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F r . IK I It 10 4 THE SUN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1919. AND NEW TOllK TRESS. THURSDAY, NOVEMHBR 0, 1010. MBMBEIl OF THE ASSOCIATED FltESS. VI.A la.nMn ..-- n- -. U vpl llltl VOlV CU- - .1...... ..I 1 illlart fn h. 11.. . nmthlli-ntlo- o all UUUJ1 n.ws credited to or noi SIIINQ'H WOrtlS 011(10(1 III otherwise credltod in :hla paper anil also ui local nana puonsnea nerein, becnmo a a despateheii It complete All rlrhtH nf Of BHCCI41 I . , , . , dispatches herein arVal.o reserved. \ comraan i, mm iovemuur u, \'\J &&S &?3Xii \a?te7. \ceess will forever remain day sacred to Intrepid men who then Sab,crl,llm., MaH. raHtpal.1. un(ylnK fame glorIous Year. Monthi. Month. In the of tho United JJAlLtX t)U.U.tli .MIMMI u.w DAILY only 8.00 4.00 SUNDAY only S.OO IJHf ClNJDIAN KlISI. DAILY SUNDAY., .$10,00 $5.00 DAILY only 8.011 4.00 SUNDAY 6.00 S.OO Foukion Rath. DAILY SUNDAY... titM $12.00 DAILY only m.oo D.uu SUNDAY only. 0.00 4.S0 J1.50 One $1.00 -- j a l : j a ft . 4 ft .7.1 .50 six that evening; sun. m.\5 m'oo o.so Jectlon of covenant League \' \ \u0 of would In nn Important books nooK wonLD sense, a usurpation power. iwcoKiyi. one year M'\\ Canada... Other countries All checks, money orders, c. 2.0U to be nua. payable to The Sun. Published dally, Including by the Sun Printing and Publishing Association, 180 Nassau st., Borough of Manhattan. N. . President, Frank A. Munsoy. 150 Nassau St.; Ervln Wnrdmani Tltherimcton; Trcaa., Wm. T. Dcwart, all of ISO Nassau street. London odlce. street. Paris ofllco, fl Ilu deja Mlchodlere, olt Hue du Quatre Pept.mbre. Washington ofllce. Munsey Dulldlng. Brooklyn ofllce, lloom 202. Eagle Bulid-ln- c 303 Washington street. our friends who favor vs islth Krtpti ana illustration jor puoncaiion vwn to have rejected articlt returnnl thev must in ok cases etna tiampi jor mat purpose, TELEPHONE. BEEKMAN T 7 Americanism on Top. Whether In Massachusetts, In Keiv tucky, or whatever impa dent 'nnd preposterous claims of super' sovereignty Anjcrlcanlsm In our Government, In our Industrial fields, In our every day life, got trampled and mutilated on Tuesday American hobnailed boots. Massachusetts whnt happened to Mr. Samuel Ooxipebs's trade snpqrsoverelgnty within the United States wns no more vigorous and con- clusive than what happened In Ken-tnck- y nnd similar States to Mr. WooDnow Wilson's League of Na- tions supersoverelgnty from without ' tho United States. . The demands on this republican na- tion by empires or by trlbnl com- munities of the Old World for special rights nnd privileges over national don't go here. The demands on this republican nation by steel union organizers nnd agitators, by coal union organizers nnd agitators,\ or any others, for license to override national law nnd defy na- tional power don't go here. American sovereignty Is still on Job In the United States nnd for the United States. The American people arg, always ready to vote, always ready work, always ready to fight American sovereignty over nny nnd anything having to do with this free and blessed land. November 0 A Glorious . Day ln American History. General Pebsuinq was ln course of his recent formal visit to thte city whether he could that one particular Incident In history of American Expeditionary Forces stood out In his mind as a climax of our war effort, and replied without hesitation: \Cutting the lines at Sedan. ' Cut- ting the enemy's lines there on No- vember t. That was the cllmai.\ Of this great victory General Peb finiNa wrote ln his report to Sec- retary of War under date of Novem- ber 1018: \With comparatively well rested divisions final advance ln the Meuse-Argon- front was on November 1. \Our Increased artillery force ac- quitted itrclf magnificently In sup- port of the advance, and the ejiemy broke beforo the determined Infantry, chlch, by Its persistent fighting of the past weeks and tho dash of this attack, had overcome his. to resist '\The Third Corps took Ancrevllle, Doulcon and Anderanne, nnd the Fifth Corps took Landrcs ct Satnt George and pressed through succes- sive iln3 of resistance to Bayonvlll nd Chennery. \On the 2d the First Corps Joined ln the movement, which now became an Impetuous onslaught that could sot be stayed. ' \Onrtho 3d advance troops surged forward ln pursuit, some by motor trucks, while the artillery pressed along the country roads close behind. \The First Corps reached Authe nd Chatlllon-sur-Ba- r, tho Fifth Corps Fosse and Nouart and tho 'fThlrd Corps Hallos, penetrating the enemy's line to a depth of twelvo mUea. \Our large had ad- vanced nnd were skilfully brought position to fire tho Impo- rtant lines at Montmfidy, Longuyon and Conflnns. \Our Third Corps the Mease on the and tho other corps, ln the full confidence the day was thelra, eagerly cleared the way ot machine as they swept north- ward, maintaining complete coordi- nation throughout \On tho Cth a division of the First Corps reached a point on the Mcuso opposite Sedan, twenty-fiv- e miles from line of departure. 'The strategical goal which was our hlshft hope was gained. \We had cut tho enemy's main line of communications, and nothing, but surrender or nn armistice could save his army from complete disaster.\ Tho enemy was suing for nn armis- tice when the Americans reached \a on Mease orposlte Sedan.\ Five dny8 Inter It cffectlvo, and ndvnnco of tho Anicrlcnn troops Into Germany was unopposed. In Mcuso-Argonn- o battlo they hnd fought and defeated total of forty enemy divisions. Thus the Mcuse-Argonn- e battle contest\ In General Peb- - victory for nn American nrmv under amcnenu tno anniversary pi its culminating the nml pince nnnnls only .40 tho States. Too Tendency In Toward Usurpation of Power. Again wo respectfully Invite the Jo attention of the Senato of the United 74 ! to the obvious elrcumstunco One either tho ratification or tho ro- - tiie tho of the Nations be, and the of Sunday, II. 40.43 Fleet mrcnw- - 2J0O. State, tho over under In union au- thority by speclnl thc to' for body asked the say tho the tho 20, the begun will calibre guns Into upon crossed 6th, that guns our the tlie Much These Days States We aro not speaking of a treaty concluding peace. Wo speaking and this lu year flill of nn attempt to effect\ by the ratifi- cation of n treaty of peace, n radical departure from the Republic's policies, Involving changes which should be ac- complished, If accomplished tit nil, only by the sovereign will of the peo- ple of thc United States, expressed lu tho provided way by the amendment of the Constitution. The Constitution gives to the Presi dent and the Senate the power to make treaties It gives neither to the President nor to tho Senato the power to effect by means of trenty a structural change In our Govern ment such ns Is Involved In the sub- jection or delegation of any part of our sdverelgnty to nn International supergoverumcnt administered In with alien Powers. A process of structural change thus effected ln the name of treaty mak- ing would bo to that extent a usurpa- tion of power, whether tho usurper was the Executive or the Senate. The power of structural change such ns Is contcmplntcd by the Wilson covenant and now under discussion by the Sen- ate Is not conferred upon either the President or the Legislature by the Constitution. It Is one of the rights mentioned in the Ninth Amendment as retained by the people; and In the Tenth Amendment ns one of the pow- ers not delegated to thc Government by the Constitution. The more Carefully this scheme of constitutional change Is examined In its complexities nnd complications thc more clearly apparent Is the need of n reference of the wholo portentous question to tho people themselves for decision. This tendency to usurp powers of far reaching Import Is contagious. It may proceed on the part of an Execu- tive In unconsciousness that Tiny usur- pation Is Involved. In the samo way a Senate, resolutely endeavoring to prevent nn Executlvo usurpation of power, may easily lose sight of the fact that the final decision Is not even with Itself but with tho people. Consider once nore what George Washington said to his fellow coun- trymen In tho Farewell Address :- - \It1 Is Important, likewise, that the , habits of thinking ln a free country should inspire caution ln those In- trusted with Its administration, to confine themselves within their re- spective constitutional spheres ; avoid- ing In the exercise ot the powers of ono department to encroach upon an- other. The spirit of encroachment tends to consolidate the powers of all tho departments ln one, and thus to. create, whatever the forces of ernment a real despotism ... If, ln the opinion of the People, the distribution or modification of the Constitutional powers bo In any par- ticular wrong, let It be corrected ln the way which the Constitution desig- nates. But let there be no change by usurpation; for though this, ln \one Instance, may be the Instrument of good. It Is tho customary weapon by which free governments are de- stroyed.\ Whenever this tendency appears It ought to bo repressed nnd corrected In tho manner pointed out by the Father of our country\. That Is, by going to the people. If we are to con- tinue as a democracy let us bo n thor oughgoing democracy. A Governor's Thoughts. Tho Republican party hns gained Assembly. It has elected half n dozen Slaydrs In New York State cities tbnt were provlously ruled by Democrats. It has won In this city tho only cltywlde contest the Presidency of tho Ronrd of Aldermen and prac tically everything In Manhattan nnd Brooklyn. Next year a Governor, n United States Senator nnd forty-fiv- e Prcsl dentlnl Electors will be chosen. What must be tho thoughts of the Democratic party's solitary hero ln this State? Will he run again for n Governorship which ho gained by only 77,000 plurality, or will bo try for. tho toga in expectation of tho rcnomlnn-tio- n of WAOswomn nnd strong sup- port from the women voters? cogitations of the lion. Altect E. Smitii must be Interesting. Thc Independence or thc Judiciary. This year's campaign for the pres- ervation of tho Judiciary mny best bo compared with the cnnvnss made twenty-on- e years ago In behalf of Justice Joseph F. Dalt, nnd that comparison will hearten nnd encour- age every citizen believes In n bench responsible to tho people nnd not to political bosses. iVs Tammany under Mubpht re- fused to renominate Justice Joseph E, Newbuboih ln '1019, so ln 1803 Tammany under Crokeu refused to tho Finns and tbo Russians would Justice Josehi P. Daly, movo tho friction between tho two As tho Republicans In 1010 to armies. Tho campaign against Pctro-th- o rescue of nn Imperilled bench and grad would be to tho liking of tho made Justice NEwntmofcit their, can- - Finns; they successfully fought e, thoughjio was a lifelong Dem- - shcvlst armies In Finland nnd drove ocrnt, so In 1808 the Republicans them out, of their land. They aro made Justlco Daly, another lifelong strongly urged by their popular mill- - Democrat, their candidate, ' 3 13 a to , caso anneal wns made to tho People, nld In thn MnHirn of Petroernd. but.cla,m nwerwa Dy samuoi uonipera ana ,,leV!ltor thc.. tuU easier Hero the narallel nnds. .hor'iiMitnt . ,.mn.lQ fotlter rcpreaentatlves of organ labor t . a,owep methoJ ot trallslt. It ...w. tnat tno rient o: a man to quit it is nlirp that restaurant. fln \ 1898 the did not respond their to an army. ,10 ieaBe3 cannot be takon away law. lt\ thlcK-- 1 as they did, this year. Instead of :rhcy probably mistrust tho strength Tho' Is Indeed Insidiously and i j ))crcetj y windows' ciucieii .MiNiiiu uma n.i x uuENiTcii army nnii tiemanu uuuiuiuiuuiy imaiuiunnK. and badly defeated. The Tammany candidates nirJ tho votes recorded, for them were : Geo rob P. Andrews James Fitzockalo 164,157 David Leventkitt 103,731 The 'Kcpubllcnn nominees and the) votes recorded for them were: William N. Cohen ; .,115,321 Josunt P. Daly, t 121,373 .Henry W. Taft ;ioo,ssc DAi.v, though ran way Northwestern Army of ticket, did n look Moscow, assistance- - Russia neoDle are a In which n a gov 8 Stato ticket was elected, Colonel Roosevelt being Governor. Whilo thc electoRrte of the First district then failed send Jus- tice Daly back to the bench, this year the electorate In tho enmo Judicial t did betler, and may ns- - sumo that after the rebuke It admin- istered Tnmmany and Tammany's master It will n long time before another assault on tho bench as fla- grant ns the refusal to renominate Justice Newhuhgeii and Judge Smith Is attempted. t Leaven In tho Hoard Kstlmato. Tho election of'-- GuabdiA IIehbv II. Ouiuun means, ns The Sun frequently reminded Its readers before election, flvo votes In the Doard Estimate. From tho strictly .business standpoint this Is the most Important thing nccom-pllshe- d here on Tuesday. experience of Mr. Cubkan In city government and the militant qualities of Mr. Guakdia promise that nothing will \get past\ In tho next board without scrutiny exposition. Tho logrolling that has been so easy nmong eight members tho same political faith will come to, an end, or nt least It will bo pointed out to the citizens. Such will the strength of tho new minority that their five votes can prevent the passage any reso- lution upon' which both the nnd tho Comptroller present ns friendly ns strange bulldogs nro not united. matters whero twelvo votes, needed for affirmative .action tho two Republicans will of themselves able to block unwise action. We look for reform- that body whose recent performances have been described by one of own members as \disgusting nnd ridiculous.\ Finland's Help to Russia the War Against Bolshevism. A despatch from Ilelslngfors, the Finnish capital, which has conjlrmatlon from Washington, re- ports tho \proffer of the recognition of Finland's Independence by the North western Russian Provisional Govern ment. This Government has the sup port of tho allied nations nnd Is with the other organized movements ln Russia, and Premier, Lunosoff, Is very evidently acting with tho approval of tho Archangel Government In tho north and, of Admiral Kolciiak and General Denikine In thc cast fouth nn effort to settle tho differ ences which havo existed since tho armistice between the Finns nnd tho Russians. This recognition Is the' first parture from the policy which the leaders had s,et of re- establishing upon Its former geographic boundaries. Tills pbllcy has been one of tho difficulties which havo confronted tho Allies In dealing with tho heads of tho movement It was largely responsible for tho recent troubles Riga. While neither Kolciiak no; Denikine oih proved the aid furnished by the German troops the attack on that town,, It becamo apparent that the Russian leader, Avaloff-Hermono- t, believed that If could toko Riga from the Lofts ho would advancing materially tho Russian cause In tho Baltic region. Tho recognition of nn Independent six more seats the New York State Finland must carry with it tho Tho who cume The Justmcnt tho Finnish claims for n boundary line between that country and Russia. Tho Finnish demands, If acceded to, would' carry the eastern boundary Finland to within ono hundred mllo.oM'etrograd and north- ward along the coasts tho White Sea nnd the Arctic Ocean. Another question that must arise will bo tho future stntus the small Bnltle States, Esthonln, Letvla and Lithu- ania, tho Independence of which Fin- land hns heretofore Insisted upon. It Is evident that In recognizing tho In- dependence Finland nnd granting conditions that would prove the Finns the Itus-slnn- havo mndo no small concessions both In territory nnd policy. In return the Russians aslr the re- sistance of thc Finns the capture Petrograd. Finland can throw n considerable forco to tho old of General TuDENrrcn ; the Gov ernment his hnd an nrmy Its com- mand which has been able ft rcstoro order which earlier defeated tho German and nolshevlst forces tlrat at- tempted to occupy the\ country. This the loaders. In each tnrj- - to certain t0 by ze.l Mm wor In by bo- - iuk a uetwceu & kin. t HOUSE marblo surerncini plausibility cham)K restaurant, uQucrsiautuus RESTAURANT prefer voters equip 164.0CS chosen official Russia Qounito from mo siaicmeni useii in mo iiDstraci Band be guarantee tho plays may that future Governments will Vn!T L IhL and slimpscdlas Congressional ,ono rdlshe3 one'a Blmpl reeognlzo their independence. j seek othor employment, or oven to retire Tllcro ln former aa wIckcd .'..ys wns tho first small coun-- 1 and llvo a of eaos upon hla savings, BOmo gloried and drank deep try crush KolshovLsm within Its if ho have tho Is course ju3t untn ey knew not whero they wcro boundaries nnd to rnlFO an cffectlvo. 08 inalienable as business man's at urawn to lamentable ways, no barrier against spread Into west- - rlBht t0 from busl-- ; a0Ubt, by tho resemblance ot MM and \vo 011 1 ho surroundings to tho I'orsep- - i?nrnrt it ti.n ,,i,t h I\ \ 1 \ 1 ... . have ' oils, where In sueh lndUCCll to Carry fSUUO Fpirit 111 Tho Insidiously misleading nart of tills ennMnet. If vonnir Omar the aid which they to fur- - claim U In, tho fact that tho right thus nlsh Itussln they would bring about asserted is purely an Individual right tlie fall Pctrograd nnd open the ' \ 13 being confused for the to m LTTZ: not have In, For this fUsin.e to alas nil too numer to wo to be of II. La and of La nnd of ' bo of at In aro In In its and In de up ut of In he bo ln of of of of of to ln of unquestion- ably at and tne llfo tho his Its h'3 niS aro by he be Its ad- - and the Entente Powers w6uld not bo too high u prlco In recognizing tbclr Independence. Mr. Smug Proposal. Tho Secretary of War, D. made statement i a\ entirely naturo from tho on Tuesday when he wns 'elns. ques-f'S'1- 1 comwno wun outers into - union, often fostered by coerclvo by Senate compel ,.l1,.i,.,.,i their which Is investigating the administra- tion of In tho Army : \When n man can't get along with his chief he ought to get out of the service unless his chief Is wrong, andjhen you ought to chango tho chief.\ As it Is obviously Impossible for anybody to the chief except tho President nnd ho keeps his Burlesons nnd his Bakers tho dic- tum of Secretary Baker amounts to this; That man who has spept or thirty years ln tho nrmy or the nnvy ought to quit whenever ho docs not agree with the passing fancy of the Secretary of particu- lar department. In such theory were to be ac- cepted ns sane wo might ns well tear down West Point and Annapolis, the lnstlutlons which us to win the wnr Germany. On Congratulation to the Governor of Massachusetts. The Governor of Massachusetts gave lesson to the National Admin- istration In how to govern fearlessly. This les?on hns been happily used In tho mlnprs' strike. The Presldent'of tho United States has sent to the Governor of Massa- chusetts telegram congratulating hlni on his reelection as \a for law and order.\ Tho victory really arrived on the day when Calvin Coolicgb showed himself to be man, not n cock. That day or any day between then and tne was the tlmo for congratulations from all who do n\t wait to sec how a cat will Jump. The aftermath of election brings up, as Is usual whenever Tammany is defeated, the suggestion that ChaKles F. Murphy's leadership of Tammany Hall Is threatened. From present In- dications that leadership will bo Mur- phy's until he decides to drop it Thcro is no other practical man In the local Democratic organisation who would and could take Murphy's place, away from him. Thomas F. Foley probably does not wish to bo- leader. Alfred E. Smith or Jamks A. Foley might tho Job, but It Is not for a Governor or a Judge. Wo fancy that Mr. will ln his place,\ as useful In driving Democrats out ot their party as any outsldo of Washington. It 13 lmperatlvo that West Virginia reveal to an eager world her system of training for Consider Mr. ItoDCEits. This fullback of West Virginia's started tho defeat of Princeton two minutes after.tho foot- ball had been kicked Into play. Owing to tho surprising and accu racy of this zoo pounaor witn tno speed of n. sprinter nnd tho power of, hammer thrower h.'s team scored 19 points ln the first quarter of play. Princeton, 0. Much his will was dragged from tho field early In tho second not of overexertion on his part but because It had been found neces- sary when ho was downed that threo young gentlemen of Princeton should sit on his head nnd ns many more or. his body ns could thero bo accom modated, and while this exr\r!n''p bid not his will to It had. and not surprisingly, put his physical coordination out of gear. Ho to tho field later, and, aa In the first when ho carried tho ball for- ward ho also carried two or threo Prlncetonlans draped about his per son Tho world has need of knowl edge of the system of training which develops, academicians of such admi- rable typo. Truo Wilsonltcs will read the Mas sachusetts result as a victory for law and order, and the election In Missis- sippi as for tho \Tou put mo off tho ballot, but look what I did to you!\ wires Major Dynamite Kelly to F. If Mr, Murphy remem- bers this Jeer ho may get even next tlmo by nominating Mr. Kelly on a Tammany ticket. Tho of La Giunnu and Cun-oa- x should Increase tho Intelligence of tho Board of and Apportion- ment about 900 per cent Arthuti of Tho Bronx seems to bo a livelier Murphy than of Manhattan. A Marylnndrr'a I'len for Ills Own, from tlie Itatre de Grace IttpubUcan. Our garments are old nnd tattcrsd nnd torn; the soles of our show are shockingly worn! the crown and the rim are gono , Finnish forco appeared beforo PqtTO-fro- our hat; our cupboard Is not grad several months ago, and It la a r4t would stay 'round the hou for \ 1MV Mm rood rhunen In e.ru.- ,! that It. did not then capture tho town yet wo aak nothing but what Is our due, was that Its was halted if we but hd it perhaps, sir, from you Instead ot this aa tale or n-- t it v lnr. we'd iorfultv thou and Ut Hire THE LABOR LEADERS' SERVI-- TUDE FALLACY. Clear Distinction llctncru tho I mil vldual Right to Quit and tho Com or Conspiracy to Intlml-- ' flight of ltighly polished steps .ini mw WnriM i(n n.itMno- - guarded by highly ornamented bronzo railings ot Houso of nf Hflrtl coinlns varlablo. To the Editor or Tiik Sun Sir; Thcro n,i f,m their Nw leader, General or 0f through uuifiuctf or a- Ditente Powers' is sweetly Itusslan victuals, Finland members to means. of withdraw of any. Jumshvd clorlcd nnbocomlnn- asked of Justlco ahead, his Mayor paying linker's Newton his weather ous who havo only an Imperfect con- - ccptlon oC tho distinctions involved In a proposition so plausibly It should be plain to every one that tho \right to quit work,\ of a man's own frr.e Is ot different Baked, a a moas-tione- d n to Justlco change a twenty a enabled against a a victory n election ornament Murfhy contlnuo Democrat athletics. 'eleven activity a ,agalnst Rodcers quter, modified perform returned quarter, a triumph covenant Michael Charles Munrnr. election Fetlmato Charles advance byind blnntlon members urea, inalienable rights Into the mass, nnd then upon tho exhortation ot labor bosses voto away from a large part of the rrnundq jInrlno capital temples asserted. Individual ex- ercised volition, which. spread workers In whole the equally j as an opera, as varied as and sacred the In- - as as lamp post; dashed dividual to soil his labor. They talk line lunch no nonsense adout .glibly about labor Hut tho Corned beef and unionism Is In Its naturo negation 60 cents; lettuco Individual to life, liberty and tha sundwich, cents! Did lionora- - pursuit of and the \closed shop\ principle If ever It obtained na- tionwide scopo would leave no man free ln his right to contract for tho sale of his labor, but would, by im- posing the will 1 1 a tyrannous If by any striti of the It ever reach that stage take from tho minority tho rights. Individual !n their naturo, which tho was designed to mako and for the of which our Con- stitution is our sacred Thero Is no doubt In thc mind ot ' fair minded person that unions havo dono much to benefit the conditions of labor and, they aro entitled to Thore Is, however, the same legal right of tho wholo peoplo to regulate i nd control of labor that Is to control of capi- tal; Indeed I might go further and say hat thero Is an obligation on tho part if the people as a whole, through Its eglslatlvo agencies, to protect Itself tho of within tho \ t tho which, under the guld meo of drunk with an ex- aggerated senso of their authority, would dissolvo our sacred and plunge our beloved country into Com munism, Sovietlsm or Bolshevism by whatever name may be called the greatest enemy of right, lib- erty and The attitude of Samuel Gompers to- ward our Constitution as exposed by The Su.v In a editorial ar- ticle of Sunday should bo taken as warning by the people. J. Sheridan, Brooklyn, November 5. ON Historian's Pen Leaps to tho Sub-Jc- In Way. To the Editor or The Sun Sir: In the midst of wars, strikes and dis- turbances one Is apt to form a distorted view of tho relatlvo of mun-dan- o matters. I notice that tho weight which really attaches to tho has ben entirely overlooked. This is tho land of tho waffle. Bight hero In county, Is tho of the, waffle, and hero wo havo It at Its best Very little Is required to see in its presont perfected form tho stress and strivings .of generations of good cooks: the four1 pieces a perfect circle fitting tho plate, or bnes Jialf or of tho plate, the In dentations with a thin but perfect bot- tom made for holding tho maximum amount of luscious chicken gravy, the soft yet crisp texture, adapted to nil di- gestions; these, I say, nn j tlonary process beforo perfection was reacneu. In that this gift of the gods to! man may not longer rest ln obscurity I give, below two receipts furnished by competent whoso I have tasted ; SWKET MILK WAFFLES. One quart flour; ono heap- ing teaspoonful baking powder; one pint sneet milk; ono pk-c- ot butter size of an egg; one of salt Mix tho flour with tht baking powder and half of tho milk. Add the yolks of tho eggs, the rest of tho milk, tho melted butter and a of molasses or Beat the whites ot tho eggs and stir ln lightly, then bake not burg or freeze. sour milk waffles. One pint thick milk; half cup tour cream ; half cup butter ; no baking soda: three eggs; one tea- spoonful of salt I first enmo to county In tho blessed year 1 S74 a chicken and waffle dinner could be had at Whltesell's Hotel. Nazareth, for 73 conts. Nowadays, duo entirely and di- rectly to the pernicious activity of the same meal costs $2.50. Whitesell has gone, but tho chicken nnd waffles remain to console this and suc- ceeding Edwajid Hart. Easton, Pn,, November 6. 1020. To the Editor or The Suit Sir: The party that kept us out ot war and Is keeping us out of peace will bo kept out of power ln don't you think? Hilton B. New Tom:, November 5. Discouragers of Oratory ln Our Pacific Islands. From the Pacific Commercial Advertiser. Governor Charles James McCarthy says that when ha opened his few remarks at whistles blew. When ho reached matlc crisis of hla address a flock planes began do stunts overhead. As It pVems In Canada. Tmm t'.e M\'irrat Finan .Vtj. With pnduetlon the n.nst rrylng ned of the hour, three civic hoMJ.-iv- s or ha'f holl-daj- a ln on- - we - j p , h Lr n Am r. .r , 0f itxa jwut uosscujuy. fronts of More Than 200 l'cr Mndo at the Capitol. Nov, 0. Down ono tho tnelr claim walIg wlilcliAthn Pnnltnl where' the such their empty reports Attractive In all things except tho h. c. of 1., 'has pono-trate- d even to the cloistered shades where members refresh themselves be- tween speeches which ringlngly damn, threaten and promise to reduco tho oycrwldo between tho C03t and prlco of those delicacies stntesmen consume, fuel to feed tho llres of oratory. Only King of Illinois openly robolled and carried robolllon to tho floor ot tho House. One day ho ordered in tho restaurant for tho of naturo n of corned beef and cabbage and' ono and lettuce a lunch, surely, for combined poet and practical as well composed a Industry Inalienable' right ot a a with it. Industrial slavery, but price? a of cabbage, chicken and right 35 tho Individual majority could Inalienable heritage. overy trado properly regu- lated, 'hero Individual ambition. a n forming teaspoon- ful dropped exhausted portion chicken blo gentleman frpm eat his order? Ho did not. His agony of hun- ger was tackled and downed by his racro at tho Hn tnok hla R.ivorv GRAND TRUNK BILL Calendar PASSED HOUSE Stl'llSfflO ,ln)ntl ..llltllCnilOIlS aIannkkueim, Inability AMENDMENTS co- operating KM?i?h Intentionally coaitltutlonal remarkable vaudeville, happiness; Imagination Constitution preservation encourage- ment. combinations combinations Government demagogues Institutions, convincing TREATISE WAFFLES. Constructive importance Northampton Pennsyl- vania, transplanted Imagination two'eggs; teaspoonful teaspoonful Northampton generations. Son.vedorm. Washington, truthfully, Impudently Representative' replenishment sandwich; politician, sustaining Galcsburg . . . plates to I . , . - hnvrt a convenientiy store, - r \nee Government i nt S B, further, ! houl(Jbon any had contents tho United and weighed nn scalo; Canada even to ounces, grains. Then from n nearby dealer ln Hko goods ho learned the going prices, and later, assisted by a well equipped account . n,.,-- - nW ant, the materials , of cornoC beef and cabbage poi-tio- n cost 8.05 cents, of the sandwich 4.58 cents. His further computations, restaurant 100 per diverting cent, charge s. . I terminals would bo injurious tho !l.llan, frnde cabbage tho net vfas 212 per cent., on sandwich, 250 per a spread was there! Kin? offered a impassioned remarks ln tho Houso on this breaking ln and entering by h. c. of 1. on prem- - 1 L It John An other great waffle home mark evolu- - order cooks wares sugar. When 1320, j must nrlco. King their ..the cent. auda cious It Kepronentatlve Sears at moved that corned beef fixings bo referred to steering committees on both sides of Houso to bo di- gested, as were, into a report on how about It A pretty pass, Indeed! Four 'hun- dred thirty-fiv- e each a different sure shot for what us, themselves- - suffering out- rageously from same trouble; their own Jeans stripped to the buttons for tho wherewithal merely to life.. Tho or comedy, as It, of matter Is that the Hobse restaurant Is not a privately owned concern: U Is owned man- aged the IKrtse, GI1- - vlctt is ex Its maltro d'hOtel. READING THE lis Full Wind, Does Not Necessarily ' To the Editor of \M. writing Ridgofleld, tho of the barometer as a of forecasting rainy deserves a few crumbs comfort. More- over, the members of his whq chuck at tho efforts tho head thereof should bo required to get by hoart what Solomon has in Proverbs ih this to that to bill. lnrn to to same aSSUr- - and yea, to soon had The ,7' to ln to cost ing, to in and the Mr. few an this that once and tho the It and euro alls you like tho and and bnt Tub Sun Sir; The on scorn said xlx. fact skipper tho na. Instructor, to time only of Languages It \trustor to an was master 01 Weather Bureau observers, professional and aro In th'o kindergarten class. an old water skipper into the at Jim Scarr perks up and the of budding meteorologists gather about In order to absorb chunks of tho northv,-R- t corner eternal truth. Out nt tho means weather changes was his and watched It and watched It,' not to against rain but to put his in order for wind. As a matter of fact the tho not all, and Instructors forecasts may not in company tho change. a summer afternoon, when tho air la very moist and summer cover the tho fall tho In the eastern part tho Indicates tho onset a and' the is usually accompanied a Not Infrequently tho shlft3 even a sprinkle rain, however. Long Mtperlenco In watching tho barometer, the nnd thn thn derstorm With a fair degrco accuracy, but baromoter Itself Is a very guide. Tho approach ordinary cycloolo may be moro readily. tho wind and sets in points south and northeast and tho barometer falls steadily a Is approaching from the west or the south- west and the centre will pass the obrerver twenty-fou- r hours. pretty certain to fall tho front south side the area barometer. But tho barometer wind rain; It begins rlso when wind changes an easterly p. westerly quarter. If tho fall slight there may no rain; but this I not tho caso. September ono and one-ha- lf of fell tho 30.01 Inch ngnt 11 Degan to fall riots. j when the backed Into the south. On \M.\ erase tho \fair.\ and bis trust tio wind van\ dis-ov- cr the approach rf M November t w I B'sBftl . I A, ES; Sun BY for Mc'asuro in the Cana- dian Sonatc. Act Provides for Acquisition of Miles, Lino in tho United States'. By a Corretpoptlent of Tun Su. Ottawa. Ont.. There are sure Indications of a 'stormy ane and In Florida bill In Senate. The PaeUk mate. ,. third was given tho measure\ In the Houso morning, after nyo had been disposed, of quick and the bill pissed by a vote of SI 63. a major- ity of 31, The first half hour in tho Senato saw notlco amendment by ono Government nupporter limiting tho aggregate maxi- mum arbitrator? $180.- - 421,325 preference and common stock to $37,000,000. Senator Lynch-Staunto- n of Hamilton moved that later. W. II. Ross of Mlddlcton, N. S., another Government Senator, also carrio out ef- fectively against the bill. He Bald tho of the Government Canada actjulro 1.C05 railway ln the United States Is sufficient reason for ltlm oppose tho the last hours of the debate In the House the Issuo raised by tho American linos the Grand Trunk led to discus- sion of tha noint nnd nn amendment to Jluckentla King If wr that United Unclnnati States was acquire lines ln this country the Canadians would not bo In- different we not evory reason believe that the Government of tho United States actuated by the kind of protecting tho Interests service and carried them a their citizens?\ Mr. urged that .... tnrll!monf nhnnM direct neignoonng arug ,L,. thero from the 201 Second street, no op0Mjbmtyof embarrass- - carefully lnent between States apothecary's over the Qrand Trunk. drams, sustain In i renly Arthur Melghcn said Mr. King had sent ou' an a ghost, was not likely to George Patent, CJuobcc, vvest, seconaea truth. wnT T Trunk bill the .effect that tho of ncquirftig American territory continuous of the Grand Trunit anu tno after allowing tho policy of traffic American for of Cana-show- and might involve Canada that on corned beef profit What whole oflido Rain. Conn., within Inches whole. better Grand going return. and \that for tho mentioned reasons tho lines means a ser!oU3 of tho annexation of ada by the United States.\ Tho resolu- tion continues: the is opinion a government cynical old \'V' Z'ZJZ ises of gentlemen sworn to drive him; fj.ovornmcnt Ehouid Bive immediate thenco with lashings of assurance to House docs tho statesmen, with tho tragedy, Speaker BAROMETER. Foretells Mean rnlrery of from depravity means weather of family honest of :15. amateur, When forecasting ba- rometer, himself sills clouds barometer States northwest change forecast between twelvo 2 rain snowcr words \change\ Vblxox, 111 The DEFEATED 1,005 of early amendments award motives invitation who Onrnd nbovo acquisition danger Can- -, \That House that eloquence, intend o divert Canadian trada Canadian porta by taking over that por- tion of tho Grand Trunk Hallway and operated the States.\ this amendment the Government majority was 44, tho of of the six divisions. There 27 pairs on all the votes. On an amendment tho f 12,- - GOO.OOO guaranteed stock to arbitra- tion also, along with the preference and St. All tho cross with tho Sir James Loughec, fjovernment In the Senate, rend a letter from tho Minister, Sir Robert who in Virginia, statins he Is entirely ln accord with tho Grand Trunk bill, and that ho had initiated the policy In Lon- don nearly two years ago. Brings Increase of Aa a result of the campaign to $14,323,000 endowment for Trinceton ; University, the faculty been strengthened. These promotions appointments have been : Department Assistant Fro- -' fessors V. Kennedy '03 nnd W. promoted associate nml Kfimnol Sliftl As a matter of tho ot ' fnrmerlv an old sailing craft was about tho, prnfessorshlp. Department Modern on who got much satisfaction of Percy A. Chapman '03, ln- - tho barometer. In Interpreting . ho promoted assistant pro- - n mist romnnrr.d with wlmm \s\r!.nip. nemisiry deep drifts ofllce Battery Park class wisdom from of sea skipper's only of he forearm falling of In sky. of of United of wind, thunderstorm. wind without of wind rloml.n rn.ihtn the unsafe of from Bain of low Indi- cates not from barometer from wind from X Stuff Xov. th Government ot Senator Miall of In of be of on lines of these of from erection very from situ- ated refer of raise mado Croll L. Fleece, Instructor, iiromoted to an assistant professorship of Illology Assistant l'r.-.rsso- L. It. L'ary promoted asais-tan- t on permanent tenure. trustets also cnnllirhcd tho fol- lowing appointments of Instructors, as- sistants, and readers: Departmi nt of Philosophy L. L. Buirmejer, Instruc- tor, S. W. Prince, assistant in the Psychological Laboratory. Biology L. V. Silvester assistant of History and Politics S. J. Howe, In- structor. J. D. McCallum, In- structor, and T. N. Hopkins and W. It Fisher, readers. Modern Languages- - Plerro Maurey barometer does forecast rain at H. C. Lano, In French, except in nn indirect way ; It and K. E. Spencer and V. C. LIzaso, In wind, nml the rain or may ac- - struciors bpanisti. Physics w. van rapid by eh.irnrtpr nf will to tho ln the to Is on and nnd to the to Is bo always On largest CharleB Charles Instructor, forecast approach lecturer An-le- nt Orlen- - storm When shifts storm storm when front The very occurreu the would nnd S. of miles will in ln were to lead- er Prime IS and to tirnf. nrlilna to an The '13, '13 ns on one Languages, and appointment of W. Potter '36 as lecturer In tho Department Art nnd Archieology. RACE URGED. Chlo.-IK- Jury MuLim on Itlols. llaco by agreement quick punishment tho Ity color ad- vanced nr no at- - tachod \worn to set nt rest ICahulul submarine started to . ni .... rumors nnd larger toll. harbor, th. w.t.r T rZVl ?,L V ho to Mn 'uv by any of air- - 29,S5 lncne3- - At Inches n wagons to pictures crowds ; \rain\ birom-te- to ra o Mount I i S. Borden, English u English William Itcccnt 5. Chlcneo' submerre tn- - irn1.. cviuiuea iu irui xnois. THE WEATHER. Kaatcrn Now Turl:, fair y j liicrcaslnij cloudlncsa una warmer; diminishing north vlnAs, t- - with fruh northwest wlmli on th coaat; tartly cloudy, warmer In th Interior Northern New Knglniji tocul anowj to- day, with dlmlnlahlne northerly wlnda, partly cloudy .Southern New England, cloudy with tlUnlnlshlnff northerly winds; cloudy Western Now York, fair clouJy, with probably rain WASHINGTON, Nov. C, Pressure Is Hill very low on Now England couit nn! northerly gales occurred during Tuesday night and Wednesday. Thero Is another disturbance ovor couthwent Kanaaa, an apparent northeastward movement and In again tailing cm the nunh froxsuro In tho Ohio Valley, tho taken region and tho extreme North-we- prcssuro Is moderately high. There were ralna ln the middle Atlantis Mates, 'Now England nnd the lalto region, with some Bnows over the northern dls. voyage for xorihwest rains and Trunk ef pt oth,rn California. reading tho for pioposal \Have United assistant solutions It la somewhat colder tho Atlantlo States and Wet and conslik-rahl- In tho plains .Slates, Missouri and upper Mississippi vulleya. There anow Thursday ln northern New England, snow Thursday und probably Friday In upper Michigan nnd Thurs- day night or Friday In lower, Michigan tho lower lake region nnd tho Ohio Valley while In the Atlantlo States, except north-or- n New England nnd In the east Gulf Slates tho weather will generally !!r Thursday nnd Friday, although local show-er- s probable In tho Florida peninsula. ftt Unlled States Weather Bu- reau stations taken at r. M. yesterday, mcrhlun time: Rainfall Temperature. Bar- - last 21 Stations. High. Low. omcter. Wealber. .',.'.,u ,. near Aiuitny 4o 4o Atlantic OUy.... 41 Baltimore lllsmorck U Boston 40 Buffalo 41 liarle-jto- the-bill- . said that Chicago 44 PsniutlnnH in tho it project not On Is out were CO Cleveland 43 Denver CO Detroit 42 (lulrcston 7S Helena 40 Jacksonville .... 74 Kansas Ulty.... M Angeles.... 01 Milwaukee 40 78 Oklahoma City., 3 l'hiladelitda .... 43 Pittsburg Portland, Me.... 40 PorUand, Ore... 60 Salt Lake City.. 4S San Antonio.:,, 80 San Francisco.. San ' Diego U St. Louis 64 .Washington .... 43 WEATHER RECORDS. Barometer Humidity dlrectlori velocity Weather Cloudy Precipitation temperature yciterday, recorded annexed M...J2 M...IJ ..45 M...42 fair Willi warmer rain New 3 CO M...4I P.M... M...44 M...45 M...44 19.S0 .!\) Clear C0.01 .30 Clear 30.11! Cloudy 29.40 Italn 20.14 50.00 S20 80.? 20.23 20.21 29.93 30.03 20.02 29.S0 29113 29.90 29.80 30.23 Highest temperature. Clear Cltjy Clear Cldy Clear Clear Cldr Clear Clear air u.oudy 29.40 20.00 30.00 80.03 30.03 CUT Clear Clear Char dear Clear .0 8 P. 79.71 29.71 72 01 N.W. N W Wind Clear The this city by the official la shown tha 8 A. 9 10 A. M.. .45 A. II. M, 44 1919. A. M P. II... 4 I 12 42 58 28 CO 31 W 40 40 S! 62 32 32 W 4t 40 31 St 42 42 W 60 31 40 29 81 IS 29 30 00 S3 29 83 61 48 61 In aa In 11 12 \9 12 44 I. 42 P. P. BP. 1918. 1.22 1.20 p. si. M...44 ..44 P.M.. M...44 P. M.... at 1! Houlr table: 1912. 7:30 A. Average tomperatura, EVENTS TO-DA- Fourth day the roll call tho American .lied Cro. Debate League Nations, LnuU tho afflrmatlvo and County-Judg- Orattan MacMahon of Klnss negative, Paul's Congregational Church, Sterling place and Now York common stock, tho Government majority nu- Brooklyn, M. shrank to bench went elcv07tlXnmerLa?enSgh.rS opposition, PRINCETON FACULTY STRENGTHENED Endowment Campaign Teachers. has Morris Iiepart-me- nt will Pt. .04 l't. Pt. l't. LOCAL M...4S .44 M. 52. Lowest 41, 46. lor the lor for tho avti- - soclety'1 llullding. Thirty-nint- h street, a, aav. -- Meeting the Daughters Nebraska, Hotel ABtor. Meeting the Portia Club; Inc., Hotel Astor, Meeting tha American TrapstiDotlnc Asnoclntfon, Hotel ABtor, the National Dottle Man- ufacturers' Association, Astor, M. Luncheon the Rotary Club, 12:30 Meeting tho Young Folks League, M, Meeting tha medical examiners Royal McAlpln, M. Meeting the Metaphysical lnstitu'- - McAlpln. and M. Meeting Passementerie Manufac uro-- Assorlatlon. McAlpln, \Tho Irony lecture Fannlo Hartley, York Evening School Industrial Art, 201 East Forty-s- . street, Church and school motion plcturo ton ference, McAlpln. auspleei American Educational Motion Plcturo A sorlatlon and affiliated organisation' Regular monthly meeting the ber Commerce, Liberty nooh recital by Sam Stern, Straus Au dltorlum the Educational Alllanr Ea! Broadwi-y- , 8:15 M. The clasn millinery, Stuyvesant Igh borhood House, Stuyvesant and Nin streets. Annual dinner the Avenu Asm elation. Waldorf. Jten for Now Age,\ lecture the Rev. Dr. Charles Aubroy Eaton Ne York Academy Medicine, 8:30 Meeting the Now York City Colony National Society New England Women HBmtltnn Institute for Girls. Dinner Tracy the Assicl.'iop Foreign 7:30 M. Mass meeting dlcuis the high living, Hrooklyn Teachers' in Hronklyn Talning School, place anil Nostninil aronue, M. Convention the American Nu'uro pithlc Association. Commodore, day. PUBLIC LECTURES \Hollshevtsm Its Tru Samuel Ilerger. Deputy Attornei-Oe- oral. Evandnr Chl'ds High School i fiinn avenues. iiuuUw, .r.M.ructcr. Chemistry nni\i 4tnt Ttnii' Iliesler, Melghan, H. A. Jones '\''rated by Lillian \s. Fisher. Pub.p and A. Nelson, half-tim- e assistants, ffho0'. Broadway and Academy Department of Physical Education \oi0 aria rsew Imperialism, M!' Nies, instructqr. Civil Engineering Mynsn Ornnt, Publla School CI. Hour E. P. Culver, and Essex etreets. Albert ltlchardson and H. \Th.\ fenartment Dock'.\ Cudo havo bton reappolnlod Instructors vA,n?aoIcJ.l,' Clouilr utir ucmsirv, ana \Water Common Suh.tances,\ IPs-H- . M. Burns and H. A. Neville assist- - tratod. Dr. William Estab'onk ants that department. Tl.e board Temple. Fourteenth street and Second confirmed the 'appointment the n\ Paton Foundation of wiiMSmn.nM- - ?S ?ll??;\u Willi, linger., r.r., TW.I.JU. Morrl.\ air1 ana nosion of thun- -' fe.minilry of to the SEGREGATION Hrcommcnda- - tlimo Chicaco, Nov. segregaclon nnd rgardlss recommend partly l SO, 29. thomometcr, 2 3 4 P. P. 10 V. . 12 temperature, membership I s ... -. 44 41 01 A. at Hotel Cham Correspondents, cla'l E. of nn, bo be A. Y. C. CUTS WAR WELFARE Oppnn Transport Ilecrptlon CoiiimUtco Dppnrliurnti Dropped. departments doing wolfnre been dlsr.nt nccordlng announcement yesterday by Brown, secretary tho Huoron boken. They are tho tr,. and reception committee denar problem In thc report tha Coroner'a Men tho transport Jury which investigated tho rorent race aided soldiers sailors .pi. \rs nois. ine report, puDiished ports, while men the based the testimony t;,0 wltiiPMPs. wol omed them when they nr\v whbh resulted twenty mrn belru? Hobokcn. Seven hundred for tjie Grand Jury charges of mur-- carrying 1.383,000 eoldlera wen- - der manslaughter. Mr. nrown announced al-- o Aprcndfd was statement lost bacgago department Coroner race riot deaths were tabllshed. at the Hudson Hut ibhu). .soiaiers tracing strayed Kits threo negroes. Tha CnMn.. ..1.1 ..I v.v,uwi PHiu ,he statement to 93 reports of much th. and all Coroner said ould lit of 23-i- tako at llv tho coast. upper tho aro hrs, Lm Orleans..,. Convention Arcanum, the Fashion.\ .Mls on' eosl Slgnlflcam- lllu'tra'eit II A. nnd Hut nnd the and by had the that SARGENT PAINTING \ILNT'ST.\ Itnlibls Oppose- Shntvliii; Syiiagog\ vIn llnstoii Mlinr' DETnorr, Nov. Declaring No Offer for Dntch AVct Iiii1lr. b' Sargent entitled lately added UMho Bost.-- n TliF. lUiiLE, Thp Oovnrn- - Info-m- .'l of fnn unb .,' the etecut'.v rf.T ,\ v'l the In.: hi meeting hern, ..rS-- .. ,,.1 nillrh thn hn.r.l u9 jtlio library against Its .$3 ilomlr .03 .11 Clumlr ClOUiT Pt. .01 Clear rt. Clear .11 Pt. .02 Cldy A. M. M. Wind 1919. M. 47 of third In on of H Pink J. St. P. P. 44 So ng 29 West of of P. M. of M. of 10 A. M. of 1\ A. of Hotel M. of P. of of tb 1'. of Hotel P. of P. M. of bv New of 15 P. M. Hotel V. of of 65 street Song of , P. In M. of Fifth P. M. \New Ir of P. of of P. M to Louis by of Press city Ciub, P. to Ar Park P. of Hotel ' A. anu \v- - ' N. H. O. i 5J- - sir- - A. ' by 15. S. . of j'udiio Konooi ... urn In by I. Labor In on nf r a - q e. i a of gu of of ! ; 1 Two Y. work havo to nn C. EL er !r ocean of of ocean on Morris of other held sworn 29 ..... of ,3m .10 of of of \The Nov. ninn, to-d- y.- - nrntof .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. 6 M 8 9 I 2 8 8 2 8 8 8 2 S 7 a t \ \ ' \ .. .. i h ,i r r i A .t 'on - cn ' In tr , - .!; on . ' ' a I -- r ' ' .. , ,u in . - ..o n . in . t0 , - . t In 8 ,3 ,i 40 6 8 3 e M ' I t ! 3 -,-- -- .. ... 1 (' r 1 ! t it no r.P r r, . f n .. A ti j T .. 7 A, it 48 44 11 S P. P. M 19 2C P. M 2 of i. L. 'i ui a la C- C. a In