w il. gfca.'?. i;.. Jtobtfc w&att C LEDGER COMPANY ". taidlns'ton, Vic 'Preeldent'l John C. xr e ptmMa AAa.....J treiary ana xrtaeureri rnuip if. i . minims, jonn J. apurseon, Dlrectora. BDROIUAIi 130AP.DI . K. Ccaria. Chairman : Editor - MAJtTOi. . .General Bnatneaa Maneaer dally at Pceuo I-tsosa Bulldlnc, mdence Square, Philadelphia. rail...., Broad and Cheatnut Htreitl ITT. PrtlfVnlan Bulldlna .200 Metropolitan Tower 'f 40a Kord Hulldlna 'i. a... .... ...leoi Kullerton Jiuildlns i .......1202 TrtOun IJulldlnt news TtitnRAtr.qi ItTOKl BcUtD, . K. Cap. 'Pnnrlvanl& Iw mrtA 1111. C. o llcaaic The A'ur HuMlna t HrltlB.. ll.nnnl llnii.a ,-,. 1 Beaaav 31! Hut Loula la Grand Jf SUBSCItlPTION TERU.S TniKi Fcaeio Linen In etnred to sub- a in i-nuaaeipma ana aurroundlnr towns rata of twtlra (IS) canta par wnk, payable uailivr Ball tn fiolnta eutild nf PhllaiUlnhla. In rted Steles. Canada or United .statu po- vit rrw, miy iuui cma per monin. ail foralcn countries ona (11) dollar per Subscriber wlihlnr idr... rh.n.l Vlre old aa wall aa new addrcia. MM WALMJT KEYSTONE. MACT 8000 'rraa nfl communication to JTrenbiff PuMi'o 'ar eaccpanacace gqaarr. fniinacipftirt. in at tri rmnntr.rnn roT orrici is cod am MiiL mm. Pll.J.lbl.. M.nJ.r. Janoiry 14. Jill IISTORIC BLUNDER POINTS A MODERN MORAL mis Tpiian nttnnmteil tr rnno tin.. Sinih provinces nnd failed. Tho Ger- in claim to Schleawlg-Holstcln was w ... anaea on a mytn mat reacnea duck to time of King Oorm tho OM. who hail ned In Denmark In pogt-Charlcmagno iods. Tho merits of tho controversy bean understood thoroughly by one n. but he went mad. Subsequently two era, after year1 of study, mustered thu Bants of tho Ibsuo and they disagreed. ftAccordlngrly Austria, England, France, PrttMla and Husula In 1832 entered Into Ifa Compact that "tho state of tho posseH- atens actually united undr thi Crown of 'JaVnmark should be maintained In lt.s In jWcrlty." Prussia signed with a men- PitsJ reservation, and liy 1863 It had be x" ......... onto apparent mat ono imenueu 10 bpi Schleswlr-IIolstetn In splto of all agree- .. .- .-... ......, T..1.. D4 . l.n JBI1VB, VUIIipttUi Ul LU'UUVn. .Ul) -O Ul UIUI year Xord Palmerston doclarod In tho House jot Commons that If any violent attempt were muda to overthrow tho -T-tht nnrt Int.trfprn iltli tho lndnend- K.nce of Denmark, thoso who made tho at- Stintpt would find In tho result that It jwaum noi ue i-reiuuurti ttiunu wiin wmun fUJy would havo to contend." Ulsmarck iiiughed. Ho had pacifist agencies at work IS kt" England and ho trusted them. In tho fcilowlnc January ho sent tho Prussian E armies into tho duchies, wnlch they jZM J K;lckly overran. Thereafter there was an Lftrmuuce ami a conrcrcnco in London, but r' was no moving Prussia from her tlon and It became apparent that hoc- fC,.." would bo renewed. LWeuld England fight? Palmerston was 'BO doubt as to what she ought to do, j. , .- - CCMtlnst him. At the meeting of the Cabl- tit on Juno 23, the l'rlmo Minister held W head down and acknowledged his dc- ft;.tt in these words, "I think the Cabinet Kj ttfainst war." That was Saturday and nM Monday the Times announced in detail XiS. Ke result "of the most Important delibera iB ."Wens in wnicn ungusn statesmen nave in timo been etlgaged." jjProbably tho Times would havo been tfxtWe more emphatic as to tho importance i,- m .It ,f . tt. 1 ., A a.. vaja;uje uenueruiiuna iiuu it kiiuwji inui mv ."tr...... . . . ....... . . ... jsjreiusion reacneu was aesiinea to leaa tue present mignt catastrophe, nut the had supported the Inglorious policy ! pajclflsm and was to boo Prussia, having ana bltA nf thft rhirr-. fnWn nnntlipr JRiT " ...... - I'.ln Austria, a third in l ranee and turn to make the world its oyster. ad had Indeed avoided a small war, t'ihe had yielded to the highwayman: t ... . . iwuitaugnimm to Deucvetnat nocouia t",hls will In spite of treaties; she had jtted him to add to his strength and ' Mwlvlty she had allowed him to grow lip stature of a giant. Tho rape of the provinces was the prelude to tho of 1114. Compromise had served, as ally docs, simply to postpone tho aettltment and have It found tinder ely more Intricate and terrible con- are pacifists who yet hope that VL Armies in France need never fight. 1 eyas are fixed on a negotiated Deace. reare nothing about German asplra- L, 'nothing about the commercial and Juggernaut the Kaiser has built Europe, for they know nothing International politics is too deep appreciation. They believe that phrase i and formulas can bring A f.J peace, a few settlements of unlm- (details providing the necessary ge, and militarism being left in el unbroken and unchecked. They '!) do now what England did in iilce honor and Interest for ot realizing, as England did not that peace with the present Oer- iiM nnver be more than a truce. of the leopard cling to him. Eland nor the world can af- another mistake now? We 4ce of the precipice and must ?0T ! ruined. Heaven help us i frieked by diplomats or by our i.we-ve ot totmnK straight sheet: atrakcht. There la jio es- . JC'Tba fourteen conditions of ay, j-Twioerit vyiison con ra ' BUI otJUghta. They F'tka) iauajqaatiaoA mm "wTO 'iW1 ''" ; witrraxTTivTN nrm-r-rn TTinnxm lapses. Tho only kind of Germany wo are willing to Jlvo with is the kind of Ger many that we can live with. Such a Ger many doos not now exist. Thcro is, there fore, as Secretary Lansing stated in New York Saturday, no hope of peace until tho alms outlined by tho President are definitely accepted and guaranteed by some sort of German Government that can bo trusted. 'LIBERTY, EQUALITY, FRATERNITY' COLONEL IIOOSUVKLT sees universal scrvlco as the great exemplar of citall. tarlan principles. Speaking of tho army llfo which puts "the son of tho, capitalist and tho son of the day laborer Into tho sany. dog tent," ho says: Tnke any club In this city at this time my own Hazard Club as an Instance-and every day you will mid In It ulllcer snd enlisted men of the nrmy and oflleerB und enlisted men of tho n.iy, all In uniform, all on a footing of self-reiectlnK equality: and every man of them an example of alert and orderly discipline wlillo on duty. Of course, this Is so; wo nlmot feel tho Colonel doth protest too much. H should bo taken for giantcd that oHlcers rind men are equals. Tho pollus and their cap tains go arm nnd arm about the streets of Paris with Just a bit more camaraderie than Is to be seen here. In England old barrlerH of class are being broken down, but not without a tussle. A witty Km-lisl. writer has noted that of tho three de mands of tho Trench motto, "I.lbcit, Equality, Fraternity," tho English have been so busy getting tho first that tht missed getting the second nnd thlid. In AmeYlca them has been a historical rea son for some show of caste In tho nrmy -the fact that wo havo had until now u very small and a very professional army. But that Is of the past. Wo have a citizen army. A Congressman Is rcrvlng as a prlvnto soldier. Many In tho ranks havo been moro usml to uhlnp orderH than to taking them, and tho names of officers who havo not been to West Point would fill a library. PROGRESS IN THE STOMACH WAR rpiIE (.ocrnnient ntinouncft. that exports - of foodstuffs Increased from $98,000,000 In October to $160,000,000 In Not ember. Exports of foodstuffs for tho first eleven months of 1817, however, were little greater In valuo than for tho corresponding period of tho preceding year, and Imports wero valued at moro than half the valuo of exports. Money values, It appeals, aie not ade quately exprerslo of tonnage, ov.Iiik to tho fluctuation of prices. Tho gain In No vember oer October, necrtheless, Is kufll clcntly largo to havo meaning, particularly us little change In prices took place. Tho moaning la that tho food conservation campaign Is beginning to produce results nnd wo are furnishing food In greater tol umo to our allies than formerly. This is highly satisfactory, for tho right Is nip Idly becoming a stomach war. A LANDSLIDE ON ITS WA rpWO Senators hitherto regarded as op - posed (o votes for women havo "Jumped" and more are expected to fall Into lino with the BUffrago movement, which em phatically deserves that overworked term because It Is constantly moving. A veri table landslide Is evidently on Its way on the mountainside of public opinion. Penn sylvania women talk as though they ul ready had been enfranchised for the sim ple reason that women across the Stato border are noting. This phenomenon Is always observable when tho women cap ture a State; women In adjacent States grow supremely confident, and that con fidence carries all beforo It. BEWARE PNEUMONfAI A NUMBER of persons have been killed during tho last few months by noxious gas escaping from automobiles which were kept running In closed garuges. The local gas company continues dally to warn pa trons tq uso extreme caro In turning off the gas and watching Jets. Statistics for last week indicate that pneumonia is more dangerous than gau-polsonlng. It can probably be as easily uvoldctl by proper care. With the coal shortage acute and many houses noccssarlly inadequately heated, precaution Is a good preventive of disease. Unnecessary exposure of every sort should bo avoided, no cold should be neglected and ventilation should be looked to at all times. .There is nothing more im portant than the preservation of tho health of the community. Dislocating a vertebra does not bother Mr, Edison, he's got so many of them. Chicago Is not losing any population. The town is snowbound and people cannot get out. A German newspaper lefi-ra to "treaties written on donkey skin," Prob ably by Jackasses. We may bo alt wrong, but It appears that it would bo better to closo tho sa loons than the schools. Tot a "holy war on the bourgeoisie" would amount to nothing mora than an armed protest against business. Munition problem too big for on6 man, says Baker. Headline. Events show that It was entirely too big for a liundred. Among the 134 Lords who stood firmly by woman suffrage was Lord Read ing, the new Ambassador to this country. Ho begins his mission well. Collieries in the vicinity of Shenan doah, which were shut down for lack of water, have resumed operation. It will be a fine thing when coal trains do likewise. President Dice has appealed to all Reading employes to "stand by the ship" and make good for Uncle Sam. Tho fire man on an engine is a soldier in the trenches. We suspect, that many of those who M.idaeM 0;au4iaBt-,epan JD V XUXiXMVX XrUJDUJLw JJJUVTJIiXV GOVERNOR PENNYPACKER ATTACKS PRESIDENT WILSON'S METHODS Objectioh Is Raised by the Pennsylvanian to Wil son's "Swap" of the "Governorship of New Jersey for Another High Office" I'ENNl I'ACKl-Jl AUTOIIIOOUAl'IIY NO. 4 Copvrlont, MIJ, by ruMio Lttptr Ccmpanv T HAD now been Governor for nearly a year nnd tho newspaper act had been on tho statute booksVor moro than six months, nnd up to this time np attack had been mado Impugning my Integrity. This final step on tho downward jmth to Aernus wns now taken by tho Philadelphia Rec ord. One day I was at the rooms of tho HIslotlcat Society of Pennsylvania, when a man nppeared who said he had been stnt by tho Record to show mo a paper, nnd ho asked me to read It. Tho paper purported to bo signed "A lawjer" and it bet forth "that Governor Pennypacker'a appointment of Judge Thompson was prompted wholly by tho belflsh destro mid Indecent purpose of Governor Pcnnypack'-r to get the place for himself as soon as ho urn," nnd "Ho, therefore, stooped to a plot that Is absolutely without precedent or parallel In all the l.lhtory of intrigue and corruption In Pennsylvania politics." I read the paper over nnd handed It back to him. Another Clash With tho Press "What aro you going to do about It?" he inquires. Ho said nothing about money, hut I Inferred that v.ns whut ho meant. Angry, I loukid htm in the tyes nnd said. "I tun not going to do anything about It." Then wo will print It." "Why do you tell mo what jou are going to print? I hno no lesponslbllltj for whit jou pilnt. That Is your responsibility." Tho next day tho Record then edited by Theodore Wright, printed tho communica tion with nn cdltorla" bended, "A Foul Con spiracy," and saj Inj, It lays bare a plot to swap tho Gov pi not ship for a seat on the bench of tho Supitme Court, as If the two highest of fices In tho gift of the people could be barteted or bought and told with tho In different regard for popular opinion or popular right that might be expected of Jockejs making a hursu trade. A few years later the Record saw Wood row Wilson swap the Govtrnorshlp of New Jersey for another high o'llce, und uso tho otllce, neglecting Us duties, to nri-ompllsli tho result, und suppoi tod the effort us n delectablo proposition. There was this dif ference: Wilson dlil what the Recon" only said that I intended to do, nnd tn making the statement It was mistaken. Looking at tho matter with dpeper Insight, testing It ethically, und ussumliig tho facts to be Kup, us they wero not, the accusation of the lawyer, if he was a lawer, nnd of tho Record was billy. In appointing a. thor oughly competent Judgo I had performed my only duty to the comt, and nobody had any right to ask unj thing more so far us the court was concerned. It was no case of barter and buying und selling to Thomp son, because, according to the .ory, ho knew nothing about It, and besides had nothing to give. It was no case of selling to Quay, because ho got neither otllee. It would not bo a nice thing for me to appoint a good Judgo slmpl upon tho hope of helping m self, but that lnoKts questions of pro prloty, not of integrity, and thcro aro few people who rlbo to such heights. I had no Intention of permitting talk to go on as though sumo wicked thing wero LITERARY BONES OF CONTENTION Some Popular Pieces of Verse Cursed With a Plurality of Parents the uust J of time from the rhjmo of "Hoch der Kaiser," mado famous by the lato Admiral Coshlan, and reprlntfd It In these columns, aecriblr.g Its authorship to . M. R. Gordon, a Scotchman, then writing for the Montreal Herald. Now comes a correfpondent to question Gordon's claim to It, glUng the credit to another Journalist, whose name, so far as we know, was nqter before brought forward In this connection. Gordon Is dead and cannot now defend his slender claim to fame, nnd the proponents of his rival should produce something moro than circumstantial eldenco beforo they are permitted to wrest from Gordon that which seems to be his little all. The objects of literary controversy aro usually orphans, or half orphans, the ques tion of paternity seldom arising until after the death of th real or supposed parent, and "Hoeh der Kaiser" Is only one of many bits of verso or prose which have become the bones of such posthumous contentions. There was published In this city tn 1906 the first volume of verse of a writer whose name modesty forbids us here to mention. In ids little book, "Canzonl," was Included a bit of negro dialect called "The Kettle's Song of Home," A week or so after tho book's appearance a friend of the author's In Cleveland wrote to him and pointed out that the same poem, word for word, was among the contents of "Ben King's Verse," pub lished ten i ears before. The Philadelphia writer know very well that the child was his own, but he mado It his business to go lark oer the files of the local paper In which It wSs flrBt printed, and after much labor finally located It In nn Issue of Sep tember, 1 SUC. He then challenged the pub lishers of "Ben King's Verse" to thow an earlier publication for King. They were unable to do so, but stubbornly Insisted upon King's right to the thing. The credit ing of the little song to King probably came about In this fashion: Ben King, who was a specialist In negro dialect, left behind him a great quantity of clippings, many of which were undoubtedly his own work, though un signed, nnd these were gathered together by hla literary executor, Nixon Waterman, for the volume published after his death In the early nineties. Among these clippings, probably, was the poem which the Phlladel phlan had run anonymously In the paper for which he was then writing In this city. Waterman believed they were King's, and the verses may still bo found In both volumes by any one with the time and In clination to look them up. The Ahkoond of 'Swat' Another Philadelphia Journalist Is con nected with a similar controversy Involving a piece of humorous verse, of much greater Interest In Its day, which Is preserved tn nearly every anthology of importance put forth in this country within the last quar ter of a century. Whan. George TvLanln died la this city tjtttt A -Kit tyttt a -Trtcm A V TAXTTTATJV 1.1 X'XXXJLZl.JLXKUjrXl.JUHL. iUUHXAX, uxmji.vx jfx, being done In secret, and the next day I wrote to tho Ledger: I have carefully read the wanton at tack upon myself In yesterday's Record, to see whether there could be any possi ble Justification for It except a wish to excel In newspaper enterprise. I may bo wrong, but It seems to mo thcro Is no principle of eth'cs which would provent mo from going before the next Republi can Stato Convention us u candidate for tho Supreme Court, or from asking the support of Mr. Quay or nnv one else who may have Influence, provided I do not tiss the power of the Governor for that pur pose. If I choso to tnko this course, I should not hesitate In order to escape Hloglenl comment. As u matter nf fact, I havo not asked any person who may be n delegnto to that convention, or any one who may have weight In Its deliberations, to tin anything whatever In connection with It nnd do not expect to do fo In the future. As Governor I have refrained fiom efforts to Influenco political move ments. In tho appointment of Judges I have en deavored t do my full duty to thu courts nnd In each Instance, savo In tho selec tion of Mr. lilspham, have ascertained und glvpn duo weight to the views of tho rourt most concerned, In appointing Mr. Thompson I have Indicated so p'ntnlj that oven tho blind may see my opinion ns to the kind of min who ought to bo placed In thnt position. I have given him u term of thirteen months, nil thnt I had to give, nnd only folly or malevolence could ask me for more. If, however, as the Record predicts, tho Republican State Contention should see fit In its wisdom to nomlnnto mo for tho Supreme Court, and that should be fol lowed b nn lection, I shall return to tho bench. ' Quay's Objection This letter told the exact truth and In ffect declared to any one skilled In the language that I did not Intend to bo u can didate. It nsserted my right to go hi fore the convention nnd solicit help In tiny dl rectlon and affirmed that 1 had not so done and did not Intend so to do; in other words, that I was not doing tho things I would have done had I purposed to bo n candidate. If, notwithstanding, the party should nom inate me and tho people elect me, tis tho tiHWspipcr (issorttd, then I would return to tho bench. It would In that ovent be u duty. Nothing could havo been stralghter It was likewise u defiance nnd Intended to be a defiance. Should I choose to bo a candidate, and should f choose to usk Quay to help me, then It asserted I would do It In utter disregard of what might be pub llshed In tho newspapers Again did tho heathen lage, nnd again the cartoonists earned their hire. That a man should be to constiucted us to act decently In u mat. ter concerning his 'own Interests was not to bo conceived, and one who was willing to go to tho Supreme Court must ncces snrlly bo taking nil -ort.s of underhand mcaHUrt.s In ordir to get there. Quay thought my letUr to be wi etched politics, but there vvtre some things moru Important to me than either office, and wo were not viewing tho subject from the samo angle. And I still think It was good poll tics, since it did away with nil talk about secret plotting. On the twelfth uf December 1 was the guest of honor at tho dinner of the IVnnsjlvanU Socletj of New Vol;, a most successful society, tho active spit it In which is jjarr l'erree, and thtie 1 met Governor Odell, of New York, and Gov ornor Edwin Warlleld, of Marjland. weie known and admired in Panada. In Rng hvi.d and I in Krance. M-ssant. famous edUor of the Paris Pigaro. for a long time en deavored to Induce Lanlgan to become i member of his staff, and Richard Watso t.lldcr pronounced him one of the brightest men ho had ever met. , " Shortly after his death a writer In a St. Louis paper claimed for a western man the authorship of "A Threnody," built upon o ne, line. "The Ahkoond of Swat lTd"ad ' MMI aiwTJ!"!0 i 'n"ny K0l1 """esses ef ht ? ''5? bee" l,res'" at the birth of that famous ditty, and tho shouts of the western c almant wero not permitted to prevail The poem had been written by Lan Igan while he was a member of the staff of tho Now York World. He with W. A. CrofTut. James Davla and Trentlce Mulford-alt big figures upon Patk Low was sitting In a cafo under the Tribune building one night when on.i of the telegraph editors of tho World camo In und said: Lanlgan, a cable has Just come an nouncing that the Ahkoond of Swat Is dead " .. ",WI'at? WlmtT Vha"" "led Lanlgan. W hats the news from Swat," and In Jig t me dashed off the poem, of which these lire tho best lines: What, what. what. vVhats thi- news from Swat? had new, lla.t nwa, ';mf by the enble led rhrouah the Indian OeeatTa l.l. iirsa '.h. &'.""' ouif' ,h- H" Iterranaan he's dead: The Ahkuond la HfrtM Tor the Ahkoond I mourn. ' Who wouldn't? He strove to dlarenrd ihe mt.iat. Brn, T. . . J-ut he Ahkoodn't. Dead, dead, dead; .. . 'Sorrow Rnrats!) hwats Wha hae wr Ahkoond bled. Swata Whom often he has led Onward to a Kory bra. Or to vfrtory. Aa the can mliht be. borrow Snatal Tears ahed. Hhed tears like water. Your great Ahkoond li dead! Thafa Swata the matter' Atourn. city of hatal Xour..r"it Ahkoond fa not. Uut lain mid worma to rut Ilia soul la In the aklea The aiure aklei i that bend above hi, loved Metropotle of Swat lo"a He ten with larrer. other eyea Athvjart all earthly mysteries ' II knowa vvhat'e Swat. .T,..1'' "V1 l"lr the "" Ahkoond w. . S."01.'? ot mo"iln and of lamentation! nealSiT mournlne- of tho Swat'tl.h Fallen la at lensth Ila tower of atrentlh. Its aun la dimmed era It had nooned Dead Ilea the sreat Ahkoond. The sreat Ahkoond of Swat la not. At a later date Thomas Dunn English Philadelphia-born, hud to take up a Btout cudgel, when he was quite an old man. to beat off several pretenders who were am bitious tb steal "Sweet Alice Ben Bolt" from him. And newspaper readers of our own time will recall the contention ' over John J Ingalls's "Opportunity" Bonnet: the dispute over the authorship of "Silver Threads Among the Gold," nnd the claim of Samuel Eberly Gross, the millionaire pork packer of Chicago, that Rostand had stolen from him the poetto drama of "Cyrano da Bergerac" t. A. D. . POI'B VOT Joe' Potadamer was la New Tork one day Jaat reek -whatever ey,t la that' whealleaa fa.je- ' SeyJiTr:Vw,W, -VS., l-".';.r' . WS-.-nFr J : e" lC-UJffriV "-- ,..-r-- . .-.- .: . r L" ..- :i.j- l-.-T'i-'v v WILSON INFLUENCE OVER CONGRESS Three Methods Employed by Pres ident to Assure Results Gets What He Wants special Correspondence Eieiitna i'ublic LtJoer WASHINGTON, Jan. 12. Tmti Vvlls HHi:i; moves recently made by 1'iesfdent son Invito analysis. Two of them pei- taln to the President's practice of appear ing In person before Congress to discuss pub lie question". Tho other relates to the man ner In which the 1'iesldcnt makes known his wishes without putting In an appear ance at the Capitol. Democrats us well ns Republicans have watched thesa moves and havo commented upon them, not so much becauso they differ from methods hereto fore employed by tlm rrerident, but be cause, taften altogether, the show more clearly the steady hold the President main tains upon the legislative body. Conserva tive members of Congress havo never taken too kindly ti the President's Idea of "de mocracy" In appearing In person In Congress. They havo contended that while the thought of tho President Is that co-operation should prevail between tho legislative body und tho eeeutIvo branches of the Government, the result, bo far as the President's wishes nro concerned, Is ulinost as cffectlvo as If this wero an autocratic rather than a demo cratic Government. That tho Congress body was growing less f Interested In the President's personal ap pearances developed at the reading of his address on the control of railroads. Not much moro than half tho Senato was In attend ance, and tho Representatives and tx-llep-itscntatlves In addition did not wholly till the House scats. Tho galleries had rows of empty teats There was nothing spectac ular In tho address .and. very little. In It to work up mthuslasiii. At Its conclusion Re publicans looked at each other querulously, nnd even the Democrats filed out of tho chamber Ianguldl, The President Rules Note tho difference when the war message, declaring American purposes In tho European struggle, was delivered Very few Repre sentatives or Senators had as much as an hour's notice that tho President was com ing They knew the Serbian Mission was to bo on hand, but as the visits of these commissions have lost their novelty, there was no great demand nn that account for gallery tickets. But half an hour or so beforo 12 o'clock word wcjit. forth to the Senators and Renrescntatlves that the Presi dent had decided to speak. Was It about woman suffrage? No one knew. Presently the Serbian Commissioners appeared and were given seats, then the members of the Cabinet, and then the galleries suddenly filled. Mrs. Wilson, accompanied by Colonel House, the President's European Commis sioner, took seats In the President's gallery. Corridors outside wero Jammed with people, and seats on tho floor and In tho galleries were soon at a premium. If the President had not been received with customary fervor during the reading of his railroad message, conditions were completely reversed when the war message was delivered. The usual Democratic applause was there, and the "whoopers-up," who ceem to have been ab sent when the railroad message came with notice, wero largely tn evidence when seem ingly the public had no no'lee of what the President was to do. Upon the Republican side It was admitted that the President was In the hands of friends who did not propose that there should be any diminution of his Influence, Sending for Members Here we have contrasted two of the Presi dent's recei moves. They were made In the presence of the Republicans, who courteously welcomed the President with applause along with the more enthusiastic Democrats. That the matter of "applause," which the Demo crats freely bestow upon these occasions, Is embarrassing to most Republicans Is shown by the enthusiasm with Which the majority Senators and Representatives applaud those paragraphs of the President's messages Yhlch here and' there, run atteld tram war ('s;-jr& . -" 101C awu YES, THINGS OUGHT TO WARM m&i rCfy. 1T . ..Y I cldcdly free trade commitment attached. Some licpuljllcans who have withheld np plausu on these occasions huve been chlded as unpatrlotle. They have merely adhered to views whlrh wtro In controversy between the President and thim"clves prior to the w ar. Third move. In the largo custom htatts there Is a wide division on the qutstlon of woman suffrage. Tho western States arc decidedly for It. Rarnest though possibly misguided womin, flaunting their suffrage banners before the White House, have been sent to Jail. They have suffered Ignominious)- for .heir convictions, whether light nr wrong. Many of them havo accused tho Piesldent of being unfriendly. Most Demo crats, particularly routhcrn Democrats, havo opposed woman stiff tage. A llvtly agllatlon of the vhole problem had made the situation politically HCUte. Suffragists ero chaigng that Republicans would vote solid und take the President's thunder. How it happens wo do not disclose, but ut the psychological moment u committee of Democrats favorable to suffrage called upon the President and brought away from the White House a declaration favorable to suf finge, which they flaunted In the faco of the southern Pemociats on the following morn ing as an expiesslon o the President's views. The suffrage leaders used this s their trump card on tho final day, and tho old VStates" rights" fellows, who have struggled with that Issue on tho child labor question and on the question of prohibition, wero put to their stumps. The President usually gets the support of Congress, whether he nppeara In person at the Capitol or whether "JTohiimmed goes to the mountain." But In the caso ot woman suffrage ho' had a close shave. J HAMPTON MOORU BETTER TANKS NEEDED In a number of respects the tank promises well. In tccent actual performance, for one thing, the wholesale use of tanks obtained tho British tho most brilliant success that they have won against German troops. But theory goes In advanco of practice. A car capable of going flvo miles an hour across fairly level und dry country, of crushing walls, bnrrlera, wire entanglements and pill boxes, of crossing shell holes and trenches or resisting artillery shells would play the same part on the battlefield that a mounted knight In full armor played on a battlefield of Bouvlncs. It would domlnato the field. Only the heavier artillery could touch It. The British tanks cannot go flvo miles an hour nor flatten all field obstacles nor with stand cxploslve'shells from field guns striking In vital spots. But they can come near enough doing bo to be able to pierce the enemy's line for five miles In one day. Yet these monsters are small, no higher thah a man's head, no longer at the baRe than a motortruck. Their design, with exposed run nlng gear and thin steel plates, is obviously vulnerable, Cannot a device that has come In Its fir it crude jear so nearly up to the requirements of an arm of victory be brought up to stand ard and turned out on a suitable scale In the second or third year's model? It Is worth trylnr. Baltlmoro News. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1, Where la Komo ai4 what haa brouclit It Into the newer " 2. What la the origin ot demUohn? 3. Which la the Charter Oak CltrT 4. Identify "The Great c'ompromUer." , 5. Wlio was "The Youor Chevalier?" 6. What naa Utopia? 7. W hen la Iooa? S. What la the Zend-AeeeU? 0. Who la Frank A. Vanderllp? 10. Where ta the Yoermlta Vailej? Answers to Saturday's Qui 1. Ur. William Bayard Hale, an American Jour, nallet. who obtained the celebrated 'aiuVl nreued Intortlew" with h. V .l.il" ,U"- nlth the Kjlaer 3. Mark Twain wrote "Tom Sawyer." S, laike Dolrao U In Macedonia on the Balkan 4. Vlralnla la called "The Mother of Preel denta, 0, To set the saekl to b dlecheffed. IVoni the cuatani of the eultani. wlip when they wltned to, set rid of ona of the harem had tier sewed up In a aaek, which was thrown lot the lloaphorua. , The Roendheadai the l'urltana, whe tear ahert hair, dl.tli.aiil.hlnt .hem from Si curls and wlaa ef the Cavallera 7. CenrPef Ht. Jameil the Knsll.h court. a called rem th palace, at ut. Jamei, formerly the aeoe at royal lereee, """ . Tha flnaft Kabelltant m trm Mndl... . . &f&Fmflti$S3l UP SOON Over the Telephone Hello! Your husband Just got in. You didn't call ? I thought you might. Oh, well, if only to begin The day aright." This morning? Well, whoso fault was thut? I was prepared to kiss "good-by," But What. I didn't start the . spat. ,2 'Twns you, not I. -a Wait! Aro you there? Don't go away. I hato to quarrel so with you. Well, say you're sorry and I'll say ' I'm sorry, too. But I was not to blame. Oh, come, My dear, you know you started it! Of course, I lost my temper some A little hit. But I was right! Well, I declare, You ask too much. Such abso lute Oh, please Don't start again! Well, there! I was a brute! Eh? Yes, it will be nice to hear That you'll forgive me. Yes, It seems What's that? Why, yes; bonbons, my dear, Or choe'late creamfa? TOM DALY. WAR AND STAMPS THIRTY-SEVEN new spaces In the stamp albums of coming years already are as sured as, a direct result of the status of the United States as a belligerent rower. It is not customary for u nation to wage war without providing something of Interest to , philatelists. The South nnd Central American . countries which have aligned themselves with , the Dntenle havo not jet Issued war stamps, but It Is expected that some or all of them , eventually will do so. Tho contributions of tho United States In f, this respect aro various. Most of them arise ; out of tho war tax legls'atlon enacted by ; Congress. Twenty-one documentary revenue labels soon made their appearance, ranging In values frcm one cent to J1000, for use on wills, deeds, conveyances and kindred legal p'apers. This practice wus adopted by tho, Government In Civil War days, and resump tion of It now will turn millions of dollars Into the nation's war coffers. The tax on playing cards was raised from two to sevan cents, thus making a seven-cent revenue to dlsp ace the lower denomination. The Postoffice Department did not put out a new three-cent adhesive to meet the In creased letter rate, but when the extra neces sary millions ot the current three-cent value were printed their color proved to be pale violet, Instead of the customary purplo. These pale violet specimens have appeared per forated on four sides, perforated only ver tically, perforated only horizontally and with no perforations, at a'l, thus creating four varieties. Then the Government Introduced the three-cent envelope, and thla haa appeared thus far In purplo on white, amber, manllu and blue paper, It la said the p.'atal au thorities were not quite satisfied with the fact that the color Is so dark, and that tha next printing will show these envelope stamps in lighter shade, which, of course, would pro. duce another four varieties. The foregoing chronicling accounts for thirty different stamps. In addition, the Gov ernment Is planning a thlrteen-cent denomina tion, to meet the combined new letter rata with the special delivery or registration Ui Then there are the twenty-five-cent war sav ings and IE war thrift stamps, which are classified In the philatelist's revenue division. The standard American albums and cata logues are to provide spaces and quotations for these, the assent! of the government hav1-' Ing been sought and obtained. Under thIeV plan, collector will put these In their feooto.,1. aim wiu psaiers will, lay in, hocks otHIIWHh . for, future u wsij I a !.