kQ a hi- m Vh 4 $ '1 i i i. ? I' m ttii m '$ 41 10 u?mng "public ftefcger PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ,Chrl It I.iullnclon Vlcn l'r'M Vnt 1 Mm O. Hftrtln. Brrpry nn1 Trfurrri 1'hltlp P e'nlllnii. Jonni D wllllnnn, John J Fpnrp;con, Director nnrrorttAi, DOAnm Ctncs 11. K Corns, Chairman DAVID B. 0MIIJ:T...,.i Editor JpitN C. MAIITIX .. Oi-iiorainualiiM lliinnjrfr l'ublltlic.l ilally ut I'irilo I.Uhjiii, rulMliu. Atiaktio City.. Nsw Ionic , TrrroiT .. . t. At. Iiiik... ,, Cuicco intitpfnuiniQ i.aunre, riintuifinnn .Imifl hioii lltilMlrur nm "Oil Mr troMlttan lower 7t ronl IliUMIn? llni CiilCrtnii llnlMInu . .trilS Tribune nullum NISWH Ill'ItUAUHi WjUtllKIITnN lltJIIIMt, N. I:, rnr. I'uiii-jlwmla Af iinrt I llh SI Ntir lone lit nmi 'l!i ei I uiMlnr Losixkn lllrnu Union rimti . , Hi'nscniPTtov i i:hmm Th umMvo I'tiiin laiimm l rvil to "" writ In Philadelphia anl eurroiin4ln;t lowna at the rnto nf twrlvo (U) lent 11 r wcil. pa alilo to the rnrrlor. . Hv mail to point outMo of Vhllo U1rlila In tho T'nltrl Slatra Cinn.1i. or Unllnl HHtr po pri.iilr.iih, tMistui.8 frw. nrt Col f uti t r month Blx ?CI1 itollnra pr- rnr rwjnliln In mlvynr. To all foreign rcmntrlri on" (Sll loll ir per Nonet! iilwerllieri wl'hlnc n.Mrem changed mtut Ble u'J ua Tirll n nriv a Mrca". BFIL. J10O TlAl.MT KETOM. MAIN" 2000 ET AMrms nil onminuiifrnt nn tn rtrnlvn 'iiWIc , ilgir. iirlrii. nl u . uw i I'lWi il lyiun Member of the Associated Press rnr. Assort ri:n vur.RS exriu- thrlu rntlilrtl tn the if fnr rcnnbUialian of all ne-irs ilhpatrhci crcdittd tn it or not otlwnrhr credited Iv thli P'ljiri , and nlin the lot nl tint? iiubliahed thcicln All rltihti nf rcpuhlienttnn nf special dls patrhci herein nre aim rrtrrt rd 1'hllarlalpliit. 1 rdl.fMla llr'rinl.rr 10 1919 KHAKI AND POLITICS "DOSSES and job-hounds in politics who - feel t need of improved intrcnch ment will dotheiv utmost from now on to trim their sails to what they vaguely call soldier sentiment. Khaki will figure large in 2 goctl ninny elections of the near future. Men who stayed safely at home and emerged fiom the war period without a decent understanding of the war's causes or purposes will look around for service men whose names on big or little tickets might insure victory for the usual huddle of professional place holders Regard for the service man or his work doesn't figure in the lamentable game. Ho will be a wise soldier who, when he runs for office, doesn't lun solely on his uniform or peimit the debasement of the service spirit by cliques who seek to use the symbols cf military service as a mask for shabby political jobbery. Somebody in New Jersey actually pro posed legislation to "insure preference for honorably discharged soldiers" in the public service. Since there arc 1G0.Q00 honorably discharged soldiers in the state and only about 10,000 places which any of them would wish to hold, the pro posal is plainly not sincere It is a poli tician's way of appealing to soldici sen timent. The Public Service Commission of the state in opposing, the suggestion ob serves that "soldiers did not return with the feeling that they had to be perma nently subsidized." They did not But politicians who live by subsidies will refuse to believe it. THREE LINES rpo ALL those who, irritated by sugar - restrictions, the coal shortage, dimin ishing train service and the high cost of Christmas, have yet not lost interest in the League of Nations a three-line dis patch from Paris yesterday seemed one of the most significant of many moons. Italy, we were informed, has referred the touchy and dangerous question of Adriatic settlements and readjustments to Lloyd George. A month pgo the Allies by common con sent were leaving the initiative to Mr. Wilson whenever Fiumc or other un pleasant or difficult pioblems demanded solution or emergency treatment. If enmities were to be made, if somebody had to shoulder the sort of blame that is inevitable in the case of Fiume, for ex ample, the statesmen in Europe were per ' fectly willing to let America lead. So the Senate delay, while it may be un comfortable for the President, is uncom fortable for others, too. Mr. Wilson may yet thank Mr. Lodge if the treaty blockade has served more evenly to divide the terrific responsibili ties of peace making among Washing ton, Paris and London. REFERRED TO MR. LODGE "M'OT long ago an army train manned ' entirely by soldiers passed close to this city on the way to Baltimore. It was loaded with steel containers filled with poison gas fifty times ra,oro deadly than any used in the war. The gas was an American invention. Americans de vised an aerial torpedo, a self-directing airplane, which was intended to drop projectiles filled with this compound on enemy cities. Chemists say that one such shell would have exterminated the population of Berlin. If the Germans had used this gas, instead of explosives, when they were bombarding Paris, few people would have been alive in the French capital after the first shots. The Wrights per fected the nerial torpedo at Dayton and a chemist from tho Northwestern Uni versity compounded the gas. The work of these men was completed shortly be fore the armistice was signed. It is too much to suppose that scientific men in other countries have been idle. A great many people are talking of "the next war." Few of them have any conception of the means by which it will be fought. The containers taken to Baltimore held, all the new gas made thu3 far. They were loaded on a ship and sunk some where in midocean. NEVER TOO MANY COOKS NOT all good cooks are good wives, ncr all good wives good cooks; but be-' cause everybody will concede that ability to cook is an excellent thing in a wife there is cause for gratulation in the establishment in this city of a new post graduate school in domestic science. It Is true that the school is not pri marily designed for the supplementing of good wifely qualities; Its ostensible pur pose is to teach lunch and tearoom man ferment and medical dietetics; but who en-wi for ach things as well-laid plans 7 fr"' i . . inj-lnlnt b jrtiaoy busmots'-s EVENING that women are less desirable than men as employes for the reason that no sooner do they become proficient than they get married. In this particular Instance the fact, so "far from being a detriment. Is a positive benefit. We venture the assertion that the stu dents who plan, cook and serve monls in the newly established public dining rooms will not lack for beaus with de cidedly serious intentions. In the mntrl moninl mnrkct they will go like the hot cakes they know so well how to make and serve. CONSIDER PRINCIPLES BEFORE CANDIDATES When the Republican Issues Are Framed They Will Point to the Man to Head the Ticket rpiin primary purpose of the meeting of the National Republican Committee in Washington today is to select tho place and date for the meeting of the next national convention. The forecast this morning was that Chicago would be the place and that the opening date would be Tuesday, June 8. If this forecast be coricct the signifi cance of this date is tremendous, for it indicates a determination on the part of the leaders to fight nn aggressive battle next year on the issues already in the minds of the Republican voters. It has been the custom for yeais for th party in contiol of tho presidency to hold its con vention first and for the party contesting for- that office to wait until the party in power had framed its issues and then to meet them. This happened in 1870, in 1880 "and in 1884 when the Republcans made their nominations in advance of tho Democrats. It happened in 1888 when the Democrats renominated Grover Cleveland before the Republican conven tion was held. In 1892 Benjamin Harrison was renominated two weeks before Cleveland received his third nomination. There was an exception to the rule in 1890 when, with a Democratic President, Major McKinley was nominated in ad vance of Bryan. But there was a return to the rule in 1900 and thereafter. Tho national committee is evidently in an aggiessive mood. It reflects the mood of the party for which it speaks. There will be gossip in Washington today and tomorrow about possible candidates for the presidency, but the country is just now moie interested in piinciplns than in candidates. When the principles are formulated the felection of a candidate to apply them will be easv. Now what is the big thing about which every one is thinking in these months following a war in which we raised the largest army in our history and sent two million men across the Atlantic, break ing all precedents in the military history of the world? Wo have discovered that whether we will or not we cannot isolate ourselves from what is going on in other nations. The war in Europe was our war. The icsues involved in it were issues vital to our own national life and independence and self-rcbpect. We fnced them bravely for two years and did our part heroically and well. But there has come a reaction and there are men who want the United States to withdraw itself into its shell and let the rest of the world struggle with the world problems as though they did not concein us. But the time when we could do this passed many years ago We cannot escape entanglement in world affairs if we would. Roosevelt saw this during his presidency and he said time after time that the United States must play a large part in the affairs of the world, and that the only oppoitunity for the exer cise of our will was in deciding whether we should play that part nobly or ignobly. We are confident that the nation as a whole desires to play its part nobly and to shoulder all the obligations that par ticipation in the war has placed upon us rather than to act the part of a scuttler and a shirker. The record of the Republican party during its more than sixty years of life qualifies it to lead the nation in adjusting itself to its large place in the family of nations. The party has been characterized frorji the beginning by its ability to per ceive the problems that must be solved and by its genius in solving problems and it has not been handicapped by servile bondage to any academic formulas or political doctrines that would hamper it in its constructive work. No dead hand has bound it. It has regarded the con stitution as a living document expanding with the needs of succeeding generations, which find in its provisions warrant for carrying out within the lines of a rep resentative government the undoubted will of the majority. It was not until the leaders of the party failed to perceive the trend of popular sentiment and became reactionaries that serious disaster overtook it in 1912. They turned their back upon the forward looking constructive program for which Roosevelt had been fighting, and as the inevitable result the party suffered the most humiliating defeat in American political history. The party stands on the threshold of a great opportunity. Its members are ready to pass through the door and use the party as the instrument for carrying out their will. They can be prevented only by the blindness of leaders who face the past instead of the future. Npt only are the Republican masses committed to the proposition thnt the United States must do its full share in the family of nations, but they desire also that it apply to the domestic problems the constructive wisdom which pieserved the Union, abolished slavery, solved the finan cial problems of the Civil War by bring ing about the resumption of specie pay ments in an incredibly short space of time and then developed and applied the policy of protection to native industry until the nation has become the great manufacturing center of the world. The industrial problems which con front us today require for their solution the same effective genius that carried the nation through the forty or fifty years succeeding the Civil War. The sons of the men who did this great work are also Re publicans, heirs of a splendid heritage nf n, InrinVflCiMiiilft vital in achievement. 1 v "-"! "T 1 - PUBLig LEDGER They are going to Insist that their party turn Its back on tho blunders of the recent years and tackle tho adjustment of tho industrial questions and the questions of foreign trade and domestic commerce in tho same broad-minded spirit as their fathers attacked the questions of their time. Tho formulation of the issues hns already begun. The collapse of the Dcmo- ciatlc party in its handling of the rnil roads and the telegraph and telephone lines and in its blundering blindness in dealing with tho coal nnd the steel strikes and tho sugar shoitnge Is what was to be expected from a party which has in mod ern times shown little nptitude foi effi cient conduct of national affairs. Nothing but purblind leadership cpt pi event the formulation of issues whn will Inspire every Republican with con fidence in the mission of his paity in these critical times. And when the issues are clearly framed they will point with an unerring finger to the candiilnto to lead the Republican hosts to victory BEHIND CARRANZA QINCE Mexico is a pressing issue that seems to grow more complicated nnd threatening in spite of nnything that can be done in a spirit of patience and for bearance at Washington it will be well for tho people of this country to scruti nize it calmly. We ought not to permit ourselves to be deluded by surface evi dences which never mean much in any international controversy. Carranj-a is a vain and visionary old man. It would be like him to give fui tive aid to Bolshevists or I. W. W. agents or any one with wild dreams of revolu tion in tho United States. Ho gave aid and comfort to Germans nnd pro-Germans. Yet he is but an incident in Mexico. The forces that lie behind him are permanent nnd far more dangerous and perhaps even less friendly to the United States. They are the highly emotional groups of able, educated and energetic men who form the background in Mexico City and do more thnn any president to inspire the national policy with relation to foreigners and foreign interests. The Mexican intellectuals are a rela tively small element, but they are all powerful. They are influenced to a large degree by Continental education and training. They have a temperamental dislike of America. And even the few sincere patriots among them are im movable in tho conviction that the United States has long been determined to seize large portions of Mexican territoiv. The Germans moved heaven nnd eaith to spread that delusion in Mexico during the years of the war. And certainly some of the propagandists of intervention in Washington have done good woik along similar lines. We have few friends among Mexican officials. And even the few en lightened and infibential natives who really know the United States and its motives find it impossible to rid them selves of a belief that we will make a war of conquest upon them at some time or other. The Mexican conference held nt Atlantic City after the Vera Cruz inci dent served to reveal the depth of this feeling. Representing Mexico on that occasion were many extraordinarily able men. They were cosmopolitan. They had honorable careers behind them as bank ers and railway executives, engineers nn,l ct,nl Tt, ....,i.i ',. " -..i j I ...... ..... .. ..,, .,, ui cuuiii assured them, as the other representa tives of the United States did, thnt we had no unfair designs on their country nnd no desire to profit nt its expense. They smiled cynically nnd changed the subject. The end of the conference left Mr. Lane and his associates in despair. One of the Mexicans was accompanied by his two daughters. They had been educated abroad. They were clever and brilliant nnd, like all Mexican women of breeding) they were good horsewomen. Leaving they smiled on one of the mem bers of tho American delegation with the utmost friendliness. "You will not have an easy war," they snid, "Even the women will fight your .soldiers. And we will ride with them." It will he noticed in Sep Maxim Mnyor-elect Moore's Concerning letter tenia thnt the Glass Houses congrcismtn draws at tention to the fact thnt whpn Secretnr.v GInss refers to the intricacies of the revenue hill and its In volved processes of reaching income nnd exe ess-profit tnxes he is indlrectl, if uncoil ciously, reflecting upon the Democratic ad ministration of which he is n part; for the Treasury Department Itself, nt the Instance of Its experts, was responsible for said intricacies nnd Involutions. Delegates from Itend- Towpath of TrogrMS Ing, Pottstnwn nnd other points In the Schuylkill canal coal regions, meeting in Washington as nn auxiliary to the national wnterways association, are urging the re opening of the canal between Pottsville nnd Philadelphia. With resumption of tnifBe by one and two mulepower boats, possible lack of train service might prove a shade less menacing. Attorney General Caution the Kennte SchnlTir has urged the constitution revision comnilBslon to observe caution. Our guess is that the admonition w III be heeded j that proceedings will 1 losely resemble liana An dersen's duckponil, where something impor tant appeared to be happening, nnd thnt nothing will rcallj happen until a constitu tional convention Is siimrnoned In a conven tional and constitutional manner. One of the former kaiser's farms near Hlvas, Turkc, Is being used by the Allies ns a pla ground for Armenian orphans, Tls a little -comfort for them wrung from the man who caused tin Ir misfortunes. When Rnnta Clnus visits the House of the World where Capital and Labor and Consume nre children let u hope that he'll put a lot eif (liarlt) In their stockings. The Bibulous One says onl a sufferer from aphngla can be ludlfferent to a certain Important declslou boon to be handed down by the Supreme Court. Cravers for alcoholic stimulant who swallow hair tonic arc doubtless seeking to revivify the hair of the dog thnt bit them. Fernet there would be gre.ate calm in the Contemporary Club If the lemonade jad HnmlwlfhM came UMt. PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER MAYOR-ELECT MOORE'S" LETTER When Secretary Glass Criticizes, Revenue QUI Intricacies His Ani madversions Are Indirectly Aimed at the Administration Washington, Dee. 10. s Diiiiirtmcnt, In IiIh final report toConcrcss Klvt-t littl" hope of relief from lienv) nntkmal Inintl.m fm initnv jears tn crime. He veri fies wlint Clnude Kltrliln, of North Carolina, I frijpienth (iintcndeil durlni; the onHitle(n- tldji nf the grent war levemie bill, tliKt it wittlil niiilre nt leiit 1,0(10.000,000 -per nillitim tn meet our expenses, nnd that. the. ilib Incurred would neic-Bllatc annual In oret (hnrciH of more thnn SI. 000.000.000 nnd 5.1,000,000,000 inteiest In theKC titne.H Is 1 iiinl to nil tlic annual expense?) of llic ((ueinmenl prlnr to the wnr The nutottk, therefore, is not promising, mid lt( pulilienn l.miler Mnnilcll and Clminiuin Good, of Jhe nppropiintioDH committee, are taking jtlic wis nnii-se in iiilinonMilnK CoiiRress "nnd the people thnt (conomv must he prnctltrd. Hut there Is MimethlnK ill Secretrrrj' (Ihss'k repoit ttith referent c to tlic-gmj lilcutiis of the revenue bill nnd its involved proeei'es of leuthinK intomc and excess prolits tntes that might, if one cared trdo so, he intcrprtttd im a icfkttion upon the Diimicrntlc administration Of tourse, rt: retnrv O'nsi, who was icgnrdei! n it retMiimliH K.tne ltgislntor, Iind no intPiiirto nvohe the udmluistrntioii Hut in fulrites" to (lie Hi piih'.icanK who litlpctl to fnuncthc icvenue hill, and who in conference Imhulul St nattii l'inrose. Senator Lodge, Mr. 1'ord ne, of Michigan, nnd the Muvor-tlteP of I'lili ulelpl In, It Hhouhl he recalled that llie.v pointed out the embarrassment that uas ilKdv to urUi' from tre.tsur.v interpn tntTons of "edentific" parnglnphs of thu b!llj - Jn fairness tven to the hading Dunocrajs in conference, including Senator Simmons lyid Mr Kitchin, it should be mW. thattlic Tritrsurj Department itself, nt the InsttJncc offls experts, was responsible for tho form 11s. well ns the substance of muny ofthe troublesome ftatures of the measure. Sec retnr) McAdoo Kurrounded himself with able men, some of them pretlj strong in the. ilsc of language nnd mighty clever nt calculation, who said the proposalx emanating from "Hie Trcusurj Department would work out. So it is not surprising to members of the finance committee of the Semite, 01 the vvajs and means comntlttie of the IIoue, that thej nil did not work out ns expected , pOMiUESS mil 'he obliged ultiniatdvt to take n hand in the Delawaic river briilge question The Wnr Dipiitiuent icrtnhih will, ns the proposed stiudurc may affect navigation The bridge plnimirs, however, spun to hnvc the national situation fnfUj vwll in hand and when (loverno Sproul and his tonfrcres get into nction it in more thnn likih the govcrnmtnt, bailing the question of expense, ma lintl . its aid. Meanwhile, the mntter of locating the ap proaches to the bridge is undir discussion 'the odtgning Mnvm of Philadelphia, Thomas It Smith, and Architect John 'T. Wirnlrlm, in a leport to Governor Brum baugh favored a southern terminnl, the en tram e tn which would he ppmewherc in the vidnit of Washington Square. Alfred Vs. Hurk, president of the Manufai turcrs' Club, one of the commissioners along with Mnvnr Smith and Mi. Windrim, favored ltnte street for several reasons, one of width involved the question nf expense. Other bridge pininntrrs have been tnlking Spring Garden street with the suggestion thnt that thoroughfare could be mails n fine approach to the Park. The 1'li K. Price suggestinns hnve been made public nnd former State Treasurer John O. Shcatz comes a!ongwit4i nlmiK nionnilnir tn save tho henvv tntt'nt condemnation all the wnv back to Fifth hc Ut IK Ll.fMll Kt I..1 nn.kmn.l. rt f n.wl tn a a,n "'"" """ D " apprnat a extending :nn further west thnn Second street on Market so conM I lifted ns to enable trafhe to piss over Mnrket strict tn the bridge level on three rising turns so graded as to accom modate vehicular traffic. Governor Sproul has called n meeting of the Penns lvijiia eomntisslonc rs, when some of these questions will he considered, T pvANIHL CRAWFORD, Jr , who is fnfrly .representative nf the operative builders of-IIhllnilelphia and who hns been conferring with others equally interested in the housing pr'flblem, insists thnt Philadelphia's Increas ing population could be accommodated if Ihe cit.v could bring its sewage and other facili ties up to date. Mr. Crnwfnrel thinks the Legislature should provide fur some method by which necessary Improvements cnuld proceeePin anticipation, or through the builders them selves nfTcring indemnity. 'T Meanwhile, Secrctnr John Ihlder, nfthe Philadelphia Hnuing Association, bollntTic housing problem down to two phases J J3at, a lack of dwellings to accommodate oufflft creased population and to replace worlpnlt buildings, and second, deterioration of exjst Ing dwellings. Apparently there is work ahead for those who desire to meet the needs of our increasing population. GLHNN C. MKAD, the eloquent .and ancient Rntnrlan Glenn stuck tn it until he got to the top of the heap is wmc traveler. Like Theodore Justice, Gefirge Wcntworth Cair, Dr. W. W. Keen, 1 1nilnas Knebtirn White. Dr. Jtidon Dalnnd nrSl. a few other Philndelphlans who go on tours for health, recreation, business, or vthat not, the assistant eitv solicitor was fnr.jfnr away when registration time came. Like a good citizen he made the jump SOO&jnllos from California to get in bis vote." ; . nd one vote sometimes determines Kfejnt sjirs these clnys. It was a majoilttr "of omevote that threw the majoralty of-the city of Charleston into the Supreme Cmirt of the state. another Illustration of tho importance of the individual In any contest if the Individual will milv realize how im portant a factor he Is. ( TIIH president of the Business Men's As Hociation of Gcrmuntown this ear Is Colonel Slicldoi Potter, once ellrettor of public safet, 11 jw president of the Chellen Trtit Co. And its special representative In Washington for all festive occasions Is Congressman George Potter Darrow, who Is a director of the trust company of vyhjch the colonel Is president. Neither the t-plo-nel nor the congri ssmau has any apnleigips to innne iur irtriiiuiiiimn or me lUISIOess Men's Association. The colonel insists Jbnt the population of the Tn cut -second ward has now reached 100,000 and that the volume! of business there has grown to the proportions of a city of the third cfuss. Congressman Simeon D. Fcsh nnd Secretary Carter Glass, of the Treisury Department, who hnvet been up to Germantowu on speak. Ing engagements arc Inclined to think the colonel is right. TnB Leonard Wood (League Is one ofthe new political activities which arc said to be expanding throughout the rountr. Former Commissioner Harry L. West, ofiJhc District of Columbia, who was associated with the national surety league during yhe war, lias takea charge of the Wood league work, and It Is presumed that we will lienor a great deal about it frprn now on. . h 3, HA'MITON MOOllIi. ,1 yrr THE CHAFFING DISH What Every Woman Knows TIID shopping damozel looked dowu On a bargain-counter heaven: Her bag was henv.v with the weight Of gifts for Christinas liven; She hnd three bundles in her hand, And the names on her list were seven IT WAS the subwny mcz7aninc That she was standing on, Herseemed she scarce had been n day. Albeit ten hours were done; The lights thrilled toward her, circlcwise, Each like a fretful bun. AROt'VD her, shnppcrs, newly met. With sudden, loud acclaims, Spoke evermore among themselves Of just-remembered names: Wrought garlands stirred continually, Like green and crimson flames. HK1 'I KB steps still sought the portals of The lift, for downward flight; In the sheer gulf below, she saw, Beyond deep wells of light, Gents' furnishings, in circling charm, 'Mid dummies clothed in white. "I WISH his gift were come to me," Her voice was hushed and slow: "Not endless unity of Micks, Hut some new thing to know Occult, withheld, 1 find it not Seeking it high and low. t(fS OTIIEItS have 1 meetly fixed: v Uncle, nnd Cousin Fan, s- And the five rclntives, whose names M shopping list began Kmil, Albert, Mnrguerlte, Henry, and Mary Ann." I HEARD her moan. Rut soon her path Was vague in distant aisles, Where the clear-ranged, unnumbered ties Shone In fierce rainbow stjlcs, And then, half-romforted, she paused And bought. (I saw her Bmiles.) COUINXi: ROCKWELL SWAIN. We regard tho above as the best parody the Dish has been honored with In the course of its existence. We wish we might hear from Mrs. Swain more often. Every philosopher welcomes a chance to have his creed tested b misfortune par ticularly by the misfortunes of his friends. - , Democracy, observed some powerful thinker, tends to bring life to n dend level of mediocrity, Wo recent! had a chance to confirm this doctrine Our friend the Quizcelltor began treating himself to n very fine brand of mellow, expensive nnd richly flavored tobacco. But It was not long before his colleagues smelt the difference, nnd as he moved among his encyclopedias nnd statis tical almnnnes they noted the rich bine trail of aroma that fumed from his pipe. Naturally, this being a democratic office, they began to use bis pouch rather than their own reel and green tins. It was not long before the learued Qulx found hlrrisclf com pelled to return to the general snioke-stuH of IiIb colleagues. Thus, by the sound In btlntt of the Demos, nn man who seeks to raise himself above his fellows Is promptly penalized. There Is only one way, in a democratic community, In which nn upper social stratum tan be preserved permanently wltnout tiau gcrous upheaval. Tho only chance for the Quizcelltor to have continued to smoke that alluringly fragrant and opulent blend would have been If there had grown up n lower order of smokers, a kind oi villein class, who had been so long sunk in degradation and bitter shag mixtures that their palates re fused to respond to the delights of t)ie more aristocratic fumigation. Our friend Demos thenes McGinnls, for Instance, hns smoked his violent nnd cruel mixture mi long that nothing else contents him. The QuIzedltor'B handsome leather pouch offered no tempta tion to him. I'nfortitnntely for the luxurious G;ulz, his other colleagues were not so bard Md la apslby. 10, 1919 "00 OOH, BOY, JUST S'POSE J. Man, born free, wild old Jack Rousseau, is ever where in ihnlns. The pciils of New York life seem to have cnused the islanders in the Hudson river to nsort to shirts of mail. For vvc saw in a window of the Hotel Pcnn.sjhanla a sign sning Cham Shiil Stop inJ open here thortly. G. K. Chesterton once lemarked that George Bernard Shaw was probably the only living man who hnd never wiitten n poem. After n visit to the movies vvc can add an other name, viz., Burton Holmes, who wrjtcs rhjnied captions foe- his travel films The 8am Browne Watch Chain Wc are never able to understand how it is that some ambitious oung incii tuo able to wear their watch chains dlngonall ncross their waistcoats, running from the upper pocket on one side to the lower one on the other finnk. Wc have occasionnlh experi mented in this wav, but our watch chain will not reach. Is this only possible for those who are concave below the collarbone, or does It require a specially long hawser? Page the Art Jury T. N. T., one of our watchful clients, has spotted the following ad: you salt: A masterpiece oil painting, 24 by C5, of the V. It It, and Glrard Avenue Bridges nnd beautiful surroundings $175, Watson's Cafe. And T. N. T. suggests, In that brutal way of his, wouldn't the back of the canvas make a lovel movie screen? Wc inquired about Dr. Berthold Rner, the raplclly-becomiiig-wcll-known mortunr cs-. snIst, and have received two lively replies. One asserts tersely thnt when he lived in Philadelphia the Doc was a scream. The other Is more cruel to all concerned. Wc arc told, by our friendly client James D. Law: In many ways ho resembled yourself so far as I can judge, never having1 seen OU . Doctor Baer, who is now putting New York In on uproar by his little cssns in honor of a Manhattan undertaker, edited a sprightly little German paper In this town. a dozen ears ago. J J was called Die Glockc" (The Bell), nnd carried on its front cover a picture of the Liberty Hell. But we notice a letter the Doe printed, to one of his subscribers who hnd signed himself "Wil liam S." "Why," grieved the Doc, In good German, "do you call ourseIf Ml'il. Iiaia'f Doesn't 'Wxlhelm' sound good enough? Wonderful bow qulckl people get Ameiicnn- ized." On learning that the Doc is a German we understand more tie ail his enthusiasm for funerals, For' certainly Germany has been the cause of more of them In tho last few cars than any nation ever was before. Natural Anxiety Tress reports concerning tho recent Car-j)eiitler-Ili:kett disaster state that English men In Paris Bang "God Save tho King" after learning that tho Frenchman had knocked out his English opponent. Wo didn't even know that George had challenged tho winner of the bout ALI 1IA1IA. When Colonel Houso writes his auto biography wc hope be will call it "Tho Good Listener, or vild 'lnlkorn I Have Known," Wo hopu that Dorothy Glsh will get back to the locnl screen soon, because fas we have said before) our loyalty Is being put to severe tests. iAVc have Just seen Helenu Chadwlck In "An Adventure In Hearts," and if wo were a movie netrcss that's what we'd like to look like. We particularly fancy ourself In the situation when Miss Chndwick realizes that she Is In negligee and there Is that big boob looking at her. If wo weren't sur rounded by editorial writers and qulzedltors nnd other stern but far from silent men we'd get up aud practice Miss Chad wick's siiddvu shrinkage wis very moment. BOPItATBS 7,-'j;,,..3,U . &..&& M ?J NOW tw Al &Xu (From ihe Chineic) T HAVE bidden my little boat among thc. river grasses ; It Js dusk and the stars arc out. Mv boat rocks qiiictl on the grav vtfaters That the rising moon spangles with 'Silver., The wild duck seeks her nest and the trout lc aps no more. I nm alone with the night about me, Sorrow in my heart. The cool wind " Touches my temples with phantom kisses, O Sister Moon, you do not bring comfort to mc, waiting; Now I think only of lost loves, And old memories nnd old regrets Troop like snd ghosts before me, peering into ni eyes. The Nation. The confidence with which politician? have fixed on .Tunc 8 nnd Chicago as the time nnd place of the next Republican conven tion suggests the possibility thnt some of them have nlrcady made their reservations Pullman, hotel, interpretative and othcr w isc. Pittsburgh smoke has tnken on prls mntic hues in II. C. Frlck's gift to New York. Meanwhile the treaty patiently awaits, the bound judgment of a soniferous Senate.' The voice of America is now raised inc the clarion call, "Dig coal !" ' What Do You Know?'' QUIZ i Who is Captain Ross Smith and upon, what novel exploit has ho engaged? What commission Is to consider Ger many's responsibility for tho Scapi" Vlnw fccnttlinir? 3, In what century did St. 4AKHllit live? Francis t of. 4. What is the meaning of the title of the opera "Cavalleria Ilusticana"? 5. Who was General John IJurgoyne? 0. Whcro is Cape Fear? 7. What noted American painter has just died? 8. What celebrated Roman writer was the author of a treatise, on old ago? 0. What is cassia? 10. What is a steppe? Answers to Yesterday's Quit 1 Aldcrney cows take their namo fronj tho British island of Aldcrney, one o' tho Channel Islands long famous for their breed ot cattle. 2. The Uattlo nt Salamls was fought be J tween tho Greeks and Persians. 3. The engagement was fought in Jhe bay between Salamls and Attica, Greece 180 1J. O. Themistoclcs was the Greek, commander. 4 An ethnographer is a specialist in the scientific study of the races of men. C Tho United States Supreme Court can annul nn net of Congress after It has Kanmnn nnortl tl w ""'" - tii, t ., U Tim Hcapa 1'iovv ueet was scumca oy " the Germans on Juno 21, 1010, t j 1. The word mamma is derived from Nora inaii-rrcnch and the word mother from Anglo-Saxon, ( 8. tf'Cinque Cento" is on epithet applied to art between tho years luOO and 4, 1000. Literally It Is Italian for five hundred, but the phraso is a contract " tlon of "mil cinquo cento," Incanlof' I fifteen hundred, " 0, "Cicerone" should be pronounced a ' though It were Bpellcd "chcc-cha-io? ua." The word now ineans a guide. It alludes to tho loquacious Cicero, the Roman orator. r l t r m K V 1 Mi v. hm ON THE RIVER 10. According to the Mohammedans tiff IAr tA bidden fruit of the Garden ofJCds watbo banana. f ' MA M '.t V -H.