rnp(wto J'!F,i- Rfrf-- CO CHI ail J3l; -r B wmi ' -.j WcUgpr , PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY rynvs It K CUrtTlS. Paxsistsr. 3t& W. Ofh SfcMtary: JohtiC. Martin. Tfurrj WUMcft II Lndlnttoit, rhlllp S Colllna, John B. WIN ITO, PIWlQf . fibiTontAijBOxnot Mix. 4f ,. M..l.. Vrk " . " wviiihi ti airman mJVUAUISr ..Bieeullt Editor BE IftMAltTIX Oentral PmlatM Mftif r I'oMWiod diiy At fcrtio Ltoom nullillnr. .,a Indpndenee Siur, Philadelphia. tft crvTnii . .......Droad ami Chtatnut Streets jAttAKtic OiTt Prett.tnlon Uulldlnr , Kj5W Tout UO-A, Metropolitan Tower C'mdioO. . . . .SIT Horn lniuran nulldlnc ,,; lupxmw . . s Waterloo Plata, Pall Mall, 8. TV. -T-. M;wa sunnAL'Bi PjAJtRI BCito- rJrit The Pntrtol Tlutldlnr slHrrox Mraatc Tli Tout Uulldlnr xukk UtrtKAu .. .. Th? Time HulMlna- in ntrti no rrtflrl-htuan. clv ill stir n rli fn tff, a w gfiit Ucauc S2 Itu Loul. b'afand si nscmraoN terms tl ,.. I . ft.v?Kar ,. l . . . .fStdd of Philadelphia, etrept her forelm points JS.l'MUlri UiifT OtLt, one month, twenty-me cental vi 4P'. vi. """ jpnr inroo uoiiara ah man tun g -fWon pa able In odranea MBELf- 3000 WAI-MTT lvr.YSTO.NE, MAIN 3000 A&iirts all commuulcaHona la Eitntno r, itSrpendeiie Stuart. riilladtlpMa. ' C'TmiD,irTirrmr.,itEUH!roiiTOiT!ci i ercovD- ' CU8 MAIL UATTtO. tintAurLPiiiA, FitiDAV, urxEMiir.n in. t9i. 1-rr Talked Sick THC country litis been talked sick. It has beeft ted on phrases until It has grown lean tlirouch malnutrition, lint thern u nl- r.j.Ti talk and more tall:. Instead of devot- m inciiiscivcs to uio pcriormnnco ciucicnuy and Well of present functions, practically eVcry executive ofneer of tho Government Is proposing new fields to bo entered. What does Mr. Burleson care If It does tako eight hours to get a special delivery letter front New York to Philadelphia? It Is tho tele graph system that he wants to manage. As Is so often tho case, tho thing a man is not doing Is tho thing which he Is sure ho can do bettor' than anybody else. Tho whole nation Is crying for action. Tho era is essentially constructive. It Is a time to push our horizon back further and further, to-'reaeh out, to plumb tho depths of trade and universalize our commerce. All the world looks to the United States, champion of arts and Industry, reputed to bo the most practi cal nation on tho globe, and wonders why it hesitates and powwows Instead of getting busy. For weeks It has been apparent that a dozen new Industries wero seeking a new habitat. Tho least encouragoment from Washington would havo led capital to in vest. But not a alnglo bill has been Intro duced In Congress to assure moderate pro tection of such Industries and tho continu ance of existing trado conditions following tho 'conclusion of the war. Capital will not Invest In dye works because, it would be profitable now when It knowslthnt tho sign ing; of a treaty of peace will ipen tho trado to the cheap dyestuffs of Germany. There nro baby industries wo can adopt and should adopt, but tho opportunity waits unnoticed outside the Capitol. Our men of initiative, our men who bellovo in productive) Industry, must get busy. They will find the country back of them in their battle for a restoration of common sense. They will quickly discover that tho nation is utterly weary of go eminent by phrases and n experimentation, that It Is waiting fpr lead ers who will do things and do them In a big way. "Abraham Lincoln, give us a man." AIL Belgium a Bread Line HUNGER and suffering havo obliterated all distinctions In Belgium, according to Theodore Waters, who has Just returned after distributing the first consignment of food from America. "Wo visited the dis tributing stations," says Mr. Waters, "and saw the food sent by Americans handed out la alt too meagre rations. They came In droves from all directions, and the clatter of their sabots was a sad accompaniment to tlrelr sadder thoughts, for none spoke, except to murmur, 'Merci, Monsieur.' " ( Thb good ship Thelma has already made Philadelphia's largesse available to the fam ishing; tens of thousands. The Orn 'will quickly discharge her needed cargo. Wo did our duty, but not moro than our duty, and Christmas will be all the happier because we shared in the work of pity. Never In the History oC the world has thero been a saddor or darker time for aurh mnllltiwloa r in. 1 offensive people, und never was there larger i opportunity for charity to reveal the true lieaeUaiK'nianlty. Punic Arguments "lARTHAGE once held tho world in the Kj hollow of its hand. Its craft plowed every known sea. Its imperial domkln stretched into Europe. Its commercial giants , dominated trade. In wealth and industry it had no rival Its leaders then nv .. fv ,.., . "1.7 Z. ...... - .wv. iio m Bisuuiucuia mucn aro oeing repeated with emphasis in the United States. They would not vote funds for the navy, and they jf-l . pibb!ed when the army budgets were pro- 'jp?W- one would dare attack Carthage, ws mwf inougnt. ana tney pointed to the Was Mediterranean as a sure defense against ttajtft. , I Bat two of the greatest military geniuses tftfllfc world has known were unable to save tnttge. it crumpled up. and Italy instead ' Africa determined human Progress for JO centuries. We may, if we wish, delude ourselves with Punic arguments. We may, if we desire, ex- ipose to attack American institutions and the ,' American ideal Or we may, moderately and tt&-ivlfo. restraint, adopt a program of self- l protection that will adequately assure" us Wl and give to our voice lr the councils jlfw worid uneqoaied weight and authority. w jpwi (i"Huaie w give to our up billions T wealth merely a couple of hundred million p- M worth oX insurant In the form qf a fT vur capacity jor naval protestien fcml4 he commessurate wh the vast value tJw thing to b protects. Why We Hold the Philippine. ) eAimot wtdrtand lis what way we wm ! bj granting owrtota tadpm. 6A0C. The ilaa4 are at no vahu to m MWanrretaiiy, uader our nrMt fltm p feyWKauu.i. aa4 Ifeey art VMve weafc, fW rm a aiWttary MU&dBtfttfr-rV) Cfor jijtM Martin's pb fcefere t SBU transmit u. HA&'WH iay be wmt, but he b Jt tot at history out t as- T UAtts SUUs did net lemura i'fcA pmupyuxtt intend for tpwwrcit - 3:g fk Volte Statw aid t take tka :Wwm Jr.rt tr Mneuuet miHurr .,. jB;.-jM'ff 'n ! stlM nyr xjUe$ w ., t-t hr man tteci tfest w . j fe-flcpn rjht toyr s-tmi EVENING LBDGfER-PHlLADBLPHIA, FU1BAY, ECEMBElt 18, JJ)1: previa lo lift and bear our corner of the while man's burden? Have we not always felt It to be a point of honor to carry to completion what wo have so well begun? Are wo prd pared to treat all of our territorial obliga tions on a basis of commercial gain or loss tu ourselves? There Is no objection to granting Indepond enco to the Philippine Islands as soon as It Is clearly demonstrated that tho Filipinos ore competent to govern themselves upon the plane of civilization t- whloh we have raised them. To grant It earlier and for tho salse of easing our shoulders of a heavy responsi bility! after having Invested so much In the experiment, Is unworthy of our mornt stand ards and would be disastrous to tho Filipinos themscUcs. JXulliiicalion T7HNANCB COMMITTED of Councils Is moto Ignoring than Ignorant. It Ignored tho claims of Gcrmantown and Chestnut Hill for ndoqttato police protection, would do nothing to carry out the terms under which tho Chief of tho Bureau of Gas was engaged, and the new Housing and Sanitation iffvl slon, which the Legislature ordered, -was passed over as If it were of no more Impor tance than a mechanic who wants work and will bo offered a crumb of charity Instead. The now housing law will be put Into effect, Finance Committee or no Finance Com mittee. Cities do not stand still. They pro gress, and tho way they progress Is by assidu ous care and protection of residents. It took a long tlmo to get water Instead of mud and water for Philadelphia, and a patient public endured much for years before Its trolloy surface became, somothlng moro than a disgrace. Amelioration of conditions In tho tenements Is qutto as necessary to the well-being and growth of tho city as sub ways or a comprehensive sjstem of docks or anything elso. If Councils meekly acquiesces in the rdlct of tho Finance Committee, thero remain tho courts. They will have a volco in determin ing whether or not Councils by Inactivity can nullify a law of Pennsylvania. If by any chanco the courts should dccldo that they are without authority, there remains a tribunal of last appeal, namely, tho pcoplo themselves. Thoy at least know what they want and how to get it. Although the great cities of the world havo demonstrated with absoluto exactness tho benefits accruing from a fair housing law, and our new housing law Is ono of the best ever written, some of our Councllmcn rato the Intelligence of their constituents so low that they argue the advantages of bad hous ing, and actually advance the thesis that tho poor aro better off without bathtubs than with them. The Legislature did not think so, and there Is the law on tho statuto books. It stands out llko a beacon light. Nullifica tion or no nullification? Enforcement of the law or non-onforccment of tho law? That question has been answered finally in this country before. Eclipse of Cnillnux TIMES of peace, Joseph Calllaux, as i p Prime Minister of France, could stago himself as tho central figure of a national drama; in times of war, with the setting ready for the appearance of a hero, the same Joseph Calllaux is shipped by the alley door to a far distant land. When war makes Its stem demand It Is for men. With a pitiless disregard of cus tom, adventitious trappings and Insignia are torn away and the elemental strength or weakness is exposed to view. The world knows now that Calllaux was only a figure and his power nothing but a Action; ho has been weighed and assayed and cast aside. Of course, he may dramatize himself again In Buenos Aires, but It can be little more than burlesque. More than at any time In her long history Franco needed strpng men, bravo men, true men and self-abnegating men; France has found them, but Calllaux Is not of the number. A Brilliant Quibble THE Democracy is opposed to thlp sub sidies, bitterly opposed to them, It will not assist a crippled Industry with Govern ment money, for that would be an Intolerable outrage to taxpayers. No, the Administra tion has a better scheme. It will operate merchant lines so long as they are Unprint able, but the moment they become profitable will turn them over to private companies. That Is statesmanship and proper conserva tion of the finances of the nation, Either that or the most barefaced hold-up of the public ever attempted. British "Women Rally to the Flag ENGLISH suffragettes can now dedicate their militant training to tbe defenso of their country, The Women's Volunteer Re serve, being formed in London, will offer a congenial opportunity for the display of those powers that struck terror to the hearts of Cabinet Ministers, members of Parliament pnd Art Gallery guards. Unless the Ger mans abandon their Idea of invading Oreat Britain they will have to face a new force In modern warfare, and whether It will be as effective as the male arm of the service it will be no whit less courageous and stub born. Whatever the Women's Volunteer Re serve may accomplish, Its patriotism stands out. By the time arrangements for the relief of tbe unemployed have been completed there probably won't bo any. Senator Penrose, it seems. Intends to make Mr. Crow a national figure, A Crow for an Oliver would not be wqrth while, wauld it? Bven the most peace-loving Englishmen are inellned to believe now that it is a good thing the Hmpire has more battleship than tbe fatherland. u am i i, nun),,, i.i w Tfcefe was General Bpatt in Mle ouca UefoM, as YiB. Catranwi. SaU asjl ethers pjjgrht dierer if traedy would read his tory to them. Te, 1e many eugCMtiMts as to whatto dt wl&1fc HWGO. Koue ft h atfsht wuly be aKt is substituting Car Paper is the window of teneuwiUs. The 0eate U far the Loden oonwntkui tpt the juvujotloa of safety at with s amMutowBt a44 -uUUyum it After - jUrtmaitg,t-Hi Whloiin ay !? t MtMa mt ce &4 tovtef it toe twst ifctpti sW m t( WM win tieHyri- BEHIND THE WHISKERS: THE REAL "HAM LEWIS" One of tho Most Versatile and Inter esting Personalities in Public Life, lie's a Wonder and Delight When' Presiding Over tho Senate. By E. W. TOWNSEND r NO MOP.E lamentable error could be charged against the gentle leader than for him or her to assume that the whiskers, of, tho Hon. James Hamilton Lewis you get him n&"IIatn Lowis"7 are hla most Interest-, ing attribute. On the contrary, qulto otherwise. Deprived of his whiskers, If such a barefaced outrage were imaginable, Mr. Lewis would remain ono of the most Interesting characters In the Senate of these here United States. Ho has both wit and wisdom, and I pass rapidly from that statetnont before ono begins to ponder on the Infrcqucncy of tho combination, Ila Is a rattling good debater, delivers a piepmoti speech with excellent taste, and Is ono of the few Senators who does not soeni to consider It a boro to know somcthlngabout parliamentary rules and practices. Indeed, upon those occasions when ho presides over thp Bcnato It Is not his elegant grace which nlono nit obsoncri dolo upon; his display of parliamentary lore equally charms and sur prises! Presides a la John Drew It Is as good as to seo John Drew acting tho part of a courteous beau to sec Senator Lewis preside hver the deliberations of tho Senate. The heavy air of tho Senate cham ber becomes olcctriflcd by his activities of mind and body; tho gallery wakes up also tho Senate. Press correspondents leave their cushioned armchairs 'In theh; private lobby and hasten to tho haid benches of their oin clal box. Theto Is a change In all things animate, as In a crowd when a brass band suddenly switches from "Massa's In the Cold, Gold Ground" to "It's a Long Way to Tlp perary." Tho Senator from Vermont arises and in quires', "Will tho Senator from Georgia yield?" Docs the presiding officer Blccplly mutter half the formal question nnd re bumo a disturbed nap? Not J. Hamilton' With animation, vivacity, his supplo hands outstretched upmost appcallngly townrd Goorgla, he Inquires, with Inten&o cngcrnesS, as if tho formula were new and surprising, "Will tho Junior Senator from Georgia yield to tho senior Senator from Vermont?" turn ing and bowing slightly toward tho Green Mountains. Will he'.' Why the Junior Senator from Oeorgla wbuld n3 soon think or resisting an appeal so fetchingly Interpreted asf to refuse candy to a child. Ho says, "I yield!" and tho presiding olllccr rewards him with a bill llant smile, conveys tho Important Informa tion with a graceful wao of his speaking hands toward Vermont, und leans forward with lips quivering in their eagerness to drink In so to speak the stream of eloquence he feels suro Is to flow from Ver mont. Tho Senator from that State says pon derously: "I think the Senutor from Georgia Is In error In stating that tho statuto was enacted in tho C3d Congress; it was In the C4th." ' James Hamilton Lewis' sinks back in tho Vice' Presidential chair as If almost over coma by excess qf tho sweet harmony of eloquence; he clasps and unclasps his hands In ecstasy, his eyes closed for n second, but with a mighty effort (os one, when tho cur tain falls on tho last act of the opera, re calls himself from dreams celestial with the thought that a supper bill is yet to be met and paid) leans forward and Inquires with fluttering hands, "Does the Senator from Vermont wish further to interrogate the Seh tttor from Georgia?" A. Very Busy Perionagc And with such pretty doings the Lelslan hour In the chair all too soon ends and the dull, dread houis of ordinary chairmanship follow. Tho air lose3 Its pep, the electric lights cease to glitter, the cloakioams till, with smokers, tho Senate volplanes to earth again. In one of May Irwin's farces a. ptctty but bold thing kisses tho man Miss Irwin favors. Mi3s Irwin gasps and theni takes tho audi ence Into ljcr confidence with the question, "Did you ever see such a busy person?" Ono is moved to aek that question after even nn Incomplete survey of James Hamilton Lewis' official activities. He Is one of tho youngest Senators, only K years old, I think, yet he has had an oftlclal and professional career which, divided among half a dozen citizen of moderate expectation, would more than satisfy their ambitions. A Representative in Congress from the State of Washlngton, a Benator from Illinois (he was born down South, I forget Just where, and educated soiqewhero else), a legislator in the State of Washington, an army officer in the Spanish American War, our diplomatic commissioner in London in the Alaska dispute case. Cor poration Counsel in Chicago, candidate for Governor of Illinois, author of a book on elec tion laws, law lecturer In the Northwestern University, not to mention many minor ac tivities of an official and professional nature. It Is not Just to so attractive a statesman that he should ba known only by the whiskers )is keeps. As to Those Whisker Now only a word as to those v. Makers which have so surprised and dazzled the scribes hereabouts as to blind them to those no. less brilliant decorations of mind and per son which allure all eyes not Insensible p charms other than color. Before Twaehtman and Raid and others of their sebool painted snow purple and searlet we thought ItjWhIte. Though I shoulder a sehoo), yet will I boldly" dealare Senator Lewlt's whiskers to ba early strawberry n ooloj; by early I mean those ntekad net yet quits ripe, showing every afaad of strawberry color from faintest to deepest hue. Here Is a story Senator Lewis taU about htew; Wbea his eariy wandqrlaga ajrrtl him to Seattle he arrived in that city, whloh was. 'so soon to send him to tbe upper house of its State Ltgiflature, cold, penniless and hungry. He saw sow a coal dump- before a fine private residence and applied to the, man qi (be bouse for the job of carrying the oal nu? the hMMnent, Ha wouki da the work, he said, with aeataee aad dispatch for the modest hasorarluro of It ceats, or two WU; a turn ba needed to appease tbe wage of aa mM fMy Hto very raHuUk Ixwgaln wm prHJB declined- Sat he soon foiuU an et)lr fcowsehoMw wilfc coal to he carried i, who ve him tbe Job anjl a kindly WWd Tk - T l- ft B U Haulm ut Reu- Uvtiv M ww moeb lMenet4 to the irim then to 0 uyMrMM of uw (' who w u5n a . "HIT'S NOT THE DOOCED PAtN, BUT HIT'S W oJPSSS- -: bN2vv "wvaw 2?3&gX3&k'. JSSS ?m two bits to pack n ton of coal. Lewis had a pleasant tlmo recalling himself to his "bit less" acquaintance. A year, ago Lewis was In Paris much need ing treatment for an aching tooth. A friend directed him tu a famous American dentist. The latter had no sooner got his patient In tho chair and told him to open his mouth and bo rubbrc dammed thnn tho distinguished American 'Senator discovered in the distin guished American dentist the man who' had given him two bits to pack a ton of coal. "Ho hurt mo like the dovll." Bald the Sena tor, telling the story, "but I smiled all dur ing tho operation, as well as I could under tho distressing circumstances " "MUMMERS"' OF 50 YEARS ACO Origin or Philadelphia's New Year Pageant and Its Growth lo Its Prcecut Popularity. THIS New Year shooters aro sometimes re ferred to as "mummers," but though that designation originally was the correct one. It is not properly applicable to the clubs which wo sec in fantastic parade on Broad sttect on tho first day of tho year. Tho mum mer Is English, while tho New Year shooter is tho product of our own "Neck." The nntlqulty of tho Christinas mummer Is admitted, but tho New Year shooter docs not appear to date back much farther than 7B years, and, as wo havo known him of late, not more than 50 years. There Is, however, a historical connection. The custom In tho "Neck" In the old days was known locally us "Bell Snicklin'." Tho quaintly attired, youths who visited tho old homesteads In the lower part of tho city on New Year's Uvo carried bells In their hands or wore bells attached to their costumes. They also carried pistols or guns and tired them occasionally; hence the term, "New Year Shooter." i All this was before tho organization of tha Now Year Clubs, now so numerous. Tho old time shooters in tho "NccU" used to travel in small parties nnd usually were known at all the houses they lslted, but Instead of nttlrlng themselves as Father Christmas, Beelzebub, tho Doctor and St. George, the principal characters In the play of St. George, which the English mummers used to recite on their visits, they had no play. With them went two fiddlers and a man with a trian gle or an accordion. Ono of the company, who may be said to havo been the leader, would recite a long piece of doggerel to this effect: "Mr. and Mrs, We wish o"U Merry Christmas and Happy New Year; Wo coma tonight your hearts for to cheer. We've traveled tho neighborhood round and round, And very good neighbors wo hao found. We've shot oft our guns for a Now Year, And hopo that this your hearts will cheer." It may be Interesting to know that the appealing verses ended with an exhortation to "virtue, liberty and Independence," which sentiment of the Belt Snicklin' visit was bor rowed from the State motto. Something to eat and drink always fol lowed, and afterward theto was a dance to the musle of the fiddles and trlanglo: These occasions used to bo looked forward to with delight by all the participants, both visitors and visited. And for a long time the custom was so completely confined to the Neck that it was unknown in the northern pajrta of tho city. What Is regarded as the first real organ ization of New Year shooters was known as the Chain Gang. whlcn Is balleyed to have been formed in 1840. About the time of the Civil War there was a club composed of members or adherents of the Shiftier Hose Company, and known os Santa Anna's Cavalry, which made a tour of the southern part of the ity on New "Year's Eve and the following day. After the Civil War suoh clubs m the Golden Crown, the Silver Crown and the Clements Jew year Association sprang up. and aarly in the 70s the clubs ventured a far north as Market street. The Shootera paraded ou the sidewalk, for (the streets we muddy and badl paved fith cobbles. Tk cluba became numwaui, and from the Neck flMlly spread to alt Paris at I the city. WUaia. recent years ajmiwr or ganizations have appeared In other oitiw. So much money was speat upon the dis plays here as tu caiiso a demand that tbe clubs should Join forces and, parade on Broad street About i yearn $, aftr long nego tiation Intended tu minlmlie the i Hairy an agreement was rem bed and the annual pageant 4 ittUiui.i. 'the -U pi stes considerable wow,y km ptsec &um ef the clabu pend a ret deJ tar lr eo iumt, aJUMrtrft. , A ogtatu u uii t an il ltx unrfM 4 M hav um JdofW, the cwtur racejwittf IS9A TRUTH ABOUT LONDON-COLORED NEWS What Happens in Peace and War in the Clearing House of Transat lantic Information Some Reasons Why Nations ' Misunderstand .One Another. By BURTON KLINE CURIOUS how tho conflict on tho other stdo heats tho imagination at great dls tanco from Its fires. Since their reduction of Liege, Namur and Antwerp, the Gormans havo been charged with a genius in diaboli cal foresight that would bo perversoly llat tcilng If It wero not so Impossible and ridicu lous A story was circulated that a powder factory outsldo of Namur, outwardly owned by Frenchmen, was actually tho property of the Krupps, obtained through an Interme diary and long operated under a blind. This factory, so ran the story, supplied tho pow der, dcllbetately and diabolically made de fective, which blew up the several French battleships Bunk in port several years ago, with terrible loss of lite. Tho some factory, the same story detailed, was built purposely to hldo concrete gun bases at an exactly cal culated rango from ,the Namur fortifications. When the time camo for them to fall, tho Germans had little moro to do than push a button and see Namur disappear! Stories of the same breed crept into print after the fall of Antwerp. The usual gun bases had been dlscovored under tho usual disguises, carefully built and placed at the usual time before. General Sherman's other historic war com ment applies to theso tales "Important If true." There may be some basis of fact In Iho yarns. The Germans have devoted n deplorable amount of time, energy, money nnd ingenuity to the arts and exigencies of war. But to accept such tales literally la to credit that people with powers as unde served as they aro undesirable. A Corner In News Even so, tho case against the Germans might bo believable If the yarns about their uncanny Machlavclllsm were not now matched by charges against the 1 British which Impute to them tho same isuper humnn talents, Tho accusation has sprung up that for over a century Englanti has feloniously cornered the world's output of pens, and has adulterated and colored ill, to of England and to the damage of the profit of all the rest of tho world. Every great event, the Indictment runs, has been exhibited to the world precisely as England has seen lit that it shall be exhibited. In consequence America has been misrepresented abroad for' over a centuiy. For a century wo have been miscomprehending Europe, and Europe has been miscomprehending us, because the news of us, and for us, has been strained through the British clearing house 'of Information, It Is all tho fault of London that America has been known only for Its lynchlngs, for the gunmen of New York, for the monkey-dinners at Newport; that France has been wholly a Dreyfus case; that Russia has been a land given up to Jew-baltlng1 and all be cause a sinister diplomacy In London has willed and made It so. The indictment even runs to particulari ties. News of tlie Russo-Jap war was so colored In London for the American market that we stampeded as a people to the slde'of England's ally, Japar), and only reached the sanity of a revulsion of feeling when we later learned the deception. This In spite of the fact that Richard Harding Savis was on the Job! By England's deejee. Prance was "de cadent" for decades, until tlje Entente Cor dlale oe,me Into being. Then France promptly .became "renascent," again at the touch of the London pressman. - Is Jt true? It Is trfte that Loudon is the eommerolal and financial clearing house Her the world. It is th world's bank, tbe world's trt, the metropolis and centre of the pjajaat. But it Is so because tho British, in a thousand ears of thrift and virtue as a pople, have made it so. It it wot at tha bobeat J the British will, it is because of the attraatten of British importance. Xtmt ttt world looks to Lwda as it doM, It is. wt by dwree of ibi SrtUsb. but at our own pleasure, that London has also ba the hulletln board of th.aworld provided that U so. And it is nothing more than natural that in piling the new ou tblr eofttntl butfetiu. the MUsh should ex hibit a BritUh hias. Yet If we oumeive. or if the French or the Oenoan, vw m a tmilar situeHua, if a thousand yfi u thrift and rwm m4 gvea i the uiut jjwtixe buuW ee it in the tarns fwhioo ap the mme U. Hswvs,i unartut Jt IMji g, s fjjj HIT LOOKS, E KNOW!" i that bias a deep, deliberate, studied, settled practice of warping tho world's news a com modity that Is not sold In a sealed bag, by the waj to tho everlasting profit of Eng land and tj tho damago of all else that is akin to tho discovery of German gun bases planted with diabolical cunning beforehand all ocr Franco and Belgium. The product of a heated imagination! It Is perfectly true that for years t,hc Eng lish papers havo been served by correspond ents in America who throw Into unfair prora Incnco the monkey-dinner's at Newport, the lynchlngs In Kentucky, tho labor wars in Lawrenco nnd Colorado. They havo sccmod to centre their attention solely upon tho sensational. But correctly to Interpret ono peoplo to another calls for a Bryce or JJe Tocquovllle. Tho average correspondent," even tho exceptional cot respondent, Is prone to pick up his news where It Is most salient and easily gathered. But that Is the worst that can bo charged against him. A Dangerous Lampoou The truth Is that nothing Is so difficult for. a peoplo as really to understand and be friendly with another people. Arnold Ben nett, with every disinclination to offend a people whom ho professes to admlro and who adrnlio him, recently libeled this country ab surdly In studies of us that ho meant to bo flattering. Dickens has libeled us. Kipling m nueicu us., curing tho Lawrenco strike, so sober and so carefully conducted a Journal as tho London Nation published an absurd article. In the coutse of which this country was represented to bo in such a state that tho Lawrence strike was simply a dally In cident, scarcely more than typical, of a labor chaos that was engulfing tho whole land and threatening it profoundly. But has England been alnno in this error of mydpla? How long has it been since twisting the British Ion's tali was tho handy resort of every Amerlin editor, when news was scarce and he had nothing elso to say? During the period when tho English delighted to sneer at the French as decadent, with tho Dreyfus trial us Indisputable proof of it Albion was never anything but perfidious in the French mind and in the French press, which one time went the length of lampoon ing Queen Victoria In a manner that almost provoked war. The whole truth of tha matter seems to be .that misunderstanding, and at Jeaat verbal hostility, nro the normal stata of peoples. Only when self-interest shows the toy do they see their folh-. rni ,.. . ! Wrench und English suddenly found that their Interests in Eurorm ,. m..i-. ,.: thW as suddenly d.scoVer ch 3 tutes and forget ouch 'other's faults. it this Ulmeiely talk, then so was the fault-finding anl lampooning that preceded It merely talk. L Tariff Teace Chicago Htmld. mI', '". i4r,ft """"'"Ion may ,10t Bive ablep men than the party tanr .v,H . ui and We. But it will giv"us a,, "iKlrT . Jlflc Utaudpolm. It will gne g, tariff o.ct bscaijse it will tend to take thU n"er-endi?S caysel of turmoil out of politics """-endlna- A Plurality of One rram not Avsuila Qbroolde 5rtiK.i,H "! -. ? tour PM,u. lanolf Viiia's vote lg araC HOPELKSSfAMDITION victim of the dancing erase f seek a .kilt lum.TT "! B row da.w to dak I swd ij i... Wu ait tbe devreu adepts i ut though l Raver ,. iTSuM do my -wt. i tkir. .-j -....-. I keeUate. 1 di i'TT """"' ' -S. Jf " e4 the ttrt. The tango, tedoie n4 tb ,iiot. Fiom caoaret. toLUtiTad. .bow on danclog iuhu th Jl-u, i tent kep u itb u. thert, u ? . ,7" my iei i T, J " ' alf "era SJfcot, i ab now ,. r,",,, f 1 s I M 3 va V' (.-J m II 1 J '. - t .. ""?. ?f-'r ?- sS'i"- -' $&& - &v-iMi. aaiftAs- asi mat JssB .p , ? X .. sfe'1" -iri3teSKiiilMKitei:rttfisjfii- i T s. -4