.; t 1 'lA.LVf ?V ar.rsE'Sjg. "75 " v '&M (,-"- l -.- 1 ' s.tf-1 ' . I 4' . 10 EVENING PUBLIC LEDG-EK-PHIIABELPHIA'; TUESDAY,. JULY 'Wn9i9 J ' 4 ,'' -t Tuyn' -&," .u. iFK Of I i sTJ 11 if ? 1 . t h n r 1 i r r i , t & It I-..JL l V B?-tt M I ', lMt i '& tS'fet "V. fi"5l 3 f ? ' ' fcuening "publtc Sefoger THE EVENING TELEGRAPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ,-v iCTRu5 H K wwis rntiDtNT ...'"t' H 'udlnten Vice President, .John C Martln.8ferMry unci Traurr riilllp S Colllm. John B. William Tohn T purpon Director toiTORtAL rovr.n f ("Ttts Tt K Otitis, Chairman I david r. emiut editor ! JOHN f VMlN Oner-1 IHlim Manager rubll;hd dillv nt Tcntic I.rrocit nulldlnir. inurpenuence squire l'litlarielpma Atlantic Cit rrt-t-t'l'ion Bulldlns Knw York 200 Metropolitan Tntvn unTjniT Pt, I,nri Cuicioo TiM I'O'd iiiiiininc loos Fullartnn IlnlMlnff 13U? lrit,,,ne BullJIny xetts nrnnAus WAftntsr.Tos runrvr .. N r "r. Pennvhirli A" irM 1Mb St r.nvr Toim Vt tinr . . Th ' 1 Cm Mlnr London Lireio , London rinrs siTn'rriTrTTnv TronMs The Eirpo Pinir Lr-tvpn l ned to ub eribr In Philadelphia am! mirKumltnr town at th rM of hfle (12) c-nt per wpk pqahU to ths currier. Bv r.nll i rnlnt otitld of rhl'ad'lpMi In tns lnltd STit Cflrfidi of Tnlc-1 sttr pn--fes-lnn pot7o frr flf 1 o) r,-,i p-r month lx 'SGI dolltr per iar ravhu en sd an-e To a'l forflrn countries orns I'll lol'i pr month Votip s'lih-rrct.rr -rlh1"ff ddr-- pinrM must srH-e old -u n- 1 lm BELL. :noo TALMT tToc, mmv 3100 CT7 ''f're? o'l n-n., TJ-f, PHarl p I 'i Member of the Associated Press THE AHOrHTFD PPrff rrrh,. tivpy CVflflrtl " ho HIP for ' rpvof'Tftot cthprutip credited 'p ,'m pipe find alio the Inenl tirtr puhhihpl thrreiv AV vi(77?f nf 1-rpuhUrntintt nf epprtqJ 'fn- filjr 't'tih arr ahn ifirrrcl Thladflphu. Tutdl lull ?:. ni THE PRESiOENT'S ILLNESS pVEN thnuch the Prp-i'lrnt'- il'ne - i1? L-' slight, the sudrien rerit from Wash ington oticrht not to be without an rfTocr on American opinion. The rountrv "ill be reminded of the immense huiden1; that it has shifted to Mr Wilson's shoulders. And it will hae an uncomfoitahle Mie of the assorted disasters that reitamly would ensue if the man who has np tained the American people thu far in safety through a world in convulsion should have to leave his trying post for any length of time. The sympathy which the countiy will feel for Mr. Wilon should not he un mixed with a feeling of regret that he has suffered the hardship's nxpnenced in the past by every other President who was not conventional-minded and content to move in an easy rut. When he most needed understanding he has been mis understood. So it wa with Washington and Lincoln and Roosevelt. Virtue in the presidency must he its own reward. A man without great as pirations goes his way in peace. If he have great purposes he must go out and fight for them. ONE HOPEFUL SIGN TERHAPS we ought to foel relieved - after a second survey of the interna tional complications threatening the league-of-nations covenant. None of the disgruntled or overambi tious nations among the Allies has yet demanded concessions of territory in the United States. THE NEW JINGOISM TT7E DIDN'T threaten to make war upon France when a few American sailors were attacked in a free-for-all fight at Brest. But there aie newspapers in this country which seem more than eager to end an army and a fleet to Mexico be cause a few men from a United States battleship clashed with some wandering bandits at Tampico. It is odd to observe the eagerness in many quarters to avoid, in the case of Mexico, the processes of mediation, the patient inquiries and the rule of justice . which we have been recommending to the rest of mankind. Mexico is hard to understand. Mexico is a nuisance in many ways. We have contributed to the nasty situation by our failure to have a definite policy at Wash ington. But these are not reasons why there should be a religious determina tion in some quarters at Washington and New York and elsewhere to refrain from getting at the Mexican's side of every controversy. We are asked to make immediate wai on Mexico to "avenge an insult to the American flag." There are various ways of insulting the American flag. One of them is to permit the use of the flag as a handy shield for scoundrels and hypo crites who happen to have their own rea sons for misleading the countiy and stimulating hatred of a neighbor who happens to be dull-witted and tio-ible-some. We shall make war on Mexico only as a last resort in desperate circumstances. The new jingoism is a growing malady. The "go-down - and - clean - up - Mexico" crowd are an isolated group of sufferers. They do not know that thev are trying to egg the United States into a twenty-year war. Henry Ford thinks we should "lick the world to make peace." There is a Senate group that wants war with Japan. Europe wants us to fight the Bolsheviks. Yet we were led to believe that the armistice was to bring rest to a tor mented world' THE VANISHING AIR SERVICE TCTURTHER data bearing upon the in x credible wreck of the American air service are now available to show how far ignorant politicians in Congress will go in their efforts to make party issues. The matter is one that has been re ferred to before in these columns. But formal statistics and reports of War Department experts were required to reveal the sorry tragedy and the peril of the situation recently created in the most kXttWli important branch of the military service. r rAvfn nt.,. Jni.uu.: 1 .. uuiiivas "so uGieiiniiieu 10 De eco wr -. ti k-tf' nomicai. 11 was going to show un the administration. It almost wined out appropriations suggested for the air service. The result is that in the reor- 3JJSX&1 flying units there will be about ; 4fltar.nJJ fnlrl wlirt liai.A U.,.4 I... w.-f ....w ...,t ,mu jiymg- the reserve fliers, I at enormous ex back to civil life, are to be iunked. aJBS' offering huge sums he thousands: pf Lib- -lrv" ' -" . " fifr-- . ?aSS8ii ;?.J$sR "ffi r.i . erty engines which we, the richest people on earth, seem too poor to utilize in fur ther training. Development of the flying art has stopped The air patrol for which surveys were made on the Mexican bolder has been abandoned. It is no wonder that a few sensible men in Congress have de termined to reopen the whole question and establish aiation upon a basis that will not shame us in the eyes of the world. Investigating commission's are fashion able at Washington. It mav he sug gested once again that the country would benefit vastly by a commission appointed to investigate Congress. NO DEAD MAN WILL WIN THE NEXT CAMPAIGN I So What Is the Use of the Bull Mooters Planning a Program Based on "What Roosevelt Would Do"? THERE i no nros in Giffotd Pinchot's announcement thnt "the vast mijonty of Republican; are pmcipesivp." Thero has been no news m it since the first Wednesdav after the fuit Tuesday of N'ovembet, 1"! ' On the morning of that dav it was known that 4,110,000 otes had been cast for Theodore Roosevelt for the presi denov and only a, t54.000 votes had ben cast for William H Taft The figures show thit theiP were then n"irly 50,000 more progiessives than .-tandpat Republicans But thoy were the kind of progressives ,,V,n hnlipved 111 the heiitv meriranism of Roosevelt. Roosoelt ii dcvl ind a lot of men are anvioui-to wear his nnntl The trouble w lt'n most of them i that if they got the mantle on then- shoulders they would he so ovei weighted and enveloped and en wrapped in it that it would take a search wariant ind a sheiifT's posse to find them We do not wish to lie unkind to Mr. Pinrhot. under whose leadeiship a confer onre of progressive Republicans has been called to meet in Harnsburg a week from today, but it must be admitted that un 1p:s he stood on the dead colonel's shnul deis m one would be able to spp him This 1- not Mr. Pinchot's fault It is meieh his misfortune. The announced purpose of his Hairis burg conference is to make preliminary aiiangements for electing a piogressive Republican delegation from this state to the Republican national convention next yeai. lie does not seek to split the patty, he say-, but to solidify it. And he is going to bring Senator Miles Poindextei, of Washington, into the state to seive as the cement to hold the two wings to gether. Now, it has not generally been supposed on this side of the continent that Poindexter is the kind of adhesive the party needs. He is more like a sheet of fly paper to which every political vagary afloat in the air sticks with unre lenting persistence. A presidential boom for Poindexter launched in Harrisburg, the capital of the state Roosevelt carried against Taft in 1912, might serve the ambition of the Washingtonian to lemain in the Senate, but it would not tend to bind the Repub lican party together. It would be just as wise to bring Hiram Johnson, of California, here. Johnson has his lightning rod up. He has been toting it about the New England state and he thinks that he has felt several thrills, as the Irish voters applauded his denunciation of the league of nations. But Johnson may be stiong on both edge.-, of the continent without having a single friend in the middle Both Poindexter and Johnson belong to that large group of presidential impossi bilities, included in which are Lodge and Knox and Norris and we hope he will not feel too flattered by the mention of his name Pinchot himself. Bigger and broader men than any of these must be brought forwaid before the voters will begin to feel the kind 'of enthusiasm with which Roosevelt in spired them. One might as well talk of Borah, the narrow-visioned little Amen can of Idaho. If the Republicans are to win in 1920 it will have to be with a man as big as the ls.-ues which are confionting the world at large and this country as a member of the family of nations. That is, unless the Democrats make fools of themselves and nominate Champ Clark or t.ome one like him. And so long as Wood iow Wilson has any influence in the paity this is not likely to happen. But this Harrisburg confeience is not likely to confine its discussion to the mat ter of ways and means for electing a pro gressive delegation to the national con vention next year. A United State senator is to be chosen in this state in 1920. Senator Penrose's term expires on March 3, 1921. Pinchot is a leceptive candidate. He was recep tive in 1914, but when he held out his hand he got nothing but a nomination. Penrose got the votes. If Pinchot and his friends can elect the delegation to the national convention, they may feel persuaded that they can dictate the nomination of the candidate for the senatorship. There has been much discontent with the chaiacter of our senators, fiom Simon Campion to Penrose. Some of them have been foiceful, biutal men who got things done. Their methods have not been deli cate. They have been held up by leform ers in all parts of the country as examples of the type of politician to be abhorred. If we want something radically differ ent it must be admitted that we would get it in the person of Mr. Pinchot. But if Mr. Penrose is to be defeated for the nomination there are other men than Air. Pinchot who will have a hand in the game. They call themselvps Republicans without any qualifying adjectives. And they are in close touch with the men who dictate the policies of the party. One of them has a much better chance of suc ceeding either Mr. Penrose or Mr. Knox than a man of the type of Mr. Pinchot. Yet the Harrisburg conference deserves to be watched carefully "by the observers of the signs of the times. There may emerge from it and from similar confer ences in other parts of the country an ,v A idea or a man who will have an influence upon the course of the Republican party for the next four years. The prospect for it, however, is not brilliant, for the conferees spem to be trying to decide what Roosevelt would have done had he been alive, instead of applying what bialns they have to the consideration on their merits of the current problems. No dead man will win the next cam paign It will be won or lost by men very much alive who have the courage to stand on their own feet and proclaim their own policies. That is what Roose velt would have done. MR. AINEY ON TROLLEY rARES TT WOULD have required a good corpo-- ration lawyer to make n more suave and heartfelt plea for higher street-ear fares than that just signed bv W D. B. iney, chairman of the Public Service Commission of Pennsylvania Higher farps, we leavn, are a matter nf "ordinary husinpss prudence and sagacity." One might as wpII demand "bucks without straw 01 faithful toil from Hip muz7led ov" as to expect public service from cor porations without granting th-m iee nues sufficient for their needs Thus poeticallv chants thp chairman of the Public Service Commission m n some what astonishing interval of unrestrained expiession. Might not some one make a similar plea on the side of the public'' Would it not be the part of "business sagaciH and prudence" to demand infoimation lela tive to tho usp.s made of money pud to tiolley companies under the present svs tpm of nickel fares? Is it wisely used? Or is it wasted? It has been demon strated that slipshod management, in competence or wmng-headed policies m thp direction of public utilities often im poverishes utilities rnrpoiations that are not een watei logged as many nf thpm happen to bp. Is Mr. Ainoy's decision, granting a seven-cent rate to an up state trollev company, merely the pi elude to a campaign foi 7one fares in Philadelphia'' If it is, the silver-tongued chanman of the State Public Service Commission is playing on dangeious ground. The P R. T has been making some piogros.s towaid a decent and tolerable lelationship with its patrons. It is profit ing through enlightened management It is on the way to gain the complete good will and confidence of the public. If the duectois wish to nullify all that has been done to put their corporation on a brttei footing they can agitate for zone faips in Philadelphia, while their own tioas ury and the pocketbooks of tiolley riders are being drained to pay dividends iang ing from 10 to 70 per cent to a scoie of phantom companies with a stranglehold on city franchises. Heie indeed are bricks being made without straw, and we should like to hear what Mr. Ainey has to say of them FRENCH CABINET CRISIS TTNDER the Fiench system a ministry u is formed for a specific task. When that task is completed the ministiy falls. The immediate task of the Clemenceau ministry has been finished. It has won the war. It is asking for a vote of confi dence today. Its opponents are dissatisfied with its course in many matteis incidental to win ning the war. They may be able to de feat it and bring about the cieation of a new ministry to undertake the solution of the new problems. Or it may be that the dissatisfaction is moie deep-seated and that some form of social revolution is blowing. The real significance of what is happen ing will not be apparent for some time, even should Clemenceau he defeated to day. MpmWs of the build -111s trades unions, in It Would! CMrajro are jubilant because thev have irtn.illv -.topped coiMnir tion unik in ClmdK'i Let 11- Mippnve that architect'.. Piisineois. and nil the other high ly tiained spec inlets who contribute scientific knowledge to evcr buildins operation should be moed Mime dnj tn strike nfraiut the dom ination of the 'handworkers." Wouldn't it be interesting to see what sort of skyscraper the trades unionists mid pllt (,p unaided? 1 The futuie of the Pajinc the riper iMo.n-OO Russian pi-is- oneis of war in CJer ninnv is giving concern to the supreme coun cil in Paris ficrmanr is quite willing to send them home, hut the Allies hesitate The mpu aro inffstnl with Bolshevism and once in Htii,i would either have to join the m or be killed (!erniun. started the red dance in Russia She should par the piper by feeding the 'JIIi.iiOO until the dance is over. The trouble with the And Hang Weather Rureau is St. Sulthin! whollv one of dis- tiihution. With a fine stock of rain on hand the bureau insists upon giving it nil to us nnd culpablj neglects to gie any of it to Michigan and Washington, where it might be useful in helping to ex tinguish forest tires There is mismanage ment somewhere Let Congress, while it is turning out commissions, provide for nn in vestigation of the Weather Bureau. Knglnnd. if memory The Turning Wheel serves, used tn have a great deal of fun at our oxpense in the days when our nenlj rich were nt their worst. The amazing pnl'ices on Fifth avenue, the monke.s that took tea with the elite nt Newport, the size of the diamonds that Chiengo wore to breakfast were chanted jojouMy in Punch. Now Lon don hns its own newly rich munitions mil lionaires who, tn emphasize thpir aloofness from the uilgur crowd, pay 1?1 ."0 each for peaches. S10.000 for second-hand motorcars and an amount asked for the paintings that the aristocratic families must sell to buv food. Punch is still merry, but its merriment is in a minor key. Shake the hand-shake, says Dr. Krusen. The Greeks appear to be putting the slam into Islam. Well, seven of the forty days have gone, anylmw The latest alignment : Main Line bathtubs dry, everything else wet. The troublesome hyphen keeps bobbing up in all kinds of places. It seems to be a battle royalthe Polce, Ukrainians and Bolsheviki are fighting. S &..& 2Sf'( j-? S-ii oft 2& STATE FUNDS AS DEPOSITS IN WRECKED STATE BANKS North Penn Case Recalls the Cele brated People's Bank Affair In Which Quay Figured Twenty Years Ago rTIHAT the wrecked North Penn Hankcar--- ried heavy state deposits may be cause for censure, but assuredly, it should be no cause for surprise Much the same thing has hap pened before One nf the mo.t notable cases in Phila ndelphla was thnt of the People's Rank (also a state nnd not a national institution!, which led to the arrest and trial of Matthew Stanley Qun and others on n conspiracy charge It was during this trial that there was offered in evidence a telegram containing a phrnse which became a classic. It read as follows "Rnn Lucie. Fla --John P Hopkins If you buv nnd carry a thousnnd Met for me I will shake the plum tree. M S Quay " The stnrv of tho hank's failure properly begins with the closing of the doors of the Chestnut Street Nntlonnl Bnnk, of which Willlnm M Slngerly was president, on De cember 21, 1SJ1T The Chestnut Street Trust Compnm failed with the bank- On Februnrv 2T. 1W Mr Ringerlv died suddenh While the Singerlv properties were engaging at tention nn nider of court was issued to show cnuse win n receiver should not he appointed for the fiiinrnntors1 Finance Company. The following ia the Feople's Rank suspended. A1 T THAT time Oieorgc R Graham was dinwing to the close of his long nnd nble Incumbency a dlsttirt attorney nnd he was not going to sucrcpd himself. He hnd been opposed In the heads of Severn political fnc tions, 1111 biding Mr uny And n it cnm nbont thnt when former Judge James (inv Gordon, as counsel, became possessor of a certain little red bonk in the Innk. a honk contninmg items of political as well as finan cial significance, he. showed them to the district attorney Mr. Graham brought action which rvpnled an nmnzing slttintlon of politicnl maneuvering with the taxpayers' monei . ON MARi thnt ,Ti RCH 2," the coroner announced John S Hopkins, enhier of the bank, hnd committed suicide. Hopkins left n ni'ssage to his widow and fatherless chil dren It read' "h other hand is in the linn's mouth I cannot get it nut. To me death is pieferable " .l,i-.t what be meant was shown In the telegrams nffei ed in e ldcnec at the Qua 1 ml. Money had been lent to politicians without pioper security. In leturn the hank bad he nine the rcpn.itnr for state funds In (irtobei ,". Senator M S Quay and otheis were held in '."OOll bail each to answer a c barge of conspirai tn use com monwealth funds for their own purposes nnd with innspiiing with Hopkins unlawfully to lend public moneys It was considered nnte wortln nt the time that Jua and the others were forced to line up at the bar 111 the Citv Hnll Police Court liefoie a pnlie magistrate just like mdinary citizens Benjamin J Haywood, former state treasurer and subse quently 1 ashier of the state treasury, was "barged with the same offense a few days later and gae the same amount nf bail. pLf J- Jr iL"it:R FunnnnicK uoTiinnMnL, !awcr and gentleman, who hnd been nominated for district attorney to succeed Mr Graham, defeated James M. Heck nnd was elected Immediatclj the political wise acres began to look for excuses for the shehing nf the Quay case It wasn't shehed. It went on the docket in the most i-onnncnplnre wa The new district attorne.y neither dodged his duty nor dnw attention 10 the fait that he was doing it. Against him in that tiiul he had some of the brainiest lawyers, in the state. He met then ttrrihe legal onslaughts with 11 display nf lesoiuees which commanded their lespect nnd 1 hallenged their admiration. TT -L fl WAS alleged by the cnmmnnwenlth during the trial that Ilmwnnd deposited state money in the People s lunik to be lent tn the nther defendants: that Senator (Juay had spemlated in stocks thiough Cashier Hopkins and that letters and a bnnk found in the cashier's desk shqwed how the interest was charged. The statement, in what was inlled the Red Hook, represented a compu tation of the state deposits in the People's I'ank for the several number nf das respec Imh stated -that is to say, between April :iO nnd June l.i, 1S'.)7. 11 period nf fortj -six dns. the deposit was S.VJfi.OOO ; June 13 to IP, four dajs, the deposit wns $,""(,000; and from June l'.l to October HI, u period of 1I54 dajs, it wns S.'uTi.OOO. The statement, a sample of ninny others, wns in the handwriting of Hopkins, who multiplied the amount nf the deposit by the uumbei nf dajs. first deducted 20 per cent and then the interest nn .200.000 for 1S4 days, then further deducted the interest on $."0,000 for 1M dajs, the balance being first divided by six and then subdi vided into three pints. The theory of the commonwealth was that the 20 per cent deducted was for the bank nnd that Jinn was entitled to the use of .$200,000 for 1M days, the name Quay being written in connection with the S200.000. I'l lends and opponents alike agreed that the wav Mr Rothermel handled the case inuld not have been improved upon. It was no lenussness nn his part that car.ed Mr. (Jinn s .uquittnl. Hut the statute of lim itations, which ruled nut much strong evi dence, had a lot to do with it. Pretty nenrh every ward politician in town wns in at the death for a registry berth. Who was it bad the nerve to make this Swithin person a snint? Shantung is to be given a dose of pit. pub. Henrv wns not only spanked but forced to confess thnt he liked it. There is hope that Hie Russians fed on Bolshevism will eventually 'become "fed up" on it. Investigation of the IL C. of L. dis closes the fact that there are pome things the don't manage nnv better in France. It must be admitted that at first blush it would appear that the dear little Jappy-Jan-.Tappy had his Shantung in his cheek. Kven ns the wets brought nbout their own undoing, so may the drys bang them selves with a searoh-and-seizure rope. Some senators have the idea that now that Mr. Wilson has the ear of Europe he ought to r"' 0 Aea 'n " Herr Hohenznllern is said to be wonied because the weather may prevent him from completing the wood cutting record he set for the month One would think he bad other things to worry about. In New Jersey's forthcoming campaign it is confidently expected by Our pwn Entomologist that Newt Bugbee will be abU to put a flea In Jim Nugeat'a ear. A V i.Tirr -v fffii LViibSiVCVr.Vci' 'tj t,., v feMb PMMUEJf- riW i '.r" j&frH"' ' ' -fr'?--1' r-'S J'' i r u r 1 THE CHAFFING DISH Loneliness "The worlds most notable and most "lonely man' Herald Stanlpy Lee on YVoodrow Wilson, in The Saturday Eve ning Post NO. not so lonely, either'. Hearts of men In all the enrth toward this man have turned : When wearied, they have thought of him, and lent tied To master their fatigue; and often when Some midnight woiker drugged with lamp and pen lias paused to think of coinages discerned In that spaie face, his 8!ce"p hns been ad join ned And he has pledged himself to task again. "TO. this man is not lonely. He has -'-' brought Companions to his -dream from near and far; Clear llnnics, he guesses not by him are fired. And those whovundertand how he has fought See patient honor shining like a star I'pou thut deep-carved face, a little tired. We nevei saw wetter weather than while Tom Dreier, of Boston, was buying our lunch cstcidnj : but we are a firm believer in omens, and took Tom's visit to menu that the sun is going to give a few rehearsals here shortlj . Tom Dreier doesn't get to Philadelphia vein often, nnd sn we thought we'd like to give bun a little ja,z of some sort. Accom pnnied bv Lewis Bernnys, we hustled him up to the attic-stockroom of a certain an tique bookstore. Tom is a bookworm, nnd was here in his clement. While he sniffed and snouted nbnut among the ancient vol umes, we ourself (who never, even in mo ments of highest exaltation, permit ourself to forget the interests nf Dish patrons) lamped some soiled old books, without bind ings, thnt were lying on the flonr about to be swept up unci thrown away. We pounced upon one. and looked entreatingly nt our hot until he felt compelled to say we might have it. It is called "The American Commonplnre Book of Poetry." published by Herman Hooker. Philadelphia, 18,'IS. We had a hunch thnt there was something in it that might be warmed over for the Dish, nnd here it is. It is an echo of a rainstonn that seems to have been even more severe than those we have endured recently: The Bridgeport paper of March, 1823, said "Arrived, schooner Fame, from Charleston, ia New london. While at anchor in that harbor, during the rain storm on Thursday evening last, the Fame was run afoul of by the Methodist mtet Ing house from Norwich, which was car ried away in the late freshet." Harry Reaches the Hall We have remarked before that one of our favorite poets is Harry Levenkrone, one of the office boys in this building. When Harry tunes up his reboant rebeck he often emits melodies that are sweetened with the au thentic honey of Hymettus. Wandering hopelessly about the office one evening, in hope to lay our hand upon some vagrant inspiration, we found the following which Harrv had posted upon the wall : A would-be poet, Levenkrone, Whose job it is to watch the phone, Is trjing now to get his name Emblazoned in the Hall of Fame By writing stuff alleged to be Narratives and poetry. By HARRY LEVENKRONE. Amulet If you are tired and worn, with cares ypu would forget, If you are all unstrung, with sorrows 6ore beset ; If you would learn a lesson which will keep Your heart from fainting and your soul from sleep ; , Go back to Nature with her hills and streams,, Ask and Believe She will return your dreamt ' FLOYD MEREDITH,- "c- ,1 1 SsiiiiAi y.uw.i, "COME, ALL YE FAITHFUL!" Poetry and Homicide By William McFee (Our Kperial Correspondent in the Mcditcirancnu) Smyrna, June IS. TT WAS an evening of blue iind silver maiked by great black cypresses, when the book came. I had been ashoie rum maging In a bookstore for odd volumes. I hnd purchased a small leather-bound volume of Cnrducci, tor a present. Perhaps you do not know Caiduooi. I used to stumble through his lordly stanzas in Ancona. my friend Rieardo Cairoln sitting beside me on the loof of the Turkish consulate, nnd holding me 1111 when 1 slid off into deep water. And nn the flyleaf I wns writing some verses in Fiench. though Italian would have been more acceptable to the recipient. But 1 1 lecord it here for what it is worth I I never could, with all my admiration for Italian, remember Italian verses. French poetry is ns easy tn remember as English, it learns itself, nnd I have a head full of stray setups, Hugo, Verlaine. De Musset, and so forth. And I wns writing one of these seiaps 011 the flyleaf of I'arducei's book.... You must figure the brown leather volume with a thin line of gold tooled along the edge, a blotch cm the flyleaf due to damp, for the atcades of the Rue l-'iank are damp. T AJ A the M filled with admiiation as I nieture strenuous lives of writing men in America, turning out prodigious quantities of "stuff," writing hard, going home to the family nt night, something attempted some thing done to earn a night's repose, while I, miserable wight, lnaf about the arcades of Smyrna or Ephesus, smoking Turkish cigarettes, drinking mastic and fiddling with .a string of amber beads, muttering bud French to a girl with gold eyes, and being instructed in the politics of asin Minor by n -Spaniard whose ancestors came here from the Inquisition. I feel the years passing and nothing comes of it. However. I saw a man murdered the other night. No, not in that arcade, bur further along. Talk about the harbarousness of firearms give me firearms. I like not the aftermath of knife-work, the slimy ooze on marble steps, the convulsive contortions of a ripped abdomen. . . .No, give me some more mastic nnd a cigarette and let us look out to the harbor where the great ships ride beneath galaxies of glittering electrics. I should make a bad murderer. Crack ! Friends of the prisoner taking pot shots at the gendarmerie. Quelle vie!.... I am going ashore. 1 am always going ashore. WILLIAM McFEE. The tragic city of New York is now sub mitting itself to a new Griffith film. One of the allurements of the picture, as per the ads, is "Fountains of Wine," and it is pro duced in the customary "ice cooled theatre." Wine on the screen nnd ice in the ven tilators how New York has changed. The best pun of the week has been pulled hy Ben De Casseres, who is renlly a Phila delphian, although he resides for the nonce on an island in the Hudson river. Ben saw Harry Kemp, the unkempt poet of vaga bondia, coursing down Broadway in his corduroys. "Ecce Hobo," said Ben de murely. Book collectors have their little oddities just the same ns other enthusiasts. Almost every really fine collection ot rare volumes includes a book said to have been in Shelley's pocket when he was drowned. Sometimes (as in the Bodleian at Oxford) it is a copy of Aeschylus; sometimes (as in Mr. Morgan's library in New York) it is a copy of "The Indian Serenade." It seems to us not surprising that poor Shelley was drowned if he had a whole five-foot shelf about his person. AVe hear a good deal said about the need of a new coin, a "Hi eent piece or something equally fantastic. As far as we aie concerned, the pressing need seems to be not a new coin but a few mare of the existing milled edges. SOCRATES. V''s c-"0 r- mmm a itf ifi ii f l la filial UraBi -I'm nrrnitncliii" S V'iftif irgtiiMTH -joSL THE TRAPEZE PERFORMER TTtlERCE little bombs of gleam snap from) -- his spangles. Sleek flames glow softly on his silken tights, The waiting crowd blurs to crude darks and whites Beneath the lamps that stare like savage bangles ; Safe in a smooth nnd sweeping arc he dangles And sees the tanbark tower like old heights Before careening eyes. And last he sights The waiting hands, and sinuously untangles. Over the sheer abyss, so deadly near, He falls, like wine to its appointed cup; Turns in a wheel of fireworks, and is mine. Battering hands acclaim our triumph clear. And steadfast muscles draw my sonnet up To the firm iron of the fourteenth line. Stephen Vincent Benet, in Ainslee's. Perhaps the civil courts will decide whether Haverford officials are exponents of Prussian efficiency or Prussian mendacity. What Do You Know? QUIZ What kind of a river is called a "pi rate" and what is meant by "behead" ing" a stream? What size army is Austria allowed un der the peace terms? What are ember and rogation days? When was the French Acaiemy founded? Who wrote "Lorna Doone"? What tiermnn painter was known as The Green? Who said, "Age is a matter of feeling, not of years"? What is an anemograph? ,'j Who wrote "The Maid of Athens"? 10. What is the Church of Scotland? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. The banking and currency law, kn6wn as the Federal Reserve act. was ap proved December 23. 1913, and amended June 21, 1017. Under it twelve cities, known as Federal Re serve cities, are established and the 1'nited States is divided into twelve geographical districts, each containing one of the reserve cities. 2. An acrostic is a poem or other compo sition in which the initial, or the in itial and final, or the initial, middla nnd final letters spell a word or words, 3. William Winter, American dramatic critic, nt a dinner in London, said . "Acting is the moving picture of na- , ture." 4. The man first known as the Almanack Maker was Richard Harvey, an Eng-, lish nsttologer, who died in 1623, 5. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, English mathematician, used the name "Lewis Carroll" when publishing "AUca la Wonderland" and "Through the Look ing Glass." 6. The treaty of Brest -Litovsk was one between Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey on the one side and Russia on the other and was signed March 3, 1018. 7. Emma Abbbtt, who was born In Chi- J -s cago in 1850 and died 18SS. She . traveled with her own opera company throughout the United States and re fused, on moral grounds, to ting "Travlata." 8. South Dakota was admitted Into thf Union on February 22, 18S9. 9. Maurice Maeterlinck wrote "The Blu Bird." r ,' 10. Great Abaco, or Lucayo.Is one of the principal Islands pf tiie Hahama'sroup. ' vvvj: 1 X ,--K K. . ' '" I JSJJ t, urs ' a . , Vr Y y SJ.T . - V