IWWMiBPMWWAU. JmM JI1PM W,M AWW ,L -. IMP w W 1 '-' .',"" ' i-' v'WrVV ' JL' taVYVVAOK'r.iiV.s'Yv. . ., 'i.:;' 'i '-' ' j.'. Xi .?, W?( v j-.r. ...,' ' .-& " f ,Vv , " , '-'V" '? .LNtt I'UJBUlU lutiUUliiU,' rUlJUAUJJJJLiJfillAT ,1! JJLv X , AJ.cjvjJE.iu.JD.uixv , xexi ! LEDGER COMPANY tV rtttat-fd IUhimw knaton Vlo Wraldrntt John f gtjrnnd Treasurer! rnmp p. vsiiiiarna, pnn oi'uiaw, irsetora. MHTORtAL HOARD: I H. K. CcT!, Chairman .Rdltor ,nmrnl tlualnesa Manaref ally at frniic t.rnnmi ItuiMlnr, nco square, rnnaneipnia. Lab. 1,4. nrosii ami tn""niii pii. F, . .7. ..... - rrraa-Im Ioh llull.lln IU aitinipmiian nm .,(.......... sm row irwnin .,(! tons 1ru""n !!"!'! I: h l news nunKAUHi ' 5"" ....... p, Beaut) , Th San llutl.llnc MAC. ...Marrnnl Hollas, mrnnti HO.. .T- nut lAiiii la u-anu ff ubkcmption terms 1u Iacnnru la served to aunaeriiiers Mitlk anrl iirrimnitlne tnwm nt the Kira (12) cents per week. phk1Io to "to points outald- tif Philadelphia. In ! fltalea Canada' or United Ktatra r- t'Mtaae free, ntty (Bill rent" par montn, MHars per year, payable In advance. ?xoreign countries one itw umi. .- -ftnharrihrra wishing- address ctianaed I od an OTllHiiwtiUrw", ; MM WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN iOOO dreae nil rommiiiilcntloin to KxrMna . Indrprndriirs Bqnnre. rhllniltlphin. jit Tim riiii.tiLirniA msTorncs as lR A tzcaxn-ct.ir . mattct. !,rWl.lpUl, Friday. Dtrrmbrr 7, 1917 2UEP THINGS MOVING I cannot reason with a Jackass ami It F-!VI . ... ....... M.U- auires a genius to drive u nunc, me ta&trlbutlon of literature nt cheap I anions people who have been taught tJ ... ...... .... t. ny ine muai uuiiijucncnoi njs.v... i tchoola In the world has broufiht .''''.. . - . . C'tnat me great rnaRses 01 Aiueri- Ate neither Jackanses nor mules. They S reasoned with and they do not "te'ba driven. Wherefore a national r.'uly advertised, Is as much the law :.lnd aa If It had been enacted by a Congresses. Public opinion Is a Ur. force than all tl;? statutes ever sn down, wherefore the formulation illo opinion carries with It a respon- tr'.: of unparalleled Importance. He !iii t. ... ...j.. .. i- .- py. Illo eiotueui:e icuua tiiu iuuijic -" I" wrong course Is the Innocent hf oi hla country. ''are amazed sometimes by the reck- Jakhortatlons to mlseilinebs which ap- feln public prints. Writers prate of. :'as if It consisted In the art of living ft Ut (pending. They seem to imagine ban Ideal condition would be the use -A. 'income for the purchase of Govern- ! Mcurltlea. Bave and sa e some more. . tfl' m.-.. .- . . .... arajumsni. iiiui is vciy kuu 111 na ifHily we are not looking for stugna- aV'Ane nation nus not uni iu pui an an factors to work, but it has to money to work. Money works fit. circulates; It la Idle when It does '1t. la a good thing for a man to take tot everything that passes through P---: .. ...... i ana sena it. along uirecny to tne ts.fn. ... . . fnt till, but It is not patriotic to i current j i. (a no money going out of this fJi rvf j We have most of .the gold that IM-jWtn the world and we are keeping icasn tne uovernment Dorrows it f r . . . suing liberally and throwing back Lm .channels of trade. There will be ' much hard cash In the country Mj.the war is over as there was when and probably more, nut that jirlll havo been used two or three K'a o vn.tltim nt AVKnnrm .Via Annl . ...-... M... Wfc VAbtiailb.l ...w ...tuf ce of which will be In the form of al debt, When a man puts a nun- , dollars Into a Government bond, that . dollars Is sure to come back after t'ltM particular work. When a man M'Anlinn he In nnr onmmltflnr n .rim. '.. . Mt ,111s country, quite the contrary, i"':. . ... altne manuueturer or tnat piano win kajprofit. but the Government will get ). ine traitor is tne man who eats i of wheat bread where one would l.a. a... ... In Vb Un.AH. n .1.. , MiD. There Is not colnc- to hn nnv ZJ'. . .. . 1 i supply 01 luxuries. Tne Uovern- thrill take care of the supply of non- Manufacturr..)! whn urn n,i. Xis -. ...... H.w t..w- tSiinnecessary things will not he pro. Kthem long, so the chance to buy IT illl not be here long. No citizen US-worry oecause ne uoes not carry on his dimes. The only place he ' a' padlock is on his stomach. 'V72 lnas not been a time In the his- -f,the country when profit was more 9 than now. Front that Is the result on we have governmental lnstru- to take care of Legitimate lit resulting from vast expansion la an asset on which the'cov- We need not worry about J the war in dollars so long m i waking dollars at home. jtifht not to b an era of tight- nations or among men. We the example of Uncle Sam je. He is buying what he raeeda and passing something hie friends that are in need. t.to buy what they want and enough oslda to asslat in l Uncle Sam's pockets when Irjft epty. Uunga moving. ifcOCALBOLSHEVIKI at'ot ght a mere political t;ttM The very nearfof m,im Hwue, an issue , JtetJIkMa.or real, could tfeolde. 4tha iaairitnaa., treat 'skill, npiu-oached the summit of hu miliation yesterday when the organized guardians of law and order. In revolt against their prostitution to political ends, were driven away from a councilmanlc meeting by fellow ofllcers of the law. Wo neid not consider the justice of the Imme diate pleas of these men nor the wisdom of the course they purpose to pursue. We ran got a good enough idea of how In tolerable conditions are from the mere fact that n body of men trained In tho school of strict dlsclpllno have been goaded and tortured Into revolt An admlnlitra tlon that could nchlexe that sort of result In a j ear ortwo of activity needs no fur ther testimony as to its vlclousness. The llolslievlkl Government of Hussia Is Incomparably less dangerous to tho public welfare than tho sort of government Insti tuted and Insolently carried on by our local Uolsheviwi WHEN HELL BREAKS LOOSE TIlICnK are men now living who could walk Into the thresholds nf hull nnd feel grnteful for tho rest nnd iUlet therein. Never before has It been given to n gen eration to hold so close a pnitneralilp with horror us we have held. When devlllihness and sutantc Ingenuity have done their worst, accident steps Into the arena to nugment the terror. Thero nre Halifax disasters every day In Kuropo. The end of them Is not In sight. So much for ambition, that Intempenito goad that lured a llerlln madman to set the world ntlnme. Tho fiddling Nero was a mere piker after nil. WHO PLAYS POKEIl WITH THE MAYOR? THE Major's determination to wlpo out gambling Is one that every good Mayor should have and his appeal to all good citizens to help trap professional sharpers should win cordial response. There are certain difficulties, nf course. Good citlens don't know where the gamblers hold forth nnd bad ones do. information and the lack of It nre distributed In an unfortunate manner In tho wrong hands. And now that tho police, who know nil about the connec tion between politics and vice, have asked to be relieved of all polltlco-vlclous sub tlety, tho Maor may be at u loss to find coadjutors who comblno tho harmlessness of the dove with tho wisdom of the serpent. "I'm a natural-born gambler myself," sajs the Mayor. "I don't hesltnte to say I 'like u game of cards pretty well with some good fellows, although until two years ngo I couldn't tell one card from another. But what 1 like to do nnd what the Mayor is going to do are two different things." Two years ago saw him merging from plain Mr. Smith to His Honor. Political associates seem to have taught him the Intricacies of tho pasteboards. He properly discriminates between the morals and the law of the matter. Many things that are not quite right are not quite punishable. Negligence, for Instance, is ofen hard to define In court and punish. There are an Infinite number of shades of card games, from tho quiet game in one's home with friends to the roaring publicity of Monte Carlo. ' Sometimes a political club can camouflage Itself as a "home" and a club man's castle. Policemen must havo their pinochle or their minds will not work. The best thing tho Major could do would bo to establish unity of purpose with the police for a war to a finish on the gamblers. That war will bo successful only when tho bluecoats ore assured that they can nrrest real crooks on sight without political fa voritism. BUILDING THE JUGGERNAUT NOT second In Importance to Inter-Allied military unity of plan and control Is the combination of naval commands under the guidance of a supremo council. At war with Austria, we must make our strength felt In tho Mediterranean nnd Adriatic nnd in complete co-operation, of course, with our allies. This new co-ordination is effected none too soon, for much has been made of the difference between the American and Eng lish schools of naval tactics. There has been the Nelson scjiool and the Karrngut school; the one playing the waiting game and the other the damn-the-torpedoes-go-ahead game. Mutual aid will be Infinitely better than mutual criticism. American ofllcers have advocated an attack on Helgo land; they may not be so ready for It when they must share the responsibility of de ciding. At the same time, our navy's record Is such that It need not be bashful about making suggestions just because It has not been on the scene very long. Two heads are better than one; that is a rule which applies to international strategy as well as to private affairs. Hlndenburg has been sneering nt the Allies' effort to get together. Dut precisely the handicap that German tacticians have suffered under Is that they have been com mitted to one national school of military and naval policy and have not had the ad vantage of combining the Ingenuities of different peoples coming with fresh and unprejudiced minds to the problem. Victorious nations do not clamor for peace. A new war resolution and a new resolution to win at any cost! It's very Inconsiderate of Siberia to set up a republic. No place Is left for exiling the Dolshevikl. i We reckon tho New Year's shooters can get up a good parade without Gretchen and Hans In line. The stage Is doing nicely minus Its "Dutch comedians." Borne complained that the President had , been too specific, while complaint was heard from Boine that the President had n6t been specific enough. New York Sun's Washington correspondence. Evidence that the presidential brand of ipeclflo Is of the sure-cure variety to suit any given complaint The weekly U-boat sinkings are at just about the average for the last twenty weeks. The losses have been standardized, tnd that Is something gained. We will be safe for the present If shipbuilding can keep pace with losses, But we will not be aala lor Mw.future:!-the .shipyard Mi. mam&m.'lm LORD LANSDOWNE, ENGLISH "JUNKER" Personality of Statesman Whose Thunderbolt Peace Letter Roused a Storm llTOItl) LANSDOWNirs carriage blocks -LJ the wuy." Tills blunt utterance of the Pally Mnll rhnr ncttrltfd the attitude, defined tho policy nnd scnrchlngly revealed the personality of Ilrlt iiln's premier Tory peer when,wth other con-t-ervatlve ex-members of the coalition cabinet, ho threw an unexpected and Insuperable ob stacle across the path of progress of the' homo rulo bill. In August, lain, the world believed that settlement of tho lsues between ltcdmomlltes and Cnrsonlles had been reached. The Lnnsdonnc coterie Insisted on Insertion of the so-called "wrecking clause," negntlv Ing the original agreement thnt kept Irish strength undiminished In Commons, until the end nf the war opened the way to permanent j illsposltlon of the home rulo question Nego tiations vi ere off The Marquis of Lansdownc, following his traditional bent, had turned unity to disrup tion. Decision on home rule Is ptlll In abey ance Will Lord Lansdou lie's carriage block the way to unity of action In winning the war? Or, r.ither, In tho llrltlsh attitude toward a pence won by the verdict of victory on the battlefield a safe, complete and enduring peace ? "Pacifism," Not "Pence" His pence letter Is not a peace letter J It Is a pacifism letter I.Ike a Hohenznllern-burled thunderbolt It rent the skies of llntentn solidarity of aim and achievement It crashed suddenly, momentarily It stunned Hrltlsh, If not Allied, statesmanship The noble lord cnlled for a revision of tho Allies' war nlms mid an attempt to secure pente before ' the prolongation of tho war le.ids to the ruin of the civilized world" Its fervent plea would have represented a magnificent Ideal If only the Allies wire not prolonging the war to prevent the ruin of the civilized world! Plainly tho eminent conservative, the party "boss" of the Unionists In the House of Lords, has misread the significance of this war. Whatever racial, economic or diplomatic cnuses may hive started the conflagration, the purlflng flame has refined away nil the dros of (-elflshness and aggrandizement nnd left the pure metal of a lofty purpose That exalted Ideal Is to make the world safe for democracy, as President Wilson defined what we are fighting for, and more It Is to make civilization Kife for tho world nnd the world safe for civilization. Yet Lord Itndowne has teen In nil the Ideals and all the sacrifices only the ruin of civilization The ruin of civilization must bo prevented tven at the price of losing civilization, lie sas In effect. Let opportunism and compromise, not victory for right, Justice kind world-safety, write the treaty, the always nsloundlng, nlnnyg stand pat peer argues. Ird Lansdownc's prppnsal, through force of clrcumstnnces, is giving aid and comfort to the enemv Whitcvcr Its humanitarian Inspiration, Its practical effect Is no less than tho urging of a conditional surrender. The Merman prcs interprets It as a peace "feel er" from an exhausted Unglund. The British press generally agrees It Is Ill-advised nnd disruptive at a time when n really militant i-in..i Ufe,.iii,i jattintl with solid front to Prusslanlsm The American press takes Its essence of agreement w Ith the canons of peace set forth In the President's reply to the Pope as a tribute to America s war-alms, but regrets Its premature forcing of the peace issue when war Is the only real Issue. The Self-Interest of It All His urging in ultimate an'ils seems not so much salvaging tho world for civilization as saving caste and estates for aristocracy, when the world Is swinging to universal de mocracy. Ills record of reaction Includes lifelong opposition to homo rule despite tho fact that be Is a born Irishman nnd that he owns 148,000 acres In seven Irish counties; territorial greed, In the Poor War. during which he was Secretary of htnte for War; vigorous battlo-for the preservation of the vast landed estates, of which he is one of the largest landlords, being the only peer In Uurke who owns big areas in all three dlvl slons of the United Kingdom, Kngland, Scot land and Ireland Self-interest, summed up In safeguarding his titles and his iwsicsslons nnd a political career In defending his class against the en croachments of liberalism, align the Marquis nf Lansdowne In spirit with the Herman Junkers All the outmoded philosophy of aristocracy and nutocracy which the world is consigning to the scrap heap is personified In this veteran Conservative statesman, now seventy-three jears old and Just as unex pected as he ever was To attain his ends he comes nut for a Polshevlk peace, radically separated as his thoughts, feelings and Im pulses are from those of the "Reds" in Petro grad It Is as If fjeorge V Ilaer, who promulgated the un-American theory of the divine right of the coal barons, supinirted tactics of the I W W, to buttress bis doctrines In a moment of menace Scion of a Hundred Earls Henry Charles Keith Petty-Kltzmaurlce literally fulfills the definition of the scion or a hundred earls He is the nobiliary legatee of three earldoms. Kerry. Shelburne nnd Wy combe He Is chief of the Clan Maurice. His barony of Kerry and Llxnnw runs back to 1181. ' He Is fifth Marquis nf Lansdowne. tw a creation of 1784 His degrees and knight hoods nearly deplete tho alphabet for Initlnls to stand after bis name lie is me prime exemplar of the extreme nnd waning Tory wing of the Conservatives, the czar of the Unionist peers, the party "whip" who spurs them to action nnd furnishes the brains for their close corporation thinking liven their caucuses are held at his historic nnd mag nificent Iindon mansion, Lnnsdowne House Heneata his velvet glove is a hand as Iron as that of the Knler He Is sunve, jet frigid, an adroit debater, a master of irony nnd sarcasm . Lord Lansdowne'B public career has been varied He has been honored with all the big posts, the governor generalship of Can ada, the vice roj-alty of India, the war port folio, the Secretaryship of State for Foreign ffalrs He would have been Premier hut for the Unionist debacle of 1006 His construc tive statesmanship Is comprised In the Anglo Japanese treaties and the promotion of the f ntente cordlale between France and Cngland In Kdward's reign. Ills reactionary destruc tlveness Is being expunged from the law hooks as the world grows wiser and more progressive. His mother was a. Frenchwoman, which ac counts for Lord Lansdowne's love for 'Franco and makes all the more .strange his apparent willingness to settle the war with out the vindication of France, the champion of democratic liberty. Lord Lansdowne has the distinction of being one of th half dozen living persons married In Westminster Abbey. On cMirt occasions he and his marchioness still drive to the preset ce of royalty In a state carriage, with outriders and three footmen standing behind Will Jord Landsdcwne's carriage block the way again? One of his own party organs asked the question a year ago. He would like to block the way fcr that la the effect of his letter, whatever his sincerity the mis guided sincerity of a vanishing philosophy, perhaps But the sweep of world-ltberullsm, to which he has ever been the foe, will free the path for the progress of right and jus. tics, will clear It of autocracy and aristocracy, will save the world for the enjoyment of tkattMYlueaus ra lansaowBe.wtehcM to MM at taa.aoet f,o JESUS RESISTED WRONG WITH FORCE Peace -at -Any -Price Advocates Confuted by Evidence From tho Highest Authority DID Jesus advocate peace at any price? This question ms perplexed many devout souls who are not professlcns! pacifists, but good Chrlst'ins anxious to obey the law of the I.ord. Tolstoy was one of tho most fa mous preachers of nonreslstance, authority for which bo professed to find In the New Testament Nonreslstance Is Insisted on by the Friends, the McnnonltcH nnd one or two other small religious sects. The Ilev Abraham Mltrle nihbnnj-, a Sjrlaii. who has achieved considerable suc cess n.i u Christian ctergjman In America, hns written a book, "Militant America and Jesus Christ" (Houghton MlfTllit Compiny, Piston), In which ho penetrates to the heart of the teachings cf Jesus and proves by citations from th lllblo nnd by reference to the conduit of Jesus himself that those who have, assumed that Jesus would ionent to all sortH of wrong rather than resist It have misunderstood tho whole spirit of the Chilstlnn teachings It Is a book that every iirlstlan pacifist should read After noting that the nnnreststerH have chosen passages from the New Testament which can be In terpreted to lit their own preconceptions and have made them tho basis of an nrgument ngalnst all kinds of war, defensive as well as aggiesslve, Mr Hlhbnuy sas. llellevlng thnt by making Jesus a pence-nt-anj -price man the pnclllst Is decidedly wioiig, I do not wish n the linst to com mit a similar error by clothing the Master In the uniform of a general Put I do not wish In the least to Ignore those h.i.vlngs of Christ which seem to preach pacifism and nothing else In th fifth chapter of the rinspel by St M ittliew, he ginning with tho tlilrtj -eighth verse, we read Yehnve hennl tliat It Imih turn snl.l An 'Je tor nil ie and 11 tooth for tnoth, lull I unto iu. Thnt o nslm rnu II- but whoiHittir Minll nnilt,. thii- mi thy r uhl ihe..k turn to him the uthir nlo Ami If urn mnn shall sue Iheo nt Inw una Inks iiwii thy irui rt him hHV.. thy diMk also. Arw! ihioifr ahull innunl .hee tu iro a mile Bn with him twain r i,av. brant ,tlL Llnl.h. 'U.n "."J:1' Thou "h'lt Inv. ihv nlhbnr ami hat thlnn cm mi Hut I say r.,,r.,1".,,ni" ,mT l;n"nl bbs lh,m thnt V, rf . I ."' ,''" B'.,ml '" ,h,m ,h" lisle 5"U i".ih.V . '!""; ''C ,ho ellllilren nf lour l.la m, hl,l, " ,n..h":.n f"r '" "ink. II. iin.lMTi.liih r.iin mi the Just ami the unjuit We, can innki- these words mean complete and unqualified nonreslstnnce nnd subjec tion to aggresilou only by tenrlng them out. not' only from the re--' of the New Testament but from their setting In ori ental thought and life, and by Ignoring the loniluct of the Muster himself To me, as one who was brought up under almost the Identical conditions nf life which formed tlio Master's own environment, these sav ings i.re perfeitlj natural and petfectly ilear As tribes and clans we lived a life of mutual antagonism; blood relation ship only formed for us a center of unitv liven among the Inhabitants of the same town, em h dan considered the other clans its cni'inlcs, The slightest provocation pre cipitated nn IntercianiiMi fight Oriental Hyperbole Now In view of these facts even as briefly stated, i an any ono fall to realize the Mas ter's meaning In these hyperbolic oriental sajlngs? Wns It not most nntural for Christ to advise his fellow countrjmen to llvn with one another on terms of mutual friendliness and net on terms of mutual antagonism ; tfi cherish love and not hatred, nnd not to be so quick to render evil for evil? Do we wnnt Him to speak these Minn words for us todny In a fashion which tho western world can readily understand nnd to admonish Germany to teachOn her schools not lintied, but good will toward other nations? Let mo now call attention to Jesus' own conduct with reference to those sayings Take, for an example, the saj Ing, "Who soever shall compel thee to go a mile, go vi ith him twain" Literally understood nnd detached from Its oriental setting this pas sage means that a Christian should sub mit to oiery demand made ujxin him rather than enter Into n dispute with thosp who command him. But Jesus corrects this er roneous Impression by Ills own actual con duct In the thirteenth chapter of St Luke's tlospcl, the tlilrtj -first verse, occurs tho following passage' In that very hour thero came certain riinrlsees, miilmt to him. Hit thee out and bo heme for Herod would ruin kill thee Ana he said unto them Oo and sal to that fox. Ilehnlit, I cant out ilmiona ami perform rure; to.lai anil tomorrow and the th rd day l am nerficted. Ni-ierthflens I must bo on my way today and tomorrow and ths day follow Inn- for It cannot lie that a prophet prrlsh nut of Jj-rus-lleni Hero the evidence Is clear that Jesus did not mean to teach slav lsh obedience to un reasonable demands Ho not only refused to go two miles it the command of the Pharisees nnd of Herod, hut' he did not move a single Inch "Co nnd sny to that fox I will not desert my post nor shirk my dut come what will" Mr Itihbany then cites the rebuko of Jesus to ono of tho olllcers who smote Him when He was before the high priests. In stead of turning the other cheek he said' "If you have spoken evil, bear witness against mo; hut If well, why smltest thou me?" He then passes on to the famous In cident of the money-changers in the temple nnd says: Tho other scene, however, teaches us how a noble person and a peace lover maj justly use phjslcal force. In the second chapter of St John's Oospel, the thirteenth v erse, w e read And the Jiws' pissoier was at hand, and lu wont un to Jerusalem nnd found In th" temple those lhat sold nsen and sheep and the- chimrers of mnnj sltt na And whin h" had made n s. ourBe of small inrits he. roie nil out of the timple and the sheep ami the oxen and poured out the chaneera' money and o-erlhrew the tables, and said unto them that sold ilous Take thtse thlnua hi lire! make not my fathers nuuee an nuune m merchandise Christ Soldiers Exemplar Here we find a group of oriental traders In the court of the temple, a scene which Is very familiar to me. The money changers were not hankers, but Just nionej' changers who exchanged small coins for big coins nt a small discount. Those traders did Jesus no personnl harm Tlw record does not tell us that they even cast upon Him a contemptuous glance. They were simply minding their own busi ness. Hut tholr business desecrated a hcly place and violated the sanctity of a holy Ideal The realization of this awak ened In Jesus that sense of doty which Is above fear, stronger than death and deep ns eternity Itself And the writer of the Oospel of John adds significantly to this account a quotation from the sixty-ninth psalm, "For the zeal if thine house hath eaten me up." He who would not defend himself from the assaults of a mad mob. or a cruel officer of the State flamed with righteous Indignation ngalnst those who made 'His Father's house, the place of praj'er and spiritual association, a market place. The Ideal he defended belongs to the whole human race. It Is the Ideal of the soul and Its divine refuge amidst the surging of petty amhltlons and worldly de sires. So the Son of Man forged His own weapon and struck with It as the defender of humanity's heritage. Let every soldier who Is- fighting for the world's freedom and for the perpetuation of democratic institutions find In the Master his supreme example Here It Is not c-urs to think of war as killing, or be. Ing killed, any more than our Master stopped to speculate about the Injury he might Inflict upon those who desecrated the temple and the property he might de stroy In applying the cleansing rod. Of one thing He was conscious and of that only; a great ideal was being destroyed and It was His duty to defend and preserve It The destruction which was necessary to enable Him to do His sacred duty and'ast A supreme sxample to the ages was not tu ha conBr4 with th preservation of th Byaftt,BthMtia whloh tha 0Mratloa;of MflsmmHr!Ll3'3bL -iSiar- .t-ssea&dm r i. mani ssr". .r iu Tinn m i i . . i nnn ii hi i ii i p as jv. nsni mSBS?5ffsSM M'rMM e ' JV-SH Xr M-jf iLfl-'1 ,..'-- ..." ,.'if,t'f-, -o- THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE Conscription of Men From 18 to 55 A "Tipless Day" Advocated WOULD DRAFT MEN UP TO 55 7'o the KtHtor of the Ihcnlng I'ubllc Ledger: Sir To make America thoroughly efficient for the- purpose of war, mv opinion Is that the fiovernment should first levy upon all men of the nntlyn 4y tho selective draft system, the draft to include all men, mar ried nnd single, from eighteen j'ears of nge to flftj'-flve jenrs of age. Naturally, to get the result loolcod for. these men would have to be classified so that thev may nil work nt that which they are most capable; with ejes to the future, re sponsibility should be fixed relieving men from the firing line with others depending upon them for supiort. As to classification. 1 would suggest that bojs of eighteen to twenty-one jears. Inclusive, should be made Into a reserve fighting force nnd used only us a fighting force nfter all other resources had failed to gain the objective, which Is whipping the Kaiser. These bojs should bo guarded as far us posslhle for the reason that places must be filled after the war, made vacant on account oftthe war. Now tho actlio fighting force I bellove should be made' up out of the men without nny responsibility between the nges of twenty-one nnd twenty-five jears, Incluslie. out of which an army of, say, C,000,noo could be raised and trained. Ity tnklng men nf the class named above, and where there nre no wives, mothers, etc., to leave behind, the nation Is not set back to any real gieat extent, excepting labor, nnd I believe even the labor question can bo answered. I would answer the labor question ns fol lows The remaining men, Blngle, from thirty-five to fifty-five years, mid the men with dependents from twentj'-one to flftj flvo jears. should become Immediately under the control of the United States Oovernment. I mean that military of this Oovernment should havo charge of all these men; should class nil men nnd sec thnt all men did their part toward the successful termination of this world war Should all men become a part of tho Oovernment forces, how could thero bo any strikes or disorders such ns havo been caused ly.' tho I. W. W ? I say It simply could not happen and would not hap pen for this reison. If none other, the mili tary has a right by law to try cases by court-martial and shoot to kill If necessary. Is there any good reason why a man Just over thirty-one jears of nge should not be forced to do his part In this struggle tint may take j-ears to complete? 1 said forced If ho will not volunteer, and It looks to mo ns If the volunteers only work when they receive all they desire, such ns wages, nnd they must be high, and then some will not do their bit. j Whj should n laborer, because ho Is over thirty-one. be pampered and petted Into working In some munition factory when he Is being paid well for that which ha does? Any man who will not do his bit now should bo taken hj the Oovernment and made to do, either In some Industrial enterprise or on the firing line. And, furthermore, there Is only one way, and that way Is to draft them. reople will say how are we to pay unless we, the people, are taxed? The munition factories, shipbuilding and the powder works. In fact, any business that Is necessary toward making the United States victorious, are nil paying their employes. Why could not the salaries paid tho men be paid over to the Government and the Oovernment pay the men? IJy this method all men would receive tho same rate for labor, and that must reduce the cost of production. H. U CAMPBELL. Ventnor. N. J.. December . FOR A "TIPLESS DAY" To the Editor of Evtnlna Public Ledger: Sir Every loyal citizen of the United States today Is, or should be, helping his Government to the limit of his resources In the present war crisis there should bo no rweUhsrs." M,n, womtn and children are dtnylng thtmselves many things that might add to their comfort and pleasure. It illustrates the splendid spirit of a united America. In line with ths war's needs come appeals for funds for th Bed Cross, the V. M. C, A.. ha Bay ffooui nw wnnswi ntiH am QMS4HH'IM"rV "V mwmm arw jSJKb saapap (aaav ff a .ajaaaiay WARDING TO HIS WORK .vm:. WlJ , iV'&'t-r '-- - tv w nn aid to this end perm't me to suggest the fnl'owlng "Tip to the Tipped"- Appidnt one diy In every cltv and town of the Union to bo known as "Tipless Hay" jind let all emplojes, no matter who or whore, big or little, fiom tile high-salaried man to the waiters, messengers, cab drivers, etc, who are accustomed to recoiling "tips" donate their "tips" for that day to some one nf these worthy causes This would entail no gieat hardship n.i nnv o-io, raise an hill mense sum of money quickly nnd demon strate to the world that America Is welded together, united In a union of strength, de termined at all costs to crush the brutal Prusslanlsm threntculng the pcaco of the world Think it over, fellow Americans then net. Appoint tho day and then marvel at the result' LKANHIIIt KILI'ATHICK. Philadelphia, December 6. A POLICE STRIKE IN THII good old Tammany dajs politics w a i the head and hand of the police de partinmt "Strike" had n technical sense, which wns far fiom Implilng nny unklndness to the verb, "to viork " To our Tammany an cients, the resolve of two-thirds of the Phila delphia police force to leave the department In a body unless politics nnd politicians cease to control it, to stand no longer "abuses nt the hands of every 'petty politician nnd 'ward leader In tho cltv," must seem tho beginning of the end of their world llight hundred members of th Patrolmen's Benevolent Pro tective Association on Tuesday voted resigna tion as a bodj' unless Major Smith and tho Councils take Immediate notion on the as sociation's demand to wipe out politick from the administration of the Department of Public SafetJ', These policemen ask. It Is true, for higher pay; hut as munition factories and shlpjards nre offering them that alreadj', It seems not to lie the nub of their contention. They want political assessments In the department nnd political espionage of policemen ended. They pay a deserved compliment to New York nnd Commissioner Woods. They ask for public support of a police Investigation nnd tint the department may be reorganized nfter the memorable precedent mnde by Mr. Woods. If, in this present consulship of Smith, "gunmen" of Manhattan have been Imported Into Philadelphia to do forclblo missionary work In Its recent tumultuous election, from New York the Inspiration has come for the bettering of the police. Director Wilson, of the Department of I'ubllc Safetj", hns dismissed the president of the Patrolmen's Association. The associa tion calls for Mr. Wilson's dismissal, and that of two others, nnd for tho reorganiza tion of the Police Pension Fund. "We must hnvo a man" at the head of that "who Is not controlled bv politicians," saj'H the dismissed president. "Our first duty Is to the citizens of Philadelphia " If sentiments like these In the city of Vare nnd Penrose now a re forme! make us stare and gasp, they sound genuine, fpr men of high character like former Major IJIa'nl.enburg aro Suggested bv tho policemen ns tho right persons to nd mlnlster the Police Pension Fund. A strike of policemen, a Milemn, common deposition of shield nnd club. Is new even In this time of Innovations. A strike of police, men ngalnst political boss-ship Is enough to make tho most refractory hunker "order" his "ascension robe." Whit is a police depart ment for? New York Times. What Do You Know? A Quiz I, VVlio l hersennt llmpej? J, Vtlmt l Ioidali? . a. Name the Premier of Auitrla-Iluassry. ' 4, VUi'.rli Is the lone Htur Winter . 5, Who wits the author of "Tale of u Wayside fl. Where and what In OmUT 7. What trulta murk queen Anne perld fur- 8. Where l the nette 'omiinl dlatrlrt? 0, What It the Fremli mime for the t'lirUtmaa etnii? . ID. Who la the (.rrniuii rummunder on the eastern ur Ircintf Answers to Yesterday's Qujg 1. The fhlef eharaeterUtlfa of Jatobtan furnltnr are svllitltr hut not heav.neas of eonatrue tfsn and tho marked uaa at twitted rtlunnt and rnnza. S. Mr Waller Htott wrote the famous Hoes "UiM there a man with aoul so dead , Who nevrr to nlraielf hath said. 'Thli la mr vmi. i.i native Hflai" 3. Peter Ji.rn Taeha.kowakr couipoatd tb 4. Delaware In th Dlainand State. I, Th preaidenilM aalota contlata of tweotr. . WUhelm Tejl, wji a Bwlts patriot. Urielr eonrrrned In tmlos Uw caatens from th A.tln vaka. 1. Th A.lajM i Vlataaa l In nofthaaattrn lUlr. about farir nllta mrthwaat of Venice, near he Auatrlaa frontier. . Bavlall a spaihtttl-llka paie tot In uaarai. ,. .' t. yjg U Mf ? siaf ' tf Wit Mi "r- atwr H, I ?nwaavsana w"bw J" "',r -Tom Daly's Column PITY Till.' l"H)R COP M'hcn tho copper icts a "call" from hl$ Jllicctor , Jfljdlrccfor- .liirf is told ha may not congregate at all gate at all HVicii u&scssmcnfa 7iatc fo reach the gang's collector Gang's collector' To appease the IHghcr-Ups at City Hal City Hall ll'ftcn he may not meet to counsel with his hrbther vcl(7i his brother To determine uhat in thunder's to be done to be done Taking one consideration uifh another leith another A policeman' lot is not a happy one! The above might be credited to the opera (meaning works) of "Tho Pirates of Penn'a Ants" if j-ou get what we mean. EVlillY PULLMAN coach on every road leading to Washington Is pediculous with colonels, majors, captains and lieutenants. They l.ave two subjecta of conversation, the war and, the high cost of uniforms. And now, it seems, wo civilians are to get our bumps, for a big Chestnut street clothing sljop advertises "men's suits at uniform prices." Here'- a bit that could only liuvo hap pened in one Island of "all the four quar ters of the world." It's from a recent Issue of the Tyrone Courier: The great half yearly hiring fair of Ilallj gan ley so long looked forward to by the many servants who were fast bound, and who were glad to shake oft tho fetters that bound them, was held 'here on Friday, Although tho Inclemency of the weather wns feared would mar the famed big fair and the fact of the country being at war, still the large and prosperous country dis trict of Uallygavvley can yet show a gather Ing nf fine people. This as, of course, due to tho Industry of the people. Towards It o'clrck It would he to the utmost of any mnu's power to face up the Main street from the crowds on street and sidewalks of fine physical young men and girls. A big demand appeared for servants and th wages were as follows; Men who could plough and dc all classes of work, IS; strong boj-s, ftfs strong girls, 18; second class, 6; smtilT boj-s nnd herds from ft 10s to 6. The street attractions were large and consisted of the following: Jack's Llttlo Farm, shooting galleries, etc, and great competition was kept up at these games. It seems strange that on such days that the Iilsh people allow themselves to be made victims by foreigners. As th day began to advance many men were to be seen a little lively; and an exciting street fight occurred at the approach to Mr. Mullan's at ubout 2 o'clock, and the ash plant was freely used. Anc-ther man faced Into the courthouse and smashed a panel In tho doors to the Itev. Johnston'a entrance while Mr. John C. Crossle was holding a meeting of the lied Cross. VPl'A QO DA' ' PRICE t L'alto costo delta vita . ilnk's so manny go for eata Cheap Italian spaghaW Pretta soon dere tceell no be Anny of cet left for me. Bats' a w'atsa matt"! WE ALWAYS did have our doubts of tha accuracy of that story of Lincoln exclaim ing, when Walt Whitman passed before White House window, "By Qodl there goes a man." Now comes a publisher's circular to take all the punch out of Itt "A visitor to the White House records In a private Utter that, while standing with Lincoln at a window, Walt Whitman .strolled past. Mr. Lincoln asked who It was. I said, Walt Whitman, the author of 'Leaves of Qraaa.' Mr. Lincoln didn't say anything, but he took a good look tll Whitman was quite font by. Then be v sa!4 f?;oK't iive ycw.hli way 'ot-sylf " H. W .t-?m."WHfc - .t Rffra tW t. mu.i xw jamw "" w w ' - VaV"5- esEa !j4?'.vy-...aM 3u I iajSOMnEBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaBBBBBBSsatiyiaw