:gj BIWaJa mrmtm'miimw tf, m 3T It1 'to -r, . i ",'' ',.' (. .W,.,.' ,t ' r. WV m .-vft?. C && s t N 5J.v I'JtA. WVf? - ',tsfs -v. 'Wf. tJim Subordinated by i Interests, Declares Colonel Wilson Urged People to Re!elect Men Who Opposed I ffom Pat One BMC Who belleV-pd t rtM int all Im- tllmwthti of politics nelde and put our th." &MlVw unreservedly at the sen Ice of the if' 'rresldent Of course If Mr. Wllmn hnd ; 'frwiiij- meant to nisres-artt politics he &'..' fci'- "' onr' ' rnnntrurleil n mull. n..wC.ftlall. fien-nnrtUiin rnhltiM. rnltlnfr ft.. fj S" . I it i-A mAM nf til iiltnn In It, l.lla.l ? fZj&mmt moot Impiirtnnl oltlreo under lilni, fft iWtttioiit regard to politic--.. Ilr did nnth f"' "' ' " hind. '" "' posit'on," woM I rJfijrital to Ihe conduct of the war, and In Ji 'M positions now- niot Important In aj'conneetlon w,ln neRotlatliiR pence, he "H retained or appointed men without the r?ra slightest fitness for the performance of ti$ fit-ft, taab uW finl Mir-Aii'lnliiniljitlfin ?, ;, y"" .- -.- - 7'" '" . V3J!iW a supple encermsi to servt- mi sL' ' 'if9 vf-son personally nnd to serve Ml tt'll f "$m "$ ion's party Insofar ns suth service bene- h "'Kilt ''v., Wltnon Canti Off Mn'k fcaLs am Bind that Mr, Wilson has now Prff?.. east off the mask, His nppenl Is now to Lar-V, "" Bur nartlsansh In. ItV his nctlone tlnci 'V-i. "" pure partisanship. By his action Mtioe Kfc hi announced that politico wne ml ,sv4 -4n,tt,.,t V hu VinH atromlv 1 fmmtlnlpil Ills Vyj words: for he had already Interfered K ''for purely political reasons In the elic- K-V!' . Hon. contests In Wisconsin. Illinois, fi MIchlKan and man, other Sfte Now ' Michigan and matij other Stnte? .ii"?!' Be openly u format announceinem m" rt . ' . . . . . V.cMfttea all pretense of puttlnit the public ? . . , ... ,.- .,... ......... weiiare auovu imii., . in- uninn. that this U o party war, and thai the ,, 'jiMh .. llfiniihllrans. IthollKli he admits "tin. tker hae been unouestlnniilil pro-war," kr to be esluded from any share In rsntrolllni- the war, '"Nor is this all. He makes his appeal on behalf of the Democratic party. Hut he Is careful to qualify II so as to e clude all Democrats who put loynlt. to the nation or een lo.inlty to their paity principles ahead of adheience to the ad ministration. He In no way discrim inates between Democratlcs who arc pro war and those who are anti-war He asks the exclusion from ConKress of Hie man who Is antl-admlnlstratlon, without the slightest reference to whethet he Is pro-war or anti-war, lojal or dlslojal, patriotic or unpatriotic. The one tcft he. Imposes is lojalty to himself. "The President of the I'nlted Staws repudiates the position of helnp; Treat ment of all the people, nnd substitutes .for It the position of partisan leader ship of one, political faction, while cen in this faction he makes servile adhei ence to his admlnlsttatlon the test of membership and of the moral rlRht of "any man to do his share In thf Meat work of national ?elf-so eminent "Lincoln made no pirty test He ap pealed to all loal men of all parlloi He askd that the test of fitness for Congress be, not adherence to his per irenal administration, but unconditional support of the war. Mr WIIon applies the most rigid party test He explicitly "&ni repudiates loyalty to the war as a lesi ,iWS - He, demands the success of the Demo fjsi"' eratic party, and asks the defeat of all J" tiro-war men if thev hnc been anti- .fMvXir., administration He iisks fo" the defeat .'&. iof nro-war Republicans He does not ft&J,' task for the defeat of anti-war Dcnio "45t ' crata. On the contrary, he supports 'fflfkS uch men if, although anti-war. they are pro-administration. He dona not Xkj- ask for loyalty to the nation He asks. Ti'Ti .only for support of himself. . '"There is not the slightest susgestlon that he disapproes of. disloyalty to the j. nation. I do not doubt that he does ftel il"W',m" disapprpval of such dlslojalty : but .& apparently this feellnc on his part ,ls so ,' .rt repm xnat il bui itum iitn inn, "iin iVIs'he contemplates what he resards as Ihe S?lar greater sin of failure In adherence Wr Much Unllkr I.lmuln r.'Vj-,. '' ,phoc ,, IIV, 11,1a II, a MrtSlllnil nf .t,rffi.fiteShrhiim Lincoln. In I hi- darkol dnj fM-0Bl f,'" War, I.lnroln ilrrllnrd out rklO'rlffht to niakf any onrtr anoeiil or to fwVV'V "jPP'y any party test or any Ifst if 17,' tat of loyalty In the prosecution of thr rSfe,"1 r "I loynltr to the Union and tu Hbccty. In March, 18C3, he advocated endlntr to Conirre&s only 'unconditional 'supporters of the war,' making no ref erence to any party; and in June of that year, in answer to some correspond- sinta who signed themselves as "Demo erats,' he expressed his regret that they -had not called themselves 'American c 'citizens,' saying, 'In this time of na- ,, 'tlonal peril I would have preferred to meet you upon a level one step higher titan any party platform' ; and In Au gust, in the only political letter he " wrote that year, he appealed to Mil those who maintain unconditional devotion to the Union," and In this nppenl he ex plicitly included .his own political friends with those- of his polttlcal enemies, whom no partisan malice or partisan 'hope can make false to the nation's life.' "He thus explicitly based his appeal to pro-war men, without nsking about their attitude toward himself. Again and again he appealed to 'all loyal men' and to 'all friends of union and liberty,' , and in 1S64 he accepted his nomination aa coming from the 'unconditional Union men.' j "I ask all patriotic Americans to con alder Just what is meant when the r . President says that jn the present Con ''Kress "the leaders of the minority al- "'though unquestionably pro-war have ,been antl-admlnlstration." These leiid- jt. fltra nnnortrd flit nilminlitlrutlnn ultfn Cr, !4Ji- " deelaratlnn 1 Mnr was needed., They "ffi$$$ Supported It when there wuk h demnnd jJTlftsSij ?r " l-"' They nupported it when 'Jtoji sfwa sent the army oieturat,, Tli'y up- i;X,e : portea eiery demumi for money wnetnr ' "vlsr! Slr taxation nr by lounn. Thej unpported KfSjj' sirary lu where It tood for vigorous K,jaiT'&.raaratlon of the wart and they mp. ' '&ftW m tr mmw i. Hiiiiuiitr ,,,,, . ,,i,a,,,, - ,, '. i't-U:iviitTtTa It on these lonura when liulf the -pSSysped lilnv when he hud roinmilleil ri-fcHnaelf to war measure and yet 1'resi j4tmX Wilson now makes a partisan np- PfTfijSjsst In favor of the Democrats wno ,'i-iSB)posd the war measures and against t.'Kf ;lm Bapubllcana who supported them. 'M$M; ' Only Asked Kffleleney Kl . A'siiSwi he speaks of these leaders as being, ..jri-j. .-. : .- . . . . .., j , ,V.synciusTn -pro-wnr, yei anvi-aomin. '&iMfnXtm'1 He means that when the rMStr Deuartment was administered with KsftMtcr Inefficiency they Investigated the r5"'fc' '' and Insisted upon efficiency. He I',V'ir''' ln,,t when tney 'oul-d thnt noth- iS ective was ueiua uuuo jn cuii'- M2TlMln. tl,A. tnulRtorl that ttlR WOfk bfl r ,--H-.". 'W --"- "" "- h. " ,h J Ml1, IIC IIIBfll'B ,,v ,,,, .... hthat 1600.000.000 had been spent airplanes and yet that not an alr- jhad reached our dialers at me - tney insisted mat ouj uiuitfr .get the airplanes for which the had paid. Mr. yvuson resarus 'antl-admlnlstration to ueinanu U our Mllanl men at tnt tronv receive I 'kiins and autorifles nnd tanks and planes ana &no,es mm uiunwnf, , Ml Congress hao apprupriniea so ay,' billions of dollars. The entire of- 'Ot me wepuuiicmi "" - i's eyes is that tney nave ae- 1 that, inefficiency, waste ana ex SRce.be remedied. Such n, de- ,h, treats as 'antl-admlnlstration. r worda, tna attuuae wmen p- . .. .n.TTlarf Speopie rs-- i,.w-fc.,,,.v mOVm rezards us antl-admintstra- "UtfUttr laeaad t Natlan" tMtC-;n th contrary, tnat ttiese aJMitsMl'Isaters have In a great Mown compute mqian vu 4 eootpiet aevotton to, ins 'Tfcr,rt; ., llptrstly " ss". -." "- r ' ibi, VAarlASslv fSi - -r the President .to Selfish and Par- War and Shielded Failures him when ne was rlsht, nnd supported hint vvhrit he was wrnnp. He ursos that the p'oplc (eturn to ConRress the men who were anti-war hut who shielded the failures of the Adminis tration. Jle urpes that the people de feat for foiiRres? the men who were pro-war hut who soimht to remedy the failures of the Administration. I)e puts lo alty to the nation second, and ndhereme to his personal leadership first The llepuhllrnn leaders whom hr ti-.ii1l Iiiivi- tint lnnlt3 to Ihe na tion ahead of all nlher rnnaldiTatlnn nnd Itiur rnndllloned llielr support of evrr.v i-tefntlie oltlelsl nlelj npnit Ihe eftldrnrj with which that ofllrlal neres th nation. "And t ask Mm to cnnHirlei- one ihlnu more, ou Itepiihllcimt and Independ pnls and nu hemocrats who decline to put crltip'nc sulivervtence to any mm ahead nf the Kepubllc Indeed, T appeal most of all to the hlRh-mlnded and patriotic I'emoerats whose hojs are giit In the nrn.y sld hv side with Hie hos nf thelf tlcptibllcnn neighbors, nnd who do not wish to stc these Pivnl neljchbors treated as enemies of the llepubllo Kepnhllrnii Not (tnnd Ktinuch riruldenl Wilson says that nrpuhll cans n'e not rood enough to erp the lirpulillo In tVnuuss at this time lint thej are Knid etintish tit Olr for the Itrpnhllt' ir, (hi arm-, anil n? 1 The.. ri, cn, r.,niiBli in pn the tae. anil mibsrrlbe to the Innnl We huvp sent our smiH n ml nur brothers In Mill tltplr blond HI, wittrr nvrr-en, undrr the flu'Tl we hsve Klveii our "triiiR-th nnd our nirnrv vvlHtout vtlnt to serve the I'ountrv at home. In final Ihe l.nnns, to had. 'ip thr w-ir actlvlllrs of every kind, and now we are told tint the blood of our sons, and the money saved at the cxpni-e of our wives and little children, dn not entitle us to anv woid In savin? how the war Is to he waged' Or what are tho terms on which peace is to he nrulo. or what shall he our pol'clc-, after the war' "Mr Wilson av that this Is nn time for divided counsels Vet the Confuta tion of the I nltert States says that hi musl counsel with the Congress of the United Stales. It Is mere Inso lence for the servant of the people to sny that he will not counsel with those other servants of the people whom the p opli l.ave elected for tho express piltpoe nf giving him counsel The wot Id would be hfttrr' off now by hundieds nr thousands or fearless lives nnd b.v nnny bullions of dollars ot ue.isur if Mr Wllon had been v lining to supplement his own self surllclent Ignorance bv Hi? counsel of those who would gladly have coun seled him wisely, but wou'd not creep into his presence as slaves. Itfprpfteutntlv e, In Army S-o far as 1 know, no Dnnoeiatlc Con sressman has resigned his seat to go to the war Hut six I.epubl'can Congress men have teslgned to go Into the army, and alreadv one of these has died These men are deemed fit to die for the coun try ; but the President ea.vs that they and those like them are not rtt to sit In Ihe councils of Hip Nation and to take pait in m slnplng our policy that out men shall not die in vain The Prctldent .as that Hi's is hi war. not the people's war and that the half of the ptople who have been most itholute in favor of the firm and cfilclenl prosecution of the war are hereafter to be excluded from all share In its management, and from all say-so as to the peace which Is to crown and justify it. We can pay with the blood of our hearts' dearest; but that iB all that we are to he allowed to do; and jet the price we pay, und the peace the nation is to get for that price, nie to be settled by the agency or the aid of the men of cold hoart who do not fight themselves whose nearest kin Aft- not In danger, who prepared for war not at all, who helped wage the war feebly, and who ate content with a craven peace Henry Ford has announced that he does not believe in patriotism, that he thinks the flag Is silly and does not be lieve in It, and that when this war is over he will pull the flag down and never hoist It again. The son of this multi millionaire stays at home while hundreds of thousands of men of small means leave their wives and children nnd go to the war But Mr Wilson U sup porting Mr Foul for the Senate. On the other hand Senator Weeks does believe in patr'otisin. He does believe in war His nnl. son Is fljrhl Ing overen ut this uininrnl fining death side by side with his comrades from every rank of life. lint Mr. Wilson U opposing Mr Meek. There are dozens of such cases , and the only explanation possible of the President's attitude Is that he makes adherence to his personil fortunes and not loyally to the nation the acid test in accordance with which he gives or withholds support Tha rresidint's personal organ, the Woild, Itself sn3 that the present Democratic Congress Is a 'slacker Con gress ' And the Piesldent asks the volets to keep these slackers In control provided onl that these slackers follow him with abject alaciity in whichever new direction he mav momentarily lead. Small wonder that in the cloakroom of the House the hitler' jest circulates: Here n to our Ciar, last In war. flrot toward peace, long may he waver" "The -President .s lie is anxious about the iffect on tleim.iny and our allies of the election of a Congies which would follo'v the present Ileiiuhllcan lendeishlp of the House and Senate. He need be under no anxiety It, would be clearl.v understood abroad as nt homo. Our alllm would know that it meant Unit America vvn determined to speed up the wnr, to buck her own urmy nud the nrinlrs o the allies to the limit. In tolerute no lorruptlun.or IneMileni'j In ivaglnx the war and to insist on (ier inan.' uneuiidltloiiul hurrender, (irrmuns l.eallie Muiul "Germany and her vassal States would know that In this country the pro-Oer-mans and pacifists nnd Bolshevists and Germanlze'd Socialists could no longer he counted upon as' efficient and tor tUoUH tools, that the fighting men and not the rhetoricians were uppermost, and that henceforth the Germans would have to deal with the resolute and straightforward soul of the American people and not merely with the obsbure purposes nnd wavering- will of Mr, Wil son. ."And. finally, let our people remem ber that the Incoming Congress will deal with the vital questions of reconstruc tion after the war. The President pro popes to let these questions be dealt with by those who control what his per gonal oigan calls the present 'slacker CongresB.' He proposes to put the re construction of the country In the hands of these slackers under the guidance of such men as Mr. Kltchln, the present leader of the House, and Incidentally one of the anti-war leaders of the House. Hursly ttie country will feel that this work of reconntruc.lon ought to be In trusted to other handa, and that then hands hall be those of the Kepubliran leaders, whose vision It for Ihe futiirs and who yet poitru prartlral ability to work for the best Interests of the pres ent." Continuing;, Mr, Roosevelt said: "I believe In putting this war through to our last man and our last dollar rather than to fall In beating Germany to htr knees. That Is the spirit of our wonderful nghtlnsj men at the trout. The world, has'never seen finer fighting Bicntbu. our,' soldiers at tbs front, Hut ROOSEVELT DECLARES WILSON PUTS PARTY BEFORE PATRIOTISM Uerv are a few of the many sttlklnc point? In Colonel Roosevelt'.. Indict ment of tlietrresldent'n nppenl for the election Of n Democratic Coiwcss! "It Is nn emphatic repudiation nntl reversal of the President's; announce ment of n few months hack that 'politics Is adjourned.' H easts the giuveit doubt on the sinceilty of t lint announcement, "Of course. If Mr. Wilson had really meant to rilsresaril politics he would nt once hne constructed n coalition, nonpartisan Cnblnel. ctlllns the licst men of the nation to the highest nnd most Important offices tindtfr him, without rcRiird to polltlci. He did nothing of the kind. "Mr. Wilson has now rnst off Ihe mnnk. His appeal is now to pure par tisanship. Hy his actions (since he nnnounced that politics weiv adjourned) lie had already tepiidlated Ills words; for he had already Interfered for purelv political reasons In Ihe electlun contestb, "lie nsks for the defeat of ptowar Hepubllcnns. He does not nnt for Ihe defeat of anti-war Democrnls, On the contrary, he bupports such nv.-n If, atthotiRh nntl-wr, l hey are pro-ndmlnlstra'tlon. He does not ask for loalty to the nation. He asks only for support of himself. "He puts loyalty to the nation second nnd ndherenc," In his personal leadership first, Over halt the Democrat In leaders uhom he Is now sup porting opposed him when lie wns right and supported him when lie wus wronc " nur small army mrrvpn without ti suf ficient number nf nverioiils or shoesi we tot uniforms from Ihe Hrltlsh, and two-thirds of the ships In vvhleh we ferried our troops nrrnss the nreuti were from the llrlttsh vie pnl onr cannon and our machine guns from the hard pressed 1'renrh, ttie tunks from the Hrlt lsh nnd rrenrh: we had priirllrnllj. no airplanes nt the front until seventeen months itfler we went In war In short, our gnvernmentnl shortcoming were no, himentnhle that even now we can fight nt all nnl.v because of Hie vvenpons our allies glv e us. "I hold that It was a foollh nnd evil thing to have failed to prepare during the tvo years and a. half alter the world wnr began, nnd n foolish nnd evll.thlng to hnve shown the hesitation nnd delay and incompetency displayed In making our stiength effective, which vve showed for over a year after we had llnally helplessly drifted stern foremost Into the war I hold that It is our riut.v now to insist upon tlio maximum efficiency and upon absolute dlsregnid of all po litical considerations In speeding up the war. Let us try to win it nt once; but let us set ourselves resolutely to win It, no matter what the cost and no matter how long It lakes. Must Tare lllunders "I hold that It Is neccssaty clearly to fare the dreadful blunders and worse than blunders that have been made In order to avoid repeating them in the future Hut I ho'd with even greater tenacltv that It Is our duty to treat these blunders not In any way as nn excuse, for failure to do our duty, but as an additional Incentive to devoting every ounce of strength we have to win ning the wai If we hnd prepared In advance the war would hnve been over ninety dajs after we entered It. "If the Administration had used with moderate efficiency the results of the lavish generosity of ,''ongro"s our armies and the Allied ariiiie. would have been doing last March what they actually me doing now In October. I trust our people will Keep well in mind, ns a les son concerning the mere money cost of unprepnredness, that the enormous sums we have had to raise by taxation and by boi rowing are at the very least twice ns great as If we had begun to prepare in advance, without Hurry nnd confusion and without the attendant waste and extravagance and profiteering, nnd with the patriotic and businesslike refusal to consider politics or anything else except vv inning tho war. "We should accept no penee not hiifced nn the unconditional Hurremler of (ler mim.v unit her vassal iillies, Aiifctrirrft and Turke.v, nnd upon the freeing n" the siihjerl ruees of Austria nnd Turkey front the yoke of the Austrian, ttie Mag yar nnd the Turk. Therefoie, It Is In excusable In us, and Is a reflection upon our good faith, to have remained so long vv Ithout declaring war on Turkey, for It Is mere hypocrisy to talk of making the world safe for democracy so long as we are not at war with Turkey and have not Insisted upon putting the Turk out of Kurope and freeing the Armenian nnd the Syrian of all creeds from his yoke and giving Palestine to be made a Jewish State. Freedom for All Nations "I would not subject the German or the Magyar to the dominion of any one lse. Hut neither would I permit them to lord it over any one else. The true way to put a stop to Oermany's nbllity again to innvulse the world by un ef fort to secure world ' dornlniitinn Is to give, not nutiinomy, but freedom to ull the nations that now cower under he tyranny of fiermany and her Allies. Belgium, of course, must he lcstored and limply Indemnified; and all the gold that Germany has cannot repay Belgium the fr'ghtful wrongs so wan tonly committee against her b.v Ger many during the last four years France musl receive back Alsace and Lonalne, nnd Germany he forved to carry out her broken promise to the Danes of North Schlesw Ig, "All of Poland mutt be a separate commonwealth, with a seafront on the Baltic; Finland, the Balt'o piovlnces, Lithuania nnd Ukrania must lie made as absiluttly Independent of Germany ns of Ilusala; the Czecho-Slowiks and the Jugo-Slavs must, be made Into independ ent commonwealths; the llumanlans In Kast Hungary restored to Rumania ; thn Italians of Southwestern Austria joined to Italy ; thn Greeks safeguarded In their rlghtr; Constantinople made a free city, and all other Injustices remedied In so far aa It Is humanly pos Dibla to do so. The German stronghold must he re moved from Russia, and vve should our selves help RussfYt so far as the will per mit ut to do so, and we cannot efficiently do so unless our Government nets with Infinitely greater vvir.dom, forethought. Insight and resolution than it has shown In Its handling of ths Siberian matters for the. last six months. "Th President's first note to Ger many, about two weeks ago, delivered hi in Into the hands of Germany by hi compromising Inquiries, It was ac cepted by the Allies and accepted by nur own people as meaning that If Germany unsvvrrrd she act ually did niiiirrr he wus bound by the Implication of the questions lie had asked. There was In this country a very extiaordlnary outburst of Indig nation and protest and a demand for the peace of unconditional surrender. Senators Lodge and Polndexter and a number of other Senators, including one or two high-minded ' independent Democrats, hut In the great majority of Instances Republicans, Introduced resolutions or took other action em phatically repudiating tiie Implications of the President's Inquiries and de- mmmmm i'llilllWillia Fight the Hun of Disease and drive the poisons from ths blood by drinking the famous Mountain Valley Water. Today, mors than svtr before, recognised for its wondtrful health-giving;' properties. MountairiValleyl Hf SJ Water Drink It to Get Well Pure, Palatable Sample it FREE 718 Chestnut St. " o7 r lnandlng unconditional sut render by Germany. .Vote lilslnrh Allies "Our Allies were as profoundly dis turbed as our ow n people, and their clear understanding of the situation Is shown by a special cable from Paris contained In the, Democratic 'New 'York Times' of October 1, which says "'The reports of the debates In the American Senate share first pages with the news of the great military victories on the western front. Senators Mc Cumber, .Vebiin nnd Lodge are as highly thought of In France today ns are the American generals.' Sntinn's Voice llenrd "The feeling was so strong that Presi dent Wilson speedily grew to realize It. Germnny answered him bv nn accept ance of his terms, phrased In the very words he had used There remained for him then only two courses of action. He was compelled either to fulfill the plain obligation oi his nolo by entering Into negotiations with Knlserlsm, vrltlcn mean) the sacrifice of America and humanity and which would hnve also certalnlv meant the repudiation of his nctlon hy the American people, or else he was himself obliged to respond In such fashion as to stultify his own diplomacy and tepudlalc h's own Implied offer. "I am thankful lhat he chose the latter course, he served our people and hu manity by doing so , hut It was a service tendered only because ho hnd received the sternest warning, bv the voice of the nation, that th's people would ratify no compioml'e and would tolerate no such parley as that upon which he had entered, and Inasmuch as he was the spok small for the nation. It was not a pleasant thing for Americans that he should have put himself and the nation behind him, , In the position of Inviting .1 proposition which vvhen accepted he repudiated For the very reason that 1 abhor Germany's trickery, treachery and bad fnlth, I am most nnxious that Americans shall not Imitate her in these mallei s. And now. In the light of Hie latest developments, vve are again utter ly at sea as to what position he will ultimately lake American Congress Needed "Demociatlc Senator Lewis, of Illi nois, hns actually Introduced n lesolu tlon pledging Congress to abdicate Us allegiance to the people and to substi tute therefor a frankly rubber stamp attitude of cringing acquiescence in any reversal 'of policy by the Administra tion, tt hnt we now need Is an Amer Icnn Congress, n Congress of Mralght out Americans, and not a CongresN ot rubber stamps. "It is necessnrv to make the world safe for democracy, and vve cannot do It unless vve make this nation safe for truth Truth telling, both where the Administration -Is light and where It is wrong, Is Imperatively demanded, Criticism is imperatively demanded. Nine times out of ten this Admlnis tration has never led the people. The leadership has been furnished by olhers, and tho Administration h.iB been reluctantly forced forward Into action by criticism against which it has vlo'ently protested. Rven when.it has followed this leadership it has sullenly and sometimes maliciously sought to punish the men who by their truth telling have forced it Into action II was such truth telling' that forced thr Administration reluctantly Into the war; It was such truth telling that forced the Administration to send our army abroad) It was nurh truth telllnjr which furred reasonable efficiency In the War Department: It' was sqch truth telling which has forced the speed ing up ef Ihe ship prngrnm, the air craft program and all the other pro grams which hare been so lamentably delayed. Spies f liven Tree Toot "The patriotic zeal of the people was taken ndvantage of to secure legis lation for the purpose of dealing with the work of German spies and with seditious conduct In onr own country. The laws thus enacted, however, have been used far less for their legitlmait purpose than to discourage and "penal ize any truth-telling by newspapers or by private individuals about the Ad ministration. Never before, hiy any war, has there been such Interference with freedom of the press and freedom of speech 'as In this war. The whole weight of effort has been not against seditious action, but against that legiti mate criticism of public measures unu pub'le, servants which is absolutely In dispensable if any country la to remain free In fact as well as in name. Ac cording to a former chief of the Secret Service, there are a quarter nf a million German spit In this country, and a Democratic Senator, Mr. Overman, Is i-rnnrted a maklna the figures even larger. Only an infinitesimal number nf these men have been really' pun ished. But the loyal press has been bullied and cowed as never osiore, The test Insisted upon has been not loyalty to our allies apd hostility to wer many, but adherence to the Adminis tration. It Is utterly Impossible to ao count on any other ground for the Im munity granted the so-calld Hearst papers, when compared with the extreme severity with which many other papers were treated for conduct which amounted to nothing whatever, but en tirely legitimate, criticism of wrong ac tion or of failure to aet properly by the Administration, Information Was withheld "'The Democratic slogan of 1916, Kept us out of war,' Ib now known to every intelligent person to have been political camouflage. Vital Information was withheld from the public to make Drink Drink It to eep Well ti Keep and Ttuteleii Watnut Lack of Efficiency Chargerf With Delay in Equipjng Army and Thereby Prolonging Hostilities Unconditional Sur-, render of Germany and Vassal Allies Demanded the stntnn effective. Ambassador flerard's disclosures and other evidences of Prus sian Intrigue and Insolence, subsequently given to the public, show the trne facts of onr relations with Germany as far bark as the sinking ef the t.tisltnhla. This concealment of facts showing the fixed nnd sinister purposes of Germnny and the failure for more than two ytnrs to make adequate preparation im measurably Increases the price In blood and money vve must now pay for victory. This is the sound doctrine to which nil good Americans should subscribe. "When II comes to the peace nrgolla' tlons we should emphntleal'.v repudiate the famous fourteen points announced by the President last .tannery. One of them he has himself repudiated, but the remainder are either so mischievous thai they ought to be repudiated without further definition or else we should insist upon having them defined In order to know Just exactly what they mean. They have been greeted with enthusiasm by Germany and by all the pro-Get mans on this side of the water, especially by the Germanized Socialists and by the Bol shevist? of every grade ;, and for Ihls reason good Americans should regard them with suspicion. For example, the statement about the freedom of the seas may he Interpreted ns meaning what Germany contends, and If so'no patriotic. American can support It. The first need In freeing the sens Is to free them from the German practice of mutdcr of In nocent women nnd children, IVotitd Make IT, M, a Dump t"Agaln, we ought to know Just what the Pres'denl means when he speaks ot breaking dovyn economic harriers. If he menns that he proposes to allow Ger mnny tn dump her manufactures on us without restriction vve ought to he against II, mid neither huslfiessinn.. nor wnrklngman can afford tn accept It, Wo ought to Insist on keeping in our hnnds the complete tight to handle our tariff as the vital interests of our own citizens and especially our own working men demand. If these two points mean anything they mean that the seas tire to be free for our enemies' use In- lime of war and our home markets free for our enemies' trade In time of peace. "Again, If the President's language means tiny-thing, one ot these fourteen points Is a proposal to guarantee that every nation shall reduce Its armament to a point sufficient to preserve domestic order. If this language Is tn be taken according In Its necessary meaning, America would be obliged tn scrap Its navy and reduce Its army- tn a police force rupnhle only of putting down riot, and would have to trust to n lengue of nations for protecting It against out side nggresslnn.. nther tho President's language mean this or It means nothing. But If It means Ihls every hlgh-mlnded and fnr sighted pntriotlc American citizen Should be against the proposal. According to what Is contained in the President's fourtf eu points, under this proposal Ger many, Austria, Turkey and Rnssla would, as part of the league of nutlons, have the say-so ns to Anierlcn's future, and America would have nothing but small police force with which to protect its own right. Internationalism Danger "It Is hard for me to speak patiently of such a proposition. If it were made hy any one except the President It would he considered ns foolish as tho wildest folly uttered by tho professional paci fists prior to the occurrence of this great war. The conduct of the Powers above named shows that whenever It was to their interest they vyould treat any agreement they made with us aa n scrap of paper. The simple fact Is that no league of nations or any other schemu of that kind should be accepted as' any thing but an nddltlon to, nnd never as a substitute for, the development for our own defense of our own strength nnd Its preparedness In advnnce. International ism Is a curse If It Is sought tn make It us a substitute fnr natlonn'lsm, We have to be good Americans first before wo can be good citizens of the world ; we must behave justly to nil other nations, but we must remember in the first place our duty to our own wives and children and to the generations that are to come after us in this fair and mighty land. There are plenty of ques tions, such ns our territorial' Integrity, our right to control immigration, our right to establish our own, tariff policy and the like, which I trust we will never surrender to the safekeeping of any league of other nations. "Remember one or two obvious fads, my friends. Remember that In Asia there are about ten times as manv peo ple ns there are In the United States. If the league of nations means anything, and If Internatlnnallsm Is substituted for nationalism, this means that the Asiatics In such a league would have ten sotes for every American vole, and that they would have tho right to decide such questions as the admission of un checked Asiatic Immigration to the United Stales and of the refusal to permit us to build up any barriers ror the keeping up of the standard of our people and our distinctive American na tionality nnd American social and In dustrial life, ' "Whoever advocates the submerging of nationality tn Internationalism Is either 'hypocritical or else he advocates Just precisely and exactly what I have above outlined. With all my heart and soul 1 adlure our people not to be fooled by fine phrases and glittering generali ties, but to Insist on facing facts ns they actually are, Jf they do so they will put nationalism In the first place and accent our duty to prepare our own strength for our own self-defense ns oursViime THREE OFFICES-ONE METHOD The Logan Trust Company will receive deposits at its main banking office, 1431 Chestnut street, or at its branches, 6324 Woodland avenue and , 152 North Fifteenth street. On savings funds deposits it-allows interest at 3.65 per cent. , At each office the members of its staff will be pleased to render service" ( to clients and to consult with them on matters of securities, investments .or other financial questions, . "Genuine Service in a Friendly Way" , LOGAN f RUST COMPANY 1431 CHESTNUT STREET WP8T PH'LADEI-PHIA OfFICE v-i nwwvue.mu svi, duly.Vrhcn, as an addition to, but never ns n substitute for, the performance of these duties, they will Join In any Inter national agreement that promises only what cab and, ought to be performed nnd that In good faith seeks to' secure In ternational fair dealing on a basis ot Justice and right and of scrupulous re. spect for nil nations, big or little, which are well behaved and fih not' wrong others and which nreservec ! least n. reasonable measure of orderly frctpom I within their own pounus, "UUt vve cAn help the world at largo only If vve stand hy our own people first. More than 2000 years hay passed since It was written; 'He who falls to provide for. his own, they of his own household, hath denied the faith and Is worse than an Infidel.'" Biiicprrrri. sPFvr.u "uuui" "" -" "."-. i AS VIEWED BY PRESS New Vork, Oct. 2D, -No extended edi torial comment was made by the morn ing; papers on Roosevelt's address, lait night at Carnegie Hall. Tho Times and Herald did not comment on the speeeh. Rxcerpls fiom editorial opinions follow: New York Sun: "Theodore Roosevelt defined with ab solute precision the meaning of Presi dent Wilson's phrase 'the leaders of the minority, although unquestionably pro war, have been antl-Admlnlstratlon,' Colonel Roosevelt said: " 'The entire offence of the Republican leaders In Mr. Wilson's eves is that they have demanded ,that ernr.tency, waste nnd extravagance be remedied. Such a demand he treats as "nnll-Admlntstra-tloti." In other words, the attitude which pattiotlo people regard an pro-United States he regards as antl-Admlnlstratlon.' "Nobody else hns exposed with greater clearness or more convincing particular ity the exact significance of Woodrovv Wllson's words than did Theodore Roose velt In these unimpeachable sentences; and few Americans, tortured though thousands of them nre by their con sciences, have the courage Theodore Roosevelt displayed at thli time in utter ing these unassailable truths." New York Tribune: "Colonel Roossvelt's Carnegie Hall speech last night will stand as the most terrific -arraignment of a President by an ex-President In all the literature of American politics. The President in vited it. His friends and tupporters mav protest ns they will. Such a. challenge as Mr. Wilson offered to the Republican party was- not llkelv to go unanswered, nor to be answered In anv other wav, "In making this (Wilson's) appeal, which partook of the chnracter of a de mand, he offended democracy to Its quick. What he himself could not en dure, and denounced, wan tho Implica tion of the Republican party leaders that he could not be trusted to conduct the war and conclude a peace without crit ical counsel and suggestion." New York Vt'orld: "While 'the World regrets that Mr. Wilson In person ever assumed the task of asking the people to choose a Con gress In sympathy with his leadership. It was a word needing to be said, and so said that it would arrett attention. His letter has at least had tlilseffeet: that whispered calumnies are replaced by free discussion, and men who had no thought of 'adjourning politics' for the war are forced Into the open "Of this change Theodore Roosevelt furnishes nn Impressive example. Yet his set speech !a't night IS for him con spicuous by its moderation. Maneuvered out from abuse of a man to praise of a party, this champion of the strenuous produces merely the typical party man's argument, distinguished less by its strength than by iti' length." WILSON APPEAL ON SCREEN "Movie" Got Partisan Propaganda in Advance of Publication Trenton, Oct. 23. Calling attenllon to the fact that motion pictures through out New Jersey, nnd probnhly through nut the country, had alreadv been sup plied by the Democratic national com mittee with slides depicting President Wilson's appeal for a Democratic Con gress, nnd excerpts lrom It, Republican State Chairman Newton A. K. Bugbee 'declared today that proof was at hand showing tho Presidential statement to be a part of a prearranged partisan plan to keep the Democratic party in control In Congress. Mr. Bugbee says the slides appeared simultaneously with the publi cation of the President's letter. Some of them, he said, "show evidence of a knowledge of the contents nf the Presi dent's letter and statement. For Instance, one contains the catch phrase, 'unity of action Is as essential now In Washington as unity of command Is In France.' This particular Hllde also contnlns a picture of Ihe President nnd a picture of some soldiers In tho trenches In France. It Is about as bald nn attempt to make pir tlsan capital out of the war and tn piny on tho heartstrings of the American public, with sons and brothers abroad, as I have ever seen." TO PUBLISH HUGHES'S REPORT Findings in Plane Inquiry to Reach, Wilson in a Few Days By the Associated Press Washington, Oct, 29. Charles F.. Hughes's report on his aircraft inycstl gation will bo given to the public as soon ns It reaches President Wilson. This statement was authorized today at the White House. Attorney GAneral, Gregory haa had the report since vesterdav, and expects to submit it to the President In a day or two. flFTK rice . 5. 1 zm& n-i Cites Precedents for White House Call for Demo cratic Congress Hy (he Associated Press Washington, Oct. 29, Joseph P, Tumulty, the President's secretary, Inst night made public a sec ond lajtu?r he has written at President Wilson's direction So the Cuyahoga fcotinty Republican committee at Cleve land, -riinklng further .reply to protests Ugalnst the Prsldcn't's appeal to the country to return a Democratic Congress by" quoting from utterances by Republi can Presidents. t Extracts are given trpm several public addresses by President McKlnley at the close of the' Erlsnlrji-Amerlctn Wnr urg ing n Republican Congress be circled; fron a letter written by President Roosevelt In 180 to a member or Con tress and from a Utter of President Taft in 1910 to the chnitman of the Na tional Republican congressional commit tee on the same subject. Mr. Tumulty's letter commended the quotations to the committee's considers, tlon without comment. ENEMY HOLDS KEYSTONE MEN Pennsylvania's Are Located in German Prison Camps By the Associated Press Wsshlngton; Oct. 21). Names of seven officers and forty-eight enlisted men In German prison camps were Announced today by the War Department The enlisted men Include: " , At Rastatt Samuel I. Rckenrode. Newvitle, Pa. ; George .1. Mllrath, New Philadelphia, Pa.: Claude M. Roth, Allen .T. Stevtna and Oeorge U. Haslam, Car lisle. Pa.! Asnnh T.. Manlier Union fltv. Pa. ; Mlchnel Maratohl, believed to be laenucar witn private Machaei MlKa lonls, Plymouth, Pa, At Uechfeld, Bavaria Raymond W. Harwood, Kvans Mills, N. Y. At Cassel Lyman W. Drlcsbaugh, Dalton. Pa. At I.nnsdorf Warren I.. Andrews, Meriden, Conn. At Neuhammer Curtis E. Taylor, Sliver Mill. W. Va. At.Olesson Raymond Harold Olbbons. Dunmore, Pa. ', Harold Buchter, Qreen- iown, jm. At Tuchel Harry Leonard, 1447 Broadway, Camden, N. J. At hosnftnl at Hammerhura Harry I... Northelmer, 24" Jefferson street, Read ing, l'ft. Reported in good health, camp un known Waller Kauplenlr, 230D I.arklns alley, Sout Side. Pittsburgh, Pa.: Charles Byron Lewis, North Hast, Pa.; Raymond S. McLaughlin, 1828 Oasklll avenue. Krle, Pa. ; Charles William Oram. 307 Myrtle street, Krle, Pa.; John Oross, 2SB3 North Sixth street, Philadelphia! l-rcderlck A. Flccman, R. F. D. 3, Krle, ra. ' JOHNSON ATTACKS WILSON Senator Snys Appeal for Demo cratic Ccfigrcss Is Indefensible Wnn Pranrlsen, Oct. 20. (By I. N. S.) Bitter denunciation of President Wil son's recent appeal for the election of a Democratic Congress In November was voiced here, today by Senator Hit km Johnson. The appeal, he said, was a demand on the part of the President for blind allegiance to a man,. "President 'Wilson." said Senator Johnson, "saw in Republicans those fit to float Liberty Loans and to die on the battlefield for their country, but ns unfit to !t In the nation's councils. "The statement Is unwarranted and Indefensible. It substitutes for patriot ism and loyalty to the republic servile sUhsevience to a man. It would not only destroy a political party pledged to the war and dedicated, but worse. It would destroy the popular branch of our Government. If Congress were to he come what the President demands his mere servant registering In blind obedi ence his will, democracy Is at an end." FORD RAN WITHOUT EXPENSE Automaker Spent Nothing in Senatorial Campaign Washington, Oct. 29. (By I. N. S.) Henry Ford neither received nor spent anything In his Senatorial campaign in Michigan, according to a rennrt tiled today with the clerk of the Senate. The onlv committee working ,under his authority, the auto manufacturer re ported, was the "non-partisan Fprd-For-Senate club." 'which had receipts of $S81 nnd .expenditures of $335, '15 MAPACUBA THE ALL.- DAV EVERY-DAY SMOKE HERE'S a Cigar which possesses what every Cigar professes- dominantly distinctive flavpr exclusively its own, due to the Curing which ripens and refines, and the Blending, which mellows and matures the leaf. Havana Ftller When you say "Havani Filler", all' said, and ytu've said it. , Sumatra Wrapper When you say "Sumatra Wrapper", all's faid, and ytu'vt taii it. Cents and S XU upward QSuts Buy it at any Ciar Sure, Stand, Cluh, Htttl'tr Rjitaurant BAYUK BROS. Also Manufacturers of the Famoui ' PRINCE HAMJLET Utgars PHILADELPHIA H President's Bitter Adversary Restored to Power, Says G. O. P. Men Atlantic Clly, Oct. 2. I New Jersey Republicans, In a cs.m- palgn pronouncement sent Into ths southern counties of President Wilson' home State charged Mr.. WUson'a plea for the election of Oeorge M. La, Monte ahd Charles O'Connor Hennessy, , Democratic nominees for United States' Senator over Governor Kdge snd Sena tor Balrd, contemplates the retention tyj James Nugent, of Hssex, AS the recot, nlzed Democratic leader of New Jersey. Mr. Nugent dominated the State" con vention In Trenton last month, and wait responsible for the rejection of equal suffrage as a platform plank on the day President Wilson personally Informed 'Congress he regarded suffrage as a measure necessary to the prosecu tion of the war. 1 Mr. Nugent, who Is credited with playing, a large, part In the nomina tion of Mr. LaMonte, whose candidacy President Wilson haa "cordially! In-ff-dorsed," than any other one man In triss1 State, I'J the same Nugent, the O. O. P. statement points out, that was ousted from the chairmanship of the Demo cratic State committee five years ago, because he termed -Mr. Wilson, thtrn New Jersey's Governor, "a liar nnd In- , grate." LIBERTY LOAN OVER THE TOP Fourth Subscriptions Likely to Reach $6,500,000,000 By the United Press Washington, Oct. 29. Indications hers today were that the total for the 'fourth Liberty Loan would reach $6,5.00,000,000. Basing their calculations on reports from banks throughout the country, to gether with official figures from most States, officials said an oversubscription to the great loan of $500,000,000 prob ably hnd been made. Every Federal Re servo district has 'Its quota "In sight" on official figures, while hundreds of thousands of dollars continue to. pour In, To exceed nn oversubscription of $600, 000,000 there must be an average over subscription In the .twelve reserve dis tricts of $45,000,000. Few of the dis tricts will 'not have a larger figure than that It waB asserted. Chicago, It was believed, would have $100,0000,0000 over her quota nnd New York Is expected to show $90,000,000 over. enm Populsx Prices for PtrtituUr People Re: "CHERI 13th St." 7T There is a newcomer J in the Cheri family II and like the Cheri jl idea itself, has arrived with a bang. , Trie first of these novel restau rants found high- favor at once with the thrifty patriots of our city bent on personal economy to Help Win theWtr. The innovstton now bears .the hall-mark of unqualified public approval. Thst's why "we offer the second Cheri, with the isme high standards of quality and, service - but with a double' capacity, for your comfort. Populsr Prices for Particular People will prevail as the wsr v time economy of Chirl. 132 South 15th St. ($)' 124 South Jth St. ($) (HECBJ inc. J. O. PATTON, TrssfaW 17 ft Netth. filtml Citr far U tleatr I ':. I "I vr i KSISW v ,r ' l '"V 4 j 4 v, pr y-c S 1 1 S " Mi., au!iMiliHB &UtK&f' ,; ja iV vSVri1- "-' g 1-. BUT- .' 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers