g-SipK-A -"WwwwamiBi!"" 'rmrfffrnP" '-wwssw smt - .ewe jiHiRui?wfr, S Euenfngj l$ittytx PUDLIC LEDGER COMPANY CUIUS II. h CtmTIS, rmcsmtsr Charles It. l.udlngton. Vice Prerllnl! John C, Msrtln, Secretary nml Tremuren Philip S. Cplllne, John n. Williams, John J. Spurseon, P. fit. Whulty, Directors. tSDITOtt.Vlt HOAltDi Cuts It. K. Cbhtu, Chairman. P. It. XV1IALET.... . .Editor roitN C. MAJlTt.N'. . . Gcnerit Muslness Mansger Pubtiitied dally nt VtiUa LnwRn tlullcllne. Independence Square, Philadelphia. I-eD-ac Cx.NtiiAt Uroail and Chestnut Strr'ld Atl.iKTlo Cur.. Prrjj-tnfcm IlulMIng fcsw YoK 200 MUropolltan Tower Dbtkoii.,... H2 Ford ltlllMlnR T LotJIS 400 Olob-Dmorrat llulldln Cnicioo 1202 Tribune llulldlng NEWS BUREAUS! snmoTON HennttJ TUbbs PulMIng Nir Yotm DoaBAt! The rimes HtilMlng Ilut.m HussAU no Frtedrlctutrai'vi I.ONDOH Iltjttiiu Marconi House, Rtrand 1-iws llcnxiu. ...32 Run Louis la Urand SUBSCRIPTION TEBM3 Tha Ertxuta Ledges. It served to uherlbera In Philadelphia and surrounding towns at lha rata, of alx (6) cents per week, payable to tho carrier. Ilr malt to points outside of Philadelphia, In lha United Stale, Canada or United States pos sessions, postage free, thirty-five (35) cent!" per month. One (It) dollar for threo months or tour IJ4) dollars per year, payabla In ad vance. To all foreign countries one (511 dotlar per Inonth. Noticb Snhsrrlbers wishing nddrese chfttiRed must give old as well as new nddress. BELL, 1MO WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 3000 r rj C7 Addrvai all -rommuMlc-itfloM to Vwnlnj Ledcer, ltiispendenco Square, JVihiiit-JfpMu. s.rrmcD at tub mi ii.Anict.ru I a rosTorrtcu as arcoND-ct.Asa mail itAtTcn. THH AVEnAOC NHT PAID DAILY Citt OUIATION OP TUB EVENING LKDOKIt Ton Di-cr.Miir.n was uo.sitt rhlladrlplila, Saturdi-f, Jinuirr 20, 111?. 10 British war notes to yield alx per cent Headline. Thla Is more thnn American peace notes liave yet earned. Tho pressuro exerted by tho Allies has squeezed tho Vcnlzellsts out of Jail. It may squeeze Constantlne out ot the royal palace unless ho behave:) himself. Only ono out oC every 2G1 K'cw Torkers is now said to ho Insane. We had thousht the percentage ot thoso who had mado easy money In war bahles was larger. Why should any one be surprised at tho Penrose plan to l;eep lobbyists out of tho Stato House? Do not the lobby'sta themselves know that It Is a wast? ot timo to go there when tho? can deal with Penrose himself nt hi." office In this city? Wage Increases which wero given employes all over tho country aro being subtracted energetically by tho trades men, tho landlords and .the restaurants. It requires good bookkeeping on the part fa OI Air. I lllisumcr lo leuril wneitier no 3iSi"'-b.ead or behind tho game. A woman left her husband becauso he refused to take her to Palm Beach. After causing his arrest sho discovered that ho was doing without his lunch every day In order to taku her to tho "movies" and yet they May there Is too much mathematics In tho public schools! Two eastern States, one southern State and seven wests rn States havo abol ished tho death penalty. In tho remain ing thirty-eight States 107 persons -were punished by death last year. In tho same period there were 7450 homicides. That Is, about 1.1 per cent ot tho mur derers are executed. Theso facts aro commended to the consideration ot those who are urging the abolition ot tho death penalty In Pennsylvania. Two developments of the war havo significantly como in sequence, the threat of Increased German naval activity and attempts to increase England's home sup ply of food. The sequence is logical, for, Jf Germany's plan is to begin sinking without warning, grain ships plying be tween America and England will bo tho first victims. This is a point which those who would have us enter tho war as England's ally too often forget. If our entrance into tho war would have aa its tlrst offc-t tho cutting off of English food supplies, England would prefer us to remain neutral. Dr. Cary T. Grayson, who has been a medical officer In the navy for about thirteen years, must be regarded by the President as a deserving Democrat. Doc tor Grayson, who is the President's phy sician, had risen by tho ordinary proc esses of promotion to tho rank of a lieu tenant commander with a salary of J3000. Tha President has Jumped him over the heads of 137 other officers and landed hhn In tho ranks of the rear admirals at a salary of J8000. Ho hi thirty-eight years old, or twenty-three years younger than Dewey when he attained that rank. But what Is tho use of being President If you can't ba good to your friends? William II. Smith's health Is likely to Improve from now on as rapidly as Governor Brumbaugh's fear develops that h former Banking Commissioner's case will serve Penrose's purposes. In a brief letter to Mr, Smith, explaining his "God-l)les-you get-out' attitude, tha Governor used the word "health" four times. It was only because Sir, Smith wasn't well enough to work hard, because he had to be saved Trout himself, that ho was eUmlnfcted. Now it is Intimated that tha (jovernor Is only waiting tor Mr, Smith to recover his well-known health to rein state him- If that had been really the rason for his dismissal, Mr. Brumbaugh' 'Madness should hava developed long be low ne got out ills ax tor others aa well M Mr. Smith. The former commissioner fcaS never been In politics. His piany y-sars of service produced an efficient otlko system which ma.do It possible for th wpric to run along smoothly without r4lrtng exceptional f nergles on his part. Tha Commonwealth can take his word tor It that he Is feeling well enough to worls better than tt can, take the Jov-cj-oor'g, i Tha courage and confidence with Wfcteh New Y'-iris goea ahead with lw nsi tnms.t development ought to eoa- vert every pessimist In Philadelphia Jtrom tho error o( his thinking. Tho latest extension projected Is an elevated rail road on tftlca. avcntlo in Brooklyn to connect with tho Eastorn Parkway sub way. It Is to cost $5,210.r.nC. Tho bono Ilts which will accrue to tho district lo bo opened up me so great that tho property owners willingly submit to a special local assessment lo tnlso money to pay for tho road. Tho Publlo Servlco Com mission has Issued an assessment map covering -41,61 1 city lots In n district of ten and a half squares each sldo of Iho proposed now rapid transit line. Tho assessments will vary with tho distance from tho lino and with tho distance from the stations. Tho uverago amount to bo paid by each lot Is $123.22. This is to bo distributed over a porlod of lert years, making tho nvorngr- annual pay ment $12.62. tlvery real estate owner is confident that tho value of his property will bo Increased many times tho atnnunt which ho will havo to pay for tho now elevated lino, because ho has seen aluos boom in other districts through similar Improvement in transit facilities. JOHNSON OR K00SEVI3LT? Mil. PERKINS clasping hands with Colonel Uoosovolt In tho East and Governor Johnson In tho West Is hardly wide enough In continental scope &r historical consistency to form a permanent link between tho two most notitblo Progressive figures In tho Heptib llcan party. Ills sincerity Is not at issue. Hut do Progressives need this connecting link nt nil? Republican are Inclined to ask now, not whether it Is to bo Itoosu volt and Johnson, but Itoosovelt or Johnson. Every movement crystallizes Into n leadership and assumes tho attributes of tt personality, especially in tills country. Tho four or live million Progressives will doubtless control their party beforo long. Hut when tho tlnm comes for tho mass of their opinion lo express itself in polit ical action their mouthpleco will bo ono man, and it ho Is tho wrong man they will continue lo abandon elections to tho Democrats by default. Johnson when he Is heard In tho Sen ate next December will bo ot once tho most formidable critic of Democratic ways and means nnd the rallying point for Progressiva ambition lo dominate tho Republican party. He Is not tho mnn to center his criticism upon Mr. Wilson's foreign policy, tin attitude which hits wnakencd Colonel Roosevelt's grasp upon domestic Issues In this pence-loving re public. Tho Californian takes Mr. Per kins rather lightly. "With you in your efforts to make tho Republican parly pro gressive," ho writes to tho New Yorker; "go to It and all Progressives will bo with you." To Colonel Roosevelt tho occasion Is too solemn for such slang as "Go to it." Ho tells Mr. Perkins he has dono "a great service to tho American people," as if tho last wortl had been spokon in a grueling contest, which most pcoplo know has hardly begun. Tho difference between Roosevelt . and Johnson Is that Roosevelt believes In lead ership down to tho people nnd Johnson In leadership up from tho people. Get your leader llrst nnd then your reforms, says Oyster Bay. Get your reforms and let them develop your leader, says Cali fornia. Mr. Roosevelt thinks a hard fight Is already won. Mr. Johnson hanr't begun to fight. the littlest kind a.merica'xjsm OF 1ET us Uopo that it will bo a long time J before such counsels of narrowness as Frederic C. Howe, Commissioner of Immigration, uttered in tho Academy of Muslo aro seriously considered in Washington. The I'nlted States is en tering on un era of commercial expan sion. Its capitalists arc seaiiing invest ments abroad. Wo aro producing a sur plus which must find markets in foreign countries. Wo cannot hold tho markets unless wo sond our capital along with our goods. Hut unless tho protection of tho ilag follows our business men If we adopt tho Brynnlstio theory that a man engages in foreign trado or invests his surplus in a foreign country ot his peril we might as well abandon all hope of commercial expansion. AX EARFUL OF SOUND SENSE I do not know what the national debt will bo at the end of the war. but I will make a prediction: WlmtAer It Is, what i added in real assets to the real rnhes of tho nation will ba infi nitely greater than any debt wo acquire. Tho resources of tho natipn in every direction havo been developed and di rected ; tho nation itself, disciplined, braced up and quickened, has become a more alert people. Lloyd George, In his Guildhall Kpceeh. THIS assertion may seem preposterous nt first blush, 'mt whon wo recall that the wealth of the United States has In creased by one hundred billion dollars In sixteen years without the Incentive of war and through tlto ordinary develop ment of a great ami growing nation It becomes easily credible. Tlio British Premier reminded his hear ers that millions who had been consumers have been brought into tho labor market, that old machinery has been scrapped and wasteful methods abandoned, hamper ing trado customs discontinued ami that the newest nnd best wero taking the place ot tho old and outgrown. Industrial England has been reborn through tho stress of war. Tills Is encouraging to the British and to all friends of the Allies, for It means that the British havo discovered that they can bear the expense of a war to a finish without financial disaster. ut It Is more than u portent of Allied victory. The president of tho Bethlehem Steel Corporation perceived its slgnlQcance when he told the Terrapin Ciub what has happened In England is happening In all Europe, while we in the United States nre dwelling In a fancied security Indif ferent to the industrial revolution abroad. His call to the Government and the people to co-oiierate in a spirit ot mutual confidence for the protection df our own industries when peace comas must be' heeded If disaster Is to he averted. Hie speech hpuld be read in con Junction with the annual statement of the chairman ot the United State teel Corporation, In which a siraUgr warning was sounded. It Is no time for strgeing theories. We are confronted by hard facts. They must be faced, and we must adjust our laws so that American industiy car) hold its own in tne nerce competition that looms ahead. KVENIF0 LEDGl3R-l5HITjABELPniA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, THE PARADOX OF TPIE TRENCHES They Aro Brilliantly Efficient lint! Unspeakably Wrong. Emotions Aroused by , the Snipers' Kiro My GtLRtiUT VIVIAN SHt.UES Sf-retol Concspdnienet Vvenlna Ledger LONDON, .Tail. g. Mr. Tlenry m-.l l, m far, the only American whr has wlten of Haco with a fresh InslKlit Yihd with the high quality of Imagination. To compare his ono llttith ing phrase with the perorations of Mr. As nultli i tn repeat the comparison between Lincoln nnd Mvetett nt dettvsburg. When Mr. Asqulttl proposed not to BhealluJ tlu snnrd until Belgium has been restored nnd thf tights of smnl nations vindicated bo employed a stale figure and Invoked it principle which Is by no menus clear after two years of theorising. Mr. Pord pimply Mid thnt be woUld Ret the bnys out of tho trenches by Christmas. Mr. Asqnlth hni never drawn a sword nnd Mr I-'ord linn probably nover been In a trench Hut Mr. pi.rd has Imagination ami ho has formulated the world'-) desire, whIM'-Mr. Asi'iultlt wns fofmtiliUlhn a urogram which' will prolmlily be rarrleu out) nnd a philos ophy (which will probably be discarded). As ono of those who flouted his expedi tion nnd said he was hunting pence no thn .Smirk was hunted, with forks and with hope, t mtiko amends to Mr. Pord ami marvel a Tittle thnt he was vn kein. Mr. Kurd cecins to prefer the blessing of peace to the strenuous rndpani'it of free dom. I In tried t make the grent t'isnster of the war a little iioie fruitless than It seemed even to hint, lie certainly believes thnt the gnl of human endeavor Is peace, which Is, to say the lenst. questionable. But he did come with divine precision upon the curse of tho war the trench. Wo hegnn this war by ttnyhig thnt there could ho neither romance nor glory hv it: but there wa glory, and nt once we built up tho romance of the trenches. We forgot thnt trench warfare was tho manifestation of ilermany's ilnal Initiative, when she could still Itnposo not necessarily fhe place, but tho form and lite style of action, after tho battles of tho Marne. We forgot that even for Germany, whose temper it ad mirably suited. It was n Inst resort. War Is Like Making Motorcars Some time ngo l spent n dny nnd a night In one of thoso sectors whero there Is nothing to report. The Irony of the of flclal statement Is not In Its falsehood, but In Its btnstlng accuracy. It sounds like n vllo slander. It Is a viler truth. The trendies nre a philosopher's parnillse. olenn nml well ordered and comfortable ami un kpenkubly wrong. The groat ideal of living only In tho present Is nchlexed here, for (hero is neither time uor space nor peace nor wnr. There Is only one's bit, II o the triumph of scletitlfli: inattngeinent. We told Mr. Ford to stick to his Inst and reminded him. that making wnr wns not like mnklng motorcars. We wero wrong. It Is all too like making motorcars. . I npologltsc for my emotions to the news paper editors who begged tno for the love of Mike not to send over any more trench stories nnd told mc that America was slek of the wnr. The greater indiscretion Is having emotions at nil. It Is u rotten thing to hate the way millions of men lire living and ct to believe thnt what they atn doing Is riKht. Por mo everything scrim," In the world Is either In the war or will Issue from the wnr. So I paid bitterly tor my mean llttlo thrill when I first mounted the llrcstep by learning thnt, with tin war so full ot meanings, warfare Itself is so menu inglessi, f thought 1 knew that before, but 1 wns wrong. In the trenches tln-re nrq no truths, only platitudes, unless you have tho heart to think of the Beatitudes there. Tito president of the Immortals has not been sparing of n tragic beautv or, tho liring Hup We came there on a dark, clear, starry night, and for hotns ns we splashed through tlje suggy trenches the flnrea went up, throwing it dazzling greenish light over tin. brown earth .In No Man's Land The stars and thorlights wete stage "props" no novelist would drenm of Icnvinrt them out. but they. too. satisHed the sensts. The bitterness of finding unythlng benutlful where everything was so desolate was emi nently right. There was tnyster in tho quiet night nt least as deep as tho mystery of the sniper whose flame crtmscd us again und again. What a Snipoj Thinks of a Sniper The sniper Is tolerable, because tven In tho dark he Is aiming at something. But the machine gun is aimless one of Mr. Chesterton's puns como to life. There Is no tragedy tn the death It brings, only melodrama, for It Is uccldrntal, hit or miss, Impersonal, purposeless, everything u gun should not be. I'nliko the sniper, it breeds not hale, only a furioim anger against Its cunning wrongneys Onco 1 hnd Seen the sniper's Are I gave up neutrality I be came his enetiiv niid he mine. I understood how war wus carried on even without war riors. But tne sniper Ib a detail ; a remnant of personality In this war; an anathioiiism giving way to the machine In the trenches two things are imposMbie the personal i nnd tho universal, i:cept on patrol. It is neither necessary nor proper to think about one's self. And it is never possible to think about the world. The trenches are a labyrinth and a prison, and like most prisons, they nre safe. They are not unclean, not uncomfortable and certainly democratic. The implacable parapet hftrilly admits of one rising above the other. In th.it confinement I lost first all sense of difference, then all sense of likeness to other men. Both solvations are suiierRulal. The hope of tho world Ij In tha living denial that a uniform' makes a thing out of a man, for the reverse Is as often the case. The Inst and greatest platitude of ah Is that even ' tho trenches men are men and that mankind is undis mayed even in its calamity. The men In the trenches are neither heroes nor comlo sup plements. They .ro not notably more interesting themselves than they would bo in n London "pub." But to those who find them interesting in a "pub" tt Is enough that they aro still men and that tho common honesties and the common ilecenclc3 and the common vulgarities of living persist against tho misery if the war machine. We havo given the pacifist a monopoly on tho Inn tors of war and lis has told us that death in the trenches is terrible. But the truth is that life In the trenches is ttriiblu. We havo given the sentimentalist .in uiu-.it monopoly on tho glories of war, mid ho hn tolius that death brings its redumption- And tho truth is that life briti lis redemption. THRIFT Thrift does not mean putting a little money in tho bank, nor does it mean miser liness. It means more than these ; it stands for prudence, foresight, getting value for What one spends, personal efficiency, looking out that nothing is wasted, proportioning expense to income Thrift has never been ono ot our na tional characteristics. We are notoriously extravagant, in both our public and private expenditures. It Is a sliamo to us that the saying, "A French family could live on what an American family throws away," should have jiased into a proverb and tliat we thould actually pique ourselves on our "free-handedness" as It waste were a vir tue. Certain of "Poor Richard's" sayings are seen on the posters Great Britain is using In its "thrift campaign." "Vou may think a little tea, or a little punch, or diet a little more costly anil clothes a little liner can be no great matter, but remember 'Poor Richard' : JMany mlckles make a muckle.' " low many of us know the foolishness of laying out money In Poor Richard's "pur chase of repentance"! Other maxims remind us that "Always taking out and ne?r put ting in soon comes to the bottom of the tub"; "A fat kitchen makes a lean will": "What maintains one vice would bring up two children." And at this moment there is especial significance In his jnaxhn: -i-ot age and want save while you may. n0 morning s-ju lasts the whole day." Detroit Free Press, A::? SPlS jS?JEX"jr ,y "Si .tr , .- r-!':S-. ' .T'.F- 'tfl,.J.l' .i.. . .s 4-?. &''.? . r&Mlfw,i& s. t ,. . s?. .: NV.twJim: f'--f,"!.-- 'X&'-A.i'K'.i'-ic' j fc ' .' '!' !' -"'I"" lii'ifi'lM :A I r'lt!:,l',ri!ii sr'' , - fi--'.i-i--Vl4'vi!'Vi.t,k,V' . '-.-, ., .' Jit ,,".V !V THE VOICE OF Another Attack on the Betsy Ross MythThe First Flag Was Made by Hannah Rore, Great-Grandmother of President McKinley HANNAH ROUE VS. BETSY ROSS To the JJdIJor of tho Kvcninu Ledger? Sir The article In your paper called "Tho Great Flag Mj'.h." by John Ulfreth Wot kltts, of ticccmhnr !. I believe, wii3 cut out and Bent to me nt'thnt time. I meant to write this history of tho ling anil suttd it then, but n severe illness prevented. The family bus always been indignant that Uetsy Ross should huve tho credit of making the ling, which wns made by our great-grandmother. Hannah Cljapman Rore, and this article coming out hi Philadelphia in our paper made me think it was time to state Just who did make the ling. Wo havo a society here culled tho "Uetsy Ross," which has nuked mo to join, but 1 refused, ns ltetsy Ross did not mako tho ilag. If not nsklng too much I would very much like you to print this article, as I think true Amerlcon history Is interesting to nil American renders, ond this history, which I have very much abbreviated, has been handed down for every generation slnuo it occurred, both vWially nnd by writing. The reason why I wrote this history was to show that Ilnnnnh Chap man Rore wu not a common illiterate woman. An old lady who Is now nbont eighty said Hannah Rnre's children were all fine, large men of great intelligence, noticeablo among men wheiever they went, UKtiHGIA I-!. nOUR COOK ALK. Great-granddaughter of liutinali Chapman Rore. Pittsburgh, January 1C. McKlNLKY'R GRRAT-GRAN'DMOTllRR MAUI-: THH l'LAG Andrew Roro Was driven from England to Holland by religious persecution, then enme to America and obtained land in l'ertnsylMinla from the Indians by treaty, the same us l'enn. This land was got from the Indians, by what was then known ns u "walk-around" as much land as a man could walk nround frum sun to sun, or sunrise to sunrise again tho Indians re ceiving so much goods In barter for each "walk-around." In this way he became owner of hundreds of ncrt4 of ground, situated in Uucks County, the county seat, 1 oj lestovui, being situated on the old home stead. Later Andrew Roro moved nearer Phila delphia, whero ho had fisheries, ferries, lumber mills and iron furnaces, all of which are named in his will, filed tn Doylcstowu. Almost all tho manufacturing part of Phila delphia is on Ills ground. Most Important of all thero wero Ills furnaces. Ho was tho first iron man in Pennsylvania and probably the first in America. He was known as nn "ironmonger." tho term 'In those days for nn iron manufacturer. All, or nearly all, tho shot and shells of the Revolutionary War were manufactured in the Rore furnaces. In fact, lie was kept so busy with tills work that he participated in only a few cf tho battles. Those de scribed are Monmouth, tho Brandywino and Chadds Ford. , His wifo was an Kngllsh Quaker lady of a wealthy Philadelphia family. Her name was Hannah Chapman, relative of Poctor Chapman, who was considered the "Father of Medicine" In this country. Hannah Chapman Roro made tha flag for our country. I believe at this time Philadelphia was in a state of siege ; at any rate, materials were hard to be ob tained. Nothing daunted, Hannah Roro said it should be truly an "American flag." All fabrics at that time were imported from Knglund except homespun linen and wool? ens. So she used for the red a red flannel shirt and for the white a white flannel petticoat. This history has been handed down from one generation to another ever since the Revolutionary War, Unfortu nately, they failed to say where the blue of the flag came from. We think Betsy Ross, being a nagmaker, roust have been ponfused with Hannah Rore, for Betsy never made the Hag Thus, erroneously, she has been glv'en the credit of it. Hannah Rore was considered a very refined, well-educated, gentle lly- After the war was over everything wasj exceedingly dull a( Philadelphia, so Andrew Rore and his family emigrated to Center fount v. where he established more Iron furnaces, known uitli a lat date as tho- Rore furnaces, imu our uavernment gave him land in Mercer County for services rn deied durlag the Revolutionary War. This is kuow" in htstoiy as the "donation." This laud was divided among his sons. He had a large family, prominent among which were Jacob Jamna ana Mary, - Thess AWAITING A CHANGE IN TEMPERATURE p '. .-sua THE PEOPLE three were moro closely connected together than tho others In a way. Jnmes married Murtha McKinley. Mary, or Polly Roro, as sho wns called, married David MoKluloy nnd was President William MclClnley's grandmother, Jacob 1elng grandfather of the writer of this article. Thcso threo fam ilies kept up a closo intercourse during tholr lives. David McKinley, William's grand father, learned his vocation a's nn Iron manufacturer in tho lforo furnaces. When the. family went to Mercer County It wns a wilderness, with Indians, hears, deer, panthers nnd many snakes. This family, undaunted, established grammar schools, singing schools, spoiling schools nnd tho Presbyterian church, it has furnished Pennsylvania nnd Ohio, but particularly Pennsylvania, many prominent men law yers, Judges. Governors and one President, William McKinley, nil descendants of Han nah Chapman Rore, who mndo our flag. WHAT THE RAIDERS DO To the Editor ti fiventng Ledger: Sir In your editorial today on tho latest German sea raider you say: "A scoro of ships sunk, most of them small and none of them n first-class merchantman, Is not a great hole In tho 10,000 strong the British merchant marine can muster." That is quite true, but that Wnot en tirely tho point, which Is that tho sinking of every Allied ship keeps at least half a dozen others In port, and thus rendors them useless. Tho British navy has sunk very few German merchant craft, but It keeps them Interned in neutral ports or locked up In German, so that tho result is about tho same ns It they wero now beneath "tho glad waters of the dark blu sea." Ono hundred spch cruisers ns this latest ono would tie up Allied shipping all over tho world and starve England, K. J. COY. Philadelphia, January 18. Tom Daly's Poem I run MAGIO AVPJ.ll "A thing of leauty U a jog forever," Though ycara lecloml tt, iict-cr may they sever Its lovely essence utterly from earth; .Yrt-cr a joy was born hut hath rebirth. There was a sunset lost, long, long ago, An ahtumn sunset seen through orchard houghs, A hoy's eye hrtghtcntna in the amler glow ' -v GttFc to his mliul no more of Ht to house For the delight of manhood's pensive days Than the hare memory of time and place; So nigh forgot, it seamed As something tie had dreamed. Yet now tha man, before chose boyish Uen The gloru melted on the evening breeze, Knoivs it lived on, for he hath found again Ills long-lost sunset of the orchard tree 3, A penny tribute to a swarthy vendor llath filled for vie this city street with splendor, A meaoer applet yet its crushed :ulp drips A long-forgotten savor on my lips, A rare, faint cssmce tasted once before, But only once; and suddenly I find The hojieyed gusl hath 'loosed a long locked door, And all j the olden splendor floods1 my mind. A care-free lad I stand, t An apple i my handt , And uatoh the amtf' glory grow and wane, I Ml upon my cheek the Iteming I Ireeae. fov lives forever! I have found again My long-lost sunset of the orchard trees!. 1917 vtl-- :-: ji... 1A .-ft. vd 'etiik$J?-'- What Do You Know? Qutries of ocneral intzrmt teitl be answered tn this column. Ten question tho answers to which every meU-injormed perso-. shouJd know, aromosked dallv QUIZ 1. Nntne two or threo places Hint nre below sea level. 2. Who formed the "ninck Horo Cavalry"? n, tviiat nro "trnelileMi trnllejH"? I. What In the Onto City of tlio Sotlth? fi. What Is tlio City of the Saints? l. Wlin nro "the American llon.-itmrtu"? 7. Wliitt It tlio Xlcarasimn Cnnal Itoiito con- lenllon? 8. 14 diiiri-li nrntierty exempt from taxation. nml. If mi, under iiluit munition? 0. When -iv.t Itenjiimln 1'r.inUlln Imrn nml ivlien illil lie (lie? 10. lUuit It the name ot the Austrian Kmnreas? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz The rait-tlnn tn machine titptl nn uhlplio.iril for liiiiullini: Hie itm-lior mill other heavy UclKlltl. "lit tu, Unite!" ("And tlinu, ton. IlriitiiM") are tmilltfoimPy tlio l.iit word of .ItilhiH I'lienar after llll former friend, Marrim .Inula-- llrutim. Iiad MnMied hint. The nurds are iiromitinrctl 'i:tt ten, Itru lay." Till tailpii-Mitcrc! M'lm n German of clown Nh ult of the fourteenth century, whoso i-ross Jot.ts made Mi llfp O'o itatlierhiK point of popular tales of lnlsrjilef. The l'aM.in Koet'-t.-i Is nil llnnlUh organiza tion fur tlio ndwitireinent of socialism. A (run Is s-ittl to ham; lire when tlio ponder rharco fal's tt explode promptly upon helm-; Imtltrd. Tlio linni-dihord was a Kecd musical Instrp ineiittsluiped llko n piano und similar tn n pWuio except Hint the nounil was pro duced tn pieces irf croir-nillll. or leath er, which twlttlied tlio hiring Instead of liummerlni; litem The Indus Is the -crrat rher which hounds IiiiU.1 on the west, scimrntlni; It from AN KliuuNUn nml ll-iliit-lilstaii. Mexico Cltv Is ilie larcrfit Mexican city tuearlv inn oon) find liiiudalahira tlio sec ond city (1110.1100) In sl7e nml Importance. John T. Ailiiins. of town, tins !,en elected tlco alialroian or the Kepubllran Na tional Committee. Mriiilhiirliw (1011-1737) was tlio most fn iiious xlolln inulrr ot the Crrmiiiieso school. A Papal Prophecy T. S. The prophecy of St. Malachy set forth the vision of St. Malachy, an Irish prelate beforo whoso mind was unfolded tho long list of pontiffs xvho wero to rulo tho Church until tho end of time. Their names were not given, but they wero re vealed by their natures, and for ench there was n mystical title, supposed clearly to represent some dominant trait of tho Pope's character or porno outstanding event of bis rein. Tho manuscript remained hidden in tho nnman archives ror moro than 400 years. It was first discovered In 1550, and was published later by Arnold da Wyon. Thero has been much discussion as to whether St. Malachy was actually tho author. H Is undoubtedly one of tho most remarkable prophecies known. For Instance, Plus IX was the 101st Popa In St. Mai achy's catalog. His designation would seem almost something mora than n coincidence. It was "Crux da Cruce-' "Cross from a Cross." No ropo In history had had a reign so filled with trial and tribulation as Pius IX. Tho present Pope. 101 on St. Mnlachy's list, has a disquieting title "relgIo deppptilata," "the faith laid waste." It might have any one of the ominous meanings which pessimistic interpreters place upon It, but as "Intrepid trust" Is the summing up for the following pontiff, thero Is evidently prophesied no great catas trophe at this point. Van Rurcn'a Presents W. S. D. During Martin Van Buren's administration us President there were presented to him a pair of Arabian horses and a pint of attar of roses. As Presidents are not allowed to accept gifts from foreign Governments, he disposed ot the horses in some way, and the attar of roses he had sealed and placed in the Patent Office. The Jar of attar of roses was for a time on exhibition In the Patent Office and was stolen a few years after being placed on exhibition there. The exact date of its die appearance Is not now known, 'but it was probably some time between 1SS0 and 1800 i , , , SAM LOYIVS PUZZLE CAN you find the- names of seven towns hidden in the fellow-toff short letter from a traveler: "We made a light r-tfyal boat vth a mainsail. I was the skipper that came to a bad end." Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle TUB Chinaman's prices were two cents for collars and three cents for cults. t The Northeast Corner Rubalynt of n Commuter XL Would you your Substance riotously ni,i Then to n Rummage Sale go with mV I riena ; r ffiub Sfl'6' r lh Shak6sPear Study For on theso dolh our Social Life depend. On Humor in Women II TT WAS promised a few days ngo that w. 1 would revrt to the moro ancient Indies who had whnt they called a sense of humor. Let us consider, then, tho Princes! Tamnra. of Immortal legend. Lcrmotuore has dascribed her bcntily as being enllrelv resistless. To her castle, which still guardn the pnns In tho Oeorglan road of th9 Trans! Caucasus, cuhio lovers In streams. Thus Lermontorf: And lovers' hands, sine fc-ln's dys. I . hfSw wrinkles from a fsira But tho Princess Tamnra, tiring of her lovers, nn moro modern women have Jnno from lima to time, achieved merit by east. Ing them into tho raging torrent of 'tho Ihirlel from her eatttlo's tower. Thereby Rho was amused, and lust herein iho Rhows how llko her RlstorB ift today nhn wns It Is recorded that nomo of them have been mightily pleased In tho throwing down of their men friends, Hlr John Mattmlevllte relates, too, n story of thn daughter of Hippocrates, lord of th Islo of Cos, who bad tho highly diverting habit ot turtritig Herself Into a dragon at will, by tho grnco ot IJInna: And nlso a young man, that wist not of tho dragon, went out of a nhlp. and went through tho Islo till that h enmo to tho cardie, and camo Into the cave, and went so long till that ho found a chamber; nnd thero he saw a damoscl that combed her bead nml looked In n. mirror, and sho had much treasure all abouj. her. And sho asked him If ho were a knight, nnd ho snld nny. And he de parted from thero nnd went to his fellows to tho ship, and they let make him a knight, nnd bo came ngnln ,n tho morrow to kiss tho dnmo.s"I. And when ho saw her como out of the i avo In form so hideous and horrible (that Is to pay sho was a bundled fathoms In length, ns men say, for I havo nof seen hort, bo had so great drend that ho tied again to the ship, and sho followed him, and whon sho saw that ho turned not ngnln. sho be gan to cry, making great dole out ot measure, ns a thing which bad much sorrow, nnd then sho turned again Into her cavo. And anon the knight died. Hero only a senso of humor could havo saved tho knight mado him kiss the dragon, thereby changing her hack Into tho princess ot Incredible loveliness. Had sha suggested this, had her humoroui sens been highly developed, she would have been changed. ' CORN AS A PRICE MEASURE Tho) rclatlx-o values of farm products nn4 farm equipment nro very forcibly Illus trated In tho following conversation, over heard nnd reported by a salesman for the Parlln & Orendorft Company, Canton, 111., which took placo between a farmer In his territory nnd tho local retail dealer. Tha factn, as stated, should go far toward stay Ing tho walls of tho most aollx-o calamity bowler. Tho farmer dro-o up to tho deal er'n placo of business, nnd tho following exchange ot greetings took placo: "flood morning, SI." "flood morning. III." " say, SI, what Is tho price ot that wagon ox'cr yonder?" "Ninety dollars. HI." "Ninety dollars! Why, my father bought tho same xvagon thirty years ago for $60." "Ves, SI, ho did, and bo b-jught It ot mo, but. as money wns scarco at that tlm nnd I wanted soma corn, your father de-Ux-ercd to mo 300 bushels of corn In pay ment for tho $00 wagon, and I can usa moro corn nt this tlmo, and I will make tho same trado with you today as I did with your father somo thirty years ago on tho snmo wagon, and will glvo you from my stock In addition to this xvagon at 500 00 1 buggy nt go 00 1 suit of clothes for yourself 20.00 1 dress for ypttr wifo 20.00 1 dress for fno baby MO 1 ct Ib for tho baby r-00 I3ox of cigars for your friends :i 00 S pounds of coffeo 150 2 pounds ot tea 1 oo 20 pounds of sugar - p0 200 gallons of gasollno' I" 00 Lubricating oil - 5 5210 05 tho present purchasing power of 300 bush els of corn." Auburn (Ind.) Weekly lice. "MOVIES" AND BOOZE The number of saloons In St. Louis 13 de creasing for lack of support. It would be Interesting to know how much tho p.cture shows aro responsiblo for this. St. I.ojU Star. SIMPLE BE THY CREED Slmplo bo thy creed ; A creed that reaches every soul on eirth. So clear and free from every mental cloud That every ono may read and rightly know Just what each word of sucli a creed may A creed that tells of a true religious life, Nor veiled In mystery or magic rlto ; A creed not based on distant, occult screen, Hut full of life, tho llfo of thn tmlav : A creed that may bo lived each day we live, A creed to carry In our hearts always j A workable nnd active, dally creed To fill our hours nnd moments as they And make our lives moro beautiful and And ilftTur hearts to dally thankfulness This creed Is love a lovo for all " earth. This bo thy creed. " " 1- OUGH! Attend. Q Musa, the stunt I hava to do, Nor leave me helpless till tha task Is through I And thou, O Pegasus, be with mo now. Leaving thypasture In some classlo cloughl Wing thy way hltherward, lest If thou walk Thou split a hoof, or haply bruise a hough. These words are puzzling, at the starting Soma I must grunt, and somo must simply cough ; Well, then: Tha daw, -which Shakespeaf calls tha chough, Is named by scholars easily enough, But next there comes, ray simple rhymes to block, . ,. ... The woolly dog which Shakespeare calls tne shough. That shough would bo acceptable, but look . There Is a trench that Scotsmen call a shough. t And oh, the sloughs these verses drag rae through I Slough means a marsh, and you pronounce it slough; The "chestnut bus" spurned by the satyr'a hoof" In Yorkshire dialect is sounded "slough. While, whe-p a serpent casts Its skin, the lie leaves behind Is always called a slough. Last, l ray ltksm I found, 4mt now. "Stough, mafu-UBS ditch. Is always soundea i 'slough. ' " A truce to chough and dough and hough and slough. Thou canst not aid me, Pegasus 1 through I ' Ted Robinson, In Cleveland, Plain .u-sawi. 1 5y m Mi itttrif . rwifllMiiiiiitf iMi r iiifijMBpiii, iiin 'ffittimi l&tlw..'cJA-Sf-.1 SsSSSSSSS!SSSi!