tJ: EVENING PUBLIC iLEDGERr-PHniADEIiBHIA"', FRIDAY, A1?RIU- 1819? $ i . - '! ... . ,T0 " .tor, A ,,) ViT - tf ' ' .$ - n -J- '. P$ m I? r.t ii m BK In & &- 1SV ffi I1!'. V 5fc laicnmg public Htb$tz r'THE EVENlNGnTELEGRAPH " Ik PtlllMfl LEDGER COMPANY ,'Jf emirs n. tc. cim-ns. riuiMsi fjhrl II. Ludlntton, vice PreKlilent; Jnhn C rtln. S-rrUry ami Treasurer. Philips. Collin, fhn n William, John J. gpurieon, Directors. "ftp i EDITOIltAL HOAUD gH) Ctt II. K. CciTis, Chairman jaPfVYtD E. SMII.r.T Kdltor POMN t MAtlTIN General lluslnees Manager C r,1 n..LII.L.J ..!.. . ......... I ...... .... I...K. It B(TA V f uuiinru uuny v i i IBI.IU i.hiiur.n iiuuuiua. sv$ inuepennence square, i'nuaueipnia. rH .JATUN A.NT10 ITH . 'rrv-f'tiluii lliillilhiK J)KTRniT. Till l.'jinl lliill,llliir itT.'t ht1. IiL'IH . lOlW t'llllprtnti HulMlliif CCHIOAno .... I.'IIIJ 7rlbiinr llnll.llng 'T . XKWH llllinAI'S '(JwtlABniNOToN numuc. reai. J?1 E. Cor Penntylvanla Ae ami 1 4 tit St. iffe w ion hofu: The Skpi Hull. linn NPON Iil'KEAV Loiulon JIlICJ M St'IlSCIlirTION TKft.MS Th HlCMMt Pi'Mio t'.t.uar.n N nerve.) to nh- rrlhera In Phltailelphla and urroundlnc townn at the rate, of twelve Hi) rents per week. paiuMa to the carrier. . Hy mall to point" ouMuV of rhllartelphla- In tha United Htatea. Cancln. or l.'iiltr.l states pos. Iiestlons, tmstaEe free riftv (Mil cents pr nlonth. Six J1) dollars per jear. payable In advance. To all foreign tountrles one (ll dollar per month. None Suhjcrlhers wishing address chanted must give old as wen ss new address. BF.LL. 3000 TUMI KIVTOM'. MIN SHOO KT Addrras nil comntttntcnlioni to Kvrntno Public J.fdaer. nrfrpenrfeitce Square, Philadelphia. I Member of the Associated Press Tlla ASSOCIATM PIIKSS it rxclu Mlvelu entitled to the use fur tepublteation ,o nil iirifs iHnimtchex rrrriiteil to it or not HBrhrnritr crcititcii in this pnprr. nhil oMo the locnl news puhllilird fifirin J All rights of irpubllrnlion of tirrfnl dil patches herein are also leseived. - Phllnrlelphia. trido. pril ID. I'll NEW JERSEY BEATS US TO IT 'GOVERNOR KDGE, of New .k-i-spy, has signed the mitiinuim wage hill for teachers, which provides that no teacher within the state shall receive less than seventy dollais a month dtirmp: the period when he or she is employed. With a school year of nine months, this will give a minimum of six hundred and thirty dollars a year to every teacher. The rural schools will he the chief beneficiaries, for they will net hotter paid teachers than in the past. But ulti mately all the schools will benefit, for .when a state has started in the direction of a fair amount of pay for a fair amount of work it cannot stop or turn back. New Jersey acts, but Pennsylvania Eccms to hesitate. TEMPEST IN A COCKTAIL GLASS 1 ipHE annual flurry about the legality of & ,JL- dancing: where liquor is sold is JlOW on. The season of halls at the fashionable V'liiuiei?' is uiawjiiK 10 a close aim iriiccioi I IWilson, of the Department of Public ;U...i..l.. : .1 :... . - .. .1 .....I It:. .... KSp Bafety, has just announced that he must fe1 enlprcc the rulinp; which prohibits danc ing vjn any building in which there is a bar for the sale of liquor. The rulinp; was made in order to make it possible for the police to close dis reputable dance halls attached to low Wa- aalnnnc Ruf ife tnrmc 'i trnnninl c Ki""") seems impossible to discriminate $& amonp; classes of liquor-selling establibii- Wjr r'inents. SF'') If one were so inclined one could write Rf A'fc burninp; Bolshevik homily on this con- muon, dui it is not worm wnue. i no sale of liquor is to end in a short time and the whole thine; seems much like a tempest in a vanishing; cocktail glass. A NEW KIND OF SALOON TTNLESS the people seeking; to find a ' -' substitute for the saloon make haste the' brewers may get there first. The ice-cream saloon may take the place of the saloon where beer is sold. In some parts of the country the brewers have already turned from making beer into making ice cream. What has hap pened is described by .lames H. Collins in the current number of the Saturday Evening Post. Mr. Collins tells of a brewer in an eastern "dry" city who had made Ro.000 barrels of beer annually, which he sold for about .$400,0(10. lie turned his breweiy into an ice-cream factory and turned out 800,000 gallons, .which he sold for $1,000,000. It has been the history of the moe-ipss ?V- 4 tnc "dry" movement that when the sale ot alcoholic drinks ceased the sale of ice cream and other sweets increased. ih the city in question the per capita consumption of beer had been about eiirht-tenths of a barrpl v.-jir WitV, S prohibition the per capita consumption 'tof ice cream rose to thirty-two quarts a Wd year ius' Now. when the breweis. with their Kt0", knowledge of chemical processes and their training in absolute cleanliness, a no;"' " mic in- iii-ain anu to provide l places in which it is sold under agree- 5& able .conditions, it is possible that the S .i:..i ,i ..,..c.i ........... . , utatbivai nun au(.LC.iaiui BUUSUluie 101 &"C place may be discovered. At any rate, 5CA. v euUfihiin ,..;n .... t .1. .ts" oMuovivwt ,,111 ajji-ii wiiun me men who attempt to provide something that bb,, iine people icaiij want, succeed in nnu- r ine it. - . r- A HOUSING SUGGESTION Hf 'irNE of the most practical suggestions LJf-y V. .-!. I.. t 1! ... mss l J" mime lur relieving tne housing eftv kV- situation is that of Mr. Ihlder. executive K't Secretary of the Philadelphia Housing JJ4- ' fvssociauon. l& . It is that a company of public-snirited 1 1 'fcapUalists be organized to build modest- t.'.Sr.r it'll! 1 -l 11.. i.i.. EJ'f, icuai.. jiuuaea lui iciu. :ir. miner I1XCS KgMl.0,000 houses as the minimum number to KWjT6' ercted nd he estimates the cost of fL' There is an undoubted need for that ffcumber of houses of that character. The r'.'feltormal. increase of population in peace .'yt .,. - . . ..... - Mies has been provided for by the erec ,ijn; each year of from C000 to 7000 new r Wwses. In 116, 77C2 were built. This '-4.frHtbcr fell to 2700 in 1D17 and in 1918 amounted to only 9G9, put up by pri-i-Ste. builders and 2685 bv the govern- Lu'tiivant; for war workers, making a total ftwHy the year of 3654, or a total for the b.veara of 6354. If there had been no 'iSjiormal increase in population it would lve required 15,424 houses on the basis ifcftthe 1910 building record to meet the wiands of the city. The actual number cted was 9070 below this. But there 'been an. unprecedented increase in iliiition and an unprecedented demand 'Wuges, Sur6 juatLfy Mr. imi, .-.r.n. mato of the minrmum number needed at the present time. There are vacant houses, it is true. Some of them arc not for rent, but are offered to purchasers. Others which may fye rented cannot be had for less than fiom $75 to $150 a month. There are vacant apartments also, u few of them. Hut the landlords nre asking $150 a month for three rooms and a kitchenette in downtown build ings. Such houses and such apartments are beyond the means of the miyi earn ing from $30 to $50 a week. He must live in a house for which he pays from S.'iO to $5(1 a month rent and just now it is virtually impossible to find such houses vacant. The merit in Mr. lhlder's suggestion lies in the fact that it would provide houses built without anticipation of the speculative profit for which the ordinary building opeiator hopes. Similar hous ing corporations exist in other cities and they earn a fair return on the money invested, while at the same time provid ing shelter for families of moderate in come at a price within their means. PARIS AND GOOD FRIDAY AND A VOICE FROM AFAR Easter Week and Its Ancient Promise Sharpen the Attention That the World Has Turned on the Peace Conference "Ami In, I 11 in irith jinn iilinij, rrrn initn tin rml 11 the ivoi'UI.'" TX THE wai that has just passed the - world miw pity armed with a sword and compassion terrible in aimor and millions of young men following in a quest through blood and flame. Yet grieved voices 1 ise eveiy now and then to say that the moral principle tians lnted in Christianity has failed. It hasn't failed. It rings in all the rational cnticism that storms fiom the four qtiaiters of the earth upon the Paris confeience. It is a fear at the hearts of all men who, in this crisis, aie yet unwilling to befriend humanity. It watches with countless eyes. Wherever there are fearless men who think of others first and in teims of the future as well as in terms of the present, there .lie the ambassadois of the eternal and simple truth uttered in Galilee by the Loneliest of Men. There is a suggestion of cosmic drama in the fact that the leaders and pioneers of civilization are reaching the end of their tasks in Easter Week, 111 a season that always has symnolized light after darkness, hope after despair, victory after great loss. Certainly at this phase of the business a dim cry must reach them from the far times a cry charged with all the wisdom that the world can know. The cause of right may be over whelmed again. It remains to he seen. Justice, patience and charity these guiding principles, anciently proved, have too often been left like discarded, gaiments to the humble and the obscure. The leaders of nations have been deluded with a belief that speb virtues were im practical. And Europe flamed in conse quence. Nowhere in old woild politics was there evidence of a belief that the merci ful are blessed. Hut it is the merciless who are now in the gieatest peril and the gieatest agony every wheie. In the end of every great human ad venture the lule of life proposed nine teen hundied years ago by a Man who was crucified for it remains as the one surviving light in daikness like a "city set upon a hill." It cannot be bid All the makeshifts and evasions plotted in its stead have been futile. In herited frauds and schemes and beliefs have been enthroned, elevated, venerated, walled about with armies and blessed by bishops, and one by one they have gone down to the dust carrying peoples to tor ment. All the spoils that captains and kings have won by the violation of the simple principles of conduct given for human guidance at the beginning have become a burden in these days of reckoning a danger from without or an agency of corruption within the nations that hold them. Nothing of it all has the aspect of permanency or strength. Very properly one might legard the Paris conference as the end of an adventure in cynicism that has been two thousand years long. Will that adventuie be resumed in the old fashion with the old belief that there is an end to the rainbow? If it is, and if the world must face a lenewal of the anguish through which it has passed, it will be because a Voice that was wise with all experience could not make itself heard thiough the men appointed by destiny to titter it. It was an Oriental who first said that truth lies at the bottom of every man's heart. The hearts or men have been plowed deep. Before long we shall know whether the wounds were tleep enough to permit men to see to the bottom. If the Paris conference fails in this season of fulfillment it will be because humanity has not been hurt enough. For the leaders of nations are not unlike their people. Kings aie in exile and they have faced firing squads, and states men have felt the structures of govern ment sway beneath them because they shared the ignorance and the weaknesses of those they ruled or led. They have been learning what they should have known at the beginning-that the law of compensation is inexorable. It never fails. All the political philosophy of Europe maintained the belief that crimes of cruelty, of injustice, of oppression and greed might be committed by adroit men without fear. The confusion in half a dozen nations merely shows that the men who have been making history are face to face with the necessity of an account ing at the end of their road. It is, fashionable to be cynical about the Peace Conference. There are few men who haven't at some time called the diplomatists gathered there a gang of thieves. Yet it is a question whether the leaders of the Peace Conference are not far more earnest in their efforts to be just than the men who sit safely at home without their responsibilities and criticize their, morals while they them selves, in their own little way, go head long on the course that leads inevitably to bitter retribution and regret. These arc days when men seem to fear the truth as if it were a pestilence though It is the only thing that can save them and their world. Truth is a chal lenge to the Paris conference. It will always lie a challenge to all men. The truth always reasserts itself. It will always find men ready to suffer for it. It demands justice, patience and charity in all human relations. And until it is recognized everywhere we shall ljave to go on as we have gone before, and the most awful of wars will be but a flash and an uproar in the long travail that men must endure before they can lid themselves of their besetting devils. And so all rational minds everywhere are merely trying to find a way to lead mankind back to a forgotten rule of life that might have given the earth peace long ago if there had not been men of power everywhere so poorly educated as to feel that it could be evaded. Truth which is a sense of justice speaks in many languages. It has many name. It has martyrs and ehampions among the great and among the obscure. It always will have them because of the command handed' down thiough the cen turies by one Man. Men will go on as they have gone from the beginning, to follow and find it because it is the goal of their existence. And if they were not somehow divine they would' have given up the quest long ago because of its diffi culties and its matchless pain. Whoever you find the passion for spiritual truth translated into action, transcending fear and selfishness and delusions, fired by courage, showing un mistakably the clear evidences of im mortality and riding down all that is mean ami ugly and evil, you will find the full meaning of the marvelous sentence: "1 am the resurrection and the life!" RECOGNITION FOR LENINE? SUCH intercourse as the Allies may es tablish with l.enine cannot by any means be interpreted as a recognition of Bolshevism. '1 he Paris conference ap pears to be disposed, to grant a request for food which emanates from the chastened and partly sobered wing of the ultra-radical paity in Russia. Lenine and Trotsky have been drifting apart. The theories of one aie not the theories of the other. Lenine has been gradually effecting a reconciliation with elements in his own country which a year ago be abused and derided. He found he couldn't get along without the intelligence and industrial leadership of the group which he antagonized at the beginning and he has been tending grad ually to a conservative course to save the land fiom chaos and himself from destiuction. Apostles of the led tie and violence will find little to comfort them in such terms as the Allies may make Lenine. The Russian group that has been piessing its overtures upon Paris does not represent the raw and unthinkable political doctrine of a year ago. Lenine's group, after the first fever of their ex periment, have seen disaster looming. They have been shifting gradually to a way of thinking that ultimately may lesolve itself into an experiment with a liberal socialistic form of government. Russia is due for years of instability and trouble. To refuse food to the peo ple is to invite chaos in eastern Europe. And if the Allies have had to compro mise in a distasteful situation it is their own fault. There seems to be no other way to save the Allied expedition now menaced in north Russia, where it never should have been sent. Tim proper roniling appears to be Fiuss and Finnic'. Helsolniid N I" liinlcrgn a sliidit rair-i-nngi-inviit "f stlliibli".. Two slates ihcirimI into a slate of en-tliii-iiivm l diniriil Wilson arrived. Tlieie will 1' no cull for limit It -killers at the i-.ieial center Milislilule for saloon". It is a mi-take to .uppn. that a dachs hund i't willing l bid1 simply because it has its tail between its legx. lioml citizens everywhere will join in (lie wish that tin1 armistice signed liy New York murine workers will result in a permanent pence. When one realizes Unit it is easier to make trouble than to remove it one ceases In worry nicr the delnj in foriniilaling a pence treat. The airplane race across the Atlantic is a siortitiK event until the trip lias been suc cessfully ninth1.. That moment it becomes a i-iiiiiiniTciiil proposition. Tlieie an1 cleri, men in (his cily who will not allow the million picture contro versy to stultify 1 heir patriotism and will tliercfoie support the Victory Liberty I.naif; but they are not uiakiiiK'mucli noise about It. Kecent meetinss of business men inter ested ui making Philadelphia safe for democ racy suggest the thought that the time is now' ripe for the establishment of a get-Ninvtliiug-done club in eiery ward in the cit . World doctors, concluding that it is impossible successfully to diagnose tin. case of Russia, as they hnvejiothing to go on but a comparatively few isolated symptoms, liuve decided to allow the disease to run its course, frVling assured that the strong physique of the patient will bring about eventual recovery. The report that a big railroad and tim ber concession has been made by the Rus sian Itolsli'evlk (ioveinment to two ineti with Ameiicun capital behind them gives point to the assertiou of Lloyd (ieorge that, while the Bolshevik force is apparently growing, Ho. slieviMii itself is gradually waning breaking down before the relentless force of economic facts. Strikes and rumors of strikes have more significance today than ever before fn the history of civilization. The one thing needed, on both sideH of every controversy is level liendcdiiess. Even as the dachsliuiuls ale ready to simp at the legs of the sitters nt' the peace table, so arp'the Holsheviks ready to take advantage of every manifestation of iaduatrlaluurcbt. A GREATER FLIGHT THAN ACROSS THE OCEAN An Old Tale of a Man Who Flew to the Moon, and What He Found There rplIE flight across the ocean which the alr--- men are now planning is not n marker to that wjilch old Mlshop Oodwlu, of Wnles, made the hero of a fnnlasllo tnle take. The bishop's hero Hew to the moon. lie tells of (lie exploit in a book published in London in K's'tS, which he called "The .Man In (he Moon: Or, 11 Discourse on a Voyage Thither by Domingo (lonzales." The flight is used as the means by which (he hero is transported from the earth to the heavenly body, where a perfect state of so ciety is supposed to exist. The bishop is more Interested in explaining h!s Ideal state than in the navigation of the nlr. His hook belongs in the class whh Plato's "Republic" mill Sir Thomas More's "I'fopla." It was published aboul 1SMI years after the Latin version of "I'lopin" was written anil aboul ninety years after its first translation into English. "TVOMLVCiO (iON.ALES, the hero, is a ' Spanish dwarf, who has been abandoned by n ship cnplain upon the "blessed Isle of Si. llellens. the only Paradise on earth." The captain was so good as to leave him a negro servant; but (lonzales does not regard the servant as a pleasant companion, for he compels him to live 011 one side of the island while he lives on the other. He says- -the story is told in the lirst person thnt he remained on the inland "a whole jear, sol acing myself fur want of human society with birds ami brute beasts." He used lfls liine to such good advantage that before the end of the year he had several white geese so well (rained Hint they would carry his meals from the hut of the negro to his own hut. Ity yoking seternl of them together and attaching Iheni to a car or "engine," as he calls it. he found that they were strong enough to carry him through the nlr, for lie was not heavy. A Spanish ship, stopping at the island at (he end of the year, took him 011 board with his negro and Ills geese; hut when the xesscl was within ten' leagues of the island of TcnerilTe, in the Canaries, it was wrecked by an English fleet. Domingo saved himself by using his geese nnd was carried to the peak of a snow-capped moun tain in Teneriffe. TT WAS now the season that these birds take their flight away, as our ruckoos and sparrows do in Spain toward autumn," coiil inues Conales in relating how he got to Ihe moon, "and, as I afterward found, being mindful of their iminl voyage jus! when 1 begun to settle myself to take them in. (hey with one consent rosp up, and having no other higher place to mnke toward, to my unspeakable fear and amazement struck both upright, and never left towering upward still higher and higher for the space. as I guessed, of an hour, after which I thought Ihey labored less than before, till al length (nh, wonderful!) they remained immovable 11s if they had sat upon so many perches. The lines slacked ; neither 1 nor the engine moved nt all. hut continued still as having no manner of weight." In ponder ing upon Ihe reason for this strange cir cumstance he concluded that the earth Mas 11 magnet and that he was now outside of its circle of iiiHuence. After resting a short time his birds renewed their upward flight; but they moved with such startling swift ness that the voyager says of this part of his journey; "I must ingenuously confess my horror and amazement in this place was such that had 1 not been armed wilh true Spanish resolution 1 should certainly have died for fear.-' I A I'TER a flight of eleven days the gcosc J-- alighted upon the moon. The traveler was soon surrounded by a crowd of the in habitants, who were of all sizes and shapes, from giants towering thirty-Hie feet into the air (o dwarfs not more than a yard tall. He gives a fanciful description of these people. Some of the tallest, he says, lived to be a thousand years old. The attraction of gravi tation was so slight that they traveled by jumping into the air and propelling them selves from place to place with large fans. After telling how he was entertained by the "Lunars," he passes to a discussion of their social and political condition. There had beu no thief in the moon for a thousand years when (lonzales visited the planet, for "there was no want of anything necessary for the iisi. of man, food of all sorts growing everywhere without labor, "As for clothes, booses or whatever else n man may be supposed to want." the tale con tinues, "it is provided by their superiors, though not without some labor, hut yet so easy as if they did it for pleasure; again, their females are all absolute beauties, and by a secret disposition of nature a man there having once known a woman npver de sires any other. Murder was never heard of among them, neither is it hardly possible to he committed, for there can be uo wound made but what is curable; yea, they ns sured me, and for my part 1 believe it, that though a man's head be cut off, yet if within three moons it he joined to the carcass again and the juice of a certain herb there grow ing applied, it will be so consolidated as the wounded party shall be perfectly cured. . . , i'ii .1 1.;. .. . IIL 1 me cinei cause o llieir good gov--' eminent is an excellent disposition in the nnture of the people, so that all, both old and young, hate all manner of vice, and live in such love, peace and amity as it seems to be another Paradise; though it is true, like wise, that some are of 11 better disposition than others, which they discern immediately after their birth. And. because it is nn inviolable law among them that none shall be put to denth, therefore, perceivlug by their stature or some other signs who arc like to be of a wicked and debauched humor, they send them, I know not by what means, into the earth and change tbe.m for other children, before they have either opportunity or ability to do amiss among them. ' Their ordinary vent for them is a certain high hill in the north of America, whose people I am apt to believe are wholly de scended from them, both in regards of their color and their continual use of1 tobnceo, which Lunars or Moon Men smoke exceed ingly. Sometimes, though but sel dom, they mistake their aim, and fall upon Europe, Ashror Africa. "If you inquire how justice is executed, alas! what, need is there of exemplary pun ishment where no offenses are committed? Neither need they any lawyers, for there is no contention, the seeds whereof, when they begin to sprout, are by the wisdom of the next superior plucked up by the roots, Aud as little want is there of physicians; they never surfeit themselves the air is always pure and temperate, neither is there any cause of sickness. I could .never learn of nuy that were distempered. But the time assigned them by nnture being spent, they die without the least pain, or rather ceuse to live as a candle does to give light wlieu what nourishes it Is cousunied," , THOSE who hnve reail Counn Doyle's tale of the monsterR which nu airman found between" five nnd ix miles above the earth will be interested to note that Bishop God win's hero discovered nothing but. a cessa tion ot force, ot gravity. But no one can I m-ove'llittt either 'was rijjht pr wroag. , gators-, -sT-SfSw "'-Lr- "'v- "'Yv'-rVS O'iV-i-rfiiJspfHt jjb" vr -u - . 'Kit. J-. -. -, ;n.r.. sw -'t-n- wt-'al "?-!...-. . j-:--::-".. -: jf THE ELECTRIC CHAIR Favorite Poems Village Blacksmith 1 Pen.seroso Cotter's Saturday Night I'hanntopsis ()(le to Tobacco Recessional Yankee Doodle Love in the Valley On 1st Looking Into Chapman's Homer Address to the L'uco Guid Nothing to Wear Put a service chevron on your pocketbook next week. The Philadelphia convention of the Ameri can Press Humorists is only two months away, , aud no one in this t""'n seems to have realized the seriousness of the situa tion. Joint Hnrlejcorii will soon be wearing his red chevron. Unheard Of, Perhaps, but Certainly Not Unseen Virginia I.ee, of the chorus at the Casino, and Uabe Marlowe, one ot the Tumble In" girls at the Selwyn, will sail shortly for Knelnnd to fill an eighteen months' contract at an unheard-of figure for a chorus girl. N'ew York Evening Sun. The Mexican girl who scrubs- the marble steps of the Mexican consulate at 1432 Pine street every morning is a loyal Carranzista, we linznrtt. (That sentence is lacking in concinnity, hut let it stand.) For we were passing by there yesterday mornfng Just after breakfast, when we saw a messenger ooy bring a telegram to the consulate. "Hullo," we said to ourself, "something's hnppening in Mexico." So we lingered about the pave ment for 11 few miuutes to see what was to be seen. The girl got up from her kneeling job on the steps nnd took the boyinside. In n minute or so they reappeared. The boy had the grinning visage of one who has been tipped for bringing good news. And Chiquita ,herself was smiling gently as she resumed her task. We prowled on down to the office, and the first thing we learned there was that General Blanquet had been killed the afternoon be fore, leading nn nnti-Cnrranza insurrection near Vera Cruz. , Among substitutes ffor the saloon, try reading the Congressional Record standing up, with one foot on the nearest rail. The knockout is not quite so rapid ns that in duced by whisky, nor is it so ngreeable In its primary stage; but the ultimate prostra tion is 100 per cent perfect. In the beautiful office of the Philadelphia Electric Company nt Tenth and Chestnut a place so'ctinuingly planned and so full of marvels that it is ou houor to the.ltuma'n intelligence we overheard James Spillan, un employe of the company, talking about some ot his experiences in France. Mr. Spillau, who has only recently returned from overseas, was attached to a trench mortar battery. In the Argonue fighting his platoon, numbering twenty-eight men was taking shelter in a large shell-crater, when a Ger man shell burst rlcht in the middle of the group. Twelve men were killed outright, thirteen were wounded. Only himself and two others escaped unhurt except for the shock. Mr. SplHaii" spoke with some lilimor of the anks passlop for collect llecting boche souvenirs,. I anu. jneuuoaeu.ft.fsajinjr. v' s?8'. "-'5;:i nmong the armies: "The British fight the Germans because they hate them; the French because they, fear them; nnd the Americans because they want to collect souvenirs." Electricity and the League of Nations The Philadelphia Electric Company is put ting up a new load-dispatcher's board, a de vice for commanding and regulating in one central nerve-plexus all electrical energy circulated through the company's cables; On thia amazing diagrammed screen roaring dynamos in distant power-houses arc repre sented by little clusters of lights and col ored (buttons, and their throbbing turbines are subject to the supreme command of the load-dispatcher as he sits at his all-seeing desk. We are told thnt this new installation at Tenth nnd Chestnut will he the most re markable thing.of its kind in America, and a view of it suggests the thought that the function of the league of nations will be very similar, From outlying power stations all through city and suburbs the Electric Company's load -dispatcher is informed by telephone ot any break -down or of ap proaching storms that may cause trouble, so that he can take steps to reapportion the lightninged forces at his command. In the same way, in its headquarters in Geneva the league (if properly planned) will be in in stant communication with all governments; will be apprised of emergencies among its clients, and will have supreme authority, to transfer power from one point to another according as the needs of public interest require. Like the load-dispatcher's board, the league of nations was bound to come into effect because the idea is logical, scientific and appeals to common sense. Wc only' wisli there might be one or two expert electrical engineers like Mr. Black, the Electric Com pany s chief loud-dispatcher ou the com mittee that is to draft the final international covenant, oucn men nre accustomed to dealing with terrible and deadly forces in such a way that they become the tame pets of our kitchens and library tables. Wliat we need now arc some lcaguc-of-nntions engi neers who can control nnd distribute in safely insulated chnnnels the .immeasurable forces of national prides and passions. 'TU I Go Whlsp'rina JfTlIS I go whisp'ring, whlsp'riug, J- On bleak ways, bare and brown, Across the wide and windy fields, All through the dreary town ; Tast pools where reedy sedges rock I wander up and down. SO SOFTLY do I whisper, Where sweet wind shakes the grass, The golden crocus answers, The violets hear me pass ; At firelit qottagc windows I call to lad and lass. SO I go whisp'ring, whisp'ring, To birfls on wheeling wing, s And wake the wood anemone Where shadows shift and cling, For I am Life and Gladness, For I am Love and Spring. JEANNE OLDF1ELD TOTTER. If they really want the kaiser to get a good stiff sentence, why not impanel a jury composed of Jiis daughters-in-law? if they would only put up foot-rails In the second-hand bookstores We could get as much fun there as we ever had In groggeries. s, Our. Idea of real happiness Is to pull down the rolltop at six; post-mortem and set off to meet Xanthippe for a session at our I favorite cafeteria and, our favorite, .movie I 'Sri AN UNFRAMED PORTRAIT HIS wii Asa IS wife is as beautiful blossoming star in a blue sky, Or a thought out of Keats. But she sits'at home alone, of an evening, Watching the romance of the city streets Through a curtnined window. While nt a clubhouse He bends over a silent poker table, And gazes rapturously nt a woman's angular face, Printed on a card. Morris Abel Beer, in New York Evening Sun. Prince Lichnowsky's wise words would fall on ears more willing If Germany's vic tims were not facing a desolation worse than that of the nation responsible. There is encouragement for American "wets" in the uews that the New Zealand soldier vote has defeated the "dry1' in that country. The Bolshevist idea of bringing about a heaven on earth is to make things today so much like hell that anything else following will seem like heaven in comparison. What Do You Know? QUIZ I. What are the symbols of the evangelists? L'. Name the secretary of the treasury. Si What body of American troops has re-, reived the sobriquet of the "Iron Division"? 4. Wlmt is a sobriquet? f. Where and what is the Escurial? fi Who is Hugh Gibson? Name the premier of the Australian Commonwealth. 8. Who wrote "Sister Carrie"? s. 0. Where is the Liberty Bell kept? 10. What is the design and origin ot the flag of the Irish Republic, recently pro claimed in Dublin?1 Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Sir Walter Scott called Pierre Corneille (160G-84) ''The Homer of the French Drama." . 2. James Itussell Lowell wrote the "Com memoration Ode" for the dedication of a memorial to Harvard's dead in the Civil War. 3. Iconoclast: literally an idol-breaker; one who attacks traditions and Institu tions. 4. The Mensheviki, or minimalists; the party opposed in Russia to the Uolshc- vlKi; moaeraie socialists, lt 5, General Joseph T. Diekman Is com- , mauiler of the Third American Army, . 3? now occupying parts 01 tier many. 0. Honors ot war: allowjng a surrendered enemy to keep his arms and banners. 7. Dr. Alexander Wekerle, reported exe cuted by the Ited party in Budanest. was three times premier of Hungary. 'Bll 8. The Iliad: an epic poem, in classical Greek, ascribed to Homer, relating the story of the siege and taking of Troy by the Greeks. J). "Gretna Green'1 is a name applied to a town where marriages are easily con tracted. From a town In Scotland iuut nprnsR tlm Ttnfll1i r,Anf ivIiIOish Av irrr.r "":. :. vr j$ j'.ngiisu eicpcrs went 10 ne mnrrieir, j.kSW I 10.. Boston has been called ''TheiloderafA, ' ; 1 -"I ' ft fa - a 4i i SKI ..'..te , fi . ;i kl . " 1 'i. . T j. --" r . m .k. t.irT! aftrvf., J ' "A . .: - -jh?- t ..;' !,: SM-Wi 5, ,J' Jf,T.S.U n '..J1.-. .S1iJs?J!. ', L.K,'JriAV, S . JMBI! "A . 4& 'Y,