,' 10' I H EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEJR-HlUADELPHlA, TUESDAY, MAKOH 11, 1919 r '(.r fcGStf f.- , r - "-J s . - ' Tr. M . IP! (tr5?." && laicnmg Public Hedget TOE EVENING TELEGRAPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTRt'S H. K CURTIS, PnrriNT Ctiirlra II, t.udlncton. vice Prti!nt. Jnhn I Martin. Sferjtary and Trtaiurtr. Philips Colllna. John B. Williams, John J, Spuraron. Dlrtor. EDITORIAL nOARD! Cries K. K, CctTii, Chairman DAVID E. SMHET , Editor i JOHN C MARTIN.... Otnaral Piwlnm Uinuir fubllantd dillr at Peine l.inoai Duildlnr, Indpptndtnca Squarp, Phlladtlphla. Art.lMTIO Cltt Prnt-rnlnn nulldlnr ImwToh.., "06 MMrepollltn Tower DiTioii , . . ..40S Ford llulldlni: St. Lotus..... 1O0 ful)rton nulldlnr CttlCaso 1802 mtmn. Building NEWS DUREAUSl Waihinoto.v Ticictn. N. E. Cor. Punnsytvanta At nd 14th St 7KW Tola H0H40 Th Sun nulldinc Lo.SDO.s Bcttic. . London rimra SUBSCRIPTION TERMS The Kti.siso Pcstio Lspon In atrtd to aub rrlbra In Philadelphia and aurroundinr town at th rats of twtlte (1!) centa per wttt. r)b! to ths carrier. I tlv mall to polnta eutelds of rhlladelphta. In lh United Statu. Canada, or United states rov taalona, poatsct free, fifty 1601 centa per month Sii (S dollara per year. paable In advancs. . To all foreirn countrlea one (til dollar per month. Noiica Subscribers wlihlnr addreai chanted must clvo old aa well aa new address. nt. Hm tai.m.t KrtsTOr, mai ioos t3 Artdrrti all commtislcrtftosa to Evnintr Public 2.edffrt ttdtvtndence BQuare, Pnlladelpila. H Member of the Associated Pren THE ASSOCIATED rREGS f exrlu- - sivelu entitled to the ute for republication r of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and alio ."ie local news published therein. ' ' l All right of republication of special dis. patches herein are also reserved. Philadrlpble. fundi'. Mirth II, l'l' A THING TO GET HOT AHOl T UHOEVER it was who said n few ' weeks ago that the price of coal would 0 up instead of down has quali fied as a prophet, for he has foretold that which he knew would happen. Word came from Scranton last week that the Delaware and Hudson Company would not make the usual fifty cents a ton reduction on April 1, but would add ten cents a ton to the prevailing price once a month for the succeeding five months. And yesterday a Pottsvillc dis patch announced that the J. B. Markle Company has already increased its price and that the Delaware, Lackawanna and "Western Company would soon follow its example. It will be difficult to persuade the con sumer that these increases are justified. But what can he do about it? He can't fret any coal unless he pays the price. Even when he is told that the prices of anthracite have increased less than the prices of food he will retort that the prices of food have increased beyond reason. The chief sufferer from these condi tions is the average salaried man, for his income has remained stationary. The wages of the mechanic have been in creased and the business man has in creased the prices of what he makes or what he retails and is relatively no worse off than he was five years ago. But the salaried man is ground between the mill stones. WHO PAYS THEIR BILLS? TjJRIEXDS of President Wilson are jus V" tified in their demand for infoimation relative to the sources from which the money will come to finance the speaking tours now being arranged for Senator Tieed, Senator Borah and other leaders in the fight against the league-of-nations principle. Their query is one that will interest all those who wish, to see this and other countries relieved from the burden of ruinous armaments in the future. It is apparent that expensive propa ganda in the form of books and pam phlets is now being oigamzed against the Wilson plan. Who will pay the bills? Will an investigation into this side of the peace question be within the province ..of the next Congress ? THE UNIVERSITY OF HEROES vrpHE war against culture of the wrong "- Ifirr! will rpQlilt in InA Ipi'plnnmpnt nf gf';w iculture of the right sort when the unique army university at Beaune turns out its crop of vigorous graduates. Already this remarkable college is the largest one . conducted in English in the world. Fif Tteen thousand American soldiers have enrolled for a three months' course. The faculty of five hundred members is drawn chiefly from the American expeditionary force, which has also organized iii other parts of France an elaborate educational system, with post schools and vocational institutions for the American troops. t The whole praiseworthy undertaking is something absolutely new in military history and is bound to have profound and salutary reactions. To be a "Beaune" ,man will be a distinction warranting 9 jusuimuic I'uuc, iui, ut;?iiiie mi; Jrcat tf rsize of the university, it is of a rigidly vxciuaive iyje. rvcry one 01 us lusty "" students must have donned a uniform on behalf of freedom. And if the Beaune -Valumni, all "educated abroad," should challenge one of our older home univer sities to a football match look out for a real scrap! ' HUN ART TANGLES AGAIN IT.- -'THILADEL,PHIANS who hvr ... itrv, . 1 . : : li yp'tepted with applause Mr. Stokowski's Kv ""'". nnclusion of German music in his orches- 'j. -a tra nrorrams seem to havp. d smissml F. ? TVllniKTYl in arf Ha a U'lll nlla.tlnn "Jonjeer eligible for discussion. New ' k iorK, nowevcr, which can claim native vAmerirflnism for nnlv nnnnf nno.lifiir .r . -rr .. It.nUt4.nH4n MA4tM..Hn A. .. .-. -- .. . . ..,,, HVVHV vmvuhh Ul Jjs --Hfciia imuimuiiiu, tuiuuiucs w wax wroin ,Jw AP" xne ie"'p' ne opposmon 01 several j JthU8and rmy and navy men, either in -4ino service or rcccnuy aiscnargeu, has s'tiwpvented the performance of a Viennese jU2;fPe'e'ta called "Der Vogelhacndler." riT 'Meanwhile, the Metronolitan One jjlCsoipany presents the Freiherr von Flo- ,tS,'i,e Von Weber's "Oberon" has been -v -MMa nf 4im YAtafiila. liifa nf 4l.n .-,... r -Tw v v. Bjivvwumi itiva w bile sell' "vsr!?"" Do the service men and other peti- . TtfwJera realize this state of affairs or is 1 k-because "Der Vogelhaendler" is to be vwmff with a German text that it is so tfoasive? In that case, it cannot be jBitil,etraiu of premeditated art - IV . which givo pnln, but rather what Mark Twain so feelingly described as "the nwful German language." But, on the other hantl, as most Ameri cans arc unable to understand that for midable tongue and nil of us who are normal are responsive to musical utter ance, German music should logically prove more Irritating than that which is to us meaningless. But passion cannot always pause for consistency, and per haps some of the indignant New Yorkers opposed to "Der Vogelhacndler" do not fully realize who wrote "Mnrtha." This work, it may be noted, was given in Phil Bdelphfa when Wagnerian music was darkly clouded with suspicion. Complicating nrt with politics is n tick lish business. If New York's latest tip is to be strictly followed, the only pa triotic way to "read Goethe would bo through the safe medium of Bayard Tay lors English. MILLION FOR KIDDIES IS GOOD INVESTMENT And the 1'cniiMKania I.cgM.ilurc Mu-t Now Determine Whether the Rights of Ptimll Nations Apply at Hnme TT IS cheering to find that the appro--- priations committees at Harrisburg sanction the appeal of the Mothers' As sistance Fund for 81,000,000 a sum barely adequate for the continuance of essential relief work among those women and children whose battle with misfor tune is uneven and always bitter. What every one will hope now is thnt the con scientious objectors in the House and the Senate will stand aside for once antl let the .appropriation go through to do a -ervice greater, perhaps, than any other that is possible with the state's money. In a time of colossal expenditures a million dollars seems like 11 pitifully small contribution to ease the oldest sor row in the world. For society is still only groping toward a true sense of its responsibilities in relation to the neg lected lives which, in the end, can gie back to cnilialion only a greater meas ure of what they receive. The scheme to assist fiiendiess moth ers burdened with the support of small children is a relatively new experiment of great significance. Everywhere in the world there is a sincere effort to readjust the processes of government more closely to the life and the needs of great majorities. To vitalize govern ments with u humane consciousness, to re-establish a more intimate relationship between peoples and their administra tive systems these are concerns of every statesman who knows anything of the time he lives in. The fitness of public men is, indeed, being measured' and testetl in almost every civilized community by the nature of their reactions to such tientls of thought and feeling. Certainly this sort of enlightenment isn't coming too soon anywhere. In this state, for example, the very trees of the foicsts and the cabbages of the field have experts in highly organized groups to determine what is best for them. Until the plan for the assistance for destitute mothers was proposed in Pennsylvania in 19115 there were large groups of children who remained beyond the reach of help, below the level of school influences and the ordinary protective agencies. Yet they are among the most important assets of the state and the stuff of future society. The sweep of the influenza epidemic left 30,000 new orphans under sixteen years of age in this state. Do the rights of small nations apply here? This dim and silent community has no. spokes man, no ambassador. The army that fights its battles is made up of desolated mothers whose cause is as tragic, surely, as any that ever was lost or won in lone some trenches. How they fare, how they persist, by what miracle of valor and patience they make a way against the confusion and stiains that modern life and the acci dents of circumstance cieato about them no one knows but themselves. Often enough they hold something of the great future in hands more tired than any hands ought to be. Sometimes they fail, these patient ones, and are overwhelmed. And then the jails and the reformatories take what remains of their adventure. In the final analysis these mothers whom the state seeks to help are the gicat unconscious enemies of all the forces which conspire to degiade and hinder mankind. When the Mate motes to their aid it motes to the instinct of self-pre&cr-ation. Long experience has shown the ciucl folly of denying a fair chance in life to a child and then providing harsh punish ment for the offenses and errors that are i evitable. And it has been found that the small sums allotted under the moth ers' assistance plan for the maintenance of children in a decent home environnfent were actually less than would have been requited for the maintenance of thrse same children in the far less desirable atmosphere of public institutions. The need for a sane and humane con sideration of the whole question of juve nile deficiency is greatest in an industrial community like ours. Crowded areas of population complicate every condition of poverty for women and children. This fact was recognized In Pennsylvania when the original plan for the assistance of destitute mothers wns proposed.' Since then the practical value of the sys tem has been recognized elsewhere and there have been times when it seemed that we were tto leave to others the full development of a really notable idea. Last year, for example, the state of New York spent $2,000,000 for the sort of service which Pennsylvania is now asked to maintain with an appropriation equal to half that sum. Massachusetts has a population only half as large as ours, yet ft has arranged to spend $1,000,000 during the coming year in aid of widowed mothers and their young children. The -movement represents an effort to maintain these little families until they are self-supporting, to keep children out of institutions and under the care of their mothers and to save them from ttie warping effects of. hunger, Ignorance, extreme hardship and over work. More than 1800 families, which include about C500 children, have been kept in tact under previous appropriations in this state, though the Legislature last year allowed only $-H6,000 to the fund. Ap proximately 3000 families are now on the waiting lists and it would be possi ble, with the co-operation of the various counties, which must contribute equally with the state in each instance, to assure $30 monthly to each of these if the ap propriation now pending is favorably acted upon. It is creditable to the State Legisla ture that political interests have never been permitted to confuse the work of the funtl. The beneficiaries have to prove their need and they have to keep their children in school. The state contributed an important element to the general theory by pioviding that the fund should be administered from the State Depart ment of Education. Favoritism is im possible because each request for assist ance is considered in the order of its receipt. GERMANY MUST BE FED AFTER months of delay the council of Mcn of the Peace Conference has de cided that Germany must be fed, nnd it is prepared to inform the Germans that, provided they will agree to the armi stice terms, the Entente Allies will sup ply them with food until the 1st of August. It is not humanity but self-interest that has dictated this decision. Germany is suffering from lack of food. Hunger is breeding discontent and discontent is fostering Bolshevism. No peace can be made w'ith Germany in the throes of an anarchistic revolution. It may be too late now to prevent such a revolution, but it is not too late to make the at tempt by supplying the Germans with the food which they cannot get at home. This, is the first step toward the crea tion of a livable peace. The second step must be the recogni tion of the right of the Germans to do business with the rest of the world. No indemnities can bo collected from a bankrupt nation. The rehabilitation of Germany is as imperative for the peace of the woild as the ' rehabilitation of Fiance and Belgium. This is true in spite of all the atroci ties of which the Germans have been guilty. It is physically possible to build an economic wall around Germany, shut ting the country out from the rest of the world, but to do it would be like cover ing a festering sore with a bandage under the delusion that we had cured it' by hiding it from sight. The gospel of hate must be abandoned and the world must hold itself in readi ness for reconciliation the moment the offending nation docs works meet for ic- pentance. Any other course will plant the seeds of future wars .Instead of hastening that era of universal peace for which we are all looking. According to tho The. latest New York World, Housing Problem "Premier 1- o y Geoi'se, who was sup ported by Colonel House In an impassioned burst of oratory today, swept aside the ie caleitrans of the Council of Ten." This is either an astounding announcement of lo quacity fiom the most reticent of Ameri can statesmen or else the Kngllsh language is plajing oiih of lis embarrassing tricks ap.iin. Strong eiicumstauclal evidence avots tho mix-up theory. Fiance nnd Belgium quite naturallv in sist that no German music can bound i ijlit with a loot accompaniment. Caruso's high C won't be in it with the onn of which that baby grand piano will be capablo when it flies over Hustleton. Tho delegates who departed In indiffer ent directions from a famous Kelglan le sorl seem to hate pretty well qualified as "Pparrers." The amount of pugnacity which ilr. Itorke's, liberal Sunday bill arouses gives almost the aspect of a black and blue, law to tho ilgid old eighteenth century act. Much of the President's strength lies In the tilings he leaves unsaid. It is true, but--what an interesting story his fiee, uncensored opinion of the senatorial fill buster would make' It Is to their everlasting credit that the tas-t majotity of men whose Incomes nie Virgo enough to lecclve the gentle, at tention of tho surtax have tacitly ad mitted its Justico by let using to make com plaint. Tho Allies fear that if present unicst continues in Germany the country will not bo able to pay the Indemnities de manded. In other words, when the pot qt(lts boiling it will bo found to contain nothing but a hard-boiled egg. "Everything Is for tho best in this best of all possible worlds." Out of junkcrdom is growing World Democracy. Out of tho Fenatorlal filibuster may grow tho spirit that will make the league of nations a certainty. The plan of the Central High School trade classes enabling studenta to make threo dollars a day two weeks a month in nearby shipyards ban distinct advantage over tho Saucers method of spelling "winder" and then cleaning it. The Duchess of Marlborough has been elected a member of the London County Council, defeating a labor candidate. She was elected as a Progressive. Among the topsy-turyjdoms brought about by the war this is no't tho least noteworthy. Th Germans now say that thc. can not nubmit to tho coercion of the Allies. The decision would havo had more weight If It had been reached before they quit fighting. Cattle so careful of their skins may expect to have their hltlcs tanned. Class wars are always productlvo of unspeakable cruelties and coloss.il blun ders, but a comparison between the Rus sians and the Germans is all to the ad vantage of tho Slavs. Tho Germans tried to subjugato tho world. Tho Russians, fanatically misguided, are trying to free tho world. The Germans had to bo beaten. The Russians may work out their own sal vation. Hallowing timo may yet givo the Soviets respectability and a placo at tho wprid'3 council tabls, REFORM A' DETROIT Detailed Provisions of the AVto Charter Which lias Put Out of Business the Man With an Ax to Grind Hy JAMES COUXENS Mayor d Detroit Mayor Couiens today concludes hit expo sition of the methods of reform in Detroit by svtttnn form tho protisloni of the new city charter. Ill rpitE result Detroit attained came from a concerted appeal on the part of tho newspnpeis nnd tho best ot Its citizens that every voter cast his ballot with the thought of how It was going to affect all of the city rather than himself. N'ow we nro going nlic.id to rcorganlzo our court sjstem. We find the name selfish minority opposing us, but r believe wo have tho secret and shall win. Xovcmbcr saw our women enfranchised nnd wo already havo moro than 60,000 of them registered. T feel that they will bo a tremendous re-enforccment In our work for a better city. In commenting upon what netjolt has accomplished in tho last four years in tho way of better government, I Would bo remiss If I did not call nttetttlon to tho small school board of seven members elected nt largo tipon which women have served for some time. This replaces th old twent-onn man waid-clccted board The city also has tho advantage of n small board of estimates, consisting of tho Major, City Clerk, City Treasurer Con troller nnd Cotporatlon Counsel. The old board consisted of forty-seven members. T-N" DETROIT'S new 150 page charter are. - enumerated what wo believe to bo Im provements in government: All elective city officers to be nominated Rt nonpartisan primaries nnd elected at nonpartisan elections. Candidate must file petition containing number of names equal to two per cent of registered vote. City elections, except tho first, to be sep arate from state and national elections All elections tinder supervision of elec tion commission of three, consisting of City Clerk, Recorder and tho 1'icsldent of tho Common Council, Initiative nnd referendum on ordinances nnd tho recall as to elective city officers. Councllmen recelto annual salary of $3000, and tho Council is required to meet dally as a committee of tho wholo and at least once each week in legular evening session. WARD lines are retained only for assess ments, election of constables, choice of Jurois and toting purposes. Itoaid of Estimates abolished and modern budget sjstcm provided originating with tho Mayor, and administrative de pal tments. Council responsible for pass ing genet al budget and may override Mar's teto of any Item. All commissions and boards are ap pointed by the Mayqr without confltma Uon by tho Council, and all, except assess ors and civil service commissioners, are removable at tho will of tho Mayor. Bureau of Complaints established. In connection with City CIcik's office, to re ceito and Investigate all complaints of citizens as to public service and ptomptly report to complainants. The Civil Service system adopted by tho people and now in operation remains sub stantially unchanged in the new charter. City Plan Commission, with power, sub ject to tho Council, to dltido city Into zones and regulate the type and uso ot buildings In each zone. Hoard of Water Commissioners brought under tho general budget control of tho city with reasonablo flexibility as to de tails of operation. Art Commission established to be known ns Detroit Institute of Arts, with power to take over tho existing Detroit Museum of Art. Department of Purchases and Supplies, with saving to tho city by co-operation, buying In lai'ge quantities, taking advan tage or discounts, etc. Department of Public Works, with consent- of Council, empowered to manufac ture common brick for sewer purposes and prepare creosote block for .paving pur poses. WKLFARK1 Commission has extensive powers, such as tho detelopment of markets, by bringing together producer and consumer, and rendering aid to tho needy, including payments to aged couples to prevent their separation. Trial Hoard In Police Department, hav ing Jurisdiction In certain matters of disci pline within tho department. "Bureau of Tubllc Safety established in Police Department, to enforce traffic ordi nances. Investigate accidents and seels to reduce their number. Municipal ownership is left, as in tho old chatter, to bo dealt with by tho people as they desire. , Singlo commissioner In chargo of the three Departments ot Buildings, Safety Engineering and Permits, thus avoiding conflict ot authority All permits to bo Issued from one office. Boa id of Rules established, Building codo may only be changed biennially. MODERN financial methods for all city departments hate .been Introduced In many forms to secure economy, effi ciency nnd cooperation. Daily balances required, Houso of Correction funds to bo paid to City Treasurer. City Treasurer to prepare nnd mall to owners of property all tax statements In advance, so that( tarpo may bo paid by check, money order or otherwise, and "waiting In, line" to pay taxes avoided. Current tax receipts must show any un paid tax. No property shall bo sold for unpaid taxes before the owner has re ceived personal service of notification. No elective city olflcer or salaried officer nppointed by tho Mayor to be a candidate for any office, except to succeed himself, without first resigning tho office ho holds. This will tend to prevent those paid to "serve tho city from spending the clty'j time rccklns somo other .office. i iMiimffrJX. M&& IssSS if&'-Jfflk M Ww ffl 6 ffilWl 2 sH slit jl Vlv'Av REOTUffiB'SaZ' 14& ATNfiHEfl HsH eIheSv HI Hu;raraS ra BiffifflBBE SHif eHtt Jm vaYnVaHnBHBaHHisil' ' ViroHBrMri JO! IrMIMffltjriliM 1U iLfflttliWlflnnEnMBll ' ' iwmMtrrrf" 'U f 111' IT 1 VviHHHlHBHmKFMlRw RUBBER QENATOR SHERMAN says that his fill J buster was highly successful as a means of "calling tho President's bluff." However wo are peisuaded that ho bluffs best who bluffs last. The Senator seems' to consider himself a blnffe'r'stato elected to protect (ho legis lature from the encroachments ofthe' exec utive'. -Senator Sherman adds that humanity is still governed by the principles laid down by Solomon in bis Pioverbs. Has he for gotten Proverbs, sxx, 10: "Accuse not a servant unto his master lest ho curse thee and thou be found guilty"? President Wilson, ns himself has oft times observed, Is the servant ot the Ameri can people. Speaking xf rrovcibs, wc hato one of our own to offer: There be threo things which nre tpo wonderful for us, yen, four which wo know rot: Tho way of an airplane in tho air, the way of a .trolley car on Tine sticet, the way of a special delivery letter which tar tlcth nnd Ijldcth Its time, and the way of a Senate with a President. Proverbs til, 19. seems lather timely, too: "For tho good man Is ndt at home; he is gone a long journey." Tho verso following, however, is less appropriate. Senator Sherman must havo been haid up for arguments to rcsoit to tho Book of Proverbs. For. as every publicist knows, anything may bo proved by Pioverbs. For Instance, ou can prove the ex istence of Swedish matches by Proverbs vl. 27; "Can a man take fire in his bosom,' and his clothes not bo burned?" A Modest Exception "TIIK HEART OF HUMANITY" Tho Picture That Will Lite Forever (Tuesday Excepted) Motion Picture Advt. Philip Gibbs Two ot tho few men who have succeeded In telling tho truth about tho war nro Philip Glbbs In prose nnd Siegfried Sas soon In poctryi Glbbs, who lectured at tho Academy of Music last night, sayjs one thing (among many) that It Is well to re member. It is. In his book, "From Bapaumo to Passchendaclo": "Always after n talk with them (tho British soldiers) I came away with a deep belief that tho courage, honesty and hu manity of theso bojs wcro a woild higher than tho philosophy of their intellectual leaders, nnd I hated tho thought that we havo been brought to sucli a pass by tho Infamy of nn enemy caste, and by the low ideals of Europe which havo been our own law of life, that an tins splendid youth, thinking straight, seeing straight, acting straight, without selfish motives, with clcari hearts nnd fine bodies, should bo flung Into the furnace of war nnd scorched by Its ilres. nnd maimed, and blinded, and smashed. Only by tho dire need ot de fense agulnst tho enemies of the world's liberty can such a sacrifice be Justified, and that is our plea before tho great Judge of Truth. They (the bojdlers) scorn pity, yet they hate worse still, tvl'th a most deadly hatred, nil the talk nbout "our cheerful men." For they know that how over cheerful they may bo It Is not be- i causo ot a Jolly life or lack of fear. They. BEGINNING TO BUD HEELS loathe shell fire and machine-gun fire. They have seen what a battlefield looks like be fore it has been cleared of Its dead, It is not for noncombatants to call them "cheer ful." "Because noncombatants do not under stand and never wil), not from now until the ending of tho woild." The Joy of Discovery Oil mislity soul who first with thoughtful eye Dreamed ot n world beyond the gold- wat'e's crest Daring to launch your ciaft upon n quest Whoso only guerdon seemed tho right to die Where tho sea's vast solitude brings heaven nigh With what uplifting Joy, what wild unrest Did you behold tho Islands of tho west Rising superb aslant the morning sky. So we, adventurers In latent power, Vanquishing mountains, or with dizzying speed Soaring aloft to subjugate the air, Thrill with the sense of mastery, freedom's dower, And quaff from brimming cup tho victor's meed, Tho magic heritage of those who dare. J. M. BEATTV, JR. Wo pointed out the other day how often Mr. Wilson used to use the expression " "Twas" in his writing, frequently employ ing it several times in one paragraph. Tills habit ho seems to have outgrown, and Hampy Moore, Jr., acutely suggests to us that he may have dropped tho "T" in 'Twas in the same way ho dropped It in T. Wood row. To the Concrete Ships hot us go down to tho sea As our fathers did bcfoie; Bujt In ships of steel and stone. Sprung from the rivet's roar. Ships that flto has forged And tempered to the wave, Built stern and hammered har.d, Nor meant for a deep-sea grave. The sea they shall doubly challenge, With blunt blow for blow, Batter the bold northeaster. Smash on through 'Arctic floe, i Not ships for tho deep-sea sailor Who hauled to tho chanty deep, Ships with wings of snow, Astralp to the west wind's sweep Her day Is passed, she's sunk, Her masters gone to steum, Live steam In a concrete hull, Black Iron along her beam. So through tho northern channels, No longer the white wings gleam, But ships of, steel and granite riungo onward, under steam, DOUGLAS CARY WENDELL. Mr. Hoover says ho has got to quit gov ernment work In order to earn n living, end certainly no one deserves a llting.moro than he. There seems, somcti.Ing wrong, however, In a system that can support a whole lot' of Senators and has to let Its food administrator roslgn bocauso (In tho old words of the old joke) ho can't make both ends meat. SOCRATES. The fatt that a meeting of stockholders of the Baldwin Locomotive Works adqpted a plan to ponslon'old employes with hut one dissenting vote Is a healihful sign of the times. - . '7 ,$ -' - '." . f .' Si" , ' 7 PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN TTER husband feels her as a soothing spur, A golden summons to a joyful strife. Some few observe her as the careful wif Laying two lives, nway In lavender. A poet knows her ns a breath of myrrh; A tradesman as an ever-sharpened knife: Some see the artist bargaining with life And theso are but the lightest hints of Iter. TjTOR she is Girl and Priestess and her hands, Reckless and wise, snatch at the quicken ing brands And bear them like rejoicing (lags un furled. Laughing, she scatters life; s.ljo fc.eds he flames That leap through casual thoughts ,and tawdry alms. And burns the slag clean from the rust ing world. Louis Unteimeycr, In "These Times." i Perhaps the Italians and Jugo-Slava are not familiar with all the facts con cerning frontiers that are being' discussed at the.peace table. Since tho decision must eventually rest with them (whatever the result of tho efforts of their represents, lives) a little intensive education right now might put an end to hostilities. ,' , The President is barred from hissfavor. He game, golf, on tho George Washington. Father Neptune's bunkers are toe uncer tain for any but the African variety -of the game, and that, of course, is not dignified enough for a statesman. But one can Imagine the lesser lights on board glvtnir a variation to tho famous melody accom panying the rolling of the bones. As thust "Come je little thirty-seven and be good, wont je?" What Do You Know?. QUIZ 1. What great transcontinental railway tva completed during the war? 2. Who was Titus Oates? , 3. Where do the trade winds blow? 4. Who is Governor of New York state? C.Whnt is the second largest city In th Philippines? B, What Is a capstan on a ship? 7. Who wrote tho original story of "Car men"? ,'r, fi, What state does Thomas P, Gore rcpr sent n the Senate? !. What is the capital of Netada? 10, What is a nllshal? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Tno republic of Colombia In South Amor- lea was formerly called New Uranada- 2. The battle of Lundy's Lino occurred during the War of 1812 on July 25, 18H. It tvaB an indecisive American tlctory. ' 3. Itnn the Terrible, Czar of Russia, lited in tho sixteenth century, c 4. The character of Ariel occurs In Shakes- prure's "The Tempest." 5. rortugal was called Lusltanla In Roman tlmeB 0. One-hundred and sixty square rods matts an ncre. , ., ,' ". The zemstvos, beforo the Ruisian revp'i iutlon, were local elective .assemblies regulating affairs of Russian districts. 8. In case both the President and VIcol'reaT tdent die during the same administra tion, the Secretary of State becomes President. r 9. The Union of South Africa consists of the provinces of Cape of Good Hope Transtaul, Orange Free State and Natal. 10. "On lea nura" meana "We shall liate them." or moro colloquially, "V'n,!tt ' 'em." It was a Brench army slogan during. the war, n-, ."'' 1 f f ,1 rWs ' wfrrr v V- ,- ., ,;. it IA. -'.i. J t!) i1 irf T-' f 0 .