j w ,li :t. pi i . r w . f 39 k Ctfentitg IJubUc ledger THE EVENINGnTELEGRAPH C'-PUBLIC LEDGER COMEANY ,. " CWsrtes II. Ludlnsion vice rrenldentiJohn C. fert"is.8.0.nlr'p na Treasurer! Philip fl Colllm. i jffmn P. Wllrlama. John J, Spurgfon. Directors. r? ' RDtTOniAI, BOARD) Cutis IITK. Ctntll, Chairman PAVin E. SMILEY .Editor riJOtn-T C. MARTIN.... General Business Manage" ''Published dallr at FniLio I.toom Building. . , . J Independence Bquare, I'hUartelphla, Artiiroo Cm Frets-Union Building Ws-w Toik 209 Metropolitan Toner banoiTt .. 701 Ford Building bpt. ijouis.... lima rilienon uuuaing iav SBIOiao ..........1302 Tribune Building NEWS BUREAUS I -Wism-faTAS ow BUIUD, "i . " E- Cor- l'ennsrlvanla Ave. and Hth Bt. N"nr Tottfc Buauu The Suit Building- FjAHpgn uviuD, ..ljonuon jtmcs SUBSCRIPTION TERMS E The ErKfiNO Posua Lnoon la aerved to sub a-rlber3 In Philadelphia and surrounding towns at the rate of twelve (12) centa per week, payable to the carrier. , Br mall to point outside of Philadelphia. In the United Statea. CanAda, or United States pos aeaalons. po-itags free, fifty (HO) centa per month. Six 0) dollars per year, payableiln adance. To all foreign countries one (SI) dollar per month. Notice Subscribers wishing address chanced must give old as well as new address. BELL. JMO WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN JOOfJ CT Adkress all communications to Eventno Public Ledoer, Independence Sauare Philadelphia. Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS is ercla. tively entitled to the use for republication of all newt dispatchei credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and alio the local newt published therein. All rights of republication of special' dis patches herein are also reserved. rhiltdflpWi. Mondij, June 16, 1919 NOTICE TO LEGISLATORS! WITH the resumption of sessions at Harrisburjj tonight, the people of Philadelphia expect the members of the Legislature to waste no more time in shilly-shallying, but to enact the new .charter legislation at once. These bills are now in shape satis factory to every interest deserving respectful consideration at the state capital. -Further attempts at delay must be viewed'with suspicion. So let the measures pass and put an end to all possibility of trickery and sculduggery. THE BIG TRIP HAS BEEN MADE! OCIENCE and optimi& - again won ' laurels. Captain Jack Alcock and Lieutenant Arthur W. Brown have suc cessfully made a nonstop air journey 'across the Atlantic in sixteen hours. The thing Hawker attempted they have done. Unquestionably the trip he made helped them on their journey. The Vickers-Vimy bombing plane in which they traveit.il had two engines where Hawker's Sopwith had but one. The clog ging of a radiator on Hawker's trip caused his failure. So the glory is theirs. It is a glory that may be shared on both sides of the Atlantic. Alcock is n Britisher; Brown is an American. Each belongs to a nation of achievement; each belongs to a race of good sport3. THE DEMOCRACY OF LABOR rpHE decision of the American Federa- tion of Labor to admit negro workers P to the unions, made unanimously, is likely v to be regarded in the future as of much greater consequence than any other ac tion taken by the federation since its foundation. As Mr. Gompers remarked, it removes every class and race distinction from the movement and should mark a period in the struggle of the negro for equality in government as well as in industry. TJie action is significant because it is a recognition of the success of the colored worker in demonstrating his right to be considered the industrial equal of the white worker. It is a-recognition of the democracy of labor. SECRETARY WILSON'S SENSE "HTE COMMEND to the attention of the " social philosopher two remarks made by Secretary Wilson at the labor conven- ' tion in Atlantic City. The first is that, while it is admitted that the worker should receive "the full social value of what he produces," human intelligence has not yet devised a reliable method for measuring the value of each man's contribution to the production of -wealth. The second is that "production, in creased production, is the paramount question." Secretary Wilson elaborated this by remarking that the more there is produced the more there will be to dis tribute, and the larger the production the greater will be the share of the worker -as well as of the employer. The increased production by the indi vidual workers will have the same effect upon their prosperity that the increased production made possible by machinery has had upon the prosperity of society at large. When the labor unions concen trate their attention on increasing the efficiency of the workers half of the prob lems which trouble them will disappear. , WHY THE DOCTRINE LIVES TN HIS comnlaint because the lpn-r-ip-nf- K '""-nations covenant fails to define the afoA Ttfpnroe Doctrine in explicit terms, Senor k(S to the Peace Conference, touches upon a rvy1 signal virtue of the American policy. ,i y. xe vuruinai principle oi ine aoctrme ' "ui ' was clearlv set forth bv its author in his FnijL message to Congress in 1823. It was. a S 6u warning against any further European s-, "atritmnt t.o ninnr rmnnipa n-r tn infoM.v. I srwHh independence and liberty on the . 1 An.arMan Anntinanf Tic inlaMiMifBinn Jt ' has been adjusted to the aspects of each ijwrticular case as they- arose. ! ''-'Such flexibility has something of the aaauiil value of Common law. whirh rip. rfsYMs its strength more from precedents tBAa from statutes, ma tne Monroe trine been handicapped with .verbal tidily it might ere now have been obso- But no iron-clad ruling handicapped Strward when ho fortified Mexican inde jfmdswe by his attitude toward the rncb invasion in the sixties, nor Olney i.M9m ne insiawu upon b juuicibi neauuK .mt A Vaowwelan boundary dispute. mm ltiJiMtkkn rights' are in. clastic form, which renders adaptable and open to agencies of justice the rela tions of our sister republics with the United States. Tho Peace Conference did an excellent job when it declined the task of definition on this subject. CHAIRMAN HAYS IS WISER THAN THE SENATE His Protest Against Making a Party Issue of the Peace Treaty Is Politi cally Expedient as Well as Fundamentally Sound "M'EVER were words more opportunely ' spoken than those which came from thoJips of the chairman oftho Republican national committee in Fort Wayne. The Republican leadership in the Sen ate has been pursuing n course which if followed long would land the party in the ditch and completely destioy its use fulness as an instrument for executing the popular will. In a gravu world crisis it has been venting personal spite against the President instead of rising to the occasion and basing its course upon broad-minded and intelligent principles of statesmanship. It has been doing its best to make a partisan political issue of our foreign relations. Such a course weakens the party that enters upon it and it weakens the in fluence of the nation as a whole in its dealings with other nations. It has been a tradition of American politics for generations that nil partisan ship ended at the three-mile limit of na tional jurisdiction over the sea. Salt water cemented all parties into one great body of Americans ncting through their elected representatives, who for the time might be either Democrats or Republi cans. Mr. Hays demands that this tradition be respected. He says that "the conclu sion of the, treaty of peace, including ajl its prousions, is in no sense h party ques tion." That phrase, "including all its pro visions," means nothing more nor less than the league-of -nations section. Why should Mr. Hays be talking in this way at this time? Arc not the Republican senators to be trusted to act for the party? The answer to these questions is easy, if one will consider for a moment what Mr. Hays has been doing for many weeks. He has been traveling up and down the country, talking with business and political leaders in close touch with the sentiment of the people. He has evi dently discovered that there is serious dissatisfaction with the course of the men in Washington and a sincere desire that the United States should join with the other nations in a league for the preser vation of the peace of the world. He would not have rebuked the Senate if he had not convincing evidence that the rank and file of the party were back of him. What he has said is patriotic and based on the best traditions of the nation. It is also inspired by the best practical political wisdom which has been put into words for many a day. Tho sort of stuff that has been put forth from Washington in the name of Re publicanism is neither good Republican ism nor good Americanism. The Repub licans throughout the country should pro test against the intrusion of it by the Lodges and the Borahs and the rest of them into the discussion of the problems of peace. The nation expects the sena tors to forget that they arc Republicans and Democrats when they consider the ratification of the peace treaty, "includ ing all its provisions," and to act as citi zens of the United States sharing with the rest of the world in the task of end ing the great horror which has darkened the lives of the nations for five years and shouldering the obligation of pre venting its recurrence. We are sharing with the whole human race in the great adventure which began with the creation of man, the episodes in which include the conquering of nature, and the learning by races of how to live together in nations in peace and amity, and is culminating in the supreme effort of nations to live to gether with decent respect for the rights of one another. But we find the men who should be our leaders in this great task turning aside from it and apparently deaf to the imperative voice summoning them to tho pressing duty so much bigger than tho gratification of personal spite or the se curing of partisan advantage that they ought not to be mentioned in the same breath. Mr. Hays speaks for men of all parties when he protests against making the ratification of the treaty a partisan ques tion. There are functions for the parties to perform. Mr. Hays does not ignore them. He stresses those policies with which the Republican party has been identified for years, and by indirection reminds his associates that they are neglecting their obvious duty to apply those policies to domestic proLiems by spending their time and energies on matters outside of the realm of political partisanship. There is the protective tariff, for exani ple. Under it we have the best paid workingmen in the world and our re sources have been developed so that they supply our own needs and leave a surplus for the needs of the rest of the world. The war has proved that many other industries might have been created here if the proper protection had been given tn thorn. We discovered that we were dependent on Germany for products' made from the waste of such industries as thrive here, and we have been forced by necessity to do those things which prudence should have taught us to do years ago. We ought not to forget thife lesson and wo should not be satisfied with a pro tective tariff on the dye and chemical in dustries, but should seek out other indus triec which have not been developed and apply the tariff to them in order that wo may produce so far as possible all the articles that we need. Business has been accustomed to look ing to the Republican party for helpful legislation. It needs such legislation at present, framed sympathetically instead of by men,withv ljatile minds. EVENING JTJBII3 IDaifflR-rteiABIMl with government ownership and it is not likely to toy with it now, but it is com mitted to a policy of regulation of public service corporations in the interest of all the people. It mustundo tho bcdevllmi,... of tho railroad problem and it must make it clear to the country at largo that no legitimate enterprise has anything to fear from government interference, so that private initiative may be permitted to work unhampered. If no other motive is potent enough to turn the Senate from its present mad course, it ought to pcrceivo that the warning of Mr. Hays, who has been put ting his ear to the ground and listening to good purpose, should bo heeded if the Re publican party is to be saved from defeat. Desire for tho loaves and fishes is not the highest motive, but it will servo for lack of a better one. POLICE AND THE GOLDEN AGE WHEN the Camden bridgo is built, when reformers in Philadelphia poli tics learn to walk alone, when tho west ern states elect senators with good sense, when the high cost of living becomes low, when all troubles and differences are over between men in short, when the millennium arrives traffic policemen in Philadelphia will be permitted to wear summer uniforms of a sort that might not be devised as punishment for griev ous sins. Brass buttons and blue cloth are a tradition in the police service. They in sure the maximum of discomfort for the men. The army and even the postoffice department showed how men may bo of ficial in appearance and yet comfortable. Other cities here and abroad have found ways in which to garb their traffic men fittingly in the dog days. In this city a policeman stationed in the middle of a blazing street, buttoned stiffly to the ears in a thick coat, seems no more logical than the damsel who swelters blissfully under summer furs. But the lady provides her own punish ment. Men long since dead decreed it for the helpless members of tho Phila delphia police force. CHICAGO HAS THE NERVE PLANS for spending $14,000,000 on new apartment hotels in Chicago have been made since the signing of the ar mistice. Most of them have been made within three months. Chicago builders evidently have con fidence in the future of their city, and they have the nerve to invest their money in providing homes for the population that even now is waiting for them. Cost of building may come down, but they are willing to gamble that it will not come down before the new buildings have made profit enough to justify their erection. This is the sort of thing that has been largely responsible for the growth of the city by the lake. Its business men are willing to take chances. The small powers that Making for Delay are demanding of the Big Four that a plen ary session ba held to discuss treaty changes are indulging in United States Senate tactics. The council of ten The Turks' Ante will meet the Turkish delegation in the rloakroom of the Quai d'Orsay tomorrow. When it comes to the question of reparations they will doubtless sojourn to the anteroom. ' A recent trial trip in A Merry Toung Soul the Delaware of a lo cally built vessel has demonstrated that Cole is king of speed among torpedoboot destroyers. Now let the Fiddlers Three celebrate the fact. The Britisher and the A Long Run American shared Inevitable honors in the trans atlantic air flight. The stirring drama, "Hands Across tho Sea," is thus succeeded by "Wings Across the Sea," with nn international cast. '"Tis a wise child Solomon Up to Date that knoweth its own father," said the cynic. But Judge Gorman, of the Munici pal Court, believes that child exists and ac cepted his testimony in one word, "Daddy," In a recent "support" case. "Out of the mouths of babes cometh wisdom." Two hundred thousand Tho Right to Appeal French soldiers hove appealed to Trench strikers to maintain their movement on strictly professional lines and not to disarm France by n general walkout "just when the hour o justice for the people strikes." It is inconceivable that the appeal can be ig nored. The Boldiers themsehes are working men, but workiugmeu who laid down their tools to take up arms for France and civ ilization. They have the right to demand that for which they appeal. Premier Orlando is as busy as a shuttle. Add "Hane Tales" the story of Alcock and Brown. Alcock and Brown demonstrated that It is a piffling little ocean after all. German delegates consider the work of the drafting committee n frame-up. The charter baby had several colicky times, but is now resting easily. After July 1 every club member will have his opn little bone-dry locker. In the matter of peace the Germans do not find delays dangerous. It has never been authoritatively stated that prohibition will reduce the number of drug addicts. The Dove of Pence is believed to be roosting in one of the pigeonholes in the Chateau of Versailles. The legislator in Harrlsburg who wishes to stand on his dignity had better practice a little on the slack wire. The evidences of Industrial unrest in France ought to act as a check on our own Senate. It is a mighty small ocean after all. Councils' action in making it unlawful fp steal a ride on any motor or horsedrixen vehlilo Js a great Wok, to be movie d. THEIR FAVORITE JOKES 8ome, Things Which the Members of the American Press Humorists' An- soclatlon Think Are Funny The convention of the .ImeHcaai Press Humorists' Association will.be held in this cltv next tceek. Some of the members, at the request of the secretary -treasurer, have told Mm what they think is the funniest (nltw; they ever heard. Borne of the things are original 'with them they appreciate their 6wn humor and some are not. Fol lowing is the first installment of the things which they think are good. T A. WALDRON, an ex -president of the " American Press Humorists, says that during the years of his editorship of Judge he has so often encountered his favorite joke in tho manuscripts submitted to the maga ?iuc and possibly it has been so often printed by his Honor that it would be un kind to spring It upon the clientele of the Evknino Public Ledoeii, "which has so much original humor that no relics should be permitted in its columns." T-ON IIEROLD, of Indianapolis, says he -' hasn't any favorite joke, so compro mises on n couple of aphorisms : Work is the greatest thing 1- the world, so we should always save some of it until tomorrow. Hereafter we will believe less history than ever, now that we have seen how it is made. r O. McINTYnE-writes : "My favorite joke: Tho wheeze about the feller coming home soused and upsetting the bowl of goldfish. When his wife yelled down the' stairs, "John, what's the matter?" ho re plied, "I'll teach those damn goldfish to snap at me!" TlTRS. ELIZABETH SEARS writes: "The "'J- funniest thing I heard happened last year at Camp Dlx, when the T. M. C. A. personally conducted a passel of writers and editors around the place figuring on a lot of publicity out of it. A bunch of us were in a dnsty lorry, being shown the remount station, and we met a major who had once written a poem himself and was tremendously interested at meeting ho many brilliant writers at once, as it were. A merry wit from the New York Tribune was introducing us to the major, he being m command of the remount station and having shown us vari ous courtesies. He was anxious to be nice to us and to show that he really read the magazines and knew out various names. "When he was introduced to Ellis Parker Butler, who leaned on a cane with a judicial air, the major wrinkled his brow and re peated : " 'Butler Butler let's sec Butler.' " 'The Pigs Is Pigs man, you know,' delicately reminded the merry wit from the Tribune. " 'Of course I knew, returned the major, indignantly; 'I was merely trying to place his last story.' " 'Oh, no,' promptly remarked Ethel Watts Mumford, from r dusty section of the lorry, "he's still trying to do that himself.' "And Mr. Butler sadly but truthfully ac knowledged that it was indeed so." TJOY K. MOULTON, of the New Xork -' Evening Mail, writes: I don't know a darn thing to tell you about myself. If you would let me talk about my two kids I could talk all day, but the old man has sort of settled down into a state of speechless acquiescence to the prevailing order of things. My favorite joke is Colonel House. I om eighty-one years old (today). I like parsnips and am in favor of the league of nations. I am always in favur of things that nobody understands. It makes life in teresting. I will come to the convention all dressed up like a horse. TT'IN HUBBARD, alias Abe Martin, of the - Indianapolis News, National IfWspaper Service and the Universal Films Manufac turing Company's Screen Magazine, says : If a feller screwed up his face when he asks for a credit like he does when he's asked to settle he wouldn't git it. Some girls don't seem to care so their ears are covered. Th' question you hear most these days Is-, "Where kin tbnt girl's mother be?" What's become o' th' ole time girl whose complexion changed with her varyin' moods? TREVE COLLINS, JR., of the American Newspaper Service and a candidate for membership in the A. P. H,, writes: There is one consolation about crowded street cars: You may be too tired to stand up, but you couldn't fall down if you wanted to. Time and tide wait for no MAN. So woman, lovely woman, continues, to be as late as she pleases. Some women con sec good points In every man except the' one they've married. The only reason some men long for sudden wealth is that it would enable them to lie in bed as long as they'd like to in the morn ing. A woman is quite willing to forgive a man all his faults unless she's married to him. M RS. DABRAGH ALDRICH writes: My favorite joke is new this year. That is pretty good for a favorite joke. This is it (a joke is always in two parts) : PART ONE The Joke Young Man in Stage Box This is an awfully clever play. Who wrote it? Popular Producer You did. PART TWO Why It Is Funny Perhaps it isn't. But I think it is be cause I am steadily and firmly drawing (origi nal) partyfirstpart Author's Royalties from the Broadway hit, "A Prince There Was," which Billboards and Blurbs insist is "the very funniest thing" That George M. Cohan Ever wrote! It is iunny, very funny, and every weekly check makes it more heartily hilarious. A Flood of flew Stamps The reconstruction period In Europe is producing many new postage stamps. Hun dreds of these already have appeared, and the philatelic albums and catalogues of the future will contain sections under names which do not now appear in these collectors' volumes. From Czecho-Slovakia alone there have emanated several score of -varieties since the dual monarchy Austria -Hungary disinte grated finder war pressure. Jugo-SIavia has issued at least thirty different ones for use within that new country, not to mention many Others which the Jugo-Slavs put in circulation within the history-making port of Flume. The Hungarian republic has put forth twenty-eight for temporary use until a permanent series can bo printed. Italy has issued, for use in Fiumc, approximately forty varieties, andlt is conjectured whether these will still be allowed in use should Fiume become a free city. Estlioua has es tablished philatelic identity, with at least four varieties; as have Livonia, with eleven; Ukralnia, with about thirty. South Russia, four, and the republic of Poland,.with more than sixty. The reconstruction period has af fected also the philately of Bulgaria, Ru mania and probably Serbia. And In one sense the reconstruction crs may be said to em brace various "victory stamps," Including the one issued by the United States, a series !r Slum and.those to come iron Japan. Cnn. L aua aact auier'eewn'MM mum "Wr- - .. , i . i- " r- 'ftpfojAY; JtlMWv' -4; -' f Li - " i . ... -,,.,.- u ... -. .,..... , . ......... . .. . ! . r- -; 1 THE CHAFFING DISH A GRIEVOUSLY increasing mail makes it - necessary to point out certain facts to our clients. Contributions accompanied by stamped addressed enelopes, If not printed, will probably be returned sooner or later, gen erally later. Not, however, unless tho stamps are very flrmly afllxed. If they show any evldenco of departing from their moorings wo steam them loose and Bteal them. t The fact that we print a contribution does not mean that we think It has any literary merit, nor doea It mean that we are wllflng to discuss with the author hlB or her chances of literary Immortality. It means simply that'we were, at tho an guished moment when our eye glittered upon it, hard up for material. Unused contributions are kept In a large packing case beside our desk, Into which we occasionally dip and bring forth what ever comes to hand. Outraged clients who want their poems back are at liberty to rummage In this box and rescue their treasures. ' ' Please do not ask us to Inform you of the date of Issue In which your gem ap peared. You only waste your time. We guarantee notlilns. The Ravin' (As Poe might have written it on the night of June 30) ONCE upon a midnight dreary While I pondered weak and weary Over many a joyous revelry - bottled goods galore, As I thought of bar and railing, All the while my spirit failing, Suddenly I heard a wailing, As if some one bad been trailing, Trailing chains before my door. "Must this prohibition chain Bind around my throat and brain?- Who is It that waits outside?" Hcrp I opened wide the door. "Tell me, rsven," I demanded, i "Speak to a poor soul who's stranded Will the dry law be remanded, With goblets clinking as of yore?" Quoth the raven, "Nevermore?" "Must our lusty German brewers Pour their beer into the sewers Just because a proclamation . ( Closed the grogshops during war? Cannot dry decrees be broken? By a word so lightly spoken? Is there not a hopeful token?" Quoth the raven, "Nevermore!" TREEMAN H, HUBBARD. Shaw Wins "Endured an hour's torturo . indecision tonight asking myself whether I Bhould go over to ask her to be my wife or should I go to the Fabian Society and bear Bernard Shaw. Kept putting off tho decision ey.en till after dinner. If I went to the flat, I must shave; to shave required hot water the landlady had already cleared the table nnd was rapidly retreating. Something must be done and at once. I called Jhe old thing backkimpulslvely and ordered shaving water, consoling myself with the reflection that it was still unnecessary to decide ; the hot water could be at band in. case the worst happened. If I decided on matrimony i could shave forthwith. Should I? "Drank some coffee and next found myself slowly, mournfully putting on hat ans) coat. You can't shave in bat and coat, so I con cluded I bad decided on Shaw. Slowly undid tho front door latch and went off." Tho journal of a hisappointed Man, ( How About the 8treet-Cleanlng Depart ment? What la civilization? It is the mass ing together at a. given time of the ac cumulations of the past. Senator Will iams in the Congressional Record. Those wbo haveNread the (now obsolete) draft of ta po,trM4jr wju euMl PEACE WTH INDEMNITIES Annex 4, Paragraph 0, provides that the German Government shall deliver In equal monthly Installments In the three moi.ths following the coming into force of the present treaty 10,000 gents, with other livestock. Doubtless the whole rettson for holding up the negotiations was that some German mathematician discovered that 10,000 goats cpuld not be delivered in three equal in stallments, that is, not live goats. This department, always striving to be helpful, suggests that if the figure were made 0009 goats the delivery could conform to the terms of the treaty, and the crown prince might be Jhrown in with the first installment to make up for the missing goat. I like for a man to become human every now and then and lose his temper. Sena tor Williams In the Congressional Ilecord. Why in the name of the Seven Sutherland Sisters can't these fellows tajk good gram mar but tush tush, we aro" getting quite human. Another thing that annoys us when wc read Senate debates is the habit those august statesmen have of referring to George Wash ington as "George." Place Orders Now Dear Socrates Tiro yaars a to you wero,ao kind as to send me a formula for dandelion wine which has been used wMi treat satisfaction and pro duced comfort for myself and my rrlends. But picking dandelion blossoms by hand Is a alow process: so last winter I searched for a suitable rake and was successful In finding- the "OEM RAKE," SELF-CI.EANINO, FINE-TOOTHKD DANDELION HEADER AND LAVTN RAKE. Warranted by the CASEMENT HARDWARE CO . DISTRIBUTORS CHICAGO Another label on the rake apeclftea the SPECIALTY DIVISION of the Casement Hardware Co. as being- more particu larly concerned with handllne this excellent rake. For audi It la By Its use one can collect a quart of buds In a very few minutes One simply pulls, the rake over the plants and when the opening's between the teeth are full a wiper operated from the end of the handle enables the operator to empty the rake Into a basket at one motion. I am sure that If you do not already know nf this marvelous rake you will be aiad to have the Information; and If you are going to pui-chase one I suggest that you do so at once because Its manufacture and sale will probably soon be pro hibited along with stllla and all such apparatus. Faithfully youra. HARRISON W. SMITH. Springfield, Me. For the Child Federation Here's to our young friend Mifjlin McOill, Who drew one dollar out of hit till, Mifflin's two weelspld today, And begins his career in a generous way. Mifflin, if he is given scope, 'Will develop itfo a philanthrope. John A. Cleary Is not chary He gives us one green engraving: Commentary Does not vary: There's no fun like children-saving. . As for Little Tim TJcklepltcher, he' not only sends us bis dollar, but writes his own poem, thus: Just Little Tim Ticklepitcher sends one scad Just to make tome poor child glad. - , Great men have always been trained for their high achievements by1 stern and peril ous labor in youth. Lincoln split rails and hunted wildcats. Clemenccau was a New York commuter and pursued tho wild trains of the New Haven Railroad. An article In tho Boston Transcript de scribes Clemenceau's career as a teacher in a girls' school at Stamford, Conn, Think says the article, . ' Think of the Tiger surrounded by a bevy of young things alt chattering ajt once whenever he dared to call them to order! Think of him as playing "tag" "and hlde and seek and even some of those old kiss ing games, out on the hills, near the school house, chasing some teasing girl far and wide, and sometimes catching her. We are thinking, -Prhaps the teacher's profession has compensations we.Lad not con- sUtred-whea we gIiom ir iifewaJr -. r'j . 'it?. - , . .-T"tf Tt" -" ' ' ft .' V PV, - THE CHARACTER OF A HAPPY LIFE H" OW HAPPY is he born and taught That servcth not another's will; Whoso armor is his honest thought, And simple truth bis utmost skill! Whoso passions not his masters are; 1 '! r nose soul is still prepared for death, Not tied unto the world by care Of public fame or private breath; Who envies none that chance doth raise, Nor vice ; who never understood 4 How deepest wounds aro given by praise; Nor rules of state, but rules of good ; Who hath his life from rumors freed; Whose conscience is his strong retreat; ' Whose state can neither flatterers feed, i Nor ruin make oppressors great. ' Who God doth late and early pray More of His grace than gifts to lend; And entertains the harmless day With a well-chosen book or friend- This man is freed from servile bands Of hope to rise, or fear to fall : Lord of himself, though not of lands, And having nothing, jet hath all. Sir Henry Wotton (15C8-1030). The German delegates will doubtless 1 have many serious reflections in the Hall of Mirrors. "Getting It across" and "putting it over" are the middle names of Alcock and urown. At nnA .t... a 4l.,.la J.iib-. .1 ifi . wmv. u.v . uitu juuruc; AICOCI "S and Brown found themselves traveling upslda' aown. anat s an right. They didn't do any J& ....... ..B .. A Wjfmt Do You Know? " 1 ninv . QUIZ 1. What is a dipper" bill? S. What is the temperature of rf blooded animal? I ' 'A .coia-"3 3. What is the capital of Paraguay? "TttJ i. n no painieu tne celebrated portrait trfa uaaries i ot England? o. What is the meaning of the Frenrf rthraso "bon mflrrhA1'? 0. Who wrote "The Last Days of Pora"! peii'-r " jj V7. In what part of Mexico is the town n'ii Tl1fi1A9 nml nfrna .,Un. 1 li t si uu.v. -..u ilct niiuiu 13 11 uameur "v,iil 8. Why Is the forecastle of a shiD so cnllodTNJv! 0. Who was Philip Freneau? -.j 10. What was the Gordian knot? tJ3 Answers to Saturday's Quiz P$i 1. The Republicans in the Senate have Vj maiorltv of twn. j 2. The zebu is tho East Indian humnert 1U1 3, 'Ijo as aname for an Indian is U-'flL ,-- vv? iciiyuaiy uenvru irora me lines froatf i' ' a "T".-.HA tinni Tmltnn 1 ml.n.. ...... a . t t31 Sees God in clouds, or hears Him iu thi 4. The Stars nnd Strings im. o.i.,i.j i.Lv Congress as the national flag on Junai 14, 1777, in Philadelphia. "J D. "Darbies" Is the slang term for band i-uus. ,5 0. Baroness de In Roche, a French aviatriri achieved tho woman's record for nlfl tude last week, when she flew to a height of 10,700 feet. , 7. A nawab Is a native governor or noblt 8. Charles Lever wrote the novel "CharW 0. William Henry" Harrison and Jaoak urown were two generals promInBt' the War of 1812. wuunw id. Ludwlg, van .SmUioVw.. .wii' 10 fB Si M 4. 1 :s .1 - ,l(: & KV ?'', u " "' .Wl.. ", jUtJ ' V . Hf . ""fi h A Lii :I,.-- """ fMlli III" ;" ?. -- vstm-m $ lT -. f -j i - .. t v.. W&-W2Bt " & x7? t .7s5tfWaM :V airxsr v V,0' !' vs . - t., Z$& '. &. ,sf , wirar mcimc wa ... ....,-. s . w .-; ', 1 IHfc MaaalkMflMaBalj4 i1 'ix. ' T--r-"-'nii r Mfitmitm " - ' "TiPfPS. "i g.f ki&fcJfcA, ,-i