' lfip)Hisrip"Hr -cr rw"p- EVENING PUBLIC v LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, tfRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 191- 1.0 r-f,ew(g5 Cucnlng fubjic Hc&ijer PUBUC LEDGER COMPANY CkfTl K. Ludlnrton. Vie FrtMdenti Jnhn C ?'m AlArv and TrlRurft Phllln H. Cfllllnfl. incur ioaa .j. epurston, u.reciora. EDITORIAL BOARD: lines H. K. Cram. Chalrroin SjfcV ib js, pirnxr. Editor fOICt'O. JLUtTIX . . .General Business Manager rubllihfd dalli- at rcctio I.bpom Bulldlnc, IndrDpnd&nc,, Souiri. 1'hllar1lrihtfL. i AMiiJTio Cizr Prm-t-'iiloF. Bulldlns ! Sww Tons. 200 Metropolitan Tower ! tWmorr, ,., TOT ToM Building , BTV,lnti. ..,,.., .ions Funerton Huuaine Cniciao 1202 Trlburo HulMImr Wl. ' - T-,-r-...o. f TvBifeT0 Bcf u. 7 Ip i 5"" ToBr Bciau . """'.) Sun nulldlnc j k AZ.oi.do.1 BOBKiU 1... t London Times ".Cl UUU.3VI.ll UUi. Acn.,10 I rt i Tti Ivbsino Fituq Lrav.VR Is ncd to ul) If trtbrs In Phlladelphlt and n .Touiidlng ton 19 W i in rata or iweivo u-) cents per uceic, pajauio Iv B5' m&ll to'polnts o"tslJo of riilia'lelphla In IS, lb united Btafes. Canada, or Lnltnl tttutea va- neRSinnc, i oBiaro iree, nity uu. n ir inumu " llara Tai vaar. navahla In HiirHir2. q all loreicu countries ona tail uonar pr fe. NoilCB Subscribers wtuhlnc uddrers clur.jed "BUX. $009 wALNT-T KEYSTONE, MAIN 3000 If,' - ' 6' "ET Addws all oommunlcotfoiM to Eteiitao I'ubKa itcaaer, inaeitnaence aquarc, i'utoactpma. Member of the Associated 1'resa rnn associated press is ejciu- 'ttvelv cntif.ai to the use for republication o oil netea dispatches credited to it or nor i otherwise credited In 7ifs paprr, and also the local news published therein. Ail rights of republication of special dis patches herein arc also reserved. PhllidelphU, IVidiy. NoTtmber i8. 1W AT THE PENITENTIARY A READING of the grand jury's re port on conditions at the Eastern Penitentiary makes it plaiti that shri ennui, once the dreadful afilictiun of tlir S ultra-rich, is the chief trouble uinong the convicts and the inspiration ot muny oL the complaints that have been penctrat ingr to the outer world of anxiety and hard work. The devil, as somebody has entT rt 1tiwc finrl lonfv nF Wftrlf fflP B .".- .".""', """ ' daia nanas to ao. LonK aeo the labor unions of the stale a forced tho enactment of laws devised to eliminate competition between convict labor and those who have to urk for a Hving. In principle the law is sound and fair. But it has provided some restric tions that properly might be lightened. Ihero are not enough convicts in the g,3tat perceptibly to alTcct labor condi tions, even if they were penmuetl to work unhindered. K "Pinna fnrrnnhiteA s.nmn vpjirx nifu for r creat central nenitentiarv near Iielle- ; Xonte will solve tho difiiculties of comict bs labor if ever they are carried out. If the state's prisoners arc ecr concen- i'- Iraled on the central penitentiary site they will be in an isolated region where L they can make agriculture a tempuiary 'i'Vpcation. 1 miners would not complain. igJThe building in this city is inadequate. , The site coultl be put to bolter uses. j 'Great prisons should be removed from glcities altogether. And when thoy are r'(oved we shull no longer have to bo 1old bj- grand juries that it is wrong Hto force strong men to lie in bed in the Mr'ii,j.- -r i.- .....i. ,.r .it.: t.t U'LllIU lUf UIU Wttllb Ul U1I1ULI1I1I UUL- SUOjJo. 1PREAR DAYS FOR SCALPERS ONE effect of the amusement lax law .fkttii in Im jio i'llnlpnmn n if vcn R&jiexpected. For years bills against ticket scalping suiTered eleventh-hour L" extinction m legislative halls and, if re formatory measures were passed, they It 3ere either absurdly mild or enforced ponly in theory. The infuosition of the federal lax 'changes the whole situation and places the speculator directly under the eye of the government. Obviously the scalper ,fa averse to charging a lax commensu rate with his extortionate nricc of tlio 'We of Wrt nrnfifa lint nf 'ill Vitf 4li im iKpost and prospective purchasers arc Bj Beared on by Hie additional cost. And lirfao the sidewalk vultures and others. f, within doors have dared to base the tax I"-' collected on the original and legitimate V price of the ticket. I"" Tllft TPRlllfc lei npnrtpnmrr. 'Twnnfr- ; four alleged scalpers will appear today "before Thomas Littlehales. chief Held deputy of tho Internal Revenue Depart ,mcnt in this district, to submit their re & turns to the government in connection f Tlt 4t.n!u ln aT . AA J Xl... 1 . ' wiiu wicii paic ui acaws lur uje i enn- ; Pittsburgh football game. E-HJAt?oems odd to penalize a lawbreaker 1 he hasn't made sufficient drafts public's pocketbook. Itegard- spcculators, however, "any- ,'ive pain" is in accord with ntiment. Football and Ihea- s will be almost inclined to amusement tax if it succeeds ig an ancient and disgusting LODGE'S BOOMLET -.DECENT events in Massachusetts in. Efr dicate that there are men in thp Bay ,-3iaie who are iKKing ine Jodge presi dential boom seriouslv. Two iiflliopo.ita jfef the senator havo declined oflices to which Governor Coolidge aopointed them. One Df them said a lot of nasty things about the governor, and remarked that If there was to be any favorite son in Massachusetts "we are going to have TTah.. Pnln T .1 rt This happened a dav or two after tho K, Massachusetts Republican Club had in- B,Oorcod (Joolidge lor tlie presidency. i. 1 the friends of Lodge and .Coolidge ;,u' ewu w iiKiib uvcr me siate deie- -atioh, the friends of favorite sons in thyr states will be likely to take heart Of Tiopo and leave Massachusetts out of their reckoning when they count their Uifcossiblc rivals. BIRDS OF ILL OMEN I (T UD.WIG C. A, K. MAKTBNS should I -bi sent to join tho colony of quefc Wrtin cribbed, cabin d and confined B Ellis Island. The self-styled ambassador of the .soviet government of Russia is frankly oppajftd to our system of government, and. admittedly has received largo sums rf money from abroad for tho purpose of propaganda. That money was used to Mttol bolshevism and decry democ u$J;yj Iq attack a representative sygtem ir"jrsvernmont una to laud tho most uuunfcll class dictatorship that ever tha world. dvof tho money Jia probably lklKvakld hlnnica known as "n Parlor Bolshevists is indicated by his allegation; 'that ho paid $1000 to one man of this stripe to "help in a commercial transaction" for advic. In tho matter of arranging for a shipment of boots, meats and chemicals, valued at 9,C00, 000, to be shipped to Petrograd. Martens is an enemy of tho republic. Hit wings should bo clipped and he should be caged. With Russia blockaded and no faraway dumping ground to bo found, Ellis Island seems to be the only cage immediately available. Send him thorel Perhaps tho other recalcitrants may induce him to join in their hunger strike which heaven forfend should bo inter fered with in a free country! Then let a blanket of silence be thrown uvr" the cage so that law-abidinr men n:;i.. hae a needed rest. A LABOR PARTY THAT BARS MOST OF THOSE WHO LABOR Union Men Who Wrote tho Chlcjgo Platform Have Studied the British Doctrines Without Much Benefit TF LIBERALISM in politics means - utter detestation of platform bunk, a human v lew of human affairs, a deter mination to get control of economic forces that havo been running danger ously wild and a wish to make industry serve the life that now serves industry, then there is a great deal of it among all sorts of people in America. If liberalism means disgust with tho doddering party bosses who flee to the tombs of their ancestors for comfort Mid guidance in any cvj'.s, most of u.- M'u liberal. '1 ho men who formed a new Aniuncan Labor party tho other day forgot this if they ever know it. They mot in Chi cago, wrote a platform that sounds like a series of angry exclamations, and adjourned. And because at tho outset they acted with a more than aristocratic exclusiveness, it ought to surprise no ono if their party is never heard of again. These are times of criticism and dis-d satisfaction. If there is little of liberal sentiment at the top of either big parly, it is because men who meet and write platforms like that of the new Labor party forget their enthusiasm when thg meeting ends. ' They do not carry it to the polls. Thej drift with the gang. And it '.s the gang that supports the men who so often "misrepresent Ameri can sentiment in high offices. A staccato paragraph in tho now Labor party program demands the abolition of the United Stsites Senate. Why abolish llic Senate V Why not elect oiij thut is human and in tune with tho times? A Senate is u pretty good thing to have around. Some angry and embittered delegate who obviously was thinking of Debs and Mooney wrote the plank that de mands the immediate release of all po litical prisoners. The interest of emotional labor men in Debs and Mooney is easily under stood. These men were at least the de voted partisans of a large element that had no one else to talk for it. The Labor platform begins loo far awry in the clauses which demand the immediate nationalization of mines and railwajs and banks. If you nationalize utilities you have to depend upon elected officers to administer them. "You put llicin into politics He is a brave man who can think of the banks of tho coun try under the direction of the sort of job hunters who manage to squirm into, high places so otten nowadays. The new Labor party has infinite faith and infinite credulity. Do its mak ers suppose that the tribes of politicians who arc now so pitifully without en lightenment, without idealism, without a sense of patriotism, would suddenly become efficient, wise and honest if you gave them the railroads and the banks to play with" Mr. Uompors had no hand in the for mation of tho American Labor party. If any of the other influential leaders were present their names didn't figure in dispatches. As u matter of fact the abler and more experienced labor leaders seem to have had no part in the job. If they had been there they might have told tho other delegates that you cannot reform any thing by passing resolutions and writing political platforms. When the politics of the country has been cleaned up, when shysters no longer arc elected to office and when there are no vast party machines to bo sustained by patronage, it will be time enough to talk of the nationalization of basic in dustries. And when that time comes the na-i tionalization of industries will not be necessary, because there will be better ways to make the basic industries effi cient. As a political document the Labor party program has little value. As an indication of what younger labor leaders ure thinking about it is significant. They hae been thinking for the most part of the British Labor party and its plat form, because they obviously would like to apply the theories of the British in America. That an entirely different set of conditions exists here does not seem to bother them. The British labor men agitated vainly for tho nationalization of mines und tho nationalization of railways. That pros pect was intolerable in England. And yet England has no such complicated system of graft and patronage and boss control in politics as we have tolerated, with diminishing patience, in America, England, too, is finished. Thero will bo no further need there for the ex plorers or the adventurers or the pioneers of industry- All the mines are opened. All the railways have been laid. Tho economic system is complete. Bureau crats could not hold back tho country if they wanted to. But the tinhorns and illiterates who' still get the votes of even dissatisfied labor men might very well work havoc with the utilities of the United States. If the government were to take over the mines and the railwajs wc should havo to depend upon Congress to settle undeveloped territories, to vision great cities In tho iYlldcro,5s,.'to stay up all '4f night in laboratories for tho study of new methods of mining and to go forth into tho hills in search of coal and min erals and cuch like. Yet a few years ago Congress didn't believe i.. aviation. It is skeptical of aviation now if you aro to believe the evidences of the de bate which preceded tho refusal of money which the urmy and the navy needed to continue tho development of their air divisions. A solidified nnd rationally dirccled labor vote, whether it appears in a new Labor party or through u closer co operation of trades unions, can do a great deal to temper and ndvanco polit- ical thinking in tho United States. But it will be best felt, as Mr. Gompcrs and tho experienced leaders know, as a bal ancing weight to bo thrown to ono side" or thu other in every big campaign. Tho labor vote will never bo tho fac tor that it might bo until labor men themselves are free of tho vaiij assump tion that to labor you must labor with your hands, and that only those who do manual work can have any interest in progressive and protective legislation or any real concern with reforms in gov ernment. Tt is because the Labor party formed at Chicago was rigorously exclusive that it must rank, for the present, far be hind tho British Labor party in signifi cance and power. Almost all Americans work. The majority of them work hard to earn a living. Of the professional and technical men who work with their minds, of the nervous exhaustion that is more wearing than physical weariness, the Chicago comentiuii took no thought. So, unlike the British, tiicj .-.hut most laborers out of their labor party. Had they done otherwise they would bo in a way to forming u party actually rep resentative of the majority in America. Such parties already exist. And if thoy do not represent tho majority, if thoy only protend, it is the majority's fuult. COAL rpODAY, after meetings and delibera- tions and ultimatums, after the an nouncement by Doctor Garfield of tho plan that was to have averted tho dis aster of a fuel famine, the soft cou.1 situation it, about where it was when the miners were fir.st ordered to strike. Mr. McAdoo's charges of "shocking profits," Doctor Garfield's row with Sec retary of Labor Wilson about the rale of wages to be proposed, the obduracy and secretiveness of the operators, grow ing bitterness among the miners and the obvious lack of any tiling like a sound and ordered governmental policy have served to complicate rather than to set tle tho coal situation. And winter is hero and industries aro succumbing to slow paralysis all through the middle West. "It was too late to hold hearings," said Doctor Garfield, in answer to Mr. Farrington, one of the mine work ers' representatives, who complained passionately because the strikers were not permitted to explain the grievances or their side of the case at tho cabinet meeting where the Garfield scheme of adjustment was discussed and sanc tioned. Of course, it was too late to hold hearings. But there was time for hearings and investigations six months ago when tiie minors first began to talk of a strike. There was time for an in telligent survey of the fuel industrj when the miners and operators first met to discuss new working agreements. If profits in tlie coal industry were "shock ing," it must havo seemedi to the re sponsible authorities m Washington that matters were drifting in the wrung di rection. Matters were left to drift. Tlie public is becoming awaro thut it is still in tho dark. It has been deafened by the clamor of opposing claims. No one has seemed able or willing to tell the simple truth about conditions in the coal industry. Miners and operators alike have conducted campaigns of hate. What is clear, however, is that Wash ington waited for the storm to break before it could get up courage enough to deal with a situation which was swiftly developing under everybody's eyes as a domestic crisis of the first magnitude. There is hope that Senator Lodso and his fellowi may real I?cii!on for Trouipt Action ize before Congress meets asaln that peace postponed until 1021 is peace postponed indefinitely. Reports from dispassionate observers in Europe tell of a possible merging of radical forces in Germany, and Russia, nnd such a combina tion may well startle the world. Thero are hotheads Ico Bags Ncgdid among the railroad brotherhoods who are demanding a general ttrike, but there is little likelihood that they will have their way. To consider such a course pof,sible is to believe their leaders either knaves or fools, and wo refuse to consider them cither tho ono or the other. The occnltation of the Xow Tmiu See It, star Beta Capricorn! Now You Don't was v i s i b 1 o in tho heavens last night. Luna got its goat for a brief interval. It sometimes seems to riain Itctl and Yellow us that the real yellow peril is to bo found in the shades of Ellis Island. The S0.0C0 spectators Financial Noto that banked Franklin Field yesterday had a capital time chock, full of interest. Doctor Grayson would not allow the President to eat turkey yesterday. Dr. H. C. L. prescribed in exactly the same way for ever to many others of us. Some one takes a sporting chance in an airplane fox bunt. It is the innocent resi dent of the neighborhood who happens to be out of doors. It was a successful Thanksgiving Day. The only kickers were the football players. The only turkey ever so many of us got was on the cover of our favorite magazine. Old Man Winter Is cnoyhg this sea sou's first game of freeze-out. The eeat of the Mexican Government teems to be fet for a boot. Can the Mexican message received at El Pato be a Texas etetf V J. KENDRICK CAUSES SURPRISE His Turning DoWn of Office After Ho Had Elected His Candidate a Most Unusual Course By GEORGE NOX McCAIK JXTUIIDOCII KENDRICK Is at once an " object of admiration and astonishment I discover with political workers, lie has enhanced his reputation enormously by his uuusunl action in declining any cabinet ap pointment at the hands of Mayor-elect Moore. And yet it Is nn open secret that be could have commanded the cholco of nny position in the gift of tho incoming executive. But he declined all preferment. Frankly he told Mr. Moore and his friends thnt ho did nor crave politicnl distinction. And this i! whore "Doc" KcndricU looms upon the vision of the average division and wurd leader as a personage to bo regarded with genuine surprise. Any man who, after conducting a suc cessful campaign and electing his candidate, is tendered high position and deliberately brushes the offer aside to take up his legal practice where ho laid it down. Is a new and striking figure iu Philadelphia politics. But those who know Murdoch Kcudrick bet likfwisc know that he chose the wisest part. He is on the hlghwuy to success as one of the nblect younger members of tho bar. ne has recently formed a connection with the law firm of which John C. Bell is the head. All things considered, Mr. Ken drick has displayed, in the judgment of his best friends, unusually good commou tenso in declining to sacrifice a career nt tho bar, even temporarily, for the ephemeral dis tinction of it municipal cabinet office. Ilo'ides, It would be a financial tucrifice ou his part. rpilE carelessness of u clci-L nt llnrrlsburg in transcribing Philadelphia's new char ter barred from political activity something like 0,000 officeholders. It Is not tho first caso of careless transcribing. Senator Homer J. Humes, father of E. Lowry Humes, present United States dis trict attorney for the western district of Pennsylvania, once had the unique distinc tion of introducing a bill, paradoxical as it may seem, o repeal u law that never had been passed. Tlie statute iu question can ho tound on page fi of the laws of Pennsylvania of 1RS.1. It provided that county assessors should make assessment upon laud on which the Mansion House was erected where county lines divided the tract. In Itself the bill was of small moment. It became a law through the mistake of :i elnrls at Hurrlxburc at the session of 1SS3 who transcribed the wroug bill and Governor Pattisou signed it. Senator Humes was a Democrat and a eloso friend of Governor Pattison. It was understood that the repealer was introduced at Pattisoa's suggestion. I do not think that another instance of this kind can bo found in tho legislative records of the state. riDMUND SHAW died last week. With " one exception,-Captain Archie 1). Glenn, he wai the last survivor of the little coterie of Civil War veterans who were members at the House at Harrisburg in the session of 1SS3. At the time of his death Mr. Shaw whs eighty-three jears of age and the oldest member of the Blair county bar. He was a tall dignified, courteous gentle man, with smooth-shaven face suggestive of : colonial delegate of pro-revolutionary times. The late Reuben O. Moon was an other who possessed that distinguished cast of features that seemed to belong to a distant historic period. Anion1; Edmund Shaw's colleagues from Philadelphia, all of whom have passed away, were William t'arborry, from tho old Third district, and William F. Stewart, of the Eighteenth -district, who, until his death, was known as "The Father of the House" b" cause of his long service as a member. Ho was succeeded as the senior Philadelphia member by John H. Ricbcl, of the Twentieth district. Riebel was another Civil War veteran who enlisted in the marine corps at the age of sixteen and served until he was mustered out in '03. John E. Faunce, after ward Democratic speaker of the House, wao another. During the session of S5 tho veterans worked closely on all matters pertaining to pensions, soldiers' orphans' schools and battlefield monuments. There has been very little work of that kind before the sessions of recent years. EDWIN J. CUMMINGS has very decided views on the coal situation, as might be expected from one of the leading trade figures in his line in this city. Like thousands of other citizens who, however, are not identified with tho coal trade, either bituminous or nnthracite, Mr. Cummings finds it difficult to reconcile the insistent attitude of miners' leaders with the general principle of poorly paid directoro of labor's troubles. There is an Impression that labor leaders, certain of them, aro in receipt cither of Inrge salaries, or have incomes from other sources not clearly defined. I have been to the trouble of looking up certain of these cases nnd I discover that there is little basis, visible at least, for apocryphal stories ot leaders' wealth. I have known a number of labor heads and all of them have died poor. One nhom I recall as having handled tens of thousands of dollars in steel strike benefits, with ample opportunities to graft, is now In his old aga in receipt of a salary of less than $100 a month as a night watchman. In the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Vorkers two presidents whom I knew per sonally, John Jarrett and William Wcihc, died poor men. The greatest detectives on earth keep tabs on labor leaders; their own followers. Let a labor leader once come under suspicion of dealing .sub rosa with the employers, and his end Is not far off. In recent years I understand that the heads of "national unions receive considerably 'larger salaries than in former years, salaries commensurate with their positions. Espe cially is this true with the railroad brother hoods. Measured by their responsibilities they are entitled to large salaries. "Once tho general question of corruption is raised, thero looms up beside it the twin query r Who is the worst, the leader who would accept a bribe to betray his fellows or'thc employer who offers It? Anyhow it's easy to surmise, and talk Is the cheapest of commodities. No one, we are Informed, takes Cool idge seriously. Much tba same thing was said 'about Lincoln. y ; The Amerongcn nermlt views with dis 'gust not uumingled with alarm tho tentutlvu ...rtf-amenta helnz made foe Ma fini Food profiteers should remember that a nation sometimes gives Its hardest punch at the moment when it is thought to be wholly helpless. YES, LOTS t-UitXRnyjHjreftKirraiP&M v3Tjg,ra,aEaflflfflffi )? i -VJiWmmsmMmmmmAfMrmi THE CHAFFING DISH Eureka TiTOR many years I wandered, . A-huntiug for a dame ; For many years I pondered On whom to wish my name, Afhen finally I met Minnie, With curls of pretty red j She was a trifle skinny. But yet she knocked mo dead. Suppose Bhe teas quite bonj ; Suppose her eyes did cross ; Old Minnie was my honey, Yes, Minnie was my bosi. Her teeth were false? admitted; But w hat of that, I pruy ; My Minnie, SHE COULD SHIMMY, Tbut's all I havo to say. G. AV. r Wo see in tlio photographs that all the juniors at the L. ot P. carry canes. This seems another evidence of social upheaval in college circles. Iu the good old days nu undergrad was permitted to push himself about w Ith a cane until ho nana senior. Thoughts on Cider OUIt friend Dove Dulcet, the poet, came into our kennel and found us arm in arm with a deep demijohn of Chester county cider. We poured him out a beaker of the cloudy amber juice. It was just in prime condition, "sharpened with a blithe tingle, beaded with a pleasing bubble of froth. Dove looked upon it with a kindled eye. His arm raised the tumbler in a manner that showed this gesture to be one thnt ho had com passed before. The orchard nectar began to sluice down his throat. Dove is ono who has faced many and grievous woes. His Celtic soul peers from behind cloudy curtains of alarm. Old un happy far off things and battles long ago fume in the smoke of his pipe. His girded spirit sees agrarian unrest in the daffodil and industrial riot iu a tin of preserved prunes. He sees the world moving on tho brink of horror and despair. Sweet dalliance with a baked bloater on a restaurant plat ter moves him to grief over the hard lot of the Newfoundland fishing fleet. Six cups of tea warm him to anguish over the peonage of Sir Thomas Lipton's coolies in Ceylon. Souls in perplexity cluster round him like Canadian dimes in a cash register in Plattsburgh, N. Y. He is a human sympathy trust. When we are on o'ur deathbed we shall send for him. The perfection of his gentle sorrow will send us roaring out Into the dark, and will set a valuable example to the members of our family. w BUT it is the rack of clouds that makes the sunset lovely. Tho bosomy vapors of t nu1 nrK the nalette unon which the decumbent 6un of his spirit casts its vivid orange and scarlet colors. His joy is tho moro perfect to behold because it bursts goldenly through the pangs of his tender heart. His soul is like the iufant Moses, cradled among dark and prickly bullrushes; but anon it floats out upon the river and drifts merrily downward ori a sparkling spate It has nothing to do with Dove, but we will here interject the remark that a pessi mist overtaken by liquor Is the cheeriest sight in the world. Who is so extravagantly,, gloriously and Irresponsibly gay? DOVE'S eyes beaconed as the cider went Its way. "the sweet lingering tans' filled the arch of his palate with a soft mellow cheer. His gaze fell upon us as his head tilted gently backward. We wish there had been a painter there some one like F. Wal ter Taylor to rush onto canvas the gor geous benignity of his aspect. It would have been a portrait of the rich Flemish school. Dove's eyes were full of a tender emotion, mingled with a charmed and wistful surprise. It was as though the poet was saying he had not realized thero was anything so good left on earth. His bearing was devout, religious, mystical. In ono moment of revelation (so It appeared to1 us as we watched) Dove looked upon all the profiles and aspects of life, and fyund "them of noble outline Not since tho grandest of Grand Old Parties went out of tiowee.nai Dove looked less as though ha ' falt-fja world were on tho verse of an abyss. OF US HAD A REAL CLOSE VIEW OF YESTERDAY'S GAME aim im MvVU I j ti For several moments -revolution and nuar chj j-eccded, profiteers .were tamed, capital aud labor purred together on a mattres3 of catnip and tlio cosmos became a free verse poem. He did not even utter the customary and ungracious remark of those to whom cider potations arc given : "That'll be at its best in about a week." We apologized" for tho cider being a little warmish from stand ing (discreetly hidden) under our desk. Douce man, ho said: "I think cider, like ale, ought not to be drunk too cold. I llko it just this way." He stood for a moment, filled with theology and metaphysics. "By gracious," he said, "it makes all tho other stuff taste like poison." Still he stood for a brief instant, transfixed with complete bliss. It was apparent to us thnc his mind was busy with apple orchards an'i autumn sun shine. Perhaps he was wo .Oering whether ho could make a poem out if it. Then ho, turned softly and went back to his job in a life iuiuranco office. AS FOR oursclf, wo then poured out another tumbler, lit a corncob pipe and meditated. FalstafE onco said that he had forgotten what the inside of a church looked like. There will come a time when many of us will perhaps have forgotten what the In side of a saloon looked like, but there will still be the consolation of the cider jug. Like the tmell of roasting chestnuts and the com fortable equatorial warmth of an oyster stew, it is a consolation hard to put into words. It calls irresistibly for tobacco ; in fact the true cider toper always pulls a long puff at his pipe before each drink, and blows some of the smoke into the glass so that he gulps down some of the blue reek with his draught. Just why this should be, we know not. Also some enthusiasts insist on having small sugared cookies with their cider; others cry loudly for Reading pretzels. Some have ingenious theories about letting the jug stand, either tightly stoppered or else unstoppered, until it becomes "hard." In our experience hard cider is distressingly like. drinking vinegar. Vk'e prefer it soft, with all its sweetness and tho transfusing savor of the fruit animating it. At the peak of its deliciousness it has a small airy 6parkle against tho roof of the mouth, a delicate tactile sensation like the feet of dancing flics. This, we presume, Is the 4'4 to 7 per cent of sin with which fer mented cider is credited by works of refer ence, There aro pedants and bigots who in sist that tho jug must be stoppered with a corncob. For our own part, the stopper does not stay in the neck long enough after the demijohn reaches us to make it worth while worrying about this matter. Yet a nice at tention to detail may prove that the cob has some secret affinity with cider, for a Missouri meerschaum never tastes so well as after three glasses of this rustle elixir. , V u T3AT ingenious student of social niceties, John Mistletoe, in bis famous Dictionary of Deplorable Facts a book which we heartily commend to the curious, for ho In cludes n long and most Informing article on cider, tracing its etymology from the old Hebrew word similar meaning "to quaff deeply" maintains that elder should only be drunk besldo an open fire cf applewood logs: And preferably on an evenlnc of storm and wetness, when the awlsh and sudden patter ing of rain against the panes lend. an added agreeable unugness to the cheerful scene within, where master and dame elt by the rosy hearth frying eausages In a pan laid on the embers. This reminds one of the anecdote related by ex-Senator Bcveridge In his Life of John Marshall. Justico Story told his wife that the justlcer. of the Supreme Court were of u. self-denying habit, never taking wine ex cept In wet weather. "But it does some times happen that the Chief Justice will say to me, when the cloth Is removed. Brother Story, step to the window and see If It does not look like rain. And If I tell him that the sun is shining brightly, Judge Marshall will sometimes reply, 'All the better, for our jurisdiction extends over so Jargo a territory that tho doctrine of chances makes it certain that it must be raining some where.' " Our own theory about cider is that tho time to drink Jt is when it reaches jou: and If It hails from Chester county, so much the better, SOCJUTEa. i r Where the Grass Groivs Like the Sea OH, LET me hence to empty wastes .Where the kind wind sweeps free ; Where silence has her brooding place, And on the earth's untrodden face The "grass grows like the 6ea, AU gray-green, rippling to and fro, v AVhen the soft breezes o'er it blow. r Oh, let me hence to' open plains Where there Is no man's mark; Where sound is caught but nature's sigh, Or n chance heron's lonely cry Out of the gathering dark The dark that in the land of men Is pierced to aching .light again. Oh, let me henco that I may seek Tho balm of quiet space ; Choked in the dust of countless feet, The bars which I so vainly beat Oft crumble from their place, When sleep brings back old days to me Out where the grass grows like the sea. Ethel AVolff, iu the New York Times. The suggestion that Fiumo becomo a buffer state brings the thought that a man of the D'Annunzio stripe might at any time make It "a lively old buffer." AA"e are authoritatively informed that spring clothes are to be higher. Neck or ankles? Speaking of righteous campaigns, what a the matter with a housewives' campaign for all prior rights to sugar? Whether or not Holland surrenders tho kaiser for trial, she is likely to get in Dutch. What Do You Know? QUIZ v 1. When did James Monroo announce the Monroe Doctrine? 2. Where Is Khartum? S. When was the naval battle of Jutland fought? 4. Who wrote "The Story of Kennett"? 5. What la1 the feminine of the word ex ecutor? 6. What is rattan? 7. On the slowness of what general did Napoleon blame his failure to win the battle of Waterloo? S. What is the meaning of the musical term "sordamente"? 0. What is the' coinage of Italy? 10. How long is the term of a justice of tho United States Supreme Court? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Chauvinism Is derived from Nicholas Chauvin, a French veteran of the Na poleonic wars. The word now means bellicose patriotism, foreign jingoism. 2. Two cities in Schleswig-Hoisteln aro Schleswlg and Hadersleben. 3. William Wycherly was a noted English writer of comedies, ne died in 1716. 4. Two Presidents who dropped their first names in political llfo wero Thomas AVoodrow Wilson and Stephen Grover Cleveland. B. The game of bowling was Introduced Into America by the Dutch during their rule of New York. It was originally played on Bowling Green. Indoor alleys were a later development. 0. A truncheon is a short club or cudgel carried sometimes by policemen. It is also the baton or staff ot authority of an earl or a marshal. 7. Kolchak and Yudenltch are two anti Bolshevik generals. 5. Steps to organize a labor party harp been taken in Chicago. 0. Felipe Angeles was a Mexican general aud revolutionist" He was shot nt Chihuahua on November i!0, 101S. 10. Tho Spanish regularly employ the term "Your Grace" in addressing each other. It is contracted Into the word "Usttd.'1 i ti&Jt,:- .0