-'" s ' Tkvi.-'-fc' .1 . V ,. ' d ' W 'i - ."v - - i i v.i re?" - -. v v " "V L i J" tiff W- !. I w U4, If i k r ! a ! t?i & v Dfuening public UTe&gcr V 'THE EVENING TELEGRAPH y PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY emus ir. ir. ramrts. ri.r.inrkT .Cttjirles ir. Ludlnrton. Vlre PrtaMmt Johrt C. tln. Sfrfftary and Treasurer! riilllp S Colllni. rtn x. ivmiams, jonn j, npurireon. uirecion. p EDITOniAt. BOAnDi r ' A tiles 11. k. ucxTia, unairmtn ' tJJVVIL) li. O.llllit'il. . Editor yfe-lOHM C, MARTIN.. .Oeneral Builneaa Manager 4 IMblishM dally at rcBiio Lbdgu Hulldinr. t Independence Square, Thllndplphla 'AruTTa Cur Praa-Unton IliitMfnc Xiwr Tobk . .... I'OO JtVlronolltan Toner ?J UKinriiT , . . . . . . 701 Ford llullrtln .ST. Louis.. . ., inn Futlerton Ilulldlnc Chicago. .. .... 130. Tribune ISulldlnr ,'L t xnws BuncAVss A8TITNGT0N HUREAt7. . V. TV frit rnnltnnla Iv in1 UH. Of Nw York Duiicau The Sun Jlulldlnc oadoa liCBuu.... i-onaon Timet suncntPTTON terms The nvfiNiNO Pi'fcMc LcnrtKn eend to aiib scrlbera In Philadelphia and surrounding town at the rate of tweho (IS) cents per week, paabl rlo th carrier, :-h 1 Br mall to point outride of Philadelphia. In 1 ., th United State. Canada or United State r-ft- '?& imn, pontaire free. flCtv (501 cents per month ' .,?uc iu) dollar per j ear, payable in amance " To all foreign countries one (SI) doltar pt t, Noticb- Subscriber wlhtnr address changed s '-mufct cle old as m ell a new address. BFLI.. 3000 WALNUT KFYSTCTSE. MAIN 3000 C3T Addrss nil rommuttfrallon to Fi enlno Public Ledffer Independence Square, Philadelphia Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS is exelu- ivcly entitled to the use for icpublication o all news dhpalehes credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and aha 'the loeal news published therein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein arc also reserved. I'hiladrlphu, Turidy, Mir 13. 1910 NECESSARY PRECAUTIONS ALL crowds that ever assembled for a ii- spectacle in this city will seem small in comparison with the multitudes that will turn out to greet the Twenty-eighth rDivision. There will be a happier time for cvciy body, including the soldiers themselves, if the public will co-operate with the police and do all that is possible to avoid dangerous jams at what are assumed to pc advantageous points in the center of the' city. The line of the parade covers a great distance and there ought to be room for every one if the crowds are evenly distributed along the route. Thus the city can shout its welcome in relative comfort and it will not have to waste time that ought to be spent in cheering m saying bad-tempered things to the overworked police. FOLLY'S ANTIDOTE: EXPOSURE PROMOTERS of the superfluous and pernicious anti-sedition bill in Penn sylvania were probably far from Mr. !VVilson's mind when he declared before the French Academy of Moral and Politi cal Science in Paris that the greatest freedom of speech is "the greatest safety." Hut the universality of this truth serves to intensify its application to specific instances. The real danger lies in a gag that may Rp capitalized as a grievance. The cx- ftvisting laws in this commonwealth nio- viue ample protection both against trca- ifrjEOH ana sianaer. -liesinctions on iree if'Spebch provide the very stuff of stagy riiajii martyrdom. Un tlie other hand, it is unquestionably true, as the President has stated, that "it is by the exposure of folly that it is de feated." Thin is a comforting tip upon yie outcome of the broadsides of oratory which will sweep through trfe United States Senate when the peace treaty is introduced. The scene ought to beget much hiore amusement than anxiety. It is said that Alexander Kerensky talked his government of Russia out of existence. It is conceivable that if a cen sorship had ever smote Mr. Bryan in the days of his fervid volubility a Nebraskan might have sat in the White House. The suppression of numeious activities, .harmless enough in peace times, is one of jthe burdens of war. But the terrible and .abnormal ace is endintr. Americans? wbn r .'.' 1I l..i: . ,L. :.: ; PW.iV M!,1,Jr UL"l: '" me intrinsic sanity aim jsv common &ensc ot their liberal institutions K5. cannot lecritimatelv withhold indnrkpmnnr. &, of the President's sentiments concerning W ie scope which all shades of opinion :S ' should enjoy in the new era. Sound views will he fortified with expression. The other sort aie extremely likely to perish of overexposure. v Pennsylvanians have scant cause for qualms. They are equally well protected against senatorial absurdities or those hich may be spoken or written in this Btaie. PRICE FIXERS IN A ROW AT THIS distance the low between the men who constituted the United States industrial board and tho Demo- & .cratic administration, which thnv ., ,.; ! lently criticizing because of thn fniin & f.o( the plan to stabilize steel prices, seems lormiess out lar reaching. 1 To an outsider it may appear that sta bilized steel prices, if maintained for a vhile longer, would have served to steady 'business and provide a clearer view for businessmen and workers alike in a time of change and confusion. The failure of the industrial board, however, draws at 'tention again to the inconsistency of ad ministration speech and practice. Mr. "Wilson talks like a humanitarian. Tiia" BaSes act like hard-driving efficiency engi-l?fJiieers. r;vt '" lucftaoo ana nis successor in the &'. " vnilVrtjiH mimmiafrnfinn ino.ntn.l ifCt umiiuui..Uuuu jiiaiateu on uuy- ing steel at the lowest cost and, with the vjhlp of Congress over them, seemed to .cijrc Httle what difficulties were placed in tho wav of manufnrtiirpi-o twh. -f Iharsn competition on the one hand mi M ?kclhe other the necessity for maintainintr J SVj i,vwges ana living conditions suggested in 1S P"'l"' "' fc"'eiiva w mr, tuun. Et. Tnv ib Jieeueu in tyasnington is a &' W,Uhing of philosophies between the BHtK.V"-!.l 1. -..1 1-- A il Kjnwueui, wiio bpeans ior me govern ': iAtnt. and the men who wield cnvm. f wwrtital authority in matters that actually ;voivo ousiness ana lapor. S ILTt TTi7Ai3nn nnrl hie ilonaffiMnn .!... liativ how wide and deen thn hrnnoh ; r between the spokesman for the eovern- fMftkt and the agencies that direct the pfwcuv.u jioiiciea oi. mo administration. OO0D MUSIC ALL SUMMER ITOfi common impression that ooen-air M, mliaic is a distinguishing characteris-' te oft European Jife only is entitled to no Itidcmrntin the JmiAjs of Piiiladelohians. JityKKWito tli;jHBUai.iiw'tfee Fairmount Park concerts, those by tho Municipal Band furnish both education and entertainment throughout the season of mild or high temperatures. The last nnmed organization, under Edwin Brin ton's direction, will begin its long series tonight at Twelfth and Spring Garden streets. Concerts will be given in a dif ferent locality throughout tho city for six evenings each week until early in September. " Music lovers are thus provided with admirable artistic fare, even though Mr. Stokowski has temporarily laid nside his baton and the costly opcia season is ended. Untutored tastes in music need not fear being baffled with the selections played at these free concerts, nor need tho alleged "high-brows" worry about compromising with their ideals. The balance between good popular numbers and the classics is usually skill fully preserved in the Municipal Band prog-ams. "Going Up," for instance, rubs shoulders with a Chopin polonaise on the inaugural bill tonight. There may even be a snatch of Wagner in the "Echoes From the Metropolitan Opeia House," which is also listed. The success of the Municipal Band is not measured in money, but in popular appreciation. Here's hoping that the new season will be more successful than ever. MUST GERMANY BE SCOURGED INTO A SANE REPENTANCE? Only Alternative to This Peace of Jus tice Now Offered Is a Renewal of the Horrors of Punitive Warfare WE CONGRATULATE the Germans on ' ' their perspicacity in perceiving that the tieaty which theii representatives arc asked to sign provides for what they call "a brutal peace of force." They cannot dwell on that phrase too much for their own good. When it has sunk down into their consciousness they will discover that they are a defeated and not a vic torious nation. Their leaders know that they are de feated, but these leaders have been fos tering the belief among the people that Germany was victorious or, if not vic torious, that it was a diawn tight, with honors even. Germany sought to dominate the world by brute force. She had to be combated by brute force. When her military lcad ei discovered that tho brute force ar layed against them was greater than they could withstand they asked for peace. The result is a triumph of brute force fighting for righteousness over brute force fighting for ambitious greed and lust for world dominion. One need not feel squeamish about using the Ger man phrase in describing the peace. Tho protests from Beilin against the rigors of the treaty, re-enforced by pro tests from other German cities, are made in the hope of influencing the weak senti mentalists in other nations to demand that their representatives in Paris let Germany off more easily. They arc also made for the purpose of backing up the demands of Count von Brockdorff Rantzau that the treaty be radically modified. It is not likely that this campaign of propaganda will have any other effect than to stiengthen the determination of the peace commissioners to insist that the tieaty be signed substantially as it has been drafted. Those commissioners hae not forgotten the Kind of a peace Germany boasted she was going to make. When they consider that boast they must be surprised at their own moderation. Not even wo in America have forgotten the threat of Wilhelm to Ambassador Gerard. Wilhelm, then the kaiser, was protesting to Mr. Gerard against the sale of munitions to the Entente Allies by American manufacturers. He shook his fist m the face of tho American ambassa dor and declared that when he got through with his European enemies he would cross the ocean and dispose of us. There was talk of demanding from us an indemnity of billions under threat of bombaidment of New York and the other coast cities. This was befoic we had entered the war and when we were doing nothing which we had not a perfect right to do. But'the Germans were determined to take vengeance upon every one who had put any obstacle in the wny of tho success of their program. If Germany had been victorious the war would hae spread to this side of the Atlantic and we should have been com pelled to defend ourselves against the most brutal armies which Imc taken the field in modern times. When we review the terms to which defeated Germany must submit we must not forget the terms which she would have insisted upon if she had by any chance taken any of our cities. Across the ocean a victorious Geimany would have annexed Belgium and would have forced the Belgian people to pay out of their poveity the cost of conquer ing them. She would have annexed northern France, with its coal and iron mines, and she would have seized and fortified the French channel ports. She would have taken Irelnnd under her wing and organized armies there under command of German officers. She would have annexed the channel islands belonging to Britain and used them as naval bases. She would have driven the British fiom Egypt and seized the Suez canal. She would have assumed the protec torate over Morocco, now under French direction. She would have destroyed Italy's hold in Tripoli. She would have made demands upon the Netherlands which that weak power would have denied at the peril of its inde pendent existence. She would have set up Poland with a German prince as king. She would have put other German princes, the sons of the kaiser, on new thrones in tbte Balkan states and on the old thrones from, which she had ousted kings unsympathetic with her 'purposes. The maps f these new states were drawn and the princes to rule over them were named The wishes of the jpfople were not to be consulted, j:Tke,yjf ypte to be raadWynfMla of EVEK8U PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA Germany and subservient to tho will of Potsdam. Russia would have been dismembered. It was dismembered by tho Brcst Litovsk treaty. Finland would have become a German stato and, so far as possible, tho Baltic would have been made a German sea. In like manner tho parts of Russia "bor dering on tho Black Sea would have been brought under German control and that sea would have been under German domi nation through the compliance of the Turk. , The British ports on the Persian gulf would have become German and the Berlin-to-Bagdad railway would have be come a great German avenue of trade from which the goods of other nations would have been excluded so far as pos sible. And Franco and Gieat Britain and Italy would have been forced to pay the cost of the war and to give up billions in indemnities. German garrisons would have occupied the principal cities of these countries until tho money demanded had been paid. It was boasted that the in demnities would be put at so great a figure that the garrisons would occupy the cities for a generation at least. In the meantime tho Gernfanization of Europe would have been forced through the suppression of all patriotic countcr cffoits to preserve national spirit. This is the kind of a peace which Ger many would have dictated had she won. It is the kind of a peace which she was proud to maintain that she was fighting to bring about. Alexander and Caesar and Napoleon sought to conquer the world, but they failed. Tho kaiser, "by his mailed fist, was going to succeed." Not cen the Germans can believe down in their hearts that a hard peace is forced upon them They have only to compare what they are told to do with what they planned to demand of their enemies to discover that they have been treated most mercifully. Take, for example, the coal fields in tho Saar valley. They have destroyed the mines in tho north of France and it will take years to restore them to thair normal productivity. They are asked to surrender the Saar coal fields to pay for the French fields they have ruined. This is simple justice. There is nothing ictributivc about it. They must restore Alsace-Lorraine to France. This is merely giving back stolen goods. They must make good the devastation they wrought in Belgium. Thi3 is only fair. They must surrender to a new Poland tho Polish provinces which were annexed generations ago without consultation with the inhabitants. They planned a vassal Poland. The treaty piovidcs for an independent Poland. The treaty plan is so much more equitable that no argu ment is needed to establish its superior ity. And reparation is demanded up to the financial ability of the Germans to make it. This ability is to be ascertained ly commissioners familiar with the whole subject. But it is not necessary to traverse the whole treaty. Its purpose is to establish justice so far as that is humanly possi ble and to produce conditions which will tend to proent future wars. The alternative to signing this treaty voluntarily is signing a harder treaty at tho point of the sword. There is nothing that the rank and file of the Allied aimics would like better than to have an opportunity to get into Germany and to let the German population see what war is like. Their officers could not prevent them fiom laing waste the towns; in deed it would be considered necessary as part of the lesson. Such an eventuality must be prevented if possible. But it cannot be prevented if the German people, unconvinced that they are defeated, insist that their dele gates refuse to sign the treaty. The Allied armies arc now on the Rhine. Germany has no navy and no big gum;, and she is short of food and fuel. She is helpless. Marshal Foch has gone to the front to bo ready for any emer gencies and his men are prepared to move at a moment's notice. Germany and tho German people are not yet repentant because they are not yet sane. For the good of all mankind, it is to be hoped that they will not com mit the folly of refusing this peace of real justice. We can only wait and watch. M a liif .1 o h n , tii'urp, who wu W. A Question Geary1, who whs a delcsntp from Phila delphia to the firt caucus o the new Amer ican Legion at St. LouN, assures the world thii1- the legion will not Ret into politics. No one owr supposed that it would. The Grand Army did nut intend to get into politics when it wns first organized. The record of whnt followed later alone sugRests a ques tion tlint is sure to trouble the conscientious lenders ot tho new soldiers' organisation : Will polities get into the legion? Poor Uncle Samuel ! Trouble! Trouble! Now it is the travel -vv i B delegation o f American-Irishmen who are threatening him with reprisals nt the polls if lie doesn't foiee Ilngland to do what is light hy tho Little Green Isle. Every one knows what n hard job is here involved for everybody's uncle. Said a man in a trol Outdoor ..Sport ley ear: "Try taking four of the drinks tlint will not be available, after the 1st of July and then go down Chestnut street and pro nounce the names of the places where our men won undyiug glory as they arc writ ten on the blue banners put up for the lads ot the Twenty-eighth. There is more ex citement in that sort of thing than you would suppose." Criticism in thlf man Tlie Old Story made world Is ever one-sided. Some one says that the spring styles for women are indecent. Nobody says anything about the vests and ties and hatbaDds that men are wearing. Xp luxury was so wasteful as German militarism, and the tax laid upou it at Vcc Bailies la naturally proportionately high. "Vare champions party elections" Bays a headline. Needless to specify what party he means. The permans are complaining because the treaty rpos them pr tseir honor' honors' No. WOBdw tim !JU UJWjptfrl; vi)- IIIMiWMIB fc fcF wf ANGLO-AMERICAN FRIENDSHIP How Years of Foolish Prejudice and Ignorance on Both Sides Have Hampered Relations Hy WILLIAM McFEE l.nflneer Lieutenant, IlrllUli NaT? Foltbicinff is the concluding installment of the notable letter of William McFcc, the Iltitish novelist, to his American publishers, ia tchich he discusses the ignorance of Ameiica tchich prevails in England, II I DON'T soy X saw all this (the imperfccr tions of the British educational system) ns clearly then as I do now. I nm looking back, I do know, however, that It didn't satisfy me personally. The eternal smug ness and sclf-satlsfnction got on my nerves. I cut loose and went to sen. It is n sad and disconcerting fact that the most ignorant and bigoted nntl-Amcricnns are to he found on British merchant ships. In part this is due to tho very narrowing educational system which I have mentioned nnd in part to the fact that the water fronts ofs United States ports, like water ports elsewhere, do not contain the elite of the nation. The British shipmaster found that flhnstcr awaited him If he relaxed for a single moment his business vigilance while in nn American port. The age-old theory that a senfai'ing man is half-witted, be cause if he were in his senses he would not go to sen, was strongly held in American shipping circles. "Swnt the skipper" was a popular; slogan. "He's only a lime-juicer soak him on his manifests. This reacted unfavorably upon the general opinions of American ethics held in our merchant service. The skipper who had suffered financially from American sharps retailed his experience nt the cabin table, in his owner's office, in his own parlor, and it all helped to confuse our ideas nnd strengthen the life-long prejudice against America. I CAME up ngninst this w'ith tremendous force in 1014. I had been three years in America, living among Americans and sail ing out of American ports iu American ships, nnd the chief impression I had gath ered from old residents who had never been out of their native state, from wealthy pas sengers I had met in the West Indies nnd fiom American shipmates was their un quenchable interest in England and the English. I could not tell them enough about my country. I was reprimanded for tho national vice of reticence and stnndoffish ness. They wanted to know. They wanted to admire. It warmed my heart to hear them. And it warms my heart now to re member it. But when, in the great emotional up heaval of 11)14, I made my way home to England and began to sail under tho red ensign once more, I was nstounded nt the solid mass of blind prejudice nnd ignorance which formed the average Englishman's mental equipment about America. The tragedy lay in the fnct that they didn't want to know anything about America. "What hnvc they done, anyhow, except brag?" demanded the chief engineer of a transport. "They have never originated anything that I ever heard of." I instanced the telephone, the Bnnp-shut-ter camera, the airplane, the submarine nnd tho gramophone. It was no use Strange ns it seems when written dowu, that chief engineer could not see any flaw in his argument. "I mean politically," he retorted wood enly; "we've built up a great empire. What have the Americans done in the last hun dred years except whip Spain?" I mentioned the Louisiana Purchase ns nn instance of what might be called some ter ritorial enterprise, but I realized even as I did so tho cxtieme unfairness of such a remark. Not one Englishman in, 10,000 has ever heard of that transaction. The purser, who was listening, assumed an expression of mulish contempt and remarked : "Well, nnd what'; Louisiana anyway?" And this was the view of the principnl accountant officer on board n big liner sail ing out of Liverpool! WELL, I gave it up ot last. It humili ated me to lethargy. I gave it up. When I was loudly assured that America kept out of the war because she was scared of England I held my tongue. When I was reminded that the Venezuelan question wns the reason America remained neutral I lay low. When. I wns nsKed why America didn't walk into Mexico aud conquer it if she 'was so anxious to fight I declined to be drawn. Een when America came into the war I knew better than to show any jubi lation. The Kuglish chnrnctcr is something like elm wood in grain, very tough, very curly and liable to split open in unex pected directions. It won't' do to hurry when jou nrc working on it. The average Englishman, when he found all his previous prognostications falsified by America coming iuto flic war, coolly moved back to a fresh line of trenches and prophesied that "they would neer get over." When they began to get oer he moved back again and de cided that they wouldn't fight, but would btay round in base ports, and so on aud so forth. There was no real racial malice in all this, mind. It was simply the, subtle poison of cnrs of foolish misunderstanding working out of the system. It is still work ing out. What we have to watch now Is that the irresponsibles of both nations arc not permitted to inject any fresh virus o suspicion. BUT while Englishmen who know Amer ica have a duty to perform for the bene fit of humanity thero is nnothcr aspect of the question which appeals more to the Ameri can publicist. I mean the conception which the average stay-at-home Englishman has of everyday American life. He is hardly to be blamed for declining to take Americans seriously when the big film corporations flood the market with stupid and preposter- , otis reels of so-called "college" and "wild West" life. The main feature of American life clubs, exchanges, the libraries, the common access to sports nnd pastimes which In England nrc the jealously guarded prerogatives of the rich none of these come across In the films which are shipped every week to Eng land. It is not enough to say that this sort of thing is to be sought in books. English people 'of the stay-at-home sort will not read American books. They will not even read Welsh or Irish books if they are true to Welsh and Irish life. ANOTHER suggestion for the American Js to overhaul the news agencies. All my life the staple news received in London from America has Deen tall stories of giant floods, giant fires, giant earthquakes, giant railroad accidents and giant trees. Now these are all very interesting, but It tends to give the stay-at-home Englishman the impression that his leg is belpg pulled. What we wont is an exchange of ordinary lnunnn records and aspirations: the right men don't get into the news. Aify American who has lived In England will know what I mean. What is wonted is a steady stream of general news to be handled by English writers to counterbalance the occasional phenomenal Jiappenlngs nnd create a sound, theJgiiwl ,-$ Wt Phct'tflijiUtid ftanc uwuj v. viu"" wujuauM vuwxrulBff j,MUU .-MU, Iri ' 1 i-"! j TUESDAY, ftL&y; W v. , I "Be . ' .1 THE . : V . PEACE TERKlS; -'- ! m ''''- 1 . WU '. ' "IRwfflSv :5iSs .i:-i'-"'.-.'"rS-rftt''JZ, ' -Sir': . V-T- '" .:- ' -!' i-ti. - j " . .j' . " .r ,.fc v:c? a"-.. ' .:;-. .-?: '-t ." .,r';.-rv- .... - . jy-i- -. .fi--- i-i.. --.- .... z.": .'- THE CHAFFING DISH Advertisements We Yearn For T FEEL that I simply must tell you my - great secret. I can't keep it in any longer. My wife and I had aftcn talked the prob lem over at borne. The gist of the matter was that I was making no headway in busi ness because I couldn't bcem to get time to concentrate on my work. As Joan said to me, 'i,You know, Bobby, the trouble with jou is you're too popular. You have too much magnetism. Everybody likes you so much they simply won't leave you alone." MUCH as I hated' to, admit it I knew it was true. It had troubled me for a, long time. Every morning when I was trying to get through the accumulated work on my desk the telephone would keep buzzing chaps who wanted me to go out to lunch with them. Big business nfeti insisted on my going to the Terrapin Club with them, and would sit around for a couple of hours just swapping yarns while I ached to get back to the office. The president of our company would calt mo into bis private of fice for a chat over business matfers, and though I used to try hard to break away be would keep me there an hour or so just lis tening to my ideas 6'n how things ought to be run. Stenographers were all fighting to take my dictation. The result was that my letters were late getting done. Influential men who happened to bo passing through the city would pick on me and insist ou seeing me. My w'ork was neglected CYeryduy. I USED to have to take a portfolio of papers home every night. Even there it wns no better. Joan and I would settle down for a quiet evenina, she with her sew ing and I with my work. But we kept on being interrupted. Some of the most promi nent people in the city were always drop ping in to pass away a merry evening, to hear my views on the league of nations or something of thnt sort. Orthey would ask us out to dinner, and we didn't like to re fuse. "It's nil your damned tavolrj fairc," .loan would say dcspulrlngly. "Mrs. Kitz Carlton says she simply has to have us thero every time she entertains, you are so well read and give nil. her guests new ideas on art, politics and philosophy. Isn't there anything you can do about it, Bobby? We'll be ruined if this goes on." SHE was quite right. We were on the high road to dismal failure. Everybody in the office liked me so mhch 'that every time a particularly difficult contract had to be put over It was wished on me. I learned that it's always the popular guy that gets the tough jobs handed to him. My desk was a kind of social center. Visitors to the of fice would refuse o leave until they bad been introduced to me. I never got n chanre to be nlone for a minute. How I envied little Peters, the awkward, brusque book keeper, whom everybody hated,. Nobody ever interrupted him or pestered blra to go out to lunch at 12 o'clock or play a round of golf with the president of, the steel trust whence wanted to get a Job finished. One day I took Inters aside. "Look here, old man," I said, k'tell me how you do It?" I hardly expected him to tell me, but be was'" mighty decent. What Peters told' me was a revelation. I felt like a new man and put it Into practice nt once. Of course It took time, but I felt the urge and the will to succeed, Within a month I was getting results. HOWJiappy I am now I sense, of power I havet What an added What a glorl- rant. uuityi8 ate, ysof .UupuifMi t 'iv n F Y1919' " ' &- 1 "I OBJECT, A'READY!" S. .A ''Ki - . :w ' . tt J- ms2!8Bmmmmwmjm&wmw& .j.-- mii 1 1 maw "i'ii I'a 'inmras.v-ouj v i iMOjJFTfMirfBW twrr nffnTniT nfffr mrrnn ir rrmnrr nmiri rrr - wyv-itx fyssmZsSLfei ,-..;; i'V " ... . O --r.'S- -: '' ''? - ..jr Prominent men who used to pursue me all over town now pass me by on the street with ouly a curt nod. Some of the very best people have actually gone out of their wny to avoid me. The hend of the firm hasn't called me into his private office for three months. And Joan and I have our evenings all to ourselves. I no longer have to send three dress shirts to the laundry every week on account of Mrs. Fitz-Carl-tou's dinner parties. The president of the country club has stopped talking about put ting me up for membership. Thank heaven, I won't have to buy a hunch of golf tools. I can buy some clothes for the children in stead. Whcu there's nil impossibly hard job on band at the office they pass it over to one of the other boys and let him fall down qn it instead of me. I have a chance to go ahead with my own work and make good. I'm going to be a success. I feel it! And it's all due to Peters aud what he told me. But you want to know how it's done. Well, what Peters told me that day wns "Get a copy of Doctor Bunko's The Secret of Making People Hate You." IT'S wonderful! That littlo book tells you how to demagnetize yourself. If you're jeursed with a genial disposition, ns I was, jou can leurn how to bo tactless and dis agreeable in ten lessons. Ten more lessons will fell you how never to remember n uiaus name or face or telephone number. You can niako your dearest friend n complete" stranger after reading three ot Doctiir Bunko's chapters. After reading this epoch making little book ou will never be well informed on artistic, literary, political -and educational topics. No longer will com plete strangers in a Pullman smoker- insist on drawing you into conversation In older to bear your views. Such confidence have tho publishers in old Do,ctor Bunko's book thnt they will gladly send it to you on approval. Send no money. Don't even stump the envelopu if you don't happen to have a stamp in your wallet. Just get the book anyway nnd leurn how to help yourself the way I've been helped. Be disagreeable and have a littlo time to yourself! Temperance Fugitl You cannot throw oft the habits of so ciety Immediately any moro than you can throw off the habits of the Individual Im mediately, They must be slowly got rid of j or, rather, they must be slowly altered. They must be Blowly adapted ; they must be slowly shaped to the new ends for which we would use them. That Is the process of law, If law Is Intelligently conceived. President Wilson, In a speech In Pirls. How much more intelligently conceived the eighteenth amendment would have been if it had provided for a progressive do mobilization of the G. A, It. Grand Army of Itumhounds. From July 1 to Ifi five cocktail men should, be reduced to four per day ; from July IB to 20, three per dav : from July 20 to 25, two per day, plus a compulsory glass of raspberry Boda or some other barmeclde beverage. In this way tho decantcrbury pilgrimage might be made easy and the world would be safe for abstainers. Deck Mottoes Thieves respect property. They merely wish the property to become their property that they may aore perfectly respect It. G, K. CHESTERTON. 'What is it that one finds In tobacco tins nowadays? Not tobacco, surely. We haven't whiffed a pipeful in two years that tastes like real weed except lmportdBilx- tt borrow f t, W.wjikb,vl ..---- ,i ..j'L.- Mm l-r ,. ,.w.,fi xy.. :Im s' W-l X ' it i sxrSi. ' JLi -SK ' r. -l :- 'z&, S!3?.,i,.rf.--rf- j -1 ytip'" & - J. - -r ,1--. i- e tr" . -J"' r ,i- y The Looher-On Pays, Too THEY danced unto his veering tunes, For some were trist as well as gladi They danced, they danced unto bis tunes It seemed to me thnt all were mad ! Through summer noons, 'iicatb summer v moons, They danced, they danced unto bis tunes! They never asked him whence life came (Oh, Joie-de-vivre, in motley coat, And cap with feather like a flame Upon the fanning air afloat!) They never even asked his name; I could but guess 'it nil the same. I sat, hands folded iu my lap. "Soon must they pay who dauce," I said. Off came die plumed and jaunty cap The piper wore upon bis head. "They never thought of this, mayhap!" The coins dropped ringing in the cop. It passed nlong with plume of flame' The coin a jingling music made ; None did dispute the piper's claim, And some there were that overpaid. But then, just then, to me he came, And swung that cap with plume of flame! "I did not dance!" "Still, you must pay You liked, my tunes!" "Sonio were too sad!1' The piper Inughed : "Another way, A way you liavo, of being glad!" 'Tuns true! I had no more to say; The looker -on must also pay! Edith M. Thomas, in the New York Times. What Do You Knoiv? QUIZ What is the capital of Finland? How long is a kilometer in English measurements? At whnt two towns in the Azores Islands will the American transatlantic avl- ntors call? Wlult is the 'correct pronunciation of the word route? What is a sobriquet? What is a "contretemps"? Who was Zenobia and where did she live? . f What presidents of the United States . were graduates of Harvard College? What kind of weather may be foretold when spiders spin on the grass? Who is Secretary of Agriculture? 8. 0. 10. Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Roland Morris, of Philadelphia, Is American ambassador to Japan, 2. To "burke" means to dispose of quietly; to suppress, or-smother. Named after William Burke, who was executed in Edinburgh in 1829. He murdered his victims by suffocation 3. The Greek parliament is called the boubj (pronounced "boo-lay"), 4. NC-4 means "Navy-Curtis-4. 5. Avignon, France, was the Beat of th papacy from 130D until 1377. 0. A mezzaninB floor is a lovy story between 'tjvvo high ones, espeelnlly between the ground floor and the story above. 7. Julius Caesar was assassinated In 44 ,B. C. 8. Laurence Sterne wrote the "Seutimeu- tal Journey.' jsfc &r C2S XT mil,. Of Slmouy is the buying or selling 'of ec- ,1 cleslastical preferment, c ! ?J JO. Andrew .Taekson, James K, Polk Sfr i 4 i 'i ! :. a Hn p .. ,I". M?i " . -, ' H . - . i , 9- W ? ' V ? W, . JtA'-lJBrtJU T1. l ,. jMrTrti-hil A. -J-; &: J J oh ntt&l . 0.dBL J. . . . j'.- ' A.. . ! K o .s n .bi'.. -,, An .- r yr-ro-v, ' -?i --'. TS