q.:rvr',"VfiCTTgST c, . o l r-w. 0 p - EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, AUGUST ll, 1919 10 It: w 3- s M l, Aliening public He&ger PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTHUS It. K. CUHTIS. PrinNT Charl'i If I.uellntten Vic PrtMilcnt. John C. Martin, SctcrtUry and Trfiurn Philip SI Colllni, John B. VVIltUma. John J Rpurffeon DIrertorie. 1 .OITOnlAti POAIID. r Ciart IT, K. CruTia, Chairman DAVID n. SMIt,ET . ndltor j JOIIN C MARTIN. . .Ocnfral Iluilneaa itanaa-is Published dally at Tciuo I.troru Tiulldlnr. Indcpendenet Square. Philadelphia, Atlantic Citt Prtsa-Unlon nulldlnc Niw York , . . . 208 Stftropnlitan Tower DrraoiT 7nt iorri nuiM'ne Bt. Loch . inns Fulterton liulldlnc CHICIOO 130? JrlbulM UulMInc NEWS BUREAUS: TTuntNoTos nciiAC, N K. -or, Pennaylvanla Ave. and Hth St. Nw Yomc ItcKEiu rha .Sun ItulMlmr XiONDON Hcieiu London Time eunicniPTiov TERMS Tha Etkniso PrsLto I.irwir-n I aened to aub acrlbera In Philadelphia and aurToundlnp towni at tha rale of IneHa (12) cents per week payable to tha carrier. By tnall Vo rolnti outfltde of Philadelphia, In the United States. Canada o" Tnlted .states pon aeaalona po'tasrs tre. ftftv (R0) renta per month filx (0) dollara per year, payable In pihnnre To al foreign countries on (?1 dollRr per month Norton Subscribers wl-blnr ldres rhnnnred routt clva old aa well n- new address. BELL, 1B0O WALNUT KE1STONF, MAtV S000 CT Addris all commutitcaflom to Fienina Pubtia Ledger, Independence Square Philadelphia. Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED VIJKSS h crrlu tively entitled In c uif for rrpuhlicntion of all newt dispatcher credited to it or not ethericiie credited in f'in paper and nlio the local ttrirt pubUihei therein. All right of lepuhlication of ipecial rfi patches herein ire also resencd. rhlladrlphln. Monday, Vutiiat II. IBID ANDREW CARNEGIE "ARNEGIK was one soit of man when '-' he was makinp his money, engineer ing; mergers and maintaining at Homo 'stead a theory of industrial npciatinn which, from the viewpoint of labor, was pitiless and destructive and, in the end, unscientific. He was another sort of individual later along, when, after his retirement, he had time to move off from his completed work and view it whole. His life, like that of a great many other captains of industry in America, proves ) that men of his type learn ns thev go along and that they often learn late Carnegie was ruthless at the outset because he was uninformed. He had nothing of what we have come t speak of as the social consciousness. This may have been because he himself was hnid driven and without the time or the ability necessary to a complete undei Etandmg of the responsibilities that fall naturally to leaders of men in a woild of new aspirations. Some of the bit terest strikes eer organized in this state occurred at Homestead during the Car negie legimc. Industiial combinations later declared inimical to American in terests were inspired by the Carnegie example. Yet it was Carnegie who later sincciely tried to do something piactical 'vX in the interest of world peace, and Carnegie who, in the legal wai.s waged among his successors, refused to help ihem in efforts to sustain rules of con duct which he himself had taught. When a man acquiies great powci and almost limitless money before he ac quires n dtspinlil-nel tnlnrl n r-rnfit mynv fT things are likely to go awry in hi- life. Carnegie was not populai. That, piob ably, was because he became an old man before he was able to realize the import or the consequences of many of his acts. The Rockefeller of today is not the Rockefeller of yesterday. There aie a great many other seemingly mthless men in America who, as they go along, will become wiser and sadder men. UP THE WRONG TREE TF THE radical element in the unions --and the Bolshevists de luxe of journal ism wanted proof of the general Ameri can distaste for class laws of any soit they have had plenty of it in the last week. Congress was not stampeded by the menacing attitudes of Mr. Stone and Mr. Morrison. The President was not stampeded. The men in the laihvay shop unions who broke lanks, defied then leaders and quit work in true soviet fashion And themselves now humiliated and without the suppoit of any element of opinion in the United States. There is an obvious anxiety on, the part of the brotherhood leaders to prove that their state of mind is far more temperate than that which Mr. Stone's ultimatum sug gested. Whoever has been advising the l ail way men has been a poor judge of the American temper. With their earlier aggressive tactics thp brotherhoods won, hands down. In this instance they have lost and the apologetic tone of the later statements from the railway men's lead ers show that they know it. They lost not only in Congress and at the White House, but with the public at large, which is not eager for muddling experi ments with a sort of political radicalism that has left most of Europe prostrate, hungry and economically helpless. UNASHAMED PROFITEERS QN THE same day that the Picsident was telling Congress that the price of wheat could be kept down by restrict ing exportation a delegation of repre sentatives from farmers' organizations appeared before the Senate committee on agriculture demanding that the guar antee price of ?2.26 a bushel for wheat be removed. The farmers are asking thai the guar anteed price be abandoned, not in older to benefit the public, but to benefit them selves. They are saying that if left to itself wheat would sell for $1 or ?5 a bushel, and they want that price. Under present conditions they stand to lose a billion dollars this year, they say. They yrant to get the billion. And the senators and representatives from the wheat growing states are pledging their sup port to the demand for ?5 wheat. Thjs is a profiteering plea which, if made by the packers or by the canners, vould be met by fierce denunciation and f. threats of prosecution. But the farmers can mnke it with impunity. The Lever jl food-control law exempts them from the hoarding prohibitions. The Kcnyon J packers' license bill exempts them from iv ,J1 restrictions placed upon the handlers 19 ' rf meat. 'The cnti-trust laws exempt tJ . tbMrt' . thej prohibitions against com 1 C, "lefniittaift li'tw'nt of trade. The farm- tf eya W f, Kivileged class, and they will destroy any politician who seeks to re strict their privileges. Hut In these days, when every one is complaining of the cost of food, wp are likely to discover what the country thinks of any group of pioducers which domnnds $5 wheat. A BUBBLING POLITICAL POT IS HEALTHY FOR THE CITY Split In Organization Over Mayoralty Presages Benefits From Vigorous Rlval-ies and "Opposition" Challenges TiHE cocksurcncss of self-appointed po- litical forecasters concerning the out come of the mayoralty contest has a deli ciously hollow sound. It falls like an unintentional hencdiction upon the ears of such Philadelphlans as pause to con sider what the 1 asic principle of Ameri can lepiescntative government really is. In the chcmenco of the mal claims nnd the obvious unceitamties on which they are pietentiously based there is the prospect of the end of unchecked abso Ititirim and a rigid and waiv policing of the new civic administration which the voters will choose in November. The de feated opposition, of vvhichcvci faction it ma be composed, will see to the safe guarding. It is equally clear that Philadelphia eitiens are in for better times, as they assuredlj ate for lively ones. The iivaliv which has snlit the once well- oiled political ma"hinc is, if it be sin cerely maintained, a majoi antidote against oligarchy. The city has applied it much le.s frequently than most of her siiter towns nnd yet oftener than the pessimist is inclined to admit Gang Hile is not continuous, even in Philadelphia. Thete is an illuminating penodicity in the levolutions. When the shake up comes it is less rarely a pioduet of idealistic reforming zeal than of a season of selfish political mastery too anogantly complete, too ambitiously "harmonious" to be enduring. Cloudless dajs are sometimes chaiaetei ized in this region as "weathei bleeders." Even so in the political sense is so sweeping a municipal victoiy as was the foieoi darned and carefully preai tanged election of Thomas H. Smith nearly four years ago. The storm .signals have been raised almost ever since. It is no longer sufficient to desci ibe the local parties as oveivvhclmingly Repub lican and insignificantly Democratic Philadelphlans aic not talking on mu nicipal subjects in those tcims today when Congressman Moore, nationally a "legular of regulais," challenges the Varc regime to the keenest of campaign combats. The lines are drawn. A spn lted contest is begun and the closely bal anced bi-paity system which has insured to the nation a succession of excellent Piesidents may pel haps biing to Phila delphia a good Mayor. Without lestiaints, without the Tear of possible loss of political powci, corrup tion breeds wtth the most dangerous celenty. The constitution framers vveie keenly alive to such penis and they devised the plan of national government with a wise regard for the vntue of the balance pnnciple. If the molality of mankind is not flattered by such pro ceduie, at least its matenal well-being is enhanced, and when nominees to office win in a close contest oi in the face of a vigoious minority opposition the mle of cabals such as, those undei which Phila delphia has been oppie.ssed is exceedingly distant. The histoiy of this city's "combines," lings, gangs and machines is notouously unsavory, but it is also clearly indica tive of the fact that the life of even the most poweiful of them is beset with pitfalls into which with sti iking regu larity it is in the end certain to fall. The supiemacy of "Dave" Martin and his "Hog Combine" in ISOj was followed by an exciting upheaval in the local or ganization, which expanded until it neaily resulted in the defeat of Quay for the Senate and pitted the Philadelphia boss and his henchmen against the Penn sylvania leader in a way that brought at least some of the benefits of a healthy revolution. The public invariably amounts to something when contesting factions, however conscienceless either of them may be, are at war. The Durham oiganization, as cynically as it was skillfully wi ought, followed the Mai tin legime, which had dominated the Warwick administration. The new ol der cairied contractor rule under Ash bridgc to a fine art, foitified itself with alliance with the using McNichoI and then, in the lemaikable melodrama en acted when Mayor Weaver thiew over the tiaces at the time of the gas-lease renewal crisis, underwent a temporary convulsion and on recovery paid marked lecognition to the ambitions of the Vaics in their expansion northward. Theie was no mistaking the political au thority of the South Philadelphia bosses when John E. Reybuin was elected Mayor in 1907. Four years afterward, however, heart ening proof was given that the progiess of the cycles in Philadelphia politics is something to be reckoned with even by victorious bossism. Duiham was dead and reatly able leadership capable of pre serving harmony in machinery large enough to run Philadelphia for the benefit of conti actors was at a discount. The Vares and McNichoI fell out.as defi nitely and as acrimoniously as the Vare and the Penrose factions have split at the present time. The public's police power in the face of a disrupted "organization" embraced the opportunity to be assertive. Corrupt gang rule was emphatically lebuked in the election of Rudolph Blankenburg. The subsequent piecing together of the machine's broken parts was more os tensible than leal, even though the case with which Thomas B. Smith was made Mayor seemed to Indicate security for re sumption of business at the old stand. It is unnecessary to recount the imme diate fruits of his administration. What is of prima intorest to the electorate now arc the coming consequences arising frnm'tbp collanse bl all-emhr.etno ViirrM,, J oiidnUed boaalro and the development J, of local factions as vivid In their mutual opposition as are the national parties, which, apart from all questions of ab stract morals, must from sheer necessity safeguard in general the national inter ests. It would be stimulating to conccivo n Philadelphia, decently governed, cfii cicntly administered because of the tiiumph of virtue. It would be agreeable also to imagine a world so spontaneously well behaved that no policemen were needed. But the unsentimental truth is that good government under the repre sentative sjstcm is oftenef.t the direct result of a delicate adjustment of the party equation nnd the valid pressure which the voter can exert in such cir cumstances. The veiy worst thing that could hap pen to Philadelphia today would be a reconciliation of the factions contesting in the mayoralty campaign. If the two party system, rightly divorced fiom pioblcms of national concern, cndittes here the city is on the load to a healthy political life, no matter what unholy nnd greedy, ambitions move the Ieodeis, They will be rival chieftains nnd they must realize with a new intensitv what the price of safety is. It is paiticularly fitting that the ani mated political shuffle should be evi denced at a time when the government of Philadelphia under the new charter lenders so important the constant pres ence of an aleit and watchful opposition to all acts done under that law. With the Mayor and the smaller Council elevated in power the anti-administration patty has the joint opportunity of looking out both for its own and the public's intci ests. Philosophers nnd statesmen ate an nouncing a change of the old order, the beginning of a new era in world politics. It is easier to comprehend the extent of the revolution when Philadelphia feels the effects. The chartot may be inter preted as one icaction. The political con vulsion nnd the prospect of genuine bi party local tilts should assist in making the intent of the new law opciativc. The livelier the struggle for the mnjor alty is the better city executive will the winner be. A WORLD MELODIST pUGGIERO LEONCAVALLO'S mon " ument was wi ought in enduring foim long bcfoie he died. Grand opera is a pretentious art, and judging fiom its costliness in this countiy it is still an exotic Occasionally, however, it falls to the composer's lot to fashion a melody, seldom more than one or two, which cap tuies the globe. Veidi did this with the Duke's air in "Rigolctto," Gounod with the "Soldiers' Chorus" in "Faust" and Leoncavallo with at least two numbers in the highly colored operatic melodrama "I Pagliacci." The Italian musician's name was rel atively unknown, the name of his vivid scoie was chronically mispionounccd, but every one of his countrymen is ac quainted with the stirring theme of the Piologue" nnd the ringing measures of ,the "Lament," while to Ameiicans they aie almost as well known as "My Old Kentucky Home" or the "Suwance River." Caruso made the betrayed clown, central figuie of the little opera, a stnndaid stage figure and the phono graphs did the rest with his music. As an artist Leoncavallo was perhaps infeiior to many of hi.s contemporaiies. He never "rcgisteicd" emphatically with any other work save his Calabnan music play. His "Zingari," pioduced in the Campanini regime, was a w retched fail ure. But in "Pagliucci" he sang with inspiration and virility, and the whole world took up the tune. It was a per formance which no tubutc to his mem oi y, however s'-'tidiose, can surpass. Our fmehntlinRs linve And Butter bun jti-tiliotl. A de- Alreail) HIk'' in use in the New .1 i t s e j buckwheat i roji is nw miitilietl bv the news that the I.ouisiiinn sugar-rane nip will full more than 100,000 tous below the average for the lust ton jents Fate bus Mucked the tnrds against the man who habitually orders a stntk of wheats. 'Tis conceded that a Tr This on mm tin is a bird. Your Piano 'Tis conceded that the longest lane must turn. Hut I stake m, solemn clavj, in a word, that the politician still has lots to learn. There are maxims that are curiotislj tiite. There are aphorisms to the vision plain. Hut public views, we're told, are iinh light when the martin is a-singhis; in the lane New ahead otk ni tors see strike-breakers The North Pinn investigation is be ginning to show its teeth. When Cm le U.ive "ltuh-d" did have any particular bine k sheep in mind? he Mosniiit0-s bred on the nliiny pool of politics are iiniticulailj ncthe on its bunks. No "Hili -ban" can pull the wool over the ei'h of it n nleit politician. An anarchist is n guy who put a bomb in abominnble. Any line the law has on bomb-throwers should luive n noose at the end of It. "He who stealetli from the poor lendeth to the devil" and, to give the devil his due, he repnjB with inteient. It is the general opinion of gentlemen of the profession now lit leisure in New York that strike-breakers are bad actors. Louisiana sngnr-enne crop shy; Ar gentina piohibiU exportation of Hugur tough times nhend for the niuu with a sweet tooth. The (ierman war brides brought home by Ameilcan doughboys prove thut Cupid has studied neither geography nor woild politics. The President's effort to solve the food problem Is another illustration of th0 fac! that the mini who simply does "the best lie enu" virtually admits failure. Spite of a few little incidents (ike being choked with food and run over by a railroad train the pence treaty with Mime rervutloBs is ntlll hcllns lit. McCAIN'S GOSSIP How a Place Was Made for Daniel J. Lafean William J. Darry't Change From Engineering to Hoter Management Hy (iKOItOK NOX McCAIN Tlin name of ex Hanking Commissioner Dnniel .f. I.nfeun In connection with the Ninth Penti Hunk smash conjures up a piece of unwritten politico-liunnclnl histoiy. Mr. Lnfcnn himself innv perhaps be ignorant of it, jet he was one ot the importnut fig ures In the episode When Governor Hiiimbnngli was trying to build up n personal machine in the stnte, nnd was easting about in search of positions for thoso whom he fancied might aid him, he chose for one ex-Congrcsmnn I.nfenn, of York. Jle selected ns his victim the lute Hanking Cnmmissimier William II. Hnilth, of Philadelphia. Smith was one of the nblest men that ever held thut responsible position. Me knew the routine, lie hud grown up in the ofliee ; hud been n bunk examiner for jenrs. Moreover, he enjnjed the confidence of the banking interests of the state. He vvns not a politician like John A. Herkey, his predecessor, or Daniel V. Ln fcnn, who was chosen ns his successor. They were political appointments. Several months before the end of 1010 Smith received a hint that he was due to lesign. The commissioner communicated with his friends, among them the lending bankets of Philadelphia. Thev ndviseil him to hold on nnd iu no event to resign mnlei incline. In the interim between the nnlifiiation thut his exit was disned and the duv in Intituirv when he did n'sign nuclei piessuie, eeiy banking house iu Philadelphia oper ating tinder slute laws, with one exception, wrote letters of piotest to Governor Hrtim biuigh ngninst Smith's removnl Thev in sisted that Commissioner Smith be letnlned; that his removnl not only would be n mis take but would be disastrous OHieeis of banks nnd tmst companies in Pittsbuigh nnd vicinity wrote in similni vuii. Gov ernor Brumbaugh must have received at lenst U00 letters of pint est nguinst the re movnl of Commissioner Smith Hut he petsisted In drmuuding Mr. Smith's resignation, nnd in his stead appointed Dniiiil .1. Lafean, of Ycuk cciuiitv 1 give Mi Lnfcnn the benefit of the ilnnht thut he was not nvvure of this episode which so einplinsircd the cflicicnr.v of William II, hmitb. Fi:W of the thousands who know William .1 Itntrv, of the Longncre. through his long c nicer ns hotel uiuniigei in this city, me aware Hint by profession he is n civil engiiieci He hnsn't woiked lit the job, though, for rears. He wns one of n paitv of veiling engineeis who helped to survev the vvisinn section of the ill-futed South Pennsv Ivniiia Ilnihoad. Tts nvignilii cut ruins in the wiiv of tunnels, tills mid cuts still mini n the landscape in Somerset and W"stniot eland counties. Whether the outdoor life was distnsteful or the indoor life p.ittii uliii Iv nttiaitive, Hilh Harry dropped engmeei ing and took up hotel management Hi" dircc toiatc of the liclguviu loveted a long period of yeuis. .1. Fr.i.ier Miller, who before bis resigna tion a few months ago was the etheient bend of the Hellevue-Stratford, is another hotel director who holds n wnini place in the benits of pi eminent Philiidelpliinns. He was not origmallv n hotel mini. lie wus n Ken tuckv l.nl who went to New Yoll: as pnvate serietaty to the owner of one nf the gieut bi,? lacing stables of the f. minus blue glass region llai nig nnd the biieding of iuclms was then iu its hevclnj. George ('. Hnlill, ol the Wiildoif Astoi in, when- Finei Millci stopped, took a fancy to the blight joung southern i hup, made hini his secretin! and subsequent! , step by step, ndviiiuid hnn to a nmnugi't nil po sition. Subsequently he placed hiiu in abso lute coiltiol of the big hotel on Itiiind stiect. lie will t tin u in Septembei, 1 hear, with his hi ide fieun a six mouths' sojourn iu southern California, unci n cheery welcome will await him. MAJOR DAVID LLWIS. inspeetoi gen eiul's elepui liuent, A. II. V. who is back fieun Fiance unil once moil- in mufti, is looking fitter than he has done feu jenrs. lie confesses that he feels as tine as he looks. Minor Lewis was one of the eompaiativclv few oflieeis appointed from civil life to this di pm tment "f the aimj. It wns to be, ex pected. Aftei years of training on regi inentnl and brigade stnfTs uudei General Snow den in the old national giinul he did not, us most otlicers do when they resign from the guaid, shelve his aequiieel knowl edge and forget all about it. In the nitei veiling years he kept abreast of the tnitieal changes in the iiiilituij arm of the 1 nited States service. I've heart! him for half an hour at a clip difeussiiig points of dull unil discipline with regular iiiniy oflieeis And he belli bis own every time When the nppm (unity came that his seiviees were of value to his gov eminent, Dave Lewis pioinplly selected bis job and went uf(cr i( He landed it, too, with rank of inn im Hnsrcl on his technical knowledge it should have been n colonel's eoiiiinissl.ai. While inspi'ctoi of the Sixth Division, regulai armv. Lewis had ample oppoitunity to study civil as well ns military life in Fin nee. "I never saw n diunken Frenchman," ho dee lured, speaking of the piobibition issue. "The Finn hut in looks nt the mutter of di inking in u diffeient light from the Amer ican. He lias been brought up on wine. H is a pait of his dully life. Only a few drink brandy. "The town iliunkntd in Tinnce is a curiosity. He attracts attention as much us the town irlri, who with bis drum draws a crowd in the niiiiket pluce. While every body di Inks wine they abhor diunkcnuess. For that reusoti piobibition will never win in Frnncc " CAPTAIN HILL is dead, lie was Lieu tenunt Ciiiiinuinder Hill, U. S. N., of the Finlnnd Deuth came us bis ship was leaving Hrest, Frunie. 'The ifovv will bring icgret to hundreds of Philadelphia!! who sailed with him in past years. He was formerly captain of the old Anieil can liner Merlon, sailing bctvvwn Philadel phia nnd Livnpuol. Subsequently lit wus put in commuiiil of the Finland plying on the Fauuma-I'nillic mute. Eight yeais or so ngo his vessel, which vvbb one of the International Meirnntlle Mariuc, fleet, wus placed in the New Voik transatlantic servlco ngaiu. Captain Hill's family lias resided in Phil adelphia for nearly twenty years. Ho hud spent nil his life 'at sea. Horn iu Fuglund, his apprentice ship was served in a coasting schooner. Then he got his papers as third mate of u Milling ship plying from Fngllsh ports to the Mciliterniuruu. Thence he grew into the transatlantic trude. Ho wus ii lure ehnracter. A courteous gcutlciiuiu, uioilent, elhclertt and with those he liked one of the moat compatiionublo of men. The railroad brotherhoods are anxious to, have It understood tliBtrtvh,'M ' "eeraeil tjJjtlm-atpp Fptleain l Wrely snpke fn "COME ON, JUDGE, YOU'RE DELAYIN' ,--" .-":. . '2SSt -f -si-" "-c.-.-r- TRAVELS IN PHILADELPHIA By Christopher Morlcy Putting the City to Bed IT WAS a delicious cool evening when I strolled nhrond to observe the town com posing itself for slumbei. The caustic Mis. Trollope, who visited Philadelphia in 18H0, icinipluiiied bitterly that there wns no i arousal or eheer of any Mini pioe'ceeling in the highways nfter sunset: "The stieets aie entirelv duik, scarcely a step is heard, and for a note of music, or the sound of niiith. I listened in vnin " Hut the huly would find us much more volatile now The Weather Man tries to set us u good example by pulling down the front of his little booth nt Ninth and Chestnut soon after 10 o'clock, but there are few who take the bint. It vvns u night almost e hilly 07 ele grees a black velvety sky to the noithwnrd, diluted .to a deep ptnple mid blue wbeie the moon was shilling m the south. At 10. -Jo letter wilting wns in full scruteh along the counteis ot the main postoffice. Lveiy desk was busy, the little stamp windows were livelv eaves of light Hotel signs the old signs that used to s.n HOO.MS $1 FP, and now just say ROOMS weic beaeouiug nlong the street. Ciowds were piling out of movies. The coloied man who letters cards with delicate twirls of penmanship wns set ting up his little table on Market street. In spite of the cool ah every soda fountain was lined with the customary gobs. The first morning pupeis vveie beginning to be screumed about the streets, with thut lionise urgency of yelling that always makes the simple-minded think that something fearful bus happened. A' CROWD gntheied hastily in front of a big ofliee building on Chestnut street. Policemen sprang fioin nowhere. A Jeffer son ambulance clanged up. Great agitutiou, and piolonged linging ot the bell nt the huge iron-crilh'd front dooi. What's up? Fi nally appeared a man with blood spattered over his shiit nnd was escorted to the am bulance. The engiueei had walked too near uu electric fnn ami got his head cut. Lucky lie didn't lose It altogether, snitl one watcher. Fleven o'clock. In a eignr stole served by u smiling damsel, two attt active ladies were asking her if it would be safe for them to visit n Chinese restaurant a little faither up the stieet. "We're from out of town," they explained, "nnd nil alone. We want some chop suey. Is that the kind of place ladies ran K to?" The eignr saleslady appealed io mc, nnd I nssnred the visitors they would be perfectly serene. Peihaps if I had been moie gallant 1 should have escorted them thither. Off they went, a little timorous, E1 the typical night-hawk motors begin to ap pear; huge ruiintiouts, wltn very long Bon nets nud un uir of great power. Ouc of them, a vivid scarlet with white wheels, spins briskly loiind the City Hall. Trills and tlnklings of jazz, e latter from second-story lestauraiits. Bui Chestnut street is begin ning to cnlm down. Lights In shop windows arc going off. The old veteran takes bis seat on a camp-stool near Juniper aHtreet and be gips to tingle his little bell merrily. If you drop joniethluE in his box he will tell you the sign of the zodiac under which you were born, prognosticate your lucky days and pluuetury hours and advise you when to take; a journey. He explained to me that this happened to be the night of Venus. I bad been sure of It ulreudy after some scrutiny of the pavements. As the lights, are dimmed along the street, the large goldfish In a Chestnut street cafe window grow more placid and begin to think of u little watery repose. HAIF-PAST HLKVI3N. Tnc nlrj spnceu round the City Hull arc full pf a mellow tissue of light nnd shadow. The tajl lump standards are like trees of great pale oranges. The white wagons of the blrchbcer fleet are on their lounds. The seat where the band concerts are held are demted saye for one meditative vagrant, drooping with unkaowH vlth unlmowa woes, r-swiiiij- nirviuL- cars in t lfVU' WI vt --U "ts .,s.l 'fcl.., n,lEA M...1 1.,1 In.. pause ot Noith Hroad street where their little red stern-lights twinkle beneath the row of silver arcs stretching away into the dls tnnce. Broad Stieet Station is couipuia tively utiiet. though there is the usual person gazing up nt the window lettered SCRIP CLFRGV STOPOVF.US COMMUTATION. He wonders what it menus. I do not know, any more than he. Standing at the eomei of the station the lights of the sky are splen did nnd seiene. Over the Fiuauee Building n light wispy plume of steam hovers and detuc-lii's itself, gleaming in the moonshine like n flouting swan's feather. The light catches the curves of the tiolley rails like tiibbous of silver. lyTIDNIGHT. The population seems to -'- have soi ted itself into couples. Almost all the ladies in sight wear silk sports skirts, and walk with their escorts in n curiously slow swishing swing. Sonic of them muy hnve been dancing all evening, and still pace with some of the rhythm of the waxed floor. In darkened hanks aie little gleams of orange light behind trellises ef bars, where watchmen sit and giind away the long houi". Down the dark narrow channel of Sansom street it. is very silent. The reur of a ten cent store shows u gush of brightness, where some overhauling of stock is going on. The bnck door is open, nnd looking in I can see a riotous mouse darting nbout under the counters, warily watching the men who are rearranging some display. The Jefferson Ilospitul is silent, with occasional oblongs of light iu windows. 1 seem to e'.etect u whiff of disinfectants, and wonder how the engineer is getting on. Mniltet street is still lively. A "dance oi chord" emits its patrons down n long stair to the street. Down they come, gaily laughing. The male partners aie nil either gobs, who love dancing even more than ice cream soda; or youths with tilted straw hnti of coarse weave, with legs that bend backward most oddly below the knee, very tightly nud briefly trousered. Two doughboys with nee of spades shoulder insignia greet the emerging throife, showing little booklets for sule. They uigc the gills to buy. with various arts of eitjolcry nnd brlght-eeyed persuasion. "Who'll buy a book?" they sny, "forty short stories, put out by a wounded solelier," The girls all wear very extensive hats, and are notably pretty. "Which way do we go?" is the lust question on reaching the street. It is usually the way to the nearest soda fouu tniu. TWHLVH FORTY. The watering tank loars down Chestnut street, shedding a hissing tide from curb to curb. The fleet of To Hiic night tnxls wheel off one by one as fares leap in to escape from the deluge, which enn bo heard approaching far up the silent street. It is getting quiet, save iu the all-night lunch rooms, where the fresh linking of doughnuts and cinnamon buns is being set out, and the workers of the night shift are streaming In for their vnrled and substantial meals. They eat lelsuiely, with loud talk, or reading the morning papers. 0 NK FIFTHEN. The population consists mostly of small groups od corners wait- ing patiently for cars, which nre rure after one o'clock. Chauffeurs sit in twos, gos sipping over the fares of the evening, Along the curb of the Federal Building on Ninth street linger a few resolute loungers, en joying the cnlm of tho night. A fruit stall man is wondering whether to trundle home, The pile of fresh doughnuts in the lunch room Is rapidly diminishing. Street cleaning trucks nre on their nightly rounds. It's time to go to bed, German murks hnve dropped to thirty, three centimes in Switzerland. The normal pence price was VS centimes. This kind of Swiss movement baa all the discomfort of jujutnu for the Hun. I ,A uqu,, ji is tsfeofabfa- cti. THE GAME!" BREAKING THE NEWS TIIH fir ove irst few months when John WM oversea It seemed a dream that he had gone from me. I hailed the postman every time in sight For just u little news thut all was right. The next few months while John was "over there," Somehow, I don't know why, I didn't car So much, because I missed his company, Nor did I grieve lest he'd forgotten me. The last fen months, while John was still in France. I flirted with the boys, yes, every chance That came my wny (and they were not few I) Of gallant beaux I had a retinue. But this my shnme when John came back to stay, Said, "Marv, when shall be our wedding day?" I blushed to answer him who fought for me. "Oh, thank you, John, but I have promised tlucc!" Florence T. Osnnin, in N. Y. Herald. A few Camden people enjoyed old fashioned breakfast food yesterday. Gov ernment hnui wus sold by the municipality for thirty-one cents a pound on Saturday and the stock was bought iu an hour and ten minutes. With ham so cheap ever sa many people indulged in the extravaganc.il of eggs. "Pooh!" says Martin. "Rnh!" KKTfl i.ane. xuis jiciun-unu political comic opera. business suggests What Do You Know? QUIZ ? 1. Who vvns J. Fein are! Addicks? 2. Who declared that the second marriage of a widower illustrated the triumph of hope over experience? 3. Who established the Mason and Dixon line? 4. On which syllable does the accent fall iu the word gondola? fi. What are nlevvlvcs? (t. 'Which is the Diamond State? T. What is the originnl meaning of ali mony? 8, What is bravura? I). Who wrote "The Last of the Barons"? 10. When did Kail Marx, the German So cialist philosopher, live? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. A sternutation Is a sneeze. J. Hngiology Is liternture treating of lives and legends of saints. :t. Baltimore Is known ns the Monumental City. I, Pnracelsus was the name adopted by Theopbrnstus Bombnstus von Holieu- belm (140:i-154l), Swiss theoso- phist, physician and alchemist. 5. Henry Ward Beecher sulci "A ways needs a truth for i to it." 0. Voltnlre wus known as "The He al- ImmllS Apostle of Infidelity." 7. A gigue Is a lively dunce which gave its name to one movement of the suite, nnd vvns so called from being plnyed on the glgtic or violin. Forms - of tho gigue or giga or jig arc found among nearly every people. 8. Albert, king of Belgium, vvns born April 8, 187.1. 0. The urea of Portugul is 30,038 sejilare miles. ) 10, The shepherd's sundial is a name given to the scarlet phuperne,!, which opens a little after seven every uwrft- ,Ug . c -VfJ: i nnti ptoses Ri ;.'".' oner (" icrt rail), l at . !le,,vr,Ue?rt uuiavoraruc H'Uiiwttoi.ujueui fUk'- st i - 11 -1 T, I I- fJ. T- ,a.y&JBMt. .-;umM I, ov., rs