EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JANUABY 20, 191B. 8 M ., .-.. i. .m, i nfc. iii i tJh.a,M 1 , ,.,.. ,.., ii-.t- r -ii- - - Aliening Wtiitv PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY craua it k. cuims, ritsiBNT. John C Martin. Treasureri Charles Ludlntton, Phlllt) a Colllnt, John It. Wllllamt, Directors. - - - - - - - ' EDlTOMALBOAriDt Ctarja tt K. Coma, Chairman. p.u. vntKt.br Executive Editor ' JOHN C MARTIN .Oancral BuHnus Manastr . i rubllM dally at Penile Liootn DulMInc, Independence Square, Philadelphia. IMsf-jra Ce.nivAL. ......... .Broad and Chettnut Streets ATLANTIC Cm....,,,. ....,, ....rrfU-Unlon Building- Naw ToaK.... ...,170-A, Metropolitan Tower Cnlciao. SIT Home Insurant Bulldlnr Loxtxm. ....... ...8 Waterloo Place, Tall Mall, S. W. NrarsDURBAUSt IlAtunssnud DrwiAU. . , Th ratriot Ttulldlnit Washington ntiutAU... ,. Th Pout nulldlnc Nfir York IIibbao... Th Timet ltulldlnr Btnt.l.v Buskau ..(10 Prledrlehatraaaa txjNPOi noRu 2 Pall Mall Kat. H. W. Piala IIsbkao 32 nue Louts la Grand SUnSCRIPTlON TERMS Br carrier, Dailt Onlt, alx cent". By mall, poatpald outalda of Philadelphia, except where foreign postnre la required, Dailt O.vlt, one month, twenty-nva centas DAit.t Only, one year, three doljara. All mall iub crlptlona payable In advance. BELL, 3000 WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 3000 BT" Aidrtst oil communications (0 Evening ledger, Independence Bquart, Philadelphia, trrnro at Tna ruiuDitrniA roarorrica is second cn.A a a kail VAtrta. rillLADELrillA, WCDNtiSDAr, JANUAKV 20, 191S. The legislative oath of office actually perform no supernatural function, confers no mantle of wisdom or prophecy, although tome gentlemen teem to suspect this f themselves. Secretary Itcdfield Nibbles the Bait THE Montgomery County manufacturers now have the opportunity for which they were seeking. They had the audacity to com plain of the effect of tho tariff law on their business, and Secretary Redfield has sent an Investigator among them to find out whether they know what thoy aro talking about. They have facts and figures, and they are ready to give as many of them to tho Investi gator as ho Is willing to take, on tho condi tion that ho docs not attompt to Juggle them Into meaning something entirely different from their plain Indication. If foreign goods have displaced American goods; If It has been necessary to dtschargo operatives as a result, and If thero has been no compensat ing advantage to tho consumer through a reduction In tho price of tho goods, the case for the manufacturers Is made out and tho tariff Is condemned. Secretary Retinoid threatened to send In vestigators Into the first factory from which complaint about tho tariff law was made and provo that tho law was beneficial. If he falls ho must In Justice to himself and his party demand tho repeal of tho law. Tho Montgomery County manufacturers, confi dent that he would fall, baited tholr hook for him, and he has begun to nibble. Our Greatest Provincial City SAMUEL UNTERMYER proved that ho Is a man of flno discrimination when ho said to tho Industrial Relations Commission that "the financial people of Now York have less knowledge of tho real sentiment of tho country than a man from Oshkosh. We are the most provincial people of tho country." Tho provincialism of Now York has long been notorious. It thinks that the Blow sub sidence of tho earth about New York har bor Is due to tho great weight of wealth and Intellect collected thero. But tho rest of tho country knows that this Is a delusion, and that If It were not for the continual re cruiting of that city from other cities It would dry up and catch flro In the heat of Its own conceit. It took Mr. Untermyer, Who Is a "Virginian by birth and only a New Yorker by adoption, to tell the truth to his fellow citizens. "Shinny on His Own Side" LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR McCLAIN Is J too anticipatory. Tho Senate has gener ally exorcised Its rights and prerogatives and there has been no indication of a desire on the Governor's part to spank the body or go after it with a club. It so happens, however, as the Lieutenant Governor ought to know, that tho Governor is part and parcel of the legislative branch. He has more to say about legislation, In a negative way, than any Senator at Harris burg, for he is endowed with the power of veto. His approval Is a prerequisite to legis lation, unless there Is an overwhelming ma jority against him in both branches of the Legislature. More than that, by common acceptance, the Governor, In his recom mendatory capacity. Is required to map out for the Legislature the program of its ac tivities, and he Is expected by the people to use the grejat power of his office to fur ther the definite enactments which he, and his party through him, have promised the Commonwealth. Mr. McCIaln cannot make a figurehead of Doctor Brumbaugh. 'That la not what the Governor is there for. If he has to ply the whip he will do It, but it would be a foolish Legislature that would let things get to that point. If Mr. McClaln takes care of his own ahlnnying, the Governor will take care of his. Needs to Be Waked Up CINCINNATI Is peevish. "Billy" Sunday, it appears, who never beats the devil about the bush, but always thumps him bard on the bead, has not been so polite and re served in his references to the baseball me tropolis of Ohio as the touchy gentlemen of that city desired; wherefore the evangelist must disavow his remarks or his presence Will not be desired. Evidently Cincinnati has been deceived. If It wanted honeyed words and sweet noth ings. It should never have flirted with a man who deals In neither. For, Irrespective qf all considerations of theology and religion, Billy" Bunday is a bundle of punch and then more punch. What he has said about Cin cinnati is as nothing compared to what he will say about Cincinnati If he ever gets there. Therefore, It is a good place for him to go. The town Is too well pleased with itself. It needs to be waked up. Italy la Stricken, But Undaunted THE Calabrlan earthquake of Tuesday is without doubt an echo from the slipping pr the great geological fault lrt the Abruixl on Wednesday of last week, when pearly 0,000 lives were lost and property valued at 150,030,000 was destroyed. The settling of the earth In the reglqn where tho Apennines tower highest caused tremblings north as far as, Piedmont and aa far south as Naples. The Cosenaa district of Calabria Is near the southern tfnd of the peninsula, and It Is mountainous also. The quaklngs of Mount Aotna ur frmmtly fsk there. But this if mi so fat a tb report mdKate, Astna, Is Tr ': 5 If n(ifi; tiLSi.i Mt IttjBAKABt tO SOn- rfi..- i. aw twsetby mean t r a.fjinle equilibrium has been restor"jd In tho earth masses, thoro wilt be moro quakes and mora destruction of llfo and property. And man Is helpless to prevent It and blind to forcsco It. The causes are hidden far beneath tho surfaco and lie in tho processes of earth for mixtion. But Italy, tho homo of civilization and the seat of world power for centuries, Is not daunted nor abashed by any earth forces. It will rebuild the wrecked buildings and tho survivors of tho tragedy will faco tho futuro with audacious faith that they can llvo out their lives boforo tho earth about them quivers again In the cooling process. Entitled to a Fighting Chance GOVERNOR BRUMBAUGH declares that the voters should bo allowed to deter mine for themselves whether or not women shall vote In Pennsylvania. Ho urges, therefore, tho passago onco moro of tho reso lution submitting an amendment to tho Con stitution providing for woman suffrage. Slncero mon may seriously doubt tho wis dom of conferring the franchlso on women, but that thoy havo a right to present their causo to tho electorate nnd demand a ruling Is obvious. They have, at least, tho privilege of appeal to tho final tribunal. To dony them that would bo to arm them with martyrdom, and to delay, not to prevent, tho vindication of their propaganda. It Is a marvel of our civilization that mon who rely on their wives for advlco In busi ness and In all other Important matters, who would light nnd dlo to protect tho women of their families and who would resent any In timation that those women lacked either ln telllgonco or Judgment, nevertheless expross grave doubt of the capacity of thoso women to oxcrclso sanely a function that thousands of utterly Irresponsible men are permitted to exercise every election day. It Is a sur vival of barbarism to mnko sex the test of lntelltgenco and a substitute for character. Tho women In Pennsylvania aro asking for nothing moro than tho chance to present tholr cause to tho electorate as a whole. To that they are entitled, and tho Legislature must not fall to give It to them. Let Us Have the Money Needed Now THE river and harbor bill has passed the House with tho appropriation for dredg ing the Dclawaro and for a comprehensive survoy of tho river. Tho Pennsylvania Sen ators aro expected to Insist that these pro visions remain in the bill when it goes back to tho House, and thoy will fall In their duty If they do not demand that tho appropria tion for dredging bo made big enough to deepen the channel at the earliest possibles moment, so that there will not ba tho slight est pretext for charging that tho biggest naval colliers cannot be loaded at tho Phila delphia wharves. Tho Navy Department ought to reinforce tho arguments of tho Senators. But tho need for rushing tho work Is so obvious to any ono who gives a moment's thought to the subject that a mere statement of tho case should 'persuade Congress to do Its duty by Itself and by this port, Premature Cry for Peace THE Kaiser's attempts to break the dead lock on his eastern and western battlo fronts has failed. The German troops havo been driven from Northern Poland back Into Eastern Prussia, and tho Alsne still blocks his western advance. Ho won a slight ad vantage a day or two ago, when tho French retreated to tho south bank of tho river and when he took an advanced post In the Ar gonne, but tho French havo retaken this post and tho deadlock continues. Meanwhile ho Is rushing troops to tho front with all possible speed in a determined effort to broak through the lines on the west. And tho French nro gathering themselves to gether for a drive on Metz. But the advan tage gained by neither side is great enough to effect the general situation. Whilo tho men In tho Hold aro holding tho lines men at home aro talking about peace, and tho Pope has summoned all Christians in Europe to pray on February 7 for a ces sation of hostilities. He has asked Chris tians In the rest of tho world to offer tholr prayors to tho same end on March 21. But thero Is no peace In sight for human eyes at tho present time. Tho goneral view of tho Allies was expressed by Baron d'Estour nellcs de Constant, one of the most famous pacificists on the continent, when he said that while Oermany occupies Belgian and French territory he does not understand how any one can think of peace, for It would give Germany a chance within ten years to re peat her attack upon France. Tho war must be fought to an end before there can be a lasting peace. The Order Is Now Peremptory IF COUNCILS delays longer In making the necessary appropriations for the Division of Housing and Sanitation, it will be In con tempt of court as well as In contempt of public opinion. Councils, however, cares nothing for pub Ho opinion. It takes Its orders from the ma chine. Publio opinion cannot punish it sum marily, but must wait for the slow processes of election, But the courts, whloh have Is sued a peremptory order that the appropria tion for the Housing Bureau be made, have the power to make Its punishments sure and swift. . Now, let Councils act. The destruction of the Roebllng wire plant at Trenton will not Interfere with the pulling of wires in the State House. That story of a red train of padded cars, filled with German soldiers gone mad, sug gests that they have yellow Journalists In France also. The Zeppelins may not do much harm In a material way, but they do Induce what certain of our statesmen would call a pay etiological depression. OuUerrei seems to be surprised that Villa and Zapata, who made him President, were not willing to be deposed by bint. He forgot that the creature Is rarely greater than the creator. The Democratic Senators are so enthusi astic over the President's ship purchase bill that their caucus to commit them In its favor adjourned after directing the Finance Committee to report a bill on rural credits. Nobody earned the Nobel peace prize last year, so tt .wilt not be awarded, but the com mittee In tfharge is anxiously awaiting can didates fo the prise this year If any one should auyeceed In making pence be would I.se.ivfc tue&3d fui btH year. IF YOU WANT TO SIIfNE IN CONGRESS The Way to Do It Ib to Know All About One Tiling Mann Specializes in De tails, Humphrey in Calamity Howling. ByEDWAUD W.TOWSNEND "Specialize." That would bo my advlco to any malo human, over 2B, who has yearnings for a Congressional career. It Is ever advised by tho faculty not to gencrnllzo from n slnglo Instance, nor oven, relatively, from a few. Whercforo I assort that generalising from tho aim oat Innumer able events solved In congressional history, success In their careers has been mailo only by ntrlvera who havo specialized. Now, Just to provo how humanly weak I am I shall presently recite tho successful career of a contemporary who has nevor specialized. Know something. Know It all tho way through, backward and forward, up and down, Inside and outside, and lol you will be exalted In Congress. Tho trlnls and troubles In Congress resulting because of the surplus ngo of lawyers therein are not because thoso of that surplus aro lawyers, but because few lawyers know anything thoroughly that In cludes law and do know n foolishly largo number of things partly. Nothing moro Interesting has marked tho history of tho Congress In tho last four years than tho upshoot of a few men who havo specialized In subjects Involved in tho legislation of tho present and tho preceding Congresses. Out of tho total 435 of us, you, my attcntlo reader, enn name quickly nowl how many? Half a dozcnl I thought so. Glass for the Cabinet How many of the bundled million of us, outsldo of tho flvo counties in Virginia com prising his district, over heard of Carter Glass, father of the new banking law? Yet Carter Glass, of Lynchburg, Va., has been In Congress 14 years. Until a year ngo no one north of tho Union Station In Washing ton know of Carter Glass, or, If they heard of him casually, never romembored his namo over night. Today, If ho wore so disposed, he could mako moro money than Hobson on tho lecture platform, and ho sends his re grets dally to moro banquet committees than over did Chauncuy Depcw. Ho specialized In banking and currency laws, such laws of all tho nations of tho earth having laws affecting banking; so, whVn his party camo Into power In 1310 It made him chairman of tho House Banking and Currency Committee. He visualized Federal reserve banks as some visualize oys ters so fresh that when you squirt a bit of lomon Julco on their edges thoy turn In re volt. He will probably be a cabinet officer in tho next Democratic Administration. But let us speak of farmers. Banking In terests so few of us find pleasant In days like thoso. There's Ralph W. Moss, of Centre Point, Clay County, Ind. I'm going a little bit Into tho futuro as to him. Mako a note of his name, becauso before another Congress ends ho will be moro known from tho Atlantic to tho Cliff Houso than Is Car ter Glass today. "Is n farmer; his parents were poor, and ho has actively engaged In tho cultivation of his farm." Thus tho Con gressional Directory. Moss' Coming Fame But he had a couple of years In Pcrduo University, about such time as Booth Tark ington and Gcorgo Ado wore taking their mental prep thero. Moss specialized. His parents wero poor, bo it must frequently havo occurred to him how much less poor thoy would havo, been If they had been able, when It would havo been "good farming" to do so, to borrow monoy to drain a wet field, buy a cow, replace an outbuilding or what not. That sort of thing Is dono under what Is known as a "rural credits" or "farmers' loan" system; a system mighty good for tho coun try that has It. Thoro Is a library of litera ture on tho subject thrilling, If you have a vision of tho agricultural possibility of this country but thero are no dog-eared books In that library. Moss specialized on tho sub ject. Ho will bo beginning his fourth term In Congress March next, nnd In that Con gress a bill bearing his namo will become a law which will be known In all Its pro visions by moro pooplo than is the banking and currency bill. A Farmer-Student Moss Is tall, gaunt, serious, heavy browed, deep-eyed tho farmer-student. Thero aro more dips, spurs and angles In tho rural credits bill than In the Glass bill, but Moss knows them all. He has mado two speechoa on the subject, and I've listened to them with Intense Interest. He knows his subject. It Is easy money that If Doctor Houston does not want to be, Moss will bo, the Secretary of Agriculture In tho next Democratic Admin istration. So It goes the mon who spcclallzo win recognition: Burnet, of Alabama, In Immigra tion problems; Underwood, In tho tariff; Gardner, In war preparedness. If I gavo a full list It would be a short one, but It would include nearly every name of a Rep resentative or Senator you know outside of your State. Evon If you know Humphrey, of Washington, It is because he is a specialist. Somehow, I did not mean to mention Hum phrey, because he Is, personally, a likable chap, but he Is too, oh, much too a special ist to bo left out of this brief list. He Is a specialist in calamity howling. It develops that In Kitsap, Skagit and Snohomish counties in Humphrey's Washington district there are somo men engaged In the highly respectable business of running sawmills who cannot run them aB economically as can soma other men who operate across Puget Sound, In Canada. For purposes of re-eleo-tlon this Ineltlclence has entered Humphrey's soul as it were barbed steel in his heart, and he specialises on calamity, Tho Sob Sitter of Congress Nothing more amuses In Congress, When ever time Is to be yielded in debate by whomever, there stands Humphrey suppli cating. Even his political oponents yield him time that the day's doings may not be with out the thrill pf genuine comedy which safeguards against the all work, which makes Jack a dull boy. Humphrey needs no preparation; time is all he needs. Give him that and he chants the sorrows of his sawmills, laments their woes, scolds fate, harrows his soul into tears, denounces free trade, spits at Canadian effi ciency and has a real good time of it. His name among hla fellow-members Is "the Sob Bister of the Snohomish Sawmills." But we do not laugh at him in scorn; In re joicing, rather, tor he has specialized In sob bing, and It is an Insurance of his ro eloctlpn. I promised a tale of the member who does not specialize but who succeeds. It U that qutlf so"tahinw l-,il't'r Tarn. sTt Mann candidate for tho Republican presidential nomination In 1016. Champ Clark recently said that Mann Is tho best Informed mem ber of Congress, nnd that goes across tho board from one wing of tho Capitol to tho other. Mann's desk (tho two chlof loaders In tho House havo desks, nono other has) Is piled high each day with every bill and tho report on every bill which can possibly come up on that day. Each bill Is annotated and Interleafcd by Mann, nnd his desk is other wise loaded with books of authorities on every subject covered by every bill. Thero Is no escape. No uso trying to put ono over on Mnnn. You try a fako pass and a run around tho other end; Jnmes R. Is thero with tho deadly tackle. It amazes. Ono thinks to revive some forgotten little special privilege measure poor llttlo thing! but Mann reminds that it was quite properly knocked In tho head In tho second session of the Tilth Congress. But at that It might be said that Mann specializes In details. Surprise Dinner Occasionally tho unexpectedly Informed leg islator pops up serenely. That thought re minds mo of an experience of mlno when I wns secretary for Senator Georgo Hearst, of California. Ho was generally supposed to have mado his great fortune only In mining and to bo not Informed as to other Indus tries It wns in tho session when that mon strous tax on oleomargarine was Imposed and Senator Warner Miller, of Now York, led the fight to savo the makors of milk butter from ruin, Senator Hoarst sturdily opposed the tax; It was an added cost to tho poor man's food, an obnoxious exercise of tho taxing power for a special lnterost. Ho annoyed Miller a great deal. On tho evening of tho day of that debato Senator Hearst gavo a stag dlnnor ho lived then In what Is now tho German Embassy on Massachusetts nvo nuo and among tho guests was tho then Sen ator Breckonrldgo, of Kentucky. Ho twitted Hearst on his merciless baiting of Miller. "And what do you know about butter, any way?" Breckenrldgo said. "You nover ralsod anything but gold and sllvor." Senator Hearst's eyes twinkled as he said to me, "How much butter did I mako and ship last year from San Simeon?" Ho ro ferred to a llttlo ranch of 25,000 acres he owned and worked in Southern California. I produced tho figures. Thoy showed that Hearst tho year before was tho biggest In dividual producer and shipper of butter In tho Unttod States. Ho had not so much as alluded to tho fact that ho raised a pound of butter all tho tlmo ho was opposing tho tax on oleomargarine supposed to be for tho special beneflt of butter makers! PROTECTION OF THE UNIFORM Uncle Sam's Soldiers and Sailors Should Be Treated With Respect Wherever They Go. Prom the Array and Navy Reg-liter. It Is with appreciation and hearty indorse ment that we read the editorial comment In tho Philadelphia F.ve.nino Ledoeu under the title "Quit Insulting Sailors." That newspa per commends In unstinted terms the attitude of Captain C. B. Morgan, commanding the U. S. B, (Minnesota, "In his fight to protect tho uniform of the Navy from Insult." It appears that a ticket seller employed at a local skating rink refused to allow six enlisted men and a potty olllcer to enter the place of entertainment, evidently for the reason that they belonged to the naval service and wore the United States uniform. It appears that a State law provides a penalty of fine or Imprisonment for those guilty of showing disrespect to the uniform of men In tho service of the United States, It is unfortunate, to the degree of being de plorable, that'll Is necessary to enact legislation which shall admit to a public place a. man in tho United States uniform. That right to enter by virtue of law cannot cease to add to the discomfort of a self-respecting person, who Is bound to feel that his presence Is suffered by an act of Legislature. It Is a somewhat sad commentary on our national Bentlment toward those who serve their country that they should And it necessary to obtain proper recognition of the rights of a respectable citizen by force of law. There have been altogether too many of these Incidents which call for official pro test. It seems to be a slow and laborious process of educating some people up to a reali zation that the wearer of the uniform should not be the object of unfavorable discrimination. It Is a satisfaction to quote, finally, the re marks on this subject of the Philadelphia Even. ini LanoRii: "This la a democracy and not a nobocmcy or a cactocraoy, and every honest citizen l entitled to tho 'same rights that every other citizen enjoys so long as he behaves him self. The sailors and soldiers of the nation should be welcomed to publio places and mad to feel that while they wear the uniform of the United States they deserve and will have the respect of every citizen." Wanted i "DiHy" Sunday From the Hartford, Conn., Post. Bven those who haven't any particular inter est In "soul-saving" have to admit that Bun day's presence In a city spoil good. The Hart-. ford Post belief that his coming to this city. If It could be brought about, would give us a shakeup that would be beneficial. It would ;oU eomo of our complacency and oonservatUra (" ' r Mr wj i o utroRge it It dJCo't i 1 hJJll It BACK FKOM HARRlSliURG. OLIVER TWIST, Causes of Juvcpile Crime The Home is the Thermometer of City gj tvi . mi ? ro Ji? xr a nation iiie question or openaing luonoy. By WILLIAM RADER Oliver Twist, as described by Charles Dick ens, Is tho Incarnation of tho modern boy who is having a hard time. For licking tho porridge bowl In tho orphanage and show ing signs of hunger ho was "bound out" to on undertaker, then ho fell Into tho hands of tho Artful Dodger and was brought up In Fagln's London school of crime. Ho was saved by lovo after a trying experience. Director Porter told a company of clergy men tho other day that 85 per cent, of the burglaries In this city nro committed by boys under 21. This is a high average. Statistics show that the period between 18 and 24 Is tho criminal age, the highest point being reached between 1G and 21 In the records of English crime. Tho average age in tho United States Is but 2 2-5 years above this figure reaching Its climax at the period be tween 20 and 24, nnd showing a preponder ance on the sldo of Immaturity. Among 462 criminals examined by Marro 18 per cent, had become criminals before reaching the ago of 13, Of a group of 4G criminals studied by Lombroso 35 had bo come addicted to crime before attaining the 16th year. Lombroso places the maximum of criminality between tho nges of 15 and 25. Mosly, who furnishes these figures, says: "In the course of some investigations mado by me In 1906 I found the ago of maximum criminality In tho United States to be 23." Of 43,835 German criminals, it has oeen found that 41 per cont. were under 21 years of age. Schools of Crime Director Porter says that many boys aro prompted to steal that they may go to seo tho movies. Tho tenement houses havo been blamed for bad boys. Tho streets aro re garded by many ns a school of crime. Hered ity and environment aro cited as causes of crime, while drfnk, poverty, cigarettes and evil companions are all looked upon as crime-producing factors. In spite of all we havo done to conserve childhood and protect youth, crime Is seven times more prevalent in this country now than It was CO years ago. Tho boy Is a national problem. Llttlo can bo dono with the full-grown man, but the boy is still a twig to be shaped by condi tions. The period of llfo between 13 and 21 very largely determines the destiny of the man. The boy contradicts all theories, denies all schemes of reform and defies nearly every known measuro of protection. Good men Bprlng out of poverty and bad men come from brownstone fronts. Boys brought up In the streets fill positions of national Influence. Good men havo had bad parentis, while bad men have good parents. Young Oliver Twists havo como from orphanages and mado n Buccess of life. Some boys havo bravely stood against both heredity and environment and conquered both, while others In whoso veins flow tho bluest blood have gone down. Where Has tho Home Gone? Tho passing of the old homo and the sub stitution of the flat, apartment and hotel have much to do with tho character of boys. The streets are their playground, and ore preferred to small rooms in the tenement dis trict. The curfew has but a superficial effeot; upon the character of the boy. It waa origi nally a fire or police measure brought over to England, probably, by William the. Con queror. Fires were built In the middle of tho room In the daya before chimneys, and, aa houses often caught fire, the bell was rung In the evening as a signal to coyer the flro. It was subsequently the signal for children to leave tho streets, and la still rung In some American cities. The boy problem may be traced to two tributary factors which enter essentially Into Ub origin and solution. The first Is the home. Homes are more Important than Sunday schools, publio schools, government ot state, as far as the boy Is concerned. Nothing can take the place of the home as a character making influence. The best thing that can be given the boy Is a good home, but the strange thing about It Is that some of the worot boys come from the best homes. The home Is the thermometer of tho na tion. The national morality never rises above the morality of the fireside. Whit tier's "Snowbound" s a gold frame containing the picture of, a quiet New England home an Institution which stands In the background of the republic aa a pillar of strength. But there has been tt revolt against this single and splendid Institution, and the boy has broken away and gone bqth to the city and the devil. Money for the Movie Another determining factor U money. In tho United Btatea wo have never definitely decided whether the boy should have money, or. U any. how much. It la one of the. first laauea between father ana son. i, boy with no empty purse Is la quit as much danger aa th boy with a. full i urssr Ptrmp the IN PHILADELPHIA boy should havo monoy to pay hla way hf tho plcturo shows. Llttlo David Harum had no moniT to ? tho circus, nnd n neighbor paid hla way isj' when David reached homo after hlvlai ifi' tlmo of his life, ho found something lraltlac for him in tho shape of a severe whlpplM a whipping which lod to his lcavlnj hoaj forovor. It Is an old story the tragedr tj many a boy on tho farm who la templed tf resort to dishonest moans to secure t Uttji cash. If you Investigate the boy burrliri- of Philadelphia you may find a similar ecst' ..v.....w ..untuu wium may explain, even If It does not excuse, this high per cent & theft. , Crime among boys Is one of the cotrfj quonces of that materialism now gtippfni'tiV' country which distorts values. Moner-Abl? love of it among old and young Is the Ml of most of our personal and national enV Wo are a money-spending people, ami SJj example and precopt Instil In the youni mklj an uncontrolled passion for money, 'Wlththjh passing of the simple life has como hirfai after harvest or burglaries, and it it a'u?; tional shamo that crime has Increased if: fast among the boys. It Is a dlagraea fo lii'i Institutional life of Philadelphia that Dlrts-J! tor 1Pnrtlr fnn rrivn eii.T. ta-..iH . A: - -- w. o.iw uu-v.it ubuihi - -s The American Character i ' It Is a problem that lies farther back Hal Judge Llndsey and the Juvenile couttf J every great city. The roots of the proltar run back Into the very naturo of our natloaij'; life. , Something Is the matter with thtf utf the twig is trained, otherwise there Mr tiA not bo bo many crooked trees. Are ire lit' ing better care of our dogs than our cfit. dren? Aro wo raising rascals wlthouj taof-J lng it? Is thoro anything the matter FltjQ our schools, and homes, and churches!-1 anybody loving Oliver Twiat back fromcrlai to character? Tho weak point In American character, not In knowledge nor In feelings, for j know enough and feol deeply enough. Ka not Ignorance, either Intellectual or Mj tional. Tho woak point Is the will, the Uj bono, tho ability to stand straight lit cooked generation, tho power to aay yel atjL no against all odds. If wi moral caulvalonts of mlllti apply them to right living, the world w do revolutionized in a snort time. , y, Whether it is what we read, or ibi f( feel; whether Inherited or derived imp . -. -f u. .u.l Ann trfllj BurruunuinKBf mis la cietir; ium . " 5' In ttin hnlrhnna f iht fiVArnifA b0V tBvTf . a weakness, and this cannot be cuffl nurffiw Jmlls nr liirirrAs. It must be strfOgta ened by "a power not ourselves which vA. for righteousness." When a Brave Man Dies ffrnm th fti(i. am ITrfiV r .- . - 1 A !,, thl tlxl i-ence ig sooa ana war is " , .kfil will never, come when tho pulso wll n'.l"j to the hero tale of the man who ironu hrnvuu on.l V.o i-nlmlV OIISH I0r ' M..nl rflmlw i.hrin..tiA . mi . a ..... t Ah anA llOf and on the stricken Held as bravely CWJ Loxtoy died, But tho full horror and we m heroism never come home to us rrr.TJt' We understand the many, but we ion "i1"' .. ......,. wMrhbT wnonce u comes inai wnen ". "Zi.yJH alatn Its thousands In the InoUtlnrajHW; tumult of Europe, singles out one "jl inumni ana Binning aeuw., nuu..w render homage: "When his last glance fall unihrlpWl On the mouth of an open g" Then all men's eye grow tndf , And alt men's hearts grow braY. Peace and tho Movies i From ine Alums, coniiuimon. -.i.tWH There never will be peace In - the movie men quit following tho P generals around. rrr. A TD-AHTITNn NATION Tho moon of change hangs In a clud Sj Above the baying hounds of right m'BS Across the road the uncertain "" a Yea, and the road is longl Beyond the twilight of the many ye-" Oh. leave the past to darkness and lt lM3J Frets forward to the iignu o uni. 41.1... ! enAmtftg despair, Who plot against thine honor and W a And prinoos ot ine powers ot i m..ii t.A t.l .fl.iHmHl -M. E. Bubler, in Now Torr tuttst IN THE FUTURE I know pot what the future h43 Of marvel or lurprUo, . Assured alone that llfo and dw Ills mercy underlies. And o baildo the Silent Sea I wait the muffled t0 $ No harm from Him .can com w On ocean or on shore- I know pot where bU WauAa W Tholr irondsd palma in . w I only know I cannot "" Beyond Hi b f r. r. John aitentew HrampiKSua