jr-v ' "j 1 EVENIW PUBLIC LEDGER- P-HirADELPJfllAV TUESDAY, jVfAr C, 1919 i ''T,TT w : irw &. I r a? r N.- o IF: mi vfc L JEuentiut KJublic Ule&aer f HP'THE EVENING TELEGRAPH PUDLIC LEDGER COMPANY .... .1'TP.U1J H-. CUnTIS. PrinrT d,, .( , WliB'.ir.'.,,r' "' Trmnurfri rtilllp H Collin". m'wrfi Jhn 11. Wllllm. .lohn J Hpurcewi Dltwlnr. raS HDITOIUAI. IIOAni) &' Cnn II K C'ihtu, Chairman r' -VM. " .""" i,"fe JOHN f MAIITIM Ootifral rin.lnrdi. .Mhiiubi- ip rubllhfil dally al I'ubiil Ijgou tlulldlnr. ATt.ANTIO CUT f s'Rw Ynnic i0 StolronoltUn Tower irrM-iw inn uuiminx JJETROIT ClUCAUO 701 Ton! HitlMtni toofl KulOrton lltilldlne ... l.u'i: i rtbiinc iiuiiuinc iVAStitNaTov nimrtc. N I:. Cop. iviinlvanl:i A. nnd 14th St. New York TlrnnAP . .Th Shh nulldlnr IOMK).N Uurkau Lon-Ion Tlmrt srncniPTTn thump Tho i;KNiNo ri in ir I,Fmrn la wnH to nnb fltcrlbtrn In Phllftdptplila on-l siirroyn-llnR towns t the rntc of ttirUp (12) nnt ikt wefk parable to the rarrlT. Tly mull to point miMlil or PhllnnVlphU In thft 1'nltM Stntr Criim1i. or CnltM Stnti t slon prwtRt'' rrp Oft v lni rent pr month Btx fl) fiollir per ynr, pnviM In Arhnntr To all for-Iff i ounlrli one (1 ilolMr pr month NnTirr Huh- ribort wNdfuir nMr i hanjrM yntiHt Rle old ni f n iifiv nddrrnji. HFU., WOO WAI M T KFiTnNF. MUN .into tJT Aiidrrm all rounminirnhoHv tn Krlno puhlir I.rdfft r. hulnt, iutt up, Squat r Phtlad'lphin Member of the Associated Tress rim ssnri.Thw ritrss h win- tivctfl entitle! to thr t.ic for rrpuhticatian of nil tictt s dhpnlrhci emitted to it or not ntlicnrtvr ctctlitrtl hi Mm ;rt)'vr, nti'l oho the lornt nrtt v pitlihsht't thcrriti. All unfit of ) rpubhtntmn of npreinl fi pacArt hrmn nrr ahrt ir-rrrrrf. !'fiilj(ltlpliln, liirxln. M-v a, pio HOG ISLAND AND A HOLIDAY TyrORH than 00,001) persons visited IIok Island on a recent Sunday when the vast shipyaul was opened to isitors. No one vho ever saw the Rica test of fihipbufdinff plants has Rone away with out n new sense of amazement at a spec tacle' that is almost indescribable, and a new sense of pride ml of confidence in the American spirit. The schedule of the Jrard recently published indicates that two vessels are to be ready for simul taneous launching on Memorial Day. If Mr. Brush and his associates in the di rection of Hot: Island could find it possi ble to open the Kates to the (reneral pub lic on that occasion about 10D.OOO persons would thank them for some unparalleled thrills and an outiiiR really worth while. Few persons in this city are yet able to realize that Hor Island is actually one of the wonders of the world and pei haps the greatest single work under taken and .successfully cat lied out under the stimulus of the war. Uiver -teameis could provide a magnificent grandstand for multitudes if the yard management would arrange its double launching as a holiday event. The yard itself would draw a vast crowd. The people own Hog Island. It is their shipyard. Most of them have no adequate notion of the miraclo they helped to create. Once they were permitted to see the island and its work they could affoid to smile toler antly at the emotional blow-ups that occur at intervals in Congress when effei vescent politicians find themselves in a mood for probes and investigations. THE WATER SHORTAGE TF THERE is a water shoitagc in Phila- delphia now what will the situation be after July 1 ? This city comes next to Chicago as a consumer of Adam's ale in these days when certain classes of the thirsty moisten their throats with other liquids. The daily consumption of water here is 170 gallons for each man, woman and child, or 850 gallons for the aveiage family. In Chicago it is 220 gallons. New York, whither men go fioni all paits of tho country to quench their tliiist, uses 100 gallons. Boston gets along 'with 105, while St. Louis needs 120 and Baltimore consumes 140 gallons. We aic told that the enormous quan tity used heie is due to the large number of manufacturing plants, wheie the sur plus not consumed in the homes of the people is needed for the vai ions processes and flows directly into the rivers or reaches them through the sewers after serving its purpose. Perhaps this is a complete explanation. At any rate, the water is pumped into the mains and goes somewheie. It cer tainly docs not reach the homes of the people in any such quantity as the figures would indicate, and in" some sections of the city it is difficult in the summer to ' get any water at all, save during a I-- rainstorm when the roof leaks. v If the situation is so bad as tho. outgiv ings from City Hall would indicate some thing will have to be done before the dry spell begins at the end of next month. THE STRAW HAT T3AINY days almost invaiiabiy follow !", . upon the advent of the new stiaw jSKat. "Unsettled weather," said the Mpfwcathcr gentleman firmly in making his F;HvSprognostication for the present week. p,3Ien of fashion who put away their win- v"xt ler neaagear on me iick or tne clock Vw-W Itnuo Tift nnoir fimn rf if TKn.. 1 .its?' "anxious students of weather rpnmt &5S&S . They flee from a darkening cloud. h'a,' W lritv as a venture more and mn fini,u.. Pm?"1, 'vtiward colorful embellishments. Socks "rti,- ot a nrignt hue are recent acquisitions ','0"" ear to the Prou1 sP'r't of man, dearer hV even than his passionate ties of recent Buuuiicia, uui. jl is in nis natoand that sv" the average man is most ,lr.vi.,,r .,.i I l.-i'yenturesome. Women, whose 'hats in I r' lBpiro the oldest and most chei ished ioke t,MJ'nVa lnan'ma(ic world, preserve a wise '"BiMlld tolerant silence when the season f 'i..f-aPJoretf hatbands comes round. Straw stts showwhich way tho wind hlnwu t i TAWSBf? "' "' a-'c'--' " ' jne realm of tziamA: ..t: -i i iHuumiu paycnoiuy. THE DYNAMITERS imrnnh . timi. r 'ml' ' uynamncr," that de- V v-m ncious iarce in wnicn Kobert Louis '1venson skitied the Bolsheviks of his aky, will remember Zero Pumpernickel , lines, the sntimenta bomb-compiler of ;.?olden Square. This tender-hearted ., Msassln, whose hair had grown gray ; wtw me vexations 01 internal devices SWJWi MM to explode as, planned, was on Mnas iw if uiiiviii.iiu. ,iii.ii u inrK ni kiMila'ln IiIm fiillhnnr tr m ..1....1 .. I l. I ( " "vwoj nnwiwcu Uferuixi3l ' l . .(5 .... f" r,'.A.., EhjW'.ujIi the corner of a London newsstand and "no adequate remains could be found." Zero would have been a welcome addi tion to the ranks of our local sovictecrs, who think that to speed by a church at dusk and toss a handful of TNT in that direction in the vague hope of kill ing some one, is n glorious exploit against capitalistic civilization. He would have justified their outrages with a quaint fluency of philosophy, and when netted by the secret seivioe be would have been a picturesque figure on his way to the chair. Alas! it is to be feared that those who make war on society these days are not such engagingly absurd figuies as Ste venson's rascal. They are maniacs who delight in cruel outrages for their own sake and deal horror regardles.-.. Blood is their argument and blood their desire. They think nothing of sttiking down "noncombatant" in the hofe of leaching those who they fancy hae injuied them. They need not expect society to lie tender with thom when it hunts them down. GENDARMES FOR THIS CITY? A QUERY WORTH PONDERING Why Should Philadelphia Adopt a Method Which Has Failed in Many Other American Cities? TI' IT were pioposed to take the Buieau 1 of Health or the Unreal! of Water out of the contiol of the municipal iintliiii i tles because eeitain inspectoi- 01 eleiUs had been engaged in pernicious political activity, the cry would immediate arise that good local government i m.ule of other stuff and that the Legislalme should give the city the niaehineiy to woik out Us own salvation, but not de prive it of the light' to conduct its ptncly boiiie alia 1 1. When the cliiuge is i.nsed that the polite have engaged m political aitivitv many earnest lefoimei.- and good citi zens seem to lose sight of their belief in democracy wot king out its pioblems and seek for lelief in that paternalism which they ale usually pione to condemn. We have to lecognize that then1 i a tundament.il lpttl diireience between policimen and othei municipal emplo.ves, for mitnoious courts have held that the po ice officer, while employed and paid by a municipality, is primarily the agent of the state in his law-enfoicing dutie-, nnd with thee derisions we have no quai lel. But as a unit of local administra tion and a- a human proposition, the police dcpai tmeut is no diffeient fiom any other group of municipal emplove.s. It is aigued that, although home rule is desiiable in thorny and in praclice, an exception should be made in the case of the police because they repiescnt such enoimous power and because their evil use may perpetuate an iniquitous admm istiation of its friends m the contiol of local affairs. Like many similar dangers, this has been one of the pioblems that do not seem to disturb autocracies, but which do piosont themselves to self govcining communities. And yet. bn't it better for us to work out the pioblems under a dempetacy than to choose the seemingly easier way of an autociacj ? Those who favor a police force under state contiol for Philadelphia, and who thereby oppose the expicss ievr s of Governor Sproul on the matter, often point to the state constabulary as an illustration of the efficient local police that we could secure under state contiol. They forget that the constabulary is not a local police. Do those who use this argument ac tually favor a militaiy or semimilitaiy police for Philadelphia ? Do they realize that a military police foice for cities is violently in conflict with American tiadi tions and that Amencan urban popula tions would find it difficult to reconcile themselves to such a pioposal'.' American working people, and citizens generally, have long thought of the Prussian centrally controlled gendaim erie as the epitome of the oppiessive Euiopean system, and have contrasted our own civilian police as America's con tribution to the maintenance of law and older by nonmilitariatic means. Per haps the time has come frankly to exam ine the question of whether we should change our practice in this lespect and copy Piussia. We believe that suih a leveisal of policy would be a mistake. We have ex amined the histoi) of pievious move ments in this country to correct the evils that attended local contiol of police by turning them over to the state and the summary of our findings is somewhat as follows: Fiml. That, (wide fioiu "tlicaiettrul" eonmdcialwtiH of home rule, the politi cal morals o) the iioliee Joiee are im plored bi such a ;iep only when tin politics of the state is on n tliitinrtly higher plane than the politics of the city. Second. That the principle o) "died;" icorkx nut onli when the poli tics of the state is under different on trol from the politics of the cdy (e. 17., tchcie one pcti ty is dominant in the city as wjainst the opposite party in the state or where different factions or br(inch"s of the same party are yen 1 tally in control of the city and state, 1 espectivcly) . Third. That n number of cities have worked out under local control us liiyh standards ot efjicienc-i and political morality as have any cilies under slate control. Fourth. Thai in only one rily of metropolitan mule lias thr slate control of local police been universally satis factory. In six of the nine largest American cities the plan was aban doned after a trial. The one city that heartily approves state control is Bos ton, which 10 the state capital and the only large city in Massachusetts, thus making the problem in no way com parable to that of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania. Fifth. That in those European cities where the state exercises control of the local police a share of the expense is borne by the central government. This is not tru-i in America, where the local government bears the expense whether the state exerciser the control or not. Sixth. The lack 0 control over local affairs is detrimental to good govern ment because it lessens the interest of the citizens; tn the last analysis the active intirrst of the ci'Krus ts thr sole earnest of an efficient democracy. We have lined up a few major points. Them ate other aiguments equally weighty, and a pioper discussion of this vitally important topic might well fill a book. The issue is so acutely before us, however, that we do not feel that lengthy arguments are in order. This newspaper has consistently in dorsed the program of the charter revi sionists, which calls for home rule and good government in Philadelphia, and we cannot, without a sense of stultification, bring ourselves mound to favor an emas culation of the chatter piogram by con senting to lopping oil" from local control the city's largest, most impoitant and costliest singlo governmental unit After all, we believe in the American tiadition that the pioscculiou must piove its case, and a wise corollaiy of that doc tnne would be that when a fundamental change in government is pioposed the burden of proof must lie with the advo cates of the change. This newspaper be 'levcs that the advocates of chaitor icvi sion have adequately proved then' case and that the decent elements of the community- legardless of politics, legaid-le.-s even of factional piefeiences-ure ! solidly behind the veiv elemental v changes they propose. With regard to the lai "police meas 111 e. we believe that many of the propo nents aie acting in entne good faith. But we are solidlj with Governor Spioul 111 what we believe to be bis liim v lew that democratic local government is not iiiln it Hi corrupt nor nece-. ni ilv ineffi cient and we admiie the stan 1 he1 has taken for home rule as a fundamental prmcip'e not lightly to be tin own into the discaid. I'nlesw the advocates of the state con tiol of police make a better cae than the.v haw yet been able to do, Ave aie con vinced that the.v have failed to justify tile 'li.istie change they piopose. MAKE A THOROUGH JOB OF IT rpill nly eiitic.sm that c.111 lie made rnn-up week i.s that its piogiam 1- not ( ompiebcnsive enough. llouseholdcis aie asked to gather all th" old and wornuut stuff 11 their houses and all the uibbish that lm- accumulated duiiiig the year, both inside ami oul-ide, and put it in covered receptacle-, on the sidewalk on a stated day, mp that the teams of the cleaning contiactois may ait it away. This plan clears the houses of much stuff. But there is much moio that might with piofit be disposed of. The closets 111 some houses are filled with women's gal meats no longer in fashion or with suits of men's clothing which have been kept on the chance that they might be worn again some time. They are not worn. They accumulate f 10111 year to joar and gather dust and attiact moths. What has not been given away 1 this winter to be disposed of at rummage sales for chai ity might well be sent to the emergency lelief committee for the benefit of war suffciers is Europe or for the better clothing of needy families in our own city, the identity of which can be learned fiom any of the chaiitable 01 ganiations. But what i-- of gieatest importance is that we should clean our mind;; of the uibbish we have allowed to accumulate 111 them and mak- loom for the laiger thinking in which we must indulge if Phi'adelphia is to face the futuic pie paieil for the inevitable pioblems which it will unfold. We had a population of only 817.000 foity yeais ago. Today we have 1,81)0,00(1. If plans for a city of 2,000,(100 had been made in 1880 tiaffic would not be suffering from the conges tion thtit is its bane today. We know as surely ,as we know any thing that within the next forty yeais the cit will have a population of :S,,"00, 000, that the small buildings 111 the busi ness cento 1 will be displaced by ten and twenty stoiy stiuctures and that the men and women vv 01 king in them will find it difficult to move along the stieets or be accommodated in the tiolley cars or tub wajs unless something is done in time to widen the stieets or to increase the num ber of subways or to build gieat trans vcise boulevauls leading fiom tho con gested center to the outlying distucts. The growth of the business of the lapid transit company ought to convince us of the ceitainty of expansion. In 1010 only 14,",000,00() passengers weie canied by the stieet cars. This number had in creased to 7()T,000,000 last year, 01 a gain of neatly 7.1 per cent in eight years. It is not sut prising, therefore, that we have to hang on to a strap 01 that at night it frequently takes fifteen minutes for a tiolley car to move fiom Sixth stieet to Bioad. We cannot make thei necessaiy plans nor can we eatry them out unless we clear our minds of old-fashioned ideas and begin to harbor those visions with out which no man or city ever grew great. We must stop congratulating ouiselves on our late of progicss and begin t'o ask ourselves why we do not move forwaid with gicater speed. If we gained 50,000 in population last year let us make the city so attractive that we shall gain 75,000 this year and 100,000 next year. We can do it if we choose to engage whole-heartedly in the business of a mental clean-up. In view of (lie rn-piit violent criticism tilmoil at .Mr. Wilson ,y' j,.. 'Dip Itnnt of All Evil n'spoiiMuic P w s. papers in Europe und cabled to America to indicate "pnpulnr opinion" on the other side1 it ii intiMcstiiiK to lend the current report of the Mexican division ot the Amori ,hii icmimittce on public iifformulion. Most ot the antagonism created in Mexico for the Allies was inspired, it appears, by low grade' newspapers, wbic-b Tegulnrly drew as much as $1000 a week In mibsidicH from (Jennun agents. Even the red Finns in Pctrojjrnd are unlikely to keep l.eniiie in the swim much longer. Now that the circus has come to town Philadelphia has lca cause to be jealous of Paris, ut LUSITANIA DAY AND GERMANY'S HUMILIATION j Tomorrow Will Mark the Fourth An I nlversary of the Crime So Largely j Responsible for Her 1 j Doom I I TT IS denied Mint the iniirines fought their -1- wnj through Bcllcim woods, crying "lie member tho Liisilanhi '." According to (Sen 'Till I'ntlln, what they did .veil was "Come along, joii 'llliiiiketv-lllmiks (fill In here with appropriate epithet). Do ou want to live fin ever?" Nevertheless It was often In the spirit of ilghteoiis vvralh eiigendeied b.v the iiuiiileroiis deed committed four j ears ago lomnrinw that the American armies hewed their wnj to victor). The Luitnnlu was iiiiforgotlen, even though the invocation of its inline seemed u trille too "stngej" for a ha tile er.v It is doubtful, loo, if "Remember (he Maine '" spuing fnim the throat of Shnf tei's Utile aim us il lushed up Sail .limn Mill. It wis 11 si liologiiiil 1 ii Hut limit a vocal slogan. Actual expression was super fluous. It was the passionate foice of the sentiment whhh stirinl the heart of the Ameiliiiii paliiol The si'ienlilie hixliiii.iu has of 1 nurse as signed a iniiltiplicit.v of muses for the two wars waged liv Anieiim within the Inst quarter of a cenliii.v. It mn he proved, for inMat that if (he aide King Kerdinand and Ihe good (.liieen ls.ihella of Spniu had begotten a sane heir instead of the mad PiiiiioNS .liinmt the histor.v of a gieat nation might not have heeu debased bv so 111111I1 peivcrsitv nnd, fiirlheimoie. that if "Crazy Juno," as the llngli-h culled her. had not wedded a n ion of the loyal house of Austria (he lung annuls of llapshnrg intoleniin e might never have heen locnrdcil in Mndnil. I lie iisi notion of Spanish onnression Coh. I In lhee inllueuies is Ihe next step I'ul thai whole chain of reasoning was far too lomplev for the nvoinge defender of Anient an honor and American ideals in IVIs. e iciucmhcicd tin1 Maine, blow 11 ili while on a pi'.iicfiil mission to Unvnpa liaibor on I'lbiiiai.v 1.1 of Hint jenr. Had the tiilnsiioplic not ociuiiecl it is evliemel.v likelv that ihcic vvoiild have heeu no win. rpill; Liisltiini'i 1, -iso is not pieoNely par - nllel, vel llicii -lie 111:111 analogies. 'I'll .-.minis 111:1) 1 en sou Hull sime Ihe great Ciinnid giov hound was sunk on May 7. IfH.T, and we did not go to war until nearlv two .vens aftervviiiil, the Muck hanner (linilixof tierman sea outiage was not the pmlii ular caii-e for our c nliam e into the frn) . It then b s pi rl incut to Inquire what i( was thai icall) ilid hieak our patience. If it vv.isn'l the Mitir mommy of (lie Liisitnni.i, added, of muse, fo (iermnn.v's wholesale offenses 10 liheilv anil civilialion, vvluil was it Hint plunged H,e nation into Armageddon'.' liven .ifiei nnh two )ouis reenllei tinui of Hun piovoiation between IVhi 11111-y and Apt II. 10I7. have hoi 01110 inllier ham Wo tan 1 is all some insane imperial older ie. stiioting Ameiiiau I ntn-iit Imit if coinniMte lo one ship a wick between Now Yolk and rnlinniith. Shin 1 1) aftoivvniil three or four Ameiicau steam-lu),., uni, torpedoed. What ' "f our doiighhovs who fought so supeihl.v in the Aigoiiuo 1 an renumber their names? Hut the Liisitiiiiiu dwells in his tonseioiis ness. lie knows and the nation knows that 111 so far as :ui)tliiiig so evcoruhlo as that hideous slaughter otT the Old Head of Kiu sale inn he avenged, atonement for it has hi 011 made. The lomitiv was niiivim oil Hint it could he imide when it look up arms. It was the loss of the gieat l.usiluniii vvhiih still f.iiuud the Humes of our anger when the little A.tee uenl down. The hitler vessel happens to have heen the American iraft suhiiiiiiinctl the ihi) hofoie President Wil son l-i .ni his will 1111 ssage lo Congress. I )nl the most siipeiliel.il t ominentator would d.ue lo lite that incident 11s the rea son why wo omLaiked upon our monumental enlerpiise. Chioniclers of the exhaustive Mpo delve far hack in the past. Altihi is blamed. I'iederic-k- the (iieat and Itismuick. Thov have hid lecoids undouhtedl) . Tor all tin 11- iiiuIchIoioiis celehiitv. however, it was il'iil ln-ivable that the- performances of thisc "woiHiics" were unknown to mail) 1111 irii sMihle ankce knight in the trenches, lie was mil to "get" the kaiser, to lescue Plain e ami Illinium, lestoie lihert) to the vvni Id and. vetv tonseiously indeed, to avenge the l.usitania. "TMtO.M (he siandpoint of policy alone the - Hun alloc ilv of four .veins ago tomorrow was ihe Might of fniul stupidity. When 1 ivilmitniii once heard of it propaganda on behnlf of the Allies became a feeble super II111M . All the spu-ioiis Herman aigiinionls vveie pinmptlv millet ni valueless. A defonsoless nieichanl sldj, had been sunk in utlor viola lion of all Hie lilies of war. Nearly twelve bundled passengers 1 Mis;, 1() ,0 exact luul bet 11 nun del cd. No other word was do st 1 iptivo of Ihe ilifillll). The ill .limit if liiinor of tho 1 i mi' seined the soul of liuiiuinit). Its appeal lo the emolions was elemental. Neutrality of thought, urged h tin1 I'lositlent in 1011, became an impossibility. All of the pui longed negotiations between America and Cornianv weio ineiel) an outgrowth fiom the I.usilaniii inilrago, leading ultimately to the inevitable climax, the aibitrameut of arms. Ceiuiaii) sealed her 1I00111 on .May 7 I'.IM. With insolent presumption she hijil sought to escape her fate in a proclamation warn ing piospootivo passengers on the Jiner that the) weie sailing at their own risk. The warning was laigelv unheeded, and when the I.usitnnm left New Yolk- on May 1 she not mil) was well idled. But she eariiecl Diaii) eminent personages in' various walks of Amoiiian life. A number of these weio among the losi Among thorn wore Chailos rrohman. Illbeit Hubbard, Justus Miles rormau. the novelist; Charles Klein, the diiimatist. and Alfred C. Vunderhilt. Some Hurt) pioimiiciit Philadolpliinus vvoici drowuocl It is a miracle Inched' that many moio lues weio not lost, since the1 ship sank within twenty minutes after the attack. Two tor pedoes were discharged nt 2:1.1 o'clock in the afternoon as the Iaisitanin was approaching the Old Head of Kiiisnle, on the Irish coast. Tho submarine is snid to have been l.ving about .100 .vards awn) from the steamship. Tho survivors, among whom was the gallant Captain Turner, rescued two and a half bonis after the fiist torpedo struck, were In ought to Qiiccnstovvu. Captain Lieuten ant Schwoiger, of the Herman H-bout, escaped to win florid InurolH, including the applause of the school children, in th -fiithprlnnd and In continue fo'r n your UHl) a half his career of crime. 'i'hat waH eMlj0( in the Iliglit of Helgoland .in .September 1017, when bis submarine encountered u nia.e ot British mines uud never reap peared. TWO months after the Liisitnnia Irngpcly Loid Mersey, in his official rpport to the board of incpiiry, described the Herman at tack as "murderous," and declared that it bud been mode "with the deliberate and wholly unjustifiable intention ot killing the people, on board." The "Vprdlct of history is identical. The punishment of history will bo announced at the Peace Conference, tliis week. In Hie fifteen du)s given to the Ger mans for deliberation they will be enabled to reflect upon how much the crime of the Lusltanhi vta,s responsible for their condign upmlllaUon.i ,' aas. . n , IjJl, zrstv " Jt i,J)Vj ; (it 1 .'.vr. -' 1 . -...-. .v'-i:.,'w"-"i'aJv'Vv--Ju?-.. ' ..:!: :.;.f.!S:J:c:fttref?fe5 . tji'.l' ' :'"t "1 ""V'Z?Ak&ar' 1 .'csfcl.w''-v;, '1 v.;;-. ju ; i-;m-.'s wjaeJffip it x jiiB m- v& i ELBOW JEST because his nunie is Wood that doesn't puive that he's presidputinl tim ber. V V V This is t lean-up week in Versailles also. V V V This is the time when ninny a would-be presidential iniididiite. hunting for no "is sue," finds 011I nn exit. V V V We received a birthday unci .vesterday nwd weio much touched by the sentimental message on it. "Now," thought we, much moved, "who can that bo from nnd how did bo know it was our birthday? It ceitninly is delightful to receive those disinterested tributes of fi iendship." We looked again into the envelope and found the card of our insiiiance ngciit. V V V If one of those transatlantic fljprs doesn't make a stmt pretty soon we won't he able to drink bis health when ho takes the nir. In other words, what w aie laboriously leading up to is this: We'll be off hops when he hops off. V V V Nations Nut Vet Haling Hern Iteporled as Causing a "Deadlock" at the Peace Con ference Liberia. Cuba. San .Marino. V V V Those desiiing to predict the complete breakdown of the Peace Conference and who have not ot done so had better hasten. V V V Ilv on in his own estimation Hie crown pi iiu 0 is no longer n perfect thirty-six. He's thirty-seven today. Last jeur we wrote him a birthday poem, but this .vour lie hardly seems worth the uetessur) expense of eulories. V V V Seven doesn't seem like a lucky number in Camden. At any rate, when applied to trol ley fares. V V V The I'rehiu, 'aged two and a half years, after observing some small girls in the scpiare where ho takes his exercise, is very eager to have u doll baby carriuge. Hven so early is the masculine heart perturbed by the goings-on of the other sex. V V V Another prophecy: The favorite amuse inent in rcitaln quarters In November, lill'O, will be wondering what happened to "the soldier vote." V V V The most transparent poll lien I maneuver is retiiiiig into "seclusion" in the hope of being summoned therefrom. s V V Femaledlctlons! We'10 supposed to be nngels of sunlight, Smiling, ilieerful nnd gn.v But why is it always our best beloved Cruel Pate takes away? Oh, why is the Lot of Woman to hard? Why are we so nccurst? I hear now that bar pins must be de-barred After July the first. HUB ItOA, V V V An eminent Caliph writes us: Some time when you pasa the Bell Tele phone Building on the Parkway, look at the flags. The American nag and British Jack are flying backwards. I suppose Ilr. Burleson has a reason for so flying them. V V V We pipcllct n decline fit bolslievlsm. At any rnte, until the next equinox. Bolshevism M cold-weather, ?tuft, ,. JBSfJ . - KfL.',' -&&. znmm ,WE HAVE WITH US AGAIN- -!-" ROOM Our Own Circus Parade (The (liciilist tilioiidaivn on IU11II1) Senator Slioriiinii vviiiiging Ids bauds over the league1 of nations Stieot-cleaning Depaitment lending "Billies of the Dust" J)elogntion of fish fiom the aciiiiiriiiiu demanding 100,000 gullous more water per day President in I impossibilities, led by (louornl Leonard Wood, vvitli their ears to the ground Mrs. i:ia Wheeler Wilcox vaulting from tho sublime to the ridiculous The ghost ot AVnlt Whitman smiling to itself Bear Admiral Grayson in full uniform wondering what to do next s. Mr. Joseph IVnnell commending something Profiteering landlords oversubscribing the Hvictoi) Loan . Premier Orlando explaining that he went back lo Home merely to buy a straw lint Platoon of second lieutenants severely wounded by not having been saluted Colonel House I in the aet.of beiiig deeojed iuto public utterance Parents of joiing children demanding 1111 eight-hour night Obliviou rapidly pursuing a minor poet Agents ofke Bevcmie Dcpiutmcut looking for more luxuries to tax Convincing exhibition of low visibility on I he part of average Incomes Manufacturers of 110,000 new soft drinks trying to think of catchy names for their concoctions Carter Glass' wondering what McAdoo does to earn that $1:00,000 from the movies Trench proofreaders , struggling with Hi" phrase 1 "May 1 not?" Phalanx ot freaks, I, e., husbands who never forgot to mail a letter Cohort ot super-freuks, 1. e., men who never spilled soup on n brand-new necktie SOCrtATES The rrturn of Orlando to Paris will emphasize the "Sig." in the signature. Sign at the Hotel des Itescrvolrs, Ver sailles : Wipe your feet ou the diplomat. The truly patriotic score is written with victory notes, The impression is still hard to dissipate that tho examination o( Wood as nvesiden. tial timber is'soiug to reyeal too many fcnotu. SlJT . .. ,.i '".' ' ', S , "i Ji'l. T "I - '.'V. c ""il. - . "'.s. ' 1 -, -s v "-. "-s. ''!" .'' , "iv '..' V jlpiv ' ' - .j? "sv. " -. --. ""i1 ..' '-..''.-.""-.. ''--.. "- " - ''.. ''-.'-. '-".'.. wV''FJ, "W'fpjJij'yv, S KVSPPPWWifWMffll V" , : v'-;. . ..!vJ ''K SATISFIED "IT7I1EX the Good Lord fixed the ' And arranged the spring nnd i lie seasons fall. Anil the siiinmeilinie nnd winter, And the rain and snow nnd nil; When he made the storms that bluster And the little winds that blow. And the frost thai kills the flowers And the crocuses that grow. Oil. I don't mean nn irrov'renoe When I state this ni)ster.v ; When the (;0od Lord fixed the seasons He must hav.e thought of me. When r got (hod of summer And I see the blinding heat Come rippling up and sizzling 1'inin out the blitzing street; When tho long hot mouths have worn me To a frazzle thickness, then Things change about, und autumn Comes Haunting in again 1 And I dream of Indian summer And the fine cool days to be .... When the Good Lord fixed the seasons He must have thought of me. And then, when I get restless And the winter nights are long, t I sit there by the fireside And hoar the chimney's song. It somehow don't seem tirusonic Because I know the jear. Is moving round, and springtime Will piotty soon be here. Oh, it's line, Old Niiturc's ehaugei, And they suit me to n T ! When the Good Lord fixed the seatons He must have thought of me. Garnett Laidlaw Eskew, in the New York Herald. IP hat Do You Know? QUIZ I. Who is noting secretary of stute in the absence of Mr. Luusing? II. Where and what is Quidi Vidi? ' IS. Who is premier of'Belgium? 1. When and where did the Kearsargo sink the Alabama? .1. What is the origin of the word sil houette? . . ti. Whut is indicated by a halo around the ' moon? 7. What is the meaning of "fore-and-aft?" S. What is a "Portunatus purse"? !). Why is the bumble bee so called? 10. What was the nationality ot the artht Vandyke? Answers to Yesterday's QUIz 1. Ferdinand is king of Itumanla. 2. Maui, after which the largo army trnns-' port is mimed, is one of the principal islands of the Hawaiian group in the Pacific. . 3. The Is'obpl prize are derived from a fund of ?1 0,000,000 left by the Swedish engineer. 4. Cnmnradcrif : intimacy, mutual trust and sociability ot comrades. d. The nmnranth is an imaginary unfading flower. 0. Tho 'cardinal signs. of the Zodiac are' the two equinoctial nnd the two solsti tial signs, Aries and Libra, Cancer and Capricornus. 7. Eugene V. Debs was Socialist candidate for President in 1010. 8. Exegesis: exposition, especially of tn Scriptures. 0. Stormy petrols arc called Mother Carey's C'llickCDH. 10. 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