77- wijUfcy T V ft' i v .. 'i . D,fVT .. v Li B ft h MS oa '.!feaW rw&mMfi e w V i.i nV tit . ihH w- .1 ;vt-... V Euening public fte&Qet THE EVEWNG'TELEGRAPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY .."i "..l-ualnitton. Vice Preaidrnt; John C. Martin. SFerftary Bnt Treaaurer: PhlllpH.Colllni. John a. Williams, John J. Spuraeon, Director!. . KDTTOntAL nOAUD: . Ctb It. K. CcaTis. Chairman f DAVID H. SJIILKT Editor JOHNC. MAnTIN....afncral Uualneia Manager Publlahtd dally at Fratia I.mirn llulluinr. Independence Niiuarr, Philadelphia. I.Mr CkitsaL Ifroad and Ch.-.lhul Streets ATUNTIO Cltl rrrij-lilimi IlulMlns Nsw YoaK 20d Metropolitan TovYcr pttaoiT 403 Kord IlulKIImr HT. Locia 10IIR Kullerton llulldln Caicaso 1202 Tritium liulldlni news nimcAuai WaaBiNOToiev llranic. N. K. Cor, Pennsylvania Ave. and Uth Bt. fnr tok llltuc Tha nun iiuildlnc London llciuv London Timet sunscntrTtoN teiims Til Ktkuno Piano Lii-odi I.1 served to aub acrlbera tn rhlladelphla And aurroundlnr towna at tha rata ot twelve (12) centa per week, payable to tha carrlar. Uj- mall to polnta outalda of Philadelphia, In tha United State.. Canada, or United fltatea poa. aaalona. poataae free, nfty (00) centa per month. Six (16) dollara per year, parable In advance. To alt foreign countrlea one (91) dollar per taonth. NOTlca -Subecrlbera wlahlng Address chanced tnuat rive old aa netl as new ndlreae. BILL. W TAL.NLT KEYSTONE. MAIN 3000 V Ad-lrett all rofflitiHHlcfitlniit to Evenlno TitMlo Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia, Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PltVSS is rxoJn tivelv entitled 'o the use for republication f all ncics dispatches credited to it or not Otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published therein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved, PkUiJI.hl., Thur.d.r. January 16, 1011 LABOR'S PROGRAM TN THE report Just Issued by the recon ' structlon committees of the American Federation of Labor, to Indicate the policy of trades unionism In this country during the period of Industrial readjustment, the principle, of political Independence Is con spicuously stressed. American labor will not co-operate In any effort to form a new party dedicated to clasi Interest, By formal Implication the American Fed eration maintains Its opposition to move ments now current In other countries which are aimed to form all workers Into political bloc of their own. The wisdom of this course is obvious. Labor In the United States maintains Its freedom us a balance of power. It will continue as a. critical and constructive force In politics after the fads nnd passions actuating newly formed parties elsewhere have ended In futility, failure and diminished Influence. Elsewhere the l-'eder.itlon reconstruction program sounds more radical In the letter than It can be In spirit. It cceks Govern ment "ownership or regulation" of public utilities nnd a working week of five and a half eight-hour days, and demands that ' workers be permitted to fix their own hours of labor. The litter provision is Impossible slnco It leaves out the other end of the equation the employer. But In the main the 1'eder.itlon retains the conservative viewpoint that It has held Ince the beginning of tho war. 'It Is the one labor organisation in the world that has not completely lost Its head. Ludendorff hunters. has now joined tho alibi s PENALIZE TIIL STREET SNAIL fTIROLLEV passengers wear) ot watchful waiting or congested streets will bo in clined to hail with featlsfaction the efforts of the Department of Public Safety to Induce the Legislature to pats an uct authorizing Councils to pas-, punitive ordinances regulating tralllc. 'Words, how ever pyrotechnic, seldom fall to move the serenely obstruetionary coal wagon driver or tho self-aBsured potentate of a snail like vehicle on the car track At pio-ent, though offenders may be lined, there Is no method of enforcing the penalty have through the usual means of collecting it debt. A trat'V ordinance with a Jail sentence sting nVght be moie s-alutaiy In framing 1 emulations, for the better ment of all aspects of the transit problem, botil freight and passenger, In Philadelphia. however. It Is not only threats, but alto constructive remedies, that are needful, Drays mid trolleys alike art Immpued by a street system which, though hjiuethlng of a model In Penn'a day, la now one of tha most embai raising of any from which an American city sufcrs. The rigidity of the plan Imitated by torpid municipal legislators far be.oud the original Vine and South street limits has resulted in a constricted cliecket board mid a transport problem of formidable dllll culty. Artistically, It is eifeetive that Huch wide new streets as tho Parkway and the Northeast Boulevard should be void ot car tracks. But on the congestion rlililu they have little bearing. The "one wa" rule on nanow thoioughfares is pet haps tho best expedient that has been adopted, but the city has growji too fast for th it arrangement to bring moie thin partial lelief. The P. R TVs alleged plan buggi st ing the confinement of vehicular trnlllc to certain streets while others would be to served exclusively for tho cars might bo advantageous If discriminatingly applied. Coupled with laws which the police could enforce against blockade, parking and loading and unloading offenses, some Im provement of transit tempo might be at tained. Sympathy with the traction com pany on all Its alleged grievances is hardly Justified. But Its complaints against nar row streets and the wn they are us-ed aie unquestionable found Through n Nult of his own liuy Stan nard Baker has been given an excellent op portunity to get himself thoroughly disliked. WAR ON THE YARDSTICK B1 EFORE the might of sentiment and custom the most flawless logic stands abashed. Like many another reformer, Senator Shafroth has evidently been ob livious of that fact in Introducing Into Congress his bill compelling tho use of the metric system of weights nnd mensurcs ..throughout the United Htites. His inten sions wero excellent, for It cannot be denied that rods, poles, perches, drams, quintals, SjSsiearats and pennyweights bristle with com- "JplexltJea. The decimal measuring system is really 'complete, comprehensive and avlmpla. Tha preliminary bother of mnstering the Stem would be Incommensurate to the dfs trained. But there is something g about perfection, while fallibility nesa, when, entrenched by trodl M'tWdaarins -ppeal. JC . " . 4 . W1...- I f HIS COfllUBIUU ait tut. 11 -u 1 to 23 o'clock than to 11 p. m for some times tho key Initials are omitted In con versation nnd letters. Italy's railways cm ploy tho clearer scheme, nnd yet most of tho Itoman clock faces still conform to the twclvo-hour arrangement, Tho upheaval caused by tho French Revolution must Indeed have been titanic to have enabled Its cockaded savants suc cessfully to Introduce tho metric system. Anglophobia In America must have been rampant when wo abandoned the unwieldy pounds, shillings nnd pence for the sim pler dollar stnndard. It will ho a keen Index of the power of Innovation In these momentous days If tho Senator from Colorado cun put over his obviously commendable reform. Thero nro precedents, however, for believing that, measuring by his chances of success, ho has a bigger Job on his hands than Presi dent Wilson. , CITY HALL BOLSHEVISM FIGHTS A NEW CHARTER The Vara Machine Is Revealing S)inptoms of the Dull Unreason That Always Pre cedes Deserved Clia'tisemcnt by the Public TT IS plain that the Urothcrs Vare nnd their trained Councilmcn have quite forgotten the roaring dny in 1905, when crowds marched to City Hull and sat in both chumbcrs with ropes in their hands and chipped in to buy tar nnd feathers. The gas-lease extension project was voted down though the ways had been greased for it. A system of betrayal nnd debasement even more conscienceless and more flagrant than that which flowered in the lUOo jobbery is culminating in open warfare against the plan for a new city charter. The first big attack has been rehearsed for today's meeting of Council. The chaste spirits comprising tho Vare machine arc prepared to nppcar in solid formation as defenders of tho city's welfare as guardians of its integrity 1 Uncle Dave Lano is tho stage manager of the odd melodrama. And wc used to think that Uncle Dave had cunning! No outcome of the political confusion in Philadelphia could be happier for tho city at large than the sort of campaign that is being organized against the charter-revision scheme. Tho Vare machine is in a sort of delirium. It 13 running wild. A fetid system of organ ized anarchy is entrenched at City Hall. The sooner that system is compelled to drag itself out into the light tho sooner it will be fully understood by an easy going public. And the sooner its motives can be understood. Mayor Smith and Director Wilson and tho Vares themselves aie doing a service to tho city by making their organization appear daily more detestable. And we are appioaching just that much more swiftly to the smash that always follows the ovcrconfidenco of a beggar 6n horse back. "Let us," suy Uncle Dave and Brother Ed and Brother Bill in effect, "have all the city one happy Frog Hollow! Do not put profane hands on established institut'ons! Things arc good enough as they arc!" Things are good enough behind the barbed who of the City Hall machine. But the champions of political prostitu tion in Councils haven't been trained to complain of any actual fault with the plans for a new city charter. Who, in these days of practical politics, considers tho utility or decency of anything? The war is to- be waged upon grounds of patriotism and civic pi idol Scouts for Uncle Dave and Brother Bill turned up tho shocking information that some of the gentlemen engaged in tho plans for charter revision do not reside in Philadelphia, but in the sub urbs! Biot'ier I'd ambles in from his feudal castle at Ambler to cry out in rightcou- indignation against the pre sumption hero indicated. He will not, of course, suggest that his criticism is aimed at men whoso enterprise and industry have been adequate to sustain such prestige as the city is able to achieve against all the handicaps of a rotten political administration. When advice is needed to keep the municipul affairs out of the hands of suburbanites, John R. K. Scott may easily bo sum moned from Bala or is it Cynvvyd? Mayor Smith, refreshed by the vernal peace of his Glenoids home, writes ungramrnatical tirades , to Secretary Daniels assuring the world that Phila delphia is clean. But the lesidence of these gentlemen is different. Whereas the charter commit tee suburbanites vote where they live in tho suburbs, Brother Ed and His Honor and Mr. Scott do not. They keep "voting addresses" in the wards where they first rose to political power, but which are no longer good enough for them really to live in. That is tho difference! The plight of the Mayor and of tho whole Vare machine i3 perfectly obvious. It has had plenty of rope and it is making the traditional use of it. A sane and presumably normal-minded population is asked to believe that a servile 'jtr, bought and paid for, is more desirabl.-, than the system provided for in evciy ordinance of freo government ; that the taxpayers should applaud and support a state of affairs under which their money is used to corrupt the affairs of tho municipality; that wo have reached tho ideal state of city government when money is taken out of tho treasury and used in vast quantities to maintain a system of bossism which defeats the city's best ambitions. Uncle Davo and the Brothers Ed and Bill nnd those of their Councilmcn who can think at all know that they have a difficult case to maintain. So, If the program already outlined for future sessions of the City Council is followed, tho facts of ithe matter will be grandly set aside and' the attack .on the charter- -.''tn, EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER revision plan will bo centered not on tho theory involved, but on ths personalities of tho men who have outlined a new order of municipal administration that is decent and scientific. Floods of cigar store oratory, nil the ndjectives available In limited vocabu laries, shouts and cries, tho spurious and detestable pretensions of ward politicians will be mobilized at future sessions of Council to show that men who live In the suburbs nnd work In tho city should not hnvo an interest In tho city's affairs. Well, nt nny rate, it will be worth n good laugh. If disregard of law, class interest violently maintained nnd a dominance by inefficient nnd backward minds go with Bolshevism, then wo have a Bolshevist city administration in Philadelphia. Keeping convicted felons on tho police force is a good example of It. Sooner of later there will bo a revision of the city charter and n reform in the ward system of representation where a lnrge part of the present corruption begins. The buying and selling, the dirt nnd dishonor of the present system will go. Tho times are changing nnd the bosses don't know It. The hnrder they fight the charter-revision plan tho more clearly their selfishness and futility and viciousnes3 will be revealed And for that reason nlone the campaign for a new charter is more than welcome. If Colonel IIoufo has nny regird for prec edent ho will now quote Mark Twain on exaggerated reports. WIIKRE THE LEAGUE MUST BIND rpiIE sound principle of International law -- underlying tho doctrine that a blockade to bo binding must be effective Is Inher ently Indispensable to the logic of n lcague-of-nat!ons plan. Covenants, such ns those outlined by General Smuts and Lord Rob ert Cecil, while admirable In certain re spects, aro apparently timorous of uni versal coercive meisures in a crisis. Regu lations providing for a postponement of war hut shy of proscribing It when an obstinate nitlon remains bellicose after a lapse of a jenr or more are Inconsistent with what should bo tho fundamental prin ciple of an international association. .1 league of nations tchlch, tehen haid picsscd, Icgalkes inir, is really an alliance on the old tlisastiotts sense, capable of Oiling rise to combination and groupings of J'oicers containing the perilous germs of iicneial conjltct. America cannot bo true to her traditions and Ideals and tako up membership In an alllanco which In any way authorizes war even as a last resort. Such an alllllatlon would mean entanglement. A universal league, with the utter repudiation of war as the caidlnal element of Its structute, Involves no compiomlse with Washing tonian and Monrovian principles, but rather their perfectly legitimate extension, The President summarized our attitude In his pregnant phrases at Manchester. A universal and binding league wo can consistently Join. Any incomplete mani festation of it would have the alarming attributes of an alliance of great Powers and our participation therein would Justify criticism. There must be no trilling with fundamentals. They must bind In order to warrant acceptance. There Is slgnltli-uiico In Dlttutri of the fact that represen- lleurt and .Mind tatiou at the Peace Conference is In pro portion to the extent of the Interest of each nation In the peace s ttleinent and not merely In accordance with the part plajtd by eaUi nation In the war. The plan adopted Is the American and Dritlsh plan. That Piani-t thould favor the other Is easily un dtistandabk. She was cloter to the vtar than her blggtr neighbors. Hut because strong fetllng sometimes Inti'rferts with clear think ing there Is possibility that tho course adopted la the. vvlter oil". The l'tssliiilsttc Tup (.roeruphlriil er tajs ho reads the Anutomleul? newspapers with fear and trembling these iLiju. He never knows the mlnuto that ho will hear that that t'ovu of Peace has been phot in tho Balkans. How Philadelphia would boll with Indlg. nation were the Ptace IlruniN and Mote, Mom unit J'orelen Conference to consume ns much time In getting started as she hao done before trying Thomas II .Smith! It begins to look as though the real "Em peror of Sahara" will bo President Wilson vote of the Nebraska 1 he IVrfiM I lhlrlj-Mv after Juno 20, Th" Legislature now assures the piospect of a perfectly "coiltlng" time Tho Sphinx had a nut to ciaek. Direc tor Wilton says he is a Sphinx. Some nut. Skaters are not having much luck now adays. Tho tcmperatuie is rising and grog stock falling There is no brtad In Petiograd. No liovernincnt can walk upright without the support ot the staff of life. Petrograd citizens have nothlngto eat but unground oats. That's a poor substltuto for a decent meal. Attendants at the Nobru trial are hum ming n modern version of the old song: "Oh, Vare, and oh, Vare has that little doggone $7000 gone?" Here's hoping that the Paris delegates will promoto a society affair not tainted by exclU'dvimsH When the peace commlsHloners begin to tncklo the tjuestlon of boundaries they will understand something of the feelings of shock troops going through barbed wire In Mo Man's Land Another Increase In tho prlco of Hall cakes coming' Lack of fertilizer is causing Maine potato raisers to plant their acres In wheat. The Allies are going to send a mission of Investigation to Russia, They will learn how much terrorism tux empty bread basket will hold. IHIL'ADELrHIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY THE GOWNSMAN What Is the Mttter "Willi Philadelphia? UNLIKR Shakespcaro and several other remarkable personages, It shall not be said of the Gownsman that he'never repeats. Its knows the value of a refrain, a song In w-hlch all can Join In the chorus! a slogan, on advertisement, the "damned Iteration" of which compels attention nnd a resting place at Inst In the memory, Wherefore, once more tho question that will not down: What Is the matter with Philadelphia? We seem to have reached a stoiro at least In which pretty much everybody, except tho Mayor, Is dissatisfied. For while most of us sincerely wish that wo might be cleaner phy sically, morally, clvlcally, there appear to be those among us who would like us to be even dirtier 'than we are and who do their part to make us so. When a man Is acknowledged to be III, at least wo need treat him no longer as In perfect health. The Issue Is drawn be tween thoso who would cure him and those who would kill him, or ot any rate continue to bleed him. It is a battle between a con stitution, good, bad or Impaired, and the microbe, Jones, Smith and noblnson. For tho political microbes have been fattening; on poor old Philadelphia now for many a year. . LIKH other patient?, the dear old chap Is Jbcset with many doctors who, true to their kind, are deeply Interested In diagnosis Involving, os diagnosis always does, the call ing of many very simple things by very hard names. For example. Dr. Harrison S. Morris, expert In civic symptomatology and a very daring eclectic practitioner, finds the condi tion of the patient not only chronic, and now precarious, but really congenital. "What can you expect," ho asks, "of a constitution the basis of which Is non-resistant Quakerism Infused with a dour Btreak of Presbytcrlan- Ism?" Other practitioners find the trouble In the name "Germantown," In tho refusal of busybodles to let tho "100 per cent pure" Philadelphia police alone. In the absence of Mr. Wilson In Kurope or In the presence of Mr. Daniels In Washington. Dr. John Archi bald MacCallum suggests, with creditable originality, that the trouble lies largely In the low- palarles which we pay our teachers. "Hear.! Hear!" With Doctor Garbcr's sal ary raised to a hundred thousand a year and Governor Brumbnugh, when he returns to teaching, given a living wage of say fifty thousand Instead of his paltry pittance as historian of the Commonwealth, tho Gowns man doubts not that Philadelphia will be at onco restored to civic salubrity and a flourish of all the arts. TO BH a doctor Is to disagree not only with other doctors, but as a diet with most patients. Dr. John D. Mcllhenny, a practi tioner of long standing not invariably pat at Harrlsburg, appears to have mistaken the hectic flush of tho war posters which recently glowed on tho countenance of Philadelphia for the health of real art. And Dr. John McLuro Hamilton, tho noted facial special ist, so lost control of himself for the moment ns to laugh outright at Doctor Mcllhenny. This was very reprehensible, for when an admiring constituency sends a doctor to Har rlsburg to attend on a Governor who is sick. It must be assumed that he knows a circus poster from a Murillo. Perhaps tho most convenient of the several nostrums which havo been offered to save poor oltl Philadel phia Is first to deprive the old boy of the potations semi-polltlco-reformatory that he so loves nnd then turn over the remains to tho women. When the women get tho vote but who Is the Gownsman to forecast time, tide or what women will do, might do, could do to Philadelphia, to the vote or to any thing else7 AS TO Quakers, the Gownsman has opinions of his own. Comfort and no very great surfeit of thinking has done Its work upon them. They are tho safest pcoplo In the world nnd will sit In Btatu quo for gen erations. Your veritable Quaker Is often admirable when the spirit moves within him; but his engine is set In the reverse and when It starts, is as likely 03 not to move back ward, liesides, this Is not the age for any great agitation, at least of the Quaker spirit, except against fighting. Doctor Morris may be right In attributing poor old Philadelphia's lack of a healthy appetite for anything dif ferent, bis home-loving unacqualntanco with anything he has not always known, his apathetic, senile spirit, to the Quaker blood in us. For, like many another good thing. It Is better to have had a grandfather In trade, or a buccaneer, or n Quaker, than to be one yourself. The Prcsbstcrlans nre not so enslly dis poned of they never arc. In fact, recovery fiom Presbyterlanlsm Is often slow and sometimes of an alarming character, Scotch In origin, there remains to tho end a kind of Scotchincss In them, n recalcitrancy to accept nn thing that other people accept. They have chosen a hard way for themselves ami like to see to It that nobody else Is easier. Being themselves of the elect, they prefer a cer tainty to the choosing of people of whom they are not so sure. They aro a stllT-necked gen eration, bearing tho voko with fortitude and exacting the same of other cattle. They would rather listen to bad music In their own churches on Sunday than allow others to listen to good music outside. They aro a strenuous, not a relaxed fiber, In the body politic, and tho Gownsman Is of opinion that Doctor Morris In this aspect of his diagnosis Is wrong. It is a tonic not always palatable but a tonic It is to live with the Presby terians mHR Gownsman has been doctored many -L times, always wisely If sometimes none too well; but ho Is not the right kind of doctor at least any other doctor will tell you so. However, he yields to the weak ness of his kind In presenting his diagnosis of tho caso of William Penn Philadelphia. Hsq , gentleman (though still much in trade), aged 237, tho trouble apparently senile anemia popularly called dry rot aggra vated by several unskilled surgical operations of reform, none of them radical enough. Symptoms: Pulse weak, gait slow, will flabby, no appetite except for drugs, sight dim, forcBlglit almost completely atrophied, memory still tenacious, hearing good for the clink of gold. And yet a constitution natural ly robust, a good heart and, take the old fellow all In all, quite worth the saving. NOW, what to do? First, get the politics out of him ; It Is the "dope" that Is kill ing him. Try to rid him of the hallucination that he is the only real gentleman or old and respectable family In tho brotherhood of cities. Get him to see that the age of the patron Is past and that money may make tho mayor go, but that thero are some motors that need another power. Lastly, take the old fellow north of Market street, some fair day, and let him see for himself that people live there. You may later Increase the lengths of his Journeys Into the world, and perhaps some time show him a real city, F A HIGHLY IMPORTANT FACTOR IN RECONSTRUCTION -"eir.;.; -.;-ri- "" -sggMansawRVfl. ? jgrjaeaiBfoiiwfaMi?rr: ..-":: .... " .-; THE CHAFFING DISH Latest News From Amerongen yOU are old, Kaiser Wilhclm, Count Ben-- tlnck said, And even your heir has gone white; And of course while we never will grudge you a bed, When food Is so high, Is It right'.' Your nice little visit has lasted nine weeks, Wo're beginning to feel overtraining; If you push It too hard hospitality creaks, So you need not Insist on icmalnlng. Our servants hnve threatened to go on a strike. It's a choice between you and tho cook: My chnuffeur will take you whoover you like, So Just write In the visitors' book! After his distressing experience at Co blcnz, the Trlnce of AVnles will undoubt edly nsk tho league of nations to do some thing about the American practico (and a poor practico It is) ot cutting In at dances. Important Notice We wish to Inform those who call on us that tho elevator boy has been Instructed to remove from visitors nil manuscript plans for tho formation of tho league of nations. Thcso will be carefully returned when tho caller departs. Wo have had to tako thlH drastic step because we And that no discussion of the league cn be con ducted under fifteen minutes of talking on tho other man's part and nt leaBt Ave minutes listening on our own. An old, old newspaper correspondent was assisted down the gangplank o nn ocean liner, "Whore have sou been thcso last thirty years?" he was asked. "In Paris," ho said, "writing articles about the preliminary meetings of tho Peace Conference," Cauterizing 'Wilhelm O that a Hums wcro hero today To sing the song of the Kaleer, How ho and Nick came Into France And thought tho world his prize, sir; Hut Joffro gied him n tousle rare, And Foch has handled him with care; He heard tho Hleland bagpipes hlnrc, And avva went the envied prize, sir. And now to Holland see him run, A humbled man and wiser, A cownrd knave, a wily Hun, Xo longer known as Kaiser; A braggart fool, a "superman," Defeated nt the Yser. Tho iloughboys gave his pride the sting, His arrogance has taken wing, And all tho world delights to sins The downfall of the Kaiser, JOHN McMASTKR. Tomorrow Is Den Franklin's birthday, and If lie were among us he would celo brato It by buying thrift stamps. " t "Live lonu my son," sold a Russian mother to her son when he was called to the colors, "but live so that your life may not seem lone to any one else." How long the KaUer'a life seems 1 , It only tht, nations would sign up the 16, 199 V-" "IRwSawBIlKHdBBif r f p-liT rfflirPffl lYirpttaiUMi nir r r i Hi '1 i li i I i i'i i ' ' I iiPii i HWaaaMPI11! ij ' I r nrii -m igi. in , n- ri mijmmi mii i r'.-..- -- . nlz? ..-.i.-.:--.:':i.i -"---' .;::;". .- league of nations as fast as the States are romping into prohibition! Germany should bo admitted to the lengue of nations yes, but on the pay-as-you-enter principle. On Doing Up a Pucknge of Laundry There comes a time In all men's lives When laundry must be sent; When shirts and cuffs are somewhat soiled And collars badly bent. The only set of underwear Is right upon your back. And you must flash a fancy front Or clso you'll get tho sack. Of course tho things must be wrapped up To go 'round to tho Chink's, Because unwrapped they'd draw a crowd Thoso vivid greens nnd pinks. You find some paper near at hand That looks 'bout large enough To go around those shirts and things In that big pllo of stuff. Intrepidly you make a start And roll up everything Into a nice neat parcel, But what about tho string? Now by the time; a piece Is found Tho bundle Is undone; Also, tho paper's torn a bit; Thats Its Idea of fun. The ftnnl knot has Just been made, When there upon tho floor Is ono lone sock which got left out. Say, don't that make you sore? The strlns then sticks In such u snarl That It must needs bo cut, And when you tie It up again It's long enough all but! Well, anyhow, you take In slack And cinch her up some way. Then start In getting ready For the labors of the day. Suddenly you gulp and stop! Where are thoso new pearl etuils? Ye little gods nnd fishes I Wrapped up In them thero duds! In opening up tho package Tho paper feels tho wear, So when you do It up again Things fall out everywhere. N6 more paper; no more string. You give It up disgusted. Go forth and buy a new outfit? You would but you are busted. WALTER S. FOGG. A philosopher says, speaking of tho present ern, "Never was tho human mind master of so many facts and sure of sn few principles." But thero Is one.prliv clple that humanity now seems very sure of. It Is this: That aa the common people will have to think about a war for a long time nfter It Is over, It Is well to give them plenty of time to think about It be for starting ono. SOCRATES. Doctor Dernburg has expressed belief that America, at the Peace Conference, will eventually side with the Teutons against the Allies. This would seem to prove that we etlll havo to deal with an Impudent and un repentant Germa'ny, j - . .. nJfc.i!- t. ..... rta..n- to.-. l.lVj."" ""- Ctt ..fT ttllMhwt w, Mia.. -iv ....... -"v-'a-;:':' . ..-.tri- '2..... --w.j.. '"-'. -!- "-: "? ! My Little Kid Sister WHEN I think of my little kid sister (I never thought much of her then) I don't even remember I kissed her, I certainly can't think when. I used to tease her all that I could; I was glad that I made her cry, I didn't act Just like a brother should: We weren't quite pals, she and I. I remember she asked me to go to a show A picture, "The Call of the Wild" I remember her look when I told her No: I sure was mean to that child. I remember I gave Dad and Mother a kiss As I left taem to go off and flght, But I never paid any attention to Sis; I had cried her to sleep that night. It was Over There, at a place called Lille, That I got a letter from Dad: It told me tho kid was dangerously 111 Tho shock nearly drove me mad. Like a flash I went over the days gon by: How mean I had been to that kid I prayed that night she wouldn't die; I cried, I admit I did. The crisis is over; sho's going to get well; God knows how much I have missed her, God taught me a lesson, I'll remember it well, For He gave me my little kid sister. SGT. J. V. BERRE (discharged), Hog Island Shipyard. The prominence given to Brazil In the Peace Conference recalls the appropriateness of her ofllclal motto at the present Juncture. It Is "Order and Progress." i:dwln H. Vare, having been unfavorably viewed by John M, Nobre, seems Inclined to deny that tho latter Is "monarch of all he surveys." What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. Hew rrnnr rrmldrnto nt the Tolled fltnte hve been of Butch paternal nncr.trr and who were ther? i, tlint elans or tills does tradition prescribe for a fortieth wedding nnnlrtrsarr? 3. What I the lonft river In the I'nllrd htutri aftrr the Mlmiourl-Mliilaalpitl; 4. From what political pnrtj- office litis Vance MH'ormuck Juht reiileiird? -E. Yvhut In the forrprak of it shin? 0. Where nre the Atlas Mountatnn? 7. What Is the (Irtek name for Greece? 8. What la the annual nalar af the I'rcolJfnl ol the United Htato? 0. Whit vtrote the celebrated noyel. "Tm Jonta"? "m 10. In what etnturr did Mohammed live? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Two renrwala of the nruilttlce with U- tnanr hate beta mnde. 2. There have been alx cabinet rlianies thaa far In Wllnon'a ailmlnl.lratlon.. 3. (Iranl'n Democratic opponent at the tiro of hU flrat election to the Prcnldcncy wai llorutlo C. rioniour. 4. The Vnllcd Stain paid Denmark S23,O00 0C0 for tho Vlraln Inland., In the wat Indies. 5. Mr Charlca Wrndham, nnc popular on th London atr. nnd John Maaon, aaioclated with manjr Important productions In h. theatre, died this week. " " fl. Unit chamnaana eantolna the addition ot 1 w m ,... ..... v, niiurur, 7. A marabou U a larto Wcat African itorfc, s. .. ii. Monua ror "nota Una" (note well). 0. "Spare the rod and apoll the child" see.,. In Samuel Uutlcr'a satirical poem, "Hufil brat." ' " phere l Aronriraa, a cU. ita altltoX.1 1 sn . . V.r,", v, iC"iSL