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(14) dollan per,ear, payable In advance. 41 .orriKii loumrips one ii; aoiiar irr wf" WOTtc Subscriber ' V KmVMX fve old as well i wish I riff Address changed as nw Hddress. i Kl.L, IWO WALNUT KRYSTOE, MAIN" 3000 J-w'liP' dtddrea nil communications to Kventno Public H .C" -' .,.w..... .,,..... I, J ...,l...l. ,,..,... ?,& Member of the Associated Press Ay VTCTB ABSOCIATKli VIWSU N err-...- mA ..MrJftr.rr' fn ).. ...... fr... .....,?..,.... i w w.tiiiu. , v trio nui; " niiviiMtiici. p wi 7eijr nisrm.cira crraitrra 10 it or nut ter-..c crrdifcif In thin naner. and also li'SW. local ncilst nuhHihrd thrrriii. J'tkAtt rights of republication of special dls. 'fpmtcheaherciii aie alio icservcil. m.ti PhiUdtlphlirSllurdir, .Norrmbrr 2, 1418 :" 'iWlt MURDEROUS SKYLARKING" rSTT WAS an appallingly familiar type of $St l Wh Slew llttle MarIe Bur"s- Heck i'jti and cowardly Hooliganism has long 'SgJrMrs fatalities oa Fourth of July, New i sMm.T tar Eve and Halloween hn b liern n 5X;-JMfcllessly conventional feature of the police eveJ"!orda. on the comparatively Infrequent jjiiSec&Blona when the guilty parties hao bA.DSan Cauellt "flpplrtpnt" linfl boon thor .lft tV4??8e "' '3 'nnmlsslble. The wanton j-Sftv-Carffe of loaded pistols Is an unanswer- iTSSSf inaiciment. ".t$.3Ch Innocent child, whose nniM.a nf PjiiStBrty dress adds the touch of bitterest May to her fate, was murdered. That the 'S?j;ifc,te or brutcs who shot her did not de JMbirately select their victim Is the paltriest jMextenuatlons. The act was homicidal, '"&!!!, ia that of any lawless blusterer who Jertebrates" with bullets. iW-M! a,, , ... ... . IJT.cjr--y " Btto,CM u "it unm aner eiec- fe , Mt. A HUMILIATED SECRETARY jj&jmuiN the cables told of the presence -2tt?kat the Versailles council of every Pre- ' V4jhlr and Foreign Minister of the European -?" . AI . .1 . . ft&Tf ' sympainy must nave gone vi&"Ht from many minds to Robert Lnnsfnir. -e&&X , v.i i, e ,1 !... .-, ivei w""v i,w'wa t11" aj nidi uuiiiiiiihion oz Dec- qmary of State xf the United States He faa Konspiuuuuhiy au.seiu nom tnat au :ljt and portentous assemblage, although sjiftk Government he represents is supposed :'"1iave an immenbely important part in .;s.lM deliberations. .fiSJWf' the other Foreign Ministers, Mr. Lan 1 '.'ii'n' a "leal descendant in office of such llluatrious Secretaries as Jefferbon, Mon- taSjitvarts. Blaine. Bavard. Foster. Sliormon iS",?Wd Hay, is kept at his desk in "Washing k.SH, principally tilling the role of signing ,-, name at tne oottom or notes dictated Jfcwri the White House. ? "Mwhat is the public to think? What has i? $& Secretary of State done or not done SL'JSMf, deserve this humiliation? What course lVm4lOUld his self-respect suggest under the , &-lrtrcumstances? 1 v.SjA. There are times when words can be , "S.eda, as Mr. Hughes's airplane report em- .la&ticallv TirnvpR AN EMPIRE IN ASHES Austro-Hungarian monarchy, so rjitit. t' long on the brink, has at last tumbled ??adlong Into the vortex of chaos. It Is .&,t easy to Identify all the swirling frag- aJiwents of empire, yet the ceneral evldenre 5,,k i ' . , . ..... Z .i!r(vuiwjr wietttajje js unmisiaKaoie. start ,lto though as yet all too meager, reports rA. tfttt rrnllflriua toll nf an I . nnr.. ilnn T "atim'la, with Prague as its capital: of a L"i.i. TT ..U ,1. tx , siw uuugaij', vviin wie napsuurgs over- rown; of a successfully self-determining ttoatia. with Flume as Its hnlw.irk- nf n TiftV i'VV ' ";niy"v-oary vjenna speeuing plans lor v"a..nonmonarchlcal State: of a helnles "PPMW In night to his country retreat: W "'j-Hr-'- rebellious fleet in Pola; of an over- elmlngly defeated army in yenetla. ''A'-vTa MflV Ka Dfltrl n.ltV. r.lmnr.t 1ttr.1 A 1L J Jnat (hA lerrv.hnllt mntrA rr.l.r. ViAr.nn Pm 4fMwar Is nonexistent. Even in Russia, iWflfn abBolutism fell, the pace of history riii no dizzier than It has been In Mittel- 5 MBCtSM W1 10 tOOt YCCK. ialAtVF ... Hough the effect of the long-foreseen cle has been repeatedly discussed, now It has come the imagination almost at going beyond tho event. Epoch ng history is now compressed Into undingly narrow time dimensions. The iflcance of a few hours today is equal f;the import of a decade under the old Jglixough the smoke and conflagration of Diving monarchy, however, Germany LJb discerned in utter Isolation. How RtjAk wiH strive to maintain that posl- I'la dependent solely on the extent of r jiurbllndnejs. mf - rX'L. , .! m-" ""'? b v "t orrawoM js sum- ruu to make every subject of her empire a bluer ender. -'fa ENGLAND'S OWN GLORY J. " Tv J9 lnpirlngly typical of Britain that ber tragic error of Galllpoll she I nave grappled with the Turk slngle- and completely crushed him. On i active war fronts of late, save those I'tb Ottoman empire, lnte 'national fttlon has been developed. The ,'were partners in Ilussla, Siberia, jrFrance, Flanders, Greece and Cerbia. i Knalish and colonial Troops virtually l'narched" to victory through the ,'jM Mesopotamia and the hills of Tne record of resolution, of ivor to retrieve the blunders d-Amara. and the Dardanelles of the most striking in . , FfW?-v v' U'vV NEXT TUESDAY'S ELECTION Wljst' It Means to the People of Penmjl vanla Tlie Issues ami the Candidates "M'EXT Tuesday's election Is far more important to the people of Pennsyl vania than tho dullness of the campaign just closing indicates. Overshadowed in interest as Stnte and local affairs hnvo been by tho intensity of war activities, including tho fourth Liberty I.onn sale during the last month, which in normal times would have been the liveliest period of the political drive, there arc still several points at stake which are deserving of attention by every citizen wlrt. wishes to vote intelligently. Besides choosing a Governor, Lieuten ant Governor nnd Sccretnry of Internal Affairs, the State will elect two Justices of tho Supreme Court, one Judge of the Superior Court, thiity-six members of the national House of Repiesentutivcs, half the membership of the State Sen ate, the complete mombctship of the State House of Representatives and approve of disapprove of two amend ments to the State Constitution. More over, tho Legislature to be selected will pass uponthe prohibition amendment to the national Constitution and perhaps one extending sufTi age to women. So fur as concerns tho executive places in the State government, the citizen who has tho welfare of Pennsylvania sin cerely in mind need have no hesitation in voting the straight Republican ticket headed by William C. Sproul for Gov ernor. Compared with it, the Democratic ticket is a fantastic thing of shreds and patches, fearfully and wonderfully put together. Against Senator Sproul stands Mu nicipal Judge Bonniwell, whose candi dacy actually was repudiated by a large element in the Democratic party. Whereas Senator Sproul has repeatedly declared his purpose to aid in the adop tion of the prohibition amendment, Judgs Bonniwell stands for tho whisky ring. So the issue here is squarely joined. But this is not by any means the paramount issue, as Judge Bonniwell seeks to make it. It is unfortunate that it should have been an issue at all, for there are others more vital. Comparison of the equipment of these two leading candidates for the Governor ship leaves the. balance decidedly in Senator Sprout's favor. His long ex perience in legislative affaiis at Harris burg, his successful career as a sound business man, his wide acquaintance among the people of the State and above all his carefully ripened judgment and lestrained temperament are much more likely to impress the voters favorably than those attributes of his opponent which have been most conspicuously present in his public appearances, es pecially the fact that, although seated on the judicial bench, where impartiality is the prime essential, he has never ceased to engage at the same time in partisan political controversy of a rank and grossly offensive character. As to the other executive offices, they will probably stand or fall with the heads of the tickets. Mr. Beidleman, running for Lieutenant Governor on the Repub lican ticket, is a skillful politician, with much experience in the Legislature. Former Congressman Logue, the Demo cratic nominee, is wholly out of sympa thy with Judge Bonniwell on the liquor issue, having been interested for many years in the temperance movement. His selection in the same primary is one of the freaks of that election. Mr. Wood ward, Republican candidate for Secre tary of Internal Affairs an office now wholly superfluous and one that ought to be abolished is a former Republican floor leader in the Legislature. Mr. Johnson, his Democratic opponent, is probably equally competent to fill tho duties of the office, such as they are. Regarding the election of members of the Legislature, the situation is more difficult. Here factional selfishness is so prevalent among the nominees of both the Republican and Democratic parties that it should be the duty of the voter in every district to inquire closely into the affiliations of the nominees before going to the polls. Generally speaking, where a candidate has respectability, a fair degree of intelligence and common sense and a desire to do the right thing, that is about all that can be expected. In the general run these nominees are far from touching the standard that should pre vail. In too many cases they have been selected because they stand for one fac tion or another within their parties and not for individual merit, The best that can be hoped is that their neighbors will try to view their qualifications apart from their factionalism and send the man best fitted for the highly important but too often slighted work of passing the laws of tho Commonwealth. It is always difficult to arouse Interest in the selection of nominees for the Legislature at a primary held six months before the general election. Hence the political leaders who work at these matters 365 days a year are the real censors of the qualifications of members and they usually make a very bad job of it indeed from the viewpoint of the public interest In Philadelphia the voters ought par ticularly to be sure that they send men imbued with the idea that the city should get a complete reform of its charter through a larger measure of self-government. If necessary to secure It, they should be ready to fight for the calling of a constitutional convention to revise thjat exceedingly out-of-date document. Had President Wilson not injected partisanship into the congressional elec tion it might have been possible to say that changes in the personnel of certain exactly calamitous. But, unfortunately, the President has made it entirely a par tisan issue and as such the voters must view it. Pennsylvania is a Republican State. Its people believe in Republican princi ples, which are best suited to protecting ftnd fostering the huge industries that have made our people, among the most prosperous and contented in the country. Even if every one of the thirty-six seats were filled by n Republican, which is not likely, tho result could not be viewed as having any direct bearing upon the for eign relations of tho nntion, but only as nn expression of determination to have an nuthoritntlvo voice in the solution of 'those grrnt problems of domestic con cern which will arise immediately peace Is declared. The people of Pennsylvania are patriotic to the core. In no other State m the Union have they made greater sacrifices of their blood or done more industrially to back up the Fed eral Government in the prosecution of the war to victory. But the people of Pennsylvania do not intend to have their prosperity im periled by the fanatical and provincial dictation of n crass sectionalism such as now rules in Congress. We mean the South with its Kitchins, Dents and others like thorn. So wo believe that the more Republicans elected from Pennsyl vania, piovidcd they are patriotically loyal to the winning of the war, the bet ter it will be for Pennsylvania and the country as a whole. Every Philadel phian will have tho opportunity to vote for four Congressmen-at-large and one from each of the six Philadelphia dis tricts. Tho nominees for the judgeships will appear on a separate nonpartisan ballot. There are nine names presented for tho Supreme Court. Each voter may vote for one, although two are to be elected. The present incumbents by gubema toiial appointment to fill vacancies are Alexander Simpson, Jr., of this city, and Edward J. Fox, of Easton. It is to be hoped that both will be elected. Justice Simpson, who is a Republican, is fully qualified by long practice and distinguished ability at the bar for his place. His thoiough knowledge of the law in all its branches, and especially his familiarity with Philadelphia mu nicipal law and the accompanying prob lems, make him most desirable. He has the indorsement of leading members of the bar and partisan or factional con siderations should not be involved. Justice Fox, who is a Democrat, is in a somewhat similar position. He is a lawyer of unquestionable technical fit ness, well and favorably known in the northeastern part of tho State and wor thy of nonpartisan support which shall insure his election. The Constitution by its provision restricting the right of the voter to one choice where two vacancies are to be filled undoubtedly contemplates that the Supreme Court shall not be made up of justices holding the same political convictions, even though the Legislature saw fit to take their nomi nation out of the line of party action as such. Justice Fox's election will serve to preserve this minority representation, as he succeeded Justice Mestrezat, a Democrat. For the Superior Court the choice is easy. Judge William D. Porter should be elected in accordance with the tradi tion that competent jurists are to be retained. Ho has had a useful and wor thy career of many years in this court. Of the two proposed amendments to the State Constitution, the first should be approved and the second defeated. The first will allow the State to float bonds to the amount of fifty million dol lars for the improvement of the State roads. The rural districts are being urged by the granges to defeat this amendment as they did several years ago, but the arguments used are too nar row and prejudiced to prevail with pro gressive people. The State's highways are deplorably behind those of many other States. But to bring them at once up to a standard where they may be maintained in first-class condition per manently will require the expenditure of many millions. This should be done by bond issue, since future generations will benefit by the work as well as the pres ent. It is impossible to allot enough money out of the State's current reve nues to undertake the work on tho scale needed without increasing taxes at a time when the Federal Government has drained the resources of the people heavily. Once the foundational work were done on the highways, it would be easy to maintain them out of current . revenues. The second resolution that changing the debt limitations of this city we dis cussed in detail yesterday. Sufficient to repeat that it can be desired only in the interests of greedy municipal contractors who would divert funds needed for rapid transit and port improvements to gen eral uses. Count Stephen Tlsza, Nemnl. In the who perverted the Brat of Form noble patrlotlo Ideals of his father, Kalman, Into the sheer Junkerlsm whose tenets he fol lowed sb one of the prime factors In provok ing the war, once boasted that Austria would fight, If necessary, "all the devils of the world." Before his assassination on the streets of Budapest yesterday he had seen the refutation of every one of his contemptu ous boasts. It la consoling that his taking off was sufficiently postponed, just as It seems fitting that he pay the penalty In the hour of utter disillusionment. A good many thrones With Th.tr Owners are sure to be vacated In AiUndsac.T In "Europe. Tkviwas are net rmtiLiAumLarwiAy ,iATUJia.v:'u wmmt '1 .. J. 11.1 '.la-WJ ' . r .- ; -" -' r- " SINCE YOU INSIST On Doom (TIHE opening and closing of doors are - tho most significant actions of man's life. What a mystery lies In doers! No man knows what awaits him when ho opens a door, Even the most familiar room, where tho clock ticks and the heArth glows red at dusk, may harbor surprises. The plumber may actually have called (whllo ou wore out) and fixed that leak ing faucet. The cook may have had a fit of tho vapors nnd demanded her passports. Tho wise man opens his front door with humility and aplrit of acceptance. i men ono or us lias not sat in some anteroom and watched tho Inscrutable panels of a door that was full of mean ing? Perhaps you wcro watting to apply for a Job; perhaps you had some "deal" you were ambitious to put over. You watched the confidential stenographer flit In and out, carelessly turning that mystic poilal which, to ou, revolved on hinges of fate. And then the young woman said, "Mr. Cranberry wilt seo you now." As you grasped the knob tho thought flashed, "When I open this door again, what will have happened?" fTIHURG are many kinds of doors. Re- olving doors for hotels, shops and pub lic buildings. These are typical of the brisk, bustling ways of modern life. Can you iniaglno John Milton or William Penn skipping through a revolving door? Then thero are tho curious little slatted doors that swing outside barrooms and extend only from shoulder to knee. There are trapdoors, sliding doors, double doors, stage doors, prison doors, glass doors. But the symbol and mystery of a door resides In its quality of concealment. A glass door is not a doorVit all, but a window. The meaning of a door Is to hide what lies Inside; to keep the heart In suspense. A LSO, there are many ways of opening doors. There Is the cheery push of elbow with which tho waiter shoves open tho kitchen door when ho bears in your tray of supper. There Is the suspicious and tentative withdrawal of a door before tho unhappy book agent or peddler. There is the genteel and carefully modulated re cession with which footmen swing wide the oaken barriers of the great. There is the sympathetic and awful silence of the dentlbt's maid who opens the door Into the operating room and, without speaking, implies that the doctor is ready for you. There is the brisk cataclysmic opening of a door when the nurse comes In, very early In the morning "It's -a boy!" T"OORS are tho symbol of privacy, or re--'treat, of the mind's escape Into blissful quletudo or sad secret struggle. A room without doors is not a room, but a hallway. No matter where he Is, a man can make himself at home behind a closed door. The mind works best behind closed doors. Men are not horses to be herded together. Dogs know the meaning and anguish of doors. Have you over noticed a puppy yearning at a shut portal? It is a bymbol of human life. THE opening of doors Is a mystic act: it llflH 111 it Knme flnvni nf tVio iink-rimim some sense of moving into a new moment, a new pattern of the human rigmarole. It includes the highest glimpses of mortal gladness: reunions, reconciliations, the bliss of lovers long parted. Even in sad ness, the opening of a door may bring relief: it changes and redistributes human forceb. But the closing of doors is far more terrible. It is a confession of finality. Every door closed brings something to an end. And thero are degrees of. sadness In the closing of doors. A door slammed, is a confession of weakness. A door gently shut' Is often the most tragic gesture In life. Every one knows tho seizure of anguish that comes Just after the closing of a door, when the loved one is still near, within sound of voice, and yet already far away. THE opening and closing of doors is a part of the stern fluency of life. Life will not stay still and let us alone. We are continually, opening doors with hope, closing them with despair. Life lasts not much longer than a pipe of tobacco, and destiny knocks us out like the ashes. The closing of a door Is irrevocable. It snaps the packthread ot the heart. It Is no avail to reopen, to go back. Plnero spoke nonsense (but, as usual, brilliant nonsense) when he made Paula Tanqueray say, "Tho future is only the past entered through another gate." Alas, there is no other gate. When the door Is shut, It Is shut forever. There Is no other entrance to that vanished pulse of time. "The moving finger writes, and having writ" . THERE Is a certain kind of door-shutting that will come to us all. The kind of door-shutting that is done very quietly, with the sharp click of the latch to break the stillness. They will think then, one hopes, of our unfulfilled decencies rather than of our pluperfected misdemeanors. Then they will go out and close the door. Skip This The only lasting bays that Wllhelm will get out of the war will be the baize where the Versailles council Is sitting. Where They Bit Turkey signed the armistice on the island of Lemmons. New York Herald. Clvllianlsm will no longer be the greatest crime In Germany. And the Kaiser has not only lost the Letts, but also his epaulettes. The Punktn-Pie Wrangle Dear Socrates Who's the Narberth sage who thinks he knows something of the difference between squash and pumpkin pie? Tell him he's In the kindergarten class that he should go to school under any New England fanner. One thing is sure; pumpkin pie in New England is not made out of sweet po tatoes! NORTH OF BOSTON, Not Adhetive I never stick, and so I get No raises from the boss. I'm glad I am a rolling atone, I never cared for moss! ARCTNO. The Kaiser is spending this week-end at the general staff headquarters,, ft SOW' vfl II Ml Mil II i I HIM vHisiBiBVlulallii-MiuNLVaLLia ' ysfrt ' 1 V itiaT1-. .--'-'"' ...-""--"-"' J-'" ri- jp .-;Vr." " JPrd'rK JrJ'jiV .'', -!,."' .JJSZjriK: rt'-rjfl'" .JJP5 ,uj" r-'r " x " ' WHAT A CONGRESSMAN SEES - I...- -.-.--.-. i Semitveckly Letter Touching on the Washington Doings of Personalities Familiar to PhiladvlpJiians By J. Hampton Moore Washington, D. C, Nov. 2. "JO, GENTLE reader, Browns-Mills-ln- the-Plnes was not named after Wil liam J. Browning, of Camden, Its most distinguished congressional sojourner. Mr. Browning set up his summer home there back In the days when Colonel George Pfelffer, Jr., was the whole show, except for the celebrated "duck farm" that rivaled him as an attraction. Those were the days when BUI Browning was chief clerk of the House of Representatives and Harry Lou denslager, of Paulsboro, was the Represen tative of the First New Jersey District. Bill went In with the Keelys and the Griscoms and the other old-time frequent ers of the Jersey pines before the present globe-trotting postmaster, W. C. Hargroves, had become "the big stick" down there. And now Browning has 'brought a new distinction to the place. Not only did he succeed Loudenslager on the. Naval Affairs Committee, but he has specialized on that work until he is next in service to Tom Butler, of Pennsylvania, the ranking Re publican. His recent tour of the European battlefields with other members of the committee has made him one of the war experts of the House. Moreover, th.e Re publican campaign committee Is quoting "the Browning motion to recommit," a step taken by Republicans In the battleship 'program, to show that Democrats led the movement In opposition to a big navy when "preparedness" was In its Incipient stages. SPEAKING of the navy, It may not be pleasant news to Philadelphlans that Secretary Daniels has actually made the so-called "Frogyllollow Gang" a thing of record, This term does' not Justly belong to Philadelphia, being a New York impor tation, but nevertheless the Navy Depart ment has taken official cognizance of It and the term Is likely to stick, just as "Hog Island" is likely to stick, only for different reasons. Some time ago it devel oped that the Navy Department was re leasing from the naval reserve a number of young men from the river wards who had been taken into the service. Inquiry was instituted concerning these discharges, and for a time it was difficult to ascertain the ground for them. Finally the Secre tary came out flatly with the statement that the young men were connected with the "Frog Hollow Gang" and the naval re serve was(no place for them. He said he had made careful Investigation and that no discharged man had been dealt with unjustly. THEY tried to beat Elijah C. Hutchinson for renomlnatlon for Congress from the Fourth New Jersey District, which Includes Trenton; but they fell down, Just as did the opposition to Heqry W, Watson, who represents the Pennsylvania, district across the Delaware. Watson knew he had oppo sition at the primaries and went Into the fight knowing he had to fight. Hutchinson, on the other hand, was surprised by an unexpected Republican candidacy, which gave him mora trouble than he expected. The primaries over, however, it Jjtnow expected that Watson and Hutchinson will pull through at the election, notwithstand ing each has strong DemocratlctfppotUon. , KrnmSWamSWaBSmX rTv- ,.!f !', .: -.. ABDICATION ISN'T ALWAVS Is Interested in fertilizer nnd keeps In close touch with the agricultuial situation, being a member of the Committee on Agriculture in the Houbc. T5ED CROSS war work has become of ' such far-reaching importance in the great war in Europe that the publication, by the Columbia Historical Society of "Clara Bartpn, Humanitarian," an affec tionate sketch prepared by Mrs. C. Bacon Foster, a native of Texas who died recently in Washington, is appropriate and helpful. Mrs. Bacon-Foster, whose last work was brought forward under direction of her daughter, Violet Bacon-Foster, had taken a deep interest in Clara Barton, a native of Massachusetts, and after a careful study of her character and work had placed her "first on the long roll of America's great women." Her argument was based chiefly upon Clara Barton's extraordinary services during the Civil War and 'her persistence In organizing the American Red Cross, an understanding of which she seems to have acquired in Switzerland and Germany dur ing the Franco-Prussian War. To Phila delphia nurses who remember Clara Bar ton or who have tieen influenced by her work It will be interesting to note, as Mrs. Bacon-Foster discloses, that many of her early struggles were fought out nearby. After leaving Massachusetts she taught school at Hlghtstown, N. J. Then, accord ing to Mrs. Bacon-Foster, she went over to Bordentown and started in where there was "a deplorable lack of public schools" with "six notoriously bad boys of the town," whom she succeeded In "taming," As the result of her labors "the little city decided to provide a reputable building," and "In the fall th"e school opened with 600 pupils." All this, It Is explained, was "be fore the o,ra of free textbooks." The ac quaintances formed In these nearby places seem to have figured In all of Clara Bar ton's subsequent war work In America and Europe and after she toured the country as a lecturer. . GEORGE P. DARROW, of Germantown, who represents the Sixth District in Congress,, having succeeded J, Washington Logue, who was elected at a time the Republicans were on bad terms with each other, has a fine-looking boy who wants to figure in the war. The trouble with the young man was that he was only seven teen years of age. He was offered a place at Annapolis, but declined, on the ground that It would take too long to get into the service In that way. The Navy Depart ment offered to put him on a ship to photo graph wrecks and maritime operations In northern waters, but he thought that too tame. At last it has been arranged to give the boy a chance, a place having been found for him In the Yale naval unit. Friends of Potter 'his name is George Potter Darrow predict that this young 'man will be heard from before the war in over, , , ' MANY of our Philadelphia farmers are appealing to Washington for .relief In the matter of farm labor. Some of them have places in New Jersey and Pennsyi. vanla which they say it will not be profl. ;.im ??J -??,'. ry katt 4 ZLj SO'EASV y . v (Mf "V quality" of the labor being gathered up by the Government officials, but those who have not run up against the "unworkables" contend that the real trouble is In "the robbing of farms" by the higher wages and other allurements of Government plants and munition factories. Richard Campion, tho wool merchant, has lately undertaken to do some real farming In Cape May County, New Jersey. He has 500 acres under cultivation. He has been having some lively correspondence with the Gov ernment labor experts without much Im mediate prospect of relief. This is the way Mr. Campion sizes up the situation as it is now affected by Government control and distribution. "The kind of farm labor sug-v gested Is not the kind required to produce food to feed the aimles. An efficient farm hand must be as skilled as must a ma chinist. He must be able to handle a $600 ' pair of horses.an $800 machine or a $2000 tractor. The man picked up suddenly In the city streets cannot do these things. If food will win the war,' food must be produced and to that end the Government must not onjy not take from, but actually put on, the farms experienced farm hands. rpHE fraternallsts who held their big congress in Philadelphia recently have 1 made good their promise to bring up to Congress the scheme to facilitate the pay ment of benefits to the beneficiaries of those who die In the service. They are now urging the' passage of a -bill which ' provides for such notice of death by tho Government as may enable the societies to make payments to those indicated by tho soldier or sailor member. It Is claimed that there are more than 9,000,000 frater nallsts in the United States of whom nearly 3,550,000 are under arms. Despite the report that Sialic In Wanderland the Kaiser has left Berlin for German grand headquarters. It's safe to bet that he doesn't know where he's going. Bedouin en campments are no more movable than the conferenee tdble of the Hun army chiefs, continually "rectifying their lines" with the unsolicited iaBslstance of Marshal Foch. When It tries to run over those fourtsen polntB there will be every reason In the world why the Hun monarchy should be re tired. What Do You Know? QUIZ I. Whnt la the nam of the Crown Prince of WMR -A S. Where l the Ularid of Lemnof. on which 1"! 3. Who director of ronarrratlon for tho ri- 4lH oral fuel commlaalonf wl 4. Wlir are poet sometime eallad Parnaul... fa B, What la brand? made from? vd e. Who wrote "Orlando Furloao" jSM 7. What la cerlaa iaIoi- mnA v- nam. meanT """ "li 1 H. How far la Versalllra from Pari.T ij 9. Who Is tho Premier of GraecT 10. How man times did WiUlam J, Bm nut for the presldencrr - r- Anewers to Yesterday's Ouls 1. General Townahend wa Townahend was th. dlatlnsulaba J' r emploied by tho Turka m a 2S . In saVln for the arml.tlw. i. Maiauiir senxer 2. Praaruo la tho eaDltal a RaI.i. 3. ZIU of Ilourbon end Parma la .h of An.trla and UuoVn of Hunsorr. " aim, uii.ai:a wcro followers Ulna which y .vaa uvk drawn from EMI -paean aourcea Sr-thV"V5Ki. "' w "Puttor "rolecUJ. then Cat mZrmWg2Z3Fi ar .i . YL rcBiurag; r S. Arnold Bennelrc urtnrt '-. tui n . . .- . --v p.v arm IflWS I sola." 8. Helnrkh If cut. bclonsed to the Jelh rsieA'" .of aereral man . flourished Jn the Church of fata '' r reiacea nninuini. - c "fitf,...-- '"'.'?'. P, ir.2Z. wr,"L"a,!, uripnim .v 7 " "'...;. "?,' ." ' " KepuMlal. ft S. A nesrlto la m member . an --- --'-- g-g. race T. V2L UKL ". A sSUU. J -. . . . - vm W, mwm m hi i, -! l ft.1 :.! '.I m M A 1 ti Hi 5 3 Hi .. I 5 a I A .f "J f'r 411 f&ri a i -tya jgira-5fcr ,r