mm ' i i -, CW . Wft:J . . L? -rifcM && it.. ?.: '3 tfUWB I Kv a'. v.li.. EVENING TELEGRAPH Kjblic ledger company H. Ludlnslon, VJca President! John C srstarx and Treaspreri rhltlps. Collins, Vllllsms, John J. flpurseon. Directors. ;, . EDlTOntAli BOARD) . t-xaca rt. tt. t-caTis. nairman 'g. 8MILKT, ....Editor t C MARTIN.. ..Oeneral Business Manaser ; dallv at PraLla t.cnoen llulltllnfl- dependence Square. Philadelphia. fettTUL Uroad and Chestnut Streeta I CITT Prttt-Vnlon ISulldlm zoo Metropolitan Tower 4n.1 Ford Hulldlne eeia...... long Fullerton llulldlne so, 1SU3 Tribune Building SCiui-W NEWS BUREAUS I J'Li, M- ! Cor. Pennsylvania A. and 14lh St. - JttW.Trosa; ni-niui; ....The Bun Uulldlne MHll BoicaO... London Times i" W SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Km'' 'iTliA lCraNtva Tri.irt t.tMn ta mmrvmA Im anh. lUl I u In Philadelphia and aurroundlnc tonrna ;( jaw ra( ' twelve ul centa per week, payable 5 "iJlfct m" to Poll's outside of Philadelphia, In 'J" united States. Canada, or united mates poi , -I'jjHlinni, postage tree, fifty ISO) cents per month. ,-Wm (16) dollars per year, parable In advance. (lf4.TO . an loreicn countries one leu aouar per r?. .iBBnin, & WW Nortel 'Subscribers wlshlnir address chanced give old as well as new address. CIWJ-JKU, JOOO WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 300(1 ffifcJtZtj Address all commmilcnflons fo F.vtnhxo Fublto 'X?y Xedffer. Independence Sauare, Philadelphia, mm - ?' Member of llin Atsoriatil Press fi&$jj$tTBB ASSOCIATED MESS is exelu silliest mveiv eniuica 10 r.ic use or rcpuoncaitoi l.3S?s) all news disoatche.i credited to it or not yfcj&itheTieiie credited In this paper, and also &$&' local news published therein. A3Si' All rights of republication of special dls- rx3'V,imotche hp.rrln nrn. nlxn rr&prvcA. PhlladrlphU. Tntidsr. July 23. 1918 'J. s PENNSYLVANIA'S QUOTA OF WHEAT ' ,'fiHB national Department of Agriculture Is about to ask the Pennsylvania Sal mill i tn nlnnf 1 1581 ftflfl nrrt3 in wlnlpr J Wheat this year as part of their contrlbu- f tlon toward winning the war. Tills Is an ?A last year. WT It ihe State DeDartment of Acriculture J?" sTt busy and lets the farmers In each n" t emmfw Irtinnf liniu mnv noma Hiov nrn .o. rWM.akJ -. W .. ..V... ....... J UW.1..J ...KJ ...i $ih .JtPected t0 Plant It will be easy to meet .'Sfjjirtne requiremepts, or to surpass them. i The market Is bound to be good and prices ' re'bounrl to be hlch. The onlv dlfllcultv '& Htin securing tho necessary labor to plant 'I and harvest. This ought to be available &. j through proper co-operation. ij-i' xnis State is one or the ten great wheat- growing Commonwealths. Its land is well adapted' to the crop. We are so near the seaboard that what we produce can be shipped to the nations of Europe with little delay. Every reason of patriotism ad of self-interest conspires to more the Ki"' farmers to raise wheat, and to raise thirty i,j,Duaneis to tne acre, ji tney can narvest ' 'a crop like this we can produce on the 1.(00,000 acres nearly flfty million bushels. i UBSMXy iwciuy uiiuiun uusiiuis. u WsfX i , ' if.aiici.il is uumy uiiciii incac 1 T Trl TaTIH,-.-! 1. IJI.. I1. . 11 gfe THE REAL SAVAGES glfhB AVAfViV TT-ITA-M ,,! . I..UI - w. ..iw.n.i a.uui. UIC IICIJJIII LU '.'ji XX fight the Germans In the drive n jSrogress. They have standards In wa now in varfare gShlch must make their blood boil with ,yi inclination when they discover how Huns i?. kavsi hipn vlnlntlnn nvprv nTlrnlnl nf S'- honor which has hitherto been held sacred fjiakSTrnr W4VU14CU uiiu sciujcivjiizeu peupies. I??' presence of these descendants of RfiMHaaraB-es In the battlellne re-enforces the "Ws. conclusion that to "flcht llkn .a finrmnn" wiy' WlH for the next hundred vears be thn ft, wl aupremest expression of contempt for an 'Bible. . The hot wave here Is nothing to that the boehes are sweltering In between Ithelms and Soissons. 'ARE MOTORCARS ESSENTIAL? TN A DAT when trolley systems are down at the heels and out of breath, "When suburban train schedules have been cut, when mails and deliveries aro slow because of a lack of railway equipment and ft when men are busier and in a greater If? ; hurry than they ever have been before It FJ.-t?7 tmtlsAA tn flnrl tfen ail.iinl l..., I ..I. 1- of 'steel allotments In a mood to regard vj passenger motorcars as nonessentials. !? tiA ailfr.mr.SllA la an BasAn.lnl 1IA vSm i nowadays to the farmers who own most K&-.f them. It Is impossible for men who f; 'apend all their lives In the cities to rcal- RS& lae the full usefulness of the so-called v- . Dleaauro ears. Thev rpllpvn trnffl.. nn mil. iS"- roads and electric lines, deliver goods, aid e.i- -i' commerce and communication, shins: anri ItwifV munitions are more lmnortant than antn. ."Vxnoblles, and If the full steel output is A"t wmAail 6m aliltia nnji .. vl.ln .!. u f B-W..M c.i.H .u ...uiii..uiia mo IV fcjtt? uitwwua DUMnicu in t. aajiinb.on lor ine pji "ioiorcr maxers win oe justified, other Isjs wise the restrictions are unjust and un- jiytvw.se. The rule would work an Injustice i not only on the millions who own automo &'&'". biles, but unon a vast IncliiKtrv nnrf nnnn pre?, millions of workers dependent upon It. zm r fe. i - -"'' vhen GeTnany begins to talk and think S& Emperor as the AH Lowest, Germany jj;t will. begin to acquire wisdom. R&fr POLITICS AND THE PRESIDENT riuiAiii mm iia uvats, .ur, lurpny, .X lik most of the nthpra nn hntu ni fcPpf the political No Plan's Land, are ex- Ki"8(nsiBaiij u iney seem 10 regara as fife's the,, bitter distresses of war. Like the JfptjHtlclans in this and other States, Re W.V 'publicans and Democrats alike, the Alrv ainfflnppTM nf thn Ktatn In 'NTpa. Vn.l. An 'i'"3 vw-n. --- . -" w. I.IIU l?$r. that-the war Is In their way. It confuses rytneu- plans. 11 aenes old methods of -sjmttw. t.-'fs4. nPt...a Tantmani, mt.1.1. I. nt.... A li,. 3rt'Vt Ml,I.jr, TV11...I 19 UUUUl lO lilt. W curtain on tne state democratic con MU0R, ls'waitlng feverishly for "a state- from President Wilson." Mr. phy wants only a word from the White i to give background to his campaign I show that the Democrats are "flght- rtaa President's fight." Hie TThlte House has been silent. Tarn- S ''jptay hasn't heard from It. Those who flptelre Mr, Wilson and who have a high jBjfh' In all his motives will hope that the ikkn will leave Tammany to go it ,- and that the support which the its In New York .are clamoring 111 be withheld. , L Republican more or less In office a y Governor or a Republican Gov- r'flMHra or less in New York will not ska war. But Murphy and the men 1 tjrva In -both parties are doing their Mr m&ttlii public brieve that, the '- - ttttntm - t. W? fyfra RUSSIA MUST BE SAVED The President's Economic Commission May Be Able to Find Out the Way to Do It TT MAY be accepted as a fact now that A the Powers have agreed upon a .plan for some form of intervention in Siberia. Definite statements come from Tokio that Japan has agreed to the plan pro posed by the United States. The details of the plan are yet to be made public, but it is intimated that the immediate purpose is to secure the base at Vladi vostok for the support of the Czecho slovak army, which controls tho Siberinn railroad as far west as Irkutsk, on Lake Baikal. Its larger purposes are to enable the Russians to solve their own problems and to prevent the Germans from gaining control of Siberia. There is expectation born of hope that German influence can be kept from affecting any part of Siberia and that its power west of the Urals can be weakened. The whole plan undoubtedly centers nround the arrange ments now making to send an American economic commission into Siberia by way of Vladivostok to assist in the material rehabilitation of the country. The necessity of saving Russia for the Russians is imperative. Unless this can be done, as has been repeatedly pointed out on this page, any peace that can be made will be n German victory which will be followed by future wars. The problem is so big that it will tax the abilities of the greatest statesmen in the Allied countries. Germany has been influential in Russia from the days of Peter the Great. He invited Prussian statesmen and Prussian business men to St. Petersburg to assist him in the task of making a nation of his empire. Cathe rine the Great colonized largo tracts of Russia with Germans. She was the daughter of a German prince and her successors married into German princely families. The great industries of Russia have been dominated by Germans. It was German influence exerted through Germans in high office at court which paralyzed the Russian armies prior to the revolution that overthrew the Czar. Since the revolution Germany has been doing on a larger scale what she had been doing for more than a century and a half previously. Yet tho difficulties in the way of rescu ing Russia from the Germans should challenge us to the effort. Those diffi culties lie not only in the hold which Germany already has on the country, but to a greater degree in the political inex perience of the Russian people and in the hostility to one another of the many races which occupy tho country. It may bo necessary for an interna tional advisory commission to be formed to assist the people in untangling their affairs. The economic commission which we are planning to send into Siberia will have before it a splendid opportunity to prove that a commission representing all the Allied Powers could do something toward rescuing Russia from the politi cal and economic anarchy in which she is now wallowing. Its standards of con duct would in time appeal to the sound sense of the great mass of the people. Some of their leaders in power today have, as Dr. E. J. Dillon has said, "no longer a living faith in the principles that lie at the root of civilized community life." Such leadership cannot in the nature of things last. It will collapse by its very inexperience and ignorance. There are already signs that it is totter ing. It is important that there be ready to take its place a leadership which has, respect for the rights of property, and the rights of the individual, and will not countenance the abandonment of all the moral conventions whicli make it possi ble for the family and the home to exist. There is perfect agreement on the ends to be accomplished. What disagreement there is relates to the means to be used. No final decision as to the means can be reached until more in known about the temper of the people than is now avail able either in America or in western Europe. Tho experience of shore-bound motor drivers suggests the thought that If the Ger mans were retiring in New Jersey they would be arrested for speeding SONGS OF THE WAR rpiIE songs that are being sung about this L war of ours are more interesting in a way than the more ambitious poetry of the occahion. The lyrics that you hear everywhere nowadays are frankly doggerel. They are unpretentious. They seldom aspire above a tinkle. Of the glory and magnitude of thi3 new great adventure of our spirit they have little or no sugges tion. But the people like these songs and the soldiers like them. They must have hidden meanings somewhere. In Europe and on the fighting front the favorite song of our soldiers is still "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," with Its heroic rhythm and lines of majestic prophecy. But that Is In, France. The reactions of the folk at home are different and perhaps even sub tler. Nothing happens without cause. If the less pretentious war songs are the most popular, there must be a reason somewhere. It may be that the poets of Tin Pan Alley, to whom we have left the task of setting the war to words and music, might be able to teach some unforgettable truths to those writers and composers who know more of forms and the English language and less of life itself than they. The newer war songs, to begin with, are simple, di rect, explicit. They tell of goings away and comings back; of longings and fare wells; of love and promise. Little houses are thick In the summer crop 'at war songs. Mothers are glorified. There are dusty roads and long journeys; peril, hope, cour age, triumph. u Now, these things suggest very lntl-' mately the basic concerns of mankind. They are linked Inevitably In those adven tures of the mind and spirit that are the common Inheritance of all sorts and con ditions of people. Every on has said fare irdl.tq. umtlhJtK.K oaubdy, mm b one can go through' life without the ache of a parting and the long wait that pre. cedes a face or a voice returned after the years. Any good poet knows the eddying thrill that runs In human consciousness at the very sound of tho word "Farewell." The pain of other generations stirs dimly In most people at the meaning of that word because It was the first word spokeil In tinhapplness. Tin Pan Alley Is not so obtuse as you have been led to believe. And Little Houses well, most people llvo in them. Mother hood needs no interpreter for Its beauty and Its meaning. All life cries of It. The Long Road, the Journey to tho Far Place, the Return tho poet who writes of these tilings or of hope or promise Is deatlng with wonderful stuff because It Is with these things that men first experienced emotion. Far places to which other people went In nges past, long roads that have disappeared, separations and reunions of those whose names you do not even know contribute still to make you sensitive to the war songs of 1918. The ages have passed something on to you the shadow of all their own basic experience, a dim sort of memory of all that tho race has endured. There Is the echo of tho sorrows of old, old times in tho queer ache that comes some times with tho unpretentious doggerel which tells of somebody's going away or of a road that leads home to a little house. Indeed, the wealth that abounds In Tin Pan Alley may be duo to the fixed sub conscious sense In all people which tells them that these, after all, are the only important things In life. Mere forms and subtleties cannot compare with them in popular appreciation. The Tin Pan folk have seemed to clutch that idea firmly. They may have even a touch of that greatest gift which some one has called tho wisdom of the heart. The tailors say that knickerbockers are to be discarded for boys' wear because they need more cloth than the straight trousers. But how about those mysterious garments that used to be advertised as pettlbockers? THE SENATE'S AIR PROBE MEMBERS of the Senate subcommittee which has been looking Into the air craft complications have not been able to restrain themselves long enough to submit a report to the country through the medium of an open session. The Senators have begun to report through the news papers while the formal narrative of the probe Is being drafted. Millions, we are told, were "wasted" in experiments with the Bristol typo of airplane, and "amatelirs" In the engineering and admin istrative sections of the aircraft produc tion board have delayed the aviation pro gram. The Senate subcommittee is In a mood to complain because a country which had built few airplanes was not ready In a moment of emergency with battalions of experts for a vast war scheme of aviation and motor building. Engineers of any experience are not dis posed to feel that money spent in the per fection of a science so new as aviation is wasted even when it docs not bring prac tical results. It Is by failure that knowl edge Is achieved. There may be valuable information in the formal Senate report. There isn't any in tho hints tossed off by tho Senators. In a time when politics Is being mixed pretty freely with patriotism in Washing ton the country at large will do well to wait in patience for tho report of Mr. Hughes and his associates In the aviation investigation, and suspend final Judgment till the whole truth Is told. The Bolshevlkl have Where Money taken all the late Doesn't Connt Czar's millions. And they are destined to learn that the money of Itself can't be taten or drunk; that jou cannot llvo In It or ride on it; that It wouldn't keep you warm in winter or cool In summer, and that it Is useful only for tho things it can buy. Thus, again, the Bolshevlkl will learn that work really is necessary and that money Is a mere Incident. It would be useless In We've Noticed It weather llko this to suggest to a girl bent on conquest that she keep her powder dry. Even one's nose perspires In July. New York Is thlnk.ng of calling the plaza in front of the Grand Central Terminal "Per shing Square." Why shouldn't Philadelphia beat them to It and ca" the Parkway Marne avenue? Wa could pay no handsomer tribute to the heroism of the men of all tho Allied nations who havo fought to hold the line of that Immortal river. A Swiss poet called Halter has written a ilrrai to be performed on the peak of a SwIfs mountain ns soon as peace" is de clared He has lpft the namo of the victors and vanquished blank, to be inserted as soon ns he feels sura about them. It seems to us that he is carrying neutrality almost to excess. tVhen a German gets off the ground he sometimes begins to be decent. The avi ator who overcame Quentln Roosevelt re ported that the young American fought stub bornly and with great valor, and that It was his daring and his relative Inexperience that cost him his life. Congratulations to Ellis Parker Butler, the well-known humorist, on his escape from No Man's Land. "Who's Who" used to list him as "Alice Parker Butler," but now the new edition is out, and Ellis hops back among the trousers, where he belongs. - , Spelling of Cocoanut To the Editor of the Evening Public Ledger; Sir I read In your valuable paper yester day the following: WAR SAVING While conserving, why not leave out the "a"' In "cocoanut"? Portland Oreconlan. If with the word "cocoanut" one Is speak ing of the "Theobroma cacao," from which the "cocoa" Is extracted for making" choco late, the "a" Is an essential letter and can not be left out, whether In War or peace times. If It Is meant the nut "coebs nuclfera" the "a" Is completely out of place, although the oil extracted from such a nut is called (wrongly) cocoa-nut-oil, even In most of the technical books. Probably for phonetic reasons the word "cacao" was changed into "cocoa," like the name of "Bilbao" (a port In Spain) was changed Into English as "Bilboa," but in any case it has caused lan error which is wide spread today, the confusion being at time very annoying to tne chemist. - PMtaiMeua, July. 1. A JUEAPSIV; j-f H" Uu U. 8, mm, : - , THE CHAFFING DISH The Mystery Solved I A Letter From Hindenburg T"EAR SOCRATES; . You about writing my epitaph so Jolly have been, and me so companionable a send-off have given, that It seems only fair you off to tip, and about my move ments you wise to put. ' Bill and I talked things over pretty fully when Pershing on the Marne arrived. We decided that since the Allies would not play fair, but had so brutally called In Devil Dogs and Boys of Dough to make this war horrible, artists In destruction like ourselves no longer could take a hand In It Bill, as you know, has quite a touch for epigram. He said .to me, while Ludy was busy with some Devil Dogs near Chateau-Thierry, "Let us while the going good Is, go." So wo thatLudy might take the chief command up-framed It, and I a get-away made. Poor Ludy I He Is a nice fellow, but he will some bumps be riding before he the bottom of many more seldels bees! Well, Sociatcs, I am on my way to St. Helena to fix things up so that Bill and I can live In decent comfort when he arrives. We shall tho island Si. Kultur rename, and we will not have much" from homesick, ness to suffer. In fact, I think wo will be able to have our little bit of frlghtfulness in a quiet way. Of course, it will not be the real thing, but then fellows like Bill and I, who such advantages In that way have had, must now be content things a bit easy to take, and let others their fling have. Personally, I don't want to stand around while those Dogs of the Devil are blowirg Bull Durham smoke down Unter den Lin den. Now I must tell you what we plan to do the island habitable to make for Prussians of high class. It is a quite 'large Island, as you know, and there will be Bpace for all sorts of amusements such as we are accustomed to. First of all, and most Im portant, we shall on one side of St Helena a dummy village lay out, which we shall call Paris. Our flrst care will be to see that a great number of baby carriages about the streets are scattered. Then, hiding behind a hill, Bill and I will get exercise, valuable for mind and body, in throwing bombs over the village, with especial aim for some imitation Red Cross hospitals I shall mark plainly. Throughout tho country In the Interior of the Island, various replicas of cathedrals will bo placed. Dear old Bill! Can't you see him taking a pot shot at them every now and then, when he feels In the mood? With such excellent sport, how can he miss his old home? And if ho should ever a bit downhearted feel, wo shall have a model of tho Lusitania off the shore anchored, with a torpedo to fire at her, and a lot of dum mies made up to represent American women nnd children on the deck. And I have another brilliant Idea had: I am writ ing to the moving picture actor who took tho part of Mr. Gerard In the photo play, and we will get him to come and live on' the island, In his Gerard costume. When Bill his peevish fits has, we will Gerard out take and throw turnips at him. I can nothing devise that will Bill in such high spirits put. Of course we shall a few acres set apart for a model Belgium, where a little looting and burning and other stunts can be per formed, and a few tons of paper scraps will be kept In our farmhouse for Bill on rainy days to tear up. We shall a kind of Toonervllle Trolley lay out, which we Berlln-to-Bagdad Pan-German Eisenbahn will call. And, of course, we shall have to persuade somo of tho inhabitants the part of Bolsheviks to take, "when amusement is slow. Wo can lota of good sport have by Erest-Litovsk treaties devising. Best of all, as Bill said to me just as I left, thero will be no Crown Princes, no Hardens, no Hertltngs and no Llchnow skis. Naturally Rosner will come, along to take a little dictation. And every evening over to our imitation Paris wo shall walk, and dinner will for us In tho Louvre bo waiting. Ach Knabe! Perhaps when Rosner is not busy taking dictation he will to find time able be you for your Chaffing Dish somo stuff to send. You can, if you like, send us some read ing matter, but please no volumes of Dr. President Wilson's speeches. Some one put a volume of them In Bill's pyjamas the other day, for a Joke, and he a terrible vertigo had. Wish us luck. HINDENBURG. The western front Is no longer. a con questern front for the Germans. The war Industries board is going to ask the .newspapers to. bay everything In as few words as possible. Now will that mean more work for us, or les3? The Kaiser's dentlst.havlng come back to this qountry, probably Bill Is sending those U-boats over here in the frantic hope of kidnapping some sculptor In ivory who can put In some new fillings for him. He may well be anxious, for there are no dentists on St. Helena. Elegy, in a Country Soviet (with apologies) It was a summer evening, , And Trotsky's work was done; And he, before his soviet, Was sitting In the sun, And by him sported on the green His fellow-Bolshevik, Lenlne. He saw his cheery little pal Play ball with something round That he, beside the firing squad, In snooping there, had found. And Trotsky ran to find out what In Heaven's name-Lenine had got. Lenlne explained, with nonchalance, So truly bolshevik, I meant to tell you sooner, bo, I've been and murdered Nick. You'd -like to know Just what these are? They are the medals of the Czar. "You hasty chap," old Trotsky cried, "You'll get us all In bad; Poor Nicholas was harmless, now Such cruelty Is mad!" But Lenlne laughed. "It was," said he, "A famous Bolshevictory." SOCRATES. I War Pome for Today ' I A little' nun arive now ana then V . ' - i ' itnJkS-&PF C 3aH jajtsraHiUIEsV 299k XsVsssW uPKffBBt'iKSS&JiKg BhIsBsssIV ,,Ki5jr,'f j.ii r r ?wB!!jEBEslssslsB tKvtLfc. tft2i .iaHft j t iSsS!ni " "s t" jtXs &&& -OsnTTr 4jp jBifftnj'fiS -fjKsP'xcTiTi w i 'r'f-t.ljer?fCiP-" iitr' rjsSM ..-"i-LUUagrfeW3ra! - jr- JJ" ' V iil' KISSING By Etsu Inagahi Sugimoto ONE time I went with several friends to see a modern play In which there was a great deal of what Americans call "love making." Afterward we went to a supper and were discussing the play, when some one said: "Is It really true that In Japan there Is no kissing even between husband and wife?" "There Is bowing, you know," I replied. "That Is our mode of heart expression." "But you don't mean that your mother never kissed you !" exclaimed one young lady. "What did she do when you came to America?" "Only bowed," I answered, "and then she said very gently, 'A safe Journey for you, my daughter.' " I had not been here long enough then to understand tho peculiar expression which came over my friends' face, nor the moment's silence that followed before the conversation drifted Into other channels. JAPANESE people are very undemonstra tive. We aro taught that strong emo tional expression Is not consistent with ele gance and dignity. But that does not mean that we try. to repress our feelings only the expression of them. Bowing Is not only a bending of the body; It hay a spiritual side also. One does not bow exactly the same to father, younger sister, friend, servant and child. My mother's long, dignified bow and gentle-voiced farewell held no lack of deep love. I felt keenly each heart throb and every other person present nlso recognized the depth of hidden emotion. Until late years the repression of any appearance of strong emotion was carefully drilled into the mind and life of every Japanese child of the better class. There is much more freedom now than formerly, but tho Influence of past training Is seen everywhere In art. In litera ture, on the stage and In the customs of dally life. Artists paint the autumn moon, which every Japanese adores, but he wraps the brilliant disk within a veil of cloud. Novelists lead the readers to the borders of the enchanted land, then Just at the crisis leave them to complete the Journey by them selves in the realm of imagination. On the stage our love scenes arc generally so demure and quiet that no American audience would ever be thrilled, but the dignified bearing of thoso taking part has a stronger effect on a Japanese audience than would the most ardent and eloquent raing3. WHEN I saw Ellen Terry In "The Mer chant of Venice" It was one of the great disappointments of my life. I had been quite excited over seeing for the first time a west ern actress of world-wide fame, and had formed a plcturn In my mind of a modest young doctor of laws, who would walk across the stage with slow-moving ceremony and with grave dignity deliver the wonderful monolocue. Of course, I unconsciously pic tured the Japanese ideal. Instead a tall figure in scarlet gown and cap, which looked to me, like the dress of a clown, swept on to the stage with the free dom and naturalness that belong only to common class people In Japan. Portia talked too loud and fast for a lady of ele gance and culture, even In disguise. And the gestures oh, most of all, the vigorous, manlike gestures! I had no Impression but one of shocked surprise. The beautiful moonlight scene where Jessica meets her lover and also the last act. where the two husbands recognize their wives, were full of too many kisses and seemed to be most Indelicate. I wished I was not there to see It. I know now how Ignorant I was, but then Just as Japanese actions are so often misunderstood by Americans my face crim soned over what to an American would be most Innocent and perhaps beautiful. THE Japanese lack of demonstration ex tends deeply into the customs of dally life. With all the cheerful hospitality and friendliness of everyday Intercourse there In a certain stillness of etiquette which holds In check all exuberance of expression. It dictate's the ceremonies of birth and the cere monies of death and guides everything be tween working, p'aylng, eating, sleeping, walking, running, laughing, crying. Every motion Is chained and by one's own wish with the shackles of politeness. A merry girl will laugh softly behind her sleeve, a hurt child chokes bflclt his tears and soba out, "I am not crying I" a atrlckon mother will smile as she tells, you that her child Is dying and a distressed servant will giggle as she con fesses, having broken your treasured piece of hlna Thl la auisl mvatlfrlnar to a tar- iim,mmtin.ms.: mm- m w...w. -...,.. , ..,-- T- - . .- - jv;"1H themselves In the background. A display of one's own feelings would be rudeness. WHEN American people Judge tho degree of affection between husband and wife by their conduct to each other they make a great mistake. It would be as bad form for a man to express approval of his wife or children at it would be for him to praise any other port of himself, and every wife takes a pride In conducting herself according to the rigid rules of etiquette, which recognize dignity and humility as the virtues that rellect greatest glory on the homo of which she Is mistress. , Ono other thing may explain some seeming peculiarities. The Japane&e language has no pronouns, their place being taken by adjec tives. A humble or derogatory adjectlvo means "my" and a complimentary one means "your." A husband will Introduce his wife with some such words as these; "Pray bestow honorable glance upon fool ish wife." By this he simply means, "I want you to meet my wife." A father will speak of his children as "ignorant son" or "un trained daughter" when his heart is oer fiowlng with pride and tenderness. GENERAL NOGI. the hero of Port Arthur, had two sons. They were his only chil dren and both were young army officers of great promise. The general was a rigidly Just man, and was unwilling to place the only sons of other fathers in positions of danger from which ho held back his own. Therefore he sent both his sons to tho battle front. They did herolo work for Japan and the Emperor, but both were killed. A childless home in Japan is a most terri ble calamity, as Japanese people believe that every man's sacred duty to the nation and to his ancestors is to continue the family name. This noblo sacrifice of General NogI, the vol untary offer to the nation of all that means pride in this world and hope tn the next, was greater than any westerner can understand, yet on the sad day when he stood In his tent studying a war map and the dreaded message was brought that his second son also was dead, for ono moment he stood silent, then slowly lifting his head he looked at the message-bearer and with a slight bow quietly remarked: "It Is a great honor that the nation had accepted the sacrifice." Then he went on with his work. When an American friend read of this she Impulslcly exclaimed: "It's the most heartless, heathenish' thing I ever heard of! Such a man didn't deserve to havo any sons!" To a Japanese, the cool, deliberate mannet when that brave heart was struck with deadly hopelessness expressed more Intense feeling than could the wildest outburst of hearttiroken grief, I SHALL never forget my first experience in seeing kissing between manand woman. It was on the trip, across the continent when I came from Japan. A seat near me was occupied by a young lady, very .prettily dressed and with gentle, almost timid man ners. She was a young married woman re turning from her first visit to her parents. I was much attracted by her free, yet modest, actions and planned how I would try to Imi tate her. One morning I noticed that she was dressed with unusual care, and it was evident that she was nearlng the end of her Journey. Finally the train began to Slow down and she watched out the window with eager interest. The train had barely come to a stand when In rushed a young man, who threw his arms around that modest, sweet girl and kissed her several times. And she didn't mind it. but blushed and laughed, and they went off together. I cannot express my feelings but I could not help recatling what my mother said to me "Just before I started for America: "I have heard, my daughter, that It Is the custom for foreign people to lick each other as dogs do." ' milERE wag no criticism In my mother's, J. heart nothing but wonder. I repeat her words only as an Illustration of how an un familiar custom may appear to the eyes of a stranger, Yeajrs of residence In this country have taught me that the American mode of heart expression ha? Its spiritual sld, Just ns bow. tnfcT hnfl. T nnV lindapalnnfl U 1l .- cresses klndneaa n. nHii,. mj.u. . I riove.h ., ,;.:;. ,:.:.y7.:zzi t v - t si." rjpr Tie' I Until Love Makes It So Poem for the dedication of a tome THESE stones are not a hearth until f they know . The red and kindly miracle of flame. -,. Nor this house home until love makes, it so. Houses, for good report or dubious . ., fame, i Take on the aspect of their tenants' i 'j minds; , Tho thoughts that seemed deep- hidden in the brain Shall shlno forth from the very eaves and blinds: Joy, sorrow, service, sacrifice and pain, No portals may bar sorrow out, nor dread; And these expectant, empty rooms await The soul new-born, the body newly dead, Rapture and grief and all the gifts of fate. But when a hundred human years have gone, Here, on this south and sunward looking slope, God grant this homely fortress fronts the dawn With still unconquered kindliness and hope. Don Marquis. Routing the Enemy The annual drive on General Potato But we trust Is going well. Syracuse Herald. And Liberty Doubtless the new Avenue Wilson In Paris will be a safe road for democracy. Brooklyn Times. l....nnMa 1V.W i One of the fortunes of war Is that the erst- while self-sufficient nickel Ig now unable to get anywhere without the assistance of the humble penny. Milwaukee Sentinel. Strategy f Files haven't last their cleverness. When ,, you are armed with the swatter, they settle nowhere but on the bouquet or the baby or the edge of a goblet St Louis Globe J)emo crat. What Do You Know? QUIZ What Is the meanlnc of the title CiarevlttBT Where la Camn OdethorptT Whe Is Vita Admiral von CaoalleT . What are ins cspihii vt Ohio? Name tha anthar or "Tne mmrj "The rrlrUMf nnrre is nionasurj Who la the framler at New Zealand? ho la the rremiar er new wiisnai RtatesT On what ar What la flammenirerrerT Whn said. " '."v.... """"f- 7.r.TC. I .. san at L,ik,:r, Is. not alt zas&srssrjt - .'.W' Hlnaness Answers to Yesterday's Qnlr (frotntha ens vtm sjtMrranl same Tears." ara 1431-lois. . TJ. H. M. C. stands for felted States marls) J corps. A . ... ,t Slalia la Indian eorn. What Is railed rem In h clasale and ahroad la net the ssss -' as earn la the American raeanlnr. ,", .. TTi-aU f Mlehlaan is at Ann Arbae. fivlll.. 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