,0 'ta & I li i . v S PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTnt'a . k. cvnTis. rniDxT Chsrtea H. I.udlniton. Vleo President! John ? Martin, Secretary and Treasureri rnillp 8. olllns, John 11. Williams, John J. Bpurreon, r. H. Whaler, Directors. EDITOR.! AL nOAKDl CTsct It. K. Ccatti. Chairman. P. II. TY11ALKT Editor ,tOllX C. MAP.TIN..Oeneral Business Manner Fubllshed dally at rcauo t.idosb riuildlnr. Indcpndrnc Bquare. I'htlsdelphla. XtDOia CTratt...tlroad and Chestnut Rtreeta ATtiNTie Cut rreas Union nmidlns: Nsir Tout 200 Metropolitan Tower biiaoix v S Ford nulldlnc 8x. Lotus 100S Kullerton llulldlnc CniClOO i 1S02 Tribune llulldlnc NEWS BUP-EAVB! Vritvtratnf rtraric Ttlsiri Tiultdlnit Kaw York Bissau . ..Ths Times Building iubux Pramc. . ...no KrlMrlehstrass Losdov neurit Marconi lloute Strand FaSII Bcsiau . 32 rtuo Louis la Qrand subscription terms The Eviviro Lnim In served to subscribers In Philadelphia and surroundlnc towna at th9 rata of taelve (12) renta per week. pi) able to tha carrier Br mall to points ouMde of Philadelphia, In tha United fitaten Canada or United States pos sessions, postar. free, fifty (30) rents per month. 611 (SO) dollars per sear, parable In advance. To all foreign countries one (II) dollar per month. Noxics Subscriber" wishing address chanred tnust cht old as well an new address. PELL. iOOO VAI.MT KFYSTONr. MAIN WO ' DST Addresn alt communications fo Ttenlni; Ledger, Independence Hquare, Philadelphia, nncRiD it the rnit.iPKi.rnn rostorrirs is SSCOMVCL1M UiTL MATTKS. Philadelphia. Tl.u.i.l.r. Jul; 12. 1917 HOW VICE MIGHT HAVE BEEN CURBED AND WAS NOT TT WAS absurd for the Director of Tuu "" Ho Safety to assert that conditions In South Philadelphia. In the vicinity of tho navy yard, havo been normal or that Adequate police protection has been given the young men of tho nation Weeks ago the mothers of this city weio compelled to meet together to devise ways and means of combating tho demoralizing Influences which vice mongers had thrown about tho avenues of approach to the yard. Within a month a patrl otlo citizen has contributed a largo sum Of money for pio construction of nn as embly hall, with baths and other In struments of recreation, within the yard, and wo do not doubt that ho was Influ enced to a very consldeiable extent by the thought that Bilch a center would overcome In patt tho Insidious devices of vice commcrclallsts who lay In wait for marines on leave For weeks past complaints have been reaching this ofllce We wore nsked to urge on the Varos tho lmportanco of protecting South Philadelphia, particu larly tho parts which were recognized residential sections, against tho Intrusion of loose women nnd cadets, who wcro flaunting themselves In public places and ending their agents and drummers to very point of vantage We are not so simple ns to bellevo that perfect conditions can bo obtained. Wo do not think that It Is possible to meta morphose a great city Into a temple of Virtue by day and a citadel of sobilety by night. But wo do know that only flagrant neglect of duty by the depart ment which Director Wilson controls permitted the outrageous conditions to exist which have warranted the Secretary Of the Navy In uttering a protest on behalf of the Pedonl C.ovcrnmcnt. with the idea that If the city lefused to pro tect enlisted men tho naval establishment would take matters Into Its own hands and assure the healthful environment to which recruits are entitled. The arrogance of vice In this city Is appalling Gamblers In one part of tho town boast that they can do as they please In another section, following the cruel and melodramatic raid of a year ago, profligacy Is at high tldo under what It boasts la police protection. Not In years has tho force been so demoralized, a demoralization so appar ent , even to Director Wilson that within the week he has been considering a shift In his commanders, according to repoits. A little Insido political history would sot be out of point. When Smith was elected Mayor a very considerable Organization Influence was brought to bear to give tho city a straightforward and cfflclent Department of Public Safety. Certain leaders argued that the public was sick nnd tired of protected vice and that It would establish the new administration In tho confldenco of the people If a really great Director of Pub. lie Safety were appointed. Was such n man obtainable? Ho was There was one man In the Commonwealth who everybody knew would make good. Ho was John C. Groome, of the State Con stabulary. Smith seemed willing, but ft waa discovered later that he had already bound himself to Wilson. It was art election pledge that had to be kept. Co Groome did not get the Job. If he had got It. neither Josephus Daniels nor any other man would today be holding this -city up to humiliation and Indicting the surroundings It has permitted to flourish almost at the very gates of the nation's gTeatest naval establishment. THE CREASED TROUSER IN AMERICA '.TTERBEIIT KELCEY. whose death t f.1 Bayport, Xu I., has been reported, waa an aomiraDie actor, out the preserva tlon of his Tame has been In the hands or rather legs of many more persons than those who merely knew his art upon the stage. So far as this country Is con temed. Mr Kelcey Introduced the creased trouser, that subtle knifelike elegance ft, the once tubular garment encasing: ljBn' lowwr wtreaaklwBv L. -. tiimu Jerissst Brttlw . "- . .. : Z2 apuumtvt tL ifmmuim- nesa of the silken knlekerbocker of the old regime. The cylindrical Rarment that replaced It was to the author of the Declaration of Independence the symbol of the new democracy. The similarity of trouser legs mado this leveling InOuenco complete throughout the entire civilized globo until London ordered the Damas cene, scrupulously pressed edges, nnd Herbert Kclcey, from the stage of New York's Old Lvcoum Theatre, about twenty years ago, proclaimed the sartorial em blem of superiority. Now comes the war. Trance's crease less "Pollus" defy the Hun from Verdun to tho Chcmln des Dames. Even Eng land, regardless of folds, tucks her Tom mleV trousers In puttees. Uncle Sam doet llkowlse If every one becomes a soldier the sharp pantaloon rim will be entirely taboo. "Tho world must bo mado safo for democracy." Tho class downing creased trouser for many of our patriots Is passing away with Its Ameri can exponent. TOO PROUD TO UK MAYOR! OUn Presidents nro better men than our Mnyors and Governors, becauso gang politics cannot bo so easily played en a national basis as In a city or State. So great an nppenl to the Imagination does tho presidential ofllco and Its great power make that politicians do not daro to ask a national party to nominate a trickster or weakling for White House 1 jnors. This is the basis of tho general and well founded belief that the Tcdernl power can "get things done." Men have alwnvs said. "Tho Statn (or cltv) tried to do this for years, but when Uncle Sam stepped In It was dono right." Thun when Undo Ram decided to clean up vlco dens nbout tho navy yard tho feelings of the city ofllrials weio crucllv hurt Tho gentlemen weio "shocked, nmazed and Incredulous " Rut when It became evident that Secretary Daniels meant what he said, the Mayor hastened in revel so his opinion that reports nf viro had been exaggerated. "Orders," he says, "will bo Issued to the police to clear every district nf disorderly houses." Occasionally a Mnvnr becomes a national figure. This happens when he has run a city with a fine sene of national consciousness nnd national honor. Hakcr took tho mayoralty of Cleveland as it Cleveland were a icpubllc which had chosen him for Piesldent Some of tho greatest republics In hlstoty havo been city teptibllcs Athens, Home, Florence, Venice. There Is nothing new or strango In the Idea of national con sciousness In cltv government Phllndel phla. In nil Its piactlc.il telatlonhlps to "tho world at lage, Is a more Important "nation" than Serbia or Rumania, or any one of n dozen small countiles whoo sovereignty Is worth fighting for. Wo havo certainly nt leaBt one man In Phila delphia who would make a gieat Presl dent. Dut ho has a vvenk point In his make-up. Ho Is too proud to bo Mayor. SO DIG IT WAS OVERLOOKED GERMANY saw to It that she had enough copper, steel and coal; enough food, soldiers nnd workers. She Imperial lzed her Sociillsts and socialized her lm pcrlallsts, and In tho whole big complex machine of world conquest there seemed no bolt or nut or small wheel missing or out of place. Then Herr Erzbetger said a few woids In the Reichstag, nnd Germany, ns a result, admits that tho first real crisis of her war has arrived It was feared that tho Catholic leader spoke with tho voice of Homo. One thing the German machine overlooked, fo big that It escaped notice two millenniums of Christian civilization. THE STEAM ROLLER AGAIN WASHINGTON' . announces thnt tho , Root commission has virtually com pleted Its work and will soon start for home. So many high hopes and so many disquieting fears wcro expressed concern ing tho Influence of our legates when they sailed away that It seems but fair, even at the tlsk of merely emphasizing tha ol. vloun, to sum up the Slavic situation now Russia Is back In the war with tho old Impetus of her original "steam roller." llnllcz Is won. Lemberg and Plnsk are Imperiled. Germany's peace propaganda throughout tho vast new republic Is mori bund It Is as absurd to say that Ellhu Root was primarily responsible for these mirac ulous achievements as to deny that he did his share. Victory Is death to invcstl gating committees Wo know that Russia has firmly girded on the armor of civiliza tion. That hhould sulflco us for tho present. But when Mr. Root returns and feels like talking we ought to hear a talo of heroic reawakening that has no parallel. Neither In Orleans nor Sara gossa. In the time of their respective Maids, was national consciousness ever so thrilllngly quickened as In the dayn when Mr. Root dwelt In "Holv Russia." Gasoline rosts $1 SO a gallon In Paris. The automobile Is the champagne of vehicles. The police administration Is to bo congratulated. It Is ha Innocent that It doesn't know vice when It Is seen. Fixing a definite date for senatorial voting on the food bill suggests that under sufficient pressure even the red tape worm will turn. The appointment of A. Mitchell Talmer to the exemption board by the Governor Is n clever move. Francis Shunk Brown always was "cute." Tho United States Census Bureau estimates that Philadelphia's population has passed the 3,000,000 mark. This Is getting to be no place for peanut poli ticians. The Board of Education appears to be In doubt; but some thousands of children without school accommodations are unanimously n favor, we suspect, of letting the Hornor Building go and some new schoolhouses come. It la hard to see that the decrease In fines for negligence In cleaning tho streets 1 benefits anybody but tho con. tractors. Jupiter Pluvlus may well be thanked for helping them out on their job; but, any real betterment so far m ti aiwsssjMFsMww ia ooaoansad g EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY; JULY 12,- 1917 GERMANY IS SOWING THE WIND Airplnnc Rnida on London Likely to Provoke Merciless Reprisnls on Prussian Cities By GILBERT VIVIAN SELDES Special Correspondent llienlng Ledger LONDON, June 22 VEItr few Impartlnl Judges remain In this world If the war goes on much longer It Is quite possible that Germany will not have a single neutral to nppenl to when the Indictment Is mado up ngnlnst her We ued to say In the United States that no one who had been through nn air raid was fit to talk amut reprisals. We nluass felt that, being Impartial and neutral, we of the United .States were a little better able to keep our heads and to determlno what was Just nnd what unjust. I felt that way myself And now I hive been thoroughly bombed I have rcen what Is certainly the most ex citing epectacle nvallable for civilian ejes. nnd I can testify that It Is more thrilling than nil thn bombnrdments of thn front In the calm heat of noonday In London I hive seen Oerman plnnes dropping bombs over tha city. And I want to talk about re prisals. First, the raid. You know of tho hundred dead, tho half thousand casualties, the school which was bombed and the unim portant damage done You know that tho people, of London took tlio raid c.ilmlj Hero are some details I had left my rooms to mall a letter and wis walking down , which Is nno of tho few ctrcets of London ns wldn ns Ilrnad street Tor tho lust ten dajs there had been Intermittent gun-testing and anti-aircraft practice 111 various parts of the city, so no one w.ib alarmed nt tho booming nf guns To me Just hack from tho front, thij booming meant nothing And stiililenl) 1 sau a woman dragging hor huMmntl an army nillrer, Into n covered nrihnnv In n moment the archway was full, and the crowd ticg.m surging out again Into the street. 1 looked up nnd saw the familiar woolly bursts of white cloud which mem shrapnel Then, very clear In tho sunlight, I paw threo golden lines, llk'o glided foot rules, steadily making their way northward A moment later another gun shot out nnd 1 saw .1 flash of flame, which I took to ho nn explosion In n petrol tank And after It n horrible noise I'nr on the other side caino .1 silver pHne, thing so low down that Jnu could illstln gulsh tho wings Then nil nolso (.topped nt once Bomb Watchinp; at First a Lark The people were out In the street talking, laughing, only mothers brushing their chil dren Into doorways Tho grown-up posi tively crowded Into tho open Mrcot halting tho busses nnd taxis which were hurrjlng eastward to th scene Tor there was a srene A cart drove up nnd the cither told us that h't hart Just romo from He had escaped tho bomb by Ilftinn icet It was a lark the greatest lark of Lon don for dajs Men nnd women dashed for tn-vls I got one nnd hurried down to tho , the tiro engines nine behind us anil we stopped At tho market the pollco had stretched .1 fire cordon, and .1 gay crowd was watching a smoldering fire Several panes of glass had been knocked out along tho street It was Into that nfternoon before Lon don realized whit had happened Well tho fun has cone out of that raid It went out for me when I heard thnt two of my friends had barely escaped nnd when my tobacconist told mo thit his wlfo was hlng In n hospital so badly hurt that ho despaired of her life Tho bomb we hart beatd was tho la-t of many; the planes wo had seen bad finished their nttnek on tho ' fortress" of London And now Utrmany h.ts served warning on us that If wo attempt reprisnls wo also must i-eek out a fortified town AW must not nttark Derlln; we must spare Munich We must go In against the Oerman guns. What does England think nbout It? I find mvself called n bloodthirsty Jingo becausf I nm for reprisals I am for them because I think that they nre the only pun ishment which will mako the tiermati peo ple feel their share In the guilt Hut I cannot persuade m friends of that There was a great "reprisal meeting" scheduled; before It came off a vast Amount of letter writing was done for tho papers Tho sur prising thing is that tho nntls were so numerous Quito apart from tho military advantage of not keeping airplanes either near London or for purely bombing pur poxes, a tremendous number of quite un important people persist In refusing to sanc tion the brutality of bombing open towns in Germany Pnticnce Nearing the Breaking Point I siy "quite uulmportnnt people" becauso in making up the accounts of Iliitnln ver sus Germany these peoplo are of tho high est Importance Tho facts as they stand today are simply two: 1 The common people of Germany In large measure npprove of the bombing of Iondon They havo been taught that this Is 'right bv tne military nuinormes nnd It will take a cataclysm to uproot that teaching 2. The common ptople of Bnglind are not at all convinced that bombing Lon don Is right and they do not purpose to prove It wiotig by bombing Herlln. From timo to time they will allow a raid as a regrettable necessity. Hut they will not bo moved, even by revenge, to depart from their Idea of war as 11 compara tively clean operation. There Is the situation nt this moment, but It will not stay put. Some other factors will come In. First. We. Americans and Britons, nre not going to ses London bombed to tha danger point. When German planes can cross tho channel in twelve minutes, as these did. and when tho necessity of keeping our planes at the front Is so pressing, we will have to do the undesir able next best thing. I e, stop Germany from raiding by raiding her We. too, can make the army detach planes for home defense. Second. The supply of American planes will presently overwhelm Germany It will relieve many British flyers, and If we do not care to share In the proper work of scaring Germany off London, we will at least anow buini i - Third War temper Is a peculiar thing. It Is like a very wonderful spring which ran be stretched and stretched without showing strain, and then suddenly goes sack And when the morale of the civilians slackens, the enemy had better look out. Bo far we have been In a bloody business, with our hands cle.nn. We have not committed murder Go to the. front for half a day and you will realUe mat wi, wimw.ci n. to, , not murder. But I am not sure that we shall keep' away from murder much longsr. ny "we" I mean ourselves. Americans, as well as the people of these Islands. What they have suffered we have suffered in no small measure. The worst of all we have had to the full! we have had to realise that men and women, presumably human, 1' be corrupted and, perverted until the last shred of human decency Is stripped away. The Oerman planes have not yet reached our shores. For her own purposes Oer many may choose not to attack usj she will want us to keep to the high plane of Ideallstlo fighting which President Wilson set for us. She will want a well-disposed listener and adviser among the Allies. It Is possible that the United States .v )t Germany know that what she dou "V. .- - .l. . ... i,,rzrj tp SPSJ SSSi T www wyipM tmm qftSMtsy Hi Mrs vsnsi vk ' SIBBM' s k9 s pk Tom Daly's Column (JorLxf 'hhijfctjisnj TilC QAIIDS'ER The Gardner wean blue overhaul An old hat oil Mi head And says "I, I, sir," when Pa ball) And hit face U vera red. Jlut where i( throat shores underneath Its freckled up and brown He keeps a pipe between Ms teeth And he smokes It upside down. And when he asks j;o what von wish And comes Into the halt Ills tolec smells like our chafing dish That burni with alcohol. He dont come often In the hall Por I have heard cook say She doei not like him near nt all And draws her skirts away. So he Is mostly out of doors Where fragrant breezes blow Among the grasses and the flowers And It Is letter so ADDISON R. P.ROWN happened to bo standing on tho corner when tho two teamsters rnme together and simulta neously Indulged their propensity for public speaking. Tho trnfllc cop was not yet on duty. Mr. Hrown was on his way to Whltemarsh for a day's golf, but this bawl gamo Interested him He listened until inch contestant had exhausted his repertoire. Tho cross street teamster seemed boaten and tho Chestnut street fellow proceeded upotj his way. "How nbout It?" ho asked with a leer as he passed the observant Mr. Rrown "Unethical," said Mr Hrown "You should call 'Fore" before jou start to drive through." Although the Postmaster of Bally gnvvlcy admitted ho "couldn't mako top or mil of It," two columns of tho Dun gannon Courier nnd News nro given to the testimony In the case of one Mary Ann McClcnn, accused of having used a canceled stamp on a letter. At ono etngo of the piot-ceillngs there enters a tlno specimen of Irish bull, to wit: Daniel M'Clean. brother of defendant, lives at ("lonawllllam onrt Is married The postmaster of Ilnnbrldge came to him and showed him the envelope He signed a statement thnt the handwriting was that of his sister Mary Ann M'Clean. He now thought It was nt the time but he met the man on the rnid thit signed it but he paid no attention to It When he was being served with the summons he pild "My sister has been away for two scars and I never got a letter from her but tho ono vnu gave me and I never got It for you kept it" HHTTY GREEK'S boy Edward spent ono week at Fordhnm College when wo vvero thoro In tho lato '80s. In thoso days. It seems, ho wouldn't stay put. Poslbly he never learned that the end of school Is merely commencement day. Ed's still got a lot to learn, if the morn ing papers yesterday quoted him cor rectly. "It's nil over," he said: "I'm mar ried now." I Thcro arc, of course, many comical names among our own socially elect, but wo are obliged to stuff our fist In our mouth nnd stlflo our laughter when we como upon them. It's too near home But, having few or no subscribers In Monroe County, wo can nftord to turn our megaphone In that direction and de mand of Mr. nnd Mrs. Ervln Smalo what on earth prompted them to call their daughter Orpha I. In tho midst of hone-dry alarms it may not bo quite without Interest to note that tho Llcenso Court recently authorised tho transfer of a retail liquor license to one Francis H. Llqucd. PHIL- FRIEND 12 1HV MURllV ANDREW The P. R. T., As thee, mayhap. Who hold thco by a strap Or polso on half a seat Won thy way in town May chance to see. Is laying doum . , A'cto rails In Chestnut street. The men arc black Who dig to lay the track; And one, A sturdy son Of Ham, exceeding quick And dextrous with the pick. Delights to play the clown. With hat worn upside down, And face an ivory smirk. With many a twist M li I c5TC -i 1 CHEcjiSSLlgaS!. 'In' S And quirk Of supple hand and 'wrist, Re ornaments Ms work With twirlings of his pick Through many a shining 'aro Beore If strikes its mark. An Idler by my side, Red-nosed and watery-eyed, Had stopped, as I, to see. "He wastes his time," said he. Which judgment was, of course, Host worthy of its sourcel But I, who mark noto quids The juggler piles his plok. With what delighted test lie works and working cheers The labor of his peers, Adjudge his toll the best Of all that sturdy crew. And giving him his fling Is quite the wisest thing The P. R. T, could do. It points A Moral Too The dollars lurk; W1h smiles abide VP4M .frn'ifcj-- W -PB?- "W' I F"S S" 4 iK- WHERE THERE'S A WILL THERE'S A WAY THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE Hopeful Outlook for Future in the Balkans "Sammees" and "Teddies" DAWN IN THE NEAR EAST To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Many months ago, during the of fensive that carried the forces of Field Marshal von Mackensen through Serbia and' raised hopes of an invasion of Egpt In the Get man breaM. Maximilian Harden wrote a long dissertation In his Zukunft entitled "Is There Light ill the Near East?" At that time the enfant terrible of German Journalism was Mill substantially per meated with the Ideas of Pan-German im perialism, nnd it seemed to him that the conquest of the Balkans bv the Austro-Oer-man armies and the Invasion of Egvpt. Britain's heel of Achilles, would bring both that Teuton victory and Teuton peace desired by the worshipers at the shrlno of "Deis Zet(fri(nm " Since then many events have taken place Despite the triumphal march of Macken sen's hosts through Serbia, tho Iialkan sit uation the basic cause of the war in the east remained In the same state of un certainty In which It was when the shot of Prlntiep ended the lives of the Arch duke Ferdinand nnd his consort and sup plied the spark that lit the European con flagration And just as the advance nf Mackensen from the north failed to settle the Near Eastern" problem by force, so has tho advance of General Maudo from tho south to Hagdad failed to bring any hope of untying this Cordis n knot of world politics With each month It became elenrer that this Gordlan knot never could bo un tied by the sword Then came the Russian revolution nnd the pronouncement of a ne.w policy In the history of European diplomacy tho policy enunciated by (he revolutionary Govern ment of Russia, which, In reality, was a reaffirmation of the "peace,-wlthout-vlctory" principle of the President of the United States. , We are now to witness tho first practical application of that policy at tho conference to be held by tho Allies for the purpose of discussing the Balkan sltuntlon Simul taneously with the Russian offensive comes the Insistence of New Russia that tho Balkan situation bo discussed and tho alms of the Allies In that troubled region of the earth revised Russia, speaking frankly, does not believe that the policy of the Allies In the Balkans, and particularly In Greece, has been In conformity with their professed principle that alt government must he de rived from the consent of the governed Russia boldly asserts that the course of the Allies In putting upon the throne of Greece a man who may not be acceptable to the Greek people without consulting them as to whether or not they Svould prefer a re public Instead was, to say the least, most undemocratic. Not only has revolutionary Russia commanded her troops on the Mace donian front not to enter Athens together with the other Allied forces, but she Issued a virtual ultimatum to her allies for a con ference on tne iiamin proDiem. This con ference will now be held. What can be expected from the confer ence? I believe that a great deal may be expected. If the Allies, under the Inspira tion of Russia's foreign policy of opposi tion to all conquest and aggrandizement, are able to reach and proclaim openly a policy looking toward a democratic federa tion of the) Balkans, they will not only deal a great blow to the ambitions of Germany In that theatre of the conflict, but will jet a precedent that may prove most revolu tionary In Its application to the entire International situation. The Russian policy of "no forcible an nexations, no punitive Indemnities and the t-trhti of all nations to determine their own destiny" has already accomplished a great deal. This must be clear to all those who are not drunk with those so-called demo cratic abstractions that seem to be the stock In .trade of Imperialists outside of the Cen tral Empires. First, the Russian policy has brought about the definite deflection of the Bohemians, Poles and Slovaks of Austria from the Gov ernment of the Dual Monarchy and par ticularly from the Pan-Oermans of Austria, This became Inevitable once revolutionary nussla made It clear and demonstrated be yond all doubt that 1( would pot stana th subluxation of any race or uv hmsSwf SSr ,pssws " "ssss bbshs -irl'-!U"! V JW?jlrC'1swr v tfr JMitw r I rjj, mmJtmmmmm'n . . . 1 rk . .. . ''MMFfT " . I .Is ltV I irt:' : lstuW ' m fifi 'M' shaken by the removal of that external pressure represented In tho old Tan-Slavic Imperialism of Sazonoft nnd Mlllukoff. Second, the samo process Is now under way In Germany No longer can Bethmann Hollweg prattle about the peril of Tan Slavism That peril has been obliterated by the Russian peoplo themselves The re sult is that not only the Socialists, but the entire Centrum, with the exception of three deputies, and tho National Liberals have I bolted. Today Ilethmann-Hollwcg Is on tho verge of losing his mnjorltv in the iceicns tag Following closely upon the Cabinet crises In Austria, due to the same cause, and tho open defiance of the Saxon Gov ernment by the Diet of Saxony It is rea sonable to assume that thn removal of the aforementioned external pressure is begin ning to have its effect in Germany And now- we may hope to see the Balkan conference of the Allies perform the same function as regards the problems of that peninsula which the Russian peace policy has already performed In the Internal politi cal situation nf the Central Empires. This Is the dawn we can see In the Near East If Russia, single-handed, was able to create a political situation In the enemy countries so serious ns to entail possibili ties of open revolt or peaceful sweeping democratization, what may we not hope the Allies as a whole to accomplish by renouncing openly nil ambitions of con quest and domination In tho Balkans? It would be most gratifying to realize In the end that there where the clouds of war flrht withered, the dawn of peace arose Philadelphia, July 11 s. "SAMMEES" AND "TEDDIES" To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Letters I get from abroad tell me that tho American soldiers were spoken of as "Teddies" before they landed, because of the deep lmpreson that Roosevelt has made on the European mind Cartoons havo always shown T. R. in Rough Rider uniform In England and France, and for this reason he has become identified with tho American soldier to nn extent which we do not realize here. But It Is plainly evident that tho business like approach which General Pershing has made toward his great tasks has recon ciled the French to tho fact that Roosevelt will not lead the American forces I am Informed that it was not so much T. R. that the French wanted as a real American army, and now that they have got that they are satisfied "Sammees" is a name that will suit them, so long as Uncle Sam's nephews keep coming over In force. WALTON DAY. Philadelphia. July 11. SEMI-INVALIDS WANT WORK To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Numerous editorials and comments are appearing In the papers relating to en listment and conservation of food supply but why not some relating to men who are unable to meet the Government's physical requirements and who would like to do their bit? There are plenty of men In this country who are semi-Invalids or unable to perform n. hard dav'n w-nrlt u, .!. ... . - ----- . - . ww nuu would oe helped by routine, outdoor work under medical supervision, and at the same time the .country would be d.rlvlng benefits from their abor. Even with the present scarcity of labor, private Interests are re luctant to employ men unless they are In first-class health There are many, lnclud Ing the writer, who would be glad to Dav their own expense until they were able to earn their way. a HEADER. Philadelphia. July 9, "' NATIONAL POINT OP VIEW There are seven executive departments of the Fedecal Oovernm.nt In which m are used for Secret Service. The first need e .Mnra i ..i ... : ..""' neea w ---.-- wii.io, uioBQ under one i-wiiiycvBiik ucu ana give him blanche. Doston Evening Record. carte All the persons who believe they knn best how to run a Government or a nii.. paper are engaged In other actlvitu. Albany Journal. -vmes. Washington dispatches Bay that mna the time of the Senate Saturday viTSr sumed In a long-winded speech by Sena 3 Hamilton Lewis, vvho began his remarks by saying, "Let us do things Instead ? talking" The Senator must be a humorist or something else that creates laughter.!: St Louis Star. "enter. p".ve.vyy "LiL151"6"' m , 8 I w Ai, ' ' , 1 '. 35'Ji i ?' iSSb 1 ! w 1 22L StfS? wxSaWr5 " M ft f i ;1 .Clf, i ! ti ? IV W What Bo You Know? QUIZ 1. VI hen did the New York draft riots oceorf 2. Whnt Is the orlrln of the word "'Mm- wump"? 3. M tint treat war operation was In Drotrm s xear asn? 4 What word do the Knsllsh use to dnerfbt t craduate of the Unltmltr of Cm- nrldce? o. Wliiit the catastrophe of the Vlctorll ...nnd Camperdotn and when did It otter! 0. VI lint popular novel is said to hate dmi based 011 the eareer of nn Amtrlrti President In oirito slnre the Clrll sr? 7. vvnst position In the Oerman Cabinet dl Herr Immermnnn hold? vvho Is now Provisional rrrsldent of tha thlneso Ilepiiblle? B. What Lmperor vtlshed that tho people of ., Home "had but one nerk"? 10. What nre the two American ports la III lanal Zone? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. The Krnpp works are In the (ifrmtn city . Z. "Mmh" ! A vl In nil- it Gnesntah n-nfri f table. In the nouthwettern I nlted StiUiHl It U lined to deorrlbe n hlih tableUM, , ns ulaikmi ' IJ H. Mnnnn la Ska. fana. --. Isasa . i-is" I. ! . " i'siii"ii? naiur 'r japsiM .). . 4a ThA -jfalthn.lnn latv nt ruvniilalinn la namsj ', ; after Thornim Robert Mnlthui. a not!'3! KntlUh rntinmlil II tftil.1 1131 III nrliU 4 finis riswlsieaa 4httt nnnnlsfinn Inrratlfi In n ceomftrlral and mean of inb1tnt liiba.tnc 1- that sir!, hi of till . in an ariuimetirai ratio ana n and crime are nereftsary chechi The Cnrnatlr U a el rip on the rant toist of ' increase in numrfr. India extendlnc from Cape (ormorlo mim sxfnuinc ironi rape lorragria w about latitude 16 north. nmtiu iHiiriina ih nnrtn. n. 0. Go una finnl-h painter, belns born ruento de Tndoa, in Arason Tils linAtt.Vnlhln nm ImaeTunn narlv nnHV Inoted Fillmore for President In IM' nnd as fairly powerful for seirral rears. It was orlclnalu a setrrt fmtrrnltr. I"-? sVlaflnsT nn nutlra AmarlpnnUin In fHtla u Itlca. and lt membera rrfunal to ''j. i omt i heir principles won lor li ine mwi m ,01 itnowooimnff party. . . .. . ... B. Th uutroonft uere early land holdfri I? tiw day when New lork Stat and .adjobv Inn terrltorl belonged to Holland dd estutes of the parronns deseended to tntj heirs In the order of primogeniture. 1 0. Kmllln Castelar. statesman, srholsr sol m orator, was head of the short KpanUs Republic from September. 187S, to Jas 1 10. It la the Chinese custom to par tho dMt onljr when on. la well. OUR FIRST RAILROAD 1 mHE first railroad train seen in Phils' L delohia nrrlved at the head of the Schuyl- kill Incline plane at 4t30 o'clock on ths afternoon of April 16, 1S34, after an eliht-a and-a-half-hour trip from Lancaster. Everybody laughed at this nine days' won-i der. so sure to be a failure It had takes a six years of agitation to provide tha con struction of a single track between Colum bia and Philadelphia, to connect this or' ..III. 1.a rnnal at th. fnrmer nlaCS. SO 111. tie conddence had the managers in the endurance of the locomotive that an emptT horse car followed the train with relays of horses at different points to rescue tni party In case the locomotive gave oau, They had much difficulty with "B'": Hawk," for that waa the locomotive! name, and the passengers had to get out and give It a healthy push from tlmt tlnle- ' .... M ITS, 1..J .A. Bneia VAClttanCS W the Introduction of railroads throutoa the 8tate There was a huge vested wm terest In the Conestoga wagons. -dreds of six-horse teams hauling the im-, mense covered wagons were constantly on the highways, transporting passengers . ..lv. v... aan Thl!alj.lnhtA nnd PIU1 hureh. arid between many other point-" Every few miles along our through turn' a a f.-n.... uhnu homes were on l'j pike ran a tavern as a side Industry. Th"! Inns, besides reiresnment tor irnvc.r... .. large yards to accommodate the teams oun Ing the night. It was a thriving bu.ln,'?J . ...u-.-. V, nrnnnslttnn in construct 1M ways was seriously urged the wagon drtw . .t.- .. . .., lranra mSut an. ana mo a-.wu .... ..". " .trtaS aggressive . fight against the Innovation their Income and their pleasure. ., . l.1.4 ittAnv Th. II luass-meeunKi . ,u of the turnpikes to protest against raw i. . .... t..t th.v were cr ways, .v wins.. ... ..- .iio doubtful 'utility. Political praters dellf ; brlnBln "an untried experiment" n K1 some Instances. United States Senators and Representatives mads these Pn"',TJ were elected solely on the strength of t Ing "antl-rallroad men." rj But the progress of ths railroad waiw gradual that mere was no ".IM violent destruction of the wagon tr5a portatlon Interests. Ths grand old v-o" : . "n-.trta nchooners. awm '? " vwrra-ii.v mut ths ZTUTLTSsSm -It JCr3" syCjJTHa, BBiaf ft tslnJ !! r ' .. cl, ha . , t-Z .4. .AT ' 1 EU.1t.... .i V