'W)lT 1-l -ii,-,l .. iT.Tj V"' -- -',,' "-' - 'f(-(i' 'n 'T- ,,J .,,' ,J.,f ,' '"VFT'yj- - tiVJ3XlNJ L'UULie LEDGER-rniLABELPniA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER M, 1019 10 M ff l&T$f Ir T b I r B S" I' Aliening JubUc merger TUULIC LKDfiER COMI'VNY . "KW l', t CI HT1K fntfinfM ,Ch.rl II Iajcllmrtoii Mm 1'rmldni , Jul n Martin. Kerrptfir wnrl Trrurr pr,IHi H I e'llne John Tl. Williams, Jolin J Ppiinjrci'i. nice, ii.ra i;uiiuim t, r.nMii' Cvd.cs II. K ' c-nis. Chnmnnii DAVID i: NMtM-V .. . Ijilltor JOHN C. MAKtlN' .. tlenrr.it riuslncs JImiwroi Jublhhd dAiW lit Ptnito t.rncrn tliilM'iiff, iulr"'lr'n',f tsriimro l'liltaclMplilu ATTANTte l m 'irai I incit t'llttdlnc , VonK ,. .Ull Metropolitan 'loner DrmoiT ... . 7iM l'ord liulMlru?" NT. l,oi (is .ton Pullrtnn llulMInc Cnicioo . . .1.102 VrtiVnui lliilMlne NBttS HtnBMS: washing ros vttitrii N v.. Tor. rvnn-,hanlii V-. mcl tttli St. Nett Totik til nr.u . . . Hie .Sim IlnlMliic London lutnm Loti'lon 7 fm3 Srni'ltll'TIHV TKItMl Thr r'BMMi t'l Bl it' t.nr-nEn Is erveil lo huIi ncrlMTs in Philadelphia ami mirrfiundlns tonni Hi tho ro"i nf th( U-l ivit pr w-ek, vv.'Blilo to the rftirlr. M mmi to pnirn o'it"nlo ef riiiiHlelnl'iit '" the United stair i. i anada. or t'nittcl Stater, t""' faaslnns pnntace free, lift. ivo cents per mmitti Six (J(" dollar r-5-year MiWn In Mvnnefl, To ft1! foreign tailntrlei one I'll dol'iiv per month Noitrr sutm-rlbers v 1-hlnr ncllress cininjteii mut el e old as well mi n-w mdres. . HELL, 5000 miMT KrwoM-:, mwn :ooo C Address all aommuntcalioit (o fie lino 1'nV.a f.rdoir. lintcpcHdciicf Scmarr. PI ilqnViP'ne. Member of (lie Associated Press T77: lSROCM7Tf) I'llHHH It rirfu-jtlt-cij n ilrd ft fhr Hie for renubhrrrllmi of nil ii " s divixitrhrs nedltcd iv II or not oiherviae credited in thlji poprr. ""' ''s" tho Incnt imrt publlahrd therein. ill rlrjhlt nf irpubllcntloii of sio ill dti-jia"'i'-i liririn nrr ahn rrsrrxrrl fh.lidrlpkn lu'lil". Ortolor It. lilt HAVE YOU BEEN ROBBED? rptlb.l, nrc flusli litiirf. Tor linndilti in - I'hiliid' lplnn. In Hie piu"P of two week,- uliout R7U.00O orth of lewulry has born stolen in broad dayliKlit from shops in the heart of the citj. If the mem round of hold-ups rocs on the yellow barks will have to be revised. We hhall hae a new littrature of the Wild East The t.mes are abnormal. l!ut ecn in qu'etei da,s the ileteclic bureau ha been unable lo deal cllii'iciUly with oi Kanized inme. It is disoiKam.cd b politician and it has not prowii. in cll'i ciencj or in the number of its oftlcers, with the times. It is niueli the same bureau that it was fifteen years ago. If professional gunmen and post KradunU Iiurplars can come and tro in the eit at will. r en while their photograph-. haiiR m (lie lollies' j;aller,. homellniif; serious is wrong. It is the busmen of detectives to Know the where abouts of lUch men, to pick them up nl the railroad stations and hold them for the pome who me sure to be looking for them in some other city. To deal with crooks of the sort who now harass the city we need to hae better detectives and more of them. Ml of which i offeieil a a tip to our nel Mayoi. DEPARTING GIANTS fpHK President is ill. Colonel House had to be helped down the gangplank s an invalid when he arrived in this countr.. Clcmenceau is about to retiie. seemingly weary and glad to go out of office. Lloyd George is fighting for his political life and, despite his moments of triumph, the 1iHes seem .setting against hun , The tijen who participated in the Pans cotierenre did not hoIip that a task so great a"- theirs could be completed oet nighf or in a month or tu a year. It may be a decade or a generation befoie the hopes incorporated in the cace treaty and the Icaguc-of-nations cove nant can be realized, even with wise and sincere direction of afl'ans by statesmen everywhcic. The men who- hoped and worked for a fixed peace must depend upon then successors to finish what they began. So the voi Id at laige would be wiaer to bury its hates and forget its bickeiing long enough to wonder who is to take up the load that the depaiting giants must noonci oi later lay down one by one. ANOTHER SCHOOLMASTER NE r the Hilprcituig photographs -'made at the industrial oonfercne shows joung Juhn Rockefeller in earnest and friendly conversation with Franl' Morrison, of the Federation of Labor. Mr Gompers shook hands with Mr. Gary. But even more significant than either of these incidents is the news that former President Eliot, of Harvard, has been a highly esteemed adviser to both sides in the conference. Doctor Eliot is libeial minded, with no awe of money as such, Long ago he manifested an inteiest in labor. He has gone to some pains to show the country the mighty part which humble workers play in ls affairs. "What tratibpircs between him and the leader at the labor (onfricnce should he nf inomcnl. It is easy lo tritiii.r ,Mi, Morrison and 1i t asaenatci, tT you I'm gt that v often Uiry have worked o ha"! dunne moil of lher live- thtt they hue had no Unip lo acquire I he knowledge of economic Uws tht tmgbi help theni to a urer leadership of labor "Will thev learn from Portor "Cliot '.' Will the leader' on tho -nle nf cnpilal Irani from hmi ' BLOCKING THE MAILS CONGRESS and llurleson must sluie about equally in the blame for obvious inequalities and injustices of tho wage scale which fifty-three letter carriers in this city have just escaped by the hard alternative of resignation. The walkout in the Philadelphia office represents but one detail in the slow dis integration of the postal service that has been progressing steadily under the present postmaster general. Mr. Burleson has been concerned only with profit. Efficiency and morale are nords that lie doeG not understand. His example has encouraged Congrcsi in its refusal to make such appropriations as would insure decent pay to the rank and file in the sen ice, The resignation of pxperienced men and the appointment of subttitutei to thiv vacant places mean merely that the delivery sjtteni must suffer until the new hand, arc trained. The government department which Mr. .Burleson controls is apparently unable to comnete with private business cnter- r&My. The process of resignation will continue under n system that, if it were designed to force nil the best men out of tho department, could not operate more effectually to that end limn it has been operating fo'r two or three riirs. ROBINSON CRUSOE'S POLICY APPLICABLE TO THIS COUNTRY Defoe's Hero Knew That the Only Way to Get Enough to Eat and to Wear Was to Produce It WHAT is to be thought of the man who insists that, because he cannot earn enough to suppol-t his faniilv when he works eight hours a day, he .should be required to work only .-d" hours day? This is not a hypothetical question. Tho soft coal minors are making this demand. They ask for a 00 per cent increase in their wages, it is true, but they seek CO per cent moie pay for -3 per cent less wotk. The miners are not fools. They are men of like intelligence with tho rest of us. We must assume that they are making these demands, not because they expect them to be granted, but in the hope that they can secure an increase in their pa, by asking for tnme than they expect to get and then compromising with their employe) s. The employers have thus far refused to coniproino ami a strike has been called for November 1. The soft coal miliars have undoubted grieancpi-. Their pay has not been in creased enough lo meet the incicascd tost nf food and clothing and they can buy less with the contents of their pay envelope than tliev could befoie the amount which it contained was enlarged. It is important that some way be found to enable them to live in comfort while they continue to mine coal. A strike will complicate rather than simplily the problem. The wages of the miner will not' stretch far enough to coer his nccea.-ities because the check on production caused by taking four million men from industr, and putting them in unifoims has been followed by a gloat increase in the market price of that which has been produced. Other causes, such as high wages forced by government bidding for help m war work and the inflation of Ihe cur icncy coincident villi the win. base nls-n afTectetl prices. Soft coal enters into the ioM ol ir tually ewry thing that we consume. Its puce affects the price of railroad freights. Without soft coal we cannot have elect! ic lights in fai tones, nor power to opeiate their niachmerj, nor electric power to run the tiollev cai. nor steam power to operate the pumps m the water supply departments. A stoppage of the supplj ol soft coal would mean a check in all industry and in the distribution of its products. This would still fuither cuitail the supply of lood and clothing and biing about .-till higher prices, so that if the .olt coal miners, after the strike had continued for seeral weeks, seemed the niciea.-o in pay which they are asking their, paj would buy no more than it will pa lor now ami thej would be no better off. ml the i est of us would be wor-e off. Tlieie can be no improvement in pres ent conditions so long as workers antl ri'iployers think only of their own nai row interest. They both would do well to lake serious thought of the suggestion for a truce made at the labor conference in Washington last week. Whether the j truce should last three months or six j months is a matter of detail that can be arranged as soon as it is agreed that an attempt to settle gnevances be post- I poned. j i Ve aie all -.uttering fiom the same ailment of which the soft coal miners aie complaining. We aie paid m a fifty-cent dollar for our work and our employeis arc paid in a fifty-cent dollar for what they sell. The thing on which it is im portant that we all concentrate our atten tion is the lesloration of the value of the dollai thai t, on making it possible fur a dollai lo buy more potatoes and meal, and coal. rhir canoo be done unlets the supplv of coal and men) and potatoes is untreated nobinsoii Crusoe, living alone on hit island, knew what he must do if he would have enough to eat and to wear. He know he must produce it. If he went hungry he had only himself to blame. He could not pass a resolution demanding a six-hour working day, with just as much food supplied to him at night as though he had woiked eight hours. The United States is an island of Juan de Fernandez and the people aie a col lective Robinson Crusoe, dependent on what they produce for what they con sume, it iney uo not, produce pnougn some otic must go hungry. The country is suffering now bc ausc wo have not produced enough lo make the pioduclo plentiful. The lemcdy is not lo drcicasc production In 'lopping woik, nor by working fewer hours day; bill to do our ulniott to nunc more coal, rsitc moie meat and potatoes and vhral and manu facture moi'f clothinr. No man who has cotridcrrd th crisis through which we ate passing has i cached any other conclusion. The Presi dent has urged it upon the attention of the country. It has been set forth by Herbert C. Hoover and by an indefinite number of bankers, and no labor leader has disputed it. Unfortunately, the labor leadeis heie and in England have in too many in stances decided to take advantage of the situation to demand a shorter working day and increased pay, under threat of holding up industiy because they think that public sentiment will support them for feat that the situation may become worse. These lcadets aie, unfortunately, lll advised. They are hurting their cause rather than helping it. The public hears threata of strikes with ill-disguised lm patipncp. It believes in fair play and is indignant when any group of men plans lo hold ud the rest of us for its selfish advantage. We have all suffeicd to gether and we musl all strive togethei to work our way out of the present com plications, There is a widespread feeling that ieyances tha. cannot be redressed by.J negotiation should bo endured until pro duction has been restored to its normal peacetime relation to the demands of the counlrj, and theie is n general belief that when production is no restored many of the grievances will have disap peared. So it is hoped that the soft coal .strike may be mertrd. The mine'rs tire amen able to l enroll and their employers should be like-wise. Their leaders arc opccled lo let pass the tempting opportunity to display their power and to meet in a conciliatory mood any negotiators who may tr. to bring about ;i ,ettlcment of the points m dispute. And above nil, they .should abandon all effort to decrease production through :t shorter working day. MOSES nOCTOU DKUCUM was almost too -' kind when, commenting on the ru mors relative to the President's illness, ho characterized Senator Mopes ns a backstairs gossip: Backstairs gossips are rarely so giaceless as the senator from Xew Hampshire appealed in the letter which, written In an unnamed con stituent, seems actually to have been in tended for the whole world. "He may live," wrote the Xew Hampshire prophet, "but ho will not be nnv material force nr factor in anything." Wr wonder. Ihe Pie.iidclit did not rralrp all his ideals. That is because they were high. But even if Mr. Wilson were never again to participate actively in aflair.s at Vva-hmglon the wotk he has already done will irmain as "a force and a factor" in the world's affairs for generations, perhnpt. even when such gicat leaders as Moses himself aie for gotten. The publu would welcome franker and fuller statements fiom the President's physicians. Lacking the information it tlcsiics, the country will feel, for the time being at least, that the President's attendants may themselves be in some doubt. It will not tulerate congressional sniping at a sick man who sacrificed his strength m the service of his country while his present critics weie giv ing their time to clflsi politii. POISONED AIR n is sun f - to critieiz fashionable if some quarlci mission for its habits of conservatism. Many people remembei that tho commis sioners hesitated for a long time before they permitted automobiles lo enter the Paik. The public is just beginning to perceive that thine wa wisdom in that waiting policy. And m some particu lars in the method ol caring for road surfaces and in geneial motor regula- j tious the Paik Commission still can I teach many things to City Councils. Because of the di&cu-aiou of the auto- , mobile smoke nuisance begun in these ' columns recently, Xew Yorker.., have sud- I denly lealied that the tiecs and foliage ' in Cenlial Paik aie being slowly de- i slroyed by the fumes emitted by imper fectly adjusted motors. The giecneiy in Fairmount'Park has never been seriously injuied in that way for the simple rea sons that iron legulalions existed from the firt to pi event it. The I'airniounl Park Commission, in other words, has a better vcgaid for the trees and the hrub.s and the lawns under its catc than Councils have manifested for the lives and the health of citizens. A chauffeur may defile die atmospheie of Philadelphia sheets at will if he is too lazy lo adjust the mechanism of his ear. But he will be halted as oon as he ap pears with a smoking machine anyvvheie in the Pai k. Anti-smoke ordinances aie now being talked of in New Yoik. They will be in operation theie. doubtless, befoie our own Council follows a sensible example that the Paik Commission has been cel ling for years. Itxhaid HhI, ,.i l', Ion lau VI . lust I e tin tied mm I'ncland ttn Wml. t.OMICS Itcsl "tu:e' to lake the Lnglisb Etnkr: n imiali- firilmn to aunplr takins a 'olida'", he cee3rf,r hen the people get "fed up' T'tli loafiDg they'll jet bark to work. It i- a comfortable theory and may be be true in thit rnynlry a:, in VbiRland. Thr Nrw Yolk Slup- Woincn hmldiDK Corporation .Not to ltlatnr lias denied visitins privileges to all women because pretty women distract the attention or. wotkmou and eflirieui-y is Impaired. Say what you will, il is the men who can t male their ryes behave .Scrrrtary SmAeu. of Hi" hii! the Indian Ttigbts As- vjuation. sajs peyotr, a ilru; pioruird fiuiu cacti has a ku-t, tnoie potent linn whiskv With a oipilp on the top of eyutv lactic Ho- Indnn iau jfloid lo Hugh at piohihninn ith all due ispc;, t to thr faith tieaisi , U may br irmqrkrd that- the Lnitcd States HdI hao b'n Ef'nj the resident "audi b'r treatment" for rom time pact, and d liHru'l done a htt pf ;emd Thr PrrsiHepl's phTuiriaus appcar'tn lie of thr opinion thai Moses should slick to Hie making of laws. I'ormer Lieutenant Governor McClaiu is wearing patrbed shoes. 'Well, be has nothing on the rest of us. The Atlantic City man who paid $4L'00 for water, thinking it was whisky, had to provide his own kick. T.y the time a perfect system )f trolley transportation has been evolved the airplane l'ltney drivers will be talking strike. Chicago firm is ciporimcntiug with a strain automobile This may yet put a i.rtmp id John D.'s charities An optimist is one who beUsres that treaties will eventually be made of plywood instead of piecrust Ihe odd thing about the Ballan fp ii be i forever tportiug n new tale. thai sticks and atones nmv break bones but they never win strikes. What the Russians want is Rigs with out Lett" or hindrance, THE "INABILITY" CLAUSE No Congress Has Ever Enforced the Constitution Provlilon Authoriz ing the Vice President to Act for the President In Case the Latter Is III NO VU'H IMtBKtDKNT of the United Sfiilr.s lias ever hern ilclrsalcil by Con Bies lo snro ,ih I'residrtil prior to flic drntli of the Chief MnRistrnlo of Ihe Million. Tim constitution, lmwcvrr, is dcllnlle upon tins subicct. Arrtirdlnc lo a clmifp In Avliilo 11. "In the ruse of Hip rrimiviil of the l're-iiloiit fiom nftire, or nf Ms tlcntli. trsisnnlinn or Inability to disclinrgp the powers mid duties of snid office, the snmo shall ilm-iilvp tin thp Vice President, and tho CtiiiRrefs niitv bj law pjovide for the ease of letnnval death, resignation or iluibilit.v." Bui the prescience of the makers nf our fundamental local instrument, in (his in sfance. as in numeioiis others, assumed a set of t uninistatices which have never in their entirely ot cut-red. 1"Ivp Presidents havp died in office. The constitution ma chllierv was rasii equal to Hipsp condition1. T'ivp Vice Presidents were "speedily iiiiiiicii taled in the lilijhesf pxohiIivp unite in th" land Willi lejanl in "i rutins I no nc has eter, niisen Hut-ins the imprndtninit dial of Andrew .lohuson Ihe imintry was con fidcrini; ti new possibility. The President's inarsin wa citiemcl.v nnnow. I'aillnc of -on Id ion b.v a single vote, bnwrvri, John son, despite bitter UcptimVnn nnlnponiin remained m office. lit Ihe law of JiOI. then in lopr. the president pm tcmpoir of the Senate would havp stepped into Johuson's phors had the two-thirds londrinnation vote been attain aide at I be trial. I'nder the later ail ol liSi: Hip siici cssion passes lo the sroel.ii" of stair in case "lcmoval. death. lesiRim don or inability" affects a President wlm was orijinall.v elected as A im President The Johnson crisis was r-vtinordinUM Its outcome in a period of intense pailis.in tancor lenders it extiemclv nnliKeh tluii Consicfs will ever have to busv itself nun h with Ihe presidential Slice ejsinn inirslinn piopounded b.v "mnnval" id Hie p)miiii H Isj ' iiialiilnj" is a iiiin-li nioi pinbali'r cveni el eon when il lias niwl both (oni;iess and Hie nation Ii.'im hern deeidedlv i onspcv at ive, tinrhelil livid relit i daTs after (iuitrau fiird thr fatal liulh t in July ". ISM. The pnlilital Mtualimt fat f i out serene, sinip Ihe ltcpuliln ans then in power, were ipiarreliiiK anions: Ho in eehes ihe administration whir of Ihe pnilt harms In lontend with flip New "Voil, ' Slalwaits, ' of whom the rrdoublablr l!osy i oi ( (iithiins was chief. I'm Coiikicss was mil pi srsinn and heme Hip "inability" of thp 1'iesident vPl mil. fiom the lrj;al aspect, of piessiiiE momenl -No bills wen; awaiting tint lipid's sicnnfnir. It was clear that if he Ihrd lir would be sufficiently retoveied to perfoini his necessary official duties bv the next Pivrmbn . Ileal Hess ami ltus.v mp.uhcl n el ilic-s did, n is true ilivilss "iuabililv " Their in sistence was invalidated when some five weeks aflrr the Minuting the I'icsiclent did icttially Mffn one document, a paper pre sent ed bj the secietat-v of slatt inurcruinc an extiaclition case with Canada Shorily aflci'w.itd the patienl's cundllioii took a tu l'ji for the win so and there was fiiilhei" talk" about the piopriely of leaving Hie executive depailinenl of the government ! without an acfivr brad. Tow aid the close I of tin scorching August of 1SS1 the Prrsi ' drill became so ill thai the bad tasle of I discussing a successor lo him was icalizcd even b.v the m&sl callniis inquiier.s (iarfirld was lighting for Ins life. lie died on Isep irmber 1f). at IJIheron. N J . whithei In had been leniovecl in older to avoid the alleged malarial ans nf 'Washinglori Chester A Arthur, his successor, made an admiiable I'residenl. The Conkling in fiueuie. which had alaimcd our of the political factions proved to be negligible in bis administration of moie than t liter and a half yeats PUES1DKNTIAI. "iuabililv was neier an issue with legaid to auv of the other Chief Magistrates who died in office. Those who succumbed lo disease weie ill for too brief a period 1oi" the theme to become prominent. l.imoln and -Mi Kinley who fell In ih" assassin's bullet, bad no am ti appaienl chance for life as (iailield .Inlm Wilkes tiootli pei'lnrmnl bis despicable deed very thoroughly. 'Abraham Lincoln was shot on the evening of A pi il It ltTi ' lr ,,0,1 morning al 7 o'clock lie died For a day 01 I wo onir piomtse of 1, Kiuley'o icovorr w.il held out ht his nbv etcisns. ftut hope .000 vam&bcd He bugered tor only cijht da-ri. trom Prprn-i ber 0 lo September 14. 1001 To the acute grief of the Whij nho bad elected him, AVilJiam Henry Harmon died exactly one month after taling his oath of office. It has hern said that hr contracted 1 old on inauguration day Whatever tho cause, bo was stricken with bilious pneu monia on March 117. IS), and ou April I the "Whigs had lost their first President. John Tyler pioved a maddening disap-' pointmcril to constituents who had shouted so fervently for " 'Tippecanoe and Tvlei. tool" By vetoing the Lnitrd States bank lull Ihe former Yicc Piosidenl broke de cisively with bis parlv and in September of 1SU the entire cabinet, ejupi Darnel Web slcr, the secretary of sfjir, resigned ln a body. In the hisluiv of the pii-jidrmy br sin cession'' Tyler holds ihe'tnord (or lenglli nf term 111 oflne. o wonder the Whigo regarded their cup of tesstiuu as full ' Nine jeai-3 Inter th'v rufTeir, jue (jjUj Of their only olher succei:-Cnl picEidentjal candidate Eschar-" Tavlor, eUctj for hll military piowess in the Mciicau Wai, tm he had hitherto made no pietcoElon; to alatesmsnthip eerved ac Pi-sidcnt for six teen months He difd on July j, yO, ol bilious colic, having been ill but five dayi Millard rdlmore tilled his pac ronsn rntiously, but without conspicuous bril liancy. IX 1HE drama of American history there has never yet been the ease of a Presi dent invalided for a protracted period during which his services wcio imperatively needed. Had Congress been in session while the physicians sought to save Garfield per haps more light would have been shed on the nation's interpietationof the "inability" clause than is at present available, Judging by tbe speed and firnUem.v with which they work local thieves must bo trying CO comer cud iui Juarb-Ct, "With the price of clolbtt rising tberr J possibiUty tbst patents will bo f.thiocable this winter. 1 " ' ' ' ' In the nutter of prices not eTen ili)t gravity of the ettustiou insures thut what goeS'Up must come down Colonel House is said to be iou ill (0 talk. Itcticcncc js hardly a sign 0f m,.,ncg, with the colonel. Kvery strike iucrcasts the plighinc aTtrsce of II. 0. Ia ., t .,..',.- ,,." . r" ' " ... i . , v .!.? , . ; , i ' i.3,c' i'.i &,&' V"it.v?-vrK5i..H i.s i ';h , v s- --k- Tfe-'; - . - SSrr t y M g - "' "- " fftli W$$k "' Pf ::v - A '."".' i "s - i THE CHAFFING DISH On Leaving France OI'ILLDS of ing. ic-sl Cranio, yet giccti ami mil ing. ic-sl Starred led ill popiiic-s. blue with scddicis ! slain Who under while limits fouml their peace again, j And ever wear ihe aspei I I loved brs, I Lath bill loo niulr and lender for a bio.isl I Cradling Hie bluest skies, or sleek with lain, Thr pnplnis' silver nian'li iieinss the plain, I And sloping vitieyaids puiplecl in the West. 1 Not in one laud alone does Itrauly live And their aie other suns than gild Aiijnu: So shall I'renc h peasants soem to till the loam Jn Tennessee, ami cottage windows give 1)11 landscapes tapestried, a fairy virvv I if Trance still lhing in the bills of honii ALKC P.. STKVIINSON , Utir genial colleague, C. W. I)., has been doing a little desk-cleaning, in tho iinivse of which vvr found him uimmaging through .1 batch of old clippings. He pulled our oul and showed it lo us, with the lemaik that it is tho best autumn poem he knows. It runs thus: Autumn Poem Thr nakril lulls lie wanton to the bnce. The tirlds aie nude, the gioics unlimknl Tiair are Hie limbs of thmurlesu lires, No wnndir lhat Ihr torn i clioekecl' Why Not F.dimiiHU Al eur favorite movie thcatir we mii th following announcement ou tho :crcrn "D. "W. Griflith's cSupromo Effort, Broken Blos soms, from thp story by James Uurkp." Now it scorns lo us 'that if U. W. was making an effoit like that ho might have got the author's name right, vu.. Thomas l'urkc. lut pish, tush, who cairs aboui the nutliot? How About It? Dear Socrates: I note that you sav judg- inent is born in one, and not likely to bo improved by experience. Ticie is, on thr other side of the question, a statement by the learned Samuel ,inmisoii, i,i. . I vr been searching through Boswcll ever since I saw your note in the Dish, and heir it is ; II Is a sad irtlecllon. but a Hun one, Hut I tincw almost as nitirli ni riclittru .n I do now- Mv ludgment, to )jj ruie ,,,, ii"t 30 lood . but t had all Hie ta. ts .WIXLIAM llAHis The llrat mandate of the l'asue ot nation; perms to be that exciclscd 01 cr 5ti AA ilsou by Doctois Grayson. Kuffln and Slid Out waggish friend M. M I. suggeeis that wc will know the President is entirely 'well when we hear that he has asked to sec Mr. Lodge. Ignorant as we are about music we aie greatly interested to 'note that the oichestia is going to play something tailed "Stev ensoniu" on Friday and Saturday. AVc are wondering ubout this. Is it a symphonic toue-biogiaphy of It. I. S.? As a Steven son fau, it would interest us greatly to know more about it. Pctiograd, we understand, is again "about to be captured." There is otn thing about Petrograd that has never been ri -plained to us, and that is, what has hap. pened to the Mcnshevikl. -Uiothtr question: Is there any one ivho liseeen all the installments o a motins rlrture serial? Hroad Mreet Station Again Speaking of Iiroad Street Station laj we -cere jesterday) it occurs to us to add that wandering about that place always from, to us like living in a detective story. In all thst panorama of life and burry there is a ot of -Tuterr and enigma. Where ars all these peeple toiof, pd what ar therl BUT WINTER'S COMING i . - i "- -r:aBi. . L,s,sai trr . nt,n v..i - -,l J' '-WWaUiFKTA' - . -A if. ! ssC ".v going to do when they got theirV Thai gill watching the bulletin boaul of ariiviug liains. whcie she sees tho tcluulogiuph scribble Ao. 26 iriorlcd rtui.li Hl"i one hr hitc, why is she wiping her eyes? The little Knglishman asking when the next train lravcs for ''Bryn Mauor." what Is ho up to? Theie is a subtle mystery about all this that sets one studying for ways of escape from hnl pursuit. It is n favorite imagination of ours to devise ways nf eluding sleuths. Broad Street Station has many exits. Wr have counted nt least srven ways by whb li we could dodge a ''bull.'' Tiist, Ihr outside staiis on the soulh side. Second, the bag-gage-ioom stairs by ihe south parcel room. Third, tho stairway through the entrance to the grneial offices. Fourth, the main stair way with its double descent. Fifth, the Filbert stieet staiis. where a little sliiniDg ilevalor alwajs slauds open, into which a haul-pressed fugitive muld pop. Sixth, and best of all. over the little bridge across Mar kot stieet. The buirying pursuer would naturally rush down the stairs, thinking that the only exit: but in leality wc would have darted tluougb thai small door at tho side and bo lost in the manv" passages and stairways of tho Commeicial Trust Building, Seventh, their is also that outside tcrraie, overlooking Market stieet, near Ihe cnliance, lo Ihe general ollicrs. This would make an admiiable hiding place at night. The geneial iucicasc in sharp wittcilncss lhat you must have nuljcrd in thr popula tion is due to thr great numbeio of us who chop into the movies after the him ba3 begun, and have to use our bean luittly to dopn out what has happened before wr got there. Ejaculation O Time, from thy Ihght Ope boon lot me borrow : Make it tonight All day tomorrow '. JKSTA MLN'NIT. Bill Reedy's Fish In answer to seveial inquiries, we are pleased to bo able lo state that Bill Jteedy. ihe well-known editor fiom St. Louis, did actually catch a ihanuel bass down at Cor son's Inlet . The literary fishmg party ie lurncd In town jestrrday and a number of Ihe bookisbly inclined wrip invited by the Icaitied Dot tor Bosenbach to attend the ob cquics of the untorluoato fish Barely, if ever, was a fish cousigned to iln ultimate destination with greater splendoi. In the erudite doctor's calou a litetarv gatheiing assembled, including Doctor E-'ohs-Cohen, Mr. A. Edward Xew ton and Mr. T. A. Daly'. Doctor Polis-Cohcn entertained Jhc company with his own delightful tianslations r medieval pools . .ues3is. Aevvton and Dalv not lo be outdone in literal matteis, ex 1 hanged anecdotes of tho prize ring, and Sir. Beedy gave pleasing icminiscences of John L. Sullivan. It was agreed by all that the high point of the occasion was reached In Mr. Newton's recollections of going to see a horse-race in company with Lillian Itussell, Blanche Bates, John AT. Gates and Jim Cor bott. 'After this Sir. Itcedy adjourned to St. Louis. s Something positively unique has happened to us and wo wish to chronicle it in our own list of unexpected happenings. An electric -light company has written to us as follows : ' "On receipt of jour 'titer we cheeked tlio meter u-adine ajitt found that tho iiutn who lendered jour bill bad overread th meter 10 K.TV , which mado a. difference?, ot K. "Thsiefoie wo ar now sending yo.u a. corrected bill and enclosn herewith our check." This unprecedented occurrence has caused us lo revise our whole philosophy of human Dature. We seo by the phutos that D'Annunzio is eggiehly" hairless. At last the downtrodden race of bald men have a hero, If only all the week could bo as pleasant and placid as the first pipo ou,Suuday morn inr. what, a life this ould ,be. 4? ,i?-A. ..hi -:l!4i"r A .. i- " fljtfr' V - 'ts"iJP'S-W " r . " tiy' .f?;-j f"-.,g?-7.u.i'f; - v. J-jTV-,rj..-.-f.-.. j PERENNIAL AT EIGHTEEN' she was rather nlcs, And acting fairly well. I heard her say it once or twice o mailer what befell She would not stay for untold gold Upon the stage if she weie old. At twenty-five she reigned a queen And always she could get Tho town's applause, it she was seen As dainly Juliet ; And often she wns known to sat "Till I am old I will not stay '" At fcuty she had many friends. Was still of the elect; Her good looks still might make amende For any small defect. And in her interviews you read : " 'I'll leave ere T am old,' she said." At three-and-seveuly years of age She acted still. A scold Assailed her with: "Tou swore the stage You'd leave ere you were old!" She turned upon her friend, T heard" "Yes, madamc, and I'll keep my word'" Sydney Bulletin. Perhaps some delegate will open Hit Jrnliislrial Conference deadlock with a key note. Why don't the automobile thieves st-al a patiol wagon for a change? .New York baa already demonstrated that a strike makes a longshoreman short Every strike ended Is some quaricl mended. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. What patt of the eye is the retina' , 1'. In what century did Ttobcrt Emmet ' live? ."?. What is palingenesis? 1. How long did President Garfield live after he was shot by Guitcau? ." What stale does Senator Moses rcprr isonl? 1; Which is the higher title in England, duke or earl? "x Who founded the Salvation Aimj ' S What is the meaning of 6mlatini'' 9. Where did Messs die? 10. Who was Captain Charles Wilkts'' Answers to Yesterday's QuJ; I ice Admiral Sir David Bcatty has suc ceeded Vice Admiral Sir Rosslyn Wcmyss as first sea lord of the Brit ish navy. 2. Plumbago is black lead graphite used for making pencils. It is a form of carbon. 3. Shaddock and pomelo are other names for grapefruit. 1. San Salvador Is the capital of th re public of Salvador. 5.' In 1792, after Vermont and Kentucky had been admitted lo the Union, the stripes on the American flag were in creased lo fifteen. By 1818 therft were twenty stripes In tha flsr, and then Congreta passed an act filing the number permsnently at thirteen, 0. 'JJhe United States has a naval elation at Gasntananso, Cuba. In 'Santo Domingo and Haiti, which together form the island of Haiti, the Amri can Government is exercising alone some lines temporary control pro vided for in treaties and agreements, 7. On Hundred pounds ma,ke a quintal. 8. Lorenzo de' Medici, called the Magnifl cent, ruled over Florence. 0. He lived in the fifteenth century, djiok ln ld02. 10, Hair Mn ths world war IhreV year's ihVa oat&seuf cintUen hyr, gt ;7iaIs, si&JSsJ&fiN I! ti , fe ' -J , y Is' . - n- '-"" , in r x. . . - - " -, l If r i .u i .,to'i v (tSv?.' ?!