8 EVENING LEDGER PHIBABBLPHIA", TTTEgBAY, FEBIMJABY 23, 19115. s. - ' ' ... - .. , Si .luftger PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ernus h. k cimtio. pimimnt. Arrm H LuitlAtten, Vtcfr8lrtnt: JohnO Muftlrt, Retiar mfl Trtiuuren l'Mllp 8 Collins. John It folium;, Dlrwtofit EDlTOniAtBOAnDl CtsieH K Ccalri, CMlrrrian. . niAXiCr ExeeutlT titer Jtllifj ci MAtlTIN. GsntrAt ttudntu lt&narer Published flallr at retiMC Lctttta bulldlnr, independence Square, Phll&dttphla. kxnouft CiktsAL, ,.,,..,,. tlltoad and Cheatnut Streets ATtAHilo Cm.. ........ ..... ..rraa-Vnion nulMlr.ff KkiV Toaz .............. 1T0-A, Matropolltan Tmr CliteiiOx 4. .......... J. 817 Horns Innurance Building LqnlOM.., 6 Waterloo Dace, Tall Mall, S. W. wrwo titnw at-oi WABHIKGTOf IfCKKAU. ... ... v .. - 'l""" - -w. Th Pakt nulMlnr Nitw Tonic HcnrAU, , The rim nulldlnj ... IIO Frledrlchitranfe 3 Pall Mall Rait. S W. 82 Ilu Loul Is Grand AJEMIK HURKAU . i,ob0n iiuihhii. Pari Ulbeau.. suincniiTio.vTi.nJts .fty frlr. tJAfr omt 'nf ny mall pottpald 'eiltaliJer! I'MlmWr-'iM fevt vhttt forflim poataf I require 1, Dau Oitr- on month, twtnly.flve cent; DaiLt Ovi.t on -r three dollars. All mall tub MripUdna pasoMe In- nrfvunce ktX. 8000 WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 3000 .. . . . ii - ..I i i W Jidilrtsi nil eomMMnlcatlont 10 JCijeitlnp Lfdotr, iHllcpatdcncr Square, Philadelphia. imratto at TrtB riiiLADSLruiA rosTomcr ai rcoi CI.ABS fAtl. UATTIB. I'lllUllllDIIA, 'ILI.SDAV. H.IHtlAUV 33. lsHS. J)eath doe not make it tirfii' It I the cause or teftlcft 7ie M;;i doicii his Hfc. A Lesson From Tcrrc Ilnutc A SITUATION of cnormnila Importance to .'the RopubttC has developed at Terre "Haute, Indiana. There huvo been numerous occasions In America when communities have "risen In revolt and swept Into tho gutter political associations which proved on tho public. Never before, however, has tho night and power of tho Federal Government beon invoked to rescue a n.unlclpallty from the slough of corruption. The Terro Haute case, therefore, present1? a now methed of attack which may bo utilized by any munici pality In the nation, in circumstances where tho local Judiciary and authorities, by ono means or another, have become subservient to political Intercuts npd run no longer bo relied on to execute Jintlce. Tho Federal Government contends that In Any election where Congressmen aro candi dates the honesty of said o'ectlcn Is a matter of interest to the United States, and that Jurisdiction properly lies in the" United Btatos 1 courts lo prosecute thoso guilty of fraud or of conspiracy to defraud. Judge Anderson has" upheld tho indictments of a Federal Grand Jury. Unless he Is overruled by higher authority, hereafter It will be posslblo for municipalities and States to take Into United Etfttes courts charges of Irregularities at elections In which Congressmen aro chosen. The Terro Haute case Is of particular Im portance to Philadelphia and Pennsylvania For l;hls reason tho Rvenivo Ledger assigned a member of Its staff to v'slt Terro Haute nnd conduct an exhaustive Investigation into tho methods and means used by good citizens to put an end to the elccth n dehnucherles of which they were the victims. The result of this investigation is a scries of articles, the first of which appears In this issue of the Evening Ledoeii. ( Of tho 114 persons Indicted In Indiana, 87 have pleaded guilty. Tho intricacies of the Democratic Organization, which has been trapped there, and tho remarkable part played by the women In bringing about the indictments, form n chapter in American politics that reads like fiction, but Is stranger than fiction because It Is true. JVIr. Bryan's Discretion If the duties of the State Department are so uncommonly arduous as to Justify the em ployment of additional ndvlscrs nt public ex pense, they mifiht Justify the presence In the national c.mltal of the Secretary of State. New York Run OUR esteemed contemporary .Is dilating with the wrong emotion. The absence of lIr. Bryan from his desk in the State Depart ment Iri these trying times, and tho employ ment by tho department of skilled interna tional lawyers, 'are matters for congratula Utn rather than for regret. And If the dis tinguished exhorter, enjoying the emoluments of tho office held by Thomas Jefferson, Dan iel Webster, Thomas F. Bayard, John Hay nnd 131 hu Itoot, has discovered that thero nro some things that ho does not know and ought not to meddle with he should be en couraged to continue to practice the discre tion oj absenting himself from his post rather than be prodded into attempt ng to do the impossible. The University's Anniversary WHEN a group of kindly disposed persons fourded a charitable school In this city In 1740, they did not dream that It would prow into ono of tho greatest universities in the world. Hut that is what the University of Pennsylvania is today, ono hundred and Boventy-flve years from Its humble be ginnings. The University enjoys an international fame and it attracts a, larger proportion of 4t students from foreign countries than any other American university. Its schools pt medicine. Jurisprudence and dentistry, to soy nothing of Its other departments, have pet the standard for its rivals. A teaching faculty of 80 is required to give instruction to Its 6332 students, and it has a library of nearly 600,000 volumes, ready for tho con sultation of all seekers after knowledge. Al though Harvard was founded about 100 years earlier, the University of Pennsylvania has graduated more students. We aro so familiar with this great institu tion on the banks of the Schuylkill that Tve are n danger of forgetting how bier it is and how it attracts young men from all parts of the world to lta lecture rooms. It Is a worthy product of the spirit of the city founded by Penn nnd made distinguished by Franklin And his successors. Little Men for a 1 Job THE men chosen by the President ta make up the first Federal Trade Commission do not command the instant confidence of the country. The commission la to exercise th same supervision over manufacture and sale of goods that the Interstate Commerce Commission exercises over their distribution by tho railroads and otherwise. Jt can go about ltd work in a petty, meddlesome manner, by-assuming- that the bis business men of the country' are "crooks and In IcapaWe pf doing; honest business. Jn some Ifinmtttg PjMUjtrters ot the country this Is the common Eapinuaa of me people. man aoes more rVu6lnmm than his neighbor there Is some- nig wrong with him and he must be (st to book. This feelins was largely afcible for the creation of the new contr t2r(dent ha ehostw two of the mwnbrs of tse rapwiy at. itiu Praoraaura liurty. ad three. Vmvx$um tM h. effort to olwy thd prowl- s vt it uw tat not mam t ms w taftAtatfU ,AU,i MJU4 !? WM party. One of tho Democrats comes from a town of SBOO population In Georgia; another, while his appointment Was pending, sent ti telegram to Congress indorsing tho ship purchase bill, thereby showing that he was Willing to take his ctio from tho "White HoUso, and the third Democrat Is tho pres ent Commissioner of Corporations In tho Department of Commerc'c, a capable man, but not distinguished In any way, If it had been posslblo for tho President to persuado some of the great Industrial and professional leaders of tho nation to sqrvo on this comm sslon, his appointments would havo been received with greater satisfaction In tho Senate, as well as In tho country at large. Perhaps ho did not ask them. They Shout Economy and Plan Extravagance TTUIErii: must bo economy," shout the opponents of rapid transit. Then they proceed to economize by proposing to build three miles of elevated railroad through a farm district. "Tho city cannot afford to be plunged into n. scheme tho ultimate cost of which no ono ;on now protend to limit." Quito trUc. That Is why Director Taylor haB Bpcnt months in a most exhaustive study of the entire situa tion, diagnosing lines of trufttc, probablo volume, etc. Ho Is able not only to limit final cost, but to show plainly Just what tho cost will be. It is becausa tho city must not bo plunged into a bottomless mire of debt tha the well-digested Taylor plans must be fol lowed Instead of th absurd plans of a cllquo of men who have given the subject no study whatever and apparently havo no other pur poso than to prevent rapid transit entirely by handing over the city to tho Rapid Tran sit Company bound and shackled. If the Connelly transit scheme were adopted, not In BO years would real rapid transit be posslblo. "Tho city cannot afford, liberal as Its op portunity for borrowing money may be, to load Itself with such burdens of debt that nn Increase in the tax rate would be mado in evitable." That is why the Taylor plan con templates no incrcass In tho tax rate. Tho constitutional amendment will case the an nual payments, admit capitalization of ex penses during period of construction and a short time thereafter; tho Increase in prop erty valuations which Inevitably follous high-speed facilities will proportionately In crease aggregate tax receipts, and there Is some reason to bollovo that the new system will be used by passengers, all of whom will pay fares. There will be no increase of tax rates under the Taylor plans; an Increase would be certain were the Connelly fiasco adopted. "The loop would bo the most expensive of all tho proposed subway work." The motor Is the most expensive part of an automobile. Who would build railway cars without exits, or steam locomotives without boilers? An elevator In a shaft will run, but It Is per fectly useless unless people can get In and out of Jt. Tho loop Is the heart of the transit system, the distribution centre to which all tho lines lead and without which all sums spent on tho other part would be wasted money. The holdbacks, the obstructionists, the timid neurotics, the panicky Individuals, tho men whoso Interest It Is to keep Philadelphia where it is and prevent all progress, shake convulsively at the thought of expense when transit is mentioned, unless it is tho kind of transit which would be particularly beneficial to them and worthless to everybody else. But a now day has dawned Men know that thero is no danger of bankruptcy, no financial or other reason why tho city should not havo what other cities of the same class already have. They understand pretty well the real reasons influencing obstructionists who shout economy In one breath and plead for utterly extra vogant entei prises In the other. They know tho ordinance introduced at tho recent session of Councils for what It is, a deliberate and vicious attempt to trick and defraud tho city. They know what obstructionists mean when they say they are for transit and pro ceed meanwhile to stick knives into it. Tho Connelly kind of transit is peculiarly satis factory to holdbacks, for they understand that the Public Service Commission would never sanction Buch wanton waste of public funds on bo technically absurd an undertak ing. The opponents of the Taylor plan Pro test their Innocence too much, They may try to mask their designs In verbiage, but the stain on their hands shows even through gloves. Drawn to the Shrine ALL DAY yesterday there was a procession jfxof visitors to Independence Hall. The exercises there consisted of little more than o. tlag raising. The simple, dignified build ing in which the great Declaration was adopted is a magnet that draws to it by an irresistible attraction all those who dream of liberty. The foreign-born -who have come here to get what they could not find abroad move through its halls and rooms' with rever ent awe. Their little children, conscious that the place Is not like other places, walk about and breathe in something of the spirit that inspired the early patriots. They will dream of those great days, and the thoughts of J what was done and said thero will swell in their hearts till they long to prove themselves worthy Inheritors of the estate of freedom marked out there in 1776. The old Hall Is a shrine in & very real sense. It is the most precious possession of this city and of this continent, not because of Its perfect architecture, but because that brick shell In the square stands for an Idea that thrills the soul i T- .. r Men we wearing "freak" bata at Palm Beach, as well as on Market street. Who will write, a transit "Marseillaise' calling the freemen of the city To, Arms! The snipers who are planning- to harry the, Mayor will make ammunition "for the Independents to fire back at them next fall it the MetorJatMi at NorrUtown are women, $t course they should ooatrol their historical Mfty: but tt wnMwi have curiously fa yliU.1 tfa wJ oJHoera t&!r soeuty. HOW TERRE HAUTE CRUSHED THE "GANG" With Political Conditions Similar to Those Horo tho People Woke From Lethargy nnd Used Their Power First 'Instance of Federal Interference In State Election. By IRWIN L. GORDON f. ANEW chapter lias been written in tho .nnnats of American municipalises. ' It 8 a chapter replete with political debauchery, political crime, political bosslsm, bl-panlsani ship and everything tho word "Organiza tion" has corao to signify in American poll tics; anJ yet tho chaptor Is ono of victory for civic honiBly. It Is ona which tells of a city awakened, of a titnnlo battle waged by men and wc-men to down a plundering political ring, of A struggle between civic rlghtcousnpss and an unholy nlllanco of liquor, contractor bosslsm and n debauched ballot. Moreover, It., Is a chapter of enlightenment, wherein may be found tho solution of many problems c6n frontlng cities which smart under tho hish, of a dominant pblltlcal organization, Terro Haute, Ind has overthrown "j.ho gang." Tho Organization which for years fattened upon tho givir.g of franchises, mu nlclpaf-contracts and liquor tribute, nnd In trenched Itself through unlimited patronage, hnH fallen. The doors of a United States peni tentiary now stare the leaders in tho face. Gone is nil tho political arrogance, the con trol of Councils, the mastery of a corrupt maglstrato system, of ofllco power, of con tract grab an Organization house built on tho sands of political power has fallen nnd tho placo thereof Hhnll know It no more. Eighty-seven Pleaded Guilty , One hundred and fouiteen officials, their ward leaders and tools, havo bce-n indicted by a United Stntes Grand Jury on tho charge of conspiracy. Eighty-seven of those'' haQ pleaded guilty to all tho charges, havo turned State's evidence, and placed tho responsibility for their wrongdoing squarely on "tho men higher up " Tho 27 men Including a Mayor, a County Judge, n Sheriff, minor officials and lieu tenants who pleaded "not guilty," aro now awaiting trial before Judge A. B. Anderson, In tho United States Circuit Court at In dianapolis. Whllo the story of tho arrests, of tho great est political clean-up ever made in an Ameri can city, Is one of Intense dramatic valuo and human Interest, combining, as It docs, the laying bare of ono of tho worst political machines In tho country, and the remark able fight mado by women to improve and rectify conditions, tho fundamental value of the situation lies In tho action taken by tho United States Government. For tho first time In tho history of tho United States tho Government has stopped Into a State and made the demand that na tional elections shall bo conducted honestly. For the first time In tho history of the United States, tho Government hns caused tho arrest of city officials, election officers nnd repeaters and charged them with conspiracy for de bauching the ballot. In short, the Terre Haute caso goes beyond Indiana. It is na tional In Its scope. The Government is making a test to deter mine whether it has the power to compel offi cials and voters to comply with tho laws, holding that, In an election wherea Senator or a Jteprc.scntativo Is to be chosen, thoso who commit fraud in the polling place defraud tho United States. A Federal Test Case Tho general proposition Is this; Has tho Government tho right to Interfere in elec tions which heretoforo have been regarded as strictly State matters? Tho Attorney General of tho United States has declared that tho Government has Jurisdiction; Judgo Ander son, before whom tho dynamite conspirators, whoso arraignment followed the attack on the Los Angeles Times building were tried, and who Is one of the ablest Judges In tho country, has likewise declared his court has jurisdiction, nnd will try tho accused men. Upon tho outcomo of tho case, which will undoubtedly go to the Supremo Court, hangs tho definite decision of tho question of super vision of elections by tho Government. True, tho stand taken hy tho Government and the ultimate disposition of the Terro Haute case will not affect strictly municipal elections, except indirectly, but thp glaring light which has been turned upon this city and tho methods employed to bring about the Government investigation will havo a far reaching result. At any rate, tho panto caused throughout the Middle West, the wholesale confessions and the stand taken by tho Government will have a lasting national Influence at least at the time a Congressman or Senator is to be chosen by the people. Terre Haute's Shame Terre Haute has come to be known as "the hell hole of Indiana." It has been stamped by the Government white slave agents as the most wicked city in the country. While thero were posslbly.more cases of thuggery at the polls at the last election, more open vio lations of the law, the Bystem and the organ ization which controlled city and county present a striking parallel to that of Phila delphia and the men who aro at Its head. Identical was the contractor-bossism, the liquor domination, the patronage power, tho bi-partisan Influence. Terre Haute has had all of these. She has turned millions into the hands of the favored contractors, has voted for those who propped up contractor control, has permitted the Tag gart machine to rule supreme and gather in the taxes with slight return to tho taxpayers, Unawaro of that latent power" 'which' eventually swept these men from their posl-' ttons, which deposed the "liquor king" of Indiana and his agents from their Btand be hind the politicians, the citizens permitted this Democratic bipartisan machine to throttle the will of the people. Smarting under the lash of tyrannous leaders, the peo ple time after time made attempts to overturn tho machine, but. with every branch of the municipal government in the hands of the leaders, with the courts favorable to the perpetrators of political crime, no redress was to be found. Gradually the citizens sank into a state of lethargy, into a state of "what'Sthe-use." Believing that many who deaireq" honest re form were Insincere, falling to see that any victory, no matter hpw flmall, waj a step. .toward honest gpvernment, , and eelf. con vinced that "the; gang" was so strongly lntrfnmed in City Hall, Councils and county oSle that a miracle sdone could dislodge It, the Terre Haute electorate sat complacently buck ainl watched a systematic office and contrast plundw AI4 from m IstrtkHMf w-uurvty ,B tfefl purstttMl ai Jbsf -" HMX M& Pbjydal phla political leaders, tholr organlrations were identical Indeed, wero It not for tho inroads made Into the Philadelphia mnchine by tho Blankenburg administration, tobblng it as It did of tho pollco department and pre venting uholosalo contract gathering, tho two cities might be considered politically one. Terre Haute, until tho tlmo of the ar rest of tho Mayor and his followers, was a small Philadelphia as It was under tho late John E. Reyburn, Mayor. Tho overthrow of tho Organization nt this tlmo Is all the moro remarkable when It Is realized that the entire police force, tho flro department every city department the City Council, County Commissioners and virtually the entire system In Southwestern Indiana was under tho thumb of Tom Taggart, a political boss of Indlann: assisted by Craw ford Fairbanks, Taggart's business partner, "Brewery King of the Middle West" and tho wealthiest man In tho State, and Donn M. Roberts, Mayor of Torre Haute, tho highest official caught In the Government dragnet. How was It done? Political arroganco can go so far and no farther. At last the rebellion point Is reached. It came In Terre Haute. It camo like a whirlwind. The liquor candidate must be elected; tho bipartisan tools must take office; a crooked Judgo must be placed on tho bench every offtco'from United States Senator down to Rpad Commissioner must bo retained by tho Organization! Illegal votes must be cast, a "slushfund" must be raised! Tho People Won the Fight Before the United Stntes Senato a charge was made against Senator Boles Penroso to tho effeot that $1,000,000 was spent by tho liquor interests of Pennsylvania to sccuro his return to tho Senate. Newspapers repeated tho accusation. The people, however, did not arise and demand an Investigation. It was shelved by both Republican and Democratic politicians In Congress. In Indiana the people arose and demanded that a proper investigation bo made not a senatorial probe, but a real, sincere, non polltlcal Investigation. They based their de mand upon the known facts that a "slush fund" had been raised, that the saloonkeepers nnd brewers had rendered their tribute, that thousands of fraudulent votes had been cast. It was ascertained that fully 2500 illegal votes had been registered, tho exact number strickon from the lists in Uniontown, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, where State Senator Crow, chairman of the Republican State Committee, is tho Penroso lieutenant. On election day the Organization voted re peaters, as they have dono for years In the first 14 Philadelphia wards; citizens wero beaten nnd prevented from voting In short, an election similar in every detail to the elections of this city was held. Against the system which made these things possible the Government launched a probe. Tho task seemed hopeless. A house of cards, however, soon tumbles. Backed by the women of the city, tho women who first called the attention of the Federal authorities to Terre Haute's condition, the work began. One of the least cogs of the Organization a habitue of the Tenderloin confessed. He implicated his saloonkeeper. This man con fessed and drew in the precinct leader. He in turn became a Government witness, bring ing his ward leader to the bar of Justice. Then came the "men higher up," the brains and pocketbooks of the Organization, Exactly how this Organization was built, how It worked and how It was wrecked will be told in subsequent articles. The Subtleties of Music. The true musician cares very little for your definite Ideas, or things that can be expressed by words; tie knows you can give him these. "What he sighs for is the expression of the im material, the Impalpable, the great "imponder able;'' of our nature, and he turns from a world of painted forms and oppressive substances to find the vague and yet perfect rapture of his dream In the wild, invisible beauty of his divine mjitres Hugh Haweis. WHEJRE THE WEST BEGINS Out where the handclasp's a tittle stronger, Out where a smile dwells a little longer, That's where the West begins. Out where the sun Is a llttie brighter, Where the snows that fall are a trifle whiter, Where the bonds of home are a wee bit tighter, That's where the West begins. ' Out where the skies ar a trifle bluer, Out where friendship's a little truer, That's where the West begins. Out where a, fresher breeze is blowing, Where there's laughter In every streamlet flow ing, Where there's more of reaping and Jess pf sow. That's where theWest bins. Out-where the world Is In the making. Where fewer hearts with despair are aching'. That's where the West begins. Where there's mere of staging and less of slgh- Wber there's more of giving end Haa of buying. And a man -makes Memit without hlf trying, That wfcer tjie Wt bagi Ari-iui Ctipim. to Oov BimHcsB, SO EAR, GOOD , jj CHILD-LABOR IN What Judge Lindsey and Colorado Have Done to Liberate 'He otage-cmia witnout uepnving tion oy tne juvenile judge instead ot JProhibition. By KENNETH I think the araumenta aaalnst ataoe chil dren are about as consistent as some ot tho arguments against woman suffrage. I say without the slightest hesitation that there ts more danger to tho moral welfare 0 the ehlUl going bach and forth In the streets to the school and in those things he learns through aisoclatlon In the school than there is in being on the stage under a law that guarantees any sort of reasonable profec tian for its physical and moral welfare. Judge Ben U. Lindsey. W. "HEN tho child labor law is finally passed at Harrlsburg, it must make some pro visions for tho stnge-chlld. If it is a blanket law, prohibiting the emplbyment of all chil dren under a certain ngo In any occupdtion whatsoever, It will, of course, drive the child actor from Philadelphia theatres and prevent the production here of many Interesting plays. If It excepts tho stage-child from its pro hibitions, it may bo of moro value to tho playgoer, but It will not do its duty by tho child. In work dono by Judge Lindsey In Denver thero seems to be a hint of a far wiser way of handling the matter. A Double Liberty Liberty for tho stage-qhlld Is tho slogan of Judgo Llntlsoy's newest fight. Liberty for the talented youngster to follow an art that Is also education nnd play. And liberty for tho poor little slave of musical comedy, burlesque and vaudeville. The first ho would freo from the prohibitory laws of many States. The latter he would liberate from nn employment that exploits his youth, cuts him off from mental development and even corrupts him. Tho curious part of the fight 13 tho op position. Tho managers of musical comedy, cheap vaudeville and burlesque yes. But why such people as Jane Addams, men and women serving with Judge Lindsey on the National Child Labor Committee? Why should Judgo Lindsey, in seeking the child's protection as well as Its liberty, meet the same public-spirited opposition that con fronted tho committee of dramatists includ ing Percy Mackaye and Augustus Thomas when they argued against the enaction of the prohibitory child labor law of Illinois, which lumped stage children with factory children. For tho Child, Not the Drama And the rest of the opposition who can It be but the cheaper managers in false beards and frock coats? Haul out that old favorite, the Red Herring. Judge Lindsey, they say, is the unintentional tool of the Shuberts and Frohman and all the rest that want to bring child-actors into Boston and Chicago. Judge Lindsey himself doesn't think bo. He Is not fighting for the man agers; they would prefer total noninterfer ence. He is not fighting for dramatlo art; he knows that art must accommodate itself to man's good, not man be bent to art's. He puts the emphasis in the true place the true place in all things upon the human element. He is in the fight for the sake of the child. The children brought him into it. He met stage-children and saw what fine young be ings they were, even when circumstances were not the best He compared them with factory children that came to him in Denver, And he concluded: "I have never known a factory or a sweatshop child that was anx ious to do its work. I havo never known a stage-child that didn't And a great delight in its part." There are only two Stales that have any thing approaching proper Jaws in regard to the stage-child, There are only two that do not allow his unrestricted exploitation on the one hand, or on the other try to drive him from that stage and end fn sanctioning Infringements of the worst sort, hey are Colorado and Louisiana. Prohibition That Does Not Wprk By tho laws of Massachusetts, Illinois and Oregon no child1 may appear upon the. pro fessional stage, This prohibition is, of course, merely a part of the general child labor laws; but it Js praised as preventing the em ployment, of children In cheap theatres where, they would bo under a bad moral Influence. As a matter of fact the prohibition does noth ing of the sort. Its effect Is the very oppo site. There Is no publlq sentiment behind this portiQn gf ,the law, and tb result Is wholesale evaslpn in the less prominent and more disreputable theatres. Mr. Davis, fac tory Inspector of Illinois, baa sajd that there were more children on the stage and unpro tected. In IliinpUi, under a prpbtbjtlvq iw, than ver before ta the .State's history. Un fortunately, the law does hold for the better theatres, wher tbwe would b Wsal condi tions of employment A rutaMe manager is naturally chary of incurring a public mt and a. Hue. Tfcua tiw. worthy theatre is wraji. THE PLAYHOUSE ; xiim 01 xiis laie-arc Kegtila- MACGOWAN gled by a prohibition which has no com? where it is really needed. -?i In tho remaining 41 States thero &r 3 laws really worth mentioning, either to pro tect or to prohibit. One result, of cowJ,'J' tno samo as in Massachusetts and 'IHInqliT children may appear under the worst, pojslljif conditions. For the rest, worthy dnuna'ff simply benefiting at the expense of tpe eJ plotted children in tho wrong sort of' theatre? That is only part of tho situation In'tiT States outside Colorado and Louisiana. UncY worse, thero Is no guarantee of proper 0 dltlons of employment. Children nr urtiil? In companies from which they should j $4 eluded, under circumstances neither ujorsllVl nor hygienically good. Their hours pf.Wt formance are not strictly limited. Tey M not given proper educational opportunities? vnu meir pay except ror a lew pnpom enally gifted youngsters on Broadflray If rar oeiow a decent standard. They areifa- piy expiouca. Real Protection for the Child I 'And now what havo Colorado and iLol ana done about it? They have, adopted 'Jawf meeting certain, general conditions jhttliBW oy juago. Lindsey. They do no( pr?hlM(f vonile Court of the capital' grants pnnR' for stage children to appear within 'th feSff under certain conditions fixed by the courS The mnnager must present a bond of'frofij ?2000 to 15000, underwritten by a refiikl surety company. Any violation of t"hsnS dltlons renders the bond forfeit, with, Di;fufjj thor litigation than a brief hearing bf'w tho court issuing the permit. 1 j.no conditions proposed py Judge unGjKli for Colorado are comprehensive 6m' them he has already secured, though bn plan, oven in Colorado, is not yet fully rei!- VW ized. The salary, first of all, mut U'fiW as tho courts think fair; in Colorado It ift least $25 a week. Proper guardlansitlp parental or otherwise Is secured. If tits! mother or guardian, traveling with th? chlW.1 la Tin, -I1,n.4 , , U li. .U. . Arictf supply a ,tutor. The hours of epppapuictj must nuow of a certain mlnlmupi Jot actm. ing, ana performances are limited p '?D,s a week. Certificates of health, requlrfi?' as to sleeping cars nnd the inspection of lodgings are also provided for. t Manifestly somo such national la,W vrpuW solve the situation in the whole tourlnjrjfyj' tern. Getting it is another matt?r. Judge Lindsey, realizing this, has wprked ' ?$ scheme by which the enactment of ucn .r lnw in no more than four of the taportaiil States would Insure Its enforcement in (hi rest. For a manager refusing' to agrij bunuiwuim ack uy tt BCIlcru, tuMiumyfi.rr rvew xork, created by the Juvenn w? and the friendly managers, would find bfe .ll .., al.t.1. tnVlnM And ,afly manager under bond in opt) of t States would have to live up to ti S MnnlllnHn I ..I .-.-- .-, I Via twtiiU fwwuitiviio ,1, uuior oiaica 4onv v vv m - s A Haven From Immorality 'A4ut Judge Llndsoy has left no loppholf.fjfllf the managers; as to the objectors, BWyife carried the war into Africa. The imrnoralitfllt of ttie stage Is a very (jld bugaboo, a'j!?lp exorcised and Justly in ail except tPD,! Olfina rf nfAiitntlnn futiltYi .TlMsTtt Till Bey would eliminate the child. Judge $?f f sey finds more to corrupt youth in bP ilt nary conditions of home and school Jlf- ?flf knows the city streets. Ha has tlUK4 JS little "criminals" that come to hka "homes." where the mother is either at worjc or absorbed in selMndulgencSl that go to pchools -where children mln''tl discriminate under lax condition- WraSf seen children of the same age and the fs class who have spent their tune in the,sj atre under the constant care and guioai" mother or tutor. And trtll 1 his lnvti conclusion: A I make bold to suggest that th gig be as much, If not more, logio In prWyffi Child labor laws against chl'dwl lwTs out public schools as sgstnst children Mg on the stage. I believe that th tfi: the average child in most or w K' schools rihd the dangers tq t!,OTJ are far greater than with tne cW" stage under that kind of safeguard Ttrrttr.ft4fn iat T am rtrnnoainf. The final case for the stafre-chUd-'t1 ented boy or girl freed, as vie an i" tp follow where the spark of. genius Is mueh tha mb for the new sort teJ There roust be mere of creative Vp of unwilling tasks. There roust w 4r ttmaey with tije beautiful, ww nrutlrm Thn child RlUSt 1 1H friendship pf a nrfe twin throni of culture ht the bestow flr lllvwaiutd. -, tftj