Xi.-J' -. Hi ?v r4 Al i jIi c- vfr's': 10 'J EVENING PUBLIC LEDEfc-PHlijAI)ELPm4 "WBDNlESPAT ' FEBURY' lO, 19:1 "sj , t T t 1 , . f,i i . C 'r & P l V :t to Hanr t , EC rc-sv?.: w u-r ts A&entng public Heftgec EVENING TELEGRAPH v, PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ChftrU H. t-udlnrton. vie Prttldrnt. John C run.rrtry ana Trenurtrj j'n.upP.-oi..n, n if, Willi ami, John J SpurKton, Director. t CDITORTAIi BOAjtDl Ciius It. K. Coins, Chairman aVTID E. Sin LET. .Editor C. MARTIN.... daneral Buelncti ilamttr YuMleked, dally at Pcillo t-awure Buttdlnc. Indeoendenca Bauare. Philadelphia. Utio Cm Prns-Cnlan Bulldlnc jdumi.mi ... Metropolitan lower OIT 403 Ford HulMlnr Loots lOOS Kullrrton nullJIni o lzos Tritium minding- NEWS BUnEAUSl r-7.. ? '; WMsmrsTow Otmi, fly j n. jb var. ennayiTaaja at, ana ivin ai. ftFMW Tats nritin ..The ffuiL Autldtnr IKon Bnuu London Timet SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Th(j Eruci'TO Puvuo Lkdove Ib aerved. to Bub crlhara In Philadelphia and aurroundlnr towna at th rat of twelve (12) ctnd per week paabl t tha carrier. Br mall to point outeld of Phtladalphla. In tk United Statu. Canada, or United state poi- eaalona, poataca free, fitly (SO) cent per month. Sic (It) dollar per rear, payable In advance. To all foreign countrtca on (II) dollar per EnonU. Notics Hubecrlber wtshlnr address cbanced snuit aire old aa well as new addreii. MIL. IM STAfSUT KEYSTOt. MAIN 3 Mo C7 Addrtws all communication to Evenino Puhlio JA&otr, Independence Sguarc. rhiladtlphia. Member of the Associated Pren TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS is exctu Mvtly entitled to the use for republication THI news dispatches credited to It or not lf a:rfle s-rfjf It thl rwiwr ftnrl nlan War local news published therein. ATI rlahts of republication of special di- patches herein are also reserved. rhU.JrlphU. WrdndT. Fehruirr 1. 1919 THERE MUST DC A WAY OUT IAWYERS aro busy trying to draft a con i stltutlonal bill which -w lit put an end to tho abuse of the fee system In tho office of tho Register of Wills. It Is admitted by very disinterested person that a salary of $10,000 Is adequate for the Register, and that tho net receipts of tho ofllce abovo that sum should be turned Into the public treasury. t But tho Constitution forbid the passage tot any special or local bill affecting counties or cities, and the courts have held that the act abolishing tho payment of tho Register by fees here Is invalid. If no way can be found to put an end to tho present abuso under tho Constitu tion as It stands then the Constitution iought to be amended. But It would be better to reviso tho whole document and give to this city and to other largo cities In the state such con trol over their own affairs as will inako It possible for them to pass on all such matters without having to go to Harris burg. MAIN TRAVELED ROADS fTHE State Highway Commissioner Is authorized by a bill introduced in liar risburg. to designate a continuous road across the stato as the Roosevelt Highway. fj t we nave a Lincoln mgnway ana a vyii- 11am Penn Highway and there has been talk of a 'Washington Highway. But long before there was any thought of naming any roadway on tho surface of the earth after these men they had built great high ways across the face of history and had net un milpatnnn and euldenosts 'fllon:? ftaAthei route for the instruction of thoso who j wished to travel that way. XThcy are now main traveled roads familiar to every one. And tho way which Roosevelt surveyed and laid out is likely to become more familiar to us as we move on into the future, a way that leads to the shouldering of tho responsibilities of a treat people In the family of nations. FLIGHT ACRObS THE OCEAN TUB Navy Department's dirigible balloon C-3 has broken tho world's record by remaining in the air thirty-three hours and J six minutes. It has a maximum speed of seventy miles an hour. If It could main tain this speed for the length of time that ft has remained in tho air it could cross tho ocean from Newfoundland to Ireland. Th naval aviators believe that they can cross.tho ocean. They aro hoping to do It before any other aviators succeed. But there stands in their way Just now tho big if. The C-3 has remained in the air long enough to cover the distance, but it has not maintained its maximum speed. .'j-'-fv Under the most favorablo conditions of wind and weather It probably could do It. And men can be found with confidence enough In themselves and in their craft to make tho attempt. But it is not likely fiat the responsible authorities will per jultany one to make the attempt until the -1iargln of risk is cut down. -m MHqm an. Minn n , M ....-. ; WISE WUMfclN AT int, f fcAUfci lAULb ' - t ' T'EBN realization of the vastness of tho ' 'A problems confronting them has moved - ttiB fmn f (ha T)fitla tiffi . a tf '; call in the wise women. The decision re- meets xne nignesi crcuu un me smceruy 01 ::.4'-, the sessions and should bo productive of '..'.interesting and stimulating consequences. ' tJ4r the new arrangement women will ft" j represented on all conference commit- -keea dealing with feminine and children's X interests. An International women's com- v, Sftlttee will also be consulted before final . .action Is taken on certain relevant ques ' "'tions. Some interesting reactions may be ex 'jMoted. Pestiferous suffragist plcketcrs ' ' KU be embarrassed, for to the fanatic a muse without a grievance must Inevitably .Mlc charm. Tho cheap Tory fling about a "flewWhJg circle in Paris" will probably be tted by purblind Jokesmlths, and sn's dictum that "the woman who ites is lost" may be dusted off for the significance of the new proce- ean easily combat such shallow rtes. It Is most heartening that n, whose part in the struggle for freedom was of such high spiritual ar, will be officially enabled to con- ftrHMite her valuable quota to reconstruc- , And that she will be the recipient of Jy. t , OaHPETITION FOR CERMAN GUNS tK than two pages of the last num- t-Wr of the Congressional Record Index with a list of bills donating cap. Oennan oannon to American corn- Nearly forty towna and cities WJast state ate asking for the trophies, i total for the whoio country asked yjH Jj' two weeks oavered by tho n- 2 and Honcsdale and Lancaster and Scran ton and Nazareth are among tho com munities eager to gloat over tho guns with which tho Germans hoped to conquer tho world. And Glrard College, in this city, also asks for a gun that Its students may seo what kind of weapons aro impotent when aimed ngalnst tho moral stnso of civilization, armed to defend Itself. We can think of no better use to which these weapons can bo put. Tho supply is largo enough to meet the present demand, but If every American community shows a tlcslro for a captured cannon competition is likely to become moro ncuto than that which now makes tho framing of a public bulldlngi bill test tho diplomatic abilities of tho Congressmen in charge. BORAH, AS STORMY PETREL, HAS ASSUMED A HARD ROLE Can the Freedom of Speech Retained by s Wireless Snub to the President Be Constructively Used? NLT thoso who do not rightly appre--' elate daredevil courage will blamo Senator Borah for his flat refusal to dine with the President and g)vo ear to direct Information relative to tho Lea am o of Na tions covenant and the conditions that in spired it. If the man from Idaho feels a sense of exultant prldo today ho Is entitled to It. In a flash he achieved a truly magnificent Isolation. He Is a m.m against tho sky. But that sort of eminence entails responsi bilities really enormous. It Isn't every man who can wnub a. President of tho United States by wireless. And when that feat has been accomplished It Invites for the man who performed It tho awed jot piercing scrutiny of tho whole country. It Is up, as they say, to Borah. Ho ha3 created a situation nnd ho must Justify It, Ho has reserved his precious right of freo speech and In doing so ho Im plied that all the other members of tho Foreign Relations Commlttco were either cowardly or Inept when they accepted Mr. Wilson's Invitation to dinner. This is deep water even for a man who is used to fighting strong currents. There was nothing in tho President's cabled Invita tion to suggest that ho wished to gag tho members of the committee or any one else in Congress. A fair reading of his mes t.ago makes It appear that ho wished merely to give them Information not al ready In their possession. Since Mr. Wilson has been at tho very heart and center of tho diplomatic melee In Paris It is logical to suppose that ho knows much that Isn't known In Washing ton, and it Is natural, too, to suppose that If tho country Is to bo treated to a storm of oratory from Washington that oratory should reflect truth rather than emotion. Tho President obviously doesn't wish to havo his road made harder at the Pcaco Conference by obstacles which tho re actionary diplomatists exo waiting to create out of hasty objections raised in Washington. In running counter to this general pur pose, in refusing to listen to the facts in tho case, Mr. Borah gives tho world to un derstand that he has stupendous things to say. Ho will bo listened to eagerly and ho Is likely to bo Judged from this on with a pitiless concentration of critical interest. Tho Senator from Idaho has a right to his opinions. Now, however, ho must ex hibit them In a light so white and merciless that men more ablo and even more as sured would flinch from it. Tho rebel voice that cries out at tho edgo of tho crowd Is ever to be welcomed and esteemed. Now and then It adds something of moment to tho discussion. If Mr. Borah has found In his inner consciousness something mo mentous and convincing and great and Inspiring to utter to tho country; If lie ran speak as a man devoted to truth and to the American people as a whole; if he can show that he knows more about Europe and the perilous complications now exist ing there tlian the man who has just emerged from the midst of-the battle, then he will not hare to apologizo for his de cision to remain away from tho White House. If the Senator merely effervesces and gives himself over to an orgy of verbal flag-waving In tho Interest of his party or ganization, he V.IU very properly be the subject of limitless dislike and derision. Ho will add strength to Mr. Wilson's cause. The white light that he has Invited will shrivel him. The country is in no mood to tolerate sordid partisanship In a crisis like this. Aimless criticism 'Is tho fashion of the hour In America. It falls as widely on the President's critics as on tho President him self. Ours Is a representative government. Mr. Borah has as much right as any ono to break precedents. He was sent to Wash ington to express his opinions. And he represents a sldo of American life and a sort of thinking which is dismissed too idly by those who do not understand it. Borah has the old-fashioned point of view. Tho America that he talks for is the America that produced Bryan and Uncle Joe Cannon. It is the middle western America of old home weeks and content ment, of hard work and happiness, of simple living and simple philosophies. It is tho America that distrusts frills and Innovations. If, flvo years ago, you had told them In Idaho or Nebraska or Illinois that wo should have a vast army In Europe in 1919 they would have sent you to one of the county hospitals as a lunatic. The an cient distrust of Europe, tho old contented belief that we are safely aloof and that we should mind our own business, still moves vast forces of middle western opinion. The people out tliat way are slow to realize that the world Is actually crowding in upon us. It Is evolution evolution In science, in war machinery, in methods of transportation, tliat we are up against. It seemed a few years ago that Europe might have burned to ashes without any possible danger to America. Yet war was forced upon us and it will be forced upon us again if it is to continue. Life Is nar rowing down and the Interests of all the pepples of the world are being Intermingled against their will. America can stand alone that appar ently is what Senator Borah feels. It can stand alono It It is' left in peace. But no one who reads between the lines of the news dispatches from Europe can retain any hope that It will be left in peace. New and Incredible ambitions of empire are smoldering battlefields. If some arrange ment cannot bo devised to tamo the war makers, or at least to limit tho scope of their activities, wo must prepare for end less confusion and strife and loss. 1 a It Is plain that Mr. Wilson, much us ho depends upon mass judgment, cannot tell tho country frankly what he knows about the new subterranean currents In world affairs. Apparently It Is his intention to describe for tho Foreign Relations Com mltteo tho exact nature of tho forces which may again threaten the pcaco of the world. If America is to contlnuo as a dominant force for tho preservation of a civilization now threatened from overhead and from below It Is, of course, essential that tho nation bo Intelligently guided by Its repre sentatives from Washington. Personal dislikes, blgotry( partisan inter ests must bo set asldo for this present at least, because the League of Nations is not Mr. Wilson's personal cause. It is the can io of nil people and of all parties that detest wars of nggresslnu. HIGH BROWS AND LOW Etritopr. havo tl U, Asia, Africa nnd Polynesia their marvels, but America Is tho country In which an eighth wonder of tho world turns up at least onco a month. Ours is not only a country In which .any thing may happen. It Is a land In which everything can happen and docs. When the doctors went on strike In Germany and when the Russian grand dukes began form ing a trade union we supposed that nothing stranger could develop In the way of col lective bargaining. Now New Tork comes Jubilantly to tho fore with a strike of debu tantes. Tho newspapers aro speaking In hushed tones of a "revolt In society." High brow Is, as you might say, ranged against highbrow I Now, In this giddy world there arc two sorts of highbrows. Thero l thp brow that providence decreed to bo elevated re lentlessly on occisions when tho possessor felt tho necessity of reminding inferiors of their placo In the scheme ot life, Tho other Is the highbrow who acquires tho com pound designation In tho pursuit of what ho supposes Js knowledge. Between these two groups a bottomless abyss yawns The attempt to bridge It, the open endeavor of mm supposedly wise to Inflict their Vi Isdom upon the debutantes In tho New York Junior League, is leading to verbal blood shed. Thorsteln Veblen, Prof. Charles A. Beard and Dr. James H. Robinson and a lot of others who believe that everything isn't as it should bo in tho general social struc ture of tho country were commissioned to deliver addresses to tho debutantes and their friends In order that they might know how the other half lives. Tho Junior Leaguo was Instantly split in two. More than half tho members revolted and charged that the gentlemen mentioned aren't good Americans and refused, there fore, to listen to them. Thorsteln Veblen is advanced, as they say. Professor Beard is advanced. They are of tho class of econ omists who are forev cr attacking tho foun dations of the American social order with bursts of polite- speech. A debutante who now and then docs serious thinking for recreation recalled that Mr. Veblen Joined In an appeal for funds to help defend tho I. W. W. In tho Chicago rrosecutlons. Another remembeicd having read in the New Republic picked up in tho home of a friend? an unutterably hor rible thing that Mr. Veblen said of vested Interests. He said a vested lnteiest was "a legltlmato right to get something for noth ing." The Junior League raised its eye brows at this highbrow and deemed him a low one. Petitions were circulated. Speeches were made. The strike was on. At this distance it seems Justirlod. Yes- I tcrday JCr. Veblen and his associates seemed estimable as secke.rs after knowl edge. Today they must appear to any rational minds as proof that all knowledge Is a delusion. For If they wert wise men they would not wish to mako speeches to debutantes. They would lot them go Inno cently to tholr matinees and round up their papas for the locture. Paris, Copenhagen, Pctrograd, London, Berlin, Constantinople and the cities of tho Yalu can reveal many new and Interesting Bides of life. But It Is only in America that a debutante with eyes of defiant innocence can snub a doctor of philosophy and find herself applauded by discriminating minds. It is difficult to be They Neeer lievo all you read Coma Down thoso das. The Navy Department, for example, now claims that Us nonrlsld diri gible balloon C-3 broke all records for timo aloft In the air by going up from Cape May and remaining off the earth - -i little more than thlrty-threo hours. Without wishing to lessen tho glory of the C-3, wo have to re mind a world in danger of being misled that all nonrigid members of Congress can re main In tho air, onco they go up, for moro than thlrty-threo hours. omclals of the New Tea? Jersey Highway De- . partment comp lain bitterly that arrests and revoked licenses do not lessen the number of persons who violate the law and Imperil tratric by driving ma chines while they aro Intoxicated, This re minds us that the motorcars that huddle in the cafe section of Philadelphia after the theatre each evening are owned by folk who are off somewhere drinking tea. The endles3 applause TJaqonllonabljr with which come of tho southern states re welcoming the militant suffragists' "prUon special" would be a bit inore con vincing of chivalry If there wero" better laws for tho protection of woman and child labor In that part of the country. The Hague of nations, 'ot In Frlnt said Senator Varda man in the address that started the nntl-Wllson movement yes terday, is unconstitutional. Ope might say something worse than that of Vardaman. It beglni. to look as If Jimmy Sheehan might be called a profiteer. The reallf big- American Issue will come in April w-itn the Victory Loan. ' Our "open" winter seems to have taken a tip from the latest styles In diplomacy. There la always the consolation that even it the Prlnkipo meet had been held it might, not have made the Russian problem CONGRESSMAN MOORPS LETTER Pennsylvania and the Speakership. Fame of Bryn fttawr; Good Work Done by Army Chaplains Washington, I). C, Feb. 19. TIG events are crowding upon Washing-- lngton, and tho Senator or Represen tative who makes any engagements carry ing him nway from tho capital between this and March 4 will bo taking grave chances. President Wilson Is coming home. That's good news, but quite mo mentous. No ono can tell Just what tho result of this coming Is going to be. Ho Is bringing the biggest message tho Ameri can people have ever received so far as their futuro Is concerned. The big appro priation bills are being rushed, nt least In the House, In anticipation of March 4, when all congressional business censes. It will bo up to the President to deliver and ex plain his world messago, but that is not all. He will have to determine tho problem of un extra besslon of Congress. The two bodies aro not unanimous In their desire for an extra session, although It Is said that some of the Senators would rather re main In Washington than go home. This question, nowever, is noi nseiy to bo set tled to suit the personal convenience of members. Our financial problems are so ' vast and menacing that Congress may bo forced to come back nt a very early date, here Is some politics In tho situation, too. Tho President may not want to bo at the mercy of a Republican Congress. Tho In coming legislators already huvo knives out, nnd It Is a fair prediction that the Presi dent cunnot havo such smooth sailing after March -1 as he has had with a submissive Democratic organization In control. At tho samo time, It must be, conceded that tho Republicans havo not now and are not likely to have a bed of roses whllo Wilson 1s In the White House. Thoy can Interfere with his plans, but ho will still havo tho veto power ns a club over, what they may attempt to do. Because of this 'condition Republicans are doing their best to keep from quarreling over the speakership. At the present writing they are squarely di vided on this question. Tho Mann and Glllett forces have been nlmost at a stand still since tho Pennsylvania delegation de cided to keep out of the right. So much depends upon the Pennsylvania vote that the action of tho State Representatives, when they finally get together, Is a subject of great concern. rpHC good deeds of Congressmen seem to - Hvo after them, as In tho caso of Reu ben O. Moon, of Philadelphia, and Hiram R. Burton, of Lewes, Del. Their service seemingly does not end with the close of their terms in the House. Tho old con stituents come forward with requests of one kind or another, and theso they aro not always disposed to turn down. Henco we hear occasionally from Judge Moon and from the Delawaro doctor, whoso sym pathies are touched by the appeals of old tlmo friends. During tho war more than ever they havo been obliged to take up these personal requests. T)RYN MAWR is gradually attaining na-- tlonal distinction. Not only do wo learn officially of the forthcoming dinner of the Bryn Mawr Fire Association, In which Alba B. Johnson and Samuel M. Vauclaln figure, but the Bryn Mawr Busi ness Association, headed by C, E. Wilson, Is coming to tho fore. The fire company Is known here as an organization In which the millionaires don their oilskins ant hel mets along with the professional fire fight ers, a mighty useful sort of organization. The Bryn Mawr business men, headed by Mr. Wilson, advised Congress that govern ment control and operation of tho great wire systems Bhould continue until Con gress shall have studied the question and determined upon a safe procedure to be followed. There is a big difference of opinion here on the latter proposition. PRIVATE ROYAL Y. GRAHAM, 3D, ot -- the United States mnrlno corps, a stu dent for holy orders in the Episcopal Church, has come back to tho United States and gone td Quantlco, Just outside of Washington, until ho may be discharged to follow his chosen calling. Young Gra ham Is a grandson of the Rev. Dr. Loyal Y. Graham, a prominent Philadelphia cler gyman who died some years ago, and Is a son of Matilda E, Graham, an officer In tho Juvenile Court In Philadelphia. He was on the Verdun front two months In 1918 and wa3 wounded In the Chateau Thierry fight June 7. For three months he was In the Neurological Hospital under going treatment for his injuries. His brother, Ralph Macdonald Graham, is a midshipman at Annapolis. A pretty good record for the Graham family, . . ' 1HAPLAIN WILLIAM REESE SCOTT, of tho United States army, now located at Camp Meade, Maryland, Is a Phlladel phian whom Justice J. Henry Williams and Judgo FInletter will readily recall. Ho la one of those devoted, painstaking men who sticks to his Job no 'matter where he Is sent. A few months before the war ho was located In Honolulu, where he watched the processes of army organization for war. He has seen service In tho coast artillery and In the Infantry. None know better than the men In the service the value of the encouragement and assistance which chaplains who have the jinlUc of human kindness In tholr make-uo afford. Ami 'yet 'the army chaplains seldom figure In the honors or tho emoluments of war. WILLIAM A. LAW, president of the First National Bank, writes about the desirability of having public men with In ternational vision! Charles S. Calwell, pres ident of the Corn Exchange National Bank, puts a spoke In the wheel for the develop, ment of foreign trade; M. N. Wlllltts, Jr., vice president of the Corn, has an eye on the army of occupation In Germany, for personal reasons. The bankers have a wide vision, but even they sometimes com plain of taxation which Is essential to the. maintenance of tho "big- things" la coa- -iv-.i. ?? iii i w in i i i ii m ' i wii is in in ii iiw n mii i mi i lain is hi 'in i . . . -. " j ii I i iii i"ahj ewui1 jf nil ;" maiM lal u hi ib MP wi a w af jm r. ' ' ' '. . Ui m hi" -- r. lallBWl I M I lliaalW Ii " 'I '" i 'in' i'i WT'laSW M ll'f 'Wl i"'aw 'PI"' W M Jt--?-Jr -- aa iw ill iii !! i aaaae i n i i i i i im i u i i mti r-.t-Vf.Fr.i.- ..-j-tC;. .v-r-.tj.-'"- - ---'--- ..-- V--ajf J Tatt f J I n" ;fe-: -!-f&-T.- fifcj-r i wii i1 in mm . ' T':-;--r;-r-r.V-i.i31S? i ".. )-- 1P- . . If - ..." I- ? liiV a- iT' 'aJ.. J- ... J . - l.-" ...- . . r-1 - - i -C-r" T..--" . jf-" . j'v RUBBER The Return of the Colors (rtro colored regiments that distinguished themsches on the field of honor have just returned to this country.) DEE dem bay nets flash and flfckor! Boy! dat Jazz hits mo like liokerl Hear 'cm whale dem kettle drums Wheol dat cullud reg'ment comes! Clash! Thud! Bang"! Zing! Babe, ma heart does surely sing! HONEY Boy I dcro's Henery Johnson Watch yo step, girls, he's a bear! Dat's de kid killed, fo'teen Bushes: Zlngo, zlngo, dat. Jazz air! , Honey, honey, dis Jazz stuff'll 8horely make ma feet go shullle Clash! Thud! Bang! Zing! Watch me pull dis buck-an'-wlng! Wickedest babes I evah saw: Slashed dem Bushes an' ate 'em raw! Dey ate dem Bushes fer a picnic lunch An' foun' no white meat in de bunch. HALLELUJAHI See dem knives! Carve me a bit o' Kaiser's gizzard Say, I'm sorry for dem Bushes' wives Dere's Jim Europe, he's de wizard: See Jim Europe lead dat band! O de wall of dem trombones! Kid, I'd eat right outa his hand Click, clack, rattle do bones! Hear de squeal o' dat crazy flute, Watch dat Gov'nah man salute! Ain't dat roaring Jazz a daisy? Ev'ry cullud heart is crazy! WATCH dat big buddy ovah dere, Dat's a boy wld a Craw do Garc Zing! Zing! dem flags do flutter, Babe, dis tastes as sweet as butter Hear dem drummers boom an' thunder: Boys dat plowed de Bushes under! Clash! Thud! Bang! Zing! Watch 'cm swing, girls, watch 'em swlngl SEE dat cunnel wld a proud, proud walk! Dem boys makes him look whlto as chalk! Dem big officers is mostly white, But black's de color fo" love an' fight! Babe, I'd like to hug dat dandy Must hug some one dat you, Mandy? Yo' black face como Hlnda Handy! See dem baynets flash on' flicker, See dem ribbons on de flag! Never was no doughboys slicker Put old Kaiser In de bag! THUD! Bang! Boom! Clash! See dem chicken-carvers flash! Hear dat Jazz, as strong as whisky Lord, my heart Is debll-f risky; Watch dem he-boys marchln' back Praise de Lord dat made 'em black! "The Fiehcr Poet" "I sailed In a ship of fancy On the grim gray billows of time. And I caught a netful of silver Joy In cunning meshes of rhyme." CHARLES WUAUJua oiuiuv. I sat me down In the bow o me boat, With me soul softly singing a lav, An' I patted mcsclf on' the 'urfh o' mo bad: 'Cause I'dmcndcd me meshes that day. While I held them there in ecstacy The drips splashed me over vrtth brine, Then I gathered them in with the Up o' vxe fin, And sold them at five cents a line. ALEXANDRA. -- Aniwers to Correipondents NED MUSCHAMP As yet, nothing. Return that book and all will be forgiven. AN ANONYMOUS LADY Much grat ified. ALBERT J. R. SCHUMAKER Hearty congratulations! ELMER P. BLENKINSOP Please In form us whether a cinder from George Glbbs's pipe really burnt a hole In your trousers. We dare not print your contri bution until reassured on that topic. The libel laws are veiV strtet. , v , 4 stAsarin tiL ' "-- -i-i FIXING HIS FEET tPMIiiJii i Piil i il &&&. -...-" .... , ..-i-, . - .-.", Ji-rr ni'!: ' wJ"rr...7i HEELS dieted that the world would bo saved by a journalist, but wo aro not tho one. Try George Creel. GENEVIEVE It Is a matter that should bo entered upon reverently, discreetly, ad visedly, soberly. Wo havo this on tho high est authority. BENTINCK Try corrosive, sublimate. Any druggist will supply If you state the purpose for which It Is required. , - DISGUSTED READER You aro' wrong in averring that "our intellect Is Improperly exposed." Wo take great precautions with our intellect, as it is tho only ono we have. It Is only exercised on very rare occasions. We havo nlluded recently 'to quaint epi taphs. A correspondent sends us the fol lowing from a gravejard In Birmingham, England: Here lies tho mother of children seven, Four on earlli and three in heaven; Hie three In heaven preferring rather To die with mother than livo with father. If these transatlantic voyages continue. Rear Admiral Gravson will positively know port from starboard. When a Man's Fifty When a man's twenty, he's troubles aplenty, Looking around for a wife, Saving his pennies, week after week, Caught by the bloom of a peach-blossom cheek. And spending It all for a taxlcab tariff. Buzzing 'round Bess till she leaves In a tiff. When a man's thirty, the honeymoon's past, And ho struggles along on a song, Buying fur coats nnd a flno velvet hat, Whllo the edge of his collar Is worn as a mat, With his mother-in-law and her sisters aghast At extravagant ways which they say can not last. , When a man's forty, his children havo measles, They whoop nnd havo mumps on each side; They break every pane, drive tho neigh bors Insane, And boro him each night, asking ques tions inane Of larkspur and teasels, of chickens and weasels, Whllo the baby shrieks loud for a piggy back ride. But when a man's fifty, he's Just at his prime, With his good wife handsome and thrifty: With nothing to worry, where no ono con tends, He sits leather-chaired, and draws dlvi- . dends, By a typewriting maid who is winsome, sublime; Lord! How I'd like to bo fifty! J. M. BEATTY, JR. Mr. Garvin, the famous editor of the London Observer, says that tho league of nations Is "only halt a league." At any rate, In Tennyson's words, It's "half a league onward." SOCRATES. Herbert Q. Tully favors skip-stops. Of courso he does. He Is vice president of the Rapid Transit Company. Governor Allen thinks that too many sol diers were killed In the last three days of the war. Why does he not make It the last three J ears? , Isn't it Just a trifle Inconsistent for the men who drew up the Income tax bill to com plain of complexities In the league of nations covenant? . Bernstorff, who was active In brlnglnr America Into the war, la not to be allowed to participate in the peace negotiations. The "?" WW'iW ,J . v'lierj.--, vvc i "iKW '"' jJE'WC.Ci?" r . . WuL.1T.t jrt."tt tV--tt":.ws!v;..a?' i f2SB&&?Z ,?;. -Liza W7Vlrr rr. .-.-t. .-. .''-:.-u.fr. r .a A YOVNG GOD T SAW a young god, In a crowded corner -- of tho heaven, Carrying under his arm a graceful world, As one might carry a cherished pet To tho merciful chloroforming. Ho was a kindly god, klndly and efficient. And his soul ached at what ho was about to do. For he had poured his spirit into hi world Love, and a craving for liberty, And throat tightening beauty, and many good gifts -,' Along with many that were evil. ' ,", But tho timo had come. His world strayed bloodily too far; t t It demanded too much' of his spirit: Thero was a bleak economy In heaven, , Lovingly and tenderly, ho gavo It all, Babylon and Bethlehem, Aetna and polar sea, J Nero and Joan of Arc, Helen, Judas and Jesus, To merciful death. A chilling cinder of a world , Scatters, eyeless and tongucless, , Through the field of dead stars. ' s Clement Wood In The Lyric. ', When one looks at Washington It it necessary to admit that Mr. ..Wilson Is not ' tho only member of tho government who Is now- at sea. The Salvation Army Is going to find Jobs for barkeepers and distillery workers J, when the dry days arrive. This reminds us that a lot of the liquor men are already t doing missionary work In Mexico,- , Marshal Foch seems to have conducted ', the anntstlce renewal on the lines laid down ', by Theodore fftoosevolt when ho declared that-'J Germany's part In peace negotiations should be confined to saying "Yes, Blr," I. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1, What Is the size of the Island ot Helgo land In the North Sea? , , I, What Is a litany? 3, What noted English artist was the' original of Du Mburler's character of Taffy, In "Trilby"? ' 4, What city Is known as the "Athens of South America"? E. Who Is surgeon general of the United States? G. Who first discovered ,the presence of the Spanish fleet In the harbor of Santiago "' de Cuba, In 1808? ( ' , 7. What Is the real name of tho author of "Mr, Dooloy"7 8. What Is the meaning of "Effendl" often affixed to names of Turks? 9. What Is thaumaturgy? , 10. Hour many, articles composed the Con- stltutlon of the United States before, any of the amendments were adopted? ' i i . v . .1 , .' J'v' niiawcrs tu icsiciuovo viul 1, The date originally set for the meeting' of the Russian factions at Prlnkipo was February IS. S. James K. Paulding was an American novelist, poeti historian and politician. His dates aro 1779-1860. 3. Teleology is the doctrine of final causes. 4. "Paul Pry" is a name sometimes applied to an Impudent, meddlesome person.' He appears as a character In a comedy ot the tame name, attributed to Doug. las Jerrold and produced In London In 1863. 5. Bemadln de St. Pierre, a French author, wrote the romance "Paul and Vlr-, glnla." His datca are 1737-1814, (. Batavta is the capital of Java, ( 7, The Initials P. Q. stand for QuebM Trovlnce, Canada. 8. Blr Wilfrid Laurler, ex-Premler of Canada, la the noted statesman who died Mob day. 9. 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