lFiM!!?WS m m-z m V , 4 t .- l 5, .1918 -F3 M Wv sa a ma nti.TM': to If. Is,. ' JV " 1 . it? m if, i Subtle Keftaev vPPtiLIC LEDGER COMPANY .r.vjF8."!.11-. cuivris. Phibidesi 5.- '. "urinsii, vice I'resinentt jnun c. t B wr,fil.ry nn? Treasurer: rhlliD 8. Collins. . Williams. John J. Spurceon. Directors. ' EDITORIAL BOAHD: 1 CtBES II. K. Cruris, rhslmiti IVTDE. SMILEY Editor ' C MARTIN.... general Business Stamper ubl!shed dilly at Pcblio T.rtara rtulldln. .. ' indenentlenrA Rdn... Tihn.ii.inkii P.cPmt"" Broad and Chestnut Streets na Crrr Presj-Infon Building SltK" 206 Metropolitan Tower Louis..... , . . 1008 Fullerton Bulldlns 0AQO. 1?fl Tr-ihuttm Tlnll.Mnr- V VTT-G Tt-T5t- 1TQ. Waibwoton Bckrib. -" If. E. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. and 14th St 9KSC"W 10,.K "cheiu The Sun Bulldlne Ee?uA- suBscmrxio.v tetims JtSJS'T? Etenio Tcbuo Ledger is servM to sub-1i3K-'ltlber !n Philadelphia ami surroundinsr towns rats ot nveiva u- cents per Aveek, payable carrier. o points outside of Philadelphia. In Rtfttr-n. Pflnailn oi !Tnlt-r1 Nlnles tins. i k'"i ,wsieo irer, iiny iu cems pt monuu .A.-!. - .. IrKl . . " ." .. " i'V iW ' ,C C1 JCdi JU)t.U10 III HIliltllLl', TaaJl loretirn rmintrlfm nn I'd 1 ilnllar tvr f , flsonth. Noticf -Subscribers vrlshlnff address changed ft BUt etve old as well ns new address. LVfiS rr-rr r- tLi., JITOU ALnUl KhlSTUIVS, 5IAI 3000 drfrcaA nil rnmmuufrrtf fnit fn 7?trlno Dublin Xttdoert Independence Square, Philadelphia. entered At inn rmtiprLrnn rosT oiricr At IOfUS. SECOND CLASS MAIL JIATTta. WV ,ttti- PhUidclphii, Wednfidiy, June 5. 1919 THE DUTY OF A MAN '".ArpHERE aro duties ns well as privileges Sp . . "" of citizenship, ns those younc men who wi-'. have becomo of nee since June 5 of last year are discovering; today , Voting: Is sometimes called a privilege, but It Is the duty of ever qualified elector Fighting Is sometimes called a du y, hut an occasion has arisen In which It Is the high privilege of all those capable of bear ing arms. But whether the yoi.ih who must reis- .J.L. fl f7W n ) nnHiiInn iHnif enrrn vAa it n B nw 'i ft. Iirlvlleiii ni n flnt' tViorn la nn pvpika r$tt,''tor avoiding It. He must so to the pre- Tjs acrlbed place of registry near his homo $& Between the hours of 7 in the morning fi unu i? ill llio uvcillll illiu iui:t? inn iuijiia i ... ... ,- . . ... ., . ,.- I'Pti oa lno roils. II ne is ill ana cannot fro no KiJf h f must send a representathe to act for him. Failure to register is a misdemeanor de- isjt kilned by law. But if tho law dlft not so describe It, the conscience of every ithor MW youin wouiu so inoict ine si;n-it.'i t. As the forthcoming eclipse of the sun will be only partial In Germam . no doubt the Kaiser will construe that circumstance .as an evidence of celestial intention to re serve him hla coetfd place In i-plte of everything . ,. . J. DENNY O'NEILLS STiOO LTT COST J' Denny O'Nell $7500 from his SA rtersonal noeket to run for the envernnr- hlp and lose. Jlr O'Nell is not a poor man. He will not miss the money. And since he 'la not lacking In wisdom he may deem his r?7600 well spent. His boom died of too 'much sweetness and light. And he prob- vlly knows this now. , By this time Mr. O'Xcil may realize that his own modest and undoubted virtues had little opportunity to win general attention yWhen they were marshaled forth to public .Xvlew with the sort of professional goodness at Harrlsburg that wears plumes, hires a spotlight and blows Its own horn Jazz fashion. K7jjd The renort of the O'Nell campaign e- RiSt7t senses Just filed at Harrlsburg shows that W$ " $147 remains unspent in the hank. This rfJf loot ilt nf wrpplra re mtrrht Vip usnrl In t',".., " . " " . ihSJ-f ,UDlls" a 'ract written to Miow that even (V?V a wicKea -oria it is possible to be too lyy good. Or the Governor might distribute ' tne 147 among tno neeay elevator opera- Bilf tors who were the last contributors to finance the O'Xell adventure. ,u " The announcement from Pekin that the S'ijpfr Kent, treaty between Japan and China "re ,''; trlcts" the signatories to co-operation against tne uerman menace is reauy a " reeognltlon of the scope of the pledge Then I.. .....V.I.m. "ll.l.ftl" nlmilt I. .& tnnirnllii.ln t X te Job which civilization has been forced to undertake. "MR. JUSTICE BUDD" SOUNDS WELL lir'ITIHE suggestion of Henry Budd dd as the iifsw " Democratic candidate for one of the SjfV vacancies on the Supremo Court bench E'm'aV iniit in nnmmnnH Itlf trt tVr li?,.. nf in IS& State. Sir. Budd is a lawyer of character He would honor the bench. It la the Intent of the Constitution that jSyrben two vacancies In the Supreme Court fAgifrhr filled at one election a Republican and ;w&;$i.,lemocrat shall be elected, for It pro ides Sftibat under such circumstances a voter Kjlmay cast his ballot for only one candidate HaS his own party. This arrangement, tin- ifeTiekia frustrated by Republican trickery, jMwould Give the election to the Democratic KSJweandldate. Indeed, if the two Republican :.!".. . M Lbm .wv..i n .rv. I..nr.& crnm... ......ll f&sfdates, one running as a Republican and the Rather under some trumped-up party name to jrfeyade the constitutional prohibition, or tnen Wrepoth running as Republicans, a Democratic Hcindldate of the character of Mr Budd Mwuia have a good chance of elect.on. The ShState can contemplate hia promotion to jtj.tJa bench with satisfaction. ffirW iSL'5 i Now that the U-boat raid has at last :yrrcu( an Brn-icici.uuB niuics must re- :e that the blame Is now lodged precisely -re It belongs. . I&PAN COMMUTERS TRUST PROPHETS? iljrR. McADOO has written to the secre-;-tary of the South Jersey Commuters' yjioclatlon that after the war railroad will drop to their former level, and secretary of the association is happy. t.i , 4 .,. ., SGBrk &tly uv uuiiiuuuH iu lane me joy out liPRw! but evidence Is lacking to prove jfptjjpat Mr. McAdoo can qualify, as a twenty fefW carat prophet. And there is plerlty of 'VevMence to warrant the conclusion that it rllUbe some years after the war before liroad fares and railroad freights are iuced to the level of f917. The railroads 'Jlbeen vainly asking for an Increase in es lor (several ta & suun us tno (rernment took them over It discover? 1 the rates would .have to be Increased the railroads were to meet expen3es. IMcAdoo has not only raised the price services which the roads render the Hct but he has Increased the pay of the oyes ana is now struggling wuu a rid for a greater Increase In pay from fshop workers. He cannot reducs tho anu ipe itiEo wmiuui ieuuc;n i unless he proves that he Is the one i 'only railroad genius In America who t 'do what no one else has succeeded In tkeitouth Jersey commuters must (I l(r. McAdoo Is a genius pa ..it. tr,re xo fee any FIND THE MONEY If' a Cotton Tax and a Protective Tariff Wilt Rale Revenue, Congress Should Not Fear Them THE Republicans who have stood by the Administration in its prosecution of the war are evidently determined to give it the benefit of their advice in the preparation of the new rcvenuo bills. They would fail in their patriotic duty if they did otherwise. The Republican party has drafted more successful reve nue bills than the Democrats have dreamed of. Indeed, most of tho TDemo cratic revenue bills in the past have been such stuff as dreams not revenue were made of. Representative Fordney, of tho Ways and Means Committee, has begun already by reminding the House of the impor tance of resorting to the tariff. He has computed that if the Payne rates were levied on the imports of tho current year they would produce a levenue of $518, 000,000, or nearly $3r0,000,000 more than has been raised under the existing rates. When we are confronted with the necessity of raising enormous sums in an emergency like the present it is sim ply the part of wisdom to profit by the experience of the past and to adopt tried methods. There is no doubt whatever that vastly greater sums could be raised by the tariff than the Democrats have seen fit to raise. There is no doubt, either, that such taxes falling indirectly upon the people and distributed widely, could bo paid much more easily than direct taxes such as the party in power is considering. As Cleveland said on a previous occasion, the country is con fronted by a condition and not a theory. Only theorists will fail to recognize the fact. Wo are likely to hear much more of th j tr.riff in the nex. few weeks. The Democrats are not to be aUowed to forget that mere are sources of war profits also which they have not yet touched. They have already been r:minded that they have kept their hrnds off cotton. It sells normally at $50 a hale. But it is selling for two or three times that sum now. It has been estimated that between half and three quarters of a billion dollars could be raised by a just war-profit tax on cotton. With this sum added to what could be raised by the tariff we would have a round billion dollars, a little less than three-quarters of which would be taken from the profits of producers who are getting enormous prices on account of tho war and moie than one-quarter of which would be so widely distributed that it would not be felt. The fact that one of these taxes would involve the acceptance of Republican practices of taxation and the other would involve the taxation of the southern Democrats ought not to be sufficient to deter the financial statesmen responsible for the revenue bills from giving them the most serious consideration. It will not commit the nation to any policy when the war is over, for then our whole economic l elation with the world must be readjusted. Conditions may arise under which the ancient protective tariff sys tem of the Republicans will have to be so modified that its friends will not recog nize it. And again, it may be that Europe will make a tariff combination against us, which we must fight if we would preserve our industrial independ ence. No one knows what the future holds. Wc all do know that the tasks of the present are so grave that every instrument that can be found which may be useful in performing them should be freely used. Mr. Fordney and his associates will set out a fine assortment of instruments ready to hand before the revenue bills are finally passed. The partial sidetracking of history In tho public schools is only natural. We're all too buy making new olumcs to dust off the outmoded ones LAURELS FOR AN ANCIENT HENRY WATTERSON'S editorial on the entiance of America into the war, which has tecened the Pulitzer prize as the best article in an American newspaper last year, l Trltten In the fctyle which made the distinguished Kentuckian famous It concludes with these vigorous phrases: No peace with the Kaiser No parley with autocracv. abrolutim .ind the divine right of kings To Hell with the Habs burgs and tho Uohenzollern ' It is not necessary to traverse the find ings of the judges Mr. Watterson is ad mitted to be one of the most epert phrase makers in the counti y. He christened the "star-eyed goddess of refoim" in a spirit of derision, and it was he who said that if Cleveland were nominated the party would "march through a slaughter house Into an open grave." There must be con solation for him that the pungent rhetoric of a past generation pleases the present, for he still writes with much of his old time vigor It Is to be hoped that the present can cellation of the subway contracts will not make the pregnant motto "sic transit" per manently applicable. OF INTEREST TO LAWYERS LAWYERS of the type formerly asso J dated with the business of ambulance chasing have found a new and richer field. If Information now being collected by some of the big Insurance companies is not mis leading. A sort of guerrilla war has been waged on these companies for years through the medium of motorcar owners who are harassed Insistently by faked damage claims. Almost every automobile owner Is Insured. And the casualty com panies have found It cheaper to settle minor claims out of court than to defend even a perfectly Innocent client. Now the abuse has become bo prevalent and costly. It has added so much to tho rates of general insurance, that some of the larger corporations, which have quietly been collecting evidence for almost a year, are preparing for an expose and the later oreeecutlon of lawyers In varloui parts of EVENING PUBLIC ' LEDGER PHILADELPHIA f WEDNESDAY" tTUNE the country through whom they have paid rrivi'llT'JVrE'n I I hundreds of thousands of dollars In "Jobbed" MxITCHtinEH. claims. Disclosures In this city show that there actually are men who go about seeking to have rickety wagons Jarred by a motorcar In order that they rhay make tho usual claim of "damages and personal Injury." One man was arrested not long ago and charged with stepping deliberately off the curb Into the path of a slow-moving motorcar. It Is assumed that there aro lawyers In Philadelphia who are willing to becomo partners In this sort of petty crimi nality and In a process that confuses genu ine claims for damages really suffered. This surely is a matter for tho attention of the Board of Cepsors of the Philadelphia Bar. Tho censors-should not wait for com plaints or for a scandal. It is their duty to protect .the bar consistently from those members whose conduct Is such as to en danger its prestige. The report of the excellent phone serv ice far'off In the American trenches provides another Instance of the well-known "pathos of distance " THE GOOD FROM WAR T71EW realize how life In America Is being - disciplined by the war or how much of permanent good Is sure to result gener ally. It is usual to suppose that the dis cipline of our present great effort Is felt chiefly in the aimy. As a matter of fact, life Is being hotter ordered everywhere. The war gardens that are beginning to bloom on every hand aro a hint in them selvos. No one knows how many war gar dens there are. But if all the small plots were counted and estimated It would be found that hundreds of thousands of acres of land formeily Idle are now under culti vation. Will the American ever lose his new taste for gardening? Will tho man with an acre of ground let the weeds grow In future and return to tho lnzy habit of eating only bought vegetables? It Is not likely that he will. His thoughts and habits as well as his palate are being disciplined. For him at least war Is proving a good thing. Marine Insurance went up even faster than the coast-defense air planes. Tint They Will Ilrlng It Down Judging bv the royal honors bestowed, George the rifth evidently found his blrth d.iy the best of nil times to raise I'.ilne. It's a great deal easier to avoid a full sized tornado than to dodge the draft And More Honornble General Humidity often turns those blustering thunder and lightning night of fensives Into complete defeats this .Tunc. Hi! has a nasty way of rallying his muggy forces by the next afternoon. All efforts to prove nut Was that Shakespeare vvaa He a Hun? a German will come to naught If the Kai ser retains the "Quality of Mercy" speech in the new "national" edition ot the poet's works, which ha is reported to be super lslng. What has happened to Qarabed? THE CHAFFING DISH i The Life of a Smoker Age 12, bean-pod cigars. Age 13, cornsllk. Age 15, tries his first cigarette. Age 18. freshman at college, a meerschaum pipe. Age 22, senior at college, a French briar. Age 23, clerk at $10 a week, corncob pipe. Age 25, five-cent cigars Age 30, married', rolls his own. Age 31, twins, corncob again. Age 35, ten-cent cigars. Age 40, two for a quarter cigars. Age 50 putting his son through college, corncob again. Age 60, cremated; his last smoke. Today's War Names For the benefit of our innumerable readers we are glad to prtnt the proper pronunciation of names on the most western of all fronts: New York Nyawk Boston Boss-tone Hog Island Haw-Gyelan New Jersey Noo-Joisey Baltimore Ball-ta-muh Atlantic City A-tlan-tuck Hoboken Hoe-buck-en Garabed. .No need to pronounce it at all That strange disease that Is bothering Madrid, can It be hay fever? The cloak and suit factories in New York report a dearth of "perfect 3;'s." If that refers to equatorial measurements, here we are. Every now and then we see somebody's canoe at the Reading Terminal, being shipped off somewhere for a nice little trip. It's a very poignant sight for a hard working man. We think of cool levels of moonlit water, and the plunk and swish of the paddles, and rolled-up shirt sleeves, and sun-warmed sand beaches well, we all have our bad moments. It has been suggested that England send a woman ambassador to Russia. Far more important to send a crate of safety razors. It is so gratifying to hear of the "punc tilious politeness" of that U-boat captain off the coast of (name deleted by summer resort bureau). Perhaps he has been study ing the Prussian Primer, where we lead: Politeness is to do and say The rutluess thing In the ruthless way. Heavy prune-fire has been heard along the coast boarding houses. There will be fearful slaughter among the U-boats If they get within range of the hash-howitzers of the Jersey landladies. Even the moon Is going to take a hand in sunlight saving. Why not call the rivet champions rivet erans? Since a hairpin shortage has be:n pre dicted, may we suggest that the park guards be Instructed to comb the ground under the benches? Of course, we believe In encouraging home Industries, but still the war Is going to be -won in France and not at Rehoboth or Lewt-Mw, . v.SOCRATES. or Lewtae-V f y SOCRA rpWO years ago today Kitchener died. In a stormy sunset off the Orkneys the cruiser Hampshire struck a mine and foun dered In a few minutes. Lord Kitchener was last seen talking quite calmly (can you Imagine him otherwise?) to the ship's officers on the bridge. No one will have forgotten the pang of horror and regret that throbbed In the hearts of the English-loving peoples when the news was known. To many men It was the sharpest single shock of the war. And, as so often happens In such cases, there were many who could not bellevo that the great general was dead. It was said that he had been captured by the Germans or that ho had been picked up by Norse fishermen; ho was billing his tlmo nnd some day would reappear to bring succor and blazing aid to his cause. Such human legends and fabllngs, un reasonable ns they may seem, nro always based on some underlying truth. Kitchener Is allvo Just in the same sense that Hin denburg is dead. Hintly may tag around over the battlefields with Wllhelm and Rosner, but his woik Is done; It Is sewn up and shrouded and committed to the Infernal deeps. These reports that keep coming in attesting his continuance ore vastly exaggerated. Tho failure of his Inst west ern drive Is simply the epitaph on his tablet. Just as truly ns Hlndenburg Is dead, Kitchener is alive Tho work that he began continues and will continue Our own great draft armies aio in a .sense his heirloom. It is said that ho never married, that lie founded no family. But he founded a family whose deeds will resound as long ns men honor courage and unflinching patience. In a year's time ho raised a family of four million men in khaki. He showed tho world what civilian levies can do. It is tragic that ho did not llvo to see our own National Army, which would have spoken so directly to his heart. The world loves to invent legends for Its great men. Around tho tall grim figure of Kitchener has grown the story of a sphinx of ice and iron, a woman-hater, a demon of efficient coldness and brusquerie. All such legends we take pains to disbe lieve. Mr. Schwab, Philadelphia's newest citizen, saw Kitchener at the time of his greatest stress, when he was planning des perately how he could provide ills armies with enough guns nnd shells. Mr. Schwab has told how KItchener'R face nnd voice were broken with emotion. It Is never safe to assume that a man Is a woman-hater Just because he is a bachelor, or that ho has tho temper of a frosty devil because he scowls at the news paper man's camera. Kitchener detested useless and Idle chatter. He had a passion for getting things done. He was born in Ireland. These apparent contradictions so puzzled the Interviewers that naturally they were in no mood to observe the facts. Kitchener was wise in the ways of war. He saw? long before most, that the conflict would bo a long and bitter one. He had faced the German military machine in his youth when, as a boy of twenty, he had enlisted with the French in 1870. w Probably the finest and deepest tribute eveSnaid to Kitchener was that of O HenryS- In one of his stories (Is it "The Unfinished Story'"') O Henry describes how his little shopgirl heroine keeps a photo of that strong,, soldierly face on the bureau In her mean" hall-bedroom to remind her to play the game to the end and not to flinch before the temptations that assail her. O. Henry, with his vivid human In sight, read the secret of that hard, fine face. He saw the tenderness and humor and knighthood behind the stern mask. How often the men who scowl at the pho tographer are the tendercat after all. The common people are always right. Tom, Dick and Harr.v, Eliza and Mary Ann, all the little folk of England, took K. of K. to their hearts. India and Egypt worshiped him. He gave England all he had; behind her errors and ab surdities he saw the fine tradition of democracy and clean-handedness that have marked her dealings with men. In every trench and field where the armies of the Allies aie fighting his spirit is still alive. C. D. M. Liberia's Philatelic Hoodoo The Republic of Liberia has a phllatello hoodoo in the person of Its President, Daniel Howard, whose portrait has been kept by the fortunes of war from appealing on the post age stamps of Ills own uoumry At the time the world war began the postal adheslves of Liberia contained the p'cture of cx-Presldent Barclay. Apparently this dis tressed the dignity of President Howard and he ordered printed at Hamburg, Germany, a new series of btamps portraying his own honored likeness. These stamps were printed as directed and a German steamship started southward car rying the labelb in its cargo This was late in July, 10 H. In August came the days of the beginning of the downfall of the Hohen zollerns and the German ship with the new Liberia btampa had not reached her destina tion. British warships Intercepted the vessel and took her a prize of war to Sierra Leone. Here the examination of the cargo disclosed the presence of the Llberian stamps, but as they were addressed to a German agent In Liberia and not to Piesident Howard there was apparently no way of knowing so the British reasoned whether President Howard had actually made payment for the stamps or whether the labels still belonged to the German Governmept. So the British confiscated the labels. Presi dent Howard, learning of it. decided to play safe the next time by ordering some stamps printed in England instead of Germany. Again were adhesives prepared, once more bearing tho Liberia executive's poi trait. This time a British merchant bhlp started forth with them. A German torpedo Intercepted this vesbel, which went to the bottom of the Eea with the consignment of stamps bearing President Howard's portrait. ' Presumably President Howard wag by this time discouraged, for Instead of again order ing new stamps made his Government began surcharging the remainder of previous sets with new values, adopting this practice with stamps ranging as far back as 1880. The suggestion that the terrible black volume, with Its 47,000 names of wicked Britishers, is the famous Domesday Book is gratuitously submitted to witnesses in the crazy Pcmberton-BIIUng-Maud Allan trial, accounts of which make the Dreyfus case seem a miracle of lucidity. , In view of what has already happened, it should be perfectly easy to prove that the ex-Mpret of Albania Is roally.a direct descendant of William the Conqueror, that the Norman ruler was largely of Teuton blood and that, he compiled his muco-ttatea aocumems in .juoj in order to THE GOWNSMAN ACADEMIC freedom is a red rag, exas - perating to bulls, college presidents and university trustees, a thing to bo gored, trampled and tosed In the nlr. To the quiet bruins of the lace, who go about their own business and not about other people's, the academic variety of freedom seems less a led lag than a "glad rag," to bo aired llko a hood and gown at com mencements or on other commemorative occasions nnd to bo properly boxed and protected from the moths the rest of tho year. From another angle, academic free dom is the red rag tied to tho tall of the academic cart, warning the careless passer by, "Tills cart is loaded, hands off!" rpHE Gownsman has a conviUlon that all - real human freedom is as impartial as sunsliine, beaming on the Just nnd the un just alike, illuming tho little as well as the big, though incapable of refracting as much from a Email surface as from a great. The Gownsman has another conviction, and that is that since the days of Solomon no one human being has had a patent-celestial to absorb to himself all the wisdom of the race. It seems not irrational to believe that a man who boa studied a subject Is likely to know somewhat more about that subject than another who draws his knowledge only from his inner conscious ness; and It seems preposterous to the Gownsman to suppose that addiction to books and to study necessarily destroys tho common sense of the scholar. There fore the inference that in things which belong to that in which each Is an expert the teacher Is more likely to be right than the nontcacher, be ho trustee or business man, who criticizes him. w E MAY even go a step further and de- claie that ever." free man has a right to his opinions and to tho control of his peisonal conduct, and tho questions who he Is, what he does, where he stands are Ir relevant. But there are limitations to the freest ot the free, for every man has parted with Jome of his "Inalienable rights" that he may enjoy the protection of his fellow men, and live, by an implied . agreement, under the law. There aie even individual limitations. There are places into which a clergyman ought not to go unless he is unmistakably slumming. And there are licenses which we allow to "the tired business man" as though nobody else was ever tired! which would stretch the most clastic conception of the teacher's fieedom to the breaking point. THE new trades union for college teach ers, or, as It would prefer to be desig nated, "The American Association of Uni versity Pi ofessors." has In the two or three years of its existence examined and passed on some ten or a dozen cases of violation of the lights of academic freedom, extend ing territorially from Connecticut to Mon tana and from Colorado back to our own Pennsylvania. The Gownsman never quotes statistics except to the confusion of the statisticians. But when we recall that there are nearly a thousand universities, colleges and technological institutions In "these the United States of America" in which there are at least fifty times as many ardent, eager, alert teachers, talking hard every djiy in the week, the degree to which their utterances go unchallenged Is something remarkable. THE right to say whatever you want to say. wherever jou are -and whenever you choose Is less a question of freedom than one of kindness, decency and good manners. The people who get Into trouble In this way are usually taking a short cut into that sea of troubles in which they are happiest when most deeply submerged and struggling. You may walk all day on the monotonous boardwalk of dally life, com porting yourself like an ordinary, in glorious citizen and nobody will look at you twice. But contrive to drop off a pier, when It, is well occupied with people and when rescue Is not likely to prove too hazardous, and you can make a sensation and perhaps get your petty name and, possibly your pretty picture Into the papers. There Is much to say for academic freedom as a means of publicity, and a chapter on the subject should find a place in every well-regulated tieatlse on the art of self-advertisement. THE most recent finding of the Arru-rlcan Association, mentioned above, has to do with academic freedom in wartime, and the query at once arises, Shall our can tankerous friends, our advertising friends, our friends who are afflicted with a burn ing zeal for martyrdom, it matters not about what, be restricted In the various kinds of free speech which lead them so certainly to these goals of their desires? Is there a difference between splashing In the water of ordinary controversy which may anger, wet, perhaps even muddy, and playing with fire In a dangerous proximity to much that Is inflammable? IN ENGLAND "the legitimacy of except ional restraint upon fre,e speech In time of war" has been strenuously maintained. But it has been argued, vigorously that the mate aione iB.eniuiea io exereue sucn IS IT HOT ENOUGH FOR YOU? rV I X professors, while It accepts these Kwo prin ciples "ns expressing a sound presump tion," argues for tho deprivation of aca demic office wherever a teacher had been convicted of disobedience to existing law or lawful executive order, or where such teacher Is proved to have undertaken propaganda cither actively by pacifist ten ets or by Interference with legitimate ac tivities growing out of the war. The ques tion is a nice one nnd not easily decided. There is much quiet, dangerous propa ganda In our schools nnd colleges, even now that wo aro avv'ake to It. Shall we leave it to do Its deadly work until an Im personal Government steps In to protect us? Or shall we help protect ourselves? The question Is not tho abstract mainte nance of that magnanimous fiction of our law, "all men are Innocent until proved guilty." It Is rather whether we can risk tho enemy within the gate. IT IS one of the glories of our State that any man may worship God as he pleases; more that he may worship as many gods as ho pleases, or, It such be his folly, he wor ship nono at all. and, believe, misbelieve or unbelleve precisely as he will. But It Is no interference with tho avowed atheist's "right of religion" to question his compe tency as a witness If there Is reason to doubt his recognition of the sanctity of an oath. Old report tells that It la part of an annual festival atN one place In Bengal to drag out a heavy car In which Is borne along an Image ,pf Vishnu and that his frenzied devotees prostrate themselves be fore Its progress In sacrifice to the god. Suppose such nn attempt "to worship God" wero to start out today on Broad street, would our pitiful Mayor, who loves not bloodshed, be breaking the laws of the republic It he Instructed his obedient police to run in the car of Juggernaut precisely llko anv other old dray impeding traffic? "The public safety is the supreme law. Whatever may be true In times of peace, In times of war we cannot afford to let even the academic heathen rage, A Sipn of Slackening The Kaiser has decorated the Crown Prince for "brilliant successes." Usually this sort of thing marks the end rather than the beginning of a German military enterprise, and it may perhaps bo taken as a sign of the forecasting by the Kaiser of the stop Foch Is putting to the latest drive. The decoration would come more appropriately while the Germans were 'still moving for ward. Rochester Tost .Express. A Wartime Crop Scientists are discussing the use of the seaweed In the Sargasso Sea to obtain sup plies of potash Utility Invades everything. Heretofore, all that has come from the sar gasso Sea has been supplies of romance. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Swatting the "Wanderlust" Bv raising the passenger fares Sir. Mc Adoo has imparted a summer meaning to the "Home," Sweet Home" motto that many peo ple have . never been acquainted with. Houston Post. In Place of Goosesteps Soldiers in the trenches are Inventing a lot of new dances. With the Idea of teaching them to tho Kaiser, we suppose. Johnstown Democrat. Change the Breed Funds for the war must be kept coming to the Government. The Treasury now wants retriev ers, not watchdogs Washington Star. Lofty Enterprises The gardening season isn't yet In full swing in New York, but the roof gardens will all be open June 1. Boston Globe. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. Where Is foliate UniTersltJ touted? 2. Who uc John Ilartrnm? 3. What I the national floral emblem of Canada? 4. Name the author of "Wetrd Ho." 5. Which l tho Tor Heel Mate? 6. Where In I.aon? V 7. Mho la General Slit Ton Arn'.nv? R. What is the capital of Pennsylvania? 0. What treat bodies of vtster Mere named after Mr Henry Hudson? 10. What Is the tltls of the hlr to the Eniilsh throne? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. James Monroe was re-fleeted In 1(!0 unan imously but for a slnale vote, one eleetor refunlnc to aire to any other President a distinction accorded to Washinfton. 2. Illinois Is called the Prolrle Mate. a. Dominie Karopsom an absent-minded pda rotue In "Guy Mannerlnir," noted for his characteristic exclamatlou of "l'ro-dli-1-ous." 4. Sir Walter Rcott wrote "Our Mannerlnc." 5. The tree most noted for lonjeilty Is th red wood-of California. 6. Clont the Implanted twit or wood ot a crafted tree. 7. Claude Kltchln Is the Democratic floor leader in the llouie, (. Alsnei on Important river ot northern France, ronnlaa; Mat to jeil. flowing Into to OUe, which flows Into th Bern. a. Brown University Is la Provldeic. E. I. i ttgy.-yyy&.w.M. . 'ahJ Westermsn. In the Ohio State Journal. A WHITE-THROAT SINGS FROM ancient Edens long forgot He felt a breath of spring. And In the leafless apple tree He heard a white-throat sing. With fluted triplets, clear and sweet, The bird proclaimed his Joy, And on tho withered orchard grass The man became a boy: A boy who ran, a boy who dreamed, In April sun and rain; Who knew all good was happiness, All evil only pain. Sing on, O white-throat In the tree. He does not hear you now! The years are trampling on his heart And armies o'er his brow. From ancient Edens long forgot No resurrection comes Until the smallest sparrow's song Is louder than the drums! Walter Prlchard Eaton, in the Atlantia Monthly. The Reader's Viewpoint Trieste in the German Plot To the Editor of the Evening Public Ledger Sir A special cable to the Evenino Pub lic Ledoer, dated May 30, gives us parts ot the latest speech of the Austrian Emperor delivered to several deputations from the western provinces of his empire. These In formed him that Austria Is Inextricably bound up with the Trieste trade, which Is In German hands. The emperor asserted that "his Government will always be on the side of those who- wish to keep Intact the sacred heritage of the glorious past and pre serve it Intact for future generations." He further on asserted that "never In any man ner whatever will the .rights and develop ments of the German Inhabitants of Austria be checked." . He could have omitted this last confession : we knew ven well that Austria is a vassal of Germany,' and that th nations subjected to her can expect no consideration. But the assertion that the trade of Trieste is in Ger man hands proves to be absolutely without foundation. It finds Its root In that vast network of llti and misrepresentations which Is generally known as German propaganda. We have often heard that, though Trieste Is certainly Italian In her population, geog raphy and history, yet we ought not to take her from Austria, since she constitutes her most Important harbor. On the other hand, we are Informed that, should Trieste return to her mother country, her Importance would greatly diminish, since her trado would' be absorbed by Venice. "Both statements are clearly refuted by facts. What little Austria has done in favor of Trieste she has done with the purpose of stimulating an antagonism with Venice: dls- .HvJ criminatory freight rates have been used toKfl ,kl. -... rr-t.,.. ..M-.-j .I...1... iu . .. . H ima vim. aiiib oujjju0cu i ivniry in iraoe was A h. IK.ll a.. In........ n .. . n mi. u. 4..-. .w uo wdm no ni, iiiiw, lain aifeUtllcni IOT t keeping under control one of the most im- portant seaports of Italy. There aro no in herent reasons for this supposed rivalry. Venice, through her geographical position, should domfhate the trade not only on her ' side of tho Alps, hut alto In part of the In terior of Europe, up to the natural sphere of Influence of the German ports of the North Sea, Trieste, on' the other hand, be sides her hinterland, very rich and capable of great development, dominates the trade with the Levant, which now represents about 60 per cent of her total On the day on which European and Asiatic Turkey shall be freed from the Incompetent rule ot her pres ent government there will be no limit to the amount of trade which the Levant will offer. Coming now to the pretended German In terests In Trieste, we find that these are non existent. The total trade of Trieste amounts , to about 5,500,000 tons; of this whole 3,100, 000 represent the maritime trade. Now the participation, of Germany In the maritime trade constituted In 1911 but 7.5 per cent of the total trade, while Italy Is represented by J3 per cent, 1. e, by an e.ven greater total than that of the Austro-Hungarlan ports. wnicn are, alter an, mainly Italian. The fact Is that Austria, while always suomissive io mo unjust rivalry oi tne uer op man rjorts against. Trier! iv has onlv hn w1; Intranslged In encouraging an antagonism, 'V Between vemca ana irieste. j This city under Austria, I, e., under Gr- '.--'I many, would continue to be starved In favor 1 of the German ports. She would never be forgiven for remaining, In spite of all perse cution, a typical Italian city. The reasons for Germany's longing for her possession are essentially political. This Important city could serve as a gateway into the Medlter rean and aa a bridgehead for the political conquest of the Levant and the Far East, Hamburg-Trieste. Constantinople Is only a part of the Berlin to Bagdad program of l domination. ,.V nut tne a ream entertained oy tne Austrian 41J emperor of "keeping Intact the sacred heri tage" of murder, tyranny and oppression Is already doomed to a rude awakening. Only last week Secretary Lansing declared Anierl- i ca's friendliness toward the ODnressed racaa ' : of Austria. In the name of th most sacred principles of liberty and nationality we are bound to wipe oft the earth the horrible rtalv Aft which goes udder thu na:n of (ha Auatrija',.,',-1 -J "iUV. .r -.i rt I J - I ".Ml M. io my Wit ire ue 'tee Its y fi w fcftKfe m&timmRsm C.fSL. ? SKm.Q ---", .r , A &: . mfik ls.,tM&rfA 'A Ski ". v - Vir'il" . ." SkttfufiJs. KaMttiii't w MtVltfEr&a. . V VMH)asKaMaiBsssssw3aUBt-l is, firms .' .UV n iasTTTIlasWsssTsli I IS H Hli' tj. Mi