WF V x lli m u IJv I'j' It lift' i ''! -io Uuertincj JubUc SJe&gei: rUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY cynys ir. ic. cuntis. rnmn-NT . CMirlMi H LiKllimton, VIm Prpltont John C Martin. SMrrtim ami Trcnnurcr: Philip S Collin", John I). Williams, John J. flpurcton. Director, :D;fbii!At7iio.ni): Ctnr II, K. CtT.Tiii, Chairman DAVID r.. SMILEY nJllor JOIIX C. MARTIN.. ..Ornernl lHnlnoss Manager rutlthi1 Jally nt Ptiuio T.rnnrn Ilulldlns, Indrprndmco Riuure, rhllivlHnhla Atlantic Citv.,.. . Vrcta'Unlnn IttilMlng Nsw VoaK , L'llil Mtrorollfnn Toner JIetiwit "01 I'onl nullillnt ST. 1HI,, Ions 1'nllrrton llulMIni: CHICjmio IMS Tribune llulMlne xnwg nunn.u'f: TViIltVOTn.V tlffl', , ..... ... N. 15. Cor. PcnTjlvnnln. Ac. ami 14th St. Ne Tom ncniuif The Sim IIuIMIiik l,oroN llciir.H' London 1 fines sunscrui'Tiov Tr.rnrs Th Kmimm) Pimm I.i.iiirn 1' wrvJ to iuh rrrlrwra In 'Phlladrtphla an.l rurrounillng -.owns at tha rate of tntlto ,11 ctnls per week, phmiiiIo to the carrier, L1 Ilv mall to polnti otruiil o' l'lillo.lflphla. In the United Stntfit, Cntiiiln or t'nlted State !" pexalonr, nmtnsp tree. ftt (Ml) rents per month Six n )ollar re- year rnvnblo In nilvntire. To all foreign countries ono (CI) tinllnr per month, . . , , Nniicr subcrllers lhlns aililrei clinnrrri must eKo old ns well ns r"W n 'Ure"". BtLt., 3000 TVAI.MT KnSTOSn, MMV JOCO (ET Address all comimiiilcadoiis to r.vrnltw I' Mi Lulacr, ii'.Vjifiiilc.tre Sqiinrr, Pil.niMl"' ' ' Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCl.Ti:n l'Vr.SS U.rreltt. Mvcly entitled to the nr for republication o all lines dhpatehci credited to it or not othcru-l.ie credited III fil Jinnrr, and titan the local tine? published theieln All linhti of lejiublicatlon of anecinl (111 patches herein are alio reirrved. rhlliJcIilil, Thur..l, Ottolirr II. 1'I9 LABOR'S BOLT MR. GOMPERS. left to himself, prob ably would not h'tvo bolted the labor conference. He would have beoji far too wise to invite for otganized labor full ' blame for the possible wreck of the con- ferencc and responsibility for whatever loss and confusion may follow. The ex ecutive council of the American Feder ation, rather than Gompeis and his as sociates in the confeience, seems to have orip;inated the policy of staiulpatism, which made reasonable agreements im possible. It is a losing policy. Labor for the moment has sunendered its claim to the support of popular opinion. The em ployers' croup and the conservatives amonp; the representatives of the public have now the general advantage that goes with an apparent desire to be pa tient, sincere, deliberate and ready for compromise. Each of the successive resolutions of fered by the labor group implied clearly the future dictatorship over industry not only by the Federation of Laboivbut by the representatives which the federation membeis might elect. The federation elected William 7.. Foster, a syndicalist and I. W. V. red. It elected the men who want to paralyze the whole indus trial life of the country by calling a ? strike in the soft-ccal industry for a thirty-hour week and a sixty per cent increase in wages. i If these are the policies to which or ganized labor is consecrated, then any sensible man must admit that even Mr. Gary, who has not been conspicuously public-spirited or liberal-minded in the past, acted logically in opposing the labor group contentions to the last. It is Mr, Gompers and his aides who turned aideaf ear to the appeal of the President """ and it is the executive council of the federation, which foimally offered its full est support to the belligerent steel strik- ers even when the labor conference was trying to find a way to a peaceful set tlement, that must shoulder the blame for the defeat of Mr. Wilson's plans if they are actually defeated. The executive council has been radical-minded and ob durate from the first. It may be granted that the other groups at the labor con ference were not always fair. The im portant thing is that they seemed willing to strivo for an acceptable middle ground and that labor quit before the job could be accomplished. MOORE, P. R. T. DIRECTOR WHEN he takes oflice as Mayor, Mr. Moore will become ono of the direc tors of the P. R. T. His duties in that position will be to look after the intcr- csts of the riders on the street cars. He has already begun to gather infor mation, for he has had an interview with , Mr. Stotesbury and Mr. Mitten, during which he asked them some pertinent questions. What those questions were has not been disclosed, but those who know Mr. Moore are confident that they went to the heart of the issues. Rapid transit development has been checked by the war. The city is suffer ing from lack of fast lines to carry pas sengers to the outlying districts. The new Mayor will be confronted by no more pressing problem than that connected with the way to provide those lines. The public will await with undisguised interest the disclosure of the plans which he finally makes for relieving the con i gestion in the central part of the city. TAMING THE WILD TAXICABS TD ULES announced by the Public Serv " ice Commission for the regulation of taxicabs are favorable to the taxicab companies and more or less discouraging to the men who operate what are known generally as wild cabs. The owner of a wild cab operates usually at night. Ho owns his own machine and often wishes he didn't. His aim in life is to get all he can in the way of fees. Under the new code taximeters are re quired in all such vehicles and the 'own ers must show that they, like other com mon carriers, have arranged to compen sate passengers in case of accident. The taxi companies have already met these requirements. The regulations laid down by the serv ice commission ate similar to those .exist ing in other cities and are altogether commendable from tho viewpoint pf pub lic safety. Because of earlier laxity the wild taxi business has flourished in Philadelphia, Drivers often impose ex orbitant charges and their patrons have had none of the guarantees of safety made necessary under the new code. A BOUQUET FOR SCHWAB LORD FISHER, who is usually credited with having made the modern British foayy what It 5s, has. taken his pen in knd for a. scries of broadide devised to jMjt-the;:Engllk,.owtiQf :,eMnplac(i;ucy which ho deems worse than fatal. The admiral's criticism of popular war heroes has been scathing. Ho aims to speak for the future with the voice of trumpets. The British have just been reading Lord Fisher's latest ptoposal, presented as Bernard Shaw might have presented it in his best days, for a practical bond of unity between the United States and Britain. He wants foity-mi!e-an-hour ships lunning between New Yoik and Blacksod bay, on the west coast of Ire land, with fast rail seivice through the gicen isle and a tunnel to England and a tunnel to France and other ladiating lines to the heait of the continent and farther east. The project is colossal and rojnantic, but by no mentis impossible. It would solve 'many of Ireland's tumbles. It would give the Ihiliah and all Ameticans a common inteiest. Such a system of communication would be to Anglo Saxons far mole than the Kcilin-to-Bagdad Railway was in the dreams of the Pan-Germans. But it is Loid l'l-hn's pai ting shot to the Btitish that should interest Amnrici.ns. "Schwab," says ho, "could do it!" Most likely he's right. THE SENATE'S SILLY SEASON SEEMS TO BE ALMOST OVER McCumber's Reservations Clear the Way for Treaty Progress Which It Would Be Folly for the Democrats to Obstruct THE constitution says nothing about open emotions, openly an ived at, and so the Senate quite correctly assumes the privilege to be "temperamental." Its members have a way of wincing and wailing and writhing and raving when politics bear down upon exposed nerves. All this is so perfectly in aecoul with convention and tindition that it really warrants no surprise. But the sensitheness of the public is also acute and its memoiy is short. It is awfully upset when the Senate has a tantium and is in the main quite obliv ious of the fact that such an exhibit is usually followed by action carefully keyed to the tone of popular opinion. Necessarily, this must be so or else lep resentative government is a farce. The truth is that most of us don't think so for a minute and yet, despite all our faith, we continue to take the regula tion comic relief a trifle too seriously. Consider the peace tieaty. It has been inevitable from the outset that this na tion would ratify the document without compelling its return to the Paris con feience. The country wouldn't tolerate any other pioceduro. The senatois. all except a fqw wild men who will always be outvoted, were well aware of this. But they were aware also that veibose emotionalism in the legislative halls was under no constitu tional ban and that as politician's they had a right to cultivate the technique of politics. For more than a month the scoring of points in one of the most fascinating of games has gon" men ily on. liming that period this newspaper, which has from the beginning advocated the passage of the treaty, has said little about it in these columns. The contest in Washington had passed the phase in which it could en danger the fate of civilization and en tered upon the haimless and highly pro fessional stage. Comment upon the va rious moves for Democratic or Republi can position, upon the exaggerated calamity howling and on the whole spec tacle of shifting triumphs and discom fiture was hardly necessary. Natuially, it mattered a good deal to Mr. Lodge if he chalked up a point or lost one, and tho maiks on the Demo cratic dope sheet weie of deep interest to Mr. Hitchcock. Such themes, how ever, belong to the rarefied domain of the political high criticism. Through all the performance, how ever, tho clutch of vital circumstance was not to be shaken off by the spokesman of either party. Hence it was that the foolish and corroding amendments a whole grist of them by Senator Fall, tho Shantung trouble-urceuer, and some others weie brushed away into the dis card. Hence it is, furtheunore, that Senator Hitchcock's obstinacy against legitimate reservations to the treaty is likely to leact most unfavorably against him. The pompous booming of the political big guns is about at an end. After a thoroughly conventionalized spasm, the Senate is settling down to its prime busi ness of 1 effecting the people's will. The argumentative absurdities which senators commit seldom live after them. The good is incorporated in American history. The nation is now facing a refreshing chapter of estimable perfoimance. Having indulged its errant humor to the full, having toyed characteristically with the amendment fallacy, the Senate is now plainly preparing to subscribe to the treaty of Versailles. For the termination of the period of whimsicality and abstruse professional ism, the efforts of Porter J. McCumbcr are in a large measure responsible. His marshaling of the sensible and patriotic elements best representative of the Re publican party was reflected in the defeat of the amendments. It is visible again in the reservations which should admir ably servo to clarify America's position in momentous foreign affairs. Mr. Hitchcock will be blundering egregiously if he is bull-headed about them. It is doubtful, moreover, whether his obstinacy will faithfully mirror tho President's sober viewpoint. On tour it was perhaps necessary for Mr. Wilson to be uncompromising. That was certainly one way of attacking tho amendment delusion, and when a spokes man entertains passionate convictions it is hardly advisable to confuse tho issue with qualifications due for consideration later on. As the situation now stands, the treaty is out of danger. The Paris Conference is not going to be reopened. Jt is, therefore, altogether fitting that tho United States should exercise its right to interpret tha'document soriouslx I land explicitly 3fh Amlrican pepjSq are .f ' -, '?- EVENING VVBUC LEDGER - entitled to be safeguarded in that fashion. Theic arc individuals who no doubt can find in tho treaty and the league covenant implication of all the positions which the seven McCumbcr leservations take. In that case, though the interpre tations may bo artistically offensive, they are essentially harmless. There can be no valid objection to the repetition of a good thing. On J.I10 other hand, persons to whom the treaty text is unsatisfying ought not to be ignored. They will bo reassured by the icservation by which the United States assumes to be the sole judge re garding its fulfillment of international obligations; by the additional safeguard ing of the Monroe Doctrine; by the defi nite exclusion of domestic questions from tho league; by the expression of tho right of this country to object to the voting repiescntation of the British do minionsv What Is "icserved" is not destructive of tho covenant, It is simply our eluci dation of language which unquestionably permits of such construction. Article X, which has rightly been called the heal t of the covenant, is not pierced bv the McCumbcr declaration that "the United States assumes no obli gation to piesorvo the political integrity or political independence of nny other country or to interfere in contiovorsies between nations," unless Congiess au thorizes such acts. Of course. Congress must act first. Respect for the "existing political inde pendence of all members of the league" is specifically emphasized in the pacT. The leservalion is useful as a notice to the outside woild of the structure on which our government is based. By the Shantung provision the United States "refrains from entering into any agreement on its pait" with reference to the transfer of the foimer German out post to Japan. This is fair and logical, as the cession in nctually a result of the treaties be tween the Fiench, British and Japanese Governments, in which we weie never in volved. With tho season of inconsequential senatorial antics viitually at a close, it is imperative that tho patriotic co-operation of the political leaders should be registered. Senator Hitchcock will enlist scant sympathy, save from bigoted partisans, if he adopts purely obstructionnry tactics regarding sane reservations. The Republicans will be equally blame worthy if they press the foreign rela tions committee's latest recommenda tion stipulating that thico of the princi pal Allied powers must agree to them. Such a perfoimance is only a thinly veiled. icpctition of the amendment non sense. Furtheimore, it is a queer .mental process which insists upon acceptance by somebody else of our own opinions before we venture to consider them valid. Chicanery at this late day is no longer nmus'ing. Happily such of it as still survives is likely to bo swiftly discred ited. The Senate has donned its working togs. November 1 is approaching. Po litical foiecasters have had a feeling that the treaty would be ratified about that date. A rctiospcctive survey of the typical functioning of a typical American Con gress is confiimatory of that view. The Mifini- destroyed (iiU'crliiR Tlirmsrhrs by striking teamsters is but a small tcn spoonful in the national (oltce cup but in the matter of public sentiment it is a moun tain. Kwrj hou-ewife ilepnveil of her usual amount of sug.ir feels a pergonal grievance against its wanton ili'stn.c-i'. The (lump ing of the sugar by the -Hikers was worse than wltUcd. It was nsiuino. If j 011 had to award We'd Split the Trize a prize for the most eint and accom plished waster of cnerg.i, would jou honor the mini who laboriously balances n cherry on the peak of a sundnc, the chap, who puts the twist in pretzels or the politician who still lielieu's that he inn appear honest by waving the Hag? The Philadelphia Mint I'l'imy-Iess is tin nine out be tween two and three million cents daily. "It is saving the na tion from being penniless," sa.s Ray S. Baker, director. Perhaps it is because lie isv a punster that Mr. Baker thus hnndlcs the dough. When King Albert of Our Various Land Belgium visits Har- lisburg tomorrow he will find a spec taele of the soi t that may be viewed only in n few places eicn on this diverting earth. lie will see a lot of men cheering for political liberty without be lieving in it. The day approaches No I-micer a Reason when a wink will do no more than ihymc with "drink." Sugar is plentiful in Cuba, but the fact gives us little joy. Water is plentiful at l.uku Kiie, but it doesn't help Sahara. According to the Carnegie Foundation, Justice occasionally swats the poor with her 'scalei. Bstinrntes for the new truck show that the old IJbeity Bell is to be equipped with all modern improvements. When strikers destioy property it is their cause they destroy. Before the Senate gets through with it it ma) be a piece treaty. Senator John Q. Compromise will put the treaty through if anybody can. If it is thrills D'Annunzio wants, he might icturn to the Itullnn quake zone. And of course we'll avoid nil mention of local polities while King Albert Is in town. ' French Socialists are expected to split during the coming eleetornl campaign. But isn't this tho easiest thing they do? The man in fighting trim is never a trimmer, Tho nrisontr tint on ball doenu't i-nrr hoy lwden are the heels of, Justice. ' Xi - .OK' t if- PHirADELPHTA, THUftfeDAY, ' OCTOBER 23, THE GOWNSMAN Freo Verse Once More TX TIIK current number of the Atlantic J- Monthly, Walter Pilchard Baton Is at great pains to distinguish the hn.lt' "f free Acrse If our free verse is growing hair twlxt the north and northwest side. He tells of "the bewilderment of the public," which to all nppearanees is as worried and anxious over the momentous question, "Whilt is the illu"crcnce between fiee verse ami ptoseV" as It is troubled with the high cost of living and the persistency of the I 'nlted Stales Henate In prolincting to the utmost limit our tinconcludeil world war. The (iownsmiiii has not noticed ninny faces among Ills acquaintances haggard and pal lid because of rest lost over this pus-zllng matter. But then the (Iownsmiiii has not been ery lately in Boston, not indeed since the famous night In which Ihe Boston police turned over the city to the hoodlums, nil act which, from its freedom fiom un.Uhiug like firhjmc or icason, tuny not impossibly have been superinduced by a spicics ol puciif.ii Infection from the famous put' tltlonei.s ot free cisu in Cambridge and lItiity. SOMi; time ago, when the shot I story was sciiitillatlui: in the spotlight of popu lar discussion, mi eminent authority dis lovercd that a short story is not a story which is short, but a new species or genre (beautiful and favorite word) in literature, only properly to be designated by the hjphenated word "bhoit-stor.i, ' r. still iiinru accurately and precisely "the "hurt slor.i." Perhaps Mr. Kittoii'n dKcoNcry Is one of this delicate, discriminating kind. Standing in n crowd the other day, Mr. Baton heard u liinu declare, lie tells us: "lie sas he wouldn't take his old job hue J; for tw'iie his foimer wages." I,et we be misled. Mr. Baton hastens to infoini us that "it would be absurd to suppose that this mini was talking 1111 thing but conversational pru-e." This we uie really glad to know. And our Mentor adds, "He was not even emotionally the least excited." We ate glad of that, too, for if the man had been emo tionally excited, who could qticstiun that it was that which had' driven him to erse, as tunny a man now, alas! of joie hath gone his fatal way to drink. I I1 Won.D seem that nothing, then, Is mine fallacious than the lurking suspicion whii h j nu cherish, dear lelteied leader, that in some wise rhythmic prose and free, or less than ligoiously rlijtlunie, icrsc can be nn thing whntcer alike. Mr. Baton who confes-es modestly tlint lie, too. has maw iToits In "the new poetrj" declines that in this free net of a free will, the writer is nlwa.is "inwardly conscious that he is not writing prose." Of course he is. Who ever wiote nu epic who was not "inwardly conscious" of rivaling Paradise Lost? And what lyrist strokes his sounding Ijic who is not oiitsinging Shelley? Mr. Baton sets gieat stoic on the setting of winds "in linear fashion," showing how 3011 cannot make Pater a poet by printing his rhjthmic prose, a line to each successive comma, and how a cry nice passage of feeling from Sandburg's "(trass" cannot be destroyed, as to its poetic spirit, bj setting it up as prose. We mav write Q. K. D. to this all. But what o." it? A1 LL "new poetries" and there have been twenty "new poetries" nt least since Spenser are lefciablc to two things, an impatic e with restraint mid 11 ciaving for novelty, singularity, difference. To piny the game with all its 'rules and triumph in it takes genius. To quarrel with the rules and tamper with them is easy and a sore temp tation. If ou cannot undergo the rigors of long and assiduous piactice that 3011 may play Bach and Chopin, you cm at lenst play ragtime and, keeping up with tho taste of the moment, ,i'i7.z music. And this hns the further advantage of being novel and there fore popularly acceptable. AVe are not con cerned with musicnl or poetical values, Chopin has been vilely played; and there is excellent ragtime and jnwery. But we need not dismiss contemptuously "the minor poetry" of Francis Thompson, as Mr. Baton docs parenthetically, because we have be come votaries of lawless novelty. UT AWLKSS novelty." These are dour -L' words, Mr. (inwnsman. But nil our dcpartuies from what is noepted and settled, in government, 111 art. in conduct, in le ligion itself, are, in their beginnings,, "law less novelties." Some rebellions succeed; some fail and ought to fall. Thin partitions divide the rebel and the patriot, and then are revolutions whiih substitute n higher, finer form of go eminent for v. hat has gone before as there are revolutions which appear to return us to primeval ehnns. Tree speech, fiee thought, free love, fiee vetse, free lunch: there nre some good and some bad things in this free list. And who is to tell if Miss Amy Lowell and Mr. Masters nre really going to discredit wholly the old worthies who struttid their day upon the stage in the laces and hiocndes, the farthingales- and Htoinacheis, of verse musical and regular? Tyj-R. BATON in ris-ht. There is a differ-PU-cncc, nn eternal difference, between not verse and pi use that is a trille off form, and nnimpoitnnt as the question whether an oak leaf or 11 maple h (,p 1)ri,t. tier but between the sphit of poetry and that of prose. Prose, though 3011 me.isute it out with the reguliriti of a paling fence, and put the rhythm of n dance hnll into it,' will remain prose, a thing (if arious motion, swift or slow, upon the ground. Though 3 ou fihnko from it all the Jewelry of its ornnmeuts and make its movemeiit as ir regulnr and unexpected as the wash of the sea, poetry has jet, like the sea, n grand basic throb, pulsing from the heart its Riilrit, not its form. The rent ,lifTn...,., after all, is that poetry gets you off the ground; prose keeps you on it. Who soars over the tombstones of Spoon River'' or rises off the ground with the jingles regular or irregular, of our little writers of free verso or verso in shaikles? What we want Mr. Eaton, is not more free cl.sc or ficer verse even. Here's to free poetry with the lift of n Liberty motor In it 1- Assnyers from all oier the country are in conference at the Philadelphia Mint If Internal revenue men should be called' Into consultation they might dig up enough 1111 . tcrial for a julep. Candidate Moore Is careful worker who takes nothing for granted. He js con. ducting his campaign as though he had a fight on his hands. One feature' of the teamsters' strike runs true to type: V, hen the strikers rioted an "innocent bystander" as the first casualty. Messrs. Stotesbury and Mitten called on Congressman Moore probably to tell Mm of the best nickel's worth in town. Wo will oon have to amend the phrase, b last leg" to the "last wing" of a "the flight. InlpdW8 n M'1 dly usually bears some relation to the fixing of fenct,g. Jleet siar ,mcu ate aused 0 .ruU it "beat"- r- - ' ,..- 'MJWiniiffiiin' 'iiV 1 -'" iliiftn ' T A ste)p TRAVELS IN PHILADELPHIA By Christopher Morlcy Ridge Avenue ONE of the odd things about human beings is, that wherever they happen to live they accept it as n matter of course. In various foreign cities I hae often been amused (as every tiaveler hns) to see people going about their affairs just as though it were nntitral and unquestionable for them 40 be theie. It is just the fame at home. Kvery one I see on the streets seems to be not at all amazed nt living here iiiltead of (let us say) Indianapolis or Nashville. 1 envv niv small lTichln his sense of the ex treme improbability of overs thing. "hen he gets 011 a trolley car he draws n long breath and looks around in ecstasy at the human 'scenery. I am teaching him to mi in a loud clear tone, as be gets on the en, ."Look at all the human beings! m tin. same accent of amazement that he uses when he goes to the Zoo. Perhaps in his way 1 e will preserve the happy faculty of being Mil prised. I T IS an agree able thing to keep the same sense ot surprise in one borne town thai one would have in a strange city. ou iU find much to startle ,011 If ' P Vur eyes open. Yesterday, for, nsnme ity. ou was lucky enougli to meei n - ad stood only a few feet away fr' 1J, when he made the Octtysbiug .speech. 1 1 en I fomiil that in a certain cafeteria which I fren. ent the price sou pay for sour lunch is a "just one cent less than tha punch d on "lie check.- Tlic cashier explained tint ?hs alwass gives 11 pleasant surpr.se to the customers, and has proved such n good ad -ver Wv' lodge that the. proprietor made t 1 i' ,?" And 1 saw. in a clothing dealer's window on .Nim . m 7. -7 :- ., ' t .. . 1. . n.xn fll'.V I'lllW m..i .,,., .in unci cicIm e, that for "V .;... .1... ...lvoiirimiiis snail has not men, mouicu i-m - . ., , ...nf tmii liiirini' iittx proven mm " ""'""" , - . in I died in the breast 01 im- ""- mllEKE is nine h to exercise tho eje in n 1 vosnge along Bidge avenue. Appioaci iuc bV wav of Ninth street one sees in the indow of a barber shop the new cont.nct " t e emplosing barbers have drawn up with heir journeymen. This agreement 1 .. J sound sense of human equities, pro shows n i soun I , b en e mM t do'no ac to enjure the haiber personal estning " I 'lcn,' """'i'0 T' I a,l not thought of before, how the brbers of Croat Britain must have grieved wl c. n London newspaper got up (some vn, nL'ol nn agitation in favor of every yenrs ago) "",,, bPnnl iu memory TKi'ng wanl The plan was that the mo. ey thus saved was to be devoted to In,- I had nlmost s'md "glowing" n Imt h7 to be named after the Meiry Mon- arc O course., one should not speak of raising a beard, but of lowering it. How- ever Rldec nvenue begins nt Ninth nud Vine, in 1 f . 1 nression. Perhaps tho fact that " ' ; hr city's Kreatest collec- on of eeneteries has made it mmbldly con- clous of 'human perishability At any rate u starts among pawnshops, old clothing and urnU re" ami bottles of QUI Virginia Bit- furniture, ai Bcstoier. The famous National T hentre at Callowhill street has 1 ,, inrace- it is queer to see the old become a gniag. u proseeninm arch an rllpkii A vaulted oyr a f (ls onp (.olm,s , wilderiiesK 0 .all way fuS hat bends 'around into a huddle of tiinnei in j- .. u)llhPS where a large. l,nrrot was stooping and noddln,, on a B, fftaffl This little scene is over fl?l bv m 'tall brown spires of the Church cTthe. Attsumpuon oSpring Garden street. mnEBE is matter for tarrying nt the 1 Spring Garden street "ossing Here U n ambitious fountain, built by the bequest of Mary Rebecca Darby Smith, with the rarvlne by J. J- rlcturinji another Rebecca (ihe of Genesis xxiv, 11) giving n drink to Abraham's servant and his cntnels If is carved in tho bromo that tho dono gave the. fountain "To refresh tho weary and thirsty, both man and beast," so it is disconcerting to find it dr, ns dry as ihe inns along the way. The horse trough to Broad street fqr adrasht. Tlie set lwim Ti-Jjfej!:? JS- gf 11 V ' ' Y:itinmn2&h-hMr'''' mi ii !h boarded over nun inn"i "" K" up 9 in the right direction the New Yoik Journal, always a depress ing sight. Acioss fiom the fountain is one of the best magazine and stationery shops in the city. lleie I overheard n conveisation which I leprodiue textunlly. "What sou doing, loading?" said one to another. "Yes, loading about the biggest four-flusher in the Vcw-nitcd States," said lie, looking over an afleinoon paper which had just come in. "Who do sou mean?" "Penrose. Say, if it was h Republican in the. White House, they'da passed the tieaty long ago," The proprietor of this shop is a humorist. Some one came in asking for a certain brand of cigincttcs. lie does not sell tobacco, "Next door," he said, and added, "And 5011'H find some over on the fountain." RIDGE AVENUE specializes in tobacco shops, where 3011 will find many brands that requiie a strong head. Red Snapper, Panhandle Scrap, Pinch Hit, Red Horse, Brown's Mule, Jxilly Tar, Pcnn Statue Cut tings, Nickel Cross Cut, Cotton Ball Twiv,t. In the shop windows you will see those photogiaphs Unstinting current events, the two favorites just now being a pictuie of Mike Gilhooley, the famous stowaway, gaz ing plaintively at the profile of Now York, and "Jack Dompsey Goes the Limit," where Jack signs up for 11 S1000 war-savings cer tificate. One wonders if Jack's kind of war fiue is ri'ally so piofitable nfter all. There arc a number of little side excur sions from the nventle that repay scrutiny. Lemon street, for instance, where in a lane of old brown wooden bouses some children were plnjing in an empty wagon, with the rounded tower of the Itodcf Shalom syna gogue looming in the bnckgiound. Best of all is Melon street and its n.odost tributary, Park avenue stretches of quiet little brick homes with green and 30II0W shutters and mottled gray marble stops. These little houses have the serene and sunny air so typical of Philadelphia b.vws-s. Through their narrow side entrances one sees glimpses of green in backyards. In tho front win dows move the gently swaying faces of grandmothers, lulled in the to and fro of a locking chiilr. There are shining brass knobs and bell-pulls; rubber plants on the sills, or perhaps n small bowl of goldfish with a white china swan floating. In one window was n sign "Vacancies." Over it hung a faded service flag with a golden star. Who could phrase the pathos of these two things, bide by side? AT BROAD STREET, Ridge avenue leaps up with n sputt of high life. In the window of a hotel dining room n gentleman sat eating his lunch, stevedoring a buttered 10II with such" gusto that one felt tempted to applaud. There nie the white pillars of a bank and the battleship gray of the Salva tion Army headquarters. Beyond BiWl, the avenue spruces up a bit and enters upon n vivacious phase. Dogs are frequent: white bull terriers lie sunning iu the shop win dows. Offers to lend money nre enticing. There Is n fascinating slate yard at 3525, svhero great gtny slabs llo in the sun, n temptation to. iiiehliis with a bit of chalk. In the warm bask of the afternoon there rises a pleasing nioma of fruits and vegeta bles piled up In baskets and crates on tho pavement. Grapes, give off u delectable snvor-in Bie golden nir. Elderly ladies arc out in force to do the marketing, and their eyes nre bright with the bargaining passion. Round the windows of a ten-cent store, most fascinating of all human spectacles, they congregate mill compare notes. A fruit dealer has an Ingenious stunt to attract At tention. On his cash register lies a weird looking rotund little fish a butter fish, ho dills it which has a face not unlike that of Fatty Arbuckle. Either this fish Inflates itself or he hns blown it full of air in some ingenious manner, for it presents a grotesque nppearance, and many ladles stop to in quire. Then he spoofs them gently. "Sure," he says; "It's a jitney fish. It lives on the cash register. It can fly, It can blto, it can talk, and it likes money." At the corner of Wylio street stands an old gray house with a mansard roof and giiblQ windows. Against it is a vivid store of fruit glowing in trip sun, red and purplo onq turns oft to cater the 1 -jualnt Jrlaogultir. J 'JO.h, Citanw uwinfjat as q condlWa . - J-JN.J 3PTlr ' ,- V-'rmtiWr..? ". m nfMMiMft iJr ' 'if -rrnrtfi vir fa lA t :rlMllMtmMi-ri'iVuir'h ..... and ycl,low; Here, or on Y'neyarii street, -7- ... .. Lr.. ttjv.vrAi!?AtifW$Jl iitifi jiMMirl POETRY IN A SHOE MmllERE ain't much poetry in a shoe," -- Said Hiram Keith to John Ballou. "Last night the parson at the kirk Spoke of the poetry of work ; The rhythm of the whirring wheels, The coiling smoke, the gliding keels; Of ardent minds that bring to birth Tho necessary tilings of earth. Hut I can't sec It. Here I sit From stnrting time till time to quit. So you may tick and tack and too. I think there's poetry in a shoe. "No poetry?" said John Ballou. "I think there's plenty in it shoe: In my mind's 030 I've often seen The "Steppes, the Ind, and Argentine; The fields of France wheio cattle graze; The prnirics wido whereon we raise Our own supply of needed hides. Great ships come sailing down the tides From Afric, Asia, many lands, To bring the product to your hands, So you may tick and tack and too. Boston Evening Transcript. If the Industrial conference should come to nn agreement, the next step will be to pro vide a guarantee that it will be kept. What seems to be needed is n declaration, of prin ciples to which nil enn subscribe nnd which Uncle Sam can be called upon to enforce like other codes. The National Bakers' Association meet ing iu Chicago has decreed n doughnut with out a hole. That's all right. At present prices and the present scarcity of sugar, what the consumer fears is the hole without the doughnut. The Retail Grocers' Association pre dicts that the price of coffee will go up. It would have been n safe prediction even -for one nonexpert. And if coffee goes up less of it may go down. Congressman Moore has discovered that the man who makes a stand will eventually meet many who are willing to take a posi tion. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. Who is the present surgeon gcnernl of ' tint American army? 2. What is a plane? 3. What English journals were for a time conducted by William Waldorf ABtor? 1. What is an Amerind? 5. How did the word Utopian come to de scribe nn ideal social state? G. What is tho name and title of the heir apparent to the Belgian throne? 7. How high is the highest mountain 'in l North America? j 8. What is a concotdat? " !). What is a scintilla? 10. What work ot fiction concerns a man who lost his shadow? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Roosevelt's birthday is on October 27. 'l 2. The word cereal is derived from the "I namo ot the classical goddess of corn, Ceres. 3. Kronstadt is Jhe seaport of Petrograd. It is situated 011 an island near the head of the Gulf of Finland, an arm ot the Baltic sea, 4. A hatchment is nn escutcheon or a tablet, with a decensed person's armo- rial bearings, affixed to the trout ot J liti linustt. i B. Washington nnd the Continental army t 11.. ...Int.K nt 1777. 177Q nf Bil-Ul, l ivv. vv .tft-Attu t ,11 Vollott Vnrei. B 0. The piny or "'ironus nnu urcssiaa" is not clnsslneil either ns n comedy, a, tragedy, or a history in the rlwt col-i . looted edition of Shakcsnearo's works.. n K ntlittntan Is A fllnw rinnPA nf Tlnltan ul origin. l 41 R Dupnn Victoria of' Snnln was born in Tnirlniul. . 0, Tiia teifgrapn wns invented nopuc tniviF-; ,'twp years, before the, Jejcphos Vil