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TWJnod.., Kfbruity 1, 1I9 MORE COURAGE NEEDED AT HARRISBURC A GROUP of bills providing for a com mission to suggest changes In tlio State Constitution nnd fixing the conditions under which a constitutional convention shall ho held have been Introduced In Harrlsburg. This does not mean that the Constitution will bo revised In the Immediate future, for nothing Is easier than to get n bill Introduced in the Legislature. Unfortu nately, tho State political leaders seem to be nfratd to undertake the worlt. They have been using the same old arguments that hao been offered for years as reason for postponement. They want to wait until a "more opportune" time. But so long as they are unwilling no time will be opportune. Franklin once said he was glad that man was n reasoning animal, for he could find a reason for any thing that he wanted to do. Likewise, man can find a reason for not doing anything which he docs not want to do. We have waited long enough for consti tutional revision. There is no better time than the present. The group of bills Intro duced in Harrlsburg, if passed, would ar range for a most satixfactory method of revising the fundamental law. The men who control legislation should have the courage and public spirit to Insist on their passage this winter. THE ZEALOUS DEC fpHtJ presidential beo 'that has been - bothering Mr. McAiloo for seeral years has finally been shooed away. Winging hither and yon, as the poets Fay, In search of victims, it went from Mr. McAdoo to General 'Wood and wounded that warrior In still another place. There Is no double meaning In the state ment Just issued by the former Secretary of the Treasury. He doesn't want the presidency. Why should he want it, with corporations of movie queens and kings begging him to accept $100,000 a year and u career of ease and plenty in plain tight? "There are scores of men In my party who are fitted for tho place," observes Mr, McAdoo, with the fine gesture of renun ciation with which the most troublesome of Insects was ordered from his presence. , One might be moved to ask the name of the oculist who- provides this representa tive Democrat with magic spectacles. But we will let that pass. The tone and color of General Wood's recent addresses would Indicate that the General looks with greater kindness upon his winged but perilous lsitant. The moro acute leaders of the Itepubllcan party can not observe this culmination with en thusiasm. The Itepubllcan party could use another Roosevelt. But It cannot afford to propose an echo for the presidency. There is a fatal weakness In General Wood's case. If he were actually to be nominated tho Democrats might counter with General Pershing. Then, my lords, what a pretty complica tion there would bo In this our land! BURIAL SERVICES STILL NECESSARY THC Presbyterian ministers of this city were told at their last meeting that the prohibition amendment Is now part of the Constitution and that those who attempt to disregard It are violators of the law- and hould be summarily dealt with. The amendment Is without a doubt a part of the Constitution. In one or two of the States where It has been ratified It may be necessary for the people to indorse the action of the Legislature to satisfy local laws, but the ratification is valid tinder the Federal Constitution when the Legislature has acted. But the amendment is not self-enforceable. Congress or the States, or both, must provide penalties for Its violation or it will be a mere dead-letter declaration of prin ciple, like the citizenship amendments In the South. The amendment Itself Indicate this, for Its second section provides tin "Congress and the several States slim have concurrent power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation." Tho temperance people will, of course, attempt to secure the passage of the necessary laws In every State. A prohibition bill Is now, under consideration by the legislators In Harrlsburg and prohibition bills are before Congress. When the States pass prohibition laws they can be enforced within the State boundaries just as If no prohibition amend- ' went had been adopted, provided Congress , does not act. What will be the force of a ' "Mate law It Congress shall pass an act 'rTrovldtnir penalties for violating the pro- ' lilblllon amendment and defining lntoxlcat- (SaMf liquors the courts will hove to decide. There are able lawyers who hold that the ejoncurrent power" section Invalidates the whole, amendment,- because It Is Impossible two lgUkUlve jurisdictions to pass en- Iswa aUfeetlaVaT the am trrKry EVENING law would bo supremo and displace the State laws whero they differed: but the matter will remain In somo uncertainty until the Supremo Court has made Its de cision In a suit framed to test tho ques tion, Tho liquor people appear prepared to take refuge In all the technicalities they can find to postpone the day when they nro finally driven out of business. That day will come, but It Is a mlstako to as sume that the adoption of the amendment automatically puts an end to the manufac ture and salo of liquor. "WHAT WOULD LINCOLN DO?" HIS BIRTHDAY REMINDS US In the Justice of Ilia. Reconstruction Ideals May He Found the Oasis of an Inspiring Program for the World Today VTOV he belongs to the ages," cried ' Stnnton over the deathbed of Lin coin. To tho past age, yes. The grief stricken Secretary of War interpreted tho Judgment of history with fervent veracity. But could he have foretold tho immediate future the pathos of his uttcranco would have been Intensified. The great American whose birth the nation celebrates today did indeed belong to tho nges, but In the epoch which fol lowed his passing his Inspiration played no effective pait. There was the truo Lin coln tragedy. There is no bitterer chapter In Amer ica's nnnals than that of the so-called re construction period after the civil con flict. The fame of the "first American" was secure. The entire world acknowl edged Its luster. And then the eternal Ideals for which he stood in wnr under went that Ignoble repudiation In peace which prompts uneasy Inquiry as to what the memory of a great man Is really worth. Is It to bo wrapped In the papyruR of history, grandiosely stowed nway In a lofty nlcho of fame and then Ignored, un heeded? Must it be so today when the mightiest task of reconstruction with which civiliza tion was ever confronted now calls for action? Tho question gives to Lincoln's birthday this year a depth of Import it has never had slnco the stormy days of Andrew Johnson. Throughout tho land today a "spirit of Lincoln" will be Invoked In words. That pat phrase has become a conventional for mula. In tho generations sinco 1863 ora tors and writers have made florid use of it. It was on the lips of political intriguers who prolonged the agonies of the South during the era of disgraceful "carpet bagging." It has been verbal furniture for politicians pleading causes from which tho moral nature of Abraham Lincoln would have shrunk In disgust. It will recover from misinterpretation nnd de filement only if It is summoned ns the unsullied agency of enduring peace. For peace consonant with the Ideals of liberty was ever Lincoln's aim. Ho was an archi tect whom fate denied the supremo privi lege of completing his structure. In the larger sense It remains for dwellers In the world of 1918 to finish tho monumental enterprise. And that is why tho problem that was America's in tho decade follow ing 1865 is so fruitful of warning. Time, that persistent solvent, has soft ened the once sinister aspects of those stressful ten years. Time also has reduced the temperature of those political passions and clarified certain outlines of a situation which Is significantly a kind of microcosm with respect to the drama which mankind is now enacting. For the world of today read the United States at the conclusion of Its Interneclno strife. America was shell-shocked then. Wo had our "bitter enders" eager to capital ize conquest, our Tories of narrow vision, our liberals, forward looking, but too often unheeded. It was the unfortunate weakness of this last named class that It had no leader of sufllcicnt charm triumphantly to execute the claims of Justice. Lincoln would cer tainly have done so, perhaps by reason of the love In which he was held, with the aid of Congress, perhaps in defiance of its opposition. A year before his assassination the Issues were tightening. Already In 1864 ho had devised a liberal, sane and patri otic reconstruction plan, which would have secured the goal for which the war was fought and at the same time spared the southern States needless woes. The scheme Involved tho admission of those seceded States which should adopt con stitutions forbidding slavery, providing that one-tenth of the voters of 1860 should have taken the oath to the Union and set up a government. Congress, Inflamed by the passionate unreasonableness which war Inspires, Ignored the plan and countered It with one of Irritating, dangerous and grasping complexity. Lincoln disposed of the bill with a pocket veto. In his last public speech, delivered on April 11, 1S65, with characteristically obstinate courage ho re viewed his high-minded reconstruction purposes and declared it his duty to make tome new announcement to the people of the South. That revelation never came. Those opponents of Andrew Johnson who, despite tactlessness, wildly Impolitic language and a personality which almost repelled allegiance, asserted that Lincoln's plan could not be followed because it was actually unknown, pursued a course of shameful sham. Tha details were really a minor matter. Tne spirit of a Llncolnlan peace was perfectly well known to Individuals of oven tho feeblest powers of tcflectlon. Justice was Its primary plank, Justice and the most unswerving loyalty to the car dinal principles of freedom. They are the components of a Llncolnlan peace at this hour. Repudiation 'of them may lead either to a repetition on an Infinitely vaster scale of the most critical period In domestic American history or to some Ihhig none. "What would Lincoln do?" is by no means an ldlo phrase, because It Is per fectly evident to all men who lovo liberty and fair play and hate tyranny and In trigue what tho savior of the Union would do If face to faj, with .WW 'KwtA worM PUBLIC LEDGER course, unablo to draw up specific rules for each of the manifold contingencies which arise. But wo can keep In mind Lincoln's hatred of anything which failed to rccognlzo the fundamental of govern ment for the people and by tho people, the loathing: In which ho held tho false philosophy of revenge and the greed of selfish conquest. If Lincoln "belongs to the ages," as Stanton said, lie Is liuloed among tho most previous of all mankind's possessions today- Somo of his Immediate post-bellum successors, lauding him with lip service, defiled his memory with deeds which failed to wreck tho land, In whoso history tho nwesomo hand of Providenco can so often be traced, but they did provoko a season of mocking ogony. The world Is In no mood for a recurrence on International lines. Chronologically those who love freedom nro far from Lincoln now. Spiritually they nro very near. Certainly It Is ad mlsslblo to sec In a society of nation", seeking the maintenance of peaco with rectitude, a concept with which tho heart of Abraham Lincoln would be in profound and rhythmic sympathy. Certainly it Is equally unavoidable to see In dynastic nnd lustful land ambitions a policy which would rovolt his great soul. Tho celebra tion of his birthday without tho persuasive Kiontli of his Ideals Is nn empty honor. Emulation of the principles ho Blood for is I ho world's vital need, as it would be Lincoln's greatest glovy. BALKY HORSES IN THE WORLD'S TEAM TO UXDKItSTAND the hubbub raised at Paris by the suddenly stiff-necked atti tudes of France and Jnpan, it Is necessary to remember first of all that economic con siderations rather than pride or patriotism are now actuating most of the delegates at the l'eace Conference. Japan and France or rather the short sighted financiers nnd traders of Japan and Prance hae much to gain If they aro .permitted to have their way. It may be assumed that the tension existing In diplo matic quarters everywhere has served to exaggerate the Importance of the Jupanc.se scare In Russia nnd tho French break from the peaceful routine of tho conference on tho German Issue. But It Is apparent that tho peace negotiations are at a dangerous crisis. In Franco and In tho rest of Europe there Is a continuing fear of Germany. It Isn't founded on any absurd delusions In volving fear of Hlndcnburg nnd a new German army. It is a dread of tho Ger many of the future. A new and powerful republic Is likely to rise out of tho present chaos In tho Ger man States und In Austria. Europe Isn't viewing tho economic possibilities of such a new State with equanimity. Tho Entente nations have held that the Germans ought to be crushed by the with drawal of their coal lands and other re sources nnd by the Infliction of heavy Indemnities. But It Is questionable whether the Germans can be rendered per manently helpless by this method. The saner view Is that the final peace should be so drawn that all Incitements to war would be removed in Germany as well a3 In the rest of the world. Tho political complexion of the newer Germany Is promising. It U dominated by Social Democrats and Moderate Socialists. The Trench diplomatists hold that even they cannot be trusted, and have bitterly opposed President Wilson because they desire to keep Germany impoverished, partly for safety and partly for the ad vantage of their Industries. The President has held that this 13 the surest and short est path to another war. Tho case of Japan in Russia Is not so easily analyzed. The Russian confusion is the dominating factor In this newest complication. Russia is wide open to any exploiter, any adventurer in diplomacy or finance who can muster a vast military force In support of his enterprises. Do the Japanese hope to win on a vast gamble while the rest of civilization Is tired and occupied with other affairs? Jt is known that Japaneso financiers hae been planting great hopes In .Siberia. They have already established a bank there and the machinery for commercial expansion. It U hardly conceivable that the Japanese statesmen with a powerful peare party at home would attempt an adventure so peril ous as that which would bo necessary in flouting the principles of the league of nations and InUtlng the suspicion and en mity of the world. Japan has the example of Germany to guide her now. H is inconceivable that she hasn't learned the lesson of the times. And therefore It will be better tu wait be fore forming any Judgments until the Japa nese have had tlmo to explain the nature of their course In China and Siberia espe cially those secret treaties! While ilia V o u n g Womlera of Tlmo Women's Christ I a n Association In Eng land has actually voted to pcrm't smoking among Its members, a band of nudcnts at the University of Pennsjhanla has Ptarted a vigorous propaganda to discredit t&Lacco. There aro times when an American doesn't know whether to feel hopelenly old-fashioned or ultra-modern. Obviously the mind of England and the mind of America nro not moving In the same direction. Aro we going forward or back? How widuly tha pur You Xerer poses of statesmen dlf- Can Tell fr in various parts of this mysterious world! Hera Is Japan, for example, ap parently intent upon making China unsafe for the Chinese. Now und then It It l'e.almJim Impossible to resist tho feeling that President Wilson, after he has helped to make the rest of the world safe for democracy, will have to start and do the Job all-over ngaln In the Senate. That proportional representation system for the election of members of a reorganised City Council may have theoretical advantages over present system, under which each faction elects as large a proportion of the Councttmen'as possible, but it would probably work out very much In the same old way. Mr, McAdoo says that he does not want to be President. He doubtless knows that lb pretty girl always says that she would PHILADELPHIA', WEDNESDAY, FEBRTTABY CONGRESSMAN MOORE'S LETTER Philadclphians at the Waterways Congress and Native Pennsyl vania Who Represent Other States , in Washington. Washington, Feb. 12. fTIIin champions of good waterways have been In evidence for several days on account of tho convention of tho National Rivers and Harbors Congress. Some of them also attended a dinner In honor Of John If. Small, of North Carolina, retiring chairman of tho Rivers and Harbors Com mittee, who will be succeeded by Mr. Ken nedy, of Iowa, a Republican, Director Gcorgo S. Webster and Assistant Director Hasskarl, of the Department of Wharves, Docks nnd Ferries, and George F. Sproule, secretary of the Commissioners of Navi gation, headed the Philadelphia contingent. They were accompanied by Emll P. Albrecht, of the Bourse, who presided at ono of the sessions of tho congress; Wil liam R. Tucker, secretary of tho Board of Trade: William E. Bernard, of tho steam navigation board,, and others. William J. Conlcn, of the Philadelphia port boosters' committee, was here along with Mayor Frederick W. Donnelly, who never falls when absent from his own burg to do a little boosting for Trenton. Among the gleanings derived from the Philadclphians was tho suggestion of a movement to rc storo to tho Delaware River a nautical tichoolshlp. It Is understood that Governor Sproul, who knows shipbuilding and tho river front, Is Inclined to favor the project. Congress Is committed to tho policy of establishing State marine schools, and co operates now with New York, Massachu setts and the Stato of Washington, which conduct schools. It once mode appropria tions to Pennsylvania and loaned It a schoolshlp, but during Governor Tcner's term the State failed to co-operate and tho government aid was withdrawn. TNJ J- Kr N ADDITION to Senators Pcnroso and Knox, both of whom were born In Penn sylvania, there aro two other natives of the Keystone State In the body "at the other end of the Capitol" Senator Albert J. Cummins, of Iowa, who was born at Car mlchacls and who studied at Wnyncsburg College three years, and Senator S. P. Spencer, of Missouri, who was born at Erie. There nre also several native Pennsylva ulans, apart from the State delegation, In the House of Representatives. Frank E. Doremus, Democrat, of Detroit, Is one of these. He was born In Venango County, William J. Graham, of Illinois, a Republi can, was born in Pennsylvania near New Castle. Frederick N. Zlhlman, a Maryland Republican, was born at Carnegie, and Altoona produced William H. Walton, who Is the lone Representative from New Mex ico. Another Republican nember, Edward Cooper, of West Virginia, first saw the light of day at Treverton. Joseph W. Ford ney, of Michigan, claims Pennsylvania as the birthplace of his parents, and Charles II. Sloan, of Nebraska, attaches himself by descent. They are both Republicans. The only member of either house outside of Pennsylvania who appears to have been born In Philadelphia Is Isaac Bacharach, of the Atlantic City district of New Jer sey. John H. Morln, of Pittsburgh, a mem ber of tho Committee on Military Affairs, Is also of Quaker City origin. m THERE wero three Pennsylvania eliglbles at the large reception goven by Henry W. Watson, of the Bucks-Montgomery dis trict, to the Republican Senators and Rep resentatives Senator Penrose, Joseph R. Grundy, of Bristol, and the host himself. There was another Interesting eligible, and the only one of her kind, in the person of Congressman Jeannetto Rankin, of Mon tana. .No matter what others may thlnl: about It, Congressman Rankin has devel oped Into "a good fellow" among her House colleagues. It was, therefore, In order for Congressman Watson to Invite her to his party and to present her to his friends. But what Interested the Congress men and Senators most was tho long and Interesting conversation .which ensued after the leader of Bucks County was pre sented to the fair Representative from Montana. The Grundles will talk but Joseph R. Insists that Montana Is a large wool-producing State, and that there Is every reason why the manufacturers and producers of wool should have a better understanding. Somo of tho guests, in cluding Congressman Vare, who again hob nobbed under the Fame roof with Penrose, contended that Grundy was explaining to Congressman Rankin the advisability of an early restoration of the American protec tive tariff sjstem, in which the Montana Representative is deeply Interested, a a "rpn.V YOUNG, as the intimato friends of the Philadelphia manager of the Inter national Merchant Marine lines know him, believes In according honors to those to whom they arc due. His long experience with shipping men has taught him to appreciate tho services of naal officers and those em ployed In the mercantile marine. Mr. Young has called tho attention of hli Washington friends to the cane of Captain Harvey, of the White Star liner Persic, which sailed from Boston for London about August 25 last with 2100 American troops. When off the Scllly Islands tho Persic was torpedoed, but with the aid of British de stroyers all the troops and their equipment were safely transferred. The captain of the Persic then handled his vessel in such a masterly way that she was finally brought Into Mary's Roads, and, although, badly disabled, Is soon again to be put In commission. Captain Harvey recently put Into Philadelphia as a passenger on the Haverford. He brought with him some evidences of British appreciation of his services. JUST to test out the efficiency of the Burleson postal system, one of Con gressman Strong's constituents out at Reynoldsvlllo addressed a letter to the "Hon, N. L" Washington. D. C. In due course the letter arrived all right and Is now In Mr, Strong's possession. All of which goes to show that "N. L.," aa the Congressman Is known throughout Arm strong, Clarion, Indiana and Jefferson counties, la about MaWH- to IH AND, GENTLEMEN OF - ..' ,.-:- -jy ...J- - ,.! :,..' t ..v-?.. nn ..:' . .V7Fj-'i-'m tir" ,,rv r.;i .-,.'.. ..t . - -:' utvvF.nJl'V -;V aSaaaaaB IT- 'naalaaaaaaaaKaHriiaiSaV uV ,- 1'irit..Tr.-(il;;-,-,, iSBllVK JU'.- iWtysW nssiV ' jfyi$tim jm jag;,,. JssSr - m ,r..?. W":f8riHy irjjw-4 n.'v f vmmip r. - lin l y 1 ,r..r. !V ' f if iffHBr TTlwHf 'pBfflaaalLaaaaafiwPIHSlaaaaaaaaffi - Ui,j 'i' C 1 i i - THE CHAFFING DISH Visiting Poets TTTE WERE giving a young English poet a taste of Philadelphia, trying to show him one or two of the simple beauties that make life agreeable to us. Having Just been photographed, he was In high good humor. "What o, pity," he said, "that you In America have no literature that reflects tho amazing energy, the humor, the ractf ness of your life. I woke up last night at the hotel and heard a mqtor fire-engine thunder by. There's a symbol of the ex traordinary vitality of America! My, If I could only .live over here a couplo of years, how I'd like to try my hand at it. It's a pity that no one over hero Is put ting down the humor of your lite." "Have you read O. Henry?" we suggested. "Extraordinary country," he went on. "Somebody turned me loose on Mr. Mor gan's library In New York. There was a librarian there, but I didn't let her bother me. I wanted to see that manuscript of 'Endymlon' they have there. I supposed they would take me up to a glass case and let me gaze nt it. Not nt all. They put It right In my hands and I spent three quarters of an hour over It. Wonderful btuff. You know, the first edition of my book is selling at a doub'.e picmlum in London. It's been out only eighteen months." "How do you fellows get away with It?" we asked humbly. T .HOPE Pond Isn't going to book me J- up for too many lectures," he said. "I've got to get back to England In tho Bprlng. There's a painter over thero wait ing to do my portrait. . But there are so many places I've got to lecture everybody seems to want to hear about the oung English poets." "I hear Philip Glbbs is Just arriving In New York," we said. "Is that so? Dear me, he'll quite take the wind out of my sails, won't he? Nice chap. 0bos He sent me an awfully cheery note when I went out to the front as a war correspondent. Said ho liked, my stuff about the sodgers. He'll make a pot of money over here, won't l.c?" a a WE SKIPPED across City Hall square abreast of somo trojley cars. "I say, these trams keep ono moving, don't they?" he said. "You know, I was tremendously bucuea oy mai ueparimem store you took tne to rec. That's the sort of place one has to go to seo tho real art of America. Those palntlnrs In there, by the-elevators, they were uo.io i.y joung English girl. Friend of mine In farj, she did the pictures for my first book, pity you have so few poets over here. You mustn't make me lose my train, l'vo got a date with Vachel Lindsay and Edgar I-ce Masters In New York tonight. Vachel's an amusing bird. 1 must get him over to England and got him started. I've written to Edmund Qosse about him. and I'm going to write again. What a pity Irvln Cobb doesn't write poetry. He's a gleat writer. What vivacity,- what a rich vo cabulary!" "Have you read Marl; Twain?" wo quavered , "Oh, Mark's grand when lies serious; but when he tries to be funny, you. know, It's too obvious. I can always see him feeling for the Joke. No. It doesn't come off, You. know an artjst simply doesn't W imSatSM5T2I-Zi 12, 19W THE PEACE TABLE, THIS IS OUR PROGRAM '.a St.. r."Siiv-- i.n c r.' i tho 'New Arabian Nights' ho really had something to say; tho rest of the time he was playing the fool on somo one else's Instrument. You know stylo Isn't some thing you can borrow from some one eles; It's the unconscious revelation of a man's own personality." Wo agreed. a a T WONDER if there aren't some clubs around here that would like to hear mo talk?" he said. "You know, I'd like to come back to Philadelphia If I could get some dates of that sort. Just put mo wise old man, If ou hear of anything. I was telling some of your poets In New York about the lectures I've been, giving. Those chaps are fearfully rough with one. You know, they'll Just 'ride over one rough shod If you give them a chance. They hate to see a fellow a success. Awful tripe somo of them nre writing. They don't seem to be expressing the spirit, the fine exhilaration, of American life at all. If I had my way I'd make .every one In America read Rabelais and Madam Bovary. Then they ought to study some of the old English poets, like Marvel!, to give them precision. It's lots of fun telling them these things. They respond famously, Now over In my country we poets are nil so reserved, so shy, so taciturn. "V7"OU know Pond, the lecture man in New York, was telling me a quaint story about Mascfleld. Great friend of mjno. old Jan Masefield. He turned up In New York to talk at some show Pond wbb running. Had on some horrible old trench boot's, There was only about twenty min utes before the show began. -Well,' says Pond, hoping Jon was going to change his clothes, "aro jou all ready?1 'Oh, es,' says Jan. Pond was graveled; didn't know Just what to do. So he Hays, hoping to give Jan a hint, 'Well, I've Just gqt to get my boots polished.' Of course, they didn't need It Americans' boots never do but Pond sits down on a bool-pohshlng stand and the boy begins to polish for dear life. Jnn sits down by him, deep In somo Ilttlo book or other, paying no attention. Pond whispers to the boy, 'Quick, polish his boots while he's leading.' Jan was deep In his book, never knew what was going on. Then they went off to the lecture, Jan in his Jolly old sack suit." WE WENT up to a private gallery on Walnut street where some of the most remarkublo literary treasures In the world are ttoied, such as the original copy of Ella given by Charles Lamb to the lady he wanted to marry, Fanny Kelly. There wo also saw some remarkable first edi tions of Shelley. "You know," he said, "Mrs. L In New York I had an Introduction to her from Jan wanted to give me a first edl tlon of Shelley, but I wouldn't let her."f "How do you fellows get away with it?" we said again, humbly. "Well, old man.'v he said, "I must be going. Mustn't keep Vachel waiting. Is this whero I train?" What a' ripping sta tion. Some day I must write a poem about all this. What a pity you have so fen poets ..." Ann Dante says that, i-a the woman suffrage umendmont was defeated, the femae.lstrom will continue as usual. Js&irro withdraw our Li A XL-ui 2-... WITT1 MALICE TOWARD N0NE.WITH CHARITY FSR ALL,WITi1 FIRMNESS IN TiiE RIGIlf, AS 60D GIVES US TO SEE THE RIGHT- LEADERS OF MEN WHEN they are dead, we heap the laurel high Above them, where Indifferent they lie; We Join their deeds to unaccustomed praise And crown with garlands of immortal bays Whom, living, 'we but thought to crucify. As mountains seem less glorious, viewed too nigh. So often do the great whom we decry Gigantic loom to our astonished gaze, AVhen they nre dead. For, shamed by largeness, littlenesses dit; And, partisan and narrow hates put by, Wo shrine our heroes for the future days, And to atone our ignorant delays With fond and emulous devotion try, When they are dead! Florence Earle Coates, in "The Book of Lincoln." Thieves who urcd to visit the Jewelry stores seem now to bo Invading the butchsr shops and carrying oft precious steaks and chops. They know which commodity Is the more valuable. Nat Goodwin was eald at one time to be a millionaire. Whether his Dress agent started tho report or not we are uninformed. 'But tho invintory of the rstato of tho bril liant comedian discloses that It wan worth only $6000 at his death. This does not dis prove the report of wealth, for Nat was a frc spender. Mr. Edison can stretch his arm at right ''& M"t,vc (iwn ma iAim wini cimcr iDBb and can work twenty-four hours without sleep. He Is celebrating hls seventy-second birthday by starting on r vacation trip to Florida, where that other energetic joung man, John Wanamuker, Is planning what ha will do when ho Is a hundred. L What Do You Knotv? QUIZ 1. The assent of how many States was necessary for the ratification of th United State Constitution? 2. Who is Ole Hanson? 2. Whero Is Reunion Island and to what nation does It belong? 4. What l.lnd of an animal is sometimes called I'artlet? 6. What Is a buskin? 6. What Is pemmlcan? 7. Thomas A. Edison celebrated his birth day on Monday. How old una he? 8. What distinguished British statesman has- gone blind? 9. What is an HCglutlnative language? 10. What pirty has the largest number of rtprcsi-ntatlvrs In tho Herman Na tional AEscmbly nt Weimar? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz ' 1. Four kings of England were named W1U Ham. ; 2. "De rlgueur," as used In English, mean- ' required by etiquette. 3. The American commissioners appointed ' . to meet tne iioiuhevist representa tives at Prlnklpo aru William Allen White and George Davis llcrron. , A ....... I .. amnll InnalUil ..km.... . . ...1 1, A uuiiea iv it nitiu,, vui'i-.v.. jvtiiiiAiih uifa vj DV VUCIHI. CIO. 'i 5, In 1011 the populotlon of France was given DS .U,602.:S8. 6. Qeorsla eclehratea ns legal holidays ths birthday of Abraham Lincoln and ths -birthday of Jefferson Davis. ' j 7. Millard Fillmore and Andrew JohaataV wero tailors In early life. 8. Teheran Is the capital of Persia. v' 9. 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