StJTP " " h.-"f ?"" : " v' ,vf.,v.-'Vt.i,,r 1 'v' 'Vh u.j, ' ! A '3' ft ,- r?V' Pyi- h b . P&7 iSf to-1 R' fep rr ' IP- .i tflfi faf- y kf ' 4 .v - IXl IMc l.l ' . yj". IV --'LA' ;v mm aim... LBDCW COMPANV wLrt, .. ntiBIMii .........,.- LiMHiKton,' vicvrrMtdnt: John C ttanr mart TrJ.irr. rtlUlo ft, Collins. Ptemft. John 'J. HpurffsoW IMreciorit. '. J'KtllTOfUAli HOARD) Cnnlt. K. Uteris. Chairman k.vsmii.bt..... .. ,.,., .... ,,K4ltnr CHAftTIN... General Business Manager nally at PnaLto. f.annaa ltiilMlnr. pendenc fMuara. Philadelphia Tsi,4,airoaQ, ana v,nainvi mrr-i. Itr. .., i . Yeja-lsloi. Building , S06 Metropolitan Tourer .UiikmIih , , ; . 403 rora nuiiainc M.tui.iii tlOOS Stillerton Bulldlnc ............ 1203 rrloimi Building .", NKW8 BVREAC3! )K BC11AC. .. Cor. Pennavlvanla Ava. and 14th St. 'HI UcataV.. .,..,.,.., TIm Amu Duildlnr r Bcss.u,.,.. Marconi Houa. Htrand J.ii 82 una Louis is urand - strrsfmirTTov tetims ThaiKrSNl-o. PunLia I,Ebdsa l- aarved to kuh , asfifcora In. Philadelphia and surrounding towns attMriU of tn-eirs tl.) cenU per week, payabla A Vr-Riall to 'points outald of Philadelphia. In ' United statu. Canada or UnltM State- ri lMMu, noataca free, fifty ISO) cents per month. - ",' Is (Ml dollars ptr year, payable In advance. -.jVnTb all ortlgn- countries one (It) dollar pr l'JT SeSieil- ftubscrlbe rs wlihlnc addreas chanted ;.". JMt ttve old as well aa new ad ire. J. WOO wAtNUT KETSI05E. MAIN JOM t tMaTaa'i ii Tatar s-sr KTPB '' '$?! ; .-. . " g; , . J0loaes oil rommnnlcolfona la Rvenina 7uMio j . j t t4ar, Inatpenitnco Square, pnlladelpnlo. rrfoi '. ssrcstD at tB rmtiCE'.rnu rosr omci is W reon cuam vail uatter. Pkil.dtlphl.. FrW.j. Mitrli IS, l't tl'i '' -s- J CHICKENS COME HOME TO ROOST THERE Bcems to bo sonio excitement over tho plan of tho ,"udges of the Municipal Court to add 213 employes to .the present stun of moro than COO. But what did tho city expect whciitlio Act creatine the court was pusxed In 19137 The law explicitly gives to tho President Judge tho power to appoint "audi tip tivea and odlctrs or employed us itro ren 'onably r.ecessury, the- number lit the sumo and their compenoallon to he determined" "by a majority of tho Judges." Tho law also empowers the court to "appoint Bitch official htenographcrs as Khali be nccc.t-ary,"-'tt further cnipowcra tho presiding Judge to uppolnt h many probation olll cera as a majority of tho Judges shall deem necessary. This Is ns swecpliiR it grunt of power to multiply olllccs without let or hindrance as, was ever put In a statute. Did the people of Philadelphia expect when tho law was passed that tho Judges appointed under It would not exercise that power? Instead of being shocked at tho multi plication of olllces we should rather, be aurprlscd at the moderation of tho men who had placed at their disposal such a, rich field of political patronage. The chickens aro coming home to roo.it. That Is all there, is to it. Tlia moro dynamite alien enemies plant In, .America the more dynnmlte tliero will be behind the energies of tho whole country In the final reckoning. WHY NOT TRY INTERNMENT? rpHB. inconvenience of having a Constl- tutlon must sometimes be endured even When the nation Is at war. This discour aging: reflection Is suggested by Represen tative Flood's bill In Congress depriving unnaturalized enemy allensof the right to , Vote in State und municipal elections. The right to llx tho ttiallflcutlons of ;':. Voters Is reserved to tho States save as It sj?f lias been restricted by tho Fifteenth ''.Amendment. Ccrtuin States permit women to vote. Others, in order to encourage l Immigration, permit aliens to vote after one year's residence and a declaration of intention to becomo citizens. If it is within the power of Congress to mU J,ronlb't unnaturalized aliens from voting. then Congress can pass a law permlttini; women to voto In every State, resardlcss of the local laws. The Importance of depriving enemy aliens from having any direct Influence over elec tions is undisputed. Hut some other wuy must be found. Why not try internment? Sprout, O'Ncll, Brumbaugh and all the rest in tho coming political melee will have to raise their voices pretty loud If they wish to make themselves heard above the news from Europe. ii, V WSfit TWIN CURSES M-- Jx.;'Jullus Andrasy, tho former Hun- smu i-feuiier, in one oi nis latest laments to Uie Hungarian Chamber, uro breaking rff-t -""J I1U vuiuian viuiuie. xio was en .Imk... ftnA t....vln.. -,- t- '(.,; qeavonng to bo truthful rather than cpl- fli grammatic, and he could have had little 'V,T -fauuiiu uuu uu cuuiu nave na lj 5 thought of tho peculiarly newj d fe. forci, gained by each of tho twq V.j'Vhefliilaced side by sldo. Kach wo dramatic vq. words ISfi--f'iJv v-r?' v vy siuu, iucu woru oor ', Jf'tfe) process. ErJf ".Hunger. and pnclfistn will break any na i 'ym'tifa vIIunger alono or pacifism unalde.1 k. V vTti uio iiittu unjr jivopie couia long t?j WVV- "When tho two nmictlons fall P ' tj, :toether catastrophe cannot bo far behind. fch. , . v wi.m'M o.aio mat nas vital aims or EvVif 'lWJ4o . or .great human purposes Is an evil a.'- ( "U.i.w. -- j ,-- .i fv v- ufcuuuu man nunger. nun- B "y ger la sure to follow ltas the disillusioned fc!"A'4rassy seems to liavo realized 'dimly jiyr,..,eaiewl.ere In tho back of his mind. &$& ' . 4 At,.Ure1 auac. '5 Per cent fake. Is sitimy uiBwvcrjr oi nv oiate aalry and . faeM-agents. Now wo know the business! Til,'frS gooiT.,iny little stockbrokers - pt'after.tb war hit them. hi ". a v.. ' WAR, AND HOUSEWIFERY B1ancfeat,. and lionorablo craft of rrwiicry, wiucu me apartment a., other- up-to-date ideas of the laaia llee were. errtnn!lvv lull n-r. mmouu . '.;." i MMffattng.lnto the limbo of the igjrt, iwinapfdly beepmlng a modern and pmaMwion turougn the neccs- C tfoXyuur. The patriotic urge of Mt, -.tho f ieeJ for economy -and , tft'n-et4em of serviceall Wyensltieter many a woman's tim&rft .aeUyity rom 'the pn aaemasb'jnMit. sneeis nave worm' a)u, ,llleta' hive1 than aWttVa-, aJBeaklng- uiMl tha Kfea t utMt euts UnportaM :bm Um arte rjr "creatlaa.- , tuw wiranf 1k toKwantr Agrwwuara M' ws 00 iviAKE THE DRAFT SAFE FOR . DEMOCRACY, TOO A TENNSYLVANIAN between twenty one and thirty-one years of aRO is 40 per cent more liable to be called In trja next draft than on Alabaman or n Floridan, Pennsylvania and New Jersey supplied one-third more than n proper quota of selected men, on a Renuino democratic basis of selection, in tho July drawing., Tlicso arc more than Inequalities; they aro injustices. The selective system, devised In the first feverish rush of America to war and hastened into legis lation through stern and pressing neces sity of getting armies into the field, was no volution toward n perfected mecha nism, but merely n high-geared, powerful machine, which had the merit of working quickly, If not smoothly and uniformly. Many defects were merely those of opera tion, and theso have been corrected with out recourse to lcgislutiori through exer cise of the authority in details delegated to the Provost Marshal General's office. Dut the fundamental defect of the draft, that which imposes it unequally on the various Commonwealths, through proportioning on an cstimutcd popula tion basis, is written into the law. The Secretary of War and the Provost Marshal General ndmit it is inequitable and unjust, yet they cannot do otherwise than perpetuate the inequalities of the first draft in the second without change in, tho enabling law. Only Congress, which created the draft, can free R from the. unfair and undue burdens which it has imposed on State3 with large alien population. Only Congress can make the second draft representatively democratic by prescribing selection according to representation. A bill is before Congrcss'to change the basis of computation so that the States will contribute share und share alike from cligibles within their boundaries and not in ratio to their populations. The President and the War Department favor tills bill. Every fair-minded American should favor it. It has passed the Senate and has been reported to the House over a strong minority report of six southern members of the Military Committee. Pennsylvania Congressmen should be prompt and energetic in joining their col leagues from other States in which the foreign population is large to combat and triumph ovcrithc bitter opposition which has developed in delegations from the States which have negligible alien popu lations. Wo would not for an instant draw sec tional lines in such a vital policy, which should be unselfishly and thoroughly American. Tho sectional lines have been drawn by the southern Congressmen, who already are lobbying to keep the present disproportionate ratio in the law. Alabama, North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, South Carolina and Tennessee have less than 1 per cent of aliens in their areas. The proportion in pome of the mid .and far western State3 is under 10 per cent. Pennsylvania runs nearly 25 per cent. The coal regions aro prcponderatingly foreign. Foreigners arc numerous in many Philadelphia wards. New Jersey has nearly the same alien proportion. Tho proportion ' is higher in some of the New England States and in New York. Here is oppor tunity for an effective congressional bloc, if. the South persists in its un-American policy. And the bloc must organize quickly and act on the trigger. Americans, v the flower of America's youth, man the National Army recruited by the draft. They should be drafted on the basis of Americans eligible, not on roughly estimated mass populations. Thus only can a fair draft bo conducted. Thus only can States thickly populated with foreigners retain a rightful propor tion of Americans. Thus only can they be freed from the grave menace of hnving Class 2 married men with dependents drawn before the States with light alien populations contribute their full share in Class 1 unmarried men and married men without depend ents to the service. The United States is fighting to make the world safe for democracy. Mothers In its homes, business men in its indus tries, trade and on its farms demand that Congress make the draft fair for democracy. . WE 1)0 NOT KNOW. DO YOU? WHY do women, who aro said to bo In variably curious, tlx their hair in tight little sound-proof pads over their cars? What does h'enaton Penrose think, during his colltary Intervals, of prohibition as an Immediate political Issue In Pennsylvania? Is It love oj crowding and an eagerness to hear what others are talking about that causes ninety out of every hundred per sons to stand and form a solid Jam just int.do tho front door of a trolley car whll empty scats remain inviting hut unnoticed in tho rear? "flood roads" Is a good road for gov ernorship candidates to travel. Anyhow, those dynamiters make sausage of Hog Island, failed to A slacker hiding In Mexico is no worse than a slacker In Philadelphia, Trlnceton has lost forty men In the war. Trlpecton always could boast of sporting blood In plenty. The drop In the price of eggs to forty eight vents a dozen does not. mean many omelets for tho average wage-earner. The names selected by Mr. Wilson for the ships to be bu.. i at Hog Island are in teresting even If they cannot be pronounced. The Hohenzollerns are better oil than the Schmidts, Muellers and many other Ger man families. They started tho war with six sons and they still have six. Tho Kaiser apparently plana to maks the Black Hea as well as the Baltic a German lake, but. we' iwem to havo heard of a man who once bit of! moro than he could chew, flow 'If tin. prohibition aspirants for the gubernatorial nomlnatlpii will only come out In favor of. the national amendment the luo will be taken out of Htnte politics. jiet aliot fired at P, It. T. serTlce. Head- Seme, we )ieard ' on street ' corners during tbi', Vitwrdet,her '' . .. v ' ' sounded warmer than rf ot in'vttin EARNING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, A-Hunting for. Words ABOUT noon on Saturday the city heaves a tlgh of relief. Indeed, It begins a little earlier than that. About eleven-forty cen .the most faithful stenographer begins to woolgather. letters dictated In that last half hour are likely to he addressed "Mrs. Henrietta Jenkins, Keq." or "Miss John Jones." The patient paying teller has to count over his notes threo times to be sure of not giving a Ave Instead of a one. The glorlou demoralization spreads from desk to desk. No matter who we arc or how hard we hae worked, It Is .Saturday noon, and for a few hours we are going to forget the war and spend our pocketful of carefree fresh-minted minutes. Ai the poet laureate of Philadelphia puts It "Wliener It's a Saturday and all my work Is through, I take a walk on Chestnut street to see what news Is new." EVKRY Jack and Jill has his or her own Ideas of a Saturday afternoon adven ture. Our stenographer hastens off with ft laughing group to the Automat nnd tho motif. Our friend with tho shcll-rlmined spectacles tethered by a broad ellk ribbon Is bound to the Academy of the Flue Alts to censure the way Mr. Sargent lias crfased John t. Rockefeller's trousers, and will come back bursting with Indignation to denoitnre the portrait "a mere chiunio." We ourself hasten to the Reading Terminal to meet a certain pair nf brown eyes that arc spar Ming In from Mnrathou for lunch and it mobi lization of spring millinery. And others are on t breast the roaring gusts of March mi the golf meads or trundle bab earrlugca on the sunny sld of suburban streets. BUT there Is another diversion for Satur day afternoon that Is very dear to us, and miuetlnics we are able to coax Brownie Wee to agree. That Is to spend two nr trvee glorious hours In the library mulling over the dictionaries. Talk about chasing a golfball titer the links or following Theda IJaia serpentining through a mile of cellu loid, or stalking Tom and Jerry, mystic affinities, from bar to bar nlong Chestnut street--what can these excitements offer compared to n hresthlcss word-hunt In the dictionaries! Words th noblest quarry of the sportsman ! To follow their spoor through the Jungles and champaigns of the Rtigllsh language; to flush them from their hiding plcca In dense thickets of Chaucer or Spensir. track them through the noble aisle of Shakespeare forest anil lln.l them at last perching gayly mi the branches of O. Henry or lieorgo Ade! Tho New Oxford Dictionary, that most t-plendld monument of human scholarship, gives inotlng pictures of words from their first hatching down to the time when they soar like eagles In the open air of 'today. Wno KNOW no greater Joy than an after noon spent with dear old Dr. Johnson's Dictionary of tho English Language, pub lished after seven years' patient labor In 1755. Probably pomewhero In Philadelphia there Is a copy of tho first edition: but tho one we know (at the Mercantile Library) Is the revised fourth edition which the doctor put out In 177D. One can hardly lead with out a lump In the throat that noble preface In which Doctor Johnson rehearses the great ness and discouragement of his task. And who ran read too often his rebuff to the Karl of Chesterfield, who, hating studiously nrglectcd to aid tho lexicographer during the long years of his compilation, sought by belated flattery to associate himself with the nst achievement? "Is not a Patron, my lxrd, one who looks with unconcern on n man strtiKKlIng for life In the water, and, when he has reached ground, encumbers him with help?" And who does not chuckle oter the caustic -humor of the doctor's definition."! of words that touched his own rugged career? "Lexicographer: a harmless drudge ;" "book learned: versed In books or literature: a term Implying some slight contempt"; "drub street: a street In London much In habited by writers of small histories, dic tionaries and temporary poems." 0. IHCNRV was a great devotee of word beagllug In dictionaries, and his whim sical "ret lew" of Webster deserves to be better Known: "Wo find on our table quite an exhaustive treatise on various subjects written In Mr. Webster's well-known, lucid and piquant stjle. There is not a dull line between tho covers of the book. The range of subjects Is wide, and the treatment light and easy without being flippant, A valuable feature of the work Is the arranging of the articles In alphabetical order, thurfx facilitating the finding nf any particular word desired. Mr. Webster's vocabulary Is large, and he always uses the right word In the right place, Mr, Webster's work Is thorough, and we predict that he will be beard from ngaln." w; the nineteenth nutting creen offer com. pared to the bliss of pursuing through a thousand dictionary pages some Wild Word Wo Have Known and occasionally discov ering on unfamiliar creature of strange and dazzling plumage? NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW German autocracy Is not going to sur render until It Is compelled to hurrender. That may happen In a few weeks or a feu months or Jt may not happen for a year. But In no event ivlll there come from Ger many a peace ofTer that the AllleH can accent until the German autocracy Is compelled to yield to events. Whether that defeat comes from without or fiom within. It is the flrt-t essential condition to a durnblo peace based upon the great principles of humanity and Justice. New York World. Fuel Administrator Garfield has advised all householders to buy coal In tho normal way as soon as It Is available. The advice should be taken. During the spring and summer, when consumption reaches tho low est ebb and when transportation facilities aro at their highest, reserves should be ac cumulated. The present winter's experience, ought to sulllce. During the coming warm months coal production should be kept at Its maximum. The lesson of the past months should be mastered. Chicago Herald, THE END OF A' THAT Who minds his .honest poverty In these wartimes an' a", that. The wealthy slacker, wo pass hhn by, We're patriots, poor for u' that. ' For a' that, an' a' that. Our money's scarce un" a' that, For wealth is not what real men hoard Whllo bravo boys fight for a" that. What tho1 on dark war bread we dine. Wear fewer clothes, an" a' that, Gin' slackers silks an cowards wine, We're men, we're men for a' that. For a' that, an' a' that. Their selfish greed an' a that. The patriot now, tho' o'er sao poor. Is king o men, for a that. When prices soar an' food comes high. And butttr, beans, rth' a' that, Tho' hundreds had no u Inter coal,. And many vcre sick for a' that. For a' that, an' a' that. The hunger, cold an' a' that. We'll buy thrlfrstamps and try to Have To help th boys for a' that. We've meatless days, an' vvheatless days. An' fuelless days, an' a' that. For gg we pay most eighty cents, Air they're pot fresh for a' that. For a' that, an' .a' that. ' The cost of food un a that, t We eat to live, not live to eat, Whllo the boys fight hurd an a' that. Then let us pray that come rwht may.f,' At' come ,lt .will, for- a that,, u That.peac un'. right' o'er all the earth HtMH M lM ken J ..a.-' HW V., ,4V-V ttat-,'-.' V 'rr PEARY IMPRESSED k GOV. PENNYPACKER Former Executive Tells of Sev eral Meetings With Discoverer of North Pole PHNNVIWCKKIt AUTOHIOHIlAritV Ml. lot (Copirlpht, 1)1$, bu Put'.c UrCotr l.'omiianl'J 01 tho 1 1 Hi of December, 1901), t dined in New Yorlc with tho Pennsylvania Society of that city lit tho Waldorf-Astorlu, It was a great dinner given, to Philander C, Knox, Franklin MacVcagh and Wicker shnin, the three Ponnsylvunlans in the cabinet of President Tuft.' Tho two Unltod States Senators, Penrose and Oliver; Gov ernor' Stuart; Ilornco Howard Furncss, the Shakespearean scholar the former Governor, James A. Beaver; von Moscli zlskcr, the coming Supremo Court Justice; Lloyd (''..(! rlscom, John VanamaUcr nnd inuiiy others vvcro among tho guests, Andrew Carnegie presided nnd did it' well. It was my fortune to tit alongside of Robert K. Peury for tho greater part of the evening. A few evenings before, lu tho Academy of Music, I had heard Ills first lecture Miico the discovery of the North Pole, and once beforo I had dined with him, when ho wus not ko famous. Center of Interest lie received much of the attention shown to the celebrities throughout tho evening and mado the llrst bpecch. It waH a meri torious speech, brief and with a thought In it. lie wild In substance that ho had been born along tho Susquehanna, reared In Maine and tuppurtcd by the contribu tions of Now York, und therefore was un der special obligations to tho people of threo States: that for hundreds of years explorers had striven to Und tho North Polo and to find a passageway between tho two great oceans and In our day both taslis lmd been accomplished. That was all ho said. A tall, slim man with, htccl-bluo c.ves, a mustache, n sandy complexion, while tho red In his hair was not all of n color, but u tendency, nlollo pointing to Miino more or loss remote ancestor, and a tclf-eoiituliicd jnanncr Indicating strength of will and polio. Ho was not obtrusive or effusive; neither was ho deprecatory, and when ho spoke tliero was not tho slightest symptom of nervousness. "Commander, when I heard you the other night It was nil clear to mo except your getting across those stretches of water you called 'leads.' I should not have liked to depend upon chipping off cakes of Ico and zigzagging them across. A' man on the far Bide of a lead irjight be In a confounded trap." A smile crept slowly over his face. "The danger Is not so great. Generally they are not very wide. They freeze over. Tho effort to reuch tho Polo was mado at the lowest temperature, when this danger Is the least. On one occasion, however, I realized what It meant. Wc came to a lead two miles wide. I thought out tho situa tion and concluded to wait until it should ho frozcij over, und wo waited threo days. Then my Eskimos reported a crossing two or threo miles away. Wo went over on snow-shoes llfty paces apart und singly, but It was very dangerous and 1 feared wo should never reach homo to tell tho talc." "Would It not bo possible to take somo light kind of a canoe along?" "No, tho only hope of success lay In transporting as little aS possible. We had to run the risks." To another query put by Mr. Lloyd C. Grjscom, ho said in reply: "Wo lived altogether upon compressed goods. No coffee was, permitted. Under tho excitement of the advance bfico would have resulted in loss of sleep jind that would havo meant loss of vital force. We needed It all. The ration was a quart of tea, morning and evening, hut no coffee. Coffeo Is a drink for the tropics but not for the poles. Wc would not have a movement of the bowels for perhaps a week. There whs no trouble to keep comfortably warm In a temperature tlxty degrees below zero. It was essential not to permit enough ex ertion to cause perspiration. That also meant a loss of force." Refers to Doctor Cook He, himself, mado a reference to Cook. "Commander," said I, "I had no confi dence In Cook from the tlmo of his Initial tolegram, which did not say he' had found the Pole, but that ho hud been successful. If, however, ho did got there it was partly an accident, nnd has not tho merit of .a man who has planned and labored for the result." ' "Governor, there Is no 'It' In tho propo sition. I knew the two Ksklmos who were with him from their childhood. They aro very keen about directions nnd distances. They could not bo mistaken about whero they went. Ho wandered about the coun try, but he was never fur from land. Tho Ksklmos uro savages. If the wife ot one of themfor any reason cannot go hunting with lilm and tho wlfo of his friend can, .they trade vvlvcs and think nothing of it, but about many things they know better than wo do." "Are you going to let that man Shackle ton capture the South Pole?" I Inquired. Ilo replied with earnestness: "If I had a hundred thousand dollars I thould go there." Thl was Interesting because It had been reported that he would never undertake anyUilng of the kind again. "Why don't you seize upon Andy?" and Iolnted to Curneglo only a few feet fronj us. v "He, will not do a 'thing tovyard It," lie said rather sadly, and I gathered tho Im pression that lie had mado the effort, n his canny fashion Andy had, nevertheless, introduced -lilm aq tho only discoverer of tho North Polo and 'committed the society, to the statement. Tomorrow lioternor renninaeker wilt rlie bis lnipre.la" or TrfaMent Wllaon. INTRODUCING AN ARKANSAS CANDIDATE v X W. Paschall, candidate for county clerk, was' In town Monday Interviewing the "dear people" regarding his 'candidacy, Ho guvo us a. call, wealing a look Indicative that all's well with ,hlm Thf. knowing,. ones say that 'V a known to the children as. a e4y ss iw ,orrww arounu . TMKf4MI -M HW, Wl JWH:SMI KUHMfjtl 22uimmm FRIDAY, MARCH 15, ,..,,.,, , ,. ., .. , i . . ..- , ., f - i EVEkYMAN MUST FIGHT By DR. CHA RLES A . EA TON lleud of the National tiervico Kttllou of th UnltM States Shipping Hoard, Kmcrscncy fleet Corporation WB NE12D very much In our country to cultivate tho ability to think American and sper.1: United Slates. Our people, when they broke political relationships with their motherland In the Revolution, began to es tablish a progressive Isolation In thought and sympathy which has developed to this day. rjven when we were approaching a hundred million In population, with a vast commerce overflowing the seven seas of tho world, there wero htatesmen among us who thought that wo could adopt a llscal stem without regard to any other nation on earth. When the torld was plunged Into this frightful war by Germany wo felt the shock, but wo believed that wo could tldestep thin greatcbt of all moral Issues. The town might be in llames, but wo wero possessed of tho pathetic delusion that tho sparks would not net flro to our house, even thuugli It wcr the largest house In the town. On the 6th day of last April, after years of Wanton outrage at the bands of Germany, wo reached tho point whero, If wo were to continue as a free people, we must begin to light. The declaration of war and the re organization which has followed It havo driven themselves like a gigantic wedge Into the Industrial, economic and social fabric of our nation. Our transportation system has been shot to pieces. Our Industries have, fhlftcd their foundations. Every Ideal nnd Idea common to tho people ha3 undergone radical change. A few months ago I was appointed by tho United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation to carry on a great vcain palgn of education and Inspiration lm tho shipyards and throughout tho country gen erally with a view to speeding up our out put of ships. In tho month of February we tpoke to more than 100,000 men In the ship yards of America. 1 nm bound to say that 1 nm greatly encouraged by tho outlook. Tho men aro simply llko the rest of v They havo not been thinking In terms ot America; they havo no world relationships or world Ideas; their lives wero bounded by the limits of their occupation, which is true of almost ovcry one.elsn In tho country. All they needed wua to be told tho truth. Patriotism in Building Ships- Wo havegone to tho men of tho fchlp- yardst us wo, would go to any other class of American citizens with this appeal: Our country Is In deadly elanger. This Is a war of. all tha'peopl:. Tho burden rests upon every man and woman in tha nation. Any one who refuses to sacrifice for America and for the world Is unfit to be called an American, Beforo tho war men built ships for ona purpose to mako money. Men worked In shlpyurds for ona purpose to make money. Tho Interests of these two tets of men often clashed. Each party was well vfllhhi its rights when it strove to get all that It could x legally. Today all that is changed. A man who Is building ships tduiply to make money Is not an American at nil, and tho man who works In a shipyard without any other thought than tho money ho Is making Is not an American In Ida soul. The same, hi true of every banker and carpenter and teacher and preacher. We are going to have real men In this nation after' the war la over. These beautiful boya who have bt-en nifrtured, many of thehi. In ease so long are coming through tho mill. or our 'trainingv camps maao over erect, clean-cut, clear-minded. They will mako sol Ulcrs worthy of their country and of their cause,. Any man or woman lln America whoirc-, fuses to take care of theso lighting men on the sea and In the trenches by sacrifice, by J sweat and by toll Is as mean an enemy as tf ho or she were In tho ranks of the Ger man army. The freei iqen of. tho world can beat organized tyranny, In t)iei person of the Prussian machine. The only causa of defeat liosullilo Is the Indifferent, reltlslu Blacking, side-stepping chap at homo; and his number Is growing leui every dayW , , Tho Wonders at Hog Island', i, I hava been; 'deeply Impressed by tho theroisin of tho.wlilptfWHr program, which', our 'Oovrnmnt. throtwhrUa .kbtoolmr .Board VetfiJoy.VFlHH. Cs'jWtoll. haw ia4w- 191S BUT THERE'S ONLY ONE WAY r.h of myself ever since. Alter- a careful flrstt hand examination' of that vast enterprlso I nm convinced that, if not the most. It Is ono of tha most heroic undertakings since thlH war began lu this country, or :ui' other for that matter. When you realize that there has been built upon piling In a vast swamp under frightful weather conditions it city vilth cauaclty for a population of 30,000 souls lu the last flvo months, tho Imagination can hardly compre hend the mngnltudo uf tho task. Under these conditions, and to achieve such results, there Is no doubt that money was misspent and effort misplaced, but If tho Hog Island plant can shorten this war one :y It will save twice as much as Its entire cost, . Other Great Plants We must it'iuemher that tho Hog Island plant Is only una of many where every con ceivable new problem has been thrust upon both the management and men. The Sub marine Boat Corporation In Newark Bay has performed miracles under similar conditions to thoso In Hog Island. I never visit such a plant without marveling nt tho courage and patience of tho men who, lu spite of unbelievable dllllcultles, havo accomplished huch notable results in so short a time. One feels the same in visiting tho ureat Victory plant at Squatituni, Muss., or. Indeed, any one of tho 13a yards under tho Jurisdiction of the United States Shipping Board. 1 rejoice over tho opportunity to aid in any small degree In tho awakening of public opinion to the stern necessities and dangers of this hour. Tho peaco monger Is tho chief danger at the present time. He Is the Amer ican Bolsbovlkl. Ho seeifis to love tho ene mies of his country with such passionate elevotlou that he Is blinded to all other con siderations. This war must bring peace by the method of bruvo free men. who urn willing to light and. It need be. die that tyranny may be crushed. I know the dark forebodings which haunt the mind" of many at this time, und the run. sons for them. I nm painfully conscious of the mistakes and limitations and failures of my own country an wen as all others, and I realize that this Is probably the dark hour beforo tho dawn, but In splta of all that may fairly bo said, 1 am thoroughly convhveed that wo are going to win this wur: first by a inllltnrS" decision and second, by diplo matic pegotlatlou. In which all who -a.-a entitled, because of their sacrifices will Join, and which will establish a basis upon which a world civilization can be built safely for generations to come. With this, hope In my heart It Is easy to sound the trumpet and call not lonly tho workers lh shipyards, but every man and woman to tako up tho task' mm tiuf ie uuui victory is won. What Do You .Know? QUIZ '' Jhinx'raiT p"un" ''rstterlalle of a i: aisles j'Ws.igts.v uhttt '" ' Uw,drVh m"t '"""' '"""ed spot In tho 5. Why er KlUjbeth' narrett llrownlns's rue!?'? "Sonnet, from tho rirta. . yvhlfh-of Kaiser WllhelnTs hands la erlnnltulf S:whd,wlr.,.,HT,rr.,nIil:ne.worl,, 10, ltw wMtlia Aral Riun fermnllr to iuhi.1 Mr. MILon (or Jhe I'realdennT- "u", Answers to Yesteday's Quiz I, Th llako oil field, sr. In th- l-rolnr. ( lliti. on tit J's.plaij K. Tha terrltw". fler found rich In p.tnjr.um. via. taken if ' A,Heilo7la"""'"', ,:n,",,, Mft wroU "' 3. A rstiln In'lr-- ajmr rrreaods In rani, to a ll!itnunt la ilia na.v ". .l...A mll coin, formerly1 enrreni In ih. MlrMIe Nut, fnialto tvi tin and i half S. Ttl,IVla do Honlornel A beautiful and leWr. We In fart., "u'"" " 8. Krnilns In, lha flruratlia aenao rafera hx metonrmr to the Judaea wno one wore It. 7, Troa-i A Usury sf weeru,, lltorell il: . . "T,:,,r-. '"" i regular., " 8. Con.tellallon: . A sraou of alar.. Hiar..l KHjaaasrss. . Ksjs .'. Ais:,,,Sl3a&VaMil 9ht H ... . flL.J ,...... . . itMi -n rf OUT? The Miracle Unlovely things they were, und cold As Death itself, last fall The bulbs I planted in the mold Beside my garden wall. Yet soon above each sodden husk Will burgeoned beauty blow And fill with hyacinthino musk One garden that I know. Ahl lovelier, dear seed than mine, Althoueh as cold as thev. ! I watched my widowed friend consirnif To churchyard loam today. gf rm. ""'""y"o M"-j""""h T p-gl inu sumo .DuniLjnun rower, .(,w vjuii nciwicr Beo me uisiuni, Minus 5e Tl .Nor visualize me nower.' til TilM 11AT.Y. fffl zz.. v WAR BALLAD ON THE SPOTS T .... -...., -.. 4fl jiiilJiuviacu Jiiubiruicu ouur iiiuv- uvtw 'Em Twenty Years Ago jl milEfllS la u lady playing at Keith's Thcjj - tro this week and alnco the weeks neartw' past tho advertisement won't help much who figured hi a stirring scene Just twenl years and ono month nso. which she Wl probably forgot. jft-ft In this story Norman Jcffcrlcs figures the leading man. Tho lady, of course, , very small or, nt least, young but she probably never since been tho center ot'j much und such loud applause. On thut day In February, 1838, when tl news of tho sinking of tho Maine arrlv Jefferles was press ngent of the old DM Museum. His Job was to tal.o any , sort-' sensation untl maKo or it grin nr ma ! Coming Into town on tho train ho reanj tiewu unit fit mini ltei-un tri llcUTO hOW.' nnllld turn it In uci-niliit. WIlV not an 111) trated sonci hot oft the griddle, about Kino Idea! Ho sat down nnd got to work, keeping mlnH ull tlin tlmn tlin tipi-PKsltv (if making.) lines lit scenes which ho could hope to ft . . . '. . .. r . . .... ............n. pictured in tno lantern suaes inanuia- ., nitlrl I. a lllral,. In lin.-n In fnctr WhCD' had finished his Bong ho gave u copy t.,tl leader of the orchestra. Instructing win.. fit tho words to somo Jlnglo and teach ' lliltig to little Miss Flora Parker, whoi appearing at tho Museum that wefk. -Jtu ho went to Brlggs's lantern-ouae biuu, Kivtii uiwi i-,iiinivi,m Kirnatti nnd managed dig up enough stock slides to lllustratv,n U1U), That verv afternoon tha BOI1B was sented and tho audlenco throw Its collect! hats througji the roof. Here's tho wayjj weui : i ia Above tha i-hhi Old Glory nroud was stre lug: (Laiite nil slide thrown on showing '01d Glory.". Jl Tho Maine swung safo at anchor .Ina buy. (PIcturo of batuesmp.j n-l.n ,..Annll-l,l nn 1 1. a Lnntu.' il.cktt la Dft Ing.- W Tho H.illnru dream of loved ones far. (Picture. "Old'KcntUcky Home,')..-, All's' well on board. Of danger nono'V thinking, , When' suddenly the Bky breaks In a ,5 7Plclnra I,llrntnI., Khln.i .' Ail awful crash Great Oodl tho ship Is WJ t nig, . ' Thr'cA hundred frnllunt tars aro inUH thara rrlrtur marine's and BOW on deck) vS When Dho camo to tho chorus the If singer )iad her own troubles getting Paf applaucc, for the pictures, camo v furious. Listen: k 1 hilnnilB &iil w---i i WnKhllicInn (nlctnra nf GeorirO appear) J gone to rest arid Lincoln's tP1'11!?, f hw a-rava! f. 3 "flrnnt infrtni-el Is sleenlna- In his torn Khennun'H (picture) passed But oar tills mighty nation tne ow- . Mlrln-.i rtlll u-UB ("Old (Ilory ', And wltan X1,-lvlnlev lllloture) glV word, then Hiialu must Jlght.or PSM .,.. ..i , ..... .. .. r..n r.l (hrflai 4 (IB Bl'lUIIU OV Vn ! . w r" $ too, but (ho -audience vspen Its fUrlous.CTi upon me .repetition n mo -" wouldn't' hAKntlufletl. k . 'J Afta ll.mil nil .tvat- pfnurV 'itlO bartSJ in thtCmdoori across,, the way,,declars4 i-D-'Uw ani,wiK.,t)Wi , tit-ware. ia ww,!m vw4.t)y irr?fe-i" j ' jsaBasV' .. -. J, . W.f -if IVLasH; sf'ffefc CW N & fcu.JHc . 5"i w