-,. 'If '- 0 'i-V4! f II I , , x i If ' 10 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEE PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESlXAY, ' JANUARY 28, 1920 t II m pt& aA5 'v W rsi wri! " r ';'.! i vi r'm liSLKtW I'. M HP i$ff l ttff$$ Fi' - rwyj hi:js'; I'll laps -iff I t .'?& WS S)j" ' :is ti feting public IKc&gcc PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY k7 P. S -J- - f,TntS IT K. CtnTIH. rrHir.rNT I I-1 1Ii;r,1rl " MdlnRton Vlre Pp-'MmiIi John t I, , Srrlln,P'tvl(rv nna TrcHurr: Philip H I'nlllnr !., 'Jojmlt, Vllllnm, .lolin .1 Ppurfroii, Director. ' Cmcs It K ''nitm, Chalrmxn JOMTD M. S.MU.i:t lMltor JOHN C. MAnTIK .. .General ilUBlne?? Manager i TubllMifri dlly at I'tBLto I.En.irit Uulldln. (inapp'nuencn square, rnimnoirnm. ATr.NTio Cur frtti Union IliilMlne Jkw Yonic , lJr.ToiT (St. Uuiir.. . ., Cbicicjo I WAV . ...SWI M'troDolltun Tower 701 Tord Ttiilldlnc , ...IPOS rullerton Hullrtllis 1301: JVlbuno Tlulldlnc UOnRAUS: iWiSntSflTriS tll'RMU. 1 N. ij. -or, Pennsylvania e. i-tid 1 nn Ht. ' Vaw VnMV 11. ..... f l- C.t. tli.lllnv Lo.vMS llLtt'.it! London Tim CO ( BUDHCnltTtOV TiJIlMR Th CtcMiMi 1'lhiii- Lmir.tR Is 3?rv?d tn uli crihors In T'hllmjftlphla and rurroundlns lon-rn at the rate of twelve (121 cents tsr v-eek, payable lly mall in'rolnts ouleHe of riilltdelphla. In the United mates I .inada, or United Mates ros lesion, postuRi" trtr. fills ")0 imts rr month. Bit fJ8 dollar pel" year, payable In ad-anr. To all forelsn countries one ($11 dollar per month. ,, . . Noticr Subscribers Tvlhlnc address chanced mutt give old as well i new address. ULtt.. 3000 irtlM'T KF.VsTONC. MUN 1000 VOT A ddrcss all ootmnuttlcatlonv to .'I'cndiff rnbHa Ledger Indf mndmt r Hquare. I'llllodrlnla. Member of the Associated Preas 77'' l.VSO' 1 rLli rur.SH it cxcln ehdu entitled to the use for icpuhUcattoii of all iirir.-r dhpatehes i-rrdttcd to it or nut otherwise eredltcd in this paper, cud also the laeal netos t'thllihcd therein. All rights of republication of special dis patches hcrcm arc also reserved. fhilidtlpMi. Wrdnridar. Jaimirr IS, 19:0 THE PULL NO LONGER WORKS TT HAS taken oiil three uceKh for tlie new (ulininiKtrnlioii to difceover liow the insiectors ho oed their iippointnient to U.o t'ontrae'or v hose work th".v inspeeted have been m the habit ol doing their duty. Director Winston ordered that certain work be done by the street cleaners. After a suitable time tho inspectors re ported that the work had been done. The director went over tho streets and dis covered that the work had not been done. Now fifty inspectors have been trans ferred to other districts, whero they will bo allowed an opportunity to disclose their fitness to inspect. If they arc caught covering up the delinquencies of the contractors again they will be allowed to earn their living in some other way. If Director Winston had owed his ap pointment to the fame influences that secured the appointment of the inspec tors he might have been just as willing as they to wink at slackness. The grip of the contractors on the City Hall has been broken, and if things go on as at present we are likely to see cleaner streets, at any rate, than we have en joyed for many years. THE "L" TO FRANKFORD pJELAY in the work of the Frankford "' elevated hindered tho real estate boom and the better general development of community affairs that will come about naturally in the northeast section of the city with improved transit. West Philadelphia became a different place after the first subway system was built and put in operation. Land values went up. New residential areas were opened. Similar benefits will follow in the Kensington and Frankford regions when the new elevated is completed. Mr. Moore's efforUs to have trains running by "July is highly commendable. Defective street-car service is tending to split the city up into a series of iso lated communities. Faster and better transit sen ice is necessary for the life of the central city and that of the outly ing and semisuburban region. A DIFFERENCE MR. TAFT led ii held by an upt in a presidential ballot by an uptown church club. Mr. Hoover was a close second. General "Wood trailed. Senator Harding didn't even trail. Those who voted were representative citizens without any particular personal or party bias. And since their view seems to be an exact reverse of the view held by professional party men at Wash ington, where neither Taft nor Hoover is a favorite, arc we to assume that Wash ington is made only.for misrepresentativc Americans? EDWARDS AND THE JAILS fCEAN county, Now .forsey, has dis-'-' covered that it docs not need the new jail for which arrangements were making before the fatal January 10. The demand for accommodations in the old jail has fallen oil to sueh an extent that it now appears the building is ade quate for all present needs. This is be cause the pernicious activities of John Barleycorn have been ended. But what will happen if Governor Ed wards succeeds in carrying his point and persuades the Supremo Couit that New Jersey may legalize the sale of bever ages with r or 10 per cent of alcoholic content? (an it bo that Ocean county has no confidence in the governor's plans? WHERE IS MORSE? QIGNOR MARCONI announces that he has received m.sterious signals by wireless, which he thinks may have come from the inhabitants of some of the planets. He is not sure about it, but he does not know wheie else they could have come from. The signals ate in the Morse tele ,( graphic code. If they come from some other planet, thcn some one there must be familiar with the dot-and-daf-h system invented by Professor Morse. Ridiculous, you say ? Well, perhaps so, but who knows where Professor Morse is at the present time? He died jears ago. Sir Oliver Lodge tells us that the discarnate spirits live on different planes and can communicate with incarnate spirits. If this theory be correct, why is it ridiculous to assume that Professor Morse has taught his code o the Martians through spirit communi cation with them ? Ulilil o know where Morse is anil .yhiit goes on in the realm of which wo know next to nothing, wo might just as well let men t peculate to their hearts' content, providing they do not denounce the rest of us when we cannot accept their conclusion'.. METERS AND FEET GEUTAIN of the well-intentioned recommendations inado by the Pan Amrcn Financial Congress in Waah foplW necessitate Icglslativu action in tho VttrtfMW tiuVkmis, Politics may hinder (lie realization of such projects. Hut tho simple request that articles made in the United States should be marked accord ing to the metric system as well as tho old, clumsy English measures calls merely for the application of a little com mon sense. Our trade relations with Latin America have for years been se riously embarrassed by standpattism in measurements. The employment of a double standard will uproot no traditions hero and greatly facilitate commercial transactions. The sane and interesting scries of eighteen proposals formulated by the conference was agreed to in principle by all the delegates. It is not to be over looked, however, that the Brazilian, Bolivian and Venezuelan representatives suggested ceitain amplifications and changes of wording. Reservations arc indeed very much a la mode. Every body's making them. THE TREATY DEADLOCK IS A SENSELESS DISCRACE When the Inevitable Break Comes the Available Courses of Action Will Be Just What They Always Were "l RANTING, as most sane persons do, that ratification of a treaty is neces sary to tho official conclusion of a war, there are only five methods by which tho United States can achieve peace with Germany. Senatorial approxal of the treaty of Versailles without interpretations, reser vations or amendments would bring about this result with clarity and speed. This pioross lias its warm adherents and its heated opponents. 'I he latter, whatever the validity of their objections, cannot den that unqualified acceptance would be expeditious and devoid at least of im mediate complexities. A second procedure would involve in terpretations so mild and inoffensively worded that our former partners in tho war need not consider them. Savo as balm to hypersensitive Americans, these recapitulations of the obvious would prac tically be meaningless and tho treaty would retain its original virtues or de fects. A third performance could be charac terized by such amendment "leserva tion" is only a sugar coating as would be acceptable to all of our late allies. The governments of these nations might for mally agree to our changes or they might assent by silence. In cither case the good result would be the same. A fourth method foreshadows compli cations, certain delay, but not necessarily failure. The Senate might pass really significant amendments. Objection to them on the part of any or all of the other signatories of the pact of Versailles could compel a reopening of the Peace Conference. The delegates from the va rious nations might redraw the treaty of course, after the usual array of chal lenges and compromises. When resub mitted to our legislators it might meet with more favor than the first document and eventually bo adopted. If diead of starting the conference machinery again proved potent, the separate governments, might exchange notes upon the pact until by the consent of all parties it had been given Lome new form. The fifth definite step that could be taken is that of complete rejection the ideal so dear to the irreconcilablcs. There are two conceivable constructive conse quences to this act the reconvening of the international conference, the framing of an entirely new treaty and its ultimate passage by the United States Senate or the negotiation by America and Germany of a separate pact which would win sena torial approbation. The continuance of the present dead lock in Washington until the treaty be comes a presidential election issue will in no sense alter the five optional means, any one of which must be employed to es tablish genuine peace. Should the .Senate, disregarding a treaty, declare the war at an end it will merely bo engaging in a mendacious farce. In the end some agreement with Germany to settle vital and outstanding issues arising from the war must be made. The approaches to the task arc the same for all Congresses. There are but five moves to be made should tlie com plexion of the Senate in 1921 be Demo cratic or Republican unless Europe goes to pieces and the treaty of Vcr.-ailles is nullified or becomes a dead letter. Upon the merits of the courses out lined there is naturally a great diversity of opinion. Political pressure often em ployed with gross insincerity has never theless been to some extent influential in crystallizing popular seniiment. Jt is reasonably safe to wager that a majority of tho public now favors interpretations, or een amendments, which will be soon acceptable abroad and will not occasion a reconvening of the Peace Conference. The "bitter-enders" who would prefer a separate treaty with Germany have com paratively few followers. Mr. Knox has awakened virtually no response, not even in the Senate, to his call for peace with out a treaty. Erratic as they often are. the American people have no taste for transpaient fictions in polity. But the most perilous of the methods outlined, the most intricate and exas perating, would be vastly preferable to tho citizens of this republic to no accom plishment at all. This is the wretched spectacle to which the nation has been treated for weary and costly months. Hotter a ponderous new convocation in Paris, better separate-dealings with Ger many in which she will have us at a fliarked disadvantage than utterly nega tive obstruction. Fixing the blame for the disgusting muddle is a futile task. Historians in time may successfully analyze it. We cannot wait for their verdict. Condi tions, not theories, confront a drifting nation. Mr. Lodge has an unenviable task in placating tlie Borahs and the Johnsons, in responding to the public demands for ac tion and preserving the integrity of his "reservations," which, if intact in princi ple, will be a feather in the cap of his party. Mr. Hitchcock plas politics with a weak weapon a minority faction. He will cover himself and his party with a certain specious glory if he succeeds in altering tho Republican alterations. The PT-ntiMont. is. vexed hv anv treatv tinker ing whatever and has been the reverse of in aid tp compromise, 1 put or tho unwholesome wclterl or bluffs, threats and checkmating have, however, at last emerged some elements of agreement. Tho recent bipartisan conferences, n break in which has just been narrowly averted, leaves but two btibjects upon which marked divergence of the antagonistic senatorial lenders is said to exist. Mr. Lodge is lcported to be unyielding in his stand for the Monroe Doctrine reservation. There may bo a dramatic ring to this pronouncement, but it is hol low. Article XXII of the league covenant declares that "Nothing in this covenant shall be deemed to affect the validity of the international agreements, such as treaties of arbitration or vegional under standings like tho Monroe Doctrine." To insist that this exception be stated over again is like thunderously demanding that the treaty must be printed on tapcr. The snarl over Article X is different. By this wo would be pledged as a mem ber of the league to "undertake to re spect nnd preserve as against external aggression the territorial integrity and existing political independence of all members of the league." The broad question of obligation under any treaty arises here. C. Bougie, a French journalist, pertinently inquired the other day whether "America is tho only country where the right to declare war is reserved for a legislative assem bly?" "The fact is," ho continued, "that all governments, whether democratic or otherwise, aro in tho same boat." In other words, the ratification of our exist ing arbitration treaties does not imply, save to a lunatic, that Congress is de nied tho right to declare war if it sees fit. Nor docs a pledge to mnke war against injustice rob our legislature or national assemblies of the other nations of their constitutional or legal powers. If such a possibility is seriously regarded by all governments, the fear of making any pacts at any time will bo sufficient to produce international chaos. However, if Mr. Lodge is strong enough to hold out for his revision of Article X, and if tho treaty cannot be ratified un less his opponents yield, tho surrender should bo made. If the reservation is vi cious and trouble making we shall soon find that out. Our former cobelligcrcnts may object or they may not. Change in the ticaty of Versailles cannot bo so in famous as no change in the insolent blockade in Washington. COMPULSORY ARMY TRAINING XTO GREAT foresight can be credited to the Senate military affairs commit tee for the compulsory military training bill which it has formulated and recom mended to the favor of Congress. Yet the committee appears to have done its best in an impossible situation. In suggesting a law that would compel all young men between the ages of eight een and twenty-one to "take" four months of army drill and present themselves for two weeks of training each year tho sena tors have fallen back on an expedient that is old-fashioned enough to be at least respectable. And it is interesting to observe that the scheme is recom mended not on the ground of efficiency, but because, seeming cheap, it may prove to be easy medicine for the country. The plan, which is the outcomo of months of pious thought, will seem harsh ami un-American to a great many people. Yet it cannot be called militarism. It docs not assure military preparedness for an emeigency. Military training such as the Senate dreams of would be a little more effi cient than that now possible with the system colved by tiie Boy Scouts and not quite so dependable as that long familiar in the National Guard. For the youth of the land there would be little hardship. The hardhip would come to tho country itself, which might be lulled into a false and dangerous sense of security by a scheme that is no more promising than Mr. HryanV plan for a system of good roads, Fords and farmers with shotguns to guarantee our safety against possible invaders. If the Senate committee has had to temporize with the question of national preparedness and defense it is because no nation know how to meet such dangers as may arise from a levival of militar ism. No one can yet know what will be necessary if peoples must go on fighting for their existence. The sort of standing army suggested in the newest Senate bill would be little more than a good target for opposing forces armed with the elaborate and terrible mechanisms now being perfected by inventors who already have made the Big Berthas and subma-, rines seem relatively harmless and tame.' The aerial torpedo is now a reality. There will be long-range bombardments in future wars, but shells will not be loaded with high explosives. They will carry deadly gas to exterminate whole cities. If war cannot be prevented armies will fight in future years with chemicals, electricity and monstrous devices of me chanical science. As war becomes more intricate it becomes more expensive. Its scope is broadened. The Senate committee on military affairs seems to take another and a far more cheerful view. It suggests, for ex ample, that the cost of maintaining the training system which it has devised to keep the nation safe would not be more than $500,000,000 a year. Yet a future army capable of defending itself would have to spend that much on chemicals. It would need tanks, expanding air fleets, colossal artillery. Even a senator should know that these things are not brought by the ravens. A soldier of the future will need extensive technical training. You cannot keep technicians in form with two weeks of practice in a year. The choice that confronts statesmen who have to formulate military policy Here and elsewhere is not one of method. 'Hie decision must be between the policies that may bring assurances of interna tional peace and the policies that make militarism necessary. If a program of military expansion is made necessary in the United States it will involve stagger ing costs and hardship for everybody. The alternative lies in such understand ings as will lead to the abatement of military insanity in all countries. And while the military affairs committee is floundering with tho preparedness idea, the gentlemen of the foreign relations committee aro doing their best to make such understandings impossible. May the Senate's Furiily Eight spoken of as n Figure of Speech? be There are rcl ier who ore of the opln- ton that fairjurtel eH noMay prices. HEPBURN'S RECORD Engineer Now Much In Demand Has Some Fine Work to His Credit. Some Old-Time Newspapermen lly GHOHGK NOX McCAIN rOXALD M. UHPHUKN, acting chief ot -' the Bureau ot Street Cleaning, Is a con blrtictiou nnd electrical engineer. The coutrovcrs.f that arose over his oiliclnl status was no fault of Ills. lie had been eon Midereil by Commissioner Sadler, of the state Bureau of Highways, for the chief of rontl construction and awaited only his formal uotilU'iition. , Tn the Interim Commissioner Sadler was confined to his hoihc for some days nnd the matter of Hepburn's notification wns do lnjed. Failing promptly to hour from Iliir risburg, Mr. Hepburn was offered the posi tion ot chief of the Bureau of Street Cleaning in this city, with the understanding that it was to ho consolidated with the Bureau ot Highwajs. There nroc considerable doubt as to the legality of consolidating thrsc de partments, and durlug tho delay Commis sioner Sadler notified Mr. Hepburn to report for duty ut Hnrrisburg. He Is now 1o:ium lo the city by the slate llignwnj Department until such time as the position which he temporarily urnipics in the Department of Public Works can lie per miiiicntl) tilled. TWTB. II -" land IinPBUKX is a nathc of Curahcr- id county. Ho started out to estab lish himself in the world when ho was eighteen years ot age. His father, who was the leading member ot the Cumberland county bar. died when he was quite ;toung. He has had I'hnrge of construction work nnd the installation of eleetricnl power in some of the largest industrial concerns in this count rj . He superintended the work on plants at Niagara Fulls, and completed a shell -manufacturing plant at Akron, O., which employs ."oOp men, in eighty-three dajs when the time limit of the contractors was 120 days. When he took churgc as superintendent of construction nt Hog Island only 300 carpen ters w ere nt work. His first order to the head ot the employment department was for 1000 additional carpenters within three days and an additional 1000 within a week. His knowledge of labor conditions nnd his wide acquaintance with employment con cerns over the country enabled him to secure 7000 carpenters within thirty days. A dozen typewriters were Kept busy for dajs typing telegrams that were sent by .housunds over the country to individuals nnd firms calling for men : superintendents, engineers, foremen, traffic handlers, electricians, carpenters, ce ment workers and laborers. His sjstem of efficiency embraced half hourly reports on every building in course ot erection. At any hour ot the day or night it was possible fur him to tell, by reference to these reports, just what progress was being mndc on any structure on the island. He is thirty-seven jenrs of age. rpnn passing of William K. Lester, dra--- matic and art critic, book reviewer and all-around newspaperman, breaks another link in the shortening chain that connects the past of three decodes uud more ago with new.spapcrdoin of today. Among those gone are Moses P. Handy, Lew N. Megurgec. Howard Sprogle, Tom Lugun. "Jimmy" Patterson, Frank Ander sou, H. A. Wutrous, II. II. Colclazer, 13. C. lion land. Charles W. Stride, Hugh Don nelly and a seorc of other tine, clever crafts men. One of the conspicuous feufures of news paper life thirtj -odd jears ago was the dis position, more so than today, of the men in wirious lines of journalistic work to form clique. Star reporters and political writers frequented the Continental and the old (lirnrd just. across the street. The police reporters and general news men mostly foregathered nt Green's, particularly those of the Uecord, Times, Press, T'uiimc I.KDor.i: and Xoith American. Chestnut street from Sixth to Twelfth wai the news paper rialto. They were halcyon days, fled all too soon. TOSI3PH U. GRUNDY has been elected an " honorary member of the Press League of Burks and Montgomery Counties. The league is exceedingly conervatie when it comes to distributing honors of this kind. There was no political consideration behini. its action, for while Mr, Grundy is a manufacturer and the political leader of Bucks county, he is a newspaper publisher also. His Doylestown Daily Intelligencer, com pletely outfitted in its mechanical depart ment and writing force as well, is one of the bet newspapers, for a center of population the size of Doylestown, in eastern I'cnusyl- Wlllill. The recent death of its editor, C, D. Hoteli kiss, was universally lamented in two coun ties. His mantle, however, has fallen upon a worthy and competent successor in his son, George Hotehkiss. Theie is no political leader in Pennsyl vania whose activities present so mnuy facets as those ot Joseph It. Grundy. His memory is a storehouse of reminiscences. His knowl edge of the subtleties of political maneuvers within the ken of his recollection of thirty five enrs is one of his big preseut-dny assets in his dealing with men and measures af fecting the industries of the state A CHARACTERISTIC I have invariably - noticed in every worth-while political leader in forty years has been the possession of a low, well-modulated voice. I do not recall a successful politician, even of the minor class, who was loud -spoken or blatant; what, in the btriking and expressive vernacu lar of the Pennsylvania Dutch, would be termed a "big mouth." Quay was a failure as a public speaker be'eause of his voice. It was only by a pain ful effort that he could mukc himself heard in nn ordinary hall or opera house. He never raised his voice above a low, somewhat nasal, conversational tone. "Bob" Muckey, the Republican czar ot the state forty jears ago; Senators Chris Magee, Quay, Penrose and, on the Demo cratic side, Senators J. Henry Cochrane, of Lycoiniug: William A. Wallace, J. K. P. Hall, of Elk; Colonel James A. Guffey, and, of the present, A. Mitchell Palmer, were ex ponents ot the monotone. Among local leaders Thomas W. Cun ningham is a shining example of the low spoken type of leader. Then there is David Martin, and David Lane, although the Iat: ter's clear enunciation and command of good English seem to add a higher note to a clear, even intonation. Willlurn J. Bryan is the tolc exception of u political leader who has cultivated n bla tant toue and nn apparent disposition to let everybody within thirty feet know what he in tulkiug about at any stage of a conver sation. 'J he melancholy fact is that not more than one egg can btfohntchcd from a setting of favorite sons, and sometimes the "whole Idling" goes Hooie. Perhaps it Js Sir Oliver Lodge's spirits that scud tho mjsterious signals that dialnib Murconi's wireless. v U would appear that Senator Lodge has permitted a pcrslsttnt minority to scare the life out of him. "WONDERFUL WEATHER WE'RE HAVIN', EH?" THE. CHAFFING DISH Old BUI Penn W1 TJ'H hand outstretched and courtly 'bock- ered knee For many moons he's shushed at City Hall, Where Councils dnell in might but amity And Mayor after Mayor decks the wall ; He's seen, in pride nnd pumps and emptiness, The weary city Mugdalens come and go, And rotund cops llat-footcd through the snow, ' Pinochle-bound, stein-amorous, wo guess. On Fuirmount Park, Cynwyd nnd wild Oak Lane, On Ovcrbrook lie's gazed for years and years, On limousines, and ctcry crawling train, And flippant flivvers standing onheir cars. He's seen the gifts nnd grnft of many men ; If he could write, what would Old William Pcnn? ALEC P.. STEVENSON. Ringside Seats at a Premium KXiKiiti:Nci:r dim., to no iioxino in ju:ys tiNDiimvrjAii must iib quick COOIl PAY WITH HUM'S '111 'I UK ONI J WHO PltOVKS HATISPACTUItV APPLY way wtoTiiciiH ,rro. CO., (119 JIOOIli: KT. Philadelphia Inquirer The above bright- shining diadem was speared by the gladdened optic of Mr. II. 11. Smith, who turned it in to Rob Maxwell. Bob, with the air of one bearing precious gifts, carried it in to us. Our only comment is that a luxury tax ought to be added to the 'price of seats. Perhaps the lady will take the place in tho public esteem that Jack Dcmpsey seems getting ready to vacate. At any late, one result of the war has been to make American lectin e platforms safe for British poets. W. B. Yeats is in New York, and Cecil Roberts, a young English poet of whom we have not heard so much, is coming to this town tomorrow. We have- been meditating on the influx of English poets after the war, and it oi cur's to us that by and bye piolubly some American versifiers nmj he going over there by way ot revenge. We hope that this matter will he put in the hand- of the De partment of State, so that the poets who go abroad representing this country may be wisely chosen. We have a horrid fear that the only American poets known in Englund are tl' eccentrics and the vers librtels. Vaehel Lindsaj is going over next fall, we know, because he has nsked us to go nlong as his business manager. Wo are not going; but Yaehcl is the kind of man wlio has a right to go, because he really has some music in his chest. We rise to lcmark that our friend Joe Ilcrgesheimer is Getting His Stuff Across these days. People keep on tending us paro dies of Joe's style, which is a sure sig'i. If they were anywhere within shouting distan.ee of the original we might have printed some of them. Having recently completed hcveral months' experience as an amateur college lecturer, wo wish to state that never have we enjoyed any adventure to heurtilj. To he able to talk for an hour, with n guaranteed and helpless au dience, and no chance of being contradicted, is nn experience rare indeed in a life like ours. When we told our hardened nnd argumen tative office associates about it, they were iuereduloub. An armistice is now declared in the Dish's private bex war. As is often the ease, in wars, tho result is uncertain. Some qf our clients assert that the world has been made safe for nintriinoiiy ; others deny it. We notice, however, no falling off in the number of murringc licenses issued up ut the City Hall. Now that the thermometer lutu gone up, our good friend Dave Yublock, who sells papers on tho cornet of Sixth uud Chestnut, no longer utters his mournful cold-vvfuthur ny: "Too mucli frnh nlr iu mine offlecj'' The vWc!quh Qqizeditor wept over" to NeW n i York to see Gilbert and Sullivan's "Itud digore," and brings us back this line us a desk motto ; I belong to thai particular description ot good oh man to whom tho truth is refresh ing noel!y. Acid Ejaculations Give mo an apartment abode, where The dwellers toil not, neither spin ; For n City of Homes is n nightmare Till the homes come with servants built-in. BESSIE GRAHAM'S FRIEND. Our campaign against white vest margins has utterly collapsed. For, in n magazine photo, we sec that Mr. Hoover wears them. Getting hack from lunch now, we found that some one hnd bandaged the mouthpiece of our telephone with a nice little bit ot gauze steeped in disinfectant. We did not think much about it, except that we noticed it dis persed n pleasant medical aroma over our territory. Then one of our clients rang up, and we unsuspectingly dropped our face over the instrument. The strong and pungent whiff of the drug rose up and smote us, snatched hold of our windpipe, gagged our throat, made our nos trils ache ami tingle and brought tho tears galloping to our eyes. We gasped and gur gled, i It happened to be one ot our fnir clients, inquiring why her contribution had not been, printed yet. She was a little bit annoyed, and we suspected her tg be n recent adherent to the Dish who has not yet grnsped the curious principles on which this department is conducted "If jou don't intend to print it, you should have returned it," she shrilled bit terly. AVc tried desperately to speak, but nothing emerged except what sme poet called "slow droppings of warm tears." We gulped hard and summoned up a few stummcring sylla bles. We fear that they sounded rather like a moan, for Mie strength of the formaldehyde (or whatever it is) was throttling us. "How do you expect to retain the loyalty of real artists," she. inquired, "if you never answer their letters? Why, you haven't even got a formal rejection slip'" Again we sought to reply, but could only ejaculate a choked gripit. "Well," she said, listening to our snuf fles, "I'm glad you feel so badly about it. That helps a little. If you don't print that poem in three days I'll send it to the At lantic Monthly nnd get huge money for it." She rang off, nnd perhaps she will never know that we weren't bobbing intentionally. In the various accounts of the now famous luncheon given by Colonel House to Lord Grey, it seems to have been overlooked that the Dish hnd taken tlie precaution to have ono of its clients present. Our friend Dr. Robert T. Morris was one of the guests, and sent us a private dispatch nt the time. If anything htnrtliug had happened, you muy be sure tho Dish would have picked it up. Our secret agents aro busy on land und sea, is our warning lo the public. Our friend John Herndon, Jr., who is quite ono of our family us he is our sister-in-law's brother-in-law,, has just got hack from a trip lo England, and says he is fond of Ann Dante's contributions to the Dish, Ruminating on whut Sir Oliver Lodge has to suy, we do not quite know whether to re gard it an n consolation or a threat. Wc also wonder what has happened to M, Mucterlinck's still undelivered Message. Wo have sometimes wondered how wo would choose if wc wcro faced by the alter native of benefiting Immunity by sprcudlng n message ubout spiritualism or by opening a shop for tlie frying of the Perfect Dough nut, Miss Ami Huntf, who is rather a bitter materialist, bii that the proper wuy to punish thoe who profiteer in Juimau hopesf by propounding plrltuullstie lousolulipn J 10 aucnu uicjr iQciurw in thai spirit oh. fvrws, ROBERT BURNS "Rut ice hac ifunis" ATENNTSON muy grandly sing And charm the English heurt, A Southcy's melodies muy ring, A Cowpcr do his part. But wc ban Bums. A Byron's mastery of song May guile the student's mind. A Shakespeare In "the olden lime Leave others fur behind, But wc line Burns. Tn niawatha's catching strains A Lougtcllow may shine, And many other men ot brains May tench us lessons fine, But wc line Burns A Scot mny wield n magic wund Great men of genius soar. And still the boast of Ireland Is that of Thomas Moore, But we hue Burns. Burns weaves all in his mystic chain. And strikes n higher strain ; We turn the others' fading leaves, But Burns will still remain. JOHN McMASTBIt. Since everything is for the best in thli best nt all possible worlds, we nre constrained to believe that occasionally the ileveu obsti nate jurors are induced to see the error ot their ways. United Stntcs District Attorney Kann isii't really on tenterhooks. lie knows jut about what is going to happen with that resignation of his. Tho weather man bees to it that not only the ungodly 'walk in slippery plnccs. Twining may yet win glory out of sick transit. i May an appropriation for street clcanioj be spoken of as a slush fund? n What Do You Know QUIZ 1. What state is Carter Glass to represent in the Senate? 2. What new republic has just been rccoj- nized by the United States? 3. What is tho triotto ot the state ot Peuni sylvania? 4. How did horsepower come to be measure of cnginc.powcr? fi. What is a morganatic murringc'' ti j i . Why is it so called? 7. Who was the "Grand Old Jinn in llrit ish statesmanship? . 8. Who said that "mnu, proud mn, drcksca in u little brief uiithoiiu ' plays such fantastic tricks before W heaven as mnke the angels weep . 0. Where was Thackeray bom'' 10. Who was Antonio Cuuovu'' Answers to Yesterday's Qui 1. Secretary Duuiels has officially ruled U' in tho records of the Navy IW ment the late war bhull ho known ' "Tho World's War." . Ii. John Adums named John MurslinU to chief justice of the United hint"; . 3. There uro twenty-one republics m western hemisphere. ( 4. Sir Arthur Sullivan wrote the music "Onward, Christian Soldiers, fi. ChArlos 1 of Englund was cxccutcu 0.' The picturesque character pf Co'oncl Sel lers appears in Charles Dudley Wf ner und Murk Twain's novel. J ,... . .... T- II. Imnk lie tiiiueu .age. ."" ""-,. hu i known us Eschol and as Bcriali, D" I in the dramatized version as aiua ;,, and under this name also "'." Murk Twain work, "The AoicrkW , Claimant." t . t.nI.,j 7. Osaka is the second largest city in JP" 8. A pfaenowen ia a tlrbt qr pmwp a -jg, Thtftm j ww ini' " I 11 ft n V r, ft,