6 ,& 1 - v- tt. v lr tV o EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHIUADELPHIA V W"J li- - )ELPHIA, MONDAY,. DECEMBER 16, 1918 - ''- ' ..'3w?.o,f, J; OAT iVD r I "WHAT SORT OF A NECKTIE DO YOU WANT FOR CHRISTMAS?." fJ v&v. K. M - If- R B4.iT j If I 0.. R I4,- IlW it H- Pf fls J ft 6if ? hrf i f fc' J Kfj f$ ;? m m : trW KW" l: & 5 'f 'r IK i teietttng public Mcgcc ' THE EVENING"TELEGnAPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY , emus it. k. cunns, riDf(T J Charles It. Ludlnston, Vie President! John C. tartln, Secretary and Treasurer? Philips Collins, ohn B. Williams, John J. Spuri-eon, Slrectora. EDITOMAL BOARD! Clio II. K. Ccms, Chairman DAVID E. SMILEY Editor 1 -J0HN Cl MABTIN.... General Business Manager Published dsllr at Ptnstio I.anora Uulldlni, Independence Square, Philadelphia I.COOCB CaTaiL Uroad and Chestnut Streets Atlantic Cm PrtfVnlon Dulldlnc Nxir Tors; 20S Metropolitan Tower , person 401 fr-ord Iiulldln ST. Loon.. loos Fullerton Rulldlns ' Chicago ..1202 Tril -ma Uulldlnji NEWS BUREAUS : TTAintNaTON Bcaun, N E. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave and Uth St New Toac Iltntin The Sun Dulldlnc London lluatiu London Tim i SUBSCBIPTION TERMS The. Evixino Tort-io Lmu la aerved to sub scribers m Philadelphia and surrounding- towna at the rate of twelve (IS) c-i.'.a per week, payable to tha carrier. lly mall to points outilde of Philadelphia, In tha United Statea, Canada, or United States pos. aeailona. poatare free, fifty (80) centa pr month. Six (to dollara per year, payable In advance. To all forelcn countries one ,11) dollar per month. Notiov Subscribers wishing addreas chsnged xnust give old as well aa new addreaa, BELL, 1000 WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN J00 E7 Address all communication to Kvcntng TuMlo Ledprr, Indepcndtnct Square, Philadelphia, Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS is vxclu tvclv entitled to the use for republication of all jicu dispatches credited to it or not otheittiso credited in this paper, and also the local nctis published therein. All rights of republication of special H patches Jiercfii aro also tcscrved. PhiUdrlphla, MondiT, Drrrmbrr 16, 191S JOIN THE RED CROSS UP UNDEH the Runs, to the er flrat llne trencher, the Hed Cross carried, for the American soldier, an almost mater itial care When a man was carried from the battle It nas the arms of some unsung heroine of the sen Ice that cradled him It wan the Red Cross that watched him through the night and wrote his letters and kept him happy and cheerful Through al the terror of modern war the Red Cross has maintained Its service as a reassuring sjmbol of the ineradicable human deslrt for good It will be on dut In Europe till the last American of the rapcdltlonarj fotce Is safely homo It is at work now evcrj where on the Continent amid the dreadful aftermath of war be ginning at the very foundations of the con structive scheme, averting pestilence and famine, caring for the homeless and doing all that human effort can achieve to help discouraged, dispirited and desolated mil lions. In ritiny parts of Europe it Is the first ad ance agent of a re eo'abllshed civilization. Some of Its heaviest work is still ahead. The Christmas drive for membership be gins today- and membership costs only a dollar. No d liar ever spent ould do more for those who get It and the one who gives than the dollar required for membership In the American Red Cross The red flag Is blgnlflcantly of the hue which prevents It from blushing for Its sins. SUNDAY MUSIC 01" THE BEST VIRTUAL assurance is given that Coun cils' Finance Committee will favorably recommend the Philadelphia Orchestra's offer to give a series of free Sunday con certs during the winter provided the city will appropriate $10,000 towaid tha under taking. The assets of entertainment, spiritual stimulus and esthetic development In such a proposition cannot be gauged by the expenditure necessary to make it thrive Good music available to the public at a time when the public Is best able to enjoy It may be productive not only of pleasure, but of the right sort of artistic betterment which should be sougl t by any large com- munlty. "Bluo laws" still operate against 'pay" concerts on Sundas here Lofty Idealism may be formidably costly, as the orchestra association learned when several jears ago it tried to finance gratis entertainments here out of Its own treasury. The present scheme appeals both prac ticable and fair. The orchestra will add zt J80"00 to the city's gift. The total sum Vwill enable all debts to be met. No profits from the plan aro contemplated. Tha music will be offered as a benefaction to a community whose artistic progress has already been so admirably intensified by thg regular weekdaj subscription concerts. If the present mlltl weather continues the Blrls will have to be getting out their furs again. WHEtf DID WILSON SAY IT? POSTMASTER GENERAL BURLESON , , has announced that his resolution, In troduced In Congress, providing for Gov f ernment ownership of the telegraph and i i lelephone lines, had been shown to Mr. Vilson and had been approved by him So far as the general public knows, Mr. "Wilson has not committed himself to Gov- ernment ovvt.ershlp of either the telegraph ,r lines or of the railroads. The country would like to have home definite word from htm on the subject Instead of accepting his lews at second hand. This is important because it is desirable (hat the opponents of Government ownership should know with yhat forces they are to reckon. A proposition supported by a handful of ( theorists In Congress Is not so dangerous j as when It Is backed by the President with ali the powers at his command. j In spite of Mr. Burleson's Intimation, the country will await some definite word direct from the President before believing that ho favors turning over the telegiaph g&Jjand telephone lines to a Government de S$l , partment which has managed the collec-S.--ttlori and delivery of the malls with no-gr- torfous Inefficiency and extravagance. The President's well-known fondness for moving pictures could be Indulged to the w-j full when ha eared on ecstatic Paris. THE GlftAT NEW WEAPON frjITACHINERY for public discussion of ' International disputes," says Lord Jtoberi, Cecil, Assistant secretary for Foreign Affa.rs In the British Government, "will prevent future wars." Thus the far. sighted English diplomatist suggests the basis of a new scheme which he has worked out "to Insure permanent peace. And he indicates the novel application of """ifrtf'!'qrc tha laa Blwav been overlooked I, v '"aI uridereatim'ated In the ordinary proc- ofsecret diplomacy. He Oiunion is a aeiativeiy neyv factor .wbtM t Ifltw-nallinal politic. From f- 'i this time on It will be' one of the most tremendous forces at the disposal of any statesman with a good ciUoO. It is to be regarded as a great new weapon because It did not exist until education became general. And the potential force of public opinion has Increased steadily with the perfection of the printing press, tho cable service and wireless telegraphy The achievements of the modern scientists have indeed narrowed tho world of wstern civilization down until It may b said that Europo nnd America will always be within the sound of any man's volco when nny momentous thing Is to bo said. President WIIkoii was the first to rec ognize the Importance of a unlvorsal nppeal mado possible by the wireless nnd the cables In behalf of a Just cause. Tho beauty of his method and of the suggestion Just advanced by Lord Robert Cecil Is that a Just cause Is presupposed In each case No dispute In which the world Is the Jurj can ever end In on Inter national conflict. It Is reassuring now to know that hereafter the means will alwavs exist to present tho evidence in the case directly to all tho peoples concerned AN ARMISTICE WITH SELF SIGNED ONCE A YEAR Why Not Make It Permanent So It Will Out- lal the Christmas Season and Help Make the World Better? ANY ONE who views the Christmas "or, let us sny, the pre-Christmas crowds in tho streets these days will have to ponder nnd puzzle -once again in the presence of the strange phenomenon that we call a New State of Mind. Again, suddenly, it has become fash ionable to be kind. The poor have many friends. Be little and forlorn and all the world will tiy to befriend you. Grieve and multitudes will turn from their own affairs and search for ways by which you may be comforted. The hungry will bo fed. The unprotected will find strength and compassion gloriously upon their side. Everybody is disposed to look back in puzzled amazement at his days of bit terness and grinding strife and to feel an overwhelming conviction that life was made for happiness and fair play and that the way to receive the best in exist-J ence is first to give it. The miracle has happened vearly at this time for many generations and yet it cannot be explained. Mr. Wilson and Mr. Lloyd George and Premier Orlando and M. Clemenceau wise old Clemenceau, veteran of stoims! now face the immeasurable re sponsibilities of providing a permanent peace for mankind. Theirs is a task which many men say is impossible and of a sort sure to break the heart of any one who attempts it. Would it be too much to say that the statesmen of the Allied world and all the exalted intellects of their various letinues might piofit hugely if some gift of clairvoyance per mitted them to know the inner mysteiy of days that bring tho world, once cveiy year, to a state of spiritual peace and understanding? They might learn thereby that the world never can have a permanent peace through any new style of legislation alone. Indeed, they piob ably know already that only amateurs at the game of life suppose that you may correct evil by meiely putting a legal ban upon it. To put a taboo on war will not eliminate the incentives and desnes that lead to war any more certainly than the taboo on crime can compel all men to obey the law. All great motives, all great achieve ments, great virtues and great dimes begin at the heart of man. It is with the heart of man that the peacemakers must deal in the final analysis. To it they must make their ultimate appeal. It is the thing that must be cleaned up, as the reformers say when they speak of Philadelphia politics. It is a high tribunal that makes most of the decisions usually attributed to reason. It re sponds once a year to some gieat echo out of the past to the memory of a matchless service done in behalf of an undeserving world. So, it seems, human consciousness is not altogether beyond reach by any appeal that is obviously valid and for the common good. Observe, in the light of this assump tion, the things that are happening every day in Philadelphia. When a man jostles you on the street you take time to lcal ize that it is because some one in turn has jostled him. The discomforts of crowded pavements and aisles and trol leys aie accepted generously. People in the crush establish friendly relations for an instant with others whom they have never seen and never will see again. Life is warmed and pacified. People partici pate in the eager enthusiasms of strangeis and help others whom they do not know to find gifts for some lad or other overseas. Everybody smiles with a new tender ness at all children. We obey the traffic laws,, and. realizing that the policemen have difficult jobs we buy good cigars for them. All of a sudden, obeying some impulse out of the air, we have approxi mated the goal and ideal of civilization, the state of mind that endless wars have not been adequate to bring about. After the 25th of December a change will come. The old hardening process tends to be restored. The enchantment lifts as if all life were a fairy tale. The Peace Conference will sit at Versailles to make a permanent peace and it will not be able to retain any of the magic that was over the world. Europe and America are filled with noisy radicals, rich and poor because tho Incurable Tory Is as red a menace any day as tha most enthusiastic thrower of bombs who beliove that world peace may be brought a"bout by the particular sort of oppressions which it pIsasM. them to recommewL No -man is so poor In any country nowadays that he may not grow a frenzied beard, buy a soap box and promulgate a new theory of government with the complete assur ance of a definite following. Invariably such a one will preach a system Involv ing injustice for those whom he happens to dislike or misunderstand. And the first element dispensed with in every such new philosophy Is faith which the radical of hese days calls superstition. They all forget that faith is the con victions of the heart, that tho heart is stronger and surer in its reactions than tho mind and that as the heart of man kind dictates so will go tho world upward or down. The. Main Lino bos from over here seem nlso to have been the main line bos In many a critical Juncture over there MR. WILSON'S UNASSAILABLE LOGIC rjIHE principle of Justice has seldom been - defined with more powr. and dignity thin In tho pregnant key sentence of Mr. Wllsons address to President Poincnre. Tho details to be considered in the Paris conference are multifarious. But the spirit which should anlmnte their adjustment Is of elemental nnd eternal simplicity. It vltill7es the American President's ap preciation of the "necessity of such action In the final settlement of the Issues of the war as will not only rebuke such nets of terror and spoliation, but make men every where nwaro thit they cannot be ventured upon without the rertalnty of Just pun ishment " Tho two purposes for which America went to war and for which she now shiits In the peace making are here po tentl expressed. Criminals must pny the condign penalty. Valid coercive guaran tees must be given that such outrages shall not occur again Mr. Wilson's position as revealed In his first formal pronouncement on foreign soil Is morally unassailable It presages, In i,plto of a multiplicity of interests, an ultimate wholesome concord between the nations that aro remaking civilization. It completely repudiates the mealy mouthed propaganda of Huns plotting to open a bleach of aims between tho United States and the Allies. Justlco is never more unimpeachable than when It punishes the guilty. This is why the President's conception of it, fore shadowing such action, lings so reassuring nnd so true Oscar Hammereteln Is coming back to Philadelphia Well, well ' It Isn t surprising. Oscar has been coming back all his life. ' WIRELESS NEWS ABOUT AIRSHIPS TTTE ARE so accustomed to modern won ' ' ders that when the Public Ledger on Saturday contained a Marconi wireless dispatch from London announcing that Mr Handle) Pago is now accepting orders for airships which will fly 600 mllej and be equipped with a comfortable stateroom for use nt night or. In bad weather, we read the news with no more thrill than we experienced when we read of Mr. Wilson's arrival In Prance. Indeed, the perfection of wireless 'eleg raphy did not create so much excitement In tho world as was caused when the fitst telegiaphlc message was sent over wires a few generations ago. It Is worth while, however, pausing npw and then to consider the pi ogress of Invention since the Napo leonic wars The steamship, the railroad, the telephone, the electric car, the auto mobile, the sending of messages, by wire less, the alrthlp and the submarine have all been perfected within a hundred ears. and all but the steamship, the rallroa-' and the telegraph within the memory of men now living who are still a long v,a this side of old age The commercial use of the airship does not look so Impossible to day as the commercial use of the auto mobile looked twenty jears ago And the possibilities of wlieless communication for written messages and even for the spoken word are still unexhausted. The joung men of today may live to bo able to talk bv wireless from their hojses In the coun try, miles from a railroad station or an ordinary telephone station, with their business offices In town or even from their airships In which they fly to and from town every day. The wonders that have been are as nothing to the wonders that shall be The one factor lacking The Queer to complete the pi- Tale of a Tuno quancy of' the scene In which Breton joungsters, led by a doughboy, sang 'Hall, Hall, the Gang's All Here," to honor the first visit of un American President to France was the English composer of that alleged "American" ditty. Sir Arthur Sullivan, long since laid to rest In St. Paul's, wrote for 'Tho Pirates of Penzance" the original melody to which W. S. Gilbert afTixed the words beginning 'Come friends who plow the sea" Metamorphosis Is complete when Prcnch voices pay tribute to America with a tuno first heard In the old Savoy Theatre, cm London's Strand War caused a suspension of the WIs tar parties nearly sixty years ago. And war caused a suspension of the Assembly balls two ears ago It was a long time before the Wlstar parties were resumed, but there Is to be an Assembly ball this winter which shows how much more quickly the pleasures of frivolity revive than do those of Intellec tuality. If the German propaganda exposures continue Senator La Follette and others charged with pro-Germanism may not get off so easily after all. A minority of the Sen ate Committee on Privileges and Elections has recommended that La Follette be tried. "I raise my glass," declared the Presi dent, addressing Monsieur and Madame Poln care. Is It permissible to ask of the Commander-in-Chief of the beme-dry army and navy of the United Statea what were the contentsT It now looks as if the Germans, who have been killing Englishmen, Frenchmen, Italians and Americans for four years, were about to begin killing one another. Colonel Hatch does not seem to be frightened by any local protests against his attempts to protect the soldiers and sailors from protected vice. Captain Robinson has been discharged from the army, but that Is not tho It hid of a discharge which will satisfy those who want a clean city Even tho weather man must be feeling the effects of the peace regime, for his offer ings have not even permitted Philadelphia to enjoy a snowball fight this season. , TVho says (he Germans haven't learned oiiythingT It Is now proposed that the execu tlve of the new Hun rDUbllo b made less jWweKul than tlie wwlun rraaiissC , ' " T'L" 1 t" ' ' ! '$ l ' ' BEEF, IRON AND WINE a A Humble Tribute DON'T talk of Miss Fickford or CMaplIn or Mix. , It's nono of these stirs that my preference picks: Leave over jour praise of Miss Bara O hush I Let Frnncls X. Bushman bo back to the' bush For of nil the screen artists, tho elegant dish And tho, lady I. vote for. Is Dorothy Glshl jtTISS FERGUSON'S beauty Is scornful "! nnd trite, ( Fatty Arbuckle's fun Is a horrible sight; Caruso, unheard, is devoid of his art, And I know MIst Kellermann's outlines by heart Tho feature I yearn for with passionate wish Is a bright new flve-reolcr with Dorothy Glshl i WHAT rollicking humor, what pep and what kick, How tender, how comely, how youthful nnd chic! When she's on the bill nil the houses ore packed: No wonder the child has the looks, and can act She makes all the rest seem a shoal of poor fish: The kid that I covet Is Dorothy Glshl And ithtle on the sublect of movies, ilc haic olnaps meant to say that Charley Chaplin teas the man Mho put them, on a different footing. Some one else will probably say It, why shouldn't wo: The Kaiser Is the man who put the N. G. In Amerongen. That town, by the way, Is almost the only one in Europe that hasn't asked Mr. Wilson to come and visit. This must be a busy time for Vice Presi dent Marshall something to do every Tuesday. We Have One, Too Dear Socrates The original Socrates was attended by a familiar datmon or demon which got htm into a good deal of trouble. I hope jou are more fortunate. ANN DANTE. Our demon Is tho printer's dev il. Remarks on Poets "yoUNG poets begin, when they are very voung indeed, by writing poems about death. Unfortunately they only write about It and rarely make nny serious at tempt to investigate. W ourself wrote a poem, when we were seventeen, called "To a Skull." Tho last line, we recall, was this: One thing alone Is sure, and that Is Death. N one ever took the trouble to contra dict us. a a rpHE next step Is to write poems about --love, especially richly requited love. The young poet Is obsessed by the thought of loving and being loved In return with almost embarrassing reciprocation. He takes good care, however, If he attempts any experiments, to fasten his adoration upon some object so lofty that thtre Is no chanco of his finding favor. What he really wants Is not some one to love him, but an excune for secret pining. In our" own case the unsuspecting object of our passion was Miss Maudo Adams. A BOUT the time the young poet gets his " first Job he Is likely to dally with ro buster themes, such as vagabondage, the open road, or even tobacco and liquor. He takes care, however, to conceal these effu sions from his employer. At this period he is a verj strong soul Indeed If he re sists parodving Om.n Khayjam. T OOKING.back on his preceding verses '-' as mere apprenticeship and feeling that his "art has matured," he now considers himself qualified to attack some serious topics In a way that will command atten tion. Socialists vegetarianism, deeper, waterways, solar eclipses and the memory of Abraham Lincoln are generally his vic tims. TJIS old age is occupied with such trifling themes as cash registers, cigar light ers and the movies By this time' he has observed that a fall down Is less conspicu ous If It deals with a humble subject, A FTER his death he is said to have been " "a ery graceful versifier." Some hardhearted critics even speak of him as having been "prolific" Additional Argumentg Against Prohibition Absinthe makes the heart grow fonder. A woman In Coblenz threw an empty bottle at an American soldier. Suggested Epitaph for Mr. W. H. Here lies one whose namo was writ In slaughter. Studies for Future Epigrams Feminine hearts are as delicately ad Justed as typewriters, and equally depen dent on ribbons. Considering a certain Christmas dinner that is soon to be eaten in Paris, the Kaiser now realltes u.hat a mistake he made M not being a professor. And speaking of professors, we wonder what has happened to tho ninety German Intellectuals who had so much to say at the beginning of the war? Havo they no comments to offer? The War After the War C5mmunlty Council Conference, Park Avenue Hotel, addresses by J. W. Slaugh ter, George Gordon Battle and others, From a New York paper. Page Mr. Hoover Cold Rolled Strip Steel luncheon, i n m ' Waldorf-Astoria. Also from a New York paper. It looks as though that ancient Jest about many a slip 'twlxt the cup and the Llpton will have to be Inducted Into service once more. gOCRATES. Germany's original tearful reluctance to 'g?..11 a""lBtc9 aIa the alacrity wl(h which she pledges herself to Its iitiewol give prf,ttty Mm MH4. a( !, ., Jv THE READER'S THE LINCOLN HIGHWAY Pennell's Plan to Line It With Monuments Discussed by Another "Artist To the Editor of the Evening Public Ledger: Sir Last Monday, now more than a week ago, tho Evenino Public LEDOcn Invited Its readers to write and express their views upon the city's (requirements in a. soldiers' memorial It fvas an earpest appeal, addressed In a friendly and intlmrtto spirit to the" people of Philadelphia. "Write to us;' It ran, "and express jour Ideas, and be assured that, they will receive respectful consideration at the hands of Mr. Wldenr and his associates." I have been watching the colunms of the Evenino Public Ledobp. In the full expecta tion of seeing a spontaneous outburst of en thusiastic suggestions for the permanent commemoration In marble and stone, In bronze nnd gold, of the valorous deeds of Pennsylvania's sons on the battlefields of France Of the several millions who live In Phila delphia, among whom may b counted thir teen ominous number directors of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and some thousands shall I say? of architects, sculptors, painters, graverafand designers, only one responded to your .appeal, Joseph Pennell, who In an Imaginative and Illumin ating letter exposed his grandiose scheme of decorating Lincoln Highway as a national memorial to the soldiers. With this one ex ception there has been unbroken silence. This is not apathy It is atrophy' of the emotion and sense of beauty, of taste in Its highest nnd most expressive, form Should It continue, a complete paralysis of the esthetic sense must ensue with all Us degrading symptoms of human decay; but fortunately there are stimuli at hand and of these there Is nothing more exciting to arouse the emotion of beauty thnn the''sham nnd evanescent cities and courts that, surround and embrllsh fairs and pageants. Of these we ar offered one by Mr. Wldcner to wel come home the returning armies as they pass along Broad street, and another by the mem bers f the T Square CluVto be erected on the Parkway to glorify tho phases of war and victory and peace. In addition to the enthusiasm such a decoration of the Parkway will Create, It will show the multitudes to be there assembled In rejoicing over victory what Philadelphia.' may do to permanently establish Itself as the art center of the nation, but substituting for perishable tovver and temple Imperishable Btone and marble. The Parkway Is a short stretch of the Lin coln Highway. Since It has been opened up the distance between Logan square and the rocky elevation atitne entrance to the park seems only an arrow's flight, but In that short space what rnagnlficence and splendor may be conjured up by tho Imagination and skill of the architect I In the long stretch of the Lincoln Hfghway nature will also do her matchless part In decoration and Its windings, through the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevadas of California will be adorned by ever-shifting pictures that will rival In beauty If not In his torical memories the vision that Fennel) has given us of the Slmplon, Mount Rosa and 'the "Qloom of the Alps." It will be, when carried out for I am sure It v. lit be a glorious memorial to the soldiers and a helpful revival of our civilization. If It sometimes will lead us Into the srlmo and smoke of our manufacturing cities It will also lead us out of them and enable us to escape Into peaceful valleys and on to heights of solemn grandeur; and In the) contemplation of Its viaducts and bridges built upon rocks and embowered In trees the emotion of beauty will take our minds from nature to art. and I our civilization will be better for it, Art maae- civilization possiDie, not. religion or commerce or science, and so soon aa art Is called In to crown and complete the religious, commercial and scientific structures of onr national life the people will be better fitted to frame a nations policy. The Lincoln Highway will link up the At lantic with the Pacific and whether It starts In the east from the great pleasure city by the sea to cross the Delaware to Washington square or'from New York across the Hudson, It must pass .through Philadelphia's Park way and what Is drstgned" for that tplcndld site will 'either make or mar forever the city whoso present opportunity Is unique among the cities of the Continent, It has been well said that Philadelphia should stand In art In the'same relation to New York at "Florence fia tb Rone--and curiously enough we have n our midst at this iB-BMtMt ejxioh :in our Olty's-plstjiry1 a flMWWW1 "M-1 WW f . .. . .u .1 1 VIEWPOINT and whose other qualifications might entitle him to bo called Its Lorenzo dl Mcdlcl. In my mind's eye I can see nlm llrectlng tho elevation of a temtile In white marble to crown the monument at the cntrAnce to the Park and. Inscribed In letters of gold Tho Pennsylvania Academy of the Flno Arts. JOHN McLURE HAMILTON. President of the Fellowship o! the IVnnsjI- vnnla Academy of the Flno Arts. Philadelphia, December 11. Objects to Provost Smith's Remarks To the Editor of tho Evening Public Ledger: Sir A short time ago Provost Smith's remarkable statement regarding S. A, T. C. men appeared In jour paper. Thus far his remnrks seem to have gone unchallenged and they have given the public tha Impression that wo men are slackers Our venerable provost has branded us as "bullet-dodgers." Will Doctor Smith please answer this: Did the, colleges of the country send out circulars to men of college age. telling them that It was their patriotic duty to come to school and prepare for commissions in the army, or did they not? The Committee of Public Safety of Pennsylvania sent out circular letters signed by George Wharton Pepper to all men of college ago In Pennsylvania, urg ing It upon them as a debt they owed their country in the present crisis to go to school and train for commissions Both these letters were couched In most beseeching and begging terms When the S A, T. C. was organized and all the plans were known, every man In It knew that he would be at camp in, at the latest, six months. We went Into It despite tho removal of all tha glamour from the plan as originally described In tho letters cited. Tho writer has seen more than one man who was physically unfit for military service beg to be allowed to Join the unit, not because they wanted to dodge bullets, but because they saw here an opportunity to serve America. That wao the sentiment that actuated all of us the thought that here we would be given the chance to do our bit In tho most practical wny. We came here as preparation for officers' training camp. work. Men who gave up their professional courses to devoto their time to their country nro bullet-dodgers, according to Doctor Smith. Men who gave up good business positions and offered their services to America aro bullet dodgers. Men who answered the call of Doctor Smith's and Mr. Pepper's letters are bullet-dodgers, according to Doctor Smith's own wnrrl.q nAmnmhA,- r.n.n- a .... .......W...WV., WV.W. ami. ii, we came into this voluntarily. We were not conscripted! With every call from camp for urgent military service 'more than double the men needed Immediately volunteered' Penn's bullet-dodgers did this. When the call came for tho motor transport corps for Immediate overseas duty, hundreds of these bullet dodgers volunteered for this work" and ap plied for transfers, because things were t6o slow here, . DqcW' Smith's remark was entirely un called .for and an -Insult to "his boys," -as he fondly (?) calls us. s, A. T. C. Philadelphia, December i. No Polish Pogroms To the Editor of the Evening Publlo Ledger: Sir Your paper on December 4 published a letter from Mr. Maur Drance, to 'which you gave the title of "Justice toithp Jew." May I be granted the privilege, of having you Insert a few lines of comment? While all reports about the massacres oi the Jews have come from Berlin or Vienna, via Stockholm or Copenhagen, "at the same time also were received, througn' tho Asso elated Press from; the special correspondents of the New York, Sun and Washington Post, and other sources, flat denials of those sup posed pogroms. In other words, while Germany ana Austria, at all cost, strive to prejudice pubjio opinion agntnst Poland, It looks as though the Allies were trying to warn tha America-. public against this latest German camouflaged propaganda. It Is an historical fact, corroborated by some Jews themselves, that Poland has been the most tolerant of nil European nations. (See ...El.enberger's Jewish Encyclopedia,, volume IV.) While) tho Jews were slaughter ed and persecuted everywhere In Europe they found a safe refuge In Poland and were granted not only protection but .special privileges as far back as 905. In 1345 they were given the freedom of the country. Why should the Poles have suddenly altered their traditional policy of respect for the creeds and nationalities of othersT Is It reasonable to believe that having suffered tor 1B0 years themselves, from ths oppression ,of others, they should' wish to v persecute othersT Koccluszko and Pulaski have fought for tha, liberty of (his country. No army during the last centlny want to battle for freedom Mebdld not count m 8 ", 0mfyi ( Poles Tho word "liberty" Is maglo to, tl,sm. -Why should they not respect the liberty at their own fellow citizens? 1 On tho other hand, what nation ever craved i most for world dominion? What nation Is i most Interested In the nonexistence of an . independent powerful Poland.? Germany of I course! Germany Is Just now using 'every j me-vns tqjjgep open the gate which leads Into " Russia ajSthrough Russia td the mu"h- rnvptp," "Irian a it ran nf KlhaHn. . Whtttavar serves that purppse meets with German P- M proval and support And If she succeeds In arousing publlo opinion sufficiently", as to, nrptnrllpA thn flMAcrit ,n tha Taapa Pnnfr. ence against, an Independent Poland, .'her ; aim win bo- achieved She win have frustrated tho Allied nlan of erecting a-wali of natlcns, extending from tho Baltic to the -kf traditional policy of "prang nach Osten" (push toward the East). ' "'" Ono thing remains certain: whether; In- D1..-C.,V . ..W.. ......:.. ..I-, -T. ....- -v-, . cision ox mo peace iriounai, me I'ousn ihi j . will never be wiped off the face or the eatm, and on that Polish soil will continue to 'live 25,000,000 Poles sldo by side with 6,600,000 Jews Even If all the Jews In tho -world ... (13,000,000 In all) were to migrate to, Po- land, still the Jews would be In the minority. And If the Poles hold conclusive proofs that the Jews are responsible for the nont ' materialization of their hopes for independ ence, then hardly could the Jews ask for;the application oi i.nnsiian principles oi or- jZj givenes3 in regara to tnemseives. , I Join you In asking "Justlco to the Jews,"' to all Jews, to those of Poland as well, to those very Jews who regard themselves as Poles and are despised by their brethren, the Jewish Nationalists. i V,,, m rt nnnavrr . "l1 Director of the Polish Bureau of Injorma- lion. tf,- .... ..., ..... . j.- Little Studies in Words CABAL A CABAL Is a clique or faction given to intriguing. Tho word Is applied to 'any group of men who meet In secret and .plot for the accomplishment of their purposes. Tho word Is an acrostic, mado up of the Initials of the names of the committee for foreign affairs of Charles II of England whlcfi served fiom 1677 to 1673, "alie mem bers of the committee were Clifford, Ar- '. Ungtgn. Buckingham, Ashley and Lauder dale. This committee was exceedingly un popular and It was spoken of In derision as a cabal, and tho word came Into com mon usage to describe a clique of men en gaged In nefarious schemes. The cabal was the precursor of the. mod ern cabinet, a body of ministers named from the small private room In whlcli they were wont to meet for consultation with themselves and with the king. And cabinet Is the diminutive of cabin. 3'4 What Do You Know? , QUIZ ' What la the 'chief town of the Island of 81.. Hefena? . B,'r What Italian eltr la the birthplace of the present Tope? . What la the meanlnr of the'Latln eipreialaa "cum trano sails "T t Who wrote the "Inroldsbj teie naV? ' "X was I.onlp i XIV of Frame known atst Hot Solell" (The Sun lit()T- Who vva a supposed , br the Greeks, to ha bestowed the arltt et fire en nsnkuidf '-. Who tmld. " 'Tl.safrM In matrifcenr to be tin with llttle,verson"T W ho wrote tha famous Civil War . sons'. "Tramp. .Tramp. Tramp, the Jlojrai Are I Murrliips"? I What la the larre'st dtr in Georsla What la itdter Answers to Saturdays Quu, v jf Th malorltr of the Inhahltanta of Brest ari.SEi Unions .and,, are of the . Ce.tle . '" wjilyh also the Irlsh.n'eUh. CornWi art ItUhtuiid Hcotch beloni. g . ' , Ktnic JlanoM II waa tho laii 'herMltarr'joon-' Jj arrh of l'ortuial. He now rrtHea In Kns H land. . ' v M S. I. 0. 7, 8. 0. W. Mr. MeAdoo hot euntsted that the 0irirs- i ment retain tho railroads for tlve rer , Ia Koehefoueanld said "In tho o adyei Jlnd aoi ersltr.af onr wai rrienoa wp aiwaxa not wholly illapleaslns to ua, MtimiMC A fi Hie nhrnae horns-poem la sold to t i eor-ll runtlon. of "hoe est eomus',' "this la tfcVV! In dr." M A errdoa la nn orniraental srrren coterie JS tha null at the liuck o( nn Ultnr, , ' the? h.JsW" " V-,"o W$ M jy i Tha ktord maraschino" ahonld bo nrooeiikaea 7 SS though spelled "niaraskeeno.".cjj 3 , A toucan I. n kind of tropical A Mills si 1 blr4 with aajkaiuenae beai.i , , WstTasS"r-4 m rf 3 . j rt. V . --rv. '' '.."' i -- . . ., vV rj, fi - . ' "ii - .: