EVENING LED&EB PHILADELPHIA'. SATTJltDAY, FEBRUARY IS, 191S; n : rvl wjt as-. I? ' a !--( i ?r tUfltiS L&DfJErVcOMrANY CTfttJS If. K. CUTlTIS, FsMlDtNT. mUrlei H. LtnStsjten, Vie fNlf nt j JotrnO. Martin, ertkrjf AnH Treasurer) Philip 8. Collin. John B. WTIIIntn. Director, EDITOMAL BOARD 1 K- if CtclJ. tCCcRTit, Chairman. H. WrtAI.ET ExeeutWe JMIIer t.irn i.tr, , . .n. i n. i.. m n.h .tOl.tt C.mnlrlN- general Dimness Mansger Published dalljr at rcim Linatu Bui Mini, ' Independence. Square, Philadelphia. Vt&it Ciktiai. ,..,, Bread and Chestnut Struts AtU.N'Tic Citr rrcai-trnfon null-lir. Tittr roeii . . , 1T0-A, ilttropolllati Towsr CffieAfto 81' Uoitt insurance nulldlnc tJws. 8 Waterloo rise, Pall Mall, S. W. NEWS BUREAUS I H4.isne Heaiuir , . .TIi rlrll Bultdlnr Wasminotox Bijrwo ......The Pott BulMInc ISPir YoK HUKHID ...... .The.Tfmpj llulldlnr BctMi Urn ton ,o Friolrlrhntramx IiOMWS BtiHJU V 2 Pall .Mall Earn. ?. W. Ploli HceitiU 3g nua Louis la Grand unscntrnoN temis ' S-TT 13tf rrrlr Tlltl.v nt.Y. ( ,anli- nf mall. nrt.tnatrl I'd! V'ftetitalde ef. Philadelphia, except where for'Um potuts fa, .4. nJ" required, Daii.t Ohlt, ont month, twenly-nve rents; i'lTt'" "TSDiit.r Otl.r. on Year, three dot lira. All mall ub- f-ji'..- ., actlptlona pnyable In advance. W3X. 8000 WALNUT KEY3TOME, MAIN 3000 kV Aidrees oil cdmmunfftitlotta to livening Ledger, Independence Sijuarr, Philadelphia. NTen at Hit rntt-iDELriiV rosiarncc as scconb- CLASS MAIL UATTtl. HiiiuLU'iiu, ttxrUitDAV, h;lhuaii u, iyi.l Charity covers a multitude sinners. o sins and The Nations Arc Our Baskets FOREIGN trade moans more than an extra customer or two. It mcuns salvation for American business In time of domestic de pression. The great corporations doing an Interna tional business have felt tho hard times of recent months less than the period of stag nation has affected the companies without a foreign market for their goods. Tho com pany doing a national business, Jlkewlso feels a 'period of depression less than the compnny -whoso scle market Is In one city or In one State. The manufacturing business may bo dull, but good crops may make the farmers prosperous and the farmers -will buy when the mill workers havo no money. Tho old advice against putting all tho eggs In one basket applies to all big business. And when a. great producing city like Philadel phia can transform the nations of tho world Into baskets and nil them with Its products It Is safeguarded against any possible period of serious business stagnation, Argentina can buy one class of goods; TlusBla another class: China still another, and England, Ger many, Spain, Italy, Austria and Japan still others. And some of these nations will want gobds all of the time. Herein lies the reason for the campaign to enlarge the foreign trade of this port. Wo can make ourselves prosperous and inde pendent If we only awake to our opportuni ties and have the courage to embrace them. Life Not "All Clothes and Eatin's" MR. EDISON to the contrary notwithstand ing, life Is not ull "clothes and eatin's." "What, for example, have Mr. Edison's talk ing machines to do with either? Of courso they supply money with which he can buy clothing and food, but the people who buy them are Interested In something beside keeping their bodies warm and properly fed. There Is food for tho mind, and clothing for the spirit, and they are really of as much consequence to any civilized nation as the mere material necessities of tho body. Art In nil Its forms painting, sculpture, music; literature all feed a hunger which grows with advancing civilization. Tho sav age Is not content with mere covering from tho cold. He wants adornment, and thereby differentiates himself from the animal. The crowd which Alls tho moving picture shows disproves Mr, Edison's estimate of life. They distract? Yes. They amuse and lift people out of the thought of tho struggle for exist ence, comprised In the fight for food and clothing. And every school, every church, every art gallery, every theatre, every ornate building, when a mere shell would answer, is vocal with its protest against the dominance of the stomach In human affairs. Fanny Crosby WHOEVER, In full possession of all his faculties, can read the story of the Ufa of Fanny Crosby and then repine, Is either a neurasthenic and In need of a physician, or an Inveterate pessimist, deserving no sym pathy whatever. This remarkable woman, Who Is Just dead at the ago of 95 years, de voted her life, not to repining, but to beguil ing others from their woes. No woman of the three generations through which she lived has written more to bring consolation to breaking hearts than this blind producer Of beautiful hymns. What Is the Matter With Kansas Now? WHEN William Allen Whlto asked the question that made him famous ha did Ttot think his State was so bad as It was painted, But In these degenerate days a member of tho State Legislature Is per suaded that It Is so bad that to make a pre sentable appearance it must be painted. As he is opposed, to all shams ho is trying to Induce his fellow legislators to forbid women under the age of 45 years to appear In pub lic decorated with paint and powder. This was not the trouble with Kansas a few years ago. Her women were so beauti ful that paint could not adorn them. Indeed, the natural blush of their blooming com plexions made the painted beauty look like pale, ascension Illy beside an American Beauty rose. But Kansas was less prosper ous thn than now. Can it be that lily crops, the disappearance of mortgages from the farms and the popularity of the automobile arev ruining the complexions of the Kansas Women so that legislation Is necessary to pre vent half the population from trying to seem vhat they are pot? qod forbid. At this dis tance the Kansas girls seem as beautiful as aver with their natural complexions. If Sjjain Can Do It, Why Not America? SOSfB Spaniards have foresight enough to we" that when this war Is over thero will fc a demand for new ships. They are build tn shipyards' at Bllboa for the construction flf great merchant vessels Philadelphia baa Its shipyards already fcullt. It hn Its workmen trained In tho art, and it is within easy access of the raw ma terial for ships. All that Is lacking to fill Uie Ulpyrda with growing vessels Is Ar!eaa with. vJslpn enough to see thfttthe '-JtrueUott of merefcsnj shipping thaf ta '-IjMljurtg mo Wor the war Is over will Jk4 Apers4 W demand tar asw aWps at ifjMpft ami iavet with nerve aough to get tHos lilp started in time to be rwdy when ths Juunwi com- Tbr i plenty of lata Mjtitftl. TkuI t ..itfrftMy of Ota Unit two N Uas m4 iviw UkL Hir ar HWf tholr fund In the banks. Thoy would serve themselves hrid their country If lhey" would only ptit It Into ships. They may argue that the Investment la too uncertain, flut even It the amount of merchant shipping destroyed should be small tho destruction of warships has hlready been considerable and Is bound to bo greater, and tho biff shipyards of Eng land and Germany will bo worked to their full capacity In rebuilding the navies and canhot build merchant ships enough to sup ply the normal demands of an Increasing ocean trade. Speculating In ships' Is much safer than speculating In wheat and much better for tho country. If Spain has tho nerve, why not America? Two Vigorous Notes in Spite of Unnrcp'ircdiicss rpiIE American notes to London and Ber- tin will take rank among the most Im portant state documents ever sent out from Washington, There Is n. rigor of logic. In tho London note that Is particularly notoworthy and gratifying. "Tho occasional uso of a flag of a neutral or an enemy under tho stress of Immediate pursuit seems to this Government n very different thing from an explicit sanction by u belligerent Govern ment for Its merchant ships generally to fly tho flag of n neutral Power within certain portions of tho high seas, which aro pre sumed to be frequented by hostile warships." Incidents In themselves defensible, If con stantly repealed and habitually adhered to, becoming a custom, may readily acqulro In defensibility, Tho United States cannot acquiesce In a patent misuse of its colors, for purposes of deception, when such mlsuso Imperils all American shipping and chal lenges tho Integrity of tho flag. It becomos, In fact, an unfriendly act and must bo so Interpreted. Tho note to Berlin, In other times, would be considered practically an ultimatum. It warns tho Kaiser that the sinking of an American ship or the killing of an American citizen by Germon naval vessels, without previous determination of the status of the ship and the people on board It, would be "an indefensible violation of neutral rights, which It would be very hard. Indeed, to reconcile with tho friendly relations now so happily subsisting between tho two Govern ments." Germany must renounco Us de clared policy or Invito tho severance of friendly relations with the United States. It is a situation that It would bo folly to char acterize as not critical. Washington has taken a deliberate stand and a right stand. It cannot withdraw or compromise. Our shipping must be protected and wanton de struction of It will not be tolerated. Allies and Germans are becoming more and more anti-American; the one side be cause we are not openly unneutral In Its be half, and the other for tho same reason. Our International relations are critical and are certain to remain so until this great war Is ovor. Tet In the face of such conditions, the cry for "no preparation" is heard about tho land and Washington becomes economical when naval appropriations aro concerned. It Is our wealth -that saves us from humilia tion. Was there ever a nation so obviously in need of a great navy, so well able to afford It and so stolidly obatlnnto In refusing to get it? The backbone the Administration has shown must cheer every good American. Let It be accompanied by a comprehensive pollay of national defense, that our voice may have behind it the weight of might, that wo may not be humiliated and mocked because of our unpreparedness. Wo can be suro of an honorable and everlasting peace when we aro prepared Irresistibly to protect and enforce our rights. The Moon Docb Not Use a Calendar STARTING with the simple fact that the whole month of February will pass with out the moon coming to its full, It would bo possible to exhaust the science of astronomy and the art of measuring time before the un usual phenomenon was fully explained. The awesome mystery of the movement of the heavenly bodies Is Involved In the period of the waxing and waning of the little satel lite of tho Earth. Who hung tho stars In the Heavens, and sent the solar system spinning about In space? What Force holds the plan ets In their orbits and prevents them from crashing Into one another? What mystlo Governor regulates the period of the appear ance of tho planets and their disappearance from the range of our telescopes? We have some set terms In which we attempt to ex plain the Inexplicable, but It amounts to little more than giving names to things about which wo know as little as Adam knew of anatomy when he made a catalogue of the Inmates of the first zoological garden. Although there will be no full moon In Feb ruary, we need not worry. The little satellite will present Its round face to us In due time, for the man In the moon does not know or care anything about the arbitrary divisions of time In the Gregorian calendar. This Is New Year's Day for the Chinese. China was always a backward nation. The British ought to have let the Wilel mlpa go through to Holland, on account of her name, If for no other reason. ' " '" Who wrecked the Unlontown Bank, the "money trust" or the men who got Its affairs so badly entangled they could not be un raveled? , ,- ( The New York Sun's suggestion that April' 1 should ba sot apart as Democracy Day. In honor of the way the party has fooled tha country.' deserves the serious consideration of Congress, 1 " "" t Tbera was money enough for the Penrose campaign, but there seems to be none In Washington to pay for an Inquiry Into how tho slush fund was spent. The ruts seems to be millions for carrying elections, but not one cent for disclosing who sot the money. If you did not do It yesterday, go down to Independence Hall to-day and stand on the feronie tablet In the sidewalk, where Lincoln stood in 1S1, and vow to be as true to tha plain. pegi ef yaur eity tur Lincoln was to the mwmm pta&e of tha United JWatM. UNC0tNS EDUCATION WAS 1N0T MIRACULOUS Its History Is a Plain Narrative of Work, and Shows That a Mali, by (he Aid of His Will, Can Establish , His Own College. Br JOSEPH II. ODELL A' S THE decades pass tho flguro of Abra ham Lincoln looms up greater nnd greater. Time Is giving us tho tight perspec tive nud each year makes him seem moro of a miracle. Tot In sober truth no man evcr had less of the miraculous lit his history. Ills rise wan not even sudden, but by the slowest and most tedious gradation, Every step has been distinctly traced, and there Is not one or them that any other man might not havo taken. Whcro ho differed from other men wao In the fnct that ho never Slopped step ping until ho reached tho dlzxy height of power mid Influence. It did not make him dizzy, because he had ascended so slowly. Lincoln began absolutely at tho bottom, and when ho stood on tho steps of tho Capitol In 1S65 to deliver his second Inaugural Ad dress ho was tho embodiment of 46 years of careful sclf-cducatlOn. Tho world soon rang with applause for the wise and prophetic speech, and the London Times said tho Inaugural wan the greatest Stato paper of tho century. But whence came tho flawless logic and the faultless form? Accord ing to "his own nccount, Lincoln went to school "by littles"; "In all, It did not amount lo moro than a year." Scarcely one of his teachers could go beyond "rcadln', wrltin' ami clpherln' to tho rule of three." Such a curric ulum wns not likely to lead to the greatest State paper of the century; such a courso of education was hardly planned for tho making of a President. Tho secret lay elsewhere In Lincoln's determination to mako a man of himself. Seeking Knowledge Afoot Shut off from schools and colleges, Lincoln road and studied every book ho could find. His father's library was pitifully small, so ho borrowed far and wide. Ho onco told a friend that ho had "read through every book ho had ever heard of In that country for a circuit of CO miles." With nothing but a turkey buzzard pen and homc-mado Ink, ho made a careful synopsis or copied long extracts fiom everything ho read. These ho committed to memory. Shingles, boards, shovels, doors. served as note books when he ran short of paper. Ho always kept a book In the crack of the logs by his rough bed, ready to solzo the moment ho a,woko In .the morning. Ho carried books with him wherever he went, valued every spare moment as an oppor tunity for reading, oven choso his occupa tions with a view to the chances they offered for study. Difficulties could not daunt a man who early In life had cultivated such a habit. When Lincoln began to study law he hud to tramp 20 miles every time ho wanted a law book. In doing so ho would read and digest about 40 pages each trip. Ho never allowed the subject-matter to slip from his mind; when manual labor made It Impossible for him to be reading ho would reclto aloud what he had last read and nx It forever In his mind. Twenty years after this tlmo, when ho was nn acknowledged leader of the Illinois bar, ho gavo tho following advice to a young man who wished to become a lawyer: "Get books and rend and study them care fully. Begin with Blackstonc's 'Commenta ries,' and after reading carefully through pay twice, tnko up Chltty's 'Pleading,' Greonleaf's 'Evidence' and Story'3 'Equity,' in succession. Work, work, work, is tho main thing." Lincoln Learns Surveying At the age of 24 Lincoln saw that there was not much of n future in general store keeping. Ho was ofTcred tho position of deputy county surveyor. The only difficulty In tho way of accepting was that ho know absolutely nothing nbout surveying. But what did such n trivial obstacle amount to? He borrowed Flint and Gibson's treatise on the subject and bent his will to tho task of mastering It. He worked as If his temporal nnd eternal well-being depended upon the effort; everything else was banished; friends, pleasures and food were nlmost forgotten; day nnd night ho kept at It. denying himself sleep, until he was pale and haggard and the neighbors expostulated, in six weeks he had mastered every branch of the subject upon which ho could get any Information and re ported for work. No wonder ho was a good surveyor! Ono of his blographors says: "Lin coln's surveys had tho extraordinary merit of being corroct. Ills verdict was Invariably tho end of any dispute, so general was tho confidence In his honesty nnd skill." One day, while still a law student at Spring field, Lincoln found he did not Understand the meaning of tho word "demonstrate." He told tho story himself: "At last I said, 'Lin coln, you can never make a lawyer If you do not know what "demonstrate" means,' and I left my situation at Springflold, wont home to my father's house nnd stayed there until I could give any proposition In tho six books of Euclid nt sight, I then found out what demonstrate" meant, and went back to my law studies." Fighting It Out There are times when an Inherited Inclina tion or an acquired taste may threaten to overthrow a man's purpose. At such a moment ho must summon his sternest resolu tion and act toward the tempting disposition as though It were a traitor about to sell him body and soul to his deadliest foe. No mar gin of hesitation or leniency must be al lowed. The world is full of examples of men Who have triumphed over difficulties and Impediments qulto as great as any that a young man can face today, Having once set the mark and established tho goal, ho must put his will in command and force overy other desire, appetite, wish and emotion Jnto unconditional obedience and "flght It out along that line If It takes all summer" all winter, and many Summers and winters com bined. ROBBING WOMEN OP THEIR PROPWrX 7o d EMqr If Evtning LtiffttI Sir There Is much discussion as to whether the moving-picture play, "Your Girl and Mine," now running at a theatre In Philadel phia, depicts impofslbla situations when ft shows a young wife legally robbtd of her property and earnings by er huiband and bereft of tier little children, who are taken from fatr by this samo brutal husband, sorely against her will. "Absurd V 9ry tus skf piles. "Th law In this country protects women better than that!" But lawyers tell us that In North Dakota, Oklahoma and deorfla u wire controls her own wagts only If living apart from her husband in the latter Stato If sha is carrying on a Mparate business with Mr consent, made public by a notice In newspanery for a specified time, tftuiw tbs Saw of MsryUml and Virginia a hub may wtll sway &U minor alilidrsiu wits- 8t ttojsnAi9t Of tbetr mglHur. TMa If lrua I ala JlfBiiteware, YwuMHW. l,jisylvaiil1 ON, I ' ' T i IMF - IT ITfF i ; Michigan, Georgia, Florida. Tennessee, West Virginia and New Mexico. Thuso laws aro survivals from a less-cnllght-ened period, when a married woman was prac tically the chattel of hor husband, and ore dis appearing from our statute books as they ore swept away by tho growing power of women. MART WINSOR, Havcrford Postofllce, Pa., February 10, FOR AN INDUSTRIAL FAIR To the Rdtlor of the livening Ledoer: Sir Wc can give this city the biggest kind of a "boost" by starting a movemont among tho manufacturers for a great Industrial fair or ex position to be held each fall or winter at Con vention Hall or other suitable, building. In this manner tho diversified manufacturing Interests of this locality could be shown to the best advantage, and prizes could be glvon to the best exhibit or most perfect product of each Industry exhibited. New York city some years ago held a very successful annual exhibition, called the Ameri can Institute Fair, and Pittsburgh, Pa,, has Its annual Industrial Exposition; then why not Philadelphia, which leads them all In the mag nitude of Its varied manufactured products? There Is no doubt that a Philadelphia Indus trial exposition or fair could bo mado finan cially successful If properly conducted In the interests of those vitally concerned so as to best exploit this great manufacturing centre. WILLIAM D. THOMAS. Philadelphia, February 8. WHAT MAKES THE DREAD LINE LONG? To the Editor of tha Evening Ledger: , Sir The Evbnino Ledoer nils such an Im portant place in our municipal life, also in our Lhomcs, that It Is hard to find fault with It, but ii, u ,uiiu,vmjk cuiiuriui uem aoes not maKe Pleas ant reading: "Of course, every friend of the Administration insists that It Is the war which makes the bread line so long." I am glad to bo a friend of tho Administration, but do not Insist that it is the war that makes the bread line so long. Tho absence of war on rum, the creator of bread lines for the last 20 j cars. Is tho reason. I noticed the bread line nt tho rear of the Hotel Knickerbocker, New York, last week, but Inside of that hotel was a line in front of its palatial bar, somo of whom would go to make more bread-liners. Help eradicate the boozo drinking, Mr. Editor, and when It Is stamped out, bread lines will only bo a memory, nvEnso.v w. jenninqs. Philadelphia, February 10. A GOOD WORD FOR GOOD WORK io the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I want to thank you for the invaluable abslstancc you havo rendered tho Emergency Aid Committee with your excellent stories about Its work. Your paper has been largely respon sible for tho maintenance and increase of public Interest and public help. MARIAN N. HOUWITZ. Public Director, Emergency Aid Committee. Phlladelph la. February 11 . GETTING AFTER COUNCILS To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I would suggest that every cltUen who wants rapid transit go to tha polls at the next election and cast votes for a different Council man. Do not give these men another chance to do anything for the public. McNIchol jhould go down to defeat, and I have not the least doubt but thathe will. At the next meeting of Coun cils the poople of Philadelphia should declare that afternoon a holiday and march to City Hall and demand that the Taylor plan goes through. The people know the plans; why shouldn't tho Council? It's a mistake to have them In office. Can't we put them all out? t,ki. , u, ,. L LOUIS MOIIGAN. Philadelphia, February 11, GIVE THE WOMEN A CHANCE To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Thin is Just a line to express to you my gratification In your splendid editorial In a recent Eveniko LSDaon, entitled "Give the Women a Chance." I have been delighted, as I know many others have been also, with the fine, progressive policy taken by the Evening Ledoer in regard to woman suffrage. ... , . I'ANNY THAVIS COCHRAN. Philadelphia, February 7, THE FIRST STEAMBOAT To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Peimlt one of your readers to take ex ception to Edward W. Townsend's article In the Eveniko Ledobr. Not Robert Fulton nor John Fitch, but to William Honry, of Lancaster, Pa., should credit be given, who. In 17(3, operated tha first steamboat on the Conestoga IUver. If General Sadler will consult the "Life of William Henry" he will readily sea to whom Congress should erect the monument. JOHN HUSTON. Philadelphia. February Z. 116. "Our Country Is tho World" From the Kw Totk rtnlog JPtut, "Our country Is the world. Our countrymen aro mankind." This Is the Idea shadowed forth in the greeting of the English writers" to kindred souls in nusala. Literature is a bond of unity. Art and science know no national boundaries. Truer than all else, In this day and generation it la the humane Instinct in the heart Of men which makes them all brothers. Already we have a, world-citlzemblp of grow ing -strength nrnj of Increasing self-conscious-nfM. It has manifested itself, and will again wltlt renewed power when this cruel war la .bvrr, In ft love of all that is beautiful in art and lit, and In concerted efforts to bind up earth's broken-hearted and to bring in every, whers fuller opportunity and larger liberty. Various CompanionbJpi If one's jailmate In lova or frlendahlp cannot, or && not. share ail one's intellectual tastes or pursuits, that U s, small matter. Intellectual companion esq bo found easily la men and pooMu After all. If wa think of l, most of th world's love and ftteads&ip have betn bi- tw4tt'M4s that eud not read dttv-ifr IftH , aar epwir- VS10P THAT, BOTH OF YOU!" &3MfH THE FESTIVAL OF OLD BISHOP VALENTM Customs of Other Days Evidences Foolish A Valentine "Which Cost Five Pounds and Another Which Was "Wrought With Magic. ONE of the Essays of Ella begins with a welcome to Valentine's Day. "Hall to thy returning' festival, old Bishop Valentino! Great Is thy name In tho rubric, thou vencr nblo Archflamen of Hymen! Immortal Go between! who and what manner of person nrt thou? Art thou but a name, typifying tho restless principle which Impels poor humans to seek perfection In union? or wcrt thou Indeed a mortal prelate, with thy tip pet and thy rochet, thy apron on, and decent lawn sleeves? Mysterious pcrsonngc! liko unto thee, assuredly, there is no other mitred father in the calendar. Thou comest attended with thousands and ten thousands of little Loves, and the air Is Brushed with tho hiss of rustling wings. Singing Cupids are thy choristers and thy pre centors; nnd Instead of tho crosier, the mystical arrow Is borne beforo theo. St. Valentino was a Christian who was put to death at Rome, February 14, 270. "There has long been a popular superstition" so sayeth a plain account "that on that day of tho year birds begin to mate. Hence, per haps, arose the custom of observing It by sending missives containing professions of lovo and affection." But for tho Valentino birds, go to tho old poet Donne: Chirping Choristers Hall. Bishop Valentine! whoso day this Is: All the air Is thy diocese. And nil tho chirping choristers And other birds aro thy parishioners: Thou marryest every year Tha lyric lark and the grave whispering dove; The sparrow that neglects his life for love. The household bird with the red stomacher; Thou mak'st the blackbird speed as soon As doth tho goldfinch or tho halcyon This day moro cheerfully than over shine, This day which might Inflame thyself, old Valentine! Somo say that of lato years the festival has degoncrnted. Literature records that married people used to participate In the festival. That was In tho tlmo when tho chief ceremony consisted In tho drawing of lots. By this custom names were written on pieces of paper, tho men drawing tho women's names and the women the men's. Each recipient became by this method some body's valentine. Presents wero given, ns may bo seen from tho entry In Pepys' Diary for Valentine's Day, 1667: "This morning came up to my wlfe'B bedside (I being up dressing myself) little Will Mercer to bo her valentine, and brought her name written upon blue paper in gold letters, done by him self, very pretty; and wo wero both well pleased with It.. But I am also this year my wlf6's valentine, and It will cost me five pounds; but that I must havo laid out If wo had not been valentines." Drawing Moltoes Two dayB later: "I find that Mrs. Pierce's little girl Is my valentine, she having drawn me; which I was not sorry for, It easing mo of something more that I must have given to others. But hero I do first observe the fashion of drawing mottoes as well as names, so that Pierce, who drew my wife, did draw also a motto, and this girl drew another for mo. What mine was, I forget; but my wife's was 'Mos courteous and most fair,' which, as it may be used, or an anagram upon each name, might be very pretty." It seems as If tho custom must havo re sulted In considerable perplexity, or at least considerable drain upon tho PQcketbook, How long It continued la uncertain, but Lamb describes a valentine which was a missive and not a person. Like Some, Fairy Prcjent He prefaces his story of it with tha re mark that "All valentines are pot foolish." "E. B. lived opposite a young maiden, whom ho had often seen, unseen, from his parlor window In O o street. 8hq was all Joy. ousnesa and Innocence, and just of an age to nJoy receiving a valentine, and Just of a temper to bear the disappointment of miss Ins ono with good humor. E. B, la an artist of no common powers; in tha fanoy parts of designing, perhaps Inferior to none; his fame is known at the bottom of many a well exeouted vignette In the way of his profes sion, but no further; for B. B. la modest, and tho world meets nobody half-way, B. B. meditated how ho could repay this young maiden for many a favor sho had dona him unknown; for when a kindly faco greets us. though but passing by, and never knows us again, nor wo it, wo should fel It as an obligation) an,d E. B. did, "This good artist set himself at work to pltaaa the, damsel. It was Just before Vajea tlns'a Day throe year ainc,. hs wrought. uasea u4 tupwwi, a wocdrouj vkrig. WilWM wSmm it mm That lis Observance Is Not Merelj Wo need not say it was on the flntati paper with borders full, not of comm!? hearts and heartless allegory, but allir tho prettiest stories of lovo from Ovid, juti? older poets than Ovid (for E. B. iW scholar). jm "TI1I3 on Valentino's Eve lie commendeair tho all-swallowing, indiscriminate post; E5 tho humblo medium did its duty, and from, his watchful stand tho next mornlng-K saw tho cheerful messenger knock and S and by tho precious charge delivered, -.m saw, unseen, tho happy girl unfold the valJR tine, danco about, clap her hands, as oo nfter ono tho pretty emblems unfolded them selves. She danced about, not with, lljbf lovo or foolish expectations, for she had5 lover, or, It sho had, nono sho knew that" could havo created those bright things whltS delighted her. "It was moro like somo fairy present; godsend, as our familiarly pious ancestoi termed a benoflt received, where the ben! factor was unknown. It would do her" 1 harm. It would do her good forever aftej It is good to love tho unknown. I only fc-lri tnis ns a specimen of E. B. and his model way of doing n concealed kindness." The Right Uso of Enemies Prom the New Orleans Stales. "I have, ns you observe," wrote Franklin M John Jay tho year ho retired from the Freaca mission, "somo enemies in Encland. but ihei nro my enemies as an American; I have il J io or inree in America who are my enemiji as a minister; but I thank God there, are n?f In the whole world nny who are my enemlti ns a man: for by His crace throueh a lotl life, I have been enabled so to conduct ttrMlf, umi mere aoes not exist a human blnc WM enn Justly Bay, 'Ben Franklin has wrongM plS This, my friend, is an old nge of comforltKl, reflection. You, too, have or may have your. enemies; out let not that render you im; happy, if you mako a right use of then), tit, will do you moro good than harm. They pM out to us our faults: they put us upoiuojr uuara ana neip us to live more correctly. Heading in Lumber Camps From the New York Eveninr Post The Wisconsin Library Commission reportl that the demand for good reading In lombtr camps Is so great that the lumberjacks Ml read the Atlantic Monthly until Its contest! are committed to memory. Cannot soma 4f,ot college undergraduates be sent to Northwsuin lumber camps? I How to Drive a Nail Drive a nail homo and clinch it so fattbfuUf that you can waUe up at night and tbinlcjcl your work with aatlsfaction.-Henry D! unoreau. PSYCHE Tender as wind of summer That wanders nmonir tha flowers. DoWn worldly aisles with enchanted amlltrt She leads the mysterious hours. This Is Immortal Psyche, Tha winged soul of man Ardor unspent and Innocent As when tha world began. Out of the ancient silence Over tha darkling earth, An streamers swim on the sunrise Sho moves between sorrow and m't The Impulse of things eternal, Tha transport hidden in clay. Like a dancing beam on a noonday sire'' one signals along the way. , Her feet are poised over peril. Her eyes are familiar with death, Her radiant wings are daring thlnfi. Frail as the beat of a breath. Over tha ocean of belnr, In Via pav InnrerilhlA Slffht. Sea her float and run In the gold of the j Down to tha gates of night. Tha storm may darken above hr ntA ..if... .d,,n,1( h.tnw .. ntia ,itH" mvw, . . ,-j But on through a rift where the gold llftUJ Sill) sha will dancing go. Treasuring things forgotten. As dreams and destinies fade. Bplrjt of truth and ageless youth, fiha laiififha And Is not afraid. BIU CB i H iii A VALENTINE Last spring the flowers wero young audi Enamored of the spring: And skies were blue and streams were I And dainty winds were softly piowma Anil VilrHa wra nn 4h win ST. Yet-though their songs to hes-ven start Btlll, still I lingered neavy-nearxeu, And could not hear them sing. Today a winter wind la rsguiff. The sklAn km culA and Array . The flowers ore dead and nliht is wa? His endless war, again ngW Th rivtnfl. aun'M irrav Vet blossoms all about seem Pr,aJl Awl Wra wtthiB ray heart aro WW"" Uf wvs paa w testy. ,