tlSBHE9 Z!&&2&mr .- .;,?","-:7 ' J fr r y EYENINa' PUBLIC! (LEDOERr-PHnJiEL'PHIA', THURSDAY, TOLY 10, ,1919. , v ' W i Y l" THE EVENINGnTELEGRAPH "r PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY "' Vv .CTIl.U!5 " 3C- CURTIS. PBIKiriCNT '"ic'!!'r,t," " Ludlnirton. Vice President! John a i ITirtln, Secretary and Treasurer! Thlllp fl Collins. John B, Williams, John J fipureeon. Directors. editorial noxnDi jji Clues It. K. Ceteris. Chairman yijj is. b.mii.ky Editor JHN1C MAtlTIN ...General nuslncaa Manager s Published dally at I'obiio I.tt-om Ilulldlni. , i- Independence Square. Philadelphia ''MtfO Cltl 1'rfjs-l'nioii Bulldlns f-WKr Tork 100 Metropolitan Tower c- ifri fmplT. . 701 Ford Building- ionm,. loot Fullerton Ilnlldlus 5, J CHICAGO 139: Tribune Building v NHWS BUREAUS: Winnmarov nuitriu. i ?- " Cor Pennsylvania Ave. and 14th St. IJtBWTroBic nnKc The .Sun nulldlnc L0MDON UUBIAt, London Timit BUn'TOirTlON TERMS Tli KruNtNo Prune I.nnoni Is eered to iiin aerlbers In Philadelphia and surrounding towns at the rate of twelve (12) cents per week, payable to the carrier. , Br mall to points outside of Philadelphia. In EX ftpsalnn, nntapp free, fifty 0. cnt rr minth. W Six (fl dollars per year, payable- tn n.Uanee -vh. io an ioreicn countries one mi oouar per ri month. Noticb Subscribers w!hlnsr icldrp8 changed roust clve old as well ns new nddress. BELL, JOOO WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 3300 KT Address nil communications to Kvnino PuS'fc Ledger. Independence Square, PM'adrlphla JJlcmber "f ihc Associated Tress THE ASSOCIATED Pit US S it erclu lit'efy entitled to the ue for republication of all news dispatches credited to it nr not otherwise credited in this piper, and alto the local tipirj published therein. All rights of icpublwalion of special dis patches herein are also reserved. Flillldtlpliii, Thundir. July 10. 1411 I -ruio in ,.,,, ,..,. is inio io r tmiviiui MrrMin GOVERNOR SPKOUL is not a resident of Philadelphia and, however much he may be interested in the coming mayoralty election, he has announced that he does not intend to interfere in any way whatsoever in the selection of a candidate. He is canny in this respect. t'. t. - .. u i.. .:.,.-, r !. n.. .,..,-. fu V - i liUt UlU UUMUt'n V4 Hiu uutiinn I. ro interfere in local fiphts. Once he be- I' cvitn Tin -vvnulrl Vinvo his linncte: co full thnt l'. ij i ... i!. . !-.. r... .u 1 n wouia nave no time ieii. ioi uic mai business of his office. Moreover, he would accumulate a larfjc and varied as sortment of political enemies. THE LOAN AND THE CHARTER IT WAS some one hunting for a mare's ..nest who put forth the proposition that the provisions of the new charter govern the acts of City Councils before the char ter itself goes into effect. The power of Councils to make loans for Vork which the new charter says mustxbe paid for out of current revenues is therefore disputed. , The suggestion is ridiculous. Councils act under the present charter in all re spects until July 25, when some of the provisions of the new law go into effect. li Until' that date Councils may act as T-tnougn there had been no ciiange in the lW. When it authorizes a loan that loan rufts..against the debt-incurring power of the city, regardless of when the money is actually borrowed. There have been . numerous court decisions on this point. . This is aside from the wisdom of bor- rowing money to pay lor repairs to the streets or to public buildings. Common Council, in indorsing the loan for repairs, "v-has'shown bad judgment, but it has not exceeded its power. Fortunately, after the end of this monti it will not have the power to indulge in such unsound finan cial methods. OPEN THE CAN , rpHE government has lare quantities of food bought for the armies which it will not need. It is charged that by syjreement with the canners it refrained . from selling $100,000,000 worth of canned vegetables "so as not to disturb the mar ket" This is a serious charge. If it were made against private citizens it would be followed by their appearance in court as defendants in a suit brought by the gov ernment accusing them with a conspiracy in restraint of trade. If government agents have been con niving to protect the market for the benefit of the canners the country wants to know it. The lid cannot be pried off the can too tjuickly. The people want to know what is inside. THE JERSEY PENDULUM jla TFHALP of the rumors that float across the Delaware are to be accepted as truth, the unexpected is happening in New Jersey politics and Jim Nugent, of Newark, is gaining strength as the Democratic candidate for the governor ship on a platform opposed to prohibi tion, woman suffrage and every other principle of what we have come to regard as advanced legislation. Mr. Nucrent atmears to bo sunrmrtnH H not only by the same Democrats who, a few years ago, were the vociferous propa- ft tjandists of sweetness and light and the jft political idealism of an exalted leader. i,, The Republicans, too, seem td be tcm- "f poraruy mscinaieo. oy me piain-spoKen jjijf boss from Newark. They arc drifting to M ward him in secret, if reports are to be iVr' . !- X ' -i-j v. xi .. . believed. They find some bort of mystic appeal in that side of Mr. Nugent's na ture which abhors the thoughts of woman suffrage, dry years and meticulous elec tion methods. Mr. Nugent's opponents ) areT alarmed and they nre saying so jranKiy. j," Ne Jersey is worth watching. Jijfrphets and seers in politics have pre afefnd, reactions from our present en itWaiasm for uplift by force. The eon- J'ldition in Jersey suggests that that state y serve us a suit 01 national political roineter for the time at least. And we W to thank Mr. Nugent's Democrats W stunning exhibition of the celerity .which a political faction can change dnd and its convictions when offices )t stake. ; avt r , , ' ' ' , ,, t.'j i- e""" pJflfttijr'UILIUMI I& lUKNfcUUN rJlTHIlN President McKinley submitted I 1i- e Senate the treaty of peace with Jt' Hill ?Gfl.jr j,im 2v mt. H.ii. ik ku b.. ' f-itptfcol' by a messenger and the Senate JWDjrn-l it behind closed doors and de 1 StihitHiin secret I - -'- - - U'llnnn fnilair irnoi in (Via eVUVil ! Mevii iwmij ,wv0 iu viiu 1 In .nursort. carrvlnt? with him the it. "" ;-" .. pfW3,with Germany, and in open session he delivers the document nnd sets forth tho reasons Wch led him as tho primary agent of the government In negotiating treaties to agree to the conditions laid down. Secrecy has been abandoned. The na tion knows what the treaty contains and it will know the reasons which lead to the nction of the Senate when it finally votes. The discussions in Paris may have been behind closed doors, but the discussions in Washington will be in the hearing of nil the world. They began weeks ago and they arc likely to coptinue for weeks to come. This is well. The whole nation should know what reasons the senators may ad vance for their support or opposition to the treaty. The debate will not be con fined to Washington, for wherever serious-minded men come together the validity of the arguments of the senators will be examined. In the end it will be the nation acting through the Senate which will ratify. POPULAR WILL IS SCORING OVER POLITICAL GAMES Difficulties of Republican Strategy Have Given to Wl'ld Men a Specious Prom inence Which Can Be Countered With Credit to Party THE brightening prospects in the Sen ate for the league of nations and the peace treaty are not properly to be con strued either as a blanket indictment of Republican fully or as sweeping evidence of Democratic wisdom. What the in creasing auguries of the covenant In dorsement plainlj do emphasize is the ultimate soundness of public opinion. Popular sentiment unquestionably favors the pact of international partner ship unamended and unweakened. Popu lar sentiment, urges speedy ratification of the Versailles treaty. But the shift and interplay of politics are not reducible to such simple terms. Party maneuvering is a subtle and complex game. It is a match in which such players as are strictly professional seldom wrap themselves in mantles of irreproachable idealism, a conflict in which expediency is a prime factor and sophistication a governing principle. Naive party loyalty has for nearly a century and a half been industriously capitalized by American partisan lead ers. Hut as a solvent of the political cryptogram it is without value. Any evidence submitted in 1800 to prove that Adams Federalism was all white and Jef fersonian Democracy all black, or vice vcisa, was spurious. Neither a stainless nor a wholly spot ted Republicanism exists today. Nor is. Democracy as it is played at the Capitol a complete symbol of perfection or a sign-manual of infamy. Like most cats, politicians are gray, and their indefati gable efforts to see more in the dark than their opponents beget the intricacies of partisanship. That the nation has survived such tac tics is due, of course, to the basic prin ciple of representative government, which in the end renders the legislative spokes man responsible to his constituents. If the system isn't perfect it is st least workable. It is, however, repeatedly productive of situations mystifying to the ingenuous observer. Thus if one ignores the classic rules of politics there is the superficial semblance of fatuity in the Republican reactions against the league idea and the picture of perspicacity in the Demo cratic line-up. As a matter of fact, the whole scene at Washington is one of strategy, in which considerations of the highest morality have played a relatively small part. It is impossible for politics, to be intelligible unless realistically treated as such. The Republican majority in the Senate has by no means proved an unmixed blessing to the party. The simple fact of its existence made for confidence and the determination to assert control. On the other hand, the tiny margin of nu merical superiority two votes rendered the least dissension m the ranks a source of immediate peril. Mr. Lodge has been accused of leader ship at once bungling and truculent. The charge cannot be disallowed. Neverthe less, the difficulties which beset the path of the self-constituted harmonizer were formidable, and apparently they were magnified by his own realization of his plight. This consciousness of the problem played directly and, from the political standpoint, disastrously into the hands of the wild men of tho West. William E. Borah and Hiram Johnson, who might have been impotent factors for mischief had the Senate been overwhelmingly Re publican, became increasingly disturbing elements in any program aiming at a sane party policy and successful party politics. How much the effort of conservative Republicans to prevent such a split in the party as wrecked it in the past governed the original stand on the League of Na tions and how much the opposition as expressed in the "round robin" was forti fied by sincere conviction are not easily determinable. But many things have happened since last March. Those specific objections to the first draft of the covenant which were valid are inoperative against the com pleted document. Mr. Taft has crusaded untiringly for the pact Mr. Root has indorsed it in principle at least. Mr. Wickersham and Doctor Lowell are among its stalwart champions. Some of the finest and intel lectually the strongest elements in Re publicanism are outspokenly cognizant of its worth. And yet the political drama in the Sen-' ate continues up to what appears to be the brink of defeat. Mr. Knox has made a foolish exhibi tion of himself; Mr? Fall, ditto. Mr. Lodge's alleged captaincy is seriously clouded. The coveted harmony suggests that of the lost chord. The Democrats, the minority party in the upper house, plume themselves on a forthcoming vic tory. In reality their, role was easy, PcliU- cal preferment advantages have helped to keep them, with tho exception of the im possible Reed, of Missouri, solidly in line with the presidential policy. Doubtless honest convictions operated also, but purely selfish instincts are never negli gible. Response to them is neither pecu liarly Democratic nor peculiarly Republi can. It Is politically true. The net result of the various interlock ing circumstances will almost certainly be good, for the treaty seems destined for ratification. But what Republicans who for years have had faith in the gen eral policies of their spokesmen would be glad to know is that their party has not been seriously damaged in the conflict. There are more reasonable hopes than superficially appear. Analysis of the senatorial situation will reveal that noisy upstarts like the wild men, fumbling dialecticians like Mr. Knox and a hate blinded, if otherwise able, statesman like Mr. Lodge, have been monopolizing the attention of intelligent patriotic Repub licans. What most of the senators of the ma jority party think about the revised cove nant has not been expressed. The "round robin" is obsolete. Mr. Penrose, past master of expediency, has been silent since he perpetrated his star error during the week of the Knox tirades. McCum ber, of North Dakota, has been explicitly for the league. Various appraisements of the Wash ington situation agree that thinking Re publican senators have begun to be in fluential. The Borah melodrama is ap parently heading for the cheap circuit Meanwhile the Taft troupes arc augment ing in popularity and power. It is unfair sweepingly to ascribe league indorsement to Democracy and league denunciation to Republicanism. Out of the familiar welter of politics, which should alarm only those who be lieve America a failure, comes the mighty pressure of public opinion which gives to the congressional strategy game its true proportions. It is a fascinating fray, replete with "secondary intentions" and hidden obli gations. There is an excellent chance that the way in which it has been played will per manently impair neither the vitality of the Republican party nor turn awry the great destinj of the American people. SEA NAVIGATION'S LAST LAUREL VX'HEN the R-34 completes her return ' trip tho distinction of being the me dium for transatlantic speed passage will have departed from the sea. Until that eastward voyage is successfully made by the giant blimp, however, one record of the many of which the old ocean is proud will stand. It is distinctly in line with the most gal'anl seafaring traditions that this achievement was registered on the very day when the dirigible which Major Scott commanded landed at Mineola. On that same eventful Sunday the American transport Great Northern ended the record round-trip Atlantic voy age. Neither in the air nor in the water has her feat of consuming but twelve days, eight hours and thirty-five minutes from America to Europe and back been equaled. Considering that as long ago as 1909 thij Mauretania made the run from Queenstown to New York in a little under four days and ten hours, the Great Northern's performance may seem to lack sensation. But the shuttle ferry was not in operation in antebellum days and it was usually at least a fortnight before any vessel completed an "excursion trip." It is interesting to recall that the Great Northern is a Philadelphia prod uct, launched on the Delaware in 1914. She has been the greyhound of the trans port sen-ice and is now likely to go down in history as the Inst ocean-plying vessel whose fleetness has not been revealed as snail-like compared with the prodigious hustling in the vault above. TESTS OF HEROISM "PVERYBODY in England," said Lord Weir to the home folks when he landed at London a day or two ago after a long visit in the United States, "must work, and work damned hard!" It is plain that many members of tho nobility in Europe are at an intellectual and spiritual crisis. One might even venture so far as to presume that his lordship has achieved a job. Tlie Ilritish (iovcrn Easy to Answer incut recently volt fif teen million yards of balloon cloth to n printe firm, and the In quirinB One is puzzled to know what will be manufactured from it. That's easy ior a Cockney 'nir mattresses. We nre solemnly as. Golng Lp! .urecl that there will be no reduction in the price of the article as n result of the govern ment's Intention to sell .11,000,000 pounds of surplus sugar held by the AVnr Department. Ilut, blesa you, we never even thought of such a thing. Nowadays we look for nothing but a rise. The war has done Better Than much good by indirec- Great Riches tion. Tt is responsi ble, for in.stnnoe, for the setting aside of $100,000 for the re habilitation of men injured in mines, mills and factories. Aforetime they were thrown on the scrnp heap to become objects of charity ; now they will be taught to earn their own living and thus retain their belf-respect. The fiirl,' Patriotic Taking Time by League of Uryn Mawr the Forelock has begun a series of weekly meetings to prepare for a Christmas paity for the benefit of the Philadelphia settlement houses. The girls are making paper dolls nnd furnishing dolls' houses and having a dance or two on the side. When, about November 1, agents of Hanta Claus begin to cry, "Do your Christmas shopping early!" they will have an answer ready. Canned goods are going up, according to advices from Chicago. If they go too high the public will can 'em. The declaration of the crown prince that the Allies will get only his dead body is not a threat but a promise. "Ersatz" has so long been the slogan of the Germans that one ceases to wonder that substitutes for the' ex. kaiser have become a drug on the market. . THE GOWNSMAN A Case of Arrested Development SO TRACK has come at last, and Ger many, after many wry faces and protes tations, hns signed n treaty which Is verily the bitter fruit of thc'deadly tree of predatory war which she planted. That the treaty is substantially just, few save Germans arc likely to deny. Full reparation Is vastly be yond nny human power; but reparation so ,fnr ns possible is the essence of elemental justice, nnd it is just this reluctance to re pair the evil done, this recalcitrancy to abide by the Inevitable, to take the medicine, to use n homely phrase, which distinguishes tho Ger'man whipped from most other men In a similar predicament. The German is a bad sport! Before the game he Is cocksure nnd boastful ; in success he Is ungenerous and overbearing; when he loses he sulks and grumbles nnd questions the decisions of the referee. IT WOULD seem that this, with the Ger man callousness and the worse things that came of it, were born of his darling doctrine, Ingrained for generations, that of German superiority in nil things, no mntter what. This begot nn intolerance, fittingly to be de scribed only by the favorite German word, "colossal."' In small things hr in great the German way was the right way, any varia tion from it preposterous and a certain evi dence of Inferiority. The German in writing an address gives first the country, then the city, next the street, followed by the num ber. "How ridiculous!" is his exclnmatlon at the inverse order of our usage, as though it mattered in the least. The Lilliputians were divided into two parties, nt deadly en mity ns to whether it wns proper to break an egg on the big end or the little. And the Little-endians ostracized the Rig-endlans, In Germany there is serious question, of your breeding if j ou crack nn egg with a spoon; even more, should you stand it on the table ns did Columbus. Ym must cut it across with a knife; that is the German and there fore the only wny. BE SELF-COMPLACENT and at the same time strong of will, and the gods may grant you talent, cleverness. Industry nnd all other gifts that make for success in the world, and ultimate success will not be yours. The self-complacent man, however strong he may be, is built of a material which is lacking in temper. He may break nt last, but he will not bend, for of suppleness and adaptability to conditions which arc outward he hns nothing and he will not learn. It seems unwarranted to cnll the Germnn un imaginative with his imposing, if vulgar, dream of universal empire, in which, after a short, effective nnd therefore frankly brutal triumph, when he had become master of the world, he was to mete out German kulttir to the subject races in proportion ns their inferiority might be able to receive that beneficent hnlm to their slavery. But all this the veriest barbarian could learn from the column of Trnjan or any Romnn tri umphal arch. The Germnn is unimaginative beenup he lacks the first condition of the imaginative way of looking at things, and that is the simple ability to put yourself in another's place. AND now Germany is having trouble with the role of a defeated nation. It does not seem natural or proper to be the under dog; and it is abominably disconcerting But ns to this, it is always to be remembered that, however outrageously the German people wns mi-led by its military caste, it was only too willing to be so misled, with the possessions of ronquered enemies in view nnd that "higher use" to which Germany felt thnt Bhe wns called upon to put those possessions in bright prospect. It is esy to understand a war-lord mad to try the efficiency of his toys of war in actual conflict. And it is easy to understand Reynard the Diplnmnt, trained to a game of chicanery In which provinces are the stakes. What Is more difficult is to grasp the attitude of enthusiastic assent to all this by Germans whose status in the world of science nnd letters might have given them a more humanitarian outlook. And could there be found in England, France or America any body of manufacturers and men of business who would have lent themselves to a plan for the deliberate destruction of the machin ery of their rivals? Or are there women in other countries who could receive with de light the loot sent home by their marauding husbands nnd brothers, the household goods, furniture, even the wearing apparel of their sisters in Frame nnd Belgium? NOvf the destruction of your neighbor's property that you may beat him in trade is a medieval idea ; and so is warfare for loot, with its attendant brutnlity, its incidental enslavement of nnncombntants and the rest of the horrid cntegory with which we nre nil so familiar. Medieval survivals, too, are nb-olute monarchy, with its foolish state, punctillious distinction nnd titles in all grades of society, a nobility of landowners nnd war-lords, the enslnvement of the mosses whether on the land or in factories, to say nothing of such social customs ns dueling, the solemn and protracted pleasures of the table, always a social function in Germany, and many other things. German polity up to the time of the war had about reached the days of James I in England or Louis XIII of France. Germany hns still far to go to English (ommonwealth times or to a verita ble revolution like that of France. Shall we say, without too far stretching n point, that German humor tends to the grotesque and the coarse, both medieval characteristics; that German sentiment is notoriously apt to slop over; that even Germany's boasted scholarship has in it more thanthe remnants of medieval pedantry? But enough. HERE is your Gownsman's theory : The strange and perverted psychology of the people which plunged the world into this re cent cataclysm of war is referable to the circumstance that the Germans "have been, politically, socially nnd morally, laggards in the intricate errors of the middle ages while the rest of the world lias moved on ; that they have remained, despite all their clever ness nnd success in many of the ways of modern life, essentially a people of provincial spirit, not so much, after all, perverted or misled as compelled bv their elemental and quite uncivilized self-complacency to remain unmnnumitted and slaves to the past. In a word, the Germans appear to present, In more senses than one, a remarkable case of arrested development. He Dearly Loves a Fight Frnnk II. SImonds, author of the "His tory of the World AVar," on his return re cently from Paris and the Peace Conference told this story about his six-year-old sou. His nurse produced a book to read aloud to the small boy. Before she opened it, he in quired : "Is there any fighting in it?" "No, dear," replied the nurse. "Isn't there even a disagreement?" young SImonds asked in tones of disappointment. Villa bnnds are BtlU playing ragtime on the border. Suffrage Polly has no reason to love the Georgia cracker. Rumors of Burleson's resignation may be labeled "Not yet but soon." Queer, Isn't it, how names lose their nrtfflnnl mesnlnrs? PrnrreaalvA T....wii J cans, for instance I' -J", Alt THE CHAFFING DISH They Don't Play In the Morning The story Is that In the days of the In tense Unpopularity In England of T.loyil George, the customary greeting In clubs and on the links was, "Good morning. Damn Lloyd George !" New York Evening Post. This, however, did not prevent Lloyd George from becoming prime minister. For the people who win elections don't usually get out to the links until late in the after noon, if at all. When we were a commuter we used to think thnt it would be a touch of realism to give instructions in our will to have the coffin lined with green plush. Every now and then we hear some sugges tions for reforming the calendar. Our own Idea would be to name the months after our favorite foods, according to their seasonable ness. For instance, January would be christened Hotdog, February would be Wheatcake, and so on. The Socratean cal endar would run thus : Hotdog (January I Wheatcake ( February 'i Cornpone (March) Grapefruit (April) Rhubarb (May) Strawberry (June) Shrimp (July) Shandygaff (August i Greencorn. (September) Punkin (October) Oyster (November) Mincepie (December) A City Notebook It would be hard to find a more lovely spot in the flush of a summer sunset than Wister Woods. Old residents of the neighborhood say that the trees are not what they were fifteen and twenty years ago; th chestnuts have died off; even some of the tall ttllip poplars nre a little bald at the top, and one was recently felled by a gale. But still that quiet plateau stands in a serene hush, flooded with rich orange glow on a warm evening. The hollyhocks in the back gardens of Rubi cam btreet nre scarlet and cheese-colored and black ; nnd looking across the railroad ravine one sees crypts nnd aisles of green as though in the heart of some cathedral of the great woods. Relfield avenue, which bends through the valley in a curve of warm thick yellow dust, will some day be boulevarded Into a spick-and-span highway for motors. But now it lies little trafficked, nnd one might prefer to have it so, for in the stillness of the evening the birds are eloquent. The thrushes of Svistcr Woods, which have been Immor talized in perhnps the loveliest poem ever written in Philadelphia, flute and whistle their tantalizing note, while the song sparrow echoes them with his confident challenging cajl. Down behind the dusty sumac shrub bery lies the little blue-green cottage said to have been used by Benjamin West as a studio. In a meadow beside the road two cows were grazing in the blue shadow of overhanging woodland. Over the road leans a flat outcrop of stone, known locally as "The Rum's Rock." An antique philosopher of those parts assured the wayfarer that it is named for a romantic vagabond who perished there by the explosion of a can of Bohemian goulash which he was heating over a small fire of sticks; but one doubts the tale. Our own conjecture Is that it is named for Jacob Boehm, the oldtime brewer of Germantown, who predicted in his chronicles thnt the world would come to an end in July, 1010, From his point of view he was not so far wrong. Above Boehm's Rock, In a grassy level among the trees, a merry little circle of young ladies was sitting round a picnic ' supper. The twilight grew darker jind fireflies began to twinkle. In the steep curve of the Cinder and Bloodshot (between Fisher's and Wister Stations) a cheerful train rumbled, with its engine running backward just like a country local. Its bright shaft of light wavered Ji amoug the tall tree trunks. One -would not ACCORDING TO REPORT imagine that it was less than six miles to the City Hall. We were sitting on Sixth street, having our shoes shined by nn Italinn youngster. Three small boys went by, talking eagerly. One of them said, "Aw. don't you know that Belgium did more fighting than any of 'cm, and lost more soldiers?" The Itnlian lad looked up from burnishing our buskins and cried angrily: "Did you hear them kids? They don't know any more about the war than a chicken." We were about to ask him for his idea on the subject, but at that moment along came our friend Wilbur Thomas to remark that he was going to send us a list of precepts on the bringing up of I'rchins, n list which wa3 handed down to him in his stern New Eng land youth. The' Lawyer's Intocation to Spring Blackstone writes asking us to reprint "the famous poem representing a lawyer's thoughts on spring." Presumably he has in mind the. following, which wns 'written by Henry Howard Brownell (1S20-72) : Whereas, on certain bouplia and spras Now divers birds are heard to spring, And sundry flowers their heads upraise. Hall to the comlnff on of sprlngl The songs of those said birds arouse The memorv of our youthful hours, As green as those said sprays and boushs. As fresh and sneet as those said flowers. The blrd aforesaid happy pairs I.OVB mid the aforesaid bouffhs, enshrines In freehold rests;, themaehes. their heirs, , Administrators, and assigns. O busiest term of Cupid's court. Where tender plalntlrfs actions bring Season of frolic and of sport, Hall, as aforesaid, romlns; Sprlns1 HENRY HOWARD BROWNELL. As to the Urchin Wo hnve received nn inquiry as to the present felicity and nmbitions of the Urchin. In reply to same would state that the Urchin, having had nn extremely small bathing suit abbreviated to meet the requirements of his limbs, is engaged in remodeling the Jersey sand benches with the customary implements of a shovel and miniature tin pail. His treasure trove during one afternoon's beach ing recently consisted of a dead dragonfly, three crabs, two shrimps, several large shells and two very smnll hoptoads. We built a large sand mountain for him nnd pierced It with a cunningly nrtificed tunnel. The Urchin was Inconsolable because he could not take the tunnel home with him. He is still convinced (after several visits to the Zoo) that he is a llama, and his favorite game is to contest the honors of llamaship with any one who will pretend to be a tiger. We do not like to think of the sad disillusion when he realizes that he is not a llama at all, but only a human being. We arc not worrying about the kaiser's punishment. Vrouw Bentinck undoubtedly has the matter in hand. SOCRATES. WILSON THE CONCILIATOR The President Should Seek to Persuade, Not Coerce", His Opponents Mr. Wilson can hardly fail to be aware of the marked loss which has come to his former prestige. This Is both personal and political. The high" repute in which his authority was held nt the signing of the armistice last November has been grievously diminished. It may not be wholly his fault. Hut the fact is undeniable. No one who makes it his study to ascertain what men and women are thinking and saying can be in doubt that a sort of anti-Wilson in fluenza haB been ravaging the country. The story is that in the days of the intense un popularity In England of Lloyd George, the customary greeting in clubs andton the links was: "Good morning. Damn Lloyd George." A similar conventional dislike and depreciation of Mr. Wilson Iirb spread from group to group of Americans.' About whatever else they may differ, they could agree .tha,t, tfc President hud tocn making ' ""WSi a mess of it. A slight reaction in bis favor has doubtless been caused by the excesses of abuse indulged in by the Republicans in the Senate, but it remains true that Mr. Wilson has to face the fact thnt he has lost much of his personal hold upon his fellow-citizens. His first endeavor should be to strive to re gain it. The adverse sentiment which hah had such wide expression may be largely unreasonable. But it is explicable. People have felt that the President wns too headstrong, too In tolerant, too oracular. They have thought him secretive, aloof, out of touch with the trend of popular feeling and of congres sional temper, and all this at a time when a policy of good understandings and of con ciliation was obvious wisdom. We do not say that these complaints are altogether well founded. But they have been made made repeatedly. And the undeniable element of truth in them should now suggest to Mr. Wilson the ready means of winning his way back into the full esteem and confidence of his countrymen. He is a master of speech. Let him now show himself a master of per suasion. That Mr. Wilson possesses the mental re sources to meet and conquer his novel and difficult situation, there is no reason to doubt. It is not a question of ability so much as of manner. No one can be more gracious than tho President when he chooses ; no one franker or more adroit in suggesting ways out of deadlocks. Acerbity of utter ance should have no place. The stress should be given not to authority but to appeal. And anything like a party color should be avoided like the plague. There Is embittered Republican opposition to the treaty, but the great mass of Republicans are ready to be persuaded to its support. That is mainly the President's task. We hope to see him essay it with gravity, as becomes the high, matter, jet with open hand and heart, ready to confess disappointments, to admit im perfections, while insisting upon the funda mentals in the great labor of securing a just and lasting pencc.for the whole world, New York Evening Post. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. How many boroughs compose Greater New York and what are their names? 2. How many Vice Presidents of the United States became President? 3. What is a deodar? 4. Who waB the original "Old Probs"? 5. Who was called the "Lord of Irony"? 0. What is the native name for the Island of Formosa? What Is the plural of the word incubus? Who was Goya? What is an integer? What animal is sometimes called a cygnet? Answers to Yesterday's Quz 1. The present seat of Admiral Kolchak's government is Omsk, Siberia. 2. The inference in time between New York and London is five hours. 3, Joseph Grlmaldl was a celebrated clown of Italian descent. JIls dates 'are 1770-1837. Charles Dickens wrote his life. 4, In political parlance a henchman Is a supporter of a leader. D. Korea was formerly called the "Hermit Nation." 0. "The philosophy of one century Is the common fcense of the next," is by Henry Ward Beccher in "Life Thoughts." 7. There are ninety-sir United' Stages sen- ators." 8. Gorglo is the gypsy word for nm jypsy. 0. Mozart was a native of the city o! Sals burg, Austria.. 20. Recitative in opera is musical declam&r tion as distinguished from arias, dupta -rlnfl. tr. and rnnrerfeid 'iiimhritF . ' Jtmen - M j ;pr '..'.. s AJ- i ', ). ' '1 W " r in ? . ,kn A -W.5! t X, . fr .V JS.... IJ3 Mf w OP.- . ,:. A "K - -rjnt.tiXi (T?' -! v ' J7 J ..! !.i ft . 'ff.iZt.rVi fri-Ml a&L . 't iJ ,.ji.