'.. j ,..' 4 V ' " .,'"'' X " ( i I Ti .- 1"t' ft J2. O:' &r. : 0' 4 v ..v VjSkINO PUBLIC IiEDGEil-i'kiLADEiHi. TUUIWDAV MiWilltY "21, JM ,t T5f i . r-a .' j . t v; - 't ., 1 telt- m, w Li?1. ' y" t" Hf-JC r- 'I PA' SSraft- mm,. m B4 M m, )M lubtk&i)g umam company K ctTTls;, Pasetnajj " muj viee Fr eetoent ! John C. (iMBri, J'nnip 11 ,'tJohn Spurc:n, -Li DIMtiT.'nniim. '. ' i&teji' x"cct"' chaim,n ftnlli, i I i ill C',MAJmN.i. General Umlneii Manaier ;MJtie4 llr at Fcilio limu Building, .,BHaaoiico square, Philadelphia, SPMttCWrsaL,.., Broad and Chettnut Streeti llWIli'pmt ( t i'ree- Union Hutldlna " i... ..sim Metroimman Towtr Tti . . . . . ,. . , ti, ,....'. i ,40 t'ord liulMInt rS....h......lltOA Iriiltertnn ItulMtn. ;).... ,.i. ..,,,. .J202 Tribune tiulldina Plii , V-t.M... ... .... . ..... ft : HrKCor. Pennsylvania Ave. and ltlh St. TOMX flCltKAB....... ThA Jfuu 1t,.H.1fnw MSi,XJ?.?,7,,"--k'll1"ronl ilnue, Htrand pin niUOtati.k . 32 nutt t',niili. I. rran.. F?H -. .K ntrncimrtvrtnv mKnua , - H STSXisp ..FpaLio LanoiVln -ervej to uu j .WW', !- ?h."ailph!a. and aurroundln towns B W " K twelve U-' centa per week, pat able 'V jjtia!i to polnt out. Ids of Philadelphia, In ' H Patted Statu, Canada or United Mates Von. mm .. To. all ton iree. nrty tool cents per moiitli. loiiara per rear, payable in advance, for lam rmnntrlaa .. tit .i-m.. -- anakaiillr. - - i.wMutii vnv UUIiar r ' CEST!Sp)i,'crlbr!' lhln addreo. chained tfkSsvut alvo old well as new addrcsa. y ii i )JS EH. 000 WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 000 V t? Attrtst off commit, fcotfona fo nt-enda? rblla -'. " L.tAatf. IHflftOeitdenrer Annum. If,fr,fi.,I,r,, f 1 -tjr i unit inittni! .. ..-.,- . t", -..'l . tKCOXU CLASS HAIL 11 ATT IB. (- rm mr,.,-,,.,.,. .. -.. m. PhlliJ.lpkl., Tuurxlar. F.bmirj 21, 1911 TOP TITfiUtVAV rw TRKASnK ' i... .J' ' uiuunni V iJJr' K:"A. . M rjkyrOST treason goea Into or coints out of -,v . - '"""' w" -. " ' " - fi. Jijiu'Mto the mouth. Not twenty per cent ol the !&. ,'i tiomea of America, tt is estimated, arc up-I.1:.,.- .... ... rA,iioiams uie ioou auiuinisiraiiuu eurivii- i i'V uLl . ''W'',cally and patriotically. Hotels and the res- ri!f j . ' . . .... . . .i ... .t.i. I... is!,:- .lauranis are noiuing iuai 10 me mini, uui lh cblintless hornet, there Is no rcai at tempt to conservo the few vital foods Which are requisite to Allied success. It Is a. mean sort of treason, but tt Is treason Jut the same. The pity Is that those Rullty of It do not choke. The other sort of treason, Insidious and gravely dangerous, comes out ot the mouth In. tho form ot -words. Unfortunately, thinking and talking are not synchronized processes. There Is more talk without thought than there Is thought with talk. W are deluged with the effusions of crack-brained Individuals who prate about free speech and the dethronement ot the Constitution, demanding In time of peril the exercise of their full normal privileges Vjt, and unable utterly to appreciate the ridic ulous attitude In which they arc placed by their Incorrigible platltudinarlaulstn. The Constitution provided for Its own abrogation during periods of major peril. We Inherited from the Koman democracy the Idea of the dictator. The story of Cln clnnatua was held up to school children for generations as an Ideal example ot a democracy functioning properly In war time. The founders of this Government, S35 ' therefore, provided that the President 5M. ... should be, commander-in-chief ot the army and navy, which carries with it the authority to declare martini law, thus .11. stttutlng a virtuul dictatorship for estab lished law and absolutely centralhslns'all the resources of the nation for greater ef ficiency. Moreover, practice and precedent have combined to clothe Washington with virtually unllmjted power In war. We find certain Inalienable rights sud denly thrown Into the discard. Men are not asked If they wish to serve In the forces across tie seas. They are drafted. What a man shall eat and what he shall drink are subjects of national control. How comes It, then, that any manvcan claim for himself no contraction In the right of speech when his very right to live la' subject to' the pleasure of the State? . If Uncle Sam can reach to the hearthstone and take thence the son or husband, must he be impotent to shut life mouth ot a "blatherskite or demagogue who stands on the corner inviting the populace to Insist ' on measures inimical to the lives ot these drafted men and ruinous to the common cause?' It Is obvious that among the many to and essentfal rights which are in abeyance during periods of stress Is the right of un limited free speech. Nor is the sacrifice of It any. greater hardship than the sacrifice of ilfe. The press has seer, the necessity for and .'ti. . ....,..., . ... . naa acqutcsccu in me exercise 01 an oinciai ' Vind unofficial censorship. Every newspaper "'J 'constantly retrains from printing matter ftV'pihattls obviously detrimental to the well &' .? boine of the natlonf Tet.'mlstaklng liberty K '1f'JlP license and Ignoring utterly the exlgen V 'r ?.. . - , cies oc war, some orators insist, on - uie a privilege of denouncing- the country and 'engaging In practices which clearly lend .aid"and,comfort to the enemy. It la prlvi 'lf they are not entitled to and 1.. which ' beymust not be permitted to indulge. The iwajl' ot democracy to which' they rush r (fto-refuge la the very temple they ore at- 9 .:" .-"-. .... apung uy every means in, tneir power jt: '1 birtng In ruin. down on' their own heads I," JLfr'- .t-,...'.il'.' , .... ..... qKW-vn tun iicittn ut an Winnie 1 Tlee two classes' of sociophagous trai- Uie one devouring .the food that will Uij war, and the oilier subsisting 00 tMiaMt'tba sacrlflce of the mass to 1 iMtvIdual whims,- require stern treat- fare very likely to get it. But we sieo iwattoeatea by tbe'hypocrljyt rfMem iJw, raHi at. Scott- .fcJ. .f.. -Z tt-' .... .'. . i. . fnwMKW mey tneioseives nave ePty of coffees kt, traitor - adJ Uar. 'i 'W - "' .","'' tf-ir. TJUW Ail eVOV BBBar.zBBBiWI anelent history now. "Evolution" has been traveling at alratane speed in the few years that have passed since then( and a whole new' order of dealing with labor dis turbances has been developed, Mr. Tennypacker fearlessly enforced the law as It was handed down to him. Mr. Itoosevclt did the best he could with the vague principles of -mediation and con ciliation as they were understood In his day. Only a decade before the Pennsyl vania strike, drover Cleveland could do nothing better than call out troops to stop the Chicago railroad strike. "Evolution" moved very slowly In the nineties, Now (he "third party" to every strike the public-has at last made Itself vocal, It has forced the llovernment to act force fully In the public Interest, on tho sound theory that the Government Is the public. DIZZINESS OF TIIK SLAVIC WHIM. pvUKINO the events about to take place -' there will probably be many conflicting- rumors labeled "ltusslans to Klghl" one day and "Russians Not to Klghl" the next. This U all very puzzling anil disturb ing, for the simple reason that the concep tion of a great nation 111 revolution has passed out of our consciousness and under standing. It Is as hard for us ot this gen eration to believe in the existence of na tional chaos as It Is to take Mr, Sunday's version' of an anthracite and bituminous hell literally, l,av and order prevailed during our Civil War and to a remarkable degree dining the Kiench Revolution. We should have to go back to the Thirty Years' War, 1618-1(MS, to get the most recent parallel to modern Russia. Tho pivotal point of sanity, from which one can view the Slavic whirl without feel ing dizzy, is realization of the fact that every German bayonet reported at Dvlusk, I.utslf and Rovno Is one less German bayo net at Verdun, St. Qnentlu and Vpies. AVhei L was thought, a week ago, that the Germans would merely have to watch Russia, It was calculated that between 150,000 and 250,000 bayonets would he needed for that police work. The new In vasion will probably double that require ment, and. If the Invasion Is serious, triple or quadruple It. That would save Krance until enough Americans arrive to win the war. As It Is, the Invasion of Russia has all' the appearance of a German confession of complete Inability to dent the western fiont and of the autocracy's admission that all 'It can hope for Is a negotiated bargain by whlo'i Belgium and the Bal kans are set free In exchange for a Prus sianized western Russia. FICKLE ELECTRICITY rpiIK battle of New Orleans wait foiifsht -- after the peace treaty had been signed. Lack of nlreless or even wires In those days made It dltticult to know whether or not war was being waeed. Today we suffer klititter reversed conditions. There are so many wires and so much wireless that we cannot learn, whether or not peace negotia tions are In progress. HAVE OUR SCHOOLS FAILED? pONSTANT criticism ot the public '-' schools has crystallized In a demand for a survey of the kind of education Phil adelphia children are getting and a s'udy of the business system of the s-chools. The Board of Kducutlon has authorized a lim ited survey by lis committee chairmen and Doctor Oarber has asked for a scien tific Inquiry by disinterested Investigators. The board's committee lias not even been organized yet and the superintendent's suggestion apparently has been pigeon holed. The KvKNiMi Piifci.ic l.KutiKit anticipated the need for such a survey. One of Its editors was assigned some mouths ago to make an Intensive and comprehensive "study" ot the wli.,tiK Professional etll clency ami economical business operation guided this unofficial survey, the first part ot which appears today. The series will be published In dally articles. It vplces the views of teachers, school authorities, college professors, educational organiza tions, business men and parents of all parties Interested in whether or not Phila delphia's children are being properly edu cated for the business of life an 1 good American citizenship. HUII.D HOMES INSTEAD '.MANSIONS OF rpWENTV thousand homes are needed - by the end of this year. Three thou sand of them, at Klmwood, are to be taken' care of by the Government. Contractors and builders or, rather, those who finance contractors and builders are fighting shy of work on the remaining 17,000 for these stated reasons:' First. Unwillingness of banks to lena money for building. Second. High cost of material and labor. Third. Government priority claims on material. There are here two reasons too many. If tight money is really restrictive, there Is no use talking about the other difficul ties, and If materials or labor cannot be obtained there Is- no use crying about the price or the waMo get the price, especially when there are materials, labor and money enough to build fine mansions. Next Investigation: Who has an "Im moral claim" upon the City Treasury? The Hun pulls at the Bolshevik daisy petals "lie loves me, he loves me not." Russia's silver spoons art safe, anyway. The Crown Prince, Is still on the weal front. Btfore Vsrdaman starts lit again lie ought to read whit Mr, Pennypacktr says of him. V- . The .Germans started their Verdun offen sive on February 20. Their ltll off.nalva Is at least one day overdue. Factional warfare Is the' movie men's penalty for being so successful,. Whenever );'HilorRy gets loo big It breaks In two, S . j.i- .A .. Botes take notice: Jutt as the eight bour day hai 'received the sanction of so Hiety.'so the foyr-mlnute man has perma .rieiUlestabllshtfPlhe limit, 'of monologue.' A Milfor tfca ol: two-cent piece PENNyPACKER IN COAL-STRIKE CRISIS 1 Strong Assertion of Governor's Right to Go Over Sheriffs' Heads' riANVI'.MKKK .MTOniiMiKAPHV Ml. SJ (Coiorioht, '!., ju 1'itbllc Lrilutr L'oiiumuy.J rpUU.V came the Inevitable coal strike, of which Roosevelt had told nic that he had Information anil which, as he Indicated, he had planned tu come Into Pennsylvania and,niaimge as he had done timing the Ad ministration of Governor Stone. At once, without consultation with him or anybody else, I wrote this letter to George V, Raer, the president of the Philadelphia iiiul Read Ing Rnllway Company, and to John Mitch ell, of Indianapolis, the head of the labor organization which had control of the strike: .March .11, l'JOl, Dear Sir -The Commonwealth nf Penn sylvania expects that every leasonablo elftut will be mnde by the parties In terested to accoinmodatp the differences between coal operntois and coal miners and to uveit the stilke which Is now thteateued. Yours very truly. SAMUEL W. PHNNYPACIvKR. This was simply intended ns notice to both of them that the Interests of tho Com monwealth were to be considered, nnd that she did not propose to sit Idly by and per mit them to Involve her In difficulty. They were holding conferences, each side reso lute, and In the meantime the anthracite legion lay Idle. Coal Is a public necessity, and to deprive the people ot 11 was to Inflict great sufTeilng. The New York Sun lend the letter correctly. In an editorial, Apill G, It lead: "Between the lines of tills timely message we think an Intimation can be read that the ptcsent Governor of Peiinyl vanla wilt be prepared to employ tln last lesource of his authority to keep the peace and preserve to nil men their lights." On the i:th, I sent forth this announce ment: I announce to the people of IVnnsyl vault that the deposit of jl.OHO.OOO In the Enterprise National Rank, 11 national bank which failed on the eighteenth day of October. 1905, together with Interest of H,n43.14, has been paid Into tho Treasury of the Commonwealth, mid lit your behalf I thank the State Treasurer (Mathucs) for the caie with which this 1 deposit, when made, was safeguarded ituil for the promptness with which tt has been collected. I likewise announce that on the thhd of April, IDOlJ. there was paid Into the Treasury J236,72.65, collected from the I'nltetl States Gu eminent for moneys loaned to It by this Commonwealth In the War of 1812. Truth Hidden By Politics It Is it psychological phenomenon. For the pin iioses of a political campaign, by suggestion that poslbly tho money might be lost, the people could be worked up Into a frenzy and persuaded to put an incapable, like Berry, In charge of their finances, The proof that It was safe In the Treasury was treated with absolute Indifference. The fact that moneys due for it century had been finally collected attracted no attention whatever, and no Journal thought It worth Its while to say a word of appreciation. Still trying to make the most of the situa tion, the Record said: "Political pull i,e cured for the Entei prise Rank heavy de posits of State money which served to give It the appearance of stability and lured the credulous people of Allegheny to ilntrtivt It with their private savings." On the Kill began In Philadelphia tho celebration by the Ameilctin Philosophical Society, the oldest scientific organization-In the United States, anil the University of Pennsylvania, of the 200th anniversary of the birth of Benjamin Kranklln, Many men of distinction in science and others conspicuous In the various walks of life came from over the world to attend. Among them were Hugo de Vrles, of Am sterdam; Sir George II. Darwin, son ot Charles D.trwiu; Alois Rrandl. of Berlin: Gugllelmo Marconi, the Inventor of wheless telegraphy. nd Andrew Carnegie. There was a dinner at the Bellevue-Stral'ord. at which I made a speech. On my left sat Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts, cul tivated and sincere, and next to him Ellhu Root, of New Yoik, stronger hut less re liable. Dr. I. Minis Ifays, the energetic secre tary of the American Philosophical Society, was most responsible for the e'Jccess of the demonstration. Coal Strike Proclamation The affair of the coal strike grew more heated, and May 2 I Issued this proclama tion: Whereas, Industrial disturbances have recently arisen In various parts of the Commonwealth accompanied by manifes tations of violence and disorder, now, therefore. I, Samuel Whltaker Penny packer. Governor of Pennsylvania, do issue tills my proclamation and call upon all citizens by their conduct, example and utterances, whether printed or verbal, to astlst In the maintenance of the law. Times of commotion furnish the test of the capacity of the people for self-government. Eveny man Is entitled to labor and get for his labor the highest com pensation he can lawfully secure. There is no law to compel him to labor unless he so chooses, and he may cease to labor whenever he considers It to be to his In terest so to cease. Tho laboring man, out of whose efforts wealth arises, has the sympathy of all disinterested people in his lawful struggles to seenre a larger proportion of the profit which results from his jabor. What lie earns belongs to him, and If he invests Ills earnings the law protects his property Just ns the lights of property of all men must bo protected. He has 110 right to Interfere with another man who may want to labor. Violence has nd place among' us and will not be tolerated. Let all men in quiet and soberness keep the peace and attend to their affairs with the knowledge that It Is "the purpose of the Commonwealth to see that the prin ciple's herein outlined are enforced. This proclamation drew the lines exactly where they ought to be placed, and ex pressed with precision the purpose which It was Intended should be carried Into ef fect. There had been an impression enter tained even by many good lawyers, and widely entertained, that the Governor could not interfere until called upon by the Sheriff ot the county. Tills theory would overtHrow completely the constitutional power of the' Governor tot see that the laws are enforced, and would' make the Sheriff master ot the situ ation. I let It be known that, while I recog nized the propriety of consulting wjth the Sheriff and letting, htm maintain llio peace If he could. I would not listen for-a moment to, the claim of want of power Iji the GoyJ ernor ian'd It b occasion vre'qu'lred"'suqh sjrtion.wouldwaltffer jw. Mjarttf,, a HOW WILL YOU HAVE YOUR WHALE, SIR? Steaks and Chops From the Big. Fish Mny Grace Our Tables WHEN Dr. Oliver Wendell Huhnes, In re ply to a young man's questions, "Is flli really a good brain food?" "And how much should I cat to achlee success In literature?" said, "Oh, about a whale and 11 half," folks laughed; and they have been chuckling eer since at the Joke, But some of us may shortly accomplish that very f-nt. for the Government has already Instituted a move ment to make whale steak popular. The Ameilcan Jluseum of Natural 1lllory gave a whale-steak dinner In New York thi other night and everybody around the board smacked his lips amlivowed that Mother hud never cooked anything' titilto so good. Some of the guests wondered why whales had never swum Into the Lucullan limelight be fore, which was the cue for Roy Chapman Andrews and other speakers, probably under Government prompting, to allsc and say things. One of Ihein declared whale has been a impular dish In ,101)311 for twenty yeats. Another lold bow common whale steaks and chops were, say, a couple of hun dred eais ago, among the pioneer whalers of New Bedford. At nny rate New Bi-dfoid, ottcc the btlsy hoine of the Amerlcnn whaling lm!titry, has been stlrtcil again to Its center by this news of the rehabilitation nf the big fish. Tackle Is being meiimuli-il nnd the weather-beaten salts, who have beei languishing In snug liHilmrs, nte cocKIng up their cars nnd stretching the rheumatic kinks out of their sea-legs. And thete must be a whale of a crop of wholes In tho seven seas, for It hasn't been worth while to chase them of late, years. John D. Rockefeller's men huo been illg glng so much petroleum out of dry land as to make sperm oil of but little more value than dishwater. But now the pmdiict of the whale's blubber a blinding $1.25 a barrel, Hint that, with the adtle.il prospect of market ing the meat fur u-al money, proinloes to rexlte the old activities of New Bedford. This new scheme of the Government's may flivver, but the w If o ones say they can see success abend. We don't know. We do re member that when we visited our flab-dealer's shop as late as Lent pt last year the nlls were. decorated with placatds, supplied by the Depaitment of Agrlcultme, or Inter ior, or something, calling upon us to eat plenty nf tlled'h, Tilellsh, It will bo re membered, Is the hensltlvn cieature which disappeared fiom our shoies about twenty five ymtrs ago and went Into absolute. le tlremeut: and then, piobably feeling that Its past had been foigotten, returned to us suddenly. It Is due fur uuntber period of retirement, for though the Government did Its best to boost It, few folks fall for It now. Some Hints for Lent If whale steak fulls to get across we may be avked to try shalk; and, Indeed, theie's a vvlso medico In New- York who has ahvaxs been 11 pratser of that fish's edible qualities. Dr. Robert T. Mortis, who Is a many-sided genius, deplores the fact that some good food fish are going to vinMe because they carry bad names arnuiul with them. He doesn't ask us to eat man-eaters, but he contends that the. dogfish, which Is a mem ber of the shark family, Is delicious eating If tho Government will only nrrango to cult the cieature "grayflsh," which Is one of Its nll.tses, people iiiIkM lake kindly to It. Shaik's fins, as everybody knows, have long been highly exteeined by t'hltiese gotumanils. But even It grafKi should become popu lar and prove plentiful, we have, no guar antee that It wouldn't also Immediately be come high In price. That, after all, Is our chief ttouhle, fur there's no scarcity of good sea food, nor lark of variety. It's the pi Ices they wear that stick In our throats. Shad, for Instance, which many Phlladelphlans were once able to pick up at Gloucester, alive and kicking, for from twenty to fifty cents, In the season, wlU kick all the change out of the average purse this year. They're coming lu now from Georgetown, N. ('., and while they're good, as usual, tlu-y're not being sold nt so much apiece, ns they used to be, but by the pound, It may be ounces and troy weight by the time they come where they're flncbt In the vvateis of the Delaware. Of course lobsters have grown scarce try ing to satisfy the appetites ot chorus girls and their gentlemen friends, but that needn't worry any one. with so many other cholco things coming In. The scallop Is a delicious bit. whether he's the big fellow from Maine or the small and more delicately flavored iiiollusk from t'ape Cod, Long island or Morehead t'ity, N. t. New- York city doesn't let many of the Long Island catch get nway from the Gotham hotels nnd restaurants, so Philadelphia has to take Cape foils or More bead t'ltys. What few get throimh from Long Island bilng $7 to JS a gallon, which Is ridiculously high. The general run of the titheis fetch 13 to $0 a gallon In ordinary times the.v're worth no more than $1-5". These little fellows grow In the slate-gray cuilously shaped shells which give them their name, but the big ones from Maine live In houses very unlike those affected .by most of the family. Some one has said' that an oyster Is "a fish that's built like a nut." So Is the Maine scallop. Its home Is of the clam-shell style of architecture, plain and smooth and big as a dinner plate. Local dealeis will tell you that most ot the ftslt coming Into this market fiom New Knglauil come without their beads. This Is particularly true of cod. for the New Mng landers hold out the tongues and Jowls of that fish for a dainty known down Last ns "tongues and sounds," Scroti, another favor ite down Boston way, seldom reaches these parts and that needn't worry you, either. If your taste Is anything like ours, for we've tried It and found it wanting. The Bcrod Is simply a young codjlsh, nnd Charles S, Knowiton, now of this town, but a New ling lander by birth, sajs It's prime eating when It's boiled, br, better still, stewed In a chafing dish. But for Lenten fare, calculated to defeat the oilglnal pip-pose of the penitential sea son, wo might mention a dish which has long been a feature ot a basement restaurant In Chicago, It's called "Kindan Haddle a la Rector" there, and although It may taste almost as good under some other name somewhere else, we have never found It. At Rector's, In Chicago, the Ash is brought in to you upon a generous platter, which. In turn, is superimposed upon a larger platter to catch whatever of the rich milk-gravy may overflow tho first plateau. Up to their middles In this gravy stand half a dozen plump little boiled potatoes: and the meat of the fish Is saturated with savory Juices Oh never mind a trip to Chicago, The rprlng airs arc- ttlning In this old town and presently the waters of the Delaware will be alive with the finest food fish that bless any part of tills country. The royal shad is fi0 ,,. Ing, if you can afford to entertain him T. A.' D, NATIONAL I'OIXT OF VIEW Coiinrti.man John v. Miller, in the Uou.. of nepre.entstlvei. vrou.ted ssalnst the arm? o?.?! ttce, of conipellliur private soldiers to do mSSi serflce. The, LVonereuman'i ittUudo will ill .5 .loried l;r every Mtrlollo citizen of thSromtr?" The uniform of the I'r.tted sjate. .0 Idler , Po'nl remain ever an embl-m of l,onor ot the li?d. of a flunkey St Joseph Mo.) tlaictte, "' Uuinri from tU;h tho mew American arm Int. be.!! rru leU will not bewm "linSSd iSr the reporta that the niura of our men SI i.it No doubt l.ol.ted FcIX, of tamoS It? found in our tr.lnlnr center, 'i. Iii"i? liaiiuniui are to be In American camps In Europe. They, however are too scattered to be made the baila or 1 blanket chanre aealmt our troopi.Ba t ike In Amerlcai lUrald-Republlcan. It la cenerallr admitted by member, nf .11 political Pfrtlea that the revenue S now upon the statute books contains many Inequalities and other mletake. It ha. been ursedtbit ',, Consresa will apply lUetf promptly to the revision of the law the leek can be ompll,hed In aSpIo tfme to admlnlater the 'law for ifi, tatl $$ll year. In anr event, ravlfion thouh) p und"ru,,i' a bou poi.lblo In Jlhe, Intere.t of tu.il'V'i'u all concerned, -v,Vah.lnton I'ot ' m . Tlte ""ft, prooiem la ahnot,it r,y poilca, probletn, kept alive, by frlcilnviiVtvveeii wo raiea.'one of which ,-thlnVs Jtaelc aujerlor,- and cine of which (..embittered over real or iliaif real l,i.". Th.MmDort.nl thin 1. ikl ' ..I..1 .' the relation. iween Meiloaea and Americana In- J , k yw wmmmmm turn m -w-msm .u u. -v -vm-A - wiiHJiftftW - . fctt m ilfif Mi Vt if 'ft k JUL seS&m - V..-.-.r GRAFT AND MUDDLE IN POLICE SYSTEM Autoist Had Difficulty Recovering Stolqn Car Even After It Had Been Found Tu llir Killtor 0 thr Kventnp I'nbltc T.ritil'r: Sir I read with Interest the article In the Issue of the lfuh instant headed "Auto Ists Scent Graft of Sleuths." My car was stolen the night of the 14th from nearly In front of the Ge.rmantown police station. I went at once to the sta tion house and Informed the t-ergeant, who entered tho description In the record. (I saw him typewrite it.) The morning of tfie 16th a citizen called me ,on the phone and stated that he was at City Hall, had found my car, had phoned to the detective bureau the number nnd description and that they had no recoul of It, so he had gone to thejr ottice personally and found out to whom the car belonged, They Healed him with scant politeness and told him not to deliver the car without an order from the department. He said be would return It to me If I proved my Identity. 1 could not either go to City Hall or get the car that day, but having to go near the police station I stopped there and explained the case. They could not do anything, but called up Detective Jesse Wlster on the phone. Although his .department had not found the car and hud nothing to do with It, he Insisted that I would have to come to City Ball and get an order. On the 17th, In the afternoon, 1 went to City Hall for the order and the man In charge had no record of my car. "Finally jt called up Wlster and found out that I should be given an order. I gave him my license and number so he could make 0111 the order. I then went to the garage (prl vate) where the finder had had It towed and secured It. Kverylhlng had been taken from It, The finder said that he first saw the car latt, Thursday night, ngaln on Friday and late Friday night. He then examined It and found that It had been gone, through, so had put It In a garage. I-dld not pay anything except to the finder for his expense for storage and towing, and perhaps I added something for his kindness. There Is no doubt a lot of Incapacity and Inefficiency among the police, and through talking to others who have had cars and articles stolen I learn that there Is graft. The whole system Is run down and I think It a very dangerous state of affairs. The public; should know of It. But I don't think the detectives would, know if an air raid was occurring unless ,somo members of their family were killed by It. ' , , . . I'nANCIS GOODIICK. .IB, Bhlladelphla, February 20, AN ALLIED CONFERENCE To the Editor of the Evening Publlo Ledger; t Sir The time will soon be ripe for '.the calling of a world peace conference by Pres ident 'Wilson. I do not mean for a moment that war should stop while the discussion Is mirRtied. but that the, Allien mntin. - . ---.. .w..wi,o ) rrio- lutely h ever, on the line of action outlined by the Versailles" council. But why not Institute a clearing-house In which to bring together the varylng'opin ions of Allied statesmen' Th'elr opinions "do not radically differ. H la said. Very' well' All the moro-teason to avoid the least sem blance or suspicion of variance. Asqulth and Lloyd George evidently have different views about war alms.. If Czernln and Wilson .can talk together, why cannot Asqulth and ,WH eon talk? Let us and out whether or not the Wilson program Is nearer to the As qulth, program or the &ansdowne program than It la to the Lloyd George program We, are committed to publlo, diplomacy. Why not go a step further -and nave the preliminaries o publlo diplomacy' held In' public tooT, ' AVIATOR, Philadelphia,.. February ,jp M MUNICIPAL OJsNERSmp " fa tkiHtoiorolAhtUvtikai'uhHLimr?? . ',, . Si-- '' '- .'. J". ih -.uuiL-.fK. 31-, i-i fi ir ?. iwm rimr I TnBFin - fjngrV3TOiaiiffifB . 'v ". -r---- - ".-- - 11 p. rM .v.jib EvfiN sor there Is as much good reason for the on ns for rue other. 1 have always wondered what black magic the transit magnates of the country use to prevent public discussion ot municipal own ership. Municipal ownership Is much more feasible and practlcabto than national own ership, because a city public service coro ratlou Is much more easily managed than one on a national scale. It Is strange that more young' men do not enter politics by lighting transit magnates, in Cleveland Tout Johnson did such splendid fighting that he won for himself a national leputatlon. He was succeeded by Newton Baker, who kept up the good woik. The country ought to realize that there Is no problem more dllltcult than tiauslt, nnd that those who master it are probably men big enough to take almost any Job and see it through. It would be a good thing If after the war Philadelphia could lure Mr. 'Bator to reside here and clean up our transit muddle. Philadelphia, February 20, B. S. HELP APPRECIATED To tht i:lltrof ihr. Rvtntiiti 1'nbll? I.eiluer: Sir At 11 neetlng of the executive com mittee a unanimous vote of thanks was ex tended to the Kyumxu Public I.kuukr for Its heaity co-operation lu connection with our Jll'B.OOu emergency drlvtr for" the Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia. Appreci ating your klndneVs, 1 am yours very slu. cerely, KLVIBA 7.. PLUMEIt. Chairman Executive Committee, Kmergeiicy Ililve, Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia. Philadelphia, February 20. "WILSON BOULEVARD" To the H'tlltorof the livening VuVlic Ledger: Sir I beg to differ with "A Reader's" opinion that our Parkway should be called "Wilson Boulevard." There are so many prominent Phlladelphlans who could be hon ored with more propriety In this, a city A wmcii is not cioseiy luentineu witn the career of Mr. Wilson. But I believe It would be better to get away altogether from, the Idea ot naming streets and places after men. It smacks too much of hero-worship, and hero-worship Is not democratic. We should name our streets after great events or movements In which the people have taken part. There should be a "Oecla ratlon Avenue" In Philadelphia to commem orate the Declaration of Independence, nnd In Washington there might be a' "Democracy Boulevard" to remind all men In .the future of "the world made bafe for democracy." Philadelphia, February 20, ,G, n. S. TUB CONGRESSMAN, Be y earned1 to sit-in Congress And so we ruahed him thrutmh. Ru there he sttai and. really It'a The only thing he'll do. What Do You Know? v QUIZ Who li lrilne lu Ltnroot? Are there as many HeetalUla' tn the Frenrh Chamber of Deputies aa there are In (he Herman Relcbetast About how many fltntlnr men ean lb Ger mane connt on and about what la tho maxi mum number the? ean keep la kadla? la whale meat edlbleT What la a eanteenT What la atlmlel eollf What la the Iterllllon jileni lilre the derivation of the word "damask." Name two element wltlrli the element Iodine refcemulfi. What, la Wkum? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz hliaareent n kind of rooch-grslaod leather, niually died green. 'William S.GUljeyt wito.";rne Bb Ballads." a-eoUeetlon of directing and metrically U- ks Tobacee. notatoea and mall (Indian tern) are T&thyiSi,WV.,,?d' " kM"" PtrThekt a eltr lei nortJiera Runla In tho Bailie urovlncti. , " i ' " I)etlor"von Kuehlminn It the Oennan lm , perlal Met reUiT for 1 ufclm Affaire. Relation" la the ital"or rondlllon at liei.r. 'Cjrated or kin "reh.tle'Vv, i'n V, .onX-' JIUiMf rvlaled.-Tho. farmer ile rul.u.ed I fir i,.'J!l,r T1'" 'wffeP,en Vln.hlD ir UUelrod, ah.trarll,, (he, latter means i it kjSmiWt- eoBcreielr; At ... - ,", Aroiaanarr'le a'rBooUrrifoir'ille. 1 nr.- tJ - IdC f A N J t?" "" ' : I: BEAR MEAT y fcjj SOON VET! I .-!"m- rr9-jr?.-, . .7V.--' -.j' - aaWlr --"ITniT" -" b trim ., ranti.--" jvrt- .-..- McAroni Ballads cv. Da Uigga Noiic Som' ways I may be domb. my frand For I ain't loner ccn dcesa land; 'i ict eet ees long enougn to leeia Dat I have caught da meanin' cltu ur ati da bigga noise 1 hear . Ecn street an' alley, shop ah1! Let ecs not prettn, no, but stroi Decs song dat 3 made da whole Een evra nlace dat turns a vi Eet ces da wan great Bigga Noil tin vl-i-n Innd n' rtrrlv vnieo -4 Of 'Mcricana Dollar Beell. '$ Derc ees not mooch. I am so iloi About da war, dat I could know, .i Not verra mooch at all, but stM I theenk eef I could brecng my) l Jus close enough so 1 could hei Alt :..- u....n .. t.,...it ttii nutans uaur. ui cviu ucvii f4 Where fi enters shout an' bullets s I'd mebbo hear da sama theengj'j An' where iiey lay da ship us K T ii4aaT1 iniilrl fnn An tinvnn nniaa-.ij a nice! wuuiu nun ut ouuia uiol'v Da strong, an' loud an' busy voice 1 Of '.Mericana Dollar Beell. ' TOM DA ACORNS Being the.Little Beginnings ofj Worthy Timber T IKE many another bright jchoUrj J-j him, when John was a sum Glrard College ha was excellent In's branches that he couldn't quite ig his mind what to select for his He graduated in '85, but stucc irj a year or so, as secretary to tni Then lio went Into the offices of ,th Estate and later entered the Whs of the -University of Fcnnsylvs graduating there he became set lh. TTnl.-Acal,, T,nlif KneletV.1 then that he- heard a number of1 upon landscape architecture, which! him into the channel that was tol big things for him. He gathered his ii together and went abroad tor a half, making a study of Old'Wft dens ana perrecting mmseit geusra art nf lnnrtnt-iinA architecture. A 1 uate course in that, line at Harvar slty followed, and immediately im hung out his shingle In Cambria wh.ra Iia .till la when1 tin's ftf n bless you! he can't bring Into hlJ the sick landscapes mat neeu vm ho has to visit them wherever Ui n 1... tinn.n nt tl.Anl Ha In tllO Vi Beading, Pa.; Charlotte, N. C,i"4 Wis. ; San Diego. Cal., anu no iijj as far avvayas Dublin, Ireland,- S ago he went abroad as a member. mission from Boston wmen wao study parkway systems in me y i. Pau at ttmr time. nrab&blyV ih.,Mn Ti T.t.iitenftnt of'O? vlted him to map out a plan for,' tlflcatlon of .Dublin. He was, on', of sailing to take up that work big war broke loose in i. .,.. ..ki.j v.l. , Btnv nomS' UCC" VttUI lil ." wvw, -,,-,.. storm blow over. Meanwblie rebels shot up some of the enri e,t,-inkiAii reri nhnva the irreen V safo to say his services arc, pie ,. ., ...A rrt.A l.nttrment I IIICIC lllttll CYVl. fc." .....---"-, -- conditions, and the. establlshmenjj grounds are aieo in i" "' ? written and edited a number oL, Ing with these various pranciiw C3A taiVI. anrl iranllemen. We PI No'len. M. A., probably the worij lanascape rumcti THE TOWER OF LOJ A royal palace, constating ot npbears to hv been th !eUw Tower of idOiiaon, i- rwv ..i.I... it.. r..nniirr anil fltllMn V'TIT-ji iw.l... ,1l nhrl'fl bfOail m t -.:.i.rt i,tnifl iviuflfA navllV iris ihsv nAlA1mKnwtil Vl9 nxr . , y -A-.'i--iLKrfl4BBlb -Wci. - '.- 4kl.',. a'rharlAd TI 'tL-M v .."V O J$,.. P AJTSf!!"': e.(i Ua - i noma, hbw tu 'hiwher-KJ of imi www dm1 to ttM l&zffii el ainM.' Iia IdtM MMT WIM 911