ta1'-! AtTrsTf1- ,lmv) it ifl :i 10 l!jjenmg JubUc Heftier PUBLtC LEDGER COMPANY "THUS JC. K. CCnTJS, rnmir.NT Phrl?a II l.mllnitcn, Vies PrcslM: .tnlm P. JUriln, Sivrelarv and Treasurers ThllliJ H Collins, Jntin 11, Williams. John J. Spurgcon, Ulrfctnr. EDITOIIIAIj EOAHDI frets It. K, Cnm, Chairman dav;d e. smilet .Editor JOHN C MARTI?.'. , .general Business Manager Published dally at Pernio T.mor.n llullJlne. Independence Snuure, Philadelphia, Atlantic CitT Press-17iiioii Ilulldlnc Nkiv YmiK...,. 00 Metropolitan Tower Dr.Tr.oiT "01 Ford nulldlnR St. Louis loos Fnllerton iliillillne Cmcioo 1.103 Tiibutta nultdlns; , nkws nracirs: wisiiinotov lU'srit;. ... ... N. I:. Cor, Pennsylvania Ave and Htli St. Nr.vr Yon nviMAi' The x lnvillne l.o.NDON Ui'iiuc London Ti.ius st'nscruin'io'v tkhmi The Cvrm .n 1'im.le l.t:lll 1 'iwl '" h ncrfbers in Philadelphia and rurrnvnillns tonne at the rate of twelve (121 cents pr wtl;. tu.alila tie null io'po!nt outs Je of Ph'ludelK'iia In the United States, t-'unada, or United States po vrMilniit. potaBO free, rlfty CA) rents per month BIt (Jill dollars pr veer. raynMe In advanre. To all forelen countries one (511 dollar per Noticb Subscribers wl'hlntf address rliansd must Blve old ns veil as mv addriss. BLI.L. 3000 VAl.MT KEYSTONE. SI UNJMO C3" AdJrtss all oommunteat oils to i.'i 'iuuh Pirtiiio , Uila'r. Indrp-tdcrc fcu. u,i. i'i.i P' " i Member of tlic Associated Prcs3 run associated rrtnss t- cnin- s've'v eviltlrd to the use for repuhllcntUiii at all nciis dispatches ered'ted to It or not otherwise crrillierl in this paper, ami aho the local news published thrieln. II rights of republication of special dts patches herein, arc also. reserved. Thlltdflplil.. Tur.dij, llfcrmlin 21. me " INFORMATION FOR BAIZLEY pOUNCILMAN BAIZLEY, moved by something said in these columiiabout the S.'IOOO d'nner for which h" wants to r.nn.1 Mnl-il'. rvi. 11.-. ilonmnrlMfi rt :i meet- inpr yesterday to be told who I'elshuzzar ' was. Bclshazzar, Mr. Baizley, was called a king. In reality he was a boss. He didn't behave. So his kingdom was di vided between opposing factions. That is what always happens to bosses who don't behave. SUBSIDIZED JOY-RIDERS TO RIDE in an automobile is pleasant. To joy-ride in an automobile without having to think of the cost of tires, gas oline, wear and tear or the staggering tolls of imperialistic garage men must be heavenly. This is the celestial diversion known only to the elect of the various city de partments and bureaus who are accus tomed to flit about at week ends and in their Idle hours in municipal cars behind mun'cipal chauffeurs. Of course, the sug gestion of a city garage with a checking system to restrict this ancient abuse is wise. And you may have observed that it is wise foil: who are always taking the joy out of life. HOME FOR CHRISTMAS LOOK in for a minute at any railway stati'i) and it appears that all the world is going, or coming, home for Christmas. For the time being nobody fares how the railroad!) on-which they travel aie administered so long as trains move on time and with adequate speed toward places and people that, during the rest of the year, are little more than a warm memory. Pconlo who crowd at the ticket windows in Broad Street Station aren't thinking of the Cummins bill. Their cars ache for the sound of bells drifting far over tranquil fields whore the snow still lies heavily. They are off to find doorways lit for them in far places and the trust and gentleness and the sense of surety that is somewhere in the world for every one. So it is every year at Christmas. There is a lucid Interval in which people become them sel cs again. All the obligations and promises of the season are of the heart. Congress, too, is going home for Christmas. Mr. Lodge is going. Mr. Reed is going. Even Senator Fall is on hia way and ho isn't asking us to let the blood run in Mexico. It is inter est inn to think of them all, down from the clouds, mingling in the rational and friendly crowds upon the common earth that is so intensely eager to be decent, generous and at peace. In the Senate, just before adjournment, there was a mo ment when it seemed that Mr. Under wood had inspired the members with a reference to the season and its meaning and purposes. But the mood passed. It is only possible to hope, now, that Christmas trains out of Washington may net go too fast. The senators may learn much from the other passengers if they will look and listen. RENAISSANCE OF BILL MR. BRYAN is credited with an ambi tion again to dominate the affairs of the Lemocratic party and to direct it nniid the shoal.-; of 1020. What, let us ask, has infected Mr. Bryan with a desire to give aid and com fort to the Republican party? GASKILL'S ANTICLIMAX rpHE first test of Proseeutor Gaskill's - cast? against Charles F. White and Mrs. Edith Jones, of Haminonton, who were jailed for alleged complicity in the murder of little Billy Dansey, came yes terday before Judge, C. C. Black of the Supreme Court of New Jersey. Both prisoners were released untler bonds. The sum of the bail, 57500 for White and $2500 for Mrs. Jones, doesn't indi cate that the detectives were able to fully sustain in court the charges orig inally made. The public may wonder whether a group of over-zealous detectives have blundered tragically again, as detec tives have often blundered before. DEMOCRATS HOLD THEIR OWN ATTEMPTS to find a moral in the by rlecti'ii in the Ninth congressional district of North Carolina are not very successful. The district polls a Democratic major ity varying from "J500 to 4000 at the regular elections. The Democratic can didate was chesen tho other day by n majority of about 1C00, which is about aa much as could le expected at a special election. The Republican candidate ran on a platform of opposition to the league of nations. The Democratic candidate ran on a platform of opposition to the oft iliscussed Republican proposition lo cut iwu me rvpre&ciiiuviuii vx. uc puum u . li.f - 4.1 C.,U in Congress on account of the disfranchise ment of the negro voters. It would be easy to say that opposition to the league of nations was condemned, and it would be equally easy to conclude Hint tho present apportionment of congressmen to the southern states was indorsed. But the truth is that a Democratic dis trict remained Democratic. If there is anything more than that in the result it does not appear. HOW CAN WE LET GO OF THE MAD BULL OF PATERNALISM? This la the Bin Question Before Congress In Dealing With the War Control of Railroads and Otner Things pONGRESS has adjourned for the holi--' day season without providing for the return of the railroads to their owners. The Senate lias passed the Cummins bill, which arranges for one plnn of regula tion of tho roads under their resumed ptivate control, nnd the House has passed the Esch bill, containing a different plan. Each bill makes some attempt to reim burse the railrcads for the losses which they have sustained under government operation. Unless suitable financial pro visions are made in the bill finally passed, many of the roads which were solvent when the government took them over will go into the hands of receivers. Yet labor oiganizations and organiza tions of farmers are asking the govern ment to lo'itiuue to operate the roads for two moiv yeais in or'.er that the experi ment of government opemtioii may have I a fair tttt, The rest of us believe that it has had a fair test and that it has failed. With supreme control over wages and freight and passenger rates the general director of railroads has accumulated a stag gering deficit. The service given to the public has deteriorated and no one who usc3 the roads is satisfied. Trains have been put on and taken off without ap parent regard to the demands of the traffic. All this has happened because no one has been lesponsible for earning dividends. Paternalism in tiansuoitation has pro duced the kind of results which it always produces. We are experiencing similar lesults from a paternalistic policy in dealing with sugar and coal. We cannot get cpal when we need it. We cannot get sugar for our food and we have to stand in the overcrowded trains, not only those used by commuters, but those which ply between this city and New York. We got into this me.s because of the war. Things had to be done and had to be do"e quickly and the government look the short cut, without serious thought of the consequences. Indeed, it is doubt ful if it had considered the consequences whether it would have done differently. When a nation is at war everything must bo subordinated to military necessity. But the government today is like the man in the pasture who caught a mad bull by the tail and is afraid to let go for fear of the consequences. But without any metaphors, paternal ism is a mad bull. The whole busi ness of the country is in dread of what it will do next. ... .. . Precedents have been set which arc likely to curse us for a long time in tho future. We have fixed the prices for coal nnd wheat and sugar. The grangers two years ago began to discuss the wisdom of continuing the policy in time of peace, so far as it applied to the products of the farms. For years they and the cot ton planters have wanted tho govern ment to valorize their crops in order to remove all risks frorti farming and cot ton planting and to insure to the plant ers and the farmers a definite return. Now the railroad owners are asking the government lo guarantee to them such a return on the value of their property as will give them a good profit. And there arc people who think fio loosely that the" are unable to sec the difference. The railroad is a public highway operated by private capital under gov ernment regulation as' lo rates charged. This is necessary' because there must be uniformity of rate for the same service and because the railroads must bo open lo all on the same conditions. There is an obligation on the part of the gov ernment to protect the money invested in railroads in order that these highways may be maiiitainci. at the highest rate of efficiency. But the government in normal times has absolutely nothing to do with the regulation or control of farming or planting. The prices for farm products arc fixed by tho operation of the good, old-fashioned law of supply nnd demand. When the supply is plentiful the price is low and when the supply is short tho price is high. Tho farmer is rewarded for his industry, efficiency and foresight in the same way as the manufacturer is rewarded. The government cannot go into the business of regulating prices save on those things supplied by public service corporations without producing endless complications. The first development of such a policy would be a widespread in sistence that there should be a limit to profits, or to the rewards now open to men of courage and initiative who are willing to risk their capital on the chance of reaping large returns. There are those, we know, who insist that it is n moral crime for a man to do more than a certain amount of business. Mr. Brynn a few years ago was insisting that it was impossible to accumulate a fortune of $1,000,000 without dishonesty, and he was saying at the same time that $5000 a year was income big enough for any one. America has been transformed from a virgin wilderness to the richest country on the globe because men were willing to invest heavily and wait for their profits tocome out of the development of re sources which they had tapped. The thing which happened fifty years ago -is going on now. The only difference is that men are investing fn different kinds of enterprises. They are not building railroads nor are they laying out town sites, but thov arc putting their money into automobile manufacture, into chemi cal industries, Into tho production of electricity and into scores of other en- EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER tcrpn'ses which may' or may not prove profitable. They take the risk and they believe that they aro entitled to the re wards. They do not ask the government to protect them from the consequences of their folly if they, make mistakes. They are opposed to laws intended to pre vent n fool from being a fool, because they know that such a thing is impossi ble. They know that if a man goes twice to the store which sold him a shoddy garment at a high price no lnw will prevent that man from going to tho store a third time if he has not sense enough to stay away. They know that fools will continue to expect something for nothing I no matter what statute may be passed declaring' that it is a misdemeanor to invest in ruinbows. And they know, too, that the surest wuy to eliminate fools is to permit them to be destroyed by their own lack of sense. The sooner we enn return to the in dustrial conditions before the war when the government was keeping its hands off business nnd allowing the fundamental economic principles to work themselves out the better it will be for the whole country. THE RED ARK TT WILL seem to some people that the government condescended too greatly in its attentions to the deported plotters and anarchists who, let us fondly hope, are by this time thoroughly seasick on the mystery ship that is taking them to Rus-iiu. An ideally managed exit of 'heso turbulent folk would have been quieter, less dramatic, less stately. Propei lv, they should have been made to pay their own passage and firmly urged aboard the first ship that hap pened to be handy without any of the heavy formality suggestive of secrecy, which, as it happened, permitted Miss Goldman and her associates to nssume, temporarily, an altogether spurious air of martyrdom. The red ark's passen gers were a nuisance and nothing more. A ponderous movement of governmental machinery is not necessary to dispose of nuisances. The end of the matter is not et. Odd and unexpected developments may follow the arrival of the good ship Buford at her destination. For Miss Goldman, Bcrkman and tho majority of the de ported group will be no more at home in Russia, and perhaps no more welcome, than they were in the United States. As anarchists they nre avowed enemies of ill government. Contrary to a general notion, there is no svmnathv between an ' ... anarchist and a Bolshevist, and there are vast differences in the beliefs and the ories of the two. In Russia at this mo ment the anarchists arc the relentless enemies of the Soviets, which they deem not half wild enough. They are pretty roundly hated by the leaders of bolshev ism. The men who aro running things in Russia nowadays arc not patient with their enemies. This fact may explain some of Miss Goldman's tears and the noisier of Berkman's curses. The riskiest thing any one in Russia may do is to oppose the Soviets. Critics aren't wanted in Bolsheviki-land. Whips, dungeons and firing squads await those who would criticize bolshevism half as freely as Emma Goldman used to criticize the democratic form of government and our method of administrating it. So it appears that the Reds who went out on the Buford will know freedom the next time they see it if they ever do. TIip Vouns Lady Nft Door Hut Ono. sn.vs slip suppo-pi prohibition is Itnslflii Please Note. all riKli t m its way. lutf it is pushins the idea ton far to make the battleship Virsinia so into a drydoik. Twenty - four million TaltC Your Choice dollars' worth of whis- ky is iiiovinc toward tin- seaboard for shipment abroad. Must of 51. it is said, will ro to (iprmnnj. li 'this consolation or punWniiPiit? '"Every time jou feel Cinod Ail vice inclined to buy dan- gerous toys for your children."' says Director Kruscn, in effect, "buy harmless ones for unfortunate chil dren in hospitals and eliaritable institu tions." Scientists nre excited Pull Negligible. over the alleged ilis- covery of a new planet. We don't know its exact distance from the earth, but it is probably too far away to affect the high cost of living. When it comes to re form in politics one Martin does not make Itirrl Note a conclusive summary. Tlip sugar situation is admittedly com plex, nnd not the least complex of its fen lures is that the stuff is bard to gel at the grocer's but easy to get when it is turned into candy. Judging by the preparations being mnde by the Navy Department for his capture, the business of being a whisky smuggler is going to be an exciting one. Is there any particular significance in the fact that April I has been spoken of ns the day on which the railroads are to be re turned to their owners'.' Nobody knows yet in whose stocking Pitntn AVoodrow Clans is going to put tlio railroads. At the present price of stockings Santa Olaus begins to wonder if ho. dare lo put them to the usunl Christinas strain. Santa Clans having finished his shop, ping has gone into the liousc-dccornting hiisiuesH. The league of nations simply cannot be cut out of the peace treaty. It would have to be picked out from the web and woof. II. C. of L. is a fairy godmother com pared to the famine that stalks in boine parts of Europe. - Noah had nothing on Captain G. A. Hitchcock in the matter of "queer ani lnllcs." r.odgc is ering "Peace! Pence!" when there can be no pence. Hopes for n while Christmas are still high. Sunday was moving day for the Reds. PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER. 28, 'NAILS LIE AGAINST STATE Major Murdock Proves Pennsylva nlans Were as Physically Fit as Men Elsewhere In the Country Hy (ilCOUOi: NOX McOAIN MAJOR W. (i. MUUDOOIC, who was state drnfl executive for the United States army during the war, has done a real service to the stale, He has set the com monwealth right before tho country and has clumped the lid down tight on certain inngn zinlsts nnil careless statistical sharps. There is a class of pseudo-investigators and alleged publicists who hnve. been Hulk ing capital out o C the alleged fact that Penn sylvania hail one of the highest averages iu the I'lilon for men rejected for war service beenue of physical and mental defects. Flatly it was a rellection on the manhood of the state. Hut it isn't true. Major Murdock clears it all up in the statement a brave one to make under tflc circumstances that some one has blundered. He doesn't say it wus at Washington, hut j on can thaw your own inferences. rpllE first report of the selective system -L published by Washington, back in Decem ber, 1II17, contains, as Major Murdock points out. a statement showing that the average ratio for the United States of the physically unlit lo the totnl number of registrants was -0.11 to every hundred. The ratio of Penn sylvania was, according to this, -10.07 per cunt. " According to Ihese llguies nearly one half of tlie Pennsylvania men examined were unlit for service. "If thcnc figures were correct," said Major Murdoch, "then there certainly would be cause for alarm." Hut they were glaringly Incorrect. The same repoit shows by a careful tabu lation of tho figures in detail, by every draft board in the state, that the percentage of men unlit for service, and thus rejected, was only -8. 5,"i, which is less than the average for the entire country. And this percentage would have been considerably less had it not been for faulty regulations which in the beginning were neither clear nor, complete. The largest class of Pennsylvania men re jected for obvious defects was because of deficient vision. Another large class of cases was for flat feet, due to u fuihue, for a long time, to ditlnKtiili between occupational and heredi tary flat licet. This caused many rejections of men who could do hard manual labor nnd who were undoubtedly qualified for military service. THE new prohibition enforcement officer for the state, ex -Senator William .Wayne Uiudman, is, at least by family tradition and ancestry, peevlinrly fitted for the office. lie is a native of Clarion county, where his father was n leading member of the bar and a prominent figure in Democratic poli tics for years prior to his death about four years ago. His mother was Miss Margaret Shallen berger, a member of an old Westmoreland county family that removed to Clarion county about 1770. The head of the famil.v was Lloyd Shiil lenberger, a consistent churchman and a temperance lender in his community. Ex-Senator Hindiuan is a member of the younger and dominant element in Demo cratic state politics, the Palmer-McCormick faction. He wns until 11)18 state senator from the Twenty-sixth district. He will bring to his new duties not only political experience but a high degree of in telligence and ability. He is a graduate of Princeton. PROHIBITION dodging stories aYc apropos now an the edge of the desert daily draws nearer. Charlie Howell, of Pitts burgh, tells the latest. A widely known and wealthy iron manu facturer out there, who objected to trailing over the hot sands of the future without something wherewith to brighten the hegira and moisten his clay, commandeered by the plentiful use of corn a tidy stock of red liquor. He didn't trust bonded warehouses, so he stored it in his cellar. One night recently a uniformed police man nnd a plain clothes man called at his home and bluntly inquired if he had any whisky stored about his house. Knowing he wns safe as to the law he replied in the affirmative. "About how much have you?" the de tective asked. "Well, if you must know, I've got ten barrels." "May we sec it?" "Certainly," and the manufacturer led the way lo the lower regions in' person. The policeman nonchalantly .paraded along in front of the array of barrels, tap ping ouch one lightly with his club. They were all empty save one, which had a spigot in it and from which immediate supplies were drawn. "Just as I thought," said the cop. "We've been after a couple of negroes for two months who've been 'bootlegging' around town. We g,nt 'cm last night. They've been peddling some mighty good liquor fairly cheap and we wondered where they got it. One of them .says he's your chauffeur. I sec now where it comes from." "Better lock up your next supply," sapiently remarked the plaiu clothes man as the pair departed. At present quotations the iron manufac turer is out about $iri,000. ARTHUR It. H MORROW, secretary to Councils' finance committee, is one of three men who, possibly, know more about the city's appropriations than any others in Philadelphia. The other two are Joseph P. (iaffney, chnirnmn of the finance com mittee, nnd Controller Walton. It wns Mr. Morrow who handled the Mulls of the budget which forms the finan cial program for the coming year and the new charier administration. It is only by going carefully over the items of the budget that one gets an idea of the odd ways in which the city spends its money and the odd people that it employs. Thus there is appropriated, without detailing the departments, $S00 for the chemical analysis of bodies, and $1 5,01)0 for miiblc for afternoon and livening con certs: $6000 for meats, groceries and mar keting for the municipal court; $.1000 to celebrate the Fourth of July and $1)7,-0 for Memorial Day. Then there is n tide-observer who gets $1000 per annum, nnd $10,000 is for piano plajers and swimming tenehers; $S(( p, a shoemaker and $1000 to a collector ,,f bio logical specimens. There is $t!(!0 for a barber and $t).'0 to an expert masseuse, to say nothing of a city diiir.vnian ut $(i(lo ami a technician nt S1000. A plumber there Hr Kc7cral at $1200, and an entomologist tlu-y call it a "bugologlst" at Hurrisburg at $1000. For removing ashes from City Hall $,-000, and n bandmoster at $S00. A. drillmaster at $1000 and n sheetiron worker at $lt00; $0000 is for vaccine virus and the list ends with an expert pole climber at SI, SO per dnj. All of these Hems, and thousands more, come under the expert statistical hand of Arthur Morrow. lie's a sort of tlatistlcal wguder. "ER-R, WHAT'S BECOME : "J" -i'Lmrf"ir "" ..- . ...''."'---'rr""""".'"!3 THE CHAFFING DISH First Snow IN autumn fields lone graves uiinoticed lie, Hid in the stubble, lost in withered grass ; While dark, sun-loving swallows southward fly, And flowers fade and summer glories pass. They lie unseen, until the drifting snow Marks out the hills nbove the barren ground, And says to every passing stranger, "Know, A man like tlicc lies buried 'neath this mound." , SO lay my dead, forgotten, till first snow Awoke far memories of long ago Thanksgiviugs, New Years. Chr'ntmas days With pleasures innocent and simple ways; And then my quiet dead returned to bless Me, wandering in the lonely wilderness. WILL LOU. Synthetic Poem Dove Dulcet. With Walt Whitman- in mind, Intends to say On his deathbed : "T regard my, poems as My carle dc visile To posterity." Tt is sad to have to add That posterity will reply "Not at home." H. C. L. Couplets (ftympathising Willi -If. V. A'.'NJ On vile profiteers we would falu vent our spleen When, au lieu tlu beurrc, we must use butterine! Ynrnall Abbott tells us of a singular in stance or perversity nu the part of the law yers. They are going to have some sort or convention' i" Chicago, and are not going to stay at the Blackstone. Carol THRUM'S a smile on lips a-gleaming, There's a light in every eye, And the angels smile upon us, Peeping from the smiling sky. For. 'tis hearts He's come a-seeking. Hearts in grief that still arc gay: God's own mirth be in your laughter- Christ is come 'tis Christmas Day! HM IS come again to Bethlehem, To His Own. as distant, cold, As the lowly little manger On .ludean hills of old. Itut 'tis hearts He's come n-seekiug. Hearts in grief that still are gay, find's own mirth be in your laughter . Christ is come 'tis Christmas Day! WHAT have ou to offer, grniidsire, With your silver years bent down? And your gift. oh. brown-eyed maiden, Half-way on to Woinnn-town? It is henrts He',come n-seeking. Hearts in grief that still are gay: God's own mirth be in your laughter Christ is come 'tis Christmas Day! CHRISTMAS DAY, on earth. In Heaven! In your henrts that Babe must sleep Angel-silenced all your passions, ui.nniiopilpit vour truant sheep, For 'tis hearts He's come a-seeklng. Hearts In grief that still are gay: God's own mirth he in your laughter Give vour hearts 'tis Christinas Day! 1 J SISTER MARY DONATUS. John Drinkwnter's "Abraham Lincoln" is nu interesting play, but we do not quite understand why Mr. Driukwater is so hard on Seward. For instance: LINCOLN: "There's a tide in the affairs of men " Do you read Shake tqienre, KennrdV SMWAJtD: Shakespeare? No, LINCOLN: Ah! Wc uubiuit that Mr. Seward, as a college .1919 OF THAT SANTA CLAUS I USED TO KNOW?" ,.'' n,-..--...i-'iijes?i .-.--"'fSSk . .".'"HtMB man and a distinguished Inwycr, could hardly have escaped some Shakespeare. Desk Mottoes The art of art, flic glory of expression and the sunshine of the light of letters, is simplicity. WALT WHITMAN. The .Park In Winter The river is n sheet of goldr A river in a dream cony true; The gray rocks gleam in icy mail t Against a sky of winter blue. The long chill roadway winds nnd winds, Like life, when each day is the same: Hut still there burns the sunset sky And onward flows the stream of flame! i D. P. AY. Altars T71VMRYWHKUK arc altars. -- You may see them rise In the places where men find Stones of sacrifice. T3UILT of fragile things like friends, -D Reared so tenderly. Broken by the winds nnd cold Into tnncsty. T YING open to the bky -' Where they once have glowed ; Some mail lingered ere he turned Off another road. HUItK ambition built too high, There love built too low". Wc find nllars everywhere On the roads we go. RMATRIOn WASHBURN. Confessions of a Ghost If seems my duty to report to the Society for Physical Itcieacch the very curious ex perience I had the other evening, especially as it 'casts a great deal of light on the question ul communication with human beings. I was drifling about in my usual cheerful fashion, not thinking about nnvthing in particular, when I suddenly became nwnre of a sinking sensation, a feeling of great de pression and dread. Hoping lo brace myself up. I took two or three twirls nlong the Milky Way. and skimmed nlong severnl of the astral planes. But still I had this horrid feeling of being haunted, pursued bv some palpable and tangible body. Then I saw it. Can you conceive my alarm? Disbelieve me if you will, but it was a solid and per sonal being, habited in clothing and with all the gruesome appearance of humnn reality. I approached, timidly, and, hoping to reassure myself, attempted to pass through if in the usual way. Horrible! It. was solid, and resisted my movement. It seemed to he iu great distress and repentedly plucked from a slit in its garments n small, round, gleaming object, apparently inechnn- ical iu its nalure, lo wuieli it seemed to at tach great importance. T heard it speak. It said, "Great guns, I shall miss the 5:1S train." It was obviously uneasy, and I tried to reassure it ; but my alarm was so great Unit I am afraid I had no success. Then it faded away and left me shuddering. ft would he impossible for )ne to tell in full the unpleasant and unnatural effect this apparition hud on me. In every respect it was romplelely human, nnd for my own part I have not the slightest doubt that.it was a man, and that he was endeavoring to com municate with me in some crisis of his mortal life. The emotion I experienced was not so much one of alarm as that of com. pletc and shuddering strangeness. The crea ture was si) weirdly and tangibly human, so evidently living, that I felt the strongest impiilso of nausea. No longer, I think, can anv skeptical spirit deny tho actunllly of life before the grave. SOCRATMS. We venture llii' guess that the Reds are having a bel'lcr time on the llufunKunn I hey will liuve when they laud in their home country, j,. . ...i- . ,' P -swnr--v;lt.-i''r:;:-u-n'-"-;'-'v.;---' ....-32X-'.-',0:'i ....-prr:i-j1.-tttir-r Si"" 3 ..."' VW.-tlisimF- "" jrj LAUNCHING THE BABY THKRB was a man, And all his life he worked In a shipyard. And he got married And in due time A baby was born.'' Tho man felt very Happy for a while, When suddenly He changed, For the christening Of the baby Was approaching. And the man seemed Nervous; ho couldn't sleep o'nights And he told his wife That he was sure the Minister Would hurt the Baby When he hit it With the Bottle. -Tom Fox, ironworker of Robins Drydock and Repair Co., in the Southern Marin Journal. The fact that bandits can go into a local club and rob n score of members 61 $22,000 predicates equal parts of nerve, mendacity nnd prosperity. A boosted attendance of 200 at a local Bible class when sugar was given away suggests a desire f for sweetness rather than for light. Judging from attacks and counter-at-s it would appear to be a poison "pen." tacks What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. How long docs it take a vessel to pass through the Panama Canal? 2. Who is tho primate of all Ireland? Mta ii. How mntiy seats aro there in the' Senate? I. What state has "Eureka" for its molfo?' 5. In what country will the reds, now being deported to Europe on the Bu ford, bo landed? 0. Name two of the most eminent British exponents of spiritualism. 7. From what year did the Romans number their years? S. Where is the Tngus river? 0. What is a loggia? 10. What musical instrument is named after a goose? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Captain Sir John Alcoek, who made, the first nonstop flight across the ' Atlantic, died recently. 2. Under the pence treaty Danzig is to be a free city under League protection. 3. Chalcedony is precious stone of quartz , kind with many varieties, as agate, cornelian, chrysoprasc. 1, Dulelnea wns tho idolized and idealized mistress pf Don Quixote, 5. Three of Moliere's most famous come- i dies arc "Tartuffe," "Le Mcdccln Malgro Lul" (The Doctor 5n Spite -. of Himself) nnd "Le Misanthrope," (1. A cosset is a pct-larab. 7. Hongkong is on island lying off Chins, " ncur the mouth of the Canton rher. It belongs to Great Britain. 8. Ylscount French wns commander of th British forces in the retreat from Mons to the Marno, in 1014. 0. An nd valorem tariff is levied in propor tion to the value of the goods im ported. 10, In the Battle of the Nile the British, under Nelson, defeated the Frneh . under Bnieys, on August 1 and 2, 170S. The engagement was fought la the Bay of Abukir, between Roiett1 nd tbe RosUmoulb of the Nile. A l i jii , vj; .... j- ? .V,-Wgi rwcv:-;-? - J