIC that M"' " ill Tell not All you know and ten nniu wt.M ,.,, l,nnw rlrht WSUk.. w..., m,.v -" T,,-.ni AllTMUil uw And last, but not least, th,J 1 . , Vs.T4s BWH.4 WW, IUOB4L S . aBTOWW "fJKJK"? -'WCyHW Mtt!: rsMairiai clQaflt'iatMk o mmi"f u "" sv wonaaaiav wj IHH , rOU us WIBtlw nvw taatiac tea, wkb mm 'MM ml. ,--.arnt--aabMajs! BSy,g'"JHBt - f-w) v,s