BSSSSiTw 'wiiwM'i.'iWfwwpwwgwww EVENING LEPQ13R PHILADELPHIA. MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1916. 10 PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY . Cmua H. K. CURTIS, rMarr-BXT. Oiarlea H. twllntfon, Vl .TrMld-git : JjAn C. ""tin, jretarr and Treaaurerj PMlIp 8. Collins, John B Wllimmg, UlrcciPrn. WTlT-l-rtTlTAT. nnjLTiri! CTnr II. K. Ccmn, ChMrmtn . K. TV1IAL.KX . ... , editor JtOITN C lltAIvrrN'.m....Oensrtt.l Buelncaa Manager Pnbliahed dally a-t Ptratti LiDor nolldlne. Independence, Square, Philadelphia. tran C"mitf... .Broad nd Chetnut Streets '.itto COT 4nK,Viiin Towe? Saw YoK .,..-.. .206 "KlIS tiiUMIn s I)aritoiT4ftfc..i i... ..,.,& ,.820 Ford liuiiuing Ccrcioo ,.,...,,.1202 XrfuuM Building . NEWS BUREAUS! ViistrnToa Bomab.. .. Jlm u "Jnj Siblm IlraBAU.i ..80 FrlMrlchalraaaj. LoNcoir Bcamo... .... ....... Marconi House. Strand Fixia BBMiu ....3a Run Louis lo ClranJ SUBSCRIPTION TERMS By carrier, alT rent per week. By mill, pompald MUia of Philadelphia, except where foreign pottage it required, one month, twenty-nve renta i one ear. three dollar. JU1 mall ubrlptlona payable, In cdrame. NoTtCB Subscriber -wishing addreas changed must It old as well aa new address. ZIU 1600 WAtNUT KEYSTO.VE. MAIS 3000 CT JLtirat all rommuiilcdltoiM to JJ"'"tf Jytioer, ln&etnlence Square, Fhuadcwnla. sntcizd at tub piunDKi.niiA rosMriicn ab secosd- CLA9 Mill. HATTER. HB AVERAGE NET PAID DAILT CIHCULA HON OP THE EVENING tEOOI FOR FEBRUARY WAS 101.114 PHILADELPHIA. MONDAY. APIltL i, 1916. Qbd sendeth and giveth both mouth and the I meat. Thomas Timer. BEWARE THE TAX BOGEY! Transit obstrnctlonlata are trying to con- 1 srlnee the public that the Tnylor plan menus hither taxes. Had' the elty built It' n traction lines In the beginning a handsome revenue and no debt wonld Imre reniiltril. I The Taylor plan means the retention b ' tbe people of some part nf the Milne of ,' their franchises. It mill add not rrnt of , permanent debt to the. city, anil will eientu- l ally put money nnnnnlly Into the trrnstir. i The Twining plan, mi tbe contrary , would j fasten a debt on the city for the lienetlt 1 of the P. IX. T. DIRECTOR WEBSTER has announced the , leasing of municipal pier number 15 to j Hie Pennsylvania Railroad nt a yearly rental 0f $20,000. The city does not own an Inch of wharf or ' fculkhead that Is not producing revenue. Dlroctor "Webster Is, In fact, refusing long- rm leases, on the ground that even better tlrma for tho city aro virtually certain. Yet , (already tho annual gross rental paid the city fJa $181,922, and tho advantages accruing to jjiftlie city from tho municipal pier facilities vtued for tho handling of business Is Incal- " (salable). As each port Improvement yields a revenue ftsd becomes self-supporting, tho cost Is de (rfucted from the city debt and is no longer Uharged against borrowing capacity. Tho point is this: T'o havo in the municipal ltr system an example of tho sort of public utility -which supports itself, for the construc tion of which the city's credit Is merely bor- ' rowed, a utility which is obtained without any ' Borden whatever upon the taxpayers. New Orleans, for instance, has one of the kBt pier systems in the nation, built under JtBo direction of a. Port Commission. Tho sys tem has not cost New Orleans one dollar, we fcure informed. It has been self-sustaining from l&e beginning. the municipal gas works here, badly man- feged though they were preceding the lease to tho U. G. I., did not, in fact, cost tho tax 'iyers of Philadelphia pno nickel, and today the) city. In addition to some free lighting. Is leceivlng ono-flfth all the money paid for gas Jiy citizens. There Is a revenue of almost two millions .fcnnually which comes to the city treasury faierely because the city in the distant past lent its credit to secure a municipal gas upply. THE construction of the Taylor system of rapid transit does not, as tho obstruction ists argue, contemplate the Imposition on tax- Jiayers of a vast debt. The Taylor plan, on the contrary, proposes, fry the use of tho city's credit, to return to 'the people thomselves a part of the enormous value of traction franchises. Heretofore such franchises have been grabbed by private cap ital nxJ have been utilized for the enrichment ttof tdlviduals. A list of 200,000 names is a marketable bmmodlty, B.rjng 200,000 people together, it on a pralrio site, and instantly new falues are created. Land mounts in cost. lie grant of the right to furnish thebe 200.000 ' jjeoplo with light becomes a franchise of great worth. The privilege of furnishing them with their dally transportation becomes a most valuable franchise. The accumulation of franchises under which the P. R. T.-operates in this city repre ents a right to serve, say, a population of half the present population of the city. The growth n the number of Inhabitants has, In effect, created new franchisee, for the exist ing system Is overtaxed and the right to serve ,the surplus becomes a new right, valuable 3iow and of extreme potential value. Tho Taylor system proposes that, Instead K-i " C tmrning thesS new franchises over to a private corporation to make what It can out f them, the city shall lend Its credit for construction purposes, lease tjie system, us Jt does Its piers, under reasonable conditions, end receive Itself some part of the profits resulting, both In cash and n the form of superior service to the public. 2 Taylor plan Is based on a most care- tftll census of riders. The amount of travel ' section of the city was determined, at a hours of the day, and the minimum re for each of the proposed lines was kand conservatively determined. that wuld pay from tho begin- k-oked to the lines that will not ivldend producers, In ordr that kve eysitem might be QbUaed strain- .taxpayer Mr, TajIorhea persuaded tho Legislature and people of the State to permit a less burdensome method of amortisation, and ho provided that Interest during the period of construction and ono year thereafter should bo capitalized, thus assur ing no tax, whojever on cllbens until tho new system had been given nn opportunity to provo its earning capacity. Ho persuaded the State, moreover, to sub sldlzo this public utility to the oxtont of al most $1,000,000 annually in tho foun of a personnl property tax, formerly paid to the State. He piovldetl, In tho tentative ngi cement entered Into with the 1'lilladclphln Rapid Transit Company, for tho remission of tho Hundreds of thousands of dollars now being pnld by citizens in tho form of exchange tickets. In these two items alono ho piovtded for about halt of till tho charges that could pos sibly fall on taxpayers ns a tcstill of tho llow transit system, oven it tho system lhl not cam ono penny, but teittnlncd idle niul un productive. Tliti taken no account of tho enhancement In real estate vnluoi which h.ivo Invariably followed better transit facilities, both hero ami olsowhere; nn enhancement likely lo be to gloat that tho rovunuo to tho city there from would In nil probability bo suftlflont not only to meet any possible ospoiiBO resulting from transit Improvements, but actually also lo yield n largo wurplus In addition. Tills is not n d renin, tt Is a conclusion found to bo true In tho experience of thin unit other cities. Tho Taylor system may ho likened to a great factory, complete In all of Its details, turning out a completed product mid earning a profit thereon. The stunted Twining plan may ho likoned to a half-built factory, which but half com pletes Its pioduct, wherefore it can bo operated only at n dead loss. TUU Finance Committee can decide In favor of saddling tills town with n tjreat debt by sanutionlng inakc-bellevo rapid tran sit In tho form of the Twining plan. It can, on tho other hand, provide the community with a great public utility and necessity and make thin In fact nn Imperial city, without tho addition ot ono single dollar to the permanent debt of tho municipality, by standing straightforwardly for tho Taylor plan, despite any ulterior Influences which may bo brought to bear. Let no taxpayer bo deluded Into thinking that the Taylor plan will penallzo him. That Is tho ono lino of nttnek on which tho ob structionists havo massed their adjectives. It is a trap In which only tho unwary will bo caught. Was William Barnes lunching alone? A war correspondent speaks of tho "un equivocal emptiness" of vast battlefields. A good word, but what does It mean? Shells? President "Wilson's advice not to bollovo all tho reports from tho border Is unnecessary It would bo impossible to reconcilo nil of them. Senator Martfno is not to get tho Democratic nomination without a fight, and he will not have "Woodrow "Wilson to holp him this time. An unkind critic of our military methods suggests that, In speaking of General Persh ing's punitive expedition, tho accent be placed on tho "puny." When Insurance Commissioner Johnson was asked to insure the election ot Brumbaugh delegates ho decided that was not part of his job and got out. Twenty young Germantown society women are learning how to cook as part of their campaign for preparedness. It is not neces sary to ask for what they aro preparing. Next week will be schoolmen's week nt the University, when the teachers of the Com monwealth will come to Philadelphia to learn how well wo do things here. Perhaps they can teach us something also. Tho President expects to bo too busy this summer to spend much time in the Long Branch mansion that he rented. His lease on tho Executive Mansion will run out in less than u year, and ho Is wondering whether his landlord will consent to renew it. The Governor and the president of the United Mine "Workers of America talked to the unthraclte miners on Saturday from the same platforms In Scranton and "Wllkes-Uarre. Mr. White told the miners that the eight-hour day, which they are asking, will be granted in the-near future, and Mr. Brumbaugh, who was Introduced as a "friend of tho workingman," bald that he expected the men to obey the law and to keep the peace. The meetings were important because they occurred on the day when tho agreement between tho miners and the operators expires. Negotiations are still In progress for the drafting of a new agree ment. Mr. White's opinion seems to be that an understanding will be reached without a strike, and that it will Include a new wago scale and a shorter working day, if not'Imme. dlate recognition of the union. Every anthra cite user In tho country is hoping that both parties to the controversy will realize their obligations and keep the mines running, even If they cannot come to an agreement Imme diately. The guarantors of the Philadelphia Or chestra will be asked this year to pay the full amount of their guarantee, with the under standing that 70 per cent, of that sum will make up the deficit of the Orchestra. The extra 30 per cent., it Is understood, will go toward the formation of a permanent endow ment, a system of financing far superior to that pf the jenewed subscription each year. The Orehastra Is one of a very few institu tions -which are "good business" even when they run to a deficit each year, because they powees a good will and a power for progress which cannot be measured In money. The Ideal endowment, if the Orchestra. la to be a city Institution, would be one made by a -vast number of subscribers, more perhaps than could hear all the concerts, given during a year. In any case, whatever tbe form, , the Orchestra should feel itself confident of sup port from year to year. And this Is a notably good time for a bsjinnme because Ue Orchetsi tra lias eminently proved Its wortb i the pasf Tom Daly's Column LOVELY MAltY rtXXBnTY Sure, I used to wonder tchu. In Oils parish of the Trinity, So few ftoucrs ever try To rise up and nrccl the eye, Mary Flnncrty. tint I look upon pour face And the reason there 1 fined J . ' There's not icon o' them uotiM rfafc ' To attempt to be so fain ! They'd took faded to he tiiaU ' - Maiy l'lnnertv. . Sure, 1 used to iiondcr why, , tn this parish of ihc TftmiV A'e'cr r sonohtrd ulves a cry To xlcUuhl the passerby, Mary rinncrly, lint the day ! heard your visits, 1'aUh, I knew they had no chelcS v Hut be still or chirp 'n firttt?. l'or you'd make them seem tlka ctvWSi And yourself not have to try, Mary Pinneriy- Suit, t used 10 wonder why, tn this parish tit the THnttV, Kttfft n rfiiM tittir spicads on high In the rrpton of the sky, Mary l'lnnertv. Is there snmetlilnu here thtlt'a mmte X'rry lira it n't blue to fadef In Ihrrr something stilt more tirlyht To an anient lover's slahtif tirhl the answer's In yonr rye, .lffi I'lnnerly, An nnniii iiiou.i rorrospondont onus l Rival length "what tln IrMi have over done." Well, not much anonymous cor respondence, for one thing. MIt. ADAM pritAKPFBIl, of Mi l'a.. sold n Iioifo two years n leetWood. ntjo nnd there's SB0 of tho price still unpaid. Recently Mr. hVhaeffer wrote and reminded tho do llnuurm. Here's the reply: Stony Run, .Tan. m. id HI fiear Sir that Mill $f.O yet; take mure reson. At lfnst you Kce t have Know machine trr make money. 1 think you will mnkp a man tl.v. Have jou Unnw money down there, the wnv oti ask with Wright Itig. 1 unit turn Hie World for one ImrFP. Osvllle Snyder. .Musical Trinlcls ".Musi of them Itnuck-turns.) N Tills Leo Stokowskl 'S ti muslcnl centaur. Some say lie's a liluffskl, This Leo Stokowskl. Some can't got euoiighskl And invo of their "mentor." This Loo Stokowskl "S a musical centte. RL1X. The Anagram Contest SFC1I ns they are. here aro the host wo iinvo to offer this morning: SAY, DR., STICK PAT. Yelsow. IDEAL TOWN MINGLE WAR. J. J. M. And the answer to Hugh Morr's in Satur day's issue: A soft answer turneth nvny wrath. Sir Wo respectfully nomlnnto tho late, but nono too lamented, month rf March to bo tho champion zoological month.' Why? Well, there's the March Hon, f'rliiMnnco, which calls to mind, by way ot contrast, the spring lamb; then wo meet the usual bull from tho spring training camps in regard to old charley-horse; and, besides, such doggone weather gets our goat. J. H. D. A SHARP-EYED contrib. who has been fol lowing tho Ballet Russe, noticed this im print In flno type on tho posters and other advertising paper or that aggregation of won derful Russian artists: Berlin Photo-Ensravlns Co. A QUERY Why ihould wc call the women "dear" 2ar speak of men that way? Most men have got their price, tec hear, Yet brides are given away. A. GROUCH. to nn soi.n at rmvATK sai.i: that i:i.i:ri.NT tuki:i:-stoixy Rrick House With the lot of ground thereto belonging, situate at the southwest corner of Chestnut and 6th btreets. The lot consists In breadth on Chestnut street GO feet and in depth on 6th street 181 feet to Sansom's Row on the back end of this lot there nio a largo Ice House and a convenient Coach House, with stables thereto adjoining all In com pleat order for terms apply to Joshua B. Bond, on the premises. The only interest in this ad from Tho Gazette of tho United States nnd Daily Adver tiser of Juno 24, 1801, is that it has to do with what is now "Home, S. Homo," to us. A "READER of the column" writes to us: "Can you use tills? It's original;" and ho hands us the more or less famous "valve handle wheeze." We've been watching for it. No colyum can bo said to bo quito established until that thing lias arrived. So wo thank this "reader of the colyum" for putting us on tho map. The Little Huhaiyat I I sent my laundry through th" invisible With foolish hopes that nil would turn out well; nut. by and by, my shirts returned to me Glazed, buttonless and saw-edged, like a shell. II Laugh well at him who rules of conduct emotes, You'ie but a speck that In the mill-race floats; Eat. drink and live as carelessly as Pan And pay your bills with promlsboiy notes. Ill Ttyere was the door to which I found no key; There was a ell through which I might not bee; The doctor's high-down verbiage and fee Both, equally, beyond my purse and me. IV Think if faint hope still in jour breast endures, How, won by gold or lovers' fond allures. Cook after cook, with rope around her trunk. Adopted, and forsook, my house and yours. V Some grim, btone lions crouch in Trafalgar, That hear nor shouts nor horn of motorcar, But when th alarm clock of our girl goes off Than hers their ears far more responsive arc. VI Oh, find for me that vanished shape once seen. That mustache cup, with cunning shield be tween The tea and tender foliage of him Whose bushy lip caressed its well-glazed sheen. A. A. DYSPEPSIA Is a terrible thing. Every so often one ot our contribs, gets it. Then he takes his pen and writes: "Here's a chance for you to start a 'move ment.' Your sporting writers are 'staging everything boat races, ball games, ptlze fights for the love o' Mike, get 'em to use some other word! "Also somebody is 'the greatest something or other in th game today,' today! today!! to day! I ! Of course if he is the greatest It's todny. Please slip 'em the hint to can t,he 'tislay.' "And, further, they ariJ having audiences nowaiiajs wbwe spectators used tu grow. Maybe audiences at movipa, track meets, bil liard gaiu&t and well may be uu fait, but I i doubt lt.M 1 - J0mm i " F' WB i irate Mat '0Ww4. a I j AN EXCURSION IN REALM OP HOWLERS A Miscellany of tho Ludicrously j Erroneous, Typographical, Lit- ; entry and Legal The Uncon ciousness of Humor j i THE other day q vtro talking about typo empirical errors ami hadn't half Unltfltcri with Unit subject when wo hml to quit. Wu didn't mention the fnct that Ada Crohan be came Ada Rohan through n misprint on n program, nnd wo never .said a wind about the "i;." of "U. S. Grant." IllranrSlmpson Ginut went to Wc.it Point, nnd one of tho tilings they did thefo was to put his ntimo In type as "V. S. Giant." He left it that way. It seems, though part of tho world still suspects thnt ho was named originally for tho United Stntes. " Wo said something about tho way thu typos sometimes add emphasis to tho author's copy. Tho ndded emphasis may bu u llttlo too strong. In ono case It camo near causing war between Omaha nnd Lincoln. Conditions weic rlpo for such a consequence. Keen rlvnlry ousted between tho two towns, nnd especially between the Omaha wholesalers nnd tho wholesalers of Lincoln. Tho editor of tho Omaha Beo dipped his pen in viti i'ollc Ink and wrote. Ho was given to strong language, and this timo ho lot himself out. Ho ex ceeded Ills own speed limit. Ho roasted tho Lincoln wholesalers to a terra cotta tint. Hut It vns all done decently nnd in nulcr. Mild enough ias the title ho chose. "Those Lincoln Jobbers." Tho compositor mado It "Those Lincoln Robbers." Anything May Happen Anything may happen typographically. In ono Instance "typographical antiquities" fig ured as "typogiaphlcal ambiguities." "Days of tho leaguo" has appeared as "dogs of tho Seine" and tho Lord Chancellor of England has been referred to as tho "Lord chandler." "Theological investigations of tho motive power of heat" have been made, though tho original intention was "theoretical," and wo'vo lend of a doubtless interesting work called "Mattlebrnn's Universal Geography." In a sociological treatise It has been stated that man, alone nnd Isolated, would becomo "impatient nnd peevish," though tho author meant thnt said social animal in said circum stances would become "impotent nnd perish " A judge, It was onco asserted, examined a bill of exceptions nnd approved It because ho found It "urifnvorablo" to the truth. Too bad it wasn't "conformable." A plaintiff testified ns to tho "poets," evidently Ignoiing the facts in tho case. Typographical errors ate really a promising Held for tho psychologist. Some of them hap pen psychologically. Yes, there was once a printer man who got drunk and spent tho' night In the lockup. Next day he explained to a follow worker that he had been "Incar cerated." "Incarcerated," ho Insisted. He wouldn't have it tlmt he had been Jailed or anything like .that. "Incarcerated!" The vic tim of that emphatic tnlo was setting church notices, nnd when he camo to the Church of tho Incarnation of course he made It tho "Church of tho Incarceration." A near-typographical error was the com bined product of a publisher's Ingenious mind nnd tho public's psychological eyesight, Cat nach, from his olllce in Monmouth court, fiooded London with ballads, songs, broad sides and "last dying speeches." Every pub lic event he turned to the most profitable ac count, among other veritable gold mines be ing the trial of Queen Caroline, the Cato street conspiracy and the murder of Weare by Thur tell, the interest In which, when the excite ment that the mutderer'a execution had caused was on the wane, he revived by lssuipg a penny broa'dslde, headed "We are alive again," whtoh, being generally read "Weare alive again," caused the sheet fo sell like wildfire. Naturally when the people found how even though It had been through their own oversight people had been trapped, they were duly Indignant, venting their rancor on the broadside, which they dubbed a, "catch penny," a term which ever afterwaids stuck to the publications of the Monmouth Court Press, and even survives to the present day. Following Copy We cannot turn from the subject ot typo graphical howlers without reminding the reader of a story from Chicago. In the old daxs ot setting type by liand a newspaper compositor was standing by his case near a window some floors above the street. It was windy, as usual, and a sudden gust took pos session pf his copy, the printer man following in pursuit He was picked up. on the pave ment below and carried to the Hospital The newspaper next morning paid the highest "EXHIBIT A" tilbutc lo which a compositor is eligible. "Ho follov.ed copy," was the headline on tho story. Another Instance of following copy may bo given. A recent novel supplied u word per ploxlng to the lcxirogruphei. The story was laid In the twelfth cciittir ; nnd In a descrip tion nf n monastery there win) frequent men tion of u "oentinlone," which re.ideis pie minted to be mi unfamiliar f entitle of Norman sireh'tcclure. It was eventually discovered that the author, In "rending up" his pubject. had boon misled by n descilptlmi of certuln towers, of which the "eentiul one" was spesillcl. The printer hud omitted the npncu between the two words; unil the novelist had rushed to conclusions uimnthoilsod by history nnd tit t. Sometimes novelists perpetrate howlers thnt mo In unwise typoginphlc.il. Entirely without alibi. We have tnken great pleasure In pie Kontlng n number of examples, and now, with the uiil of tho Tninny, wo add n few nioie. Novel novelties they might bo culled: "lie swung n gloomy leg." "Her plea fell on dumb ears," "Their eyes clung together." "Ills arms wont round her like cnllpora." "lie became uwuie of u thick, muddy pain." "Ilcautlfut women had turned to gall on hlsj tongue." "The moon fell; ho saw it crash silently Into tho lake." ' "Dorsoy hung on her wouls as if dangling over a chasm." "Ho utood in n litter of shavings and bits of board with a kindling ce." Legal Lore Howlers aro of inlliiito vmlety, as we havo pointed out from timo to tlmo with illustra tions. Typographical, schoolboy, literary, sartorial, legal, legislative, ot cetera. Our neighbor, tho Satovepost, talks true talk 'as follows: "Our modest ancestors confessed their inability to find tho merits of tho cause, and so relegated tho whole nlfalr to tho in tervention ot supernatural ugonclcs. Tho main dlffoience Is that wo nro less modest. Instead of tho ordeal of battlo or tho old key-aud-Illblo test or the 'slovewltch,' wo have tho defendant play a gamo of trlp-thc-coui t. If ho can catch tho Jtulgd putting nn i-dot over nn o he wins, and is pronounced Innocent." A Judge finds that an indictment for "larcey" Is bad no such crime is known to tho laws of his State, and another finds that tin indictment for the minder of Ah Fong is likewise invalid becauso It contains no allegation that Ah Fong is a human being. The .Supreme Court of Missouri decluies that "Instantly" will not do for "then and there," and the Supremo Court of Califor nia finds thnt u verdict ot "gully" Is all right, but a verdict of "gulty" is all wrong. So It goes, with many howlerous ramifications. The "law's delays" have a striking illustration in tho suit over tho construction of tho battle ship Massachusetts. Tho suit is said to havo been Instituted by tho builders more tlian twonty years ago; it lias just como befoto tho United States Supreme Court. Menn'whlle, tho ship has been retired from service. THE WORDS OF PAUL To the Kdltor of tfbenhw .edoeiv Sir a short while ago the Rev. William Sunday was charged by somo one with being a grnfter. To this Mr. Sunday lepllcd; "The man who said this should have his photo graph taken. If I meet hlni I will beat him eo that even his own mother would not recognize him." Evangelist Nicholbon, of Dai by! is be coming a Mr. Sunday No. 2. In contrast with prizo ring utterances notice the words of Paul, a genius, a leader of men and a thorough gentleman: "Being reviled, we bless; being per secuted, we endure; being defamed, wo en treat." It would be Impossible to think of a Spurgeon, a Bishop Simpson, a Phillips Urooks replying to a falso charge with the clenched fist, on tho platform where Christ is preached, in the presence ot calm-minded men, some ot whom deny the deity of the Saviour. Such re marks will be bewildering to heathen people who live In our country and to our Hebrew fellow citizens, who will mistakenly think that these words of prominent Christian leaders partake of the Bplrlt of Christianity Those evangelists have done vast good in reaching men and lift ing up the morals of the community, but they ought not to cultivate bitterness of spirit. In the words of the New Testament, they must "put on a heart of compassion, kindness, lowli ness, meekness, long suffering." O. P. CACHES. Haddonfield, N. J.. March 30. WHERE THE DANGER IS "Our danger (s internal," says Fenry Hord, the well-knqwn voyager. That would teem to fix It In the general neighborhood of the tpark plug. Cleveland Plain Dealer. FIVE YEARS PLUS , . The term of five years required for- the building of a navy does not include the time which may be demanded for preliminary . dls oussion. Washington Star. COLONIALS AT THE FRONT When one reada that British Columbia hi tending more men to the war than any othei similar division ot the British Empire one real ize what splendid soldiers the colonials must be. for those are no weaklings woo have sought Out tue nocl"Wt:3iw u .v Lv.iu-. ." At (a said that in one recent -moi th 1300 men came UP tee jrraaer Hivtt mi jw.ma uu i.j " Carlbu4 iron ana jaiaea a nuuii. -oyru Republican I .,-, -...,.. .,..- . . ' What Do You Know? Qurrlcv of general interest will be ansiccrcd In thli column. Ten questions, the answers to trhlch every well-informed person should A-noir, flic asked daily. QUIZ 1, lliiu innio teeth urr there In the nnrninl iiilnlt? 2, Hbo nnnbl Hiirrreil In the HnnlUh throne If mine nf Klnir (lerRC hchii atirilied him? :i, tVluit rlt) In the. United Stntes uiih fourth In point of population by the last teimiiM? I, VWint Is the luiiilshincnl for plrnry nnd In Albeit rnnrlH uaiild piracy 'iii.es be tried In thin 4'iuntr,? .1. IVImt members or the United Hlntes hennte lime Indian blond In their olnx'.' fi. Wlm t N the i-hlcf aoiirre of rcienue of the rlty if I'lilbuli'liililit nnd nt ulml rate Is It lei led'.' 7. Vt hn Is .1 nil il I". White? .1. In ubat Slates Is capital punishment inflicted b slimitiliK !l. Wlm! Is the rliumlrul rnmpiisltlnii of u titer? Id. With ulint Uurnpeiin nation ur nations Inn the United stales lieen at war, beside IhiKlanil, and when? Answers to Saturday's Quiz . iilti'her with the Athletics. 1 Itlrbard Iturliiiicr. I!ll or loin. Ulnt'imiH. Mnrlbu Unniulinrsnii I'lntcy. The Muiui l.lsa (I. a (iluconila) nf l.cunnrdo da Vine. Yes, Vlrtiiully none nl present, II Is nn outlet from the H.iItU-, hut its niirthrrn limit la dominated bv neutral country. .Nn. lie Is called Ton no iir Kulrl. "Mlliiidn' Is iinellciil mill Is used only. by fnrelprneraj Udivln VrllnKtnn Itnblnsnn. j lie .iiassaciuiseiis, .sciv i urn, irKimnj iiui nun loiMi limn Mtiie-nuir inns pe: mlttlni; the iidnplliin nf this plan. Unniailublc Mutter h'ditor nf --H'm Do I'oii Knoie " Will yoi Kindly tell me through your column If there Is t postal law that would punish one for i-uIIiiikI tome one else a "darn stingy nut" thiough thej malls".' Ih there any law In tact thnt g i n-ntl wlint shall be said in letters just mu tin v are noil used to defraud? ' J According to the postal regulations postal cnrd.i me uniiiiiilalile If they bear delineation."! epithets, terms or language of nil indecent lewil.j hiscliiirus, obscene, llnelous, scurrilous denuna-, tory or tlueatenliig diameter calculated by thrj terms or manner or style of display and oiiva ouslj intended tn letlcct injurlousli upon till character or conduct of another. Dunning ipostal Cutds ate included in tho prohibition I "Annabel Lee" Kdltor of "H'VifiJ Do Voi Knoie "--Will yoil kindly publish the poem called "Annabel Lce.'J In looking over tho Hvbni.vo I.imaEii, I fount the last stanza of the poem, and am desirous ot haWng tho entire poem. A 11. It was many and many a year ago, In a kingdom by tho sea. That a maiden there lUed whom you may knonl By tho name of Annabel Lee: And tills maiden she lived with no other thought J Than to lovo and bo loved by me I was a child and she was a child, In this kingdom by the sea: But we loved Willi a love that was more than lovo 1 and my Annabel Lee; With a loe that the winged seraphs of heaven Coveted her ana me. And tills was the reason that, long ago, In this kingdom by the sea. A wind blew out of a cloud, chilling My beautiful Annabel Lee; So that her highborn kinsman came And bore her away from me, To bhut her up In a sepulchre In this kincdom by the sea. The angels not half so happy in heaven, Went envying her and me yes! that was the reason (as all men know, In this kingdom by the sea) That the wind camo out of the cloud by night, Chilling and killing my Annabel Lee. But our Jove it was stronger by far than the love Of ttuvse -ho were older than we Of many far wiser than we And neither the uugeis in heaven above, Nor the demons down under the sea, Can ever dissever my soul from the soul Of the beautiful Annabel Lee: For the moon never beams, without bringing me dreams Of the beautiful Annabel Lee; And the, stars never rise, but I feel the-brlght eyes Of the beautiful Annabel Lee; And so, all the nlght-tlde, I He down by the side Of my darling my darling my life and my bride, In the bepulchre there by the sea, In her tomb by the sounding sea. Horac) Greeley, Forest Lover Editor of "What Do You Know" Replying to your Inquirer who asked about quotation con cerning forests, I cull the following from my scrapbook. The quotation Is ascribed there to Horace Greeley; "I have a hearty love of forests. They prolter gentle companionship to the thoughtful and rest to the overworked, fevered hrain. Our streams will be fuller and less capa cious, our gales less destructive, our climate more equable, when we shall have reclothed our rugged slopes ana rutgr ccaio wim irees. Timber grows yearly ecuccr aim uearer wueri it ought to DS uecoiniuK inuru pienuiui anu. cesslble. ana wouia. oe it we aovoiea io the land wmen we eaiurem m cultivate at an. wi mi Bather seeds anoj be boug I ft i season, A .1 y ? t