-TV w i t - - EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, MAY1 14, 19lT . u v"nH . , ! ! F3- , L.W 5a'.'"-S &" liftr -Mi '& 9& rT. y P lr at i H vmrL jt PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY V CTBUB K. K. CUnTlB. FaisiDiirt W .- vwwiw A.wuinatun, view 4 rvBiuanii aionr Ff -."rtln, Bacratarr and Trea.uren Philip B, rT 'Bllnf John 1). Williams, John J. Spurseon, I -ir. H. Whaler. Directors. J' EDITORIAL HOAnDl EDITOnlAI, UOAHDl V Ciacs If. K. Cuius. Chairman. n. WHALEY Editor '. . JOHN C MAHTIN.. General Iiu.lnesa Manager ?,'fl Publlahed dallr at rciato I.ttKii llullJInr. inaepena.nca square, 1'nuaue.ipnia. Lsnoaa Csntril. . ,I)roa and Cheatnut Htreeta ATLIXTIO ClTI rrrn-VnUm Hulldlng New Toss... SOU Metropolitan Tower Ditsoit 401 For. I nulMlne HT. Locis ions Fullcrton llull.llni Cnicioo i:o: rrttroiie IJulMInc NEWS BUnKAUfJi JfAtBtMTfl noltr tllata nulMlne Nsw Tonit HcHV The Time Ilulldlnr bsslix Iloaaiti no rrledrlchtra..a Lokpok ntitAU Marronl llou, strand PAItl BcaiAU S2 Huo I.ouls le Grand SUBSCRIPTION TEHMS In Philadelphia, and surrounding- towna at the, rata ol twelve (12) cent per week, payable o in carrier. Br mall to point outatdo of Philadelphia. In lha United Btatai, Canada or L'nlted Statea no.- Maalona, postage tree, fifty (0) centa per month. Six (10) dollar per year, payablo In advance. To all foreign countries ono (11) dollar per feonth. , Notick Subscriber"! nlahlnr; oddre chanced bust alvo old as well as now nddresi. Hr.tL.itK)BrALLT KEYSTONE, MAIN- JCOO aW Aud)ri all communications fo J;irn(tia Leaner, Irdcpendence Sal are, I'hllarlrlphla. sitibxd at Tne rnaintt.rnu roTorrics a tcuticns Milt. MATTrn. THE AVniUQC NKT I'AID DAILY CHI- CULATION OF THE EVKNINC! I.EUaCIl FOIl ATRII, WA8 118.037 Philadelphia". Monda7, M.jr It, 117 In tho matter of po.itponemcntH, rfstratlon day anil straw-hat day aro kciplng well abreast. It has been suggested that those who can do nothing else for their coun try might learn the second er?e of "The Star SpanRled Banner." Mr. Balfour Is said to have been "amazed" at New York's AVoohvortli Building. In that case, It beems lucky tor his emotional health that he has not yat had a good look at our City Hall! Warmer weathor by Wednesday, Washington predicts. It will seem so, In any event, at the capital when tho much attacked tax bill has produced a few more days of increasingly acrimonious dispute. Whoever doubts the patriotic aluo f oven the humblest service In war time ahould memorize this recent pertinent observation of a' Newtown Quakeress: "Little sticks aro better than big ones for atarttng a fire." The French are said to call their rreat Marshal "two-cylinder Joffre," be cause tho victor of the Marne has a blight limp. But as he has never been known to blow his own horn, tho auto allu&Ion aeems rather Inaccurate. Secretary rtedfteld's suggestion that very farmer havo a pond and raise tlsh la by no means a Utopian fancy, when It la remembered what modern methods of atocklng bodies of fresh water havo done for the fish market. Tho fisheries bureau has brought long-neglected food fish to the market at tho rate of 20,000,000 pounds a year. "Not loud but deep" was tho French women's call for suffrage. In no country In tho world were tho rights less noisily agitated, yet national sufftago for women over twenty-eight In cities seems certain to be Instituted through the Gallic repub lic on July 15. The professional cynic might say that when you seemingly want a thing too hard you never get It. Appar ent Indifference wins the prize. There has been some trouble get ting a good "ad" to stimulate the buying of Liberty Loan bonds. A straight appeal to patriotism would probably not bo so trite aj some persons think. But thero Is a apecub'lve side to these transactions. One writer predicts that if tho war ends .within six months tho bonds will somo day sell at 110 or 115. The 3 per cents that were issued in 1893 have sold at 109.34. What other actress In the world but Sarah Bernhardt could win a visit and a kiss from a statesman so entangled In the colls of public demonstrations as Reno Vlvianl? The great and undoubtedly weary diplomat's hospital call on tho artist was a tribute not only to talent, but to the unflagging force of a personality that helped to mako Franco loved long before wo indorsed the Republic's policy In arms. If the West really voted for Wilson because "he kept us out of war," what does It mean by now shaming many East ern States In the matter of recruiting? Democratic Nevada was the first Com monwealth to fill its army quota. Oregon, Which went slightly Republican, came sec nd. -And now Utah, which sent up Wil on electors, Is third. Is it nosalhl. that l-the simple word patriotism explains the ,"BHt inconsistency; A "l Vl ft 1 1 1 W1AImJ1 1.1 , - . " """ " uiapaicn irom Chl ago has ,lt that the specter of i-r,,.tt,- aaaatssnl n t aaVt nst n U nn r . m. Si! v ,s laQmT away. f,The Government report lndlr.itf.rt n,. .".'abandonment of nea.rlv twM-. a i ;$" nillllon acres In the winter wheat '"!"f oul "a vices or private investlga- rif '- - uklk l 4.. i , niiiui in mo jmi nave oiten been ire nearly correct, redum th ,,,. If , ten millions. If is well to "know the t" about auch a serious matter, hut Vim a great fault to make things out fm than they are, for such pessimism tata the purposes of economy. f. ,. . -The British attack on Zeebruarare. V-saSat'taue on the Belgian coast, and .ion oc suDmanne sneas mere Moant reportsi that. Kng- start out from Zccbruggc, which is un comfortably near tho Straits of Dover, thoy would have to come all the way from the German coast. Tho desperate effort the Germans uro making to hold on nt Lens, near tho Belgian line, Is perhaps thus explained, for If the British nnce broko through so near the sea Northern Belgium and Its coast would be untenable. Tho first activity of land forces In Bel glum was teportcd sovcral days ago, and increased prcssuro In that sector can probably bo expected If tho tldo begins to turn against tho Germans Just across tho lino In Franco. WASTE NO MORE TIME I bellexo that tho American peoplo per hnps hardly yet realize tho sacrifices and sufferings that nro heforo them. This Is no war for amateurs, This Is no mero war for spontaneous Impulse. It means grim business on overy sldo of It. President Wilson. IT IS happily truo that Mr. Wilson nnd his Cabinet have been from the first awaro of these solemn facts and that thn-p hns been no delay over any mcasuto that could be accomplished by executho order". Congress, however, has not kept step either with tho Administration or with tho people. Thero was no reason for tho loss of nil last week In debate over tho aimy Bclcctlon bill. It should be passefl by tho middle of this week, Iloose velt "volunteering nnd all. so that tin I'lesldent can set a day for registration of citizens liable to service. If Mr. Wilson Ir ndvlscit that tho Itooscclt plan Is un wise, he will not be required to sanction It, nnd In this case It would be good disci pline for Mr. Roosevelt and a number of persons who have not como closely In contact' with tho "grim business" of mod ern war to bow to tho verdict of the Gen eral Staff. There Is much cause for congratulation that we shall be spared tho many months of muddling which lnck of tho selectlvo draft caused In England. But tho peoplo can well require nf their icprosentntlves In Congress that In mattcts of emergency, when tho principle has onco been decided upon, quibbling and useless ihetorlc are outrageous flippancies. Tho peoplo aro every day nerving themselves to moot thoso sacrifices and sufferings of which tho President speaks, nnd when our men aro at grips with tho foe the postpone ment of legislation necessary for tho equipment, health, comfort or re-enforcement of our soldiers would bring to the doors of the Capitol not tho Ironical pleas antries which the present delay has re ceived, but the stem and bitter rebukes of u nation that has put aside childish things. Congress has confounded emergency measures with those that obviously re quire time. The war revenue bill has been considered simultaneously with more urgent matters, and thero Is no reason why It should not tako a month or moro to settlo the dlfllcult questions of taxen, which, In the event of delay, can always be made retroactive. But thero is a sharp dividing lino between such measures and provisions for army and navy In which It Is perfectly proper that tho Executive, who has most of the responsibility for suc cess or failure, should tako the Initiative. LET CIVIC PROGRESS GO OX THK breaking of ground for a $3,000,000 library on Saturday and tho 'presenta tion of an elaborate "Masque of American Drama" at tho University of Pennsylva nia tonight encourage tho hopo that Phlla ("elphia is not going to use the war as un excuse for halting educational, artistic and cultural pi ogress. It Is exceedingly easy, Just now, to blamo It on tho times when anything goes wrong or doesn't go at nil. Franco had her fill of such experiences In the early stages of the conflict. "C'est la guerre!" (It is tho war!) was tho phrase repeatedly summoned to condone Innumerable varie ties of Indifference nnd incompetence. "C'est la guerre!" Insisted tho waiter In explanation of why ho had served a bad egg to tho restaurant patron. "C'est la guerre!" echoed tho schoolboy who had played truant. Eventually Paris saw tho satire of this overworked npology. Savants at tho Sor bonno reopened their classes. High-grade theatrical and operatic performances wore resumed. Civic Improvements, In abey ance nt the outbreak of the struggle, were diligently prosecuted. Sclenco nnd art upheld tho claims of Gallic culture. It Is Intellectual progress, not frivolity, that is fostered by so worthy an offering as this forthcoming masque. Illustrative of tho best achievements of tho native stago and of tho forces of American his tory which directed tho dramatic develop ment. Tho aim Is Idealistic, artistic, edu cational. Tho now llbinry has a simi larly lofty purpose. Tho city for many years ha.s shamefully lacked a great book repository. No one wants to see the war banish financial prosperity. But this can bo sacrlflclally forgono long before wo cconomlzo in art, culture and learning. Tho two Intellectual projects now under way here augur well for educational progress in tho midst of world strife. They should stimulate us to relax no effort along this line. If oven battle-scarrod Franco could not stomach tho "war apology" for mental stagnation, weak ness on our part would bo altogether un pardonable. THE PRUS9IC ACID IN SOCIALISM THE fact that Charles Edward Russell, Socialist candidate for Governor 'of Now York In 1910 and ngaln In 1912, ac cepts a place on tho American commis sion to Russia (should stop the nonsen sical forebodings which Socialists have been expressing over Mr. Wilson's choice of Ellh'u Root to head the delegation. Nothing would have pleased the Kaiser more than to have America send a group of paclflstia Socialists to Petrograd. Prussia's frantic appeal to the Socialists of the world to stop tho war so that she may keep tho territory she has conquered Is today tho most dangerous movement beneath the surface of the international situation. She knows that this appeal will reach millions and stir their deepest feelings and ambitions, because Socialism serves in place of a religion for so many Socialists. HnflnllatM nf tn&terfAllat t ahA nla want 'to abolish the boundaries between oottptaaa ana maxeia worta oaf nation i- Jai ir aa i I i i " f " J- ' - - ' - r - FRENCH WOMEN TO HAVE THE VOTE Their Work In War Has Broken Down Prejudice and Con verted Parliament to Their Cause Dy HENRI BAZIN Iteclplent of the Croix do Ouerre, member of th Horlete do Gn ilea I,ttre and 8taff Correspondent of tha Evt.slxo I.tixirti in Trance. PARIS, April 13. FItANCR Is to be tho first nation In tho Old World to grant Buffrngo to Its women. Female electors twenty-eight or more years of ago will havo a voice In municipal elections In cities of tho first and ccond class on or befaro July 15 of this year. This Is n stupen clous reform, both fiom tho European and Latin perspec tive. It Is posi tively assured through a substan tin I majority In both tho Chamber of Deputies and the Senate and Is to bo granted In gratitude and re cognition of the Mada.mi: HCKimiKii devotion and sacri fice of the women of the nation to the cauo of Franca during the war. Tho bill will come up for discussion and vote with tho approval and favorable consideration of the French Commission for Fnlversnl Suffrage, comprising forty members of both houses of Parliament, who havo given It their Joint otllclnl nnd Individual pergonal approval. Details surrounding these facts were dis closed to your correspondent hi a Joint Interview- with Mcsdomes Schlumbergcr and Selgfrcld. presidents, respectively, of tho French Union for Suffrago for Women nnd tho National Council of French Women. This In substance Is what they eald' "Wo nro about to experience very pres ently. In lato Juno or early July, a success In seeking votes for women that will be unique In the world history of this roform," said Madame Schluinbeiger "I'nder re stricted conditions our sex Is to recolvo tho vote and our nation to bo the first In Europe to grant this Justice to its women "So far as tho world generally Is con cerned, this Information will bo as lightning from a clear sky. For aside from thoso di rectly interested, tho question of suffrage for tho women of Franco has been a scaled book to other nations. Twenty years ago In Franco It was the butt of Jest and rid icule nnd a favorito theme with cartoonists, Ten enrs ago it had here and there a partisan among men In and out of official life and virtually nono ninong women, save the perhaps 10,000 members of our two associations. SK months before the war sympathy with tho project had Increased perhaps 10 per cent among French people of both sexes. Eighteen months after tho wnr's beginning both the nation and the world bad fully recognlred tho patriotism nnd devotion displayed by tho women of France, nnd suffrage for our sex found Its partisnns doubled, although a strong ma jority against votes for women remained. Spontaneous Tribute to Women "Now, thirty-odd months after tho be ginning of hostilities and, as It were, spon taneously following a great wave of admira tion, gratitude and appieclatlon duo to the role played by women In those try ing times, suffrage for French women, with out a light, won Its first victory, nnd '.nds tho majority In and out of olllclal life In favor of making It In some form n law of the nation. From this sentiment has como the concrete proposition that Is to become n law A canvars of members In both houses of Parliament denotes that tho bill about to be presented by Alexander Varcnne, Deputy from Havre, nwalts only legalized formality to become Incorporated In the laws of France. It pioposes, and wo havo accepted, as the entering wedgo that tho voto shall be given to women of twenty-eight years of ago and over and In matters of municipal election only In gratitude for the services rendered tho nation by Its women during tho war. "Wo rranuiy want universal suffrago without restriction upon tho basis of Jus tice and equity, as it has been granted to tho women of certain States in Amorlca: but wo aro willing and glad to tako In restricted form at the outset a feminine right to voto, believing it will only ba a question of time, and little tlmo relatively at that, when the women of Franco will be as free to voto upon all matters as aro tho women of Washington or California, In the United States." "How long have you had an active or ganization working for suffrage?" was asked. ' "For about ten years." replied Madame Pchlumbcrger, "eighty active groups of Suffrago for Women Societies have existed In Franco, to which women In all walks of life were attached. We havo worked quietly and persistently within our own land, so much so that, aside from official relation with the International association In the United States, little has been heard of our efforts boyond our frontiers. Wo were working upon lines that we felt would end In success, but wo leallzed that suc cess was far off. Now, through the war, it Is coming to us In a modified form. Wo welcome it in the gratitude It expresses, as well as- In partial Justice to a Just cause." Justico of Equal Bights "The president of our Suffrage Union," here said Madame Selgfrled, "has stated In substance the satisfying condition that is to come. And I may add that this ca lamity of horrible war has been a school and university to those of both sexeB in France who could not or would not befora see equa.1 right for men and women in more than one point of view. "All such peoplo. and Indeed the world at large, have noted tho splemlld courage and heroism with which the women of France have uncomplainingly supported moral and physical suffering difrlng nearly three terrible years, given their lives In some instances, tolled like men In factories foundries and mills, farmed the soli in the absence of dear ones at the front, conse crated themselves, In a word, to France and her high cause. It has thus been made Oear to many who were previously biased or in different that the cause of women is equal with that of men and that the women of France are demonstrating It In work either with the hand or the head. These are the truo reasons we are to be permitted to vote upon municipal matters. "We suffragettes of France stand of course, for everything that suffragists' the wwwvm ww .vl'i.VTIiWSIH to m mA lU ML "A T ' Tom Daly's Column "HEnn lies" When I am gono and all mv tonat are tUl, Take up the muslo while mv heart lie mute; And pluck new ttrinps to that mv soul may thrill With singing and the sounding of the lute. i I shall be careless of the great, acute Demands that tax our frail and petty skill; I shall no longer Join tho fierce dispute When J am gone and all mv songs are still. For I shall lie beneath a little hill And watch tho building of each tender ehoot; And every May I know the robins will Take up the music ivhlle mv heart lies mute. Soon will tho cheerful sparrow tuno his fluto Abovo my narrow casement, and tho shrill Cricket will twang his zither near a root And pluck new sltln.7 so that mv soul may thrill. Come, then, let music, Jovlnl music, kill The sad-eyed Sorrows with their solemn milt. Bo thero rejoicings; lot tho valleys fill "With sinning and the sounding of the lutr. Let voices blended skillfully confute Tho raven's dismal prophecy, until Gray Grief shall know her own too-bitter fruit. 7.cf thrrc be dancing Icf the goblets spill. When I am gone! LOUIS UNTERMEYER. JOYCE KILMER, tho most persuasive and persistent of ringmasters, puts a herd of performing pen-bearing animals through their paces nnd (with n. bow nnd n flourish of his top hat, ''ladles an' gen tulmun,") presents "Literature In tho Making." It'w a book, folks, and a good one. Tho Imprint of Harper & Brothers Is upon It and thero nro traces of largo truths In Its pages. Also thero Is some careless proof-reading f'rltistancc: "Edna Ferber Stewart, who wrote Tho Fugitive Blacksmith " ".i prominent American humorist writer" Somo of the performers say too much and some too little; nnd other somo who havo been led Into saying something foolish mny claim to havo been mis quoted. This last Is our own alibi. Wo aro accused of having called Mark Twain, Artcmiin Ward and Q. IC. Philander Doe sticks, P. IJ "the Charlie Chapllns of their time," nnd wo are said to hnvo re marked that "theso men wrote nothing of real merit." Nonsenso! Twnln's "Joan of Arc" lifts him heart-high above tho heads of his contemporaries, however bad his tasto may have been In somo other directions. But why all this scornful sniffing, by our best sellers, nt tho nnmo of Chnrllo Chaplin? "Second thoughts Indicate," sayB Mr. Booth Tarklngton (but he, too, may havo been misquoted), "that 'T. A. Daly' Is tho pen-name of Mr. Chnrllo Chaplin." Wo greatly admire Chaplin. He's a bit of a best seller himself; and, ns far ns wo know, he's a hard-working, conscientious artist whoso material, If raw. Is at least his own. Mysterious Occupations Of all the Jobs that nro queer, It's This ono that bothers me: The "Rectifier of Spirits" What earthly work hath ho? HYP. The news that Barton Blako's trans lation of Geiuldy's "The War, Madame," Is behaving like a best-seller delights us In a serious way. Just ns Vanity Fair moused our rlslbles by announcing that this same Paul Geraldy "has a faculty for unexpected surprises." AVo've always noticed that the expected kind never seem to arrive for some reason. G. Howard horns In with this from Lttses ad In a morn contemp: Garden Hoae, full alze, ateet OQo bloilea nnd presumes the blades are used to cut tho grass with. Sir Francis Burnand SIR FRANCIS BURNAND, who was for twenty-flvo years tho editor of Punch, died in London recently nt tho ngo of eighty-one. Ho was reptesentatlvo of the flno tradition that has mado Punch with out a peer in tho realm of humorous Journalism. Ills mirth was swift, subtle nnd without bitterness. Thousands have chuckled over his classic "Happy Thoughts," In which he recorded tho polyinanitles of a guileless and simple literary man intent on writing a phil osophical treatise, "Typical Develop ments," which by reason of a thousand absurd interruptions never progresses beyond a few pages of MS. It is always pleasant when a humorist lives to a ripe old age. So many of them are cut off In their prime by coal bills or by reading Bernard Shaw.. But Bur nand lived to see his own Jokes accredited to his grandchildren in tho craft and even to be knighted for his services to letters, and his passing merits tho re spectful salute of all brothers of the pen. CM. WISTER VS. LISTER Mrs. Lr. had a sr. Much In love with Mr. Wr. But she had a fever bin; Turned her back,' he had to twr. Round about before he kr. All the neighbors up and hr., Ar.d they said of Mrs. Lr., "Mr. Wr. kr. sr." p. NUT. Fred Lacey lends us, "but not for keeps," a couple of comic almanacs pub lished by Turner & Fisher, Just around the corner on Sixth street, moro than seventy years ngo. Pretty rough stuff, bat the paper la still white and soft, which, you may bet your last penny, no one seventy years from now will ever be, able to jay of any cheap booklet Issued In this our day, Judd Lewis, of the Houston Post, would be Interested In this subtitle to the Almanac for 1845 "with astronomical calculations for the.whoto v iVti!fcSI "M-l-iiVwJS iW4J-Wfcajg$( 53SS ?sfli!r,:.-?-ir" tSf""' j ""aai4SiSt-' Sff .inuil-WI.'ufl .1 "-nsrr' O'i'ZlJb&mKlxBZ SM-sztyr "'-- -r.ir rim Pi'i'inytMi--)-.' ..... -m. THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE Mother's Day A Comment on Book Reviews Drug Store Perils Thin rtrvartmtnt fi free to all render icho with to erpresi their opinions on subjects of current interest. It (t an open forum and the Kt'rtilHi; I.rdocr assume no responsibility for the item nf it correspondents. Letters must be signed by the name and address of the icrltcr. not necessarily for publication, but as a guarantee of uood faith. MOTHER'S DAY To the L'tlltor'of the Evening Ledger: Sir Once moro wo celebrate the day dedicated In honor of her to whom God has given his greatest blessing, Mother. But what a difference thero Is today! For the first time since this yearly day of reverenco was established mothers have been called to make a great sacritlee This ear, as for tho last tvyo years, Mother's Day Is ushered in accompanied with tho faint obbligato of sciecchlng shells and booming cannon from across the sea. But this year It comes horn to us. Mothers of America aro called to snd their sous Into tho fray as prey for tho war demon. American mothers must bear the tcrrlblo burden with their sisters In other lands. What real loving mother uoes not mur mur in the secrecy of her heart, "I didn't ralso my boy to be a soldier"; but when she realizes that humanity is on tho cross, that liberty, Justico and culture nro at stake, with Spartan fortitude she answers, "America, hero's my boy," Tho strongest .bulwark of our nation, or any nation, lies not In ndmlrablo lines of defense, llch ports, great cities or famous men, but In tho mothers. She who bore the man-child; who guided his first tottering footsteps and led him In tho path of duty ; who watched his laborious climb toward his goal, cheering him by tho wayside, lifting him when he stumbled sho Is the bulwark of the nation. Many of tho world lenders proudly ac claim, "All that I am or ever hope to bo I owe to my sainted mother." No poet can pen a more lasting or nobler eulogy. And no statue in marblo is as lasting as tho monument carved In the soul of the man who has gone from his mother's tender care fired with tho zeal to battle for tho right. Tho poet says, "Tho hand that rocks tho cradle is the hand that rocks the world." He Is wrong, for It Is mother's hand that Is steadying the old world. Men who have forgotten mother love are rocking It, but mother will conquer In tho end and onco more wo will rldo on an even keel, It Is well that wo have set apart one day In special honor for mother, but In the words of tho great Emancipator: "In a larger sense wo cannot dedicate wo cannot consecrate wo cannot hallow. It Is rather for us to be hero dedicated to tho great task remaining before us." The greatest honor we can pay to mother Is to be truo to our faith, true to our (lag and unafraid of "ax or gibbet." Rome fell when hot women became de graded, and some mud-sllngers here would have us believe that American womanhood Is decadent. But when we see tha tender look of the mother gazing at tho tiny Infant In her arms we, of the male sex, can tri umphantly shout: "Let all tho winds of hell blow In our sails. "Thank Ood! thank God, tho ship rides true." HENRY RIDGAWAY ZELLEY. Paulsboro, N. J., May 11. DRUG STORE DANGERS To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Some drug stores In Philadelphia havo roach paste, bedbug powder, rat poi sons and poison of other kinds occupying a prominent place on their display cases, unguarded from the general public. Just suppose some child should take one of these packages 1 either by mistake or knowingly! Need I say any more? Philadelphia, May 9. J, N. C. DR. DOUGLAS'S BOOK REVIEW To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir 1 want to send a word of commen dation for the book reviews by Doctor Douglas, which are like the sprightly and Informed conversation of on who "sees life steadily and sees It whole" and possess the particular merit of sticking to the text Instead of trying to display ihe writer'a vast erudition, as In Macaulay'a essays. These rsviews are nwnan aov.are written for tat hwm V m '3s&s. itljV3I & J? zr-Zs! rmmr , BKf"'" ' --Mggri'tPllfViWalBBri f y ( i-TwsV aaJePSaHrTfF'friaBtfJ ...--' ' ,iIT?'i EESsr?"-"-' jr-w'.aaiBiBBBvBa-r're----: rtssssesse- phim"""- ., . . " " -taalBaaajeaaKa---t-..-a.35 -""Kfn?,v.. "V i s -aarHEgyRgffaSM-Mg rm " ..... -Br?:rraBssncuBT" ljS?aP&3 J&- . --"ysB&leMBBBBBB35K' -S aVyAfS--".. "-'''" 'r.j:tiisa1gESar J 'Jr"!rr;?Zjr .?Zrri .. -foypfrt? iji: z r-.sws "K'AMERAD!" h eaaaaaaaaaaav mrr , i -.. ..aawssi-- s &y si(f' -i trJT Til". "" .-TEaaMMJIMaaaMaaTMIIjalr-T1 --,.. --1.4.-.,:. f" ' - 7T". 'a I SSaaBEHaKrWS;.. ''''-'rTJ 5r-flS(v :y ' TZrWmm'i -cs?-! . "TSrr-w.A,---ft -" "T"Si-JrrIS. wsiinhi tt 'Hi Sfta "1 i r--- - 17...f,fc,S-,SvtLi . -. n.r..?.Ir.--.T ' . "g"1 " ' -- '"" --W----J. .-... -. r?- .. i."wm Li?rmamB'?mamm?2mr.r- jrz:jf-r' ranreitivBffgreri"- j1 a HI iani 1 1 11 11 liMMinria1 1. " iHSiS--f a, .ji 1.- - sascjHfc, V?Mww'SOTiffi r.ffSX.-z: irn - n m imtiwr i.. tm .. naPirm si,rittrw r" -.'K3i5rjwma'YSi 3SS8 Vil iu.n-U-M"HftK,r. '.iVV'-r..V yft - tho given book comes within the range of their tastes, their uses or tholr scale of values. Ono feels that ho has sympa thetically acquainted himself with tho work ho discusses, nnd ho writes ns though It were a pleasure to him to share his ex plorative adventures In tho realm of liter ature Ills dissertations, therefore, mean much more than the average perfunctory review. W. L. F. Philadelphia, May 11. LIBERIA'S POSTAL MINT Stamps Printed Solely Collectors to Sell to Liberia Is rapidly becoming tho laughing stock of philately and tho bugaboo of col lectors who specialize In twentieth-century Issues. Early In 1910 tho African repub lic claimed It was grappling with a short ago of current Issues becauso It was unable to obtain fresh supplies from Germany owing to the Entente control of the seas. The two series of 190C and 1909 were sur charged with new values, thus creating ten new denominations. Prior to that Liberia had put forth two charity labels, surcharg ing her 1913 stamps with a Red Cross and an additional value two cents on three cent values. Of the revenue derived from each five cents, one cent went to tho En tente, ono cent to tho Central Powers, and Liberia retained tho remaining three cents. Through this magnanimous act native LI berlans were permitted to aid war sufferers two cents' worth for every threo cents they tossed Into tho Llberlan trensury. Subsequently Liberia must havo engaged In some sort of warfare of her own, becauso she overprinted a number of her stamps with a crimson cross nnd tho letters L. F. F, meaning Llberlal Frontier Force. These laWls were put forth presumably In order to ralso funds for wounded battlers In bor der fighting. A few months ago Liberia hunted through her archives as far back as 1880 and resuscitated obsoleto issues which she surcharged with new values on the plea that sho was still running short of current stamps. This outburst is followed now by still further provisionals, and their very character denounces them as unnecessary and undoubtedly put forth to raise revenue at tho expense of collectors tho world over Tho stamps aro thoso of tho 1909 series 1 tho then-current labels used for ordinary postage, and also the official stamps of that date. Considering, as an Illustration, the two cent crimson nnd black stamp of, tha reg ular 1909 scries, tho sheet of 100 contains surcharges of ten varieties, all In black That this was dono purposely, thero is no question. Will the collectors assemble all these in their books as legitimate stamps? It is probable that they will. Dealers are handling them, ns they were put forth by a Government. But phllatellcally Liberia is getting herself Into disrepute. A policy of Ignoring such Issues entirely, even when posta ly used, would put a stop to such practices and conserve to tha collector a few pennies with which to purchase stamps which are worth while. '" WORDS TO AVOID Newspaper men who have "worked for Charles H. Dana on tha New York sun" recall the list of words and phrases to be avoided which was used In that office Hera Is a list of words to bo avoided: Above or over for more than Aggregate for total. Balance for remainder. Call attention for direct attention Claim for assert. Commence for begin. Conscious for .aware. Couple for two. Cultured for cultivated. Date back to for data from. Dopaio for give. Indorse for approve. Fall for autumn. From whence for whence. Inaugurate for establish. Institute. Individual for person. Infinite for vast, great. In our midst for among us. In spite for despite. Last for latest. Less for fewer. Materially for largely. Notice for observe. Onto for on or upon. , Partially for partly. party for person. Past two years for last two years Practically for virtually, .Prior to for before. Propose for purpose. Proven for proved. Quite for something of. ' Spend for pais. Standpoint for point of view, BuoMmiur tor aiierrara. wr, !WWHFr:?tfSIi trp NjfnyrtvTT75- - "- w, . . ,- (1 H tfSr" r 1 n " 'jaVflimh.w... What Do You Know? Ouerlra 0 oeneral interest ulll t aittirrrre 111 this column. Ten questions, the antutri It umlc't cierv ttWI-lnormed perjon should ci. ara aked dally. . QUIZ 1. lxioii to tho Adrlutlr Sen, whlrh U reported rleared of autimurlnes. 2. Who la C'nrl Vrnomnn. who ileelared that there la nn unpatriotic movement to lurnll fin the tinvernmrnt'N proposed control o( the food atippl? S. What vvn the Exodua? 4. What U 11 Miction nrBiiment? 5. What ore the saeti? C. Will married men ho exempt from military xrrvlec under the selective draft plan? T. tth.it l fc:iMf? 8. Ne dlnpalrhe defcrlho Oerm.in an at tacking with nninmennrrfrr. What are llammenwerfcr'.' 9. Explntn tho origin of the etprrlon "ai changeable ua a fhumrleon." 10. Each human xkeleton Includes two clatlrlei. What are the)? Answers to Saturday's Quix Sllghtlr mare thnn 10,000.000 men between IWIMltS-onA 11ml llilptv.-inn inr. nltl ILa In tlila country nnd "111 be required to (? reglnter for nelcdlvo dr.ift 'Wt'. 2 "lletHfrii sou nnd I" 1m lnrorrert. btfamii thi preposition IpetMtTi." mint lie fol IohwI l3 tlie objrctlw form, "Ikltrera sou kikI me" ! lorrert 3. The 127 American prlonpri In GermtdT were taken from urmed inert li.intiuen rap tured or Mink h.v the (irriniuii. Other American a In !erininy nro not held. 4. I.a Madeleine, u famoiiH church In Turin, li of the Corinthian htjle of architecture. 5. An Itinerant fighter Is a wandering or Jour lies tnic tighter. Itinerant" 1-t pronounced "eye-tlnerant," with the accent on tut second Billable. C. Kdffar Wilson N.e wan an American humor l(t writing under the name of "Hill" Mt. 11111" Nve. of tho United states Secret Service, lias diarce of the special train ot the Joffre-Vhlanl part) 7. Rear Admiral UenJamln Tnnnan, N tht new commandant of the l'hlladelphla -NaT Yard. 8. "Eiuojr" is pronounced with the hort "" wound, the accent lelnr on the llrt ?" ble. 0. Anthropoid open ar those most elosely r HemhllniT man. They form n family in cluding, tho Ribbon, chimpanzee, orang utan nnd corlllti, 10. Sir Henry Itlder Hagffard, U on Xm writer of romantic and hC.nlhIitor.ew notels. Tungsten HILTON Tungsten, called also wolfram, Is a rare element of tlio chromium group, found combined In certain minerals, M L-,i1frfim(ta nml cnhpMltA. Tr la Isolated ' a hard, brittle white or gray metal, meltlM A3 at about 2000 degrees centigrade, naving speclflo gravity of 1C.C-19, an atomw weight of 184 and both acid and laH properties. It Is used chiefly In the manu facture of tungsten steel and of tunssten lamps. These electric glow lamps hav. filaments of metallic tungsten, They art very economical and can'malntaln high tem peratures owing 10 me reiraciory ui- j xer or. uio meiai ya "Battle Hymn si. R. "W. Mrs. Julia Waid Howe vvroM "The Battle Hymn of tho llepubllc." Thi Inspiration, Is said tq have come In a dream. The air Is "John Brown's Body." Catching U-Boats Q. H. According to reports from Italy. submarine chasers with glass bottoms W been ery effective In ridding the Adrian Sea of submarines, and efforts now a" being made to employ them In larger num bers elsewhere. Observers In tho fast f10'0!' boats can locate submarines ns deep as l" feet under tho water. Upon locating one, a signal Is given to destroyers, which lle-l" wait for the submarlno to come to tl" surface. Submarines J. "W. (a) It Is not at all necessary that j a submarine ba on the Burfnce of tne tft f1tarHnrrA tnrn.na offAMK'plV. On tOa contrary, the effectiveness of tho submarine. ,.J lies In Its ability to discharge iorpeu while far beneath tho surface. It Is o' necessary that the periscope be out of tho water so that tho submarine sallors'can tee to aim the torpe'do. Tho ability of tM submarine to attack without showing any thing but Its periscope accounts for Iti treme effectiveness. (b) Submarine attack dreadnoughts, but the care wilt, which these valuablo fighting ships "N3 suaruca oy aesiroyers, nets, eic. i.i.v. for the fact that 'few are sunk by subma- 1-lnn Thar, ta it nrAvnltlnir Mpa that tnt j thick armor nf a. drcadnnuaht shields It .J from submarines; but this Is fallacious, ai vl tha armored portion ends about five feat ?( I( low the waterllne and torpedoea usually fl strike tne unprotected sneu 01 mo yc-j , from eight to ten feet below tne waiernna,,,. i Mr China's Prealdent. - 1 ..V,SBP W1 mr: 1 If AXWMtrMkW.. B1