m EVENING? PTJBLTO TnUDGER-PHTDABELHI, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 13X3 & i t P Id?' i 'P if. I Si V lb rl ft If. tO. ! PUDLIC LEDGER COMPANY .CTTlUfl It. K. CUtlTIS. rareiBiMT . Charlfs II. lAidlnrton. Vice Prrnldsnt: John C Renins )ubHc He&$et "v,.1'' loin, BTPiary ana Treasurer! I'nuip n iiiino. B, . Williams, 101in opuriTO", Jjirwriorn. rj KDITUniAti BOARIJl Crocs 31. K. Cinms, 'Chairman PAV1P B. BMILBT Editor JOHtt C. ?LUITIS' . . general lluslnets Manic; r Published dally at Pt sua I.rnorn llulldlnr. Independenco Square, Phllartolrhla AKUntio Cut Preta-Vnlan Culldlnc Js'btt Toss., i'Od Metropolitan Tower Dbtsoit 701 rord nulldltcr HT. Lons... .... loos Kullerloti liulldlnK CHICAGO. .... , . .1302 TTilmna Dulldlnc NEWS BUREAUS! N. E. Cor. renntjhanla Ae. and 14th bt. Itvr Youk neiSAU . . The. Sim BulMlnir I.oMON Uibbvu tendon Times St'BSCIlUTION TERMS , . Thd Emno Puiuifl Lbwieh la served to aub acribera In Philadelphia and surroundlruj toa.ni at the rato nf m eh a (12) tents per week, rraDl tnySrna"ilirt'nrpolnla outside of Philadelphia. In the United States. Canada, or United States pp eiaalniu, poitaio free, nfty ,."n cents per month But ($61 dollaro por rear, Pajable In advanco. To all forelen countries one 1 dollar per Notici Subscribers Vlsltlnc addrm changed must elve old as well as new address. BELL, 3000 WALNUT KEVSTONt. MUV 00O . KH Address oil oomwunlralfons to EitAlnp PuWo Ledser. Independence Square. Philadelphia. Jlember of the Associated Press ' THE ASSOCIATED PPVSS is rxclu tlvelu entitled to the use for republication of all vacs dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in tlite paper, and also fhe local new? published therein Alt rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. rhlUJflphU, Mluroij, September !7, 1919 ANOTHER BRIDGE DELAY PHILADELPHIA pride is not stimu lated when an nmbabsador from Cam den is told that the municipal treasury Is too slim to permit of a financial con tribution by Councils to the highly neces sary and important Delaware river bridge. Both the New Jersey and the Pennsyl vania Legislatures have voted their due shares for the preliminary survey and preparation of plans. That the great project will lag for at least six months is directly to be ascribed to the delin quency of Philadelphia. It is evident then that it will be J. Hampton Moore's privilege to foster the co-operation of this city in an enterprise which will be of prodigious benefit to the metropolitan -area in the two neighboring Rtates. There is talk of a loan by the new administration. Whatever the ex pedients adopted, it is imperative that Philadelphia be relieved of the stigma of holding up the bridge plan. Mr. Moore may be expected to give it .his enthusiastic and vigorous support. There should be no more situations in which Philadelphia confesses to its smaller neighbor inability to further a work needed and desired by the entire public in this region. GREAT BATTLE ANNIVERSARY l"NE year ago today the public learned that tho American army, fighting as an organized unit, had begun a new movement in the war. The full signifi cance of the operation was at that time unrealized. But as the final weeks of the war speeded by. the tremendous im portance of the Argonne battle became more and more evident. We know today that it was our pressure north of "Verdun which squeezed the Germans into the neck of a bottle from which there was no "escape without surrender. The plea for an armistice came when the fighting, which ultimately attained Sedan, dashed the last hopes of the enemy. It is conceivable that September 120 may eventually be listed among our pa triotic holidays. Certainly it deserves such commemoration. The largest and most powerful American army ever as sembled cannot bo too much honored for Its masterstroke in the greatest and most terrible of all wars. And the mag nitude of the event will grow with tho years. THEY MUST BEGIN AGAIN TJOETS .were actually getting some- where in popular estimation when P'Annunzio sailed away to Fiumc to risk his life for the fun of making glittering wreckage of a plan that represents the concentrated wisdom of the world. The poets had cut their hair. They shaved. They gave up free erse and purple neckties. They no longer lectured on temperament. For a time it appeared its if the world was almost ready to for give them all. Then one of their strange crowd went forth into the world, selected his graveplace on a high hill and, as the solitary antagonist of all wise and rea sonable men, declared himself ready to die in order that the weary and tor mented nations might see their greatest liope grow slightly dimmer. No matter how tilings go in the Ad riatic, the poets, great and small, will have to begin all over again. It will be fifty years before they can lie down tho memory of D'Annunzio. JUDGE DICKINSON EXPLAINS TUDGE DICKINSON wishes it to bo understood that when he decided that a saloonkeeper might legally sell whisky to be used as a medicine he did not mean that it was legal for a bartender to servo a drink to a man who professed to have stomachache. The illness must be genu ine, according to the judge, and the need must be manifest. But he did not say that a physician's prescription was necessary, and thus he left wide latitude for the exercise of tho expert judgment of the bartender as to the .genuineness ol the illness which tho whisky will relieve. THE PIPE COMES NEXT VIEWS comes from London that now k' and then a woman in tho habit of Smoking cigarettes is finding the cjga-T-ette, too light for her. The sight of a Vnmnn -inn restaurant smokim a clear is tiHraeHm ntl pnlion -where the use of is Jgarettes had becomo so common that 1r i . I? i ! nq one jiouce-u iu Tin modern woman, however, has not .ct adopted tlm liabits of the great-jrj-andmothera who used a clay pipe. When bhe" gets to the pipe stage and old chokers pay that tho pipe is the most 'mrfifnrtnry after all sho wjll doubtless ewe 'Jsieerseh3Um or a French briar mtfUr thn th 3. P. of an arllr em- cratlon. Now and then one of them who wishes to bo "plcturcsquo will uso a churchwarden and tho ultra-fashionablo may adopt the Turkish hookah. Tho cigar, however, is likely to retain its popularity, for it has many uses. The feminine Joe Cannon of the future will go about with one of them in the corner of her mouth, lilted up nt a rakish angle, while she gives orders to her fol lowers. And the Dick Crokcr in petti coats will sit with her delegation in na tional conventions chewing a cigar in grim silence as she watches the proceedings. WILHELM'S RED FRIENDS ARE REVIVING KULTUR A Big Volunteer Army That Doesn't Even Draw Rations Is Giving the Junkers New Hope T"ULTUK, it appears, has not been - dissipated or interred after all the trouble the world took to be rid of it. The thing is with us in what the adver tisements describe as "a new and im proved form." It is self-.starting, this time, and warrnnted by 'the manufactur ers to take any hill. America has the opportunity to iew the phenomenon clearly in the mingled light of the steel strike and the review sent today by Mi. Kospoth, the representative of this news paper at Geneva. Geneva is the strangest of cities these days. It is the pivot about which Europe swings m turmoil, a grand stand from which you may contemplate the vastest drama of human history. From Gcnea any intelligent observer of events may view tho operation of a plan to put a blight upon the social and economic life of all Europe except Germany; to im poverish and exhaust the nations that won the war by u method of attrition known as sabotage. Sabotage is the ultimate weapon of fanatic radicals. It takes many forms. It may be an oiderly strike. But in its 'more subtle manifestations it is applied through secret agreements among work ers who conspire, while remaining at their posts, to disorganize lailway traffic, the mails, the communication systems and the means of production. Sabotage means blow destruction and teirorism from below. Railway unions which prac tice sabotage deliberately put their in tricate systems into a hopeless tangle. Miners disable machineiy. The aim of sabotage is the breakdown of the social order, the overthrow of all existing ad ministrative systems and the centraliza tion of all power in the hands of groups such as that which William Z. Foster has drawn around himself at Pittsburgh. Sabotage used to be practiced only by the more leckless and desperate of labor groups in Europe. But Mr. Kospoth had reason to believe, and any one who ;ads his article will have reason to believe, that sabotage is now being deliberately organized upon a grand scale over all of Europe and that the strikes and contests and conventions and all the paralyzing philosophies spread under the pretense of humanitarianism in the Old World rep resent only its surface manifestations. It is a method by which somebody some where wishes to make Euiope a little more weary, a little more desperate, a little more unhappy than it was left by the war. Mr. Gompers seems to have been the one labor leader of prominence who was able to see below the surface of the pre tentious Socialist congress at Berne when idealists and crooks, saints and sin ners, sane and insane gathered to decide how tho world should be made over. Gompers would have none of the con ference. But it is plain now that the issue which ho disdained to recognize in Europe beat him across the Atlantic to challenge him again at Pittsburgh. Foster's refusal to delay the steel strike until after the industrial confer ence called by the President is sabotage as radicals understand it and u pecu liarly dangerous sort of sabotage at that. The relaxation of productive effort in England, in France and ill Italy and the disorganization of the economic system that follows it is sabotage on a grand scale. Mr. Foster in his book describes a dozen forms of sabotage for the guid ance of those who follow him. Meanwhile there is no sabotage in Ger many. There aie no widespread general strikes in Germany. Leibknccht, who was accustomed to advocate that method to workers, was shot not so long ago. He was bhot by German army officers in the streets of Berlin. Wherever bolshovism has shown its head in Germany it has been clubbed to death. Nosko attended to that detail. He is minister of defense in tho new govern ment. He was a representative of tho kaiser in other days. Thq German Gov ernment has been begging its people to be patient, to be strong and to be or derly and systematic. They are urged to work and build and produce. While the new Germany is regaining its equilibrium and its confidence and not a little of its old resolution, all the rest of Europe is being enervated, morally and physically, by the Fosters of the Allied countries. Not all of them aro vile. Arthur Hen derson and Ramsey MacDonald arc sin cere representatives of enlightened liberalism in England. And yet even they have helped to create the sort of economic confusion which is the one hope of German junkerdom in the days of its defeat. Germany still has a dociio popu lation and the personnel of a vast army. The country is without war materials. But war materials are not voryar away. And it is worth observing that junkers of some other countries aro playing un consciously into the hands of the junkers in Germany by their ignorant opposition to the decent claims of conservative labor. To find a backwash of all this confusion in America Is to realize something of the force of tho social and political impacts that are occurring in Europe. For tho stee strike, though it was called in the name of the Federation of Labor, is not for federation principles. It la an agita tion on behalf of what radical thinkers in all countries know nB The Interna tional. Tho International is not ah or ganization of worklngmcn. It dojs not encourage industry. It is an organiza tion that includes tho restless, tho dis satisfied, the neurotic of ninny countries who arc convinced that thei o is a way to find happiness without working for it. The International is organized to bring about un upheaval calculated to displace constituted government, revise the social system overnight und put all power und authority in the hands of groups such as Foster is leading in Pittsburgh. Countless generations of men, workers nnd pioneers, inventors und organizers, spent their lives in creating the values leprcscntcd by property and organized industry. Yet the Bed of today has con vinced himself und his associates that all created things should belong to the limited groups who happen to labor with their hands, nnd that the world can get along without talent, without trained minds, without the creative instinct com mon to the indispensable classes of men who work for the loe of working. Foster und his crowd aie now fighting bitterly among themselves at Pittsburgh. They arc the sort who, because they can nccr agree, can never be satisfied. Gioups like them have alrondy weakened more than one European nation at a time when those in Europe who value life and peace need all their strength. And as the hopes of the rest of Europe decline the hopes of the bitter-enders in Ger many naturally go up. THE PRESIDENT'S RETURN rpHE Piesident's speechmaking tour, suddenly abandoned on the medical advice of Admiral Grayson, was ob viously bused upon the theory that popu lar sentiment on behalf of the treaty could be sufficiently aroused to overcome the senatorial opposition. For certain elemental reasons i'cnts have not justified this hope. Most of the members in the upper Iioum' ol Con gress aie jockeying for position in a con test conducted on party lines. Mr. Lodge, for example', is not so much concerned with the cheers which the President's ad dresses have provoked as with the piob lem of combining Mr. Borah, Mr. Johnson and Mr. McCumber in a harmonic chord. Mr. Hitchcock is engaged m unravel ing Democratic complexities, of policing the ranks so that Mr. Thomas and Hoke Smith will not slip out. To the cham pions of the treaty it is practically more important that Senator Ashurst, of Ari zona, has no longer any qualms about its merits than that crowds in his state rush to the station platforms to sec the presi dential train whiz by. There aie always safety-valve possi bilities in the ptesence of the President in Washington. Mr. Wilson's intermit tent occupations of the White House since last Januaty have been accompanied by substantial political results. Both the legislators and the Chief Mag istrate profit by the closer relationship. The President has talked moic extrava gantly on tour than ho would to. the Senators at home. There is a tendency for spite and unreason to attain a maxi mum when the President is from home. The significance of u swing round the circle has long been debatable. It was bitterly costly to Andrew Johnson when he sought to enlist the people on his side against an enraged Congress. Mr. Wil son himself refrained fiom spectuculur touring in his successful campaign for the presidency in 1910. The barometer of popular enthusiasm is far from accurate as an index of popu lar convictions. It is disillusioning to note that Mr. Wilson and Hiram Johnson have simultaneously evoked fervent le ccptions. In the assumption of unflagging phys ical powers Mr. Wilson follows the re grettable example of most American Presidents. The public is an exacting master. The conventional demands which it makes upon its high officials are tre mendous. When a servant of the public olunteers as Mt. Wilson has to fulfill more than the legulation functions the extraordinary strain is bound to be regis tered. There is really no mystery about the public's attitude toward the peace treaty. Ratification sentiment is strong. What remains to be adjusted concerns amend ments and reservation safeguards. Party politics and honest convictions are both involved in the issue. The place where all the factors will bo eventually clarified is Washington. Freed from the burdens of trael, the President in the capital should be a potent aid to treaty progress. Tho gap between the opposition senators is psychologically widened when ho is abroad whether in Europe or in the Far West. It is incon ceivable that Mr. Wilson at home will go to the extremes of speech which charac terized some of his endeavors to feel the popular pulse. The Senate, too, will bo face to face with realities. The President's recovery and tho ter mination within a reasonable time of the critical battlo of Washington are reason able hopes. Wine judging was a The Good Old Days feature of the Allen tow a Fair iu life good old days when sauerkraut sold for ten ccuts a pluto with a dub of mushed potatoes nnd a slice of pork on the side. Now there is no wiue, which is perhaps just as well; for with kraut ut fifty ccuts a plate straight and sevcuty-five cents with potato aud pork fixiu's oue would baTC little moucy left for libations. The good old days have ghcu way to the good old daze. The government will offer for sale in Philadelphia and Boston next week 11,. 000,000 pounds of steel, including finished armor plate and unfinished trench helmets. No effort is being niado to prove that it will bring down the II. C. of L. Vare men vainly bunting evidences of fraud may console) themselves with the thought that tbeir fuilure proves this to be a pretty clean cit. Peon's thirteen commandmauta seem desigued to take the freshness out of the frcsbmcu. There is indication that President Wil son has so fondness for D'AnnunzIo'a free verse. CONGRESSMAN MOORE'S LETTER How John Wanamaker. Wrlte6 His Little Essays Gossip About John K. Stauffer, J. Howell Cum mlngs and Other Well- Known Persons Washington, D. 0., Sept. .27. TjlVBIlY now and then wo have a visit -" ' from Dr. Joseph K. Dixon, who at the Instance of Itodman Wanamaker has been keeping the American Indian on the map. The doctor is a devoted friend of the fading ince and keeps in touch with the latest offi cial Washington information concerning the red men. Ho is not only a student of the American aborigines, but does n good deal of writing on this subject. Ills collection of Indian photographs is noteworthy. rplllj famlllur signature of John Wana--- maker excites comment on the part of those who wonder whether the distinguished I'hilailolphlan really writes the editorial ad ertiscineiits under which appear his fac simile. It is not untimely to answer this moot question on lirbt-hand information. The great merchant does write those editorial toitmiontR. As n conscientious workman lakes pildo in the piece of eabinctwuro he has built, no Ilr. Wanamuker dcrlu-s sat i'fartlon in the effect of his literary work. It is raid by those who know that the in spiration for these business sermons is i aught in the morning ride to the office or in tho shadows of eventide. A sunbeam finding Its way through tho window at breakfast or the cheerful voice of tho news boy furnish n theme for the day. Victor Herbert may catch tunes for his new inarches iu Hie revolutions of tho Ioeomotic wheel, us Willurd Hpeuser gathered much of the music of the "Little Tjioou" in u suenkbox off llancy Cedars. And so It is with Mr. Wanamaker and his inspirational writings. After nil, it is gospel truth that we find "sermons in stones." TXTASHINfiTON correspondents hac noted '' the absence in recent ears of John K. Stauffer. who formeily wus one of the actic spirits iu Iho press gallery. John quit Washington several jears ago to take a hand in politics iu Heading, lie hnd mndo n stinlj of rll. planning and was elected to Council, being superintendent of the Dc paitnieut of orks arid Public Property. In this new ofliec ho worked hard lo estab lish improved recreation centers und pluj -gioiiuds, ami fels now that he has a stuff of l.'i.OOO children on his list. The other clnj Washington woke up and learned that its old friend of the press gallery has beaten the slate iu Bending and bad become the Kcpublienu nominee for major. Mr. Htauffer is u fighter from way back, and his old friends here hae the feeling that he is going to be elected. rnlin House is rassing legislation for the -"- farmer just us if the fanner were about Hie poorest paid of nil producers. And that tails to mbnd Unit there aro some Philadel phia farmers who uro actually making their farms pay. It is a btanding joke that the average Phlladclphian pajs the price of an aero of ground for a quart of milk when ho rims his own dairy ; but not so with Colonel I. Howell Cumiuings, prisidcut of the John 15. Stetson Company, who has ."lfi acrcn, more or less, near Wemersville in the Lib nnon vnllej. The colonel has a beautiful home iu the mountains ucarby and the family gets a gieat deal of enjojmeut out of it. The farm, however, is a separate entcrnrisc, running to Guerusejs, Cheviots nnd Herk shircs in livestock, ad to corn, wheat, pota toes and soj a beans hi vegetable products. it is u model rami, und model farms arc generally of the expensive kind. Hut it is run on practical lines nud is actually made to paj that's the wonder of it. There arc a good ninny other Philadelphia fanners who might profitably take a leaf out of Farmer Curamiugs's notebook. , TIG strikes and little strikes occupy much --' space in tho newspapers, but little strikes become ns far-reaching somet lines as big strikes. Down in Florida there is a lailrond which carries phosphate rock from the mines to the seaboard loading points. It is not a big load, but it is mighty im portant with icsnoct to phosphate rock, and phosphnte roc', is mighty important with respect to fertiliser, and fertilizer is about tho first con.tf'Js'-ation of the eastern farmer who prNfricos our crops. There fore tho farmer, tho fertilizer manufac tures and tho (oiisumer aro all interested in that little raihoad strike which has been in effect in Florida since last May. The Baugh & Sous Companj, of Philadelphia, wants the phosphate lock, nud Secretary Itasmusseu, of the. Department of Agriculture ut Harris burg, and Prof .Jacob O. Lipman, director of the New Jersey Agricultural College, at New Brunswick, havo both been appealed to to ask Director (ieucral limes, of the United States Railroad Administration, to see what he can do about that little strike iu Florida. A1 LICE M. GAIUtETT is secretary of District Association No. 1 of the fim.l. uato Nurses' Association of Pennsylvania, nnd by Instruction ef that body of young war workers has brought to the attention of Congress resolutions urging that the army nurse corps be given rank such as Is given iu Canada and Australia, to onable the nurses' to give to orderlies nud others orders that will 1k obeyed The nurses nro quite aggressive about this matter, contending that many of their armv patients havo suffered and died because the orders of tho nurses were not promptly carried out. Tho presi dent of tho Pennsylvania association, Dis trict No. 1, is Helen F. Grcaney, of Chest nut Hill, and the board of directors includes Anna M. W. Penuypaekcr. Most of the officers of the association are now actively engaged in hospital work. INTBBEST in the Philadelphia mayor ulty contest has not wholly abated, .since the newspapers are being scanned for the re sult of the official count and the buttons of one of the candidates uro still being worn about the Capitol. A number of congress men nnd public officials who were in Phila delphia for the Knights Templar celebration and for tho Pershing parade brought back stories of the great local interest in the light and seemed to evince, nn intimate knowledge of tho situation. It is tho feeling among Republicans that tho rrsult will be a good thing for tho Republican party throughout tho country, in tnc rieaato and House the jrnpresalon prevails that care must be ex ercised to set the Republican party straight ana avom uiotuiu wuurevcr possiDlo prior to the presidential campaign of next year. It is still doubtful whether President Wilson will run for a third term, nnd it is quite certain taut no Republican candidate upon whom all elements can ngrco is yet in sight. The spirit of unrest is abroad, but Repub lican leaders arc hopeful that in due course the elements will get together for a wlnnlnr campaign in 1020. Oue hundred nnd seventy-five naval cadeW arrived ut Hog Iidand jesterday on u barkentinc-rigged steamship and inspected tho plant ns the guests of tho Emergency Fleet Corporation. And it Js a safe bet each and every one of them saw in his mind's eye tf8 Island launching the shfp of which be .would some doy be master or cbicf ) TRA VELS IN PHILADELPHIA , By Christopher Morley September Sunshine WHAT un nfternoon it was! Sunshine aud blue sky, blended warmth aud crisp ness, the wedding of summer and nutumn. Sunshine as tender us Cardinul Mcrcier's smile, northern breeze sober as the much hnrusscd lineaments of the Tonismith. Citi zens went about their business "daintily en folded in the bright, bright air," us a poet has put it. Over the dome of the postofiicc, where the little cups of Mr. Itliss's wind gauge were spinning merrily, pigeons' wings gleamed white in the serene emptiness. The sunlight twinkled on lacquered limousines in dazzles of brightness, almost as vivid ns the "genuine diamonds" in Market street show windows. Phil Warner, the always lunching bookseller, was out snapping up an oyster stew. Men of girth and large equator were watching doughnuts being fried in the bakers' windows on Chestnut street with painful agitation. The onward march of the doughnut is n matter for serious con cern iu certain circles, particularly tho circle of the waist line. STROMING up Ninth street one was privileged to observe a sign of the times. A lunch room wus being picketed by labor agitators, who looked comparatively unblemished by toil. They bore large signs buying: The C Restaurant Is Unfair to Organized Labor. Side by side with these gentry marched two blonde waitresses from the lunch room, wearing an air of much bitterness und oil cloth aprons emblazoned Our Employes Are NOT on Strike All Our Help Get Good Wages Some of the Walters Want Our Women to Quit So They May Take Their Places. "Wo'rc doing this of our own free will," said one of these damsels to me. "These guys never worked Jierc. Our boss gives us good money and we're not going to walk out on him." She leaned a blading lamp toward one of the prowling pickcters, nn Oriental of dubious valor. 1 would bo sorry for that envoy if the lady spreads her lunch-books across the area by which his friends rccog nizo him. Almost next door to this cam paigning ground is the famous postal-card shop in which one may always read the secret palpitation ot tho public mind. The first card I noticed tbcro said: Many Happy Returns of the Day What Day? Pay Day. ARCH. STREET seemed tt be taking a jt momentary halt for lunch. On the sunny paths of old Christ Church burying ground a lew roeaiiaiors strouea to and fro, und one young couplo were advancing toward tho wooing stago on a shady bench. The lady was knitting a sweater, tho swain ar guing with persuasion. The Betsy Roes House, still trailing its faded bunting and disheveled wroaths, looked more like un old curio shop than ever. Oue wishes the D. A. It. would give it a ccat of paint and remove the somewhat confused altrn POTIK PSTRIA. A littlo further on oue finds a sign . Select Evening Trip Down the Delawaro On Palace Steamer Thomas Clyde THEATKIOAIj MOONLIGHT This reference to nautical pleasures brought it to my mind that I had never en joyed a yago on the palaco ferries of the Vine street crossing, and I moved in that direction, On Front above Arch one meets the terminus of tho Frankford L, a tanglo of talmon-colored girders. Something per ilous, I could not hco just what, wus evi dently going on, for u workman in air shouted, "Watch yourself!" This terse phrase is one of the triumphs of tbo Ameri can language, as is also the remark I beard the other evening. rcierred to a certain 1 pBbUcan whvl caneU a, sptak-caey t b' THE OLD STORY t' s. zzurzavT1. : i r .i-'-. . rrj.i. -u.i t.-;j- JT".,!4r et t- -u.j . m -. i m i : i . i .i.iit j.- ri . - t-t . t. -.j- address I shall not ndmc. This publican had apparently got Into un argument solv able only by the laying on of bauds, 'und had emerged bearing an eyo severely pulped, "Home one's been w'orkin' on him," was the comment of one of his customers, -I TXTATCHING myself with caution, I dodged "' down the steep stairs by which Cherry Btrcet descends from Front to Delaware nvcuue. In tho vista of this narrow passage appeared the bharp gray bow of the United Stutcs transport Snutn Teresa. The wide spaco along the dojto was n rumble of traffic, as usual: wagothj of golden bananas, sacks of peanuts on tUe pavement. But along the waterside bulwark wcro tho ens-' tomnry groups of colored clti.ens shooting dice. Crap, I surmise, is a truly reverent form of worship : nowhere else does one hear the presiding deities of the congregation ad dressed with such completely fervent peti tion. A lusty snapping of fingers and un occasional cry of "Who thiuks he feels some?" rose from one group of'hrippy com petitors. Here again the student ot man ners may notice a familiar phenomenon, tbo outward thrust of tho negro toe. It seems that the first thing our brother does ot buying n new pair of shoes is cut out u section of leather so that his outmost pha lange may sprout through. Tho trauquil upper deck of the Race btreet recreation pier is a goodly place to sit und buryey the shining sweep of tho river. Tho police boat Ashbridgo lies there, and one may look down on her burnished brasses, watch the tugs puffing up and down, and the panorama of shipping from Kalgbn's Point to a big five-masted schooner drawn up at Cramps'. APPROACHING the Vine street ferry a mood of reckless vagabondago is likely to seize the wayfarer. Posters inform that the Parisian Ffijicrs' with "40 French Bublcs 40" aro in town, nud ono feels con vinced that life still teems with irresponsible gaiety. A savor of roasting peanuts spreads upon tbo air. Buyiug a bugy ono darts aboard the antique. ship Columbia, built in 1877, and still making tbo perilous voyage to Cooper's Point. There is un air of charming leisure about tho Vine bticct ferry. Two mules, attached to n wagon, waved their tall cars iu a friendly manner us we waited for the sail ing date to arrive, and I tried to feed them soino peanuts. All the mules I have ever been intimate, with were connoisseurs of goobers, but somewhat to. my chagrin theso animals seemed suspicious of the offer. After several unavailing efforts to engago their appetites tbelr amused charioteer In foraecj me that he didn't think they hardly know what peanuts were. These delightful mules watched me with an air of embar rassing intensity throughout the crossing. They had quite the air of ladles riding in a Pullman car whoso gaze oiie has Inadver tently Interrupted aid who have miscon strued the accident. These mules wcro so entertaining that I almost forgot to study tho river. On tbo Camden side 1 was somewhat tempted to go exploring, but u friendly tinman assured me the Columbia would shortly return lo her homo port and curt-en tod mo not to allow myself to be stranded abroad. So all I have to report of Cooper's Point Is a life sizo wooden figure of ,a horse, near the ferry, slip, Then wo inadii tbo return trip over' tbo sparkling beer-colored water, speaking a sister vessel of tho Shackamaxon route. TUERH is much to cafch the eye on a ramble up Viuo street from tho river, but probably most interesting is a very un expected 'stable about number 1-0. Passing under un archway, one finds a kind of rami, barnyard scene; great wooden sheds. on cqch sldo of an elbow alley, with lines of wagons laid away. There is an old drinking trough of clear water, horses 'stand munching Jn the sunshine, and a queer tanglr of ragged ref antijwuU tHa)w otI H I 5'4plV'kS$22K!3w:1;s?,"f ' ' fashioned scene. A few doors further on is uu equally unexpected sign in a barber shop window: Cups and Leeches Applied. Ono also finds a horseshoeing forge iu full blast, with puticnt animals leaning their heads against the wall and rosy irons glowing hi the darkness. With bimilar brightness shone a jug of beer thnt I suw a man carry ing across the street at tho corner of Fifth, The sunlight sparkled upon the bright brown brew, and as peanuts arc thirsty fodder I pushed through tbo swinging doors. The Bells of Beaimc THD old bells, the bold bells, the gold bells of Beauue, They arc singing, they uro ringing in tho ancient church of btonc. They are ringing, they nro qinging where the viuc-wreuthed hillsides stand, For France is soft in autumu aud tho cloud is off the land. "Come back", come back, my pollu Live, love and laugh with me To red, red wiuo and red, red lips in sun-i kissed Burgundy." To those who cling to Cote d'Or, tho massif's mighty line, To those who guard her memory along a black cragged Rhine; To such tho bells are calling iu vibrant chimo nnd tone; Tho old bolls, tho bold bells, the gold bells of Bcaunc. "Come back, come back, my poilu Lire, love and laugh with ine To red, red wine und red, led lips In sun kissed Burgundy." Steuart M. Emery, in the "New York ncrald. Admiral Grayson is not only a good physician, he is an excellent politician. At least the labor leaders are not denied free speech before the Senate committee. What Do You Know? - QUIZ 1. Whut 'is n brlgantlno? ' U, AVho isiBald to havo been chiefly re sponsiolo for fixing the standard rail way ' gauge ot four feet eight and one-halt inches? ' 0. What color is rcddlo? - ( 4. On what syllable in the Word bacillus r should tho accent fall? 5. What is a regicide? 6. Who were the Carpet-baggers in American political history? 7. How did the verb to park come to be applied to automobiles? 8. Who wroto "Robinson Crusoe"? 0. What were the winged sandals of the classical god Mercury calfed? 10. In what century was Gutenberg, the inventor of modern printing, born? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz s 1. Cardlual Mcrclcr Is a clti'.en of Maluies, Belgium. 2. The present year is CCSO by tbo Jewisli calendar. i 3. Austria-Hungary, Germany and Italy were members of tbo old Triple, Al liance. 4. A personals in his nonage when he ia In his minority or immaturity. Si A rondo is a piece of music with a lead-' log Jthemo to which return is made. 0. Pllmsoll's mark is the load tine mark painted on the hulls of British mer chant vessels to iudieato the limit ot ' submergence allowed by law. 1'. It takes its name from Samuel Pllm- soil, who was instrumental iu having the act of Parliament passed in 1870. 8. Plutarch was"U Greek biographer, who wroto the "parallel lives" of famous f, Gfeeka and Romans. -. fi, Chejcato Is the capital ot Wyoming. n 18, gtwssna w"-s wy at yfivmtr. 1 .-...iV f 8 ':a.- & r" -'.. Ai Wwff.' r ' u , ft' ft 6 ';,! 'fi M 0 C -. -