m -O a i IMl "-A-.V H-"1 i J.'? Vi I (.ft r I W t& Vr W -I if J- 1 ":, 80 fumnms "public Ue&gec y PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTnifH IT. V- ntTTJTTd n. .. , su&f.T'a" ", kudlnnon. Vlco President. John C. i ',, Tr11Ua,,OT,??rlr "? ?reaureri Thlllp S Collins. ,H3t -John U. VWWIams John J Pmirgron. Directors. XDITOllIAI, fiOAUD. Cms ir. K. Ctnms, Chairman ' DAVID E. SMILEY Editor JOHK C, MAHT1N.. .general Kmlnesi Manacis I'ubllilii-d dully at Trnuo T.mori IVulldlnc, Independence .''nuure. l'luiui?1thm. JJ""" Vo 200 MetroiollUr Toner BrrxoiT T01 1-ont nultiVne 8t. Loris ions Fiillorton liulldlnc Cuicaoo 130? Tritium UulMIng news nunn.us: asiiivotom BcurAU. , K . Pennsylvania Ae. ami 1 1tli St. Naw YoK I.tniUD The Sim Ihillillnc X.D0.1 11CJU0 London 7'imta hrnscniPTioN thrms The- 'trr.Mvo I'i rur Li:nnni i served to sub scribers In Philadelphia and stirroundini: town f th mte of twelve (12) cents per week, payable to the carrier. By I. all o point outside of Philadelphia. In the United Stnt-s. Canadn. . Cnttcd Statei pn. SP!.' P0.'1'"?8 trrr- nrtv ,r,0 ccnti p-r tnenth. '(") dollars per year, payable In advance To a!! forrlsn coi ntrlea one (!' dollar per month. NoTirB"Subrrlliprt wNhlnc addr chAnrteA IDUIt Blve old as veil i n w nllriB-.. BELL, J000 tPALMT KEYSTONE, MAIN 5000 Cr Aildrtat all communications In Fvrnnia Public t Ledger, Independence Square rhl'ad trhia. Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED rHESS h cxrli,. t'tvely entitled tn the use for irpuhlinition of all news dispatches credited to it or iiof otherwise credited in this ,iaper, and also the focal iicici pnblishri therein. Ail right." of tepubitralion of special dis patches herein ire alia reserved. riiilatMphiM. IridM, 'Tiitrml.rr ", l'H ' BY FORCE OF EXAMPLE pHARGES are made that men have been registered in the Vare ward-, from lodging houses where they do not live nnd that names have been put on the assessors' lists not represented by any Jiving person. But why should this be surprising? If Senator Varo can register from a house that has not been occupied for two years or more, why may not a lesser man register from a house in which he does not live ? The force of example has inspired phi losophers and pieachers to many a homily intended for our good. Why should it not inspire politicians to deeds intended for our undoing? MR. WILSON IN COLUMBUS '"WTHEN this treaty is accepted, and I '' say 'when it is accepted' because it Will be accepted," is what the President said to his audience in Columbus yester day, and thus verified the conclusions of observers far from Washington. Mr. Wilson, however, seemed to be nnxious fb remove any misunderstanding about the nature of the treaty, and it is evident that he intends to devote consid erable time to this effort while' on his tour. It is true, as he said, that many of the criticisms of it have been made by people who apparently had not read. it. If they had read the document they could not be so mistaken about its provisions. But the President's confidence in its ratification is reassuring. He knows as much about the situation as any one and the rest of us can bo content in the same confidence which he shows. rt - - -nJ WISE COUNSELORS AT WORK JT IS reassuringly evident that leader ship in the Republican patty is not held exclusively by senatorial ofiieeholdeis. Otherwise the threatened trailing of the President's tour by the treaty obstiuc tionists would now be confotming to schedule. , It isn't. The bitter-enders on , behalf of treaty smashing will confine , their nagging to congressional oiatory. Hiram Johnson hardly counts. It is hintpd that he is courting the nomination fpr tRe presidency. Consideied with his record, no fac,t could more succe..sfully minimize the significance of his lone awing nround the circle. What is of real impoi tance both for the nation and the Republican party is the attitude of suclr men as Taft, Root, Hughes and Hays. For months it has been apparent Jhat they have had scant sympathy with the antics of the marplots in the Senate. Mr. Taft, for example, holds something more influential at this time ,than an office in the party. lc com mands the lespect and confidence of the bulk of its members. The' dropping of the "pursuit" is clear and wholesome evidence of the force of Jhis sentiment. The situation is an augury that the Republican party will become stronger than ever for causes that are just and that the eason of wild floundering in opposition to its best coun selors and the pervading spirit of the nation is Hearing a close. A CARNIVAL OF CONTRADICTION TN THE French Chamber of Deputies, M. FrankliivBouillon has announced that he will vote against the tieaty be cause the functioning of the league-of-nations pact is too greatly dependent on decision by the Congress of the United States. ' The treaty smashers in Wash ington bitterly complain that America under the covenant is virtually at the mercy of the European powers and that the position of Congress is ignoled. Both of these interpretations cannot be true. Furtheimore, a covenant so equiv ocally worded as to permit in honesty of such variant readings would be little short of idiotic. Its rea) meaning is quite as clear as any broad-working formula for 60 great a project as a fellowship of nations can well be. The obligations and duties under the pact are interlocking, re ciprocal. It erects no monopoly of power lfpc any particular country. Those persona who contend that it docs V e lined up on the same side, no matter ',. how divergent their interpretations are. ' Borah, Brandegee, Knox and Johnson arc actually lined up with Deputy Franklin- poUillon. They are nil simply "agin" the government. "v The fact that this attitude In America iI In France compels its champions Jfaitly to contradict each other in their jwtiona of what the treaty means is plain jMroot of tha desperate folly of such if IwtfenUtions,- v- tup ni r mwM ir WAMicuiMr: JL. w- iw.t, .w ...,,.w. IM1U ''" '' -r'".T Til it1 ,ll..nn.nHtn.. ..r it., fi., i.i ' mansions, once so characteristic of the iron, Philadelphia is payingho familiar irfjj."' f Progress. The recent an. nduncement that tho picturesque col onnaded Roberts houso in Rittcnhouso square will soon make way for n huge apartment hotel is followed by the news that the spacious old Norris residence at Sixteenth and Locust streets is to meet the same fate. Tho charming Wilstach mansion at Eighteenth nnd Walnut streets vanished I some years ngo. The Lippincott houso and garden at Broad and Walnut sue ' cumbed to modern enterprise at an car ' Her date. While it is idle to resent these adieus, I which are so plainly an index of mctro I politan development, they are hard upon i the sentimentalist and the sincere ad mirer of graciojis architectural survivals. The physical aspects of Philadelphia have been slow to change, but in tho cen tral part of tho city at least the trans formation has now become swift. Gcr- muntown is still a fascinating museum of eighteenth and early nineteenth century "places." The Friends' meeting houses still strike significant "atmospheric" notes even within the original metropoli tan boundaries. The State House, Car penters' Hall and Christ Church arc rightly inviolate. But whether it hurts the artistic sensi bilities or not, the metamorphosis of the town cannot be stayed. Pride and re grets 'struggle for position in the shifting scene. FIGHT FOR NEW COUNCIL MUST NOT BE OVERLOOKED Something About Bosses in General and a Survey of the Method by Which They Keep Control nniME spent in pious denunciation of -- political bosses might better be em ployed in a lational effort to find the reasons for their existence. Without tho aid nnd the active sympathy of a largo element in the population a political ma chine of any sort could not survive for a day. As the next election goes so govern ment is likely to go in this city for a good many years. An extremely power ful oiganization is intent on using the new charter an instrument conceived for its destruction to get a surer con trol over municipal nffaus. It i plain that the people have only an imperfect acquaintance with the thing they arc fighting. That much has been made clear by the methods of leformers in every election heretofore. Their chief weapon was a slogan. They cried out for what they calletf civic lighteousness. But the pluase is indefinite. It means nothing. It couldn't get even so strong a man as Mr. Blankenburg anywhere. Opposition to corrupt politicians ought not to be founded in mere emotionalism, 1101 ought it to be limited to a vague phrase expressive of nothing tangible to befuddled voters. It ought to be based upon the obvious fact that all their gestures of patronage are rank andvshal low and abominable imitations of friend ship. The modem habit of likening a machine boss to Robin Hood, who plun dered the nch and gave to the poor, springs fiom a romantic delusion. A division leader is always glad to spring to the aid of a partisan in trou ble. But tho system that he repiesents is the system that maintained dives and the soit of lax police method in which too many troubles of the ordinary sort have an origin. He will pay the rent for a poor family in a crisis but it is his own system of spoils that keeps that same rent at a maximum figure. The people who hold allegiance to a coirupt political machine' pay in a thou sand ways thiough unclean streets and consequent illness; through waste of revenues which must be met by taxes applied even to the tiniest house and passed down by the houseowner. The system which they support perverts and debases every law made for the protec tion of woikers. It turns' factory inspec tion into a farce and laughs at laws made to insure health by providing against the adulteration of food. Once in a while a division leader will send a doctor to an afflicted family. He is the one who should do so, certainly. Robin Hood i obbed the rich. So does the modern boss and his aides. But they rob the poor, too. Those who know how'things go in tho inner sanctuaries of boKsism know that the Vare leaders are not seriously con cerned about the abstract legal terms of the new charter. The trend of events jhows that they are devoting their ener gies to obtain complete control of the new Council, which, with its restricted membership, may easily be made a close corporation devoted not to the general welfare of the city but to the policies of a controlling bo?s. A regime like that of the Vares can be defeated only when the light penetrates the minds of its supporters of the rank and file. And it is because the new Council may be boss controlled and be cause political control and general negli gence have made it possible for machine inteiests virtually to monopolize the councilmanic campaign that the fight for the mayoralty takes on the aspect of an actual crisis in municipal affairs. Within the next four years, while the experiment with a small Council is in pi ogress, the people ought to have at least one conspicuous, powerful and inde pendent representative on the inside. Such a man the Mayor ought to be. If the city did not take advantage of the teims of the new charter in advancing candidates of the right sort at this elec tion, that is not proof that it will not do so later along after it has been awak ened to the possibilities of a salaried and restrcted Council. What we shall need meanwhile is fear less and intelligent criticism of municipal methods from some one in authority. The next Mayor might see all his policies de feated, his plans wrecked by an antago nistic Council, yet he could feel that his administration was. a success if he could but perform the service of an inexorable critic and good reporter of the new sys tem as ho finds it The possibility of Vare control in Council is the greatest conceivable argument for the election of Congressman Moore. Political hossism. survives wherever EVENING PtfBLIC LBDaERPHILADBLl?HlA;, FEIDAV 'SEPTEMBER reformers have failed t6 find a Substi tute for it. Its pretensions are fraudu lent, Its gifts arc spurious, it is founded on ignorance and hypocrisy. But it docs nt least pretend to recognize the human concerns, weaknesses and worries of the multitude. Those who wish to establish better political standards in America may not have to follow tho bosses' method of approach, but they will have to deal realistically with the conditions that make bosses possible. THE HEATLESS MELTING POT WE HAVE set up n melting pot and hnvn nptrnnltA tti KuUrl n firn unflfti have neglected to build a firo under it. This is what Judge Page, president of the American Bar Association, told tho members of the association in his open ing speech at its annual convention in Boston. He was discussing the perils of I American democracy. The immigrants i have not been absorbed into our social and political system. They do not un derstand the genius of our institutions. They are the people who are making the most trouble and it is they who are hos pitable to the ideas of the Bolshevists. Judge Page remarked that to make a real democracy there must be surrender, compromise and service. He said that the golden rule is an "absolutely and im peratively necessary rule of conduct in a democracy." There is nothing new in all this, but we need to remind ourselves of it periodically lest we forget it. The few persons who are talking about revolution do not understand the nature of our institutions. We live under the rule of the majority. Whatever the ma jority wants it can get. It is a dissatis fied and ignorant small minority that talks revolution. It wishes to force its ideas upon the rest of the people whether they will or not, forgetting that if the majority wants anything it can get it. No "reform" that can stand up under examination and public discussion is ever rejected. All that is needed is patience and perseverance. But it must be admitted that the neg lect to apply the golden rule in business has provoked and is provoking unrest. Far-seeing men are already engaged in the effort to bring about a better under standing between the workers and those who hire them in order that tho ground for complaint may be removed. The more intelligent leaders of both sides are ad mitting that they have made mistakes and have not done as they would be done by. They admit that they have tried to do the other fellow and do him first. But the tiouble here is industrial and not political. It would arise under any form of government. It is' merely a phase in the progress of humanity toward enlight enment, but the dissatisfaction with it is bright with the promise of a better day. If we can Americanize the immigrant, and teach him what the right to life and liberty and the pursuit of happiness means, we can make easier the solution of both the political and industrial prob lems. The Socialists who used None, of Course! to nrtfiie that they could steer the country into a new en :a of peace and prnmUp had hardly their com cation ih Cliii'ajo before oneneil they split violently into three warlike cliques, each of which is consecrated to a theory of its own. Now which, do you suppose, lias tlie right idea? I'nclc llavc I.ane ache, apparently. to bet airainst Moore in the I. ory body is invited to (hie may say that only Velvet ma malty fight. cover ins liionrj those who liae been in orj-anization politics as long as I'nele Dave can afford to take chances such as lie is willing to face. The American Xntion One. Tuo. Three! al Association of Kalance Like Me! Dancing, which recent ly held a convention in New York, decreed the passing of the shimmy and the reinstatement of the waltz. Strong in the belief that dancing is the poetry of motion, they are resolved to taboo the vers libre of Terpsichore. Franklin-Bouillon will Canned Soup oppose the ratification of the peace treaty in the , French Chamber of Deputies. "Sow watch the chamber call him. Diivers of undertakers' Hiiili Tariff wagons in Cincinnati for I-ast Hide are demanding an in crease of wages of !?5 a week. This will assuredly Increase the cost of the Cincinnati bier. Now, perhaps. Shantung. we'll learn all about The entente finds food a potent argument witli recalcitrants. The tiouble with Villa appears to be that he doesn't know when he is licked. . While we are watchfully waiting Mex ico continues to spill the beans. There is a ilying squadron on the trail of fraud in registration. Would not grub bitig squadron be a better name? One can't blame the political contrac tors altogether. With the city scheduled to spend pretty nearly $1,00().(X)0 a week next jear it is small wonder they grow excited. It must be said for the President that he never hesitates about tackling a big job; and October's labor conference may prove as big an undertaking as the peace con ference. A member of the Japanese peace dele gation has declared in New York that Japan will shortly return Slitntung Jto China. An official declaration to the same effect would cat a gladsome, roseate glow over the President's trip. It would appear that all a runaway bank clerk has to do to elude the police is to wear crimson bloomers aud drive a plum colored motorcar. The theory is that the color blinda the sleuths. It was the tactical error of trying to get rid of tho car that brought about Stanrg's arrest. The House of Correction at Holmtsburg operates a gas plant for the benefit of neigh boring dUtrlct. Prohibtlon hes reduced the number of Inmates in the house, the plant is shorthanded, and Tacony and Bridesburg, are in darkness. Residents of the districts are In a parlous state but perhaps some Itnoiiifji' 'v,i -.mim- ii inrif- as'-anr WHEN WARWICK ORATED Meeting With General t-atta Recalls to Col. McCain Story With a Punch Which Made Hit During Gu bernatorlal Campaign of 1894 By nHOHGK NOX McCAIN MET Oeueral Jaincs W. l-ntta 'on the street the other day. He la best remem I bered by the older citizens and politicians as secretnry of Internal affairs of the state for two terms from 1803 to lUOH. In spite of his snowy beard and mustache, he carries himself and his eighty years with n hint of the o!d martial bearing that char acterized him when he was assistant adju tant general of volunteers in the days of the Civil War. He is one of the young old men of Phila delphia, lie keeps himself In trim by keep ing busy. He is in dally touch v. 1th the big affairs of life. GENERAL 'LATTA was one of a group of men that witnessed a unique demon stration at CSrecnsburg, Pa. In the party, as I recall, were the present Attorney 'Gen eral W. I. Schaffer, Colonel Recder, of Bcllcfontc; Colonel Henry Hall, now Wash ington correspondent of the Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph, and Charles V. War wick, afterward Mayor of Philadelphia. It was during the gubernatorial campaign of 1804. The party had jumped from Franklin, Pa., to Greensburg. It was Saturday night and everybody was hurrying to get back to Philadelphia. On the trip from Franklin down the Al legheny river the fnmous painted rock" near Franklin were pointed out. Thej recnlleil nn incident to the mind of Colonel Hall, who related it to three others of the party facing in n double car sent. As Hall concluded the story Warwick slapped his knee in enthusiasm and said, "I'm going to use that story tonight at Greensburg. It'll bring down the house." And it did. rnnE mass meeting was held in the old court house in Greensburg. It was a splendid audience. The greatest enthusiasm prevnlled. General I.ntta opened the meeting. He ad dressed himself particularly to the front benches filled with Grand Army men. Charles F. Warwick closed the meeting. He, too, addressed himself specially to the. veterans who were in uniform. His per oration was the iory told by Henry Hall on the railroad tin. This it was, in brief: Down in V ver county at the outbreak of the Rebellion one of the first men to enlist was n gaunt woodsman more than six feet tall and built in proportion. He was rough, uncouth, and the homeliest man In the region. He was so uglv that they nicknamed him, "The Indian God." He was made color sergeant of his regi ment. Somewhere down in Virginia one morn ing a year or so later headquarters re ceived information that a body of the enemy was in the vicinity. Skirmishers were thrown out. the regiment assigned to posi tion, and preparations made for an en gagement. In the meantime the color guard In ad vance had moved forward of the line which had halted. The order to halt was given, but the guard failed to hear. Tn n louder and more emphatic tone the officer in command bhouted : "Color guard, halt! Bring your colors back to the regiment." The guard halted. The sergeant, the "In dian God," fearless, crude, and profane, turned half-round and shouted back so that his words rang along the line: "Bring vour damned old regiment up to the colors. I never recall such a scene. The climax had been worked up beautifully by War wick, who was an eloquent and captivating speaker. The Grand Army men leaped cheering to their feet. Women rose nnd waved tRcir handkerchiefs. Hats were tossed in air and the hand In the midst of the uproar played the "Star Spangled Banner." The effect" on Warwick himself was so pronounced that tears trembled in his eyes. Wp barely made the midnight train for the East. A MEDIFM-sized, strongly built man. brown skinned nnd vigorous, and wear ing mandarin glasses, who seems to have a speaking acquaintance with two or three persons in every block on Chestnut street, answers to the name of Timothy O'r.eary. When he was assistant superintendent of police some years back hc was known ns "Tim" O'l.eary, the man who drilled the police force in military tactics for four years nnd who had the best dressed nnd most soldierly police force in a generation. O'r.eary had been in the army nnd was a drlllmaster himself. To Tim O'l.eary belongs the distinction, held possibly by no other citizen of the United Stntes, of having administered a good sound punch in the face to a future prime minister of a European nation. That is. if Leon Trotsky can be termed a prime minister. He is at least a despot. It was during the period of Trotsky's residence on the East Side, New York. The greasy little anarchist filled in his time when not writing flaming editorials for the anarchist bheet with which he was con nected In visiting neighboring cities nnd preaching disorder and general annihila tion. On one of his trips he came to Philadel phia, accompanied by Emma Goldman and her side partner. Berkinann. to harangue a choice collection of their kind in the Parkway Building. Of course, thf police had been tipped off. Assistant Superintendent of Police O'Lcnry was also there in citizens' dress to judge the character of the speeches. WHEN Trotsky got properly started hc not only cursed the capitalists but hc damned the government nnd demanded Its overthrow; or words to that effect. It was at this point that one T. O'Leary hove himself on the stage and politely but firmly, and with due emphasis, notified the future despot of Russia that his speaking time had expired. "Who arc you?" blustered Trotsky, throwing out his chest like a pouter pigeon. "I'm a police official sent down from City Hall. You're abusing the government and preaching anarchy. I don't want to bear another word from joti," Bald the assistant superintendent in a tone that would haye been significant to anybody but a fool anarchist. "You cannot deny me the right of free speech," sputtered the greasy little Bol shevik. "You've got no rights. You'ro an alien. Shut up," was the final word of command. And then something happened. The wretched apostle of governmental chaos began another insolent reply. Be fore he. got properly started, however, O'Leary's open hand shot out and the base of the palm, above the wrist, landed midway of the agitator's face. That is, just beneath bla nose. The effect, of course, was to bend that organ unr.nnl urM h.ni, ward with a force that sent Trotsky reel- ! log Into the "arms of a friend. t AOC- 111" ' 'P T'efltii t -" "WE'Vti HAQ. ENOUGH FIGHTING, LET'S ' ' .j ' ,'. TRAVELS IN PHILADELPHIA By Christopher Morlcy On British Soil "YESTERDAY I spent several delightful hours on "British soil," with ns au thentic an envelopment of English atmos phere as though a loug sea vojnge lay be hind the adventure. The first thing one notices on reaching British soil is men smoking pipes. As I entered the Consulnte of His Britannic Majesty, on Third street, I saw a gentle man relishing a pipe in tho luxurious man ner peculiar to the island kingdom. I felt, ashamed of the medicated vegetable ciga rettes I was smoking as a dcspnlrlng hay fever remedy. They are very thin little tubes, with a cardboard mouthpiece; they exhale a vile peppery scent; they are as sociated with the first whiffings of very young lads who buy them nt drug stores before they dare purchase legitimate fags. "Emit the smoke through the nostrils," says the legend on the box; "they will make the head ns olenr as a bell." I emitted furiously, and asked for my friend the vice consul. Trailing clouds of ayomatic incense, I was ushered in. I HAD had a hunch. In the morning paper I had seen the announcement of the Cunard Line: PHILADELPHIA to LONDON Vennonia Sept. 9 For a long time I had had a hankering to get on board n ship. Like Mr. Wilson, who "chafes at the confinement of Washington," the mail who feels any salt in his. blood chafes at being bound down to pavements. He has spells when he wanders along the docks, yearning over oyster schooners tho Maggie A. ITateUtt is in from Maurice Uivcr Covo! and feasting his eyes on the tall, lean bows of ocean-going steamers. He rides the Gloucester ferries trying to memorize the comely lines of the vessels in midstream. The propeller of nn unladen tramp, turning over in a slow flap-flap of foam, kicks at bis heart. The harbor is a never-ending panorama of romance nnd excitement. He tries to imagine n thousand excuses for getting aboard the ships hc sees. ut it is bard to make sailormen understand this yearning. They expect one to have some plausible reason for wanting to hang about their vessels. I have never met a profes sional mariner who did not suspect me of some dastardly purpose in loitering about. How can one explain that just to noso about a ship, to poke and peer about her fascinating decks, is an end in Itself? Sup pose you were to say you were "admiring the funnel," tbey would think you mad. And yet that is just what one wants to do: BUT my hunch was this: to lure the vice consul from his tasks, and under his .authentic wing to go down to the I'rnnonia, 'the pioneer ship of the new Cunard service to Philadelphia ; to go aboard, if possible, and gloat. The chief rule in life is to follow the hunch. It never fails. So the vice consul ngceed, and emitting clouds of medicated fume I sallied along with hlrni At the Cunard pier we found the new pier .superintendent, Mr. Aunall. I would have been much abashed to face his clear gray' questioning cje alone, but tinder the chaperonage of my consular friend nil was easy. Beside the sheer flauk of tho Vennonia we 'stood chatting and he agreed that we might go aboard. Just then along came Captain Brown, and we saw that fortune was with us. Up the ladder we scrambled. We had a glimpse of the well known scarlet and black funnel, familiar in New York and elsewhere, but a stranger to Philadelphia. Then we were. In the holy of holies, the captain's cabin. Captain Brown got out his pipe and his tin of Cap stan. It was plainly British soil! CAPTAIN BROWN was the perfect host that only the sea-captain can- be. The two landlubbers bung entranced upon his words. His sea experience has been as com nlete: one thinks, as any mariner's. Trained in the, rough school of sailing ships, ho has peon twen'V Pnr- in i"f vnnir.1 roinnsnv. 1919 in the Montreal and Boston services, and on such greyhounds as" the Campam'o and Lttcania, the Lusitania nnd Maurctania, On the last he was stiff captain before the war. A naval reservist, when the war broke out hc was put to immediate and grueling work, first in the landing of troops on Ger man Southwest Africa (Swakopmund) then in tho terrible year of the Dardanelles trag edy. He was commander of the forward turret on the Albion, one of the two ships sent in .within 2000 yards of tho Turkish forts nt Seddul Bahr and Kum Kale, with orders to stay there Until cither the forts or the ships themselves were put out of action. Captain Brown drew out of his desk drawer a fat notebook in which hc kept a private log of his war experiences. He read us some of his notes, jotted down with the terse compression of the naval officer. I hope some day hc will find time to put those days into a book. It was a terrible picture that lay behind the blunt brief words. Never was humau heroism more fearfully exhibited than in the tragic effort of the British and Colonial troops to force a lauding on those sandy cliffs. Out of a boatload of 230 men sometimes only ten would gain a footing on tho shore, struggling through the -barbed wire, with shells and concealed mines burst ing among them. Captain Brown told of a boatload of killed and wounded men that drifted back to the Albion, swimming in blood up to the thwarts, the dead men floating in this blood. He used two words to describe it. Bloody murder. For seven months he slept beside his tvVclvc-iuch guns 1- .1.. A !!..'..' ii.M.f 111 luc 4.VIUII a iuiti.n LATER, Captain Brown was commander of the Prjiicp Edteard, nnd then was in command of the anti-submarine defense iu the eastern Mediterranean. As hc talks, with bis quick, cheerful accent, his bright gray seaman's eye, it is hard to realize what this friendly, bronzed little man has been through. One gains an inkling of the quiet discipline of the sea -that trains a man to. take what comes. "Carry on," the favorite catchword of the Briton in wartime, is the phrase that occurs most often' in his talk. That's the only explanation .these, men have for' it. Thf? shrug their shoulders and say they "carried on." CAPTAIN BROWN Is very pleased to be the pioneer skipper of the new Cunard service to Philadelphia. This is his second visit to the port. The first was last July, wheu he arrived In the midst of St. Swithin's debauch, and got 'the impression that Phila delphia was a very rainy place. "Y'ou have a fine port here," he says. "It's right in the heart of industrial America." He has visited Hog Island, and is very enthusiastic o,ver tho plans to deepen the Delaware chan nel to thirty-five feet at low water. His own ship, by the way, built in Dundee, is the English equivalent of the Hog Island fabricated ship. She's an 8000-ton cargo carrier, more, graceful in design than the Hog Island vessels, but with coal-burning reciprocating engines instead of-the oil-fuel turbines of our own wartime fleet. He told us of one ingenious dodge adopted on ber , during tho war. The double-derrick masts were made to fold down out of sight during a voyoge. On the port side of the pilot house was a fake mast, far off the central line of the vessel. An enemy submarine, sighting this mast and getting it into align ment with the funnel, would think tho ship was proceeding in an entirely different di rection from the course she was actually steering. OiVR host insisted on our staying to lunch ' with him and his officers in their snug mess-room. It wan a delightful sight to see tho vice-consul's eyes shine as he gazed upon genuine British food, including so thor- , oughly ivngusn u reusu us ancnovy es sence. Take a Britisher, many years ex patriated, and put him on an English ship Where hs can see the red ensign flutter over the taffrall, taste a pipeful of English to- bicco, and har some good rousing- anecdotes , of Oermap IkUiip. nml'irii'wW ' v ' v ft n . V. FEAST AB1T!" thoroughly happy man. I puffed my medi cated tubes and thrilled to See the emotion of my consular friend. rpH.H captain is already a stanch Phila- delpb'.a fan. It Is pleasant to hear his enthusiasm on the subject of the whole heartcd co-operation of the American naval, officers with whom he shared many respon sibilities during the war. He says the Cun ard passenger service to this port will be started as soon as they can build -some ships.. n the meantime he's busy moving big cart goes across the blue water. He showed us the deep holds of tho Vennonia, where thou- . sands of tons of wheat were pouring down from a floating elevator alongside, and where barrels of oil and sirup and crates of Cali fornia raisins were being stowed. And by this time, as we Had made him nearly an , hour late for nn appointment uptown, we thought it fras time to take our reluctant leave. The generous captain, who deplored my herb smokables, even insisted on my carrying off his own tin of Navy Cut. Smok ing this, the vice consul and I returned to America. On Reading a Certain Book T TURN a page, read on, and on, J- A traveler up a pleasant road Where others have before me gone With brains that dreamed, with eyes that glowed. Unmindful quite of time I fate. From line to line my glances flit, Delighted and bereft 'of care . By quip of humor, flash of wit. Sometimes I con n paragraph, Whose beauty makes me pause a while; A happjv fancy wakes a laugh, An ap! allusion lights a smile. , And so a feast my journey seems Whcro I partake yet leave behind A wondrous board whereon there gleams Untouched n banquet for tho mind. Samuel MInturn Peck, in the'Boston Evening Transcript. Wlmt Do You Knotv? NQUIZ Who is premier of Egypt? What state docs Senator Hitchcock rep- " resent? , What is the meaning of the word nmphlbologous? How many years before the Civil War did Wncle Tom's Cabin" appear? On what date do some states observe Columbus Day as a holiday? WThy is the Blue Peter, a flag indicating that a ship is about to sail, so called? What Is the Erse language? 8. Where did the President deliver his first address on his nation-wldo tour on behalf of the treaty? What is a peri? n. 10. What "organ of the human body wasi once believed to be the seat of IU humor and melancholy? ' Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Cardinal Mercicr Is primate of Belgium, 2. The only bequest which William Shake speare made by will to his wife was that of his "second. best bed, with the furniture." 3. Brazil was formerly a colony of.Portu- gali 4. Fosse; long narrow excavation, canal, ditch, trench, especially in fortifica tion. ! G, Karl Renner is the head of the -Austrian peace delegation. G, An English farthing is worth about half a cent in American money. 7. All bills for raising revenue, for the fed eral government must originate in the Housb of Representatives. , 8. A lough I a lake or arm of 'the sea. The word is derived from the Gaelic, 0. The althea is called the "Rose of Sharon," 10, "Suaviter in rnodo" describes. a,-n w mJ r7-!V 2 w?r,R m W 4 Vt-' 'ft I 4- "a ij. i laL-S j:'. htf -w. . a "-A&' $ v&.. ,fc ' . UY a a f -. rt? . , i . JS,,...,-. ,i)