WSHiH ijt - Fs?;ii i iupiiiiwsi k ui "m ?sssa.H'-iPtt!ffn ' .t'Tw - T yiT'S, 'i EBfPW. a'--! JWK ,'"" a-fps Ft T . t' : ft B0, .,H"i,' EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, ldlS , . Pv' I 4 . ,-.. .. ? . - IWWfffJwSWA'feBES? .'Iv v ' s n Ik If R I & Js &, fi letting public HcDgcc if-W TOE EVENING TELEGRAPH F-' V'f.' ruoLiu L&uitii tuoirAni id' ?- -TITHTTflM V mmTT.Q PittntT K 'Vw-iiC'!ftlt H; Ludlnston. Vice rrenldeni- John C. !' jS lattatt fia&B. .i n.... . rikitia riii.. jforwhn n. Williams, John J. Spurceon, Directors. EDITORIAL BOAIID; -Ctntjs H. K. CcTt, Chairman f DAVID E. SMILET Editor JOHN C. MARTIN..., General nutlntra Manaeer ." - ' Published dally at Ttnuo LBinirn Building. ?, Wii inapn(iencs pquare, FMlafleipnia ?V&- ATtlNTIO ClTI I'rrss-lnfoii Hillldliia New Tola 209 Metropolitan Tower !T!totT. 4K Ford llulldlng- 7;J 1"VIB ,... ,,....li'in I' uurriMII iiijii'iiiik .vmcioo l-.-"-' rrlDunr nuiiainc NEWS BUREAUS: WASHINGTON HCBKAU, ... N E, Cor. 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All rights of republication of special dls patches herein arc also icservcd. Philidtlphli, VtdnrfJy, frptfmbrr IS. nil THE FARCE OF IT XJtTE HAVE a law whose purpose Is num- lnally to prohibit political assessment" upon officeholders. It forbids any member of a political committee, any nflleer of the Commonwealth or of any county, the Mayor of any city or the head of any department tinder him from maklnp; or permitting; a demand to bo mado for a contribution ot money for political purposes upon any sub ordinates. But the law provides that nnthinir in it shall prevent any officer or employe from making a "voluntary contribution." Sheriff Ransley has been nsklnK the local Officeholders for "voluntary contributions," and the Mayor has been saylnc that the men need not pay anything unless they choose. . But the clerks know what will happen to them If they do not "voluntarily" con tribute. And the farcical law remains without any teeth in It. Just as it was Intended it " should be when it was passed. The American soldiers at the front have the "right Idea about the Austrian peace move. They say "Let's do the jnb first and talk afterward." THRIFT STAMPS IN THE PAWNSHOPS THE Indignation of Juds;e Davis at the pawnbrokers who would loan only B0 per cent of their value on thrift stamps was natural and proper. Congress has been passing laws to pre vent the stock brokers from beating down the price of Liberty Bonds, but it has neglected its obvious duty to give atten tion to the pawnshops. If the loan value of a thrift stamp is less than the loan value of a share of corporation htock something ia- wrong. The banks will lend 80 per cent on a share of stock. The pawnbrokers ought certainly to lend as much on securities that are the equivalent of cash. Won't Mr. Kltchln take the mat ter up at once? The boche had imitation tanks in thf St Mlhiel salient, and they have recently been telling the people at home of imitation victories. IS NOBODY INTERESTED IN THE ELECTION? FEW voters registered on the first day and still fewer had their names put on the rolls yesterday. Why Is this? Can it be that the voters are forgetting that an Important election is to bo held t?& on November 6? We are to choose a H 4 Governor and a State Legislature, and an 5?1' entire new national House of Representa tives Is to be elected. Men fit for the work before them must be sent to Wash ington. If the voters do not qual-fy we are likely to have the wrong kind of a Congress, whether the majority be Re publican or Democratic. The men who are not lighting ought to be willing at least to vote and thus perform one part Of their duty as citizens of a free republic. One cannot help but wonder whether a few Huns aren't loose among the Mriking miners In the anthracite regions. AMONG THE FIRST OF WAR CHARITIES AMONG tho multiplicity of war charl .tles there are some which plteously prompt the heart to loosen the purse .strings. Of such a character Is the move ment now being conducted by the Penn sylvania; Working Home for Blind Men to raise $150,000 to be used In teaching trades to American soldiers made sightless by the war. Acceptance of the fact that barbarism L!n- Its dvlnir mnrnpnt lu rt-nl .nm,,,!, .. Pmake those who see the right pay with iSl'dS their spiritual vision Is bitter indeed. None Wh? k Iess ll !s tne nart ot courage to face IKvct1?- truth, the part of generous patriotism vio ratuie wnai ih piuxui less intolerable vp 1 & needless to expatiate on the good Jbrhlch contributions to this proposed fund fciwl aAccomnliah. Thnneh th mnet liK-ai T.fc- w .a. w '""-IUI BvpE '' MPOnse will fall to right a wrong. It gjyV wureaiy win neip 10 relieve us poignancy. &sK 'The sum should be oversubscribed In the b't " .... ............ 4- . .. . t Austria now Knows me penis of keeping S vll company. Wl,t - Mj'Ullllnll ailHUlt jMArvllVL. OUUl) T IS gratifying news that Lieutenant Orant writes from France to the effect jgO ,'ihat the airplanes equipped with -J50- fftorsepower motors are me lastesi tnings 4t fly. 1 'T'f.Ttme enough wae spent In developing (lh motor to warrant the confidence in It T'Wch' Its designers professed; When an 1 aviate r wno nas ustt one or them rts that the alrplanej quipped with are. the most wonderful, yet produced ..MKHCKwrwarawitn connaence w THERE MUST DE A REPENTANT GERMANY Only Willi Such a Nation Can the Entente Allies anil America Re Magnanimous "IITORD comes from Washington that the men nbout President Wilson nro considering the advisability of treating Germany when the war is over with tho same magnanimity which the North showed to the South at tho close of the Civil War. There is peril in attempting to draw any such parallel nt tho present time, and perhaps nt any time. It involves, comparing the southern States with Ger many, a comparison which is an insult to those States. The South never sought world dominion. It never attempted to force its views upon reluctant peoples. It never dreamed of conquest. And it was never guilty of deliberate and organ ized barbarism in violation of the laws of war and the dictates of humanity. Lincoln fought the war on the issue of the preservation of the Union, and when the war ended that issue was settled for all time. Germany is fighting not for her right to have- the kind of government and the kind of social institutions which she de sires, as the South fought, but to force her Government and her social institu tions on the rest of the world. It is a war of conquest which she has started, a war disregarding the rights of other na tions, a war in the prosecution of which she has broken her sworn word and vio lated all the principles of honor among nations, in the belief that tho German race is destined through the process of evolution to bo the dominant race and that other races arc to exist merely as German vassals. The ' differences in the purposes and motives behind this war and our Civil War are radical, and they must tinge and color all our thinking on the sub ject. Whether one agreed with tho South or not one could lcspect its pur poses. They were honest and worthy of civilized men. The German motives arc those of a savage tribe which, by rapine and murder, massacre and pillage, seeks to destroy the tribes which occupy the lands that it covets. Only one course is open to the nations arrayed against Germany and her sub servient vassals, and that is to fight them on the field till they are defeated. This is the task on which we are now en gaged, and in which we shall continue until it is accomplished. No attempt to divert us by peace propaganda in tended to weaken our arm and divert our minds from the great task will lie permitted to succeed. When Germany is defeated will be time enough to consider how she is to be treated. And, if we mistake not, the treatment which she receives will depend unon her mental attitude not the mental attitude of the Hohenzollerns" and the mil itary party, but on the attitude of the German race as a whole. It is conceivable that the Germans may admit that their purposes were indefen sible and that the war which they started had no justification whatsoever, and that they may admit the right of other na tions to life and independence free from the danger of aggression by ambitious Powers. This would mean that she has repented and is in a mood to do works meet for the repentant. In such a case the world will be magnanimous. But if a defeated Germany is sullen and unrepentant, magnanimity would de feat its own purposes. It would strengthen the military party in its belief in force, and that party would immediately begin to prepare for another war for dominion. There is not the slightest doubt of this. Until we know the state of mind of the German people it is useless to spend time discussing seriously what we are to do with Germany after the peace treaties have been signed. The terms of peace, of course, will be those which America and the Entente Allies shall dictate. And they will be framed for the protection of the small and the big nations alike against a German menace. Whether Germany is to be admitted into a league of nations will depend upon whether her purposes agree with those of the league. At the present moment they do not agree, and until Germany has repented they cannot agree. And no negotiation, secret or public, at this time can make them agree. The executions in Petrograd show that the Bolshevlki do not value Russian life any more than the Kaiser valued the lives of his Germans. THE KAISER'S NEXT MOVE T)LAINLY one of the purposes of the - flerman peace noto was a sharp divi sion of polltjcal and group opinion in the Allied countries. This, indeed, i-eems to have been the central motive of the Vi enna proclamation. Senator Lodge's quick approval. In tho name of his party, of the President's brusque and uncompromising retort is, therefore, the more timely and appropriate. If the Germans can think at all It must be manifest to them by thfp time that the force opposed to them Is'not founded In tho theories or Ideals of any individual or class or group, but rests on the very foun datlons of civilized opinion. 'Senator Lodge spoke yesterday for all elements In the Republican party and made It clearly evident that the President will have the fullest support of such political adver saries as might be expected. In a pinch, to take advantage of shifting conditions at Washington for their own benefit. It is altogether Improbable, too, that there will he in Kngland any such division of political opinion as the Austrian Em peror's note was designed to bring about. Fortunately for the British, they know the Hun. Yet the smoke of the Vienna peace bomb will hang in the air for days to come. There will be echoes and re'ycr-" biratlbns-lBa a new bombardment may be expected within a short time, Tho licxt move may he even more daring than the first. It would surprise no one if the Germans counter President Wilson's robuff with n more or less frank proffer of Alsace-Lorraine to Krnnce. The grow ing desperation ot Germany's internal con dition would make such a plan appear altogether logical. This approach to Franco and the reiterated suggestions of "floods of kindness" suggestions which cannot help but have a powerful appeal tn nations sick of blood and bitterness will sooner or later appear as the trump card of German militarism, slapped on the table In a wild effort for salvation nt the end of the appalling game that has led the German peoples to shnne, ruin and death In that hour, and not before that, the war for free government will reach Its crisis. Whit will France do? FTow will France withstand tho temptation? No one who knows the heart of Franco nny doubt for a moment. The French will fight on. They will he told that they may take tho lost provinces undespollod and that they may have Alsace-Lorraine as they are now green and undented nnd not laid waste as they would be were they to be nkon by tho slow and cnlly process of military conquest and occupation. When that offer Is made as It Is sure to he before ery long -the spirit of the I'lonrh people will be put tn a test as great as any it has met since the war began. Hut France Ins fought for civ ilization from tho first. And so she will light to the end. Stefansson. of whom Ifn, Mrfnrnnn. m spnko yesterday, r'm llrre, QuIrK! touching the matter f blonrto. Is said tn have discoverer! In the Arctic an Island as big as Ireland. Rut what Is ,'l-e in this world? Will Ktefansson's Island lie as full of fun and trouble, f Bnry and beauty and con trariness as Ireland? Are there fairies there? Are tho people clevei as the Irish In realiz ing the live great ends of mankind, which are fighting, making lme. telling stories, singing songs and bidding defiance? Stefanshnn Is silent nn these points So It Is useless to Indulge vain lmpis ' A heavy income tax is .sU .somellilnR to he levied not only ,:n-' "n the President's salary, but on the sal aries of the .lodges in (he t'nlled states Supreme Court The constitutionality of this procedure is doubted Vow, what is to hap pen If a Judge nf the Supreme Court should really wish to enter a suit and fare the necessity of making a decision In his own case? I The Kaiser 1" said to be nervous and 111. He showed the premonitory symptoms when he was talking tn the workers at Krupps' last week. A reign nf terrnr N in progress In Petrograd which makes the famous reign of the French Revolution seem like a little show er. An Item of $17R.noo,noii for air service Is included In the ne army appropriation bill Let's hope that we shall get the worth of our money this time When a man orders a meal nowadays without carefully scrutinizing the process nn the menu card you can set him down for a millionaire and a reckless one at that. If Judge Rnnnivvell plans to organize his new party nut of the Democratic dul lamftes he will find plenty nf men disgruntled at thp disposition of patronage here. As it is unofficially reported that the fourth Llheitv Lnan (piota for this district will be half a billion dollars, those who plan to KUbsciilio would better begin to dig deep in their hoarding places for the coin. The saloonkeepers are now saying that they will not close at midnight unless the hotel proprietors will also close their bars at the same hour. Hut the hotel men say t!u one might as well ask a man to agree not to take a drink In his own home after mid night. Who'll umpire the dispute? NOTES A1SD QUERIES (Willi Apologies to Lewis Carroll! 44"7"Or were once, I'ncle Samuel," Herr -- rsurlan said. .,j Sl, "Inclined more for peace than for light; Yet now you send troops in an endless parade Do you call that consistent or right?" "In the past." Uncle Samuel replied to the Hun, "I tried to appeal to your brain; But now that I'm perfectly sure you have none. My doctrine is physical pain." "You were once, Uncle Samuel," Herr Burian moaned, "Not armed or 'equipped for a fray: Yet you hash up a salient cleverly honed Now what is tho reason, I pray?" "In the past," said tho sage as he bran dished his gun, "I kept myself fit as to muscle .. By training with freedom unknown to the Hun; That's how I have taught him to hustle." "You ere once," quoth Herr Burian, "ploddingly nice In digesting erch note and its meaning; Yet now you dispose of my. screed in a trice On what, may I ask, are you leaning?" "T'other day," thur.dered ' Samuel, "I . girded each loin And arraytd all my legions for strife; And my bellicose strength and unlimited coin Will last r j the rest of your life." "You were once," said the Mouthpiece, "inclined to contend, ... That I differed perhaps from a German; Then why can I no longer call you my friend, And why are you wise to all vermin?" "I'm weary of babpje," said Samuel. "Enough! Be off with your fogs and your hazes; My answer "Is that I'iptend.'tQpo rough'' (AiidUkiek'.yau toff VM??'lfe,t'nJ '.- THE GOWNSMAN The English nnd Some Other Tongues ARKCFNT number of Lo Matin, the popular Paris dally, contains to the left and the right of the title two panels. In the first Is a small map of the two hem ispheres and entitled "Tho English Language In the World," those parts In which that language rules being duly designated, with the legend, "200.000,000 speak English." The Panel to the right reads "Learn English," bracketed with "I must, I can, I will," each word accompanied with tho corresponding French and the French Indication of our English pronunciation. These latter are to us amusing: "A I meustt, AI cann, Al oOlll"; but they perform their function. The last page nf the same paper displays the Amer ican national hymn, "La I3annl?re Etollfe," the words and the music, accompanied by a translation Into French and nn Interlinear Indication of our pronunciation: "O, s(. cann lou st, bal ze donnz curie lAItt? Ilnuot sft praoudle out hMd att ze touAHAItts lastt gllmlgn." THE Gownsman Is not disposed to admit that the Germans are often- 'lucid : but occasional Germans are visited by lucid In tervals. It was In one of these that a certain eminent professor declared, "English Is destined to be the universal language of the world. German, French, Italian, all, must hold a minor place " But this was long bo fore the monstrous egg of this war was hatched and In a moment when Kultur was nodding at the helm of the Teutonic Zeppelin of state. Jocularity aside, English Is not only the birthright of more millions of the human race than any other language, but It Is likewise the second language of millions more, not to the manner born. English has long since succeeded the lingua franca In the Near East, and, ns "Pigeon English," fol lows the guinea nnd the dollar in tho trade of the Pacific. E NGLIRH is possibly not the best Ian-' guag" In tho world though the Gowns man devnutlv believes It to he very nearly such It has not much nn the French, to put It slangily; for what tongue can compete with the proud slogan, "What Is not clear is not French"? Rut English has an adaptability, a resourcefulness and a power to adjust Itself to emergencies unrivaled among -the languages of men And the first reason for this Is tho delightful Illogicality of English, Its sweet unreasonableness, German Is logi cal, severely logical, like the people who speak It. Professor Tuppcr, In a recent sensible paper on "The Awful German Language,'' recalls Mark Twain's bon mot that he would rather decline, two drinks than one German veih. STILL another delightful quality of the English language is Its lawlessness. Sir Philip Sidney. Inng ago, called English "the grammnrless tongue"; and never a Lindley Murray of Ihem all has ever been able to make It anything else. The men who know Latin and Greek grammar have been trying for generations to construct a grammatical cabinet In which to pigeonhole the English language, nut most of the boxes are. empty and the rest are stuffed to overflowing with exceptions. Ynu cannot box nnd coffin the English language as If it were dead. Sir Walter Raleigh our admirable contemporary professor at Oxford, not the Elizabethan benefactor of tho human race who discovered tobacco our Sir Walter has very recently commented on the freedom of English as il lustrating the distinctive quality of a free lace. U notes that It Is this freedom that brings to English Its wealth and that while in most tongues there Is a word for a thing, nr twn; a way of saying something, or per haps two ways, in English we commonly have at least three words and Innumerable ways nf putting things; and if we do not like old words and old ways, we make new ones in stanter, nr less learnedly, off the bat. TO QUOTE a happy passage of Sir Walter's in illustration: "We can say most things In three ways, according as we draw on one or another of the three main sources of our speech that is the original English, the old Norman French, the Latin and Greekl. Thus you can Begin, or Commence, or Initiate an undertaking, lth Boldness, o Courage, or Resolution. If you are a Wonman, or Laborer, or Operative, you can Ask, or Re quest, or Solicit your employer to Yield, or Grant, or Concede an increase In the Earn ings, or Wages, nr Rmuneration which fall to the lot nf J-nur Fellow, nr Cnmpanlnn, or Associate. Your employer Is perhaps Old, or Veteran, or Superannuated, which may Hinder, or Delay, or Retard the success of your application." THIS Is only an Illustration of our wealth In common ocabulary. We are ns rich In the making nf the new meanings and In the new minting nf slang Almost the oldest trick of the speech of our remote ancestors was Its power to make compounds. And we retain it today. A certain official fell Into trouble lately hooause of a "food-hoard." It sounds like Anglo-Saxon, which it' Is. 'We can still talk of "joy-rdes." and the "fool killer" Is still with us. Rut we do not say, "horse-lron-rall-road-vvagon-company," ns they do In Germany, because we are not logical. An amlahlo instructor In French once rushed into the Gownsman's room excitedly. "I haf one kest-l-on to ask. Can ve say in lngllsh. 'grow less'?" "And why not?" "But 'to grow' is to become greater. Ve. can not become greater by becoming less, and ve can not become less by becoiplng greater. It would he impossible in French," But not in English, where we have no Acad emy to declare correct usage, and can therefore grow and shod .our old shell, like a crab, every generatlnn nr twn. IT IS fun to start a precisian appealing to the authority of good usage In our mother tongue. Any one can muddle him vvlth his own analogies In ten minutes. The appeal to authority, too, in matters of speech is often a veritahle boomerang. We are law less speakers by birthright and only school ma'ams should he circumspect and fastidious of the proprieties Shakespeare' was a fine old reprobate in the use of language, vindi cating once and for all the liberty of the tongue. He Is as innocent of the dainty "correct" use of "will" and "shall" as an Irishman. He delights, like the old anarchist that he Is, In disagreements between his royal verbs and their subjects. And when you correct your son, dear reader, for Baying "those kind of fellers," he may retort, with the logic of a gramnrarlan, "Shakespeare says "those kind." THE best English Is that spoken by cul tivated men and women In active con verse with the world. Not that spoken by the learned In the laboratory, or by the col legian in the schools propriety forbid not by any means by the man in the street, even less by the girl In the shop, whose .largon A might as well De singaiese. But an of these are helping make the language, shoving It along, so to speak, elbowing It Into queer places, if you like. But If you are formulat ing your rules of speech at leisure, they will fall out ef date before they are ready and the Idiom under your microscope will sud denly have taken wings. By the time that you have fixed on what you ought not to say your own tongue will refute ynu. When you have determined precisely what your neighbor ought to Bay, or what he should be forbidden to say, you will become a gram marian or a German. AS TO slang, It is the one certain evidence . that a language Is still alive; for slang Is the language of the people In the process of making.' Moreover, a picturesque slang Is a safeguard against profanity, which peace to the clergy is little more than Inar ticulate Bpeech seeking utteranco in explosion. Mechanical ingenuity has timed and regulat ed explosion Into a powerful motive force. Let all grammarians, logicians and sufferers. under foreign teachings know that English Is not a degenerate offshoot of, the old .Teu tonic stock, "a base dialect gabbled by plrater In their depredations on the high sea's," as one of our enemies politely put it. English Is the free, masterful, adaptable speech of a free, masterful and adaptable- people which Im rfABtlnAil tn rtlln fh urnrM ,a' Ka,u they ar,nHis9Huror;,but heeauutlwyt DR. JOHNSON'S BIRTHDAY By Christopher Morley IT IS very .annoying to hear Karl' Rosner referred to- as "the Kaiser's Boswell.',' For to boswelltze ("which is a' verb that has gone Into our dictionaries) means not merely to transcribe faithfully the act? and moods and Import of a man's life ; It Implies also that the man so delineated be a good man and a great. Horace Tradbel may perhaps be a Boswell ; but Rosner, never. , TODAY Is Doctor Johnson's birthday (ho was born September IS, 1709), nnd a mod est memorandum tn that effect requires no apology. The Great Cham needs no cham pion ; his Speech and person have become part of the Anglo-Saxon heritage. The ex traordinary book In which Boswell filmed him for us has attained that curloUB estate of great literature the characteristic of which is that every man imagines he has read it, though ho may never have opened Its pages. It i3 Ilk Niagara Falls: we may not have sen it, but we have a very fair mental pic ture of the phenomena. We all wear hats, though few of us have visited a hat factory. We all us Doctor Johnson's pithy and sono rous phrases, though we may not know where they were minted. But we will never cease to pray that every honest mnn should study Baavvcll. There are many who have topped, the rise of hiimMi felicity In that book: when reading It they feel the tide of Intellect brim the mind with a unique fullness of 'satisfaction. It Is not a mere commentary en life: 1t In life It fills and floods every channel of the brain. It Is a book that men make a hobby of, as of goir or gambling. To know it is a liberal educa tion. I could understand Germany making war on England in order to annex Bosvvell's Johnson. There would be some sense In that. WHAT Is the average man's conception of D'octor Johnson? We think of a huge, ungainly' person, slovenly of dress, addicted to tea; the author of a dictionary nnd the center of a-tavern coterie. We think of him as prefacing blu.ff and .vehement remarks with "Sir" and as having a knack for demolishing opponents in' argument. All of which Is pass ably true, just aB Is our picture of the Niag ara that we havf never visited ; but how It mlss'es the inner tenderness and tormented virtue of the man! I knew no better way of celebrating Doctor Johnson's birthday than by quoting a few passages from hk "Prayers and Meditations," jotted down during his life in small notebooks-and given shortly before his death to a friend No one understands the dear old doctor unless he. remembers that his spirit was greatly perplexed t and harassed by sad and disordered broodlngs. The bodily twltch Ings and odd gestures vvhl'ch attracted so much'Bttentlon as he rolled about the streets were symptoms of painful twltclilngs and gestures within. A great part of his Intense delight in convivial gatherings, In conversa tion nnd 'the dinner table, was due to his eagerness to be taken out of himself, One fears that his solitary hours were very often tragic. THERE were certain dates which Doctor Johnsoq almost always commemorated In his' private notebook his birthday, the date of his wife's death, the Easter season and N6w Year's. In these pathetic little entries one Bees the spirit that was dogmatic and proud among men abasing itself in humility and pouring out the generous tenderness of an affectionate nature. In these moments of contrition small peccadilloes took orl tragic Importance In his mind. Rising late in the morning and the untidy state ef his papers seemed, unforgivable sins. There is hardly any more moving picture In the history of mankind than that of the rugged old'doctor pouring out his Innocent petitions for greater strength In ordering his life and bewailing his. faults of sluggishness, Indulgence , at table and disorderly thoughts. Let us begin with his entry on September 18l 1760, his fifty-second birthday: RESOLVED, D. J. (God aiding) To combat notions of obligation. To apply to study, t To reclaim1 Imaginations. To consult the resolves on Tett.y's .(his wife's) coffin. To rise eafly. To Btudy religion. To .go to. church. j To drink less strong liquors.. , To tteen a'lournal.1 ' ' r. , :l:Tn nanVlMlnW'bv'i'o'rBV-'toUjLfiu mjm&iirvifflw "I SO SOON YET VAS DONE FOR, t vnivnpn vvr t vac nrriTiw irnut" ' Send for books for history cf war. Put books In order. Scheme of life. . THE very human feature of these little notes is that the same good resolutions appear year after year. Thus, four years after the above, we find him writing: Sept. 18, 1764. This Is my 66th birthday, the day on which I have concluded 55 years. I have outlived many friends. I have felt many sorrows. I have made few im provements. Since my resolution formed last Easter, I have nrade no advancement in knowledge or- In goodness; nor do I rec ollect that I have endeavored it. I am de jected, hut not hopeless. I resolve. To study the Scriptures', I hope, In the original languages. 640 verses every Sun day will nearly comprise the Scriptures In a year. To read good books : to study theology. To treasure In my mind passages for rec ollection. To rise early ; not later than six, if I cap ;. I hope sooner, hut as seon as I can. To keep a journal, both of employment and of expenses.- To keep accounts. To take care of my health by such means as I have designed. To set dortn St hight some plan for the morrow Tomorrow I purpose to regulate my room. AT EASTER, 1765, he confesses sadly that il he often lies abed until two In the after noon ; which, nfter all, was not so deplorable, for he usually went to bed very late. Bos well has spoken of "the unseasonable hour, at which he had habituated himself to expect the oblivion of repose." On New Year's Day, 1767, he prays: "Enable me, O Lord, to use all enjoyments with due temperance, pre serve me- from unseasonable and Immoderate sleep." Two years later than this he writes: I am not yet In a state to form many resolutions ; I purpose and hope to rise early in the morning, at eight, and by de grees at six; eight being the latest hour to which bedtime can be properly ex tended ; and six the earliest that the pres ent system of life requires. One of the most pathetic of his entries Is the following, on September 18, 1768: This day It came Into my mind to write the history Of my melancholy. On this I purpose to deliberate ; I know not whether it may not too much disturb me. FROM time to time there have been stupid or malicious people who have said that Johnson's marriage with a homely woman twenty years older than himself was not a love match. For Instance, Mr. I-:. W. Howe, cf Atchison, Kan., In most respects an amia ble and well-conducted philosopher, uttered In Howe's Monthly last May the following words, which (I hope) he will forever regret: I have heard that when a young man he (Johnson) married an ugly and vulgar old woman for her money, and that his taste was bo bad that he worshiped her. Against this let us set what Johnson wrote In his notebook on March 28, 1770: This Is the day on which, In 1752, I was deprived of poor dear Tetty. When I rec ollect the time In which we lived together, my grief for her departure Is not abated;' and I have less pleasure In any good that befalls me, because she does not partake It.. On many occasions, I think what she wo'uld have said or done. When I saw the sea at Brlghthejmstone, I wished for her to have seen. It with me. But with respect to her, no rational wish Is now left but that w.e may meet at last where the mercy of God shall make us happy, and perhaps make us Instrumental to the happiness' of each oth,er. It js now 18 years. LET us end the memorandum with a less i solemn note. On Good Friday, 1779, ho and Boswell went to church together. When they returned the good old doctor sat down to radthfl Bible, and he says, "I gnve Bos well Les I'ensees de Pascal, that 'he might not Interrupt me." Of this very copy Bos well says: "I preserve the book with rever ence.' I wonder' who has It' now? , ,So let us wish DBctbrPhnaorf many happy iCSMP - nc paawga.W, as,;iong; asr a;nin.Mjwa .- .tax THE READER'S VIEWPOINT What France Has Done for Morocco To the Editor of the Evening Public Ledger:. Sir The marvelous achievements of -France In Morocco since Its occupation in 1912 are of great Importance, as a uselesal country has become one of value to the world. Its great tracts of cultivable land are admirably adapted to the raising of wheat and other grains, so that It will probably , become one of the great sources of the " world's food supply. The facts here pre- ' sented are taken from an address to the Royal Geographical Socnty and published. In. the Geographical Journal for August, by one who for thirty years has been British con-f sul at Fez J. M. MacLeod. He tells us that tribal warfare prevailed over nearly the whole country In 1012, but that now there Is a Just government, administered' In the interests of all the people. Camel tracks were then the only ways of communication. Now there are 500 miles of macadamized roads, 511 miles of railway and 100 In course of construction, and 2,138 miles of telegraph lines! There were virtually no ports six years ago and Casablanca was a squalid Mrjrlsh town of 10,0nn Inhabitants. Now there are a number of rrts furnished with quays, stores and sanitary services, while Casablanca has grown Into a well-equipped European town nf 82,50n inhabitants. Every disease then had its way unchallenged. In 1916 there had been established sixty-eight hospitals and dispensaries and about one in every four of the Inhabitants had medical treatment, nnd there is every evidence that In a generation tho population will have. Increased threefold. Especial attention has, been paid to educational privileges. The' thirty-seven schools of six years ago have Increased to 180, Including a Franco-Arab college at Fez. Agricultural, horticultural, 4 arborlcultural, veterinary and meteorological services have been established and annual s agricultural nnd cattle shows have been Instituted. All these are already provii Ing of the greatest value In Improving then methods whereon the chief wealth of the. country depends. The municipal nursery gardens established at all the principal towns do excellent work in inculcating proper methods of fruit and vegetable growing, while the veterinary service gives active assistance In teaching better methods nf stock raising, Morocco today, thanks to France, is no more an African, but a European country, with the same economic laws and almost the same method of life. J. M. H. Bread Loaf, Vt, September 16. , ,, Hertling calls for no pew German .con quests, and for once he will be heeded by' all civilization.' The registration yesterday was light. Can it be that two trips to the polling places In one week represent a task too heavy for 1 the average man? ' What Do You Know? QUIZ ' J 1. Of what former French prorlnee, ronanerrd 1 bj- Germany in 1870, I4 Ktraasburg the capital? z, What la a tomortro ana wnat aoee toe word . '.iijl mean? "f ,MI 3, What l a aansarM? t y$ a, wnni is an iraoer - 'aI 5. When did William ' the Conqueror Inrada ) -! Eniland? ' j M 6. What la the capital of Idaho? j . i -- 7. What la n fusue? , '& 8. How ili'i (lermany'a lirlrmhlld line get Ita Avi name? - CI(!j 0. What la a camelonard? .$ 10, What daa In the sear are eqnahV divided , ' 'fl a a to direct aunllglit are! Ita abaence? I ' , Answers to Yesterday's Quiz - ' "W 1, "The Htars and Strlpea" la the name of the J dullx newarmper published or the American i J troopa In France, v , .-, V;S 3, Coluiubua I)ajr falla on October 12. '. , 3, A cairn ,1a 11 pyramid of roush atonea lined aa . 1$ Cairo are frcouentlr made br polar i- ' ?,'-1 pivrri, "9 w f fr 4, A coloratura ninarr la one. killed In tna a- ..- nterv or nrin r,flw"ei m muir eoniiaiinr" -wjviji of dlvUlom, rum. trllla and cadrniaa. 5, Waohlnston Irving- aometlmra wrote under t ha -;-v 'I name of (leoffrey Crayon. , -, , t V? I 6. Nan Jimn It the capital nf Porto Blco. . W I 7. A llcli-cate la .a roofed gateway of a church- , ard, where the coffin uvtalta tho clersr- JSm mnn'a arrival. ' '' .A' 8. 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