i ' VC'-Y. ? H T, i J, -t -f " ft & B & j 10 1ST m ihtjj public iledger fiat EVENING TELEGRAPH , PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTRtS If. K. CUIITIS. Pusinc-ST. fne H. iaidlnrton. vice Fresiaen-.: jnnn U. ij Secretary and Treasureri rhlllp a. Collins, Williams, jonn j. opuracon. i-ireciors. ...ii fnrnrtnlt. nninnt v Cnrcs It. K, CciTia, Chairman VHJ E. SMILBY Editor 6. VARTIN.... General JJuslness Manarcr frtsUlaned dally at rcatio Lawr-i Bulldlnc. maer-snatnce -square, i-nuaaeipma. CtrvTaiLi. Ilroad and Chestnut Streets mo cty.i. ,...ress-Uition nuiidini .206 Metropolitan Tower 4 U.I l"ord IlulMIni .lOftR Fnllrton ltulldlnn ..1K02 Trilune Iiulldlnc tlOIKn ... . OtT... Oil. ....... 00.......... - i1at NEWS BUREAUS! ' t i- WatnmaToN Hem-it-. ----r". E. Cor. PennsIranla Ave. and 14th St , linn TotK Ilciuc The Sun DulMlns . "Uaefpox Buauu London "Times -if ,? S RtinsrirtiPTinM TP.nMS TlThe Evxmno Prauo L&noca la aerved to aub Mmen In I'hllailelphla and aurroundlnff towns mi we rate of twelve (1.) cents per week. paable -Mm mm carr carrier. laW -n-t (1 tn hnlnra siiitaM -s r nhit(ir41r.rt lea in ijf ifi UnltM fltaten, Canada or UnllM MUt-M poi r attloni, r-oMage fre. fifty (J0) centi ptr month, it fm ($ dollars per year, payable In advance. ItSATo all Xorelcn countries one (Jl) Uolltir per iHwo Fv . T !? - wonc subscribers wishing ddn gfiSViluat fflv old as well hs new address h1-. Nonc Subscribers wishing address chanced 'Ms. AKLt.. moo xrAi-Ntrr , BILL, 1060 WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 3000 V K F .4 f ir?t3 all communications to Evening Public Xs-rtffff r. Independence Square, Philadelphia. kV" .Member of the Associated Press . TttE ASSOCIATED MESS is exclu- tlvelu entitled to the use for republication all nctcs dispatches credited to it or not otherwise ci edited in this naner. and also ifi- -the local news published thctcln. Si All rights of republication of special dts- Ifc- 'Patches herein arc alto rescried. rb.lUd.lphla, fdnr.dty. Jul; 10, 1918 SIGNS AND OMENS THE Socialists are digging themselves In with a demand for a six-hour day. The trolley company at Ilcadlnsr, Tn., la agitat ing: Shrilly for eight-cent fares. tThe two-dollar sandwich and propaganda for the abolition of all work of every kind cannot be so far ahead. Guard your umbrella piously and be braced for the deluge. The proposed Federal tax of ten cents ta gallon on gasollno will hao one momen tous result If it is actually lex led. It will take all the joy out of Joy riding. REMEDIES FOR RENT GOUGING , TTHEN they begin to make speeches In ' Washington wise men lose hope. It Is yet too early to predict the result of the Inquiry being made before Congress -Into the abuses charged ngalnst hotua owners and real estnte men In Philadel phia. The hearing 1 a prelude to t'u . consideration of J. bill which representa tive Darrow has prepared to prccnt rent gouging. KjThls la a big country. Most Congress- aian pnma f-r.,m nrtmrrtjiriaa In wtttnVi Kt j ..w... ......., .. r,'. mere is no question 01 real estate vaiua- " lions involved with the general problem Ct the war. Congressional action for the "f Balrtt nf n fanf liifrl-nt-oearul VimiDA i unfnm m f-r . . .-i .,uuoc ii tjwv -jn i-nuaucipnm is aimosi too mun to ex pect The regrettable thing is that an l1 ly situation couldn't have been cleared HVP Dy simpler methods. j;Mr. Darrow, who has the support and 't approval of Admiral Bowles and the shlp &, building chiefs, proposes to arrange for M""wlll be authorized to Investigate each case & alleged rent gouging, to make ap- W jjpraisala and to offer recommendations upon wnicn tnp local courts could base injunc- Mf'tlons In cases where the house owner at- untempted to abuso the privileges of owner ship at the expense of the helpless and Inner kuttfrlncr tonnnf The method appears logical enough. The Majority of the people, even those who nrn Lt , drawing war wages, are making sacrillccs Vitt A. l- - -- . .. . ... . jit ui mo wur. io one snoma De permitted j3f til squeere exorbitant profits from tile dls- jjly mbm ui umcin. )' Admiral Bowles suggested that rents f; should be increased only to meet increased H taxation and that the house owners ,r ahould bear tho increased cost of labor and materials es&ential to repairs. Here i there is a suggestion of injustice. It would seem fairer. In view of the Impor tance of labor and material costs, if the . .owner and the tenant were to divide the .-, burden. The murder charge In tho Fifth Ward Eg- , eases, says the District -Attorney, has not tf, j? .en droPPeu It has been, so to speak, Kr -.'mislaid. W ' m F- ... AitMUiatiUi' UUUGIltRTY IT1HE whole city feels a sympathetic In- terest in the splendid ceremonial ar- Kjr ranged at the Cathedral today for the en fea thronement of Archblshon Douchprtv Tho .new Archbishop will be welcomed warmly (.as a new citizen of unusual distinction, who began life humbly In Pennsylvania jand was elevated to his exalted office after .demonstrating In wide and various fields Teat qualities of mind and spirit. 'Archbishop Dougherty has won distinc tion as a humanftarinn nnrl a ctrnTn.. tr a. i succeeds a man who wna rrpntK- o.i.om.,! S" and venerated. The city at large will wel- :j .come him to the place made vacant by the rfR. Tdeath of Archbishop Prendergast in the y-f assurance xnai ins contributions to the Sethlcal and spiritual life of the community Wlil be as great as those of his dlstin- Bf-BUlshed predecessors. v "w rt 55f' Shipbuilders at Belfast, Ireland, hae i.'- .... - . ipieiea an suuu-ion steamship in fifteen ys after her launching. That Is Just one re record for the Delaware to go after. f, ' LESS LIGHT. ,:'rrtHE reduction by 20 to -30 tier ren nt frj? M. the artificial light In business buildngs, fevhotels and homes now proposed by the gTlqat administration may seem at first PMce HKe an excessively roundabout 'jthod of saving coal. It might have been Hrtter had Doctor Garfield and his asso- MM displayed greater efficiency In or- Jlng and encouraging a more extensive luctlon of the required fuel. artlal darkness Isn't cheerful espe- 4svfty when attended by the suspicion that siJIJpsii't necessary. ? -a: : ... , hr iiw" country win co-operate witn the ruel pt to remember that many of the homes K jMiVUtillo buiwings in England and i have had to depend for a long time m0Mr on candles. Seeing Is believing. M 9Mtwho still refuse to realize that M at war may be helped along by Miveet restriction to a realization of . Hwt pMrtaBt ftwt. WAITING TO BE SHOWN What Can the Government Do 'With Control of the Electric Lines That It Cannot Do Now? TDEFORE tho Senate passes tho rcsolu- lutlon oxpllcltfy empowering tho President to take over the telegraph' and telephone lines it is expected to insist that adequate reasons be submitted to justify such action. Tho burden of proof is upon those who propose that the thing be done. The resolution states that its purpose is to insuro the continuous operation of clcctricnl communlcnting systems, to guard the scciecy of war dispatches and to prevent communications between public enemies. The assumption is that public enemies have been communicat ing with one another by means of tho telephone and the tcleginph and that thcro has been a violation of the secrecy of war messages. Proof of these things ought to bo forthcoming in the first place. What specific war dispatches have leaked out and what public enemies have commu nicated with one another? If the Sen ate can learn these things it will have made a good beginning. Then it will be ready to ask how the Government can prevent the use of the wires by public enemies and enn pre serve tho secrecy of war dispatches moro effectively than tho companies now operating the telegraph and telephone lines can do it. If the supporters of tho resolution cannot show definitely how this can be done then tho reasons offered for the seizure of tho lines be come mere pretexts for tho advocates of Government ownership who wish to take advantage of war conditions to upset our present system of private own ership. The same force would operate tho lines as operates them now. The Secret Service agents would have no greater right to inspect suspected messages than they now exercise. They would have no freer privilege of putting their men in an office to lie in wait for per sons who wished to communicate" with public enemies than they now enjoy. And, so far as wo can see, nothing ma terial would bo effected save a transfer of the direction of the telephone system from the hands of Theodore N. Vail, one of the most efficient business executives in the world, to the hands of Postmaster General Burleson and the superseding of capable telegraph company executives by this same cabinet member, who after five years at tho head of tho postal sys tem has yet to demonstrate extraordi nary executive ability through improve ment of that service to the public. If this be all there is behind the reso lution the Senate doos well to pause before adopting it. But that resolution refers to insuring continuous operation of the electrical lines, which must refer to the preven tion of strikes. The strike that was to have taken place on Monday has been abandoned. And when the resolution was introduced in the House wo were told that it had been planned long before there was any thought of a strike. When Senator Smith was asked whether the passage of tho resolution was asked to prevent a strike or as a war measure he replied that it was a war measure, pure and simple. So we can dismiss from consideration the talk about insuring cont'nuous operation. The excuse for taking over tho rail roads does not exist in the case of the electrical lines. There are scores of rail load companies, many of them serving tho same territory. Some of them were doing more business than they could ac commodate and others less. Terminals were not pioperly utilized for handling freight. The arrangements for the use of cars and locomotives were not adapted to a time when every transportation resource of the country should be em ployed to the best advantage. Tho rail roads have become under the present arrangement a single unified system. The country accepts the situation be cause it appreciates the gravity of the crisis. But it has not yet been shown what benefit would accrue from taking over the electrical lines. It is satisfied with the service which it is getting and it is confident that the Government cannot improve the service to business. It would like to know just in what way the Government can help itself by ousting the men who are now in charge and putting political appointees in their places. A Hun cannot see the truth. be made to feel It. So he mutt UPLIFT IN CONGRESS TT WAS Interesting to react Congressman J. Hampton Moore's breezy tirade directed at his colleagues in the" House who are agitating for a commission to guard the moials of Washington working girls. Mr. Moore was stung to fervid ut terance and clamorous scorn by the chat ter of the members who talked for hours about the obligations of the presumably more enlightened "employing class." The delusion that a stern morality Is the peculiar attribute of those who have money Is outworn. It belongs with the age of mittens. That It should be enshrined In Congress Is not at all strange. Congress loves the old point of view. And yet it commissions are to bo appointed there is and never was any reason why the poor should not take a turn at the Job and name a commission for the conservation of the morals of the rich. The poor, un fortunately, haven't time to do other than imlnd their own business. The world Is swiftly outliving the pro fessional upllfter. Public opinion Is doing more than any commission ever did to make life safer for the uninformed. In the course of time Congress, too, will lea,m that the rich apd the poor, the humble and the pretentious, are alike at bottom and that no group monopolizes the talent for wrongdoing. If n commission Is to be appointed It should servo society at laree and do Justice to all alike. Kcrensky doesn't seem ltnw'a Your to be making much of Tact, Aire? a hit In Paris. Now Is tho time for Alec to watch his step, for the American bleachers nro keeping their eyes on him. If he's a four-flusher wo haven't time to monkey with him. America Is pretty busy trying to win the war. A lady In New York A Habit wants tho nation to We Hiits call Itself Usonla. Sho hays It' Is absurd to call ourselves Americans, because the Cana dians and Mexicans are as good Americans as wo are. liven so, wo hao kind of gotten into the habit. Foch sals, to make Ilort rase war Is to attack, When lllniljt tho strdtegy of the situation permits, we e-tpect Hlndy may have occasion to recall this dictum Mary had Utile (Inoil Tldlne", Mr. (Inrfleld bin Her lamb Just 1ood to roll In ; But Mnry, like a prudent girl, Used It to put her roal in. 1 For those who dislike Dnrkeat tho pioupfct of llght- (lermany less nights there should be cotisolntlon In the knowledge that they have llghtless days In Germany. The new bathing suits uncoxcr a multi tude of bhlnii Some one ought to suggest' that they tax the gas in Congress. The Bolshelkl control Moscow, they control themselves? But can A war In professional baseball seems uninteresting ecn as a sideshow. Stroebcl, the German Socialist, who called upon his people to hurl their rulers "to the devil," hasn't much consideration for tbe feellngi of hades. If the proposed reenuo bill Is passed wouldn't It bo only consistent to pay taxes on paper shoes, near-silk flocks and Imita tion wool trousers with substitute money? We hope no one will hae the poor tasto to crltlcl?e the weather for n long time to come. Not within our memory has there bepii such a niRrselous spoil of cool, clear, azuro weather at this tlmo of year. Those German editors who continue to trot hopefully forward with pence proposals evidently haven't learned thai' somo of the old maxim1 hno been revised and that, al though It only takes one to make a light theso dajs, It takes two to make a discus sion. THE CHAFFING DISH Rroodings on Russia T"OES the Kaiser plan to Invude Iluss-la, '-'where angels fear to tread? To go steam-rollering ngalnst the de fenseless Soviets seems Moscowardly. Tlio Kaiser's kind of warfare Is not only ruthless but truthless. Apparently tho Letts have organized some pan-soviets of their own. Pantaletts, we call them. Tho Czocho-Slovak troupe has walked the trans-Siberian railway ties all tho way to Vladivostok. Perhaps they call themselves Slovactors. While tho new Finn-Hun expeditionary force Is marching along tho Kem-Kande lax-Kola railway on the way to Ekaterina, it is to be hoped they will take with them the author of the song "K-K-Katy." He ought to make a pretty good anthem out of that material. But perhaps the Finns will decide that the game Is not worth the Kandelax. A Bolshevik official In Moscow telegraphs that the weekly mutiny was caused by n group of cheeky fools. Is that a whiskered pronunciation of Czech fools? The German editors nro very hot over tho fact that a few pro-Huns In this coun try have been forcibly draped In tar and feathers. They must bo Jealous, for cer tainly a suit of tar und feathers Is more durable clothing than the paper garments worn in Berlin. The Fairies T "IHE fairies work bo hard these dajs To keep us gay, For if we let them know we're sad They'll fly away. They tell us there are still tho trees That climb so high They trip the round moon In her flight Across the sky. And there are still green fields to find And hills to press, And back behind the western wind Tho wilderness. And so we lot the fairies think That we are gay. For If they knew how sad we were They'd fly away. BEATRICE WASHBURN. Spatriotism In order to save leather women are asked to wear low shoes with spats next winter. Fashion Note. Perfectly Fair, Harry, If No One Else Said It First Dear Socrates Would It be fair to say that the whole world now js made up of Bolsheviks and Bolsherlctims? HARRY MAULE. Devil Doggerel X am red hot for a chani-e and a "man's Job." i'eraonal ad In New Tork Timet. If you want a Job Where men abund Put on the togs Of a Teufel Hund. If you ache to see Bill under the cogs, Why not enlist With the Devil Dogs? Extra Attractior-I Great Literary Sensation!! Tomorrow, the first Installment of an amazing serial By William McFee OrSer your Chaffing Dish early til 4, SOCRATES. .it 11. . vV IT IS A LONG ROAD TO KOLA rtlHE proclamation of martial law In the Russian province of Archangel and tho landing of American marines to co-operato with tho French and British forces in pro tecting military supplies at Kola, on ths Murman coast, occurred at about the same time. The news reached this country on tho day before tho Fourth of July. But not one person In a thousand knew enough about the geography of Russia to tell where tho Murman coast Is or to ex plain tho relation of the provinco pi Arch angel to the other provinces. ARCHANGEL, or, as the transliteration .of tho Russian spelling has It, Arkh-' nngetsk, Is the northernmost subdivision of Russia. It touches the Arctic Ocean and extends cast nnd west from the Ural Moun tains to Finland, It Is bounded on tho south by the provinces of' Vologda and Olentz. It has an area of 326,000 squaro miles nnd a population of 500,000, or a llttlo moro than one and a half persons to tho squaro mile. Tho White Sea cuts it into two parts, leaving about a quarter of Us area west of that sea. This part Includes Kola and tho Kola peninsula TT'OLA Is the newly rediscovered Ice-free -t-port of Russia. Tho Norse fishermen hnd known of It for generations, probably for centuries. Tho tag end of the Gulf Stream approaches It nnd then loses Itself In tho ley waters of the Arctic. The fish ermen have been In the habit of spending tho summer on tho water with their nets. In tho autumn they put into Catherine harbor, on which Kola lies, cured nnd packed their flsh and In tho spring sold them. Kola Is nt tho head of the harbor. About half-way bctweon It and Ekatorlna, or Catherine, at tho mouth of tho harbor, He? another fishing village of Alexan drovsk. This village had a population of less than COO In 1914. rpHE war has changed the whole aspect -- of tho country roundabout, for It brought about tho discovery that Kola was far superior to Archangel as a port for landing mllltury supplies. Archangol Is on an arm of tho White Sea 300 miles further south than Kola, but Its harbor Is frozen for seven or eight months of the jear. And It Is connected with Moscow by a rail road with a single track. When It becamo evident that It would bo Impossible to move tho storei that hart been landed nt Aichnngel tho work of extending tho rail road which connects Potrogiad with Pe trozavodsk on Lake Onega so as to connect with Kola was forthwith begun. It was pushed forward with nil speed until now there Is said to be a double-track line be tween the capital and this open Arctic port, a dlstanco of 874 miles. rrUIl" line between Petrograd . and Pe- trozavodsk has been open for several years. Trto bundled and thirty-seven miles north of Petrozav odsk tho new road reaches tho town of Soroka on tho White Sea, in tho same latltudo us Archangel. Swerving to tho northwest tho load touches Kem, thlrty-flvo miles away. Kem Is the most important Industrial and administrative centpr of the region, but It has a popula tion of only 2000. North of Kem tho road runs for 224 miles through a district of small lakes nnd extensive bwamps and Im mense forests of fir to Kandalakcha, a fishing settlement. Thence It ciosses the Kola peninsula for 179 miles to Catherine harbor and Kola. rpHE section of tho road across the Kola - peninsula to tho Murman coast was built under tho greatest difficulties. The workmen wero almost literally eaten aljve by midges and mosquitoes, the pest of the Arctic regions In summer. They appeared In great clouds and It was almost impossi ble for the workmen to prevent themselves fiom breathing them nnd swallowing them. The engineering problems solved were most perplexing. The ground Is a floating sod in the summer, supported by tho water from the melted ice beneath, which In turn rests on the frozen subsoil that never thaws. For one stretch of 133 miles it was necessary to drive piles to support tho track. In other places cofferdams had to be built to keep out tho water while search was mado for firm foundations. At one place a lofty wall of granite lay acioss the lino and It was found necessary to tunnel it for half a mile to make a way for the tracks. THE Germans did their best to interfere with the completion of the road. The rails for the section from Kola to Kanda lakcha were shipped from Brooklyn In 1915. Part of them weie on the steamship Sllvcr wings. But from some undetermined cause the ship foundered off tho coast of Nova Scotia and sank with her cargo. Arrange ments wero at once made to send moro rails. As the road Is In operation, they must have ai rived safely. KOLA has been llko a boom town in the West as a result of tho discovery of its importance. The bay Is thirty miles deep, with the town at Its head. Where It widens out a little there is a large Island named Zemenova, that has been developed as a receiving station. Extensive piers have been built and large warehouses have been put up. Thousands of men were taken there to engage In the work of con struction and to handle the military sup plies before Russia dropped out of the war. The supplies were landed on the island from the ships and transported in barges to the railroad terminal. Hundreds of thousands -of tons of these supplies are now said to be lying there exposed to the woather and guarded by the American, French and British forces. THE Germans have been making demon strations In the direction of Catherine harbor In the hope of being able to seize the military supplies. The nature of the ground over whleh they must pass Is such that it will be almost Impossible for any considerable force to penetrate the coun try If they are opposed. The only feasible way to get there is by railroad, and it is easy to destroy that If conditions make It necessary. Not even the Germans can march through a boggy country infested with mosquitoes and with no solid ground on which to camp. Kola seems to be pretty safe at present, for It Is a longer road there , than the road to Paris. YOU NEVER MISS I "- -Q-U--.I I.TT-W'v'1-it.TttU.ianiBt' Wt "a Vf.v .til. "V . V Hi.t't'AIVSB -- - ".--. "'-vft vStMW 9 . -- s "-- - -. -.-::vfe "V xWi -i1'i.34T .. -.". . . it v rfT-r " "-w. - -xw -. V - -V. " v --v v, ". " THE GOWNSMAN (imo ORGANIZE represents tho domi - nant idea of our civilization. To or ganize Is to bo respectable, and as eveiy ono wants to be respectable, every one dreams of now schemes of organization It Is difficult to think of any class that has not been organized of late yeais." Thus writes George Moote; and further:, "To organize something or, put It differ ently, to educate somo one is today every man's ambition. So long as It Is not him self, it matters no Jot whom he educates." A DIVERTING book might be written by nearly any man of middlo life who has not forgotten how to use his pen on or ganizations to which I have belonged. Perhaps a still moro dlveitlng pno might be compiled on organizations, membership In which I have thought it wise to decline: provided always that the wi iter would dare tell the truth. That difficult matter) to tell the truth! There was a hobble-de-hoy urchin of twelve, in whose fieckled, red headed makeup, contrary to all known law of precedent fact, there was no dash of humor. He was a solemn youngster, wide eyed and abominably honest. Hfs observ ant eye was attracted eno day by tho odd ity of the appearance of a lady who baa been young at some doubtful period not too long ago. As ho nearcd her He observed that tho oddity in her face which had at tracted his eye was a markedly crooked nose, peing Interested, ho asked her, "po litely!" he afterward affirmed under moth erly correction, "How did your nose come to be crooked?" "And do you know, mother, first she gasped, as though she was going to faint, and then asked me where I was raised? and I said, 'Only Just here..'" B UT the Gownsman has dlgiessed from ono painful subject to another, from organization to the damnable art of telling the truth, which latter art he is credibly Informed once put a successful practitioner of it for a period of twenty-four hours ln Jail, where he richly deserved to be. With circumspection, therefore, let us step back to organizations. There aro organizations "to the which" we cannot escape belonging, the State which bids us bear a load If we would be free strange paradox! And there Is the church nnd ' political purty, both, In these days, largely matters of birth, not choice. To be or not to be a Presbytetlan? Never a Hamlet of us all is troubled with the question. And In what high disdain do we hold a man who has been a Republican and has dared to cease by his own volition to continue ever In that noble, elevated and patilotlc condition. There Is even a certain extenuation plead able In the case of a man whoso father was a Democrat before him. It is llko being born a Methodist or a Htckslte, not so much a thing to boast about as to accept with the other vicissitudes of life. "DUT if there are organizations which we J- cannot escape, there are others Into the entering of which "the ordinary man Is supposed to exercise at least a species of volition. Matt-imony, for example, though the Gownsman piofesses himself here somewhat in doubt. Can one help being married, for example, either beforj or after? And then there Is tho family. It Is Incredible into what families some men contrive to be born. But here a wise providence steps In: for no matter what his family, every man and especially every woman is sure to be proud of It. "The La Fools of the North, the La Fools of the South: we come not of the La Fools of Essex, but of tile La Fools of France, as honorable and ancient a family as ever bore arms, and ours Is a coat of motley, lineally derivable from Joseph's coat of many colors, for the La Fools have ever been of many colors." All this with becoming acknowledgment to ancient Ben Jonson. n t . THE WATER 'TIL THE ,, t P f ' ",r - XTOW, of organizations that wo have -- ' thrust upon ua tho chlcfest are chari table and literary. For nlnoteen centuiles KQod men havo been deeply concerned In tho saving of their own souls; now we are mainly busy about the souls, the health, the conduct, tho nutrition and the manner of getting boin of other people. Charity Is dead: It decayed with Chatlos Lamb's beggars of tho metropolis and has long since been literally organized into a late nnd dishonored gravo. Has tho Gownsman a reader so demoralized that he would throw a penny to a beggar or a bone to a dog? Or if he has been guilty of such an indiscretion, will ho not sco to It that the next beggar receives a soup ticket or an Investigation slip or somethlnu equally pioper and organized and that the next wn-jdetlng cur is caught by the authorities therefor provided and sent to the bourne whence no puppy has over returned? 1ITERARY and learned'' societies nre i the very fungi of the world's Intellec tual activity. Like the fungi they spring up over night In almost any close, warm atmosphere and flourish In a variety of form, color and attractiveness. And, like the fungi once more, It Is next to Impossi ble to know of which one dare partako and which do flourish merely "for delecta tion unto the eye, albeit they be rank unto them which have not strong stomach?." It must be conceded that the gregarlous ness of literary folk 'far exceeds that of sheep. Has the reader ever noticed that sheep arc apt to feed all headed one way, scenting the air of morning as a flock, turned tall If sheep have talis to a biting wind ensemble? This today Is ono of the ways of Jlterary societies which aro wont to lubricate fine word! by program, to Btudy together, knit their brows In thought together nnd meet and discuss In ordered wise. Especially do literary nnd learned folk cut together: "for, like every sheep, every member of such a society whom the Gownsman has been 1 onored to know eats well. Some also drink. A GENTLEMAN of middlo j ears and anxious ways once called upon the Gownsman "to Interest you, sir, In an Im portant movement which I am now setting on foot." . Hoping against hope for something new, the Gownsman bade his guest bo seated and to go on. J "Now I come from tho West, where, you .know, we do things." Tho Gownsman nodded assent to the first, an obvious truism. "In my native town wo have a literary society, sir, 700 strong. I find nothing like that In Philadelphia. Sir, it is a crying need. I want to interest you In the foun dation of a literary society In which Phlla delphlans can begin the study, sir, mind you, the serious study, of poetry." "But, my dear sir, there are already forty such, of twenty or more of which lama reluctant member, or officer, for aught I know to the contrary." And only modesty prevents the Gowns man from reeling off the list of honors of this kind which are his. 'M'AY mpdesty, begone; who cares? The Gownsman cut his eye teeth In the Browning Society, which in his day beat out our western pioneer with a member-, ship of 903 women and seven men. The Philadelphia Shakespere Society mark well the distinctive spelling had read twenty of the plays of Shakespeare and, making a menu card out of quotations from each, had dined on It before the State from which our Westerner-came was even founded. Is it for nothing that Benjamin Franklin, who founded the Franklin Inn, the-Public LEDaen, Hogg Island and the Northern Opera up at P4oplar street, also founded the .American PbllKp.lel lffa i R 1 fera-i-t'--apSSOTK . .-fist -- '-w. --. T'-iSiL'" t'Kni sH-V-. ss-.v'tp-!,!--- au - - - ir ---2J5SJ5Jj --J. s ifi - fiL-. sfS&yih ...--' -II ' k. -- "VU j " .- clcty for the diffusion of useful knowledge which our esteemed secretary, tho ever amiable Dr. I. Minis Hays, considers only matters which concern tho measurements of stars of the seventh magnitude or inves tigations into premature senility among tho gastropods? Think of the literary so cieties of North, West and South Philadel phia the latter at this very moment dis cussing that KngUjsh classic, "Pigs Is Pigs." Think of tho literary reminiscences of Camden, with Whitman, now finally burled there, or of tho poetical potentialities of Manayunk, when Ogontz has given us Ezra Pound! LASTLY, there aro organizations as there i are organisms which one would feign eVade, and these aro especially all societies designed to teach one anything, to make one better, to regulate, order, guide and in terfere with that Innate willfulness which alone prevents the reformers from reform ing the human race, regonerate and unre generate, off the earth. It Is an admirable safeguard of nature that you cannot edu cate a real boy beyond a certain point: the boy In him rebels, nnd it Is a happy shortcoming that organization carries with It Its own deadliest foe, for even the faith fulest wardsmen cannot live by the organi zation alone. THE SLACKER By Stanley Kidder Wilson T CAME upon a rose Within an orchard close, Single, on a frail stalk, At a break In tho walk. it shrugged at me, a tease, 'NeatA the serious, busy trees; With a truant air danced Opportune to winds as they chanced; Shyly curtseyed, pouting, As if faintly doubting, In presenco of the fruit My gravo stand at salute; Lifted no arresting voice, Murmured, '"Twas not my choice; I, too, would bear and serve, Enrich sinew nnd nerve, I, too, be patriot, But, alas, sterile my lotl Mine's but a laughing bit, Mine merely to flit Futile from eye to eye As hunger plods by." "Nay, be of comfort, child," I countered, "there's a wild Ingenuous service, too. Not unlike God nre you: God Justifies His being, Free as well as freeing." What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. What ,l Jlio capital of the Dominion of Canada? 2, Who la William .Monie IIusheaT I. M ho first nunllril .lonaltndo and latitude In the location of places! 4, Name the Three Musketeers of Dumaa'i romance!, s. About how many American troops are at the front? 0. What are the equlnoieiT 7. How doca. the order of aurceaMon to the throne of Turkey differ from that ot other monarchies? a. What Is ft Krroaroix? 0. Who la the (lermun commander on tb Aus trian front? 10. Mho saldi "I would rather he the first man here than the aecond Jn Rome"? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1, Vassar College Is at roushVeepsle, N. Y. t. t'harlea Fran-la la the Emperor of Austria 3, General ion Ilutler Is In command of tha (lermana In the Chateau-Thierry area. He la noted as an exponent of the 'infiltration1' I rut ray. 4, Connecticut Is derived ..from Indian words meaning "Ion rltrse B. Andrew Jiirkkon wna the setenlh President ot the United Htates, , 0. Nashville la the capital of Tennessee. 7, "Hi- selzlnr the I-llimui of Uarlen you will wrest the keys of. the world from Hpaln.' waa said by Mir Walter Rulelah to Queen t, "1m l-ine nux rantfllla a," usually known.ln r.nsiiBii us lumiiir," .is by Alexandra liuuias. iiiv -yuiiarr. i' Aurellns Antenlti (ltl-180 A p.) teat . Roman Kmiieror known alio .for Ma; Shi 1U.TJW . "i1"'"! iE . WELL RUNSDRY ---. . id att I SKi'I I M M M '-i -v? 3L ,,-": :?j' " ,. - . - . , , , .-.ei-i V 1 " t, - -. f t. v - - ljt ' P-ar-L-r J .. .Sh