AW1'- " &" EVENING. PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JULY 19, lOia 8 ts iir rw r. tt.in.bl) sw M-t &.. SrtSc l3& ?( fc G I i- W ft hlv-s V I? ' E fr IP ft &- m & B. br- 2Ss Is, fe ! Aliening public ledger THE EVENING TELEGRAPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY, crnus h. k. cuktis. r-mrnDSNT Chsrln If. I,udlnton. Vice rrMldfntl John C. Martin. Secretary and Trurrl Philip 8 Collins. John II. Wllllama John J Hpuraton, Director". t.MTOni.U. Eo.vnu: Cincs II. K. CtrsTis, Chairman IDA.VJD n. SMILEY Editor JOHN C. MAHTIN.. . .Central rmlntM Manager lajbllshnJ dilly nt rrntlo I.EnorB Hulldlnc. Independence btjuaro, l'lillartelphu. Atlantic Cm rresvtnloil BulMlne Ur.vr YonK 200 Metropolitan Tower I)ETIt0lT 701 Pord Ilullillnr ST. Lori inns l'ullerton HulMIng OniCAOO 1307 Tribune UullJInj news nrnc.rs: Wasiiis'otov ncnec, N K ""ir. PcnnsjUanla Ave. and Hth St. Kr.ir York Kckkau The- .Tim pulldln London Ucnuu LonJon Hmh SUrtSCRIPTTON' TERMS Th nieNlMi Ii m.ic Ltnurn li nered to sub scribers in rhlladelphla and surrounding towns at the. rate of twelve (IS) cents per week, payable to the carrier. By nail Vo points nutsld of rhltadelrhta. In the United States. Canada, or Unltfd Statrs pos nosslftns, postage free fifty ("o) rents pr month. Six (G) dollars per ynr, payalle In adnnce. To all foretgn countries one (Ml dollar per month. NnTirn Subscribers wl-htnc address changed niust give old as well as new nddrees. BtLL. 3000 WAIALT KEYSTONE, MAIV 3000 E3F At'dreos fl'I en imi rations to i'vrmna 'idme Lcdon. liuhiinut tin frqiuiri. Philaih l" ". Member of Hip Associated Press TEE ASSOCIATED 1'EESS is erehi tivclv entitled to the imp for republication of all vies dispatches credited lo it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and oho the local news published therein. All lights of republication of special dis patches her in aic also reserved. rhlladtlphlj, S.lurd.r. July 10. Ill' ALL IN THE CAME TT'S all in the game!' said Helen Russell, twelve years old, who broke her aim while trying to slide to first in a baseball game on Thursday. "All in the game!" There spoke pluck and courage. And that there are many possessors of these great qualities suc ceeding days abundantly prove. "All in the game!" and friends attend the funeral of Coxswain Herbert L. Souder, one of the young men killed in the seaplane which dropped in the Dela ware on Monday. "All in the game!" and First Lieuten ant Arthur Richard Say res, of Haverfoid, undergoes his seventh operation at the army hospital at Rahway, N. J. "All in the game!" and Bernard Holtz hauser, forty years old, paralyzed from the waist down, the innocent victim of a stray bullet, smile- as death slowly but surely approaches. "All in the game!" and heroes and heroines of all sorts and conditions, some with the halo of romance, some with the trademark of the commonplace, play their parts and depart. Good luck or bad luck, home run or strike out, "it's all in the game!" TRIUMPH T3AYNHAM, the British flier, might '' have walked out of a book by Kipling as he stood at the wreck of the tiny air plane that brqke her back in a last vain attempt to leap the Atlantic when there was no prize, no great glory, no hand shaking kings waiting on the other side. There would have been only a knowledge of the achievement to ease the restless soul of the Mattinsyde's pilot, and that was denied him. Raynham seemed, somehow, even a bit nobler in his failure than the men who crossed to triumph. He was the fust at 1 St. John's for the grand fl.ght. The winds of heaven plajed with him. The broken promise of his friend and his rival almost cost him his life when he tried to take off at first and was wrecked by unfavorable air currents. He saw the British and American planes cross and the big British dirigible arrive. And at last, the loneliest of all airmen, he smashed his machine beyond lepair in an attempt to risk his life for the love of doing it. The best of the Anglo-Saxons was in Raynham when he lit a cigarette and paid he would yet make the flight; the stuff that has taken the white man in triumph to the ends of the earth, foolish sometimes, at times unwise, but with a epirit that, like his heart, cannot break. MADE IN GERMANY? TF A press agent of the newer Germany J- hasn't been having dreams at Essen German scientists have devised a gasoline- turbine and perfected a device that the rest of the world has been awaiting eagerly for a generation. A new eia for aviation would begin instantly if an engine such as that which is said to be 'ready for the newest German airplanes has actually been invented. The ordinary gasoline motor works against itself. A rotary engine of the internal combustion type has long been sought. The Gnome engine 1 evolves, but Jt works by the compression that dissi pates a considerable percentage of its own energy. A turbine gasoline enghje, in comparison with the gasoline engines of the conventional oscillating type, sivould represent an advance as great as that of the first electric motor over the email steam engines that it supplanted. THE FIVE-CENT LOAF fpiIE poor man is going to get a five - cent loaf oft bread if he wants it and Oovernor Sproul has his way. That's why the Governor has vetoed a bill making it unlawful to sell a loaf weigh ing less than a pound. Of course, there is nothing said about the size of the five-cent loaf. Time was when you carried it under your arm. This was followed by the time when you car ried it between your thumb and finger. ,Theime approaches when you may carry , jt behind your ear like a, pencil or ciga Tctte, or in your vest pocket like a match (vjbox. But it will be a five-cent loaf. The state has undoubted power to say V-tthat the loaf is a unit of measure and to fix its si?e. It fixes the cubic contents of a quart of milk and the weight of n pound of butter, and the weight 'of a bushel of potatoes, onions, corn and wheat. But it does not fix the size of a L'a( V r &u,lcl u asparagus, or a bundlo of beets .l?y cU5Wn anu mq purciiuser ueciuca 'JJwhether th Jfiunch or bundle contains ;f ,lpHftfBh yBYbtth the price asked. SS&cSS -lffaL F..! a: righl In objecting to any law which will compel the very poor to invest more In a loaf of bread than they feel like spend ing. Five cents Is as convenient a sum to pay for n loaf as to pay for a street car ride. And 'the people know that when wheat is dear the loaf will be small, but they would rather have the small loaf of fresh bread for five cents than a more expensive loaf weighing a pound. DAYLIGHT IS NEEDED ON FOOD PROFITEERS An Angry and Bewildered Public Is Tired of Having Its Pockets Picked Three Times Dally "UfHEN the women of the country first ' ' began to talk seriously of a meat boycott to bring down prices, the food speculators at Chicago countered with their usual skill. It was then that the packers began to lench out for the sort of control over substitutes that stung the Federal Trade Commission to something like eloquence in the icccnt arraignment of the Big Five. The packers may grieve ostentatiously and declaim their innocence in print. The public is hard to convince. No one in his senses would attempt offhand to fix the whole blame for intolerable food prices in a country that likes to boast of its ability to feed the world; yet the influence of the poweiful Chicago group is regard ed with suspicion. The public is bewildered. The very fact that no one can tell why it must submit either to exoibitant pi ices or to hunger is in itself an indictment of our system of governmental administration. Commission- hae been appointed in America to investigate everything imag inable, fiom the cost of steel mils in Thibet to the effect of the boll weevil on Democratic majorities in Louisiana. But no one at Washington or elsewhere has yet tried to make any provision for a commission that might be qualified to explain why people who aren't wealthy often have to go undernouiished in a country like ours. Food is merely the fundamental neces sity of life. It is the first concern, in every family. Naturally, therefore, food and food prices and distribution are things that the routineer politician never thinks about. They are things that do not enter into his philosophy. They are realities. A politician hates realities. They have a way of showing him up. What is needed in this state and in every other state is a powerfully organ ized food commission with authority to investigate the whole question of food, production, distribution, manufactuie and marketing and to protect the public in terest at every step of the way. What the people want is information. Give them that and they will do the rest. Their dominating impression now is one of a losing battle with an invisible ciowd of food gamblers who threaten them with actual hunger. And somewheic in the backgiound these gamblers persist and flourish. They cannot be fought by curb markets alone. The usual Dairy and Food Commission is undermanned and without the authority whicli it should have in a crisis like the present one. Its effoits nie usually con-, fused by political corruntionist. So the man who feels himself harassed by rising living posts may be assured that in a way he i- leaping what he owed at the poll'. He mav cai ry his lunch to work and feel that ho has won against the huiiy-up lp.-tauiants that charge as much for their ttiiy nothings as Pheny used to charge for a fair soit of lunch A vast number of people would be far better off if they could reconcile themselves to a lunch box and substitute a bit of honest food from the home kitchen for tea-and-jazz or nameless fanta-ies of eat-an 1-get-out restaurants. The declining arts of house keeping may be revived if the lunch kings keep on turning the screw on their patrons. It appears that food will cost as much in America as Americans will pay. There seems no limit but that of the national patience. The gouge is being plainly felt everywhere. But no one knows whom to blamt' for it or where to strike or how to make a complaint. Food gambling on a large scale began with the introduction of cold storage. It has grpwn and expanded throughout the counti y with cold-storage facilities. Ar tificial lefrigeration, which made it pos sible to preserve food supplies in large quantities at central distiibuting points, has been of vast general benefit. It prevented waste, equalized market prices and made the work of producers and dis tributors easier. That was in the beginning. It was when the means of meat distribution and storage were gradually concentrated under the control of narrowly organized groups that the trouble began. Vast speculation and limitless jugglery with almost all perishable food staples have been made possible by the cold-storage system. And the latest report of the Fedeial Trade Commission charged that when rising costs of meat, eggs, poultry nnd the like turned the people to less expensive substitutes a movement was started by interests controlling meat sup plies for control of these substitutes. If the packers' group in Chicago con tinues 'to follow its present habits of thought there is no reason why it may not within a few years exercise control over the food supplies of the country from the place of production to the con sumer's table. The retail handling of food is still left largely in the hands of in dividuals who have no direct association with the packers. But there is nothing to prove that this condition will be per manent. It is easy to conceive of an expansion of the food-control system in which the Chicago group would follow the example set some years ago by the brewers, who, after wringing all possible profit out of the business at the top, went systematically after the retail profits as well. The important thing to remember jn the present instance is that there is no visible means to prevent such a tight ininir of a food monopoly. Anti-trust laws can be always avoided. The tinly ;: - ;: - mntimii iifniiwimi 'town iiiiiwi" i They have a horror of the light of day. It is for this reason that state or federal commissions should begin at once a thor ough survey of the whole question of food costs and distribution in ordrjr to relieve a pressure that is already almost intolerable. No question now before the coun try is so Important ns that of food supplies and prices. It is clear that there is waste and profiteering everywhere. If a food administration is needed it ought to bo re-established. If a licensing, sys tem is necessary it ought to bo estab lished. But more important than anything else would be the sort of information which a ruthless food commission could turn up. It could not only eliminate the food gamblers by exposure. Its more important duty would be to suggest and even devise means for the more scientific marketing and distribution of food products of all kinds. REMOVE THE "PEN" GOVERNOR SPROUL has let it be known that he will look into the charges of mismanagement of the East ern Penitentiary when he has disposed of other pressing matters. Warden McKcnty has said that he wel comes any inquiry by properly authorized persons, and has asserted that there has been no bad management. But we do not think the warden would insist that ideal conditions prevail. The prison is nearly a hundred years old. It was planned and built when the theories of prison construction and management were in primitive condition. John Howard, the first of the prison refoimers, had been dead only about forty years when the penitentiary was started in the first half of the last century. More than 1500 men are confined in it now. Many of them are idle because thcie is nothing for them to do. Instead of coming out better fitted to live an honest life, many of them are confirmed in habits of crime. They are rebellious against the society which puts them out of its sight behind stone walls and then forgets them. It is impossible to apply modern meth ods of prison management in this build ing. The abuses of the old methods pre vail there, and they cannot be avoided. The Prison Reform Association has been for years urging the state to move the prison to a latge tract of land outside of the city, where the inmates could be em ployed in the open, come in contact with the earth, could care for animals, have the opportunity to occupy their minds with wholesome thoughts and decide to turn their backs on their old ways when returned to freedom. If the Governor will make his inquiry with a view to backing the project to icmove the penitentiary from the city it will be more profitable than if he seeks simply to learn of abuses which, from the nature of the surroundings, are in evitable. The prison, besides being out of date, is a blot upon the section of the city in which it is located. It should be razed and its site turned into a park or put to some other use which would impiove property values in the neighborhood. The city is spending millions on the Parkway, the upper end of which is only three squares from the penitentiary. The district bounded by Poplar street, Broad stieet nnd the Parkway, convenient of access to Fairmount Park, has possibili ties which have nevpr been realized be cause of the handicaps upon it. The city is doing its share w'.th the Paikway. The state should co-operate by removing "Cherry Hill Pen." TOP RANK FOR THEM! rpHE President has undoubtedly ex--- pressed the desire of the country in recommending to Congress that the per manent rank of general be conferred on John J. Pershing and Peyton C. March and that William S. Benson and William S. Sims be raised to the permanent rank of admiral. The responsibility for directing the operations of the army and navy was shared by these men. They did their work well and they deserve official recog nition. The least the country can do for them is to allow them to retain for the rest of their natural lives the rank which they have held during the period of the war. It is a small reward for their services, but it should be given quickly and un grudgingly. St. Georges, Del., is Money Talks growing fat attacking dragons w h o exceed the speed limit. The lion-hearted constable of the boiough catdies 'em in n speed trap nnd puts suit on their tnils, in the shape of salty fiues. And now the Automobile Club of Philadelphia is planning to bring him to trial for alleged malfeasance in office. They don't like the wny he makes their money talk. They hope to make him shut his trnp. The Registration Com mission rules that when the lnw says Personally Means in Person that n man must per sonally apply to hnve his name placed on the asscst-ors' list it means what it says and that the presentation of a petition does not con stitute personal appearance. When it is understood thnt the purpose of the lnw was to prevent fraud upon the list it is difficult to sec how the commission could have made any other decision. Well, an) bow, we nre not in any imme diate dunger of forest fires. Old Probs, nppureutly, has not yet dis covered thnt the country has gone dry. As n witness Henry appears to have power but no traction. Political vviscucres are looking forward to a failure in'tho impeach crop. Several more or less distinguished peo ple appear to be among those absent at the Wilson at home. Every time a lighted match shows Its ability to discover escaping gis, one or more men in a hospital express surprise. A Brooklyn girl striker is accused of throw i or eggs at strike-breakers. At present prices, this seems to oe a case or tcrowlng im,inmirimiWirmiMiiimiimm CONGRESSMAN MOORE'S LETTER Ira Jewell Williams Is Interested In Mexican Problems Merchant Tailors Opposed to Immigration Restriction Washing ton Gossip Washington, July 10. TJIHLADKLPHIA newspaper men of - twenty-five yrnrs ngo hnve born organ ized Into what is known as "The rvewspaper Vrternns," Vpwnrd of a hundred of the men who wrote editorials nnd took assign ments n quarter of a century nixo have re sponded to thp call, nnd nearly ns ninny are to be heard from. The list sent out by Kdmund Stirling, who is the secretary of thp organization, contnins some names familiar to the newspaper galleries in Wash ington. Harry S. Brown, for instance. Hnrry wns n populnr rhllndclphliui who drifted opr to New York like n number of other ernek reporters, nnd finnlly came to Washington as one of the New York HernM stars. .Tames S. Chnmbers is on the list, and .Tim used to look up bills hero like any other correspondent. John I). Cromer, who won n labor reporter on the Press In the old days, is here permanently ns one of the offUial reporters of the House. Charles It. Bacon, who is also listed, is nc tive at Trenton, X. J. ; Charles W. Camp bell, who wns succeeded by "Tommy" Lo gan, of the Inquirer; Bob Hnight, who wns for a time secretary to Congressman Mor rell ; William II. liny, who had n Washing ton career; Colonel .Inines II. Lambert, who hnrks back to the days of Hlnlnc, with whom he was on intimate terms; Robert M. Mc Wnde. who is now attached to the Depart ment of Labor; Charles It. Mirhncl, who is on the job here for the Press and the New York Times ; John J. Spurgeou, who has Important Washington lonnections. and former Congressman James Itaukln Young, who was best known in the old days ns "S. L," of the Stnr, are on the list. Philadelphia ellgibles whom Mr. Stirling has not jet checked up include "Tony" Diddle, who gets around Washington ns n marine otlicer ; Colonel Jnmcs Elverson, Jr., who U a property owner here; U. Willing linn;, who is figuring in the wnr food sup plj question, nnd Gcotgc W. Xorris, who is the hend of the Farm Loan Bureau. You have to travel these days to get where the Philadelphia newspaper inun does not find j on out. rpIIH Mexican situation continues to dis- turb Ira Jewell Williams, n pattner of the former Attorney Gem nil Francis Shunk Brown, who comes to Washington occa sionally to slzo up conditions here. It ap pears that Carranzn's failuie to check out rages upon Americans in Mexico is behind tin agitation which has at Inst found its t, ay to the floor of Congress. The Stnte Department is not so responsive to the de mands for reparation ns many of the sena tors nnd members of Congress think their constituents nre entitled to, nnd indications point to a further discussion of the subject. VARIOUS bills to restrict immigration now pending in Congress nre beginning to stir up opposition, since mnnj employcr.-m-i-t that thi- ounti y is going dry as to labor. The lntest protest comes from the Philadelphia Merchant Tailors' Bxchange, of which Robert Stewart, Jr., is president. The PMliunge insists that theie is a down right shortage of skilled labor, and contends that such workmen as do not belong to the objectionable or dangerous element should be admitted to this country. And among those backing up this proposition nre Wil liam II I)ion. Peter Thoni-on. Luigi Ilienzi, and a host of othcis who "put it oer" the human form. COI.OXr.L.TOlIN V. WOOD, who made nn honorable record in Mexico nnd was of much -crvi e to the government during the lite war, appeared before the was and mi'.nr. committee in opposition to the lii'i-n-ing fc.ituie of the dyestuffs taiiff bill and made one of the most effective speeches lieaid bj the Congtessinon. The colonel tool; the ground that the neces-ity for obtaining lieensfs would setious'y interfete with the ordinary procedure of business, especially wheie tlm manufactmer desiring d.vcstuffs for futuie use might be held up by depart mental routine or by the Intel ferenec of i ompetitors State Ite.ire-entiitivp Matthew r.itter-on, from Senator David .Mm tin's h.iiliwiik, was an interested nuditorat the heai ing. II' IIU'TCNANT THOMAS A. I.OC,rR ar rived from overseas n few days ago nnd just naturally his dad, J. Washington Logue, former congressman fiom the Sixth district, drifted into Washington to greet the boy on his discharge from Camp Gordon. The lieutenant made a good score on the other side, having been in command of a fine bunch of pioneers. There was n touch of sadness iu the greeting of father nnd son, however, in that Lieutenant Francis C. Logue, a son and brother, died on the wny over. A investigating committees the government Is well stocked with nutomobile.s and ambu lances in this country , in France nnd in Fngland. Some of the hospitals are begin ning to put in requests for these machines, some of which have been devoted to the use of officers of the army. Mrs. John ItaniR bottom, secretary of the junior auxiliary of the Roosevelt Hospital, is endeavoring to have consideration given to thnt institution. Several of the doctors who help out with the work at the Roosevelt Hospital, which is in the congested district, nre residents of the Eighteenth Ward. If the government begins to distribute its war machines for peme purposes it might take another step aud permit municipalities to obtnin, nt reas onable prices, food supplies suitable for large institutions. OUR. Philadelphia Andrew Wright Craw ford, of the American Civic Association. is interesting himself in a bill thnt has been prepared in the Deportment of I.nbor to create a bureau of housing and living condi tions iu that depuitmcut. At this time Congress is not in a mood to create new bureaus, but the demand from the various departments is almost us insistent ns if the war were still on. Mr. Crawford and those interested with him have n high civic pur pose in view, but it is coming to be a ques tion whether the federal government should not relegute some of these welfare problems to the jurisdiction of the various states. AMONG those who lament the departure of .. "J. B.," and whose voice has been hpnrd in Washington, is Julius K. Nnchod, of (ilenslde, who ued to be associated with Charles Class, whose brewery iu the Twen tieth Ward was something of n landmark. Nnchod is now president of the Glensidc Nntionol Unnk, upon whose board of di rectors are William Frnzier Harrison and Philadelphia's Mayor, Thomas B. Smith. 'Nnchod has some very strong notions about "2" aud during the fight on the Ramsey hill made bis views known to Governor Spfoul. Those who declare that the Hull Moose party purposes to put a presidential candi date in' the field doubtless put the accent on l.B . -., ,t. .. 1ittmmMr.. - 'JwSk jL --'-bSS5rr ':::"' '1-J ..vS':'-:7'.-..'Vly'vV,iyj H.yfjJUrAfr WhiSPS -I --frtTMPr. .liM- ' "- TTTfli Trn,T-ni.",Aj:.-ri-i ..irh ww- " . WCHttWtM-Jr : V- jAUdCXX&XilXKtL1 UrISJtlVMyuBilLZ.-Z.- ..-.. - ' - .. . . SsSaiiSwuMSMJssgtgiig THE CHAFFING DISH Testimonial ( Dedicated to 0. W, D.) THE man whom chiefly wc adore, The man of sweet demeanor-, Is the man who keeps in his desk drawer A nest of nice pipe-clenners. AND to his virtues ndd one more (Let Fame soar like a rocket), He leaves his cleaners in his drawer And doesn't even lock it. He Had Their Number I am not such a Stole ns to suppose that ou will, or to think It right that you should, nlWAj-H be In Company with sena tors and philosophers ; but of the young and juvenile kind lot mo advise you to be choice It Is easy to make nciualntances. but ery tllllleult to shake them oft. The Indiscretions ami scrapes which very often the lead one Into prove equally distress ing anil disgraceful. George Washington to his nephew, 1783. We are as -orry for poor Tinsides Hayn ham as any one but why did he tempt the jinx by inlling his plane the "Chimera?" One of our clients reports having seen the NC-4 on exhibit in the Sheep Meadow iu Central Park. New York, nnd wonders why the meadow is so called, since there are no sheep there. Thnt is the kind of question that mnkes it almost too easy for us to corn a living. The meadow has been given that name ever since one, of the captured ewe-boats was as sembled there. When the President invites senators to the White House, asks Quid Pro Quo, does he put It. S. V. P. nt the bottom of the note? 1'iobably not, we think. It looks too much like Ratify Shantung Very Promptly. He might, however, put S P. Q. R., to intimate Senate Please Quit Hunting. An English visitor tells us that he snt in the Senate gallery on Thmsday afternoon, during nn important debate, and wns rather startled to find only nbout twenty-five sena tors present. We note this ns n hopeful sign, for Mr. Hornh bod the floor nt the time. One crsion has it that Mr. Ford's neigh bors spend the evening whittling on his back porch. We had always wondered how those chassis were made. Another echo from Mount Clemens avers that Mr. Ford has the mouth of a saint. Hut we all have, since July 1st. Severn! of our enemies Have begged us to sny that Senator Colt shows horse sense in approving the league of nations. Hut we are willing to go ns far ns to state thnt Shantung is the unruly member. When it rains hard enough to put out our pipe we feel we have a legitimate grievance. Meeting the Weather Man W!;, K STOPPED by the Weather Man's little illuminated booth at Ninth and Chestnut about 10 o'clock in the evening. We were scrutinizing his pretty colored pic tures, wondering bow soon the ruin would determine, when n slender young man ap peared out of the gloom, said "I'm sorry to have to do this," switched off the light and pulled down the rolling front of the booth. It wus the Weather Man himself. Wc were greatly elated to meet this mythi cal sage aud walked down the Btreet a little way with him. In order to cheer him up, wo complimented him on the artistic charm of Ids little booth, with its glow of golden light eblulng ou the colored map and the bright loops and curves of crayon. We told him bow almost nt any time in the evening grou?a of people can be seen admiring bis stall, but bis sensitive heart was gloomy. "Most of them tloc'v understand it," he said morosely. "The women f the wont. i.v,&.1u.i.,?r....j.13 .. ,...- .ju.a...,, . -,.,- , "ALMOST PERSUADED. EH them studying the map eugerly. Hopefully, I would creep up behind to hear their com ments. One will say, 'Yes, that's where my husband came from,' or 'I spent last summer over there,' pointing to some place on the map. They seem to think it's put there for them to study geography." Wc tried to sympathize with the broken hearted scientist, but his spirit had been crushed by n long series of woes. "The other evening," said he, "I saw a couple of gills looking nt the map, and they looked so intelligent I really was charmed. Apparently they were discussing nn nrca of low pressure thnt wus moving down from the Grcnt Lakes, nnd I lent nn ear. Imagine my chagrin when one of them said : 'You see the color of that chalk line? I'm going to make my next knitted ve-tee just like thnt.' And the other one snid : 'I think the whole color scheme is adorable. I'm going to use it ns n pattern for my new camoulluge bath ing suit.' "Thank goodness," cried the miserable Weather Man, "I have another map like that down nt the Bourse, nnd the brokers really give it some intelligent attention." We went on our way sadly, thinking how many sorrows there nre in the world. It is grievous to think of the poor Weuther Mun, lurking with beating pulses in the neighbor hood of Ninth nnd Chestnut in the hope of finding some one who understnnds his pains taking display. The next time you are standing in front of his booth do say some thing "about the Oceanic High in the South Atlantic or the dangerous Aleutian Low or the anticyclonic condition prevailing in the Allcghnnies. He might overhear jou, and it would do bis mournful heart good. Frogs' Legs A frog's front legs are short aud splay ; His hind legs can't be beaten ; Yet the front leg3 make their getaway While the hind are caught aud eaten. C. L. EDSOX. Literary Notes Mr. A. Edward Newton has sold another essay to The Atlantic. Speaking of The Atlantic, you may have noticed n very fine poem in the July issue o'f that mngnzine by Williutn McFce. We do not often caress ourself in public, but we wish to state un act of heroic renunciation. Mr. McFee sent us thnt poem for The Dish, but we felt it deserved the dignity of maga zine uppearance. So we sent it on to the editor of TbcAtluntic. If any ono doubts the truth of this, we can shew the original MS. of the pocra. Every one has heard of Senator Vest's tribute to the dog. But why has no dog ever paid tribute to the Senate? Mr. James II. W. Althouse Iins a literary treasure that ho has been kind enough to show us. Captain Lord Dunsany recently copied out the mnnuscript of his unpublishdd one-net piny, "The Compromize of the. King of the Golden Isles," nnd sent it to Mr. Alt house iu return for a kindness Mr. Althouse had done him. The whole piny is written in a beautiful little notebook about 3 by 2 inches, illuminated with red ink and bound in a bright-colorcu unentai paper. Mr. F. J. Wylle, the secretary of the Cecil Rhodes Trust, the delightful gentleman who acts as godfather to all the Rhodes scholars at Oxford, was jn town yesterday, and remained good humored in spite of the remark made by every one he saw, "Well, it's a regular Oxford day, isn't it?" Mr. Wylie tells us that ho spent a night in the already famous O. Henry Hotel In Greensboro, N. C, and that it is a very pleasant caravanserai. He was particularly Interested In it, ns ho was one of the first readers of O. Henry in England. The late Harry St,eger, who was O. Henry's chief booster and literary executor, was one of Mr, Wylle's wards at Oxford and iutrpduaed htm to the American writer. , , ""-Aw 1ir .. ffliirarMTiMMninir h wiivMirt ?" Hi RAIN ON THE ROOF rHEX the humid shadows hover W Ove ver nil the starry spheres, And the melancholy darkness Gently weeps in rainy tears. What a bliss to press the pillow Of a cottage chamber bed, And to listen to the patter Of the soft rain overhead ! EVERY tinkler on the shingles Has an echo in the heart; And a thousand dreamy fancies Into busy being start, And n thousand recollections Wenve their air-threads into woof, As I listen to the patter Of the rain upon the roof. ART hath nnnght of tone or cadenc Thnt can work with such a spell In the soul's mysterious fountains. Whence the tears of rapture well, As thnt melody of nature, That subdued, subduing strain, Which is played upon the shingles By the patter of the rain. Contcs Kinney (1820-1004). The motor driver careless enough to run into a traffic policeman has need of a strong alibi. Now it costs no more to send a letter by airplane than by an old-fashioned one-horse stnge coach. Kaiser Wilhelm is said to be suffering from "deep melancholy." But did anybody expect him to be feeling chipper? That the grief he has caused the world causes him concern nobody believes, but that he failed in his enterprise very naturally grieves him. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. What and where is Tien-tsin? 3 J I 2. In federal impeachment proceedings i where do they originate and by whom ! is the accused tried.' ) S. What Is a charivari? 4. What is a mestizo? 5. What is China's foreign population? C. What battle of the Civil War is known as the Battle Above the Clouds? 7. Where is Slelton-Mowbray and what is it noted for? 8. Who Wire it said that "the purification of politics is an iridescent dream"? 0. Who wrote "Presents, I often say, endear absents"? 10. When nnd where was President Wilson born? Answers to Yesterday's Qulr 1. The estimated native population of that portion ot the Shantung peninsuja formerly, held by Germany and now occupied by Japan Is 108,000. 2. Eight hundreO men for each congress man or representative are to be re cruited for the national guard in each state when the act providing for that organization fully operative. 3. Lima is the capital of Peru. 4. Erancis nopkinson wrote "The Battle ( of the Kegs," a satirical poem refer ring to nn incident of the Revolution ary War. l'ho author died la 1701. C, Tort is a law term describing a private or civil wrong, 0. John Huss wns a celebrated Bohemian religious preformer and martyr. His dates are 1875-141B. 7. The sixteenth amendment to tho con stitution authorizes the imposition of the federal income tax. 8. The highest waterfall In the world is the Grand Falls, of Labrador. Its height is about 2000 feet. 0. The Bistlne Chapel, containing tho famous frescoes of Michael Angclo, is ' part of the Vatican iu Home. 10. John Qulncy Adams was the eU&"i T.l.l.l. !. TTlt.J D).tu - . .'" r?r ..rr . -. ;, rmimnMMr,TumKM'ki - tfJs - - 'aM I t t