W H a r ' ir 10 EVENING PUBLIC LlGEl PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, NOVI$MBElt 10, .1910 ,1 I o " W W BFv i&T fa.'i. &-- IrV' L V B ... r .. , f Yaiening $JubUc Wefcger i! . PUDLIC' LEDGER COMPANY .... crnus ii. k. cuims. rmMsi ..Churl's II. r.udlnirton Vloo PrrnMi-nti John C, I Martin, 8rrUrv and Treasurer: Fhlllp H Collins. vpnn ii. wnunms, jonn i. Hpurgeon, uircciors, ,"" iibiTouiAtTTioARt): Clues II, K. Cittik. Chairman DAVID E. SMILEY.. Editor J01IM C. MAHTIM.... "central IlutlncM Manager Tubllhrd dally nt Prnno T.Knarn HulMln?, Indrprndcnco Bguurc lMilhitlelphU, ATtaNTio City Trm-liiion hulMInc JS'r.ir Yobk 200 Metropolitan Tower DtmoiT. ... 701 rord nulldlrnr St. Iritis. .. .Inns rmlcrton HulldlnB Cmcioo 1302 Tribune Building- NEWS BUREAUS: ivniNoipN Hrirr, N. J;. Cor. Pennsylvania Me. and 14th St. Knw York llfltrjf T.iu Sua Tlulldlnc London Uuiicac London Times SUBSCRIPTION TERMS The EnNiNn Pernio Lnivint Ii nerved to ul cribers In Philadelphia and Fiirroumllng town' nt the rnte of twolvo (12) cents per week, payable Bv mall to'pnlnt o"titdei o' Philadelphia In the United States. Canada, or United States pen reaslons, ttoitage free, fifty (."ill rents Mr month BIt (ti dollars pea yeay payable In ndvanre. To all forclffn countries ono ($U dollar per month. ... N'OTicr Subscriber, wlshlntr address cnansea must give old n, well ni pew address. DELL, 3000 WALNUT ' KCYS-TONC. MAIN 300(1 B3 Address nil oommiitilcaWoitt to Kvenlna Pnlillo J.ctloer, liitlcucndenee Square, I'lillatletynla. Member of the Associated Press run Assoct.Ti:i) rnvss f? rxw- slvclv cntltlct. to the use for republication of all nctct dispatches credited to It or pot otherwise credited tn this paper, and also the local nnr, publlilicd theiein. All rlphti of republication of special dis patches herein arc also tcsrrvetl. rhilldrlphia, Monday, INotrinbrr 10, 1119 A HORNETS' NEST SENATOR VARE stirred up a hornets' nest when he said no Mayor since Mr. Stuart had left the City Hall with the respect of the public. Mayor Smith has cone aftt-r him with some pungent remarks and with some threats to disclose facts that would bo interesting to the public. Mrs. Blanken burjr has come to the defense of her dead husband. And former Mayor Weaver has indignantly denied the allegation. Fortunately for Senator Varc he will have leisure for the next few weeks to dodge the hornets, a leisure that would not have been his if the primaries had resulted to his satisfaction. Instead of telling the new Mayor what to do ho will be allowed to do only what the new Mayor permits. Perhaps this new sen sation will occupy his mind so complete ly that he will not feel the stings of the outraged men whom he has criticized. HOPE FOR DEPOSITORS' NONE of the vaiious rumors about the rehabilitation of the North Penn Bank which have been afloat for months has been verified. But a new plan, which appears to be pretty well ad vanced, was made public on Saturday. It is that a new corporation, to be known as the Phoenix Trust Company, is to be organized by the stockholders of the de funct bank, each stockholder to subscribe to the new stock a sum equal to his hold ing in the original bank. Then the de positors in the North Penn are to be paid 50 per cent of their claims, the bal ance to be paid in time out of the profits of the new institution. This would place a heavy obligation on the new bank, so heavy that only men with g?eat courage would undertake to shoulder it. Rut the success of the orig inal baiik for several years before the looting began proves that the district in which it is located is a good field for a bank of deposit. The people there have money. They live a long way from the center of the city. They need banking facilities just as they need facilities for buying food and clothing and fuel. If the plan can be put through by re sponsible men with banking experience it will be a happy issue out of their trou bles for hundreds of depositors in the looted bank who cannot afford to lose their savings. PEACE IS NEARER TDATIFICATION of the peace treaty, formal peace between the United States and Germany, virtual acceptance by the Senate of the league-of-nations covenant and all that these things imply ifpr America and for the world are nearer s because of the President's willingness to Ct accept minor reservations without op position or complaint. The President in this instance did the wise and rational and inevitable thing. The Senate has a perfect right to express through formal "reservations" its inter pretation of clauses that are presumed to be too far at variance with American tradition and purpose. It never had the moral right to throw the treaty back at the Germans and invite a state of affairs that ultimately might isolate America from a world sincerely determined to find a way to better international relation ships and permanent peace. Mr. Wilson had no better right than the Senate to be stiff-necked and uncompromising. Through the reservations in question ,' Mr. Lodge and his associates may save their faces and at the same time provide such restraints as they deem indispens able for future emergencies. Doubtless they were waiting for this opportunity. And meanwhile the news that the President is again able to par ticipate actively in the work incident to ratification will gratify and reassure the country. LADY ASTOR'S CAMPAIGN MOST people will sympathize with Lady Astor's declaration that there js nothing funny in her campaign, and many who sympathize will feel sorry that ehe found it necessary to make the fur ther declaration that she is "deadly seri 4 omb." For, be it known, most of the statesmen who are "deadly serious" are BjftBO "deadly dull," and legislative halls have more than their fair share of this brand of near-thinker. One feels svmnathv for her first state- Tiient even though it is not wholly true.' There is inevitably something funny in the antics of the people who are shocked t a woman .doing ibvything out of the ordinary, and we venture the guess that the lady .icrself has smiled, albeit some what bitterly, at some of the humors of the battle she is waging. That itj's not at! fun 'for her one" can readily iihdef stand, She has known some bitterness tititl feltjttome hurt. But we, are sure that she is not so jy serious as he momentarily sw-tii-t JUeadly earnest," it you will, for ono has to be ca"nct,t and sin cere to wage a fight with a hope for vic tory; but, not "deadly serious." Bless the lady's heart, if she were "deadly serious" she would have been in f6rming a wearied world that the fate of empires rested on the recognition of women through the election of one to the British House Rf Commons. And she has done no such thing. She has conducted a business-like campaign with plenty of vim, plenty of wit and plenty of good hunvor, and lots of good people who would scorn to consider themselves feminists will wish her success. AN EASY WAY TO PREVENT MOTOR TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS Enlarge the Traffic Squad and Let the Men Work Unhindered by the Petty Politicians TF EXISTING laws and ordinances were enforced there would be less complaint about speeding motors, fewer accidents and less wony about schemes to make the streets safe for the democracy that goes afoot. But the laws arc not enforced. The police are not permitted to enforce them. In no department of the municipal serv ice is there more petty and detestable political interference than the traffic squad has to contend against. The con tinuing efficiency of that hard-worked unit and the good sense and good man ners of its members are a cause for won der to any ono who knows what a thank less and difficult job is that of the men charged with the enforcement of ordi nary rules of safety in tho streets. Eliminate the big and little politicians who whisper and pull strings and make threats when a speeder is arraigned before a magistiate and there will be little need for the sort of informal police method .that Superintendent Robinson would es tablish by the use of tell-talo cards, issued to the public to be returned with the record of supposed traffic violations. This plan, like any effort to curb the speed maniacs, is in some ways com mendable. It may enable i the police to keep a record of habitual lawbreakers for use in supporting formal charges in an emergency. But Superintendent Robinson will be lucky if, in the long run, the scheme doesn't work more harm than good. The simple and direct way to make the streets safe is to enlarge the traffic squad, put half a dozen motorcycle men on patrol along the streets of West Phila delphia and then see to it that the police are unhindered in the performance of their duty and that they are assured of the co-operation of the powers at City Hall. That co-operation is not possible now. The everyday experience of tho aver age traffic man makes it appear that at least half of the people arrested for flagrant violations of the motor ordi nances have friends higher up who are always ready to intervene in their behalf and make punishment impossible. "I've often come down -from the Cen tral station," said one member of the squad, "to find a man I'd pinched driving away as happy as you please a few min utes after I had taken him in. And often enough these fellows take the trou ble to turn around and drive past my post to give me the laugh. After a while you begin to realize that to run 'em in is a waste of time. We can only bawl 'em out. And, believe me, we do that, anyway." Nine out of every ten men who drive automobiles are careful, for their own sake and the sake of others, to obey the traffic laws. The friendly relation estab lished automatically between this ma jority and the police themselves and tho instinctive impulse for co-operation that animates them are the best possible pre ventives of accident. There are fools everywhere. It is too much to expect that they will not be found occasionally behind the steering wheels of motorcars. There is a familiar type of driver whose singular vanity is gratified whenever he can break the law and get away with it. And, oddly enough, he is the sort who has "friends at the Hall." One wild driver sets an example to others. West Walnut street and many of the streets in West Philadelphia are speedways because they are sparsely policed. And statistics prove that acci dents do not always occur on heavily traveled thoroughfares, but many occur on the streets where traffic policemen are few or altogether unknown. Until the good influence of the traffic squad can be extended there will be violation of the motor laws, danger to life and an in creasing percentage of casualties in the streets. Policemen of the type which lules in the traffic squad know how to deal with motor traffic. If the politicians will let them alone the public need not go into the police business on its own account. It is not easy, without experience, to determine the speed of an automobile or to judge the hazards attending its opera tion. That is why Superintendent Robin son's card system, devised as it has been with the best intentions and for an ad mirable purpose, may have some odd and surprising results. The number of excellent people who are still unreconciled to automobiles and who view all such contraptions as a visi tation of Providence, sent as an awful preliminary to the day of judgment in an unrighteous world, is surprisingly large. It is unfair to everybody to ask such folk to pass a fair judgment upon the work of motor drivers. Those who dislike motors dislike them with enthusiasm. It is possible to find an occasional citizen who is convinced that no automobile ever, travels less than forty miles an hour any where. The world is pretty evenly divided be tween those who ride in motors and those who, for one reason or another, do not. Prejudice exists on both sides. But who ever has been honked at rudely or forced to flee for his life in undignified haste from the path of some lunging gasoline maniac or been splashed on a rainy day in the streets is quitiMikcly to be an ardent Reporter for thureu "of police under tho card system of unofficial es pionage now proposed. Such a lecord of motor abuses as Is proposed could not be altogether free from spite or malice nor could it be with out error due to faults of judgment on the part of people whose imagination is stimulated, by conventional prejudice. Amateur or informal exercise of any thing like official authority always leads to confusion and unpleasantness for everybody concerned. A citizen who observes infractions of the law ought to go to the proper authori ties and give his evidence under oath. Like many other ills that afflict the city, the reckless use of the streets is due primarily to mean and petty politics. Business organizations which are giving time and money nnd energy to a cam paign of education deserve the thanks of tho people of those who ride and those who walk. They will do even a better work if they will continue to the root of the matter and impress upon the new City Council tho necessity for an en lightened view of the whole general prob lem. There is room here for a great deal of good work by the new administration. The traffic squad Is amazingly efficient. Find money to incicasc its membership and let the men know that the people higher up will help them to keep the streets safe. Provide for jail sentences in cases of particularly flagrant or dangerous viola tions. Then it will not be necessary to ask the public at large to assume duties which, in justice to eveiybody, belong with the Department of Public Safety nlone. THE PROBLEM OF LABOR QTRIKES are industrial barbarism, ae- cording to tho Senate committee which has been investigating the steel strike. The committee says further that "there is no place in this country either for industrial despotism or labor despot ism." In order to prevent the setting up of either kind of despotism the commit tee concludes that "tho public has a right to demand that capital shall not arrogate to itself tho right to determine in its own way those industrial questions, and it is the same as to labor, and the duty is upon Congress to provide some way of adjusting these difficulties." This is substantially an indorsement of the plan for a labor code which this newspaper urged upon the consideration of the industrial conference in Washing ton last month. On October 11 we dis cussed tho subject at some length, set ting forth the proposition that the public was as deeply interested in the settle ment of labor disputes as it was in the enforcement of the criminal law, a law enacted primarily for the protection of society at large by punishing those who disregard the rights of others. We re marked then: I'pon the Icqal fundamentals In the re public It Is perfectly logical to superim pose, consistent principles covering indus trial cases . . . The conference has an unexamoled opportunity to renounce quackery In favor of treatment by general principles' which will permit genuine cures for specific diseases when thoy break out. Now that this plan is formally before the Senate in a committee report, it is in shape for discussion in Congress. It is evident to every one that the old methods for settling labor disputes have failed. The public has been inconvenienced by industrial war. The war has continued until the parties to it have concluded a treaty of peace. But the treaties have been temporary. When new disagree ments arose the war has been resumed. The rights of the public have been ig nored. The employers have said that they would run'their business to suit themselves, no matter who suffered, and the workers have insisted on their right to hold up all business until their de mands were granted. This is industrial barbarism without the shadow of a doubt. Our civilization could not continue if the parties involved in highway robbery or murder should insist on their right to settle the matter by private agreement, the party with the greatest power to have his will. We have arrived at that stage where we mLst extend to industrial disputes the same. rules which apply to all other dis putes. We must establish a code with courts to enforce it. The suggestion of the Senate committee that relief would be afforded by compulsory investigation of the causes of labor disputes does not go far enough. The parties to the dis pute always know the facts. Publicity can bring nothing but moral compulsion to bear. Legal compulsion to submit the matters at issue to a proper tribunal is what is needed if we are to have indus trial peace. Before Congress discusses the matter very long it will be forced to this conclusion. It cannot begin the dis cussion too soon. Slostclnik, Yninvni, Kindly Souls Jnlcenov, Kozey, AVa- sikuk, S k m a s k o, Fershtmnn no, it isn't a lit of Russian towns. It is a list of men who have been making their living In America, probably a better living than ever they were able to earn at home, and nre charged with trying to change our institutions tn fit their views. Probably the most A I'orwaicl Step . heartening tiling about the report of the Scn ntc committee investigating the steel strike is the recognition of the duty of Congress to provide some way of adjusting labor diffi culties. This Mill mean eventually the for mulation of certain genernl industrial prin ciples as basically simple as the common law and as simply administered. Somehow or other we Meiely a have more respect for Point of View the U. of P. student who gave a pint of his Wood to save the life of a friendless little orphan than for tho courageous soul who monkeyed with trolley poles and defied the police. Th? Department of Departmental Justice, having ar rested 200 Reds, asks the Department of Labor -tfi deport them. Speaking ns ono .department to another, it is i) labor of love, nnd justice demands it. DrjB have won in Pick -Me Up Nettled Ohio by 101 votes, ac cording to latest ac counts. A victory by bo narrow a margin mlcht well give the most earnest prohlbl- I tionlst a deelre for y bracer. t ORPHAN BOOMLETS General Wood's Presidential Candl' dacy Causing Embarrassment to Favorite Sdns ll CLINTON W. GILIIKRT Sinn" ('iiiirspondenl of the Kvenlng Public Ledger Washington, Nov. 10. GI-:NI:RAL WOOD is In the lead for the Republican nomination for the presi dency. This statement is not so sensational as it sounds. To he in the lead for the nomination today is to bo n long way short of being nominated. No one lias the nom ination in bis pocket. A combination can still beat General Wood, hut it must linvc t.oinc one to heat him with. A popular movement can bent (icnernl Wood, but h popular movement must have ita hero nnd where is the hero? The development of the Wood boom will quickly bring Into the own the fnvoiitc sons. Up till now there Is only one man formally ami by his own announcement a candidate for the Republican nomination Senator Poludcxtcr, of Washington. Iu ad dition there aio three important actors, but not avowed candidates General Wood, Governor Lowden, Senator Hirn'm Johnson, There nre many other disnvowed hut recep tive candidates, such ns Scnntor Harding, Senator Kiinx, Senator Ilrandegcc, Senator Sutherland. Governor Goodrich, of Indiana; Governor Coolidge, of Massachusetts, and Senator Watson, of Indiana, if Governor Coolidge is out of the way. rplIP. obvious thing to do to stop the Wood -- boom or even to ke.ep nlivc other hopes is for these lesser candidates to come out into the open. If they do not do so soon the politicians in their own stntcs will wntch the growth of the Wood movement with envy. And if it keeps on to the point where the grni'inl's nomination seems likely they will seek to nllj themselves with the probably successful candldnte and the hopes of the faunitc son will disappear. The Wood movement is getting to the point now where the receptive candidates cannot long ignore it. The must spenk up or forever hold their peace. THE Wood rtuididney lias had n peculiar development. Last winter he seemed te he unmistakably in the lend. Then his sup port languished. It certninly did not gain force nnd indeed seemed to he losing force. At tills time the Wood movement wns n pop ular movement and nothing else. As n pop ular movement it stopped short; the people were not sufficiently interested in the elec tion last winter nnd indeed nre not now tf indicate their choice. They begnn to snv 'hat the Wood boom wns dead, that no mili tary man could be nccepted as a candidate for President. The wise men in Washing ton dropped the genernl down into Inst plnce in their list of probable candidates. Tho only trouble with this judgment wns that ru one took Wood's plnce. There was no one in the lend. Even in preliminary estimatei you cannot beat somebody with nobody. w HEN the Wood boom languished th politicians took hold of it. Of all the candidates Wood has the best organization, with John T. King, of Connecticut, as manager, and with Frnnk H. Hilchcock, a successful picker of nominees, active nmong the colored delegntcs of the South, his old specialty. Associated with these men nre the old Roosevelt supporters, George W. Perkins nnd tho men who nearly made Roosevelt the Republican candidate for the presidency in 1012. An illustration of the activities of the Roosevelt supporters is the effort to force Senator Harding out of the race in Ohio nnd hand thnt state to Wood. Rehind it are Wnllis Brown nnd the Roosevelt politicians in Ohio. Senator Harding is in a difficult position as a favorite son. His term in the Senate ends this year. He would like to be a candidate for the presidency, nnd if he misses that and tho vice presidency he would be sure of nomination to the Sen ate. The Wood men in Ohio do not want to leave him nil these choices. They have been-trying to force him to say which office ho will run for, the presidency or the Sen ate. If he announces his preference for tho presidency they will put up a candidate for the Senate and then if Mr. Harding misses his Inrger ambition he will find his lesser one foreclosed. tf: 1 M MR. HARDING could be ccrtnin that accent n nromlse of the vice presidency and let Brown nnd the rest of them turn the state over to Wood. But while the uncertainty lasts Ids-position is difficult. Meanwhile, if lie does not openly seek the presidency, sac rificing the Senate, he may see his state slip away from him to Wood nnyway. His position is a little more troublesome than thnt of the nvernge favorite son, but they all nre having their tioubles and the poli ticians gtendllv make Wood more formidnble. Then people are asking: Is this Repub lican national convention going to be a politicians' convention? A politicians con vention is ono in which people hnve no favorite candidate and the politicians are freo to name their choice. The present in dications nrn thnt it is going to be just that sort of convention. Tho people are indifferent. Thoy have no Roosevelt. Gov ernor Lowden leaves them cold. The Hiram Johnson boom has developed no popular strength. Nf OR is there the slightest sign of nny possible enndidate over whom the coun try will develop enthuslnsm in advance of tlm convention, nnd if such a candidate does not show soon the politicians will have the convention in their ' hands. It Is the realization of this fact which haR made Washington suddenly wane up to the fact that quietly and unostentatiously General Wood has moved up into the leading place as a candidate, with Governor Lowden, who has (ho second best organization behind him, in second plnce. The two men nre the first choices of the politicians, Wood and Perkins nnd his old s-s.-cistcs, the Roose velt Republicans, except such ns support Johnson, nnd Lowden. of the always regular old guard Republicans I HAVE said that General Wood failed to develop spontaneous support of large pro portions, But still his candidacy has a cer tain popularity. So far as any enndidate has a -popular following it is Wood. The pbl-f itleiuns have eh"?;:: T.Iseiy. They have picked the man whoup to the present shows the greatest dapqeity to develop strength among the voters. That man is nlways the man thnt has to bo benten. The suddei waking of Washington tn the fact that Wool was the man to be benten may lead to his being beaten. But here he is, for the time ut least, in the lead. Having eaten all the extra food of the nrmy. the populace will take n whirl nt the navy bennery. Having buried the hatchet, Vare refused to use n hammer. Senator The consumer has n suspicion that th raw sugar snortnge is coonea up, i thnt It' is , sv,v Ohio if not yet dead sure OJidry-on,l "JUST A LITTLE MORE PUSH AND "'il-lin-H THE SAUCEPAN NOCTURNE MX GIRL In nnger snid Thnt bhc had no time To waste upon me. Then she hurled A truly magnificent Ormolu clock In my direction. In that luminous instant I kneto irirtt the sapes meant Who said that wovwn Js a tissue Of contradictions. He Went to the Movies I went to the movies. I hadn't been to the movies in a year or more. I might not have gone on this occasion had I not wished to study the possi ble effect of n new nnd novel bond of inter nationnlism suggested in dispatches from South America. The folk of the Argentine cities, murmurcM the wires shrewdly, nre becoming Americnnizcd, as we would say, .. tho movies. Thev are studying nnd cul tivating tho manners of the United States- reflected in the tilms. I wished to see whnt the Argentinans of tho future will' be like. For forty cents I was enlightened. - The young Argentinan of the years to come will nrray himself in truly wonderful clothes. His hair will be exquisitely tailored and coated heavily with varnish. He will be reckless with his money. He will not take off his hat when ho addresses a lady, no mntter what his social rank may bo; nor will he rise when a lady enters the room. Ho will .remain firmly seated in an ornate chair and manifest deference by wiggling his eye brows, by rolling his eyes nnd by violent backward and forward motions of his bur nished (so to spenk) bean. When the rich young ArgenMnan of the futute desires to express the legendary dis like for his mother-in-law he will tip her into n lily pond. When he calls for after noon tea ho will never cntor by the door. ne will go through a window or, after climbing the roof, will descend by the rain spout to the garden. All of the future Argentina thnt does not wear rags will cultlvnte evil habits. They will smoke and intrigue and commit crimes of violence agninst the virtuous and humble. Only the poor will have nny decency. When I travel I shall travel in Spain ! C. Wt How Shall We Meet? H OW shnll we meet ngaln, my dear? Shnll we both fccm cold, or will you and I Give rormal greeting, then wonder why? Shall we tell the secret we thought to hide In the anxious search for a clue to guide? With a throb of joy and a fleeting fear Will you question, "Is it you love me, dear?" Ah ! AVhere shall we moot again, my dear? In cit, or camp, on the tossing Bea, The forest trail, or yet maybe As I vision you oft by the hearthside here, Roth hands clasped, as you used to, 'dear. ' And your hack to tho fire's golden cheer. Like a herald out ot a toreign land Will you cry largesse and give love's com-. maud? Oh ! when shnll we meet again, rrly dear? PHOEBE HOFFMAN.- 1 ' Nearlng a Goal Editor Saucepan: Slr Tho theory of Inexorable conserva tion applied with conspicuous success in the light-lunch restaurants that we all know best has been extended to typewriter rib bons. I observe that.they advertise wafles" and donuts for breakfast. ETHEL D. Even a one-course dinner s.t a lunatic asylum may b spoken of as ''soup fro nuts." .... , Add 8aucepan When a poet has a slight; bronchial affco 1 tlon would 'It bef'eatIralyarpprrto,declajy ... ..i. ..ta:MiJ,...dtf!b3r'filf. KTrmU.!..-, . . life if-'--M "t ir. ail mk that Pan was having trouble with his pipes? Orwould that call to mind too vividly the plumber? To say that leaders are sometimes mis leaders is not necessarily nn attack on feminism. Ballot Dancing The New York Tribune, discussing the nrrival of Michel Fokinc, creator of the Russian ballet, says "he revolutionized the art of ballot dancing." Probably sought to discourage those who desired to vote early and often. Pirate Song To, ho, my lads, for a life of case And a trick on the bounding main ! With our sails blown full of the trade vinds' breeze And our thoughts on a pirate's gain! For we'll reap and sow where the typhoons blow, . And our coffers will fill with gold; To the ensks ! Let's drink to the ships, we'll sink And tho life of n pirate bold ! ROBERT LESLIE BELL-EM. The Column Conductor The column writer, to mnke hit, says Demosthenes McGinnis, must have a big henrt,-a sense of humor, a nrcnchnnt wit, a fnnd of information, a 'ready understanding and some slight litirary ability. A column may consist of poetry, "near poetry, jokes, wheezes, more or less frivolous editorial paragraphs, short essays, satires and yawps. The province of the column Is to "uplift the mass." This may be done in many ways. The colyumist may, cause n thought to fer ment In an obscure corner. Or he may start a smile on its journey through the world. Or he may inspire a highbrow or a rough neck with the belief thnt lie can .write n darned sight better column than the col yumist. Tliis promotes g,ood humor, and good humor's catching. Seablrd "The slim dispatch boat .skims, with wings of spray, Leaping nnd dancing pver the swelling sea, Bearing tho word the restive ships obex Unfalteringly. With proud and dominant keel she shivers by, Poised on the whitening, fincasy foam. Sho strains, as if alert to witig'the sky ' And make it her home, CLEMENT WOOD. Personal Note neywood Broun, the baseball expert and dramatic critic who writes most excellent book reviews for the New York Tribune, dropped Info tho office of the Saucepan on Saturday en route for the sporting depart ment to get some dope on tho Harvard- Princeton football game. Knowing him to be n young man of catholic tastj, we sought! to interest him in Mrs. Wilson's doughnuFT recipes, but Bomebody or other effected' a forward pnss fat about thnt time and his nttention seemed to waver, and so" we de sisted. , Kate Douglas Wiggin has just compiled a list of books for boys and girls, ner list, which Includes "Robinson Crnsoe" by Charles Kingsley, is Incomplete. It ought to 'Include "Water Babies" by Daniel Defoe. "s. The Young Lady Across the Way says that with so much weather lying around loose, first thing we know Philadelphia will have a climate, Tho one sad feature of fuel control is that If the strike continues there will be next to nothing to control. second place when fdotbnll comes along, -j ' .Heatlesg days may be" comlagT-wlth it" without eevrlf ordew. a IT'S OVER!" i VILLANELLE OH, HILLS we loved In sweeter days of old, What faith shall bind, and what strong love prevail? , The scythe of Time is singing through the gold. i Malefic priests thy mysteries have told On some black rosary of hidden Baal. Oh, hills we loved in sweeter days of old! Once walked wo there in such diviner mold, Nor life nor death nor Borrow might assail ; The scythe of Time is singing through the gold. The flocks of Dawn must couch in Dusk's gray fold, For that veiled shepherd piping down the trail, Oh, hills we loved in sweeter days of old! But thou art tomb of all the heart might hold, . Tho dumb days trend like mourners ashen pale; The scythe of Time. is singing through the gold. ' A ghostly campfire on a windy wold," We followed like the knights of ancient tale; N ' s Vain was the question, far the HolyGrall, The scythe of Time is singing through the gold. Sydne Bulletin. Philadelphia has broken its tax record this year and the figures bespeak a' big .and prosperous city. But the true gauge of our prosperity will never be known until, thert is published tho amount of our war amuse ment nnd luxury taxes. Joseph S. MacLaughlln has an 'alibi; but probably the ' real reason he wasn't elected Mayor was that the voters 'didn't want him. Or is that explanation too re freshingly simple? ' What Do You Know?, QUIZ What Is a sconce? . Over what people did Cyrus the Great rule? What is fondant? Between what years was the Thirty Years' War fought? What was the original meaning of the word merry? Who was St. Swlthin? AVho is assistant secretary of war? Where is Timbuctoo? 1. 0. 8. 0, Who wrote "Mr. Midshipman 'Easy"? 10. What was Benjamin Disraeli's title?' Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1 . The Rev. John Jasper was an American negro preacher. . " 2.- He is known for having declared' to his congregation. "Brethren, the' sun do move!" 3. The Volstead law is the prohibition en- forcement.act recently pnBsed'by Con gress. ' 4. Hcndrik Hudson (properly Henry) wm an Englishman, 5. Thackeray' died leaving the novel of ''Denis Duval" unfinished. G. Kam'chamelia the Great ruled over th Hawaiian Islands and was the first to' unite them In a single kingdom, 7, Bangkok is the capital of Siam. 8. Cornelius Tacitus was a noted Romin historian and legal orator, born In the first century A. D. , f 0, Ills fame chiefly rests on his work de scribing the manners and customs ot the Germans, 10- as treaty, ot Jjnadniupe nidalgo ended., the Mexican War In 1848. tkMfrii take ita satae' fcota a jHiVwhVH -i vf .Mtsieo Cifcr.V f, . '' t . .! . .pi i4r f tl ft A.