jy litfAb tflwwfctetfw wMfcmmin MW&t&&S TOBUC LEDGER COMPANY orfttis if. k cuntis, fsimn. ar-. ift. Ocfin. fceerirys John C. Martin, TrMuUfer J tttirta It Wtlngtorf, fhlUS S. Colllni. John B. Wil MWft. Directors. . BDltOnlALBOAllDi AtttMss It, K. CtrMt. Chairman. RjMsr,,v Smutty Editor UtatoxnilN..,. .Clentrfcl Butlnct Manaeer fli.-. vMIhl Mlt ftl fusUe ttMM Uulldlnr, Indepwidanee Square, Philadelphia. steB CamMfc. . . . . . . . ,.JBrea anil Chtitnut Btreets KTio Cltr rrtM'VnioH juuuainz m tfcafc.... 170-A. Metropolitan Tower Chicago 81T Home Insurance Buliain PWAWK. 8 Waterloo rioce, Tall Mill, 3. W. tklSeairio Th rafrtaf IltiMdlnr Pw?Bi!iuO. . ..TheV)! Hu Id n ftKciirit... Tha TlfrtM Mulldlnc ftf-i if BO Frledrlchslraaa nnitiun a Pal Mall Bant. 8. W. Stjmo 88 nu lioula le Urand 8UDscwrnoNTEnM9 Tlf rrlr. Dlll.T Ottr. atxcuntn. Dy mall. eilnld '.Wtiild of Philadelphia, except where foreign poetaee Brtcrutrva, jjmt.t uhi.t, one monin, iwemrnT wmn nt.r nn.T, enn vnr. three dolliri. All malt aub nlptlana payable In advance. ' wuftthto-wAUnrr keystone, main aooo J.diiy$ elt eammunlcatlons to Jlvtntng Ltdfftr, Initfendenet Square, rMladtlfhta. W SKintD at inn rmr.AStt.vim r-oatomcs is bicond- t-. i cuss Miii umn. ' riniADEUflUA, TilUIlSDAY, 1JECEMDER 31, 1914. ,;? ,' " ' ' ' . a , There icas a man toho tea always too husv H iv JJiuy,, nc. utuo. ;y vital, iNot critical rmilB issue between London and Wnshlnc- Xton Is not critical, for a crisis Inters psychological conditions which do not exist !' find which aro not likely to exist.' The Amer ican Government Is seoklng to roach an egrcement under which American shipping can operate with tho purpose, first, of sccur Ins definite recognition of our rights as a neutral, and, second, with the Idea of reach- Ins an agreement which will preclude tho possibility of animosity and hard feeling hereafter. Tho protest, therefore, is a peaco measure primarily, brought forth at a time iwlion entire friendliness will mark tho dls- feusslon. It lays the ground, too, for flnan- r ?ial reparation to American Interests after the war. It Is devised dually to vindicate our m tights and to assure recompense for any wrongs airenay suncreu. The British claim of fraud, whllo construct- . Ivety admitted, Is not tho vital question. Tho f fact is that England has virtually put a ring -, ef steel about all Europe and Is subjecting R-trade from neutral to neutral to as vlgor- rpu3 restrictions as cargoes destined directly Ifo-r belligerents. The United States cannot tudmittho right of Great Britain to rovlvo In pPxnggqrated form tho doctrine of ultimate destination. Because Italy borders on Aus- gitria is no good reason why trado between '.Italy ana tno united f states wnicn was per- 6fejtly legitimate a year ago should bo sub- -.jqct to intcricrcnce now. ..uigm manes ngni, ' but not at the expense of tho United States. & T n An 4Vinf T3.t4lal. wA e.fta in rnttm '&. hundred years ago, against which tho In fant America protested so vigorously, wcro -llttlo more destructive of our trado than the iVABt system of surveillance now in effect. ; Ab a matter of fact, American Atlantic ports re practically blockaded by British men- Rot-war, -which halt and inspect practically . eVery ship leaving port. Tho manner, too, in I which great marine highways havd boon SiBlncd,, practically preventing all commerce, his indefensible and Is only permitted because tbero Is no combination of nations strong : enough to prevent It, or willing to mako tho eacrillco to do so. The seas belong to no nation. They are ' "no more England's than wero they Venice's when that Imperial city regarded them "as ,118 bride and warned all others to cease from their adulterous Intercourse." "Vo are utanding on such high ground, with such weight of argument behind us, that recogni tion of our salient claims is inevitable, sooner liM3r' A Credit of $90,000,000 jrTTIUItOPB is practically at a standstill pro XLi ductlvely, und Its necessities have re quired It to purchase In abnormal quantities Irom the United States. Tho result of this g- decrease in our imports and Increase in our exports Is a trade balanco In our favor for December of approximately $90,000,000. The tariff has nothing to do with the sit uation. 1 Is the war that has brought It (about and It is the war that will continue It, Brovldsl the Government is able In soma tway. to assure protection or our neutral freights on trie nigh seas, wo nave oecome the ime great market of tho world, and the most vital problem that confronts us In rela- ' tQn thereto 1 distribution. There Is no trouble finding people who want our goods: If the thing is to get tho goods to them. f. rho Impetus gtvsn our foreign trade Is IMkely to put us in so advantageous a post- EtlOn.- PQore no wunu vaitusiruiuia la uvci ithat It "will require years for our chief com petitors to gat back on an equal footing with lis. If they ever do. It Is not a condition to gloat oyer, but we may well be thankful that lh,e awful cataclysm has not wrecked utterly thQ whole fabric of social intercourse, and ithat this great nation can still uphold the Ifcrts of peace and commerce. Sheer TVaste of Human Life XTtB A. TVINBIiOW, of the State Board tot Jtjeaun or. new iorK, speaiong oeiore Kihfti American Association for the Advance- Hient of Science, meeting here this week, said: K were tho of 1,500,000 men, women and chll. 1rn wno mea in uie unueu ouiei qan"S ivn. fully o per cent, or weee ueatns were neea Ima Half of them might have been prevented by jslrople procedures. Doctor Wlnslow's assertion will be not only florae out but accentuated by social work- Ler In Philadelphia. Evil housing, filthy sur- pUtJlV, H1BWW34 WHUHtuiW, idLR Vfc PUM" ttri short, a general lack of those essen tia which make for physical strength and iMM-rful mJnsIs cause a death rate entirely Ifidjond proper proportion. Tet Councils hag wu over one of the "simple procedures'' iidch would serve to remedy such waste, of '5,T..,,.. ...... ..ttln l.i l .. at... WfiAH w yuvKuti 4inv biifu; kio H""1 Let the School Code Alone $ wpniKEB? yara of successful operation Jus. JLUts tae sonnaence or the rramers or the ywAMylv&nla Education Code, Any attempt te pvr0HfP It or to amend. It radically must -fee AiHttv. jrUted. it Is probably the very Ph4 8AtiDn of educational laws in Amer B'sUfr a If Pvwylvnla hasn't the best sj-a- ttm publlo education of any State In the Vtt It la because the several boards of feil lrcMifli liave galled to see and to Uew .bi ottportuHlty. jMt Whoot t 1 comprahensive ana .Si e J 1 Jf.l.J- t. i pest eterjf i t wmmm twy HVBKTaTO kflftGEBPHTLABBLffHlA; THTTBSDAY: DBOEHBBIt 31 aeli district, whether urban of rural, the opportunity to build and conduct schools to provide the type of education most needed W the locality; By careful previMo'ti, It min imises to tho lAst degree any form of polit ical interference With the trtto functidns of education. Terhnps tho best fentufo of the code has been Its infiueneo in drawing tho best fcqutpped men of the' community Into the service of tho school system. They act with out pay and their position is now recognized as 6no of responsibility and honor. Never before In the history of tho Commonwealth have so many citizens of high typo given their vnlunblo time and Judgment to tho administration Of our public schools. 1914 1 Year of Blood NO Y13AII hnc stamped the record of Itsolf so deep In human chronicles as 19H. It marked tho ond of an era and the beginning of another. It gave birth to the grandest and most fearful of all tragedies, for in compari son with tho catastrophe which It fathered nit others that humanity has suffered seem almost trivial. It Is a year never to bo for gotten, but cortnln to cast Its shadow for ward over tho last of Its successors. To tho United States It has been a twelve month that can best bo described as Mlcaw bcrlsm. All Industries have been waiting for something to turn up. Prosperity has been Just beyond tho horizon, keeping company with tho end of the rainbow. Bumper crops woro not sufficient to balanco the heavy losses Incidental to tho cataclysm In Europe. Tho Increase In railroad rates, at first denied, was delayed Interminably. Tho now banking Bystom provided for last Decomber did not become offcctlvo until November. The Mexi can situation was a long scries of postpone ments, one week leading to war and tho next away from It. A "watchful-waiting" year It has been In commerco and business and tho general activities of society. Let 1914 got It did tho best it could, and that was a llttlo moro than humanity could stand. It earned for Itself a place In history after tho manner of a Claudius or a Nero. It leaves few memorials of which history can bo proud. Lot It go back into the nothingness out of which It came, unrepentant and Jubi lant, but not half so Jubilant as humanity Is to bo rid of It. Smug Councils Plnys the Game TrIE most significant thing about tho Job less men who flockod to the office of Direc tor Harto yesterday was the obviously good character of most of them. "Thoy wero poorly clad, but a glance Bhowed that they wcro not typical 'bums' or chronic failures not mon that 'somehow can't get along.' " It Is evident that tho $60,000 appropriated by Councils for charitable purposes Is woo fully Insufficient. That much and moro a week Is needed. An Industrial revival will bo necessary before all can be taken euro of, for oven the beginning of great public works, with tho attendant sympathetic impetus to general trade, would not bo sufficient to relieve the situation entirely. But tho city can start tho ball rolling. The way is not hard. The United Gas Im provement Company is ready to undertako tho expenditure of ten times ?50,000 if au thorized so to do by Councils. The substi tution of gas for gasollno lamps, at a saving of thousands of dollars annually to the municipality. Is tho proposal. But Councils does nothing. It rests on Its oars. For Mr. Connelly, Socrates of the Finance Committee, has not only becomo parsimonious In regard to tho city's money, but has apparently ap pointed himself a trustee to see that tho U. G. I. does not spend any. The City Is Man's THE city Is man's and God's Is the country. From Its asphalt to Its domes each metropolis Is material evidence of the In genuity and vigor of humanity. This won der and that wonder, all are associated In timately with great personalities, and all alike aro tributes to tho splendor and glory of man. Tho city Is his work, his own creation, his masterpiece of effort, and all who live In It, consciously or unconsciously, have their visions warped and their stand ards of measurement limited by the horizon of stone and marble which surrounds them. But the country is God's. There are tho Illimitable spaces, tho magnificent splendor, the reach of heaven, tho birth and death of day, the miracles of creation, the recurrent harvest. The weather Is moro Important than the theatre, and tho rain pours in rich volume as the gift of Providence. All things unite to concentrate attention on the mightiness of nature, tho marvelous arithmetic of Providence, the eternal harmonies. It Is the soul-land, where the human mind gets into closer touch with the infinities, and every day has its ancient miracles. So, the man In tho country has the more religion and the man In the city needs it moro. Tho one Is spiritually Influenced, the other finds materialism drawing him like a lodestone all the time. The one takes hla vision from books, the other from the skies. The city man needs moro help In overcoming handicaps. That Is what tho approaching gTeat revival movement Is Intended to give him. What's trade between friends? There is an end to everything, even 1014. The United States knows what its rights are even If some other nations do not. The report that "bandits menace Vera Crua" Is remarkable. It was formally turned over to them weeks ago. , The trouble with the Income tax is that before the Government can get the tax the citizen must get the .Income, There Is too much talk about international law. There Is not any; the nations are just making it now Governor Blease has pardoned 1514 con victs. The penitentiary authorities are ex pecting most of them back soon. Tho arguments In favor of the ship pur chase bill would be moro convincing If not read. Representatives of thousands of workers yesterday Indorsed the ra,pio; transit plans. Everybody is for them, including Councils, and everybody except Councils says So. I I juiii mil liai i I1 1 II The Progressives want to be represented on the newTrade Commission, hey need it They have little enough representation anywhere else. Jonathan Bourne, the former grea.t states man and pllllant reformer, Teljes npw fpr jta,n ti tbe use of an eld but unusual word. Swatr jUrilge ' Rot Know what it iuAt. & -BILLY" SUNDAY AS EVANGELIST AND MAN Some of tho Secrets of llis Marvelous Power - " Psychological Ptcachlng." Versatile in Interests nud Activities. Sunday Outside the Pulpit. DyTOM C.MIRK1L MUCH has been said and much moro writ ten about llev. William A. Sunday, the baseball player evangelist, fearless flayer of sin and sinners, tho man who in seven short Weeks turned Scranton and tho entire Lacka wanna Valley Upside down and insldo out, who flashod ncross tho vision of 200,000 peo ple llko a meteor to disappear and leave be hind him anil his scries of remarkable meet ings a wake of memories and results that bid fair to endure. Billy Sunday Is great, gauged by his own achievements, To arouso In something llko half a million men tho desire to lead better lives, to bo tnlcr to Ideals, Is In Itself an accomplishment that challenges comparison with tho very great of all time. It it Is admitted that tho man's work and his achievements aro worthy, then there Is little room to debato their degree. He simply does moro than nny man of his kind in tho memory of tho oldest living Inhabitant. It Is not pertinent tp ndduco the fact that a certain pcrconlago of his converts do not "stick." For that matter neither do a certain percentngo of tho Initiates of a lodge, a cer tain percentage of nppllcants for Insurnnce, a certain percentage of cvldeuco taken under oath. Tho utter fallibility of human naturo must bo admitted. It has yet to bo claimed that defections from thoso Mr. Sunday en lists for better living nre nny moro numer ous than from thoso secured by other men or other means. Sincerity and Psychology In Judging his methods two things must bo considered. Tho first Is tho naturo and char acter of tho men Interested locally In a "Billy" Sunday campaign, tho second Is tho freedom and directness of tho operations. More convincing than either Is a personal knowlcdgo of tho evangelist, and when this has been attained by nny ono through weeks of repeated contact under all sorts of trying conviction upon the car of the listener, all doubt of tho man's sincerity vanishes. When a campaign Is in prospect, ho has tho city organized for months ahead. By unconscious and almost Imperceptible de grees ho directs general Interest to religious matters, arousing at tho samo time a great amount of curiosity In himself and his com ing. At this staga of tho proceedings ho makes not the slightest effort to conciliate nny one. The result Is that local forces are active, alert, united. These forces aro tho church forces, and If tho man stopped thcro tho Sunday meetings would not bo the great success they Invariably are. But tho very first thing ho does when ho begins to talk Is to attack the church folks, or rather tho abuses they pormlt, and tho flaying ho gives pastors and peoplo allko at onco challenges the Interest and attention of thoso outsldo tho churches and they begin to attend tho meotlngs. Thoy do not admit It, but thoy go to hear an attack upon men nnd women whom they believe have a "holier-than-thou" attitude toward tho rest of tho world. i Secrets of His Versatility Onco Sunday has his crowds, tho laws of psychology mako tho rest certain. Tho evan gelist puts n simple proposition so simply that very few men or women with normal Intellects can refuse assent. It Is at this point that tho great humanity of the man Is seen to bo a determining fac tor. Born a farmor, his father dead beforo tho boy ever Saw tho light of day, raised un der 'conditions that early mado him know the problems of life, struggling from his youth up, fighting for every mental acquisi tion that has come to him, ho never for an instant has lost touch with life. An omnivorous reader, ho never retires to his study; a shrewd thinker and a deft logi cian, he never gives himself up to tho pleas antries of philosophic contemplation. A great traveler, ho at every angle touches elbows with overy phase of life official, re ligious, criminal no element Is foreign to him. With something very llko Inspiration he can gauge his hearers In a moment and direct his thoughts to them In exactly the terms best suited to their dispositions. He knows that a great mass of people can never direct their minds long In a definite channel, and so ho constantly varies the lino of his thought, always recurring to the main theme. Ho knows that emotional stress can not long be maintained, and that contrast Is the basis of emphasis. Therefore Just before tho climax of each sermon he Introduces some note of pathos sometimes out of line with the main body of his discourse and this enables him to clinch tho final thought with that emphasis which results In hun dreds and hundreds coming forward and taking a Btand for the church and for God, when the invitation is given. Tho sermons, prepared with great care, built up by many changes and additions, are not selected until ho enters tho pulpit. Many times ho changes his mind after he has taken a place on the platform. The slang which Is such an advertised feature of his talks Is pronouncedly evident only In a small number of them. Vehement thought and emphatic, delivery, however, character ize every public utterance of tho man, and this too when ho preaches four sermons a day, any one of which would utterly exhaust the average man. The Man Himself "Billy" Sunday's personal habits are sim ple. He eats heartily, but of plain foods. His single nerve stimulant Is coffee, of which he is very fond. When under stress he is restless. If a conveyance Is not in instant watting, he will' start to walk. Wherever he Is he engages some one In conversation, and more often he asks questions than answers them. To this and hla habit of miscellaneous reading Js to be attributed his astonishing versatility. Agriculture he knows as well as most farmers. Medicine and law he can discuss freely with professionals. Some preachers find that he is not sound theologically, but 'none say he Is iot Sound. There are two or three things he a afraid of. One Is being formal. In the prlvaoy of his apartments he acquits himself like an Rthlete In tralnlngr. Never seeking society., he Is at home on every rung of it. To those who are his guests he has a frank, simple cordiality. Art and science he knows as well as the average amateur, and hla capacity for figures is staggering to those who find that tho multi plication table taxes their memory. No estimate of the man would be fair whloh did not take into account bis remark able 1 of family. Mrs, Sunday shares egnlegir In the work AnA triumph rf It is unobtrusive. He, however, makes fro qucnt public avowal of what ho owes to her, and In all Important councils concerning his work sho has a voice, nnd often a deciding volco. Strong likes aro usually contrasted with strong dislikes, but If Mr. Sunday has a strong dislike for nny ono ho conceals It mas terfully. Tho breadth of his friendship Is" phenomenal. So Is his memory of names and faces. These, of course, account largoly for tho element of personal popularity of tho man. In his D2d year, "Blllv" Sunday seems to be at tho zenith of his power as an evan gelist, with organization perfected, himself experienced, ripened, heart mellowed, soul expanded, eyes to tho east, marching for ward to still greater conquest for right liv ing, right thinking and right hoping. HOW I WOULD ABOLISH WAR No More Money, No More War "If I Wcro Rothschild." By SIIOLOM ALEICIIEM A Sketch bj the YlJdl.h Merit Twiia, Treniletfd for the Evening Ledger. IP I wero Bothschlld, oh, It I wcro only Rothschild, guess what I would do? To begin with, I'd seo to It that my wife is always provided with an extra threepence, so that sho won't bother me every Thursday about tho last Saturday provisions. Then I would redeem my Sabbath Kapota, or rather my wlfo's fur coat, so that sho may stop picking at my brain about the cold. I would next buy tho house I live In, tho three rooms, the cellar, attic and all sho Is always com plaining of lack of Bpaco, you know. I'd say to her: "Hero are threo rooms for your cooking, washing, baking and leavo me alone, so that I can go on with my teaching undis turbed." I'd marry off all my daughters. What a relief! All my wants attended to, I'd look after tho town's needs, I would order a new roof for the synagogue; tho old ono' Is full of holes and Is always dripping. I'd have the bathhouse rebuilt entirely. One of these days it Is bound to collapse and cause a ter rible calamity. Tho hospital Is certainly not in bettor shape, so It, too, will have to be re constructed. I would put up a real hospital with cots, and doctors and medicines and soup dally for all patients, as thoy have It In real cities. I would build a homo for tho old and organize societies to "clad tho naked," to marry off all old maids and to bury tho dead. It I were notlfschlld I'd put a stop to war. I would abolish It completely. Would you llko to know how? By means of money. For Instance, Eng land got at the Boers. Why? Wherefore? Because It wanted tho gold mines. They also say that the Germans, French and tho others are brandishing their swords In tho face of tho Chinaman, thoy want him to cut off his pigtail, and dress himself In pants. What business is it of theirs If ho prefers the queuo and the smock? Let him walk head downward, If It so pleases him. Hero Is tho Turk In his red fez: why do they always talk of cutting him up and dividing him? And each of them wants tho best share. One says, "You take Stamboul and give mu tho Bosporus." Says tho other, "No, I'll let you have Stamboul and tako the Bos porus for myself." Tho third comes along and says: "I don't give a darn for either Stamboul or Bosporus, I want the Darda nelles!" Immediately a general outcry Is heard What? the Dardanelles? Tho Dar danelles is public property. It must belong to all, Tli us the wrangling goes' "on, until the Germans be'fcin to war, and human blood s shed like water, and streams llko rivers into the sea. Here are Dardanelles for youl But I shall come along and say; "Pray, brothers, listen to me. What Is it all about? I know what you are all after. So here you are; a trillion for you; a trillion for you; two trillions for you. With God's help you will repay something in the future." Tou get the.Idea? It is" a business stroke, and It Is a great moral act. I stopped slaughtering ono another like steed and swine war Is stopped. There is no more need of arms, armies and the whole outfit. And the hate and jealousy of nations will all vanish no moro dislike of Turks, English, French, Gyp sies', Jews the whole world will assume a different face Just as the prophet foretold. And perhaps I'd go still further on, If J were Rothschild. Maybe, I'd abolish money altogether. No more money! What do wo need money for? It is a certificate, and an Illusion, a eln that tempts all. If there were no money the temptation would not exist. Do you understand me? But you say to me: "How would one manage to buy food, then?" The answer las "Look at me; T manage It nowt" The FVeneh Yellow Book From the New Republic. In Jul? the Germans believed what they did hot know, beeaust it was pleasant; the British refud tijr belUve prhat Ufy knew, tteuause Jt ws !MJ$sni. ,But Frejjsh lUgioouiuy fti Yjjr . f)Pflr VH W( WBW .JS, 1914- "STiR FORGET THAT TRIPP ' NEW YEAR'S CUSTOMS UN MANY CpUNTRIES The Giving of Cifts Frolic and Pa genutry, Bells and Guns, Orient and Occident, Past and Present. ijy WILLIAM RADER CHARLES LAMB wrote, "Of all sound3 of all bells, most solomn Is the peal which rings out tho old year." Desplto tho Inevita ble solemnity which broods over tho death bed of tho old year, tho new is welcomed with warm greotlngs and hearty anticipa tions. Tho deity Janus was represented by tho Romans as a man with two faces, ono look ing backward, tho other forward, implying that ho stood between tho old and tho now year with a regard to both. It Is tho for ward look that characterizes popular now year celebrations. Men meot each other with greetings of good will. Thero 13 an unusual social freedom which, on occasion, may break down the barriers of conventional conduct and give expression In fantastic and spec ta'cular observances. Wassail, or Egg-nog? Tho wassail bowl, In England-rof ale, nut meg, sugar, toast and roasted crabs or ap plesand tho egg-nog, In tho United States, aro a part of the New Year's celebration. In Scotland New Year's Is moro generally cele brated than Christmas. Thero Is observed among all classes a custom of giving and re ceiving. It Is tho day of tho bagpipe and good will. Persians celebrato tho day by exchanging presents of eggs. Tho Druids distributed as New Year's gifts branches of the sacred mlstlotoo. In Anglo-Saxon and Norman .Eng land, Now Year's1 gifts wero common. For a long tlmo tho custom of offering gifts to tho sovereign was observed. Wolsoy, It will be remembered, gave Henry VIII a gold cup, and it is recorded that Bishop Latimer handed Henry a New Testa ment with a leaf doubled down at Hebrews 12.4: "Ye have not yet resisted unto blood striving against sin." In tho old days of Homo tho Emperors ex acted from their subjects tribute of a pound of gold. As a church festival, New Year's Js of subordinate importance. Ono of the cus toms, howover, generally observed by tho churches throughout tho world, Is the watch night Service. In this country this service Is quite generally held In churches of all de nominations. In the confession of sin, earnest prayer, singing of hymns, and preaching, the worshipers prepare themselves spiritually for tho new year. When the old year passes, and the clock strikes' 12, the mood of Intro spection is changed Into one of joy and con gratulation. The Chinese New Year's Among all nations that observe the new year, It Is a period 'of preparation, convivi ality and merriment. The Chinese share this spirit on February 18, when differences are adjusted, debts paid, gifts exchanged and the joss houses and streets resound with the noise of fire-crackers, which splutter, crack and blaze with the inherited hope of driving the dovils away. ti Thero has grown, up In the United States a now form of New Year observance. The "mummer" of Philadelphia Is a de velopment of the "bell snlcklerl' of 50 years ago, and the fiesta hints of the iew Orleans Mardl Graa The American no longer stays at home If he happens to live In the city, and drinks his egg-nog or wine by his own fireside as the clock strikes 12. Instead, he goes to the streets, where he blows a horn, wears a masque, throws confetti and yells at the top of his voice. Then he will go tq a fashionable cafe and make himself bet lleve he is seejng the new year in by eating and drinking. In San Francisco the streets are Illuminated and thronged with people, who compete with one another In making hideous noises, More recently this unrestrained impulse of good will has been organized and reduced to somO intelligent form of order, so that the celebra tion takes the form of a gorgeous pageant. In Pasadena and Los Angeles flowers are used Jn Street pageants, and the New Year's greet ings are expressed on a, magnificent scale of beauty and decorum. Philadelphia's Comic Supplement Philadelphia has the mummers" pageant whloh is peculiar to this city, Each year this representation of festive Philadelphia (n, creases In size and significance. This year it promises to surpass all previous years in Its fantastic, artistic, unique and original de Bigns significant of the city's prosperity and the nation's progress, It will he the cqmlo, JHopplemsRt of thy year a btefr-mWiJs; introduces "New Year's Gift in a blue coat, serving manlike, with an orange and a sprig of rosemary on his head, his hat full of brooches, with a collar of glngerbroad, his torch-bearer carrying a marchpane, with a bottlo of wlno on either arm." In this character Jonson represents tho pre vailing moods of New Year's of old Eng land and of later America. Thoy differ from thoso of Thanksgiving, which was originally a Jewish festival; of Easter, which Is ruled by a sacred historical, event; of Christmas, which is pre-eminently a day of holy mem ory and of tho fireside. Now Year's Is the hour "when every eye Wears symptoms of a sober jollity." Shooting Out tho Old Year Men aro never so Jolly as when they are celebrating the lnovltable. It Is something of this Bplrlt that Is in tho old Epicurean in junction, "Let us eat, drink and bo merry, for tomorrow we die." In the wild and often senseless manifestation of merriment wit nessed In modern cities on New Year's Eve thero Is evident this deeper feeling, that as wo cannot control the years the best thing to do 13 yield to them with a merry heart. In this connection a word should bo said about tho uso of powder on Now Year'3. In old England tho bell Is still tho volco of tho deeper consciousness. When tho English man would utter his best thought he rings a bell. Tho chimes play the melody of hl3 soul. In America tho gun Is fired. Ono of tho differences between the United Stateg and England Is Illustrated by the gun and the bell. It has been the custom In certain parts of tho country to shoot out the old year and shoot in tho new. Early in tho morning tho country boys wero wont to get up and steal out with the old flint-lock or tho pistol and mako "tho welkin ring" by shooting out tho old and welcoming the new year. Not the least among Tennyson's poems Is that portion of "In Memorlam" In which he sounds tho merry bells of England and rings In tho true and good. It Is a hint of the higher possibilities of the occasion and of the still moro Impressive ways to recognize tho passing of a year. We are Just begin ning to behave Intelligently on tho First of January. Philadelphia Is setting an exam ple of combining fun with philosophy, mer riment with sanity and the frolicsome with good taste In furnishing n pageant in which tho happy good will of the people Is mingled with the sober significance, of a new begin ning for every life. 1 i The Shovel Mightier Than the Sword From tho New York, Trlbuna. Fighting is still an absorbing game, we con tinue to bellevo, despite the reports which lay stress on trench digging and other similar ac tivities. Building tho Panama Canal was pretty absorbing work for steam-shovel men and engi neers alike, and that was no more than trench digging. There Is no question, however, that the present war has finally swept out of existence tho last of the old trappings which once were synonymous with martial dolnBs In the popular mind. If war Is still a thrilling, Interesting oc cupation It Is not because of any decorations with which It is Idealized. A battlefield without swords may be a very scientific affair, but It Is certainly a long way from fighting as we have been brought up to regard It. As a matter of fact, the sword has actually been discarded, by official order, In our American army. Instead, an officer carries a magaxlne gun. amounting to a miniature rifle. Evidently the British officers are working out the same result as a matter of practice and necessity. PILGRIMAGE I will tread on the golden grass ot my bright field. When the passion-star has paled, when the night has fled; I will tread on the golden grass of my bright field, In the glow of the early day when the east la red. In my bright field a broken beech tree leans; And a giant boulder stands by a black?burned wood; And a rough-built, falling wall and a rotting door pear, like a scar, th spot where a house once stood. My eyes are mute on the white edge of the dawn. My feet fall swift and bare upon the way The long, soft hills grow black against the sky,' The great wpo4 moves, unfoldssthe high trees sway. Ths worn road stretches thin, and Ihe low hedge Mrs. And a strong, old bridge looms frail o'er a ghestjy stream: And a White flower turn and breathes, and turns ajraln. Does It live, as J live? Does It wake, as l waked, from a dream? (How merciless Is the dawn) how poignant the huih of my soul! How changeless the changing skyl.how fearful that wild bird's callt 1 ' H I hear the quick suck of his wing, the push of his brsast he Is fonel Mow sw(tt Is an eon of tiajel how endless. b.gtnnlngUss, all!) '" "' I tread on the golden gtass of my bright field. The sun's on a hundred hills; Hhe night hu fled; !?! !i f" M W 1lfht find. St.'9 y 4 "" ,h" m WR 1 Hi mm f: im. && yet a Jjtr jart i, t" WpTf yB1 WA. - "iKSR'saBwraite-, ': laka&f-j-. HJjjPjjpl xl e'''1 Z JiaEiittjitfii