' Wrf ft' 10 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1919 Jtilf " IS - c Srt V' f D Lv if t h K a Y M :. i b e fM 4 tm Aliening public Sle&gec JV"i . ana I MIS UYENUVU TELEGKAFH PUI3LIC LEDGER COMPANY .ctiius it. k. cun-ris. Pnr-iDimT ChrlM It. I.udlnirton. Vice rrfxldrnt: John C. J.trtln, Secretary and Trexurers Philip S Colllna. John B, William John J. Hpurecon. Directors. i.jrroniAi, boars. , Crocs K. It. Cittis, Chairman &A.VID n. smile? .Cdltor , JOHNT V.'r.TIN'.. Oenerr.l nu;!ic3 Manager Publlihed dally at Pent to I.recrii Iliilldlni. InUCftt'nUCIlrfl Mllll.lt.v lMllluiUlnhtn yvTiMrfTio tin rrcss-vnia . .' " - " r.--i rrcaa-Unlmi IlulMIn nsff jonrc Detroit 200 Metropolitan Tower Rt. Lnr'H. ... iniw l"iiil.rtn it.,n,ii "i i om HuiMinr CUICAQO 1307 7f&uil DuilJIng Nntvs mmcAusi Washington DmrAU. N. i: '-ir. Pcni.ajlvanla Ave. and I Ith Pt. Hew Ynnrc liFKCAV The .Vim llulMlnir Lo.sdon Ucbeau London Timet Sl'TltsCniPTTON mnMs Tho ErMvo IMiwu' LKrmru li eervel to sub scribers In Philadelphia and 'surroumllnc towns at the rato of twelve (12) cents per week, panble ta the carrier. . By r..nll .o points outside of Philadelphia, in the United States. Canada., or United States pos sessions poitn&e free fifty CiM rents pr month. 6be f0 dotlnrs per year, payable In advance. To a!" fonlen countries one (Jl) dollar per month Noticr Subscribers wthlnir a Idress chanred Must give old as w ll n- nM" n Idrcss. BEIL. 3000 WALMT KEYSTONE. MAIS' 3000 t3s 4(lrfrrss nI roiiitmii cn'mm fi Ledffrr, lH(Lpcnilrnct A'juair, Tl ntlt ( Pl'hltc VUi'adc pna. Member of the Associated Press TITF! ASSOCIATED PPKSS is errl iively entitled tn the use for irpiihliention of all news dispniehes credited to it or vnt otherwise credited in this pnprr, nnd alio the local vein pitfthihf themn. AH rights of rcpuhlientinn of special dis patches ffin are alio reserved. Philadelphia, Urdnr-ilo, July 10. 1410 GET THE STOCKADE READY TT IS time that the Governor's charter program to cntch the elephants even if some of the mice escaped was ap plied to the North Pcnn bank case. The mousetrap eems to be in workinp: order. The little fellows that were used in looting the bank are being caught. But it was not the little fellows who got away with more than $2,000,000. Their collapse under the public gaze is sufficient proof, if proof were needed, that Viey did not have the nerve for big crimes. Tho stockade for the elephants the big fellows ought to be set up without delay, and the elephant drive should be gin at the earliest possible moment. And when they are rounded up they should get the full limit of the law. BARKIS MORE WILLIN' TflREELAND KENDRICK says that if he should enter the mayoralty race he would intend to win. He is now looking over his private business affairs to dis cover whether he can afford to make the race. He will know in about a week. ' When Senator Vaie first mentioned him as the type of man for the place he pro fessed never to have considered the mat ter. Apparently he has been considering it during the intervening weeks and it looks attractive to him. If he discovers that his business affairs are in such a shape that he can run and if he dis covers that he is still regarded as avail able we may expect to hear him say next week that he is an active candidate and that he will get the nomination hands down. In the meantime Senator Vaie is can nily waiting to learn what the independ ents are planning to do. THE DEAD MOOSE OEARCH for buried treasure in the deep sea and attempts to disinter the body of the Bull Moose and breathe the breath of life into it are enterprises that always will engage the passionate energies of the world's greatest optimists. Treasure is for those who work. Political leadership is for those who win it single-handed. The Bull Moose, roaming the green places where great hopes go when they ; die, is without doubt glad to be dead and f free from contact with the hapless wights in politics who do not know how to lead or be led. j The many-toned and hollow incanta- tions at Harrisburg yesterday and Mr. Pinchot's hysterical cries to the unan swering ground show that the Moose is indeed gone forever. , Nothing remains to his survivors but the first word of a composite designation that once was magic in men's ears. MUST PROTECT DYESTUFFS rpHERE is a stiong lobby in Washing x ton urging that the waitime func tions of the war trade board be continued for the indefinite future, so far as thev affect dyestuffs. The war trade board has been granting licenses for the impor tation of dycstuffE that is, the control over imports is exercised at the discie fi, tion of an appointed body. This is de- fensible under the war powers of the gov ernment. It is an open question, however. whether Congress has any power in time of peace to authorize any commission to regulate imports of dyestuffs or of any thing else. The ways and means committee has been taking testimony for a month in order to get information for the drafting of the proper kind of a bill to protect the dye Industry which has developed here during the war. Representative Longworth's measure levying a high rf tariff on dyes has been the basis of the M- "l It Is admitted by all the exnerts who have appeared before the committee that some forjn of protection for the industry Is needed. Certain chemists, however, have testified that the tariff would not provide adequate protection. Thev rup. Y ;great the creation of a commission which jis should have complete control over all dye Imports, It should decide what dyes n' Tebuld not be produced here and what 'ehould be admitted, and to what extent r ' The Chemical Foundation, which has i t taicen over irom me anen property cus- i-v -j. odian the German patents for dyes and ' plans to use them in this country, is con- (.l 'fJ..-i! ..!.. . J I . . .. ".iimeuuB m.nic piuyniiuiLua in oenaii !4j?jt-tn licensing system. One of its at- ; WMNHeys securea ib signatures 01 a large W&ter of Philadelphia users of dyes to a , to Congress. The dye users a tariff, but in its original form subsystem wag Mked or. In .the preference a ijj0ri toflfffIfc under the impression that It was to ask for tariff protection rather than for the licensing system. The advisory board of the National Association of Hosiery and Underwear Manufacturers has passed a resolution condemning the licenses and asking for a high tariff for the reason that they wish to be free to buy the dyes they need wherever they can be obtained without having to go before a commis sion to ask for permission to import cer tain colors. The license plan should be thoroughly examined In all its aspects before Con gress acts. The burden of proof of its fairness and its constitutionality rests upon its proponents. But all are agreed that the dye industry must be taken care of by the government, so that it can be developed sufficiently to provide all the colors that can be made out of coal tar and its derivatives. This is necessary not only for the protection of our textile industry, but for the production of medicinal drugs. A NEW MYSTERY OF PARIS FOR THE SENATE TO SOLVE The President's Anglo-French Treaty Should De Rejected First and Inquired Into Afterward TT IS the plain duty of the Semite to reject Mr. Wilson'- Anglo-French treaty, in letter and in principle, wholly and without delay. If there is upon tho majority side in Washington anything of the patriotism and courage supgestedvjn earlier dcmonstiations by Mr. Lodge and his group thi scheme will be dismissed with little ceremony. Meanwhile tho President needs to ex plain not only the exact origin and pur poses of the1 inci edible document a thing which he failed utterly to do yesterday. He has even a greater need to explain the mental processes that led him to ac cept a principle .so violently opposed to all the assurances which united the coun try in support of his earlier policy. Unless Mr. Wilson is moving in a mythical world of his own creation, unless he continues to disregard the advice of his associates at Washington, he must know that the country is being swiftly disillusioned. It is anxious and it is criti- cal minded. There was and is a great idealism in Arr erica, great hopes, measureless pa tience and resolution to give stiength to the Piesident or to any one who will be a voice speaking the sane and clean de sires of all mankind. But it must be an odd experience for those who followed along trustingly with Mr. Wilson to find themselves now groping in an atmosphere of whispers and mystery, evasions and compromises. What happened in Paris? Who worked the magic that brought about a revolution in Mr. Wilson's spirit? "A new day has dawned," said the President in hit. letter to the Senate yesterday. "Old antago nisms are forgotten!" These phrases seem thin and almost ironical . . the light of the document urged, in the same breath, to the favoring attention of the Senate. A new day has dawned indeed! But it reveals astonishing things at Washing ton. The old antagonisms are forgotten! By whom? The very text of the treaty shows that the old antagonisms are to be perpetuated and hardened and that new ones aie to rise with them and keep them company. Unless Mr. Wilson is practicing a sort of strategy too subtle for everyday minds his convictions the convictions that nations were willing to give their lives for didn't survive the Paris confer ence. The President at first giounded all his policies upon moral principles. As he compromised and became expedient he lost strength. 'And he lost strength not only among those who believed in him but among those who didn't. It is this that may explain the treaty which we arc asked to make with France and England in violation of the fundamental principles of the earlier Wilson doctrine. There is one way in which the Senate may instantly reveal the folly and danger of that proposed agreement. The Senate should demand that the treaty be rewrit ten and that new clauses be incorporated in it to bind France and England to attack any nation which may be guilty of unprovoked aggression against the United States, -say, in the Pacific. By this simple method the whole form and puipose of the treaty will be revealed. The issue will be fieeu from the fogs of half truths and implications that now surround it. We shall be in a way to formal participation in a new three power alliance. We shall be able to un derstand the extent of the obligations which we are asked to assume. It would not longer be necessary to disguise the hard and ugly truth in a drapery of sen timental phrases. f There is little doubt that France and England would accept this arrangement cheerfully enough. A working alliance with the United States is more than any ambitious government in Europe ever dared to hope for in tho past If the treaty were carried to its logical form we could delude ourselves no longer with a belief in the league of nations. We should have to admit that the league of nations was an agreeable sham. As it is, the American people are in danger of losing both ways. They are asked to accept all of tho disadvantages of an armed alliance without any of the usual guarantees. Mr. Wilson implies broadly that France wishes and needs the piotection of a treaty such as he has proposed. It might be permissible to inquire of whom the President is thinking when he speaks of France. Is he thinking, of the plain peo ple of France who endured the matchless agonies of the war,, who made the sacri fices, who desire only peace? Or does' he, like so many others, think only of M. Clemenceau and those who share the Tiger's theories, when France is men tioned? ,There is nothing anywhere to indicate that trie French people wish to see a revival, of, the old diplomacy on a new and grands wale. Oar lUave would .not tiJ'irHi -tlm 'Trrnrli mmnltt' lr Sirn.,.1,1". u with those In the present French Govern ment who believe as lif. Clemenceau be lieves. M. Clemenceau does not share Mr. Wil son's faith in the league of nations. He doesn't believe that permanent peace la attainable. He looks for future wars and says so with admirable candor, Marshal Foch expects new wars. He has just been warning the British to prepare. And if there is anything upon this earth that can do more than anything ejse to encourage such distrust and such hope lessness it is the sort of document that the President of the United States has just presented to the Senate for ratifica tion. There is no misguided member of n European government who would not feel himself newly assured under such an ar rangement and no clique of mercenaries bent upon new adventures in commercial imperialism which would not be newly heartened by the knowledge that the three mightiest world powers were armed for its protection. Reasoning a little further, it is plain that France itself that is, the vast, in articulnte mass of the French people is consideicd not at all. What Mr, Wilson proposes to do is to strengthen the pur poses and the hands of a group of men who even now are reconciled to the pros pect of future wars in which tho-o who know nothing of treaties must inevitably suffer' and die. The treaty is one of two things. It is a sentimental sham that is likely to have a disastrous effect on opinion among the restless and dissatisfied peoples, in and out of tho league of nations, who are not included in its provisions. Or it is a lint and frank departuic from the principle of the league of nations and one that tends certainly to lead those who make it into a war against half the world. It is a new mysteiy of Paris, As a warning to Germany the treaty is fantastic and superfluous. Goimany is done with fighting for a generation at least. Clemenceau knows this. Mr. Wil son must have known it. No nation not composed entirely of madmen, if it were able to fight, would venture to risk the organized wiath of the nations in the proposed league to enjoy a triumph that could last only during the time re quired for the coirneil of the league of nations to meet and take a vote. On the other hand, the treaty sets a precedent for alliances within the league the sort of thing that Mr. Wilson used to loathe and disdain. If America, Britain and France can have separate alliances, why should not Italy and Japan and, ultimately, Ger many, have agreements of their own? Is it to meet the prospect of such alliances that we are asked to ratify the Anglo French treaty? It is a rule of diplomacy that each new agreement nullifies those that preceded it Opposing alliances in the league of nations would put an end to all hopes that sprang from Mr. Wilson's promises. And thus the man who has done most to put life into the league of nations would have been the first to nudge that grand scheme on the way to a sorry end. Once on n time the Ttefrtin;: to Type Bull Mnop was n big nnd tPrrifyinB ficure. IIi "moo'" was loud anil stinnR. Hut Time, tho ivinipositor. has pied the lino. The "bull" is now lower rase, and the Moo-e hns become a mouse. The two thousand The Making alien soldiers who have of American b e n naturalized i n this eity during the ln'.t three months will doubtlrxs make good citi.on. They have learned in n practical vi linol what Americanism stands for. And if tlie, have suffered for the country of their adoption they will loc it the more. Sacri fice K the mother of patriotism. The latest report of I'reparinB for the geological survey Emergencies -linns incieased pro duction of coal, but as jet no indication that there will be enough to go around next winter. There is short age of labor. Minrts, moreover, are indis posed to put in a full week. Also there is car shortage. On tup of this Canada is buy ing all the American anthracite she can get. The careful houschuMer will therefore buy nn ax and be prepared to break up the fur nituio for fuel when the cold days come. As citizens of a great On the Hot (.. Line nation, the signing of a petition is the easiest thing we do: o no surprise need be felt oer the discowrv that Philadelphia textile and dyestutf manufacturers have signed a petition of whiih tliey thoroughlj ilisappro. They put their .lohn Hiincocks to n document calling for n licensing commission when what they A ant is a high protectee tariff. Adopt ing the motto of "Do or Ilje," they have permitted thomselios to be "done." Sergenut D. M. Del inas. w e a r c r of the Victoria Cross, is in jail in Seattle awit to the TexaR state (iood Man Oone Wrong ing Ids thud trip penitentiarj to complete a term for having received funds for a bank knowing it to be insolvent. Twice he escaped and both times joined the British army. It is right, of course, that the law should be enforced but it would -eem that there ought to be some better way of dealing with this man than putting him in jail. It 'em may be the "pen" bank for some of Local Democrats are now setting up the pins. Kvery hat in the mayoralty ring so far has a string attached to it. Hight uow we are launching 1000 footers on the installment plan, so to speak. The penalty for sleeping in a box ear In this city appears to be ten days In the, county jail. It is too severe a penalty for so poor a bod. I. Germany is discussing the necessity of a forced loan of 200,000,000,000 marks. If Germany had won the war we would be paying the money. Germany has been admitted to trade relations with the rest of the world, but It's a cinch she won't sell any beer Id this country, i - The Tulsa, lauuehed at Hog Island Jon Saturday, wa cbrUtenrd i(h' a. bottlj b CONGRESSMAN MOORE'S LETTER "Dud" Eaton Coming Back From Haiti The Free-Port Plan Not Favorable to Philadelphia. Washington Gossip Washington, July 30. rpiIII House of Representatives Is preparing to quit work this week and recess until about the second week in September. The members feel that they have gone about as far as they can to put the government In running order and to enable the investigation committer to get down to renl business. Itollcalls have become an abomination, and In somo instances nro due to the petulnnce of some members who do not linve tilings just ns they want them, Committee work is thus disturbed nnd no real good is accomplished, i except to show tip the persistent absentees, while injustice is done to tnnny faithful members who get caught in committees or on departmental work while the rollcalls are going on. It will be a good thing for every body to permit the House members to return lio'nie for a few weeks while the Senate Is deliberating over the peace treaty. They can talk to the folks In n way that the news papers do not. For instance, the eastern members, if so inclined, can tell their con stituents whnt the soldier-settlement scheme means. They enn tell them that this bill, although'sponsorcd by the Republican lender, is in substation the scheme of the secretary of the interior, Mr. Lane, who desires to colo nize certain western states and bring into use certain lands that are not attractive to settlers and which promise to be very ex pensive to the government. Tliey can tell their constituents that there is a fierce "pa triotic demand" for an appropriation of $.-0O.0n0.nno to begin with, nn appropriation which will fall upon a few big tax-paying states, to enable the secretnry of the interior to buy semi-arid, cut-over and swampy land so that it may be offered to our gallant soldier boys on practical terms, including mortgages, along with the "community settlements," and return pajments for stock along, with "amortization." The secretnry hns spent a barrel of money booming this project nnd hns received about 80,000 postcard replies from the -1,000.000 soldiers to whom the alluring bait has been held out. lp to date, so far ns some of the eastern experts who hnc looked into this soldier-settlement scheme are nble to divine, about 2 per cent of the soldiers might be induced to ipiit the cities nnd the productive fnrms where the fanners now need their aid to help out with the project of unloading undesirable land upon the government nnd the soldiers. But the proponents of the bill are extremely in sistent that this is the way to help the soldier, notwithstanding the soldier himself has thus far said very little about the matter. "DTD KATOX is coming back from Haiti, -- wheie he lived with the marines "100 miles from nowhere." And Hud's homecoming is a delight to Mr. nnd Mrs. Arthur 15. Eaton, of West Philadelphia, who have been anxiotu about Ids welfare. The marines who were assigned to Haiti went lojally, but wore never thoroughly stuck on the job. The climate nnd the food were not always desirable and rumor has it that the s.atlves, with the menacing and ever ready machete, were not too companionable. ALT -tt- Ph 'hllnifelphians have been drawn Into the free -port scheme sponsored by President Wilson's friend, William Kent, of the Tariff Commission, considerable opposition is de veloping to the bill introduced in the House by former Governor Sanders, of Louisiana. Kent is from California and has obtained indorsements for the free-port project from commercial bodies in San Francisco. Xcw Orleans is also interested and has joined hands with the Merchnnts' Association, of Xew York, which does a great deal of reso luting to Congress. At a recent meeting under the auspices of the Merchants' As sociation a Xcw Orleans man was elected head of n fiec-port association. Xow comes Savnnnuh and other southern cities nsking to be made free ports along with Xew York, Xew Orleans and San Francisco. The movement has, become so active that Chair man Kordney, of the ways and means com mittee, induced the House to transfer the Sanders bill from the interstate nnd foreign Loiiiiiicice committee to the committee on wajs and menns, which had it when Mr. Kitchin was chairman, and was afraid, under Democratic auspices, to bring it out. From the Washington viewpoint the free-port idea does not look very favorable for Philadel phia. Its friends are not friends of the protective tariff principle, nnd William Bur- gess, of Trenton, who wns recently before the ways and menns committee, expressed the opinion that Republicans do not want to have an thing to do with It anyhow. TWITlS. MAUY D. OBDYKE, of Philadel ''' pliin, who "is attached to the Chester committee on protective work for women and girls in tho field service' of the United States interdepartmental social hygiene board, is a very happy woman. Her son, Benjamin, lins been admitted to the Xaval Academy at Annapolis. And there arc sev eral others who are feeling quite proud of the boy, including Colonel Ben Obdyke, who figures at the Manufacturers' Club and who sometimes looks in at the Master Builders' Exchange. A BOND of union between the Pilots' As socintion for the bny and river Delaware aud the old United States Coast Guard pre vails to such an extent that the pilots have forwarded resolutions suggesting that the coast guard be taken from tho Treasury Department and be permanently attached to the 'Department of the Navy, under which, according to Captain John P. Virden, presi dent of the Pilots' Association, it logically belongs. The pilots think the coast guard would be happier with the navy and that a million dollars annually would be saved by the transfer. The, coast guard has been oper ating with the navy during tjie war. And Captain Virden's boys have been co-operating with both. HE T'SKD to be colonel, but owing to his splendid war service is now Brigadier General Cyrus S, Radford, depot quarter master of Philadelphia, Like Brigadier General C. L. McCa'wley, now stationed at Washington, but who visits along the Main Line, General Radford has been Interested in the. development of the Philadelphia sta tion, and It has certainly grown. If these officers had their way the marine corps would occupy a very large part, if not all, of the new army ciock ana storage piers at Phila delphia. Both the Army and Navy Depart ments have been stirred up over this situa tion. And It develops that tlie future use of the army port terminals Is being considered by a committee appointed by the secretary of war. This committee has not yet reported, but there is a strong probability that eventually some provision will be made to take core of other departments of the gov. emipent which dpslre storage space on such extensive army piers as those erected ,at Philadelphia. Lieutenant General Liggett, overcome with emotion at his welcome-home reception, now knows what Bacon meant 1)y saying, "Beading maketh a'full men." ' r There ,l jBcllcatlon that those vho .favoi; literventlopHja ipi ef ico nave o;i 'ji ' " ax A 'Mm fi . : ' ". w m Mm mm i TRAVELS IN PHILADELPHIA By Christopher Morley The Paradise Special THE big bus known to thousands of Phila delphia childten as the Paradise Special was standing ready at- 1021 Cherry street. Inside, in one of the large classrooms of the Friends' Select School, twenty small boys, each carefully tagged nnd carrying his bundle, were waiting impatiently. It was half-past eight in the morning, and the bus was about to leave for Paradise Farm with the Tuesday morning consignment of urchins for the sum mer cnnip run by the Children's Country Week Association. The doctor was looking over them and one jpoor youngster wns try ing to conceal his tears from the rest. The doctor had found a spot in his throat and he had a high temperature. He was not to be allowed to go this week : his turn would have to come lutcr. They were all a bit Impatient by this time. Most of them had been up since half-past five, counting every minute. I F YOU 'enjoy a shrill treble uproar, and find it amusing to watch a busload of small boys enjoying themselves at the top of their versatile powers, I recommend a trip on the Faradise. Special. Throughout the week the bus is biisj- taking children and mothers to the various farms and camps run by the association, but Tuesday morning Is boys' day. Xot the least amusing feature of the trip is to watch the expressions of those the bus passes on the road. It creates n broad grin wherever it goes. That shouting cara van of juvenile glee Is Indeed an entertaining sight. There were nineteen boys on board when we left Cherry street nn unusually small load for the Paradise Special. Others were going out by train. But nineteen bojs, aged from seven to thirteen, comprise a consider able amount of energy. Three or four of them had been to Paradise Farm before, and immediately took the lead in commenting on nil that befell. Mickey Coyle wns erne of these, lamenting that as he would be thirteen in September this would probably be his last visit. "But I'm lucky I ain't dead," he said philosophically. "I've a brother twenty j ears old who's dead. He died on my birth day. He had bronnical pneumonia and ty phoid and flu." AVe passed along the Parkway. "This is a Bollyvard, ain't it?" said one. Entering the Park, another cried, "Is this the coun try?" "Sure, them's the Rocky Moun tains," said Mickey In scorn. THB first question In the minds of nil the passengers was to know exactly how soon, and at what precise point they would be "in the country." The Park, though splendid enough, was not "the country." As we sped along City Line road there was Intense argument da to whether those on one side of the bus were In tho country while those of us on the other side were still in the city. Another game xthat Beemed to underlie all their thoughts was that this expedition was In some way connected with misfortune for Germany. Every time we overhauled another car or truck which hap pened not infrequently, for the Paradise Special travels at a good clip that car was set down as German. Every time a Bwift vehicle passed us we were said to be in danger of.belug torpedoed. For some period of time we were conceived to be a load of. German prisoners who had been captured by the Yanks. Then agcln one small enthusiast shouted out that we were "bullsheviks" who "had been arrested. vXCE satisfied that we were really In the ,' 0 country and they were not quite at ease on this point until the last of the sub urban movies had been left belling their at tention focused Itself on the question, of apple trees. Even ,so experienced a Country Weeker as Mickey (this was his fifth visit to the Farm) was vague on this point. To a city youngster almost every tree seems to be an apple tree. And everything that looks in the least reddish Is a strawberry. Unripe blackberries along th hedges were hailed .with tumult and shouting, s strawberrloj, Fivery cow xUh-tyrM f rtgarded.a )lttl, lfmuny,i .uv','""l''' inw- "DEAD RIPE, TOO!!'' n-'--Ts fs'wW !:'Tjhf1 WiSz hill was pointed out (from a distance) as a "statue." AFTER we passed Daylesford and Green Tree aud the blue hills along the Schuyl kill came into view, the cry, "Look at that scenery!" becninc incessant. Any view con taining hills is known as "scenery" to the Country-Wcekers. When the scenery began eleven-year-old Charley Franklin could con tain himself no longer. He began to tear off the clean shirt and new shoes in which his mother hail sent him from home, and. digging In his bundle, hauled out a blouse and tattered pair of sneakers that satisfied his idea of fitness for the great adventure. He proudly showed me his small bathing milt, carefully wrapped up In a Sunday comic supplement. His paper bag of cookies had long since been devouied, nnd the question of how soon an other meal would come his way was beginning to worry him., Then we turned off the high road, past n signpost saying Paradise Farm, nnd they were all -on their toes. The long, echoing tunnel under the high railway em b.inkmeut woh greeted with resounding cheers. More cheers for the swimming hole just boyoud. We drew up at the foot of a steep flight of wooden steps leading up the hill. All piled out with yells. At the top of the stnirs stood a. rather glum group of forty similar urchins. These responded without much acclaim to the applause of the new comers. They were the batch going home on the bus. Their week at Paradise was over TI7IIEX we left, a few minutes later, the 'arrivals were already tyclng, assigned to their bunks in the various camp bungalows, and were looking around exultantly nt the plentiful "scenery" and evidences of plen tiful food to come. But the temper of the returning load was not quite so mirthful. They ulso had been up since an early hour, but play had languished as they had put on their clean clothes dnd had carefully bundled up their other stores in small newspaper wrappings. One small cynic told me that he had learned the necessary connection be tween greenvapples and castor oil. Another, with flaming red hair, seemed to hav.c tears in his eyes. Whether these were due to green apples or to grief I cpuld not determine. But the way they all shouted good -by to Mr. and Mrs. Steel (who have charge of the camp) showed how they- appreciated their week's adventure. "Good-by swimming hole!" they shouted, and then "Good-by snakes!" ex plaining that they hud killed four small gar ter snakes In the meadow. They cheered up greatly when they saw a freight train puffing along the railway, and It was evident that we would have a fair race with that train all the way In to Overbrook. Immediately the train was set down as a German menace, and the cheerful chauffeur waslmpored to do his best for hlscountry. It should 'be said that we beat the German train to Over brook by about oae hundred yards. THE latter part of the ride was nurked by a Budden panic on the part of the passen gers concerning sundry nickels and dimes which seemed to have disappeared. Nathan Schumpler, aged eight, turned his blouse pocket InBlde out a dozen times without find ing the dime be was sure he had had. This, was a terrible blow, because he told me be had lost a quarter through a crack In the porch the day before. This started all the others exploring. Knotted and far from clean handkerchiefs were hastily untied to make sure of the precious coinage for home ward carfare. At last Nathan found his dime, In the very pocket he had been turning upside down for fifteen minutes. When they got back to Cherry street they were overjoyed to find a number of toy trains and tracks waiting on the floor. Sly last sight of 'the Country-Weekers was whea they were playing with these while their guardians checked off their lists and made sure that each had carfare to take him home aud knew how'to get there, "res," said the chauffeur, ftB jim" Kirw; (jum-meu mem uis- e,r,-ttw K.gfl.lHmcfl.ViiHt, K you LIFE WHAT'S life? A story or a song; ' A race on any track ; A gay adventure, short or long; A puzzling nut to crack ; A grinding task ; a pleasant stroll ; A climb ; a slide down hill ; A constant striving for a goal; A cake ; a bitter pill ; A pit where Fortune flouts or stings; A playground full of fun; With many any of these things; With others all in one. What's life? To love the things we see : The hills that touch the skies; The smiling sea ; the laughing lea ; The light In womnn'B eyes ; To work, and love the work we do ; To play a game that's square ; To grin a bit when feeling blue ; With friends our joys to share; To smile, though games be lost or won ; To cam our daily bread ; And when at last the day is done To tumble into bed. GRIF ALEXANDER. If the Mason suitcase was stolen by a common or garden variety of sneak thief he probably got the surprise of his life. And speaking of contractor government the Town Meeting party has a pretty big con tract on its hands. When "Dave" Lane says tho Mayor should have "gastronomtcal ability" he probably said a mouthful. And no candidate should bite off more than he can chew. What Do You Know?. QUIZ 1. Whnt Is a hookah? 2. What is a glockenspiel? 3. What and where is Old Faithful? 4. Who Is Sir Roger d Coverley? 5. What packers are known as the Big Five? 6. Who was It said, "The mystery of his tory is an Insoluble problem"'? 7. Who was Anne Hathaway? 8. Which of the states Is known as the Hawkeye State? 0. How did Pall Mall, London, get Its came? 10. When did the Germans destroy Louvatn? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz ' 1. Lagnlappe is an article added gratis' to a purchaser to encourage custom-j any complimentary present from, a dealer to a customer. 2. Huanuco Is a town in Peru, the capital of a department of the same name, in the Andes, 170 miles north-northeast of, Lima. 5. A grig Is a sand eel or a cricket. "Merry ns a grig" may have meant "Merry as a cricket." Other authorities have It that the phrase was originally 'Merry as a Greek." 4. Yale University was named for Eltbu Yale, born in Boston in 1048. He became governor of Madras and died In 1721. 6. "Peter Pindar" was the pseudonym of John Wolcot, M. D. (1738-1810), humorist and satiric poet. It was also assumed by O. F. Lawler, a later writer. 6. BlrJtobertWalpolesald, "The gratitude" of place expectants Is a lively sens of future favors." 7. The Andaman Islands He in the Bay of Bengal, 120 miles from Cape Nejrsls , in Burma, the nearest point on the I mainland. 8. A canun is a Turkish cither. 0. Rotten Row is a road in HydcPark.i .' , London, a fashionable reeort fM rldiaf'',,!5 apd drivfcg. ' 'j, " (J .! 19. AT, !- bMMWM or tirf. 'H '' Hi ?l il ' u I- ?1 1 'i ;i 2 ;uiB&jjjgjfl t tltjWwM'itwJ adgivttt'Ai2iiui.,.rr' w 7 "-A i&r&ZZr -TO. "M TS familiar vo&tri'ot Ijrjbjkf -' , th ..- . X J k'j." "-J, . ' ",r-clW " "