myWwiwyWWH a EVENING LEDGEtt-PniLADELPHlA. FRIDAY, MARCII S, 1015. t-'MV M: Hanger HJtlLIClEDGEIl COMPANY emus it k ctnTis, rmisti. fcturl 11 Ludinnon, Vice Hrnlini . John C Mrtln, Peermry And Trwuorsrt Philip B. Collins, John IJ. Wllllsms, Dlrfrtom. I Tim ii mi i EDITORIAL BOAnDi Crura It. K. Cis.ni, Chairman. ft II. WtfALET Hxecutlre Editor I Hi m- i.i. in JOHN 6. MARTIN . . . t . . . .Otners.1 naslntss Msnagsr Published dallr At Pontic liMtrt nulldtng, IndtMnilcnw Square, Philadelphia.. Ltook CjsrrAr. . , .Broad and Chestnut Struts AlUSIK Citt Prttt-Vnion BulHlSK Nkw Ifoaic 1TO-A, Metropolitan Tower Cmcunn 817 Home Insurance BulMIng LoKtwx 8 Waterloo Place. Pall Mall, 5. W. t NEWO BUREAUS! ,, WtntoTO! Bcri; The P llulldlnr Nrw Tome ncKln The Tlmn llulldlnir rtsnt.it Boiair; no Frledrlchetraeee LoteoN Btiaatn 2 Tall Mall Bait. S. V. 1'isu BunsAD 32 Hue Louis le Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Br. carrier, Dutt Onlt, six cents. By mall, postpaid Outside of Philadelphia, except There forrlrn postage XUU.T Only, one year, three dollars rcrlptlona payable In adranre All mall aub BtIA,300O WALNUT KETSTOTC, MAIN SOOO W JLddmt all communications to F.vtnine Ltdatr, lndtptndtnce Bquare, rhiladelfhla, SKTniD at Tit a rmtADtu-niA roiTOrnca ai arcon- CLASS UAIL UATTIl. rillLADELTlllA. FIIIIUV, MAHCII 3. 1915. The ladder of fame can be mounted onlu one round at a Ume. The Fight Has Just Begun rjIHE fight has Just begun. - A Councils that scarcely n month ago voted half a million dollars to relocate Bewera preparatory to the building of the subway loop yesterday voted to throw that money Into the gutter by refusing to sanction the loop Itself. Councils yesterday repudiated and Ignored a superb transit plan, prepared at a cost of thousands of dollars to tho taxpayers, In favor of a half-baked, delusive schemo that is backed by no expert approval and represents noth ing more than the overnight opinion of two or three wily politicians who, with their backers, caro an much about tho Interests of Philadelphia as they do about canals In tho desert of Sahara. Councils voted for tho development of sub urban real estate, under a pretenso of pro riding tho city with rapid transit. It Voted to hand tho city over shackled to the P. R. T the shares of which company, curiously enough, became strangely active In tho market, an activity which developed when It became definitely known that tho Organi zation had determined to trade the assets and tho future of the city to the company. Councils voted to perpetuate tho abortive nnd scandalous exchango ticket abuse, whereby almost a million dollars Is taken from the pockets of tho citizens of Philadel phia annually enough wherewith to pay tho sinking fund payment necessary on the en tire cost of the Taylor project. Mr. Connelly, driven into a corner by cu mulative evidence of the obvtou3 Illegality of his. original ordinance, struck from It Us most apparent brand of trickery and left In It tho words on which the Organization clearly rests Us hope that tho entire under taking will fall. The supporters of this ordi nance stand convicted In the public mind of voting to spend $100,000 of the people's monoy for an election which they are confident will bo abortive, null and void bo far as results are concerned. Instead of the Taylor plan, the plan of "Rhawn Street Pete"! Instead of the Taylor plan, the plan of "Slippery Jack"! Instead of the Taylor plan, the plan of "Persimmon Charlie"! A black flag nailed to tho mast nnd on It written so that all may see, "The Public Be Damned." And In an assembly, about to participate and aid In the betrayal of tho people's hopes, tho leader of tho band has tho temerity to rise and state that ha suspects the Pennsylvania Railroad of being behind the Broad street subway, saying, "The ugly hand of the Pennsylvania Railroad may be In It. I beg of you not to allow any rail road to fasten Its fangs upon you"; and proceeds forthwith to vote for tho identical part of the program which he thus denounces us a railroad cheat, while at the same time uui6 mo jjuiijiei uuuuri-S 10 join In ja" scneme, ino oniy result or which could be to deliver the city for decades to the P. R. T. without price. Why should tho city build a Frankford elevated and hand It over to the P. R. T. without guarantees? Why, that's the lucra tive lino tha transit company's mouth has been watering for these many moons. It would have been glad to build It with Us own funds. Is there any people under the sun that can bo fooled by the kind of sophistry and argu ment these obstructionists have presented? Is there any people who can fall to Bee the Hands of Esau, the slelght-of-hand, the trk-Us so openly played? Rapid transit Is bigger than Connelly, big ger than Seger, bigger than Costello, bigger than tho Organization. It is the throbbing hope of hundreds of thousands of strap hangars and exchange-tlcket buyers, all of whom- are aroused and eager to brush aside those who have betrayed them. And the crowning Insult Is that "Slippery Jack" tells the people of Philadelphia that he Is fighting for economy when he votes to waste the JW0.000 to be spent for sewer re location, the thousands spent to secure the Taylor plan, the JIW.OOO to be spent for holding a perfectly absurd election; and while shouting that rapid transit would in crease the Utx rate, vote for and supports a Hind of rapid transit that would put the pagers of the P. R. T. Into the pocket of vry parson in Philadelphia who rids or would rids on the old or tbs proposed line. For Councils has voted that tbsr shall be bo universal 5-cettt Cars, a proposition to which the P. It. T. had agrosd; and it has voted also to parAUMU aiserimlnatiftns in lEtHmlttrj rets tgsw that this eity has already too i Ion etidured fdu tftese oten get vmy with it? Can they put this one over on tho city Can they persuade & million nnd a half people that black is white, wrong right, a fftko the real thlng7 Con they get the voters to agreo with them that profit for Organization men who own land In tho country Is more Im portant than rapid transit for citizens? Can they foist this mnkc-bclleve transit on Philadelphia? Tho disgraceful action of Councils yester day was but nn Incident In n campaign. Tho fight hns Just begun. Keep This Pnnntna Trade NOW Is the time for tho commercial organ l7atlons to prove that they are nllvo by setting out to learn why the American Hawaiian nnd Luckenbneh StentnBlilp Com panies nro withdrawing from this port their ships engaged In tho Pacific trade. Tho ves sels that have been coming hero by way of tho Panama Cnnal have carried pnylng cargoes. Profitable cargoes can bo londcd nt this port for the return voyage. Enough business originates hero, nnd In the field tapped by tho railroads with terminals on tho Delaware, to Justify frequent sailings to tho Pacific. If tho port Is to bo developed the shlpi must stop hero for Philadelphia goods. This city must not bo compelled to send Its freight for tho Pacific through New York or Norfolk. It matters not whether tho companies hnvo abandoned us at the request of tho railroads to avoid a rate war. Wo must have ships to accommodate our trade. If tho Luckenbneh and Amcrlcon-IIawnllan Companies will not glvo us what we need thcro must bo capital and energy and Initiative enough hero to get what bottoms nro necessary In some wny. It Is easy to talk about booming the port. It Is Just ns easy for real men to net. Now Is the tlmo to do something, when the Pannma Canal Is getting ready to carry tho merchant ships between tho oceans and when every other considerable port in the world Is pro paring to accommodate business developed by tho new trade routes. Gocthals Earned His Promotion THE promotion of Colonel Goethals to the rank of major general meets with uni versal approval. If It were posslblo for Con gress to reward him In a more distinguished way tho public sentiment of tho country would sustain It. This army engineer hns accomplished the most stupendous physical feat of all time Nothing like the separation of the continents has over been attempted before. The build- lng of tho Suez Canal was llko digging a cellar In comparison. The French had made tho nttempt at Pannma and fnlled. Some of tho greatest engineers in private life wcro put In charge of tho work, after tho United States took It over, hut they gave It up, either willingly or at tho request of the Gov ernment. But when Goethals took hold tho canal progressed. The promotion of Brigadier General Gorgas, of the sanitary force, to equal rank with Goethals Is also fitting. The conquering of tropical diseases by Gorgas Is, In Its way, as great a triumph as the severing of tho con tinents by Goethals. Tho canal could not havo been built without tho active co-operation of the sanitary force. Both Gorgas and Goethals deserve well of their country. A Suspicious Law THE rehabilitation of the merchant marine proceeds merrily. Tho President has signed tho seamen's bill, which Is ostensibly for tho promotion of safety at sea and In reality for tho purposo of Increasing tho cost of operation of American ships. Incidentally, it Involves disagreement with a score or more of other nations. There can be too much of a good thing. Softer jobs for sailors can readily become no Jobs for sailors. Kentucky and Missouri tried a scheme of legislating tho ftro Insur ance companies Into bankruptcy, nnd both States were quickly In a panic of npprehon slon because tho Insurance companies do cldetl to get out of tho field rather than acqulcsco In such wanton regulation. This seamen's bill Is such an Inexcusable thing that It Invites suspicion. Perhaps the Administration feels that If tho operation of privately owned ships Is made impossible tho next Congress will ngreo to the ship-purchase scheme. Dreadnoughts Batter the Wheat Market WH,AT IT of wa HAT Congress would not do tho course ar has done. Hod tho President during tho last few months had tho authority to declare an embargo on wheat he would nover hnvo hod to exercise that authority. But it would havo been a club to keep tho speculative market down, and down It would havo kept. Tho operations of tho combined English and French fleets, designed to open the southern sea route to Russian grain supplies, hnvo saved the dny and prevented six-cent bread. It Is another Illustration of the world-wide effect of events anywhere on earth that tho prices of necessary food In all parts of the United States should depend on a few ships which batter at the ancient causeway where the East and tho West meet. Where McNIchol'a land Is thero must the elevated go. Councils Is In favor of any route that does not get there. As they say In Pittsburgh, even a bank cannot got along unless there Is more money than politics In It, The Congressmen sang when the session ended and they started for home, but the country shouted for Joy, Bravery is a noble thing, but what does It advantage a man, to get In tho way of a dreadnought that Is firing 16-Inch shells? There is some doubt as to who is entitled to a man's wages, but It is well known that the woman In a man's Job does not get them. How quiet it must be In the White House day, now that there Is no Congress for the today, President to shake about by the scruff of the neck! j The brilliant epistolary repartee of Mrs. Emily Sargent Lswls has disclosed tp the public at large the gifts which her friends have long known she possessed. There are a few thousand cynics and "knockers" in this State who are amazed to discover that the Governor meant it when he said that he was for local option Mr. Connelly's idea seems to be that the transit plan is Just a sehsm of a million or mora nuink in rat better ftiftHrins for them- VM ol eounth H Pttbtto jeant he l uot going W sewsMBsja of thut king. TODAY IN THE TURKISH EMPIRE Safety of Foreigners Depends on Ambassador Morgcnthau Tho Jews and Other Subjected Races See Liberty Ahead. By VANCE THOMPSON IT IS extremely hard to find out what. Is going on In Turkey, So far nn the for eigners are concerned, things seem to bo very bad Indeed. Jewish refugees tell tragic stories of loot nnd murder. There would seem to bo no exaggeration In tho statement that in Constantinople tho safety of tho foreigners depends upon one man Amhnssador Morgcnthau. He has been nblo to protect tho two great American col leges, Robert nnd Constantinople. The other foreign Institutions, except those of Germany nnd Austria, have been looted and wrecked. FnctorlcH, banks, schools, hotels and rail ways havo been seized. The Turk's Idea of war Is plunder and there Is plundering. Morgenthnu Saves Mnny Lives Mr. Morgenthnu Is also acting for France, England, Belgium, Scrvla. Switzerland, Den mark and some of tho South American re publics. Ho has saved many lives, but the property of the Allies has been confiscated or destroyed. Of course, It Is clear or tolerably clear that a day of reckoning will come for tho Young Turks, but they can face It with bank rupt serenity. They have nothing to lose, not even honor. Tho Younp Turks notably that Infamous "Commtttco of Union nnd Progress" are made up of ruthless adven turers, outlaws of tho Levant and a few vis ionary old fanatics. By way of "union" they started two civil wars; by way of "prog ress" they began four foreign wars and have lost already one-fourth of tho empire. It should be said they never drenmed of win ning. Tho Young Turks were not fighting for victory. What they fought for was plunder; plunder, and abovo all tho graft that goes with Oriental war-making. There arc not mnny real Turks In tho United States, but It Is a curious fact that they fall apart Into two classes tho victims of old Abdul Hnmld and tho victims of tho Young Turks. If you talk to them you will Mud their opinions of tho war depend largely upon whoso victims they were. Tho victims of the Sultan, If they havo no lovo for Tur key, are still faithful to Islam. No matter what they say they still bollcvo In the dawn of the "holy war." You might fancy that the recent events In tho East would bo answer i sufficient to these expectations; but events make no impression on tho Oriental mind. I within sound almost of the printing presses. there are Turks who really believe that tho Turkish flag Is up in India nnd Turkestan and Persia, Indo-Chlna and Araby. In Bitter Subjection It may be a question still whether tho Aus trian territory will be divided among tho nn tlons and races that Inhabit It, but thcro Is no doubt that such will be tho fate of Tur key, both European and Asiatic, Like tho Austrlans in Austria-Hungary, tho Turks form but a small minority of the population of the degraded Turkish Empire. Tho popu lation is estimated at 20,000,000; tho Turks number possibly G.000,000. It Is only by a very little that they outnumber tho Jews nnd Armenians of tho cmplro. And here, I think, you como to tho real problem of tho division of tho Turkish Em pire. Tho other races once held in subjec tion by the Turk havo pretty well succeeded In finding a way to liberty. As one by ono Turkey lost hrr great and beautiful provinces In Europe Montenegro, Servla, Rumania, Bulgaria, Crete and tho others tho long tyrannized races found liberty nnd homo rule. Greeks nnd Rumanlnns, Bulgarians nnd Ser vians nro all free of tho Turk. Thero re main, still In bitter subjection, tho Jows and tho Armenians. That modern Turkey exists nt all Is due to these two races. I do not mean that they furnish the fighting forces. Tho Turks them selves fight well enough. They nro good fighters wherever you find a Mussulman you get cour.igo of a sort. And oven badly armed, overdrlllcd and uninspired by a na tional cause, the Turks havo not mado a bad showing In this scattered war. But the Turk cannot do much of anything else. Ho can fight; and ho Is good nt Oriental diplomacy, since ho can lie gravely, superbly, lmperturb ably. He hns a scmbre genius for deception. But In commerce or manufacture or trade or business of any kind he Is practically use lessoven when In fez and dirty stamboullno ho peddles rugs or sticky Bweets In Vienna or Paris. Establishment of a Jewish State Tho huslness of Turkey Is done two-thirds of it nt least by tho Armenian and by tho Jow. They are the bankers, tho manufactur ers and tho traders. And they have suffered alike. If tho Turk has amused himself by murdering tho Armenians 30,000 men, women and children in the last ofllcial massacre In Slllcla ho has taken quite as constant a pleasure In plllnglng and degrading tho Jew. The movement for the creation of a Jewish Stato In Palestine Is so well known that I need hardly refer to It. Tho destruction of tho Turkish Eraplro and the readjustment of Its territories Is perhaps the greatest opportunity aver af forded for the creation of an Independent Judcn. Not only tho Zionist, but the states men of Europe are already busy with this matter, and In due tlmo the great lords of finance will have their word to say. So for as I can learn there Bcems to bo no objection on the part of any of tho great Powers to the establishment of a Jewish State. Indeed there is an Immense and romantic appeal In the more Idea. An anonymous writer, who seems to wrlto with authority, has even mapped out the territory of tho new State. It Includes Beirut, south of Lebanon, Syria, south of Damascus, and Jerusalem, except the city proper and the environs. Of course, this exception Is tho crux of the problem. Naturally, one would think, the Jews wpuld ? , 'f ' """ T r , - wpuia J"" " Z ft?. ZZ sajtm was cut out. Their Stato wquld lack the very crown of its national significance. Jerusalem Is not only the political heart of Judea, it is as well the symbollo heart qf the race. A Jewish nation without Jerusalem? As well Italy without Rome. Tho New Armenia Fqr the Armenians the matter is simpler. So far as J know there Is no objection which is not Turkish to an independent Armenia, The State already exists on paper. At the "Pro-Armenia" in Paris I have seen a fair sketch of this new, free country. It is to take in nearly 140,000 square miles of territory, in cluding North Aleppo. East Angora, Adana, the Konk-ii. Hivas and Harput. I think a population veiy nearly as meat as that oj "WELL DONE, T Belgium (before tho wnr) would gather there. Thero Is, of course, a portion of Armenia proper which Is under Russian rule. And hero you would havo a now subject of dispute In tho post-bellum discussions of tho divi sion of Turkey at which I am glancing. Tho Ideal solution would be that Russia should release this territory and permit It to form a part of the new Armenia. I see that It Is already proposed that Russia should ex chango Russian Armenia for Turkish lands more vitally Important to Its control of tho Dardanelles. All of which means" a mighty powwow among tho nations who gather for the flnnl settling of peace terms. One thing seems evident as n rock. Tho dismemberment of Turkey Is certain. That old hag of tho Orient Is to bo stripped and tho rags of her raiment, her bangles and copper anklets are to be divided among tho nations. One need bo no prophet to sco that Franco will extend her protectorate, that Greece will gain a slice of Smyrna, that tho Tigris and tho Euphrates will bo Russian rivers nnd that Mesopotamia, whero tho Ger man Emperor hoped to find another Egypt, will welcome English trade and English civ ilization. Ho would bo indeed a prophet who could tell you what flag Is to fly over Con stantinople or what flag will be raised over tho twice-sacred city of Jerusalem. Only of this you may be sure: neither flng will show tho waning crescent. NATION'S LETTER WRITER Robert Lansing Likes to Fish, But Tells No Fisherman's Yarns. From the New York Evening; Post. The people of tho United States are well acquainted with tho Attorney General of tho United States. After a year or two In the office, even a "book lawyer," If he had Indicted anybody or prosecuted anybody, would get his name In the headlines of a newspaper. It ! easy enough for a great civil or a criminal lawyer to be known to his countrymen, espe cially If he Is doing big things. On the othel hand, an International lawyer may do a good many big things In the course of a career without being generally known by his country men. For that reason, there are not very many people in these United States, outside of his own profession, who know much about Robert Lansing, counsellor for the State De partment, who Is, In fnct, tho Attorney Gen eral of the United States In International mat ters. It was not until the present war In Europe broke out, and more particularly when the United States found It necessary to write out in black and white Its views as to the rights of neutrals, that Mr. Lansing came Into his own. No American has yet been found who Is willing to say that tho notes addressed to Great Britain and Germany did not measure up to the best traditions of American state craft and diplomacy. Mr. Lansing la one of the quietest, most mod est men In public life In Washington. Tempera mentally, ho Is splendidly equipped for his work. Ha Is thoroughly human in thought and action. He Is kindly and sympathetic. Ilia gray eyes twinkle, and his face lights Into a warm smile on the slightest provocation. He likes to be of service, and Is of service, and goes about the Job so simply and earnestly as to win confidence without seeming to try to do so. He. Ib Immensely popular among the newspaper men. Unlike Mr. Bryan, who Is Inclined to withhold diplomatic Information, In the first instance, and to refuse to discuss It If It gets Into the newspapers without his sanction, Mr. Lansing Is one of those publlo officials who will at least say enough to give the newspaper men a "straight steer" and pre vent them from making mistakes unwittingly. With all the human attributes, Mr, Lansing Is not noted as a "story-teller" or as an "anecdote-maker." He Is, however, a fisher man, but even this attribute does not Include, so far as can be learned, tha telling of fisher man's yams. Armed w(h a good, stout pipe and fishing-rod, Sir. Lansing Is prone to take his annual leavo near Watertown, N. Y., or at a fishing club on Lake Erie, to which he belongs. Not Infrequently he wllll be seen at his desk In the State Department when the hour for diplomatic callers has passed, work ing steadily and quietly, with a fiat-bowled briar pipe In hand. If he Is Interrupted by a aeries of academic or hypothetical questions, such as some of his callers ask him, he will answer them all clearly and- fairly, while at the same time sketching on a pad of paper a picture, usually a human head, which may or may not contain some of the characteris tics of the questioner. THE BREAD OF LIFE We live by Adaption. Ifoiw and Love; And even as 0 are well and wisely axed. In diifnity of bates we as-end Wordsworth. ' THOU GOOD AND FAITHFUL SERVANT!" "I n.j.irtnii JiaH iKffitUiis&iffi-g m k. 31 CttitTcRuni Hit i lit loT 3Itj j hsiH . BEST THOUGHT IN AMERICA DIGEST OF (1) Outing, "Taming Shank's Marc." (2) Scrlbner's, "Tho Freelnnds." (3) American, "Four L'ons at Once." (4) Cosmopolitan, "My Finest Day's Sport." (5) American, "'Braves' is Right." SPORTS WHAT constitutes a sport? Why, for Instance, Is golf a sport? It's nil in tho head. Lugging a heavy bng of ennes up and down hills for several miles for the purposo of dropping a small white ball Into n small holo In the ground by the most dlfllcult nnd un natural method concelvnble Is considered sport entirely by grace of tho curious mental nttitudo of the golfer. It would bo vastly ensier to pick tho ball up In tho hands Nature gave you, and drop it quickly and neatly Into the holo. If a man'B living depended on tho number of times per dny ho could contrive to accomplish something ns precarious and hazardous as putting n golf ball Into its holo he would call It pretty hard work. Thero Is a whimsical echo of this question as to tho difference between work nnd play In n description of an arduous walking trip taken for pleasure by R, C. Whitehouse, in Outing (1). My dear friend Dutch, who Is addicted to pcdestrlnnlsm, declares the noblo nrt never had half a show In song and story. Why, he demands Indignantly, should they havo wholo page departments on golf and tennis and tld dledewlnks and totally Ignore tho honorable sport of walking? "Darned if I know," I used to tell him. I don't havo to any longer. I know. Dutch has Initiated me into tho sublime Joys of pedestcrlng I am convalescent now. But at this writing I feel a trlflo reconciled, and no fooling, thero Is no moro nncient and honorable sport. It originated with Adam, who reeled off a fow miles dally along tho rural byways of Eden. All Adam had to do was walk a fow steps farther each day than tho day before, and go back home complucent In the knowl edge that ho had broken all worldis records. Robert Louis Stevenson said that to enjoy wnlklng to tho utmost, one should walk alone. I second tho motion. Thero Is always a harmonious unanimity when walking alone. "Shall wo rest half an hour an this mossy bank just ahead?" wo ask ourselves. "You bet," comes tho unanimous response. But when there are three of us, nnd wo ask the same question, tho other two Invaria bly reply that threo miles tho other side of yonder high hill Is a much more de;.rable spot. Wo had better push on. Men like Dutch speak of going three miles over yon der high hill Just exactly as If thoy were speaking of moving three benches farther along in the park to get out of the sun. Thero Is another description of a climb in the current magazines. It occurs In John Galsworthy's story, "Tho Frcelands," run ning In Scrlbner's (2). Ho Is concerned not so much with tho climber as with giving a splendidly aloof, unfettered senso of dawn coming up over the Malvern Hills, Climbing at a great pace, ho reached Mal vern Beacon Just as It camo dawn, and stood therb on the top watching. He .had not much ncsthetlo sense, but he had enough to bo Im pressed by the slow paling of tho stars over tha space that seemed inflnlto, so little were Its dreamy confines vlslblo in tho May morn ing haze, whero tho quivering crimson flags and spears of sunrise forged up In a march upon the sky. The first lark soared up and began its bright praise. Save for that song silence possessed all tho driven dark right out to the Severn and the sea, and tho fast nesses of the Welsh Hills nnd the Wrekln away in the north, a black point In the gray. For a moment dark and light hovered and clung together. Would victory wing back Into night or on Into day? Then, as a town Is taken, all was over in one overmastering rush. Blood nnd Thunder Thrillers Two famous sportsmen recount the most thrilling experiences that they have ever had, with vivid photographs to back up their as sertions. Stewart Edward White, who has been writing a series of hunting stories for the American Magazine, describes "Four Lions at Once" (3). He was firing at two lions in the oftlng when two more suddenly bounded nut of the bushes, and he alone, with a native attendant crouching behind hlrn to load his guns for him, vanquished the four single-handed. When I got back to camp an hour Jater I tried to put down in my notebook exactly the sequence of events. I put down some thin?: but subsequent recollections that float across my mind make me doubt whether I can reproduce an accurate sequence There fore. I will not try to tell you in what order I shot at those lions or where each several shot hit I do know that I shot at each of them in turn, as it seemed necessary to keep them checked. It was a good deal like push- THE MAGAZINES nig eager puppies back Into a kennel yaffl .urn yuv. men ni'ouipr. men anotlicr, tbti mo first oiip back at you again. A late! count of i-ar'ildgc showed that from tM two rifles I fired 18 shots Five of th(3 were expended on thr first lionets and font on the big male nttor the main battle wif over. So I mtiHl havo used nine cartridge iu muj uiu iiHir-.jp uc moso i missed ow I used the two tillos alternately, for I lis; some sort of a notion of keeping both magff aiiic-j iuii. .iiemDn roisn went on croonln' nis war bong and loading like a machlt' Tho smaller lion crllanscd earlv In the. crsn? and about 100 yards away. The lioness eatm close In, but was crlpj.lcd for keeps at abouj 1 Ft .r...rlo rnVir. I.I.. It.... 1 1 ... 1 An ! - j.,...;,. auu inn nun iiuu siupiicu ou jaroj msmm, nnu was sitting on his haUncf staring about him. Suddenly he launch? himself nt us. This Is In my opinion the supremo momenl ii u nunirr-s mo the moment when all pri llmlnaries at nn end, the lion makes hl "' ami ueauiy uttntk. The littlo unessel ..two UIU llIUHHUll I1H1I e. - A omm. erlng emotion fills all his being, It Is no" tuu-jiiy anger, nut somotlilng wso it. Hathei u iveung or antagonism, a pitting of fors1 nnd skills. Beneath all is a great wary alert, ness that sits like a captain in a conning, tower, spying cnnnlly over all the situaUoS ns it develops, posed ready to plan compel tontly for the unexpected. II Paul J. Rnlney, well known everywhere tw his Hunting Movies, describes "My FineS Day's Sport" (4) In tho Cosmopolitan. Hfl was hunting In British East Africa. t Wnen wo reached tho ton of tho hill V saw the Hon galloping below us In Wl long, graceful stride, through quite one's country, while nt least half a mllo behind him was the pack, fighting dogs and all, taSt nlng In full cry. I had nover seen a lion ruffl bh iar in ine open i started to cut him caj ...... iimii iuii uii iuii nt. mm, croucneu unuw a nusn. Han pointed him out, and I canv on my norse with my big gun In my ham In nn Instant. He looked as if ho were golfi to ennrge. but hearing tho hounds com m however, ho turned and dashed into cover.? did not want to kill him. as I was anxloui to secure some cinematograph pictures, bofl as mo uusn was very thick we were unable to. uo so, ana l concluded it was best to snooi mm. I fired through tho bush at 50 yards, to: gun snapped, and ns I lowered it. went 01 right in nmong tho hounds, luckily withouj ooing any uamagc. Tlie lion dfd not see w However, and bounded off throuch tho bu My companion cot u shot a littlo later, am broke his back, which ended tho finest darj. sport I over had. Inside Dope Thero is some very sophisticated Inside Ii formation, intelligible in proportion to yP1 fanning propensities, In tho first of a ser)4 of articles by Ring Lardner, In tho Ame: can (6). Ho is still talking about that l"j world "serious" and tho Boston Braves, xiic- tiuy umi iiuiucu I'ju lliu .uiiivva "-. prob'ly sarcastlcal, or else ho meant tnffl wero brave to stay In tho league and lay, what they was gettln'. You know the nafflj, was hung on 'em a couple of years ago, wnQ, they looked like they should ought to w called the Garbage, and when tho fella callMj 'cm Braves he prob'ly shook hands with h"S mi.A .... .v.. nnu.A , it.. ,in.n....M vll self nn says: "1 certainly pulled a runny , tnat time." - - - TliBv'n n lnt nt famnrt miua Wlnnln' arOUlu now that says they picked tho Braves, Plc,kJ era m win me pcunum un men jm-w i, in win the hicr serlntis. Tint T het vou COtlUn. hnw n Hotter from Term Ilnntn In EvanSVUlS with tho money that any smart baseball mi won on em. uocauso smart uaseoaii Hnnf nlnlf nt1n tVtAii nwn lltflpmant The prob'ly have a better plckln' average If tfe did. But thov don't. It ain't natural. "4 Ev'rybody I seen before tho serious awes that the Athaletlcs couldn't lose. And ev fS body I seen nfter the serious asrd tnai AlVinlaMfto l.n Inol n ri rl mnal n them klOU ttint.frVif nit ntnni thnt ItM rnmA flUt &bQ& the way It did. It's certainly wonderful hSgl! lew people is ever su'prisea. It don't tret vnu nothlnir to be too B?i I've picked one or two winners, but I ""A was gave no craait ror it. Ana we vt- .,lt.la lnt r lnAr nnd hnd the OVerlA 1I l.lA .,. n ra Tt'a tha hejlt dOPI think twlct before you speak, and then in say nothln'. MUTABILITY Wo are as clouds that veil the midnight roo How restlessly they speed, aim b''"' nulver. Streaking the darkness radiantly' Tfci see Night closes rouna ana mey are iit wa Or, like forgotten strings lyres. whose dl4 niv vnrlnna ruruuiu to each varying To whose frail frame no second motion brl One mood or mpduiatton line tne is-i Va mt-a dream lias power to poison H We rise one wandtsrlng thought poiiut) Hav: We feel, conceive or reason, laugh or v4P' 1 It is .the same, for. be It Joy at sorrow, The path of its departure still t free, Mitui talerdxy may ne'e be l"1 h" ' Mafiirht mav endure but M"ljbl' t JI.V,