jsttf1 8i 'V B.jfi.1 lU a. J s inm!tlmir' tmm&Mzbfltt LEDGER'COMPANY tIB,H, K. CtmTtt. I'bmipxt I H.i lAKllnrtO'l. Vl rrM!-nt! Jnh-i c. anfl Treasurer, rnuip h, comns, Tlfllum. John J, stmraeon. tilrc-rtnra. 1 . KUlTOMAt, BOAJlDt cm . Vr r- u.w f.t. LIRrp i. J .i.kii.. .iirinu ijTe, SMIM'.T TSdltnr C IsUttTlN.,. General Business Managsr 1 daily at PcstiO I.ikiu Bulldlnr, aoindenca Sauara. Philadelphia. CwtTSaL, ,,. Broad and Ches.out Streets D ClTr....... lraUnlon Dulldlna oU. 1 . .. . . 109 Me tropolltan Tower v ut,u3 jora iiuiiainr Ft,,., lfflM Futlerton liulldlnir i., ..j.ui Jriounr jjuuaing KEWS niTtEACS! iToir Beirut;. E. cor. rennsyivanie. Ave. and iftn fit. m liUBHU....). The Aim Uulldtnr v Benin.. .. ..xlarronl House. Htrand Boauu . 32 nua touis la Grand ''- BUBscntPTiov TEnM.s Etimsq Pcriia Ltofl'a U aertet to eub- In Philadelphia and eurroundlnf towns rata of tweiva (12) ctnU per week, paatlo ra rrl.r. mall la nolnta outside of Philadelphia. In hltad States. Canada or United mates pos- i.- poaiaca rree, ntiy tool cents rer montn. I dallara np vir. navshta In acltanee. all (oreicn countries ona (1) dollar per ILJI Suhlerlhera trlshlnr adlress changed $lw old aa vrell aa netr address. WW TALNUT XEYSJOE. MAIN 0a oWresi all fommunfeaffons to Fttnino Public naeteaafc agnore. i'niinaeiania. ' BrsiD at tub rnit.irtt.rnii rniT orricc as . SECOXD mi Milt. HATTtn. fltl) W V,(' Pall.J.lpkU, UcJnr.J.j.Mitth 13. HID '' SfTHE MILK LN THE COCOAS'UT BW18 iiowsnarjer docs not believe tlmt I4 ''-the holders ot fortieth Want land on sjacucri nouses iur hok isi i'" wc,n,e:tn t ' tttkbej built Intend to obstruct tlio plans 'fi-tho Government by holding out for ; Unfair or exorbitant prices. t MM tk I tl.t,. ,Jn!nn In ,!.., ry - V4MB wot. icttDUll tut mm uimiiuu n luuk 1 .. kl. 1 aa.........H.. h .. iinl.lnl'n Itnni Irt inu mi Who understaiul tlmt they can Ugh' the iVun by co-operathiB whobheartedly with . ."Viaaa Coiemmdnt In Its nlans to build hllllis. V pThe second icason li that If they by un K''tehsiBce should honestly think their Kind kf iA nrlh trifit-n thin ft fftlr lirtrp nttil llllt ,, r..... ...... . ... . teur 'cavijei it, 111c uocrntticiii nun vnu iuvi -ilt teltatio It bv the rluht of cniiuent domain K uMtdpay an cqultablo price for It. iujfVii Tr nnA nf fit. vA.tunnu tu mtt mlfll. Inn llin If!1' .v-.w.. .- T - KJ "fcther will answer. John D. limit pay oci J34.000.OOi) In Wr taxes this car. tjettlni: the rucKs, no to speak, out of Kuckefellcr. GESCHAEFT 1ST GESCIIAE1T AN UNDISMAYED Socialist named JtiNoske aroie icccntly In the Ccrman Reichstag to talk of a s stem of pntfltcci -tfie which, lie said, uai developing to nameless dimensions In the fatherland. And before his hpnotkcd colleagues t, clapped the extinguisher on him he had ... u t- 11.- t.-..i 1- .m SMj (ori, the most brutal war profiteer alle ua hvvii uic cm Ul lUUd). r Alio jvumci umi t.cij uiiivi iiife" jiiitiif LJgf eier in me toiossai game. 11c t owneu uTT K nnn ftm nnHIl nf tlin It'fiKin Bln..l.u l.nfrtrn lvf the war and lias bought steadily cer f.J' "alnce. He had an inside Knowledge of kr3 ,what was to ImpDcn. 'Ins man who Is so mk close) to God! Thu Daimlei Motor Com- USy iny. a Krupir htibsldlary, has charged the fx jerman ptupie it price tor eucn motor tn.ii Vs mreo limes tue sum icqwrcu 10 ouuu thy that essential of modern war. The Dalm MW . i . . . ..1... .... 1. v nr jjia.11 iiiicuii.'iit:u lu imiu ui ouuii 11 Iilta'money wasn't paid. Trail Krupp and Fjj Xalser Wllhelm were tho profiteers In this t . Mtstance. .Vr The llelchstag hurriedly stoppod these i"dUar lllllli iim Tho TiTfiir.t. I'nmtnni' t..i.fip. yp nUy wltli royal sanction, has refused to H BMIOW 11s dooks. nen me socialists tried 1 to, penetrate the cll to see who was bo F Industriously bleeding them at both ends : 'A they didn't exnect to dee lurklntr In tlin 'T .- . . .. . ... ' f ( MCKgrounu tne laminar llgure In cloak i jfi i wimci. 4 no nifciii- nna cuuaiuercu 100 i $ dreadful for Germany at large. The laws S V K' compensation work thcmseltes out '? awrlously. Tlie Kaiser Insists that find f6 jnnt him to rule Germany. I'erhups God Kt'A Marshal Hale took tho I;iss. hpnil.mio j!'Jf jkrewery from the foe, but Allen Property -.& cutodian Palmer lias the record for captur if :" German breweries. t, ; Wi ,No NEWS IS GOOD NEWS jpWMMON sense as well as military ne- m reslty dictates general agreement with U V Ihaj'iiW policy of the War Department In ', Bltaprtssmg aaarosscs in .Amerlcnn cas 'hvltiky lists. Topulur opinion condemned j(Wjpnovatlonon frst announcement, but fjWOcallon ot'reasons lor tho suppression easid how It will operato have proved that 1 , 'MJHilar opinion was too hasty. fc tThinext of kin, who alone hao con- K 1. .Jit J rfirhta It !... m..tn III 1- Bl u icfc MIC lliafciUt, Will UO WStifted officially of casualties affcctlnr; .. lijiar, relatives, ivames win contlnuo to bo ajjTtitied in the newspapers, but ecn the Hiarance or common name? need causo Hr.aaxiety to families who possess them , r ad. have sons In the service. Formal no- tleatlon by the, War Department will .den rttfsr tiro victim of the Huns to his Immc- sjittte family. ' No news will bo good newx. -?A- Brooklyn mother whose drafted son tfrtiUyed his leave and was by wy of atatajrtlnf has taken him back to his pdst. SHasx for the remainder of his service he ,rjr to live up to a mother litco that -.'.C UP, MB. BUSINESS MAN! Mi kBLK men of buslnejj experience have felt the peculiar aathe that : so Inany cood Amerlcat s who are i"tbe ago of military service, yet !lo,havo a hand In thu culminating lor a free world, should find good l.Mid a shining door open to them In il made by Kdward Dole on behalf T. M. C. A. for competent execu- yHf home and behind tho lines In Instance the men who have been enough to enjoy the peculiar wi essential to marked success In Mod themselves suddenly In pos- ," something as good as youth Y. M. C. A, recently obtained fund. It has assumed charge Clean canteens ab oad, and t)iua the additional responsibility si 'expenditure likely to run up , or thirty millions. minus anu level neua mo jkltrltiules of maturity are re- ' tnw wdtk as, weii as lor active MriMML M miuit It h.'j The '- WE'VE HAP ENOUGH rpiIERE Is little renson for a further continuance of the inquiry which the Senate Judiclnry Committee has been directing into the nfTnirs of the German American Alliance. Tho committeo is lavishly wasting Its bioath nnil Its energy upon tho Hcxnmcrs and tho Ulrichs and nil the other emissaries of Potsdnmnutioti, who should he dismissed Immediately from public attention and helped along into decent oblivion with whatever sort of swift hick the Senators find themselves able to put into words. The purposes served by the inquiry nre merely those of final corroboration. It crystallized convictions that have been more or less general. It has shown that tho leaders of tho Alliance, the men who presumed to influence tho opinion of its membership, were neither inventive nor original. They bubbled the pieces they were taught by the Berlin Foreign Office and. ns industrious lackeys, they were royally tipped. Through all tho dismal lecord of their tabors there is only one definite ic3ult observable. They managed consistently to belie and misrepresent tho vast majority of tho membership men and women who were associated with it for reasons of sentiment or for the love of old times rather than because of any svmpathy with a lunatic Government thut Is carrying its people steadily dovvn vvaid through matchless agonies to destruction. It is easily coiicoivnblc that many of the conspicuous piupagandists of the German philosophies in this country find an actual pleasure in tho ngUmcty which the Senate committeo is providing for them. Of course, tho Federal charter of tho Alliance will be withdraw u. It should be witlidiavvn now. We have had enough. In one sinister effoit of the leaders of the organization, disclosed at yestct day's session of tho Judiciary Committee, there thould bo a lesson for all voting Ameri cans. The Alliance rigged agreements con sistently with petty paity leadcis. They struck intelligently for once in .such instances. The obscure boss of one party or another has a great power in tho aggregate and he always was and always will be the weal, link in , system of gov ernment like ours. Tho leadcis of the Alliance found him easily appro-ichable. And it nay be worth while now to specu late on the things that might ultimately have happened if tho course of propa ganda of this sort, stupid but energetic, were pcimittcd to go on without intci ruption and cNposurc. Who can imagine Americans or Eng lish or Japanese crowding into powerful organizations in Germany to promulgate hatred or distrust of the existing Gov ernment? Nothing of the sort would have been peimissible in times of peace. Atjd were such a fantastic enterprise launched now its leadcis would be promptly interned upon a diet of black bread and thin soup. 'I he logical thing to HUggont In i elation to dlrt MreplH Is, of course, a Ucnn-iip week In the Ilepaitmeut of Public- Worl.K CLOSING Ul THE RANKS IN WISCONSIN rpiIAT Is good news whkli conies from - Wisconsin ubout tho withdrawal of Gov ernor McGovern from tho senutorhil rate In favor of Kcpicscntatlve I.enioot With the elimination of Victor Merger by Indictment bj it l'edciat Urtind .Iur It leaves the contest between a red-blooded American and James Thompson, the 1. 1 Kollelte candidate, committed to pro Ger man paclum l.i Toilette has been lepudlaled by the Wisconsin Legislature. He Is thoroughly discredited. Yet tho ramifications of fac tionalism In Wisconsin are so complicated that the nation was led to fear 1-a I'ol lettclsm might win in tho person of Thompson through a tlivMon of the forces of the opposition. The danger is now apparently removed and tho nation expects to hear of I-en-root's nomination' net Tuesday ns tho Republican candldato by an overwhelming majorltv. The Crown Prlnco Is i-ald to be again driving at Verdun. Most llltnly It Is jet. DANCING? YOU'RE MISTAKEN! CHTURING reassuianccs of it general vernal Innocence and unsophlstlcatlon of heart upting brightly fium much that Is being said and written of -tho move ment to prohibit "dancing In the cafes." Who would have supposed In these times of fever and frivols thut all those clever and representative persons whose voices rise In the general symposium wcro ac customed to staying home at nights In gcntlo Ignorance of what aeiiiully goci on at the dansants? What will those earnest folk say when the news Is broken to them at last when they learn that no one dances at tho cafej that dancing passed out of vogue years and cata ago? That Is, Indeed, the i asc. One does not dance at n dausant. Ono walks about or twirls. One toddles or ono dodders or one limps here and there, jazz stricken, to the sound of music of sorts. Hut dance? Never! We were pretty well fed up on Trotsky, anyhow. Germanism In the schools Is like polsom In the wells. Poets ore too academic and "educated," a critic charges. Writers of veia llbro plead not guilty-. Lesions, from all over the Uritlsh empire are bearing arms, but only the Scotch aro baring legs. German ratlkala plan Lis Slay Day atrllta Headline. ' Under Potsdam rules one strike Is out. Even with the parsing of winter the fuel administration Is not going to .have a chance to prop Its feet on the desk and think about brassies. The Prussian Itepubllo lias Illustrious precedent for Its migratory capital, , Once the capital of the American Tlepublla was In President Madison's saddlebags, The Kaiser, babbling noisy, approval of ' Us '"-Deity r ash , suceawlve eastward EVENING PUBLIC' LEDGER The Gownsman APIUtT young woman once nsked Presi dent Kllot. "Ami when will Harvard open her doors on ciist terms to women as to men?' And President lillot Is said to have replied, 'Tin year after Vnssir opens her doors to men im to women." This was lone iigo, boforo the foundation of annexes, adjuncts and addenda to Iho tollcges for men. Hut the answer Is apt enough J and tho question Is pt III Willi tin. F 'I3TV things In tlih world aro ko conserva- the as u toIIce or university. Among Htuilrntn, a thing that lias been done for n few years Is it n Ininiemorlul custom : among alumni, tho suggestion of a iliungo from "what was dono In my day" Is tho counsel of sedition. Tho good old times" burn and glow In memory and all thut has happened flnca hits been only it ctPHdy tleillno Into dirkness nnd unrighteousness Tho old tur rktilum, tiiidir which. If the tlilth be told, not a fen- of lhce enthusiasts suffeied lor turcx more or less well deserved becomes. In the I ipse of lime, a thing perfett and cacro3anet, Mkn tho Itrltlsh itinslltutlnn, which, 'If you begin to tamper, heaven only Knows where we'll end" "Jlv salvation at college," nils one. 'was mathematics and plenty of It ' "And niltie," dtclaies another. 'whs Greek, under the rigors of old times." nd wo wonder that the salvage has tinned out so paltry. BUT It Is not of mathematlf nor of Greek lint the Gown-min Is writing today hut of that momentous and vexatious uuestlon width n rcrt-iln btnefitctor of the University "f Peniinvlvniil.i once lalhd lotnewliat basil1' In the tint ument of his gift 'the coeducation of women nml girls" Colonel Dennett's meaning Is cleir by the tonlett He infant the education nf men nntl vv union Johitlv In the stnio Instltutloi nml under the injov meiit of cntiil privileges and opportunities Not the Keiiueptrutlnn of young women In elolslets and niinii'iles of their own. iind"r leathers largclv of their own ko . nor vet the hv In Id iirinngtnient bv which a neigh boring great unlverMtv lends Its tirufs--ors In theli ji'drd momeiitn to the sisters of stu dents whose brotheis bave iilready had the professots' best -Wlint shall wi do with the women" Is tbe iiiptlou In piluc illnn as clsevhere a tituFtlon which will not clow n 1hnui,li It Is t timing to be not 'Whit hh ill we do with tbe women" but "Whit do they propose lu do lo us" IT MAY eem -omevtliat sltniijre to the general reitlet that Uiev should be llirafh Ing out Ibis old cpiestlou nt PemiMliarila at this Itte date it lu tv n mind him of a font lace In wlili li tbe first limners hive pissed tbe stand .Hid the enthusiasm has HUhlded Into gossip nml peanuts when, luilclenlj, we ale iimrlseil that lliete Is llll anotber tontevtnnt Inhniing MUiiewh.it flits lertd but Mill vallanllv. In the rate This howevri Is not quite fnlr for men and women have been ctlutnted side by side at Pennsvlvaula now for inoie thin twenty vears Women may now- become law vers ilivMtlun leather. luvellgalorM In nclence and In the arts under conditions precisely thotc lmpoed on men ami with pieclsely Hie same advantages Theie are, moreover, at this moment m the Gownsman Is In formed more than 1201 women students at Pennstlv.mli, not on "a tentative and e ceptlon tl footing" as tome of the unln slriitted seem to think, but Inking their plare, doing their work, accepting the Fltu nllon and uccepted In it. Tlli:". what Is It ill about-" Nothing moro than h question as to Iho foi m.il ac tept.ince of nn itiioniplished fact Tho pith of logic Is stony and painful to kui li as still hahltuitllv wear sintl tls, and It lends into unespeited places, places In which foiii of us nio fearful to stand Till t then Is merely a pause In the Inevitable march for ward to give the lagguds hi thought an ittiportmilu to catch up While they aro Elragglhig In fiom various ntrrow ami Ill-lit corners, let us oe wbat, are some of tho ghosts and phtntoms that have frightened their sleep and now disturb their awakening "I believe hi tbo so-called higher education of women." savs one, hi his adjective con ttadlctlng his faith and agteelng with Doe tor Johnson, as to feminine accomplishment In the tlalcs, its a prettv and strange feat like t dog dancing in a doublet, and etpullv toiuniMidablc Another was bi might up on tho old tollege tradition nntl thinks Hint It "will alleuito h section of Pennsvlvnnliscon blltuencv" should women be admitted to a college founded for men A third xayn 'Tho hot and girl cannot be reconellcd and har monized The resultant Is lacking In manli ness and womanliness' 'lheo passiges aro not Inventions of the Gowtismnu, thev arc transcriptions fiom the tepoit on this subject In a recent University publication Ho can not dent the readers this last despairing wall 'Keep our boys pure in tone, fice from the Influences and opinions of a girls' community life" Let us hope that the holder of this opinion has no sister, much less a daughter, for he deserves neither, NOW theie Is now licie a more feivcnt lover of the things nf old than tho GtmiiFinan. howsoever he confess-that these precious possessions alo often best viewed In the golden base of recollection Tor the things that tiro worth while, let us hold fat and die I'l Iho last tienchcs foi tho -entl-mentalltlcs of incmoiy n sigh Is sacriflic enough. And Is the monastic- nybtcm of edu cation worth ve-y much moie than a sigh" Kroin another point of view there Is the edu cation of the clasres, and there Is tho educa tion of the masses. It Is patt of oui Amsrl tan gloiy that we gle every man his chance. It will not lessen that glory that we extend an equally Impiitlal justice to ovciy woman, whether at tho polls, In butlness In the professions or lu education. Tho spirit of tho age calls for equal opportunities to all and right demands It Oui American uni versities began ns small piopaletiuy schools: some of them, despite their august title t and crowded halls, nie essentially sut h today Then came the days of tho benefactor and the munificent patron who, with oveiy ie sped and lu full reiognltlon of his bounty, often drove, after oil, a very fair bargain, lecelvlng for his gift the distinction of an association which Ids money tould not buy him elsewhere Hut the proprietor and tho patron, In the case of universities with their creations, nu uttsotuto president and an Irresponsible governing board, are bound straight to the fate of the dodo v class can educate u class; It tukes tho rianctlou of the mass of h nation to educate the masses. 1'or a university Is not so much a place hi which It Is u reproach not to tench every thing under tho sun as It should bo a place from whoteMiospltable doors no citizen, man 01 woman, shall bo turned fot want of op portunity to study In that wherein be Is equipped. BUT tho Gownsman Is Inst In his gown Dear friend of tho hal'owed past, the higher education of women, even carried on shmiltaiieoufly with thu of men. Is not 'so called." tentative" or "exceptional." but actual and existent, l'ven ujitlqulty know another typo of woman besides pretty.fnccd Helen of Troy. Women have been wilting since .Sappho, philosophizing since Hypatla queening It since the days of Semlramls 1 It Is you that Is 'Irreconcilable." not our boys and girls, and we can afford the "alien atlon" of those who send their sons to col lege for other reasons than the educational advantages which colleges afford The Gownsman hopes that Pennsylvania may be fully and avowedly open to women as to men, not because It will "make up for 25 per cent of loss In tuition fees caused by the great withdrawal of ineq for the wr serv ice," but because It Is the obviously right thing, and therefore the politic thing, to do, ISxat-perated with a long harangue at dinner on one occasion by a lady who, avowing herself a champion of woman's rights, dwelt Inc ftroso. tfla-as In hand, to drink "to Ionian.' & aiiii a It Via trim nniif Aim ......I m - Vall-V wm BHdui, nun UUI CljUblll JfJ wniiinn taAHt our Miinr(np nn rmtiu a.wu.. nla..1 HftlA nsrft4ll miM aHA... a.a . tVy-rMS t.w.w ,,VVV"-t V WW IMAM D limiting).: ii Atir noml on a fu-.un.-l foiintiutlnn Af .. .!.. MkM-iMBt OBloBlkkata;' Ul.hu - PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, MAKOH 13, GOV. PENNYP ACKER TELLS ABOUT QUAY Interesting Sidelights on the Character of the Man Who Long Ruled Republican Party ri.vMrMKi.il MT(iniotiitriiv mi. ni (CoriHoM. lOlt, 11 ritUlo f.ftfa'r Couiianvl QUAV. JOHN SCOTT, it most wot thy Philadel phia lawyer, son of United States Sens lor John Seott, told mc, November 10, 1910, tho following facts: He goes lo tho Canadian woods every slimmer, Thcro he has nn Indian guide nf whom he Is very fond, named Louis Gill, of Iho trlbo of Alcnaklcs One tliy this Indian nald to him. "Do jruii know- .Senator Ctl ny?" "Ye?, I know Senator cjiiny." "He is nne of our tilbc," Hie Indian uniunctl Willi a glad smile "Dues he take any Interest in your nf folrs?' nsked Stntt "Vcs." replied Gill, "when our Catholic Church burned down wc wrote to him ami lie sent us $UU0 He Is a good man " January il, It'll, T W :-'leltz, Deputy Attorney General (with John I'. Hlklti) under tin oo Stalo administrations, enter tained n few of us at the llnirlshurg Club with his iccollcctlons of Senator C'uav He said: "Most Wonderful Man" 'U'lity was tho most wonderful man I liuvc ever known, lie understood men thoioiiglily. lie never gavp oitlcrs. Ho had no regal tl for money save ns a means to an end Theie wcic times In his life when he whs penniless u was entirely without vunlty lie- Ind ccrlnln veins of Hiiptrstltiou. Unco In I loiida n rattlesnake cicpt nut fiom a hole. I throw n stone at It. He (linked me nml told tne never lo hIi Ike a snake. Then ho explained lo me that once u long while a-.ii the Scnilnolca lint tho lattlesn tkes, after lout hostilities, made a treat; nf pcitc. No temlnolc will ever strike u inltlcsniike. nml no snake Mm e has bitten a Seminole 'I never strike n snake,' said he. 'ami tlo-i't ou tlo It,' "In tho miinnier of IS3j I tried to prevail on him not to login his stiugglo with Gov ernor Hastings I pointed out to him that ho vvus Hi m lu ills seat In the Senate foi seveial veils, that Hastings's strength wouhl wane as his term ncarcd Us end, that the Mayors of Philadelphia and Pitts hutgli and tho coiporatlons nt that time were hostile. He said to me: 'There Is no fault In vour tcasonlng, but I must make the light. I often tllscaul lny icason and follow my Intuitions,' ' He took me down to ht Lutle, In I lor Itl.i, with him several times. Thcro ho en tertained tho I'arl of Ncwcastlo and his brothel. Lord Hope Ho was an ndmlrablo host. While there was never any ostenta tious show of attention, ho always quietly suw to It that his guest had the best boat and the best fishing tackle and the pleas ant scat. On one occasion, vvhllo we wero llshlng together at Atlantic City, a man of sonic tl ctlnt Hon uskcti to go along. 'Arc you .i good sullni .' It Is apt to be lough out there, and when wo mo once anchored wo have to stay,' tho Senator quletlv sug gested The man tamo In a whit shirt and, after tho bo it had been tlxetl about fccvon miles out, Hen Sooy went hack to the shoic. Hrelong the man with tho whlto shirt lay on tho broad of his back In the bottom of the ho it, urctchlng and gisplng, wlille tho fish wcio being thrown all over him 'Damn him,' said tho Sena tor, "he ou,Hit to havo had sense enough Hot to lome out heie ' "On another occasion at Atlantic City, ho said to Sooy : 'Hen. I will give you ten dollars If you will Jump Into the sea' hi an instant Sooy was ovcrboaid. Wo thiew him a i ope The Senator drew a knife, and suld: 'Hen, give up those ten doliais and I will not cut this rope." 'I will swim to China for ten dollars,' said Sooy All laughed and drew him In An Incident in Kloiida ' Another time wo vveie fishing in Tlorlda. The bige. powerful fish (tarpon) had to be exhausted befoio being taken Into tho loat Wo had lost seveial fiom the lines while playing with them. Tho Scnatoi said: '! Intend to draw the nest lsh straight to tho boat,' and he did. It was a ilanseious proceeding When It tame neat, the Senator tailed, Hen. gulf that fish.' Sooy struck It, and lu an Instant tho har poon and fish wcro up in tho all, and Sony was battling with the waves. Quay helped him Into the boat, whereupon, disgusted, he shouted, Mf any tl mm fllul wants an' othci llsh hdipooned. he may do It him self ' (Turning to mc) "He was veiy fond of you and proud of what you accomplished. I was at a hotel lu Washington ono eve nlng with Quay, Pentose Durham, Lnny Tyre and John P. Hlkln and wo hud been dlscueslng foi seviral houis Pennsylvania afTalrs. All of them except Hyre and my self retiicd to an Innei toom It had been assumed evciywhcie thai Klklu was to bo the nominee foi the gov einnrshlp. unit every thing looked favoiable When thoy came out Quay had been di inking some, and I ordered a cairiagc und went home with him. On tho way ho was silent, but finally said to me: 'The old man Is not dead yet, Tleltz. you stick to mo and jou will como out all right He repeated tho vvons. I knew that something had occurred In tho room, and feared foi l'lkln. A few weeks latei ho sent'vvord to Klkln to come to fit. Lucie, and there told him ho could not bo the nominee for Governor. "I hive often seen him diink. r never saw him so under the Influence of liquor that it affected either his head or his walk. Ho had u peculiar way of driiikin,-, During a. campaign perhaps for u year ho would not touch a drop. Ho had ab. solute self contiol. Ho would pour out the liquor for his guests, and sit among them, his own glass empty. After the campaign waa over he would go away and drink, I always thought to get rid of the neivous anxiety," Tomorrow Cioiernor 1'enntparLer aketeliea Wu Tine int. denertl Hninnel I'eario '",'",, lime, former llrltl.h Anibus.ailor let the fjnjteu KIMTOIUW, KI'KJK.VVIH Tim bos on the Texas ur like (lie bu In Texas-Kiwd shots Hutf.lo Uoinnienlil. ,n Sweden, aa tho most unneutral neutral la il.. Herman cuntepitoit of an umpire. Wall Hire,! journal. ' Fuel AiimlnUlralor UarfleM ma- do better when ,he temperalura tata lo IK) In 'tho shads nix" UUIuf r- i that tha.so." Although Mr. lllqult ! IT WORKED IN JERSEY , nu h,kt u.Li:r Hm Jet IHtlJ and there an the farms of Now rscy there must be men who could read President Vllon's latest message to the Ttusslans with an understanding of Us motives strangely symptthetlc. Intimate and personal. They can look out of thch win dows any day ovci deserted Ileitis or down a gray und silent road at tho slnbbv little schoolhouses where Mr AVIIsou first t perl ineiited v.lth a method of politics that now Is Involved with tho destinies of civilization The man fiom Princeton went Into tho first political campaign of his life without any of tho uual equipment Ml ho had to depend upon lu n campaign tilled with tlitllcultles was his almost mvstlc faith in tlin common Judgment of not nml people a faith of the sou that peisists against till titles, thiough all disaster und all sticss, to novo mountains at tho end "We shall tell the people about It" Thit phrase came repeatedly- at tho Inner toun clls from the piesldent of Princeton when big Jim Nugent, the Democratic State chali mau, and Senator Jim Smith started nut with him on the first stumping trip he cvci made Till! new earidlilttc went about into sin ill tov ns and faun settlements as well as Info the cities, nud lie spoke to farmers ami their wives In llltlo groups in the schoolhouses, not of the things lie hoped lo tlo for agrl ciiltuie and the tranheriy Industiy, but of the elemental vlitues, of tho deep Issues tiouhllug the republic-, of the splendid hopes of earlier patiiots thut gradually wcio being cheapened anil debased He spoke, as ho lilnisdf might have said, from tho heait P.lg Jim Nugent was a Sh ikcspearean scholar, nn authority- on floweis. it lawyer of great ability and a nnn wlthho physique and strength that enabled him to frighten ft Legislature with a look Yet ho didn't understand his candidate. Neither did Sen Aim Jim. Hut Iho odd thing was that the w oiklng women of tho fnnus, theli husbands and the hlied hands, who used to gather In llttln crowds when the taudld.ite tame along in his hired autoumbllt, did under stand what It was all ubout "I DOUUT If they will grasp the ub-trait Ir.tues," big Jim used to say to Piesl dent Wilson of Princeton These thing) are too vague too Involved It was tho habit of tho man from Prince ton to say In reply that theio weio tho really Important things und the simple tilings mid the things easily understood ond of most moment, "We will tell tho people about It All you havo to do Is lo muko them understand," Of tho ultimate outcome under theso cir cumstances the Wilson of that time had no moro doubts than the aveiage man haH about tho coming of morning. He believed that people may bo negligent, that they may let things drift to a given point, but that they are ready nlways lo turn the full tic ntructlve power of mass Judgment uikui any thing truly evil or truly wrong. The Wilson of those days was h lonely man and ho glow lonelier as his campaign pro-tressed, since tho constant reiteration of u revolutionary theory of political action convinced the Democratic ' Htato committee toward the last that Hio new man actually meant what be said. The old bipartisan arrangement was to ha.ve been directed against hint on election day, according to common rumor. Mr. Wilson himself knew of this, even while the managers of ids campaign fat with him on tho platform of one or another meeting place. Tor some reason or another that ugly plan was aban doned. Tlllirii: l still much foi politicians to ponder on In the results of mt earn palun. The people understood the man who siioke to them of high nnd splendid Insti tutions threatened with decay and corrup tion. The politicians didn't, Nor could they believe that others would. Thev were dla. I . .nil l .... - . IHjacu in, end loceii .iuiii ' nncetop tt l visitjiirr wncii no hiu tliai u was In the hearts jof all people to pe .right and even 3918 "'E'LL DO!" "OUIir .- ':-1 has icpeatedlt- manifested Ida enduring faith hi tint thttiiy It Is vehiit he hts In inlntl when bt sols out to talk .to I'ongtcFS. It wus whit he bad In mind when ho ad dressed his notes to Germ tin. tin Is ineiely" cictlltmg all the worltl with Iho elemental human little of love of truth Ills Is a faith so high tb.it It Is lu Itself often splendid enough lo Inspire icsiilts tint Justify It AFRICAN SLAVERY AGAIN Mcnjiin. Condition Stukes at Kv cry Workci in Kuiopc ami America WG CANNOT tolerate nut pjssibllltlcs of the enslavement of I.I i, U Afrlci Long f'iMii. eV'"'',1 S",lc'' r""(I ollt "'' ""pos slbllltv of having slave l.tboi wcrklng In tho same svsten, with white To emu that hiioiii- '.wi.10-.,"" i1"10'1 S,tc" " '"" ""' hlooth war lie si ive-owner, tho t plolter of the nn it slT'' ' "'ruU at"' ' """ to am vvhle democracy. Ho brings buk his Ket,.,,0.c',r"1"1 "-""' "" "ft at home . f t be i ,1,:V'"cne.0 l",A,"a In the midst f the list centmy between Federals nntl Confederals must not happen agnl n on tllo Afilci Slavery In Afilca open or dis guised whether enfniced by the l?sh cr h.ousht about by Iniquitous l.a,d stealing strikes at the home , free-.lefn of every Luropc.ti, worker-and labor knows till .. Hut how mc we to nretent n, ....i .. . latloi, cI.,so at h'and i.Tompc 5R Uganda worke, under I tsh' n, lf'1 1 .'" ells, hi tho New Itcpubllc. VLVIllllV Wa"i 'il"1;"." "eBrl hot I I nil n it s fr in, . .. Put t lia.1 Aladlln'i la.nn' "'' Wh-u f eouM not aee, fer .,,1,1 I lm.1 Urn t sh m Irsln An. I..UM..I with ..ifa'nf enl Jly be.titlful castle,, Hptln' Hlite Ihen I hue nle,l I hntc inonet .ml ,,.'.""' .f.ni . "'"Ill lint I-il cite ill .... '." ''""" "'"re, al VVr 111 ene t tn lamns nf mIK. Irlilie ihi e i ertune whatever vnueh.e- "' 7"i..r!1L'' ""In i is mr nn r-...r lou BHVe 1 bate nnthl-ltr or I own no "-im imin mp in 1 ie. James Hussell I.oe What Do You Know?" QUIZ On nlit drmiif. Mio open ef "nlcoletlo" Iillipfl7 j. ,;mi .. tne e mini nf the rnueaMis? 3. n,e the nullior f ..,nrr ,;,,,,,,.. I. Mlmt re-Ion N railed "the -ru,,,.,, ', ,. rnpe"? aranury of Kit- B 111'" Is til ehlef -ltlreenlA ni.. Atlan.le deep,rnnVi;V,r,,n, "rn:n, H.e 0. Mlial Is the foar,..lenl Me,. " ' "".tlsl'rnTt'i'n'iV ""' "" ' IWr lied fro.. H. VVhut la u hreiet? II. VVItti wna Olieron? 10. What la a hrltatillne? Answers to Yestci day's Qui 1, Ifernun.nl-lla.rlild m. the -ni . . , In tho Atom-., NliW Tu7,'.,,,I,i7' J Tales .'" iV. I".'-' ."', rnstom (a eiiTer what tlllnklnr. Clenrre K0t, ninlft,M t sriaiMtnniitli- tl1 ,!i'" Werts w,re doi'2 '': nis r dolnr nd rntll.h novelist, wrol(l Ro Orrerji en -una rat us fr wi.ii iiu.iciuni oi tern. (Jlli.enoe y eisll. - as. ltnlhn eoniitoiier, "incoiello.' wrote 5, (.henti n nnimerrlal. nisnnf-.l .... . ffitS-r. ' "' '""""" ""' '"'""-1., Tri.in.B.nd '"" "ni.u.fx,a j was 0. Thr"f Tribune, '' "''.'."Sent ' ""'"' '"" of "-lii s, "Hammeee" I. the name rr lb. .i IrtMllS In Yrmn-m ......I-, . 1". nerlt Kit i ... . i - tl'.f . l..v ' -1 if"' I icllt and ecmntnli. a.hUIi ...... . . .. . . . ,. . i'vn.iiiLi i en tne blacks If we .have no gencial w itchcr o ,u an ion.Utloi.s- We wu.it n toininon l,,v for Af.le... u genei.il declaration of rights and we want a common autho.m to vvh Icl, o black man and the native trilo , for Justice What Is Hie good of try I, go elevate tho population of Uganda and to give l-ershlna br Henri naiin il,. i!L ",nr-l .- stau f it a ' :.V-? r" .i.i .. J) t -'.' rj.''., .! 'JT' ' .,' iV- ' 1 .'. J' I '. .fc--3tVr, S M ,-rJ -j : s) SI M The Eternal Question When first dark wai elouds veiled th SkV .141 And through the waters tamo the cry $' Of BclRium, stricken by tho foe, js You begged America to go f- With haste to join the tasl. Your fathers, patient, turned to ask, a) While ou wete frantic to begin, , j "What will you do to help us win?" - off And now that wo have j'oincd the fray, Sent our bravo boys out there to stay Until the end, to do or die To lift tho torch of freedom high, Your brothers bravely face the fiic. But, culling back to you, inquire, Amid tho battle's ceaseless din, "What aro you doing to help us win?" So when nt last tho muiderous gun ' Is silenced, and the victory won; When men who've fought and starved and bled Come homo again all save the dead; When to the world you toll the story Of human sacrifice and glory, Your child will ask, when you begin, "What did you do to help us win?" CHARLES V. MOORE. rplllS poem, hue printed foi the first lime. -a- was nu the point of being mailed to rei York when we Intel veiled. We urccd that uliii A llirs iiillinr In mm ivi i-iv KrP flF.' nincc nie iiuiiiui t nun . iiiciiivvi "j i1ir ltiiiltif-vi . ( mtitntitill n. Hi Id filr t i hll lpes-satje should bo zen flibt tnhls Pevfl nclKlibon. The Judse -for that's lii-J Utle---SI amniueu umi our puini uitu wen iai.eir, ho we h ul our way with It rf i inn nuiit'rt t . .iiooie, luiincrii ui fiinia, men or iow oiK una now me -ju3. ness n'-ijclute of 4. II I'llnt-oii. of the CrotS HulItllriK-, Is ono of the hcHt-Unoun and moitt'J a1rmtntit iii1L iunilAia nf ttn SJiiiillilnnd. a3 Ho Is the author, a.110113 other things, of 9 ".Moore a History of tho State t. United ana" Otherwl'c," which, as tho preface declare",!! U the only history on the market wwou aumlts its general Inaccuracy. "If." the foicwortl lontlnues. "we Jialft. failed to tlo Justice to anv-onc mentioned Ml tlio eourso of this sto.y of events, sincerJ apology it made In advance. It must be '. meniliererl tli.it i.nn ..ii,nr.t utiu.il rrnin ner.'s sonal knowledge of all that has tratisplrtoj In a period covering 111010 Iliau four ceo'! liiiies. Many 1 oncluslo.is, therefore, huti been reai lied through Infoi niatloti obtaineojia e.n... ...I.. H .. ...I ... ,...- I . ....... fl.,111,1 V 11 0111 wt uti-, nuu t tl ll.lt ti lun euiec ,.-. that llttlo dependence can bo put In other , peonle." 1U Let us, for a moment, dip Into the fl'lt.1 .1 ... . .1.1.. . .... . ..... ...... ...ot.'..i cnujitc-r ui mis iiamt vtora, tieaung ii a physical description of tho country. 'Thj climate," lie says, Ms variable. dependlnM upon Its tondltlon, and the atmosphere neryj ous ona nuctuatlng. "Generally speaUlngiti'J surface Is undulating. The highest ground ll the world, we aro lold bv real estate genii,i lies ulong Broadway, In tho city of NJ York. Indeed, there Is a very small part J of tho metropolis on tho lev, el." "Fish sndj oysters are abundantly supplied to cplcurfaj lint, loumors to nianlou.es. i The set ond chanter Is devoted lo "DIscoT. cry and Settlement." Hut why not make youirj own discovery of the entire L'S3 pagtaT A! oh for settlemcnl, tho price marked on tbJ paper Jaeuet is J1.S0, and It a worth It W T, A. v " : j "TIPPERARY" IN LA SCALA fl Whole battalions of Thomas Atkinses, whet the snowfall burled tho Austro.aennsaa li deep Alpine drifts, paid UsUs to the Milan Opera House and received Immense ovatlom JJy way of acknowledgment, Tommy ' the laurel-crowned "Tlpperary" and crcat" u sensation, as well he might, lu that ' lnccca of Italian opera. Klowcrn were sha( ercd upon him lu most ernbarrfrsslng faiuii Tito reason of this delicate attention n be the kilts. In which tome uf the Brill soldiers wero clad, and nt which the p"i gazed In undisguised amazement, tmo elan peasunt cclaliped "luncy, women well us men co to war In thut country, 1 . yet they look as though they would ro inincepieui 01 me ucrinans.- Laura that some of these kilted "ladles" rece'y not only flowers, but equally ewbarrus lflflBAH. yJ Mi 1 &lS!mS2& isS. "SPM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers