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

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BEFORE THE SANDMAN COMES
rs
ted
JIMMY! , Jimmy South-brcezc,
come Iicrc a minute!"
Mrs. South-brcczc called soft
ly through the trees till Jimmy heard
her and ca'mc blowing up to sec what
she wanted.
"I find I have to go on a little
southern journey," she said.
"Something about our winter home,
mother?" asked Jimmy.
"Exactly that," replied Mrs. South
brcezc, "but I'm not ready to take
you with me yet this is just a little
exploring trip. I'll not he gone more
than two or three days. You make
yourself busy and happy here in the
garden till I return."
"AH right, Mother," answered Jim
my, "and I'll watch for you every
evening."
And Mrs. South-brcczc blew away
toward the Southland.
"Xow I wonder what I'm going to
do first," said Jimmy to himself; "it
feels very queer to be alone in the
garden."
"You're not alone," whispered a
quiet little voice, "I'll stay and keep
you 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
Jimmy, half-provoked, "do you mean
to say that was you talking so sweet
ly and softly! The last time I saw
you you were ranting around the
garden in a regular hurricanel"
Susy laughed softly.
"Yes, indeed, this is your very same
cousin. You never can tell about us
Wcst-brcczcsl Sometimes we rage
and sometimes we smilel 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?
"Susy West-Breeze!" exclaimed
Jimmy, half-provoked.
"All right," he said, "mother has
gone away and I have two whole
days to do just as I please with."
"What do you want to do first?"
"Please, before you start playing,
won't you help me scatter my seeds?
Your mother promised her help, but
I guess she forgot 1" Now who could
that be?
Jimmy and Susy looked all around
the garden. It was the big old sun
flower back by the alley fence I
"Indeed wc will help you," replied
the breezes, "but how can we get the
seeds?"
"Just shake me 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 outl
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-brcczc came back
and told them they were two extra
fine children!
Copyright, 1014. by Clara Ingram Judson.
BLACKBIRDS AT ARDMORE
Public School Made Besting Place by
Hundreds of Them.
Ardmoro has been suffering from u
plague of blackbirds. Hundreds of the
birds havo settled, for a time, In the
vicinity of School lano and Ardmoro ave
nue, where a large public school wn-
located. They caused considerable dam
age, and residents finally appealed to
the police for the right to shoot them.
Captain of Police DonaBhy said that
would be against the game laws. So he
sent Charles Hall, janitor of the Station
house, to tho place. Hall and John
Struthers, Janitor of the school, climbed
to tho school house roor and tried to
frighten the birds oft by tiring blanks
from shotguns. Soon a flood of tele
phone messages were coming to Captain
Donaghy from residents of the neigh
borhood, complaining that two colored
men "wore shooting blackbirds.
By MALCOLM S. 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.'
:
llk.ndor3rtw-
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ls JL. Wi vL a i - n In
I'm 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,
By day and night, asleep, awake,
To bless and help, for Jesus' sak,
Amen,
C0FWI0I1TED 10H ST 1ULCOL11 . JOHNSTON,
, The World's Most Remarkable Prison!
THE OLD BRITISH
Convict Ship "Success"
The Oldest Ship Afloat (Launched 1790 A, D.) and Only Remainins 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
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This Wonderful Vessel
Has Made History
through three centuries. Sho marked the bo
bcglnnlng and tho end of England's monstrous
penal system.
Sho has held lurid horror and dreadful In
Irjultlcs beside which even the terrible stories
of the Black Hole of Calcutta and the Spanish
Inquisition palp into Insignificance.
Sho Is the oldest ship in tho world and the
only Convict Ship left aflo.at out of that dread
ful fleet of ocean hells which sailed the seven
seas In 1700 A. D.
Sho Is unchanged after all these years, noth
ing being omitted but her human freight and
their sufferings from the cruelties and bnrbarl
tles practiced upon them,
Aboard her are now .shown In their original
state, all the airless dungeons and condemned
cells tho whipping posts, the manacles, the
branding Irons, the punishment halls, the
lenden-tfpned cat-o'nlne tails, the collin bath
and the other llendlsh Inventions of man's bru
tality to his fellow-man.
From keel to topmast she cries aloud the
greatest lesson the world has over known In
the history of human progress
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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
AMERICA
On Mnr .", 1012, Mr Arthur Brisbane, the distinguished
editor of tho New York Journal. In a full-page editorial,
which was reproduced in ten other leading daily papers
throughout the Stites. devoted his brilliant pen to a picture
of the Convict Ship "Success" as a lvld and striking lesson
in the progress of humanity and civilisation Describing tho
Convict Ship as n sad but valuablu It tson to the people of
America, he wrote
"When vou study thesp scpnos of cruelty nnd atrocious
torture, when ou realize they havo disappeaied forever from
the earth, except in isolated sangu corners of the world,
where men revert to animalism, and when you reall7e that
these scenes of cruulty, brutal as thev are. were as nothing
ns compnied with what precuded them, you realize that this
world POKS advance.
" Tt shows what government did to tho poor, tho
icnornnt, the helpless making them infinitely worse than
the were at first, even though the wore tho worst criminals.
We can tbnnk Ood that the Convict Ship, with
the men tortured and branded. Is today an ohlbltion, Intended
to educate and no longer a dreadful reality, planned to punish
and biutalize"
MIW A nitlv unit W.n. March :in. mis "America has rap
tured one of England's most historic ships one of the most
Interesting vessels braving tho breeze nt thn prosent da."
HOvro TR X'Nxrilll'T, net. i. una "I.t us senil this
convict hulk, this eloquent rebuke to penal svstoms, around
the world She is a floating parable of the crimes of man
against man And when she has finished her mission, search
out tho deepest soundings in tho Pacific and there sink her
and the thing she signifies in a thousand fathoms of dis
honored oblivion"
Governor Foss, of Mass., Wrote:
TIIK COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS,
Executive Department.
Boston, October 2S, 1912.
CAPT. D. H. SMITH,
Convict Ship "Success":
My Dear Sir: Your ship and her equipment of old instruments of punish
ment bring to mind as nothing else could the social conditions which wo havo
outgrown during the past 100 years. I am very glad that the people of
Massachusetts have had this opportunity to seo tho strides that havo already
been made towards better methods of treatment, for think your exhibition
will act as mi added Incentlvo towards tho further Improvement of our Insti
tutional methods. I thinlt you nre doing a great public service by the
exhibition of these horrlblo and obsoleto prison methods.
Very truly yours,
EUGENE X. FOSS, Governor.
Governor Pothier, of R. I., Wrote:
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND, PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS,
Executive Department.
CAPT. D. II. SMITH, Providence, November 20, 1912.
British Convict Ship "Success," Providence, R. I.:
My Dear Sir: After my interesting visit to your ship today I nm
prompted to say: Public opinion in our day would not tolerate such Inhuman
treatment of unfortunates anil such cruelty as was practiced In tho clays of
tho convict ship "Success." It has become the great power of tho world nnd
ITS VOICE MAKES THRONES TREMBLE AND GOVERNMENTS
ATTENTIVE.
I take this opportunity of thanking you for your invitation to Inspect thla
historical vessel.
Yours very truly,
A. J. POTHIER, Governor.
Governor Mann, of Virginia, Wrote:
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA.
GOVERNOR'S OFFICE.
RICHMOND, VA January 22, 1914,
CAPT D. H. SMITH,
British Prison Ship "Success."
My Dear Sir: I write to oxpress tho pleasure I enjoyed nnd benefit
received from a visit to the "Success." It carried one back not only to u
different time, but to entirely different sontlment.s in roference to those who
are nlwajs talktng uhout the good old times. In truth, the world Is not only
progressing, but is getting better, and many good people havo waked up to
the conclusion that one crime does not make u ciimlna! or bar him from
becoming a good citizen unrt useful man.
I trust that the "Success" may be isltert 1 many people and the
contrast between the old unil new methods of treating those who haa
violated the law result in good of socletj. I, and those of my party, hiciilv
appreciate the courtesies Miown us while on your ship.
Very truly jours.
WM. HODGES MANN, Governor of Virginia.
nit. I'RMC ril VM!, the brilliant Editorial writer of the
NEW YORK CtLOnn, In a le.idlns article in that paper, dated
May 3. 1913, said
" Hero you see punishment raised to Its highest
power Tho record of the cruelties hero practiced by tho
English people Is so frightful that no one can be blamed for
not believing It, the truth is more incredible than the wildest
fiction It is impossible to believe the tor , yet it is porfectly
authentic.
' Out of the past this ghost ship vails to us Its solid oak
we can touch Its rusty manacles are all too tangible its
hideous cells our feet mn explore. Its appalling record,
books and documents, we eon see with our own eyes"
UON'l'ON Til WEI, lilt, June HI, I1U- "Tho 'Sue cess' today
ts as the hulks they tjohn Hoyle O Iteilly and James Jeffrey
Roche) pictured, the same In her haired es, the same in
her gibbet-halter, tho same In all ways except that the prls
ont r are not Inside her to clutch the gratings which close her
hatchways and cry out to the square) patch of sk above
them "
THE CONVICT SHIP WILL NEVER AGAIN BE SEEN IN PHILADELPHIA
Your opportunity to visit is NOW. If you do not seize it yours will be the regret at not having seen the greatest
and most extraordinary exhibition that ever visited your city. When you walk her decks, grooved with the chains of her
miserable victims, the past will speak to you its sad and mournful lesson, but you will leave feeling better, because you
live in a better age. Wealthy Americans spend millions annually visiting in Europe old castles and their prison dungeons.
Today a five-cent cartare brings you alongside the oldest and most notorious lloating prison the world has ever known.
Do not miss this profound illustration of the most vital factors in the betterment of the age. During the s,hort period
of the ship's stay m Philadelphia the price of admission will be
GREAT BRITAIN
CORK RVIMIM1II. Met .t. mis "llor story Is the most
extraorrtlnarj one that could be told of the, real life of a ship;
it exceeds in weirdness tho legend of Vanderdocken's Flvlng
Dutchman nnd les In hoi pus with the wondrous phantasy
of Coleridge's 'The Ancient Mariner'"
I'M.li M II. I. !7I:TTI:, Mm .. III12 "In all the wortd It
would be difficult to find a ciaft with a mor Interesting his
tory than the old teak-built barquentlno 'Success.'"
ll.l.l'xTIt 'I'I5I I.IIMION i:v s. prl n, IIIJ'J "As a relic
of the days whin a man would bo transported for stealing a
two-penn pie, and hanged for er little more, aho Is of re
markable interest "
AMERICA
Admission
Open to the Public From 9 a. m. to
10 p. m Market St. Wharf (between
Market and Chestnut Sts.)
NOTE The Convict Ship can be boarded direct by gangway
from the wharf. She is lighted throughout by electricity
and can be visited by night as well as by day.
Admission
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