tMMitwV7 h'7C" , 'I; JLU EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY; DECEMBER 5, 1918 W58 s T ,.i. - ,.i p..." g r . L it A. II I fc ?'N. I.V I kvs eg 1. it KO v laienmg $tagUc 3Teftger THE EVENING'TELEGnAPH TUBLIC LEDCEn COMPANY onus it. ic curtis, rxrsrotxT Chsrlts II, Ludlnaton. Vlc President : John C Martin, Secretary- ami Treasurer, Philips. rollme, John n, Williams, John J. Spuracon, Directors. EDITC-niAI, J30AHU: Cncs II. K, Ccitis, Cbalrnun BA.VID E. SM1LCT Editor JOHN C MARTIN.... General Husli.t Manager Published dallr at 3'cbiio l.wra nulldtnr. Independence Square. Philadelphia. IorDOr Cbktiii, Ifroad ard Chestnut Streets A-rLaKTia Cm Press-t'n'on nutldlne Naw Toix 20(1 Metropolitan Tower DaraoiT 40.A Kor.l llulldlnc St. Locis 1008 l-ullrto3 IMIMIna CmcaQO.,.., 1102 rioxne Building NEWS BCTtExrS WiinlNOToK STIiatC. N. Id. 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All rights of republication of special dis patches herein arc also reserved. PhiUdelpliii. Thornier, Ilrrtaibrr ", 1018 THE JOYS O.F rUBLtC SERVICE M'ADOO Is out. naruch S out. John D Ityan hai rjuit his place at tho top of: the aircraft board. Doctor llarfioKi now Joins tho chorus of the resigneis, and thero aro signs of an cutward movement elEewhere in tho ranking personnel of tho war machine which Mr. Wilson built in a. hurry. Mr. Schwab is looking eagerl toward private life and hit resignation H supposed to bo in tho President's hands. Of Mr. McAdoo It may bo raid that he hi leaving a colossal task half finished Ho dislocated tHc railroad system and theroforo would seem to bo tho logical man to aid in iti readjustment" to a peaco basis. Doubtless there i .1 ust amount of tonstructlvo work thai tl.o other chiefs in wnerafney depjitmcnts I might do in tho next year. Yet it is haul to blame them for quitting a hen ire which Is invariably thankless and without pioflt Doctor Garfield had les leason than ar.j of his associates in th" war machine to wish to stay in office. Of all the ofllclals in. tho war service ho was the moht m sistently criticized. Ho wai the alluung tarffot for thousands of grumbling citizen" Llko the others who organized hpeual de partrflents in Washington, he left more congenial work for a putiiotk dutj. Schwab turned away from tho nff.iirs of a -vast corporation and imperiled his per sonal fortune. McAdoo. on his own ac count, went broko in ofllce. The fellow citizens of theso public servants never seemed to remember their ci.stenre miles there was causo for complaint. And yet wo wonder in Anient a whv st larger number of gifted men no not devote themselves to the sonni' f M.i commonwealth! Though William Ilohcnzolli rn i em phatically undesirable, Iio is crrta.nl-v not 1 uncalled ox. NO EUROPEAN HOLIDAY? UF THE European Governments contem plating continuing the ban against tourists until some tuno after tho feigning "of peace aro wisels- considerate not only of themselves but of tho would-be- vi-utoifc. Ileconstruqtlon on a vast hcalo it the need of tho moment in parts of Italy, Kclgium and France, and tho latter country dis plays 60und judgment in intent to pro hibit tho entrance of any person not pre pared to assist in such work. But tho chronic tourist also, although his long-suppressed zeal for travel remains without European outlet, has valid cause to applaud tho arrangement. I'oimerly he relied on tho paternal and exhaustive Karl Baedeker to blaze the wuy in Wnds of an alien tongue. Today many of those red tell-talo volumes aro out of date and void of authority. , jZaberri can no longer l.o tiacked down iit'tho index, of "The fthlne" handbook. It'fl Saverne -now, vhile Strassburg has Jost -an "s" and gained an "o." "Kaiser platze" vanish in favor 'i" "Waco "n- la Itepublique." Xew Loundaiy ;inc3 mean a completo reclassitlcation nf "Trae'.er'.s Onides." It will be well for tho comfort of unllingual travelers, to which category fmoa Americans belong, to wait until hi movements abroad can bo enzily safe guarded as in tho days of old. t Furthermore, there ii something t-uggea- . tivo of heartlessness in the concept of making a holiday just now amid hemes eternally hallowed by supremo tragic sac- , rlflco. When Franco is ready to rcreh c tho fat-pursed tourist and caro for him with tho former offectionato interest she will open her arms. -No whlstlei blow when troop sr.ijis. Lear injr' wounded return. Heart throb.i pay a tenderer tribute. DER TAG FOR AUTOMOBILE "T7TIEN gasltss Sundays cams the heart " of all that world that rides or hopes to rido on rubber tires struck bottom It seemed then that the automobile was to bo exiled for long. Now the man who used to he King of Prussia and German 'Emperor by tho Will of Gott is In exile. Thoy call him Bill. The war Is over verywhore but In Congress. .The War "rt- if Department bcems to havo found a sub- utitute for gasollno that is more powerful thnn ems Itself and so ehean as to tnlcn mi all tho sMnn ot of joyriding. Tho war, hf that tnreatenpu temporarily to paralyze I u tht motor industry, has Klven it new vi- t at T . . . - itajlty ana a tremenuous lot or pnceiens , advertising, Tho gasollno engine was one of the great victors at Armageddon. It Is j, ' jro wonder that the joy bells are ringing , '' ,in the motor trado or that the Automobile Si Trade Association of this city is to have --; i Jubilee neit week. k'-s i? '' BJven those who do not drive motorcarn ' rtgrettod to teo the automobile threatened , "' wHh temporary extinction. Tliey could . l.fijSra.y e(tt a thrill out of the advertisements. i')V2!sM not remember tho unbelievably ifaiiii))' 01 rive jii uiuriuujii uiu L.toiaivr."throujrti ft. -panorama of $!"& tffftj JWft of th weekly magazines? Looking onco at tliolr ecstatic faces papa drove wp know that tiro trouble, upkeep nnd such tcrm3 were the inventions of cianks and hypocrite. Life in tt dovll-wagon plainly was one long sweet song. Automobiles won in war a triumph that thoy ultimately will duplicate in peace. The family car of these days it more affec tionately regarded than the family dog. nnd a million times moro useful. It is often given a pleasant namo indlcativo of esteem and personality. At the Philadel phia Jubilee the new 1921 modeW will bo shown, of course, and wo nhall bo glad to seo this added sign of blithe poaco onco moro returned to a troubled world. Tor tho motorcar is essentially the plaything of grown men. It renews their youth. And it Is tho first of thrlll-glv cr. "It's lonely up there," said a returned airman. "There's nothing to see, nothing to show that you're going fast. When I wuntid fun I hot-rowed a Hi-ver and drove that:" NK'-A AJ1E OF GERMAN KI.LTI 11 ' l I'OST-W'AK ACTIVITIES Anierica Mti-it Hai- h Higher Ideal If It Would Ki-rape the Kind nf llligliting, Materialism Whiih Led to the War V17E ARE hearine; mucli about the re habilitation of America nf ler the war. Congress and the newspnpers a.-e talkinp; of what is to be done with the railroads and with tho returning soldiers, and with the relations of capital and labov. And much of tho talk seems to be based on tho belief that if we would avoid disaster we must apply the principles of German kultur to the solution of the problems. But nothing could bo more disastrous to American civilization than to remake it oi. the Gentian model. The oak is in the acorn. The oak is the ideal which the acorn is fated by the law of its being to realize. Soulles?, conscienceless, giecdy Germany is tho realization of the' ideal of German kultur. The ideal of a nation, the intangible, invisible shape into which tho dreams of its people would force it, is the most powerful in fluence at work in shaping the form of its civilization. And the ideal of the nation is the combined ideals of the peo ple who compose it. It is about time thai we bean a searching of heaiU to discover just what we want America to be, for many things aro in solution just now, and their re shaping is easier than it will be in a few year's. One voice has lately been heard decrying German kultur. It is that of Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. In the course of a recent address at Princeton he reminded up that there ute three fundamental as pects of life which must be considered if we aie to do anything more than drift. They are: Fir.tt. The aspect n) etltus. iclueh he de- sctibis (is the docirinc of eondvet and service. Second. The aspect oj ecoiiomus, which is the doctrine of gainful occupation. Third. The aspect of politics, wliieh is the doctrine of the reconciliation be tween the two and of living together in hai mony and Itelpfulnrs-,. Doctor Butler concludes tli.a if we face the future with a realization of the truth that ethics, economies and politics are not three different and contradictory disciplines, but three aspects of one and the samo. discipline, we fchall put behind us the German-made psychology without a soul and the German-ma'de economies with nothing 'higher than-gain as the end. If the American people- believe that the mission of politics in its broader as pect is to bring about harmony between conduct, inspired by the theory of service, and business, entered upon for profit, the tasks of the future will be comparatively" easy. Wc shall then have an ideal, the attempt to realize which will shape to the highest ends everything that we do. Apply this to the lailioad situation, for example. Do we want the Government to own the railroads becauso we are jealous of the private citizens who now own them and because we seel: to deprive them of their sources of wealth? Or do we want the railroads to be returned to their owners in order that they may be ptotected in their property and continue to get rich from it? Or aro we seeking the best way to solve tho problem of railroad transportation for the greatest good of the greatest number? Can the enemies of capital and the owners of cap ital meet on a common platform of de sire for the common good ? If they can, the rest is easy. If they cannot, wo are doomed to u conflict of interests and to an attempt to imbed in our national lifo the principles of German-made economics with nothing highe'r than selfish' gain as tho end, where we ought to havo a unity of interest and a conflict only of z6al In seeking the best way to serve the whole psople. The labor problem can be solved as simply if we choose to apply to it tho combined ideals of ethics and economics and politics as set forth by Doctor But ler. But thus far certain of the labor leaders appear not to be considering the larger ethical ideal, with its theory of bervice, because they arc insisting on the economics of gain, and they are demand ing thnt politics shall not attempt to hnr monize ethics and economics, but that it shall ignore every consideration save that which will insure to labor the high wages which it hag been receiving during tho war regardless of the needs of tho rest of the community. And there are also some employers who aro equally lilfnd'to tho ethical side qf their function in society, and are considering only how 'much work thoy can get for how little .money. ty Js too much to hope that there will T,H1pmtfcal,-asd'?ople):''aiiUcatl6n of Doctor Butler's idcnl nt the present time. Hut there nro some men who nro shaping their conduct by it and there always havo been such. When Uicy are in tho controlling majority thnt mil lennium of which poets huve dreamed and prophets preached will bo upon us. Yet men who love their kind will not hesitate to hold this splendid ideal aloft at every opportunity in tho hope that it will ulti mately draw all men unto it Now that tho P. It. T. Talcs of Wnjslde Pan informed us that sin iMp-stopi nro not ' responsible for any ltn revise In accident." It should go n step furtlier and tell us what is. With verity as a slogan wo havo tho rlKhl to know. "Wo should nut li.ixe I he ( ii)i riiat Jeer lost the battle of ths Mnrne," says tho es crow n Ii nice, if ilif ilik'M of our general staff had not suffered from j enro of nerves." "Arid a r.To of champagne," might be added by .Marshal ljch, who saw tlio lees of pre sumptuous revelry when he enteied Chalons. In otii way it is bard Old Man" I to sen why so much I he l!o ttlijeotloa was raised 'o Mr. Wilson',) bea trip ' apt.i.in Mci'iiuiey. and not tho Presi dent, is really the boss of tl.o tieorgo Wash ington liven Senator Sherman mlght'sootho his uneayy soul with that reflection. With tho restrictions off, it's a Blorlons care of sucar "hoo-ratlons" nowadays. ,.!.. If only Maon and Dhton could be resus citated fur tho Paris conference some, per maner.ej nf boundary lines could br a sun d U ih, ubles keep on telling ot the r-lab-oi.ite $3 -" meals consumed by American ecu. respondents In Germany, bonio restaurani keepers w-111 bf petitioning for the re-ctab-Ik-hniml of tho censorship. THE ELECTRIC CHAU V Vieit to Ainctongen Hu Our Special Correspondent Irul'N'U the Vountws Hentlne Bolrg oer her hoiisiliolil account with a gloomy face. 'Is .Mr Huhi pollein anywhere nbout"" I ax'iod "I il lUe-io'te him if 1m if-p't out of the mij ' "'ot at all." 1 said in t iet he's very mil i In the v.ij I think jotill llnd him Hi the gaulc-n, taking his ni"ililinr tineonstltti t'on.il. Lock out for tho barln.il wire'.' "Hciu'ekeeplng is cpenMo these days, Irti't if" I said, seeing- the mournful way in wh.ch she turned to her plto of bills "I hope thfu-s no shortage. In these parts"' ".'o siiort.iRe of guet., hiiw.ij," she said She .seemed quite pleased to he ; hV In on tnle in a dis-sieit man, "KS.' he continued. ieitl.ing is so X dear that If, except some of Hip lsi tnrs We hue l.ithir a liouw ful linn, you know So sriirj, I o.'in't ollir mhi tho spare room, but the Count is sleeping In the stablo as It is And tho expense.- well, we nro KOiiik to put in n i latin for indemnlt as soon as thtie's a I'ocernment in Kerlin to IHe it with All ilie shops In Auirroiigeu have put up their prices sinee- Mr. Molienzollein arriwd The eiuality oi ihe foods has gono down, too I've ordered I elon't know how much around Bias--, but it doesn't seem any use. Tho pi ice of saus'.ig.i is almost prohibi tive: j mi know some people Insist on having what tlnj'i'e accustomed to When wo aro alone we live mucn mou ninplv " "At any rate," I i.iid, "thero aio tomo economies jou II be able p. make Under the e-lreurnstances you'll hardly feel like hanging up mistletoe for Christmas.' "i Irafious '." she cried ' 1 t ym: supposo t1n-5".l s-iaj- as long as that' Why. all th tenants will leave. Tliev've been corn plainlnK already because Mr. Tlohenzolltin has been giving them signed photos of lnmseff And tho chambermaid has given me notKP. because when she, poes to make up Mr liohenzollern'H room in the morn ing she 1'nds all the furniture) plied around the bed In a kind of barth ade Also ho dis turbs us n great deal lit night 1, talking in his sleep ' 'If 1 wcic J on, ' I v.ntiueil, '1 vvnuld pars the, word around tha' .Mr. and iMra. Wilson nro coming to spi nd Christinas with jou I think s,eur .guest'' will le-ave fast enough when they hear that " A charming smilo spiead over her har assed face,. ''That's a good idea," sho said. AKTl-It j- zoller boii.e searching I found .Mr. Hohen- ni walking in a dense grove of trees not fin- from the castle. When he saw me coming lie skipped quickly behind a thicket and dodged about with surptislng agility. At last, however, by waving a handkerchief, I managed to convince him tliat I had no ulb rlor motive, and he approached 'ilullo. old chap," I said. 'The' last time I saw ou was ih Herlin. Things havo changed a bit since, then, what?'' "A great many Ead things have happened," ho sud, Klanclng uneonociously at bis civilian i lothes ' I am particularly dis tressed to hear of Mr. Wilson's visit to Kuropc. It shows a disregard for tho feel ings of tho American llelchstag that I can not help deploring Ho would do much bet ter to stay whero 1 e w, J lem glad to talk to an American. I believe that in your country I liav.) wme friends still" "Wry ftill, indeed," I replied. '7 baven't heard tl.cm iay anything IN A DISTANT part of the estate 1 heard re-poita that sounded l.ke shooting "I hope I'm not Interrupting your hport." I said "Perhaps you're out for gami)7" Ilo looked a bit pallid. "Oh, no," ho said. "Thats only a little t-niptng I mean snipe hunting. As a matter of fact, two or three of my staff havo been kind enough to walk nrouiid tho grounds wearing somo. of my old uniforms, just to draw tha lire as it were. That given mo a bit moro freedom and time to read the news There's not much In tho papers nowadays, do you think? "It's queer what some people will do," I said, mtdltathels, thinking of the chaps who were -aetng as targets. Tdn't if" ho said brishtly. "What do jou think can be tho frame of mind of a man, who will deliberately shoot an another human being? It seems almost Incredible, don't you think?" ho added, aa though eager to be convinced. ''It Is alwaya tho incredible that happen," was tho only lemark that occurred to me. w T'Vi: Iir.LN' thinking a bit about coming 1 over to America," ho said. "You know I need to visit a good dentlr.t, nnd if that fellow liavis is still practicing I might le.t bygones bo bygones." "Yes," 1 lrtused. "that's about tbe only way you'll bo likely to get u new crown " ' "I'm not at all pleased with the attitude of tho Dutch Government," he said 'There has been altocether too much talk about extradition. tlUt extradition Is raroly fatal. Is it?" "Your apprehension is well founded." I said. "One of these da The Hague it going to send a statement to Versailles headed by the words To Hill Heniercd." Across tho lawn we haw Mm. Ilohenzol lern approaching, and her husband looked worried. "I'xcuso rnc," he said, "but I must get out of the way My wlfo keeps on urg. lng mo to put mybelf right with posterity by telling all. Now you know I have con siderable posterity of my own, and J haven't much regard for it.'"' lie shook my hand limply and vanished mip cud uixutrvryin. tfOTItATIJg. - THE GOWNSMAN "Amiability and a Sense of Proportion" A CHKKrtFt't, nnd optimistic correspond-f- fnt recently sent the following letter to mir dark nnd despairing contemporary, Tho Nation, nnd It was printed as Inconspicu ously a pos,hle; hut, bo It remrmhered to the good, that It was printed. VS.', '" f," ,,0',, "ally to black as The N-ntion paints it? I know that Mr. Htirlc , i.1. 'orfcc,. "at Mr. Creel Is a bit unreliable, that Mr. Oompcm Isn't Mr. 'Henderson, that Senator Lodgo Is unen I'Rlitened, that Mr. Iloosevelt lacks the judicial temper, that security leagues and councils of safety are often blatant nnd myopic, that Hepubllcnns are protection ists and protectionist not always unselfish, that iieaToca are discriminated against on account of race, color nnd previous condi tion of servitude, that judscs lmposo ex cesplve rcntences, that conscientious ob jectors nrc submitted to Indignities, that personal liberty -Is annoylngly curtailed, that war provokes passion, and I think1 with The Nation that It would be better ir t w-ero otherwise. Hut after all, i- It so bnd as you make It out? What are the objections to amiability and a bense of proportion? A"AHIWTY,ind a sonso of propottton ' .f A Tho first is a question of temper, the second on attitude of mind. Untpicstlonnbly this is a very unsatisfactory world, mado wrong In the first place, If you will have It so, Mr. rc3Simlst, nr.d run wrong from the beginning. You and I rather suspect that wo know somebody, whose name Innate mod esty forbids us to utter, who would have done It much better in the beginning or at any time since, for that matter. , And accord ing to our temper, wo despair and look black, or we laugh with n good-humored Republi can friend of the Gownsman, taking joy after all In the high Joke which the piece of per versity, tho Goddess of l-'ortune, has played on tho Innocent American people. "Just think of what a joke It Is," he says, ''the greatest of all junctures In history, the re cording of the entire political world, a de mand for the subtlest trained political iia garitv that the vvoild has yet lequlred and only a Democrat in the chair at Washing ton and even he won't stay there. There has been nothing fo funny sinco Horace wrote that lino about the mountain in the labors of childbirth, which after earthquake, shivers, thtoee and horrors, brought forth a ridicu lous muse " Tlimin is much to tay in favor of tho cllmato of Philadelphia, for example, if any ono cares to Ray It. But there arc times. notably In summer, when we aro sorely and piotiaefedly Hied Whether It Is our un comfortable civic conscience nr tho sands of Puritanlcm In our easy Quaker bearings, the Go'i nsiiun is not prepared to say, but certain it is that our temper as to the weather has been permanentlv spoiled It is a current fni ..hi ammig lis to damn the Weather on evir., p,is-silble occasion, ard wc. do this often with a happy vni letj of epltlut which is far from discreditable to our ingenuity. Now the Gownsman can personally atllmi that the summer climate of Chicago can be. as moist, as hot, as dank nnd dripptiigly dlsigreeablo as an;. thing which his native city can pro duce The Chicago mtiuny is us given to antics in climbing as emr own. and Is as likely to stay up all night. The torrullty of the one c tj . in a word, Is the torridlty of the ether nut does Chicago complain? No. everything in right In Chicago. Wbere lote, on a day which jnoft potently suggests a heated place whither neither the virtuous Gownsman nor any of his readers shall ever go. the Chlcago.in merely exclaim- 'What a glciiious summer daj '" WH HAVI' lived through events without pn c edent and wo havo matched tho un precedented with tho unprecedented ; and we shall continue to do so. We are not only making history : we ai e making example for futum time to point to and, let us hope, to follow. Our place among the nations has buddenly become tho foremost: not because wc have stilferecj as others have suffered or glvi n as others have given, but becauso a great idea, an Idea involving a large gener osity, .i splendid dlslnterebtedness, whether bj accident or design, has taken possession of Ui and Inspires In tho world a new hope for the future WlRrefnr- your Gownsman, like many others, u overwhelmed with mortifica tion at tho frequent littleness of our temper of mind, our quibbling and pettifogging, our bkkering and small talk, our congenital dis satisfaction with whatever Is, whatever has been, whatever is promised A sense of proportion might cause us to "-eeognize that to be an American in such a timo as this n an honor above the price of party ; that to bo a sharer In tho events which have taken place is to be a partaker In the radiance of an lm perlshablo glory. Wo are feeding, as we have fed. the hungry; wo aro protecting, as we havo protected, the weak against the strong hand of wrong; we are "intermeddling" grandly to give the downtrodden an uplift into a freer world. And our hand has been against the Colossus of tyranny which, with tho help of other hands, we have toppled from its pedestal of authority and power. In propoitlon to all this, for what du the trivialities of proceduro count, the niceties of' outworn precedent, the question of who's who In this instrument of our national -will or that 1TTHY not be amiable, good-humored. YY kindlj ? Great things are doing, why not be a help to them, not a captious obstacle? There 13 much that is going right, despite all that is going wrong It is going to bo winter, it is true; but inevitably thereafter It will agam be spring, and winter may be enjoyed by thoso who keep warm tho cock les of the heart, as spring may be made miserable by those who complain even In tho sun. After all. we get in this world prutiy much the things which we go out to seek, though there are often surprises In their coming. For all things are .accom panied by their bhadovvs; but which Is tho shadow, which the reality It is often diffi cult to tell. Possibly our momentary tes tlness Is mainly a matter of nerves. We have been keyed up high, now, for nearly flvo 3 ears ; our feelings have been wracked, our emotions stlried, our fountains of In dignation, admiration, patriotism, generosity drawn on to tho very dregs. And now the high tension Is, in a measure at least, re laxed, and we turn back on the little things about us which we had lorgotten under the sterner stress. BUT wliy not try amiability? Why not start out today to discover everything that is at least extenuating in conduct which at first flush we think we are gong to dis approve? Why not llnd out whether after all It really Is a low and sclflsh motive alone which has prompted this act, that or tho other? Why not look for the fine qulxotlo Idea that has led some ono with whom We habitually disagree Into what wo conceive to be hiu folly? It is surprising how the habitual iearch for what Is admirable and praiseworthy lifts the searcher and clarifies his colloquial judgments of men and affairs, us contrastodly tho habitual search for sinister motives and Ignoble purposes bends a man double like a ragpicker whose pack of dirty linen bears him down. And should you meet with hated Dr. Pell, though why you hate you cannot, tell, do not think out Ingenious reasons for your hatred to match with other Ingenious reasons thought out by other Ingenious haters, but listen to the good things that may be said The Gownsman doubts not. oven of Dr. Pell, how able a gentleman he 1, after all, and how valued In friendship by those who know hlra; and even If he does hall from Texas, though you Btilt may not like hlni, not having your. aelf discovered him, at least be amlablo about It,. Kx-KIng Nicholas of Montenegro de clares that "in order to seo which way the wind was blowing" his abdication "wan a Btraw " Logically explained,' since his throne seems to havo been of the tamo material. Sweet and pleasant It now Is If you aro o minded to turn your coffee Into a alrup wlih no longer the ilightoit twjnge of WMWoHr' "? iBvioejlotv n , , "BE NICE, YET, CHUtiGE; EFFEJR SINCE MlaaMafelWiSBIS: yrHSMS.Y-. lk if aJBBfetfSBBBlBBVCiBBHHsWBto-tL3Ba'Ua''BYJ)fBl?Q''4aBm-'B'f'H.4E. t'Srt-JJ tnF tr.n par . nrimr v a1 C--.' ?J t& X TM a 'TaliBBBVVaV Af I'alalalalalalaalalalaMir'llCalalalaWaaalawsaliaa'aialaMar'aWT. TT"mMzli-1' JTt-a iJ-J f. viMM I T I ITU lllll MT 4T X - AX.Iri.'. J u'v'slaBalsUl 7T .ntV'S VMaSSJSiBaaESiSSCv jTi'j.' l A"-jt"-- ifr-.s. Skt ' aHaaaflHiawfdiraCfUaaaaaVl &MMmr1X;fXswx' BhnSUIr MBUeb 4 -ivfflKKSf i'. J&g&& &i&?&. BSffiLtiMg? , 9EaLLLaaaanf rVXx :x xMMm-, ' JiiS "aafeaJraaaiMirflEi"? ' f ftaaaaaaSr S'SsKS'-'i SMtKXmfWhrv'SWfMMtrii K -UUtr s i?WKmRffm&r TaaaLWIaB?UaB jwf 2 aaHEaaaiaCt &&? tBdUin- (&! '-Mf Lr KSirflR3eSSiiiJSjfle'X SXltBStLrrr.Jwv How to Keep Our Ships on the Sea Lnlt'M, Subsidies Art' Paid the American Merchant Flag Will Disappear From tho Ocean Senator Fletcher's Errors Exposed Ily CEORGE F. SPROULE Secretary oj the State Commissioners of Navigation TUC leply of United States Senator Dun cm W. Fletcher, of Florida, to the state ment recently made by P. p. ICnlght, vice president and general counsel of the Amer ican International Shipbuilding Corporation, that because of dlsprlminatory legislation ''no man can own and operate a ship prollt ably under tho American flag." as appearing hi tho columns of the Kvenino Prnuc I.unm.R under date of November '27, 1918, Is bubject to much erit'clsm, nnd I am of the opinion that Mr. Knight's views are rather in accord with those of practical shipping men. I take it Mr. Knight's rematks apply to American vessels In the foreign trade, be causo beforo the war thero were somt in stances of American bteamshlps prospering In the protected coastwise trades of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. ISSUE can be taken with Senator Fletcher's remarks that our shipping laws aro not nearly so burdensome as those of Kngland, Germany, Norway and Japan. Havo any of these countries laws compelling the master of a ship to give to the seaman one-half his wages every five days while in port? Is the standard of food on tho ships of any of theso nations comparable with that on American ships? I think not. Do any of these coun tries compel the production of certificates of competency for able-bodied seamen, at least othor than service such as Is lnd'cated by tho "discharge-book"? Yet our laws make it necessary for a seaman to produce from the United States local Inspectors a certificate of competency, and cert'flcatos of service on foreign ships cannot be accepted. Do aim of those countries require -that, EG per cent of tho deck department, exclusive of officers, EhallTie certificated sailors? I think not. Do any of these nations, excepting; perhaps Japan, require the carrying of so large a crow as American ships. Thl3 can also be answered In tho negative. Then Senator Tlctcher seems to congratulate us on the fact that we have no "load-line" law In this coun try. Has he ever observed tho position of tho "load-k'no" on the side of a British craft? If so, would he wish to Beo American ships loaded to a greater deptji? This "load-line" Is so adjusted as not seriously to interfere with the carrying capacity of foreign vessels. He speakB also ot tho fact that ships of foielgn natioim cannot carry deck-loads beyond ceitaln heights, which in tho winter season Is very much reduced. Might it bo asked, has Senator Fletcher ever spent any timo during the winter season at Norfolk or Old Point Comfort and observed the iiriusn "tramps" whilo en route from the Gulf to rjuropo with timber, that come there for bunker coal? I feel that the deck-load re strictions on foreign vessels are not too severe. So far as American vessels are con cerned, the Eizo of decktloads Is regulated durmg tho winter season rather from a humanitarian standpoint. fvTO'vif anothor point he makes In the favor J of American vessels la that our seamen are excluded trom the provisions or tne com pensation law, while those from Kngland, Germany and Norway are Included. I am ot the opinion that all bp.t a very few of our States had passed this law when the United States Supreme Court on May 21, 1917, de cided that tho enforcement of its' provls'ons would come In conflict with tho general marl t'me law. On October 0, 1917, Congress enacted legislation to remedy this condition, giving claimants the right of appeal to the common law of any State. Again he speaks of our vessels not having (o pay hospital dues for sick seamen, wh'le such payments aro required ot vosbels ot foreign nations. LUT me state that tho wages of Amer ican seamen deserting must be paid to our United States shipping comnllssloners, who in turn transfer this money to the Unit, ed States Treasury Department to help main, tain tho marlno hospital Borvlce. In foreign vessels, wages left behind by deserting sea men revert to the ship owners, so this about equalizes Itself. The statement of Senator Fletcher that tho wages of, officers and crews constitute only a small percentage of the gross operating expenses of a vessel will be challenged by all Bhlpplng men. Take, for instance, the signal failure on the part of the Untied Fruit Company to operate between Jj'jiiiadetesdtt'Weitindl, th-Aerl- . ISS REFORMED!" can steamships Admiral Farragut. Admiral Schley. Admiral Sampson and Admiral Dewey. These vessels were constructed soon after the Spanish-American war and because of tho expense of operation they were re placed by steamers of similar class under the foreign flog, and tho cost of operation on one round trip to tho West Indies dropped 50 per cent. Other Instances ot the failure to oper- ate American steamships in competition with foreigners were well and forcibly brought to tho public view by the late William u. WInsor, who was financially Interested In the Boston .yteamshlp Company, which construct ed the steamships Shavvmut and Tremonf for service between the west coast and the Orient. It has been stated by such eminent authority as P. A. S. Franklin, president of tho International Mercantile Marine, that In normal times it costs from 37 to 47 per cent more to build a ship In this country than In Kngland, and indeed the president of the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company, one of the largest yards In tho country, once made the statement that an ordinary freight-carrying steamship, termed a i"tramp," could be constructed in England for about 75 per cent less money than In this country. , AGAIN reverting to tho statement of Sen- ator Fletcher that the wages of the offi cers and crew constitute only a small per centage of the gross operating expenses, let us quote John Donald, ono of the present members of tho United States Bhlpplng board. In tho operation of a small steamship called tho David, In the West India trade. While operating this vessel under the Ameri can flag her wag?s per month were $1235, nnd when placed under tho Norwegian flag they dropped to $680. These were normal times, but normal times aro what we must reckon with as soon as the peace treaties are signed. There Is no gainsaying the fact that with the present rates of freight, American vessels can be operated successfully In the foreign trade, but can any one figure out how they are going to succeed when, for the sako of argument, case oil freights .from Philadelphia to Japan drop to from eighteen to twenty cents? IT IS an economic problem that cannot, be solved otherwise than by a complete re vision of our navigation laws, or the equaliz ing by subsidy, or other means, of the dif ference in cost of operation. The world war demonstrated the need of a merchant marine, and all practical Bhlpplng men would like to accept some of President Hurley's theories, were they not confronted with the stern realities of past experience. It has been- Btated that the baBls of the English navigation act, under which Kngland grew to commercial ascendancy upon the sea, was the principle of reserving the carriage of English rate, to English ships. The late James J, HIU, after building In New London In 190-1 two of the largest twin screw steamships under the American flag for Bervice between the Pacific nnd Orient, made the statement that it was a much euBler task to construct a thousand miles of railway than one ship, He was confronted with many difficulties and soon realized what a "hopeless task It was to attempt to operate American vessels In competition with foreign, era He favored as a measure of keeping up our merchant marine the payment of nn ex port bounty, but was strong In the belief that when a country has to buy a merchant marlno and pay for it out of the general Treasury of the country, It will not last long. I havo always Inclined to the belief of the b'e walls, of Bath, Maine, once the largest owners of Balling vessels in this country, that a direct subsidy must be given American vessels to keip them going. I might mention that the French Government, besides paying a building bounty, gives a mileage subsidy of so inuch per ton per hundred miles sailed, which practically covers the operating expenses of a vessel. By reason ot this subsidy the French ships played havoc with the California trade, and freights went down to figures where no ship,' without assistance such as the French ships have, could compete and make a dollar. This practically Bounded the death-knell of thd American sailing ships In the "deep-water" trade, and such as were left soon passed Into the hands of concerns such as thy Hi! Balms' Pa'r' Afcoalatloii. HE CATCHES ME I 1 i HYMN TO FREEDOM MOTHER of man's time-traveling gon' erntlons, Breath of his nostrils, licartblood of his, heart, God abovo all gods worshiped of all na tions. Light abovo light, law beyond law, thoti art. , We have known thee and huvc not known thee; stood besldo thee, -Felt thy lips breathe, set foot where thy feet trod, N Lo.vod and renounced and worshiped and denied thee, As though thou wrt but as another God. The ciowned heads lose the light on them! it may be Dawn Is at hand to strike the loud feast dumb: To blind the torch-lit centuries till the day be, Tho feasting kingdoms till thv kingdom r come. I have love at least, and have not leir, and part not 'From thino unnavigablo and wingless way; Thou tarrlest, und I havo not said thou art nut, v. l SnH ..11 .1... ..!.. I... i - ., r-i. ii-.j "I )ui in cn.) iiifcjui. ioiik nuve cienieti tnjj,, 1 day, i Come, though all heaven again be fire abovo thee; Though death beforo thee come to clear,, lliv nlrv- - it Let us but see In Ills thy l'acc who love -J thee; Yea, though thou slay. us, arise and let, ' us die. ,$, From "Mater Triumphalis," by Algernon ciiorips Bwinuunic, j-m Mr, Schwab gave Philadelphia a rip on her port dellnqueneles, and she seems to -have . answered with an Auch. I No wonder Mr. Wilson slept peacefully r through the noises In Elroad Street Station, the other night. Hadn't ho just arrived from Congressional halls? il What Do You know? QUIZ 1. What former position ilu" Dim tor ('itrfle'il tt " ijume on realrnlnr n redernl futl fcdminl-, 3. Where and what li Gretna Green? 3. Where In the Tolcano of Orliuba. sfur which ''. tho ship bearlnr the newrnpiiocr correBPoad- ents to Kurope Is named? . Who wrote the opera "Martha"? f S. What notorious politician Is HIU owaltlnr a V 0. Who wraa eajlnl the "American I'ablst"? 7. What la meant br (lolconda? 8. Who was Klttr Cllve and when did ihe'lltf? 0, VlJio aald "Gratitude la expenaWe'T 10. How should tbe word xnu be pronounced; , Answers to Yesterday's Quis ' ' I. tile Herman iirrra ox ireTfS. Ilie rraftftian rlty recently entered br the American troops. Is Trier. ' J, The metronome U un Instrument martin timo br means of n pendulum. It la nsM by musicians nnd waa Invented br Maclttl. it friend of llrethoTrn. ' 3. Kurt Eisner la Premier of nararla, 4, riufareh wrote In Greek Ilie parallel lltj.'l Sre A?d! MMtvl """a. Ills dates a. ruiittt Arenas. In Chile. Is the toutherom.sl town on the American continent. """" 0. Black Friday Is the name applied to two dls- 1 "f'R"i' 2?" n h.nn,rnclaf. history of the ' i.", nwi,p nwtriuurr SS, JBBV,, When ' KM. and Jay jlould tried to rornertho fold market, nnd HentemberB. l813.jWhei" ' tbe widespread "panic" of that year tier.. "i .7, The orljtlnal Cyrano do Berxerae was is ' Frencfi dramatist. .HI. T5 arBl. 8. I,e Matin, name of a-French dalle s....... ' means "Tho Mornlna." t"ri ' ffiurtsRw1 ,hfl """ p( "-'" "n.;i 10. llehasl yjllllfm Halff, an. Irish mbkmi7: I' , fl?JtW afti-fv'' " " ' flirsatWiVVr ""T ouuffyj 1 l 11 Vrtt. fi iT fJ ' I .--