BSSSw.ijyiwwi hum' up '"iaiWi"i ? v"- G&fiqltfi& -WsrtWStt-wflt! ZFvntfarw&qfpwmtyU'' P)l-1Btg-rigWjft EVENING LEDGEK-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 121101?j s BP it-' & i' Su wtitig 55r Jgei: PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY omus it. k. cunTis, Pumidint. f Charles It .aldington. Vice President J John C.Martin, Beerftarj' arid Treasurer; Philip a Colllna, John U .Wllllama, Directors, EDiTont AtTtioAnb : Crncs II. K. Ccxtis, Chairman. P. II. WTIALEi?.,. , ..i... Executive, Editor JOHN C MAItTIN... Oeneml nutlneva Manager Publlshtil dally at Pcbuo Luxhr Building, Independence Square, Philadelphia. LtDOM Ci.iTRAbi. ....... .Broad nnd Cheatmit Streeta ATHNTlp ClIti....i.,.........;,rCM.i;iilon miUdlng Xtw TOaK................170-A, Metropolitan Tower Drrtou. ......................... .820 Ford lluildlnc Fr. Louts 400 Glob' Democrat nulldlnic ClltCioo , ,.1202 Tribune Building NEWS BUREAUS! WMnlNOTON Dchrau...... ntgga Building N.w York Ucniuo , The Timet Building Timlin IlniEiU , no rrledrlchatraaas I.OHDON IrtmrAH Marconi Ilouae. Strand JvUaia Uotno........ .... 32 Hue Loula ie Grand , , sunscniPTiON terms ' By earner, alx renta per week. Hy mall, poatpald entalde of Philadelphia, except where foreign pontage la required, one month, twenty-five renta; one year, three dollars. Alt mall auliacrlptlona payable In - advance. Notioi Subacrlbera wishing addreaa changed muat tlve old aa well aa new addreaa. BEtt, J009 WALNUT KKYSTONE. MAW J00O D A&Artst alt communtealtons to Evening Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia. . jurrato at tijb rmr.inn pitu roarorrtci as bico.nd- CLAB8 UAtL UATTia TUB AVEnAOB NEV PAID DAILY ClnCULA- TION OF THE .SVENIht, MSDdEt. FOH JANUARY WAS 09,214 Pnil.ADEI.PnlA, SATURDAY, FEnttUAnY 12. 191 Shall I ask the brave soldier who finhts by my side In the cause of mankind, if our creeds agrrcT Thomas Moore. Has Thcodoro Roosevelt been mentioned for Secretary of War? There are moro victories In the nows papors than thero are In tho trenches. The. latest lynching news Indicates that tho United States should tntorveno in Georgia. Mr. Wilson will go down In history as tho man who put tho Houso In tho White House. A fow moro resignations llko Mr. Garri son's -will not do tho Republican party any harm. "Nothing to say," was Mr. Tnft's comment on tho Garrison resignation. Oh most rare, most unappreciated ex-President! Austria has called to arms the classes of 1865 and 1866, according to an Incredible re port. But If Austria Is bound to have an Old Guard, why not? t Prof. Jess Wlllard refused to fight 30 min utes for a paltry J32.J00, whllo Flanders Is full of husky young fellows who nro lighting all day for a shilling. The situation of the city on the loan ques tion comes down to this: What's the use owning an automobile If you ore too eco nomical to supply It with gasollno? Mr. Garrison says that he Is out of politics as well as out of the Cabinet. Ho begs leave to hopo that he Is still a patriotic American citizen, willing to go to tho polls nnd vote. Every one interested In tho preservation of tho ancient landmarks will be delighted if Mayor Smith will bring about a restoration 'of tho old City Hall, In Independence Square. Tho Kaiser has been censored out of ex istence by tho movlng-plcture board of au thorities on what is right for tho public to eee and what Is wrong. Now when the presi dential campaign begins ! If General Hugh L. Scott believes what he eays he believes his continuance In olilco 13 a mere courtesy to tho President, because the General agrees with and even goes further than tho very principles which mado Mr. Garrison resign. Or is it possible that some one else has had a chango of heart? It Is evidently tho intention of Principal Keller, of tho new Germanto'wn High School, to make that part of the city appreciate what tho Institution can do for it. At tho formal opening last night ho had represen tatives present from all tho Important busi ness men's associations, and had a com mittee of pupils on hand to show the visitors through tho splendid new building. National defense requires a national army, not 48 separate armies. Mr. Hay and his associates seem ta aim at some sort of a compromise force, half national and half State. It does not matter whether tho reserve is a continental army or some other kind of an army, so long as it Is a national army. States' rights can do no more to a program of national defense than ruin It. Mr. Roosevelt's position in the matter of our duty against Germany is appreciated by many persons who still ilnd this distinguished litterateur at fault in his comparisons. A abort time ago he compared Belgium to the man who had fallen among thieves, but prosecution of the analogy seemed to con demn rather than approve tho good Samari tan in the eyes of Mr. Roosevelt. Yesterday he said that if a man's wife is slapped by some other man and he does nothing about it for three-quarters of a year then it Is of no consequence what ho does after that. It might be offered that if a man's wife is slapped and the man immediately throws his children in the face of the other man's revolver it matters a great deal how he Is go ing to explain himself at the bar of eternal justice. The first Important step in preparedness was taken when the Senate followed the House In adopting the resolution Increasing the number of midshipmen at Annapolis and appropriating J600.000 for enlarging the ship ways, at the Mare Island and the New York Navy Yards. Congress authorized the build ing of two new battleships last year, They are to be built in the navy yards, but neither Mare Island nor New York Is lu shape to begin work, and work cannot begin until the money just appropriated Is spent. It will be September or October before work starts, 18 months after the ships were authorized. As It takes three years to build a battleship, the new vessels cannot be put In commission in l$ss than four and a half years from the date Wiien Congress ordered them. No one knows vrtien the battleships that the present Con frees is expected to make appropriations for can be started The League Island Navy yard could be put in shape to build one of tbm If Congress would appropriate as much lor new sblpways and shops as It has Just given to tha Mare Island yard. The Qovern ni, wiut do part of tee Mitl of the fetgact Pr. for the private rtf HftJfiNidy so crowded with work that it Is said they could not lay down the keel for another largo ship In less than 18 months. NATIONALISM VERSUS THE GOLDEN RULE Pure roM rnnnot Tie vised In commerff, It onimhles, So tinea pure nltriilam when It Ik prnctlccil, not hy Inillvlilunl, lint liy Stale. If tho United otnten mnkrs the nllrnlatlc rule tho hnsl of It Intrrnn liannl relations, II will lie nnrrlflrlnif the Intercut of Amerlrnns to the InlrreMn of foreigner. It tlml ihity In aolf preservntlnn. tin sreomt iluly In protec tion nf .Americans. If either nf thooo lie neglected, tho vvhnlr fnlirlc of American lm will fnll to piece, IT WAS a Brent day for tho United States when John Hay declared that its diplo macy wan controlled by but two maxims, tho Golden Hulo and the Open Door. Those were times of peace, when Idealists tnlltcd about tho brotherhood of man nnd theorists Invented "the International mind." And under the polished, pullto crust of diplomatic courtesy there was browing the most slgnlfl cant outbreak of nationalism since tho Mid dle Ages. Today, looking on tho strugglo and begin ning to doubt tho practical value of tho altruistic rule, men say, with Major General Leonard Wood, thnt you must put Iron Into gold before you can forgo nrmor out of It. Tho United States is still a couutty of high Ideals. It must tlcrltla whether the Ideal of linselllsh devotion to the interests of nil tho world docs not ncttuilly destroy whatever op portunity wo have of being n lesson nnd an example to tho rest of the world. By modern business standittds the Golden Rule l.t what Is culled u fnlr proposition. It Is an oven give and take. In private life. When It Is applied to nations It begins to mean something else. It mentis that this country shall regard every other country us a co-operating equal and a friendly one In the work of spreading civilization. It means, according to Homo pacifists, that the country recognizes tho very highest prin ciples of right and wrong, and no matter what tho outrage against Its citizens, will not strike a blow In behalf of the wrong to avenge those Insults. It means t hut the right of every other national Is held equal to tho right of American nationals; that If u Mexican rebel kills Americans there Is to bo no rcdresr, becnuso the sacred cause of liberty may be compromised. Carried to extremes, It means abdication of ull national rights. Theso extremes are not putely Imaginary. Until this war began the talk of tho French socialists and of tho English pacifists was In precisely the words used above. In this country tho moro fantastic opponents of a protective tariff havo urged the equul right of Germans nnd Swiss to thrive on American markets. Napoleon III of Prance, with his high-minded, generous-spirited Ideas of tho concord of nntlons, prepnred for the disas ters of Sedan, nnd were It not for the sclllsh directions given to French thought by Its leaders since then, the second Invasion of France would have been more crushing than tho first. Napoleon III was tho forerunner of anti-defense policies, and his face should bo on the ballot of any American party which will dare to go before the people with nntl-preparedness as n platform pledge. "It seems to be an Idiosyncrasy of 'tho International mind,' " says William Morton Kullerton, who studied that phenomenon as Paris correspondent of the London Times, "to tako an altruistic pleusure in sacrlllclng Its own patriotic impulses to tho prejudices of its nolghb"rs." Thero aro frequent occa sions when an Individual, who seeks the light of the Golden Rule, cannot condone tho policy of his country. In time of peace, In a democracy, he criticises, as many men criti cised tho Mexican policy of 1848 and as many men criticise the Mexican policy of 1910. But in time of peril tho right to criticise lapses; there Is only one right, and that is a duty. What is wrong for a citizen Is often most right for a state. No man has the right to kill. No Stato can bo denied that right. Tho highest virtue of n state, said Spinoza, who lived beforo the time of William Jen nings Bryan, Is security. Tno cry against preparedness in tho United States is a cry for national weakness. Every appeal to kindness In International relations Is, in some way, an appeal against American citizens. Because if this country weakens itself by pacifism, it will not persist. The evil Is not that Japan may tako the Philippines or snatch San Francisco from ub. By applying the Golden Rule wo might persuado ourselves that Japan needs them moro than we do. Tho disaster would bo that this country, dedicated to freedom and to democracy, offering not only a haven of rest for the persecuted, but a harbor of hope for those sickened by bureaucracy and tyranny abroad, would crumble and fall to the ground. If tho United States Is to remain a country in which the Golden Rule can bo practiced by individuals without fear of the encroachments of power. It must give up the altruistic rule in Its relations with other coun tries. It need not become militaristic; it need not cease to strive for peace among nations. It need only forgo a breastplate of gold and Iron to protect its heart. Because onco tho heart is pierced the most golden of golden rules will avail nothing. A FLOOD OF HUMAN KINDNESS ABRAHAM LINCOLN was a flood of Xx human kindness that swept across the earth in the hours of Its agony and left on it imperishable memorials to bo a light and inspiration to all men. He came from the common folk whom he loved. Ife was flesh of their llesh, but Providence put into htm above the shoulders a capacity for leadership and guidance com mensurate with the mighty task for which he was ordained. He passed through the sloughs of despond, Ordeals almost beyond the power of human souls to endure only hardened the iron of his purpose. The pen alty of greatness is to be a target. He did not object. There stretched into his vision the glory of the goal. He saw something worth working for, something he could not fail to work for, worthy of the blood poured out for its attainment. Sympathy flowed from him, but In that soft heart there was no coward beat, no looseness of decision. Again the world is on fire. Again the flood of some great human's goodness must swell against It. Somewhere a mighty soul Is throbbing toward the task. Not in the mighty Iron tubes which deal out destruction and death, not in bomb, or mine, or airplane, does peace slumber, but in the great brain of some gentle human bains who Is waiting to point the way out Somewhere In the world there Is a Lincoln Great oris bread great men. The Weeding world waits for itlm. Tom Daly's Column OUR VILLAGE POET Whenever It's a Saturday and nil my work Is through I llko to walk on Chestnut streot to sec what hows is new. And so this evcnln' here 1 nm nwnlkln' up nn' down , A rubbor-ncckln' rotm' at what's niloln' In this town. First olT, I tee 1,1ml. Gnnlson, his gripsack irt his hand, Hound Jerscywnrd from Wnsliln'toti; 1 see him slop an' slntid Uy Schtvnrtz's toy shop window nn' stidly shake his liciitl. I sntlck up close to listen, alul this I.S W'al lie sulci: "Oh, look nt nil them soldiers! Gee, don't they bent the Dutch I An' who snld tliej'ro expensive? Why. they don't cost so much. Oh, look nt nil them fiddlers; oh, look tit tlielii!" ho snlil. An' then ho turned mi' walked awny nn' sadlv shook his head. 1 see 1M Vnro this nvctitn' an' brother William, too, t bet they're up to mischief; but what? 1 wish 1 knew. An' then thnt other youngster he never makes iniicli noise I bet he's up to somcthlu'; oh well, Holes will bo Doles! Ilemlials hie of MoNlchols; they've got another "hint"; Tho stork Just biting the youngster. Cigars uie 011 you, Jim' Oli. say. It's fun on Saturdays when all my work Is through, To walk about on Chestnut stiect nnd fico what news Is new. Gee! Ht Knew Thomas E. Hill An Afterthought I'. K A few months after "Hill's Manual of Koelnl and HiihIiicsh Foims" came out n .voting woman up at Ulgln sued 11 joting innti for ioO.CiO". alleslng breach of promise of mnirlage nnd of foiliig some of Ills Invn letters as evidence. The voting man swoio that ho had .copied thu letters from Hill's .Uiimm, and his ntturncv, by wnv of ridiculing the opposition, culd Hie action should have been brought tigainst the real author of the lottcis With this tip, a lot of us young savages, nlded bj an Ingenious lawyer of our town, con vinced Thomas 11. that lu all such canes dam ages could be collected tiom hlnii anil the poor man won led himself pale contemplating the countless suits that might be brought against I1I111 for breach of ptomlt,e. V. it II, Sir! Is This Not Treason? It has become the pievalllng fashion to desig nate nuy one with a mission us squlrrtl diet; yet the I.lbctty Hell Is toted hither and you by overzialnus pet sons. Can we tako the hell's condition as 11 warrant of thelra? Joo Baker. Classifying Your Countrymen III. You can tell by just oac paper You may hear him asking for "Lemnio liavu today1!) Sun-paper" That his homo Is Baltimore. IV. If. when In a dlnlug-hall. You should hour a waitress s-ay, "Sorry, but tho beefsteak's till" She's from Al lento wn, P-a. EDGAR LEE MASTERS, author of the "Spoon River Anthology," has written nn ode In praise of William Marlon Reedy, of the St. Louis Minor, which comes nearer to real poetry than any 0110 of thu sharp etched Spoon River sketches which have mado him famous. So It should, for grati tude Is a splendid spur for Pegasus. Hero aro homo of the best lines: He sits beforo you silent as Buddha And then you sav This man Is HitbelalR. And while you wonder what his stock Is, English or Irish, u behold his ejes As big and brown as thowe desirable crockles With which ns bojs we used to play. And then you see tho spherical light that lies Just under the Iris coloring, Hcforo which everything Becomes as plain as day. It's not wo hard a thing to bo wise In tho lore of books. It's a different thing to be all eyes. Like a lighthouse which revolves and looks Over the land and out to sea; And n lighthouse Is what ho seems to me; Sitting like Buddha spiritually cool. Young as the light of tho nun Is young, And taking the even with tho odd As a matter of course, and the path he's trod As a path that was good enough. JIM MAI girl we MALFATTO stole tho best servant p ever had. Her name was Lulsa. It still is Lulsa, for it was only her last name she changed to Malfntto. All this was half a dozen years ago, and we have long since forgiven Jim. We oven gave him odd jobs occasionally, and ho always did them well. He calls himself 11 plumber, but last summer we discovered that he's much moro than that. It came about In this fashion: Wo decided last August whllo tho folks wero away In the country to build an addition to our small house, which was to bo a sur prise to them upon their return. No ordi nary builder could bo trusted with such n job for several reasons. We had to know In advance how much it was to cost, how to tlnanco It nnd Just what day the Job would be finished. Jim told us to tho penny and the hour. So we told him to go uhend. "All right, leave It to me; it's a cinch!" said he, for Jim got his education, school and street, In this country, though ho hasn't forgotten Ills Italian. Ho called in to help him Tony, the stonemason; Louie, a whale of a laborer ("that guy could pick your houso up and Iny It down ugaln," said Jim) and the three of them did most of tho work. Jim started his day at 3 a. m. and knocked off nt 10 p. 111.. until, for the sako of the slum bering neighbors, wo mndo him be reason able. The neighbors, though, got their fun out of It. It wus interesting to hear Jim giving his orders to Louie in tills fashion: "Ascolta. Lulgi, fa II placere til lasclare quel mattoni sul muro orlentalo prima and then we're gona pull down the .dog-gone scarfoldin's, get me?" Jim encountered unforeseen difficulties every day and overcame them, kept books with exact records of the least expenditure, coaxed and bullied his helpers, fought with Bupply men for discounts, finished his Job (including the Inevitable extras) on the day promised and charged less than was right for his services. The neighbors have been talking about "Italian efficiency" ever Blnce, Jim's fame has gone abroad. Some day he'll be a mighty big figure in the community, and that's why we're recording here our boast that we started him in the right direction. Casey at the Bat (It T. A. Daly did It In a McAront Ballad.) Casey, he wan granda man. Fans all holla rom da stan': "Who oan heet Ilk' Casey can?" Then he com. No heet ball wit" battln' eteek, Mudvllla fans all getta seek. Holla; "O, you punka Meek, Blgga Bum!" J. V. McBvpy in Chicago Trbun. No, eet es not truth you speak. Eef dat story had been mine, I would pralso dat othra Meck Petehtn for da weenin' nine! THE FRONTIER OF LINCOLN'S TIME Its Spirit Was Embodied in the First American Democracy Born in a Cabin The West in the East THE first American, ns Lowell called Abraham Lincoln, wus born lu a cabin. And In tt cabin, wrote Birkbcck, America itself was hied. Tho historian Turner has written: "American domoctacy Is funda mentally tho outcome of tho experiences of tho American pioneer In dealing with the West." Further: "I-et us see to It that the Ideals of the pioneer In his log cabin shall enlarge Into tho spiritual life of a democracy whero civic power shall dominate and utilize Individual achievement for tho com mon good." Theto was a West oven In tho early Colo nial days, hut then It lay closo to tho Atlan tic coast. A new West was developed In tho years Immediately following the close of tho War of 1S1L'. Tho Far West Is a still later development. Andrew Jackson was tho very embodiment of tho pioneer period of the old Southwest. Abraham Lincoln was tho very embodiment of tho pioneer period of tho old Northwest. When James Itrycc wroto his American Commonwealth he declared, "The West Is the most American part of America. What Europe Is to Asia, vvhnt England Is to tho rest of Eutope, what America Is to Eng land, that tho Western Stutes nnd Territories nro to the Atlantic States." Symbolism of the West Always the West has Inllucnced tho older part of the country. Hy Its competition and its attraction to settle! s it has reacted on the East nnd given nn added Impulso to the democratic movement on tho Atlantic sea hoard. But tho West has been moto than geographical; it has also been symbolic. It hns exemplllicd and symbolized a reaching out, an emancipation, a strugglo for freedom from ancient forms nnd usages. It has meant tho frontier nnd tho pioneer, physically and spiritually. Tho very winds havo blown tho West back to tho East. Tho geographical limits of the West havo been reached, but tho Inexhaustible faplrit of tho West Is with us yet, here, theto and everywhere. Even Thomas Jefferson was a Westerner, with his Declaration of Independence, his .statute for religious freedom, his purchaso of Louisiana. Martin Van Bureu was hied In an Eastern log cabin under Western condi tions. Harrison was tho hero of tho North west. Polk wus a typical Tonnesseean, eager to ujtpand tho nation. Wobster culled Zachary Taylor a "frontier colonel." Andrew Jackson, with his tierce spirit, broke down the traditions of conservative rule. He began tho era of tho popular hero. And then cutno Lincoln, whoso grasp of tho ax handle of tho pioneer was no tinner than his grasp of the helm of tho ship of stato. For him her Old World molds aside she threw, And, choosing sweet clay ftom tho breast Of the unexhausted West, With stuff untainted shaped a hero new. Wide, steadfast In tho sttength of Uod, and true. Ills was no lonely mountain peak of mind, Thrusting to thin air o'er our cloudy bars, A seamark now, now lost In vapois blind; Broad prairie rather, genial, level-lined, Fruitful and friendly for all human kind, Vet also nigh to heaven and loved of loftiest stars. Nothing of Europe here New birth of our new boII, the first American. Paths in the Wilderness Abraham Lincoln was born In Kentucky in 1809. When the boy was seven years old his father took the family across tho Ohio on a raft, with a capital consisting of a kit of carpenter's tools and several hundred gal lons of whisky. It was the custom of tho immigrant of the old Northwest, on arrival ut the nearest point to his destination on the Ohio, either to cut out a road to his new home or to push up some tributary of that river In a keel boat. In Indiana Abo Lin coln's father hewed a path Into the fotest to a new home in the southern part of tho State. For a year the family lived in a "half-faced" camp, or open shed of poles. Illinois, when Lincoln came to Sangamon County, was Just emerging from its pioneer stage, or rather tho conquest of tho forest was giving way rapidly to business and polit ical enterprise. There wero still, however, such log houses in Illinois as that described by an Englishman in 1831 two rooms, with an open lire in one of them that served In winter both tor heat and light. But cities were growing up Chicago, Springfield and others. It was a country of plain people farmers and Judges, circuit riders and land specu lators. The plainest of them all was Lincoln. In him they recognized themselves. They belpwl elect their rail-splitter President of the United States. Thay wero commonwealth bulldejr, The- ex Unstve trlod. of pioneering hM-jjassed, tho AND HE LEFT THE DOOR OPEN AS Intensive period Is hero and now. As Lin coln embodies tho spirit of the former period, so also ho stands today tho groat exemplar of Americanism. Wc havo 1 cached the geographical limits of America. Tho spit It of America goes marching on, GOING TO SCHOOL BY MOONLIGHT Illiteracy has been gieatly decreased In Ken tucky In the last decade, but the campaign against It goes merrily on. The movement was started by a woman, Mrs. Cora Wilson Stewart, then u county superintendent of schools. Tho "moonlight schools" for persons over the school age are tho chief menus employed In the cru sade. Mrs. Stewnrt put Into operation a system of ivcnlng schools, open during the autumn when tho weather was pleasant and the roads wero passable. They were called "moonlight rchools." At the opening session over 1200 persons almost one-third of the population of the county em oiled. The students learned with almost In cicdible lapldlty. The, Congressman from tho district ropoitcd that after the closing of tho first school year ho received moio than ten times as many requests from the county for agricultural pamphlets, etc , as he had received before. In 1913 Mis. Stewatt and her teachers personally visited and gave instruction to every Illiterate In tho county who. because of timidity or other reason, would not go to the regular schools. A supplementary movement In which everv lltetntc person wus urged to pass along his knowledge to at least one Illiterate was stat ted. At the closo of 1913 It was found that Mrs. Stewart's ambition to wipo Illiteracy from tho county had virtually been achloved. A comparison of tencheis' reports with population census showed thnt there teninlncd In tho county only 23 lllltcintes. Of these. 17 woto In capacitated by Imbecility or Invalidism, four had stubbornly resisted instiuctlon nnd two had moved Into tho county after tho closing of tho "moonlight schools " Mrs. Stewart has now broadened her activi ties to include the wholo Stute. The Legislature hns passed a bill ci eating a Stute Illiteracy Commission for tho purpose of studying nnd benefiting tho condition of adult Illiterates. One hundred pcisons volunteered to malto speeches tluoughout the State in fuithciance of tho campaign. The Governor Issued a proclamation calling nttcntion to the problem of Illiteracy. During 1011 2000 teachers. Instead of tho 1000 asked for, volunteered, and moonlight schools wcie conducted in CO counties In the State. One hundred thoithuud pupll3, ranging in age ftom IB to 93, wero taught in the schools. In 19111 tho work was conducted with oven gtcatcr energy. About 120 speakers conducted a publicity cam paign. Three salaried agents were employed to organize moonlight schools nnd new schools were organized In less accessible neighborhoods. Thousands of "stickers" aio being placed on packages anil mall and posted In public places. They bear such slogans as "Eveijbody IteadJ and Wtltcs In Kentucky by 1920," and "No Il literacy lu Kentucky After 1920." DRAKES AND WILD GEESE Perhaps the most famous of the mythical "un claimed estates" In England Is that of Sir Francis Drake, who, accoidlng to tho stoiy. left property which has now giown to the value of JJ30O.OOO.0OO. The Drako belts, of whom thoro are, said to bo some In a number of States of tho Union, will probably continue to piovido "easy marks" for bogus claim agents, but the latest declaration of a United Stute3 postal In spector that tho Drako story Is puto romance may keep borne people from a wild goose chase. Springfield Republican. THE VOICE OP AMERICA I who tho daughter am of Fate, Horn of tho gods' sweet rage, Havo I gtown so degonerato That my sons' heritage Is tho soft flesh of babies or the brittle bones of age? Through sloth of power have I grown Llko one who lazy lies. Till spiders spin about my thronq A wob to blind my eyes? And uro the stars upon my crown the wings of rotting tiles? Mine was tho soft conceit of one fjood men called mother blest, Why should I fear when every son Drank lovo upon my breast? And so 1 ate the popples that lulled to flaccid rest My heud was safe In Northern snow, My feet In tropic sands, My giant sea guards loved me so They washed and kissed my hands, Yet, sea by Bea, there leaps the green hate tire of alien lands! And shall I sit with fingers laced An Idol on a mat Ana shall the girdle at my waist Burst with a century's fat? The slattern mistress of a weak arlsto-demo. crat! Did not the weak come gathering Like babies at my knees? And did I not my torchtlame fling O'er spume of souls and seas? Now shall my breath blow out the lamp so I may He at ease? Nay! nay! I spring from out my night Of luxury and sloth. And from my lips there flames the white Fire of a virgin's oathl Men pray, "O Light!" Men beg, "O Truth!" I answer, "I am both!" Sons of my soul! My sky-flung call Rings with the rise of sun! Hark ye! For one! Hark ye! For all! And I am All and One I And I hall be so to the world until all worlds be done. Hither, my young, who face the East- My old, who watch the West! Shall Ease be made tht land's talgh Priest, To whom kneel all the rest? we 01'ai uw York Wort HE WENT OUT What Do You Know? Queries of general interest till be antntrii in thit column. Ten questions, the otinctri to which every well-informed person thnU knoic, are asked daily. QUIZ 1. Hmr Innu Is ISrmul Street? 3. What constitutes the Hill of ttluhti, n ufo. Mnod In America? :i. What Is the npprnilmnte coot of 11 moden ilrentlnniiKht? 1. In one of Ills letters tn the I'reiihlent Mr. Cirri- kiii refprred tn the t'lnrlie nmentlmrnt. nji lines the CInrke amendment provide? ,1. What Is the chief Vnrlllc port of Canada? C. Name the two United fttntes Senator! Iras New Ynrk. 7. About how much nnnunllr linn the GoTtraant recently heeu spending for national dtfmMl 8. VU1UI1 Is nearer to the l'nimnm Canal, Itilldt or S.111 l'ranclhco? 0. Wnlt Whltiirin wrote "Oh, Cnptntn! Mr Cu. tnln!" With what fit)' near Philadelphia a tho name or Wult Whitman atiaclattdr 10, In what forclirii iiuvr did John I'aulJoati itm after the Revolution? Answers to Yesterday's Queries 1. Itiisscll A. AlRrr. S. Thirty-one dnju. .'t. Hiram Johnson. I. Two, Itnrleson and Gregory. ' S. Hy treaty with Great llrltaln In 1890 IlelcoUd (or Heligoland) came into the domlnloo if Germany. 0. Lliurli-H W. Hllot, Andrew 11. White, Wooditf W lSon. 7. the J uro virtually the hunic dltance from tbi open sen. Philadelphia Is a few mllti nam. 8. The llcht against landlordism, or the holdlnrtf enormous estates hy single Individual. 1 J. Tucnt) millions. 10. retrogrud. Stevenson's Prayer r.dilor of What Do You Know" I set a tr quest for Stevenson's morning prayer In your column. I tun gladly Inclosing It FB.ANK a BEALE. Haddonfleld, N. J., February 10, "The day returns and brings us the petty rovni t .., .. n...l .lull.. Vfaln 111 It play tho man, help us to perform them JFB; laughter and kind faces; let cheerfulness aMMlJfl Willi IllUU&ira. VJlU UV IU H" MUM.v. .. v business all this day, and bring us to our ri lug beds weary nnd content nnd undlshonortl J and grant us In tho end tho gift of sleep. Amti The Title Pnsses by Will Kdltor of "What Do You inoto" Ples ttl me what should bo done hi tho following ciw, A i.i ln,'Au In tilu will n hnllse In PhllUQH phla and some ground in N'ew Jersey to h,5'i What steps are necessary so that the wife W have title bo that she can sell the prcpen necessary? Will It alter matters any If tnert should be a mortgage on the house? tt a TVUITIT Moore, la February 9. The tltlo to the real estate passes to the vtldof, ...!... .1.. ...Ill .lA..tBln l n h,T Vin hltXl Dt f .viici, lliu Hill iicwaiiici ifc i" - -- - bated If the pioperty Is mortgaged she 1 Uiiei It subject to tho mortgage as though ihe Ml, hmtrriit If i,t,,lft. flin inm, ,nndlttonS. COIlSUIl I lawyer. .3 Date of Subway Opening .3 Editor of "What Do You A'noto" When I j the Subway was opened as far as Uth street w 190G my statement was ulepuica i "J1"" ,' wnu .... XTnTAh J hAKniKn T rndft In town ty ", of the Klevated and Subway that day and wi transfeircd to a car on tho suriace ouu dowu Market street. Can you tell "" w"j year It was? " ' Philadelphia, February 11. According to the fifth annua! report of fit Hapld Transit Company for ma w '"r-; June 30, 1007, the Elevated and Subway U '., 1 , tnr. USA fOnl V" Delaware county line to 15th street on larcn t tnn? I I.T.I II . "rTJ ..... -. ..- ... i.u T hava 14' the nnswer to Mr. Balph Schelrer's Wl M tlift ivnnla In "Hfntlinr." Am Sending IM W,,M words of both choruses as given In the W -t that name: "" FIRST CHORUS. M Is for tho million things she gave me. ( O means only that she's growing old, T is for the tears were shed to save me, H Is for her heart of purest gold, K Is for her eyes with love-light shining, U means right and right she'll alwy . Put them all together they spell motner. A word that means the world to me. SECOND CHORUS, M Is for the mercy she possesses, O means that I owe her all I own, T is for her tender sweet caresses, H is for her hands that made a home, E means everything she's done to neiP p li means real and regular you see-- Put them all together they spell Motner. A word that meana the worW to g Philadelphia, February . The uean of the House , Editor of "What Do You ;"-." tW G. Cannon the senior In point of nervrc? j House of neP-'esentaUves0RTj,BAST WOtf Mr. Cannon la now serving his tw"''t3 uui mere wus uu imw vi -,"" vjij BPB Vila ninth . A TAnl. Taenia nnd DetWVCU . 7 teenth and twentieth. William A. ??' ffl 1st Virginia District, holds the "',,t, A longest period of continuous ,', W now entering on nts mirieemu w e SSfiritfit,&a nf Wnr p,l;, iimi.i n Vnu. Know" H ! Secretaries of War did Lincoln tQ Two Siroon Caraero. of Penjylv!' fciiwin M Staatou. of Ohio.