12 PUBLIC LlDCW ttntTAN &$& yS.H. ,K. njBTlB.rwiiMrHT t H. Im4Im(. Vice rreeKtenti John C. etarv Vnilanm TTMovreri rnmp H.comnt, rhn J. Spurtaon. Directors, IDlTORUIi BOARDS CMW C MAHTIN. ..general Bualneas Manager dally at To tic Mmh Dulldlnr. ndenc Rauare. Fhlladelnhla. TSALk... Broad and Cheatnut StreeiB ClTIfti.,,, ,, Prt9'Vnion Bulidlns !...,..... T .SOU Met f-nnnlttan Tnwr ...i. m .-..403 Ford Rultdlnr .4 1103 Trieste Dulldlnr nicvra mtnciiia. y kloSAn. . tor. t-ennariTania. Ave, and ntn hi. Bnun -. ..... .The Ann IlulMlm ciD ...... ..MurconI Uguae. Htran.i 'in .. ..jt . . . jiue ixxus te uranu StlltSCRtPTIOV TKHMB nrnia rcnuo umii 1 aerved to eub. ra i-nuaaeipnia ana surrounainc lowne .4e ef twelve (121 -tote nee OTMlr. navahtM aarrler. StLJM'l o polnte outaldft -of Philadelphia. In WM Stltet. Canada or United Mate po- pottere free, flftr " rente per month. all forelm countries una (ft) dollar per !- Subecrlbera Telihlnr addrea rhanfred f atye old at mil aa pew addreaa. i i i MM WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN SWO tETAMrttt all tommunltaltont to Evnirio Public ,-Lager, Indeptndne Bquart, Philadttphla. isniap at tiii rBnantirnn roT orrics is StjQXP CUa Milt. VATTtH. PkUJlrl.l,Tu.iJr. April :, 111 JAPAN KEEPING FAITII v ""Pi SLAVED accounts of the- address of -' Foreign Minister Motono to the Japa- Parliament on tho eve of Us adjourn itient last Tuesday, which have Just reached thi country, Justify the conclusion reached Jast-week that tho Siberian complications -were, unraveling themselves- Tho Foreign Minister said: It Is desired to mako It clear that tho Imperial Government does not regard Rus sia ms an enemy. Japan will not adopt an aggressive policy toward Russia and docs not hevltate -to declaro unreservedly and sincerely the, deep and warm sympathy of the nation for the' Russian people. This declaration is made In tho camo ptrit aa that which moved President "Wll-ae-n to send a message of sympathy to tho Moscow Congress of Soviets. Now It ro mains for the nusslans to demonstrate thac they are not enemies of Japan, France, England and tho United States. They can do this by organizing to prevent the Gcr ionization of Russia. Th Kaiser hasn't yet thanked God be came his ,blg- gun accidentally hit a church f Paris and tilled twenty persons. Hut ts will. GERMANS TALKING DUTCH "DEFORB deciding what to think of tho '-'Dutch protest against tho seizure of the Dutch ships by tho United States ono Should look at tho war map of Europe. Cina will find Holland Is u little spot on tha map, bordered by tho North Sea on one side) and surrounded on all other sides fey territory In the 'control of the German tunnies. Holland has about as much lib rtjr of action as a mouse between tho front paws of a hungry cat. So when tho Netherlands Government, In Its Official Gazette, describes tho seizure et tho ships as "an act of violence, which Itwllt oppose with all the energy of Its conviction and Its wounded national feel ing," we know that tho Government is peaking for the ears of Berlin, even If the voc Is not tho voice of tho German " Chancellor, Yet tho form In which tho denunciation of the American policy la couched suggests that tho German am bassador at Tho Haguo has been using tha Netherlands Foreign ortlce as his mouthpiece and Is launching propaganda through tho official channels of a nomi nally neutral Government. Tho protest will be put on file In Wash ington and receive due consideration at tho troper time. Don't wait for the Liberty Loan ram. -HH!8l'' Cat,.. I MBK w MX, f. "" PUpx to open. Duy now. THERE ISNT ANY SECRET TT IS being said of Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, late Commissioner of Health In Penn rlvanla. that tho secret of combating In fantile paralysis, a scourge to which ho devoted much study, died with him K 4 Imagmablo statement could be more mis. ' leading. Doctor Dixon had unusual op- ' ' yortunltles to study Infantile paralysis awing, the, epidemics In this city, and he a4vno secret of tho m6ans or Itsellml. natteflj Ho urged consistent and almost rttlgtew attention to cleanliness In streets ml alleys. Such simple precautions, an. plied throughout the State wherever the Authority of the Department of Health was adequate, did much to cut the death rato in Pennsylvania in the courm r,t nni. lr-Uton's able administration of his office. 77 xuviwr ui.wn uiive now ne would teuetjess. havo something to add to the ment already mado in relation to tho eetion of Philadelphia's streets and aUUy. A mail with .his knowledge and xiMffanco could . be- tocallarly eloquent p In Vfeys of the dirt that has been permitted to V and depay and form breeding, naats for 'alt sorts of 'contagions In the crowded etitMis of the city. It ioesn't appear as if the Kaiser would ever tt that dinner In Paris. MCiNG BACKWARD AT IT . Jswst of mankind that larger arjd ler pan or tne population that atb not 'In ntitnmrih1t b.i i . JfosBin, get the ' week-end-away habit- Sunday "lias Its more Jubilant cele- on Monday, whonr It ts possible to ut it (n the newspapers and per- uw manner in wiilcn reverent multl rctd to the occasion. This ob- i always tends to restore a waning Iff th collective spirit of the com- Vara celebrated Easte? Sunday by taat SSecretary, Daniels was to- dethroim him In South with a vpUey of lies. "Wis. trying to determine whether to America or to Qernunv. s City th sacrlllclal lobster was I In mlllflULU nnA .a4a . .1.. IHsmI Wi tk jHK W? an4 the liberty pilieutt aUtffea iht. .religious spirit pt fro luteins; rat crowds slept plousjy tn intihurd table at, th' crowded, hotels. STr 'wai e t illy llva seHbun tnntm- !. . jj .'..j,- .i t .. r. 7 prw uu : o roda oout i 'iitdelpJiU, mi. ").! 'i'...m . petween machines khiot; . nowhere W-patlcular in vv- tlirtttlon ttr Ik:., chey -art growiaa t& c'.. viift l9 M it THE TRIANGLE OF DEATH nHAT great red trianglo forty miles long which Hindcnburjr has thrust into tho breast of civilization points at tho heart and soul of all wo hold dear. For thirteen days that bleeding fang has crept closer and closer. Spiritually speaking, it is as close to Philadelphia as it is to Paris or Amiens. What threat ens them threatens us. And it is well for every man to realize the truth that confronts us. For thirteen days history has been on the anvil. Our souls havo been tonso with something not far from dread. Wo have scon what we thought was impos sible: tho iron battering ram of the enemy thrust back again over tho Jand so dearly ransomed from the battalions of death. Germany is not beaten. Amid innumorablo profitless argumentations and disputes as to what wo have or havo not accomplished, how many airplanes we have sent over, how many ships we havo built, there looms the ono indis putable fact. The German army stands today within gunflre of Paris, and at the very suburbs of Amiens. " It is busily digging itself in, and unless our counter stroke falls suddenly and soon it will be too late. It is a tragic circumslanco that not until tho ninth day of the world's great est battle were tho Allies able to agree upon tho appointment of a supreme com mander for all tho armies of resistance. Although it seems as though that should havo been done long ago, this is not the timo to mourn past errors, but to profit by them. The thing to empha size now is that the generalissimo lias indeed been named. Our prayer is that he may be able, disposing his armies from ono all-seeing nerve center, to slash through tho deadly salient. It is indeed the voico of the nation thnt echoes tho wish that Pershing had a million men under him to hurl into tyio reeling lines. Our hundred thou sand, who arc said to be singing their way on to the field, arc valiant in spirit and they will acquit themselves with tho gallantry of their blood. But wo shall need many more; we shall need every heart and hand and soul in this country before th6 smoke rolls away. Germany has not broken through, and for her the great and bloody advance is indecisive enough; but it is no less a serious check to the Allies. Now is tho time fo? every American to nerve him self for greater and greater efforts. God knows that England and Franco have done their share. From now on wo shall bo baptized blood brothers with them in the most gallant cause ever allotted to men. The clergyman who Buggcitcd that all vice bo swept out of the city to points be yond the limits of a ten-mile zone obviously doesn't own any suburban real estate. WAR GARDEN ADVENTURERS TTCTAR gardening. If one Is to accept tho solemn word of many who lndulgo in that fashionable sport. Is a far moro thrill ing gamble than poker or horse racing. Tho suspense is moro prolonged. You never know what Is to happen next or whether anything will happen. A pessimist at Ambler, thrilled by the appeals of the food experts, went fervidly to work last summer and wrung a crop of potatoes from the bashful soil of his domain. Tho potatoes cost htra SI 2 a bushel and ho writes plaintively to say that there was not ono potuto In all his harvest that couldn't have been swalloued whole without tho least discomfort. A group of gentlemen farmers banded together In Bucks County to do the thing scientifically. They hired an expert, se lected tho ground carefully, preparod to grow potatoes by tho ton and lost $40,000 In the course of the season. This Is tho dark side of tho picture. The little war gardens havo been suc cessful In tho main. It is tho common error of the amateur to suppose that you can grow anything anywhere by merely plant ing seed and playing a hose at decent In tervals. War gardeners will profit by taking the serious advice of the seedsman and by reading the slmplo Instructions of tha Department of Agriculture, before launching the seeds Into the willing but not always adequate earth. Crops must be planned according to the nature of the soil. And even If nothing grows in them war gardens ( provide exercise that Is as good or better than golf or tennis. It la now planned to sweep all the idlers from New York'3 Broadway. Few will be left but tho policemen, and they may be taken soon. WHAT A CENTURY HAS WROUGHT THE announcement that the hundredth annlyersary of tho establishment of tho presentH)iubllc-school system In this city Is to bp" celebrated this week Is mislead ing. " Tha school system that was established by the act of 1818 bore so little rcscm blanco to the present system that its de scent from the earlier system Is difficult to trace. The principles on which public education is based have been radically changed in a century. Tho act of 1818 merely established schools for tho free education of tha poor. It was based on the iheory of the Constitution, which prljr to 1790 directed that schools should bo maintained in which the teachers should be paid such salaries as should "enable them to teach at low prices." This action was amended lit that year so that the Legis lature was directed to provide, schpols "In such o. manner that the poor may be taught gratis." This remained the only provision for free public education In the Commonwealth until the Constitution was revised in 1873. , Free publlo educatltn for all who de sire It is a. comparatively modern thins hero. In alt the early years of tha city and of the Stats it was assumed that tho well-to-do would send their children to private schools. The publlo schools havo grown, however, under this handicap until now they provide free education fpr the children .of the. rich as well as tf the poor. They train oung men for college entrance and they give td those who do pot core, or cannot afford, to enter col- a good practical education, In many aaaa Wtter thaa- that which tha graduates at ,4 revd a j,undra fctfi iir .is J!" ? 1 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, from tho conreptlon that public schools should be maintained for the poor alono Into the belief that If democracy Is to be maintained tho State must offer to alt alike tho sarno kind of education under tho samo conditions. The change has como about so gradually that wo are in danger of missing Its significance. Tho nolshevlkt nro forming an army. Look out for the new horror of the eiplostve adjoctlve. A FUTURE ROLE FOR MR. TAFT TUB qualities of mind that Mr. Taft sup plied to tho Federal labor planning board to Insplro what Is believed to bo tho most adequate working arrangement yet devised for employers and their employes were neither new, nor strange, nor mystical. Mr. Taft's common sense, his perceptions of Justice and tho humane philosophy that characterizes his more familiar reactions are reflected in tho terms of tho agreement devised to prevent strikes and lockouts during tho war. Tho most amiable of our former Pi Mi dents appears to have carried Into the KCbslons of the labor planning board noth ing but n larger conception of the labor Issuo aa it affects tho country ns a whole. Ho nppllcd to tho problem n llttlo of con structive Imagination and the unselfish and disinterested view of tho third party the nation itself. With such an altitude of mind there Is no placo for tho harsh prejudices and mis understandings that usually mako labor contests so painful and expensive. Tho commission In which Mr. T.ift was a mem ber was ablo to percelvo that tho essential need In every caso of bcrlous labor trouble Is sympathetic nntl intelligent interpreta tion of nlms for both sides. It is easy to believe that Mr. Taft was tho inspiration of the recent agreement. And it Is to bo hoped that he may not be too busy in tho future to carry this work a iittlo further and to apply himself to the largor problems which arc certain to spring up In tho future, when, after the war, tho country will demand a basis of permanent protection against the losses and discomforts of strikes and walkouts, on tho one hand, and lockouts on yio other. BEEF, IRON AND WINE Dying Confession of an Advertising Man T.N' MY day I was a genuine alvc in-hcad, shock-abiorblng human dynamo. I was tho subject of that famous article in one of the efficiency magazines, "Forging Be hind In Business, or How One Man Fought a Long Fight and Lost." I invented pep, punch und paprika. My copy was always a big thing to look for, a small thing to find. I wore Ulppcnhelmer clothes, btnohed senslblo cigarettes, brushed my teeth up and down, obeyed that Impulse, had tho skin you love to touch and always asked the mail who owned one. I never omitted to Include tho words supreme, obligate and ultimate in every pleco of iopy. I could split an infinitive at fifty jardj und always used to say how much moro forcefully tho Old Testament could havo been written by Orison Swett Maiden. I Invented tho dou ble page spritul. I never neglected to cay uJiom. for who. Then some ono said that ads ought to be written in good English. That killed me. But I have filed application for preferred position, next to pure reading matter, among the obits. FUrtOrt GRAMMATICUS. Dovo Dulcet has never had much pub lic recognition as a poet, and tha fact that wo liavj printed several of his verses lately seems to have gone to his head! Ho sent us a long telegram last night from his homo at Oboslty, N. J., (collect) suggesting that ho should do a dally poem for us, dealing in a light-hearted manner with the events of tho day. And as an evidence of good faith he Inclosed the following: Ode to a Quartermaster "U. S. Quartermaster in France mis takes foot powder for flour." News Item. Quartermaster, save that powder For the weary feet: It was" never meant for chowder, And net designed lo cat. Powder to relieve forced marches Made against the Hans, Meant for corns and not cornstarches, For bunions, not for buns! You to degradation shall como If you do not know Undo Sam sent you that talcum For doughboys, not for Cough. DOVE DULCET. The Agony Column of the London Times Is always delightful reading. Not long ago we clipped from It the following "per. sonal":i ALFRED Send the disguise to the usual place. Leave the parrot with Aunty: it will cheer her up. Will see you Friday as arranged. jj. w. Wo love to speculate about that meet ing on Friday and wonder whether X W. had brown eyes and what her disguise was and how Aunty got along with Polyanna! the glad parrot. Some years ago an anthology of the Tlmcs's Acony Column was published, re printing the choicest bits culled from' the years 18Q0-1S70. Wo have tried for a long tlmo to get our hands on that book. For any flctloneer or playwright It would bo better than a hundred years of corre spondence courses. Wo told Earl Derr Diggers, the author of "Seven Keys to Baldplate," about the book and he said, ','If I had a copy I would never have to think again." The volume Is called "The Agony Col umn of tho Times, 1800-70," and It was published in London by Chatto & Windus, about twenty years ago. Has any one In Philadelphia a copy he will lend us7 A friend of ours was asked what scenes he enjoyed most in the movies. "Tho windy ones," he replied, ' How much easier It seems to spend a quarter on tobacco for (ourselves than a dlma on milk chocolate for Xantlppe. Xantlppo fejls us that ice cream sodas r sunaaes haye gone up to twelve cents a&ja Wrtkcn paarawcy fX'RATJHaV, WEEMSTS WASHINGTON IN PHILADELPHIA mills publication of a new edition of Wcems's life of Washington, by the J. B. Llpplncott Company, whose office U around the corner from Independence Hall, recalls the fact hat this most popular biog raphy over Issued on this continent has been connected with this city almost from the beginning. . The first edition, the dedication of which to Martha Washington bears the date of February 22, 1800, was publlthed In George town. There is a copy of this edition In the library of the Pennsylvania Historical So ciety, In Locust btrcet. The society nlso has copies of the necond and third editions. After the first edition had been sold Wcems mad arrangements with a Philadelphia printer to Dring out another one. This becond edition bears this announcement at tho foot of the title page: Reprinted by JOHN BROIEN. No. S3 Chestnut Street For the Author Wecms enlarged his book and changed tlm wording of the title betcral limes. Thorn Is a peculiar Interest, therefore, In the compo sition nnd arrangement of the page as It first camo from the printers. Hero It Is, copied from tho Historical Society's precious vol ume: A HISTORY Of the Life und Death, Virtues and Exploits of GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON Dedicated to Miis. WAsittxarox And containing a great many curious and aluable anecdotes, tending to throw much light on the prhate as well ns tho public life and character of THAT VERY EXTHAORDLVARY MAN The Whole Happily calculated to furnish a feast of true. Washington Entertainment and Improvement Both to ourselves and our children A U- b feather, ami a chief's a rod; An honest inan'a lh noblctt work of Ool. Who noble ends by noble meani obtains r fallinc. amllea In ctIIc or In chains: .Ike nooil Alirellus let him rekn or bleed, l-lko Socrates, that man ts Brest. Indeed. PRINTED FOR THE REV. M. J.. WEEMS Of Lodge No. 50, Dumfries By aiw.x .( v.vaumt, geohoe-towx (Trice 2s. 3d. only.) "llTANY other editions were printed here " after John lirolen brought out his re print. I have a copy of an edition bcarlnj the date of 1837 and the Imprint: PUBLISHED BY JOSEPH ALLEN AND SOLD BY ORIOG & ELLIOT No n. North Fourth Street On the back of the title page Is the copy right notice, announcing that on September 2t, 1S24, II. ('. Carey and I. Lea bad de posited In the office of the clerk of the Dis trict of Pennslvanla "Tho title of a book the right whereof they claim as proprietors. In tho words following, to wit: 'Tho Life of George Washington, with curious anecdotes, especially honorable to himself and exemplary to his jountr coutrymon.' " Tho tltlo page romains rurtner the announcement that this 1824 edition was the"tnentv-seventh nrentlv lmproed." At tho bottom of the page Is a note announcing that the copyright has been purchased by Joseph Allen und transferred lo him. It Is probable, though I hae not been ablo to verify It, that Matthew Carey, the predecessor of Carey & Lea. published the book nt ono time. But there Is no doubt whatet er that It has been published In this city continuously slnco John Brolen first brought It out. The Llrplucotts purchased the plates from a local publisher years ago, and they have had the book on their list ever since. in fact. It has neer been out of print slnco Weems first hired a Georgetown printer to put his story In a book 118 years ago. More than eighty editions haie appeared thus far, and no one knoua how many more will bo demanded before Its popularity wanes. THE new edition Is Illustrated with repro ductions of the old wood cuts which appear In my edition of 1837. It is not known who made these engralngs, but some of them are signed In the left-hand corner by a roman Hallo "A." If they resembled more closely the work of Alexander Ander son, the first American wood engraver,-: they could safely be ascribed to hhn. But Ander son, whose work Is familiar to those who havo looked over the publications of the American Tract Society, issued in the first half of the last century, was fond of a finer line than Is used In the Wcems engravings. Benson J. Losslng, howeer. In his admirable appreciation of Anderson, reproduces some Anderson engravings, and one of them li signed with an "A" Identical with the letter used by the man who made the Weems blocks. It might afford a pleasant occupation for some antiquarian to find out whether Anderson did really make the engravings, or whether they were made by some other early wood engraver whoso name began with the samo Initial. Anderson was a New Yorker, and most of his work was done for New York publishers, but us Philadelphia was the publishing center of the country when (the Weems Washington was In Its early popularity It would have been most natural for tho local publishers to employ the best-known engraer In the country to lllustrato the book. G. W, D. Mayor Smith was in llurnln- Atlantic City quite .shame? near the place where the big fire started yesterday when, the news of Secretary Dan- lels'o charges reached him.- No one ever had an adequate notion of the Mayor's capacity to blush. My Soul Is Across the Sea 0 my beloved, I cannot sleep; The roses whisper and I awake. The still small voices that pulse and roll Make awful thunder within my soul. While the roses bow and tho lilies nod, 1 sco great billows that pound and shake Tho very walls of the world and break In crimson foam at the feet of God. 0 my beloved, I cannot sleep. The ravens are crying In yonder pine, Tiie robins call from the linden tree; Their voices drown in the roaring flood Of that great river of Are and blood Where tho hope of tyrants shall fall and dlo. Ten thousand cannon across the sea Are calling my toul; I fly to thee. There till tho shadow of Death pass by, 1 clasp, O beloved, thy hand in mine. I watch the war eagles wheel and soar Over the rivers of PIcardy; Where tyrants have sown, I stand and weep In jhat red whirlwind tho nations reap. Tho wide world shrinks to a lurid line; In the dread shadow, the souls to be And the vanished ages are set to see Whether the monster beyond the Rhine, Or freedom, shall perish forevermora. Asleep while tha world I crucified? Think not, beloved, think n,otof me Wrapped In the bliss of peaceful dream, Mid bursting shells, In the lightning's gleam, I walk In the horror of No Man's Land. For I send my soul across the sea; There In tho shadow of Death with thee, See, O beloved, I touch thy hand I weep while tho world Is crucified, AL0N3O BKOWN, TUESDAY, APRIL' 2, -"UNLESS INTERVIEWS MRS. I HAD always wanted to have a private talk with tho wife of a professional humorist and greatly welcomed the assignment that sent me out to Licorice Hill, the BUburb mado famous by Meredith McSkltt, the noted whim hurlcr. The drolleries of this talented wit have convulsed three hemispheres and In numerable continents nnd archipelagoes and peninsulas. His book, "Tho Sardonic Sar dine," Is even mentioned in Baedeker's United States as one of the things that must be read by every traveler who wishes to underhtand the saturnine and fantastlo gayety of America. I FOUND Mrs. McSkltt busy sewing but tons on a large acreage of cloth that I at first thought was a horse blanket, but sho explained that It was her husband's waist coat. She had not expected me. and at first It was difficult to persuade her that I wanted to Interview her and not her husband. "Mr. McSkltt Is In bed," she said, "recuperating from an afternoon reading at the Women's Athenaeum. He is Un great demand at tho women's clubs and finds them very exhaust ing. He always comes home dreadfully dis heveled, too. i Every time he makes a Joke he, laughs bo (tempestuously that his waist coat buttons get loosened. And then tho women rush up afterward and seize them as souvenirs. Loosened as they are. they como off easily. I. have to keep an extra supply, and though I sew them on with number 8 thread" sho held up a spool of strong cable "It doesn't seem to do much good. Mr. McSkltt laughs so very powerfully." Being In a humorist's house, I thought I might venture on a small pun. "What you need Is u haw-hawser," I said. To my dismay she turned quite white. "I must beg you not to say anything liko that,' she whispered, "We never allow any Jokes around the house. There are dreadful scenes If Mr. McSkltt overhears them. Ho will not permit any one else to poach on his presenes. He Is very benslthe about such matters." 1yrRS. McSKITT," I said, "I am 'ery 1V1 anxious to learn from you what It feels like to be the wlfo of a humorist. It must be an uproarious existence. I have read 'The Sardonic Sardine," and 'The Par son Who Stuttered' and all Mr. McSkltt's other books, and I have often envied those who live in the samo house with so. mar velous a man. Won't you tell me a little about it?" "Mr. McSkltt was born In 18,70," she said, In a mechanical sort of way; "he attended school, was trained for the ministry, married Henrietta Jones" "I beg your pardon," I said. "Am I to understand that Mr. McSkltt has been mar ried before V "Yes," Bhe murmured. "She died of mel ancholia," "You amaze me," I replied. "Living with such a man, bubbling over continually with laughter and " From upstairs I heard an imperious voice bellowing something Indistinguishable, Mrs. McSkltt breathed a hasty apology and ran from the room. Presently I heard the bass rumble of a masculine voice, followed by shrill screams of hysterical laughter from Mrs. McSkltt. Her mirth was piercing and vibrated through the house so that the vases on the mantelpiece trembled. "Not much melancholia there," I thought. "But why does she seem so depressed!" MRS. McSKITT returned to the room, her face a little flushed. "I suppose I may as well tell you," she said. "It Is very trying living with a humor ist, because he Insists on practicing all his Jokes on his wife beforehand. Whenever Mr. McSkltt thinks of anything funny he sum mons me and repeats It to me. It I don't yell with laughter he gets so depressed that he becomes ill. I have had to practice arti ficial laughter until I can screaln wth ap parent mirth at a second's notice. Often he wakes up In the middle of the night to tell mo some quip and I burst Into roars of ap proval at once. It I didn't he would keep roe awake all night explaining why It was so funny. Humorists are remorseless, you know; It you don't laugh at them they will murder you. "One of my greatest troubles," she went on, "1 the women who are always calling me up to make appointments for Mr. Mc Skltt to go and stIvb humorous recitations to them at clubs and other plce. They say Jww Jolly It mut !a to live wMK'sweh a man, aaat Uy fea't real! it ia IwanasHile for us i , i , . ' 1918 YOU WANT ME TO DO WITH WIVES McSKITT to keep a cook because Mr. McSkltt stays In bed all day to read the newspapers and bits up nil night laughing at his own Jokes. I haxe to go to the hotel to sleep the night before he goes on a lecturing tour. When he gets an Idea in his head he is quite unman ageable. Ho wanted to burn down the house tho other evening becaute he said It would bo a good Joke on tho cook to come home nnd find the house gone and us screaming with laughter In the ruins. He goes away on u trip and sends postal cards to the W. C. T. U. saylnr, 'There's a very good bar at the So and So hotel.' And when wo go out together he does the most humiliating things. He went up to tho clerk of the Laequer-Gllt Hotel In New York and asked It It was the Bowery Mission. He ordered a dozen sets of cocktail glasses sent to our minister und hUd them engraved with the bartender's pracr. He Keeps me busy apologizing all tho time." T CAN quite see that jour life must be 1 Interesting," I said, busily making notes. "Ear too Interesting," she said sadly. "One afternoon T camo home and found that ho had Invited the synod of Methodist bishops here to tea, 'Just to see what they looked like' Ho laughed so at the Idea of their coming that he had forgot to tell mo about It. Wo only hud one box of biscuits In the house. While they were here a truck load of porcelain bathtubs droo up and a dozen tubs were delivered on tho lawn. He had arranged that 'to entertain tho bishops,' ho said. The bathtdbs are all down In the cellar now. He uses them to keep goldfish in. And he is always playing tricks on mo, such aw advertising that free meals for red headed men will be served here on such and such a date, or something of that sort." I HEARD n door open upstairs und a heavy tread. "For heaven's bake." she whispered, "don't let him And you here. He might crack a Joke and If you didn't laugh he would assas sinate you. He Is dreadfully savage today; he was at the Women's Athenaeum today and lost six buttons." I fled, nnd as I closed the front door I heard Mrs. McSkltt burst into falsetto screams of laughter. It seems a hard life. s, v. The True Voice of Russia Everybody Is saying now that you cannot make the Russians out, that they are a na tlon of riddles. The reactions at Odessa, the whimsical warfare of the Bolshevtkl help to make all Russian definitions obscure and all Russian principles elusive at the moment. It Is a peculiar coincidence which has suddenly forced opera and concert goers to a better acquaintance with Russlin muslo In a, time like this, when no one seems to know what Russia Is trying to say with all her other voices. The prejudice -against German muslo may have one beneficent reaction under the circumstances, since tho work of Russians, heretofore but little known. Is often substituted by the Philadelphia Orchestra and similar organizations. And the muslo of modern Russia has Its own message for a sensitive car. It Is, In Its origin, a little like the recent literature of the country. Tides of aspiration common to all the people were in the books of the last decade because, even though the mass of the Russians cannot read or write, they had the good fortune to have sympathetic and sincere and talented Interpreters among them. It would not be too much tb say of tho later Russian music that It Is the one true expression of the national spirit. And It is the muslo of a people of glowing faiths, of Ingenuousness of heart of v sion and imagination, and tenderness and an Inherent love of beautiful and lend"? Captain Archie Roosevelt, when he was bombarded fn But German Aim U Bad fourteen hours hy German guns, must have realized how' some of his papas enemies used to feel in the old days, . " Victory has been won. but nobody cab foresco what will re- LudendorO Ileludes Him. elf Ludendorlt Which XSS LVL mjapo VMU U3 lrom' IT FOR YOU!" AS READERS VIEW IT To the Editor of the Kvcning Public Ledger: Sir The proposal that war saving stamps should bo used as tips suggests to me a nlan that would help our Government to Bell mor'i thrift Btamps. Not every ono can afford to pay out twenty-flve-cent tips, nnd I would like to make as a suggestion to the right parties the following To mako up books containing twenty five cent stamps. To make up books containing twenty ten cent stamps. These to be used as tip money and these stamps to be exchanged for $5 stamps when enough of the five nnd ten cent stamps art saved up. Instead of giving tips in coin, I would sug gest that we give lips In stamps. In this way I believe that we can secure more money for our Government. LOUIS B. HOWITZ. Philadelphia, March 3U. $M Likes "Social Prattle" To the Editirof the Evening Publlo Ledger Sir I read Mr. Percy Shallow's "Social Prattle for Men" with considerable pleasure, even at the expense of some perbonal humili ation because Mr. Shallow reveals the fact, hitherto unknown, that I am doing the dish washing myself In the evenings and that the J Whistler "Miniature In Yellow," for which I " paid several thousand dollars, turned out to be a twenty-dollar bill. I am shortsighted, It Is true, and often make grotesque mis takes, as, for Instance, when I tried to wash Mrs. Albacore's pet alligator, thinking It was a cheese fork. But I can forgive Mr. Shallow for making public some of tho secrets of my menage, because the "Social Prattle for (Men" seems to tne such a Jolly Idea, and I 'have always thought It grossly unfair that the ladles should be so entertained by newspaper small-talk while we men are comparatively neglected: It you will send your Mr. Shal low out Ao call on mo In Caraway Park I will (In the vulgar phrase) put him wise to a great many curious and quaint little Inci dents that occur In this suburb. There are a number of 'anecdotes about our mutual friend, Gerald Thlmbletrot, that would amuse . your readers, I feel sure. I hope that "Social Prattle for Men" will be contlaued as a feature In your valuable paper, for I am Bure that It will glvo rise to. a great many amusing embarrassments and prevent many of us from taking ourselves too seriously. ALBEMARLE ALBACORE. Caraway Park, April 1, Dispatches say the,' No Niiri Irish regiments won In ThU over heavy odds on the west front. That Is a habit of Irish regiments. "Politeness 3rst" is For Conductors the new slogan fash Toot loned for trolley pas sengers by the P. bV T. We would suggest to the management -i that it Is never polite to let a lady stand. QUIZ 1. Where la Alalenaf S, Who wrote "The Illltliedaln Romance"? 3. What American rllr l knowrt aa "the tit of Ilrotherlr Loo" and wbjT . Uhat la humiii? 5. How manr rreeldenla of the Hnlted ' State were bom In New York MaUf 6. Identify "Uio Oil Man Eloquent." 7. What Is bullion S, What la meant'br mueot; 9. Who la Amelita GaUl-Curcl? 10, Name tha rompoaer of "The Buttle Weduini" rraphonr. , , Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1, rennarlranla la called the Kerttane Stale o Mcoiint of ll central or "Wei tone" por tion in the thirteen original gtatca. 2, Kin Honir VIII of Kntland waa railed "lllcin Klnc Hal" on account of his routb-undV ready manncri. 3, Th Dobrudja la an Important pronr of Kojnaala. It waa nrerrnn or tha flertiwn and Ruliarlans. and lis separation from the -'!? ,!BV- raen'ed of IlumanU a ao f Betlln'a txaca terms. i. "'fr'!;1". .,""?, "alng ana (III. voem vt tho Ortt collection publlthed by Mcar Allan 1 Oi. B, 8la iliard la n beet, bat the root l net rd Me, The If "701 are uted lks tuinack anj popular with American sardenera. S, New York lt Is colloquial! railed Gotham. 1. -Altte -alti arriarerul and wilt, touches. In qualities Athena Ulnr (he capital of AMka. neyori ii nt, la rrance. m lk.ni-4 kler t- &!? n? " FiKrh Im peaei a caster la Ma vCaeobr m m vausertntiit&iiuK ,i . -J .j ,- . I Jn i