Mtoto Wf4" aMM && ltmic ummat comtany CTOtg K. K. CUHTW, hkMm MMTOntAL BOARD I Cnii H. K. Centra, Chairman. 9. at WXALKT .,...,.... i.... Better 0. XAWT1M.,,rmrl Baelwiai Maneser 1MW?&2 Bi1 T,aa freJW jg,J'""' at fl'MUWi Iww fhflMtf. wajao VSaae, lnseela'Hie. I...,. Bread Hi Ubaetnut Street rrfM'inwn inniaing itrcaoman Toirr Miiinan mora, nuiiaing le-Dmrot HulMtrg ....V.lrfll Trlbane Uulldlns JOTWS IWRKAUSt Vmms ....hi noiidiiut rHrll..,,...Ttn rime llnlMIng Baavb .. . .no.Friedricnatraaaa wlltHXii .Marconi llouae. rtrn1 lB,i, ..,. 83 Rue Louis la Urand mfnamirTinv rrnvm Wr earner. fet (Mil pr wk. Tly mall, MmM Battel, ot rhltadelphla, erept where. raise faaaaga U required, on month, twenty tm ttwi en rear, threa dollar. All mall ahMrirttMn yM In advance. Wotto PmWrlher wlahlng addrra changed , pn en aa wen aa new aaur. KEYSTONE, MAW JOM JgrTewr ' MIX. MM WALNUT Ej AMnrt oH rotnitwnlrntloiw to Jfrra)0 Ltiftr, adeyeadeao Bqvarr, rhfladelpnla. it wis rnruhn.raii reaTomcs is a60KD-CIJ Mill, MITTS. TK AVBKAOK NKT TAIn DAILT CHI CB1VATJOM Or TUB KVENINO I.KDdSlt FOR 8EITKMHF.R WAS lit. Ml I. rhUadalekl, Setarday, (Meter II. ll, Naemsslty will tsach a man, how mver slow hs bi, to be wit. Euripidss. I . Love Admitted Best Cause for Mar- nan. Headline. i tiiu ovqr uisputca lir A little moro Democrntlo decrease In tho cost of llvlnn will bring It down 46 about double what It wan. ... Speaking, as Bomo folks have ro eently ot Herman efficiency, Lieutenant tKAns Itosc by any other name might do sui much. Tho President's train, which bucked Into a crowd at IMchmond, Ind possibly Was psychologically Induced to back up 'by the attitude ot Its distinguished pas- denser. EVTMNo- imxMHmmTm&mA, twmafciv For tho twenty-sixth tlino a tug kasgono out from New London to search for the supcrsub Bremen, Tho tug's cap tain Is named Hunt, which seems suffi ciently appropriate for all practical pur-poses. Thcro is J100.000 n Washington that Is saying Hughes will win and off era dda of two to one. Thero is $130,000, , OO.OOO tho estimated total wealth of tho United States that Isn't saying nnythlng at all for publication. It's praying. Tho Rural Credits Hoard Is nwamped with Inquiries from people In the cities who want to know how they can borrow money. If they have good security to offer they will have no trou W(r In getting all they want In Philadel phia, however It may bo In other cities. The parallel may not bo altogether ebvlous, but somehow when Secretary jitje-, calls In a bunch of college lire.ii teWnts to discuss army affairs ono Is re I minded of tho ancient phmso of tho chap who, called to a fellow workman, "Get itway from that wheelbarrow! What do jfffu know about machinery?" Oermany's Pittsburgh wants ruth less U-boat war in order to boom business, because "the war must bo fought to a Jlnlsh, and either Germany ot- Kngland must win, and the Interests hero on the Tthlne are ready to fight until Germany Wins." They are also ready to fight until Germany loses, so long as the receipts for munitions keep coming In. We really may work back to the rreat good days. Pugilism and wrestling were flno arts In Oreece. They are to y, but few believe It. Mr. O'Brien has followed Mr. Corbctt from tho ring drama teat pays to the footllght drama that eteesn't. The ring will rival tho foot lights when Us rewards are lighter. Art md refinement are paradoxes, They only pay when -they don't pay. John A Moore, ot South Twentloth vtreet, Is a tax reformer whoso plan for Wlevlng the financial burdens of the city f ie' Hkejy, to have the support of all the women. He Insists that the bachelors vof Sniti, lty ha says there, are 400,000 pf them- should, pay a special tax for the fivlege of being bachelors. If they were tailed, say. 16 a year, this would add fQJKffipi to the public revenues and re- V Mfvereal estate hpldera o that extent, , Weiiwould suggest that the women be ed tovvote on the proposition and that their verdlet. be accepted. There are some things which, If 9oknt must either be spoken to a finish i ec not apeken at all. It would have been ofalr to' Fifty-second street for Mr. Ferry .-JI H, a oenter of vice unless he felt -" Mur4 he could prove It and that the Qy would promptly back 1ilm In cleaning ourthe sick spots. This will undoubtedly h 4oo. for tite city has always had pride ' in West Philadelphia aa its youngest child at hope, growing healthily westward toward open country in an ever purer atmosphere and with a fine tradition of Malty Uto, 'What may be Jcft undone by Gfcr Mall, ubU sentiment will do. For ew that tt arctHht has' beep turned U there U no turftinif back- To turn thfti, Atkt em and then tfa nothing mora mere harm than ged. It ta imy ftMasjia)et c ilWMiltiowi eapniwie. Tney an r frsen th volearte, Oiw mt rtt tnr might hit the Utah, tmt It weM not hit Utah. Upon the Hg eastern ports, particularly tht city,, would fail the brunt of the work ot building etttaMrine and battleships and making powder, getting labor In a hurry, pre paring Vttast dofenses, laying mines, toeing trade, facing nil sorts of risks. It might mean prosperity, and then It might mean mushroom enterprise and inflation. It may be all, right for tho West to be tnnatod nnd calm. But hot sir Is cheap nnd cocksure, and capital is dear and cautious. jrniay b gxod thine that people ts wenrr wJwn they are Hying en HtU M a vqleana. It would net 4lt K Mt hlwsrnan of a sMp eon- ky . awkmrineii Jet, Hi 0m im tte tcomimm. Mtw. m.uwmm ,, ea hvoi- it wtm nsldf d a nubtouw Wi. a broker he'd up the newa of a tow hours till he oould buy the depreciated aeeurtaes of LonAm. H U held to be no reproach to Kns; oapiUl that it had cone to make the ane pusntsr to win Waterloo. Many MM West in too pen son taiak mIm ti mrrr taw owe MM W. M aVrA -, "w: ,.sr ; .yi..t" HAS MR. WILSON HYf NO TIZED GEUMANY7 rpiifi IndeiHindent voter who has rend tho Now York World to learn the best that can bo said for Mr. Wilson nnd tho worst for Mr. Hughes must, to retain sanity, co mo to ono conclusion: Mr. Wil son has hypnotized Ocrmany, Tho staggering Kaiser, with ono side of his brain craving peace with the United States and the other sldo war, calls to the voters of this German colony: "Deliver mo from the glare of those terrible cyesl Break his eyeglasses! Beat him! Any thing to beat Wilson!" The World says: if .President Wilson Is henten, the Oermiins will have a right to regard It ns "a glgnntlc Oermnn victory," nnd to decornto their windows with flags. Ortlclnl Germany may not know what Mr. Hughes will do, but It will know thnt the President has been defeated, nnd by the Orrmnn voloj that Mr. Hughes will he without ltowcr until March 4 nnd that Inn Government of the I'nltcrt Stntcs will ho ndrltt To as sumn thnt tho Imperial Government will not tnke the fullest ndvantngn of Its opportunity Is to nnHUino that the Uer man war eagle has become n dove. Let us try to conceive tho tangible happenings thus conjectured. On tho night of November 7, nt about D o'clock, let us say, tho nows will bo flashed to Germany that Mr. AVllson Is defeated. It wilt bo 2 o'clock In tho morning over thero at that time, but patriotic Berlin will arlso In Its nightcap nnd mako night hideous with grisly Joy. It will decornte the windows with tho Intertwined Ger man nnd American flags. America, It will cry, has repudiated Wilson and Is loyal to tho Kaiser. And then, glowing with tho rapture of a now entcnto with America, tho Ger mans will sink an American ship loaded with American citizens, who will all bo drowned. What could President Wilson shy to that? Something llko this: "Great heavens, Lansing, I havo beon singularly repudiated by tho American peoplo! The Government of tho United States Is not my personal property, I have no right to express my personal pas. slons' through It, an I said tho Colonel wanted to do. How do I know what Hughes wants to do? Tho World's been saying that he's tho Kaiser's friend, nnd that therefore ho wants war with Ger many, nnd that I'm the Kaiser's enemy, nnd therefore want to keep peace with him. Do friends mnke, war? Do enemies keep tho peace? I've let tho World keep saying that If I'm repudiated It means war. Well. I'm repudiated. Then why wait till March 4 to start war7 Send for Daniels to call out tho marines, and let her rip." , More Important than even tho neces sity of Mr. Hughes's election Is It that wo keep our sanity. If Germany wants war with us wo will bo- at war with her whether Mr. Hughes or Mr. Wilson Is elected. If Germany doesn't want war with us we will not be at war with her, whothcr Mr. Hughes or Mr. Wilson Is elected. Nobody has hypnotized Ger many, unless It Is Germany herself. Sup pose tho Germans do want Mr. Hughes elected. So do the English want Mr. Hughes elected. If Mr. Hughes Is pro German, why In tho numo of reason do tho English want us to have a pro-Oor-man President? SCOTT, DOVE OF PEACE TTAIlMONV In Organization love feasts " has como to hang llko a rare Jewel from tho delicate thread of Mr. John R. IC Scott's presence. The Vares and their various followors, Including the Mayor and other orilclnls, dodge these dinners at which only the McNlchol faction would bo represented If It were not for the facile Congressman. It Is something to tuck away in the attlo of memory for future reference when compromise candidacies are discussed at Atlantic City and other slate-making suburbs of Philadelphia, It Is a healthy thing to expose Mr. Scott and others ambitious to serve their fel low citizens In high ofJlce not "expose" in tho unpleasant sense, but In the strict meaning of tho word, to put out, or set forth, for scrutiny. What particular charm or wisdom has he that gives him the radiance ot a dove of peace hovering on high wing botween the two bitterly opposed factions of the Organization? Ills career resembles somewhat that of Con. grersman J, Hampton Moore, beginning with subservience to the Jocai Organist tlon and developing on national lines to a degree of Independence. Moore could probably have gotten the mayoral nomi nation last year If he had wanted It, but hie national .prominence and success In Congress were too much to abandon lightly. 0cott has not found Congress very help ful, bt this M his first term and he is only ferty-three, and a good 9rt at ao tlva years bid him bide his time, He Moke' pty etose to the heme city, near the pick, candle ahades at polltlenl ban HtMtU. and he has even talked vigorously of reform. H has considerable personal foiiftwia tor a Vare man hailing from a MoWiabol kMtton. The nm ot those under duress or In. aiiarp human trouble whom bin dnntorUy in and out ot court baa ro4 nappy k leekm. As Ooogrs. man-MVbmsl b has oome before Uae wbU COM MM nnd miM lb iniinimisji k n.f, T.r !."" J. T -' -3Wynj !&&&Mt&xi Tom Duly' s Column The Vilkue Poet Whenever lands of mlo play or fire bells ring out, It doein't make tnuch difference ichatjob I am about, I have to drop mv tcork right off an' make a quick tklddoo An' ruth outdoors on Chestnut street to see what news it new. The other day f eaupht the sound of martial fife an' drum . An' knew that home from Mexico our soldier bovs had come; I hurried out to have a look an' filck out thote I knew The more I looked upon those lads the more mv tconder grew! An' something made mv bosom swell an' took me lv the throat An' couldn't let me rest at night until 1 sat an' wrote: Return of the Guard "Homo ngalnl" tho bugles play, Down October's breeze; Juno that saw them march nway Saw not men like these Thrco short summer months ago, Out of shop and. mill, These, who heard the bugles blow, Marched jet marched but 111. Nono too young theso eyes of mine, Still they could avouch Many a ragged, lagging line, ( Many a shoulder's slouch; Many a Weak and loose-hung Jaw, Units out of tunc. Marked our rookies, rude and raw, When they left In June. "Homo ngnln," tho bugles play, "Home, sweet homo again." They wcro lads who went away Ah! but these are men. Mark the bronze upon tho cheeks, Mark the flashing eye! Mark tho cnrrlngo that bespeaks Will to do or die. How llko veterans they go, Homeward bound, nnd yet All tho battle stress they know Is Its distant threat. Lads! O lads! we'd welcome War Gladly for your sake, If 'twere always never more Thnn about to breakl IT'S TOO much to say that the monot ony of tho lino weather was beginning to got upon our nerves, nnd yet Philadel phia was nble yesterday afternoon to np predate tho Joyous relief with which rain is hailed (no pun Intended) In certain parts of California. And then to awaken to tho wide-flung beauty of this crystal morning! Therein lies tho charm of our oftcn-mallgnela Philadelphia climate: "Ago cannot wither her. nor custom stalo her Infinite variety." A WOrtDSWOItTHIAN WAIL Vacations come, vacations go. Vacations cease to bo. My little one is o'er and oh I The difference to me. G, Etymological Entrances SLEWED Somewhat drunk (slang). Wtbater'a Dictionary. Tho master of a ship a sailing vessel, of course, for wo aro getting back to origins, remember had some trouble with ono of his men owing to tho letter's fond ness for liquor. At tho end of tho voyage, when It came to this man's turn to bo paid, tho captain said: "What nnrne, my man?" "Kane, sir," replied the seaman. "Cain? Are you the man who slew his brother?" "No, sir; I'm the man that was slewed." THE WOMAN'S EXCHANGE In o. o. d. p. asks: When two women are talking over the telephone, which one should bring the conversation to an end? We put It up to the Missus, and she said, "Tho ono nearest to the end, of course." HAS your eagle eye, asks W. B. P., caught the following, calmly reposing under a window on Market street above Fifteenth: $2.00 HATS WITH THE B.OO LOOK, $3.00 BIr In my favorite morning paper, on the morning ot the First Regiment's re turn, I read this head: "First Regiment Arrives in Phtla.; Will Parado Today; Banquet Will Follow Parade Up Broad Street." Later I saw the parade and there, euro enough, was a "hot-dog" man In the crowd behind the last com pany. F. K. BEWARE THE DUNKIIOUND! Serving tho City Beautiful He Bites All Unlovely Things Our pet will be busy today and possibly tomorrow. ' BIr A hurry rail for tho bunkhound, pleat. Il mm attend to tho rontrartor or contractor who ar sradlna and pavlnr Havtrford road and City line. They ahowod Intclllstnco enoush to Start hoth Join at the aamo tlm. and aa a rtiult tin City Una closed oft romoletely and liavar- tuch a lovely condition that aero ta the on aafo and comrartabla IC. C. K. Dear Tom Why can't rpu perauada your nunanounu 10 ri"e in a ironer car or on ina I, ana para a mm ai ma montna- aooi ion or. iri on in window panaaj We plana traya way remalnlns, umuh would rt Ike a IHtlo llsht and a look ouUido Mice In jnanaa. w, I, while. I K. And arraat nlaaaura In tha asnlolla of tha nunknouna. -intra i ami mucn work ror'hlm. For Inatanro, on th north aid of Cbcatnut Jtreet, not tar from Thirty-ninth, ther la a de eded aton lady la a rather neallgei eoatume, oldlns a Jar. Hh look decidedly unbalanced. Perhapa the bound doea not. blta ladia. but h might at Itaat bark at her. TVM- ACCORDING to the P. L., Von Tirpltx. aa reported by Ambassador Gerard, said amongother things: President Wilson sends notes to us whieh are virtually ultimatums every time we break Infractions of interna- tteaal law. And one of our oontrlba asks If we shouldn't amend by making "Infractions" two words' and .striking out "of,'' Another one over the door of a, Veetaurant lit SaTanaytenk: AWUn KA.TINO HHWBL'B QVirTHRaJ MMOKM W. OUR city firemen and alt business men who bY bad or contemplate having ftraa wtU be Inter i4d jm this netfe wbiefc Qtob Tretcar took U to Jot (ar im w WW x. wa ftyjfty . I fsstss AasJkMeasaaata?k BfAssssssssssVassVl t MlllfflaMaBlTlfty W4 ... tiift w? ???," wmfiFfw0 9?iP JmfP 1 ABOUT TH THE BOSWELL OF AMERICAN POLITICS Edwnrd Stnnwood, Man of Letters nnd Affairs, Has Written the Standard History of the Presidency Plays Whist and Courts Sleep by Extracting the Cube Roqt By GEORGE W. DOUGLAS IT IS not given to many men to write n book which has n continuous sale for more than thirty years. Some of tho great novelists and poets have done It, and a few historians. An American to whom this honor has coma Is Edward Stanwood. His great book, "The History of tho Presidency" (Iloughton-MIRUn Company, BostonX was first published in 1884, under the title ot "History of Presidential Elections." It was conceived while Mr. Stanwood was editor of the Doston Advertiser. This was In the days when every good Iiostonlan would as soon have gone without his coffee for breakfast as begin the day without reading what the Advertiser had to say. Mr. Stan wood retired from the Advertiser when there was a change of ownership In 1888 and became managing editor of a weekly paper of national circulation. The greater leisure there gave him time to produce his book In Its first form. In all the years since then he has been working on It, revising It, polishing It, cor recting and recasting, until the last edition Just from the press Is In the form which pleases him. It brings tho history up to the election, of Wilson In 1012, with an appendix giving the platforms and candi dates this year. When Mr. Stanwood's second book of consequence was published a few years ago, "American Tariff Controversies of the Nineteenth Century," I asked him about how It was selling after It had been on the market a few weeks. He confessed that It was not a "popular success" In the sense of becoming a best seller. "But," he continued, "I am not writing books to make money. I want to leavo behind me a few books with my name on the title pago ot which my children can be proud." That Is the spirit In which he has worked. Ho has spent weeks to my knowledge In tracing down a single fact. He does not make a statement without verifying It and can put his finger on his authority It ques tioned. His memory Is more tenacious ot detail than that of any other man I ever met. When he Is sleepless he calms him self by extracting the cube root of numbers In the billions, using neither pencil nor paper, but keeping the figures In his mind. When he wakes In the morning he can re call the problem as he left It to fall asleep and continue the work until It' Is com pleted. This mental gift has made him an excellent whist player. He has played the game every Saturday night of the winter season for years and has written a racy history ot his whist club, of which the late Edward Atkinson was one ot the best known members. He Is the secretary of the Massachusetts Historical Society and ot the Arkwrlght Club. This club Is an association ot tex tile mill owners. Through his connection wtlh It Mr. Stanwood has become one of the best Informed American experts on tex tiles., His report on the subject for tho census of 1900 Is a mine of Information about the Industry not only In the United States, but In tho rest of the world. Al though her Is a protectionist, his book on the tnrlff Is Impartial and recites the his tory of the great controversies over the framing of schedules with n fairness and accuracy which has made the book valued by all who wish to know the facts. It In this determination to get at the truth which has made his history of the presi dency the standard and authoritative work In the field. It stands alone. Although sev eral other books have been written on the same subject, they are not to be compared with his. Some of them are palpably nothing more than ,a rewriting and reas sembling of the Information which Mr. Stanwood has collected. That by the late Colonel McClure, of this city, reproduced the tables of election returns from the early editions ot Mr. Stanwood's books with the Inaccuracies that they contained. It Is said that there were typographical errors In some of the tables, snd that these, too, were copied. Mr. Stanwood himself cor rected all the Inaccuracies In later editions. Some men who have written -on the subject havo been gracious enough to acknowledge their Indebtedness to Mr. Stanwood. The book la more than a history of the presidency. It comes as near to being a political history lot the United States aa anything that has-yet appeared. It tells how the early candidates for the presidency wore nominated, how the congressional caucus dominated national nominations, how the first real convention was called and summarises the Issues In each cam paign. The history of the first "dark horse" Is told. And there Is not a political party of any consequence which has appeared from the beginning an account of whose origin and rise Is not given, along with how It dis appeared If It has not survived The book Is concluded with a chapter on the evolution of the presidency. In which regret Is ex pressed that the Chief Executives of recent years have assumed to be a third house of the Congress and to magnify their powers far beyond the purpose of the Constitution. The chapter on tha Republican split of 1012, however. Is probably the most Interesting at the present time. In It Mr. Stanwood maintains that the radicalism of Itoosovelt was bound to cause disaffection In the party, which had been transformed from a radical party Into a conservative one. The Democracy, which was once the conserva tive party, he asserts, haa become more radical than Republicanism was at the be ginning, and he Insists that a realignment of the voters was Inevitable as soon aa radicalism began to challenge the su premacy ot conservatism In the Republican organisation. As Mr, Stanwood Is a con servative he is not an admirer of Colonel Itoosovelt, but he manages to treat the dis tinguished, tounal naturalist with the same fairness that governs him throughout the book. STRAW BALLOTS UNDEFENDABLE You don't always have to wait for a re iteration of experiments to discover the straw ballot's unreliability. We have be fore us the last publication of a very fa mous straw ballot taken In 1914, In fact, this very ballot has since been used to es tablish the claim of Its gatherers to cor rectness In this line of research. It was a New York straw ballot. It had covered a period of Ave weeks In compilation, with perlodto publication of results each week. Throughout and to the very end It probed New York State sentiment on two matters. .the governorship and tha United States sen- atorehlp. It showed that, whitman would be elected governor and Gerard senator. Whitman was elected governor, of course, and It la upon that faet that subsequent claims of the. ballet's accuracy have been based l but Gerard wasn't elected senator not by about 70,000 votes. Detroit Free Proas. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW The length of battle line 'In Burope, Asia and Afrleals about 4 WO 'mil, or approxi mately one-sixth the length ef the earth's otreumference. BuKato Times., Is It not enough to .have our national honor ailed In question, by foreign Oovern. meats wtnout luivlng our national game accused of depravity by our own cK !? Nw Yerk aw. Outside of Wall street, m one is Ukelyjo take'very seriously tha ourrent talk of paaee tsi Murope tkreVwh JlaHttesn mediation, sje fvr aa suob talk aJbatta wtsajk weaniatwm It mar have tu uses. Hew task fribtMM. F4 '- fV r - i , why ! W son carried In 191! T Both parties will strain every nerve to carry New York, but t appears more and more possible for Wil son to win even if he should fall to get those forty-five electoral votes, Birming ham Age-Herald. LIFE'S TRAGEDY When I sit down to read at night I hear a thousand voices call The painted cups, the mirror bright, The crary pattern on the wall. The curtains, whispering that they were Plucked from the bottom of the lea, The ceal that knew the Flood, the chair Remembering when it was a tree. They told ot those who beat and broke, Blasted and burned their lives away,' And with them other volees speke, And spoke mere dreadfully than they. Terrible sounds of wee, and strife Made thunder In th4s quiet room Women who gave the mlU'theliyllfe, And. men who shuddered.at the leem. a The noise -Hie snarling hammer made In maddened ears,, the fettadry'a roar, The hands that stltened the rieh broeada, Tna beat the brass, ttuit heud the.door. Hew can I read whir revad me swarm . Creaturss that strove ana) wept and died 5 To make this room rieb, safe aiad warm, Te keep the wontbsr-bsaeto otjMdeT Hew aaa I rest wblH in tbe Aw attne and garrei. den and pit. bey Mp wbo bvtn w (J m - -TirL s.im ,- V,ilV ""'v .' What Do You Know? Qu-Hf el otntrnl interval will pa onwiral In thla column. Ten oaaattoH. IS anaieer t Mck every toelMnermeil pereeit kM knot, or oxkti dally. QUIZ 1. What are "brat Journal," parlaneeT t. What la a quarter at tralnT S. What I homeepnuT In railroad 4. What floor In a botldlnr la aometlmea called rhai thi ilrS e tnezaanlnet 8. When I her la a aeartltr ef aema neeeaaarr rommodltr what la the rule thai sorerna the prleeT It there wa nre per leaa bread than wa needed would prle riae rive per rent! 6. What la the sooaeetrp ef tha German army 7. Sometime a man la 'land poor." What doea that mean? S. Who la the Democratic candidate for United Mate Senator In rennarlranlaT 0. What are the traneepta of rathedraUT 10. One often read of "medlatUed" royalty or family ar Itate. Kiplaln tho term. Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Trillion! by Knllh notation, a nnlt with eighteen rlpnam by American, one with twelve elphera. t. rrovlelonal rrealdent' ot Irtah Repnbllci Patrlrk Trarae. - S. John Wllkea Booth! aaaaaaln of Lincoln. . simrrira. hbi namrg lor AiofTinj, rriirunui. n writer and eiplorer. who wrote about ine jew worm, jnef into sener Colombo. 5. Duaontt a canae made br hollawlne? trunki ale, a renin dwelling .or cxcstb. lion uaeo lor tnelter. 6. lire fret nine for a man and. Are feet. flea .DO I am did nat earn general nao notu alter me eeatn or tree abant the helehta which could be called neither tall nor abort. for a woman are 7. "The nlrliu, Harah"l Harah nernharji aetrea. i alien tho playfully deacrlbed. nd lltnba, nk of atatue apart from wd. bead 8. Torao and I 9. A eapltallat la one who haa wealth stored up ta produce more wealth, with ar with out CAmpetitarai a moncpouit may bo a eapltallat, who haa no competitor In. bla Held, or a man without capital who la the only en who haa aceeaa ta wealth la certain jorrns. 10. Sinking fqndi money act apart to wlp out a rltate'a or corporation' debt by degree. German Music in London M. Q. -The English have not put Ger man muslo under the ban. The London Bymphony Orchestra has Just issued the prospectus ot a series of six concerts. Each program comprises four works, making twenty-four In all. Of these, nineteen are of Oerman composition, three English, one French and one Belgian. There are nine Symphonies on the programs, all Oerman. Even thote people who have pleaded for a broad view of musical matters. so that Oer man masterpieces should not be boyootted think that the Bymphony Orchestra has Unwisely gone to the other extreme in rely ing so overwhelmingly on Teuton music, while Ignoring completely the fine classics of Itusslantand Italian composition. Copyright J. H. The copyright law provides that the application for registration ot any work shall specify to which of the following classes the work In which copyright Is claimed be longs: nooks. Including composite and cyclopedia works, directories, gazetteers and other compilations; periodicals, Includ ing newspapers: lectures, sermons, ad dresses, prepared for oral delivery: dra matlo or dramatlco-mualcal compositions; musical compositions) maps; works of art; models or designs for works of art; repro luctlonsof a work of art : drawings or plastlo works, ot "a scientific or technical character photographs: prints and, pictorial llltistra tlons. The amendment of August it, 1812, adds motion picture photoplays; motion pictures other than photoplays. The appli cation for registration of any article should distinctly specify to which one of these classes the worK belong An article Is not entitled to registration unless, It Is rea sonably possible to eiasa It under one or the other of the designations named In the statute. Application Is made to the Cony right Office, Washington, p. c. Protection may be procured merely by the publication of the Work with the notice of ooiveiii,. affixed tharete. I la required that.auah' ..wi.v". -. .. wuii wpy PuDnSiied or ottered for, sal in the United States bv authority ot the eopyrlght' proprietor. Tha notloe of oot-yrigfet should om "if the word "Cjppyrlgbt" orv the abeVeTtatl Cepr.. with the name ofwSS prletoT. It Is provided, too, wtavSiiu; for non-oompllaiwetharewHh. that tWe'eoev. right proprietor aU.jo pubUeatlea, ImmL dletety forward, two. WntHete ooJS'iJ: beet edition of the work to JtheTUmeuof Copyrif Ms. Washmaten, D. C.. wIST T ul of $1 tor reateti-ntloa wiOi'iiaiiii, copyright proprietor has the prlvlleee In Hen-trf seoimg eopUa Waehlwon dkeot ot depositing tbem with noatmaatar, whoir requested, 1 required o give receipts there. for. and inaU-tkam te. the ,oopyrtbt '- - without eostto tbe applloaat, MaTt !! of tabotowajaSs. a priat must be aw .7 the otto, and with laoturee. dcamatie -duotloaa or mWeallqpmimHkaM. a kuu- acript or urpewrniea eopjr aaw vianjiami vmnm am nr)Mrf irnm w"wwa a aaaau- PJtMe1. iamaT-, "1 - fflk . - .- " -! ru ojj. . ' 'M$MMi$&MKl5m: -' WMLPHU SEASON OPENS Wit UKCHKSTRAC( Stokowski Finely ji J",,""o oympnony at vorK in Honor of War Victim Leopold Stokowskl'a baton opened the new musical season iii-u aiieniion yesterday ---- the Aeademv nf M...t ..: .rn J ccert-of the Phllat.i.i. seventeenth year. Tha nn. YVr"" tesemMed Its predecessors of tha uL . or nine years. Thla Is to say, oi3 auditorium wan r-ma .. . ln1 duly appreciative of one of the hiJL . or musical endeavor. in the phrthaSv nects of-thn apene hn-.... '"'"ai I change was noticeable, The dlSatf timnated I" wh -h a - -wnai has -framed the orchestra nn iu. . no more. It haa been replaced brTi nt want nAitn V.1l .. ' arffl wholly devoid of ny !, mtsguiaea or otherwise. Th loiaiiiciiou uy mi improved I .HHmMtd f.f l..t ....... ,.,t... . ,nl ycBr, , txt t'loKoiiia uiw uraieiui io the eye. Ai temporary a stop-gap until more ttak stsglng Is ready about fop th n-lTl year. It Is to be hoped that thbT ,.. ai.Uisj win uo Rsj sautryjnr i Admirable ImprovlMUon. Opening cdncerta are tradttfonAl& w-. ...... i..,1 iwumic ineiin moreover, are generally toward'l nwuuaiu aaunfl or music, Tsatfi iMuaiom uuereu no actual dee froni this policy, save for tha ..! excuse for the Inclusion of Max'? variations ana Fugue on a ThaaZS Trill--. rvn.1. -e . . " -...c. n. ..,. ui,riiiiK was mane in a i or in rnemonam, as tne Herman on was killed In the war In May, HtJ luriunuiciy, variations are not a rfMj Htunuii .viiifuBiuvii vnoae preteeeas Is likely to Inspire grief for Irreparable"! iiniic lunocn. iney unquestionably to tne.ncia or musical acrobatics. Te'ei pobo inem aarouiy is to reveal tei skiii ana even erudition. Hut tbe'.-j im is ioo nnmperea to excite great ( tlnnnl nnrient. '. . . .. ta. . itegera vnriauons are skillful Thirl c. euici u miuiicry ox moaern coel point, but, frankly, tho set In quertai ions ana wearisome. Tne baalo forgotten opera, 'Der Ernetans" iTheM vest Wreath), Is Teutonlcally com ramer more cruaa man sympathei naive, Tne composer haa don with such material, but whether It ' togetner' wortn wnile is another ou To the Interpretation only praise oaJtl accoraea. -rne score bristles with;: cuttles nnd Mr. Stokowskl's triumphed over them with ease. The other numbers of the Dror far the greater part of It belonged'te'1 realm of Inspired muslo, and the orch performance keenly emphasized tht: acter. The afternoons rain had see no deleterious effect on either the or the liorns, aa Is sometimes the caa tne sonority or tne brass cnoir in. Bib magnificent patriotic tone poem. dla," which closed the concert, was,! Ins- unit milaA.Hntrllne .-. .. -.wv ....B....0. Beethoven's "Corlolanus'V overtore,,l was the opening composition, was si with a' fine appreciation ot Its traits i nlty, but the high-water mark ot caalon was reached In Brahma's exe Third Symphony sometimes eulogised the composer a Erolca whose beauty and serene yet mighty iff was glorified anew In a reading whteai played Mr, Stokowski at his best At I conclusion of the last movement, whenl rapturous opening theme Is again; catcly Bhadowed, the audience ap with such vigor that at the conductor' heat the entire orchestra stood and Its acknowledgment. Mr. StoKon always at home In Brahms. The ad artistic resources of both him and Ni gaQlzation want no more congenial en ment. : tt WHAT TOWNS ARE FOR Some forty places In our country, l Ihg from Ashtabula' to St AugtisUaelll run by city managers. This means tastj everlasting American problem of rail government Is now being tackled fully by calling Into action one of the of human traits that Joy of achler that thrilled In Tubal Cain's heart w hung up the first piece of good Iron'' banked his forging fire and went get something to eat Running a city I business In the baser sense of (anyhow) making money, but it Is bu in tne better sense of getting imp things well done, The city manager 1 free hand and a lob of his own. II I fore can buy things cheaper, hire and 1 more capable men and help them .turaj results. The citizens (or shareholders) I see what he la accomnllshlnc In the ' condition of the publlo property, seajij streets, sewers, parks, etc.; can cheerjj accomplishment against the coats, as i In accurate accounts and revealed la i and brief reports. Then they can back I up or get him fired as need la. TM tlclans cannot undermine the active' power by dividing responsibility. Independent offices and contused Ju tlons, but must either keep their has or else buck the task of firing the , the town. American common sense I serted itself and the new method' wilt I As the years go by we will have ph cases of trained men starting as t of tank villages and rising to run big i wun pay ana recognition proportio their work. A lot of the dynamic- now being trained In our eagia schools will be turned directly Into n our towns better places In which te j. nat. is what towns are fori comer - VISIONS I never watch the sun set ado, western skies But that within Its wonderness I mothers eyes; I never hear the west wind sob .the trees But that there- comes her broken o'er the distant Beast And never shine the dim stars 'bat j my heart would co Away and back to olden lands and, I of long ago. A rover of the wide world, when heart wuh vAiinr The sea came whispering lo m is J beloved tongue; 'And, oh, the promises she held ot, lands aaleam That clung about my boy-heart and! mine eyes with dream: , And Wanderlust came luring me tilt ' the stars I swore That I would be a wanderer tor evermore. A rover pi the wide world, I've Northern llsht a AAashlng countless oelors Iri the s" wintry nignta; I've watehtd tha Southern Cross o'er smiling, sunny lands. nna seen tne tast- sea earess paia stiver sands: StHl wild wrest 'is' scourging Wanderlust ef -yore' And I must be a wanderer Tf or em mere. And yet I see the sun set adown tkeVl ern skies. And jrtianpse within the wonda mother's pUadliur eyes; And yet I bear tbe -wbet ind . in the waee. ' That Vftfahr oioafcs bar brokon all ! tin ataeauas. aa&a- . :a-- -Wa mm i AM MM, wmstt shine tbe dim Water Heart would go tu ber i.