mr jwf 10 nr PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY C1BUB II. K. CUHTIB, PmiDiitT. Churtet It.I.nntnKtcn,VlcePretl4tntt John C.Martin, gmT and Treasurer; Philip S. Collins, John 11, Wllllamt, Directors. r EDITOMA1. BOARD t . . WltAtET ..... .4 EcutlT9 Editor Hl1 JcllN a MARTIN...... nOtneral Bulni Manager ,f, '..' PubHshfJ dally at Poblio Lkdokii Building, Independence Square, I'hlladelpr'a. " , X.bobb CiNTnAt..,.., Broad and Chestnut 8tret '' ' ATlifmo ClTI......,.,.,,,.i,,Yrn.ttilon Biillilln H1t T0BK................170-A, Metropolitan Tower r DrroiT....t... ................ ...823 Ford Building ' ST. i.atili ,,,,.,.,, ,,. 400 Olobe Democrat Building V,, Cnioioa..,. 130J Trillins Building rnn. NEWS BUnEAUS! , WltntNOTon Bcxeiu.t.... ........... Hlggs Bulldlnr , Nmr T0K ntjmun. ... ., Jhe Tfmrj Building iKiNnclM HorD... .......... .Murconl House, Strand Pi.au BriEio ...32 Bus Louis le Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Bjr carrier, elr cents er week. By mall, postpaid ' outside. of Philadelphia, except where foreign postage It required, one month, twenty-five cents : one year, three dollars. All mall eubscrlptlona payable In advance. Nonce Subscribers wishing address changed must Hi,. , 1 old as wen as new address, EtU 1000 WALNUT KETSTOWE. MAIM 3800 Cy A&dreav all communications to Exenlno Ltdptr, Independence Square, Philadelphia. Hints it ins rnii.ADEtrittA rosTorrics is sicohd- " CLASS UAILUATTIE. TUB AVKRAdB NET PAID DAIIT CIRCU1.A- TION OP THE EVENING LEDOER FOR DECEMBER WAS 00,783. rmtADELniiA. Wednesday. FEnnuAnv 2. iit Men must xoork and tcotnen must weep. Charles Klngsley. Tho German sailors seem to know some thing1 about tho sea. It Is about tlmo wo had a storm to keep up tho average weather for tho winter. 1 OI Tho new steel merger may bo perfected bo foro tho formal Progressive-Republican consolidation. j " Now that tho K-5 isn't going to turn Into a tragedy, will some ono pleaso explain why there nro always six gunner's mates on board ""' a submarine and no gunner? " Colonol House has been told that American diplomacy might accomplish moro If It wcro ' not hampered by publicity. It Is so hard for JQermany to understand democratic govern ment. v , Fifty per cent. Increase In tho cost of build ing work authorized this January, over tho first month of 191G, Is a slight measure of tho prosperity In Philadelphia. Tho total this year is nearly $2,000,000. Two cents moro for gasoline. Price now v-the fatal figure of 23. Will tho producers ex- plain Just how much is duo to increase of dc- "mand, how much to scarcity of supply and nohow much to pure cussedness? J", Commissioner Jackson, of tho Stato De- , partment of Labor and Industry, has Issued Mon ultimatum to bakers. Bread must be clean. It recalls tho famous musical comedy order of four eggs and one of them must bo ,-,'. good. V The Quartermaster General reports to tho House that tho Government could equip 800,000 men within flO days. Pompey was going to stnmp his foot and bring lnvinclblo K .armies Into the field, but tho moro ho stamped tho closer to Borne Caesar got. The first definite figures about tho use of ... cotton in tho manufacture of munitions have Jbeen given to Congress by an expert from ,,uthn Bureau of Census, who said that American manufacturers havo u-Pd 1,000,000 . bales In the last year and that 2,000,000 bales have been used abroad. When it Is nnnounced that 220 midshipmen are to bo asked to resign from Annapolis be--causo they failed to pass certain examina tions, tho country would like to know whether tho questions they could not answer related JJo matters which it is imporativo that a good naval officer should know. A further step In tho distribution of educa tional centres was made yesterday when tho new South Philadelphia High School for Girls and the Frankford High School for Boys nnd Girls were opened. A high school education Is gradually becoming as customary and necessary a thing as tho grammar school education of three decades ago. Tho Reading has lifted Its embargo in or der to avoid a coal famine In Now England. Do the Pennsylvania pacifists doubt that somowhere, In the secret files of Jealous na tions, there lies a map of tho coal mines of this State, with Information as accurato as that possessed by the Department of tho In terior? Do tho pacifists of the Ozarks feel secure? Tho colors of the "books" issued by the various Governments have ranged from "white to red, but none Is more sinister than the "Black Book," which details the atro cious persecutions of Jews In tho war re gions. It has not been recorded that the '.-Jews have been "slackers," nor that they -''nave lacked in valor. But persecution and prejudice can, apparently, continue oven in he midat of war. Internal wrangllngs in an Institution de voted to any form of public service Invariably damage the good name of that institution, sometimes unreasonably The dispute at the Frankford Hospital, which bears the mark3 of sectionalism and should never have become public, will certainly not enlarge the confl- 'denes held by men and women In the charac ter of the hospital." The affair should be set tled quietly and swiftly. r ' The workings of the police department aro Jnscrutable and mysterious to the lay mind. Undoubtedly there are "reasons" for the shifting of policemen's homes. Yet the samo ,&y mind does understand human nature a "bit, and it knows that the order to return .to undesirable surroundings Is bound to work hardship not only on the members of the force,, but on their wives and children. As w. S. Gilbert wrote, "Take one considera tion with another, a policeman's lot Is not a jjP on8'" " "g3ioNatloial Cash Register Company has w anally admitted that It has violated the Fed eral anti-trust act by combining to restrain fcaA attemptipe to monopolize interstate iJmds and commerce. In cash registers. The tso against It Was so strong that It was kalfw for it to resist the courts any further, rattr ends the civil action. There wero jgwuy aggrieved competitors, who thought ffcftt tho criminal prosecution of the officers -was Ui taoat righteous aet of the Govern tpt. But, although the officers admit thr gutt to Uu civil eauv the criminal aetiw is to fwa Tw otttmm had &m PviA i ttatenfr emsia, but tftyapa,fil jr. EVENING L&pqER-PBILADELiPHIA, verdict of tho Jury was sel aside and two of this counts In tho Indictment wero quashed. The remaining count was construed In such a way that the attornoys decided that a new conviction would bo Impossible. Somo other way than through tho anti-trust laws ovl dontly must bo found for getting at the men guilty of unfair competition. LICENSE COURTS AND LOCAL OPTION The license court l tint Imtinil 40 re spect the tnllilllr of the protest of n run-Jorltj- nf the residents of n nelclihorhooil nenlnst n snloon, for tlie Inir docs tint iirM lilc for the exercise nf lnenl option. It In n rettiiliitlnir nnd reslrnlnlnpr, not n prohibitory, stntute, iNilillc opinion) lioiv ccr, Is ft Rood Riililc to the court. IF THE pcoplo who aro trying to convtneo the Judges that no liquor licenses should bo granted In Germnntown and that tho num ber of saloons In West Phllndolphla should not bo Increased do not succeed they ought to refrain from casing their Toolings by damn ing tho Court. Tho powers nnd duties of tho licensing Judges hnvo been protty well established by a long scries of decisions. For example, It Is established that an overwhelming preponder ance of signatures to a remonstrating Vetl tlon need not compel tho Judges to rcfuso a license. In an appeal taken by a saloon keeper from tho decision of tho Common Pleas Judges, who had refused a llccnso un der such clrcumstnnccs, tho higher Court said: In the caso In hand there appears to havo been nn unusual eltoit, both for nnd ngainnt the application. Tho number of remon strants considerably exceeds that of tho pe titioners. Tlila is nil ery well, so far ns It Is addressed to tho discretion of tlio court. Tho result Is not conclusive) upon him. Otherwise we would havo local option with out tho sanction of nn net of Assembly, jot enforced by tiio Judiciary. So long ns thoro It no law directing tho licensing authority to be guided exclusively by a formal or Informal referendum tho Judges must cxorclso tho discretion with which they nro clothed. It nny ono Is to ho damned by tho Gcrmantoun nntl West Phila delphia people for a possible fuiluio to limit tho number of saloons according to their wishes, It Is tho General Assembly, which failed to pass tho local option bill last winter. Tho remonstrating petition, or Informal referendum, Is not a safe guldo to tho Court for obvious reasons. Tho way It works Is well illustrated by tho proceedings In the Common Pleas Court in Crawford County last year. A petition signed by forty-ono nnmos nsked for a license for tho Lufuyotto Hotel, In Mondvlllc, ono of the largest nnd best known hotels in western Pennsylvania. It was accompanied by a remonstrnnco signed by Ji'7 names, whtlo 191 persons remonstrated ngalnst granting n, license to a restaurant across tho street from the hotel and 232 favored It. Tho Court granted both licenses, because of Its own knowledge It bo Hoved that public comenienco would be served. The title of tho law itself is Instructive. It reads: "An act to regulate and restiain the sale of vinous, malt or brewed liquors." It has been decided that It is not a prohibitory law, but that tho restraining purpose Is def inite and clear Therefore, when the Judges have to find out whether thcro Is a demand for n saloon llccnso they must consider other matters than would bo prevailing In tho caso of a business which was not to be restrained. Tltero Is a demand for a grocery htoro in a district where enough groceries can be sold to make the business prolltnble. Tho fact that a saloon would make money In a given location Is not sufllcicnt to Justify granting a license. Tho point for tho local remonstrants to re member is that the License Court has a wide discretion, nnd that there Is nothing In tho statutes which Justifies it In accepting the verdict of an Informal referendum by peti tion as binding upon It. The referendum must bo supplemented by other evidence. In tho Crawford County case already referred to the Judge disregarded tho petitions In grant ing the hotel and rcstuurant licenses, but when only 1628 persons asked for tho granting of a wholesale license and nearly 12,000 op posed It tho Court decided that public senti ment had been so clearly indicated that It would be Justified In refusing tho llccnso to tho wholesaler. Thero Is no doubt that so wide an expres sion ns possible of tho sentiment of Germnn town and West Philadelphia would bo helpful to tho License Court. Thero Is no doubt, either, that woman havo as much right as men to sign tho remonstrating petitions. Tho views of tho Supremo Court on this quostion may bo used to strengthen the purpose of those circulating tho petitions. The Court said:' Tho act does not require that cither peti tioners or remonstrants should be voters; it is enough that they nro citizens, whether male or female, hence It is a mlatal.o to pass over women nnd count only otors. Public opinion, however, Is a power with which even tho Courts must reckon. A closo voto on a license cannot bo conclusive nnd should not bo considered to Inhibit tho grant ing of it. But whoro tho remonstrants are in so great a majority as clearly to repre sent tho wishes of the people, their protest Is In itself nn evidence that public conveni ence would not bo served by granting tho license and that no necessity for a saloon exists. A community vote, therefore, while recommendatory only, should Influenco tho Court, although it cannot direct a verdict. Tho process Is a stop toward local option, even prellmtnary to It, but citizens should recollect that it Is not local option, which can be brought about only by the action of tho Legislature. ANOTHER EMDEN! WHILE tho State Department is brushing down tho bristling questions of Inter national law aroused by the arrival of the British liner Appam, In chargo of a German prize crew, the world will take a moment to applaud the hardihood and tho vigor of the captors alone. After the Emden's traglo end, and after a few other raiders had been swept from the sea, In tho boastful phroso of the officials, tho oceans wero clear. Every port was guarded, every harbor blocked. And suddenly the Moewel The history of the Jloewo Is not yet known, She started from tho Kiel Canal, When Bho shot across the Appam's bows she was dis guised by falsa colors. Her men fought in blood on tho decks of the Appam, took her, and apparently transferred to. her prisoners from seven or eight other prizes. The Appam was taken to Hampton Roads. The Moewe Is still roaming the seas. And what must stick more than anything elso In the throats of the Allies is the ex traordinary voyage of 4200 miles, from Uie Canary Islands to the shores of the United States, through, waters policed by Allied ships, without adequate sources of provision, secret, dauntless and successful! it is an ad venture and an ochiavameHt which redeem; a welter of unhappy and tragic episodes on And. TomDaly's Column YOU might think wo wero a barber, so llttlo do wo cnthuso over safety rnzors. Wo llko tho old-fashioned straight blado and wo feel wo "ould shavo In tho dark with It. Yet wo notlco that whenover wo shavo on a train It makes tho Innocent bystander nervous. Tho other day, traveling to tho West, wo noticed an old gentleman Hi tho corner, who had Just settled down nnd lighted a long black cigar for a comfortablo smoko nnd who was watching us with ap prehension. Wo felt nono of It oilrsolf, al though tho train was swinging over a rough part of the road, hut nil of a sudden tho old gentleman jumped up, slammed his freshly lighted cigar into tho cuspidor nnd said: "Heck! I can't stand this," and stumped nwny. ON THE way homo, n fow days later, wo told tho story to Alexander S. Grelg, vlco president of tho Frisco Railroad, who wns our traveling companion, and wo asked him If It bothered him to sco n man shaving on tho train. "No," ho said, "I ntn rather skill ful with tho razor myself. I used to shavo my head." Wo looked our surprise. "I ad mit It sottnda strange," ho conceded, "but It rnmo nbottt In this way: When I was a youngster In Scotland a fellow townsman of mine In Aberdeenshire, who hntl a bent for exploration, took mo with him to tho top of Ben MncDhul to determine tho exact source of tho River Dec. On tho wny homo I undertook to cut ncross ti glacier nnd beat my companion to tho trail below. I paw my friend dlsnppear in tho mist ahead of mo, and tho next Instant I dropped through tho crust of tho glacier. I wns nearly scared to death. I couldn't mnko my friend hear me, I knew, and It was lmposslblo to climb up from tho holo into which I had dropped. Thcro wns a stream, however, running through tho bottom of the glncler and It had mndo a tunnel for Itself and I decided that my best chnnco was to follow It. Which I did. It brought mo out on tho sldo of the mountain, on tho edge of a sheer drop of somo .100 feet nnd I had to do some scram bling to get lo solid ground. A week or no after that my hair began to como out In patches, nnd It looked as If I would bo ab solutely bald within n short tlmo. Thero wns n French barber In our village, nnd I consulted him. Ho was nn unusually wlso man. 'Tho shock,' he said, 'has done this for you. I'll shavo your head for you, nnd after a whllo you'll bo ablo to do it for yourself.' Ho showed mo how to arrango mirrors so that I could shavo my own scalp; and this, every morning for n period of two ears, I did. It was tedious work, but I got my hair back." rnnnuARV second So. Groundhog Day is heio again, Quito rutin, lirlRlit and clear. On Groundhog D.iv can you toll when 'Twos cloudv, dull nnd drear? The woodchuck alwajs sees himself And fcoots hack to bW den. lie needs a. mirror on his shelf Perhaps he'd stay In then! Th. Atsall. Hal I1.1l Another busted prophot. THE Christmas cigars havo all been smoked or given away, tho suspenders and such like aro hidden, but somo things are still In evidence. Tho mall brought us this the other day: RING W. LARDNER RIVERSIDE.ILLINOIS If tho engraving at tho top wero a llttlo larger, I would never havo to sign my name at tho bottom; people would know almost by Instinct tho Identity of tho author. But tho stationery Is a gift hor3o, so I suppose I should not complain. For the Promotion of Picturesque Profanity THIS contest closed at midnight and tho bouncer put everybody out. You never heard such bedlam. Hero aro somo of tho things they wero saying: "Bs" tlio warp In tho tlhll'H wnlklnc stick, " ami "by tho hlnses that hold up tho Gates of Ciohonna," If ou don't award tho prljo to me I'll Wsli tho 1 111 so upon sou that "wm may neor Ulo until you know tho woes of wealth." Thraneon. "By tho tumbling tin tied to tho tan tllto's tall I By tho wildly weird wows wound with wondrous wall!" Th. Atsall. Somo oaths jou did not not aro Matwlncer's "May the prcat fiend, hooted and spurred, with a scytha at his Birdie, rldo headlong down her throat." "By tho loo sou bear tho soveu deadly sins." "May ou bplnil all eternity pushlu' hutthcr Into a keyholo wld a hot nail." Yellumo. "By th wound In tho tendon that never would mend on tho hoql of Achilles." c. 11. a. Above tho roaring rises tho protesting vole of A. Fireman. "It seems to me," says ho, "that every ono'a got too far away from Shan's Idea of picturesque profanity, Somo of these blood-curdling maledictions aro cor talnly a long way from Shan's tunoful oath." Ho's right nnd so wo declaro Shan tho winner of tho thing he started. Tho book goes to him. Silenco! Clear out now, tho rest of ye! Move on, now, movo on I fl.viQUK rnorEssioNs on ounrcn. jobs This ono apponla strongly to tho Imagination; J. RAYMOND SMITH Assisting l'all Bearing I'all Bearers Furnished S102 BBANDVWIND STBEBT THIS, from "Pnxton's Philadelphia Di rectory for 1818" is tho equivalent of our inllroad tlmo-tablo today. Thirty hours to IlaJtlmoro! Hew Tout Chaise anil I'llot OlUca between Chestnut and nlnm In Fourth St, No, 48, Winter Establishment or New York and Ualtimore, FIHST LINE FOH NDW YORK. Tho Post Chalao will leave Philadelphia every morning at fi o'clock and arrive InNaw York tho same evening at 6 o'clock. Fare IS, SECOND LINE The Mall Coach Pilot will leave Philadelphia every afternoon at half-past 2 (half an hour before the mall), run through and arrive Jn New York the next morning. The publla ore Informed (hut In this lino no detention will be mat with on the road, it not carrying the mall, and of course not subject to the Inconvenience of stopping at the numerous 1'ost Offices on the road. It has one more seat than the Mali, and will carry but eight passengers. Fare $10. The coaches both of the first and second lino on the new construction, 'baggage on springs, and protected from the weather by leather boots. Fare $12. BALTIMORE PILOT Will leave Philadelphia every morning at 6 o'clock, lodge at Havre de Grace, and arrive In Baltimore the next morning by 13 o'clock. Fare $12- Easiest Sort of Work v. "Voi reafl me like a took," said Fred. That made Ms sweetheart laugh, "OK Prd" she tald. "J really read you Hlca a paragraph." WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, lOlg: "HIMPOSSIBLE.il" lmi MM (ia.ii mmmm (liiiiil . THE KOMANCE OF THE PORK BARREL Gentle Art of Raising tho Wind Praised by More or Less Success ful Practictioners The Pas time of Patriotism ONCE upon a tlmo you regarded n Con gressman, every Congressman, ns tho personification of goodness nnd wisdom. It might have been in your salad days. No, we won't say that tho phraso has other con notations. But It was when you wero young nnd trustful. You believed that away off in Washington thcro existed a wonderful, always right, lircproachablc, altogether ad mirable, perfectly perfect "Government." You pictured "tlio Government" In some such vnguo way as many peoplo think of tho Ruler of tho Universe, Disillusionment came, but you wero too busy with other things to care. You talked nnd knocked, perhaps, but that's all tho good It did. You figured It out that Congressmen aro no better and no wiser thnn their constituents, nnd thus camo pretty closo to tho truth, for a Congressman rep resents his district ethically and morally ns well as politically but you lot It go nt that. Pcoplo talk of tho scandal of the Federal appropriation bills and of log rolling, but after nil It's only a species of romance. Awo Is mightily mixed with romance. Wo speak awfully of our Imperial Valleys, our miracles of science, our maityrs of scienco, our cap tains of lndustty, our seers of social Justice; of Galileo and Booker T. Washington, of Socrates and tho sweet girl graduate. It's a beautiful and9blesscd thing to dlo for one's country, a lino and splendid thing to start out from tho llttlo red schoolhouso and carve ono's way up tho steep and dizzy cliffs of suc cess, a gratifying und honorablo thing to bo elected to Congress, But a Congressman's career is not ended with election to Congress. After getting on so well ho must still keep going If not for himself, then for others. Success Is crowned with altruism for con stituents. What modern mlrnclo surpasses tho sudden blossoming of n $200,000 public building in tho midst of sagebrush nnd cactus? Moro romantic and awe-inspiring than tho return of Ulysses or tho homecom ing of tho Prodigal Son Is tho spectnelo of a Congressman bringing homo tho pork. When the Band Plays "Pork" How does It happen? When nnd why? What aro tho results? Preparedness: Four sopnrato committees appropriating for military expenditures. Mo bile nrmy of tho United States scattered among 40 or CO posts. Why posts aro con sidered an asset to a community: purchase of supplies, Interesting drills, nttracttvo parks, band concorts. Navy yards present tho same needless multiplicity. Thero 13 not a navy yard whoro a wholo squadron or fleet could bo properly accommodated under condi tions that might nrlso. Sandy Bay, Massachusetts: Five million dollars called for by plans for Improvement of rofugo harbor. Jl.500,000 spent up to 1013. Engineers could uso $500,000 a year. At pres ent rato of annual appropriation, work will bo completed about 1060. Texnrknnn, Texas: Monumental court house built flvo years ago at cost of $110,000. Postofllco has separate building. Courthouse open for business throe or four days every year. Unused during tho 360 other days. Now York City: Busy court forced to hold sessions In Woolworth Building. Compare Toxarkana. Park City, Utah! Growing so fast that In tho next ten years four postoffleos employes will bq required. Government Is putting up a $23,000 building for them. Whllo Chicago, suffering from mall congestion, can't get money enough to buy a site for a much neoded building. Scores of expensive postofllco buildings are oreoted In towns having postal receipts of less than $10,000 a year, TownB of 760 to 2600 Inhabitants got buildings costing from $50,000 to olose on $200,000. Court In some instances 1b held In these buildings two or three days a year. Sometimes a publla building Is totally unused except for a few days an nually. Seattle wanted a new postofllco, Through tho Instrumentality of Representative Hum phrey, of Washington, $300,000 was appro priated for this purpose. Then a site was acquired at a cost of $175,000. Then the Post office Department learned that the site was seven feet under water. So the Government has tho site, but Seattle won't get the post office. Mr. Hendrlck then points out the ar guments used by the politicians. "There aro two factions down In this dis trict," says the Senator, "Ojte sido has the postmaster, I want tho other to havo this site. It will make better feeling In my dis trict." The foregoing are only examples, speci mens. Instances of whlan there are bun dreds. Appropriations Klne appropriating com mittees, fifteen npproprfntlon bills. Admiral Flsko explained to commlttco our lack of tor pedoes nnd submarines, and was followed by a delegation of business men from Vallejo, Cal., asking that moro millions bo spent on tho Maro Island Navy Yard. Economy Senator Aldrlch dcclnred tho financial methods of Congress caused a waste of $300,000,000 a year. Two-hour debate as to whether Jnnltots In chargo of commlttco rooms should bo retained during summer months. Geography River and harbor bill of 1910 contained Items favorablo to 29G out of 331 Congressmen. Similar distribution of pork In other years. What do Congressmen nnd Senators say about pork? Somo aro quoted below: Remarkable Remarks South Carolina Senator "It comes with bad grace from men on that side, who havo been getting their sharo of chicks and eggs from tho National Government, to get up and captiously criticise tho rest of us who are only doing tho samo thing." Member of Congress "Mr. Speaker, "thero aro six men In my district after my seat, and I must do something to raise tho wind." Rcpresentatlvo Austin, of Tennessee "I bcllovo In putting money In circulation In stead of hoarding It up In tho Treasury. At tho samo tlmo. these buildings glvo employ ment to thousands of American working men." Representative Burnett, of Alabama "If you want to economize, why don't you stop building battleships?" Senator Clark, of Florida "Wo can unlto tho affections of tho peoplo all over this glo rious land in a closer bond of union by rear ing In their midst nn edifice for tho transac tion of the public business, which, whllo be ing useful, will at tho same tlmo remind them of tho glory, tho majesty and tho power of this great Republic." Senator Sutherland, of Utah, with refer enco to postofllco costing $107,000 at Jasper, Ala., population 2509: "I think It Is a. llttlo bit Important to tho Federal Government in a town llko this, where It Is holding Its courts, to bo represented by n building with a flag flying at tho top of it." Representative Garner, of Texas "Thero nro a half dozen places In my district where Federal buildings nro being erected or havo recently been constructed nt a cost to tho Government far in excess of tho actual needs of tho communities whero they nro located, Tnko Uvdalo, my homo town, for Instance Wo aro putting up a postofllco down thero nt a cost of $60,000, when a $5000 building would bo entirely adequate for our needs. This Is mighty bad business for Undo Sam, and I'll ndmlt It; but tho other fellows In Congress havo been doing It for a long timo and I can't make them quit. Now wo Democrats aro In chargo of the House, nnd I'll tell you right now, ovcry tlmo ono of these Yankees gets a ham I'm going to do my best to got a hog." ANCESTOR, OF THE BANK One ancestor we have always with us, nnd that Is tho pawnshop. Only we're reforming him. The pawnshop Is tho ancestor of thn bank. It has existed In somo form In all ages and among all pooples, Tho Greeks, tho Hebrews and the Chinese, In ancient times, borrowed on --the security of personal effects. In medieval Europo, when princes and kings and such llko personages needed money, tliey went to the pawnbroker. The pawnbroker was the banker. Pawnbroking was synonymous with usury. Germany led the way In the establishment of governmental pawnshops, In that country royal, municipal and private shops may bo found. They are usually run In connection With savings banks. St. Louis established a municipal pawnshop one or two years ago, In general the American way of dealing with the evils which havo boon associated with pawnbroking has been to regulate the business' by law and to form loan societies to combat the "sharks." Tho Imperial pawnshop of Vienna was founded by Josoph I in 1707. That miTRes It older than nny in Germany, though the latter country was the first to make governmental Institutions general, Tho Bank of England may be consid ered a pawnshop in that It lends money on plate. Pawnbroking Is everywhere regarded as a le gitimate business In Itself. It Is criticised only because of abuses sometimes connected with it. WILL WELCOME IT America will not begrudge Europe an Indus trial boom Immediately after the war If It en ables the prompt payment of the enormoui sums that will be due neutral countries. Wash ingtbn Star. MY CREED (Shortly after the death of her brother, Rich ard .Watson Gilder, six years ago, Jeannette &, Glider wrote the following verses, which she called "My Creed." So far as Is known, this Is the only poem Miss Glider ever wrote, In halt a century of literary and journalistic activity.) I do not fear to tread the path that those I love have long since trod; I do not fear to pass the gates and stand before the living God. Jn this world's fight I've done my partj If God be God. Heknows it well; He wilt not turn His back on me, and send me down to blackest bell Because I have not prayed; aloud and shouted Jn the marKet plaeu. T4 hat we 49 not what we ss y, that tnakea in wPi thy of Hm e. What Dp You Know? Queries of general Interest will be answercil In thh column. Ten qurvlloni, the answers to which everv wcll-lnfoi mcil person shoulA1? knoio, arc asked datly. QUIZ 1. Is Vnlpiinilsn further cnit nr esl than ITilU. ilclnlilnv 2. Nninp lUe thiltrcl Mntcs ScmitnrH from States west or the mimhipih. 3. tMin nre "The Allies"? I. What Is mount hy a paper lilorliiulp? G. Is "ilrrnilnouglit" or "ilrrndnnughl" the eorrV spelling' 0. Wlint Is meant when n ship Is snld to lie "In- terned"? ?. Mlin Is tho Prime, Minister of Austria? S. Wlint Is mennt hy rnnserlptlon? linn It tia'y lieen tried In the United Stntes? IV Where In liillmlelphln Is the hest collection ol , meninrlils of American hlRtory? 1 Mho Is the llol cnior of Massachusetts? 1 If Might Wore Right j lUlttor of "What Do You Know" When I wu; a boy I used to rcclto a poem, entitled "Th World Would Be the Bettor For It." All I can icmombcr of It now aro these lines, which ended. ono stanza: J If might wero right a In every fight, 1 Tho world would bo better for it a Can nny of your readers help mo to find thij whole poem? JOHN LUSt"! Lansdowne, February 1. a VhI Wordsworth Said It Editor of "What Do Yon Knoo" credited tho saying about "plain living nnd high think- W" Ins" to nmcrson in tho course of a discussion, ' but was told that IJmcrson did not originate it Can you tell who did say It IRVINE ENGLEWOOD. ' Havcrford. February 1. ! Tho sajlng comes from Wordsworth's "Wrlt.jl ten In London." Following Is tho way It stanMii In Its context: Plain living and high thinking are no more:. Tlio homely beauty of the good old cause Is cone, our pence.- our fra'rful Innocence, And pure religion bteathlng household lawi Epictctua Editor of "What Do You Know" What W flirt nntnrt nf thn nhllnsnnhpr whnm the l&tj Mayor Gnynor, of Now York, used to read? Ij remember that ho was rather ridiculed at the. tlmo for it. R. M. i Germantown, January 31. Mayor Gaynor Is reported as saying that he read a llttlo of Eplctetus every day He irss) not exactly ridiculed, but tho remark afforded great deal of nmuscment, apparently because Itj was considered unusual for a Mayor of Ne; York to read an ancient philosopher. Majofj Gaynor himself asserted that ho knew EplctctM only slightly. The Feather in His Hat Editor of "What Do You Knoto" What wui tlio llttlo feather on tlio cartoon pictures ctj Dald Jayno Hill? G. V. Philadelphia, February 1. 1 You nro probably thinking of David B. Hill! Tlio llttlo feather boro the legend, "I am a Derootj crat," which wns tho llrst sentenco of a speedy niado by Mr. Hill In tho Academy of Mttfla Brooklyn, nt the opening of a campaign. Tin Democratic party hud been much abused at the tlmo. Dald Jayno Hill was recently our Am bassador to Germany, succeeding Charlemagn Tower. J Tho Virginlus Cditor of "What Do You Know" I read m cently that a survivor of tho Virginlus had Just died. Can you tell mo an thing about tho ehlPfc CARD W. Philadelphia, February 1. j Tho Virginlus, nn American-built steamship under Amorlcnn registry, was used by CubaM to ship arms and material to the Insurgents j that Island. In 1873 she was carrying a aWL and a number of Cuban passengers from KInRJ ton, Jamaica, under the American flag, her at tlnatlon being a secluded spot on the coast c Cuba, She was pursued and captured by a SPi lh fnmhnnt nnd nn Mnvnmhnr 7 Cantaln r and 37 of the crew wcro shot at Santiago, Wj order of the Spanish general In commane. Salaries of Presidents Editor of "What Do You Know" Is the s9 ary of the President of France greater tnan i or the President of this country t WALTER SHOTTER Camden. 'Fnhriinrv 1. The President of France recedes 00. francs, with a further allowance of 'u'?j francs for expenses. The President of 5S United States has a salary of $75,000. m traveling allowance Is $35,000. As a frano a normal times Is worth about 20 cents, M, r care Is at present a much better salaried mJj Mian Mr, Wilson. Peace. Troubled Soul K..11, - ..... . n r-.. ir..!f T?ne!CS suitor o "iricu o iim ?uw ---.-a please find the words of tho hymn asked m by R, p, H. Mrs. M. U Clair, Vital Spark of Heavenly flame Quit, oh quit, this mortal frame, Trembling, hoping, lingering, tlylnsi O, this pain the bliss of dying. Cease fond nature, cease thy strife, Arid let me languish Into life. Hark! they whisper, angels say, Bister spirit come away. What is this absorbs ma quits. Steals ray senses, steals my sight, Drowns my spirit, drowns my bre.w Tell me soul can this be death? m The world recedes. It disappears, Heaven opens on my eyes, my ears With CA.Iwwle, antMnhlr vlpitf Lend, lend your wings, I mount, I Mm ua, grave, where is ray yujj Oh, death, -wJtwe 1 ftjf etiJW 1 1 i l,,.;--i. Jp- ' Mi m