Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 23, 1916, Night Extra, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    if-:"
3-
L
. f
- -r-m-r-
'
?
IV
IV ;
fcicnhtg
Helper
ikr
PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY
CTBUfl H. K. CimTIB. risetoenT
ludlntton. Vice President) John
nn
(! tr
.--...-.
f:
ratarr and Treasurer! VI
mutants, Directors.
Hip B.
KDITOniAU DOAHOl
Ctiui II. It CUTIS, Chairmen.
T. H. WIIALEI.. Editor
fOHK C. MAnTIN... General Business Manner
Published dallr at rruo I.rrvini nutldlnr,
Independence Aware, Philadelphia.
Lapon CcTait.,.,,Uroad and Chestnut Streets
AntNTto CITT VrrtfUnlen Dulldlns-
C,w Toix.. ,200 Metropolitan Tower
JparaoiT 820 Ford Ilulldlnc
AT. Loon... .....400 Olobv-Demoerat Uulldlnc
CfllClOO 1202 Tribune llulMln
NEWS BUnEAUfll
WHBIH0T0K ECiiiD nirti Building
Kiw ToK Dciuu... Ths Timri Ilulldlnc
1Ltx llcsaio , 00 Frledrlcbstrasis
IoKSOM IloaiD Mareonl House, mrand
Wil BCtuo 32 llus Loult la Qrand
AODScnirTioN innus
By carrier, ilx cents per nk. Ily tnall,
postpaid outalda of Philadelphia, except hera
forelan poataca la required, one month, twsntr
Ave oenia) one year, thrao dollara. All malt
Subscriptions payable In advance.
Noticb Subscribers wishing- address chanted
snutt (Ira old aa well aa new addreas.
BELL, I00 WALNUT
KEYSTONE. MAIN IMS
Kw Address all nmmvnteatUmt to Evening
dprr, Indcpendtnae Square, Philadelphia.
bxtoeo it rnn rniLASct-rnu rosTorrica as
SBCOMD-CUSS KAU. surra.
EYBOTNdJ LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEmER 23, 19IB
tor aa Wnrner Miller or Thomas a Tlatt,
both of whom were chosen before cither
the primary was Invented or election by
popular voto provided for. But ns Os
wald Garrison Vlllard suggested bofore
the voting, Caldcr's nomination Is a
triumph for democracy, ln,thnt It proves
that Just nn nvcrago nort ot man, Is
liked by tho average nort of men.
THE AVERAOB NET I-AID DAILY C1R.
CULATION OP TIIB HVENINO LBDOEA
FOn AUGUST WA8 117,850
rhUidtlpblt, SlardiT, Sspttmaer 11, Hit,
When muting on companion son,
Wa doubly feel ourtelvet alone.
Scoff.
If the Mayor can llvo In Glcnslde,
hy should not tho City Solicitor llvo In
Merlon?
Hate has traveled far when an
Australian court can decide that an Eng
lishman who Is called a German Is do-famed.
Some Marie Antoinette among
economists Is sure soon to suggest that
we eat cake instead of bread in order to
bring- down tho price of wheat.
That $25,000,000 offer for their
West Indian Islands Is moro than tho
Danes can resist. All parties are plan
ning to get together and grab It.
It Is only a little prematuro to say
that three Republican Presidents will
tneet at the Union League Club In New
York on October 3, when Roosevelt, Taft
and Hughes come together.
It has remained for tho Boston
Transcript, which calls the Vlco President
Titmouse Tom, to classify that distin
guished Indiana statesman. Ho will
cease catching fishes In other men's
ditches In a few months. ,
The distinguishing featuro of tho
proposed monument to Francis Scott Koy
Is to be a young man twenty-four feet
tall, or a Httlo lower than tho top note
In tho "Star Spangled Banner."
The members of the three Phila
delphia regiments who aro expected homo
from the border on October 3 will get
hero In time to register. As they were
to vote anyway, thero was no reason for
keeping them In Texas.
Washington seems to bo worried
bout Villa, and no wonder. General
Pershing was sent Into Moxlco to get
him, but tho bandit's ronewed activity
about Chihuahua means that somo one
blundered somewhere some time.
They do things differently In Italy.
Finding that speculators had 10,000,000
eggs In storage and were holding up the
public, the Government seized the entire
lot and sold them at two cents each, half
tho market price. What's the use of
hens laying for tho public if the specula
tors are laying for it, too?
A referendum is to be taken in the
Authors' Leaguo of America on the ques
tion of Joining the American Federation
of Labor and thus classifying themselves
with the structural iron workers and
other mochanlcs. Without intending to
be disrespectful, It may bo said that the
product of some of tho authors can prop
erly be classified as pig iron.
We ought to have courting going on
in every farmhouse In Pennsylvania,
and they ought, to make courting par
lors, if necessary, to bring the eligible
men and the rosy-cheeked lassies to
Tether, Governor Brumbaugh.
We havo a lurking suspicion that
young people havo always found a way
to do their love-making even in the re
motest rural districts, parlors or no
parlors.
Great Britain is determined to pre.
vent the mall seizures situation from
reaching anything approaching a
diplomatic crisis. Washington dis
patch. Tho best way to prevent tt Is for
tho British to stop Interfering with tho
free movement of neutral malls or to
pray night and a day that the men in
charge of American dlplomatlo affairs
may be continued in power.
Tho nomination of McCombs for
the senatorshlp by the New York Demo
crats Is not encouraging to those who
wish the President to carry that State.
McCombs was put in the race by Tam
many aa a rebuke to Mr, Wilson, and
Tammany la understood to be planning
to aelj'out Wilson In November. The
choice of Hughes's electors In New York
Sb scarcely In doubt.
It looks as If Philadelphia could
entertain the Knights Templar at their
'next triennial conclave If It la so dis
posed. If the hotel proprietors show a
baooatng spirit of hospitality there Is
sold te be .Httle doubt of a favorable do
etstsB. Then, If the Convention Hall is
eeenpieted 1a Jtrae, with the Parkway ap
proach opened, the Templars will find
wore ample town for their parade and
mom aattefaeiory accommodations for
tbeir mneain'pj than any other city can
m
, f
'X
X. OaMar,.aC Keer-Ypric
say prere pi be a. npntar, htttwMe
reoord tae aot Justify the Imps kkipi to
aaU mmam up te ttee sUwa4 pjr
"B!teWM?KS,''tf
RECRUDESCENCE OF
. . BRYANISM
i
"CUtOM a position of puro dofonso of
their recent labor legislation, Demo
cratic leaders havo suddenly swerved and
actually grasped this rlflo of criticism
aimed at them to uso It na a club on their
opponents. Instead of continuing to
apologlzo for tho railroad wago-lncrcaso
law, thoy havo abruptly decided to boast
of It and uso it as an appeal for tho
"labor vote." Instead of condoning It as
Mr. Wilson does in saying thut "tho sit
uation must never arise again, but It has
arisen," to explain a predicament ho
plainly regretted over had arisen, his fol
lowers now toko the stand that tho wago
increaso law was Just tho opportunity
tho Democratic party had been waiting
for to give labor Its duel
To prove tho vehemence with which
they Intend to stir up or create class
prejudices, thpy go tho longth of an
nounclng a plan to capture Pennsyl
vania's electoral vote through tho co
operation of Its 100,000 railroad men
"working night and day for Wilson."
These wero tho tactics of Bryan, which
failed threo times and will fall nlways.
There are no classes hero to understand
class appeals.
There Is ono thing that "goes" in Eng
land that never "goes" hero. Over there
the lord of the manor (or his cousin, dis
guised as a Radical) can say to a crowd:
"Laborers you aro and laborers you will
remain, and tho best you can do Is to
elect influential men of my class with
Liberal sympathies." They either swal
low that or go in a body into tho Labor
party, which Includes tho Socialists. In
tho Labor party here, calling itself tho
Socialist party, thero aro hardly any la
borers. The Socialists in America aro
nearly all highly educated and leisurely
men and women engaged In tho arts and
in literature, sliding occasionally Into
gentlemanly phllosophto anarchism. They
are tho very people whoso habit of mind
makes them sco class distinctions that do
not exist, because- they aro entirely out
of dally touch with Industrial workers.
Bryan thought ho could perform tho
feat of coalescing theso Idealists with tho
men who worked with their hands. Ho
thought ho could infuso Socialism under
another namo into tho ranks ot tho work
ers and draw a sharp class lino. He, too,
talked of carrying Pennsylvania becauso
of Its great Industrial clectorato "work
ing night and day" for him. ' Wilson saw
the mistake of tho Commoner. Ho onco
know that labor did not want to bo
labeled as a mass of Insurgent servants
patronized by highbrow idealists, de
prived of oil interest In various national
Issues and restricted to tho ono issue of
"Wo want moro pay.' Ho knew thero
could not permanently bo a Labor party
because in America thero aro so many
thousands of men constantly leaving the
workshop for tho offlce, so many fathers
In tho workshop with sons in tho ofllco,
bo many fathers In tho ofllco with sons
In the workshop, so little chanco for class
spirit.
How desperate, then, must bo tho Wil
son campaign manager when ho takes
up Bryan's broken weapon and goes after
tho labor vote! He suddonly forgets the
lesson of Bryan and tells labor not to
consider Mexico, but only the wage-In
crease law; not to consider tho tariff, but
only the wago-lncrcaso law. Tho swerve
in policy becomes moro sinister when wo
turn to New York. Thero 800,000 men
are stirred to a temporary revolt And
they, too, are to forget all other issues
and think only, of tho wago-lncrcaso law.
They want more pay, and hero Is tho way
to get It.
Why not. Indeed, an act of Congress
fixing the wages of all engaged In Inter
state commerce that Is, everybody? If
that Is not the lure to the unintelligent
in centering attention on tho railway
wage law, what Is it?
Tctm Daly's Column
run village roET
Whenever Wa a Saturday an' all mv tcorfe
U thhtugh
I sometime let tho week' events pan
by trie In review,
Instead of seeking Chestnut street to see
what news ts nctv.
An' so today, In looking back on this
eventful tccck
There's just one most Important thing of
which 1 wish to speak;
An' tchlle upon the circumstance I sit me
down to brood
Tho heart within mo swetts an' sings,
with deepest gratitude,
That after ouf experience not one of us
Is dead
For Mother started In tho tceck by lytng
sick In bed;
An' when that great calamity upon our
house Is poured
Tho only thing that saves us Is the mercy
of the Lord I
Tho cook had found another place an'
left us without warning,
An' Mother worked herself into a "break"
by Tuesday morning,
An' there we were, tho lot of us, as help
less as you please,
While all the household cares began to
swarm around like fleas.
There was the huckster to be seen, the
milkman to be paid,
The dishes washed, the kitchen swept,
some eight beds to be made,
We made a mess of everything an'
growled an' fussed an' roared;
An' the only thing that saved us was the
mercy of the Lord,
Now, daughter had experience In making
choe'late candy,
An' I myself at boiling things had often
proven handy,
An' Bonny knew a trick or two with
lemons, so you see
Tho cooking of the dinner just devolved
upon us three.
Wc called tho children 'round us an' then
I rose an' prayed
That He would bless our cabbage, choc'-
latp fudge an' lemonade.
Oh, Terror perched upon our roof an'
Famine ruled our board.
An' the only thing that saved us was tho
mercy of tho Lord.
Bo now that it's a Saturday an' all that
trouble's through,
I much prefer to sit an' let the week
pass in review
Than run about on Ghcstnu,t street to
sec what news is new.
YES, FALL IS CAME
SU
BEWAItE THE BUNKHOUND!
Serving the City Beautiful Ho Bites
All Unlovely Things
Wo aro liable to got Info trouble, we
fear. Suddenly, without warning, our
Bunkhound attacked a gentleman on tho
street. Wo learn
ed later that it
was Mr. Al Jol
son, tho come
dian. Can ho
havo been doing
anything unlove
ly, wo wonder?
If wo had attend
ed his show we
might not need to ask, perhaps, but may.
bo you can -tell.
-r -- -r
r j s ri
c it: 3 ? . J
,
THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE
Board of Education Charged With Violation of the Law A Tax on
Immigrants Demanded More Protests Against
Bruce Hawkins's Plan
CUEER UPl
Here's a little leaven
To raise pur hopes once moro:
Phillies gather 7 .
Pirafes only 4.
FOLLOW McKINLEY'S ADVICE
- JwRr i
A .
n
AM "f? 1
"-..
.
'nvr-i
. rJst
JAMES A. FARRELL'S remarks about
the prospects for American trade
after the war havo been quoted by
the Democrats In Justification of their
course of Inaction on the tariff. But Mr.
FarreU's latest utterances at the meet
ing of the National Foreign Trade Coun
cil sustain the Republican demand for
intelligent preparation for the crisis
which is sure to be upon us when peace
comes. He urged the adoption of some
policy for bringing about a friendly ad
justment of commercial relations in bucIi
a way as to avoid a trade war, in view
of the evident purpose of the belligerents
to create discriminations against neutral
Powers in their efforts to conserve their
own resources.
The council's special committee on
the foreign trade aspect of the tariff
recommended a policy similar to that
which McKlnley discussed in his famous
lart speech at Buffalo, which looked to
protecting American markets while
JaeMMatfag that International exchange
effeewunodlties without' which In norma
t4netfcere can be no successful export
trade. Tbe council adopted a reso
lution urging upon the. President and
Congress the necessity of modifying the
tevilC lews. In euefa a way as to make
saere responsive to the needa, of jthe
. If this U to be done it must be
W Um BqwMlqaajL t$ the
ami nl 4a at iii i tmu-
iaw - - . .. ,i7 -
p
The Philadelphia Rhyme
I know It's a crime, but here's another,
rerhaps this one may put you out of your
misery.
Oh. well, dear I)aly. whero'a tho harm
Of rhymlnc I'hl adelnhla
With that younir elrl of rial lo charm,
.fa jolie Silt Allele t Fir Ah.
I knew you'd ay the meter Jerka,
Ilut whafa the matter with the rhyme?
And certain thlnaa In Ilyron'a works
would make my meter seem sublime.
Of course, tho Interjection "Fl" Is sup
posed to burst from you, and I wouldn't
blamo you. With many apologies,
c. p. a.
Dear Columnlator Your effort to find a
rhymo for Philadelphia Is futile. There
ain't no such thing. Philadelphia is unique
not only as a city, but as a word. It Is sul
generis. It Is matchless. It Is rhymelcss.
You might ns well try to ilnd out who
struck Billy Patterson or the dato on which
the Greek kalends fall or tho pasturage of
tho cows which gave the milk from which
was made green cheese that composes the
moon. o. W. D.
THIS sign, turned in by Jac, sounds
suspicious to us. However, If there Isn't
anything llko tills nnywhero thero ought
to bo:
I. M. AIKEN
EXPERT MACHINIST
16 YEARS WITH CRAMPS
NORRISTOWN, Sept. 19, For the pur
pose of "encouraging golf and athletlo
sports," Judge Miller today granted a char
ter to the Gulf Mills Golf Club, located
near Radnor, in Lower Merlon townshln.
P. L.
No wonder we don't seem able to get
below 173 in our B. V. D.'s. Golf, then,
la not an athletlo but a mental exercise;
possibly merely a state of mind.
O. T. T. finds this sign upon a factory at
Frankford avenue and Westmoreland
street) '
GIRLS WANTED TO BE LEARNED
In proof of the superhuman abilities of
Indiana citizens, see your "Quick News"
(today) Wednesday, Item, "11,000,000 fire
loss":
"The loss, impossible to estimate, was
placed by relatives of the owner at prob
ably 1,000,000." D. H.
If the hotel loses Its license there will be
ono more less hotel In western Chester
County, several having dropped out of busi
ness In the past few years, West Chester
contemp. '
Revision npward and downward.
IN a book dealing with members of the
Legislature of Pennsylvania (1893-94) we
find a picturesque old character who has
passed. Henry M. Bortner, a miller of
York County, who thus descrlben him
self:
Bortner l mr name.
V.
Iftmnr If.
jitmrieti& comes near tha umn
Hb Iubbs btfor ray wlfti
Ten children w havo yet ally.
Albert
aecoixo. Jjonlau. Jint. i
Henrietta came number thi
tandi number one.
on. ma nimi la jrii
-"A -JiL '-"" T "- w
wnu, aiooiaa
a man.
The fourth a soj
'rne
fill name la Johnt
rvu aoaj
;
tWI
Jcalah fifth, he la a aon)
Their au ieit nome except thli pn
Amanda eUtb, fce wae not -wefl,
A ad now efee U Vsa lad to telU
And Ear etcht, and that U o.
He ruu the car to JHaUfaoroi
Tla Department tree to all render toho
Wish to express their opinions on subjects of
current Interest, It is an open forum, and the
Evening Lcdaer assumes no responsibUttv for
tho views of its correspondents, Letters must
be stoned bu the name and address of the
wrttcr. not necessarily for publication, out as a
guarantee of good faith,
WAS THE LAW VIOLATED?
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger:
Slr When the legal facts in tno sowaen
Fltlcr School case wero brought to our at
tention, and fully understood. It was felt
that the Board of Education surely did not
appreciate the situation. We believed that
when they were fully informed they would
correct tho mlatako they had made. Ac
cordingly, steps were taken to this end.
Some of the board were Interviewed per
sonally and the Inconsistency of the rule
pointed out.
It was claimed that under tho law tho
Filler School principal could not be re
moved. The Board of Education had acted
under tho rule In this case and that, there
fore, their action would need to be re
versed. Tho men Interviewed agreed with the po
sition taken. It seemed reasonable to sup
pose, therefore, that the same contention
would prevail with the whole board. A
letter written to the board on the case was
referred by them to tho elementary school
committee. After reciting the rule and the
law and calling attention to the fadt that
tho rule made certain averages thef basis of
promotion, rather than one of the three
highest names on the list, ns provided by
tho law, the letter went on to point out
that the law forbade any principal being
displaced by another even If his school did
grow, providing he held his position prior
to the passage' of tho present school law.
Tho Fitter principal came In this class, and
unless he was physically or morally In
capable he could not lawfully bo removed.
Finally the board's attention was called
to Its action In regard to other schools In
precisely the same position as the Fltler,
and the question asked why these princi
pals were all retained why was a way
found to keep them in their places, and the
Fltler principal, on tho other Jiand, re
mo ved displaced? '
The elementary school committee de
ferred action on the claim ot the Fltler
people until June 16, when a subcommittee
held a meeting and later reported unfavor
ably to Fitter Interests.
The portion of the letter dealing with the
different treatment other schools had re
ceived was Ignored. Shall we submlt7 Cer
tainly not If we were In the wrong, rather
than the board, we would make different
answer; but when we seo the right on our
side, should we not see that Justice Is
done 7 Does not the board by Its actions
make a mockery of tho law 7 T. M.
- Germantown, September 22.
WORE ABOUT HAWKINS
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger;
Sir To complete the wild dream of
Bruce Hawkins, , why not run the British
flag over the White House?
Such expressions and suggestions as 'he
gives vent to in the Evening; Lddoer are
the dirtiest Insult administered by an Eng.
Ilshman to the American people. He should
be treated as a criminal and dealt with as
was Cltlxen Genet.
He has Insulted every American, from
the President down to the naturalized
laborer, T. It.
Philadelphia, September 22.
ONE WAV TO RESTRICT IMMIGRA-
t TION
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger:
Sir Neither a high nor low tariff, with
unrestricted Immigration, ever did or ever
will give continued prosperity. I have been
a worklngman all my life until a few years
ago, and am convinced that tho only method
that will, insure the good, loyal American
working people, both skilled and unskilled,
a Just portion Is to place a tariff or head
tax on all foreigners wishing to compete
with the loyal American working people.
This will Blve the American working people
the same protection that their employers
have, and which they never had since this
country Is In existence. These people come
here In droves, are clannish to a degree, de
preciate property wherever they congregate,
live contented In the moat oongeeted and
Insanitary manner, as they have been ac
customed from childhood, care nothing about
our institution. Sixty per cent of them have
no Idea et making this their home, Thty
wn in proauoing eommoditUa.
i,i dm amount and earry
rn mu pht
: . teisaaMMMM
L " v !i ?.. -
says the combined amount of these aliens
amounts to mora than $200,000,000 an
nuallybarring tho war henco if this
nmount had been expended where it was
earned we would have fewer of these
periodical years of business depression, at
tributed to overproduction, but is simply
underconsumption. Furthermore, we would
by this head tax get only the better class,
who would make good citizens. Personally.
i. oon c care ir 1.000,000 como here every
week, but you can take It from me if the
.Yori.ln,.peopIe' regardless of party,
dont bestir themselves and get Congress to
nenr .?.... " B"ens- lney will In the
near future have cause to regret it
Especially will this be the case after the
nrrHel,,We.w111 be fl00de1 w'th cripples
or partially Incapacitated humanity who
will eventually become a public charge.
W 3 L.
Philadelphia, September 22. ' '
HOW ENGLAND PROTECTED US
To the Editor of the Evenlna !..
trfLT" rf.a"?ed .baa fls coun-
-. ...w. ,,.uk:i;uUn uniti i read Mr
Bruco Hawkins's letter.
Hero we are a nntlnn nf n.i i, . ...
r,J&.P.u.'VJSS??h, . hav-
A. ...i Vu "ca'". ie greatest pow
der works, tho greatest brains, and so on.
JrnJl" U.k w1 W haV t0 l0Ok "P to a
small island ;for protection! A country that
comes to us for her ammunition. flyl7g ma
chines submarines and such material that
is used In warfare! A country that 1 as : to
hire men to fight for her beciuse he" own
You, Mr. Hawkins, tell us how England
has protected the weaker nations? my
she protected the United States so much
that,W? -had t0 llck her twl" thathe
would let us alonel Look how she sent a
handful of marines Into Belgium to bet
back a half-mllllon Germans-how she has
ldrawn most of the small countries of Eu
ropo into the war to help her out That in
some protection! l ,B
How nice it would bo to give England
ur..blUhlps ond mel be ruled by
British omcers! I suppose that they want
to take another cruise to Galllpoli and ex.
ploro the bottom of. the Dardanelles to
keep some of the English ships-company.
About the only part of a batleshlp we wll
ever give England is In the form of twelve
inch shells, If they don't stop seizing our
mall on the high seas. our
If you love England oo much, why don't
Z??, R0b.a.ck. Bnd nht for h- Instead "f
hiding behind tho American flag and telling
this country what to do? I think if all of
the English shirkers would go back to Ene.
land she might make a better showing in
this war, "
Perhaps, after all, you are only a curb
stone general, who is used to standing In
front of newspaper bfflces and telling the
crowd how little they know. But wheS you
have it printed In the paper 'there will
always be a few red-blooded Americans
who will tell you where you get off.
Philadelphia, September 22.
BUSINESS BEFORE PLEASURE
Children don't mind studying their les
sons, but they like to get all their play
ing off their hands first Fort Worth Star
Teltgrara. A GIRL'S BONG
The Meuse and Marne have little waves:
The slender poplars o'er them lean.
One day they will forget tho graves
That give the grass Its living green.
Some brown French girl the rose will wear
That springs above his comely head ;
Will twine It In her russet hair.
Nor wonder why it Is so red.
His blood la In the rose'a veins, '
His hair la in the yellow corn
My grief Is In the weeping rains
And In' the keening wind forlorn.
Flow softly, softly, Marne and Meuse
Tread lightly, all ye browsing sheep t
Fall tenderly, O silver dews,
For here my dear love Ilea asleep.
i
Tha earth Is on his sealed eyes,
Tha beauty marred that was toy pride j
Would I were lying 'where he Ilea,
And sleeping sweetly by bis aide I
The spring will some by Meuse and Kara,
The birds be Mttfeeeeme in Use tree.
j. aeep uh w,ena if m
W3f tojri
What Do You Know?
nL,
SSh
HlaJMtrMt
V ,e, "
Queries of general Interest will l answered
in this column. Ten questtons, the answers to
which everu well-informed person ahouM know,
are asked dally.
QUIZ
1. What la soId-beatlnsT
2. IVhat la the nearest point nt which Fennayl-
vanla approaches the Canadian frontier
and about how far from the line la It?
3. What la meant br the cosmos?
4. What la the leeal rate of intereat In Penn-
amnnla and what la tbe rate allowed br
contract? Are i the ratea tbe same In aQ
the Htatea?
5. What la (Sheffield plate?
0. What rresldent of the United States refused
to take his aalarr?
7. What la holrstone?
8. What la a periwinkle?
0. Define the, TroDle of Cancer and the Trople
of Capricorn.
10. Who li Lieutenant Governor of rennayU
Tanla?
Answers to Yesterday's Quiz
1. "Wrappers"! the corerlnrs of clrars
era": tue tobacco within the vrrnpi
t. Emanuel Laekeri a treat
puw
"Pill.
wraDDcra.
German chess
. ATrraa s
03.000
area of American
mei
fila,.. .lu..
aauare miles.
"Ootqr around Bohln Hood's narn"i maklnr
.ludlcroulr misdirected effort to accom
plish nnniethlnc. Ilobln Hood, a bandit,
naturally never had a barn.
8. Actual earning of Investment In stock bonzht
at 08 which para, o per cent on 60 par
value: $2.60, or about 3.07 per cent.
0. The aense of smell, more, than onr other
sense, ruldea animals In the quest for
food.
7. McCombs conducted o eampalrn for Wil
son's nomination, led the fl.iht for him
In convention and was his campalzn
manaier.
8. Withers of a Jiorsel the Hdte between the
shoulder-blades which takes the strain of
the collar.
0. The word "Quakers'' was first riven to the
uenorainniion in less Mr Justice Ilennet,
whom Kox told to 'aynko and tremble at
the word ot the Lord.1' ft is not prop
erly applied to Friends. w-
10. Orchldi pronounced "orkld."
Old South
B. T. O. The best known building which
Is called "Old South" (there ore several)
Is the Old South Meeting House In Boston,
at tho corner of Washington and Milk
Btreets. The society was formed In 1669
and tho present house was built In 1729.
Here the men of the town gathered to pro
test against forcing Massachusetts citizens
into the British Navy, to demand with
drawal of British troops and to decide tho
fate of the hated tea. Here were com
memorated 1771-1775 anniversaries of the
Boston massacre with orations by Lovell,
Hancock, Church and Warren. Used by
the British as a riding school during the
siege of Boston. Restored and used foi
church services until 1872. In 1876 more
than 1400,000 was raised to keep the build
ing from destruction. Lectures on his
torical subjects are frequently held there.
Three-Dollar Gold Pieces
F. E. The coinage ot S3 gold pieces was
discontinued under the act of September 26
1890. You could find out from a dealer
whether there la any premium on one coined
in 1854, but such business information can
not appear in this column, as there Is no
fixed premium on coins, their purchase
uonib a nmvicr ui private enterprise.
Resources of Greece
L. 8. 1) Greece will not prove to be a
food resources of the entente allies. This
the most southerly of the Balkan nations'
does pot produce enough cereals to feed
her own people. Its chief agricultural prod
ucts currants, the vine and tho olive
are to be classed among the luxuries rather
than the necessities. 2) Greece has an
area about equal to the combined area of
Belgium, Holland and Denmark. With tha
Albanian territory of North Eplruawhlch
the entente Allies permitted her to occudv
In November. 19H, her total area now
exceeds 46,000 square miles, being about
as large a the State of Pennsylvania, m
Although Oreece Is In straitened financial
circumstances, her expenditures in ii
exceeding her revenue by 811,600,000, "he
maintains an army of 60,000 omcers and
that by calling W her reserve, of all
Held, while Th.7 touTl a'valiabl. unorwnl.
arranirth adria Knn ana .ii7 ""Organised
Mlliury service "K Tareeco as aZns v(.V
tually all her neighbor MttonT eZ'.
futovei Kliu MIUnerit Haft flvful 111.V.
jk.ooo Mfftiiii u. -". nxea. upon
The perlodof ctlv." serv ce" rSqu
thy army I three years or cvainTa.n2
artillery and two yaare for InfTntry vlr
2S,e.s'js
- S TJ -M,wnr a Is Utui
IOeeeeWLiE?T25-J
wlV ,' j. "i T WT
SEVERE TuMNDteAt
BRITISH west:
Cadets Forced to Do Fiu
Months
at Great Britain's two wl?ttlnf " !
hurst and Woolwich, la oi,a,"3i
matter from what i. Li! 5U a dlffZSl
In pre-war days the shortest".? ' M
spent hero before getUnr rlSL V 3ll
eign ecn months. Now the minXS" 1
luumna. '""uia j ai
,. A.nd evcn. this period may b. ,M,
If tho great army in the niM ?krtoj
cera In a hurry. n'M tor 2
There are no vacations fn .. .
structors-nothlngbuth.
As between the n.i ,...?.U, h
at Sandhurst and the noyarMmf7
emy at Woolwich, vlrtuahj T&F
eneo la that ... .?. ln omr ai
the engineers and artliael r. "tMim1
pughly grounded In the scIene. . M "
At Sandhurst, which, by tha .. .
exceptionally gloomy barrack.livT J'l,
situated In exceptionally rteai,S'.ta,M!l.'
y several htmrtV.V "'rJi'r " W
onranlrert In rr-.--u!"' n- tW 71
as a bnttnlVnn .7 T", n "" WM It?
Bni-iir. ::.-:. :-""ry. .
army act aa company comm.i ,
have the power of InnuK.lV
Ishmpntn nn . ...i.. i B aln t.1
discipline, but a. fh. J.r ""! tf
to be gentlemen and wiff.'W
career the primary duty of WhEi V
lead men. the rom.J iLl h, U tt
pected to maintain discTpneaX
V .7 - "' n:ttaures. t
nusUcatlon and tho sentencing c . .
to lose places In the list of ucln1
d dates for mmm rfe"8.lee.l
punishments for minor oflensei v1
from the college Is a puntttSSS
for more serious: nrrni.o ....-" ""mil
bo "removed" for other" than otS&iSfl
ofrensen for nnv nf h .n .""'PinXf 1
First, moral or' physical unmnesf.',!
Hi.jc.bu utitiws, ana, uurd. If r,nn.i,J
by tho commandant as not likely to bS!l
an elTlclent offlcer. w"il
Expulsion is the gravest punlshm. il
may bo Inflicted, and is, ri$2S8&ffi&
only In extreme cases. The name of ana ,'
Z,&"lM.W&i
and the Civil Service Commission
order to nrnvAnf u ..!. . ..".
subsequently entering tho naval or mlS
service. ' "' ur lmaa
To take some of the dlsclpllnirytH,'
rOUtlno Work off tha nhni.M... .. .v.' ."
pany commanders, who nre also Irutroetm'"
granted to a number ot cadets In each coa-
tmi'y, uhu une cao.ee is given the rank d
underomcer. The latter acts as a subutw
to his company commander and asstoj bh
greatly in maintaining the general ton t
the company. The undetvofllcer's Job Is m&
sought after, because It carries with ft i
good many little privileges, as well u tt
ncceR.qlnn nf rilfrnlfv
- -o..,. (
In order to encourage Industry In in'
a medal Is granted to each of the two be
qualified cadets of each half-yearly bates,
while a Bword Is bestowed on the cadet cea-
aiucrcu io do me oest quauned cadet of us
year.
The principal subjects In which prartlol
as well as theoretical Instruction Is Impartel
to cadets at the college are military' fell
work (fortifications, bridge bullllnr, W
Iitlons, etc.), tactics and topogtjfli
(sketching, map reading and making, etc.).'
In addition, drill, riding and gymnastic! tn
also taught.
The theoretical Instruction Is Elven to 0
cadets In the "hall of study," as the Kte'
room is termed. Practical demonstrttlssi
of all matters that are dealt with tneorsel
cany are given in another place. '
It is not, of course, all dlsclnllns" ui
WOrk at thA rnlteirA fn air.-w .
nealtnv snort nnd reornflnn i nv.,i,.i'
and, as a matter of fact, enforced to i ee
tain extent. AnyUilng. however, In tkt
shape of gambling or extravagance Is tot
sternly discountenanced. The rules is t
respect might. Indeed, be said to verp M
tho sanctimonious, so very stringent r
thftV. 3
At one time tho cadets used to b &
vorltn mnrlr fni rnnlni. Hn.t... .4 tk.
money lender fraternity's alluring drcuhnVj
but are not so any longer. The ma!
they have ceased to be so Is because a aUi,
wuu now receives sucn circulars is m
strict injunction to report the fact, tnl
Extravagance also ot one time ktM i
very gay reign at tno college, but was I
lshed because of its bad moral effects oo
weattny laas ana because it made tM
tlfirm Ur fVin nnnpaw rt rial da aMKarril
-. ..u wb t,aaw livvibl VUUCVO 4H tlUUeilW"
Now no cadet Is allowed to even inotf
messing Din (over ana above tbe oral
jiicbb tuarKea oi seventy-nve cents a
Which thft nnvprnnmnt nnvi nf tnnri
S1G a month, Including beer and win
mm wii io may not spena a greater
than twenty-five cents a day, without
ouuuuon oi nis company oracer. mis
tlon Is given only on special occasloni,
ua iur me purpose ot entertaining a
Horses, ponies and does are n
fYVAft tl n bant ! V.. Antes Vnr
v .. vu m uv nvaib uj Kilts (.uucta, y
tho embryo officers, much as uport U
wjurasea amonjr mem, permiuea w p
rt jiiociings, pmy poio or nuni w
nn 4Ia ABn
was uio OlUVD
Afternoon tea with each other I
aiBaipauon" wnicn la aiioweo w-c
hilt nnthltin la l...... InlATli
"" 1VUIU15 ell 1.1IC OUupo U linyei"
HnilA laa nlll.J A . l-iuiilAAA
their rooms. Lights In rooms nav ti
.uauvve WUl, Ub aVV.sV Jl. IIs VCtyT
days and Sundays, when an extra
hmif1! n-nA In & TTs.MfflfaMi
whs t 5iVD IO tj(tt,ItCU UHUWWWWv'V
however, keep a light burning for w
nuur. a
NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW J
The "Progressive" vote In Nw
Deems 10 nave Deen cnieny a vow w --i
nf I.a T)A...I... ..- vnlnr AUt 1
w- uia Atvgicooivo jia ,.'- Zj
uuDiuoBs in accoraance wim mi i
opnngneia Republican.
Alter demonstrating to tne dusuw-b
at Shadow Xwn that the Adamson i
aesignea to shorten hours ana noi v
wsscB air. Wilson win sumuiuu -
. .- . . .. ivun
seni 01 painters ana prove w .
uiuck is wmio. uoaton imnswiy
Tb t.A a.4 nf nnu further nfOof
for three years a condition of w
existed between the United 8tW
Mexico? Better that Mr. Wilson b
. . . . . ...... thU
sagea in a state ot war i"" "'7
.. BISAlCBh V.UIIIt .UI ,D-V.- ".
"he has kept tho United States W
.....111 M, M- r. I . n.a.tlM
. (j
TTTP. I1RTTRII THING
It la better to lose with a conscience
Than win by a trlcK uniair, ,i
It Is better to fall and to know you're J
wnatever tne prize was, nj"i .
Than to claim the Joy of a far-off son j
wna tne cneers or tne ianuoi i
And to know down deep In your lnwlf.
A cheat you must live and aie.
Who wins by trick m
Ana at nrst no may mm v -t--But
many a day in the future lie" '
When he'll wish he haa met o7;
For the man who lost shall be glad '
And walk with his head VP hlil.
While hla conqueror know be
the part '
nf a nheat ni1 A llvlna lie.
The prise seems fair when tbe flM
Bat.MTa u is truiy wuu
Tou will hate the thing when the
-??L
And It's ttUr you nvr should
Pkava mmt flio blUT
lM.mimetmTMwUmewa
! . aa.Al. L tt L-'a Jai &
1 iBiaS HaaeaF IMBf )