Vi "v"- 7! 1 10 f EVENIKG LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1916- rUBLTC LEDGER COMPANY oiwis it. k. curiTis, riDi!M. Charles It Ludlngton.Vlcerresldenl, John C Ms.rtln, Heeretary and Treasurer i Thlllp S Collins, John D. Williams, Directors ElUTOnlAt, BOAtlOt Ctrcs II K Ccrtis, Chairman. P II WIIALEY . .Edllnr JOHN C. MARTIN Ueneral Business Manager i . - . . .. Published dally at t'csuo t.trotR Tltilldlng, Independence Square, Philadelphia. t.ltnr CtNTait, ttroad and fhestnut Street ATtANTIO Cltl I'rrss.l ttlou nulldlng Ntff Took .,.. ..l'O-A, Metropolitan Toner DrtRQtT t. R20 Kurd Handing Rt, l.ocis 400 Cfoftr Demon at llulldlng CHttino.... l-OJ Tribune Building NEWS BUnBAL-H: Washington Brro Wegs null.llng Nr.tr Tons Hurrah Tho Times nulldlng BntttN noitin f.O rrledrlehlrnsse I.onpov ncsrAtr Marronl Home, Strand IUrts UciEiB 3" ltu l.ouls le Urand SUBSCRIPTION" TERMS By carrier. six tents pr ueck Ity mall postpaid uteld of Philadelphia, except where foreign postage In required, one month twent-IUr cents: oie Vcar, three dollars. All mall subscriptions pajahla In adtanc NoTtcs SnMcrlber wishing address changed must tlv old is well as new address BELL, 3000 WAI.MT KI.YSTOSE. MvlV ,10110 B3 Aidns) alt rommtiitlf'nHons to r.'i ruler; LtAatr, Independence Square. Philadelphia bmiied XTttiD rnn.ADRirnu rosTorrtcu as Btco:.n. CLASH MAIL MATIM THE AVnrtAOE NCT TAID DAILY CIRCUCA. TION OF THE BVBNING LBDOEIt FOR JANUARY WAS 0,3U rillLADELPIIIA, MOVim, FKRItt AIIY :. 11 But the sunshine aye shall light the sky, is round and round tee urn; And the truth shall ever coma uppermost, And justice shall he done. Charles Mackay, The Russians aro snug as u bug In Ker manshah. Now that the Colonel has visited Mat Unique, the natives will probably realize how Inconsequential Is Mt. 1'pIcc. Norman Angell found the atmospheic of Havcrford College more congenial to a peace advocate than the atmosphere of Princeton. All the Boston lawyers with a grievance against Mr. Brnndcis seem to be taking ad vantage of the Senato Investigation to air them Charles Sumner r.lul, who sajs that the Massachusetts delegates must be pledged to Roosevelt or nobody, Is not acting like a bhd of peace. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt shows political sense when she says that the eriuul suffrage movement will fail if it is confined to the uocially elect. That report Is aggressive and virtually de cides a case that is now befuio the coiuts Director Datesmati. Aggressive in whose iutcicst? I'll fight licit and the devil till I go so fast they can't see my dust. "Billy" Sunday. Walt a minute, "Billy." You'ie chasing the devil, the dcII Isn't chasing you. Magistiate Carson has decided thai bar tenders must not bit drunken pations. Tho old receipt for handling n whale was, "Kiist get him Interested, then Kick him in the face." Tho President plaved a trump c.nd when he Intimated that if Congicss wanted to run the foreign affairs of tli nation the Demo crats would have to find nnother presidential candidate. A sidelight on feeble-mlndcdnesa and Its effects Is the fact that, of G73 deaths In the city last week, 34, or more than one in every 20, were due to Inherited debility and malfor mations. Kugenics Is n Joke only to people who make a joko of It. It is really not surprising that two out of sixteen representative rtndcllffe girls had never heard of Secretary Lansing, while three thought that he was Secretary of War and one felt that he was some sort of Ambas sador. Tho Kvknino LKix.i.n has received startling proof of the Ignoiance of many Americans since it began the publication of tbe daily Quiz. The question appearing today, for Instance, relative to the clicumfeicnce of the earth, nits asked Saturday of eight per sons of more than oidlnary intelligence. The nearest any one of them came to a coriect answer was to miss it by 7000 miles. It sounds Incredible, but It is true. But it is said there aro people In North Carolina, where Jo?ephti3 Daniels comes from, who think that Andrew Jackson is still President of the United States, probably because they have been voting for him so long. The era of the war conespondent may be past, but for graphic description it may be doubted if rcpoits weie ever superior to those now appearing as a matter of tontine day by day. An example is tho following from the Evenincj ixpc.Eit of Saturday: The Teutons fought with the gteatest brHvery and never faltered as the storm of French shells tore through their utiles. But flesh and blood no matter bow great tho gallantry, could not stand before ilia death scjthe of the French fire. Shells from hundreds of guns and bullets from countless machine guns and thousands of rifles decimated the German ranks Bat talion after battalion was hurled forward by the German commander in utter disre gard of the enormous loss of human life. Boon the field was piled high with the corpses, and the charging soldiers stumbled over the bodies and fell amid their own slain. It was carnage such as had not been seen before In the war Even the German rushes at Ypres, when their charges were described as gigantic assaults In which the soldiers rolled forward like endless waves of the sea, were as nothing compared with the onslaughts of the masked phalanxes north of Verdun, This Is in a fair way to become a garden city. Wherever the plan of paving only so much of the roadway aa is needed for traffic Is carried out, with a wide grass, plot between the curb and the sidewalk, the street WtH bay all the aspects of a parkway. The lawns in front of the houses will be several feet deeper because of their extension beyond the sidewalk, and the dust of the street will be kept out of the houses with greater ease than where the sidewalk adjoins the curb, Residential property on such streets will be in demand because of the attractive surround ings. And the burden of the cost of paving and maintenance will be much less than In streets laid out in the way that has prevailed here for years. Director Patesman, of tho Department of Public Works, deserve the commendation of all public-spirited citizens jtyr taking' the Initiative in this admirable reform, lie might go further and deserve still higher praise. A real estate man in Brooklyn laid out a large tract on the plan just adopted here. The streets were the regulation width on the city map. but he paved only enough of the roadway to accom modate the traffic in a residential district. The rest ef the street width was seeded down Veiwwa the ourb and the sidewalk, and rows of trees nml shmbberj were planted! but befoio the planting nml seeding were begun lie laid the water and gas pipes In the space between llio rurli nnrl the sidewalk. In order tci make it casv lr tepali them without tear ing up the pavement And then ho sold his houses about ns fast ns he could build them. VERDUN AND VICTORY Hie Hllark on Verdun Is n military imslers, Time nml (onillllons nre ntalnst ler inaiii nt dial point. V.en sneress mlclil prate rrnltless. Iiermnnt's mirnne l nollllral itnn l,nalle. it inn neutrals nml In tnal.e the frown rrlnre n nopttlnr hero. A desperate .iltitrti, how eter. Is nften the most edefllte hind of defense. rpitAT Vet dun Is m.vstlf.v lug liutopenn nit X leu ns well tis nettttal observers Is ftp parent from the few comments on the great battle which have nlreatlv t cached this side. What Verdun makes rlcar Is the meaning of Hint exceptional series of regional attneks which the (ici mails have been delivering. The past fortnight witnessed Clermnn gains nt Ypres and In Alsace, tho cMicinltlcs of the Hue, Climnpngnc nml Artols wero likewise tho scenes of battles with the decision wa ve! lug, ns In trench wnifaro It must, fionl side to side. All these local gains seemed purposeless enough until the veil was ie moved and the ndvnnees In the Wocvre region weie consolidated Into nn attack on Verdun. From the 9tlt to the 20tb of Febru ary nerman.v was feinting, drawing her bend barl like n snake, turning now here, now theie. until It rmild .strike nt Verdun. lint vvhv strike at nil? The conditions for nn offensive, espcelnllv ngnliist ft forttcss where time ittid tide favor tbe besieged, weie not fnvorable, Tort Onimiiinnnt. outlying Verdun, was taken In n blinding snowstorm and. nccotdliig to most recent reports, Is either ictnken or surrounded by tho French. Nor was tho situation nbotit Verdun nt nil comparable to the conditions pi e ailing In Kttssla when tbe gic.u spring offensive be gan. Verdun, when it falls, it it falls, will have no excuse of lack of preparation. Further, the Herman command was under no illusions ns to the cost of nn attack, for tho experiences of last .tunc, when tho Crown Prince attempted nn assault, were robtty be .vtitid measure. Finally, Vctdun was con sidered nt the beginning of tho (list West ern campaign ns an nccessorv to the main drive tluough Belgium. II still cm be only nu uuIIIni to tho battle which began nt l.lege. continued nt Naiiuir nnd btoke on the waters of the Mnrnc. Unlike hlcge. it opens no roads, except to the trenches. It will be piotcsted that the lietmaii High Command was familiar with these disad vantages nnd that, in otderlng the attack, took them Into full account. Precisely be cause that protest Is valid the world, which has gaped in wonder at (Sermany these many months, hi astounded anew. There are lea--.oil", and they ale so Impoitant that they overcome nil oblectlous. The first of these, tho political reasons, havu been noted befoie. They include a spectacular demonstration for the dissatisfied at home, a warning to Itumanla that .Serman's fire can still be fed and that those who piny will be burned, and, finally, a sign in the sky for Americans a little too intent, for German purposes, on the freedom of travel nnd the sanctltv of In ternational law. All these aie the connecting link with the p.ibt, with Hrzerum, Saionlc.i and the nastern front, where Russia's ie tut ii is increasingly painful. For the future, the projected dash to sea, tho now K-boat activities and further blows at Kngland from the air. may be contemplated as pan of the political program. Behind politics He the d) nastic necessities of the Hobenzollcrns. Germany, successful in the field, has hail but one point of unspai ing criticism, and that, bv misfoituue. was tho fallmo of the Clown Prince. It has been held thero that the Crown Ptince, dashing his tioops n vain against Verdun, failing to distract n large army from tho Marne and Alsne, allowing time for Verdun to be te foi titled against tho great guns which felled l.icge anil ruined Ypres. vitiated all the sac liflces of Germany and nullified her other victories. Yet the Crown Prince must be come Kmpcror of the Germany which will ris-o out of the war. bo it a successor of tho Holy Roman Empire, sti etching from Calais to Constantinople, or merely Prussia and her nppendages. lie may even be called upon to assume office during this war. at a time when d nastic change might mean revo lution. He must be made a popular hero, and since transfer, even to a glorious Held, would be confession, the Ciown Prince must push his force against the chosen fortiess of Verdun. So It Is peculiarly inappropriate to iuquiie whether Germany Is willing to make this sac rifice at Verdun. The Hohcnzolletns nre will ing and to them tho chance is a glorious one. In Its very hazatd, in tho probable frultless ness of the endeavor, there is something which may be turned to benefit the "indomitable will," "the high peiseverlng purpose of the Crown Prince." v Nor will military strategists be slow to point out that the road from Metz to Paris Is dominated by the fortresses of Verdun. One of the most picturesque accounts of the war told of the correspondent who went up a wooded height near the fort, took a tele scopo and saw Metz lying calm and clean in the line of lire. The great guns have never been discharged. Metz lies undisturbed. But to undernilne a threatening position, to bet soldiers again on the way to Paris, even if every foot of road be through baibed wire, will prove military Justification enough for the Crown Prince. At the same time he will be carrying out Germany's first principles, to appear strong even when weakening, to gain strength from the nppeaiance of It and to build her strongest hopes of defense upon a good attack. if Germany wins In this single struggle, she will yet have the greater battle in the West, and the campaigns In the East, to meet, if she lose here her prestige will be broken Irremediably. POWDER NOT ALL OF WAU ABOUT 38 per cent, of the total exports for . the last calendar years was made up of war supplies. The exact sum is Jl, 314, 414, 359. All but about (10,000,000 worth was sold to the Entente Allies. Explosives, however, were but a small part of the total, for it needs more than powder to make war- The value of horses, mules and automobiles was greater than the value of all the explosives sold Other supplies consisted of food, freight cars, wheelbarrows and carts, acids, copper, metal working machinery, barbed wire and tele phone wire, lubricating oil, boots and shoes, leather and nickel. Only 1 12,000,000 worth of firearms were sold, which with $181,000,000 worth of explosives, makes a total of leu than one-sixth of all war supplies sent abroad. It is apparent that an embargo on powder and firearms would not go far enough If we are to refrain from selling goods needed by the beUlxtrents to carry 9a war, Tom Daly's Column FODDMl (Professor Mehner. In the llamburaer Naehrlchten, predicts that cstlle will entully be fed on paper.) "What arc the cattle baicllna forf" said riles 0 the J'icsi. "To turn pou out, to turn von oul!" the Farmer said, "1 guess." 'no 1 took llkr a bale o' hajf said l'ilcs 0 the rrcss. "Oh, siicclcr far than thai to them," the Farmer laid, "t pucss: For thrt'ic fecdin' 'em on paper an' the efll tcrs fAf it so. The)) gobble books and maaailncs iChenevcr they've a show. It wouldn't much tuiptiic me If lou'rl be lha ilCtl to go, For thcv'ie fecdin' Ihcm on paper night and mornin'F' "What brings that sweat upon jOM! hrmct" sold Flics of the Pies?. "Mlf horild thoughts! My horrid thouilhlsl" the Farmer said, "I guess." "What makes vau look so iehitc, so iohtlet" tald Fllei of the Vicss. "Ilccaiisr of what I've got to tialeh," tho Farmer said, "t yucxi. I dread to sec the Utile 1 alves thai olit'd had but a thirst For mother' milk giow wild for news,' but, oh! the wiener wur.it Of all my fean U thai the dean Will get a laslc for Hearst, For they're fecdin' them on papei night njtd tnarnin'!" (Not t lie rorned-tlnmd-ud ) 1 nn rnsi c.vitn Str Uld 'err net on" of those dulishtmd post cards, first th- hail. then the forcnurlers and so on donn to the tall 'lhls Is one. "I hl.i Is the head Hut what I wanted to sU Is, t)o j.oti print (onumlrums' Here's a good on". "What's the difference between nn old man n oung man and n worm" ' Yours r. Tttiliej A CERTAIN tiusl company miles fiom Blond and CI not n million Micstntlt stieets recently put n gieen eleik upon the Job of sending out monthly statements. The clients of the company :uo listed on tho books thus: Name, occupation, nddicss. Now it happens that some tire so 1111 foi tuuiitc as to dcsei ve no occupational classi fication, being ronflned In certain Institutions for tnetii ables. All of these weio addtcssed b.v tbe gieen cletk Just as he found the entiles In the book, as for instance: "John Smith. Lunatic, Stale Hospital, Nnrtlstown, Pa." Conversational Classics 1 Overheard In a lophenated restaurant.) "Ball, this climate. Every kind of weather wo have, all dlffctent fiom each other." VI X. inn pnsr fAiti) r HeiH a th foieaumlr .Vly gntimiur whs bail Of course ou can t s.iy h hat's tho dlfferem between tlueri thtngs Malic I shuuld uught to of said "Whal'n tho dlffpif-ncc among- an old mun. a oun man and a worm" Don't jou want It? F. Tlnnt Aim! Something Hatching Here? The Official Congressional Ditectory sas on page 156, "Tho Senate has set as a coutt of Impeachment in the casts of tho following accused officials " What D'ye Mean? The .Mt. SCiiin ruvival Is ahcady felt as an in fluence for good In the community. Jacob Kent and Mrs. Peaii Biothers woi shlpcd there Thursday evening. Bear Bocks Col respondent, in Mt. Pleasant Journal. "rpiIK papcis aie continually toasting me," JL complained the Piomiuent Political Per son. "Never mind," replied the Wise Man, "some dny they will see only jour good points." "Ah! but when?" ".My filend, 'the hour of his death no man knoweth,' " mi: rosr CARII Sir' Now this Is the middle. They's two more pieces to come and that conundrum ain't finished jet. either. Don't jou want to know what's the difference among an old man, a joum man and n worm? F. Tlnney. Child's Winter Garden of Verses IV. The Rain. At night the tain thumps on our loof; We'ie diy because it's waterpioof. It drenches all our high brick wall, But cannot come into the hall. It beats upon the window pane, But we need never fear the rain: Because our house is built so well, It wotks Just like a big umbreil. Signs of Spring in Philly Sir Signs of Spring say you? We ate not ouite .sure, but we think 'twill be tbe reappear ance 011 our station platform of a certain very gieen skirt and jacket which we wot of: or else 'tis the very busted nose of our eldest son, who, feeling a bit of balmy air on Washington's Birthday, took a trial tiip around the block 011 bis Christmas tricycle and at the coiner Just to the north of our house discovered the ex istence of centrifugal force. II. II, n. Love lingering at the lattice, with Iteason retiring through the postetn gate, and not al wajs in good order L. c G. THE TOST CARII Sir This is the hindquarters, and we re getting near tbe end of that conundrum, too. you must say to me. "Whit's the difference, Frank, ainon an old man and a joung man and a woim," and then I'll tell sou. p. Tlnney. WE feel we could not have selected a more timely time to piesent this seilal, nor a more suitable set la! for presentation at this time. It is: George Washington BEING N(V ONLY A- RHYMED STORY OP HIS I.II-'E. BUT ALSO ALMOST A COM. PLETE HISTORY OP THESE V. S. By OEOROE MORRIS When he was a little boy His father gave him a hatchet toi That made hi heart Jump big with joy No.r George he started lo cut up strips And made a lot of cherry chips He cut away and made no slips With It branches leaves and all When It fell It gave a bump There stood George and the cherry stump, When George saw- what he had dons His hatchet glittered In the aun IU did not hide he did not run He chopped tha tree down Just for fun ilia father came out for a walk To have a quiet little talk To get the sun. tha air and breae And take a walk among tbe trees And aa he waksd behold his wrath He saw a tree across the path. His father's heart was filled with pain For this good trea It hsd been slain For cherries It will bear no more Vnd shad the chair It had before fieorgo'a Father ha did look around The tree It laid upon the ground. Now Oaorge waa thinking. "It me see" 1" crop down soma other tr (To Be Continued i THE I'OSr CAHIJ Sir. Hem's the tall, and that's tbe end Did you ask ma "Wbat'a tbe difference! among" eh. n right. Why. they ain't any difference among an old man and a youne roan and a worm Th chickens will set 'n " , . F. Tlnney. B. U T., of the Chicago Tribune, recently chucked a chortle because be found in a coun try paper our old friend Dull Thud "I was wondering what had become of our ancient friend," ses he. We thought the eld thlnr was dead, for it jrtvs "sickening" aa loot; as wo can remtmbar, J-JUL JJJ!SMISHHiiKfKi ji n ii Jsa?stswKs' . it' a,, J ,-.. 1 ..0 i- ' - ... . 1 -s-wa-tfBirirairiA: 1 si; .'ii " n1 j n - 1 si ' r E'A v- "n fKtii. 1 if j j j ' . sink , 1 " ' A7M" cW&..B ' " fiH.. : ' ' I ,.n ,, 1 ...- -. - , , .. , 11 QJ n Iv AihfxM WiKiCi nt-'1.1'" -.' .......... fifij I ! ('ii . 'i --issismmWiPAi'- J r - 1 V S t ii.i V ' V f.fSWr..T..fll:TJIiM M lr ,1 r ' V3 i' I . : t 1 ajfi M ' ' I ,VJ vSWWffifStWkJ -A-.f-1tjai .. ' -" ESSBnawwrtRffiJ Aw?WSV 'ivirx I ,.., it .,-,.- . Ahtr icffv5pwja2Raiii i ; ii yF?'igBRBHtffi'' ! .U.-,.'.-.,.J.i, 'rt4MOTKHW ' 'i - r "? - i r-ffimBmsmSm klMii d&ii&'MFmmtf& ri' CAPTAIN GILL, "RURAL-LIFER" Famous Yule Tackle Tackled Oppor tunity in the Country Church. The Fable of the Bully and the Parson W"KS VV of hi Walter Cnmp published the lluo-up twetit.vlivc- jc.its ago, lie gave a position to (till, Yale's gie.it tackle Theie have been other great tackles at Yale, doubtless, but ask an "old grad" or visit tbo campus when C1III Is back for commencement and vou'll llnd that this paitlcular hero of the gridiion has not been for gotten ct. Tliete aro re minders, too, in the "gm" museum, in the shape of tiophies that bear ills name During one of his seasons on the vnislty team (Sill was captain. He i& 53trj3- i o an.i. also, when he made tho varsity crow, was at New Haven, Moio than that, in Ills senlui' vear he was "tap- ped for Bones." Today he keeps In good athletic ttlm. ictalns hi.s i epntation for scholarship and is quite ns likable as ever. He counts his ft lends among tho highest in the land and among tho lowliest, Manliness, we trust, is not a tarlty under the Min, but that is the quality in "Charlie" Gill that im pi esses itself on everybody, whether on shott acquaintance or long. Two Kinds of Opportunity On receiving his sheepskin he was con fionted with Opportunity, spelled with a big "O." Able and backed by family position ho had ahead of him a splendid career In business nnd the public eve. He sided with opportunity, spelled with a little "o" in these Hidden! nnd materialistic times. He de termined on tho Christian ministry. So ho entered the divinity school. On his gradua tion he became a home missionary and after ward a country preacher. Theie is some difference between the. two, but they niu much alike in opportunity is Gill saw It. He pursued his tusks with an equipment fnr superior to his university training nnd his travels In America, Europe and tho Oticnt, Service was his forte, but he didn't go nt it with a pair of "specs" and n tape measure: he lived It. His people knew It was n man us well as a minister who had come to live among them. Ho worked on, nnd frequently when lie had a month's vacation he coached varsity football teams at a money payment for the four weeks that would put a minister's yearly salary to shame, and did. One of Ills first Jobs was making n com munity out of an undeniably backward aggie gallon of houses and Inhabitants in New Eng land. The place had been without a chinch for twenty years when Gill went to it. One day, as he approached a house on a seldom traveled road, ft young barefooted glil, with tattered dress and flying unkempt hair, ran from the littered yard into the house. Through the open door her shrill voice readied him: "Here comes the minister." And a. chorus of obscene profanity after that. The moral and social laxity of the "community" was flagrant. The tory of Gill's achieve ment In that town has been briefly told as follows: "Disbelief in the existence of good ness appeared to be common, public' dis approval of Indecency was timid or lacking, and religion was In general dlstepute. Not only was there no day of worship, but also no day of rest. Life was mean, hard, small, selfish and covetous. Lund belonging to the town was openly pillaged by the public olllcers who held It In trust; real estate values were low; and among the respectable families there was a general deslie to sell property and move away. their Good In the Dad Town Thon a church was organized. The change which followed was swift, striking, thorough and enduring. The public property of tho town, once a bourco of graft and demoraliza tion, became a public asset. The value of real estate Increased beyond all proportion to the general rise of land values elsewhere. In the decade and a half which has elapsed since the church began its work, boys and girls pf a new type have been brought up. The reputation of the village has been changed from bad to good, public order has greatly improved; and the growth of the place as a summer resort has begun. It is fair to say that (he establishment of the church under Mr. GUI began a new era in the history of the town Around this, strong personality traditions it i : Mi zmwmv "IT MATTERS NOT ISS DEY RIPE; :Milii 'Sri''.'1 .wJrtM-V, ,,3 'jU :;- have grown up. They may grow up about a country minister as well ns about a captain of lliinnce. Gill operated a tract of forest land for the benefit of the tteastiry of one of hla churches, employing up-to-datp sclentlllo. methods. According to the story, the foreman of his gang of woodsmen disputed Gilt's insti no tions nnd waxed vvrnthy about It. "If 'tvvan't for y'r cloth I'd wlpo tho ground with you. you " "Never mind tho cloth," said Olll nnd waded In. The back woodsman got the licking of his life and s-oon aftet'vvaids Joined the church. Gill sny.s this Is a fable. All light, but there's lots of truth in fables. Lessons From Football Fifteen years In tho service of the country church taught GUI many things about what most of us call la a ha.v sort of way "the country life problem." His lemark that the reason vvhy fanners can't coopeiate is that they never learned to play when they weie boys has been fiequently quoted. Perhaps his experience of tho football Held contained a lesson or two In practical sociology. But Gill doesn't believe that farmers i rally can not cooperate. They have cooperated in little, neighborly wnys since the beginning of time, but orgnnii-ed co operation is tho thing. Ho believes, moreover, that the country I'liurch ptobleni Is at bottom an economic problem. Several years ago Gill leslgned his pastorate and began making caieful surveys of huge rural territories with reference to industries, institutions, character and changes of popu lation, and so on, tho data accumulated cover ing a period of several decades. It was the first thorough-going investigation ever mode of tho economic and social conditions of typical rural territories with reference to the church. Ho went to Europe to make n special study of rural organizations in Eng lnnd, Ireland and on the Continent. Today ho Is ono of tho leading "rmal lifers" of America. It all came nbout tluough his ie spect for opportunity, spelled with a little "o." As secretary of tho Ohio Rtitnl Life Asso ciation nnd of the Pmcliot Country Church Commission and ofllcer of similar organiza tions he is busy enough. His main Job is Just getting down to brass tncks on tho important question of where country life Is really at. It Isn't a muck-raking business; it's construc tive. It's a tnsk for nn optimist and social en gineer, nnd that's GUI. He's one of tho cap tains of jural progress, doing his part on the line, helping the team to score. JAPANESE AT THEIR GAMES Japanese flower arrangement has made an ilmpiesi on American Ideas and taste, and many other things Japanese have proved of great Intel est to our Western world. Some of these are Intetestlng Just because they ate Japanese. (James, for Instance. One of tbe most popular games among Jap anese children is otedama, played with small cloth bugs tilled with red beans. The number of bags used Is seven or ten. The game con- i slsts in throwing the bags Into the air, ono after another in quick succession, trying to i-atch them befoie they leach the ground. The idea Is to keep all tho bags in motion Another popular game is ishikerl, or stone kicking Chalk lines are drawn on the street, making squuies. In which pebbles are placed The game is to bop fiom one square to another on one foot, kicking the peb' .os. In tbe game of mlmlhlkl. or ear-pulling, two boys sit opposite each other with loops in their hands und to to lasso an ear of the opponent. Another bos' game is kubllilkl, or head.pulllng. Two bojs aie tied together by the neck und then they tiy to pull each other about, the one yielding being defeated. In ltlramekkura sides are chosen. Each side btares at the other, and the side nope the members of which laugh Is the winner. Even to show the teeth Is to lose. I'deoshl is a game wherein two boys sit op posite and push, hand against hand, until one yields In yublzumo, or finger wrestling-, two bos match finger against finger, the fingers of the opposing hands being locked together, thumbs free. The fingers are pressed against each other until one boy's hand is pressed back or down. Ikusa-gokko is a war game in which the f youngsteis dress in paper uniforms, with swords anu KnapsacKs, ami pataae. NATIONAL POINT OP VIEW Publicity Is a good thing in many ways, but whether It pays to tell the entire world what a nation Is doing in the way of military prepared ness and advancement is a question. -Rochester Post-Express. The commercial spirit is good In Its way; the spirit of unselfish service is better, but some thing of the military sentiment will always be needed to act as a leaven against Philistinism. Birmingham Age-Herald, The great mass of the American people are opposed to war with any foreign Power lightly undertaken. While they desire to be reasonably prepared for defense In case of attack by a for eign foe, they will not easily condone any mis take on the part of men In high places that brings us near to war, nor forgive the unneces sary sacrifice of thousands of precious American lives by politics In the name of national defense. JJurllc-toa Free J?rcs. m&am&mffi&m yic-Tr-. mmmm&m u. svtVli '' AftKjviK..SHB 11'. .,,nf ' - . ' -J -jjjuauirfttas I:, ', -. . . '.! i .-,-" 'i ! GET 'EM 1 $ 24&'2TiwWAl'v5orTstrTSVfi if j4psps3rr or mv3fimfflspi ii AimWwA fii? b''W ':imm, n J'Wart.rtl cs !l . ' 1 .orfjrfciif4i J inm-J&fflv. m "w 'iTWMrfs' : hi M,. Wl? "J. V?i f t'S .-- 'rj;rV-- ''.'! yUXf&f Ufa I i What Do You IW? Otcrics of general interest will be aniareJ in this column. Ten Questions, the aiitcm to which every well-informed person )mi know, arc asked dally, ' QUIZ 1. Sewn illspiiti lira speak of "the faieoitlae fur Vcrilun which (Jrrimin strategist ban riiterlnliiril since 11(3." Kxplaln tie if-i-renre. . Wli Is ttrrrrliir.t I, line, of the Interior Di liurdnriit. Ineligible In the I'resldac;! 3. About v. Suit Is the iiiiniuil revenue ol thi city or I'liiluilrlplibi? 4. What Is tbo Hrrtintfrr. ce of the eirtb? ft. V hut in the term for which a .lustbe of tbi ('nlted Miites -Miprcm Court Ii ij pointed? 41. Is I'nlm lleacti on the west or (he emt colli oT Florida'.' ?. Who U l.t-mtii-t V.. (Itilgg'.' s. V ho Ih Lieutenant (.oiernnr of rtnujrl-, v until? ft. Im Mnnltii north or soudi of New Orlrioi? III. Who mis Cleirluiiil's Spcreturj of Stale dat ing the V enr7Udim controversy? Answers to Saturday's Quiz I. VIlsHourl. '!. No. a. Vlrglnlii. I. It stretches rust nml wrsl, ( nmprlMii tki ren(rnl pnrdnu of (iermnny. MoA( ! oilier Mutes nre south of Us wiitem half. .-. Composer of music, conductor. Horn 1IM In Bohemia. Hied Hill In Vienna. Coo. ducted opera und concerts In (he United Mates, li. Lisbon. 7. Toulon. H. Sir John !). No. 10. Martin fi. ltiirniiril. Hrumhaugh. Sir John Tcnniel Editor of "What Do You Know" Is Sir Jolm Teunlel, the famous English caitoonlst, still , alive? ART SCHQOb. No. He died in London on February :6, 1911. , Kindness to the Living Editor of "What Do You Know" Can jou help me find tbo poem in which these lines ap pear: Oh friends, I pray tonight. Keep not your kisses for my cold dead brow, The way is lonely, let me feci them now. a k. u Will some reader come to the assistance of i a. k. u? I Mixed on History Editor of "What Do You Know" I heard street orator say the other day that the Klni England Is a dhect descendant of Queen Elli' both. I always undct stood that Queen ElliaMW never married. I. L. w- You are right. She had no children. The, throne passed to James of Scotland ' "By the' Saskatchewan" Edflor of "What Do You Kno w"Will jrrt kindly publish the song, -uy mo !' - -from "The Pink Lady." and oblige greatly A RKADEH. ... w ,, .nr llan whtCB Here is ine song, oy u. i n. nw' mfs is printed by special permission " - Ushers: By the banks of the Seine, With girls so beautiful, t It gives one pain to remain, Quite dutiful. And yet I've sworn by stars above j Throughout my life to reserve my love j For a girl by the Saskatchewan, , t For a girl by the Saskatchewan. . But the girls by the Seine ;! All come canoodling; They're bold and vain, With a taste of snoodllng, . .,.. Their lips are red, and their eyes areDfig-ni. i And they've got a style that removes from sil' A girl by the Saskatchewan, Yes, a girl by the Saskatchewan. , Refrain. Flow, river, flow, down to the sea; Bright sea, brings my loved one home to w tmi. a.,,,- n tni. I'm trying hard to n- But hear me say it's a very long, long wy , From the banks of the Seine for a girl to g : stay By the banks of the Saskatchewan. When you live by the Seine, If you refrain from enjoying, fM Liune jawiuiiy, The sweet, gay life In a gay. sweet ay. And save your love tilt you're old ana era For a girl by the Saskatchewan, For a girl on the Saskatchewan. On the banks of the Seine There's love awaiting you. To quell the pain That's exasperating you; So skip with Joy as you laugh. Ha. lis And wire a quick, little, cool Ta, ts! To the girl on the Saskatchewan, To the girl on the Saskatchewan. Refrain. Come, faithful one come stray with nie, This Is springtime up )n gay ra'f; you neea a resi roiu jum .- , 1(n Kor hear me say It's a very wrong, r j When you live on ine ocu t tbe day, For girl on the Saskatchewan. (CwirUfct, XW, pj CJbWU JJ.W" ,.U.IJ.'AI IHIUasn.iu.Jjfa