I'.i-f.f'WfW xT . itw? . . ,ffOT t ,M EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY," JANUARY (I, ' 1919 w . lift m ;. J :. ' ueniug public Hciigcc TOE EVENTNGnTELEGIUPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTRUS It. K. CURTIS, riMiDcir .ci;frlt. H. LuJInelon. Vlcn Presidents John C. Vlrtl1;s:C.r..Urr nt Treasurer: Philips. Collins, ( John 11. Ttllllams, John J. Spurgeon, Director!. r.DiToniAi, noARDs , , Ctirja II. K. Ccitit, Chairman ,', PAVIP E. SMiLKT Editor IJOHX C. M.tRTlN'....genertl Uuilntu Maiia.er Published dally at rmio t.toora nulldlni, Independence Square, Philadelphia. I.tDora CBNTeiL liroad and Oi-ainul Streets Atlaktio Cm JVrM-t'nhiii Ilullellnr New Yeas; mo Metropolitan Toner i'rraoiT tos Ford Iluliaini , rlT. Locil ...ll'OS rullerton IlulMtnn Ciuci'.o . ...1S02 Tribune llulljini NEWS BCftnAC't WilHtXQTO.S IlCaitD. N. K. Cor. Pennsylvania A. and 1 till St. Jsw Yciai Itcnrsc The 3u Ilulldlna- London llctmc London T(:nrs BURSCIUPT10N TUltMS Tha.Eva.Mva Priuo I.tuaai Is aerved to sub acrlhera In Philadelphia and surround!!.? toirns at the rata of twelve (11') cents per week, payable, I to the carrier. ..I'?. mal! to Pol"' outside of Philadelphia, In the. United States, Canada, or Trilled .states po. rations, pnstsce free, ruty (,oi cents per month. Blx (III) dollar per yaar, payable In a.ltance. To all foreltn countries on (511 dollar per Bnoilh, N'otici Subscribers wlshlnc address chanted anust five, old as well as new address. BELL. 3009 VALMT KF.VsTOM'. MtIV SOW V3T .liMrra nil cOMmunirrtfions fo l.'V'utnff VubUc Lttloer, nrfrprmfriier Square, Vhilailrlpl.la. Member of the Associated Press TUB ASSOCIATED I'ltJISS ft c.rcln tively entitled to the c for republication ef all netcs dispatches credited to It or nut ffAcrici.tr credited In this paper, and also the local newspubllshed therein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. riiilidfljiliii, MonJ.iv. Jn.iur, t, H) ARE WK (;lMI.I.i:i)? In this city outrages liae luen .tnerM recently which shoubl not e.virt in a (.iii Iscd State. !oei not -elect Surojl. rpiIEriE i no doubt about the otiti.tR-i. Xelthor Is there any doubt that other wero planned by the bomb throw ur. If they are inconsistent with civilization what it the matter with I'lilUdriplilu? Daniels in a lyln' (inn r.aai mteifer nce In Philadelphia police conditions. MrAUOO. HOMKOPATHIST TlTR. JIcAUOO Is ursiiiK that Kovernment A'-- control of the railroad., he continued for five !ears longer in order to !eep tli" roads out of politic. This Is like urglnif political contiol of tho 'police force in older to keep tlio poiicv out of politics ox hlluwinsr the politicians to appoint HUbxervIt-ut civil .set vice com Jnlstloners In order to keep politic- out of tho civil service. sf Homeopathy as i medical theurv Ins Its friends, but the theory that like cures like hag never been accepted In the le.tliu of government unless In the belief that the best way to catch a thief is to put anothei thief on his track. Hut them has always been grave suspicion In uch a case that the two thieves would foim n partnership Kuropc nia say that ' is as far a wax from permanent prace ns t !' ,1'ole.s THi: rUTURL Alt.MV "M'OTHIXa couid be mote icnsonablc thai, ' Seeretury Hakefa .einlnUr to tile House Committee on JIilit.it:- Affairs that plans for the future organiAinoii of the rmy cannot be .seriously considem.I until after tho Peace Conference. The whole future military policy of Him Vnlted .States must depend upon tho outcome at er willies. Argument and bickering now n : elation to the mllitar.x piogiam of the future can only servo partisan .-c-tii-ndl or personal interests. I'nld tlie new Ku.o pean pol!c!e.s are deflnite' fixed, no one can foresee what is best for America. In the same category of problems ihat must be left for consideration In the liglr of future developments is that wlucli Is growing from the friction between yw.si Tolnt men in the oMIcwV corps and the newer men from the training camps. If the sort of pea e which Mr. WiNon Is trying to biiug about cannot be realized, the country is Miro to b stunned b th" immensity of the inlhttt-'isiic program which will be forced upon it by ne.essi'. It is the unfortunate habit of men in tne House and in the Semite, as well as tin man in tlio stitet. to speak unit think o!' military picpaiednes In terms of the pins, ent. As a matter of fact, military nations of the future will have to draw heuulj, on all their wealth, on the population on their supplies of raw materials and on taeir energies to maintain the accelerated pact which scientific eo!utwn and inarhi'm methods make uecessaiy in tlie wur game. I If tlfcri' is to b no settled peace, we shall I certainly ieiulm a. ast standing amy und I wo shall have need of oil the best otll ers v.lio served thiough tlio reci-tit war. Other- wise there should and doubtless will be ft . ji'au for the promot.on of all oill.'ers on tlielr mei its. whethei tiiey ure West Point ' eis or not. . New Vork, too, had an unf.,rMin.i' beginning for ;nc new eta. I t i,t i tluiei'ien U named Smith. AMERICANS WITH lORKlLN TITLIS TT IS now chevalier Vaucla.i.. as t-'aniiie' J -I. Vauclaiii has just lecei td that rati: in the Trench Legion of Mono.'. AmeMea is the home of many men who ha bei n decorated with the button of the legion a founded b the great N'apoleun. It is also tlie homo of many knights und oum of native lililli who hae mceived their titles from foreign powers. The number of papal counts would be dfttlcult to estimate. The Italian state has honored citizens of Piillu dclphla with titles, and we hao Danish nnd Swedish Jules adorning plain American citizens. They do not sport then titles hem, ,lt because they do not prize them but be cause tlioy prize democracy more. Some llay an Industrious compiler of handbooks vlll make a list of American citizens who have been decorated or ennobled by foreign powers. It" will make inteiesting leading for the cuiious. j ' ' Petiograd and Pliltadelph.u are not u d'ssltnllar after all. UolslieUsis in both cities go uiiuunlkhcd. THE FIGHT ON ROLSHEN ISM fpUB British ultimatum to (iermuin. d ! mandlng that 11 11 e.tlngulhir be found for Holshevism in what used to be tin. fatherland, miy hale an Ironic sound when H Is remembered that all Germans snnc enougli to be dealt with seem to be doing their utmost already In e.Torts to reitruln tendencies to ultra radicalism. Vul !,.,, it 't 'LI lut the British demand a suircestlnn ,r ..- , ' si -' tlio method vliloli may liavo lo bo resorted t by the Allies befote Hut-ope can be stabilized, Tlio people In each affected country, rather than Invading armies, may bo re iulred to put down Holshevlsts before liny are permitted civilized recognition or Iho privileges of membership In u league of nations, Knormous disadvantages will attend any effort to put down Holshcvlsm by force. An Invading nrmy In HiiMwta will Inevitably provldo propagandists of the red cult with the material for mlsreptescntatlvc and in flammatory campaigns among the unin formed masse.', The Allies cannot nfford oven to bo making war upon peoples who believe themselves to be seeking freedom. Fltlmntely it may he necessary to Isolate or quarantine countries allllotcd with Pol shovlsni and permit the people to light tile l.8iio out among themselves. Ftleler these circumstances sanity may return far more quickly In lttislu, Au'tila und Clcr matiy than u would If mlllloiiH wrte threat ened ucfaln with the iiRonlex of a new war. OK INSPIRING IDIiALISM Another Man of l)etiuy Wlio Wa Haiieil to Auioiiiun Leadership AVIicn the (,'oun try Needed Him JJO AMERICAN with a heart or a memory will bo able to read of Theo dore Roosevelt's deatli without n sense of something very niuch like grief. In after years, when the sk, , have cleared and the country has had time to Fctths uown and look back ttanquilly ul tlie .sources of that inspiration whicli lias strengthened this generation and Riven wines to its purposes, w shall realize how greatly this dynamic personality contributed to tho present greatness of the Republic. Colonel Roosevelt's devotion to his country was not of tho routine sort. It was passionate and almost religious. In the end Roosevelt is sure to bo listed with the men of destiny. He appeared at a time when tlie irtcat political par ties, grown shiftless and mercenary, had peimitted shrewd, selfish and powerful minorities' to concentrate national ener gies under their own dilection. His serv ice in this crisis was extraordinary. He went to battle with the forces that were destroying the faith and courage of tho electorate, and his leadership was like a trumpet call to the younger men in the country. When Wood row WiUon entered New Jersey polities ns the candidate of a party that had every reason to fear a modernized Republicanism, he consist ently praised Colonel Roosevelt and, time after time, characterized him as the inspi ration of the general movement which tended to bring about a v. holesome revo lulion in the ethics of party methods and party administration. Mr. Wilson .said more than once in his earlier addresses that one of his great aims was to con t'liuo and broaden the work that Roose velt had begun. Because he was unseliish and devoted Colonel Roosevelt bicame a terror to the cliques. Like every other great Amer ican statesman his concerns and his faith were with the people rather than with the self-constituted powers ranged above the people. Too much attention has been given to the pictuiesque side of Roosevelt's career by those who try to understand the secret of his extraordinary popularity. What the vast majority of American saw in Roosevelt was merely the iviii "otlection of their own dominant char acteristics audacity, clean purpn.-e. a hatred of mean things and n you-bo-damned attitude of mind toward every group and every influence not in accord with tho common desi" for decency and fair pljy. Those who have criticized Colonel Roosevelt for hi.- restless war of word mm, 11,. 1 I .J.l.l-. .. "i" "ln I'lesviu .-unniiiiairaiion Have, in fact, minted the .significance of one of the j subtle and moving tragedies of American public life. , The 'olonel's lattm- las wen- sUil- dened and colou-j heaily b peioonal af flictions and intimate loriow. Ho must i haw) enduicd the aches that come to j t cry strong man brought suddenly to a realization that his work is done. In a , time when the greatest of all service wa. to lie done for his country lie found him- I 1 .-elf out of action by the inexorable judg- ! ment of passing years and by the fore.- , ! of circumstances. I sumo ol olonel Roosevelt V best friends felt that not all his attacks upon j Mr. WiUon and tho international policies . of the present Administration were n , tiroly wise. They were not. .Hut, unlike much else that ha. been said of the ! President in these tumultuous juars". i Colonel Roosevelt's criticism was noi inspired by el(ishn.hs or a deim deliberately tb discredit u leader of the . .opposition party. Roosevelt would have ' been more than human if he had been ! able, to escape every sense of bitterne-s because of his inability to participate in I one way or another at the end and climax of tho shining adventure which involved i his country's strength and spirit. In addition to the spiritual isolation that must have weighed upon him. Colonel Roosevelt had to endure tint loss 1 ut one of his sons and tho injurv of an- ' ., ., , . 1 1 t. ., t other. Certainly his sense of separation and loss must have been thus intensified. Tho war brought him nothing but suffer- ' lug and disappointment. He would hae fought if he had been permitted to go, As it was, he fought as best he could and on the side that he believed to be right almost up to the moment of his death. Ir tho future we shall know exactly ' why his counsel was consistently rejected ut the White House. It must appear to any astuto observer that his active par ticipation in administration affairs at this crii.ii. wasn manifest impossibility. Roosevelt liira the habit- of dominance. II was the secret of his strength and the inspiration of his greatest work. There could be no room in a wan cabinet for two minds of that chaiacter, since the present President has an almost identical mcntul habit. The similarity of the motives of both men and the common ori gin of their purposes make their differ ences seem tilt the more regrettable. What Roosevelt tried to do in America Wilson Is trying to do for all humanity. Colonel Roosevelt will be listed with the truly great Presidents. Ho came along in the nick of time, as Washington, Lincoln and Wilson have come, to shoul der exacting duties. Ho was tho first President after Lincoln to perform really great services to the country. Ho left us tho Panama Canal nnd the greater navy. But he left, too, ideals thut have inspired thousands of men in every branch of the public service. It is largely because of Roosevelt that the old sordid methods of conscienceless political managers can never again be solidly established in tho United States. The fact is in itself an adequate monu ment to one of the greatest Americans of the century. On land, ns on ships, the Flatch-way may proe dangerous to the penerscly un- obsenant. WILSON REPLIES TO CLKMENU.Al." VTO STATESMAN ever enleicd upon a ' more stupendous task than that with which President Wilson is occupying him self nt the present time, lie is seeking to change the motives and putposes of Ciovernments in Europe and to turn them into u new channel. Whoever has under taken to overcome tho Inertia of any great corpoiatlon will appieclate some what the dllllculties which the President Is courageously facing. Habit, custom, precedent of e.irs do not ghe way readily. Xo single man can of his own force over come tlio inertia of the Kuropean Ciovern ments any more than he can overcome the Inertia of an aealanche. Mr. Wilson Is not trying to do tills thing alone. He is .summoning to his assistance a poer greater than the statesmen and greater than the Mot eminent., they ad minister. He Is appealing directly to the fountain bead of power that Is. to the peoples theinsehes. They are ltungeilng and thirsting for an arrangement which will do away with wars and provocation for wat. And it is such an arrangement tlie Piesldent is striving lo make by bring ing to bear upon the (jovcrnments the pressure of tho public opinion of Kngland, Fiance and Italy. Premier Cleinenceau's declaration in favor of a balance of power rather than tho concert of power for which -Mr. Wll son is pleading has not discouraged him. His Chamber of Deputies speech lit' Rome was a direct 1 espouse to CI.mFiice,iti and mi announcement to tnls old Ktalesinan that his thinking was out of harmony won the thinking of tlie present. "There must he something substituted for the balance of power." he said, "and I am happy to Und everywhere In the air of these great nations the conception that that thing must be a thoroughly united league of nations." The rremli and the J.ng!i.-h have re sponded to tills idea most heart!!. They have looked upon .Mr. Wilson as the herald, of a lew era and they are looking to the1!- .statesmen to cooperate with ldm. The Italians have also shown their siu path eelth 1,1s purpose and he has most subtly leprescute-d to them that the ami hu are in hearty sinputi. -fl.d when the city of P.onie in.ule him one of its citizens he talked of the part nership between Italy and America in the woik of freedom and said: "I would not have felt at libcrt to come awn, Horn Amirica If I had not felt that the time had arrived when, fed getting local Inter-e-sts and locjl tle-i and local purpos". men should unite In tills great enterprise that . ill ever t.e free men together as u body of brethren and tt body of free "pit its." It is too much to hope that the ideal I wlmli the Piesident is holding aloft will I be wholly te.tlised during tlie pieent j generation. Hut if he succeeds in heading tlie world in tin- i.rIii dlmotioii lie will , have accomplished s.omethlng very much I evorth while. The Urst .step wl! lie In the abandonment ot the effort to balance one giotip of Powers against another for l.e purpose uf pi .-serving world peace Tuo necessity of forming a concert of flee nations hospltabV t all other nations which "lualify for ndml-sion so far over shadows. eer thing else ihul n must ulti mately commend itself to the judgment of e.en so guiit a laggard as t'lcmenceiiu. The British "talesmen "ie committed to It. und it is to Impiess its importance upon the otho." nations that -Mr. Wilson is now aiting as a sort of diplomatic hyphen lonnecting the people of the foui great Pov.ers with one another: or, to thatigx the tigum, be 14 acting as the mouthpiece for tbn lilteiain e of the longing-! of humanity. '1 'ie i.ttie gioup of llutli leu.. .. ,llful iii,.ii ,,, the Sen ate are now denying that there ev.ni nay "aim'' to einb.irrar the Prinldftit In I'.iuoiie. That lnnati.s to be cen. All Hint eve ate cumin, l of now tlmt tlicre wen. signs of such an aim and tha the aim w.n bad either way j uu looked nt 1' It seems strange to an lliere N 1 lis- lirink obsereer at this ,11,. taiice that then, would be hubbub and mutely In llerlin because, of a ""''" stril!-'- '"'o lat time we heatd fro,n """'"' ""'r" """ liur,lly u tooa mall- able in tha' extraordinary t'iti. , l'a" ""' unM ,e'l why I lie .,, -irr- ,11 mil n M mat tll.lnj fain. est gentlemen n ho ,u niosi msMiHiit in tne criticism of what thee call 'Mi. Wilsons idealism" seem able (u go .ciitifi-MHl.: along without a itu.e.r of u. ji-ciiun 10 in" imiiiuai tuiories rusivreel at l-'" H'"'" Speal.lig ol dee:l Hie llun V.i IIIrIii : houilils, 1 boujilia to apiirar 1 hut those of tlit-m now conspicuously active in tlifn city are. on the ccent of their true prey about City Hall. t THE CHAFFING DISH Our Own .Nursery llliyinc A Bedtime. Ritual Try It on Your Own) rniHS little eje Is abut up tight, This little eye hns said good-night, This little forehead lias ceased to think, This little noso Is soft nnd pink, This little oar has nhut Its door, This little ear can hear no mote, This little cheek hns now been kissed, This little cheek has not been missed, This little mouth Its last has sahl. Tills little chin has gone to bed. ' d'p to. sleep at the end of the rhinne I'll jiV you again at licakfast time! A Wet Night "Had night, ch?" "Ves, horrible!" "(!ood night to be home." "You Hald It." And ot Is anything more lotely than the city streets on a drenching evening? Wide stretches of asphalt gleam like hfkes of Ink, dabbled and splashed with pools of amber and crocus yellow, Puddles of lilac and silver brightness waver and flash nt every corner. Taxirabs spin and slide, their skid-chains clacking against the guards. Pavements ure molten gold. Broad fctreet is ti dazzle, (.parlclo und shimmer. Here and there, outside the windows of cigar stores, tho pavement Is red as a parterre of carnations. And If, as ko often happens, the downpour ceases about sup per time, go out and watch tlie jeweled richness of tefleotions at theatre doors. Kvery curbstono is a ribbon of light. The news that the Prince of Wales is to visit these parts icmlnds us of Artcmus Word's Jocular (and Imaginary! interview with a pre. Ions Wales. "T axed him how ho liked bcln a Prince (is fur as he'd got," (.ays Artemus. And his parting word to "Sir. Wales" was, "When you git to bo King, ti and be as good a man as yure mtither has bin." Whenever we see some such piira.se as "Kvery one knows that the, etc.." we sus pcet that something Is coming that we never heard of. ".Most person., know says that genial dominie, Dr. Dick Gum mere. In tlie Nation, "that the Pennsjl v.inla station in Xew York is a direct imitation of a restoration of tlie Hath of Cnrac.alla." We didn't know It. And pondering over it a bit. we Wonder what friend Caracalla would ha.e done If he had had to get along with a modern city apartment '.' Twelfth -Vlght is supposed to end the Christmas festivities, and it is always a little saddening to seo nil tho wlthcied Christmas trees lying in the ash cans. It conduces to melancholy thoughts upon the swift passage of all mortal things, and so on -that is, of nil except the ash wagon. For as day succeeds day and wo still see our poor forlorn tiee lying patiently In tho alley, we wonder whether we may not bo able to use It again next Christmas. Si. Agnes's Kee is coming along, when young ladies are supposed to bo able lo seo a vision of thoir future husbands, pro vided they go supperles to bed and do not looic sideways or behind them when they retire. If any damsels In these parts have a hallucination of the Prince of Wales they might tip us off prleately. The dialling HWi always likes to bo first with the new.--. We aiwajs delay as long as possible opening letters that come t us v illi little transparent loopholes In the front ot the em elope. Sandwiched in between two such w have just found a communication from Kinnio Falsetto, who says she thinks it was eery brutal of tho English lo celebrate Piesldent Wilson's arrival in London by a prise-flglit. Wo didn't tiulle get her at llrst. Then ie saw what she meant- -Ho.Mtig Day. .SOCHATICS. President Wilson and Frame 1'ri.sident Wilson has been recast ed 011 his landing in France ycstetilay with an enthu siasm and a unanimity of acclaim tarely ac corded to an man, and which is bound to ineiease, as it also trial;, s manifest, the immense moial hoid which he has asserted ov.-r the imagination not only of France but of etery Kuropean country, it Is of gocd onie-n, and ten trust that Hie president will ncceii! to tlio full tlie trlbu.e paid to iiini as ai once a gre.it Idealist that Is to say, a detotie of principle and a groat leader in j piuciic.il affairs, and let the consciousness of power make him s'.rong. He will need all his stiengt'.i, u'.l his piactlca! effectiveness, If the Idea1 lie has set till is to be clfeetlwl.. main tained, lie n probably much strunger thai, be c-otiee:ee, mid tlicre .11 e gieat popul.ii foices, forces which onco stirred ate ovei ttlielining, .11 this country at least -and the same thing Is probably true of franc- -to which If he chouses he can appeal. In ins otvu '.u'lm.-y he lias had opiM.otUe.ti, n.i.cli of it just party opposition, and he can Judge best bote far It need be tegarded: but here all pau.cK are for him, ut least In name, and tin- gieat forces are on his side. v0 hop,, and belieeo .tbat In our oven Prime, Miniaier hu will tlml no lukewarm ally, and M, e'lem eiit'i'dU has already ileeiared himself hi faeoi of "a peac of moderation," Tim omens Jr filterable, but there nto lions in the iwlli. .. Manchester Uuardlan of December 1 1. Ilia! men. Is littln really appealing -.n the Tuucblult editors' appeal for 11 new dial Is much muie a terbal than an actual p.ua dox. It wo'ild be inteiesting to Knott ,mv many of the members, of the committee of thirteen wlreli just absolved the -.klp-stop de-pend upon automobiles in getting around the city. There seems to be plenty of grit In th way the Northern Pacific withstands tho on-hl-iugbts of Atlantic breakers and rather more than enough rand all about hei A million love letters wi Uteri by Ameri can soldiers are on the way to Aii.etlci. Tlio censors who hate 10 read ail this correspond ence wlU peter be able to complain Hint they hnven't 'had training In the aits of expres sion. In the old days mey used to call tlie political machine In this city the plunder bund. For the time being one la tempted to cast Ukkle time still appropriate deslnatlon and write the City Hall outfit down aa a blundcrbund. e- .:...- .v.' ''".y ,$y .-.vrj:,';.'.''-''' aT" KaSMaW" Oaaah. ft MslfiWigM iB3t tSjjL '5sMa-' jL QD MifcL 'aflKaHB ftti- !!Hm - ' 4--atfwPP3TirBTr tP i' riJ!iarIajtlafV53plBa?-afllT-aWTMaff irTtm'-H - ..UaT aartllEa&ew" " 4 s&- 'Ji, ' JOAN OF ARC AND HER MESSAGE The 508th .tiiniii-rsary of Ucr Birth. Celebrated Today, Emphasizes Anew the Beauty and Moral Grandeur of Her Ideals GL squadron in Xew rli. and of League Island also, boom today In honor of an aiiiilvers.il y which might fittingly bo made tho lirs : International holiday nf a league, of civilized nations. Five hundred and eight teats ago. In the little village of Dom remj. on the bolder of the old Fiwirh piov-, mces of Clitempagtie and Lorraine, was horn a human embodiment of the kind of spiritual force and clear moral vision toward which a war-wounded world turns In hope today. History knows the child ns .loan of Arc. Her story, unique In Its intcipl.iy of Incident, has beeij a P'ent agent of French pattlotlsni for generations. Its supernatural features1 bate protoked both puzzled skepticism and unqualified owe. Poets and dramatists at the intocation of her name hate throbbed with eloquence. Tlie gieatest of lliein Shake speare in it mood of nallo-ial astigmatism vilified her memory in Henry I, but his hand Is not always clearly traceable in that chronicle play and, In any event, his dis coidant nole is oeertt helmed in the diapason of praise. TT M 1 tint itil recently all the outpourings of either atants or singers caught the inn ingle hlg nlrlcanee of the Maid's message. Suddenly the war chulfled li. The spirit of Joan o Arc was not meiely regnant otcr French national Idealism, but over 11 far wider doiii.T.-i of thought. Tlio aspiration., of all lovers of liberty upon the planet hate been newly stimulated by the marvelous and un dying tale of the triumph uf truth In tin age o' falsit; : si.np'.e. feriont zeal for Just.ee in an era of chaos and corruption. Material onlt win the piteous death of tlie Maid of Orleans Spiritually sho was uncon querable. II 'tas lb'- fotces which she had set In 11101 Ion which eventually ransomed her fathoiland from the devastating lutader. It Is thei snnie potter which stirs the mass of mankind today In Its unquestionable, feeling that what Is eomplex and cloudy in the woild drama inn besi be elucidated and dispelled by an application of elemental principles ns familial- to 1I10 unlettered peasant as to tlie profouudesl of scholars. President Wilson, umld the diplomatic obliquity of quickly shifting situations, git es lepeated expres sions to these sentiments. Joan of Ate, re eo'ted and nniazed at her two trials by the scholastic sophUuicu ot her Inquisitors, would as easily have comprehended the mass opinion of an ag" which In outward furnltiir bears but the remotest resemblance; to her own. TT IS J- prihn pel naps 111 tins mono mat the fifteenth and twentieth centuries are Indlssohibly linked. Tlie new bold ot the memory of tlio maid upon tlie popular Imagination, a sway re. valid In the speeth of statesmen and pub licists, a sway that lias been exemplified In patriotic posters in .a land that was unknown In her day, a sway In a popular song with which virtually every F.ngllsh. speaking sol liter is acquainted, may bo thus explained. France does not speak of idealism in terms of Xathnn Hale, nor lo us is "Chinese'' Hordon the Inevitable symbol of tint spirit ual quality. -Natlopal hemes and heroines abound, figures of grandeur, nobility, moral beauty. Hire, Joan of Arc effaces frontiers. Her example Is on Indisputable Influence on world thought. The battleships which slg ualUo that fact today pay the only sort ot respect of which they are capable. Tint ArA tent nflAt ntl .hj nmiit. .... -. . Pictures, the constant aUiulou of speech th. I EASY PICKINGS ." " ttuest ti Unites, eloquent because simple, spontaneous, naive, Informally nnd u.iextln gulshably genuine as the Maid was? If the date of her birth ever does become a holiday and the event Is quite conceivable men and women in all the realms of freedom will not need to be instructed ns to Its meaning. Tii".v know it nou, cten those unacquainted with all but tho barest outli.icK of her btoiy. AS Te that tale, Us external incidents. J- although of secondary import to the spiritual universality of It, message, coin pose a biography unparalleled. Louis Kos suth pointed out that Joan of Arc was the only person of cither sex who eeer com manded tlm military forces of a nation at the age of seventeen. Cleaving to this line of thought, the record of her captaincy of defeated armies following tlie authorization of her po.sitlc.i by the spineless I'liarles vn, her superb triumphs at 01 leans and Paiay are simply untnatcli abla accomplishments. Her failures at Paris and Complegue arc dhectly attributable to tho sinister Intrigues and Indifference of the French Arniagnao party, whose cause she so unselfishly espoused. Iter absolute skill In leadership, a direction whose singular humanity hi a grossly brutal ago is attested by her sworn statement that she never killed u man, Is un-hadowed by those bitter clrcum Malices. rV Hill: mental acumen, unsupported by the smallest educational advantages for sue was llllteiate the valid otllclal record 01 tne great ttlal of H2l and of the piocess of rehabilitation Instituted by tin. church glee wonder-waking evidence. IJcr teplies to her accusers after ttlis had been perfidiously sold by her captors, tho Burgundlans, to her nations foes, the I.'tigllsh, re will marvels of peisplcicity and touching mental honesty. -Voidest of all is tlie supreme alor of her letocaljon of all that she Ifad denied con eernlng her belief in her celestial mentors "Many things.' declared the girl, "did he llho puncher say that t hato never done. if I iti-tci to say tli.it L.01I has not sent me 1 should be. damned. It Is true that (tod has set-.', me My voices have since told me that by confessing 1 committed a great wicked ness, which 1 ought never hate elone. u that I said t uttered through f,,,r ot J,1(J She." Fiont that point her courage never failed. Tlie deatli pyre, ut Itouen had no spiritual terrois for her. TT CAXXOT bo said that the cxhausth A Investigations of tho visions and m.ic, te Ices ,,-., now U..1.11 e-u insimv-u ijer to ,,,,,1..,.. the .lellveeane. f .-,.J,. ,.. ... . lindertako ,,,... ; .. ' "' ii.ivt. lurotvn much tern In history. Tho church 1 as Tea ,,.""; her. Mark Twain. In ,., r n wodlo ir f ntipM.,,1. ,-. -,,t...i.... , '""I'somc tribute "" " siv iiiiiai eviriinvii iw .. ribute. ; '. " '""ui 01 tne mysten- transcendental aspects aimeal-.i ... o-rrtX 'Anv"-;,; Its to tho as to her "supranormal' us for any facts in her hlatnrv acunie-. i, -UlJ 00 ..... " --sll liven that serene repository of wu Anatola France, shifted the proble. 0I"' Pails neurologist, who talks T pmei ius'iv "unilateral hysteria." nnd then ,.,. "if became the open door by wl,lch the dwL or what Joan deemed tho divine Jr. iS, Into her life. It strengthened I e" f.Htb " consecrated hor ,lc.,!,-, . ..... ... 1,'.u" and an. her will Joan remains perfectly lea the and normal. Xenous pathology can, there, fore, cast hut a feeble light on JonnVn, ure It can reveal only one part of her spirit." Till-: key 'word Is the last It U the spirit of the Maid which no shadow of dubiety can sully. It will ring as 11 deathless over tone In the reverberut Ions nf muf. -. ... .i i,.T ,,.Tn , ,... "r::.u.1 " ,,e.r ""n eenloua machines of material power as they ISff S.,,ie'.Sfmorr V" N'w York Bay Voice From the A. E. F. tty Lieutenant Crantland Rice Third Army, A. II. I "piP-AXCE may have Alsace-Lorraine; Italy can grab her share; Slip the British Turkey-Spain, ' Or a slice of old Ukraine, Africa, or anywhere; Hut so far as- we're concerned, Looking back across the foam. Willi our faces westward turned All we ask Is "Send us Home," Belgium has a worthy claim On the war chest of the Uun; Serbia may well exclaim "We were nlso In tho game Whoa you scored the winning run." Hut concerning just our stake, Hiking through the muddy loam, AVe have one request to make All we ask is "Send us Home.' Mujbo we have done our pait; An) way, we gave our best; Though a trltle slow to stmt We came tfiroush with willing heart When we bumped against the test; Xow when all rewards are duo. Peering through the wintry gloam, This 'Is all we seek from you - All we ask Is "Send us Home.'' Oid Virginia we mean ole luglnny swung back out of the Past ' A Voire I'r.im Old Times with its golden accent to speak In the person of that maid of Mr. WH.-on's who fibbed nobly -i'o.. her land und dazed the household servant of Hngliud's king with the quiet statement that we have at the White House gold dinner plate quite as marvelous as that of tlie royal establish ment of lirltnin. tine need not have been below mnlrs at Buckingham Palace to know how tills daughter ot slave's moved austerely In that environment, refusing to be dazzled, pi oof against Incredible wonders, stonily re sulted lo show no emotion all for the honor of the old folks at home. Ole Virginians will recognize the trait. They will not smile at It. They will be reminded ot a time when the setvant In the house was not a "prob lem" and 1111 Irritation, hut tho lovable god- ' dens of a hearth and an authoritative guar dian of family pride and traditions. And they will bavo 11 sudden wistful sense of something lost forever out of life. What Do You Know? QUIZ '" " leomr"' "", '""'"' '' "" Kl":!',, ""'"'' ln 2. UI1.1t Is the latest alrnlnne nlllliiele rer.irJ mid by whom was It nmele? m'' I). MI1.1t Is Inicloloc.".' 4. VWiiit vi hh tlie natlormlit, f jjln . , s . 1I-111 lal.ot. who .lie, o. ere.) .Will Anirrlra" li. What Is (lie highest mountain In ,frlrn- tl. Mli.lt (lire tmoU ef the Nrw Te.tu'men( mr 1,11,1. m us 1 he hynontlc flosnel" '. Mhat It niillmiMi.? 5. How- old was Joan of ,r(. .,,, ,,. ,. burned nt tlie stake; l,rn '" "'" 9, Mlien Is M. Valentine's liajT 1(1. Mlmt Is the origin of (bo orU jinculain nswers lo baturdav's Quu I. 'Ih iVKSiiSfltt. ,,i,l,qmuTriSST ','!,: ,i,,!f "; ;l.rnKs.,ullh,e.' Il jXWi' .V" . Melee. . Stales hut mllllr.l lh ,,.ni.'n,i iiinrn.linrnt nnd IweKl" 1 .ore ,.' .i"1"" In order lu Insure its pnasaie. "earj- truthrsLws&nrr . 1 a.sii.a-l.. t.. ...: .; " 11111.-- It li.is been rstl lus hern estimated (hn( (I,. n.. ,. , sjmnouw reo,n,no.ia,e ,uo?a7.W.''n, OS. snec- ' ''".ir.Y'J.",",,.",,!.1;,,!!""'" """ . h. IMi.etelii Is n dlmlnuthr form of Vh.'.."!' . 1. Marie, llashklrtseir wos r. .eu,.l ,'i , T""1' N ' author. Altlioiuli",," ,11V,""1 "' mul ieeot .ll.tlnrtl e In? th. ifiT'.? "rom- , vvhlrli Is eonsnleu"" ?;;,, V'l'' Cr uf 4 3 " AIW&dS.I.SS?. ,,U- ,l'1 ". Msp .SueV'ii,, vxstsixsr " vlneenr l.y molil funaui ''"", ' h 0. Mount llltd.ni. In North fs,,.ii . ' , WaVlauVla-iVro rf " "F' &IK ,0 .ra'SSAlte; 0yrnmt y s.Tfl.l 13- ij:j ..!. ki k- - A I xys-. .y , ..? a K-STsU mmmszzK ''l'LV?.1ftJi t 1 K. , If - f.-sr,- V-??!a I ..- I .-- l-.rMmtm.mmm