r9f9 w$ffl&-f-W'v1P!,SV'x'-Wr " "m!fnif' 'wy' m A tM f ftfimftuj, ilMhjer PUTlLid LEDGER COMPANY . crnus it. k. ctrnns. rtsre:T. dro.'IV. bcti, Scrtryi John C. Martin. Trtttureri Ctuwltt It. Lndfaiion, rhlllp B. Cellini, John fa. Wl llrn. Dlftttan. EDITOnlAti HOARD I Ciats H. K. CciTis, Chlrmn. tAMSTf . Eieeuli Editor ' . . .'itXnTIN Otntftl Dulnt Mtnsgtr Xt)Mtntal dally t rcBt.io t-irvira Dulldlnr, lndeptniiinc BiUr, Philadelphia, X.tmt CiKTBtt .Broad and Cheatnut 8lret Anintor CitT rrrsa-titlon Building It aw Task 170-A, Metropolitan Tower Cmo09 81" item Iniuranea Dulldlnr Lfl.NDOX 8 Waterloo Dace, rail Mali, 8. TV. NEWBDUItEAUSt tfiiataacaa Bctlio . Th ralHal Bultdlnir wiamtravroN ucaaan TBe roit uuildinn wmdtr(iK,r.cno.. The rim.i iiuiMinn fttU,Brritnv......... ..no rrlMrlchtrM lANroN.Ilraaatr .....2 Pall mm mot. h w. fauasctxao . . 32 nua Louti la Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Br. carrier, Dailt Oslt, al centa. By malt, ponlpald tutalde of Philadelphia, except where foreign poetate la i-ou'rsd, DiiLt Onlt, n month, twentynre cenlaj DtttT Okli, one year, three dollar. All mall aub Mtlptlona pajable In adrance. Bstx,sooowALmrr KEYSTONE, MAIN 8000 l W J.Sint oil communication! to Evening I Liair, JnitTtndenet S quart, rhltadttphla. ' ' ' ' . ... i 1 ammo At tn rniucii.rxu roirornci it arcoso- cuii tuit, uiTTu, fry"1 i ' .1 rillLADEU-HIA. TUESDAY, DECEMnElt 89, 1914. "When vou see failure on the troad highway itop long enough to take the reason tohu out 0 Ms pocket. Then hurry along to catch up iclth success. " TIio Old War Horse" Docs Not Flinch THE gentlemen -who nttonded the confer ence In tho Mayor's ofTIco yesterday to consider tho problem of unemployment were not at all confused or mlBled by incidentals. They know that 50,000 nops would not solvo Hie unforlunato Bltuation, and they real ized fully, too, that tho thins to bo sought in a permanent and not a temporary remedy. Tho conference represents tho first scien tific attempt to aid tho unemployed. In con trast to tho political blundering that lion characterized other so-called efforts. Tho Mayor's statement indicates that tho munic ipality and other large employers of labor Tvlll undortako to distribute employment among tho greatest number posslblo during the present crisis, to bring men and jobs to pother, and later to lnltiato legislation de vised to provide a clearing house for employ ment. Some action also will probably bo taken to compensato for seasonal employ ment and endow positions with permanency. Tho municipality's part In this program wilt depend largely on tho attltudo of Councils, which In turn is dominated by tho Finance Committee, over which John P. Connelly presides with dignity and author ity. Mr. Connolly, wo surmise, will bo glad to do something to help the unemployed If ho Is shown how. He has been somewhat stumped. It seems, by the Immensity of tho problem and its possible effects politically. Neither tho Finance Commltteo nor nny member of it would willingly keep a man out of a Job, it may safely bo sold, and If some men hold two Jobs whllo others hold none, It is plain that the committeemen are as much grieved about it as anybody else. To him who hath shall bo given If ho has tho necessary pull. Tho peoplo of Philadelphia, disgusted with Councils, havo looked to tho Mayor to over come alt difficulties and do something. Tho "Old War Horse" is not disappointing them. The conferonco yesterday was a guarantees of that, and something tangible will be done unless tho stubbornness of Councils passes nil, bounds. President Will Not Be Fooled IT IS announced that tho President will veto the Immigration bill If it comes to him with the literacy test left in it. So ho ought. The character of a man has never yet been tested in a spelling book. It may Jbp a crime to be Ignorant, provided an op portunity not to be Ignorant has been neglected, but, unfortunately, tho American public school system Is not in vogue in all parts of the world. The unterrlfled Democrats of South Caro lina, where Governor Blcaso Is about to re tire Into obscurity, would be in a pretty flee If reading and writing were required of them. A good many thousand would have to emigrate to Patagonia. Yet' they are of , good American stock and are not lacking in the attributes of patriotism. Some of the Stt, great heroes of the world regarded scholar- K.Jahtp as a sign of effeminacy. They could not "wite. and they refused to be taught. Undesirables are people lacking in moral flbre. When an X or other kind of ray that will lay bare the soul of a subject Is dis covered; our immigration rules can be made perfect. Until then, foreign police records Jfffil be better guides to exclusion than gram- mars or readers. &""' f":r Lawmaking in the Open THE newly chosen Speaker of tho Assem bly of New Jersey promises a much-needed (reform In lawmaking. Simple In Itself, it bids . fair to make those legislators who would con- ceal their ulterior ends beneath a cloak of Verbiage come forth and reveal themselves. ; t The promise is that when a legislator Intro ;du.ees an act he shall accompany it with a explaining exactly its purpose and in- ijiti Too often a "snake' has been hidden 2Iip.ln a wealth of words, virtually meaning less; In themselves, yet later found by the courts to be expressive of an entirely different meaning from that which was Understood by iii lawmakers and public at the time of Its Z3&SS2gO- New Jersey already has an examiner, or editor, of legislation, whose duty It is to see that enactments are couched In clear Eng lish; but even he has been unable to prevent LJts, He Introduction of aats the true nature of la obscure from the mere reading of sss? .... w if 9 wgwwi mat uui uwjr me wsraintr or v sat oat. but Its title, should aentaln ttt nlth Mf Its latent and meaning. TriflingDoesNotPay GQVSSNOR HARBISON ie confident t&t titer U not likely to be an outbreak 9f scteue proportions in the Piitlpflins. Why bouid there be? However tyrannous ur atfMMUctmiea mey be, U I saariy pviteK tf iDMjtpariet with what went beffer. To tm W&. th jMiPPle of the UulWd SUta? wight & xit sgatast bearing y umgir the . man 4 tounKu if tat far Unci my, nut ffeti jtajawa to eewptaUi would be the , ffrt r UHfrawiwe. 'way H&ye beMt lOWMMajf rood m rMivar PtottMl -i5 - ought to rmms w to it wtth tU fury ,jf &MMMC XUr trouoi t that uoma staculauive ana vtrvi souU Ju ttuu. pjt of tkt worW wOtn tw furwtwiy out pmtsi ytiuu- tSHw-VWHBB (Ml VflSH BHlfiJ awl: UGtB. Halt - - - - , 4 iviiSw regaled by some ef Its eloquent leaders. They have been misinformed' and beguiled. Somo of them, no doubt, have been examining their bodies for tha bruises which thoy cannot And, mid other marks of cruelty. Tho Filipinos must not be governed against their will, wherefore', say our logicians, let them bo turned over to tho tender mercies bf bandits. Olvo them freedom! Ihftt Is, let them Mexl canlzo thotnsolves. Let Ihcm riot and murder and ravage, If they want t, for It Is of such things that democracies are made. It Is n pity that tho Filipinos should be tho victims of wild theorizing here, but it has long been a maxim that there Is nothing so good ns dellveratico from ono's friends. Yes, tho Jones bill Is probably tho causo of the conspiracy, but through the proml03 of Its friends and not the opposition of Its oppo nents. Tho Incident doubtless will bo or con siderable valuo In temporlng Governor Har rison's attitude. In government trifling never pays. Tho Port is the State's THE Stato of Now York built New Tork city when It built tho Erlo Canal. Ono of the most valuablo assets of Pennsylvania Is tho port of Philadelphia. It Is nn asset which the Stato cannot nfford to let deteriorate, cither actually or comparatively. Tho port Is a plcco of machinery which must bo kept in perfect order at all times, up-to-'tlio-mlntito In equipment, and Its fa cilities offered at moderate cost to usors. That tho Stato should put tho full weight of Its credit and resources behind tho port Improve ment movement Is too obvious for argument. This Is tho program: "We recommend tlmt he Slnte lmllil iilinrveM nnd rnrelioiiei provided with llie beat mrclinnlenl trnnaalilppInK equip ment i tlint nlie nke ntepii for the com pletion nml Improvement of tlir tirlt line rnlltrnj nml Hn connection rWth vrlinrven, YrnrelionaeK and rnilromlai tlint the mnln tnln rrhnrvrn for (rnnalent or Independent venarlnt tlint alie lmllil n ilrjilork to nc rommoilnte ocenn ntramcrn of thp Inrfcrxt trpri thnt nlie keep Hip dock flrcilRCil, mid tlint nlic provide deeper chnnnela In the Delnrvnrp nml .Scliuvlkllt IllverH. If the? Initial Htep for elnhornte Improve ments nre taken at till" time, I'hltndelplitn vrlth Ita nnturnl ndvnntairra villi lie re ntored io the position of commercial nil premacr thnt lic once occupied. The sooner It is translated Into fact tho better It will bo for Philadelphia and Penn sylvania. Brain Bacteria PROF. LOUIS F. BISHOP'S theory thnt hard, consecutive brain work Induces an Insidious disease which shortens tho lives of Intellectuals need not halt tho mental efforts of the ordlnnry man. Tho majority of us aro willing to tako such chances of longevity as came to Llttre, Mommscn, Dolllngor, Emer son, Gladstone, A. G. Wallace, Cardinal Now mnn and others of similar mental calibre. In fact. It would not require a very largo ceme tery to accommodate tho men who have thought themselves to death. But even wero there such danger It would bo better to dlo young and glvo tho world n few vital thoughts than to llvo for a century and bo nothing moro than an echo. "Mc, Jim and Justice" TOUCH the Organization on tho quick and it hollers, as Director Porter has found out. Let a prisoner inform certain Magis trates that ho is under tho protection of this or that politician and his innocence is estab lished immediately; that Is, he docs not have to establish It, but is automatically released. "What is tho prisoner accused of?" "Assault and battery, your Honor." "Guilty or not guilty?" "That Is Irrelevant," Interrupts Jim Mc Shane, boss of the Steenth Ward. "The de fendant's a friend of mine." "Discharged." Simple isn't it? Yet multiply tho Incident by a thousand, and tho voting strength of Jim McShane Is easily explained. Tho fellow who gets arrested now and then for misde meanors always has the boss to say the word that gets him off scotfrce. That Is what Magistrates are for, which will bo of Interest to people who have Imagined that these emi nent gentlemen wore for ornament only. Tho police are handicapped when the friendships of a prisoner are of more impor tance than his guilt or Innocence, of course, and Director Porter Is qulto right in saying so, even If it brings down on htm the excoriation of an eminent Judge. And the "women of the street" seem to be particularly fortunate in obtaining quick releases. Direc tor Porter has the proof. Ho Is not "talk ing through his hat." That, perhaps, ex plains why the Organization is disgusted with him. Bank on Men, Not Methods THEIIE 13 nothing to criticise In the rec ommendations of the Pennsylvania Econ omy and Efficiency Commission. Undoubt edly a number of the State departments can be improved by the Introduction of up-to-date business methods. Let us reform or rearrange the auditing, systematize the pur chasing and redefine the duties of the sev eral officials, But even if we get the mech anism of administration perfectly modern and absolutely flawless It will be no guaran tee of good government. Nothing can ever be a substitute for brains and conscience. We may have antediluvian methods and medieval machinery and colo nial buildings, but if we have big, broad, enthusiastic, clean and patriotic men filling publiq offices we shall have good govern ment. The power of appointment possessed by the Qovernor Is worth more than all of his other powers combined. If he refuses to make appointments simply as a reward for past political services, or with a. view to insuring a future party Victory, and makes his choice purely upon the character and (he ability of the candidates, he can be aure of a notable and successful administration. VI i ii. 141 The President came within two years of being 60 years oW yesterday. It.le all right for the Italians to Albania, but there hag never been a who eould stay there. take king TMs Mexican business la pretty hard qn epoyelopedht jwbHshers who are trying to keep their volume up te the rslnut. .There are alwaya plenty of tteqveqUoiu meetisg la Philadelphia, and tfcw sa jqsre. It t titt canvewteat place. TUe trouble with tha Kiii1ii is that Jut aMt the time Uwir asUnt teres man to bve been whipped tha nwta amy a'rtva. Th aeroplane 1 doing tkft WW the ytjMHttne are waiting tor inraMpiug to turn u. it u t mosquito tbt eout i& jnta warfare, B - iS'fflB - si'iiADiaLiJaiA: fltraspAY.' djboembbb POLAND'S UNDYING ' NATIONAL SPIRIT ii !! . i nn a--n as Whnt the War Means to a Country Suf fering, Like Belgium, tho Hardships of a Conflict Which It Had No Part in Making. Dy EDMUND FULLER SHOULD this wnr end with tho autonomy, If not the lndcpcndcnco of Poland, such a reward for fidelity to Russia In her hour of need would be no unduo compensation for tho trials through which the unhappy land Is now passing. Tho Poles, llko tho Belgians, arc suffering from tho hardships of a contest In which they originally had no Interest. The determining battles between Itussla and Ger many nro taking placo on Polish sollr'and,. which over wins, desolation must bo for the tlmo tho portion of tho people. Tho woes of Poland nro ns familiar In ro mance as In history. In that tearful novel which a former generation rend with avidity, "Thnddcus of Warsaw," thoy wero recited with sentimental rnpturc: and tho Thoddetls of our old friend, "Tho Bohemian Girl," could always bring down tho liouso with his stir ring referenco to tho tlmo when tho fair land of Poland won plowed by the hoof of tho ruthless Invader. Freedom's Shriek Tho historian, less partial, has had to con fess that, little as tho partitions of the coun try wero justified In morals, the Inhabitants themselves wrro not wholly blameless for the fate that overtook them. Freedom may havo shrieked when Koscluszko fell, but sho had been previously wounded In tho house of her frlonds. It would hardly be nn exaggeration to say that tho Inability of tho Poles to gov ern themselves made their country for years tho plaguo spot of Kuropc. Almost from Its first nppcarnnco In history, Poland was cursed with a military nristocrncy quite as nrrogant as that of Prussia In later days a class out of sympathy with tho needs nnd de sires of tho body of tho peoplo. Tho country emerges from the darkness at the end of tho 10th century with tho achieve ments of Its first King, Bolcslhus, who, after Incessant warfare, dominated tho wholo re gion from tho Carpathians to tho Baltic and tho Elbo to the Bug. When ho died tho wholo structuro collapsed, and for nearly three .centuries Poland, divided and sub divided, was dovnslatcd by her neighbors. Tho Tartar invasion In tho mlddlo of tho 13th contury left her well-nigh prostrate. Tim Lithuanians nnd tho Teutonic Knights be tween them might have completed tho work had It not happened that tho force of clrcum-l stances drew Poland and Lithuania together under ono King. In 1B0B Slglsmund tho Great came to tho throne, nnd under him nnd his son the king dom far exceeded Its old power under Bolcs laus. Its western boundary was 90 miles from Berlin, Its eastern 150 miles from Mos cow. Its population doubled, Its Industries developed and settled government blessed Its Inhabitants. But with tho death of tho sec ond Slglsmund it paused under tho sway of elected kings, its Diet became nn oligarchy, nnd Its aristocratic military casta obtained full domination. Nor was tho rule of this caste oven efficient. Tho llberum veto, or tho right which nny member had of objecting to and thus blocking legislation, mado It possi ble for an Individual or a faction to force tho Diet to a policy of Inaction, no matter what the peril of such a policy might bo. This brought tho nation to anarchy on more than ono occasion. In fact, tho history of Poland from this tlmo down to tho third partition In 1795 Is n rather dreary chronicle of disorder nnd dis aster which the heroic deeds of men like SobleskI and Koscluszko cannot altogether redeem. SobleskI defeated the TurkB and saved Vienna, but ho accomplished nothing in the way of tho Internal reforms which tho country needed so much. It may be doubted If any ono could havo done this. Tho turbu lent nobles had the real power, and they used It solely for their own benefit. Tho miseries of the peasant claBs could hardly have been greater under a foreign tyranny. The Land of Kosciuszko Soblcskl's successor was Augustus of Sax ony. Ho Involved tho country In war with Sweden, nnd Charles XII tried to forco Stanislaus Lcczynskl on tho Poles as their King. He did not accomplished his object; but tho elective nature of the monnrchy en abled Russia later to get the place for Au. gustus HI, and on his doatlt for Ponlatowskl. These wero tho events which led to a league among the more enlightened Poles to reform the Government and to preserve the national independence, now obviously threatened. The movement failed, and the various partitions of Poland among Russia, Prussia and Aus tria followed. It was against the second par tition. In 1793, that Kosciuszko and his as sociates fought. That episode Is In some respects the mpst splendid in all Polish history. Kosciuszko, as Mme. Sembrlch has reminded us, had fought In the American Revolution, where he greatly distinguished himself under Gates and Washington, and was chief engineer In constructing the fortifications at West Point. After tho war he received the thanks of Con gress, and was made brevet brigadier gen eral. These military experiences were of value to him In his attempt to free Poland, Although finally defeated, he kept tho field for six months against a greatly superior force. Thereafter Poland ceased to exist, To Austria, Russia and Prussia went the spoils and the honors of war. Austrian Poland has been fairly contented, Russian Poland, after the failure of the lib eral constitution granted by Alexander I, has been a hotbed of smoldering hatred against the barbarous methods of its masters. German Poland has resisted to the uttermost the.polloy of peopling it with German Immi grants. Yet In this time of trial the sym pathies of the Poles seem to be mainly Rue-, slan, largely because of the promises which the Russian Government has made. Whether these promises are, kept or not, whether Poland la reunited under the Russian or the German flag, the undying spirit of nationality has been greatly revived by the very dis tresses from which the people suffer. Not the least Important change In the map of Burqpe Is likely to be obssrved here when the war s over. Jo.hrt Muir and Emeraon Frero tha Na Tarit Sua, To John Mukr there was no pvu, nothing IsMtar, rude or UBoeexwiUt In the American wiU4fM. "One should go m the woods for safety t said. CivHtxd town he reuded as tW dAWrw awd hotJi, A wui' could ts.k ear f Wwwlf la the vytWarai aad natsite was hoMitasi. He ofsottowi vt be pfeafbad. With a bundle of bread ad '$ U be wt Into the Storraa akws at all time of she y 8awe might drift aad frwetaf beat, but John Muir was safe anjt lasey; in the tmmamiouB moods of nature he feu elattou TM lar km a coav&d Muir never carried ftiunasr-the rUWuki harttM U not iwo- V vofcad, od the water , betsod sftey vr khuikuc rapnaa, mmmm nm mvmtm mmoay i th rl4i Om at Mi rUt dfeatveiat- hb nm0MmmmiimmmtM maainin. ...... o, CD") liiiliilni ments of Mtilr's life wns Emerson's shrinking from a night In the sequoias under tho stars. The Concord philosopher came to see the big trees, Muir was his guide and a sunset glow transfigured tho west. What an opportunity for the author of tho "Song of Nature"! In vain his admirer pladed with him. It wns getting late. tho dews wero falling, there wns a chill In the hlr, tho camp bed wns rough, strango nolnes wero abroad, and Emerson left Muir to his wilderness. OLD-TIME HOLIDAY "ADDRESSES" Night Watchmen of Philadelphia Used to Pre sent New Year Verses to the Householders. THBRB Is a species of native poetry that has completely passed into eclipse, and though to a largo extent it was rather crudo In stylo and not very lofty In Its homely sentiments, It seems a pity that It Is no more. For many years the native muse used to find expression In tho "addresses" which wore distributed by tho newspaper carriers and by tho city's night watchmen, before tho days of tho Police. Tho annual addresses which tho watch men used to present to householders in ex pectation of a gratuity at Christmas went, of course. Into oblivion when tho city was consolidated and tho watchmen gave place to a moro or less regular police. But tho newspaper carriers continued tho custom un til about tho end of the Civil Wnr. That was a period of reconstruction In this city, as well as In tho South. Tho old times and old customs were beginning to glvo way to newer ideas and practices. There was something delightful about tho unabashed way In which tho watchmen and tho newspaper carriers offered In verso their claims to bo remembered at tho festive sea son of Christmas and New Year's. In tho eighteenth century, when tho carriers, then usually boys, began to present tho sheet containing a poetical description of world enveloping events of tho year coming to a close, tho verses were of a higher type than In the last century, when In all of tho watch men's addresses a decidedly mercenary noto wns struck. In the carriers' addresses, al most until tho custom died, tha verses wore moro of au offering than a dcllberato de mand for a gift. A few of these ancient addresses still re main In the collections of antiquaries, and they give a fnlrly lively Impression of Just what the custom was. The newsboys of tho eighteenth century, as did their successors, the carriers of the nineteenth, usually se lected some writer with a poetical gift who would agree to write the verses for a small sum, or, perhaps, would do It as a con tribution to the cause. In the collected works of the young Penn sylvania poet, Nathaniel Evans, who died In 1767, In his 25th yor, there will bo found a copy of tho address ho wrote for the news boys to give to their customers at New Year's, 1762. Evans was a young minister who had decided poetical gifts, and no one who reads his "Verses for tho New Year, 1762," will doubt that probably not one of his young newsboys had-any very clear idea of what he was driving at. The verses ara filled with poetical Blmlles, which must havo entirely passed over the heads of those whom they were Intended to profit. It was, In short, a rather high flight. The addresses of the old-tlme watohmen went right to tho point, and even debated it with the prospective giver. The address of the Philadelphia watchmen for the year 1818 is an excellent example of the style, both of the verses and of the rather humor ous audacity of the petition, In the course, of a dialogue between a watchman and a, oltlzen this occurs: CITIZEN. You've no title of me to expect a reward. With all the appearance and pride of a lord: For-watghlng Philadelphia, there's taxes ap ' pear, Yet you roust come round at the close of eaeh year. WATCHMAN. And put you In mind of the taxes you pay. CITIZBN. I never refuse to be Hbral and kind When an good reason, at all ! asejgRed. WATCHMAN. I'm confident the you'U be USfil to me. The Wat&roans hard lot It Is fFeijently In a Ue&teroiw sight, when he has to go round. Is a hard OB, indeed for tbrotwh bait, fefn asd ssow, Aftd tfee sJsW e'er jo dark be Mtut mr. steAUy g The tour te cry awl tfe Won to soUu, WMet the alumbertiw cttlson rente at ids ease. Ever on the alert to you froui barm. Should fire break out b give th hXtpm. And thu pruperty rocuo fwwe, vxoutBCfl And v tmtf tho towa J Uut ann JUSTICEWILL NOW BE DISPENSED CCO UNEMPLOYMENT AND Cost to "Workers and Society at Large of Present Inefficient Means of Bringing the Jobless Man and the Manless Job Together. By JOHN B. ANDREWS SmeUrj Arorricin AiloclaUon for Labor Lfglililioa. Br iptclal orranltmeat ilh Tho Now Republic IT IS uppurcut to any ono who knows any thing about tho Biibject that our labor market i3 unorganized and that thcro Is a tremendous wasto of tlmo and energy In tho Irregular and haphazard employment of workers. It Is this very groat social wasto which wo aro Just beginning to appreciate, but every method for overcoming it so far tried in America has been painfully Inade quate. Tho first and simplest method of bring ing workmen and work together Is by un systematic Individual search. A man not recommended for a position by a relatlvo or frlond often follows tho easiest course, that which Involves tho least Immediate ex penditure of money and thought. Ho starts from homo and drops In at every sign of "Help Wanted." "Help Wanted," scrawled on a piece of cardboard, is tho symbol of Inefficiency In tho organization of tho labor market. The haphazard practlco of tramping tho streets In search of It Is no method at all. It as sures success neither to the Idle worker In his search for work, nor to the employer In his search for labor. On the contrary, by Its very lack of system It needlessly swells tho tide of unemployment, and through tho footweary, discouraging tramp ing which It necessitates often leads to vag rancy nnd to crime. Tremendous Wajte It Is Impossible to reckon tho cost to the community of this methodlcss mothod. Be yond tho tremendous waste of time, there Is tho waste Incurred by putting men Into tho wrong Jobs. Tho law of chance decrees that, under such lack of care, misfits must be the rule; and society now permits tho dally process of attempting to fit a round peg Into a square hole, A second common method of connecting employer and employe is through the me dium of advertising. About 2000 newspapers published in New York State carry every year somo 800,000 columns of '"Help Wanted" and "Situation Wanted" advertising, at a cost to employers and employes estimated at $20,000,000 an expenditure of about 5 for every worker in the State. If the money spent brought commensurate results, there would bo less ground for complaint. But at present an employer advertises for help In several papers, because all the workers do not read the same paper. The employe lists the positions advertised, and then starts on the day's tramp. At ono gate 60 or 100 men may be waiting for a single Job, while In other places a hundred employers may be waiting, each for a single employe. Unnec essary duplication of work and expense by both parties la apparent. Philanthropic employment bureaus fall mainly because of the taint of charity which Justly or unjustly clings to them, and have become for the most part merelybureaus for placing tho handicapped. Self-reliant workmen are Inclined to shun such agencies, and employers do not generally apply there for efficient labor. Charging small fees or none at all. these offices nro unable to com pete with the moro active private agencies which spend large Bums of money develop Ing clienteles among employers and em ployes. Trade union "day rooms" and of fices maintained by employers' associations have to contend with mutual distrust, while their bsneflts are at best limited to one trade or Industry, "Employment Shark" Private employment agents, doing fcusl ntsa for profit, have sprung up In nil large centres, no, fewer than 800 of them beJng lleensed in New York city atone. While wajiy of these operate with a reasonable degree of effleleney, thejr general character Is ploturesauely If not elegantly indicated by their eoubrlquet, "employment shark." In the year ending May 1. wis, tha Com, milar Ucensoa of the city of Now Yortc reported tna Investigation of 1838 com plants against registered ei4omot agMtft, resulting in nine wavkloaI tho Winn; o swo uus 'tftw to victteiti2 apUcat3 and the revocation f is MCII Among tho wore evil law Rt the door of tho prtvite s4HUcJ are charw7 esttw Usw fee, mtim fee- wt,ta wnployer yrtw. after , tw d, tUttM --ftmiji to mm wbt isur fitUt wttk TOH" MAGISTRATE'S COURT NO, 4114-1- THE LABOR MAEKET new fee, collusion with immoral resorts.' sending applicants to places where there Is ' no work, and general misrepresentation of: conditions. Only recently the writer heard from a Northern Now England labor otriclal a har rowing story of tho lumber camps, where workers had been sent from prlvato agencies In New York and were fined and Imposed upon to an extraordinary degree. Eight men, including a printer, a painter and a clerk, wero sent by another New York pri vate employment ngont to what was de scribed In their contracts n3 "construction work, machinist and contract work." Tho men found themselves In a Pittsburgh steel mill, before tho furnaces. Physically unablo to do the work required of them, they had to apply to tho office of associated charities for asslstanco in finding work at their trades. Although nn Investigation wns made, New . York Stato was unable to tako any action, as nono of the complainants was within its jurisdiction. Such examples could be multi plied almost Indefinitely. Need of National Exchange System Public employment bureaus, designed partly as an offset to tho abuses of the prlvato agencies, date In America from 1890, when Ohio authorized the first State sys tem. Today there are between 70 and 80 such bureaus, maintained by 10 States and by a dozen or more municipalities. Notwithstanding tho work of a few, theso public bureaus are still far from furnishing an adequate medium for the exchange of Information on' opportunities for employ ment. Every ono who has studied tho problem realizes that method and Bystcm in putting men and opportunities for work in touch with f ach other will not of themselves prevent oversupply of labor or of Jobs. They will do so no more than the Cotton Exchange guards against nn over or an under supply of cot ton. They will serve merely as lovelers in tho scales of labor supply and labor demand. Besides the unemployment which Is due to the failure of men and jobs to And each other, thcro Is much due to other causes which even the best system of employment exchanges would not directly eliminate. But every one realizes that these other causes of unemployment cannot be success, fully attacked without a basis In compre hensive, conscientiously collected Informa tion such as cannot be furnished by our present machinery for dealing with the prob, ' lem. Under present methods there exists no automatic, cumulative means for collecting the facts. That results, of course, in exag gerated statements In both directions. Our paucity of information on this complex and vital question, has continued, even though labor problems in one form or another have taken the lead as subjects for legislation. Any scientific lawmaking on tho programs of social Insurance especially unemploy ment Insurance and of vocational guidance must be grounded on facts of relative em ployment and unemployment of the workers tabulated by trades, by sexes and bv aces. Without a nation-wide system of labor ex- cnanges, np basis can exist for anticipating In an accurate manner the ebbs and flows of the demand for labor. Without concen tration of the Information now collected and now held separately in thousanda of sep arate organisations throughout tho land, the poselblllty of looking into the future, or of profiting by the past. Is out of tho question. ROSTAND AT WTEIMS nndrd In t Vrftneh &P V.iij Y9,i,t by Thom,i Ju , , -,. ., f? J m mot Immortal still. thHU. !. P?rbe primal TU8I.tv!fa 'wt 01 th mil; b pf!8 ho brok Uv with notour wo4 Wl WW 1U .,,wWM! uvtacr thro lu ikaw - S TAJTflLrl (asVU ' ' " ' 5S t4d Wwh giateftu. 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