Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 26, 1914, Page 11, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ftVTOTfoTKBP&B SEPTEMBER 20 "IQljj
11
CHILDREN'S CORNER
ecotj.
suit,
tl
r at
vtry
1 iia.
talnl,
them
waft
' ana
' for
vcrj
rett
chllj
hi
urt
umei
Ilttl,
Tlghi
the,:
othe!
ys W
ver;
Wih
rid brH& Series?
BEFORE THE SANDMAN COMES
o-
on
dul
Thli
neofi
J I. MM VI Jimmy South-breeze,
ciuHc licrc a tnimitet"
Mrs. Soutli-brcczc called soft
ly through 'the trees till Jimmy heard
licr and came blowing up to sec what
she wanted.
"I find ( have to go on a little
Southern journey," she said.
, "Something about our winter home,
mother?" asked Jimmy. '
"Exactly that," replied .Mrs. South
brccrc, "but I'm not ready to take
you with me yet this is just a little
exploring trip. I'll not be gone more
than two or three days. You make
yourself busy and happy here in the
garden till I return."
"All right, Mother," answered Jim
my, "and I'll watch for you every
evening."
'' And Mrs. South-breeze blew away
toward the Southland.
"Now I wonder what I'm going to
do first," said Jimmy to himself; "it
feels very ucer to be alone in the
garden,"
i i L i ...
i uu re hoc aiouc, wuispereu a
quiet little voice, "I'll stay and keep
)ou company if you like."
"Indeed I do like!" replied Jimmy,
'warmly, "but if you please, who arc
you-"
A gay little laugh was his only an
swer. "Susy West-breeze!" exclaimed
ineeJn' Jimmy, half-provnkedr-"dp yoifmean
to say that was you talking so sweet
ly and softly! The last time I saw
you you were ranting around the
nloutl
n the
front
lonj
run-
ickcd
ccor-
Just
f the
-t on
it on
J at
elllc-
i ol
ilted
ta
i the
wed;
ithi'
ntb
par-kind.
wta-B
the
'Ofl'
iAR
garden in a regular hurricane!"
Susy laughed softly.
"Yes, indeed, this is your very same
cousin. You never can tell about us
Wcst-brcezcsl Sometimes we rage
and sometimes we smilcl. But I feel
in a very nice humor just now. Don't
you want to play?" And Susy smiled
and sang so enticingly that of course
Jimmy wanted to play with her who
wouldn't?
I guess she forgot!" Now who could
that be?
Jimmy and Susy looked all around
the garden. It was the big old sun
llower back by the-alley fence!
"Indeed wc will help you," replied
the breezes, "but how can wc get the
seeds?"'
"Just shake mc real hard and they'll
fall right out into your arms," said
the sunflower.
Jimmy and Susy laughed, and then
shook that old sunflower till the
brown seeds rattled out!
All over the garden, the alley and
the lawn they scattered those seeds
so thoroughly that next summer the
garden looked like a sunflower patch.
So interested were Susy and Jimmy
in their seed scattering that they for
got about playing and worked all the
time till Mrs. South-breeze came back
and told them they were two extra
fine children!
Copyright, 11)14. by Clam ItiBrani .Tiulson.
BLACKBIRDS AT ARDMORE
"Suay West-Breeze!" exclaimed
Jimmy, half-provoked.
"AH right," he said, "mother has
gone away and I have two whole
days to do just a; I please with."
''What do you want to do first?"
"Please, before you start playing,
won't you help mc scatter my seeds?
Your mother promised her help, but
Public School Made Resting Place by
Hundreds of Them.
Ardmorc has-been HUffeilnfj from u
plaKiio oC blackblids. Hundreds of the
birds have settled, for a time. In too
vicinity of School luno and Ardmore aVe
nuc, where a hiiKe public school wa
located. They caused considerable dunn
age, and lesldentB llnnlly appealed to
the pollco for thu right to shoot them.
Captain of Pollco Donaghy said that
would bo against tho game laws. So he
Edit Charles Hall, Janitor of tho Station
house, to the place. Hall and John
Struthers, Janitor of the bchool, climbed
to the school house roof and tried to
frighten the birds off by tiring blanks
from shotguns. Soon a tldod of tele
phono messages were coming to Captain
Donaghy from residents of the neigh
borhood, complaining that two coloted
men were shooting blackbirds.
g Iiy MALCOLM S
-ffl
JOHNSTON
'HE evening comes, the day is
done,
I have my little nightgown on.
Before my mother turns the light
And kisses me the last good night,
I kneel beside my cribby bed
And fold my hands and bow my
head ;
And while her fingers smooth my
hair,
She teaches me to say this prayer:
Dear God, I thank Thee for this day,
And health and strength so I might
play;
For light and love and pleasant food,
And for the times that. I've been
good.
lpy- o "w -
Owning
' fMntgery jn
mil
Vm sorry for all deeds ill done;
I'm sorry for them, one by one;
-Dear Father, may Thine angels
bright
Keep me from evil day and night.
When on my pillows I shall sink,
Of Jesus, Thy dear Son, I'll think;
For on His strong, His gentle arm,
No child of Thine can come to harm.
May parents, relatives and friends
All know Thy love which far ex
tends, v
By day and night, asleep, awake,
To bless and help, for Jesus' sake.
Amen.
rOHBWIITI.il Wit BT tUICOIJ! K. JOHNSTON-
?llb.nd
" I' IIIIIH ' II III ,
t
V
The World's Most Remarkable Prison!
THE OLD BRITISH
"! . Ol LL
Convict oniD oucce
H
The Oldest Ship Afloat (Launched 1790 A. D.) and Only Remaining Convict Ship in the World
Now in Philadelphia, at Market St. Wharf
On a Final Tour of the World, on Her Way to San Francisco, Where She Will Be a Feature
of the Great Panama Exposition
66,
os
m
wmm
VttfWU.
m
YilF
m
Wm&XlBnm
KSSsV
iy,w
m
5&
ftru
m
Si 17
This Wonderful Vessel
Has Made History
through three centuries. She marked the bc
hctrlnniiiK nrnl the end of Knglamr.s monstrous
penal hystem.
She has hultl lurid horror and dreadful In
IqultluH beside which even the terrible stories
of the Hlnck Hole of Calcutta and the Spanish
Inquisition pale Into lusignlllcancc.
She Is tile oldest ship In tho world and tho
only Convict Ship left afloat out of that dread
ful fleet of ocean hells which sailed tho seven
seas In 17U0 A. O.
She Is unchanged after all these years, noth
ing: belni; omitted but her human freight and
their sufferings from tho cruelties and burliarl
tles piacticod upon them.
Aboard her aro now shown In their original
state, all tho airless dungeons and condemned
cells, the whipping posts, the manacles, the
branding Irons, the punishment halls, the
leaden-tipped cat-o'nine tails, the coflln bath
and the other tlendlsh Inventions of man s bru
tality to his fellow-man.
From keol to topmast sho cries aloud tho
greatest lesson the world has ever known in
the history of human progress.
ttr w fU
WiL
vm-
Ha.".
mmi
saw. if t
fWl
'
Si
mm
w&
MiftV'ftVi
mm
mtmi
mmm
mmiMwXy
iWVi.'
v ji'i: '
Kir!w5&.c?
M
m
, .''
Wfi
&
&.
V
EW
&&
't.
m
W&mffJ.
,:Ar,
e
My wr,''i
ip:
l-j ."
W-- :
WM.' W'-'.i
w w;. v "
IV . . . . ..
J. ."!'
vi
Mi
,fiifr
;)jr,'Sj
y.-",
.. - n
KZPv
t;
v:
jy
lJ?
s&.
i'J:
i?fpy
This Wonderful Vessel Has Been Visited by Over 15,000,000 Fifteen Million) PEOPLE
Including most of the crowned heads of Europe, and has received the patronage of many leading State
and city officials since her arrival in America. The world's greatest men have written volumes about her.
What the Press of Two Continents Says of the Convict Ship "Success"
No other exhibition ever received the publicity accorded by the world's press to the "Success."
Leaders of public opinion everywhere realize that in her lies a great and striking object lesson of the
softening and civilizing influences that are now animating human progress. A few extracts from many
thousands-
Governor Foss, of Mass., Wrote:
run com.moxvi;al,th of Massachusetts,
U.NCcutlve Department.
Hoston, October 2S, 1&12.
CAPT. D. II. SMITH,
Convict Ship "Siu'i-pis":
My Dear Sir: Your .ship and her equipment of old instruments of punish
ment liritiK to mind us uotliin? else could the social conditions which have
outgrown during tho past 100 jours. I am vciy slml that tho people of
Massachusetts liavo luul this opportunity to se,o tho strides that have already
been made towards better methods of treatment, for I thlnlt your exhibition
will act ns an added incentive towurds the further Improvement of our instl
'"l1?,",",1 mct'l0,(lH- "'I"': J-"" aro ilniiw a Brent public servlco by the
exhibition of these horrible and obsolete priiion mothods.
Very trulv Vours,
KI'(!I2.N'H N. I'OSS. Govornor.
Governor Pothier, of R. I., Wrote:
STATIC OI-' miODK ISLAND, PUOVIDKNCH i'l.ANTATIO.VS,
, , 13xoctitlvo Department.
CAPT. D. H. SMITH, Providence. November 20 101
Uritisli ConWot Ship "Success," Providence, II. I.:
My Dear Sir: After my intcrestinc visit to your ship today I am
prompted to say: Public opinion in our day would not tolerate such inliumun
treatment of unfortunates ami such cruelly uh was practiced In tho days of
tho convict ship "Suecofca." It 1ms become tho Kretit power of the world and
ITTRNt!viI MAKK8 T,IUONKS TKMHI.B AND OOVEIlNaiKNTS
histo i"'T t.,,'1"1?pporlll,lUy of '''"''"K "u for your insitation to inspect this
AMERICA
Yours er
A.
truly.
J. POTIIIEK,
(Invornor.-
Governor Mann, of Virginia, Wrote:
CO.MMOXWRAl.Til OV VIIUJJ.VIA.
OOVlUtNOIVS OKKlCU.
RIC1IMONO. VA January " 1914
CAPT. D. II. SMITH. -auuurj ... uh,
iiritiuh I'rison Sliip "Succeas."
My Iicnr Sir: I wrlto to espresd tho pleasure I enjoyed ruid honefit
received from u visit to the "Success." It .anied un buck not wily i
different time, but 10 ontiroly different bentimrnts in referoiu-0 t thoo who
aio always uilk nB nbout tho good old times. In truth, the wotld is not onlv
proKiessinB. but is BottiiiB hotter, and muny Kaml people have wilted up to
the conclusion Iwiono crime dues not inulio n. criminal or Imr dm from
beiomiiiK u wood citizen and useful man. " lr m
1 irusi inai uui -jiucco&s" may lie isited by
""lu.iai t.-ni-i-n mi- 1. in iiim now inetncuis of
1 muni tin- 1.111 it-aim 111 Ktmu lit Mll-ll-H . 1
many neunlo ami h
trcutini; thuso who i, ,,..
..ti.l ik.... ..a ... . . . . .
uppreclntc tho courtebies shown us while- on your Bhii. ' ' U1SUI
Very truly yours.
WM. IKniii:s .MANN, ihieriior of Virginia.
i..' " V"-v " ,nl" M' Arthur Hrlsbane. the distinguished
editor of the New York Journal, in a ful I -pa go editorial,
which was iepiodue.-d In ten other loading ilailv papers
throughout the State. deot.-d his brilliant pen to n pb-turo
of the i onviot .Ship -Suti-pfcM" .is a vivid and strlklntr lesson
111 the piotrreBs of hunmnlt and el lllsation UehcnbiiiK the.
Con vlet bhlp is .1 sad but valuatde lesson to the people of
America, he wrote
"When ou studv these scenes of erueltv and atrocious
torture, when .ou realize thev have disappeared forever from
the earth. . xet pt in isolated hiiviiR-e eorners of the world
where men r.-ert to animalism, and when you realize that
these sn-iiiis of cruelty, brutal as they are, were a nothinc
as eoinp.iiei with what preceded them. ou realize that this
oi lit I ions udvanee
i"' .u i'l"10"'" whnt, Boprnment did to the poor, the
icrnorant, the helpKss makinir them Infinitely worse than
they wore at tlist. even thouj;h thy were the worst criminals.
,k . . . V" '?n ,n",nfc Ood that the Convict Ship, with
the men tortured and brandid. is today an exhibition, intended
and lirutalii'i-'" "" lonBl'r "-dreadful reality, plamud to punish
,. V:U' V".! I'IMlll.n. llnn-li :in. IIIIU' "Ainericit has rap.
m '. '.'. J!?."' Ct ,-nw,n'"1 " ,"" historic shlph. one of the most
iiitori-sliiiL,- eel.s brn vim; the tn.-eze .it tin- present day "
IIUo'l-ON TltWM'llll-r. (let. ail. litis "Let us cendthls
onic-t hulk, this ebniiunt lelmke to penal stems, around
the world Mir- i- , ilo.itms p.ir.ihh of the crimes of man
neraiiist m.m nd when sh. his tlnihi-d her mist-Ion. search
!.i .i'Ld."i'',p?!,t r01"","" ln t,u ru-trle "nd there stnk her
and the thin ur he Mmiiil. j. , ,t thousiml fathoms of ills
iioimri d oblivion "
GREAT BRITAIN
CllllK i:VHIMnt, Mn !!. lilt-.- "Her htor lb tin most
extiaoi.lin.iry one that loubl be told of the real llf. of a hlp
it ei.eds in weird lu-hK the 1. u'einl of Vandi rdei ken Kl inij
nutchmui .uui iie In lion. i. - with the wondrous phantasy
uf Pull ridm' i. The Am lint .Muiimr'"
.. ini'iV'1, iV.ii,,li'.'V:J:',r,'IS' 1'"' '-" "- I" -''I " world it
would b. illillcult to Ihiil a .r.ift Willi i more interesting his
toiy th.n the old teak-built bar.ni.ntlne -Su . ess '
.ili'1'.1 'Vl V,,JI' I'0Nn NIJW -. Vprll it. UtK "An a iell
of the days when a man would be transported for nt alinor a
two-pentiy pie. mid h.iiiue.l for .iy little more. he Is of re
ni.ii kable Int. rent-'
AMERICA
VPU-'v'.ip'Mh.'i'.'i'-V" V" 1h,,1-1" H'btorial writer of tho
NEW iitk lil.OI.l-, in a I. .ulina aitiile n thai nat..r hiu,i
I'M J, ai
i"i, .. Hvr'l f.'.?,', lJ"ni-hment inised to its highest
The rei-oi.l of tin ei ii. .In. . h...... ..... .. .V -l
h IKOIlle l SO ftlBl.tf,.l Ih.l .. ..;...." T"i.VJ"'. V
not believll.ir It. the truth is more m.r.dlbb than ih2 wll.lL";
It Is imputiklble to believe the ktory. yet It ill perfectly
My J
powor.
KnslUh
hideous
biioks and
lit lion
authentic
"Out of the past this ghoM hliio nails tn m. fs ....11. 1 ,.r.
w .an touch. Its rust maiucles uie mM inn niKi.. r.
eel In our feet ma explore. It aonnllimr r..,..i
lncumeiitk. u i.u be. with our own nvus"
HUSTON 'I'll yVHI.nil. JU0. fc tt- The -dud, bs t.,.la
1? J? the hulk they (John lio-le OHi-ilU und JrtniK J.ffrei
Koclie pic.uivd, the win.. I h, r balled "IU. the fcatu" i?i
bet Kibli. l-haltil. the 1.11111, in all n.uj except that th. pris-.11.1-
II. not u.M.le hei to .lui.-li the aratliiK whl. h clow- h. 1
I 1i.hw.1yh and i out to tin Mmaie patih of sky above
Admission
Open to the Public Daily From 9 a. m. to
10 p. m Market St. Wharf (between
Market and Chestnut Sts.)
NOTE The C'omicl Ship can he boarded direct b KanBuaj
from the wharf. She u lighted throughout b cUclricily
and can be usiu-d bj iukIiI as well as bj da.
Admi
ission
;
I
M
m
A ,
aid
N
A&a.
f 1 '! hMri liln
sSyPfAe-- 'r i'-N