IPHP'H.TT "iPw ' fW SHIr W "iNr .. ji ' ". lW!!,-trv tt .' "" i . ij,. ' " iff.. ' -JTV " ' .. .." ' ' " .'" .,.', "i ' nY . m :' , TtA...-T&.feJ chv- llS1 , ' "I 'V, W: 'v ft.1. ;' b V WlS ,: WA m L "T. ,js Lk., i"i 'iff! k i ' r. ' ' iv.rt, . P'. 4$ sssssssllrs'MBlBSHsTa'SJ'sUSMjHi A YtttLtt Ufrttft COMPANY CTHU8 X. X. CURTIS, PanrssKT 5W, Z.MtnBton, Vic Prtslatnlt John . Hvtattrv ftnil TNiaimn Ttil1ti M . . John B, Williams, John J. Bpurron, Whaler, Directors, EtirroniAr. nninni ( ,Clc H. K. CoiTti, Chairman. f.,VHALET Editor C. MARTIN., (laoerat Buitneit Manartr dally at PeaLta Lama TinllAln. i laatpandtnce Bquart, I'hlladalphla. CiTjH....I!roal and Chestnut 8trta ) CltTi... ... , . Press-(n Ion nultrllnv 'OAK.... 200 MetroMlltan Tower T. ... ... t . . . 403 Kneil nulMIn Otns.. 109 aib-trmoerat llulldlnc 0 1202 Tribune Building NEWS BTJItEAUS: 'Oir BrraaATr ma TtiiiMtn TOKK RnaBAU Th T(m llnlldlnr IN Bureau , 60 tYledrlchstrasi ION IJtIUAD........Marpnl lln. Rtr.m! 1 Bobbau 32 Rue Louis la Grand I fiUBSCMPTTON TEItU9 cf b' nv ftTtinw iiwiK is svrTru to uopcripen m Philadelphia and surrounding tonns at the The Erisiso Limm Is servtil to subacrtberi i) fata, oi twaive (12 ctnta per week, parabla r; s'ina carrier. L.v - mall to colnta outside of Philadelphia. In ft, united Statu, Canada or United States pos WJMMfeat Pl5r? Jtf- nrty (80) cents per jtftfe. dollars per year, payabla In 49 ait lorcujn countries one isii aonar per tin. OTtCS Subscriber wlshlnr address chanced vivo cia aa wen aa now nuaress. - MtX. MOO WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN iOOO "iMre-ja oil eommunltatlons to Svenlna ! lAOOtr. ndeyenaeace Square. rhUadclphia, - - fe aumio at tub rBiLatLrnu rniTornca ii AUOaU-CUSB MAIb UA.TTEB. THB AVERAOjn NET FAID DAILY CIH "CUIATION OP THE EVEWINO LEDOEIl . FOR MARCH WAS 100.071 PhiUaelphli, Frld.r. April , 1917 Tho Tresldent has called for volun AH together now I At that, vro suspect that Senator t.. ldc could whlt anv of tho heavv- ky"Welghts now professionally engaged. $JL Mr JIoAdo l3 bashful. He asks : for only threo billion and a nan, wnereas 'the country Is willing to put up any MMiint. By his statement that tho United .tes "never quit waging any war entered until she was victorious," Duke of Rutland handsomely dispels .ur long lingering doubts of our acconv Mlahment in tho bunded and mismanaged If '.Far of 1812. . Tho Public Service Commission's Ilea of -what constitutes public conven- fful that that distinguished body Is not In . .'ViahnriTn of nntlonnl nreDaredness. It mleht ftfca anitatlnc raUInff lemona aa a reply to ,rf.0rnian ruthlessncss. &rj w- The latest victim of German supor- K',!frath la history Itself, which, according tne Berlin TageDiatt, -seems to turn ythlnK topsy-turvy and does not be. H'xjiva at all In conformity with tho 'fjWwughts of wise menV Hero's a real ?v?robIem for "Kultur" to tackle. I '!!. . .Kr TIia Tinmn rt reqMAntn tt Ppnn. f',Uwylvanla will be protected, providing tho r,jriff political patriots, otherwise tho party f 'leaders, have the privilege of spending ; .'v J5 uo Wixr auiiu ajJiupiiaLcu ik luanua uiiu fcjy' aramhla to think vhat would hnnnen If &a' these alleged Americans carried any i.wS 'weight In "Washington. b'm T, ,...i,.., ... .. r.'vj"-' cei6aio U1C lilCllLILUl IJI1 111U HllUCiS -'Sateeplte tho floV of prosperity. Mendl- (,"fants Will be part of humanity so long fcto there is a E,!':?less, and seei world. They are born use- seem to do all in their nower .. - - . fc-v.'.to maintain this condition. Practlco in reading iaces nas mane mem oxporis in f ., m . . ,t . ' ningllne out charitably inclined persons. C4Whilo thslr eyesight is excellent in this .8iJ? ... .u... .. .. ..... . iV . XMiiiei:iiuii, iiiuy ucciu iu uo uiiuuio to 'j'A&kee tho recruiting stations which offer jy- . . . ..... TiMBaiedlate employment with Uncle Sam. it. The case of John Bach JIcMaster HA Avidly exempllfles the difference between iVp ih1"b lliaw,! UI1U llVllie, II., ill illU UlCl" jj. jtlngulshed University of Pennsylvania Dfessor's "History of tho Peoplo of the Jnlted States" war is always a secondary vtohsideratlon and the Revolutionary and V' Civil conflicts are not trpntnd nt nil Pf, Peaceful development, industrial, social, n-""4oonomlc, Is the writer's chief concern. fBut when it comes to the Philadelphia (ocument urging tho President not to ' blwed tho pacifists, Doctor Monaster's r V stcnature is mllltantly conspicuous. ' Qaj Any scare over the alleged attempt P'ito poison tho water of the East Park l!ivi?feservolr " immediately allayed by the . yaj.f that rhla drlnVlnip mnnlt, 4 nnln r ittimit In emarffunev rajiaa. Phlnf Tl.ivla nt ci JthW Water Bureau, also reassuringly k.5 '2J- . t . ... .. Ay vjuMAti tiiui. luiia ui iiiuai. xJtusuna woum do . uvuuijuiii jr iu iciiuc, iiiu nuicr iiunniui. the whole incident, crazy as It t, should be a spur to Councils to tie ordinance, already Introduced. sing Ave hundred policemen to the city's waterworks system. No ;! too mad for a peoplo run amuck, jrlect to protect properly a gnat bridge itirVancouver, British Columbia, mado ,flOMibIe its destruction by dynamite at itjlfc 'outbreak of the war. Our new order - ' - "- .al,4,A aanM.. .. t..A !.. OK ,; second dhallense is unheeded Is the right tart of precautionary t, directly In Jine with the most : kind 'of home preparedness. A : i 'm ultimate effect on the war, an of Russian and British am forces, officially announced ;yeterdy, to of the 'highest k.v Ever since m-osnertn , of n e obi the western front lU.Grermany has cultivated Mtni domination. The i,mnunea a ruae awaken- still entertained pf wnaUr-offenslve that would tly,RuMtan troopa , suae- forses mt.ttmyjp F.-a M Wl "". 'W ' v ,iyrlii,'AnaiollA and even 'Asia Minor. It is even possible that a Russo-Brltisn army may eventually attack Constanti nople from the East, as did its last captor, tho great Ottoman Mohammed II, in 1453. There is plonty of historical precedent to show that great wars aro not always decided by what are commonly regarded as their major operations. Napoleon himself confessed that it was not so much Waterloo that wrought his downfall as the tremendous drain on his men and resources exactod In Spain, where Wellington lod his expeditionary forces far from tho sccno of tho central European shambles. A beaten Turkey, an Asiatic dream shattered, may ptovoko rcftsonablo Germoti peace proposals long beforo Entente troops ever enter Berlin. OUR WAR BEGINS THE nation Is at war. It is no longer in order to discuss somo borderland "stato of war" or of "armed defonso" of our rights. Wo stand, with "everything that wo are nnd everything that wo havo," to go forward with this fight, against foes without and foes within, to stop only when a free German peoplo gives tho world tho guarantco of peaco that only a freo peoplo can give, or, 3 tho niter native, when our flag floats with those of tho Allies over tho last of tho despot isms, setting its subjects free. JOIN THE NAVY THE navy needs men. It needs thorn to m,m capital ships; It needs'thom in tho marlno corps; It needs them for sorvico on smaller craft, for gun crows on our merchantmen and for scores of other purposes. Tho navy's needs aro tho prlmo needs of tho nation in this crisis. It Is on tho sea that we must humblo Germany. Tho sullen submarine imut bo driven fiom tho depths. Tho lines of communication to Europo must )0 kept open. It is tho navy .that will get first into action. It is tho navy that will mako posslblo a quick ending of tho war. Tho nation is destined to havo tho greatest navy In tho world. Tho peoplo havo waked up. Thoy havo learned the lesson Captain Mahan tried to teach a quartor of a century ago. A great mer chant marlno will grow up alongsldo this great nayy.- Young man, go into tho navy! There Is a great futuro on tho high seas, n futuro such as has not been offered to Americans In generations. Men who know tho Rea will bo In great demand for years to come. Let young men help their country by Joining tho navy now. Thoy will find that by so doing they havo also greatly helped themselves. SAVE A BABY! fTIHB soil of Belgium will never bo re " doomed if in tho abomination of desola tion human life, too, ceases to oxl3t. Tho utter extirpation of that great people Is under way. Tho million children who must father nnd mother tho next genera, tlon of Belglums aro being slowly starved. They can survive only if tho world comes to their existence. Ono hundred thousand of them can survive only if Philadelphia feeds them. Ono dollar a month saves a child. They are children worth saving, for they aro tho offspring of heroic fore bears. Phlladclphlans, you havo been slow to answer. Bo sjow no longer! UNIVERSAL SERVICE FOR DOLLARS MAKERS of war material aro well paid, and they should be well paid. Rail road nnd farm workers nro seeing to it that they get a Just reward for their Industry. Upon theso threo sets of work ers depends America's success in tho war. No system of financing our campaigns should decreaso their earnings, dhectly or indirectly. Those who have raised tho cry, "Let tho rich pay for their war!" manago to mako two errors. t First, It is not a war of tho rich. If it were, there would bo no war. If thoy could havo censored tho demand's In nows papers that tho honor of America be upheld, they would havo sought to havo the news of tho Lusltanla sinking cen sored. Tho Idea that rich men controlled tho newspapers in order to mako war explodes on contact with the ttony truth that a consistently unpopular nowspapor cannot make a living. Tho altornatlvo to this view Is that tho American peoplo are so hysterical that a, majority of them can always bo led around by the nose by any plutocrat run amuck. Second, If by tho rich is meant the own ers of property upon which all the needs of a nation at war are produced, it will bo necessary to lmposo very heavy super taxes on the owners of farms, railroads and a majority of factories. Tho first effect of such a procedure would be to raise the prlco of food, for labor is not to suffer. Labor has done bettor in Eng land in wartime than it ever did in time of peace. Tho unproductive rich, or, rather, that part of the nation's wealth which is not employed in producing necessities, should feel the burden first. Increases Jn the income tax should be made and the ex emption marg(n should be cut down to $1500 or $1000. Wo must prepare to raise billions, not millions. THE WORLD'S GETHSEMANE THIS Is the world's Good Friday. Civ ilization in sackcloth undergoes its passion, pours the full measuro of Its sacrifice that the earth may bo set free. The etornal flame of freedom flickers amid tho surrounding darkness. That .light was faint nt Chalons, yet it blinded Attlla the Hun. It wavered at" Tours, when the fate of tho Aryan race hung in the balance, but still it burned, and its subtle potency rolled back the Moslem hordes, , Today still mightier powers of might invoke een more poignant sacrifice, Tho agonies of the tragic garden where lib erty must be watered and nurtured with, IM learn oi men win uo uw(i unu uuier. Jui;tbe euMwntsequel of Pood Friday's ,JtjJ y -f11 1JN V" Jta!iJWJBtrJ. JLKiiJArx, ar xvj-u u, --' THE BIG CHANGE IN NAVY MORALS Drunkenness Now Not Tolerated nnd Honesty IsGuiding Principle The Bad Old Days By A NAVAL EXPERT THE average man of mlddlo nge or older who has eons who are considering what to do In tho world seems to have a wrong Idea of tho kind of men wo !mo In the navy. It Is probably from the Idea preva lent twenty or thirty years ago that every man wearing the navy hluo was a drunk nrdj nnd, generally speaking, ho was. In those days nnd earlier, tho hulk of the en listed force wns composed of sailor men who drifted away from tho merchant murlno to try out the navy to drift back ng.iln Into tho merchant marlno after tho enlistment In the navy had expired. Theso men of tho merchant marlno wore, generally speaking, a touch lot, ns they had been kicked about by the merchant skippers, who were two-flstod unites, nnd had to bo to control tho clement that mado up that class of workers In those days. The laws for merchant wotk gftn the rap tain great power nnd, at the sumo time, required n physical force to enrry on the dally routine. Tho sailor wan, ns u rule, brought on board the merchant ship the night beforo Balling In a drunken condition nnd had no Idea where ho wns going until ho soberrd up. Naturally lio was "ngln tho government" from the beginning and hnd to bo clubbed Into Bhapo. When such men enlisted In theyiavy they could not help bringing tho pnmo Idea of "buckling everything In flight" with them, nnd the nay dlclpllno had to bo and wns ory BOere, so that such an clement could bo controlled. It wnB not long, however, beforo tho crow was whipped Into shape and tho ships wcro ntnart nnd the drills excellent In spltb of tho material. As long ns n ship w.ib at sea cruising all was woll, but then tlmo cumo to glvo liberty on slior oorythlng was upset for a weo'-c or mon Ccncral liberty wni tho ruptcm that Is. hnlf the crow was gl en liberty tor forty-eight hours. After tneir return ino other half was glvon the snmo tlmo on shore. Theso days woro harrowing ones for all hands,' especially for tho executlvo of ficer, who had to do his best to keep a Bomblnnco of discipline during this tlmo of havoc. It wni considered tho proper thing for nil handt tn romo back on board bo nearly drunk that thoy could barely "too the Beam' when their names were cnlled to mURter right after their return. Then they would go olt somewhere and sober up. It wns a common sight to bco theso men finally empty a bottlo of rum Just ns tho boat was coming to tho gangway. Thon tho effect would not really get busy until nfter pass ing Inspection. Later on, theso men would bo dead to the world for a day, and It wai tho established custom to let things go as long as tho peaco was not disturbed by nolso or fighting In those days tho percentage of Ameri cans In tho crow was small, and all lnn gunges wero heard about tho decks. Tho ship's cook wns always "Portugee Joe," nnd ho was nearly nlwny.s n Portuguese, too. North Countrymen, Germans, Hawallans, Greeks. Italians mado up tho crows, and tho olllccrs' servants wcro Chinese, when theso excellent peoplo could bo obtained. Many "beach combers" (tramps of tho sea) were picked up nnd enlisted anywhere that a ship happened to anchor, No wonder that the fathers of tho pres ent generation of young men advlso against letting their hons enlist In tho navy with such a memory extant ' It Is in lino with tho Judges who havo at different times allowed a bad joung man to go freo pro vided ho enlisted In the nay. The Great Change However, all this Is changed, and it Is tlmo the new condition should be well known. Tho navy of today Is mado up of as flno a lot of' young men as thcro aie any where Drinking Is lrtually forgotten, and tho ono who falls to be back on tlmo froni leave Is considered a freak. Drinking Is "bad form" now "beforo tho mast" as well as In tho wardroom, and nothing kills a bad habit so rapidly as making It "bad form." The cases of court-martial for drunkenness In tho navy aro now few and fur between, nnd tho enlisted men prldo themselves on being "clean and sober" on their return from leave. Ono vory good rulo has been established lately In tho service and helps much to retain tho present high standard of tho enlisted force. This Is an order whereby a commanding officer may get rid of a worth less man or dangerous character by simply reporting him ns "undeslrablo for tho serv ice." By return mall authority Is glen to dlschargo such a man with a bad con duct discharge Most of tho. enlisted forco Is composed of young men, men between tho nges of six teen nnd twenty-five. Of course, thero Is a largo number who mako a llfo business of tho senlco and thcro will be always on a ship a percentago of older men who act as a backbone for the discipline. Theso men aro nearly always chlof petty nfllcers, men of great respectability nnd Impoitance. trustworthy nnd tried. Thoy hae been promoted through all the grades to their present positions nnd havo been closely watched throughout all this servlco nnd marked by tho many olllcers they hao served under nnd uirlve at their present responsible places only through worth, and long-proed worth. These men nro tho ones of tho enlisted forco that Intluenco tho younger men with whom they nro closely In contact nil tho tlmo, while they are tho result of tho Influence of the olllccrs who trained them for their duties. So a young man la now in good hands and ho Is yiero nearly all the tlmo and Is not adrift nearly half tho tlmo as ho may bo In tho city. Honesty First There Is an atmosphoro of uprightness and honesty on board ship that few can Know anu realize. I'eoplo tliero know each other "by tho back," as they say In tho nuvy, and few succeed In fooling their Bhlpmatos long, nnd a crooked fellow Is soon known and publicly nicknamed and epoken of by his especial crookedness, how ever small It may bo and few remain who havo big crooks In their disposition. It does not tako long for the olllcers to find out ono who Is -wrong and ho gets short shrift. The ono thing that Is most strongly ac cented on a man-of-war Is honesty. With tho Impossibility of locking up one's pos slons on a ship, honesty must be enforced. If a slnglo case of stealing be known, at onca everybody on board is on edge to find tho malefactor. It la considered a calamity to bo on a ship known ns a "thief ship," and everybody feel ashamed until tho crook Is found and severely punished. Any joung man in tho navy may learn any one of many trades, so that he may earn his living after finishing a cruise. Some of the trades are machinist, latho or planer hand, molding, blacksmlthlng, cop persmlthlng, bricklayer, ejectriclan, storage battery man, carpenter, shlpQtter, etc There Is no end. Thero is even a tailor, a shoemaker, halrcutter and laundryman on board, and men may choose to do any of these. Furthermore, thera Is education for those who deslro It, and Skilled Instructors detailed for tho purpose, so that those on board who wish 'to study may advance as far as they like. They will always find the olllcers ready and willing to work with them Into the most abstruse science. Furthermore, the present law authorizes the Secretary of tha Navy to appoint to the Naval Academy each year 100 enlisted men. That Is a rare chance for those who have no political Influence to get tha rare ap pointments available In their districts. Only ons year of service Is requlrad bafore tho permission may be 'obtained to take the, ex amination at Annapolis, and the young man Is ordered and the expense of travel paid by the Government, and he I subsisted and given a place to sleep while waiting for the examination and afterward until he enters. It la a wonderful chance. The examina tions are savere. but any younr mart who. has ben throw two yeara of hlh ohoc-l.1 yetems afcouM Tom Daly's Column Phyllllccrlcs ! TUB SALLY BALA OAJt I rose up in a llala car On tHfty-sccond street, And all tho bally Imps there are l'laycd mltcMcf ivtth my feet; I should have uaitcd for the jar Beforo 'I left my scat. Next time I'll hall some shooting star And find a vacant scat, For walking through a Bala car On Fifty-second street, A feat too monitrous ts hy far Vor my two monstrous feet. JOMACAW. OUR HUCKSTER told tho Missus that ho wouldn't cniry grapefruit nfter this week; "because," said ho, "they cost mo $4.C0 a box nnd I nln't gono to investi gate $4.E0 to mako a quarter." "Somo pooplo may put it moro tenderly, moro diplomatically," writes ono of Bert Taylor's contrlbs., "but, after all, my frlond Skinner was right when ho said; "Somo women wear white shoes, others havo big feet.' " Kin Hubbard's Abo Martin put It moro t. and (1., and, having said it boforo friend Skinner, ho put it right; "Somo girls hao big feet and others wear whlto shoes." to A nriLF-coxrnssED ruiLosopjivn Ts It your pride sustains you vwst When other men's conceit omif hollow "My school's the world!" you often hoast And wait for the applause to folloux With any casual phrase, you love To strike a nollo attitude; Afti3 xolth what eloquence you prove Borne stale and standard platitude! Is tliicra no cure for this offense That human flesh. It scctni, Is heir to; This philosophic flatulence That all your underlings must swear tot Is there no end to your supcro rower of rhetoric and Inaction? Can nothing shatter, nothing rurb, Your sleek and smiling satisfaction? In soft emotions you lie curled With all your placid creeds beside you; And blink approval on a wot Id You Uke to think has taught and tried you. The iforld.you say, hat been your school But have yon never contemplated, Oh, poilllva and pompous fool, IIow badly you've been educated? LOUIS UNTEIIMEYER On ' tho buff paper Jacket of Louis; Untermoycr's new book, "Theso Times," from which tire nbovo Is taken, wo read: Mr. Untermeycr " Is. first of nil. a singer, while constantly deepening and broadening his contract with contemporary problems. Woll, these times 'nro tho times of big contracts. "SPIiIKO II AH COM a " The ticcs were rocked by April's blast; A frozen robin fell, And twittered, as he breathed his last, "Lykcllc, lykcllc, lykellc." llert Taylor, In Chicago Trlbuno. "The spring has come, has come," began The Weather Bureau chief A bll::aid struck the silly man! "Has come, has come to grief!" To Make an Emperor Laugh (From Dubois and Mathews's "f.lfo of Oaluaha A. Grow.") In tho intermission after tho adjournment of Congress in March, 1853, Urow went to Europe with some of his colleagues, among whom wcro E. B. Wash burne, of Illinois; B. I'ringle nnd E. D. Morgan, of Now York. They ronched Paris during a week of great In terest nnd George Mason, the American Minister, secured them an nudl enco with Emperor Napoleon and Empress Eugenie. During tho conversa tion the Emrieror, who was nt ono time In this country, asked W-ishliUrnn In what part of tho United States ho resided. Wash burno replied, "Oalena, Illinois." "Oh. yes," said tho Emperor, "thcro Is a great deal of lead In that region. What do you Amer icans do with nil that lead?" "Vt'e sell It to our friends and give It to our enemlos !" Wnshburne answered, at which the Emperor laughed heartily. "Dear Boss," writes C. C. S. from Potts town, "I hopped Into tho Signal Corps of tho regulars; yesterday nnd loavo on Fri day for training and eventually the avia tion section. But serious as this step should make mo feel, I'm convinced that my first duty is to call your attention to this subhead In a morn, contemp.: ' Woman Worth $2,000,000 Asks Alle gheny Courts to Annual Marriage In setting up our own dear paper's financial news yesterday an inspired com positor made It "American Beat Sugar," but tho heartless proofroom caught it. Neighborly Recriminations You'vo borrowed my hatchet and nice shiny raw And taken my screw-driver, too. You've left my new plane lying out in the, rain, My chisel you used on a screw. Just one tool you left me, but now that is gone, Today It. too, answered the call, For Bome'funny "hick" took your worn old. Ice-pick, And now you have taken my awl. MACKIE. Two small paths lead up to a couple of shacks off Richmond street in Frankford and a sign nearby reads: NOTIS THESE RODE IS PRIVIT Josoph Bramwell, observing it in pass ing, pointed it out to nn Irish frleqd Who said: "Gobs! the word 'is' is th only wan there that's right an' tSiat'a wrong:." Overheard in a Route 13 Car "Good Friday! It'a the day the nursery, rhyme reminds us to buy those Red Cross buna." "Why didn't they allow La Follette to talk all that dayr demands Fit. "It was his. What? don't you know? 'Spj Wednesday.' " Springing to the defense of B. Roeap, M. S. demands to know' what kind of a Watch we use. "A good one," says he, "ticks five times per second." Two pota toes or one onion to the first man who will bring such a watch to usi Double groft for Urn -who will' detiswltn X i'''. V. . xV-X" -&iiVT-- .ZT P t: t;" JTJ.f.f .". V THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE An Anecdote Which Explains Difference Between Statesmen and Politicians Another Universal Service Plea STATESMEN VS. POLITICIANS To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir The Senate of tho United States was called to meet In special session Im mediately after the closo of the regular bes Blon of Match 4, 1807, by tho President, for the purposo of considering cxecutlvo ap pointments, and among tho new Senators who responded to that call was Goneral Simon Cameron, of Pennsylvania, who suc ceeded Hon. Edgar F. Cowan, elected six years before. At that tlmo my namo was beforo tho Senate for confirmation, or rejection, for tho ofllco of Assessor of Internal Revenue for tho First District of Pennsylvania, and, desirous of the support of Senator Cameron, I visited Washington for the purposo of explaining to him why I should bo con firmed. Calling upon General Cnmeron at tho Wlllard Hotel, he and I soon started to walk to tho Capitol, and In crossing Fourteenth street we met Senator Alex ander G. Cnttell, and tho New Jersey Sen ator pleasantly greeted tho distinguished Ponnsylvanlan with "Good morning, State's man." Quickly Senator Cameron responded: "Good morning, Cattcll; call me nnythlng but statesman, as It Is a distinction I have never sought and never shall. Call me politician nnd I would bo proud of tho honor " Senator Cattell appeared some what surprised, and thus renlled: "It wns my Intention to compliment you. Inasmuch! as you nave secured the Senate's approval of threo Important troatles with threo for eign governments within tho short period of fifteen days, that Senator Sumner, as chairman of the Committee on Foreign Af fairs, wrestled with for fifteen months with out reaching a result. But nlensn tell m the difference between a statesman and a politician, as you understand it," and this was Senator Cameron's statement: "A politician la a man who has somo in fluence a statesman Is a person wholly and absolutely without any influence what ever." Senator Cattcll asked General Cameron If ho would more definitely Illustrate tho dif ference, and this was tho prompt reply "Thcro is my friend Bin McMullln, of Philadelphia ;yhe ts n ward politician and carries tho Fourth Ward In his vest pocket Nobody could tako that ward from tho Squire. "And my other Democratic friend, Sam Randall, has such a grip on the First Con gressional District of Pennsylvania that no one ever thinks of making a contest against him for Congressman from that district. "And my friend BUI Mann in sn !,.. intrenched as the Republican leader of i-iiiiuueiiJiiiii. iiiai no can nominate any one for any office In that city from a county Judge to a ward constable these men are among those I have In my mind as poll. Uclans fellows of commanding Influence." "And thero Is one other," said Senator Cattell, "whom you have not mentioned. He like Squire McMullln, as tfc tho Fourth Ward, carries the State of Pennsylvania In his vest pocket, and It doesn't make a bulge in It and his name Is Simon Cameron." And General Cameron modestly respond ed, "Sometimes I can help a deservlns friend in Pennsylvania," Senator Cattcll then asked Senator Cam eron if he would please enlighten him as to statesman men without sjiy Influence whatever and this was tha reply, made with a humorous expression: "Cattell, I can think of two only Just now Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, and my son-ln-Iaw, Wayne MacVeagh, of Pennsylvania." And It was my belief that Senator Cat tell, who, with the railroad interests of Now Jersey back of him, wsb a politician of the most modest demeanor, considering the in fluence ha exerted in New Jersey and at Washington, heartily confirmed General Cameron's definition and limitation of a statesman. JOHN W. FRAZIER, Philadelphia, April 2. UNIVERSAL SERVICE , To the Editor of tho Evening Ledger: Sir I favor universal military training unreservedly, and hope the Chamberlain bill wilt pass. Compulsory military service was Insti tuted by Prussia during- the time Napoleon dominated Europe, and was as much a na tional institution as It was a national neces sity, .After 1870 it was adopted by tha outer ui iim iiainiMi nmr, ana to "sFeTWsMSB I UsW assBBBBBBBnsTaiBT SB-BBS sbbUsS fMSBBBBBsmtVa ., I I I SO BE IT! NaAU V'AOtf- good thing, nnd It Is to be regretted that tho United States did not adopt It many years ago. PAUL PRY. Gcrmantown, April 3. WHY NOT SEND MAIMORIE'S BATTLESHIP? Having discovered that tho European war Is to havo Its great final battle on the west or east front or at Salonlci, In Mesopotamia, in Egypt or at sea. If It Is not going to end In a stalemate, tho Xew York Trlbuno now finds that millions of negroes In tho South aro plotting a rebellion against the United States. Tomonow it probably will advlso Mr. Wilson to "let the erring Sene- WHEN QUAKERS FIGHT American history Is full of Instances of Quakers yielding to righteous Indignation and using force. They havo carried arms in defense of their countiy and they havo used their fists In defense of their friends. Joseph T. Dullols, ex-Mhilster to Colombia, In his iccciitly pubPshod life of Galusha Grow tells of a case of tho latter kind. It was at tho time of tho fight between Rep res,entatlvo Kelt, of South Carolina, In tho Houso on February 5. 1858. Kelt had called Grow a Republican puppy and Grow had called Kelt a slave-driver. Then blows wero struck. Great commotion followed, writes Mr. DuBols, nnd the entlro Houso was Involved nt oneo In a rough-and-tumblo fight. In stantly tho center aisle In front of tho Speaker's desk was packed with an ex cited crowd. Mob spirit descended; each lawmaker stniclf a lawless blow wherever an opponent could bo reached. John Covode, of Pennsylvania marched down tho side nlslo with an old earthen cuspidor In his hand. As he passed Richard Mott, a peace-loving Quaker., from Ohio, Mott cried out: "Whither goest thou, Brother John, with thy earthen spittoon?" "To fight for Grow with this weapon!" shouted Covode, waving tho cuspidor on high. ' "Peace be with thee, brother," counseled Mott. "But If thou must fight for Galusha, aim thy spittoon well, John, and hit the mark I" And with this Mott followed Covode Into the fight and got badly damaged. I . All Points of the Compass Casuals of the Day's Work XLH, "VFTEN wo havo been allowed to call at V7 tentlon here to the dedications of books. Sometimes the dedications are the more important. It Is for that reason that we would like to call somebody's attention listen, please! to John Gore's dedication to "The Barmecide's Feast." Thero is one line In It which should stick In the memory of strong men : "Have donned the real, and doffed tho make-believe." Good Americans are doing it In these days of history making, and tho whole thing is worth re membering. Here it is; For thosa who In life's monstrous . pageant-play havj marked beneath the i "? th8 BoW th0 commo" humaS livery of gray which all .must wear Blnce all must fear the cold; for those who, from the crowds that prance and pace beneath the llmellgtot and ft lo smlle of kings, sweating and Jostllmr for a forward place, drew back to S berbboned courtiers dared to flash mute messages of laughter shared. .n.- V ' 2" nar' ' Bme wider space have donned in? real and doffed hamh.ke;bhelleV0' a,,a found th" hearu that beat beneath the lace, and lived "hw ns l men ever live T; where oft the generous Bunshlne of September U?,? mltae.nce working?, and many a Joyous "8uri ..' member 1!' raked into dam.' .,1 ...: rr?mi.,nt0. fl?me the "hes ., , ii "" luai narao or half. inr?heteBnm3okee reVl8'0ned Van,she ffi'SS,5S'ftoour the office atnnt. V-:- """'WW and trust our 7 i .' " "" T..ws Would warped timbers o l "shlpot Fo8 which sails unspoken on a phantom I""1 that fashion frown. Ton Sd mSS men disdain, to seek life's wealS & some unfettered west, and wake toblnd ?Urfeti8J" on nKa'n' wn0 westward n the dying sunset gleams tho tatted topsail of a ship of dreams "Jre For those who onesbrlef hour hava known tha worth of that tlma.,ervJ stavsry. sueeess. weia-ht i .v,.y'n, i .ui, - -- .. - ;::l '" ." l --"?Wrr. yrw,m.ri-Mn.la, .. y ? y What Do You Know? QUIZ l 1. noes nrrmnm- Intend to declare war on tba Lnlteil .states' 2, What l liaril elder? 3" M'.m..,11'" ."ot. Cn.'.,nt Tnrnonskl. tlir. dMli. imtrjl AiiHtrn-IlunKnrlnii Ainhissmlor t ' J'nUeil Stutei. Iren nfflcliilly retttlred uy tlilt 4,overnnieiit? 4. ft hat Is the illlTerrnre between a fratrlld nnd ii resit Ide? r. DMInziiNli between the Civil Wnr battle of Mlnslnmiry IIIiIbb unci Cemetery itlilce. 0. ft hat anil where was Arrndia? 7" M,,l'ull,"1 ",c "tather "' tll American 8. Where la Sheboygan, nn American city when i. "erenJum BhnntMl nn alrnont nnna'- mous tote niralnt war with (icrmnny? 0. CI, the full nauio of the Secretary of mate, 10. Who was "Cncle ltemus"? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. "Sclecthe conscription" U conscription of lertuln cIuxhf of men. 21 The population of Mrlco It about 15.000,000. '' I",'iU,e,,, """''t ItroHnlnK. who illeil In 1H01. wan the wife or Hubert llrcmnlnr, the J-nclMi poet, and herself a poet. 4. The Cernmn retreat In northern Trance, hhorlrned the wur front thero by about forty mllet. B. An nre Is 100 square meters, or 110.(1 (.quart jarda. 0. Reykjavik In the capital of Iceland, which Ii a DunUli tolony 7, A pointer Ij ; siunoth-roHteil hunting; dot which ktands rlelil nnd points with lti nose upon Hcentlnir names n setter has oat and usually crouches I rut cad of pointing. A. A mandarin In a Chinese public ni(lrlil ulia wears n distinguishing button on tie lut. 0. The "vanishing race" of America Is popu larly supposed to lie the Indians. 10, An anridotlst Is n person who relates or toilet ts anecdotes. Border Marriages O. M. Gretna Green Is a village of Dum fries, a border county of Scotland and near tho border line between Scotland aud Eng land. Formerly common resort of i una way couples from England, the practice was broken up by an act of 185G, which provides that no mairiage should be valid In Scotland unless one of the parties had lived In Scot land for tho tvventy-ono days ne3t picceding the marriage or had .his or her usual leal dence thera at tht time. " A Petrified Forest N". P. Thero Is In tho northern part of Arizona a wonderful deposit of petrified wood, covering nearly 100 squaro miles Tha trees lie scattered In 'every kind of posi tion nnd In pieces of all sizes? One great Ji trunk forms a natural bridge ncross a can yon forty-five feet w,lde. There Is every ovidenco that tho trees grew' besldo soma inland sea. A'ter falling they became water-logged and during decomposition tbs cell structure of tho wood was entirely re placed by silica from sandstone. The silica Is either colorless like quartz or shows tha beautiful colors of ngato and opal. Nicholas II E. C. Nicholas II was Pinr nf Itussla from November, 1894, to March. 1917. tha dato of his abdication being reported as March 15. Tho latest dispatches described him as being detained at Tsarskoo Sclo. Aiken, S. C. r. C. C The population of Aiken, S. C Is about 4000. It is a popular health and pleasure resort. Chinese Religions v H. J. fc. There aro five well-established religions In China the Confucian, Buddhist, Taoist, Mohammedan nnd Christian. Thera Is no stato religion, but thero is a movement on foot to have the flrst'nnmed adopted as the state religion of the republic. Isle of Man A. N.B. Tho Iala of Man is under Brit ish sovereignty, but has Its own constitution and government, nnd Is exempt from laws made i by tho British Parliament unless specifically named. The chief executive offi cer, the Lieutenant Governor, is appointed ' Dy uio Brltlan Crown. , The Kaiser -) T. B. W. (a The "divine right of king- ship" is a doetrlne that rulers ore nppolnted v by heaven to be rulers and that "their acts j are inspired. The German Emheror Is the a'i foremost modern proponent of this doctrine. (b) The German Emperor is not a cripple. - In that he is nctlvn nnd thiei hut hla . left arm is shorter and smaller than hls'ijj ngnc -i i)is ib oue, n is said, to an acciaan at nis Dtrin. (,4 'Metric 8vsts "! T .. ..... Jr'l I. ,., -!.. r it l tn ST,-!.'. ! 'l ti 'fil f Kjp fjitM-ri4. Ealr teeans J . in an T'VI.. arai" ' "' MM fcJHFSHBff 7 yKmtBmMMmiBB!SExrJfMBEaa&&ufc.it. MjaawRMLvn i ' 7 'jHianj'.,. mmmmmmams, 1 , -V';' m, lij.JHUBBBBBBKL&.-iX- Jtl.P Zi33BBBBaHsBSBBBBBBBBBVakaBnP'HBBBBSBBBVHni M- ' vBHuyu