.vt v "V Vi, 10 EVEXISU- PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1919 wOi r J n A uemn$ public Hedge c THE EVENo'tELEGRAPH PUBLIC LEDCER COMPANY cinva it. k. curiTi.i, rmiNT Charlta II. tanHnrton. Vic Preaidann Jnhn C. Martin. Srrrttarr ni1 Traaaurari Philips Colllna, John B. Wllllame. John J, Spurtaon, Diractora, KDITOnlAI, nOAIlDl Ctici II. K, Cntn. Chairman Tixvw r.. tuiur.r f.dltor JOHN' C. MAnTlN,....Qnr) Bualnata lUmctr rubllthfd dallr It rcitlo I.IMM Bulldlnc, tndartndence Square, Prilldlphl . ATtaillo CiTt rftts-Vnlen llulldlnt f:n Tone. . . 208 Mttrorolltan Towar itioit (M roM Hull line S.T. I.ocia.... . 1001 Fullarton lunulas Cnicioo . .. iti'i trlbunt Ilulldlns NJtWB nunEAL'S: TVilBI.KOTON IlllliC, N. E. Cor. Pannartvanla Ava ind 14th St Nw Tone Heme... . The Sun Rulldlnc London Iiciuc. London Hwi nUBscnirTtOK Tnnsis Tha nrMo PriLio Lirota li aarvad to aub-arrtr-fra In rhlladalrlita and aurroundtnr towna at tht rata of twehe (121 rfnta pr wark. payatla to tht carrlar. Tty mall to point outatja of Philadelphia. In tha United xtataa Canada or I'nttrd statu poi aeaslona, potare frr AftN 1501 rants pr month fix (IS) dollara per aar. ra)abla In advance. To all tertian countrlta on (111 dollar par month. Nonet Sutacrlbara wlahlnr addrtaa cnanstd tnuat sua old a vll aa nw adlra. HELL. JOM Ttl.MT knTOM. MUN !" C3" Address tlV cei imiitilcrthoiM to 7t tfino PtiOlfe Ltdotr, I itl'veudtnrt Squar Vhiladelphti. Member of the Anoeiatrd Pren ' nir. issociATCD p ?;&. m rxnjii- ttvelv entitled to the use for tepubllcatlon f all news dispatches credited fi It or not themls credited In this papet . on J also the local netcs published therein. Ml rlohts of repu6I(cnf(ou of special nTt Watches herein are also reserved I'Mladrlahla. Tiiridir. Ifbrutrj :J. IMI TUB FIRST GI.IMMEK 01' NET DAWN rpiin demand of the men who tire draft- in? the new city eirirter for home rule In tho matter of street cleaning methods and the aetlvlt.v of the committee on nut niclpnl affairs of the Chamber of Com merce in arousing interest In the next mayoralty campaign nrc symptoms of un awakening which promises much for the future When the influential bu-ilhes uml Pio fessional men aie Indifferent to the Kind of government we havo that government wl".l be bad. The unsatisfactory conditions that have prevailed here for rears have Krovvn up because the men who should have taken mi interest In good govern ment have neglected their elutj. Tlicj have been too busj with their own pilvate affairs to libthcr with the larger affairs of the whole community They have sat In their libraries and In their clubs ami talked and thought of everything but how to get the city so governed that a dollar's worth of work would be delivered for vet j dollar paid In taxes. "We do not mean to Inipl.v Hint the have been woisc offenders than men of the same kind In other large communities. Cit government in America is u bjword becauso of the indifference to it of the great mats of business men. The have farmed out government to men who have made a business of it, who havo exploited the cities as a private preserve for their own profit and enjovment. Thcie arc signs of a new d.iv dawn ing in Philadelphia. It will dawn if the men now active continue the campaign which thev have begun, for the moment an alternative to the things from which o have been suffering Is presented for tho approval of the voters they will wel come it with enthusiasm. But they must bo convinced that that which is offered them will be an Improvement over tho things which have lcen. Otherwise the will prefer the evils they know to others the extent ot which thej know not. EXPANDING THE "TEMPERATE" ZUaC pOXTrtAKY to a rather prevalent im-'-' presslon. the "dr" L'tiltcd States that Is scheduled for July 1, 1919, will not bo unique Canada goes entirely luiuorless on Ma) Dav . and even now thtre are onlj " nlnetj towns In the Province of Quebec where John Uurlcvcotn, has legal standing The great slate of Wouoia in JleKo ncarlv twice the area of Pennsylvania, prohibited the sale or alcoholic beverages some time ago A bill for a" white-ribbon Cuba wan recently Introduced In the na tional Congress in Havana. Americans who have been finding it hard to realize what a "Tempeiate" Zone of literal sig nificance will be like ate under additional pressure to plctuie Its certain extension into the Arctic regions with a possible off hoot In the Trop,. - Canada's abtinencc Is a tesull of war legislation for the ptohlbltlon regime thcie Ik booked to enduro for only one tai following the date of tho signing of the peace Xteat.v But teetotalism in Sonora, once flowing with pulque, rests on no such temporary basis, while the Cuban plan is said to have "teeth" of permanent In Usivcness Tho significance of the situation lies Jn the fact that if a really powerful anti pi ohlbitlon reaction Is coming, It Is already feai fully belated. The 'Great American Desert" from but a little way above the Tropic of Cancer to the North Tole will be existent bv next Hummer Jf k mistake has been made the anti-ub-stalners wilt have the opportunity to prove that it Is territoilally one of the biggest t blunders in hlstorv WILLIAMS APPROPRIATE CHOICE COMPARED to Amerongen, Ht Helena was Broad and Chestnut stitcts. Wil liam Ilohenzollcrn's utter obscurity proves this, as It also Inspires revision of the orig inal opinion that he was more fortunate " n Jils place of exile than Napoleon Bona parte. -To the latter the (mpdthetlc Las Cases played the role of a scdulou Kurl llosner, tpuchlng up tn resounding phraseology the vCorsIcan's observations and propagandizing wun untiring zcai on ucuaii oi me appeal ing "Napoleon legend," The ex-emperor 'if the Trench and his chronicler unc.ues- ij tlonably passed many pleasant times to- Bether, j St. Helena, moreover, admirably "qualifies at one of the globe's island para- fL'JtS- t I' V. .It.. nt-A I. Inn I... ...iMfl-l .lm.l.,l.il njciurtsque. Its climate auavc. never truly d torrid, and Iongwood, where Napoleon was comfortably housed, enjoys tho refresh- ' MliC delights ot bn altitude of 1700 feet kfeeve sea level. After a quarter of a ccn- j'-.'-lirj? ot.oumpalgnlng might there not have I cMMnMieraoierpaim in sunny, practiui -rK Wl.Mltmf ' 1ltWPv uxv -Atwnuo isie . - ' W gr-nut -', U work! during Napoleon's six jears of enforcofl rcsldcnco there. Jamestown harbor, an Important port of call on the India route, bustled with activity between 1S1G and 1821. Cooped within tho tiiurow confines . ' the Ucntinck estate, can the last of the Ilohcnzollorn monarchs regard the futo of tho world's greatest military genius with aught but envy" No ltoner cheers tho sham "conqueiot " No Interviewer records his babbling The Netherlands have a wretched winter climate. It begins to look a It the Bluff of Berlin In choosing his own place of exile had for a while at least saved persons, unaware of how de lightful some Islands can be, from select ing one altogether too good for his deserts. Whatever he has lost. Mr Hohcnzollern seems to have kept his senso of proportion AM Ell ICAVS HAM) IS UN THE PLOW Mr. VTHmhi Vani to Kiiou t hctlier It Will Hold Pad to tlic End of the I'urnm TI" MR WI1..SOV had wished u motto A for ills Boston speech he would havo quoted the words of tin- tlreat Idealist, who said. "No man having put his hand to tho plow and looking back, is fit for Him kingdom of C!od ' Tim I'rcfldt'iit did not lefei to the lcaguo of nations In set terms He said illscnsloii of it was piematurc Ho came hack to le port piogiess tovard me leullzatlon of the Ideals to establish which America went Into the war. Arrangement of details took time. There had to be careful considera tion of u multitude of questions, all of which wcte moro or less Intimately l elated with the gieater question of drnlting ,i treat which shoutd adjust the issues ot the present wai and make future conflicts difficult lie tepoited that Kurope, wlihh had dis ttusted America for throe eais and hail suspected her of gross and selfish mate rialism, had changed Its opinion. When we sent our men acioss the seas to light for the realization of an ideal Hurope re sponded at once, because wi demonstrated that wp sought not selfish advantage but the freedom of free men rverj where. When the war became u fight to make the world safe for tin plain people who live in it. the pliln people who were fighting began tn lift their heads to heaven tuut to fight with a new ardor and n new hope Europe discovered that "America not only lirlil Ideals hut acted Ideals." And he assured his heaicis that the wai had been won b that inspiration. The tide of Idealism is running high not only here hut in Europe There is no mis taking this tact. And as the President said. nn man who resists it "will find him self thrown upon a shine so high and barren that it will seem ns if he had been separated fiom human kind forever" The ideal toward which wc arc striving i the abolishment of war. that our children and our children's child! en maj be spared the honors of the last four years L'nless Hip arrangements of the Peace Conference arc guaranteed by the ilvllbed world, the President Is rlcjit when he sas the) will not last a gcncradni. It is up to America to decide whether it will Join with the other civilized nations In making that guarantee. Wo went to the help of the world: that Is. wc put our hand to the plow, and now there arc men who would look back. If we palter now, If wo prove that wc can hold ourselves true to an ideal for mils, a few mouths, we shall not only earn the contempt of tho world and forfeit that respect which we well-nigh lost through three cars ot doubt and hesitation, but we shall piove ourselves as a people unlit for tho kingdom of God, which devoted men aio now doing their best to set up on eatth. We do not believe that the lonllileiiie in the peoples of Europe, which Mr. Wll-on frequently expressed when on the other side, nor Ills conlldonco in the. people of America, which hi- made known in Boston )esterdaj, is mlspl.ueil. Statesmen on both sides of the eceau should read and pondei these portentous sentences which oocuued near the end of his latest remarks: The nations of the world have set their heads now to do u great thing, anil they ale not going to slacken their purpore And when I speak of the nations of the vsorld I do not speak of the governments of the world 1 spenk of the peoples who con stitute tl nations of the uoild They are in tho saddle anil the ai going to see to it that if their piesent governmental do not lo their will some othei governments shall. And the see ret Is out and the pres ent governments kno li If tho Euiopcan governments fail the people who have saffeied agonies because their iiileis either failed to piotcct them fiom a gnat calamity or dellbeiutcly brought that calamity about, then the peo ple themselves will change their govern ments. Whispuings of discontent with the slowness of rule-m aio alrcudy being heard in England and Prance. In America there- is a handful of men demanding that we tut n our backs upon our icsponslbllltles and wash our hands of the whole matter. These men aio quibbling about constitu tional Inhibitions and national sovereignty and tiadltlonal policies and aie forgetting the great world Issues with which wo aro Inextilcably Involved whcthei we will or not The Piesldeiit has ananged to see some of these men tomorrow night In Wash ington, und It is understood that he Intends to explain to them Just what is Involved In the lcag-ue-of-natlons plan He pi of esses to have confidence in their patriotism nnd in their openness of mind. We do not suppose that he will Insist on an accept ance of cery lino of the league covenant as made public. Hut unless wo mistake his Intention lie will use all the liilluence which lie possesses to persuado them to agree to Its general purposes and to com mit tills nation to a polley which will throw the weight of IN power and wealth on the side of world prare, not only for Its own sake, but for tho sake ot the whole family ot nations of which It Is a distinguished mcmbei ,!S ORIENTAL INVERSION THE quler of resentment folt In Japan whenever her subjects are denied rights of expatriation is a striking commentary on the wide disparity still existing between Oriental and western modes of reasoning. American opinion regarding those ot our i-rlsen "l'0 chanwo their nationality Is Jt- let be tart. .A'llHum Waldorf Astor had a liberal dose of It. Germany, Prance and Italy hao long refused to recognize the adoption of a new national status by emigrants from those lands. Until 1888 tltcat Britain clovo to tho rigid doctrine "once an Englishman always an Englishman." "Once a Japuncfc. per haps subsequently something ory differ ent." sums upt however, the eastern doc trine, Insistence on which is creating big nlflcant Issues in tho Peace Conference. The Island empire would prefer that her roaming subjects lu Austtalla. California, South Africa or Mexico should becomo Australians, Callfornlaus, .South Africans or Mexicans rather than that they should remain pledged to the Mikado. This view point directs pressure on the non-Japanese nations to grant to new comers to their shores privileges which these countries have been always rather anxious to withhold from their own wan derers. Even in u reconstructed world East and West continue to approach cer tain questions from most divergent angle? CHVMP CLARK, RY AM, MEANS CHAMP CI.ARK was referred to at a Washington-Wilson dinner In the na tionul capital ns "the second most dis tinguished American" nnd nominated for the piesidencv Tile man who did not get the nomina tion lu 191- smiled at the speaker and ictnarkcd, "Darkls is wlllln'" Thus encouraged, the toastninstci. when his turn came, expressed tho hope "that Champ Clark will bo the next Piesident of the United States." So the dinner, arranged to celebiato the achievements of two Presidents, was re solved Into an affair to boom the nomi nation of a less distinguished American. Clark 1ms a hitherto unsuspected or at anv rate unnoted, claim on the consldeiu tloti of the Dctnociat.s, who hope to elect their presidential candidate net eai, a claim which ranks him with both Cleve land and WiNon. tho only two men whom the Democrats have elected since ISJG All thiec have taken liberties witli their baptismal name. Cleveland was chrls tened Stephen Grover and dtopped the Stephen. Wilson was named Thomas Woodrow and dropped the Thomas Clatk was culled llcauchamp bj his ndoiing mother, after her own father. But the canto outh thought that Ileauchamp was not u name with which votes could he won nnd he dropped the flr&t syllabic and secured an alliterative and what ho thought a demorcatle tIe .which has Justified his Judgment b.v earrving him to success in n long scries of elections to Congress and won him a majority ot the delegates to the 1912 presidential convention. Now If picccdcnts count for anything, Clark- is tho man for tho Democrats to tic them selves to next .vear No nomination could give the Republicans greater satisfaction Tho inllltai.v tteatj vviiicn Marshal Toch will soon present to lli-r lluiiilv Vln-I llr 1I-.I tho Germans will pro vide for the demobilization of the German nrmj down to a small peace basis of be tween five and ten divisions of 10,000 men each Before becoming unduly optimistic over the news, It may be wlso to recall tho fact that a German delegate to the Socialist conference, at licrnc mado the following sig nificant statement- "L'ndcr the pretense of defending tho Prussian border ugalnst the Bolslievlki and the Poles, a volunteer nrmj of con 00o Is being organized b) Hlndenburg lu Potneranla and eastern Prussia " Germany will play fair only when she must. American experts arc Moix-j in .lunk said to favor the sink ing of surrendered Ger man uar'hlps because a division ot the spoils will be difficult and attended with complica tions Tho Prcncii, n. thrifty nation object to such waste. Why not sell the ships for junk and elevoto "be proceeds to the Inter national Red Cross." Tho balvution Ami) All l-ua fur m will hereafter gather -IticWnot funds for Its work In an annual drive, und the passing ot the tambourine will be dis continued. Now let some Salvation Army poet write a song celebrating the passing of the passing of the tambourine Padcrcwskl finds life noadas forever at concert pitch 'Ihere will be no setting up ixnclsck aftei July 1. Bolshevism is stusslng the last sj liable of Budapest. Any victim with a stor of ii hold-up iim) now tell it to the marine. Boston had the President's Inain, but Philadelphia has grandpa's lie-ait What lias become of the eurmuffs the thoughtful citizen was wont tu vveai at this season of the 3 em " The pullie lime not et managed to make the crime wnvti waver Tli.rc v. no let up In the hokl-ups The Allies will need it lung spuon to skim off the scum that rule to the top when the Russian pot boiled. In Spain another eatilnct lias quit Pull tlcs In that country must ncceHa.ii lly be taken with a gri-Ht deal of resignation. I.at nltiit's meeting at the Metropolitan Opera Houie whs nut a dead one. though 'the Will and Testament were prominent. Kurope promises May peace, but Americans can't help thinking that It Is likely also to bear the "May I not?" Impress. All trusts arc not iniquitous after all. Witness the mighty one which Americans, according to Mr Wilton, have built up In Europe Champ Clark may or may not have hoped of succeeding Woodrow Wilson In the White House, but it may be accepted as a foregone conclusion thOjt he wilt not call on William Jennings Brjan to help his boom. It Is patriotic, of course, but is It not a trifle Incongruous to honor, as lias been pro posed, so intensely live a. factor In American history aa TUdpre Itovseylt wth a. . II ..A li 'U.U.... t...l lory nameo a UsmKuss T-' v" BRINGING WATER TO JERUSALEM SOME months ago an account xvas pub lished of the new water , supply which tho army under Sir Edmund Allenby had contrived for Jerusalem. Tho event was of great importance to the people of Jcru salem, and very cxprcsslvo of tho change, from Turkish to British administration. Since tho llcrodlan system fell Into de cay Jerusalem was dependent upon an Inadequate- plpo lino from Solomon's Pools nnd upon the clstorns, public nnd private, which storo up rainwater. The cisterns, for the most part, had become dilapidated, foul and breeding places for tho malaria fly. The new supply Introduced by the en gineers means freo water, clean water nnd more water, nnd u great gain in sanita tion The January Issuo of the "Quar tet 1 Statement of the Palestine Explora tion I-'und" prints tho full report of Major Stephen, 11, E., who designed nnd executed this notable public Improvement in the city which appeals to so many millions of three faiths. The report contains some addi tional facts worth bringing out. The r.e cessltj for a new sottrco of supply arose from tho circumstance that tho army was di inking up all the good water nnd most of the bad, so that a water famine was threatened for tho Hummer. The old sup ply consisted of cisterns Vltli a storage, capacity of 360.000,000 gallons and a plpo supply from Solomon's Pools of 10,000 gal lons a day. Many of tho cisterns were, In fact, empty, when not dirty. Tor prac tical reasons a new source could be found only to the south of Jerusalem. Somo spilng heads were found lu the Wad! Arrub, twenty-two kllometerH from Jeru salem on tho Hebron road. On investiga tion they turned out to be fed from ancient underground nqucducts, probably the work of Herod. These spiings had n iell of 14,000 gallons an hour of ab soltttelv puie w.iter. A pumping station was creeled, a icservolr with a capacity of 300.000 Milluns was built on the Hebron load nineteen kllometcis from Jerusalem, a pipe line to tho city was lild and a icservolr of 2 000,000 gallons was erected there Within two months water was pour ing into Jerusalem at the rate of 230,000 gallons a da). It Is estimated that the new-old sources thus tapped again after manv ccntuiles once jlelcled, and can again jleld, 1,000,000 gallons a day. That fact Is one ot a host which Indicate how much more was once done with Pales tine and the great potentialities of the countiv. Tor Jerusalem there has been opened out a clean nnd regular water sup ply in place of a dirty and irregular one. It Is a great boon to the poor, nnd should lead to the stamping out of malaila. Manchester Guardian. RIDING WITH ALLENBY i Ai I dieam, it .ccim to wc 1 hai-c ilddcn ulth .Ulcnbi' ON A day, in the time long gone. 1 rode into tho heart of the dawn Out of Gaza. My desert steed. Son of a sire of the NedJId breed. Took the breath of tho morning sun With never a pause till we had won O'er rocky sweep nnd o'er sandy swell To the liven House of Gabriel. Then, eio the shut of the eve, wc came Whcie the last red streamers lit with flame The mosque of Helnoii set In the 'vale, With its towering minarets, nnd its tale Of Isaac's nnd Abraham's tombs. Where only the Knlthful In tlic glooms Ma bow, vvhllo faintly tho cressets flare, And the swart muczr.lu calls to prajcr. Thence on to Bethlehem we sped, With the dome ot Allah overhead, And never a sign of a cloud In lew To blur the breadth of its gold and blue. ho he matched, and It seems to me I have ridden tetth Allcnbyl THEN Jerusalem, and the hill Of Colgotha, and the sacred, still Church of the Holj Sepulchre! The Vale of the Mount, and the cease less stir Of pilgilm feet wheie the Chi 1st onco strayed, Under Ihe ciuel Cioss down-weighed! I rode by Jenln with its palms Clear cut ngnlnst the noonday calms; I rode by Nablous, I rode by Naln, And over tho wide Esdraelon plain l.'p the. slope to Nazareth, ' Where out of the dim bazaats the bieath Of the shaven sandalwood was blown. I skirted tho snow -crowned mountain zone Of Ilermon, und saw tho morning stai Silver the loots of Keif Hawar. And then I looked on the lovely loom Of orange, pomegianute and citron liluoin, (A bower that to tho Prophet's eves Was the picsclence of Paradise) And came to Damascus by the gate That leads to the ancient Stieet i ailed Straight No hr .luiiihcd, and it seems to me hair ildden tilth AUcnby! NEVER again the Turkish blight On all this land of lure and light' Never again the brutal ban I'loin far IJeeishcba unto Dan! Rather tho beam of His promised Peace In this homo of holy memories! His peace for all men under the sun i-'iom Ncljo north to Lebanon; His peace thiough the hand that set them f t ec ' hntr ildden with Allenbi)! Clinton Scollaid in Asia, .o matter how the February calendar disputes It. 191. with prodigious bounds toward world peace, Inspiring!) deserves classification us a leap year. Secretary Daniels, a few days ago, talked by radio telephone to President AVIlBon, 800 miles avvny at sea. This was one of the In frequent times when the President couldn't talk back Time Is a. confirmed sentimentalist. A pair of Sir Walter Scott's old slippers has been sold In tendon for $80 In spite of the known fact that his poetical feet were not nlnas correct. A correspondent of the Frankfurter Zel tung, writing from Spa, sayas "The English have not yet arrived. They were not able to keep pace with tho swift marching time of the Germans." Which suggests tho story of ti colored gentleman who kicked a. Jack- rabbit, from tils path wUfe the adjqmtlon, ''aWaV VlHV fa-lf b rdtauLan Jdlail j In . 1... tat BENEATH CONTEMPT, BUT WORTHY '. ELBOW PRESIDENT WILSON'S ship ncativ ran aground in Boston harbor. It seems as though Hoston should have dredged tip those tea leaves by this time. The nct Liberty Loan will undoubtedly be a success. It comes, we believe, during Lent When the ctowds ubioad hailed Mr. Wilson with enthusiasm, he snld ho re garded It as u ttlbuto to the American people. When the American peoplo hall him with enthusiasm, he sajs It Is a tribute to the efforts of the I'caco Conference, What nrc vou golnsr to do to get over n personal tribute to a man like that? Think how baffled Mr. Borah mist feel. Sjnllictic Poem T wiote to n noct. savlnc itenilinc- our noems has convinced me I That ou could write a good novel In prose-." And when he got my letter Tho poet thought to himself, "Did he buy my book, Or did somebody lend it to him?'' What Is going to become of the ai lists who used to draw the goats for the Bock beer signs'" 1 lie Troubles of Press Correspondents Itofloii. Fell. 23. President Wilson to night Is passing his tlmo in such vvnys as passcngets do on a ship that has arrived homo but has not landed. A dispatch to tho New York Times. Meaning, wo suppose, tolling over tho customs declaration on that long list of gifts from abroad. Boston, Feb. 3 1. President Wilson this afternoon is pusslng his time In such ways as oratots do when they are delivering a speech that has not yet been finished. Dispatch to the Chaffing Dish. Boston, Feb, 51. Your conespondent this afternoon Is passing his time In such wuvs as coriespondents do when C000 seciet service men sunound the man whom they wish' to interview. Dispatch to the Chaffing Dish. Washington, Feb. 2,"i.- Senator Borah this morning is passing his time in such ways a. statesmen do when they have de clined an Invitation to dinner which they now wish they had accepted. -Dispatch to tho Charting Dish. Miss Bliss, the lady observer lu the Philadelphia weatherman's bureau, has cer tainly had a soothing effect upon our cli mate. Wo would like to assign her a per petual mand'ate In such mattcis. On the noith pavement of Matket stieet, near Third, thete stands what a sign pro claims as "the only cork tree In America." We hope it will be removed after July first. It will be too tragic to have these emblems of ancient haprJness still con fronting us, It seems sad to think that befote long cellars wilt be good for nothing but to keep the furnace In, Social Chat After watching tho gentleman who sells gyroscopes on the north side of Market street wo have come to the conclusion that the solar sjstem has been pretty well thought out. . t Stevo Mcader onco wrote a poem on Lin coln, at our buggestlon, and It Is so good that come one has put it Into a collection of Lincoln literature. We think we ought to draw some 'royalties on that. a a Ned Muschamp returned our copy of one' of Philip Glbba's books, and gave us a sack of tobacco and half a box of safety matches as usufruct or lagnlappe. We have lots more books, Ned. a Yachel Lindsay, the well-known poet and agent of the AntyMfMfcLatueleft town. " ' I laiajraViE-Sfl ',s',.,' . ,1 .T Wa "MaJI laf m ftf f -W1Sm'l9rrfi"YftfBnQ JBIBalsiBaiBiBiBiBaRaiBBsBiBBWlBBIiBafcMti a ytt(a- ,CtaHMHf took him m .r-'yJr ."' 'i-. -. ROOM tho aquarium at tho Talrmount water works. Ring Lardner was in town recently and spent two bedlcss dajs with Bob Maxwell, the most circumferential sporting editor in town. On lcavlntr. Mr. Lardner was heard to remark, "Whoovcr named Philadelphia tho Sleepy City was a degenerate liar" Taking a visitor down to seo Old Christ Church ycsteiday, we found tho church yard full of clothes fluttering out to dry. And our companion remarked, without any signs of premeditation, "You see, clean liness Is nct to godliness." The most surprised render of the Presi dent's speech, first published in last night's papers (Advt.) was undoubtedly Oliver Ilcr ford, the well-known raconteur. ! Vie onco wioto a poem on "Washing tho Dishes." A mining engineer in New York, who read It, nnd claims to have done considerable dishwashing himself, sends us tho following, with tho laconic com mont that it is tho best poem on the sub ject ever written: Dish Willing Why dry them If jou like, dear heait. You know I loio to have jou near me. The pretext doesn't matter. Still I hato to sco you get Your hands all greasy. Aly own? Yes, they are not like what my mother used Tocoll a lady's hands, well kept and satin smooth. Sometimes I look at other women's hands So white! So tender! Tempting I should , think To men If I, a woman, sometimes long To stroke them, Then I look at these poor hands of mine. Nails blunted, flesh burned rough. I can but think with some rogrot Of the roso-pink of yoilth, that long ago was theirs. I can remember they had dimples, too, Where nbw are wrinkles only. It was not vanity that made me prize Such beauty as I had. I had the more to give jou that was all, Now I can only serve ou with these hands. They have been useful all these twenty years. These twenty busy, happy, anxious years We've spent together. No, darling! Don't' They're soapy still and wet! Now jou have made me uy. They aie not hands, but swords of valiant serv Ice. Your kiss the accolade that nobled them! Anne Hlgglnson' Splcer, In "Songs of the Skokle." On Seeing an Airplane in the Early Morning When first we saw lis radiant mothllko grace, Its gliding wings of gossamer outspread All golden In the morning, arid the red Fire of the sun ablaze upon its base, Entranced we stood and raised our ejes to trace Across the sapphire heavens where it led; Now diving behind a cloud, now high its head, As it rose' again athwart the sun's broad face. Tho dream of Icarus Is at last fulfilled Oh gods of old, restrain awhile your hate From that bold hero who, by daring thrilled, Essayed at first to pass your lofty c&te: For who could worship, If the gods had killed The first whose spirit ventured to be great? J. M. BEATTY, JR, Why didn't some one point out to the President, while the train passed through, that he was equidistant from Independence lall, one of the oldest things in Pnlladcl- la, ana wooarow winon Havre, one of . .MaaAa - ' fiUUajaaAiftaaci ft tf ' t WT a.'aC OF NOTICE tW r vjj - :xaTj . COA'CEIAVA'G EMPERORS I. God Send the Regicide WOULD that the lying rulers of the world Were brought to block for tyrannies ab horred. Would that the sword of Cromwell and the. Lord, . '' Tho sword of Joshua and Gideon, ' Hewed hip and thigh the hosts of Mldlan. God send that ironside cro tomorrow's sun; Let Gabriel and Michael with him ride, God send the Itcglcldc. II. A Colloquial Reply: To Any New'tboy Tr YOU lay for Iago at tho stage door with a brick You havo missed tho moial of the plu;., He will havo a midnight supper with, Othello and his wife. They will chirp together and be guy. But tho things Iago stands for must so down Into the dust: Lying and suspicion and conspiracy and lust. And I cannot hate the Kalsor (I hope you understand) Yet I chaso tho thing ho stands for with a brickbat In my hand. Vnchel Lindsay, in "Tho Chlneso "N'lght ingale and Other rooms." The Youngest Colony Tho Incorporation of New Guinea, de manded by Australia, would bring a" singu larly Infirm race under the flig of the com monwealth. The average 'duration of llfo Is shorter in New Uulnca than in any thr country, owing to tho peculiar diet of lh natives, who devour with gusto the larvae ot beetles, dug out of decajed tree trunks, and habitually drink sea water when JKar th coast. "The people die oft about forty," we are told in Mr. A. IX Pratt's "Two Yar Among tho Cannibals ot New Guinea." "We saw one very old man, who may hava been about sixty years of age tho only example ot longevity that wo came acros.. He was bent almost double, nnd had a long, .white beard. Ills fellow tribesmen regarded lilm as a great cut loslty, and brought him to see us. Despite tho decrepitude of his body, however, there was no trace ot senility; his semes were unimpaired, and the poor old crt&ture showed great gratitude tor a gift ot to bacco," Manchester Guardian. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1, Who filed the first shot in the war be tween tho United Htates and Germany? 2, What two Republicans are rival candi dates for the Speakership of ( the House of Representatives? 3, Who wrote "The Ring nnd the Book"? 4, Who lnvtnted the telephone? 5, For how many ears was Napoloon prisoner on the lslandof St. Helena? 6, What Is the meaning' of the word "largo," used as a musical term? 7, What Is another name for the famous. plctuie, the Mona Lisa? S. What river flows through the Grand Canyon? 9, In what war during the nineteenth cen tury were Orcat Britain and France allies? 10, Who was Phil May? Aniweri lo Yeterdf)'i Quia ' 1. Kurt Eisner, who was assassinated in Munich 'last week, was Premier o( Bavaria. 2. Benjamin Franklin' said "There never was a good war or a bad peace," J. Henry Hudson, who laid claim to New Amsterdam, for the Dutch, was nn Englishman In the employ of tho Netherlands. 4, Charlotte Bronte wrote under the name of Currer Bell. C. ranacea: Vntvenal remedy, 6. Itufus Daniel Isaacs Is Lord Reading, British ambassador to the United States. 7, The Seven Sages of Greece were sup posed to hays .been Thalcs, Bias. Child. Cleobulua, Perlander, .Plttacus and Solon, I A tlmocracy Is a form of government In which there IS a nropertv rjiiailfle. tlon for office, . ., .. .at n, Hamilton Is tho(capUal 'pf .Bqrmurfi 10, .SKaHWajh!'. BtfflM MWU.ing,.'t tht f rtfl M ,i' I r V --" "- - I saiMI W Wlft . u v-4a5-iv5SWW3,t f. i '? 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