F?955wr .,;FKS5v' -4v5' titiffiF&fijgfr fm. 32m PN .t'r' i Wy II u m J I A -.. lis s de" ifiroli. 5,-. to ' tat Kt, a m r v 1 B e r,s& 10 Eutming public He&acc THE EVEMNo'tELEGRAPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY . CTRUB H. K. CURTIS, Pimimnt i.Cj!fJ' " Lvdlnton. Vice Presidents John C. TA-'li e$M."y n.i .TnMuwi Philip H. Cellini. John B. WlllUme, John J. Spuraeon. Directors. EDITORIAL nOAUD! , Ctict H. K. Ccim, Chilrman I fcAVIP g. B.M1LET Editor OHW C. MAnTm.... general Uuilntii Manager ,r Publlahed dally it Tciuo I.uxjKa liulldln. Lrrora cimtiil. inacpenaence squire, l'htlidilphli llroad and Chestnut Streets ATLANTIC CITt. Nlir Ton ... .PrrsS'Vnio Jluflrllna .91111 M,rnnll,a., Tnw.. Ditsoit 4U3 Ford liulldlne BT. Lonil . . inril Pnll.tlnn Hull, tin iCaicaso i:o2 Tribune Iiulldlng NEWS DUtlEAUS: WiniH0T0N Ilcirif. N. E. Cor. I'ennaylvanla Ave. and 14th St. w Tor UcutkV. . l The Sun liulldln sto.l Uciuv London Times SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Tha Evr.NlNO PuiUc Likb la aerved to ub crlheri In Phlladilphla and surrounding towni at thi rate of twelve (IS) cents per week, payable to the carrier. fly mall to polnti outilde of Philadelphia, In tha United Statu. Canada, or United states po- Jeiilona, po'taae free, ntty t.iOl cents per month. tg($t) dollari per year, payable In advance. To all foreign countrlea one (SI) dollar per Bianth. HoTiqi Subscribers wishing address changed lRVt five old as well aa new addreia, ELL. 0OO WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 1000 KT Addrea nil communications fo Rvrnino riibhc Ledger, Independence HQuare, PnladelpMn. Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PHESB f rxolK llvclv entitled to the use for republication all neu-s dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news published therein. All rights of republication nf special dis. patches herein arc also reserved. rhiUdelphli. Thutid.y, Jmirr 2. 1W ROBINSON THHE best that can be said of former Superintendent Robinson, as he returns to his berth at the head of tho I'ollce He partment. Is that If he were lit for his Job he wouldn't accept It. The normnl pride of almost nny man Would compel him to steer aloof from a position In which earlier failure had been conspicuous enough to bring discredit on the community. A sense of tolerance may be general, If Robinson's friends wish merely to let him erve tho short tour of duty necessary before he can retire under the service pen sion fund. Otherwise, unless the Vare flmlth administration Is ready openly to antagonize all the decent sentiment of the community. It has made an extraordinarily bad beginning for the new year. Tha responsibilities of this new year are. heavy enough to make It feel old at the very outset. IT IS ABOUT TIME THE LAW WAS ENFORCED XT7HAT happens when a law in not en- 'forced was again illustrated on New Tear's Eve, when two persons were hilled by firearms and a third was wounded. No one is supposed to be allowed to carry a pistol without a permit, and no one may hoot a pistol or . gun in the streets unb-ss he is authorized by the proper authorities. Tet at every celebration for months, when the people have been crowding the atreets, some one has been killed by a pistol hot. If there were no pistols In the crowds, no one would be killed. But the police ap parently do not Interfere when men and boys use firearms. . A rigid enforcement of the law would prevent the shocking "accidents" that have marred the popular rejoicings. A pre liminary proclamation forbidding tin- carry ing of guns and the summary arrest of overy one found disregarding it would quickly make the streets safe for Innocent participants in street celebrations. Mr. Daniels's notion of disarmament cm to be power strong enough to make It Universally compulsory POINCARE AS OUR GUEST DIRECTLY in line with the doctrine of . International friendship so forcibly em phasized by Mr. Wilson in Ills Manchester peech Is the announced decision of Ray mond Poincare, President of the French republic, to visit the L'nited States at the conclusion of the Peace Conference, Something more than a mere exchange of courtesies will result from such an un dertaking. Even discounting much of the enthusiasm elicited by our own President In France as an inevitable convention, the Inherent psychological effect of his pres ence there cannot legitimately be disputed. Similar influences will work for good When M. Polncaro comes here. The salient attributes of American character and Amer ican statesmanship are pietty clearly un derstood the world over. Kronen traits are continually puzzling the outsider. America misjudged them grievously between 1S70 and' 1914, nnd new riddles have even arisen In this reconstruction era. M. Polncam Will be enabled to perform borne valuable services here of deeper wortli than the mere spectacular flabh of good feeling. That lie Is the type of loader to grasp such opportunities Is Incontestable. No Tresldent of France slnco the Third IJnv yire fell on September , 1S70, has so ig. orously impressed his personality and pur poses on his fellow citizens as 1ms this scholarly and patriotic executive. I.oubet. yallieres, Kaure nnd their kind were over shadowed by their Premiers. Despite tho eminence of men like Vivian! and Clemen ceau, Raymond Poincare has remained a dominant figure in the 'republic. America will be proud to welcome him on his own high merits. "Man blasted Ills road with dnuinjte" acresma our BnlslieWt manifesto And Ins pelllnir likewise ' THE FUTURE OF COLLECE SPORTS THERE is a moving sisnlHianco in the fact that much of the activity nf those Who are worklns to "hung college athletics back" Is inspired by thoughts of men liko Hobey BaKer, who can teturn now only In the memory of the multitudes who know and admired them. Whatever doubts may have grown up about intercollegiate sports must have vanished in the last year. Every college athletlo field contributed brilliantly to the work of war. Like numberless other institutions of the easy-going days of peace, however, college y,athletlCB will never be the tame again. KThe spirit of criticism and the regard for lettti- ethics now felt everywhere in the 'ad. cm r 111 sere to wipe out many of the r1 formerly existed In the Inter "MA WKtern of sports. The harsh and ajjRnjr nrgfesalpnallsrti ..fqsteyed by I it paid coaches and meddlesome alumni nnd the tendency to concentrate Intercut nnd attention tin picked squads will be ills rnurnRed by popular opinion. It will be well If, when college athletic really "come buck" It ciin come with something of the broader and more htinviii systems that have prevailed for yearn abroad, nnd eg pcclnlly In English universities, where sports are n mixture of art nnd science developed nnd mnlntnlned not for the snko of a university's reputation, but for the tiuko of the youths of the land, whoso par ticipation In nil games gives them u train ing and a temper not available to the undergraduate who Is only permitted to Bit in tho bleachers anil exercise his lungs. WORLD OPINION WILL NOT TOLKRATIS SECRET PACTS Perpetuation of llic Allies' Covert Treaties of 1913 Would Render League of Nations a Slum I VHILK the war endured, vital reasons of policy justified the taboo on the topic of tho sccict treaties signed by the Allies in the pact of London in 1915. Portia's injunction, "to tlo a Rieat right do a little wrong-," was a policy fre quently applied nnd in a variety of ways by all tho co-bellifrorcnts under pressuio of a common peril. America's distaste of backstairs diplomacy was of long standing and yet secondary in the hour of crisis to her abhorrence of German autocracy, the foe of civilization and sane liberty. Wrangling over the details of covert deals might disastrously have muddled a problem whose solution depended first of all upon united devotion to an imme- ,diate aim, the destruction of the Hun menace. Wc shunned tho pact-of-London theme. Our Allies, too, temporarily brushed aside certain subjects intimately related to their tradition and designs for the future. It is at once the weakness and the strength of the Peace Conference that it will lift many a veil of reticence. Dis agreements, heretofore sidetracked, will receive new emphasis. There are vir tually none of the national pilots uncon fronted by the prospect of some choppy seas. On the other hand, frankness, however painful, is usually of ultimate salutary advantage. Ostrich-like tactics at tho peace table might conceivably bring forth a pact ostensibly radiant with moral beauty. But such a pledge would not he worth tho cost of the parchment. Failing to take cognizance of unsettled sources of international irritation, it would be as futile a docu ment as any which Germany signed at tho Hague. Happily, there is little reason to be lieve that a sheer mockery of that sort will be perpetrated at Paris. The very fact that, as tho opening of the sessions draws nigh, reports of conflicting claims grow increasingly louder i. evidence that a good many cards, on the existence of which it was momentarily pleasant not to dwell, will be laid on the table. .Some, it is true, may, even yet, be reluctantly revealed, hut it begins to look as though there will be sufficient electricity in tho council chamber air eventually to clear it. Tho process should be wholesome. Tho chance of resultant benefits ought to fortify timorous souls now shocked when they behold current problems bristling. Pacing facts, although un comfortable, may be also tonic. Chief among the specific facts, which it would be only folly for American pub lic opinion to ignore, is' tho London ugrccment framed in strict accordance with the spirit of that ancient diplomacy which liberals throughout the world now hope to see forever destroyed. The full toxts of those secret treaties have never been publicly disclosed. From author itative hints, however, it may be deduced that three major intotests animated the signatories that of unified strength against the German terror, that of fer vent national patriotism and that of selfishness. The result was a bargain of the con gress of Vienna type. Italy, Franco and Russia were presumably promised tei ritorial expansion on '.he attainment of victory. The interest of England, to whom the ipport of their armies wa indispensable, was to see that thev got it. The convention was not wholly incom patible with certain aspects of the war in 1915. Today, at least from tho in stinctive American viewpoint, there are hoth technical and ethical reasons why this bargain must lapse if the Peace Con ference is to be true to its announced aims. Legally, a great holo has been torn in the pact by the defection of Russia. Her Adriatic ambitions are gone, and the whole complicated relationship of Ityly to the Dalmatian coast and hinter land must rightly be viewed fiom a new angle. Russia's eclipse alone renders altogether impossible tho enforcement of the tieaties as they were originally darned. Only by the most specious brand of jurisprudence could any agree ment so elementally fractured be con sideied valid. Hut the ethical aigument is of still more potent appeal. A league of na tions, pledged to tho maintenance of justice and fair dealing and proclaiming its espousal of tho doctrine of open diplo macy, can bo naught but a sham if permitted to be organized on a basis involving the enforcement of "insido agreement." With profoundest respect for the pit eous sacrifice which our Allies in Europe havo undergone, with tho sincercst re pugnance felt by all thoughtful Ameri cans to assuming anything that savors of a self-satisfied "holier-than-thou" atti- tu(V thfti is deepest conviction that secret -" ifr"" tn the year I X A ' EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER 1919 constitute a betrayal of Ideals now very precious to the whole mass of mnn kind. The President, masterly in hl inter pretation of popular sentiment, de clared In Manchester that the league of nations must be a full partnership for the right or America would not enter It. Something wider than a national policy was there expressed. Sound liberal opinion everywhere unquestionably sub scribes to It. The hope that secret treaty huckster ing will go is stimulated by that fact. In spite of immediate clouds', the faith that men will in tho end not bo blind to the war's appalling lessons Is very pas sionate. Furthermore, It is most encour aging that tho hidden theme Is up for discussion. It was nevor so dangerous as when quiescent. Belfast's Sinn Fein prisoners nre re ported n "playing revolutionary limes on Instruments made from kitchen utsnills," and It's safe to bet that the opposition got a thor oughly vigorous panning. NOT YET, I1UT PERHAPS SOON rpHE HUggestlon of the London Express - that the Prince of Wnles come to Amer ica for a bride Is not likely to be taken seri ously by any one. Hut If the prince really wanted n bride lit to bo a iiueen, he could find scores of girls in this city qualified liy beauty, grace and intellectual capacity to adorn any station In the Old World. And It would Improve the royal Urltlsh stock to replenish It .with fresh blood. Rut that Is not a matter of great importance, for there Is less Interest In royalty nnd its pteservntlon today than nt any other time for centuries. England, Spain nnd Italy are the only consldeiahle PowerB in which royalty still survives. It has dis appeared In Russia, Germany nnd Austria Hungary, where democratic governments are now forming. It remains in England merely ns n symbol or p"ylng point for the scattered portions of the Empire. l'et if the Prince of Wales were to be allowed to choose his bride without regard to her titled ancestry, he would doubtless be delighted with the opportunity of com ing to tills country, where he would be sure to find a girl to his liking. Other royalties have found such girls here, but, alas! they have had to go back homo wifeless, for they could not get the consent of thelr.famllles to such a union, nnd the American girls would not consent to enter a union which for reasons of state might at any time be dissolved. Two words Ileserllo the creed of llol fhevlom: hums end bombs. WHAT DO THEY WANT? fTIHERt -- lines IHERE Is "Ire In Congress," the head- say, because of Secretary Dan iels's suggestion for a larger navy. There is "ire" in tho Senate because of the President's suggestion for a League of Nations. How many newspaper readers will real ize that they are viewing the stage ire of the "willful" group which seems nowadays to represent neither the Republican nor Democratic party nnr the United States? If there Is to he no League of Nations, there must he a large navy. No one who thinks at all questions this. What we should like to know now is whether the incurable enemies of Mr. Wil-on's foreign policies are willing to ex pand their war on tho President to a degreo thnt will make It a war on the country. Pr. Henry S. Tanner. V'Htinif unci Fame who won notoriety in 188D by faMIng for forty days, has Just died at the age of eighty eeen years In the county hospital at San Plego, fal. His experlmentattraoted Interna, tlonal attention, and church people weie in tensely Interested In It, for they assumed that If he succeeded, then tho authenticity of the forty days' fast recorded In the New Testament would be established. Doctor Tanner made another bid fur public attention In 1913 when he asked Mrs. Enimellno Punk hurst, then visiting this country, to marry him News of his death was telegraphed throughout the e-ountry, when men who hae accomplished much more are allowed lo die with no notice taken of them outside of their own community. Regrets over the death Ifenili Prophet of Paul Marguerltte. A inillruteil who long ranked with his collaborator and liiutim', Victor, as one of the leading writer- of France, are mitigated In part by the fail that at least lie lived to see the Justl n.'nt mi of his conception of his country's dfstlnv The two nuthors were sovis of Oen eml .l.'.m Augustei Mureuerltte, mortally woumlid in a superb yet frultlp-ri cavalry charge at Sedan In lt'o. Perhaps their most important literary achievement, In addition to the novels, was their history of the Franco. Prussian war embodying their earnest belief that French courage and French military genius would once again thrill tho world. Vindication of his forecast must have been sweet to Paul Marguerltte. The Urookiyn Rapid Km pine Transit Company, What l 'nun with Its consistent record of bad eervice and anogant manners, lias gone Into the hands of a lecelver. The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company, for Nliullat reasons, met a similar fate some years ago This Is the familiar fruit of in htltutlms which lieisWtently antagonize the public, irritate It with Incompetent aelminls tnitlon and at times Imperil Its life. It must appear to any Thej Wun'i lutlnnal-mlnded person Hrllrve You that the news from Europe Is adequate, to assuajie the umtletiea of those politicians who have been worried sleepless over the likelihood of a third term for Mr. Wilson. If the President has any special craving nowadays, it must be for rest and peace. One war that never Wlier I'ea.-e will be settled, that Coiiferrnre Are Virion will go roaring down the line of time long after all the nations have settled down to ways of permanent peace, la that which rages between the "wets" and the "drys," The new year had a wet atari both Jfy'rtt.,w- 1p..rTrr.- i., s.- t 'w 'V-T, - - PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, THE CHAFFING DISH To Our Patrom Very early In this New Year we fiile' occasion lo thank our patrons for their fo'rbearanoe during the period nf the War. Owing (o the humor rnllons Imposed by the flovrrnment Humor Administration, nnd the very large amount of humor needed In Congress ami by the Committee on Public Information, It was frequently Impossible for us to deliver adequate sup plies of amusement for civilian use. Not Infrequently wo had to fall back on sub stitutes, synthetic Jokes, pathos or even poetry. The public lias been very lenient, and ive appreciate the patriotic spirit In which you have subsisted on scanty fare. It Is expected that In future deliveries of genuine goods may be made with sreater frequency. The Charting Dish. It has heen our observation that tha meek nre most likely to inherit the denrth. We havo heen tnlklng with a United Stutes vice consul recently returned to this country after an unpleasant experience with the Rolshevlkl. He wns thrown Into Jail, together with another American con sul nnd several hundred other persons of nil nationalities and pursuits, on n vaguo charge of "counter-revolution," and re mained In captivity for over seventy days. His imprisonment was marked by every posslblo circumstance of hardship and anx iety. He nnd tho other prisoners wero herded live together into a cell Intended only for one; they wero allowed nine minutes a day out of their cells; they wet a fed on a slice of black bread and a portion of thin cabbage soup per day. They slept on the floor; they were continually told that they were about to be taken out and shot, nnd, after the almost dally executions of some of their fellow prisoners, one of their guards used to come and tell them humorously Just where the bullets had struck the victims. Thoy wero never given nny semblance of a trial, nnd all these things happened In spite of the two consuls having completu diplomatic papers nnd n correct passport from tho Holshevlk official supposedly in chnrge of the town where they were sta tioned. The only explanation that they could get for their imprisonment wns that the Allies were killing Bolshevlkl in the northern provinces nnd the Red govern ment intended to go In for reprisals. We asked the consul what Washington said about nil this, hut ho would not com mit himself. Finally he said, "Washington Is sympathetic." The more you hear about Russia tho less you know. Rut there nre certain rules about Intervening in a hornet's nest that every country boy has by heart. The Horrors of Peace Douglas Fairbanks writes: "Some day I propose to write n novel. The main rea son fcr this determination is the fact that I have never written one. By i-.o doing I will expand my Imaginative facul ties and thus prolong their usefulness. The fact that not one novel in a thousand is likely to measure up to a masterpiece should not halt one's determination to put over a winner If possible." The Anatomy of Melancholy MELANCHOLY is the privilege of hu '' man beings. Horses nnd dogs, ele phants and canaries may suffer extremes of pain, want or discomfort; they are not, I think, melancholy, which Is a pain.of tha mind and Implies borne power to e-onslder the world as a whole. Melancholy is cer tainly a very superior gesture of the in tellect. It Is not to be confounded with peevishness. It is u proud misery: man never feels so elevated, so entirely wise, as in his melancholy fits. A MELANCHOLY is of two kinds. It may ! ' be a settled philosophy or habit of thought, inclining the Individual to a dark cned view of life and its problems; or it may be only a transient mood, due to some vivid momentary realization of human mal adjustments. It is not to bo scoffed at. becauso it may be due to the most trining causes, such as the contemplation of work undone, or a surfeit of pastry, or n choked plpestemwhen no-cleaners are liandy. A melancholy founded upon a trivial matter may rapidly spread, like ripples i'n a pond, filling all the mind with active pulsations of discontent, touching upon Innumerable topics, such as municipal government, tho price of beef and the activities of the Hoi shevlkl. Again, melancholy may be due t self-pity, or to pity of others. A man mav pity himself because he Is so poor that ho has no fun. or because he is so rich tint ho has no fun, or so wiso that he has no fun, or because others nre pitying him This form of melancholy Is agreeable hut transitory. A man may pity others be cause thoy are unlike himself, or hn may pity them becauso he sees them baitled by Insoluble problems. This form of melan choly Is to be encouraged. TN FACT, all forms of Just melancholy 1 are to be encouraged. A thin and quar ulous melancholy, based upon the minor horrors of life, such as the growth of beards thnt must be shaved or the neces sity of having some Jolly-japery ready for one's pavement friends, may, with en couragement nnd careful solicitation, gro.v Into a tender sympathy for all human woes. Think nf the brooding melancholy of car conductors, before whoso eyes is dail enacted a panorama of human ills tress which they are helpless to relieve. A man who is never melancholy is cither cruel or insensible. 1 havo seen lately a number of statements to the effect that the Kaiser Is very melancholy at Amer ongen. This Is not so. He may bo peevish, or disappointed, or insane; certainly ho Is not melancholy. He has not sufllcient brain or heart for that noble emotion. M ELANCHOLY, however, is an even. tlally contemplative function. It re. quires thought, and those who are too busy to think have no time to be sad. Some times you will hear It said that the world (s sadder now than it used to be. This Is not so- in public at least. A man who at tempts to bo melancholy on the streets will not long survive the taxlcabs. Perhaps the Increase of motor traffic will rob us of our mVlancholy, the racial heritage of the) Anglo-Saxons. SOCRATES. - i - --- -winrTn T ',' ;7---"-'''r?'rg-JrU..liaJMdaMaa , fz-j-i .-,. . ., .. ....s-ruA ,"' 'vVA'p TIJSWM?' J Xl.tr AGUc. I ?$s?i .w.V"' siA,t'fnaffuw-- n v -"- '-,".. .M.:HTVr, "',- --- .;-". m: Xr pv.-r" j &j&0r3j& rl'.zJl'2:j2 VULiS' f r. Wtti .-'"-- ttj t!'SA J &' THE GOWNSMAN The Egotist EGOTIST Is a person who Insists on AK, talking about himself when you want to talk about yourself. His talk Is Incessant, fluent, often eloquent, but It suffers from a certain monotony of subject-matter, for it swings, as Inevitably as the stars in their courses, nhout one great center of gravity, himself. The egotist Is at least as often a woman as a man ; and, as In other respectr, one sex Is deadlier than the other: which, will depend on your own. In conversation the egotist habitually emulates the practice of Lord Maeaulay, who, knowing that It was quite unlikely that nny one in the room could approach the Inimitable conversational powers of his lordship himself, naturally asked, "Why waste time listening to dull fellows?" The egotist Is rudderless and un steerable In discourse; he Is, Indee-d, no very good listener. For when not himself talking he employs these Interstices In his own con tclousncss to a better purpose than listen ing, that of thinking up what next to saj. In short, the egotist Is a tiresome nnd dis agreeable fellow to everybody but himself. But In this ho Is more than compensated, for the buoyancy of his self-esteem sustains him lightly In the surges of life on which ho floats as tidily as a cork ; for, come what may, he will sing no miserere. EOOTISM Is somewhat like moisture. Spread as dew upon the leafage of an open nature, It Is harmlessly exhaled In the sunshine of a rising day. Accumulated until It fill a little essel and frozen by neglect In the shade, it will do as water does, ex pand and erack the pot. "Great wits to madness are allied" Is merely the popular expression of a recognized truth, physically demonstrable in the circumstance that, like the pot, the cranium will not give; where fore the expansion technically known as a "swelled head," If It go on, must Inevitably crack something. There wns a boy once at college who sedulously and fmpude'ntly affected red and blue socks. Not red and blue on one sock, not red socks at one time and blue at another, much less socks of any color decorously concealed In high laced or buttoned shoes, but right foot red and left foot blue, alternating with right foot bluo and left foot red, worn with shoes only properly to be designated decollete. The punishment meted out by his classmates to this orgy of egotism In color It does not become a modest historian to disclose, Kutllce it to say. that punishment did not cure, for the egotism which once expressed Itsolf in red and blue socks now finds Its outlet In mauve and yellow "poetry," as Im modestly decollete ss were over those sopho morlo feet. The Gownsman will not say that as et anything has cracked, but there is a great strain, SOME persons nre more subject to egotism than others, though nearly any human being may fall Into chronic megalomania 1f fed too much on the rich food of adulation. Persons of under-stature, especially If they be stout, often walk about on a species of cothurnus or choplne of self-appreeiatlon by means of which they approach more nearly the Inches of their more fortunate brethren. Peformlty Is sometimes most pathetically sustained in a similar manner; and fools tioat merrily In the shallowest waters, buoyed with their bladder-baubles In which Is only the rattle of drlfd peas, Small poets are an egotistical breed, seeing deeply Into mill stones, sandbllnd as to their own miserable little weans. Reformers who discover ex actly what l wrong with the world are apt to find, each man for himself, the only pana. cea to right It. And when a man lias made a pile of money, especially If the process of the making has Involved chiefly Incubation, there Is nothing which he will not tell you precisely how to do. "Money speaks" in all the Idioms of egotism; too often it thunders 111 terms of the veriest tyranny. The megalo mania of a inonnrch has wrecked four em pires in our day, the megalomania of the Holshevlk another. And tnegaleananla Is only human egotism raised to n dangerous higher power and Intrusted with a mechanism be yond Its comprehension or control. HAPPY Is tho cobbler who stle-ks to Ids last. The neglect of this obvious course of conduct develops curious manifestations of egotism at ts. The man who has achieved a ml rn of success in noma one v ; .. ...,,. , Liiim.....!. .1 ...in -"ia 1019 HE CAN'T SEE IT -j.Ay,sw m thing feels therefore thnt lie may spenk with authority on all others. One who knows a little law gives forth deliverances on state craft for the Instruction and enlightenment of potentates. And he who can translate some prehistoric Inscription or has Imposed on the world a belief that he can becomes, there fore, an authority on the latest air route to Japan. Oliver Goldsmith was not content to be the foremost stylist of his time, a master alike In drama, essay and fiction; but ho was even mote proud of his skill as a gamester, wherefore be died heavily in debt He was emulous one ilay of the feats of an acrobat, wherefore he fell over a chair and barked hl. shins. Alas, poor Noll! "pOSSIBLY, like much else, egotism Is only -- n matter of degree. Consciousness Is In separable, from lire nnd self-conscltmsnefs is only a more concentrated, a more centered consciousness, and so o-i to egotism and Its excess In vanity and megalomania. It ,ls not only the weak v ho are egotistic. Indeed, some of us float ordinarily below- tho line ot a proper appreciation of ourselves, water logged with the notions prevalent at tho moment, which ooze In on all sides, and leavo us at the mercy of every wave and new current. However, Some of the strongest men have been quite conscious of their strength. Artists, authois, musicians and tho like Irritable genus exhibit an exasperat ing hyper-consclousuess and dilation of the Image of the ego; and there Is something about religious ministration which well, not to mince matters Justly herds together many of the cloth Into a class, not wholly male nor yet quite female. As to such as make a profession of that art which wu all exercise, the criticism of others, It was said of one such that his love of letters centered In the middle owel of the alphabet aim stopped theie. Certainly his charity never extended to the fifth, for there is nothing so repugnant to the true egotist as excellence In others. STILL great men aro not Infrequently ego tistic. Greater men lose themselves in the largeness of their idea?, their art, their projects. Cailyle was a grumpy egotist; Whistler a waspish one. Bernard Shaw Is nn exasperating egotist, against whom there Is only one remedy: "Don't read him" And there nre not wanting examples of any of these much nearer home, did not politics, discretion and good taste forbid the naming of them. On the other 'hand, It is dlfllcult for the man of aerage self-assertlveness, of the usual self-seeking, to conceive of any one as possessed of a woodpile wherein an African of greater or less stature and blackness Is not continually hiding. The last thing that a veritable egotist can appreciate Is disin terestedness In anybody other than himself; and In himself disinterestedness is commonly nn optical illusion. The ex-Kalser will be getting Jealous of poor old Torquemnda If he learns of the outrages now being committed in reference to his name. Surely these are dream days n England, Count Tlunkett, Just elected to Parliament by the Sltm Fein, had to be released from Jail before he could take his seat. Pluck carried tho French armies to glory. Pluck, under the other definition, seems to be the watchword of not a few French states, men. It Is surprising Bo learn that a riot In Posen caused Ignace Jan Paderewski to faint. Judging by his valor In the concert hall, we had thought him proof ngalnst the nervous shock of any tumultuous uprising. General Pershing's Cobleni order is in tended to let the Germans know that peace Is not yet made and that war conditions enforced by the occupying army must be respected, willy nllly. The sooner the Ger mans recognlie that they nre conquered th better It will be for their comfort. Senator Hoke Smith cannot understand why President Wilson can seriously consider "so Impossible and impracticable" a plan, as that for a League of Nations. And we can not set how Georgia can seriously consider pofi'inposslbfe and Impracticable .- man as! i . .mjjI.is.. rsj. -.-- i i mi i ! - - - - - , - ft ..-.,,:. fe'V'"'" U fefWniHWw' Mc$it W 7 -' aBjnvnn "i....:-.-Hj-"..t w, f jvfUHKnr -,t; fllilHHlm -'.'i':-,-'-" '' ' it V " MHHnH '""'"- 'fA'c.'.:"J.v. -, n "JJJJJJiHrlJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJiJfllJjJJHJJa'" . fvt-fV.. . V' X .V Ys IHIIIH'' ,').i,"'ii . .i s.t'rV mm 'wwri&APMSVTtt?? AM'mwlmw&mmmmmmmMKZ'?jr' & r'- -m-l M " I mm. n ''v.''. s' lHur-' it.m ,.' Itnllln Klrby In the New Tork World'" fW . . v . To a Lady Running -for ai , : m i '-it i rain I i - i jG. NOT Irresponsive to a hint of ankles) Not without a certain soft derision ' ''., For flashing heels, jneposterous " As engines of'thls haste r fall In saunterlngr with long ease behind her, i(i Vi Braking even my usual twenty-mlnute-to-do- thirteen gait Lest I shall overrun her snaillng with furTous seven-Inch ateps. . : I That comfortable Half-there-leeway; of the whole time grant I hear In tmconsulted- certaVnty -within- my waistcoat pocket- , . ; Nor turn a hair when down .the line '' ' Wheez! Cluff ! Ouch! Cltiff ! a train! " ' Leaps then my lady a full major thlrd-out of her furs Clel! Has she no watch? Oli.ves, but will sliii trust ' Or even 'check up with it? Oh, no. Further, can it be douhte.d that she has allotted . , . ' '' At least one half hour by some credible dock. Infallible chronometer-of the kitchen, say? Verily. Yet lo, this sprint, '" . ' ' ' Frantic, disintegrating, synchronizing pu,ff with onswceplng puff, - -vi-, Scuffling on nonaccelerabla heels, , Generously redeeming promises lodged In a hint of ankles. - . - , c I let out a link. t t Of course, that's tho express, and' equally, of course. - - , v . . , i The lady knows as wel.l aa.I.that the town local . Can't very well climb over it. v " Rut every day for every year abe could digest this pedal lesson. ... Yet scurry at the near sno'rt of the superior threat. ' ' I have let out a link v No sharp addendum, two mor.e Incites, in, a lazy stride, perhaps And dubltate whether it Were not charity"" To collar her, - . -,.,- . Thinks she to glance around and .learn vot that long loafing line behind? . She thinks not. , ' I should be glad' to translate nonchalance for her, - j, Pounding the gravel in her., waketwlth! a deliberate halt. ' r "' ' Rut there: she flutters on;'and after all' These be ankles. - . . i- . . Breathless but swollen qf triumph she -pulls up at length And the express yields her' a slap-In trie face. i ... ,, Five minutes later she rushe the. local Dawdling In And I 'surrender sltm farewell rc-V th'e'Udda'r to a ruminant Bmoklng-can"' ' ' STANLEY K. "WILSON, f 57T " - Reejwleacat Hero Wilbolm sleeps. Kor M'erejy's sake, Tread softly, friend, lest he, should, w;ake,.' Oliver Herford, In "The Laughlpf WJliovy.'-j' What Do You Knaiv? QUIZ mrtitlon of i'blumt tlA,e 5lhintl! nS . - J ' t S. Where . Abraham I.lnrpln Imitji. anil frrrm what .sta(e wan nelrttd.ta.heJ7ft7J(rJL 3, How many Sinn, Felner won, et 'inT iit llrltUh I'arllsmrnt lnFth,e Ment "Vlflin" 4' ,M"Sft"bV?',1",t t.u'n.J4Jn 5, Hoy- jiiany feet make a 'knot oV rtauUftl ' ' - r ' " " f A, What rulom are In the. flac.ot Jlpinanla;;, ' 7. What w the enl name ef Jenny l.lnd. tha famous ulticer? '" -i ' - s ,1' 8. What la n laburnum? '. , 0, Kram 'what rmiiintaln illj . MoNt-TlaV-ltht 10, Who van i . called- the WMlilncton f South Amerlrar - .- ... , ""Ml" Answeri t,o'Y6te"r'dayV-OiU'rW '''- 1. FrnnVlln '. ftoosevVlt'la 'AMifVanVfVcrrptry of the ?ttTy. i . 3. I'lti-tireen lUllrfk wrroie "jfarco UoiiarU." 3. The nieetlnic da tnr tha Tretldent'a Cabinet are Tueailay and I-rlday, , , - "' " "III, "'.'.l ?'" nns In place of, Imteael .f. J'ilu" helqa Krnirh for ptafe...v "yV 3, The Mnnt-' nntOenl tunnel riir.i.1 mj -41. . ern .1, .11111 rarni the n0und4rT-.betireVn t'rnnea nud llulj. Jt l nearly- elht nillia Bill) lour. 0, Itudjurd Klpllnt boriOIK IlbmMiy, In'dla. ' xr,T5'lin: ,n thI l''n""VSdhtVn''ea'n. tslsrd lari nearapanulatloiiifhiriViiy other Aaierkan 1tN. ,i, 4, 7 ' ,, .J"" n, re -""i iivru -peiTair- mean "I hara tinned." . ' 0, Drnnri' la ratted romic srftaii'li rrneh Uwn 1., t'h"Uv;!T7Lv;; jj,. rr J$. i .