.y yt - A , VA'W; V, 5. f.'"W , T" ' . --.T .. i- . r 1. ' 5M i io K. JU Iru-uulO LJiJL)(iJb;li-i'jiJLiiJ-Ltl.LiI!, V. M Lu;jL8Ii,.m ' T.1 iUiS Kin-v-v. i 1. . u t ' 1 J--JUi,. -o, 7 1LL1 J LVM "f?r4 r 'r 5M i).if h-. 1 f m. ., - & . ?..& MPS . P I' S- ft k I it I K m Pi lr l M iJ i V?v i r. :t IfuemnglJubUc ffiedgec ,u THE EVENING TELEGRAPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ',. IT V ' . CTHUS H. K. CURTIS, ri.MlPi.NT .O- wrtln, Serrttarr and Traiurcri Philips. Collin. t.r-'(V JOhll II. William. John J. flnurinn nir-awtnra Clans It. K. Cuitii. Chairman DAVID E. BMILftY Editor JOHN C. MARTIN.... Ocncral Business Manager , Published dally at Pnuo I.rrwis Dulldlnr, Independence Square, Philadelphia, I.Ior Cintkii, Uroad and Chrstnut Streeta Atlantic Cm Press-Cnloa Dulldlnr Nnr Toil t 208 Metropolitan Tower DinoiT 40.1 For.l llulldlnc ST. Lotus iions Kullerton llulldlnc CaioAao 1202 rrlluns llulldlnc NEWS DUnEAUS: WisnmoToif Iicariu, . N. E. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. and Uth St. Naw ToK lli'auu The Sun llulldlnc Xonpon Buiud London Tim, i SUBSCRIPTION TERMS The Evbnino Puma LiDon la served to sub scribers In Philadelphia and aurroundlnc towns at the rate or twelve (12) rents per week, payable to the carrier. By mall to points outside of Philadelphia, In the United Statea. Canada, or United States pos sessions, pontage free, fifty (30) centa per month. Blx (6) dollara per year, payable In advance, vTo all foreign countries one .$1) dollar per month. None Subacrlbers wlshlnc address chanred anuat clve old as well as new address. BELL, SOW WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 30OO KT Addrets all communications to Evening Public , Ledger, Independence BQuarc, Philadelphia, Member of the Associated Press Tlta ASSOCIATED PKE8S U cxclu tivcli entitled to tho use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherxclso credited In this paper, and also the local news published therein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved, PhlladflphU. Wrdnridijr. Derember IS. 1918 THE MAYOR IN THE DOCK TP MAYOR SMITH felt as much hinnlll-- atlon as tho city oiiRht to fed today Tfhen ho was arraigned, even tliouKh only ijSyv by proxy, on n charge of participation In lection misdemeanors ho will have atoned In a measuro for the wrongs charged gainst him. Earlier accusations made against Mayor Smith, as a result of the shameless up heaval In the Fifth Ward, represented a frank exaggeration of blame Inspired 'by the usual factional spirit of municipal poli tics. In the present Instance, however, tho charge of election law violation Is founded upon the fact that tho police, who aro tinder the Mayor's control and responsiblo direction, seem to have participated with deliberation In ballot frauds and tyranny over voters. It may be difficult to prove that the Mayor was a direct associate .In the fla atrant violation of tho laws he Is sworn to enforce. But this makes little differ ence. Arraignment In court under a crim inal Indictment is severe punishment for "-any man with a reputation to sustain. Mr. Smith's unpleasant fix represents the price he has to pay for long and plac:i association In a political system that Is Ignorant, backward-minded &nd malevolent. It Is a system" more powerful than any In dividual. The Mayor lilmsells, in a sense, one of Its victims. Retribution doesn't come to systems. It visits the individuals who comprise the systems one by one. 'Mr. Smith now holds Its visiting card In his hand. A Jewel of an army in a Rhinestone set tine is the best of all Christmas presents for Uncle Sam. PENROSE AS A NATIONAL ISSUE TTTHETHER we like it or not it must be ' admitted that Senator Penrose and tho school of politics with which he Is iden tified is a national Issue, likely ti grow more acute as the presidential canvass of 1920 approaches. There is a little group of western Senators who have set out to do' their best to prevent tho senior Senator from this State from becoming chalrma.i of the Finance Committee In tho next Con , Cress. Their opposition Is not based on lack of appreciation of the abilities of Penrose, but on the memory of what he and the meu associated with him did in 1912. As the East goes so goes the nation used to be the rule, but this was upset In 191G, when on election night every one thought that Hughes had been elected. It was tho West that elected Wilson. It will be tho 'West that will hold the balance of power In national c'.ectlons In t e future. It Is the sentiment of tho West that the party managers must study night and day if they would avoid the mistakes of the past. The first task before them Is to find out whether the little group of western Sena tors represents the opinion of the States from which they come or whether they are merely talking for themselves. One or .tvyo are notorious blatherskites. With all his hundreds of uniforms left behind, the ex-Kalser Is suited to no role save that which he now Inglorlously fills. DELIGHTS OF THE UNEXPECTED AFIFTEE.V-YEAR-OLD girl remarked the other day as she waa looking over tho Christmas gifts which she had pre pared for her friends: "I used to wonder what I was going to get for Christmas and worry about It; but, do you know, I have found out that It is a lot more fun to give presents than to get them?" There is a whole philosophy of life In .this. Wo have the highest authority for its noundness. If every person could ac cept it as his guide the holiday season ' would bo a- happier time. But you hear women in the shops saying to ono an other: "I have exchanged presents with . Mary every Christmas season for years, nri T fturtnnan I milRt irpf 1-ipr Rnmothlnr, W-" r-'i ',h,a year but I d0 not know what to buy." S5 4V' This business of "exchanging presents" $'Xf( l the bane of the existence of those who tjifsi Engage In It. We do not Intend to con Kfiilttesm It, for it automatically places Itself rVpJun, the dock every hollduy season and mS;wUs uentencc. But wo would suggest that f'v. little money he saved from tho annual SurgKtfund to be used in buying something M'!1 somebody who will not expect It and . 1 )Nv ma Satan. aO lat a!1 fltlnHAA BjA4tan It Plt iL K' ,i3&ui.iui uy any viiiv. iciuiii t, xiicii mo '"-'ioy. of giving will lighten the burden of "" ";;t"bllgatIon under .which so many of us tagger. -, ','' . i . The "Red" cross In Germany Is of a sort '''. -which the Ebert "moderates" are finding ex. - Medlngly hard to bear. ' REVISION MOST BE IN THE OPEN fTTHATEVEIl mny be the purpose of the m,n wbp are suggesting that a com- ItflWoyor' twenty-five repre- jifut. ) vviavu I tne pao a grievous and doubtless fatal mistake to attempt to force upon tho convention nny cut-and-drled program. If wo aro tp havo a rovislon worth whllo it must be mado by elected repre sentatives of all tho pcoplo Democrats ns well as Republicans, reformers us well ns machinists, Socialists, Prohibitionists, homo rulers and thoso who favor control of tho cities from Harrlsburg. Then lot these delegates thresh out the Issues until they discover what seems best to tho best Judgment of tho majority. Thero Is noth ing llko public debato to clarify the think ing of the participants If they enter upon tho discussion with a desire to get at tho truth instead of with the deslro to carry a point. This newspaper sincerely hopes that tho General Assembly will this winter author ize tho calling of a convention of elected delegates and will make provision for the representation of all shades of opinion In It. Then It will not matter much whether a commission makes a picllmlnory draft of a constitution or not. No -small group distrustful of the wisdom of elected dele gates can force Its views upon n, largo body of elected representatives of tho peo ple determined to revise their fundamental law to suit themselves. CONCORD OF PRINCIPLES iMUST BIND THE NATIONS Agreement on Mr. Wilson's Oft-Proclaimed Basis of an Enduring Peurc Transcends in Import Any Program of Details "LIVERY ONE knows that the war was not fought in nil quarters of tho globe by millions of men and with passionate intensity because Vienna threatened Bel grade or Russia mobilized perhaps too soon or because the Germans marched into Belgium or because they promised security to but one American merchant man a week plying between New York and Falmouth. General principles a duel of them re spectively representative of democracy and despotism fanned and sustained the, flames of conflict. General principles a concord of them, since tho foe will play no constructive role in tho Paris conference must there fore logically form the fabric of peace. Emphasis on this point is manifested today in all nations to be represented at the memorable convention. Conflicting' claims on specific issues, antagonistic purposes with regard to numerous highly important details will inevitably be pre sented. Adjudication of interests, the balancing of practical values are part of the entirely legitimate functions of such a meeting. But the promise of results would be meager indeed without the car dinal tie, tho broad concept of orderly freedom which has held the Allies to gether throughout the war and is the antidote for chaos at the peace table. The dynamic force of such an ideal gives the clcir ring of sincerity" to the recorded fervor evoked by President Wil son in Paris and in the French, Italian and British press. Since the landing at Brest the Paris populace, whose cheers for the American chief executive ring through tho boulevards, havo received no clue to his opinions concerning the dis cussed eastward expansion of France, the size of the indemnity or the rules for sea rights. It is not even known that the Presi dent himself has definitely formulateu any, while there is a weight of significant evidence to suggest that a tabulated pro gram of preconceived "demands" is the last thing with which he would confront our international associates. Even the fourteen points, which served well their purpose in clarifying the German mind, have subtly taken a secondary place. They are meaningless unless informed by the harmonizing principle pervading the thought of statesmen and their con stituents in all the Allied nations, and they are even susceptible without incon sistency of radical alteration when sus tained by such a spiritual force. Hence, when Mr. Lloyd George at the climax of a political campaign espouses unlimited expansion of the British navy, that declaration, though prophetic of argument at the session, is overshadowed as a valid augury of results by his affirmation of belief in the general pur poses of democracy. The former conten tion is a subject for judicial inquiry. On the latter the whole existence of the court and its chances of accomplishment depend. "Our object," said Mr. Wilson in his congressional address of April 2, 1918, asking for the declaration of war against Germany, "is to vindicate the principles of peace and justice in the life of the world as againei selfish and autocratic power and to set up amongst the really free and self-governing peoples of the world such o concert of purpose and action as will henceforth insure the observance of these principles." Since arriving in Europe the Presi dent's whole attitude, which has won such favor that the detail-mongers have questioned the authenticity of approval, has simply been in line with those prin ciples. A more specific platform would necessarily undergo revision as tho President visited tho scenes of devasta tion, as ho gained new light through per sonal contact with high national spokes men on innumerable problems of race, boundary and economics. At this early juncture it is not only wise but honorably so to rely on the passionate desiro in all the nations to restore civilization on a reasonable basis of equity. It is that primal motive which make many discords in tho conferences to bo sounded in a relatively minor key. Without it the meetings would bo anarchic, and this tho whole world will never sanction and would eternally re sent With the unifying principle estab , JUWdJt is poMlble-to poncaive' of tyifc renders in tho deliberations. At this prospect it is easy to bo cheaply cynical and to storm in nanickv stvlo at tho moro mention of'thd word barter. To bohajjr? in mis wny is. to ignore tho announced concept of justice, which need not 'be inherently compromised at nil if it bo given priority in tho "program." The Congress of Vienna from (h.o)Ut sct threw overboard this essential factor arid it hns become a byword in disgrace ful diplomacy. But tho Constitutional Convention which met in Philadelphia in 1787 opened with a concert of 'general principles, nil looking toward tho estab lishment of order nnd legitimate freedom in a vast empire which was actually in those days a world in itself. The nobility of tho fathers', achieve ment, high purposed in essentials, Is quite unsmirched by the record of com promises whereby a riddle of conflicting issues was solved. Of the three major ones the most significant and ingenious" was tho satisfaction accorded tho largo States by basing representation in the House on population and the concession to tho small commonwealths whereby each State was equally represented in tho Senate. If this was "barter," in tho shady sense of that word, the United States of America has mado tho most of it. With this fruitful lesson in mind it is perverse skepticism to be alarmed at tho multitude of questions certain to arise before the Paris peace board. Agree ment on the main structure has been reached. They echo in every plaudit which Mr. Wilson receives ns an earnest that his "program" is that of other statesmen and nations. At once in its comprehensiveness and it simplicity it is the only one by which the deliberations which seek to remake the world can bring forth results. The cnM which Mr. Wilson took with him to France seems to have been altogether over whelmed In his warm reception there. MEXICO AGAIN 01,D times seem to havo returned when a. whiff of fresh smoko from tho per sistent Mexican volcano blows across tho front pages of the newspapers to cloud momentarily the glamourous news from France and to remind us that we still havo unsettled troubles at our own doors. It Is to be a revolution now, we aro told, to unseat Carranza. This suggestion Is not novel. Unquestionably Carranza ought to bo unseated when a better man can bo found to fill his place. But thero aro Inti mations, discernlblo between the lines of recent dispatches, to Indicate that the next revolution In Mexico may bo as far from motives of righteousness as those that pre ceded It. Any one familiar with recent Mexican history must stop automatically in wonder when he Is solemnly Informed that the powers which threaten existing government represent or will represent a union of the "Iluerta and Madero adherents." Simi larly It might bo said that the Junkers and conscientious objectors havo united to save Germany or that tho lion and the lamb have entered into a co-operative plan to bring universal peace to tho animal king dom. It was deadly enmity between the Iluerta and Madero factions that split Mexico wide open a few years ago. The Iluerta Gov ernment a bloody, tyrannical, strong handed regime, dominated by ruthless and cruel self-interest came Into existence directly through the murder of President Madero, whbse mystic idealism failed to help or pacify tho country. What we would like to know now Is, tho nature of the magical force that Is to unite the two forces heretofore most violently opposed In Mexico. It may be necessary to look backward over history for a guiding hint. In the old times that aro gone forever revolutions could be made to order In a large part of Central and South America. Any one who had a great deal of monoy Invested In concessions was sure, sooner or later, to find the demands of controlling politicians unbearable. When a greedy and unthink ing system of graft threatened ruin and extinction there was but one way out. The concessionaire financed a rebel band, started a revolution, set up a new govern ment and carried the territory a step for ward to the light through a good deal of waste and bloodshed. Thero are always disgruntled and warlike factions In Mexico. They havo been befriended by European and American Interests beforo this. For two years President Carranza has been In a trance of pro-Germanism. Tho navies that guarded civilization got most of" their fuel oil from the Tamplco fields. Tho German emissaries at Mtjxlco City con vinced tho Mexican President that a tre mendous export tax on oil would bring vast revenues to tho Government treasury. It would, for a day or two. Then It would automatically r,uin the foreign investors who developed the oil fields, stop tho out put of fuel oil and culminate In govern ment .confiscation of untold millions of private. '"property owned In America and Europcr. ; . This, scheme has been carried forward wltn cnergi'. President Carranza calls It n measuro for "tho nationalization of In dustries." The American and the Euro pean Governments are busy.- They can protest and aro likely to do no moro for Tn'e time, bejng, .Are wo'to assume, there fore, that the latest of the artificially cre ated revolutions Is being stimulated In Moxlco by Interests that see no '.hope In any other mothod? Automatic ' 4'shwash- rotlenc. Vntlcnce! er's, a table 'that waits on Itself, a mechanical contraption that does the work of the bus boy and a, face-drylng machine which eliminates tho need for towels are. among the marvels on display at an exposition of hotel ap. pllanCes In New York. Now who will' Invent-' an automatic handshaker forthe lobby and a motored bell hop and 'majw'. life llko unto heaven It8elt7 A proclamation Issued J.e't It rose! yesterday by Governor Brumba'.ugh 40 ,an.- notnice tho election, of Alexander Simpson, jr and John W. Kephaft Ho the- Supreme. Court arid of William D, Porter to' the SupeT rior court was the seventyrthlrd.of the Brum. An Advertising Genius Whistler's Connection With tho Lady Eden Portrait in tho Wihtach Collection "PERHAPS tho greatest advertising genius ; of modern timps, no excepting P. T. jjarnum, was James McNeil Whistler. lie dyed his hair, and .allowed a' long lock In front to remain ljeht t colored It turned gray as ho grow older In order t6 attract attention to himself. Ills dress was pic turesque and unusual for tho samo reason. He had a lot of fantastic quarrels with his prttrons, ascribed sometimes" to his er ratic temperament, but without doubt de liberately arranged by him In order to provoko discussion In tho public prints. Every ono familiar with tho history of art knows tho story of tho Peacock Room which he painted for a London patron. There was no contract, but it was agreed (hat Whistler was to do tho room for BOO guineas. As tho work progressed ho asked a thousand and this irlco was agreed on; but when the room was finished tho nrtlst demanded two thousand. The patron refused to pay It and Whistler declined to accept a penny less, nnd ho never received anything for what Is generally admitted to bo the most splendid pleco of Interior decoration of modern times. When his patron refused to pay his price, Whistler Jumped at tho chanco to get advertising us quickly as a cat jumps at a mouse. Ho got It. Tho purchaso for tho Wllstach collection In Memorial Hall, Falrmount Park, of Sargent's portrait of Lady Eden has re called another Instnnce of Whistler's ad vertising genius. Whistler painted a por trait of Lady Eden, but when her husband paid for It ho offered pounds Instead of guineas. Whistler Insisted on guineas, and when they were refused ho painted out the faco and Inserted the face of an other lady. Ho was sued for tho delivery of the portrait, but ho won his suit, and got moro free advertising than he could have bought for ten times tho sum ho failed to collect. Tho husband of Lady Eden then commissioned Sargent to paint his wife. And now wherever tho Sargent portrait goes tho story of Whistler goes with it. No professional advertising man has ever put over a moro successful bit of publicity work. Tho comments which Whistler mtdo on each occasion when' ho "quarreled" with his patrons Indicate th t ho understood the value of tho discussion of it In tho public prints. What England Has Done A Philadelphian whose stepdaughter has married an Englishman and has been living in England for years,, wrote her with the purpose of quizzing her; that he thought viost of the people on her side realized that had it not been for the Ameri can troops and their quality and number sent to France it would have been impos sible for Foch.to have accomplished what lie did. The woman seemed to think that her stepfather was belittling the work of the English, and she replied. In the course of her letter, written on November 3, she makes the following interesting remarks: t T .EVIDENTLY, without intending It. got a -- good old rise out of you on the subject of tho U. S. A. can't help smiling about It You aro wrong If you don't think I read tho papers. I take three dally papers, two weekly and one Sunday paper. I have never mlssea reading ail matter pertaining to the U. S. A., all the congratulations, etc., you mention. 1 am naturally Interested. I also get a con siderable amount of first-hand Information from people In touch with them at the front which does iot nppear In the papers. I am, without "bucking" I Imagine, moro up on what the U. S. A .is dolr In France than you are. When I say she has done "exceed ingly well" I consider that high praise, not "Mild Praise," as you call It. As to what the U. S. A. is doing at home I know nothing ex. cept what tho papers tell me, and they cer tainly give great praise. So don't run away with tho Idea that I don't admire my native country. I do enormously. As to my feeling Intense admiration for the English race, you are right. I don't wish to be misunderstood, so will go Into the matter a bit. I feel I have every right to feel patriotic and proud 01 England. Thero Is not a drop of blood In my veins that did not originally come from Eng land. I am Just as -much bred from Englano as anybody living always here. My love for England can't lessen my love for the U. S. A., Just as the love for a mother and a child can be equally strong and never Interfere with one another. Do you understand'; America has not been very long In the war, she has unlimited resources and men. 1 am enormously proud of her, but she can never bo In the same position as France, and aboye all, England. The former Is fighting for her own soli and women and children. We are fight ing for our Allies and tho right ; U. S. A. Is doing the same. The English have done more to win this war than any other nation on earth. At tho end of four years and three months they are as undaunted, as heroically bravo and shedding their blood as freely as they did In tho first enthusiasm of the war. Please do not misunderstand If the U. S. A. had the chance without doubt she would prove herself all that we think and as mag nificent. She can never have tho chance, for victory Is In sight while she Is still winning her spurs; also with unlimited men to draw on, her men at the front need never go On for years with their backs to the wall, the same men (thoso left of them) still fighting to the death, exhausted, maimed and uncon querable. This the English have done ana are doing, and I am filled with overwhelming prldo to think that I have the right to be proud of them, that their blood Is In my veins. My point Is that we have never faltered dur ing nearly four and one-half years against greatest odds ; U. S. A. has not been tried to this extent, but come In when the Hun was beginning his final spurt before collapse. I do hope you understand what I am trying to explain; U. S. A. Is doing magnificent work. It Is eaBy to do wonderful things when you aro fresh; It Is toonderul to still do magnificent things when you are ex hausted mentally and physically. It Is -easier to fight a, winning fight than to fight against overwhelming odds through many years and never once lose courage. Knowing my coun try I know that had she been In England's place, she would have fought against, odas and .-never, given in. Just as the English have done. There are only two countries In the world who could have done It England and U, S. A. I thank heaven at least America was spared what we have gone through. I see Austria nas cavea in, certainly Germany won't be able to hold on very much longer, I Imagine, The evening news Is splendid, but I feel too worried at the moment to be very elnted. r The President Is said to be laying the foundation,' for world peace. The next thing In order will-be a good old-fashioned raising bee, "j'olrfed In by all the neighbors. This Is (he season when a man's wife buys cigars and neckties for him, and, as Mr, Dooley sagely remarked, he does not care which he smokes. The, Kaiser's friends are. now saying that 'hq did 'not know he had abdicated until he gottlii news; 'from Berlin. There seems to, ! ,-,- Hill i CONGRESSMAN MOORE'S LETTER Auditor General Snyder's Hit in Washington Delights and Responsibil ities of Large Families Chevajicr Baldi and His Lemons Peril in Eating Terrapin Wahlngton, Dec. 18. fTIHE Delaware River has a real booster --ln George Uhler, Supervising Inspector General of Steamboat Inspection Service of the United States. General Uhler is one of those competent officials who holds his place In Washington regardless of the political complexion of the administration. His duties take him to all parts of the United States, and recently he has been giving special attention to steamboat regu lations In Alaskan waters. Uhler likes the Delaware because he was born on Its banks. He Is a product of Delaware City, the northern terminus of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, and Is therefore a natural boatman. He describes his first vicit to Philadelphia like this: "I camo up as a boy on a spar In 1864, and thus first beheld the spires of the big city." The Inspector General delights to tell of his association with Captain Ellsha Webb, whose son. Ellsha Webb, Jr., of tho Vessel Owners and Captains' Association, Is now pleased to call the general ''one of his god mothers." Uhler says young Ellsha was "the pretties baby he ever saw." Theodore B. Palmer, Charles E. Davis, Jr., and Albert F. Brown, who keep In close touch with river conditions, have gotten hold of this "pretty baby" story and are passing It along the wharves. ' CIHARLIE SNYDER, of Pottsville, the ' versatile Auditor General of Pennsylva nia, gave the national colons a sample of Keystone State oratory at the recent din ner to Governor-elect Sproul. 'No ono Is moro popular at Pennsylvania banquets than tho eloquent and witty ex-State Sena tor, his' long association' with Senator Sproul and the relations he must maintain with him" as Auditor General enabled him to work off some highly Interesting and amusing Incidents with respect to legisla tive practices. When called upon suddenly at' Washington, the Auditor General rolled his hand around his white vest In charac teristic fashion, looked "Uncle Joe" Cannon, "Nick" Longworth and "Jim" Mann squarely In the eye, and then "went after" the Governor-elect. It was a treat which the,Washlngtonlans enjoyed. a CABLE dispatches Indicate that Brigadier General George II. Harries was one of the nrst Americans to enter Berlin. Many old newspapermen will recall Harries as a fellow-'scrlbo. He was one of those who put In an appearance for a Washington paper at the Homestead Tlots. ' When the strikers undertook to discipline the news paper men and censor, their dispatches, Harries was ono of thoso who formed an organization for protection and resistance. He .figured 1ft the visitation of the strikers' committee to the National Guard head quarters, suddenly thrown up on a com manding hill, with Major General deorgo. R. Snowden; of Philadelphia, la, command, A photograph, or newspaper, men at Home, stead July, 1892, Includes Harrjes, Cresson ScheUi the artist; Hampton Moore, "Brig" Young and Charlie Vaughn, now of Pitts burgh Harries was always strong for (he military, 'having helped to build, up the National. Quttrd of the District of Columbia, of whiclf, for a time, he was 'In general command, TAJtQ.S .families are a ,dellgh to fond COMBINING DUTY WITH DfiSIRE abbut the Christmas party In Saginaw that Is likely to celebrate the homecoming of the boys of his family who had gono to France and which Is to be attended by thirteen of the Fordney grandchildren. Governor-elect Sproul listened and then said sympathetically, "What more can a man desire?" But there are other ways of looking at trie large family problem practical ways like thoso of the late Sena tor McNlchol In seeing that the sons are properly placed. With James J. McNally, tho barge ov ner, the situation Is somewhat different, since most of his family of ten aro girls. How did McNally meet the situ ation? Very simply. As each child was born ho built a new barge and gave It the name of the child, thus building up a fam ily and a business at the same time. 1 CHEVALIER C. C. A. BALDI, who is recognized as a spokesman for thou sands of Italians in Philadelphia, is another large family man. There ore seven chil dren in the Baldi group, but what pleases the chevalier most now Is that three of them have acquitted themselves with .honor in tho war service. One of tho sons, Virgil, a nineteen-year-old youngster, is a yeoman on tho Oklahoma, which has at tained distinction, In connection with the President's trip abroad, Joseph Baldi, 2d, Is a lieutenant In France, whose captain has recently complimented 1.1m for service and gallantry. A third son, Dr. Frederick S. Baldi, Is In the aviation service. "Charlie" Baldi, as his friends best know him, came to. the United States a poor boy. Ho recently said he arrived with forty cents In his pockets, and begar. his career In Philadelphia Belling lemons from a bas ket. In addition to his other . services during the war, all Charlie Baldi and. his firm did, as the story 'goes, was to sell about $600,000 worth of Liberty Bonds. Some record for a boy landing with forty cents, who has since been personally hon orod by the King of Italy! YOU can never toll. Sometimes a 'man Is sick when he doesn't know It, and then again ho Is not sick when people thtr.k ho Is. William Rowen, of the Board of Educa tion, who loves Kensington as the people of Kensington love him, and who once coughed a great deal, was assigned by his chums In Select Council to a "wind-up" 1.1 some haven for tuberculosis. But William fooled them. He was trying one day to get the lowest coffin from under the tall pllo In his establishment. He strained ., little and found something clog his throat which he thought to be a tooth. H has tlly put it In his pockot, but on finishing the coffin Job and returning home, exam ined it to find that it was only a small ter rapin bone that had lodged in his throat about six months previously. This was what caused his throat trouble without his special knowledge. It appeared that he had taken In the bone at a dinner given for him end'some of his colleagues at the Elklna home on North Broad street. Fol lowing his discovery, of court 3, William stopped worrying', aliout his throat and chest and Immediately resumed his, physi cal status, much to the surprise and d:llghl of his colleagues'. Now that armed strife baa' ceased, tho x ' n?f- ii . A Skip-Stop Muddle WHY all this fuss and pother, 'Bout the skip-stop plan? The public needn't bother 'Bout the stlp-kop plan. A fig for nerves and bosses; Ain't the cars owned by the bosses; And they won't stand for losses; "Nit" the skip-stop plan. What tho' some lives are taken By the skip-stop plan. And Weakened nerves are shaken By the scop-tip plan. Sure, the trouble's In my eye, For all are born to die, And pray just tell me why Not In the skip-stop plan. "So let the truth be told" Of the skip-stop plan, With your nickel pure as gold, In the stop-skip plan. Let every car be cram'd, The door of tntry slam'd, For the public may be d d disregarded By the skip-stop plan. The All ChUdrM'a This runny World! Soviet has beta farmed J In Berlin. Several M. hundred .boys and girls about the age of ' fourteen na.rs.detl . In Berlin, dam&ndad the ';-&- vote and threatened the sovernmentat of- 'TV fleers with calamity unless the Ministry were; ,V:, T)n1hAvlz-rf. Kultur aeemit to hav renat 'i&C? to pretty deep in Germany, Now we await the revolution of the babes n arms, Are we to live to see Ferliapa the day when the one time Kaiser of Ger many wilt have to hire an airplane and a pilot nfS1 fli-plA AnAfoaalv nhnv Iia Aartti itiat .. . " ' j- will not Brant nlm even standing room? .iitj The Board of Healtn & met yesterday to "dls- w ''Yea cuss means 'to prevent' the .return of' Influenza." Have you ever . S noticed that boards of health everywhere al- ;M ways meet to. prevent the return of, a disease M after It has returned? 'if If the Argentine minister, who Is now tho only foreign legate left In the Russian capi tal, should consider writing "Diplomatic Life In Petrograd," that singular work would, be In the nature of an autobiography, What J?o You Know? QUIZ 1. Who Is the Premljr of (Irtte who has visited Mr. Wilson In I'arliT ''It. 1. nam three noted men all known as DenJamls -A, Constant. rg-i z. who waa Frederick Trnnraon? 4, To what nation do tbe Madeira mini's b- R 111... . lUak.m Tt...Ut. a,...-! Jl.il BtatrT , ,p t. What kind of ainlo.lra Is called "Hosier" In'-'S 1. What la the slnsnlsr of tho word klsef n $. What 1 "frte-fhampttn"; 0. What nrtlclo of clothlns Is railed a reefer 10. From what Htate. never heretofore renra. ! repTO" rjDe- pemcu ur (iia nrua oi m lir tha head nf til .TrMmr panmeni, note Becreturr Ulass cams? Aniwera to Yesterday's Quia 1. juibdoa is ins i-ormioese name ror uitts, -ji: ft Tfi Vmldtlen wlftfi fl n.iiv tia- kA -W' tended to January 17. ' ,. t..Danto Jived durlnc Darts of.Uie thlrtsenth ad "j rnnneeain centuries ma oaieo aro uve- , v "Hall. Hall, tns Gani' All Here," 1. soar U-'.W-'' a inelodr written foe. a number hf-rUnlM "Come, friends.- whs plow th sea." In "TW Pirate of I'susanes." Sir Arthur Uallltai. was the comooser. HSV 0. Benedict Mnlnoxa was a noted phlli kll.V .1 nflllVM A os AinstcruBin ana M."": auese 40vr. ma uaies aro joaj-jj, . ...-. - - ..... e. new unven a uo israjcas cuj- in; v 7. A'.thur-a-bano la '.Ion vohleJa'wttlsVi r . oeato'clooWn -.forward -- .1 a ri.iw 'mum-mmm, 'm . ti 4 ': '.?! ft 11 r-1 Lbauwsvtignj .An0ryM)fevMU' ItWuKL'"! lrr.f';4- V i. KWW' wm TfJgjJrrfyZ ,WW flW mXT,t if' V "W. '.-. .? &(, l.Ki ' - JC .' NiWl. I' -?r i ."' fciY j ' -''1 " T ' t W!, -0l!rSSJJW,- WVPtPf?? 'w --. TnTm nrrn nam VHLk. '"""" I IM1C f.1Hr yftf tmmmmmkuMtuwm.i-mmimmimtrmm, i rv.rwx fpp 'SvIiHIkPv? 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