EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, MAY 1 , 1916. mil 1 1 i i i . : KUT tJ ? c f , K t I fr I" t 3 J 10 PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CYntJB H. K. CUP.T1B, PirarotsT. Charles It t,ilngtcm,VlcePrsldenti John C. Martin, Bwretary end Treasurer) Thlllp B. Collins, John a, Williams. Directors . EDtTOIUAt. BOAhDI .. Ctaos H K. Crnxis, Chairman. r. , ir. WHALEY.i i ......... ... i ......... . .editor JOHN C. MAItTIN.... ....General Business Manaicr Published dally at rustle I.toorn Building, Independence Square, Philadelphia. Lbom CtiTiUL, ,...,,,, Droad and Chestnut Streets Atmvtio Cut. ......... ... ....rreia.fnfon Rulldlnc gNw TonK.i i,,i.. ,.,,,.,, ,200 Metropolitan Tower FTnotT ......... . i.,,, ..,,,. ,. 82(1 Ford Building r. Loins, hmiii, ...i.409 atobe-Drmoerat BulMIng CmcAdO. .............. ...... .1202 Tribune Building NEWS BUBCAUS! TVAaniNOTos Btnmu. .Wrgs Building Naw York nenmu......,,,.., ..Ths Timei Building JlrrtMS Bcmiao. ..,(10 Frledrlchstrnsso Lo.ndon Borpao.... ...... .... Marconi House, Strand lUiua Bcieid... S Buo Louis le Grand SUBSCRIPTION TEP.MS By carrier, Mx cnt per week. By mall, postpaid cutslde ot.Phlladelphta, except where foreign postage a require, one month, twenty-five rental on year, three dollars. All mall subscriptions payable In advance. r'oi Subscribers wishing- address changed must Hive old as well a new address. BELL, aooo WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN i00 Ity Jf'dre alt communications to Evening Jjtdgtr, Independence Square, PMladt.pMa. ' ' iviMixn at ins rmtAtietpnu rosTorricn as erco"D- CABS HAIL MATTES. THE AVCnAOB NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA TION OV THE EVENINO LEDGER FOR KARCH WAS 110.121. rniLADELrniA, Monday, may i, ui. Angling Is somewhat like poetry men are to be torn so. Izaak Walton. STAND TOGETHER! F , Let the sections stand together nnd no f scheming- of tho politicians can beat the .transit loan, A FEW weeks ago Mayor Smith ordered certain changes In tho comprehensive transit plan, tho effect of which would havo been to waste millions of the taxpayers' money and deprive them of real rapid transit. At that tlmo the Mayor was eloquent in his declara tions that ho was a true friend of transit, and that tho wholo purposo of his remarkable proposal was really to benefit rather than harm tho city. It was a regular Bryan "God Bless You1' sort of situation, with tho Mayor and his friends ready to "bless" rapid transit out of existence. But tho people were not dumb enough to want that kind of blessing, having been prom-, lsed tho real thing, and they protested with such vigor that tho Mayor backtracked faster than ho ever progressed forward and straight way got into line. For that ho deserved praise and gladly wo accord It to him. Tho next best thing to a good Mayor Is a poor Mayor who can bo made to do a good thing provided ho Is pressed hard enough by tho public. But now tho epoch-making, comprehensive transit plan, the key to tho futuro greatness of tho city and tho supreme test of the com munity's fitness for intelligent progress, 13 before the people themselves. At last they have the affair In their own hands. Yet, wonderful to relate, they suddenly discover that among the factlonallsts the achievement of a rapid-transit system for Philadelphia is not half so Important as the temporary politi cal success of this or that ephemeral pigmy, who happens, goodness knows why, to be clothed in the raiment of office, or has hopes In that direction. And the reason, we are ' told, why factionalism must fight the loan is that the Mayor, who was to be Mayor of all the people. Is in fact nothing but one of the ,Vare office- boys, obsessed with the Idea that Philadelphia and all of Its' revenues are tho personal property of the Vares, to be used according to their direction for the greater glory and aggrandizement of pig-protectors end political voluptuaries. The Public Ledger charges and the Rec ord charges and the Inquirer charges and the Bulletin charges that the Mayor himself is the greatest menace to the success of the loans that exists. In fact, every newspa per in the city which speaks with any au thority, Including the North American, be lieves and has said that Philadelphia must have rapid transit as planned, and every news paper in the city, which has an opinion of its own and refuses to bootllck, not including the North American believes and has. said that while the 'Mayor pleads for the loans with the voice of Jacob, his actions reveal the hands of Esau, with a couple of knives In them. A political Mayor is a heavy burden for any cause to carry. We hold no brief for Mr, Smith, whose shameless conduct of his office in the inter ests of the Vara gang is an injection of malaria into government. But, on the other, hand, not less contemptible would be any other man or set of men who used the collar on the Mayor's neck as an excuse for them eelves to knife rapid transit and deliver the city in a stroltjacket to this selfsame Mayor and the traction Interests. lThe loan bill was drawn In such a way as to ti up the Smith Administration, The routes nre specifically designated, in their compre hensive relationship. Given the money, which he can spend but a part during his term of office, and the Mayor must stand by the Taylor -plan and by no other plan. He cannot deviate from It essentially. A favorable vote means a contractual obligation which neither Mayor nor Councils can vitally change. But let the transit loan bill be, defeated and the Mayor will at pace claim that the people are opposed to It, wherefore he will dump over board all of the magnificent work done by Mr Taylor, call for a new deal and expose the city ta the mercy of the traction Interests. " The way to put strength Into the Mayor's hands is to beat the loan. There is no reason to believe that McNlchol favors rapid, transit, in spite of Senator Pen rose, and Mr, Lane is, by Intimation, too strong an advocate of len-cen,t fares and VrbrfdV traction, dividends to be anything lgjLstreJghi enMBjf f public improvement .ilka, ,is. 'Uavu am bj jgff trt3m & csfe - 'tafia nit itiittUmt- t faction, each keenly alivo to the chanco of strangling transit. Mr. Lane mobilized his voters against the small loan last year nnd It was only In his stamping ground that any opposition of Importance do eloped. Ho will bo more activo this year. But wd nre going to have rapid transit no matter how tho Lilliputians rave and consplto. Thoy cannot block tho growth of this grent metropolis nnd deprive tho masses of a splen did, self-supporting public facility. They cannot do It, becauso they vllt In daylight nnd nro strong only In tho dark. This tlmo da) light bathes tho wholo trnnslt question, and that means popular approval. "VVo say, therefore, to tho pcoplo of Trank ford, and to tho people of South Philadelphia, and to thoso who live In Darby anil West Philadelphia, and to thoso along North Bro.id street, in Ocrmantown and Chestnut Hill, in Roxborough, Manayunk and tho Northwest, to tho people in tho great central sections, and to all othet citizens who have the wel fare of themselves and Philadelphia at heart: Transit li not a political question. Leaders who nth ho j oil to vote against transit seek to betray ou for selfish purposes. Tlic.v mlcjit better rlflo jour pockets. Avoid and Ignoro them. Orgnnlzo ourselves without political or factional tlhislon for this one fight, for this ono -vote, for this ono project. It is jours nnd jours only. Let no men, tiso jou as tools to client j ourselves. Or ganize, plcdgo ono another, in public Hirelings sontl jour messages of support, each section to tho other. Trumpet jour purpose. Bo enthusiastic, and tho llttlo fellows who nro whispering In secret of schemes to defeat tho loan will run to cover bo fast that jou will Imnglno an epidemic of jack rabbits has ar rived In town. Stand together and jou will win. If Congress woro determined to prevent the adoption of nny preparedness plans it could not bo going about it in a better way. Whoover planned tho caves that are to bo built on tho municipal playgrounds was a boy onco himself and has not forgotten It. Tho circus at Hunting Park avenue nnd 10th street will interest pcoplo who have been Indifferent to the ono that has been exhibiting in Penn Square slnco tho first Wednesday In January. Tho summer headquarters of tho Austro Hungarian Embassy will bo at Patchoguo, N. Y this summer. Tho German Ambassador, however, is dolaylng his summer plans till ho knows whether tho American climate will agree with him. "Profit sharing" is enjoyed by tho employes of 200 Ametlcan enterprises, but what does the National Civic Federation call it when the employes of 200,000 American enterprises get their weekly wages whether there is nny profit in the business or not? Harmony reigns again. Sweet concord purrs its blessing over Brumbaugh and Pen rose. Both are now morally certain that one, at least, is not a candidate for the Presi dency. And yet, strango paradox, sovcral Pennsylvanlans rather suspected as much bo foro either gentlemen spoke. Senator Lodgo and John Bassctt Mooro have been elected vice presidents of tho American Society of International Law, succeeding Mr. Brj'an and James B. Angell. Mr. Angell Is dead and Mr. Bryan well, when ho went to Washington to tell Congress what to do In tho German crisis ho discovered that he was not so live as he thought he was. That Germany can bo humble when it suits her purpose, and when several hundred thou sand men are under arms to compel her, can be learned from the official statement that Switzerland has received an abject apology for tho flight of a Geiman aviator over her soil. As yet It has not been discovered whether the aviator who has" been dismissed killed 115 Swiss men, women and children. Those German submarine commanders who had such difficulty in communicating with headquarters several months ago when "mis takes" were occurring seem to hae developed a new system of wigwagging their chiefs. Since tho ultimatum was sent by President Wilson not one doubtful ship has been sunk. Or perhaps the British have cleared the seas again, Just as they did last year? It is all right for the Joint Committee of the Bourse to urge the city to co-operate with it in attracting attention to the advantages of this port, but while the business men are waiting for the city to act they can do a great deal themselves by demanding that all water borne freight for them be shipped direct to Philadelphia and by doing all their water ship ping themselves from the piers on the Dela ware, They will have to do it anyway if the port is to grow. When the battleship Idaho is launched In Camden in June the ways will be clear for another big ship. Congress has not authorized the construction of any vessels to take its place In the shipyard. If the customary prac tice la followed, It will' take months to draw the plans for the new ships which it is hoped this Congress will authorize and more months to get bids and award the contracts. The navy will be stronger when the Idaho is fin ished; but this will not be until the middle of next year. The Mississippi and the California, vessels of the same type as the Idaho, are still on the ways, and there is no prospect of their completion till late in 1917. Nof the pressure of other news, but the lack of action at Verdun, has kept that name from the prat page o(,Amerlcan newspapers. The suspicion la growing that Verdun may soon be spoken of In the pat tense, Germany haa shot her thunderbolt and missed, the mark as surely as she missed t at the Marne. it is Jlkely that another wild attempt may be made on the impregnable heights which stand as faithful as Frenchmen. In the wide circle around the city. But after the first assault nothing but the utmost confidence 'in victory could Justify further slaughter. If the Crown Prince's precious prestige could still be won, Germany might spate another hundred thou sand men. Merely to take another chance would be criminal. It Is to be noted that the offensive at Verdun is no longer exclusively German, and an offensive from a beleaguered post, when not the result of desperation. Is d. j nptom fit strength, which no invading; array lan jlesplse. It remains Jo ba seen whether either France or Germany has been $o 41a repwtfantJy M5tnpcI by VenUm a tn Tom Daly's Columji BERRY V. OF P. Oh, hear our 'rah-'rah-'rah, Bcrryl Wc dd not care a strawberry, As long as tee have you, Berry, To icear the lied and Blueberry. Our skies will not ba blackberry With you upon the track, Berry, Because tie cannot lose, Berry. Old Venn would be a gooseberry If you should cease to be Tho joy that makes her chucklei "lie's my tittle h-u-huckle Itucklcberrv, V. of PI" Looking Ahead "TTAVENT you decided yet where you're -Li to spend tho summer?" "Oh, yc3 mother Insists upon Newport, but she nnd father aro hopelessly divided about where wo'll spend the fall." "Indeed?" "Yes, mother says tho Catskllts and father says the almshouse." Ireland was Irclnml When England wasn't much And Irelnml will be Ireland When England's talking Dutch. L 'Zat bo? An' what'll Ireland bo talkin' In them days 7 The Dubuque College quintet, which Is com posed of two former West Philadelphia High School runners, arrived In town nnd took a few spins up nnd down the track CHtorday. Morning Contemporary, "Some quintet," comments B. V. B., "and haven't ft lends Barnum & Bailey missed a bet hero?" Sir Here aro an ad. and a sport noto clipped from tho same papci: LOST frlday, .1 artificial cjes, In small box. Will finder please send to Wnit & Oths, 1710 Chestnut st. Trunk UiUer found ills bnttlng fie esterdnv Rnd poled out two singles and a doublo against tho Red Sox, who were shut out by tho Yankees. Who lost the other two? H. M. Wiener. THIS, from our own denr paper, would lead one to suppose that tho Frankford Theatre, which Is being described, is the home of com edy solely: Tho approach to tho er Is down a, gently Inclined slope, flanked on either sldo by ornafo funwas which extend up to an overhanglnc gallery from which you enter tho b.ilconj. Dean Boundaries II JUDGE SULZBERGER ' They put a helmet on your head. ' A dainty thing as light as lead, I Which hugs your dome s circumference, They press a lever (no. too hard) - I And pins record upon a card s This curious sort of dotted fence I In this, that holds these rhymes, you see A brainy legal boundary, For here the highest thoughts Intrench. Within these little dots we find -t The measure of a mighty mind, for long a glory to the Ucnch. s' AN ESTEEMED fellow citizen, who has Just Xi returned from a Western trip, reports various signs of the times: In St. Louis a wight yclept Grubbconducts a restaurant, which, certes, is known as "Grubb's Gtubbery." In Chicago he becamo awaro of "Baer, Gowns." Arriving here, with all this upon his mind, ho noticed that ono Manger conducts a res taurant on Market near 19th street, and re called that "manger," in French, means "to eat." In addition to this, several stay-at-homes have called our attention to this sign at 11th and Columbia avenue: BONELESS PEANUTS. THEATRICAL managers (with the loud pedal on the musical comedy promoters) aro notoriously a bunch of sheep. If a play or a song gets by big, there'll bo a dozen more like it on tho market right off the bat but we never believed this of the book publishers until wo noticed a local firm's ad. of "Our Miss York," patterned upon Edna Feiber's "Our Mlhs McChesney." Notice To tho ladles of Allentown and my old cus tomers, the ragman that drove the two black horses from Bethlehem now drives two gray ones and Instead of blowing a whistle will toot an automobile horn and will drive over his route same as before on Tuesdays and Fridays 2I.t.'t Allentown (Pa ) Call. The Canny Fisherman I met an ancient fisherman All In the misty twilight gray He had two wee ones. In a can. 'Tvvas without hope, or conscious plan I hastened aB, upon the way, I met an ancient fisherman. And Fortune chanced to cast a wan Pale smile on me that chilly day He had two wee ones, In a can. "What luck?" I chattered, as I ran When, fortunately, as I say, I met an ancient fisherman. Ho poured for me, with rare phllan Thropy a wee nip, without pay. I met an ancient fisherman. He had two wee ones, in a can. A. A. The Versatile Mr. Robinson (Culled from an article in a local evening con temporary). Manager Wilburt Robinson said this after noon: "Coombs is one of the biggest finds in years for me. He s himself; the last season proved that. He Is more; he helps every way he can, and that sort of a player is past all mere monetary value, I expect to work him tomorrow, though I reserve the option to change my mind at the last moment. (Key changes to minor) "Pat" Moran and Robinson strode out to the diamond this afternoon, went ankle deep into the mire and yelled back, "Game oft!" The pair left the Phillies' bench. Suddenly Robinson spoke- "Well, I'll be slammed. I only bought these kicks yesterday, Pat." "It's sort of soft, I'll admit." replied Manager Moran. "Sort of soft Where do you get that7 It's quicksand. I ain't goln' to kill no players in this stuff Say, Jake Daubert would sink at first base I would have to pull him out with a derrick. Maybe you would like to have him go down In the mud and stay there all winter Next spring you'd dig him up and have a real first baseman." Grave Diggers Strike The grave-dlMlni force In the Holy Cross Ceinsterv at Yeadon struck toUr tut mora par Fuael cor teges droVs through, dues of jrsta. but lh setjon of tts$ strikers uUf4Ja placUur (ha bodtea Jj, u,. vault. F. T. M., jvho discovered the above In the Score eard, remark that one trll Isn't much, to bras aheat for Rudolph. WHEN COMPROMISE FAILS IN ENGLAND Duties of the Opposition in Parlia ment and the Enigmas of Gov ernment by Coalition in Wartime IMAGINE an ndmlnlstiatlon at Washington with Wilson as President; Taft, Secretaiy of State; Roosovelt, Secretary of War, and Eugeno V. Debs, Secretary of the Interior. Put Bryan In as Secretary of Agriculture (perhaps tho nearest thing to a padded cell In tho Cabinet), Undo Joo Cannon as head of the Postofflco Department, and find other places for such differing types as Henry Ford and Senator Lodge and you would have .some thing not unllko tho present British Cabinet. Such a notion of Government by coalition is an English nnd not an American Idea. In this country crises do not make the lion nnd tho lamb Ho down together. Crises hero tend to differentiate tho political parties more than over. Hero In time of stress the ciy is " r t us have nothing but out-and-out RepubJ .ans or Democrats In office." Our Government Is not operated in tho spirit of compromise. The American mind looks for victory at tho polls and expects to reap all tho fruits of that vic tory. Tho genius of tho Englishman in gov ernment is tho bpirt of compromise. Ho, too, looks for a victory at the polls, but after his victory he is not sure of all tho fruits. If tho opposition puts up a stiong fight his compio mlsing nature may make him satisfied to get only hnff of the fruits. Therein is tho undei lying reason for tho present Cabinet. Kitchener and Lloyd-George Who would have dreamed that the lengthy legs of Lord Kitchener, imperialist and mili tarist, would ever havo stretched in council beneath tho same mahogany as those of Llovd-George, near Socialist ojid pacifist. While Kitchener was fighting the Boers in South Africa Llojd-George was voting in Par liament not to send supplies to Kitcheners and Roberts' armies. When Kitchener was a na tional hero Lloyd George, disguised as a police man, was escaping from mobs. His pro-Boer speechifying made him the most hated man In England for a time. Now he Is strong enough to control a faction of his own which would make him Premier instead of Asquith. while Kitchener's glory has dimmed. It is not eaBy for men of such differing antecedents as Lloyd George and Kitchener to become reconciled. It was only tho fact that Britain faced the greatest of crises that pro duced the crowning achievement of British compromise the coalition Cabinet. In the past it has not been the custom for the Opposition, or minority party, to be friendly to the Gov ernment in time of war. "The duty of an Opposition is to oppose." This is a maxim of tiritlsn pontics. In the good old days, when compromising was not so much in evidence, the Opposition regarded a war merely as a glorious and extended opportunity of ham mering away at the men In power. The idea that the Opposition Bhould support the Gov ernment In a war would have drawn an In dignant denial from a Whig of George Ill's time. Throughout the American Revolution the war waB bitterly opposed by the Whigs, And, in view of the fact that a majority of Englishmen thought at the time that the union and integrity of the Empire was at stake, these attacks looked very much like disloyalty. "Wellington Ought to Be Hanged" But far more disloyal did the Opposition be come in the Napoleonic period, Between the war which Pitt opened against France then and the present war against Germany the points of resemblance are many and strong, England's future was at stake. And yet the minority persistently did everything" that was in their power to encourage the enemy and to overthrow the Government that wan fir-htinr. for the national life. Fox, Sheridan and Grey used all their wit In. defending the French revolutionists and maligning Pitt. Fox went so far as to express openly his Joy at the success of the French arms at the expense of his own country. It Is difficult to read wltht out disgust of the tactics of the Opposition against the Duke of Wellington, who was destined finally to destroy the menace of Europe at the Battle of Waterloo. Lora Hutchinson, a Whig lord, expressed the opin ion that "Wellington ought to be hanged." Creevey told everybody In 1810, five years be fore Waterloo, that Wellington's career was finished. Jeffrey, the famous editor, was In favor of peace at any price, and only a year before Napoleon surrendered said Napoleon couldn't be beaten. If Lord Kitchener dips into history he must find much to encourage him in the fate of much-abused heroes In the past and their ulti mate, vindication, Disraeli was the flrt British statesman who refused o take advantage of the rwluoas blunders of Government In. th mny&mk$st. ml war, and who enuselated th ptrtotle Ajo. trine that pa altw taw a war ws mm" -v' - i-t-.'i, ,xre -':,." -? ,'S. ducted it was tho duty of nil parties to support the Government. But his doctrine was not followed in tho next gicat test after tho Cil mean war. In tho South Afiican war tho Liberal party denounced tho campaign ngalnst tho Boers ns wicked and Impolitic. While tho Government wbh feeding, clothing and housing the women and children of the Boors, tho wholo Llbeial party was bi entiling vengeanco ngulnst It for "cruelty and barbarism." This conduct on tho pai t of tho opposition un doubtedly encouraged tho Boeis and piolonged tho var. Learning to Compromise It was thiough n hlstoiy of such bitter les sons that England learned her art of political comptomise. After 700 years of pat Hamentury life a nation leains that tho Government is often wrong and tho Opposition often right and vice versa, and that both sets of heads nt o better than either set alone. For this tea&on tliero has grown up a system of what In this country would bo called "pussyfooting" be tween tho Premier nnd tho leader of tho Oppo sition. If the latter can stir up enough public wrath against the former's Intentions In some proposed plcco of legislation tho Premier will usually consent to delay or amendment, so that all parties will be pleased. In this way homo rule for Ireland has been vhtually com promised out of existence. That compromise Is not always a good thing Is shown by tho shaklness of tho present coal ition Cabinet masterpiece of compromise that It is. Tho trouble with ' a coalition is that It Is mado up of too m't equally Important pet sons. It Is composed - "leaders" and gets along ns badly as an "all sar" theatrical cast In a Cabinet, as in a board of directors, the pesnonnel should taper from a strong execu tive to various subordinates content to co operate and take orders and administer. At least that has been tho opinion in this country, wheie Democints are raiely desired In Repub lican cabinets. And, by the samo token, the last man Democratic President would np point as hi adviser in casa of war would be a Roosevelt or a Taft. EXIT THE QUILL PEN A curious result of tho "Jacking up" which all departments of tho British Government have experienced as a result of tho war bas been the flnnl abolition of the quill pen In Government service An English correspondent of Office Appliances says that these relics of medievalism had hung on In certain leisutely places, but at last they have had to go, to make place for the more businesslike metal pen Outlook. RENAMING BERLIN New names suggested for the town of Berlin, Ont , are leported In Cnnadlun papers A woman sends in Vermilion, Elyrla, Doraln Somebody else suggests Woodrow Then there are a lot of war names, like Cavell, Verdun, Allies, Marne and Belgium New names arrive dally, and there Is a faint possibility that the war will end before Berlin's committee on selac lion can make a choice. Cleveland Plain Dealer. THE COUNTRY NEWSPAPER "The Sweet, Intimate Story of Life" Makes Its Columns Glorious But the beauty and the Joy of our papers and their little orlds is that wo who livo In the country towns know our own heroes. Who knows Muri'hy in New York? Only a few. Yet In Km porja we all know Tom O'Connor and love him. Who knows Morgan In New York? One man In a hundred thousand, Yet In Emporia who does not Jtnow George Newman, our banker and mer chant prince, Boston people pick up their morn ing papers and redd with shuddering horrors of the crimes of their dally villain, et read with out that fine thrill that we have when we hear that Al Ludorph Is In Jail again in Emporia, For we all know Alj we've ridden in his hack a score of times. And we take up our paper with the story of his frailties as readers who begin the narrative of an old friends' adven tures. Our papers, rrar little country papers, seem drab and miserably provincial to strangers; yet we who read them find in their lines the sweet, intimate story of life. And all these touches of nature makes us wondrous kind. It is the coun try newspaper, bringing together dally the threads of the town's life, weaving them into something rich and strange, and setting the pat tern as it weaves, directing the loom, and giving the cloth its color by mlxiig the lives of all the people In its-color-pot it is this country news paper that reveals us to ourselves, that keeps our country hearts quick, and our country minds open and and our country faith strong. When the girl at the glove-counter marries the boy in the wholesale house, the news of their wedding is good for r. forty-line wedding notice, and the forty lines in the country paper give them self-respect When in due course we know that their baby is a twelve pounder, named Grqyer or Theodore pr Woodrow, we have that neighborly feeling that breeds the real democ racy When we read of death In that home we can mourn with them that mourn. When we see them moving upward in the world into a firm and out toward the country club neighborhood, we rejoice with them that rejoice Therefore, men and brethren, when you are riding through this vate of tears upon the California Limited, and by chance pick up the little country newspaper with its meagre telegraph service of three or four thousand words or, at best, fifteen or twenty thousand; when you see Its array of countryside items, Its Interminable local storlea; Its tiresome editorials on the waterworks, the schools, the street railroad the crops and the city printing don't throw dpwn the contemptible Utile rag with, the- verdict that there is nothing In it But know this, and know It well; if y0U Imm swM to It. aw4 what vou saw wwu m.tr- aggteits Jtttfcitpapfr with rvernt hands, . tratty -utere sunt. t timmhumSmT H if S I . 3 What Do You Knowl Queries of general Interest will be antwent In this column. Ten Questions, the antmj to which cveiy well-Informed person thStU know, are asked dally. jM QUIZ What Is the correct pronunciation of "Sin i rein"? ml .... ..,u.,,.,v.n . ...V ....n. j. w, ,,I.,IQI Jf reive uniarietr VVhn U Patrick Ifcnrr IVnritfl? What wns the pigtail an emblem ofMj J Clilna? Jl Why lini the criming of May 1 becin nnurco of anxiety to 'lie nutliorltlti li vnrlnun countries In recent yenrs? Of what Ik hIIIc muile? What distinction nhotild be made iMti tine oi me noriiN -runner" anu "tartuerM W hat French statesman was assassinate! 1 at the opening of the present war? o. 10. From what Hource I rubber obtained!? Who wrote the uroina "laust"? Answers to Saturday's Quiz Lord Wlmborno In Lord Lieutenant of It j land. The Ilrltlfth have not reached nagdad tut their surrender at Kut-el-Amara marbl the abandonment of their efforts. 3. 4. S. 0. 7. B. 0. 10. Victor Herbert 1h an American orebeitrill conductor and musical composer. Oilier Wendell Holmes wrote "The On. I IIoss Shay." ,3gl Julian lloue Invented tun sewing raacMMl In lRfS. SlialiCHprnro acted old men's parts. Mtka Ih south nf Pctrograd. The next Comrrefutlnnal election is on Nt. 11 vemher 7. 1 tiio Jung or npatn wan a King as soon ii lie wnn born. Jf The Government nf the United States mrsr a cable line to Alaska. New Jersey Corporation Editor of "What Do Yon Know" In fornbl a corporation under tho New Jersey" law iJ'B formed under general statute or special charter how many Incorporators nro lequlred ancHhM ch stock must bo subscribed? T. Hj If you wish to form a corporation you wl havo to employ a Invvyer. anyway. It wlllj wiser, therefore, to put your question to IdriJ Comparison of Sieges Editor of "Whnt Do You Knoio" Canjt tell mo how tho siege of Kut-el-Amara compart) In point of tlmo with tho siegei of Port Arthur, Richmond, Vlcksburg, Plevna, Mctz, Ladyroiftl Lucknow, Adrlanople and other modern slegej' II. T. UJ General Townshend's force In Kut-eljAjwi withstood the onslaughts of tho Turks arid l vatlon for 143 days The Busslans shutjl Tort Arthur in 1905 hold tho record In reces warfare In this, regard, having fought off U Japanese 211 days before surrendering. Jl? ever. Sebastopol held out 334 days, and flw then the defenders did not surrender, but with drew from the city after destroying the shlsi In the harbor. Again at Plevna the Russlax besieged the city 114 days, losing 18,500 met during the first day of fighting, while the Turji lost 30,000 during the entire Blcge. The W Russian los'j was 40,000. Richmond heldi 310 days. Vlcksburg fell after being beslep by tho Union force 213 days. During the FrW Prussian War Paris was besieged 131 dais ft4 starvation caused Its fall. Metz withstood tt onslaught of the enemy for 134 days, and U commander. Marshal Bazalne, was, court-mir-tlaled for surrendering. Przemysl surrender after 200 days of fighting. Antwerp held ort only nine days. In the Boer War Ladysralft was besieged 118 days and KImberly 12S d Sir Robert Baden-Powell was besieged at Matt king by General Cronje from October 11, 18' to May 18, 1900. In Lucknow, during the Spo revolt, 1700 men held off a force of 30,0504 dlans for 12 weeks, and then held the city W two months after reinforcements arrived befw peace was restored. Adrlanople was deferuM by the Tjirks for 118 days before the atta of the Bulgars, who advanced on the city October, 1913. "Little 'Act of Kindness" Editor of "What Do You Knou"rJUr Is tS poem requested by Dllzabelh Jn the BvewmI Ledoer for April 27; LITTLE ACTS OF KJNDNESS It Isn't the thing you do, dear, It's the thing you leave undone That gives you a bit of heartache At setting of the sun. The tender word forgotten; The letter you did not write: The flower you did not send, dear Are your haunting nosts tonignt. The stone you might have lifted Out of a brother's vvayj The bit of heartsome counsel you were hurried too much to say. The loving touch of the band, dear, The irentle winning tone Which you had no time or thought forj With trouoie enousn ot your own, Th6se little acts of kindness, So easily out of mind, Those chances to be angels Which we poor mortals find They come in night and silence, Each sad. reproachful wraith, When hope is faint and flagging And a chill has fallen on fajth. For life la all too short, dear. ' And sorrow Is all too great. To suffer our slow compassion That tarries until too late. It Isn't the thing you do, dear, It's the thing you leave undone Which gives you a bit of hartach At the setting of the sua It Is by Margaret 13. gangster READS The poem has also been seat In by Mf- dAtlon Koms, LavrenceviUe, W J . Af yftlladeipWa, others.