,' ViAj, . :-.:-T j;,if '15' v kK " .,.- - yi EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEri-PHlEApELPHIA, THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1919 r:$ , F$8 e , Li hrflvfi' ? 1 T IV rt w pf lif It l it V I' '? A t l e ha rji r !'' lit Hi I I: 1-' ! I v l;" . ;r ISS-. i fcr. .; t.tif; rx I 'i TOE EVENINGnTELEGIUPH ! JKT PUBLIC LEDGEU COMPANY fejWV crnus it. k. curvris. pumiokm. t W tr ..tMtrtin. fitrrrv anrt Trurri Phl.lD S Col In". t i;uRwhh B. Williams. John J. Spurrtom Director. EDITOniAIj BOAnD: Crtca II. IC. Ccitis. Chairman tKffi. i;hvid B. BJOLBT Editor " VW JU V. .VIAHli;s uenrai liusinei- ..imnite-- R.ft . 'o Published dally it Toblio !.idoi. llullUlnr. ?A ',. Indawndenca Sauare, rtilladflrhla Att.'Iktio Cur. Kiw TfllT. . . . . , . ITS-CMOU liUlHIIMK 200 Metropolitan Town TO I ropl HulMlna; ions rullM-toii nulldlnir 1302 Trlbimir Bulldlnr -lv .BmoiT. ,' Ufft &JM """ 'l, . ' R. ror. PannavlviiiU Ave. and 14th St. '.V'-tMi kitt ToK Dcnrjin The Hu t BulMInc (-,' I.0SD0.N Ddkiac London 7.ri srnscniPTtoN terms Tho Etinino rcsitc Lepcir 1 aprvd to sub arrlbars In Philadelphia and surrounding toivns attha rata of twelve (12) rnts per week. pa.able to tha carrier. By mall to points outride of Philadelphia In tha United State Canada or United Stti rn eesaton. pontage free, flftl (SO) rente tr month fllx ($0. dollar per sear. payable In adnr? To all forelrn countrl- one (Sit dollar per month. NoTim Subscriber wlhlnc address rhanrd muat fflve old a rrell as new address. BELL. 3000 TTALM'T KrVSTONC. MIN 3009 C Addrrsa all commMttfcatlou to F emo Public Ledoer, inrfependeiiee .qnfire, PliilodJpto Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED riiESS in eichi livelu cntitted to the use for irpiiblieation of all news dispatches credited to it or not athencise cicditri in this paper, and aho the local news published therein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein are aho reserved. Philadelphia. Thundar, Mir 8. Il DOWNTOWN'S IRON MEN rpHERE is no reason why the tioup- of the Iron Division should not match up from Oregon avenue on the day of their parade in accordance with the ex cellent suggestion of their friends and relatives who live further south than Washington avenue, where the line will form under the present arrangement. Trains from Camp Dix may go to either point. The old armory of the HOth Infantry men is a few blocks Mow .Washington avenue. Why shouldn't they be permitted to pa.s it in their triumphal march? Many of those who saw the bitterest fighting with the Iron i Division will see their old landmarks for 1 the first time since they left home if the parade line is extended further south. They lived below Washington aenue. And they ought to be paraded theie now. if only to render a tribute to the other who, having once lived below Washing ton avenue, now must live foiever in France. THE REAL FIGHT BEGINS rpHE passage by the Senate jestcrday --of two of the bills drafted by the citi zens' committee is a preface to the real fight on charter revision. Every possible effort will be made to defeat the bills in the House, and if they cannot be defeated an effort will be made to change them so completely that their sponsors will be inclined to disown them. This is the time for the friends of home rule to be alert and to watch every move lnrHarrisburg. REPLACEMENT VOLUNTEERS U rpHE news that the first contingent of ' volunteers to replace homecoming troops in France has sailed testifies to the success of the War Department's policy and to its skill in interpreting ,the shades of American character. Undoubtedly most of the men who went abroad last year are delighted , to bo demobilized. But vyith so large a population as ours there "is bound to be s a wide diversity of tastes. It was this upon which the War Department reck oned, even though it must have known how eagerly the majority of the dough boys were doffing their uniforms. lU There are certain natures to which army life appeals. This is evidenced in the fact that many in this first thousand of new troops were recruited from men " in camps who had not seen foreign S jervice. a It is said that some 23,000 of the H .60,000 soldiers wanted for replacement purposes have already enlisted. This is , a happy augury that the plan whereby 5f the veterans will be enabled to come a home speedily is working admiiably. f SHALL WE 'OFF WITH ITS HEAD'? CHAUNCEY DEPEW remarked, yea is 'ago, when it was first proposed in 8 Jew York to create a state railroad com mission, that either the commission would own the railroads or the railroads would own the commission. Of course, when P' the commission was created the railroads did their best to own it. Whether they Vk, l succeeded or not it is not our puipose to iP " discuss at this time. I'i, XTa maVAllT Ttriatt in noil nffnuriAi, XA I Ji:$fi. Alan. AVinvrva i-n rtAa in T-Io wioViiivr tiir vann... frV1 iUC ,lUlfel JltUUb ail atftlilflUUlfc Vy ICUIC & k aentatiyes of some of the smaller cities Mel Tins suite. V Vjiu. akUnlinlilnn 4-1-in nAIMHiinEinn i,n aVVai-. iaair.ni.,1 ' t 'hat it prevents tHe municipalities from exercising proper control over the street ff - .------- c r-- -- - -- ?! YYJ O . W4.W1. 1UHJ, - CIl tu LI I e extent of forbiddintr the municinalities to operate street-car lines themselves , This city has had some experience with wthe Public Service Commission's disposi- sJQv "on uPsec arrangements maae by its AsSr' ..fflcinlf!. but no one here has vet bppn an n4 -iLl fMnU eta In r.linireA tllo nnrnmieelnnam ,-.tU l$flS?Minv improper use of their power. Per- loW-rVhsps the critics of tho commission are yfi-jrrievcd because the commission has too ?mucri power, liiey certainly want to Sjiiply the favorite remedy of the duchess '-Mm Lewis Carroll's famous classic, for , ,'tjwy are shouting as with one voice, "Off fits ita iieaai- JAZZ lis? .'TN,XHE military service you can pick '"Mrp the brightest jewels of the day's slavngr. The air service has a lingo that "gJBBiB with this sort of embellishment. itoe airmen took the vagrant "jazz," for ,jjHniple, and made it shine by brilliant X 'niuctjnrtl? speaks of flying any k,. ' jtl., , . ..i i m. 1 "jajps wi jHneoia. J. no navei mmaiur'iii inns Euref THE DEAD HAVE TRIUMPHED IN THE TREATY Terrible Punishments of Defeated Germany, Fully Revealed in the Terms of Peace, Testify How Faithfully Exact Justice Has Been Vindicated at Paris rpHE sacrifice was not in vain. This is the throbbing implication which is the spir " itual fiber of the momentous documentary finale to that titanic human tragedy called the world war. To translate into conciete, binding teims the ideals for which the conflict even tually came to be fought by civilization was the enormous task of the conference whqsc leaders yesterday transmitted the peace treaty to the German delegates in Versailles. How successfully this task was proceeding could not be fairly judged by piece meal icports of the vaiious settlements. It is the cumulative effect of those decisions welded together into a decisive whole that is so profoundly impressive. Sinister and selfish influences died hard while the document was in embryo. Disquieting rumors became at times epidemic. They were inevitable with the knowl edge that supermen are mjthicnl. Such imaginary beings did not, of course, devise tho just and terrible judgment which has been announced to Germany. But fallible, like all of us. though the Paris delegates were, the sickening shambles of nearly four and a half years had inspired them with certain cardinal dctciminntions destined by their sheer intensity to triumph over difficulties. These animating principles were: That scltisli aggression imsf vol slitui tlie to ms. ' Tim i Germany mwt make specific nloiwment fnv Iter ains. That she must be tendered powerless ever again to affront the woild, and That milHarmn must he crushed so that peace may be preserved through thr instrument nf a co-opei utivc international enterprise. The incorporation of all these resolutions into the treaty is what accords it its vibiant spiritual vitality and a significance such as no other judgment ending a war ever attained. Again and again defeated nations have been bowed in dust. But the humilia tion of Germany has no parallel. This isolation in history is not merely resultant from the sternness of the terms set forth, but from the intimate and absolutely con vincing fusion of justice with severity. Thciein lies the strength of the indictment. Therein lies tho reason why the frightful toll of lives was not morally futile. The dead ltae triumphed in the treaty. The permanence of their victory can, however, only be assured if civilization is faithful to the machinery for exterminating war, which is the essential framework of the woild's new tiuctuie. I'oiecasts. that the league-of nations pact would be inseparable fiom the peace document are impressively verified. All the righteous thunder of the treaty, all its magnificent bonds with justice will be mockciy if these reciprocal pledges aie unful filled. Conversely, the prominence given to the league principle renders additional. defensive alliances dangerous superfluities. Of the nature of such is the proposed protective pact binding Great Britain and the United States to aid France should fche he again menaced. Under an authentic league peril to the nation which suffeied so poignantly in the univeisal conflict is inconceivable. Under the conditions which will prevail in Germany when she signs the treaty, the effect of which must endure for generations, the conjecture has no piactical warrant. For the foe has not been summoned to surrender unconditionally. That showy phiase is essentially nebulous. Conditions, awesomely just, sweepingly stern, will compel him to play a lolc ending the European jeopardy. Shallow folk wly feared that civilization might fail to realize that it had really won and that the instruments for re-establishing right and decency were at hand arc completely confuted. Germany is denied undeisea craft. After a hi ief period she is denied air aima ment. The general staff organization is annihilated. The army is limited to not more than 100,000 men. Conscription within her boundaries is abolished. Helgoland is dismantled. All fortifications within fifty kilometers of the Rhine aie prohibited. Her small authorized navy is forbidden to employ a personnel of more than 15,000. Militarism, the mania for which Germany kept alive, i.s thus exterminated. Military might as exemplified in the mad nation which set out to conquer the world becomes an impossibility. Even more crippling are the financial provisions. It is misleading to call them indemnities. The magnitude is justly commensurate with that of the foe's sin. Retribution is their keynote. Virtually speaking, they arc simply debts, and no less of that nature because they are colossal. The system for tho payment of the billions in reparations must necessarily be adjusted to Germany's financial ability, but no loopholes are left for her to wriggle through as her economic structure is strength ened. The commissions which will take the work in hand, after the first five billion dollais has been paid within two years, will hear the foe's side. The atonement will be honorablj exacted, and that rather enhances than diminishes its immensity. The territorial leadjus-tments" deprive Germany of cherished possessions, but every one that she loses permanently had been unrighteously retained. The princi ples for which the war was fought, upon which the fourteen points were enunciated and upon which the armistice was based have been incontrovertibly preserved in the return of Alsace-Lorraine to France and in the Danzig, the "corridor" and Silesia grants to Poland. Racial affiliations are fairly recognized in the delivery of a small Walloon territory to Belgium. The Saar Valley arrangement is an economic settlement, compensation in coal mines for the foe's ruthless destruction of those around Lens. The eventual dctci mi nation of sovereignty of the region, from which France will derive reparation in kind, will be left to a plebiscite. The temporary internationalization is dependent for its validity upon the league of nations another evidence that the tieaty cannot survive without the active force, moral or otherwise, of a society of nations. Although all these boundary revisions and transfeis of sovereignty should be satisfying to all persons who have been eager to see Germany stripped of territories which did not ethically belong to her, the nation which carried moral obliquity to such a hideous climax may be expected to call the terms harsh. Sentences providing for the return of goods to their rightful owners invariably appear so to the guilty parties. But compare courts of justice with unfettered aggressois. Napoleon con sulted nothing but his own vaulting des'nes when he partitioned Germany after Jena, and Geimany herself simply grabbed what she wanted from France in 1871. Under this treaty, with Alsace-Lorraine, the colonies under league rule, parts of East Prus sia, perhaps even Schleswig, gone the last named if the proposed plebiscite proves anti-Teutonic the empire will be homogeneous, but, as a military menace, powerless. Exact justice aims piecisely at that goal. That mark is sought again in the provisions made for the fixing of individual responsibility for breaches of criminal and international law made by individual Teutons. The once perplexing question, "What shall we do with the .kaiser?" is leadily answered. It shall be done with him precisely what is done with any one charged with lawlessness. A fair trial will determine the extent of his offense. This is an admirable way to prevent the growth of any sentimentalism such as enshrined the name of Napoleon after he had become a prisoner at St, Helena. If the kaiser is punished or simply held up as an unutterably shameful figure it will not be because of revenge that he will suffer. His acts will brand him. German threats of refusal to sign the longest, most comprehensive and most discriminate- considered treaty ever devised will, of course, be forthcoming. The Teuton blusters until the end. His words and deeds are alike reckltfts until there is no escape. Then, as in the armistice days, he quails before irresistible power. Such force is existent now on behalf of civilization. The foe is prostrate, incapa ble of combating the military strength which the Entente still overwhelmingly possesses, helpless in the face of the prodigious weapons of economic pressure which the victors can exert. The gambler quits cold. He lisks all and loses all. Geimany did in the military campaign. She will m the peace sequel. On the anniversary of that crime, the shock from which inspired humanity to fight on until the right should prevail, Ger many is the suppliant for a treaty which is the most humiliating ever received by any nation in the planet's annals. She plummets the depth of ignominy on Lusitania Day. As for the victors, patriotism has made many a nation pioud in the hour of triumph and it does now. But that emotion is surpassed by even a nobler one as the purport of the decisive document is revealed. It is a clean peace, inspired with an honorable respect for scrupulous justice. The survivors of an appalling age rejoice to be unashamed of the portal to the new era which dawns. "He came jazzing down, poor chap, and was bumped off when he pipped a gas tank!" That is the'way they tell in the hangars of a, reckless man killed in a nose dive. Our soldiers didn't march to Germany if you believe the airmen. They jazzed across the Rhine to have a look at Fritz. Slang is more than a vivid use of an odd word. It is the voice of .an unex citable spirit in crowds or in individuals that is humorous because it is wise or wise because it is humorous. Only statos me!' losetheir heads .and alk solemnly 1 w a mux. ' t A GOOD AMERICAN AGGRESSIVE ignorance is terrible - enough. But icnorance whnn it in proud, belligerent and given to feats of energy is an appalling thing. Such was the force that opposed itself to law and order in Seattle and Mayor Ole Hanson left It in the dust. There was an interval in which every one said Mayor Ole had blown up under the heat of the spotlight. That was when he was aid to haves talked wildly about lampposts and lynchtygs. .It'was kuuu n uvwr w"b nc ws jik'iiuaueipnta yesterday that he had been misquoted, since ho will insist on maintaining lnw and order by lawful and prdcrly methods. The mayor of Seattle comes from n line Unit respected the' law and pioneered as crcutors of order. And ho is interesting because, happening to bo.alicn in name, he has even done his utmost to correct what ho seems to consider a misfortune. TKc little Hansons back in Seattle serve to reveal the mind nnd purpose of their father. There is Olo Hanson, Jr. After him come Theodore Roosevelt Hanson, William Taft Hanson, Eugene Field Han son nnd Lloyd George Hanson. The city was glad to welcome Mayor Ole. And it would be glad to welcome the little Hansons with a band and a parade. Jlfirched through the streets they would show what most Americans are and ought to be like. WHEN CONGRESS CONVENES PRESIDENT WILSON'S call for an extra session will clear the air in the world, of business. It will permit finan ciers to see their way more clearly and it will make the going easier and less peril ous in politics. Whether the country likes it or not, it must be admitted that Congress was bundled away into enforced silence when it most desired to be heard. Tho charac ter of the opposition that was developed against the President toward the end of the recent session and the trends and apparent purposes of antagonistic criti cism aimed, since the adjournment, at the league-of-nations plan, actuated the President's determination to enforce a recess. The woik of the American dele gation at Paris could have been seriously hindered if each step toward an accept able peace had been met with an uproar of violent challenge in Washington. The President's summons of yesterday means meiely that the league-of-nations plan is now safely formulated and beyond the danger of being wrecked before it was complete. The Senate can take it or leave it. Congress must accept its re sponsibility in the full light of day. The President cannot make a treaty. He may only negotiate it and submit it to the Senate, and it is by its authority to ratify or reject treaties that the Senate nor mally expresses its judgments. Mr. Wil son has not exceeded tho privileges granted him by the constitution. The covenant of peace is not perfect. It is a beginning and must be so regarded. But the indications now arc that the treaty will be ratified with little delay. Indeed, with the presentation of the peace terms to Germany the league of nations becomes an old issue. New issues quite as novel and perhaps even more im portant will leap into being almost as soon as Congress assembles to receive the report of Mr. Wilson and his associates at the Peace Conference. The proposal for : formal alliance between the United States, Great Britain and France to insure the French people against further onslaughts from the Gciman side of the Rhine now appears, with official sanction, in the cable reports. It may be assumed that France demanded some such guarantee in return for sacri fices made in the course of recent de liberations for the sake of a workable league of nations. Current announce ments are to the effect that the alliance will not be secret that its terms will be published to tho world within a few days. Even then the Senate will be justified in subjecting the proposal to the closest scrutiny and analytical criticism. The suggestion will not sound whole some in America. We may maintain the utmost esteem and friendliness for the French people. But we are not able to control the agencies that direct French foreign policy. If there aie financial cliques in France dcsiious of subjecting vanquished nation to intolerable pres sure or inciting a vengeful spirit in a neighboring country, shall we guarantee them safety and success in the enter prise? That is a question that the Sen ate may put squarely to the returning peace delegation. Any case between the France and the Germany of the future should properly be settled by the league of nations. If it cannot be settled by that means we ought to know the reason. Here, it appears, is a new issue fpr the critics. But there will be many others. The coming session of Congress will lead into the national campaign. That in itself is legrettable, because partisan in terest and partisan bias are almost cer tain to be felt in an unusual degree in decisions that should be inspired simply by reason and patriotism. The character of our future relations with other peoples in a world that is changed and narrowed; the part we shall play in making over the world will be decided at the next session. The ques tions involved in bette. economic adjust ments necessary to protect the strength and vitality of the country by protecting its workers will be pressing and acute. The railroads and telegraph lines, the returned soldiers, tariff and taxes will loom as dominant problems at the next Congress. We shall have to meet each issue bravely and frankly or lag behind those European statesmen whom we are ac customed to call benighted. Shall we look forward or back? Will the House and the Senate be as wise as they pre tend to be or will they sit like Belgian refugees and wail amid the ruins of po litical theories devastated by the war? Russia 1h btill well The laOolier-On outside the circle of rivilis-.ution as it link been drawn in the leaguc-of-nations covenant and KUggehted i" the terms of peace. The Itubsiau Mtuation forms an unpleasant back ground for a (crumbling and desperttc Ger many. If there is any weapon that tho Ger mans may use after nil their war material hn becu tuken away they are guro to seek it in tho cast, It isn't pleasant to bo . Last-Minute Men told by a visiting muyor talking for the Y Loan that this city is only 40 per cent American. The last-minuto man always puts the loans over. But If wo were all last minute men this would be a sorry world. THE GOWNSMAN Tlie contribution of The Gownsman, xcltich axuallti oveears on this pane on U'hundau. (, emitted today fat; took ofjpact. If.tellt U ? 1Hj A . f - -T. ATOV J'"--' J.. WUK-d . vv.plr " "i l'i VVjWJfo . a I . ' aWB V- i' K'i.-'ir.. rr . .". J jM &Cl . THE CHAFFING DISH They F IltST tlicy said they didn't start it. Then they said they couldn't bo beaten. Then they said they weren't beaten. Then they said they wouldn't .sign. They Did and They Could nnd Tli'y Were and They Will. V X V Unpublished Telegram AJlTErtONOEN MAY S glo cu:jii:xci;ai' i'aiiis dear imiiunij HAVE .7UST m:.P TnnATV IT I.S A PAR KAIt nETTF.n THINfl THAT TOL' 1IAVK DO.U THAN I Dr.HAMi.ii- posami.n o nor uii.i is at YOUR DISPOSAL TAKE 11IJ1 TVHESnVIllt YOU CRT nilADV MHS 11I5NTINCK AND 1 OOING TO MOVIUS TONIGHT TO CKUIHIIATE GRATEFULLY nHNTlNCK V V V Overhead Expense Dear Son ales- The milliners grind .!o. but they grind exceeding (.mall, I eiird to invelt this morning nn balancing my bank book TUAODEUS MONKIIONKS. V V V Mr. Wilson was piesent nt the Hotel Trianon when the treaty was handed to the. Germans!. Si,e wns a Trianon-combatant. V V V The Fatal Cravat When a man of rank makes his enliee Into a circle distinguished for tatte and elegance; and the usual compliments have passed on both sides, he will discover that his coat will attt.ict only a slight degree of attention, but thnt the most critical and scrutinizing examination will be made on the ft of Ills Cravat. Should this, un foitunately. not be correctly and elegantly put on no further notice will bo taken of him; whether his coat be of the reign ing fashion or not will be unnoticed by the assmblj--all pes will be occupied In ex amining the folds of the fatal Ciavat. Ills leceptlon will in future Oo cold, and no one will nia.ve on his entrance; but If his Cravat Ik elegantly formed evcij one will rise to receive 'him with the mopt dis tinguished marks of lespect, will elicei fully resign their seats to liim, and the delighted eyes of all will be fixed on that part of hia person which separates tho shoulders from the chin. From "The Art of Tying the Craiul," American edition, published by Robert I)e Silver, 110 Walnut street, Philadelphia, 3628. V V V Our Cradle Roll The Chnfling Dish's official family is grow ing rapidly. Our learned friend and book collector. Air. James SI. Shields, informs us of the nrrivul of Miss Alice K. Shields, born yohterdny. Miss Alice, however, is not a first edition, linviug been preceded by a bt other and sister. Her father claims that she is a small oetn)o. V V V Out of the Hurly Burly The seismograph out nt Swarthinorc lias been recording shocks nnd tremors. Perhaps n letter has traveled from New York to Philadelphia in less than three das. V V V Puzzle: Find the Pun Under tho stress of theeo Polish machina tions we havo been bent to the ground like a drooping plant. This Is not enough. These &ama Poles and the Polonlzcd land lords coming to their aid with -their polished boots tread upon ua heaping In BUlt upon Insult. The Lithuanian Review. V V V ' Desk Mottoes In the morning when thou risest unwill ingly, let this thought bo present I am rising to the work of a human being. Why then am I dissatisfied If I am going to do the thlugs for which I exist and for which I was brought into the world? JjAROUS AUHBMUB. V V V , 11 ecnu to have bceu comparatively, easy ,t'n ,, .jfpuifatu . ' k ., M l.AIafr f4t. IT'S "CLEAN-UP WEEK" OVER THERE, TOO P -,n J. u k Can jou imagine anything less likely to un hlnnket a di(nvy citizen nowadays than the tepid meditation just iiotcd? The modern business man would devise something far more spirited, such us: tui: i.o.vci:it i ri:mai.iv m: THKt;ili:A'n:itiItOVSMY(VEKIIEAD V V V In Memoriam (Willi apologies to the niitlim- nt "In l'ltm- dei Fields") Tho dulsj was never Known In the, South until afler tho Civil War, it I.s said Now evety part of the South visited by the Union Armv is covered with daisies. "Mheim.in brought them to us," said h fouthcrn man, arid tho march Jo tho sea can lie followed in the summertime by keeping where the. daisies grow. The teed hcpin.s to have been trauspoilrd in tho hay that was lnought along to feed the horses. The Ladies' Home Journal At (Jelljsburg The daisies grow lletwccu'the furrows Row on row That cunnou plowed Long j ears ago. We are the IS ray. Wc nrc the IJIue, That carried on that southern tide, Were washed together Side by side Forever in each other's arms Are we who lie On Freedom's shoie , To sleep in pence Forevermore, To you fiom war-lorn hands we throw Unbroken Union Keep it so. lte je as brothers Not as foe, For in the furrows ISIoom and blow The peaceful daisies Side by side. They do not know AVIm struggled heie Who fought who died, To stop the How Of southern tide, At Uettvsbuig. C. S. SMITH. V V V Social Chat Mr. llolicnzollern was up betimes this morning to have a look at the newspapers. Count Rrockdorff-Rnntzau spent a busy evening last night, reading. He complains of eyo-strain today. Ilerr Ebert admits that lie is a self-made IIuu und bus never had much opportunity to learn foreign languages; hut after perusing S0.000 words of French leeenlly he admits that he has mastered the rudiments ot that tongue. "1 never was in doubt of the mean ing," he sujs, a A meeting of the trustees of the Ludlow Street lliihlncss Men's Association was held yesterday in a neighboring spaghetti ghetto. After the collation Messrs. A. Edward New ton, James Shields nnd a representative of (he Chuffing Dish were observed in intimate, converse with Mr. Philip Warner, the genial bookseller. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Quota hope to reach this city on Saturday evening. The exact hour of their arrival is still uncertain. Albeit Mordell says it is very unfair of us not to mention the title of his book in this department, but somehow wc cannot bring ourselves to do it. Wc have to draw the line somewhere. Wharton. Stork is going to cross tho great UlVlOQ lOUloriOW l" VMv nvtua, fcUlil U Krqoklyu, tr,liclp.cclebiato Walt Whitman In hWw3&mMm,xmRmxz&) AW. i P v.'-" mr .J ! ;L ' lj'j WVrZk '-'!". .s i-;v .??. T.. ', . .1 I-- BBBTT - -. - -. f 6 .. ,. 1 I, i LW -:-s. jN'-:'&W'lLwiSJ-r:''.'j ru ' rrf '"'jiaJTf ''Vj -"' "-"" ' U 'v? 2i- ""if' THE GOAD T HA A Co HAVE come lo the place where I almost 'ould do what a coward docs I'd liko to go out and lose myself, Forget that T ever wns; Rove out on u blest oblivion Over the borders of day. Where nothing has been, nothing shall b, Where no one shall eomc that way. lint n something down in mc is goading A something that really is I And 1 cnunot full fiom the ranks ot men Or die ns a coward would die; 1 cannot flee from the battle Though I bear the brunt ot the fight, Xor leave the light of a hateful duy For tlie dark of a restful night. They t"II me that Pride is an evil. That ever since earth began The source ot much of tlie trouble of men Has been in tlie pride of man ; Yet tomorrow I'll go on my journey Knowing that one would have died Ilnd it not been for the goad in him That evil that men cull pride. Unmet Lnidlnw Eskew, in the New York Sun. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. Who was the first conmiaudcr-iu-chlef of the British forces in the war? '2. What is meant by the definitive edition of a book or Bet of books? a. What is a corvette? 1. What was the origin ot the republic of Liberia? .". Name the author of the following: "It due participation of office is a matter of right, how are vacancies to be ob- tuined? Those by death arc few; by. lesignation, none." ti. When was the Panama canal opened for navigation? 7. What is alliteration? S. Who was the "Artful Dodger"? 1). To whom is the invention of service flags ascribed? 10. What is the largest island in any of the Great Lakes and to what country does it belong? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. The city ot Chihuahua is in northern , SIcxieo. 2. The pallium is a band of white wool, with four purple crosses, worn by the pope and sent to primates, patriarchs and archbibhops ns a sign, that they shnre in the plenitude of the episcopal ' office. ,'l. Lustra); of, used in, ceremonial purltl- cations, " , A. Tench was the real name of Ulnckbcard, r the pirate. , 5. Surinam in South America wns the --.colony awarded to the. Netherlands by the peace of Breda in 1007 in exchange for New York (then New Ncthe?- lauds), which had been conquered by the Kugllsh. 0, The Shcriffan umbrella is tho symbol -of the rojal power of the sultan of Mo rocco, s 7. Svelte; lightly built, lissome, supple. 8, W. S. Oilbcrt and Arthur Sullivnn wrote the comic opera "Xlie Yeomen of the Ouard." 0, Charles Sumner waB a noted American btntesmun and orator, .champion of iintlslnvery ideas and long a member ot the Senate from Massachusetts. Hia dates are 1811-1874. W & fu Baron Makino is the fiend '' Mkf M ' rTiiiiiw''riy'niiwljii'"''tii'tlia'j Tiih ' iltiim. v'4-. 51 . TCC".. I -l I i -., tl ??r"Af-T flTS"t"" a- '-,. '. ."'.'? UHFLf s '? sf? -!',? 4 ' . .kirw;r&srj&.,. U - virf.. f. jajM-'. .....- j.f- iitt-ZX.rjv'-JJi,m -j-1 j . w. ;j fW. ft in ,-.- - Hf ,., ,.j vv.r .'- ' gsp-."Xi,.v" ttaua. EZHSGEa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers