lR-PHILABELPHTA, FRIDAY, fOVl?!MBfeK 57, 101. 5 Iff li i rt f C I HJfcLtd LEDGER COMPANY t cros it. k etmris, rauiosjrt. Cfcartw It Ludlntfon, rump 8 Collins, Jonn B. TVII thin, Directors. KblTOtUAL HOARD I Cltl It. K. Cturm. Chairman I H tVItAt.ET Wt.,H. VAHnr 'Ul'l T " . itlK C. MARTIN .. . Qnl Tlmln... M.n ISiMUhM dally at Pdbmo LtMnt ttulldlnir, Independence Square.. Philadelphia. Jfcpflea Cs.vrtur. Broad and Chestnut Streets RET I " rreu-Unlon UulMlnr rS. "" io-a, Metropolitan Tower llICAQO SIT Tffltnn IntMrnn HulMIn nxbai 8 Waterloo Plate. Tall Mill. R. w. NEWSBUHEAUSr lABi1ttrA ll, . a. .. 1 . . . SW'ViSPJiJXW" w3?-!! "."? K?i.n,' a-'-F Frledrlehtrat &???. t"U 2 Tall Malt Bant. 8 W. .n.5 uciud .. 3 Itue Loula Is Grand sonscnirrioxTEnMs E erlpt!6n payable In advance BF.tX, 3000 WAtNW KEYSTONE, MAIN 3000 W Addrcte all fonmunteallona to riming Ledger, tndependenee Square, Philadelphia iNTnttn at tun riiitiDCLrnu roerorncr as second- mm MAit. limn, rilltADEU'lllA, HtlDAV, M)VUIIIHt 27, 1911. m i n i , fn . ., lake Icnalhcs Oil Auicricnn Enterprise 'T71ROM motives of patriotic pride tho people J. oc tnis country are hoping for tho re- establishment of tho American merchant marine, which. In tho day8 beforo inllrond Ik Investment outrivaled it In attractiveness to private capital, nnd beforo the Anglo-Gcr-niati shipping "conferences" acquired a mo nopoly of oceanic trade, carried tho Stars and Stripes to every port throughout the soien sets. Our commercial and shipping men. stirred by tho vast opportunity thrown In their way by a war which places upon this neutral nation a real responsibility to lesror neutral nations, not so fortunato ns ours in business resources and prospects, arc .studying-tho problem of a homo supply of shins to KVhandlo tho world trndo to which they have fallen heir. Congress has dickered nnd dallied for years, revised old laws nnd parsed new ones, with the final result that American en terprise nnd ambition hno boon so effec tively balked that today we hae no mer chant mnrlno worthy the name as vnnce xnompeon points out. In his nrtl cle.on this page, tho Government at Wash ington can remove tho obstacles which pre vent tho development of nn adequate mer chant marine. There Rro severnl things to be ' done, but the first nnd most Important step IS the complete rovlslon and reconstruction of our -navigation laws. Theso laws Imo been so muddled by much tinkering that hardly anybody cansny offhand what they mean, except that thoy heavily penalize a man for doing business under tho American flng. Relief Without Waste RELIEF upon such a largo Hcalo Is nocded at home ns well as abroad that every effort must bo used to avoid waste. Although there are unmistakable evidences of a re turn to prosperity throughout tho country, there must of necessity bo a period In which many of tho unemp!ocd will fall to find their places In the reviving industries. Theso are bound to suffer acutely during tho com ing winter unless tho community springs to their rescue. The Emergency Aid Committee, under the ildoMfi of Mrs. E. T. Stotcsbury. has form ulated far-reaching plans to meet tho situa tion In a scientific manner. Tho overlapping or uie efforts of phllantropic individuals tgnnd charitable organizations, following their own Impulses and thereby ocralding In some cases while others nre left to neglect, is avoided. The committee offers Itself as a clearing house and a bureau of direction, by means of which each dollar will give a full dollar's worth of relief and just where It Is most needed. Such .sagacious foresight cannot be too highly commended. There nro multitudes of generous men and women ready to give their full share, and even to mako personal sacri fices If they can feel assured that what they may do will really be applied to necessitous cases. The character and experience of the men and women serving with Mrs. Stotes bury are a sufficient guarantee that there will be the utmost efficiency of distribution, and this fact should stimulate generosity. Excessive Modesty MODEST!" Is a virtue when practiced In moderation; an excess is equivalent to tne wiping out of Individuality. As a com mercial centre Philadelphia has been long obsessed by an extravagance of reticence. "With a volume and variety of productions that any city in the world might envy, our coy Philadelphia Is nevertheless not taking full advantage of the opportunity to adver tise its attractions at the Panama Exposi tion. In these days shop windows are as essential to business as counter. It will certainly be a shame and the source of great loss to this community if there la not adequate representation of Philadelphia's enterprise in tho next national exhibition. The rest of the country Is likely to take us at our own valuation. Blind Folly THE great war has offered scores ef new Industries to the United States. Many lines of manufacture heretofore dominated i,by forelgnera are now practically extinct. KXn the circumstances, American capital would frtot hesitate an instant were there 'any as surance, of a continuance of the protection h-the war assures. But no capitalist will risk Mia money In an adventure which, while cer tain to pay dividends now, will become un profitable the moment industrial activity In Europe is resumed. Tho unscientific nature of our tariff making Is revealed. Otherwise the Government would at once encourage capitalists to adopt ..these "baby" industries by assuring- them of all necessary protection upon the restora- "Usa cf normal conditions. This would not ,b an Insurance of profits, but It would be rt, wi the contrary, a splendid opportunity aV'W th aequlsltion of trade is foolishly negieeted. It la a pity that agrarianlsm should be so bjjsd to its own welfare as to array itself agl8at the maximum development of our Mtmufaoturlng interests. Censorship From Within j.- "IHICAGO having: determined en municipal t v j oaace nana ntto useit embarKM on een. mtng the danM to be indulged 1b, A jury h it wmejt- ie t, witness the latest steps ijib 4M&atrated by experts, and te apply ttys yUcj of knewiftige ta anything doubtful tfcat tay 4evetoj. Yfc WKMr. tt Msmsr, we sfeall have always vttjk. n, Pltes uui Bi&dsrn daucuag aav brought fnrth ten times the crop of moral mentor that flourished In early Comstockian days. The necessity Is to bu ndmltted as much as regretted Borne sort of chastening opinion In the background seems a necessity of civil ized life. But how much better when that opinion Is public opinion, when the censorship has the mornl aenso of the community behind It, and how much more effective It would be If that Jury In Chicago might represent, to somo extent, the dancers themselves and become not an outside force, Lut a power from with In, a curbing of themselves with their dwn best Judgment That Is real liberty. Unjustifiable Usurpation THERE nro somo elemental things the In terstate Commerco Commission has never understood find seems Incnpnblo of ap preciating. Tho Interstate Commerce Commission was created as a Court of Equity In Commerco and hot nn Executive Committee to oporato all tho ralltoads of tho country. Tho Interstate Commerco Commission Is not nn extra and ultra ndvocatc of tho ship pers In a suit In which tho railroads nnd the traveling public are defendants under pre sumption of BUllt. The Interstate Commerce Commission Is not tho substitute of tho Federal Govern ment, authorized to assume a secret govern mental ownership of all railroad properties x "" Jiiiersimo uunimerco i onimis"iun la I not tho constitutional and confidential agent The Interstate Commerce Commission Is of pessimism, whoqe chief purpose It Is to keep business depressed, finance disorganized and confldnnce disturbed. If the Intcrstnto Commerce Commission will conflno Itself to regulating abuses and removing nnomnllcs, ns was tho Intention of Congress when constituting It, instead of usurping the role of fiscal dictator, operat ing1 despot nnd legislative autocrat, the In terstate Commerco Commission may still perform good service. In Its present mood of nrrogatlon of Mcdo-Persian authority, It Is growing to be a menace to tho Inalienable, rights, without which our liberty nnd pros perity cannot survive. I'cnn's Surprise CORNELL sprung her surprise yesterdny. And it wns a good little surprise In Its way. Two touchdowns In succession, leav ing tho score 12 to 10, naturally called up before Cornclllan eyes visions of other "Tur key Das" when tho "Dig Red team" hnd gono homo surprised, astounded and plucked. Hut when Cornell replied by making a touchdown off a punt, things wero back to tho even tenor of their predestined ways. At any rate, It was a flno "come-bnek" that l'enn made, as flno ns it was unexpected. Is Germany Nrar the Turning Point? WAIt news Is ever deceptive. Tho facts themselves aro always under severe question. Thelrx Interpretation is none too simple a matter. Finally, the world has seen many n beaten army turn upon a careless, overconfident foo nnd win to victory. But it IS such considerations nlono that can deter one from recognizing In the news of tho last two dajs tho turning point for Germany. Dlxmudo recaptured by French marines; tho menacing- submarine base at Zeebruggo destroyed by tho British fleet; Metz threat ened by forces bombarding a town scarcely ten miles away; and on top of this, serious, perhaps calamitous German reverses In tho east. -Whlio the left wing of the Russians has penetrated BO miles beyond tho Carpa thians, the Czar's forces west of Warsaw appear to have Inflicted on General von Hln denburg a defeat far more decisive than any hitherto administered In tho eastern cam paign. It may mean that, while the German I offensive on tho east comes to a dead stand still and threatens to turn into desperato defensive fighting, tho Russians will be pressing hnrd on Posen, Brcslau and ulti mately Berlin. In the face of the present state of the war, with the numbers and resources of the Allies growing greater dally, it is little won der that Prince von Buelow, the ex-Chancellor, writes a Berlin paper that he fears the war "will prove a very difficult task for LGermany." Such an admission from so influential a German Is quite as significant as the fnct of the Allies' victories. Eternal Qualities PEOPLE speak of the difficulty of accu rately presenting a past period In novejs and fiction. Some assert tho lmposslbllty. They assume that human nature has changed. Men may have become more cul tured, less warlike, their manners and morals may have changed, yes, but the Inherent human qualities remain. Just as "Medea" applies to tho life of today, so may the nov elist nnd dramatist, with an understanding of human psychology and emotions and known facts, recreate the past. With such knowledge one might accurately picture an cient Carthage. Rome and Alexandria. The conversation given by Theocritus of two ladles In Alexandria, changing location and terms of speech, might take place off Rltten house square. It Is as Intimately gossipy, as enchantlngly chatty as any modern tea talk. Today sometimes an Orestes appears In court, an Electra is sent to an Insane asy lum. And today, as ever, the frogs of Aristophanes chatter. From the way King Albert of Belgium fights you would never guess the horrid truth that his middle name Is Marls. "Peace In Mexico" has almost caught up with "Death of Menellk," and Menellk finally died. The weather this morning synchronized quite perfectly with the "morning after" feel ings appropriate to the day following the consumption of the Thanksgiving dinner, After reading George Bernard Shaw's scathing criticism of his conduct of the war, Sir Edward Grey probably exclaimed: "Oh Shaw!" Whether Russia can conquer Germany is an open question, but in dealing a knockout blow to the "demon rum" she has achieved no small victory. If the present rate of destruction continues among the leading naval Powers, we may find ourselves with the greatest navy In the world without having built a veiael It Is one of the intrlaaelea of military strategy that Japan should occupy a big sllee ef Chinese territory for the purpose of preserving China's neutrality. The dooters, at least, are gettin & little satisfaction out f the war as an opportu nity fer iRSHEMrabie operations that prove the ever-growing pawer ef surgical solense, With England nsaiwlng; the fight against Germany, nations are able to Borrow money that sever were able to borrow before. "T WILL YANKEE SAILING MASTEHS - SCOUR THE SEVEN SEAS AGAIN? Half the World Is Calling for Neutral Ships, and It's Uncle Sam's Big Chance Two Important Problems to Be Solved. By VANCE 5 lS ZaUKTrnT0 ft'S" '. &?.!'? '.!. tfr ! .AW THE American ting sailed to every point of tho compass. You havo read of those -. -w - - ..-.... stirring days. And you know It was war that drove us out of that trade. Will war give us back our far-faring, flag flying Yankee ships? Can we get back our lost trade nnd bring new cnrrylng trade under tho flng? Theso are the questions tho best brains In tho world of commerco are asking today. And with hardly an exception they answer In tho affirmative. Wo can got back our sharo of Uie world'B trade; nnd more than our shnre. It Is waiting for us. More than that, It Is calling for us. Half the world Is calling aloud for neutral ships Under our neutral flag. This is tho sort of thing that should get Itself snld first of nil. The finest thing that commerce can do :s to supply a want to nnswer a cry for help. That one can help oneself by helping others is only a corollary. For years the groat nations of Europo have been building up trade with South and Central Amcricn, with Asia Minor and tho Far East. At great outlay they did the pioneer work, whllo u stooJ Idly by. They created Immense demanUs now wants and needs In theso more or less undeveloped countries, and having created tho demand they supplied It at tolerable profit to them selves. Demand Is Still There War catno nnd the supplies slopped; but the demand for them did not stop. Theso folk, who hnd been educated up to wanting bright colored British cottons nnd boots and linen who hnd come to find the glittering, cheap things made In Germany nnd Austria nnd Frnnco qulto Indispensable yearned for them ns a man yearns for his habltunl cigar. And they couldn't get them; and they can't get them, England, at a cost of over n million a day, is trying to keep the trndo routes open. And she Is doing It In a way, an you know. In spite of tho daring raiders of Germany. But oven nt thnt tho war rates for Insurance nro so high that It Is well nlgh Impossible for the warring nations to do business nt a fair profit. It Is only in neutral ships that this trade, east and west, can be carried on without loss. Neutral ships nro a prime ne cessity. South America, for Instance, Is nn Innocent party In this war. It is the duty of tho neutrnl nations to come to her lescue and see to It thnt she Is not d prived of the things she needs. It Is only a decent duty to seo that the Innocent nations do not suf fer. And whnt neutral Power can help them? I don't think the merchant mnrlne of Spain or Sweden can help much not oven that of Switzerland. It's Up To America It sccni3 to be up to America, ns the slang men say. It Is the duty owed by tho great neutrnl nation to tho lesser neutral nations in their need. That we shall build up a huge, profitable trade and hold it Is merely one of tho plcnsant little ways of Proidcnce to emphasize the fact that doing good is Just ns sound a policy as being honest. And for nil this two things nre needed banking facilities nnd ships. The banks ns you know have led the waj. And the ship ping men have begun in s. rather feeble fashion to be sure but still It's a beginning. In the month of October. I am told, 131 ships were admitted to American registry. They nre flying the flng today. And It is worthy of note that 100 of them were Dullt In Ameri can shipyards. What that means Is this: In ante-bellum days American shipmasters found it more profitable to fly a foreign flag even over homemado ships. War conditions have, to some extent, equalized things. Thoy have given the American mercnant n fairer chance nt the world game of sea trading. His competitors are handicapped by war risk Insurance rates as well as by tho war in creased cost of tho goods they export. But tho gamo Is not qult,e nn even one yet. To get n rough general Idea of It take, as an Illustration, tho German merchant marine, which had grown to be so formidable a rival of English commerce at sea. Thnt was nrtlftclally fostered by the Government it wns enlarged exactly as the livers of Stras bourg geese are enlarged by artificial feed ing. And on that Government pap it grew nnd waxed big until it menaced the sea trade of England herself. Of course that illustration points the way. The great merchants the tall men of com merce are virtually unanimous In the opin ion that Government aid is necessary If we are to seize the opportunities now offered us and as well do our trade duty by the smaller neutral States. I am trying to make this statement at once concise and precise. Per- I OUR "VISIONARY" PRESIDENT America Is a nation of "incurable dream ers," and Woodrow Wilson responds to these dreams with actions as well ns Ideals. This Is the by no means unpartisan analysis that George Creel makes of the President and his successes In the current Century Maga zine. To attempt an Interpretation of his hold upon the popular Imagination In terms of strict mentality, Mr. Creel continues. Is to commit one s self to the patent absurdity that he Is the first President with brains. Others have matched him in Intellectual grasp, and what sets him apart, even as It set Lincoln apart, la nothing etse than an exact comprehension of passionate idealism as the animating impulse of America, Vision, spirit. Ideals, without the clue af forded by these dream words, Woodrow Wilson Is a blank, the United States stam mering and unintelligible. The soul of the many Is found In the far flung idealism of the Declaration of Inde pendence, not in the cautious phrases of the Constitution. False prophets and strange gods have won no more than lip service, for deep in the heart ot the nation an abiding faith In th ultimate triumph of love, justtce and brotherhood remains untouched. Finan cial genius may be given its sorry day of homage, yet Its right to control the destinies of America has never failed to be resisted, and the great moneymakers do not live In memory beyond the reading of their wilts. What larger confirmation Is needed than the present Impregnable position of Woodrpw Wilson? He lacks color, exhibits no mastery of speotaeular values, makes no dramatic tours, contributes little to the thing called "human interest." that queer newspaper compound of anecdote and unconventional Incident, yet no man since Lincoln has niched himself so lneradicably In the confidence ot the people. Ha has had the vision to see beneath the stagnancies of materialism down to the well springs of an Intense spirituality He doe not mistake baekwalera for tho living stream. The lnalateac that he is the last word In a well-ordered lntelleot, a personality as ooid and remote as though Kant's "Crit ique of Iure Reason" were galvanized Into aotlon. U the stupidity of muddlers who have lost all touch with the .elemental aunpllel- THOMPSON .. nuo niluwil fn every port 0 the seven teat. haps ono may get nt It In tnis way; Two things nro necessary If We are to be able to compete fairly with the sea trading nations. In some way or other our merchants must have ships that cost them no moro than the rivals pay for their ships, nnd tho Becond point Is that they must be able to man them nt no greater cost than the rivals pay to man their ships. Government Mutt Face It Now at some point or other nnd In somo definite way tho Government has got to meoi those two gravo Issues the Government fit the ship owners. And tho merchants aro pretty well of ono mind that It Is a matter ns In Germany for the Government. You build a ship hero In nny homo ship yard you please; tho additional cost of con struction Is estimated to be from 25 per cent, to 30 per cent, over tonnage constructed In Great Britain. Then (tho second point again) tho cost of sailing that ship under our numirabio navigation laws Is from 25 per cent, or 30 per cent, higher than if It wero a British ship. And there, as the Scot would say, bang goes 60 per cent, nt least. In some way these two things have to be made up. There must be somo method do vised of offsetting tho greater cost of build ing and operating American ships. The merchants with whom I have hnd word bellovo that the higher cost of ship building could bo got over in time. It Is only a temporary inequality which tho Gov ernment need mako good. Once shipbuilding plants and organizations wero established nnd set going American Industry and In genuity should be nble to hold their own It is only thnt Inltlnl cost that would weigh too heavily upon them. Wero It removod, wero tho building of ships nn established nnd going Industry, thoro would lie nothing to fear from tho men of Belfast, Hamburg or the Clyde. ( How could the Government step In and do this work? The brain of the business world Is busy with tho problom. Ono plan which has mot with favor Is that the Government should form a corporation to mnnngo this part of tho maritime work; that tho Government should retain 61 per cent, of tho stock nnd let id per cent, go to tho public; that tho management should bo In tho hands of a directorate, conjunctly appointed by the two houses of Congress and by the stockholders, nnd that tho oxecutlvo head should bo elected by this directorate. Ono plan nmong many. Tho working out of some practical scheme will be easy enough, once the great principle of Government nld for building ships for tho nag nas been accepted; and It should bo borne In mind that tho expert shipbuilders aver that this aid need bo only temporary need last only until the great plants aro In operation nnd tho orgnnlzatlon has been perfected. It is only a matter of giving the boy a good start In the world. Father will get it back when Wllllo grows up. At least so the ship men say. Watch Officers, Americans There remains always that difficult second part the operating cost under the American flag. Wages are higher, you know. Tho chief feature In tho additional cost is tho law which decrees that all watch officers Bhall bo American citizens. And they demand Ameri can pay. I do not think nny ono wants this provision of the navigation laws changed. These officers should bo American citizens, if the merchant mnrlne Is to form as un questionably it should a training school for our naval reserve. At present it costs more to get American sallormen nnd officers American crews because there Is so small a contingent to draw from; but It Is evident that as our merchant marine grew it would more and more attract tho right kind of men. It seems little possible, though, that the operating expenses of a marine under the flag can be greatly lessened. One of the things that makes for cost Is the ample space given to the crew, under the law; and another Is the good grade, abundant food which must be provided. No one, I think, has any thought of changing these good provisions of a good law. And It Is to the Government the ship owners look to make up this handicap laid upon them by the laws the Government has enacted. These are the things the business brain of America Is thinking about. We need ships to carry goods to the wa'r strlcken neutrals that touch the seven seas; and, of equal importance, our own foreign commerce is paralyzed by the war and only a national merchant marine can set It right. So that Is the problem; and It Is up to Washington. CURIOSITY SHOP The highest street in the world Is Main street, in Denver; the richest is Fifth avenue. In New York city; the widest Is Market street. Philadelphia, and the shortest Is the Rue Ble, In Paris. The dirtiest street Is that of Tchankstl. In Nankin: the cleanest Is the Via Castile, In Seville, Spain; the most arls tocratlo one Is Grosvenor place, In London: the most beautiful Is the Avenue des Champs Elysees, Paris. The narrowest Btreet Is Via Sol, Havana. Cuba, which has a width of no more than 12 Inches. ..Tne Iporamus Jury" was formerly the title of the body now known as a grand Jury, from the custom of their writing the Latin word Ignoramus meaning "We do not know," "The evidence does not inform us" on the back of a bill of Indictment when they "Ignored it. The words now used are "No true bill." In "Collectanea- Curlosa," Ox ford, 1781. is a copy of a charge by Judge Alllbon, at the Croydon Assizes, In 1688, in which the Judge directs the jury thus: "If you find that anything proceeds from envy and malice, and not of due prosecution, you may acquit the person that Is so wrongs fully prosecuted, and so justice Is done be-, tween party and party, so an Ignoramus Jury may not be of no use." Th- .fabJ? Bay5. t.nat Truth 8"d Falsehood went bathing, Falsehood came first qut of the water, and dressed herself Jn Truth's garments. Truth, unwilling to take those of Falsehood, went naked hence, the "naked truth," ' CRISES IN GREAT LIVES To Americans the name of Lafayette sug. gests the young, high-minded hero Who sac rificed personal ambitions to help America win Its battle for freedom To France tho name suggests the man who might have spared It the Revolution. When Lafayette returned from Amerlea he was full of the fire of Jefferaonlan democ racy. When the National Assembly was convened In 1789. Lafayette placed before It a declaration ox lndpeadenoe similar to Jef ferson's instrument Early in July, 17S9. ha was selected vice president of tho Assembly, and already he saw his mission. & France without bloodshed by ths "JJ. noblo Ideals, from monarchy to tpubcan ism Later, when the citizen army Jn ns the National Guard was 'orme9l frcVief was chosen to bo Its commander-ln-cn ei Never had fortune, in such dep Xn" smiled so upon ono man With lh.6.I;!:!r".n Guard he could protect Paris, could """ the mob, could protect royalty until roaiiy saw Its own foil'. , , , . . i,v Tho people of France trusted him, but tney demanded to be fed They were "n,1"; Lafayette did nothing Ho tried to keep on good lerms with court and people U'K5 J" Versailles tho King wavered between demo crntle concessions and reactionary P'"; Lafayette tried to keep a middle course, mil in all the time his Inaction was becoming moro nnd moro dangerous. The mob was beginning to seek other loaders, c"1? Desmoullns was making his voice heara. Still Lafayette wavered niid did n0'"1"?' Incapable or throwing himseit wnoie-no rriiv itiin thii nf?hi. im hiitntfrf and was lost. Thero emerged ono who could act. ove" wrongly, but could net Immediately. JJas Mlrnbeau And with him Lafayette's crisis camo to a disastrous end. It remained ror Napoleon, years later, to rescuo from an Austrian prison this man who could have mado Napoleon Impossible. VIEWS OF READERS OjN TIMELY TOPICS Contributions That Reflect Public Opin ion on Subjects Important to City, Slate and Nation. To the Editor ot the Eienlno htiatri Sir Ruinl credits and Hie proposed organi zation of a Farmers Union were subjects to which the Amerlcnn Federation of Labor gave attention In Its recent convention, while the National Grange of Patrons of Husbandry, in Us erosion nt Wilmington, discussed Immigra tion and other matters which the Federation considers of vital importance to Its own mem bers. The proposal of unionizing tho farmers must meet, of course, the objection that the situation of thin class of producers Is economically ery dlfTcrent from that of Industrial laborers, and therefore the forms of organization in the tno cases mum differ The labor union, which deals primarily with the relations between emplocrs and employes, is co-operative, but Its tacks nre unllko those of the organizations which Ameri can farmer aro patterning nftcr Belgian and Danish models nnd adapting to the conditions existing In this country. Co-operntlvo bulng nnd selling, in which little Belgium has given lessons to the world, la probably the most Im portant subject In the new rural economics. BuO the Federation of Labor wns right In deciding that "tho Interests of tho workers In industry and ngriculUiro nro closely allied." This Idea of common or similar Interests is making Its way In all groups of society Ita expansion Is full of promise. READER. Philadelphia, November M. BUSINESS EFFICIENCY IN CITIES To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir A police commissioner with Imagination la considering tho suggestion of having the policemen light nnd cxtlnzulsh thn electric street lamps on their beats. Whether tho plnn is put In effect or not It Is significant of something tho cities should be doing Business administration is only the first step In municipal progress. It means bringing the cities up to tho standards of com mercial organizations that have been current for decades. Something moro Is needed. The cities must go ahead with that Intenslvo study of means nnd ends which Industry is only now adopting undcrx tho name of "business ef ficiency" Tho cities must study every department. In Itself nnd In its relation to others, to see where saxings In cash and Increaso In power may be offected by elimination of wastes and duplica tions. If such scientific management is val uable to corporations it is Just ns valuable to municipalities. e, A. L. Philadelphia, November 28. VTAR DEPLETES UNIVERSITIES To the Editor of the Eientng Ledger: Sir Oxford University opened Its year with only a fraction of Its normal student body. During the American Civil, War many -of our colleges were depleted and had to closo their doors until peace returned In soma Instances entire classes volunteered for service and marched to tho .front under their own student officers. Oxford has always had a military organiza tion within the -university, and as Earl Kitch ener believes that the best officers are not those promoted from the ranks, it Is probable that the collegians will all be commissioned at once. A university education Is largely a pub lic privilege, and should Imply a return of pub lic service both In war and peace COLLEGIAN. Swarthmore, November 26. A NOTE OF THANKS To the Editor of the Eientng Ledger: SIr-rPIease let me thnnk you and your delight ful representative who reported my girls' ballad dances at tho Little Theatre on the 17th Enthu siasm is rare, helpfulness Is too often dull and n gentleman in business Is too refreshing to go unnoted. Although authoritative critics laud nnd encourage real art effort, the crowd is slow to tnko any achievement that has not gone to Europo to get foreign names nnd starting ground. When a newspaper really helps Amer ican art. initiative nnd effort. I, for one. am gratefully glad. MARY PERRY KINO. Sunshine House. New Canaan, Conn., Nov. 25. T NATIONAL VIEWPOINT The Federal Council of the Churches of Christ In America, which proposed the day of prayer for peace. obsered October 4, is planning to extend 'the good will and sympathy of the -"""" .iiuii.jito m America." through prominent clergymen, to the churches of Eu rope, including belligerent countries. After all a most fundamental fact, in spite of all this war business, Is that the peoples of the various nations have vastly more in common, as human beings, than they have In disagreement aa fol lowers of different flags. The Federal Coun cil Is n proper body to help emphasize this neglected truth. Springfield Republican. The flag has not been saluted. There Is no assurance of peace. Except for our naval force we are In no position to fulfil our en gagements with foreign Powers. Setting out to establish constitutional government In .-ic.iii.-u, we are leaving .Mexico to ita own re sources at a time when its Internal affairs are more chaotic than they were when wo Inter fered with them. Have we served the Mexi can? Have we served ourselves? Have we served mankind? New York World. The check which the Minnesota Minimum T.1!8?. Ac,t vhna rlvf'1 " belng held uncon stltutlonal by an Inferior court Is chiefly slgnl flcant as showing how tittle the tribunals of ono State are affected by the decisions of another Appeal to the State Supreme Court will de termine If the Interpretation of such laws Is really different In Oregon and in Mlnnesota. New Tork Evening Post. , We don't think ourelv that Bernard Shaw Is a profound philosopher, a aoclal prophet an excellent dramatist. We have found fault with Shaw and have been Impatient of his eternal paradoxes and fallacious processes. But w admit that Shaw la salt, Attlo salt, In an Anglo Saxon world ot too much utility. And we re- - .jjuhj-,,. "i up complacency and prods bypqexfry. when he pitchforks stupidity and flay respectability. He Is a tonic, aid is a, tonic, mi as a social savior, does us good. MlaneapjoUs Journal. . TO THEODORA Sweet maid, the passion of the rose , l 'y not at your feet! The eoolest flower that aprlpgtlds knows I deem a gift more meet. A newer whose virgin whiteness glows . Adawn the path we trae. -Khjie yttthe naked hawthorn throws Prophetic shaaow-lace. AfUwer fragraat whtaiw, That tender eeotaney And truth and honor far outweigh All passion's ecstay. Sweet maM I pray thee. hv. no fer . v. i TTMr my -"" lowers. And haply whan fair Jun. u her -Mary Lawscn. la tn. Outlook. SCRAPPLE J Contraband of"Wr When peace has been busted widj open and the nations of the earth are engaged In shooting at each other with whatever Is handy, the contraband of war gets into the war reports with great regularity. A contraband of war"Is a commodity which would help a country In its nefarious work of reducing the population of Its neighbors. When an article has been declared contra band any wnrshlp is entitled to run up the flag, give three cheers and grab the ship which carries It. By this means steel, copper, automobiles, wheat and other articles are taotng kept out of Germany by England at tho present time. They would also bo kept out of England If the English fleot would kindly look the other way long enough to let the German fleet get out of tho Kiel Canal and begin to roam tho ocean picking up chanco acquaintances with the American merchant marine. When a nation has enough cruisers it can be very officious about tho contraband-of-war business and can keep tho freight steam ers of the world bobbing up and down on the high seas while Its officers hunt for salt petre In the stokehold and examine thd offi cers' quarters for signs of mules. Thus war becomes a calamity even to the noncomhat ant. However, wo should bear the contra-band-of-war rules patiently and endeavor to establish contraband of peace, which would bo a much more useful thlngr all around. If the United States cruisers could examine every incoming steamer for smuggled foreign husbands, now Argentine dances, Elinor Glyn novels, French gowns nnd rartslan come diennes, and could declare theso contraband of peace and llablo to Belzure, fumigation nnd sale, tho causo of happiness would be greatly promoted In these parts and this country would become oven moro eminently desirable, as a place of residence. In the Civil War tho Federal Government declared Negroes to bo contraband of war, nnd thus struck a vital blow at the Confed erncy. Tho European nations liavo dono a more deadly thing. They have made a con traband of war out of wnr news, and a. puz zled world has to guess from week to week whether the Russians arc In Petrograd or In the last ditch, nnd where the Germans aro ndvanclng, on Paris or Berlin. George Fitch. . . To Maud "She never kicked" this was the epitaph We carved above her final resting place. And all tho cruel goadlngs of tho staff, .Tho b!udgeonlng3 sho got, In sad disgrace, Sho took In pntlent calm, nor ceased to laugh, With moro of nolso than harmony or grace. In short, through Ilfo sho always held the pace; "She never kicked" when sho wns gl'en tho gaff. Her way was fraught with undeserved blows; Her road was always thorny, never smooth, And Bhe was subject, all hor life, to rulo Of many masters, yet sho always choso Tho kindly way; and so we say, to sootho Her shade, "Sho was a good, hard work' Ing mule." First Prize, Please Fond Mother Can't you manage to give my son one of the prizes at tho exhibition? Teacher Your son will stand no chance; ho obstinately persists in Idleness. Fond Mother Oh! but then, If that's so, you can give him a prize for perseverance. She Didn't Mean It Old Gentleman (who had Just finished reading an account of a shipwreck with loss of passengers and. nil hands) "Ha! I am sor ry for the poor sailors that were drowned!" Old Lady "Sailors! It isn't tho sailors; It's tho passengers I am sorry for. Tho sail ors are used to it." Exchange. Of Course Some persons ask; In deep surprise, Who keeps tho doctor fake, the quack; To answer one need not be wise. Who but tho hypochondriac? More Or Less Jonos, your roast Guest Mrs. delicious. Is s; ijmply Mrs. Jones Oh, yes, my husband always buys the best; he Is a groat eplcac. G. K. Chesterton on the Weather I do not know If other people are made like me In this matter; but to me It Is al ways dreary weather, what may be called usoloss weather, that slings Into life a sense of notion and romance. On bright blue days I do not want anything to happen; tho world Is complete and beautiful, a thing for contemplation. I no more nsk for adven tures under that turquoise dome than I ask for adventures in church. But when the background of man's life Is a gray back ground, then. In the name of man's sacred supremacy, I desire to paint It In fire and gore. When the heavens fall man refuses to fall; when the sky seems to havo written on it, in letters of lead and pale silver, the decree that nothing shall, happen, then the Immortal soul, the prince of the creatures, rises up and decrees that something shall happen, If It be only the slaughter of a policeman. From "Tremendous Trifles." Add Alliances J O F I F R E F R E INCH no longer stands alone. An English paper K U L J T U R T U R f K E Y A Real Horror One horror of warfare that flllsus with woe, And even Impels us to plot, IanJne.isn,iwledse that Jlngolsts driven to go To the front will escapg being shot During the Training m nra.S, ?,Y 8m"h's (whose number was 11 HflJ ticliurch Pnrade' an". having done a good deal of marching, he was naturally feel ing the effects- of It during the service. He had not been In church long when the rov er"?d BtntIeman pnounced the hymn: languid?'6" ' Art th0U Weary art thou ..MrJvt?,.?.mlth houted with a loud voice: "Not half!" London Opinion. Trapped "Dick," said his wife, as she poured the Sngr ee" Vdld you S6"M this "Nothing hut papers." day1?" you poat tbat letter x ru yMtr- "Certalnly." dreX8youU''haVen,t reC,Ved tU " waa ad' The Babbling Fool "SL'IJi Rra. B0m8 PePl who take It as a personal grievance that there are only ten commandments and only seven daadly sins" They spend their very virtuous lives in a mad endeavor to fill m what the Bible left .U,V a,.?rePare wonderful moral budgets full of "Thou ahalts" and "Thou shalt no" " If they escape murder by their thlrUeth yeir they usually set up a prophets. At 60 they thlsUwo?rd,a8retadv0 W.'8 D0Ul vluo ,n uia woria aireaay. Far too manv eren and SVertSt.n or 'T ' "TmES Thero wema t hl P8?; "Iffn In front, tilt. ,S?i b8 a general impression that Quite clear, that the Topple Vt?ue If whK n SSaffSa,1 WUh0Ut hoice' & asXyltasf aZ h! ?r ch,ldr8, they will pliaM u?5f " ad Pray that beggars refuw 1 ... 6 ,A " th " blame on lonni Y" '"J " tha sureiy-and thank H...rr .f.. IMW on c wero children. arranged. '"""" llasAt, things werft wfcMt we dUroraaUy HI 4 t tfe, Jg- -WP' Y s?f TftS- mjMr&f "s?3 iS 3ri3ifetit SSasslIs