WrWr' " Effi AUGUfilT -30, 1917 :sT -V tSSS JGe&gcr .JPOBLIC LEDGER COMPANY sTTHUB H. Kf CUUTIS, Pmsidzkt M IT. T.ufltnrton, Vice President!. John tin. Secretary and Treasurer! l'hltlp H. PiL-fDnn if. Williams, Junn J. opurseon, I. Whelv. Director!. F, EDITOP.IAI, BOAItDt '. .-. ir T ..-- .- ... wkB i. vtiitBi v.nairraan. , WnALET Editor 1 C. MARTIN.. General Dullness Manner pulldlni. pma. Untied dally at 1'cni.ia I.irain 'I '"f'1 Independence Square, I'hlladtlpl i mPv"H v.n-iMAi.1 . .Liroau ana ncninui oireeis L'; asal,T' cut Yess-lnto Ilulldln tdbx iuu jietropolltan Tower AIT.. ...... intt IPnrrt IlntMIn Louis., 100ft Fullerton Hulldlng :aoo 1202 Tribune Uullillnc I NEWS nUTtEAUSl 'UBiiioTof iitaiAD.. nice Building TOUT Ucniuo Tha Times Building DM BtJICID Marconi Houso. Strand a !..... nn ..... . .. . r. . t STW A.I.SI..U Om HUO LAIUIS J UnU ,-jjK subscmption teiims .-Tlia Etikiko I.inotn li served to subscribers V M, Philadelphia and surrounding; towns at thn .'''(pita of twelve (12) cents per week, paiabla , to to carrier. sy man to points outside or rhllirtelphla, In y Voajaaaloni SSc, United States. CAnada. or t!nltr1 Htnr unit. tons, posts to trt, nrty (Mi) rents pr Hth. Six (10) dollars tr year, raj able In ,.... ... .ui.tiu vuuuttica uiic tii uuiinr wr pi:. IfoiWoTiCi Rubacrlbera vvlshlnpr address chanted War JasWt lve old as well aa new address. jfStW'aWtL, JOOO VALNCT KEYSTONE, MAIN 3000 .'tTii w &$?v "Address all rnmrounlcntlors fo rrralsff "" j, ,Ldotr, Independence Square, Philadelphia. i."? snrosiD at Tn rniLAPatrnu roiTorncu At -iV-i ' BICOXB-CI.ISS Ullt, 1IATTBB LS - ., Pktl.rt .!!,!. Tr...e.J.. 1 fi 1QI? -j . - -.,-.r.,.mi ihui.ui1 ", w ' fo.y $' JTHE PRESIDENT'S MASTEHLY MOVE FOR PEACE if ? sw V3 E4 w : m 'itJt , TN THE summer of 1864 tlio friends of Kjfft, ' Abraham Lincoln almost tlespnlrod of ness, stupidity and general copperhead lm united In a formidable coalition which denounced the war as a failure, purposed to selzo the Government at the ensuing lections, enter Into negotiation") with the. moribund Confederacy, accept the failure- of the democratic experiment on this continent as a fact and repudiate the principles of every man who had offered his life In sacrifice that tho Union might be preserved. Among all tho men who lived in that day thero was one Wboso eyes pierced tho horizon and whoso Vision of complete victory was never dimmed. He had the faculty of stating the truth In such a way that none could misunderstand It. Ills purpose was not only to end ono civil war, but to pt event the recurrence of others. There was no power on earth that could swerve him from the path he had laid down. Ills banners were dyed In tho blood of tens of thousands of men, and ho did not pro pose to abjure the promise he had made them that they should not die In vain. ' Pence he would have, but only after the overthrow of tho system and state of mind that had caused war a peaco with reconciliation. Ills heart and hands were open for tho Southern people. By the next summer Abraham Lincoln himself was dead, but the sort of neaco for which ho had striven rested on the land and the principles to which ho had dedi cated his lifo were established forever. If.., t 2,V frf fe'H i. r, ir I A FEW months ago President Wilson himself was proposing peace to tho aatlons then at war. Ho was In posses sion of absolute Information to the effect jthat peace must be got quickly or this country would bo plunged Into tho con flict. He proposed a peace without vic tory. Ho now answers a similar plea for peace from the Popo with an emphatic reassertlon of tho goal toward which this nation alms, and without tho attainment of which It will not Htop. Though his 'latest utterance seems to be utterly at variance with his preceding position, in Its essentials, It, In truth, dovetails into the whole previous policy and purpose 1 of America as outlined by himself. kY '-.There must be a victory for democracy, !W llJ. .. -.! ..-- ... . . .. 5ihM u i.ucjuuoi.., miii'u mo worm is noi iaafe while autocracy controls miiitnrv 'Jgfe2L Jmlsht and Intrigues to use It for pur- $t noses of ainrrnndlzpmpnt? Imf fuiu- a. v in M KUn (than that this nation will tint tm "Hunt. iV4ia.tr.. . .. Fi e damages, tne dismemberment of Hii Umpires, tho establishment of selfish Euitj Ind exclusive economic leagues we deem inexpedient and In the end worse than K&J Km SSSS 'futile, no m-t let v any fP 'during peace. . . proper basis for a peace kind, least ot all for an en- That must be based on Justice and fairness and the common rights of mankind." In a few words ho .1 j 'has kicked Into the bottomless pit tho $ij feivfhole scheme of economic leagues and A . . L?ATnm l fil Stat! nlotn r0 t amh. -- wH.iuv.wm. uoMuuoiii ui, uctjuauy, prop ierlv nuttlnc nn rnrl in thn mnnln ttm W,' " .7 - . s 'TnA jviinrrnimn iiniiir.i rtmAT... i Tn tt..1 nUflni. .,! A 41.. All,.- .... -MtiiA, fstvii.r, iiubivis i.u .iiu viaea iiiai post- tollum prejudices aio not to be sane- ned and formally notifying the people Germany that their dove of peace can ntr back a green leaf, In the form of iture equal commercial and political op- riunuy, provided a democratic Noah U)?Jliol not a Hohenzollern Noah looses the fi.'if.. - &. ? woum not be to the advantage the world to mako nnntliai- Tnimj . M v""u Ul iany or another Alsace, to pauperize of millions of people and enslave economically. Whatever the crimes have been perpetrated against Uon, civilization is superior to the Ul instinct of vengeance, and, more. that, civilization is intelligent and Ul not cut off its nose to spite its face. WWB statesmanship of Lloyd George, UpabIeaa it is. is not the statesman. 4tiip of Woodrow Wilson, who seems to 'inspired with a veritable genius for nt of the true aims of liberalism. i tdw baa become fixed in the German v' 9i' rTr-Mliwfmrjtmaa i ( ' 1 .. . ,'. nation and the race from the face of the earth Is the aim of the Allies, that there Is no hope for Germans except to fight on and on, to tho last man and to the last woman, until every resource is exhausted and naught is left to save. The President has knocked that Idea Into a cocked hat. The note sounded by, the President In this latest communication is, we bollcvo, by nil odds the most momen tous heard tlnce peace discussions camo into vogue. It is truo that tho dynamic forcQ of his previous utterances has changed tho current of human thought and even changed tho essential purposes STRATEGY OF THE FIGHT AT CRAONNE Capture of the Heights Will Give the French Commnnd of the Plains Lending to Belgium Tom Daly's Column By HENRI BAZIN Staff Corrtspondnt ot tha Eventna I.tJaer in France. PATHS, July 28. THI3 war was never moro Intenso In any phase than It has been along thlsi front, along these ridges and tops of tho Alsne. I have lived In a storm of artillery that shocks tho air for many miles, French of tho war, defeating German propaganda ( artillery and Gcrmnn artillery. A 420 fhcll In Russia, rclnvlgoratlng tho revolution and, even In Germany Itself, subtly and Irresistibly undermining tho militaristic stnto of mind, but not beforo has there been so Riiro a hope, so nbsoluto nn as surance of safety for Germans In a world safe for democracy, as Is now exposed to vlow. It riddles Uio Kaiser's carefully nurtured plea that Germans must fight or sink, It shows to Austria a way out and It puts this mighty arbiter of national destinies deflnltoly and surely in line as tho champion of all peoples, foes as well as ft lends, proposing a sure and durable peace, based on tho very principles of civilization Itself. rpiIEY read with their eyes shut who say that tho President has rejected tho peace proposal of Popo Benedict. Ho has dono nothing of tho kind. Ho has, on tho contrary, shown how that proposal can bo translated into nn instrument for the achievement of peace. Ho has Indicated how tho German peoples can get to a conferenco tablo nnd bit there In good faith. Moteovcr, tho first real move ment toward peaco will bo found later, we believe, to havo dated from yesterday, for it was yesterday that tho gates for reconciliation wero opened and the way out of war shown to the people ot the earth. "We must await some now evi dence of the purposes of tho gieat peo ples of tho Central Powers." Thero Is tho Invitation, open and above board, clear and" emphatic. The peoples of the Central Powers will accept it sooner or later, probably sooner than most people Imagine. FIRST STEI'S IN HUMILITY rnilU German Junker must havo a crick -! In his once tlgld back. Bowing to a nation such as the Argentine Republic, whose tegular army numbers but 24,000 men. cannot fall to bo painful cxctclso at (lrst. Agonizing, too, tho words ac companying tho new attitude of inclina tion undoubtedly were. Unman', de clares Beilln's note, In order to maintain friendly relations with Argentina, "Is willing to grant fteedotn of tho seas" to her vessels and payment of an Indemnity for tho sinking of the Republic's steamer Toro. Orlando Furloso never penned that document. It sounds like a trial com position from Foreign Minister Kuehl mann's first class in elementary psychol ogy, and, figuratively speaking, that is Just what this humble sctap of paper Is. Herr Kuchlmann lately voiced tho theory that tho viewpoint of neutrals was worth considering. The gladiatorial principle of "Let 'em come on. We're nimed!" has somehow lost a bit of Its thrill slnco the United .States took up tho'rhallcngo. Swashbuckling Herr Zlmmcrmann's successor actually favois tho study ot non-German national psychologies and tho cultivation oi sweet reasonableness to ward off further foes. Success in his first endeavor is immediate. Had such a policy been launched earlier there would have been no -war. Pessimists will havo a hard time proving that peace with Argentina has been nssured In order that a "hotbed of Ger man propaganda may continue blooming there." Teuton Intrigue Is, of courso, prevalent In Buenos Aires, but tho nat ural sentlmont of that Latin land Is so overwhelmingly pro-Ally that the path of the plotter is much less rosy than It ever waa In tho United States ptlor to last April. It is easier to believe that Germany is learning to look beyond the range of her artillery fire. Humbly she seeks to retain tho official friendship of those few nations who still receive her legntes. Of so sagacious a move as this her old bungling trickery would have been in capable. The step was dictated by Teu ton humility, the very quality which civilization desires to sco grow greater and more profound until its presence is gloriously manifest at tho green baize peace table. As a slnccuro In weary hot weather days that of German Minister of tho Colonies has Its unquestioned charms. Austria asserts that she abandoned Jiumo oumu voluntarily, it is with a similar spontaneous exercise of free will .U. -. . A.- - -. . . . uiui una evuuuiiics n cnair on which a tack has been significantly placed. Canada's final 'passage of her draft bill completes tho harmony of action of that great neighbor and our own land. The long unfortified boundary lino be tween .the two countries grows dimmer every day. Critics of Mr. Wilson used Iron ically to call him "President of Human, ity." That he is now actually tho au. thorized leader of four-fifths of It is evi denced by the apparent willingness of all tho Allies that he should bo their spokes-' man in answering the Papal peaco plea. Says James W. Gerard: "The Em peror said to me that tho Colonel (House) and I in our black dress suits looked like a couple of crows; that; we were like two undertakers at a feast and spoiled the picture." There's many a true word spoken In Jest. The picture of autocracy is beinjr turned to the wall and the feast L .-" , .:: immtw id -- .,.,.-. ,-, .... ..- , J. -,7T '' ' F" ' -" imatSViiX. vt ' v k. -'-'. ': r'it.i v;.? urfr uft from a, Hocho battery fell seventeen miles behind the French line, I was told this morning Thousands of gas shells have poured thplr dealth-dcallng fumes about us. .Vo man llea without a mask. Tho nolso is beyond description. And the valor of tho pollu Is n white, light among all tlio valorous deeds of men rlnco time began. These ridges and tops of tho Alsne nrs as a nature wall separating two allcys, tlio valley of the Alsne on tho south, tho valley of tho Allctto on the north. The advan tages being fought for arc essential to both commands. Wo must havo tlio valley of the Allette. And tho lloclio, unless ho Is willing really to seo tho beginning bf his certain end, must hae tlio valley of the Alsne. That's Just tho story. It's not u new htory. History I full of Its records. Ancient wars havo been fought- bete, and before this month ot July, 1917, tho fortunes of France have been at stake here. Only, never beforo have tho full fortunes of right, not only tho right of France, but of the world been at stake. Two and a half years after thn Marne, nt tho Oliemln-des-Dntne-s. nnd nt a point exactly where tho "contemptible little army" muilo Its debut under fire, fierce fighting has been the order. It was Inevitable. Thcso heights and plains of the Alsne are nature's buttresses supporting tho solid masses ot Coucy-I.aon-St, Oobaln and have been one of thn logical points for battle In the mili tary history of France. "I'etlto Suisse" they have been well named. I.cry military advantage which Involved attacking Paris Is dovetailed with them. The definite safo essential to an unconquered capital and a free Franco Is their holding by French nrmlcs. Also, once In full possession by the armies of the Tri color, tho way Is open to the Meuse, and even to the Itblnc. Scene of Ancient Strife Frencli history la pregnant with proof that the existence of the French nation Is Involved In holding or losing thce Alsne heights. There was the battle of the Alsno In tho time of Caesar, tho battle of St Quentln under Henri II, tha battle of Craonne under Napoleon. The Germans knew these things well. In September, 1914, they had fortified this region at time of Invasion, trusting tho fortifications would never bo needed, but prepared to stop the French and English nt this point If It be came necessary Which it did. Thus these heights became the extreme limit of re treat during the battle of the Marne. After over two years of vvnr our armies are upon these heights, nnd the end of our 1914 offensive Is geographically taken up in a general offensive of 1917, for that Is exactly what Is happening, as but little time will show. The Boche Is resisting desperately and, as the news of the last eight days tells, has started a little offensive of his own upon these battle-scarred heights. The limestone formation of the territory Invites abrls for him, since It Is rich In chasms, cavities and caverns. In a sonse, he thus has had some thing of nature-protcrtlon against our ar tillery and a fitting place from which to carry out tho modern war Idea of counter attack. In It he has consumed the flower of the Prussian Guard, the last, I well be lieve, of Germanic disciplined trained youth In the highest military sense. In defending these hills, knowing that once this region of Franco Is lost retreat over the plains of the north Is certain; knowing also that such retreat removes genuine right to a Ger manic occidental or west front as a genuine thing. Wearing Down the Enemy As the French have stood at Verdun and tho Somme, so they vv 111 stand on the Alsne. The battles I have witnessed about Cra onne are already part pf tho new glorious history of France, a fitting part of the work of June-July, 1916, a fitting replica of wearing down enemy force as It was worn down at Thlamont and Fleury. Craonne Is worthy of addition to tha glorious names engraven In the history of this war, as worthy as Verdun, Ypres, the Somme, the Marne. In clearing tho valley of the Alsne from enemy grasp and domination, the French know their advantage, too, and what It means in conducting the rest of a waning war upon tho part of the Boche. The val ley of the Ailette Is the last clrcumvallatlon without Laon, for from the heights of Boye. Hill, where tho Ailette has Its source, the entrance to Laon Is dominated and even tha plains beyond extending Into Belgium. AU this Is why the fighting about Craonne has a genuine military and strategical value of extreme Importance to cither com batant. The April-May offensive, then, was a vie tory for France. It gavo to the armies of the Bepublio the entrance to tha Alsne, the canal, the road to the valley, tho slopes and acclivities that lead to hills dominating the river, a part of the plateau, a part of tho Chemln-des-Dames, of Hurteblse, Craonne, and even tho approaches' to the valleys to ward All and Vauclerc. It gavo French batteries a clear range upon tho distant plains, and placed a portion of Ailette Val ley at the mercy of French fire. DEBTS OF THE RICHEST NATION The outstanding debt of the United States will be Increased more than sevenfold by financing already authorized for war pur poses. We are going to spend for prepara tion and for Initial operations alone nearly as much as four years of ' the Civil War cost both the North and tho South, in addition we are financing n 13,000 000 000 loan here for our allies. All this will' In crease our debt from approximately 1,000,000,000 to 8,000,000,000. Yet after all that Increase our per capita debt will still be lower than that cf any other leading nation except Russia; and If our loans to our allies, for which the Gov ernment will hold their securities, are ex cepted, our debt of less than 'SO for each man, woman and child will be by far tha lowest among the nations. On the other hand, our national wealth la tim... -1 more than twice that of any other oountr flaggy .:.', MTyriac '-"' w -. At.atH'J:M nowx ao Tim rATMonAXs ll'c Dive: Three rive. WE BARELY say goo'-by to Joseph M. Connor when In comes Will Lou, also bound to tho wars. Wo aren't sure what Ills billet is to be, hut it his fighting Is as good ns his verso ho should como back with shoulder strnps. TAKTD ELIZA. Tantc VAlxa, in (lermanv, Hocked mc to sleep upon her knee, ToUl io ffllc- of elves and gnomes, And great, Hack hears in their forest homes, Chattered icith mo and joined mv play, Have mc cookies on Chriitmai Vayt Tuntc l'M:a, long ago, Pulled my sled through the drifting snow, Hunted with me for many a licit That i-lllagers built for the hints to rest, Took mc walking p Ooclllngcn hill To watch the gay Soldatcn drill Tantc Eliza, I come again To sack your land, to kill your men; Yet If, you looked leyond the dead, Perhaps you'd see mc lend my head To catch some German lad's adieu To his mutterchen for love of youl , WILL LOU. TREASURE BERT TAYLOR presents an nd, from a Chicago paper, presumably: "Wanted Several Industrious peo- plo to distribute moral literature Will pay $180 for 90 tlns' work." .Sounds like a lot of money, put that way, &ez ho. Now, what wo want Is n word that teon'f sound so much like a lot of money. We'io tired of talking "billions." Why not tcvive tho biblical talent nnd camouflage tho filthy lucre, or tit least lump It? Muybo you enn Invent n word, dear render, that will oven back tho talent off the boards. If you can we'll give you a tiny fraction of It, say a nlco crisp bone or Iron man. Go to It. GOSH! THIS GUY KNOWS US! Dear Sir Referring to our Invitation for some ono to take n crack at tho Scotch Irish, I write to ask If any other Irish will do as well? Dldjcvcr stop to realize how near ou ourself came to being Falrmount Irish, having been born between Schmld helser's Meat Market and Klein's Brewery yonder on Coates street fornlnst 23? And when you beat It to Green Htreet, look what you had round the corner at either end the block. Weldemann's Drug Store and Moser's Bakory one way and Klndlg's house and Feltlg's Market the other. An' I'll bet ye had tr first haircut at Charlie Uerlach's barber shop! RIPPEY. TO ItVTII llefora Leaving for the Ware. Tlury say that I shall set a wondrous thing: Ten thousand vien that march as one, The cannon's crash, the bullets' nip and sting; Death-brinaing birds against the sun. They tell mc glorious fortune w4ll be viinc; To battle bravely for the right; To be a part of that unbroken line That, singing, surges into fight. They say my days are rich and full and fair; It seems they never can surmise, J only long to touch your golden hair; J1 world Is mirrored in your eyesl FRANZ. - H . j .-. -WW -.'1KIIIIIH i GERMAN PAPERS PLEAS1!) wtfx m lU aHP p '',-.. ......,u.ir,-",,i -- H . -Lr."" ... i- IBBBBBBaBBBBBwP Stl ! '":"""v',, "-"":; v ":.:.-.. i I- LaaaaaL k . . tH Jfvi"f.f ., -, alii V '., . 41 J WWMtl'ttWMr iy3F'B-lwI5K ,-,'; , ,! ,. '-sag; . ;. ,f .?, f ;: z-w- a ! TrSfiar tPlBr $.' . ..., i1 i'.iaSi?,.!.i.i ,.:., iov,,iV-,..!ir.a s, What Do You Know? f Inside Stuff Sir Down In Norfolk there Is an old fellow who keeps a small stand on one of the business streets. He made a crude sign which read: SOFT DRINKS Later on, wishing to convey some addi tional Information to a thirsty public, and not having space at the bottom of the sign, he printed It In tho middle, with this result: SOFT INSIDE DRINKS SALLAD. PASSING a talking-machine emporium yesterday, we fell to wondering what the Wizard of Orange Is doing, and If we might really hope to hear of Edison re turning Columbia Victor? A POSTCARD from Carl Shanfelter from Southampton: "I'mon my way, but d. k. w." That means another bunch of our lads have got by the U-boats. A SUMMER FALL lie fell asleep upon the silt. The tdndotvslll was deep How deep the areaway below Alasl alasl lie did not know Until he fell asleep. NOW YOU STOP! It Is no fiction that B. F. Story Is a "Manual Manipulator" In Lacoula. N. H. The Laconla Democrat also Informs us that Mrs. Nellie Huzzy is vUltlng her sis tor. Mrs. Toof, at her home In Dover. Evi dently an error for Portsmouth. In spite of Mrs. Toof, however, we still find over in "The 'Mouth" Mr. Ham and Mr. Beane, but that la probably because Mr. Payne Is also present. Of additional Interest Is the fact that Mr. Ham conducts a, leading restaurant, and Doctor Walker Is a chiropo dist, while, paradoxically, Mr. Lowd's Vul canizing Station Ms located on Pleasant sttcet, ' HUGH MERR. THE sign on the front of a building on Market street between Thirty-seventh and Thirty-eighth read: "Horse Dental Par lor." Sometimes It's possible to look Into parlors, from an elevated train, but wo couldn't see into this one. We are un able to say, therefore, what manner of reading matter was on the table, but we could make a guess or two: "Black Beauty" (paper cover). "The Horse Laugh (weekly comic). "Boots and Saddles," "Balaam's Ass." "We Are What We Eat" is the title of a booklet Issued by a local grocer. Not to mention certain cannibal behind the Hlndenbur line, we know what H,WM ?T" !WFf JPW?r5 ' JitKKi. - -,' . THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE Britain's Responsibilities "The Six-Hour Day" Destroy Weeds a ship or in the strangling (like Casement) of a traitor to King and Church. RULE BRITANNIA. Philadelphia, August 2B. Tilt Cfjiartmenr in tret to all readers iu7io ills' to express thtir opinion on subjects o current Interest. It is an oueti forum and the hvenina Ledger assumes no responsibility for ths vteits of its correspondents. Letters must be signed by thn name and address ot the writer, not necessarily for publication, but as a guarantee of sood faith. BRITAIN'S RESPONSIBILITIES To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I nm shocked and pained beyond measure nt the rebellious tone of letters such ns that of Mr. Dan McDermott, who clam ors for tho freedom of Ireland during these times ot stress when the pillars of our Anglo-Saxon civilization are rocking; when tho valiant sons of our empire are fighting shoulder to Bhoulder for humanity, democ racy and the rights of small nations, happy In the assurance that their Interests are being watched over by our patron, St. George, who, at the head of a battalion of angels, held at bay the oncoming hordes of Hun barbarians during the retreat of our gallant Tommies from Mons. How can Irishmen read of tho mighty deeds of our warriors without feeling their hearts leap with gratitude to the God who has so blessed their country by placing It under the pro tection of the knightly hosts who at Galll poll and KXit havo proved themselves worthy successors of tho paladins who thrilled the world with their boul-stlrring exploits on a hundred htilckcn Melds from Fontenoy to Majuba mid from Colcnso to Bunker Hill? Let Mr. McDermott and his deluded coun trymen remember that we nre all fellow Britons, and members of the freest empire the world has ever seen, nnd. that wo are allied by a sacred covenant consecrated In life ana death with the group of nations who are lighting and suffering and dying for the liberty of all the races ot mankind; and as we remember the imperial service to which we, nnd the peoples associated with us at this time, havo been called, let us concentrate our faculties and dedicate all the energies of our soul to prayer. If the men and women of our empire do not pray In such times as these when the reali ties of eternity are so clearly revealing themselves among us when will they pray? If we do not pray as a. people Intelli gently, earnestly, and labor In prayer, we shall fall In our high calling and trust tha hlchest nnd most sublime that has ever been Intrusted to any people. It should be clearly understood (and In thought and sentiment we must labor even painfully until this truth becomes vivid and clear) that, as Premier Asqulth well said In Au cust, 1914, this is, first of all, "a spiritual conflict" "We wrestle not with flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers; against tho rulers of tho darkness of this world ; against spiritual wickedness In high places," and therefore "the weapons ot our warfare must not be (solely) carnal. cut spiritual.- au self-renunciation, all unrsi anu hunger or soul, an severe uiscipuno or life and the most bubllme nights of faith and hops will be necessary In order that we may be equipped with tha "whole armor of God." What a lesion It Is to remember that this "whole armor" Includes such difficult elements for human nature as "gentleness In victory" and "patience tn reverses," "persevering against all odds" and the assurance of vic tory when appearances seem to tell only of failures, as In Franca and Flanders the ability to plod on amid discouragements and bewildering perplexities ; the God-given ability, moment by moment, "In dangers often. In watchlnga often, in weariness often, to serve Htm with a quiet mind," the miraculous tenacity which enables men to endure and to serve as seeing Him who In Invisible ; to live amid the tests ot time with a firm hold of the realities of eter nity; to be able to fight the good fight of faith against tha enemy under the guise of the present evil and at tho same time firmly to exclude hatred from the heart and pray that It may please Thee to for give our enemies, persecutors and slander ers, and to turn their hearts" ; and to pray "forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them who trespass against us." Let us then go cheerfully on our way. wiUHUi mn, euiiavisua si ttt HHTil reomi aj afffj aSffiaa. wf es22SKt3 THE SIX-HOUR DAY To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I do not believe God wants man to woik from 7 a. m. until 0 p. m. that Is, lust to slave his life nway to maintain a livelihood. Some men have to start early In the morning for work and return late at night, working hard all day. Such a ono manages to wash up for supper, ofttlmes too tired to eat or read the paper after supper. He has to retire early to enable himself to be fit for labor the next day. Just think of It eat, work, eat, sleep, cat, work! Nothing else out of life, no time with his family! I say I do not bellevo God re quires such a life of any one. I firmly bellevo God would be better pleased with conditions it we had five working days, six hours each day, giving man a day, not robbing God of His day. I (Irmly believe that six hours a day Is the correct thing. Philadelphia, August 26. BERT. DESTRUCTION OP WEEDS To tha Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir In a twinkle of an eye hours of labor can be saved. In a twinkle of an eye one may destroy a weed that would, If allowed to go to seed, throw millions of seed3 (and it seems that a seed of a weed never falls to grow) which causes the farmer and those raising foodstuff hours, yes, days of labor. Now I believe It should be compulsory In this country, as I believe It Is In some other countries, that every ono should be compelled to keep the weeds on his ground cut down, nnd wlieie there is woodland they should be kept cut down twenty-five feet in from the edge of the wood growth. I firmly believe. If this were carried out, In two or three years time wo would not be bothered with weeds and I do not think we would be bothered with mosquitoes ns much if all high weeds and grass were kept cut down anT,vBu,a,m.PJr.pIacea fllled ln or drained dry, Philadelphia, August 24. TUDOR. NEGROES AS VOLUNTEERS To tha Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir In answer to R. M. B 4th. I de sire to t,ay: Why should a negro fight In a revolution for a country of which ho was a slave? I cannot possibly see an answer to this question, but maybe it. M B or some of his friends can answer It Again, ln the Civil War they were forced to tight against the Federal troops, but when the emancipation proclamation came Into existence they naturally desired to fight for the North, their liberators R JL Bh ,,? ' they should not'have deserted the South, but should, have continued to fight agalnsr. their benefactors. All United States histories of recent date credit tha capture of San Juan Hill to the negroes, and I don't think I would dlsbe-i lleve them In favor of It. M. B. .imw ca th0 "eBroea volunteer when re cruiting officers turn them down with the answer. "We are not recruiting negroes at present"? One Philadelphia evening paper stated that a negro In New .!. n,.ii..j the most4 t!"iym"?f.t0 enIlst' and h8 received the As I live In the northern seotlon or Phila delphia I cannot answer him on the South Philadelphia situation. There is a bad sec. tlon ot every nationality and race In the city, and I guess R. M. B. closes his eves when he goes through these sections How can the negro ln the South exercise his voting rights when the Government wilt not. stand behind him but T lets the people take the law in their own hands? HARRY B. MOORE Philadelphia, August 27. """" MY STAR All that I know Ot a certain star Is it can throw (Like the angled spar) Now a dart of red, Now a dart of blue; Till my friends have ald They would fain see, too, My star that dartlee the red and the blue 1 ,Then u,r b,rd! fl They must solace themselves with tha planet above it. , What matter to me if their Ur U a KV'Mi"riLV iiLi ? ? f 'o r, What Do You Know? QUIZ I. The prevent 1'one Is ltenedlet XV. When iS lienedlit MV rrlcn? 2 Wh.it la thn Allmnlnn name for Albania? 3. Where Is um llunenek? 4. Whnt Ih meint In KnKlnnil by anch eiprel- xlonit nn "tainted titles"? II. Mnntlcnor Thomas 1'. Kennedy has died la Koine. Who Has he? (1. What la the 1'lnnMi Diet? 7. How many iotatf classes of mall matter nre there? 8. Name the two men representee New Jersey In thn United States Henate. 0. Una there ever been n revolution ln Ger man)? 10. Name the founder of the Jesuit order. 1. Answers to Yesterday's Quiz A sonnet Is a set form of verse, of fourteen lines or ne tect earn. There nre two tanrlnril forms the Shakespearean, com posed of three quatrain clinched by n lliuil couplet, nnd the I'etriirrhnn, rhymed) u-b-b-a-a-b-b-u, e-d-e-d-enl. 2. Cannonlers nnd drivers nre the two mala divisions of urtlllcrymen. S. Holland. Himln. Hultzerland nnd the Brandt imvlun countries are the principal Euro pean neutrals. 4. The platenn of Hnlnstrrn. has been the scene nt Austrian retirements In the face of the Italian drive. 5. The liohemhin composer. Drorak. found mu sical Inspiration In American neirro melo dies, notably In his "From tho New World" symphony, fl. Thn orldn of the word "glycerin" Is the (reek Mord "itlvkeros," meaning "sweet." 7. retrnntus was the most famous arbiter of taste In the re I en of Nero, 8. Lemuel Oulllier Is the hern of "OulllTfr's Travels," a satirical romance by Jonathan .Swift, published In 1120. 0. Dr. William von Klumm has Just resigned ns (iermnn Undersecretary of i"oreln Affairs. 10. "Trjlnic It on the dog" Is theatrical slanr for producing- n pluy In n smnll city or ton ii vtlth n view to nscertalnlnc In ad vance the probable nttltude toward It of metropolitan uudlences. AN EARLY THEATRICAL FUROR PHILADELPHIA'S first great theatrical furor was excited by tho arrival in 1811 of George Frederick Cooke, the English tragedian. In those days there was no advance-seat sale, the method being for servants, or porsons temporarily retained for the occa sion, to stand ln line for places, and when the doors were opened rush ln to seize seats, In which they remained until their em ployers came to claim their places. As early as the Sunday evening preced ing Cooke's first performance the steps of the theatre were covered with men pre pared to spend the night. Some of them actually took off their hats and put on nightcaps. By Monday morning tho streets were Impassable, and by that evening the crowd at the theatre was so great that It was evident that ticket-holders, especially ladles, would not be able to make their way Into tho building without danger. The management was In a quandary. At last It was decided to depart from custom, and a placard was displayed saying that those who held admission tickets could go In through the stage door. This so clogged that approach, however, that when Cooke arrived he was obliged to moke himself known before even he. the object of all this flattering attention, could force a passage through. He did this by calling out: "I am that man going to ba hanged who told the crowd they would have no fun unless they made way for him I" Tho crltlcUms that appeared next day make one feel that all this eagerness to see Cooke act. was justified. The receipts of the first night were 11604, and the prices of eeats were not high. Box seats brought only SI, Cooke was the first of the English stars to visit Philadelphia, but many other tra gedians followed him, excited, probably, by reports of the wonderful reception he had' had here. It was therefore a heavy blow when the playhouse In which he ap. peared the Chestnut Street Theatre burned down on April S, 1820, Plans for rebuilding were Immediately made, .however, so that It -waa tin i . vi Chestnut Street Theatre that the .eMeri iSJSLSSSSf 'Mathewe oere4itirtr!l