KjSISSI tw h W K, r0lO 4 im, tic i-retTtrenij jnnn v. M TMaaurcri rmilp ft. Colllnt, , John . Spurtaon, Director. MTOIUAL BOARD I aT. K. Crjtit. Chairman LET.. ...,i Editor llTIN,...0nrl Bualntaa Manttr r t Potto Itiwn nmldlnr, act ptiuire. rnuadtipma. L....Broad and t'heainut Btrteti t..., Prttl'Unlon Building ....... .,:o Metropolitan Tower ..., ,....4i).i lord Bulldins "i ...... i ....loos rmierton HulMInx ..t VMi iriuunt Buuains j NEWS DUUEAUSi Car. I'cnntrlrtnta Ave. nd 14th St. rttitt Thu Sun t'.ullillnt iug.ii London Times 4BUBSCKIPTI0N TEAMS no Fcsua L.CD4CK la tsrved to tub. PhtltdelDhla and surroundlnr towna i l twtlvt UV) cent! pr wlc. ptyatlo ST. , o polntt outalde of Philadelphia, in piaita. vanaaa. or unuei mates poi nts rree, nnr io nn prr inonin. (art per year, payable In Advance, irtlgn countries on (II) dollar per nfcaerlhera sctahlnr addfeta chanted Md at well at new addreti. I WALNUT KLYSTONE. MAIN Joefl ft oomm,.Ml.o((AM In Pi eHliifl ltif)IM fc ftdrpindenra Square, rhllatltlphta. i it tub ruiLiMLrnn rnst orrtcx it ttCOND CLilt Mill. UlTTCa. itdtlphia, Wedondar. Mir IS. I'll L GOODBY, GERMAN ird of Public Hducatlon has re ad to an undoubted public demand iliB that the teaching of German Fiooli be cropped. jjh'is a feeling that' the language t studied witnoui subjecting me l9; tome subtle sort of German p n- (F 'And there Is also a feeling thit there were no danger of misleading nj people, the language of the Ger es not deserve the attention of It Americans. The (tctyiol board peneves mat. mis reeling is en by a majority of the people In r?or It would not have acted. time, however, that the War F.o- : will not reject officers who un.ter- Re) German language, nor dls'-hii'ge ' army soldiers who can talk wlin ' prisoners and can understand aid In the trenches of the enemy gtttey approach them through No ..and While German may not be hero. It is of the first Importance ere be In our army in Franco a number of men who understand ruage. ;far the people hae been silent In re- the six-cent trolley fate Idea. Hut almost hear them think. BRIDGES FOR PEACE f Federal Government, aided by ael Hatch, of the Marines; Ad- owles and Mr. Schwab, has nls- remarkable talent for animating blclpal administration in works of Bess and in the realm of material ' as well. Systematized vke Is the trolley system is no longer In the way of ship construction. Admiral Bowles demands that Jkr Ferry bridge bo rebuilt or re. BtThere is a hurried "Aye, aye, sir!" -Hall. Ferry bridge should have been ttg ago. It is dangerous. The River bridge should haxe been i, before this. Such lmpioements would have facilitated business. traffic routes and" made llfn gen- sore comfortable for millions of "wlhVbo an essential nerd of this slty after the war. An era of building might properly be an inv i development after a declaration of WTidea of traffic that have been pty the war will not diminish. The and vehicle traffic across the ' la now .. dense at the ferries SH'can hardly be accommodated. Hi, continue to grow the essential atlon between Philadelphia, and ey will be seriously Impeded. should endow Colonel Hatch airal Bowles to retain them perma- a source of inspiration to an and politically paralyzed mu- Iclaldom. m . . . .. jtajenioua contractors who got 920 -ht.uUnr artificial snow in New ltst some new street-cleanlnr in- wight have waited another month. have melted even faster then. .THE FORTUNE TELLERS 'It that Camden has Illuminated signs to steer motor traffic at alia Philadelphia is as yet unable rt Councils to the logic of this jMthod? Ts Philadelphia a suburb i or Is Camden a suburb of Phila- BL p.';vgenlus yet arise so to train a comedy chorus that at least one at every song will be intelligible Uence? hpollte to permit women to stand trolley car, why doesn't some plat endow the P. R. T. with a ffUquette7 '.I Lt)M matter of salaries Councils' nimltte It asld to be 'consider for city employes." Verily this of novelties. : k,'-' ilUTH AND FICTION of Peter Clark Macfarlane's Utory. "The Crack in the Bell," paper, who took time to cpm- with yesterday a news from rard, have reason to know how lb there la in the familiar as eh holds truth to be stranger A good novelist makes only !pen and paper. Fiction Is no truth. The world doesn't anfe truth Is even the sort ' way be encountered lmme lUHe 'corner. . comfort themselves with t'ihe'tbug polic'ewan, the dull ' sslnd ana the animal ajirewd- rM politlcaand the brutal methods, of divlalon heelers " legencL But Mr, Macfarlane rtjtl)e saw akd. knew to be ,nJiadIphla political oystesn. 14 .have been called an ex-, ' Mk" .DeuUth att "Hattle": reit of them hadnHtt. )wTn the ioo4y. Mn If W.M 1 .dfaMfe' ft ......... rrafc xight There Are Only Two Social ClaMei ToJay, Thoie Ulto Love Liberty anil Those XVho Faor Kslfrim rpilE German shells have blown up the illusions of llflf American Socialists about the war. In 1910 the party rlcclnicd in it3 national platform that the wnr was brought -ajyitit by "the desire anil effort of competing national proups of capital ists to grasp nnd control the opportuni ties for profitable investment," nnd that it was "one of the natural ft nits of the capitalistic system of production." Its leaders said in St. Louis In Apiil of last year that the United States hnd Ij'tii violently nnd needlessly dinwn into the war and that there would soon be n social revolution in Germany nnd Austria-Hungary, when a ichcllious working class would end the wnr. More than twelve month have passed ami the social revolution has not occuncd. The German Socialists arc still co-operating with the Government in nn attempt to fmce n military autoc racy upon the wnild. The revolution in Russia, which held out hope to the Social ists, has been used by llie Germnnt for their selfish purposes. The Socialists in France and Italy have been persuaded that they can hope for nothing from their fellow theorists of Geimany. It is evident today to Hie Amrtirnn Socialists that the Entente Allies nnd the United Statc3 aie fighting the cause of social democracy that i'-. they air arrayed against clas.s power and privi lege, against autocracy nnd the vule of the iion heel, politically and industrially. Thh has been evident to the rest of us from the moment America entered the war. We are fighting for thp broadest possible freedom for men and nations to livo their own lives in their own wny, protected by the common conscience of mankind. Xo Socialist can nsk for any thing wider than this. It must be said to hiJ credit that Eugene V. Debs has nt last peiceivcd the truth. Ho is demanding the denunciation of the declarations of his party last year, when it called this a capitalists' war and said that the rich might pay for it' if they wanted to. He has even gone so far as to say that some of the statements of the St. Louis platform woie ticason nble and oiTcnses against the laws. All this is well so far ns it goes, but the educational effects of the war will not be complete until the Socialists have learned that they have erred in stressing the division of society into two classes, the rich and the poor. There aie two classes, it is true, those who love libctty nnd those who lose bondage. Those who are seeking ftccdom are fighting Ger many. Thobo who aie content tn live in shackles which they themselves forge are wearing the uniform of the Kaiser and his allies. This is the only issue at stake, the issue of freedom versus slavery. It is said that the Socialists do not intend to nominate any candidates for Congress this year, but that they will support the Republican or Democratic candidates who seem to them best to represent the issue. This is a step in the right direction. It indicates a claiifying of their vision and a growing npiu rela tion of the honesty of purpose of those with whom they have radically disagreed in the past and with whom they still dis agiec on many matters. If they can remain in their present mood while the war continues they may discover that wo nro all insistent on the equality of rights and opportunities for every ono and that our American Con stitution was framed to secure those rights. And they may learn that it is profitless to array the poor against the rich nnd to attempt to divide society into hostile classes. Wo nro all working together for one cause. That cause is the fullest and freest liberty for the indi vidual consistent with the liberties of others. Militant Socialism will die when this fact is recognized. The good that there is in the Socialist program will then find an easier acceptance because it can be considered on its merits unconfuscd by propaganda hostile to any social group. The crisis in Mexico? Oh, Carranza knows that oil Is nfcessary upon tlio troubled waters ! ELLIS AMES I1ALLARIVS SHOES "B1 K PATRIOTIC nnd wulk!" talcf Thomas K. Mitten, president of the P. R. T.. to the West Philadelphia trolley era when tho shipyard rush jcrtnAcd his lines. That command from the heights still stands alone as tho oddest summons to patriotic service. It lnvolcd the queerest suggestion et advanced to make the world safe for democracy. But theio seems to bb no unity of Idealism in the P. R. .man agement. Kills Ames Ballard, general counsel for the company, has Just emitted a pastel In prose to prove that It ts cheaper to rldo with a six-cent faro than to walk. Tho high cost of shoes, ululates Mr. Bal lard, Is such that the wear and tear on sole leather by one who would shrink from a six-cent trolley ride might reprebent a loss rather than a saving. Is Ballard's time so valueless that he would lose nothing but an Immeasurable quantity of shoe leather by walking long distances to and from his toll each day7 Walking to work, as the general counsel of the P. R. T. might know, were ho a closer student of the times, Invokes lostes tljat cannot be computed In terms of shoes and shoe leather. It InvoUes a loss of time aud it Induces a considerable degree of weariness. Men nnd women and children may walk to work If they do not mind laboring two or three extra hours a day at that unnecessary employment. People might save a little by going with out luncheons and thoy might economize n money by -doing without water and without, light. But water and light and food. Ilka trolley trantportition. are India- ansabl! la a iss-iAem.of commune) exist eiice like ain) m a kivvar Jr.-Ballard's eecentlals of modern existences-Including street railway accommodations that may not bo appraised In the primitive terms so picturesquely enunclnteil by Mr. Mitten ami Mr. Ballard. If Hlndrnburg Is rfalty dertd the boss of Hades will hac to agitato himself to main tain prcrtlgn In bin irnlm GERMANIZED MEXICO CATiRANKA and the Germnn minister at Mexico nt. nlded by bribed and cor rupted newspapets ami leglslatnis. nr" doing tlielr utmost nt Tnniplco to cut tho supplies nf fuel tn the Hrltltdi nnd Ainerl un fleets. The plan has been formulated through lopg-drawnoiit governmental In trigue ilelseil tn clio a formal and legal rmblnnre to a mairuver )t frank and Mrulenl enmllv. Htettta nt Mexico nt nnd nt Tnmpl"i lndli.it" that tho United States miy be nn the verge nf Another crisis In our trillions with shifting rrR.mes in MpnIio. The Mexican f'nncrrss has Imposed nn British nnd Amnlinn nil tinkling In Tam plco a avstrm of I.inph which Is niulvnlen' to tho mnfWatliMi ni luniljsli nf the In rtutiC I'melgn win kern In the nil Molds b.no been hautsred nnd threalfiied The full fmce nf Gel man propaganda In Mex'-n Is bring npenh tested nut nt this moment, lust as the full fnrco of the German m.'; Iar power Is belns tcteil out In I'rrr-. There Is u ilpflmtn rrlntlnn between the two i lit r i prlvps nil from Tamplin is used in vm quan tities by tho Allied fleets. It rat mi bs dispensed with. Hither a serious Interrup tion In shipments in n dlverslnii nf extoii she nillltarv forte fmtn the Pulled Stales tn 'Mexico would satlsfs the (irrni n.i. II nppeira fiom ieinl developments that the I nlletl States may jet 1m compelled tn kpIzo the Tmnplt'o region tn nvnld a mole .prliuis (ompllcallon 1'ioin tlm Amerlmn point of lev the ptesrnt agitation ill Mexlcn i-epies'nt' only the expiring pirowsm of tlm tin l vnomoiis svslem nf diplomacy that the wot Id has ovtr known. Melt-o Is ns badly In need or civilizing as tieimanv. That task Is certain to bo one nl llie Immediate tesponslbllilles of this i-ountrv utter the war Prnlittrtl nnnrihv, la the gill of government, has hr-i-nmo Intolerable anil perilous to decent t (immunities. llpjirrpnt.itlve I'.in ('nnnniimlr! i iimi, of Illinois. Fald lm would 11Kb to lake iJenigs ( r?el "bv llin rial of his breeches and the hat k of his neck mill hull him Into space ' It's nice lo frel that wn have a Inng-tllstnuce gun of our own, but,we wnndei, iicvcitlirlcna, wli.n spate ever did to t'ni-l" .Ion? The onlv padded roll Vn' ncpert ill Pngland has Sml lust been exi inptrd fioni tullllarv service under n govrinnii ntal outer which held that he (nuliln't l spateil Nnvt tvr Know that the Allies expect to laki the Kaisir alivr The V r p ii r h Hill" llliie? lie's ttlilte lievlls ilniibtless would Ullli lert (IIsIIKp to be told that the Kalvrr w ai runts a designation pteclrelv similar to thelis Yet. all ai-ciiunts Indicate that he gits IiIiipi every d.iv. The fierm.ui pitsnners who repnrtrd Itlndrnbiirg dead mav niprcly have said what eveiy ono has long suppn-(d that lllnden burg was a dead one Tho Fifth Ward reveals tho real pur-, pnso nf a polltli.il club. livery policeman carries one l: THE CHAFFING DISH Ilalldd of I'rugality Mi beard is blonde as honey, I shave alternate, days: np Sundays, Tuesdavs, Thursdays, My cheeks and chins I taze; On MmidajF, Wednesday, Fridays, My bootblack shines nnd buffs, But bet nf all my high das The days I turn my cuffs. I nlwa.vs wear soft collnrs, My old straw's on my head, I never buy my matches Rut borinw them Instead: Put cardboard In my Insoles, i Knt naught but hoov erstuffs. But best of all, my brothers, I alwajs turn my cuffs. Double. This Is Thrift Ptamo Week. Don't forget those little brothers of tho Liberty Bond. Lord Northrliffc's Medal Lord Nnjthcllffo has been paid a tribute that must delight him lonsidcrubly. The Germans have found tlmo to sttike nit a medal for him. Ono Mdo of tbo medal shows Northcllffo hatpen.ng his pen against a kind" of nutmeg gtater; from the bottom of the nutmeg giater a frog is 'crawling up his sleeve. Thero must be Mime very subtle symbolism in that. At his elbow is an Inkwell marked Hetztlntc. which we take to mean red-hot Ink. Tho other faco nf tho medal represents Northcllffo as Mcphlstopheles gloating over a world which Is wrapped In very un pleasant looking flames. Over the ton 'flagratlon he Is holding out some burning newspapers maiked Times, Dally Mall, Kvenlns News, Mntln, Nowoje Wremja. This must be a very pleasing tribute to Lord Northcllffo. .' nd after all, the more plglron tho Germans put Into those mednln of theirs the less they wjll have for shells. A Detk .Motto for Leniue and Troltky ) IloMieviklsm Is tl.vnaniitPr-wliich may be used for blasting rocks lo prepare (lie foiind.it ion of a building; but .vou cannot mako jour building out of dynamite. Herman Bernstein, In tho New York Herald. Finland has its Red and White Guards; and the lkralne has Blue Guards; even the' Kaiser has his blackguards; but they all cem more guarded against than guarding. We hesitate Jo buy any of those twenty-four-cent airplane stamps for our letters. Most of the things we write to our friends are not Important, enough to pay that to sand them. They used to tell us that truth Is stranger than Action. Not 1n the Fifth Ward. Down THE GOWNSMAN (( AMERICAN education today is amarlngly .Tlperineatert with German Ideas; our methods, our pedagogy, our organisation have been tn n degree Germanised." These were the-w-rds nf an eminent university piosldent recently. And bo added. "My vocation Is deuce, nnd niv lalr education w-ns almost entliely In German laboratories The por traits that hang on my study wsllb are most l.v those of my Gorman teachers! four-fifths cf my scientific rcad.ng is In German." THIS "educational penetration" Is Indubi tably true, nnd It would be ns unfair to denv that vve have been benefited bv the borrowing of foreign Ideas as It would b preposterous tn afllrm that all we have which Is good In rdiKHtlnn was made In Germain- " A iinilevman may get trade by tho superiority of bis waies. or bv tho superior ty (f bis ad vertlsononl lie msv combine both Gr manv has ininufartured some verv excellent educational wares in Ihe past, nnd likewise man) (heap ami trivial ones. And her ad vpillseinent has been loiislslenllv nggrefslve nnd persistent. She his a1n believed In tho rmracv of what tho poet calls 'damnable Iteration" and hv means i t It has heen nbl tn corrupt even KontP nf our educational saints Ss a thing often enoueh and thre will entne a time whfii people will believe It. Place n tlguie or s name w hero th man .n tho stieci must seo it and vou i-in tenth him thit flgnte or name whether he wanti to It.irn It tr not. w HAT aro some of there "lUmmble Itera tions'"' fine Is that the Hngllsh nation Is an offshoot of tho cieal Gennan people, coiiuptoil bv inlxtiiio with other and. theio fore tnfeilor stock and degenerate from tlio Ideal of Kiiliin Vnoilui Is that tho Rng. Ilsli tonciio I- deiivpd fiom German, nnd heio then i iiuillv a iiulbble mole or loss skillful, nn the (inutile nioniiliic of the word "Germanic a which mav be applied either lo Ihe Luge ginup of mankind Hutch, Pcandl nvvlan Scoirh ns well ns English nnd Ger man oi whiib mav uie,in onlv tho last A late Governor of Pf ninvliinia. famed for th ciusilfitv of hi- tonuuo nnd bis terror of cailciluio. rxer inalnlalii'd. If tlio Gnwnrman Is tint niiRt ikon lint a reitsln tjerman iner conarv gen'ral hid more to do with bilnclng about llie independence of America than the Preiicli inoiiov nnd Influent es wblth hlied him to help us And it linn been "nigued In print that It l purely nn nrcldent that tho tin laratlon of Inilcpendenco wnn not written In German. C1i:rt.M.X scholarship emulates dermin Tpollitti in ilils dlituni' "f'laim everv thine in night, nnd then compromise," Tbert wns once an acrimonious dlcu&siou ns to whether Poleildge did not bilnc bark from 'topitliigen not onlv all his philosophy, hut all bin pnrtr.v nntl all tho biahis which ho I'lnplovcd In tho protltn tlon of either Ap paientlv Colerltlgo went lo Germany a fool and inino Inck to Pngland a philosopher. A cnnunnii (liltn of this kind which has boon scnli licit n bundled tlme, lull which will not die until th" sundown of Kullnr Is Hint which dot lairs Shakppc.ire ncghttetl nntl foigot ten In t:iiKlautl unltl mllst nvend for tho world bv Genu. in nfllnlty wllh his genius A (hath mask found in n ragpicker's shop In I Misseldni f ami nllcged lo bo that of tho gieat dramatist turned oul on examination hy an eminent cinnlnloglst to ho "ilMimtly Teu tonic In tjpe" Hoh could II have been any thing lse? Sh.iKespe.iro vias a geiiius and, theicfoip, a (iPiiti.iu Tod. iv n paper brings us tho newest Teutonic tllscovorv. made bv a lo.timrt Htiliu ptofcssoi Napoleon was really a Geitii.in. Why fict such a matter with piont plulolngli at, nn heolopiial or nn lliiopnlnglc" Napoleon was a g(iilu, all genius Is Gorman. Willi Get man unlvoisltlf. Get man ex chaiigo pmfessors, German ail. uiuslc. philos ophy nlwa.vs to Ihe foio with "Genu in lloiites" founded at llnivard nntl elsevvheie, vIsllH of Get man princes nnd .1 unlveisal looting of tho niprrlatlve quality of evpry thing German, vie naturally canio to forgot somewhat tho iiuadvcrtlsetl nations: Ilalv, the land of beauty and of nit; Bnglaud, w hent o wo hail our Government and our blond: Pionce. who helped us in tho tlmo of our need to out ficctloni. TUG mask Is now- off nntl wo have mas. teied the foniiiil.i: "Put In the peg of peaceful pent ttation wherever theio Is cicvico, crack or nanny, mid rlvd In tho bent nnd with tho hammers nf wnr." It lemaius for us tn master tho foriuulai-lst and to keep for our spoils the good things which wo hnd of hint hefoio h loathed the ltvetlng since, lelecling Iho shams and affectations To the Gownsm.tn It seems nn nffeetntinn to call a let in of Instruction a "somtstci." or a i lass in which theio Is consultation a "seminar" He Is nf opinion that because German professors lecluic habitually to their classes it dos not necessailly follow that Amcilcati teachers In college, high nnd pil maiy ichnola must teach cvrrlhiiig bv tho method of monologue. And ho Is nf opinion that even If every pttty exeici-e In clnt.s Is labeled In Germany "scientific research" and often printed formally nnd called a thosK It does not follow that all Amcilcan unlverrl tips must forcibly demand the continued pcr petiatlon nf a like absurdity. G HUMAN Idras in education have Incul cated on us the pieposterous notion that nil subjects nre equally worthy of pursuit, substituting method and protest for sub stance ami intrinsic quality and giving us that Invely vvmd "rcsenrth" with which tn cover up a multitude of sins and a wilderness nf Ignmances Hestnrcb Is nn thing fiom looking up n word hi the dlctionni) to inn appraising nf tho cnnvnlui.ons of a bialiv power geired up to tho writing nf "Paradise Lost." The Germans, too, have given us that deadly conception, tho mensurabllll.v of even thing, and with It Us coiollary, tho converti bility of any nno thing Into tenns nf any other If a boy is unprepared In mathe. matlcs or Greek ho may substitute account ing or manual training- if a giil falls In physics or French, she may offer "domestic st ience'' , nntl the measure nf one Is verily the measure of all the nthers. rpHD excess In nur American education of J-method over Insight. Its dangeious utili tarian tiend. Its tendency to set store nn or gnulratlDii nntl nn elllclency Judged hy ma terial standards, thrie aie some nf the things which German logic nnd Germnn thor. nughnes-s havo begotten In us, tn the end that man) of tho finer things nf life and of the arts languish at our great seats of learning Between an education that makes n man and an education that makes an efficient machine, German), from the nature of her Ideals, pie fers the latter Hut uuth Is not tho education fitted to a free republic He.ilthy young American manhood aa been, for the most part, too much for the Teiitnnizer, nnd some of our tiouhlo is Just that that we have parted with our older humane methods to put In their place a system fir which we are unfit and which we administer Imperfectly. The method which, accepting )our piem Ises, goes on to the logknl conclusion though the heavens fall, the method of logic. In a word, makes of the man who employs It a machine, at ctllclenf as n machine nnd no more, peifect If all goes rlrht, a catastrophe If a peg Is out or a spring Impalied. The method of common seiue trains a man who Is never as uniformly efllclent in a specific thing ns n machine, but Infinitely moie ver satile and capable of adjustmert to new und changing condition!. This Is the line Amerl tan system, which we had of our Kngllth ancestry and have varled'to meet American conditions. Method from Germany and let there not be too much of It humanity and common sente adaptability from England. If we will have urba.dty and theie It need of it in our education let us seek It of our heroic ally. France, 'n whom Is "(he Inheri tance nf that I.atln culture which the north ern tribes have even yet not wholly assimi lated. American boys at the front are fooling the Germans with an alarm clock. They will teach them several other tricks beforo they are tlnlthed. i The entire supply of platinum has betn commandeered by the Government. Does this mean the retting of the Jewels the ladles wear at the opera? 'Sfow'tbe.tjerrnans are talking about an ml ! - llW...tl .. .VI. A. J.BU..., v"i "naughty, mmm:mmmmmvi . " !t J -a. If-T . i, .tr.l. , IUSI I m .DSSSSSatSWaanl.1-"--... . '"I 'll. -r - ''l n- ufcai .. . I - - nn , . . - .-tt - - - -7 Mrj"1- . mtti iTar fTifai irTI r .,,-; ,.'--vv r-af c - -?...-.. -. .. -JS" i-.. i('. -;--" MiarB!2i JJtf.;,:--J fr-'z'-t- '-JessK?-J-- ZSr'''''', ......rrT'- - -jtrr-J ...-jss ' Bolshevik Uprising in Marathon; Ice Cream Sundae Indemnities By Our Special Marathon, Fa., May It. XTOW thnt the wnes aro onco more open fni rllspalchos, ltls possible to tell the true slory of tho Bolshevik uprising in Marathon, and paitlcularly the sinister part played In the matter by tho bureau cracy or .vinnuiaKO lain. j All wars nnd tovoliitlnns nro due lo causes p.utly sentimental, partly eco nomic. The nntuial deposits of Ico cream HUndnn nnd stravvbetry shortcake aro ex ceedingly rich In Mamthon nnd havo al wn)s been coveted by thn residents of Mundrako Park, the adjoining suburb on tho Cinder nnd Bloodshot. Moreover, Man drake Pnrk is Jealous of tho Marathon train service, ns ten moro commuters' trains per day stop nt tho latter station. IT IS my exclusive pilvllego Jas I have lemarkcd so often In theso dispatches) to explain how tho Bolshevik uprising in Marathon was brought about by subtle piopagnnda fiom Mandrake Tark. It be gan vvith the engineer of tho 8:13 train, tho tavnrlte vehicle of tho Marathon com muters every morning. Spies from Man drake Park persuaded tho engineer that It ,w-ns a tedious and thoroughly bourgeois thing to run the train into town on rails ovcry morning Why not dismount from tho track Just before reaching Marathon nnd give the upmmuters a surprise? The engineer and train hands, seeing the phi losophy of this Idea, tenanted themselves the Pancnmmuting Commissioners of Hall, loads, piled the locomotive off the track and ptneeeded to run into Marathon on the county turnpike. Finding that the train would not run on tho roadway, they vvcro not at all dlsmajed, but hitched the locomotive to a hand printing press nnd began to Issue bullotlns declaring nil social manacles struck off tho hands of tho populace. THKHK Is no space lo describe in detail the lamlned Intrigues Initiated from Mandrako Park. I can only tell the re sult In Marathon. In the first place, the -Marathon phar macy, declaring that It was weary of serv ing sundaes and shortcake to a bourgeois public, ran up the black flag, barricaded Itself behind a bulwark of salted-peanut bags and refused to fill prescriptions. The resulting shortage of sweets and sodas loused a very menacing mood among the flappers and bolshevlxens nt the , girls' hoarding school on the hill. The pupils Im mediately organized themselves Into a Battalion of Death, hoisted a silk stocking as their emblem and barbecued their Latin teacher. The postofllce decided that under theie new conditions It would e unsafe to de liver any mall until It had jeen censored and spent a hilarious twenty-four hours In reading the letters of the entire com munity. The village man-of-all-work, who had been engaged In mowing the lawns and raising vegetables for tale, was per suaded that to furnish the supplies of life wau undemocratic, and declaring himself the panproletary soviet of the ash-htlls ha ripped out all his beets and artichokss and planted skunk cabbages Instead, These vegetables, he insisted, were more liber tarian. The garbage man, terrified by the spirit of disorder which was spreading, was 0-sA ' w-r-TWrT-,f SsfB ,r5rtiarrta?feSt-. ZSF- '-.. -7--ST- ds4isscss:-'-- v - - ''' '. "-- --" .s.ik. jij" r- ::L17 vs&Z- g$rf-' --u Correspondent had neglected for many months to collect. A wealthy bourgeois was discovered en deavoring to secrete his stock of cigars by hurvlng them In the gaiden. He pleaded that they vvcio only chemical fcitlllzers, but nono the less la wns put to toitiire. He wns tied to a post whllo the pansovlet commissioners smoked them before his v cry pj e. In tho pnilsh house some of tho more stolid citizens gathered tn form a provi sional government, protected by the boy scout Hoop; but the uproar outside, where all tho citizens were, celebrating their new-' found liberty, wns so great that the de liberations camo to naught. AFTKIt twenty-four hours (ho dlsorganl x zatlnn wns complete. It had been announced that everybody would bo nble to do vvhntcver he liked, but It was soon found thnt this meant no one could do anything. Tho newsdealer nt the .station, having decided that it was undemocratic for others tn lead the papers before he had done so himself, blockaded himself be hind his wire gratings and rcfued to sell any papers of magazines until he had read them all from cover to cover. The Battalion of Death flappers, rendered des perate by the lack of soda water, sallied from their hilltop and laid waste tho drug store. The men of the village, weakened by enforced nbstlnence from tobacco and newspapers, were powerless to do an) thing. Kscape was Impossible, the citizens of Mandrake Pntk having sunk an obsolete Jitney ncross the high road, nnd the rail way was not running. The Pancommutlng Commissioners nf Railroad, unable to control the dl.sordcr they had arouted, had retired to a tnll treetop, wlienco they kept up nn irregular sniping with monkey, wrenches nnd ball-bearings. Tho village laundress refused to wash any clothes urj less she was elevated to the nobility under the tltlo of Duchess of Suds, TVTANDRAKK PABIC was now ready to ' complete Its Infamous designs. An ex peditionary foice, heavily armed with safety razors, knitting falchons and In famous proposals, proceeded along the railway track calling loudly "Kameradl" Whlle,thls force engaged the attention of the distracted Marathonlans, a large body of Mandrake Parkers rushed upon them from tho flank, armed with frontier recti tiers. While the Marathonlans, under the leadership of their panproletary soviet of the ash-hill were chanting. In a lugubrious voice, "No annexations, no Indemnities!" the forces, of Mandrake Tark had seized tho Ice cream pits nnd the shortcake quar. rles and the conquest was complete. T.-AM not jet permitted to divulge In full the grotesquely tragic results of this In famous business. A, negotiated peacqVas signed at the Marathon pharmacy hy the high commissioners for jf.-.ndrake Parlf and the Marathon envoys, ho were the before-mentioned panproletary ashman, the Duchess of Suds and the chief of the Bolshevlxens of the flapper schobl. Mara thon was compelled to demobilize he.' boy scouts, to cut her 'train schedule In half and to pay an annual tribute to 'Mandrake Park amounting to S.000,000 maple nut sundaes, .The situation Is very menacing for other suburban communities along the .Cinder and Bloodshot, for Mandrake Park ' i' "- "X ,'" "SAW . . - . -f?e:'5c.-. .;&2Tvji " FINIS T HAVE fought no mighty fight; I have not affmnted Tate; 1 have kept no'llrc alight Pale within no tcmplc-gale. ' I hnvo not done anything That is noble, brave or true. Nny, I cannot even sing Itondels beautiful or new. I have not been worth my bread Vet thus much I beg In fee, When I lie among the dead Folk may murmur this o' me: "Here lies one within the tomb Pencil stilled nnd parchment furled Who was somewhat overcome By the beauty of the world." John McClure, In "Songs nnd Rillads." Vacation Tlioiiplitfulncsv 1 hlnklng about tlm summer or autumn va cation problem )et? Better do .vour thinking and planning eaily this jear. Of course you are busy. Your emplojer needs ou and mir hest offoils. As a loyal American nu aie giving every ounce nf energy tn jour dally "bit" sn jnu'ro going- tn need a Utile lest to keep fit To let .vnurself tun down, to drop below standaitl Is really unpatriotic. Vacations aie all tho moie needful In stren uous times But this jear plan your vaca tion trips thoughtfully. If sou can, arrange for a change of vvoik nnd s( ene, say from office or shop to some farm whom your effort Is needed and will tell In the sum total of food production this fall Or If oti must have real rest, go to some nearby rest place. Transportation facilities for long Journeys will be taxed heavily; your self-restraint In making jour Journey a short one will ha generally helpful, 'if you must go far afield go ahead of the lU'h. It's always wise to do so; It's doubly wise tn .do so this sear. De troit Frearres. Patriotic Balance Thesa war coats make one's head swim and nne'n pocket shrink. But If they tmlkt one's patriotism swell there'll be no harm done. Charleston News and Courier. Begin at Home Rome of our people have been so busy lamenting the laggardness of the Govern ment In war preparation that tbev overlooked the need for busing a Liberty Bond. Pitts ton Gazette. Very Particular Most girls fancy a Toldler boy with blue, black, brown or gray e)es Toledo Blade. What Do You Know? QUI, 1. What It a liaison ofltrer? t Name the author of "Jana Trr." 3. What l the srltin of the name of New llamphhlrr? 4. Where It O.trnd? B, Who la Vke Atimlral KereaT . Iritnllfr "th(i yrpent of tht lte." 7, Who vita Archibald t'lntertnc Gunter and what hit pecullarlt)? 5. What It a "hoollttn"? 9, Which la the t'entrnnltl Stitr? 10, Who wretei "It Is not rnouth to knowt vre mukt alio apply"? Amwert to Yeitenlsy'Quiz 1, 'TrfMntt. I often r, endear tbsenta." It k Quotation from "A ntterqon on Rottt I'll" from'Tha Kaaaya of Ella." t, Kllai peir.na.nit or tohrttiiiet of Charlti l-anih, Kntll.h etailit of tht etrlr ptrl of ' ihe latt centurr, 3. Kltld. Marshal Viscount Frtnrh It tho now llritlvb Lord I.leuUnant of Inland. 4. The Vrnrrnblo Htdtl the ttrllett EntlUh htt- torlan, 6)3.133, 5. "Woverley." the Brttef tho terlrt ot hlt. loriral novels, to wlilili It tate the nam, written by 8lr VVaMtr 8ol and flrtt a tued tnonymouily. . The followlnr rretWenta of h I'nltetl fUslo vj dltd in ofdett W llltm lltnry llarrtaon. Jt . A. Otrflald, VVlllltm Mcillaltjr, I 7. Louljiana vsat nsmtd In .honor of Kins liil XIV of franco, tht "(Jrand Montrta." s, liinirir. roio. or national plat, M tho United Stalfi l0Trnunt wssoan It nta btsun In ISM tnd mUtSXli uf i vioinan aw turn VtYJW MllfVi i :y uui r.,iaoiarianflseiofy,"The senvit arialiaateaklV4tftkfltaattBiaaua.,US