s ttimlttg JgjJSfc fc&SttJCr I'UMJClEDGER COMPANY CthtlB It. K. CUtlTlB, 1M1D(NT. CJitl il udfngttm, Vlc lrInt r John C. Msrtln, f'CfftRt? ti4 Trtmursri Philip 8. Colllna, John B. jviillimn, biwton. EDlTOltULIlOAnDj Cikt'g 11. K Ccrtu. Chnlrmtn. P. rt TTHALEY. . EcuUt BJltor JOHJ C AtAltTlN .Pentr-I Builngm Mngr published dally at Fcstio LtDOta Building, InJtptndtnce Square. Philadelphia. Lwrtn Cbsthili ........ Hrod and chmnut Btrt ArcKtlc Cm. . . ........ . . ..Prtta-VnioH OulMir. Nstf Tons 170-A, Metropolitan Toner Cnkairio. .... , . .SIT Home Insurance Building Loxcon. ........ ..8 Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, S. W. WtnthrOTON IJcatlu .,, ,.Th Pl HulMlnn Kbit ynKK Bcikau ............ ..The Time) Hulldlna IIkhMh llnxAD .t ...... 00 Frldrtchtri houpott flnnnt). 3 Pnll Mall Bait, S. W. Paul Ilent-tr 32 llu Louli la Grand SUBSCRIPTION TEIIMS IJy carrier, Dailt OnLt, lx centa. 'fly mall, ponlpald eurald of Phlladelnhla, eicept where foreign poitnte l required, Hjui.t OM.T, one month, twentjr-flve centii Ditt.T Onlt, one rear, three dollar. All mall tub rcrlpllona payable In advance. ttusofto Walnut keystone, maim sooo ," i - eW iftfrei alt communication to Eventnp Med0ff independence Squar, rhtladelphta. -NXtain at tub riilLiotLruiA roiTorrioi ai srcoHs- CLAIS I1IL MATTtn. I ' ' - ' - rillLADELPIIlA. TDKSI1AY. .MA II CI I 9. 1915. " ' ' ' J. weakHno dodges the Issue and loses; a ttronp man faces it and wins. The Stake of , Greece In tho War KINO CONSTANTWE of Greece recolved hia military education In Berlin. His wife Is tho Kaiser's sister. Since tho begin ning of tho war ho has been using all his influenco to preserve Grecian neutrality. Ho has refused his consent to tho war policy of his Prlmo Minister, Eleutherlos Venezelos, nnd Venezelos resigned last Saturday. Venezelos is the statesman who has lifted his. country from a feeble and poverty stricken Power Into a position of prosperity and political strength. He was tho organiz ing mind In tho Balkan war, and because ot his military and diplomatic genius Groeco to day includes a considerable part of Its an cient domain In Macedonia and Thrace, which was ruled by tho Turk when the Balkan war began, This masterful Greek statesman, with am bition to recover still more of tho ancient em pire that was ruled from Athens, steps aside because his King will not consent. Whether the nation is behind him or behind the King will bo disclosed within a few weeks, and per haps within a fow days. The news reports, which como by way of the channels con trolled by thb Allies, indicate that the Greeks are. enthusiastic for war. They are said to bo anxious that when the dismemberment of Turkey takes place Greece shall get her share of Asia Minor. Unless they throw the weight of their influenco with the Allies their claims will not be considered in the event of tho de feat of Germany and the conquest of Turkey. If tho Kaiser can convince them that ho is sure to win and promises to give Smyrna and tho adjacent coast as the price of their neu trality, Venezelos will remain In retirement fpr n. whllo. President, Wilson's task of pro. serving American neutrality Is easy in com parison with that confronting King Constan tly. Preparing for the Next Fourth IF THE precedent set last year of holding a national celebration of the Fourth of July in Independence Hall Is to be followed this year, the State and the city should begin preparations at once. Representative Dunn, who has introduced a bill in tho General As . sembly calling for an appropriation of (20,000 for tho next two years and authorizing the ap pointment of a State commission to co-oper-nt.o with a' city committee, has started the work in the right way. Tho money should be appropriated and a commission of rep resentative citizens should be named. Although the legal title to Independence Bquare and Independence Hall Is held by this city, the great hall really belongs to the Whole country, and Philadelphia and Penn sylvania owe It to the nation to do all In their power to have the great national cele bration of Independence Day occur In the Bquare sacred to liberty. New Jersey Will Get Local Option First WHILE Pennsylvania waits the organiza tion of public sentiment in favor of Jocal option, tho New Jersey Legislature gets ready to pass a local option bill putting the Stato In line with tho best temperance sentiment. Before the week ends the New Jersey bill Will become a law, according to the Anti Saloon League. But no one knows JUBt when the General Assembly here will be forced to respond to the undoubted demand of the peo ple. It pretends to bo a representative body, but If the men who control Its members can have their way It will refuse to represent tho people on this Issue, The only way to bring It Into line is to let It know that the people will not he denied, and that they will see to It that those who are trying to frustrate their will shall not have such power again, The people can rule here, If they care to take the reins in their hands. And If they do not assert themselves they will have only them selves to blame, as the Governor remarked on Saturday night. The Barbarous Turk THE- Turk makes war by massacring the nationals of his enemy who happen to be Jn hia territory. This Is the survival of the old system of barbarism when no man's life was safe unless protected by force. Jt will only be necessary for the Turkish army, or the Turkish people, to keep on kill ing Christians to bring about the complete destruction of what Is left of the Turkish Kmjjre It has been a pestiferous thing for generations. Civilized nations are fast ap. preaching Jhe (Joors of Constantinople, and hat clty must soon fall Into their hands. Whenever may be the outcome of the war in wafern 'Europe the een.tlment of the world vil nqfc- tolerate the return of the city and Us Burremnding territory to Turkey on any terms. Simplicity of the Housing Problem PHILADELPHIA has 295.000 buildings oo. cuplfcd tor residence purposes by 387,000 t ..miliea. That I there are flnly 32,000 famlllw wfud ip not have a whole house for their o? . Manhattan Borough, or New York, hjljilge'ljigejts-'wfui enlarged by annexing the gpjbt has 75,000 buildings occupied as resl &imwb by 493,000 lamlUes. or an' average of abwoat seven families to a qwqjljng. In New Yfwk, a whole. Including Brooklyn, Staten Um4, Cjena and tb reeton above the liar k.tft JUvor, there la aa average of more that tfcmt&mJtyw to tn Jwu In Chicago, with itiltaSpieh of prairie landn the elty lBMtf, tare about two fasjlllaB to the tomtmiiX Uw Mta te V es-atry with janw Xkva tao.aoo totaHMf-M- tr are only 14, ad titey tt m$w UmoM, tit wbioh KVENItfG there la a lower average of Inhabitants In each house than In Philadelphia. Tho Governor's Ideal of n liouso for every family, nnd thai well ventilated and with modern sanitary conveniences, Is easier of realization than soino pessimists would have us believe. When tho prevailing conditions are so Rood, the Insanitary, squalid tenement without water, without bathrooms and with out light or air becomes conspicuous. Tho housing law wns Intended to bring about their complete removal, Hut selfish men nro seeking to preserve them, to protect tho dirty Income of their owners. Arc the decent peo ple of the city and the State willing that they should succeed? "How Will I Ever Explain It to Jim7" "Vt'EN boasts were made at tho previous s session of the Legislature that rapid transit in Philadelphia would ho held up until 1916. When Finance Committee of Councils pigeon-holed tho Taylor ordinances for weeks, It was clearly apparent that the ob structionists were relying on dilatory tactics to accomplish this purpose. Public sentiment forced them to a show down and they sought to muddy the waters by captious objections to parts of tho Taylor plan, while at the samo time offering to pop ulous Frankford and North nnd South Phila delphia a will-o'-the-wisp sort of transit, which, they anticipated, would serve to di vide tho transit forces and so permit months more of delay. Tho original Connolly-Seger-Costello sub stitute ordinance was, presumably Intention ally, faulty In two respects. First, tho ordi nance was to bo stnmped with probable Il legality by specincally basing it on personal taxables. John G. Johnson exposed the trick In this so clearly, being supported by City Solicitor Ryan, that not oven Mr. Connelly dared retain tho objectionable words and an amendment to strike thorn out was permitted. Tho second dilatory dovlce was to mako tho loan ordinance provide for a program In part so utterly Impracticable, namely, tho exten sion 'to Rhawn street, that no public official with a. conscience would accept It. It ap parently was expected by tho obstructionists that tho situation would be saved for them through this subterfuge, even If tho ordi nance was permitted to be passed In legnl form. So sure were they of this that tho word was passed to vote for tho amended measure. Rapid transit seemed to bo tied up in a hard and fast knot which no human being could untie. But tho pullbacks were too sure of their ground. Mr. Taylor found that he could uso tho funds provided under the ordinance and yet not spend one cent for any plans but his own. The Frankford elevated obviously must be begun in town nnd gradually bo built out. The funds will be oxhausted long beforo Rhawn street Is reached, and no other funds will be available until a new Councils speaks. That new Councils can specify what sec tions of tho system the specific funds shall be used for. Tho elevated will bo built with Rhawn street as the ultimate terminal, Rny, but Brldgo street must be reached first. How long after that will it take to get to Rhawn street a Councils subsequently to bo elected must say. So, too, Just because the present Councils will not provide funds for tho loop is no reason why a later Councils will not. Tho electors In November will decide that question. Meantime, available funds can be wisely nnd conservatively expended In dig ging on Broad street, where under any plan a subway Is certain. So, all that Councils has been able to do Is to delay an Indorsement of the Taylor plan as a whole, while providing funds for the ac complishment of part of that program, and a very Important part of it. Mr. Taylor, in other words, takes n broad minded view and expresses by his action com plete faith In tho electorate, on which ho throws the burden of his tight by calling on It to decide in November whether It Is for tho "fake" plan or tho real plan. The obstructionists have blundered into a blind pit from which they cannot extricate themselves without stultification nnd certnin political repudiation. They have been check mated by the skilful tactics of the Director, whose vision is of quick transit, quickly got, unwarped by selfish political ambition. Ho Is ndt trained In playing tho game, but theso men compelled him to play It. and with what cards are on the table he has turned the trick. They did not make quite so hideous a crea ture as they thought they had constructed. Instead of the Impossible ordinance they Im agined they had written, they are amazed to find that It can be used to good advantage. There Is a good deal of humor In the situ ation. The friends of transit can nfford to laugh at the pullbacks. How readily tho duckling takes to water! "How will I ever explain it to Jim?" The Inefficient always Insist charge of inefficiency Is unfair. that the When a baby swallows a bichloride of mer cury tablet some one la to blame for leaving It where a baby could get It. Employing men on the Parkway7, or some other Important public work, is better than giving emergency aid in any other way, For the steenth time the New York courts are to be asked to decide whether Thav 1b any saner now than when he killed Stanford White. The Standard Oil people seem to be as much Interested in Doctor nittman's economical process of distilling gasoline as any of the little producers Of all the fool things to be argued before the United States Supreme Court, whether the upper berth in a sleeping ear should be made up before a passenger applies for It Is about the fooleet. Secretary McAdoo riQw says that there was never any Intention to buy the Interned ar juan ships if the ship purchase bill had passed. But an Inquest over the corpse of the bill is uninteresting and unimwlant un ite? the Adnintrs tln ptaM t jfulvarilaa it tato W t the next awtaa ot Geagress, LEtai3Il - PHtLABJDLPH:rA: TTTBSDAT, MABPH 9, 101& DR, R. JOHNSTON .ON THE WAR , j. . The Philadelphia Pastor Chides England for Lack of Appreciation of American Sentiment "Display of III Temper" Regretted THE following letter Vas written by Doctor Johnston, rector of tho "Church of tho Saviour, to tho editor of tho Edinburgh Scotsman, In which newspaper It was printed, together with an editorial reply. Doctor Johnston himself Is openly an advocato of tho Allies, nnd tho Scotsman, of course, Is nntl-Gcrman. Tho correspondenco nnd reply, therefore, both deal with tho subject from tho viewpoint of tho Allies, and are presented hero only becnuso of their undoubted Interest to the general public. To the Ildttor of thc-Scotsman: Sir The local papers today tell us of two tliliiRs. First .we are told that "Scotsmen hiss America," nt a meeting addressed by Lord Itosebery In Kdlnlnirgh, and vary their hisses with shouts of "dollnrs." Secondly, wo are told of a speech In Minneapolis, by Doctor Dornhcrg, ox-Socrctary of State ot the German Empire. In It lip advocates a future combina tion botween Germany and America with a view to terminating British 'lomlnatlon of tho Bens. I havo received letters Intcly from ndlnburKh, In which nn Imputlrnt spirit and unwarranted criticism of America Is evident. One good cleri cal friend writes: "lthcr tho States must condemn Germany, and plainly sny so, or con done her crimes." Where has such wholcsalo condemnation been heard more thin in our midst? It Is quite another matter to intcrveno with force of arms. Some of our finest citizens ndvocato an American entry Into the wrr. Per sonally, I cannot boo that this Is Justifiable, though I would rnther fight than preach the Gospel nt this hour. The responsibility of tho President, Involving the hnpplncss and well'aro of 100,000,000 of people, Is too weighty to bo determined by any outside authority or MV accumulation of devout sentiment. In rcpiv to an Invitation to a "neutrality" meeting, tho i Dlsliop of Pennsylvania wrote, and tho letter j nppearcd in the public press: "As nn American citizen, pledged to ttpnoia American Irtenls. I am altogether against Oer mnny nnd Austria In this war. On tho grounds that they nro threatening, nnd would destroy as far ns they have opportunity, those political nnd personal liberties and rights which we Americans have made the foundations of our Government. Feeling ns I do, you will readily understand that I cannot havo part In nny mooting or movement which hns for Its real object, whether or not explicitly nvowed, tho support of a cause to which I personally nnd resolutely am opposed." Attempts to Capture Public Opinion The desperate efforts the Gormnns nro making at the front to defeat the Allies Is only equaled by their frantic cffortB to capture public opin ion In America. Nothing will nld them more than the Idiotic display of Ill-temper by such audiences wo arc being told of. Tho sltuntlon In America ought to bo calmly considered. Hero Is a nntlon freo from nil cnlantrllng alliances, freo from all fear ot Invasion and threatened by none. It finds Itself the only grent nation outside, as far as fear and self-interest are concerned, tho possibility of war. An Independent peo ple, accustomed to determine Its own policy nnd sottlo Its own .principles, It hns nover fought with Germany, nnd tho history of this peoplo records three grent wars. In ench of th'sp wars Englnnd has been tho enemy. How Is this people acting In this crisis? Tho whol" nntlon, with tho exception of tho Germnn population. Is with tho Allies, Britain's cnuso Is spoken of ns "ours": tho "we" and the "us" of war conversation Is eloquent of a wonderful sympathy. Tho press is a unit; tho vigor of Its articles, tho lofty conception of right Is not excelled by the London press. In tho clubs, on the street, in ofTlces, In the street cars, tho one spirit Is shown. At the Union Lenguo Club the other day a well-known citizen of mature years raised tho song "Tlpp-rary" In responso to the orchestra. I suggested that it was an unneutral net. and the astonishing answer como back from tho mild American: "Neutral, sir; I'm damned If I nm." Most Americans think he would be, too, If ho were neutral In heart. In every walk In life, Judges, writers, clergy men, manufacturers, lawyers, native-born pro fessors, sailors, soldiers, teachers hold tho snmo opinion. This pronounced sympathy with the allied cause Is not nn equivalent to "killing Kruger with your mouth." It Is backed up by the presence of American men In the French nnd Canadian nrmles, by American money, by tho American Red Cross. At the opera, at the orchestra. American women are knitting; In Bible classes and in theatres they are knit ting for Kitchener's soldiers. American hearts wait anxiously for news of success, and are heavy when 111 reports come. In return for this, Ood mend us! Edinburgh of all cities hisses tho name "America," and shouts "dol lars" ns interpreting Amerlcnn motivo in seek ing to guard legitimate trade. I would rather havo had tho Joy of beating tho mouth that hissed than In destroying a company of hostile foreign soldiers. They at least are lighting for their country, tho other Is showing tho ser pent's teeth. A Lying Commonplace The cheap, sneering, lying commonplace abAut tho dollnr Is too frequently found on Euro pean lips; the flying of tho American flng in August of almost any year In Princes street Is not for love. It ill becomes men so to speak. When the. Briton cares nB little for tho dollar as tho American, the poverty, and shame, nnd want, and hunger I have minis tered amongst In Gorglo will bo gono forover. But enough . With regard to the President's note and Mr. Bryan's communications, British people ought to realize that they have to regard the rights of this nation. The shipping bill is not new; It Is ns e'ergreen as Homo Rulo. I believe that one of tho first acts of the first Congress of theso States was a shipping bill. I listened In Jho Senate to EUhu Root's denunciation of an American ofllclaPB note, which proved that lofty Integrity and high Idealism was not a stranger In America. I heard a noble citizen ot Now York say that ho would not consider American commerce under any circumstances as against England's preservation. These sen timents are widespread. But to the President It 1b not given to tako a personal view. He Is the guardian of tho future, and against a vicious precedent ho has to set his face, When, under the present strain, Scotsmen cannot sea this, we nro not surprised. But It Is well to eliminate the Buperlor cry of "dollars." In the Civil War. England preferred the material advantage of her trade to the Integrity of this Union. The fact that slavery was Involved Beemed then to have no effect on the morals of the contraband trade. These bitter memories ar all dead. It has been given to an Edin burgh audience to revive them In the generous Amerlcnn heart, Official American neutrality Is difficult to maintain; It Is the President's duty to maintain It. Americans must be allowed to trade. The evil suggestion of the meeting I refer to has joined hands with the Germans, who say that the hands of the Government here are red because they are trading with England In dum-dum bullets! The neutrality of this nation Is akn to the neutrality of (he American who was admon ished to be neutral. "I am neutral," he an swered. "I don't care a damn who beats the Germans." The Task of the President Let It rest there. The taik of the President Is serious, especially when the aggressiveness and number of the German population is re raembered. Belgium was a fortunate excuse for going to wer; I do not doubt the sincerity of the posi tlen tpken; I dp say. and openly say it here without reserve or shame, without Belgium's neutrality. England must have gone to war Years of Irritating lnults, years of threaten ing menace were bound to result In this way Suckled on Toryism. I nevertheless have been a constant admirer of Sir Edward Grey since the day of hie flr?t swecli n his first campaign as a .tripling with his beautiful wife he ap peared en a border platform Britain's posi tion needs no defense; soma Britons need a geg od uthws wisdom. Let tbo. whp In these times of war have leisure to attend meetings, rsmemtov that an American President has duties to nn in.-i-Zl, SI"??: i.'i l$'? Wttt snftJ The ABMrteaa'e love of gbt ytf hajwpit f .. K ..' TC ' '""( i ' ' -"ij y il i BBIIiffi&S,. W&l . . -L fl ISSMlssSilf 1 rattle of the eword; his instlnotlvo response to his Inheritance of Anglo-Saxon Ideas ot liberty, require no stimulus from any quarter and his Irrltntlon at puerile hisses is best left sleeping I am, etc., ROBERT JOHNSTON. Rector of tho Church of the Saviour, and formerly rector of St. Mnrtln's Episcopal Church, Edinburgh. German-Americans The Scotsman comments editorially on Doctor Johnston's letter as follows: A correspondent, who wns formerly an Edin burgh clergyman, nnd who Is now minister ot nn Episcopal Church In Philadelphia, makes complaint In a letter printed In another col umn of Scottish feeling rcgnrdlng tho United States. Ho alludes to an Incident nt Lord Rosebery's Edinburgh meeting a fortnight ngo, which It Is evident has been misrepresented and distorted by German propagandists in America. "Wo are told," ho writes, "that Scotsmen hiss America, "and vary their hisses with shouts of dollars." Tho statement Is false. Its origin Is tho Innccuracy of a re porter; its development Is tho work of a slanderer. Thero wero no hisses when Lord Rosebery mentioned the United States. One foolish and Irresponsible person cried "tho al mighty dollar." The audience turned upon him as a nuisance, and their Impatient demand for sllenco wns apparently understood by a care less reporter to bo tho expression of a hostile feeling against America. Our correspondent will, no doubt, tako means to correct the false Impression produced In the Philadelphia press by this Incident. His commentary on Scottish feeling need not be discussed, ns it is based upon an Illusion. But it is interesting to learn from a private letter that ono of tho leading ministers in Philadelphia wns describing tho conduct of German-Americans in virtually tho snmo terms ns Lord Rosebery at a time which synchronises with tho Edinburgh meeting. "Tho German population of tho United States," Lord Rosebery said, "which Is very lnrge. Is extromely anxious, so far ns we can gather from the papers, to play the samo part In tho United States as Prussia plays In Ger manyto bo the mahout of the United States, to be tho driver and to (Irivo her Into what would be a civil war with her ancestors nnd her friends Great Britain." "As to this Ger man propaganda," writes tho Philadelphia clergyman, "I am getting more and more In dignant nnd arousod. Many letters havo como to me lately showing beyond a doubt that there is a network sprend over this wholo country secretly nnd silently, nnd that very great harm Is being done, so much so. In faot, that I really believe our Institutions are In danger." GREEK PRAYER FOR PEACE It was not loft for modern times to discover the blessings of pence. Tho Hebrew prophets hard company when they praised It and besought It of a higher power. Prof. Alexander Nnlrne. of King's College, London, has cited In the Lon don Times tho following prayer he found In the Pax (lines 091 ft.) of Aristophanes, the Greek writer of comedies (450-38S, B. C), and furnished tho translation, which, though somewhat free, gives admirably tho flavor of tho original: O thou that makest wars to cease In all tho world. In accordance with thine ancient name we be seech thee Mako war arid tumult now to cease From the murmur and tho subtlety ot susplolon with which we vex one another. Give us rest, Make a new beginning. And mingle nsaln tho kindred of the nations In the alchemy of love; And with some finer essence of forbearance and forgiveness Temper our mind. FRIENDS No man can expect to find a friend without faults; nor can he propose himself to be so to another. Without reciprocal mildness and tem perance there can be no continuance of friend ship. Every man will have something to do for his friend, and something to bear with in him. The sober man only can do the first: and for the latter, patience Is requisite. It is better for a man to depend on hlmoplt than to be annoyed with either a madman or a fool. Owen Fell tham, THE WILSONIAN VERSION To eay "I am the State" Is sadly out of date, For your ruler autocratic: Heads the party Democratic, And declares, whate'er befall. He Is the "Initiative, Referendum and recall'': "That's all." John P, Davln. M. D., in New Tork Bun. . . m r . ii v , WAITING ' ' ' Serene, I fold my hands and wait, Nor care for wind, or tide, or sea; I rave no mqre 'gainst -time or fate. For lol my own shall some to me, ' Asleep, awake, by night or day, The friends I seek are seeking me; No wind can drive my bark astray, Nor change the tide of deetlny. What matter if I stand alone? I. wait with iW the coming years; My hrt shall reap, where It has sowp. Arid gamer up It? fruit of tears. The stars corne nightly to the sky; Thft tidal wave unto the tm; Nor time, nor space, ngr deep, oor hjgh. Can keep thrown away rpflv rne. Jba Burroufbj. FREEDOM STILL LIVES While pne tw w ipk out against In. Jwrtlse. yvhljv through. 'nw's dorusd "Rlgbtl" clear VattMit Rs '?. jw WTM1H VHI. W. NMWt, . "GREAT SCOTT, WHAT WILL JIM SAYl" fef tnavjr . n & . , .,;,:. t-x. Who Got the Taxpayers' Money, and How Hundreds of Peopla THB Roberts-Fairbanks Organisation at Terro Haute, after all opposition had been beaten, began a systematic contract grab. Within one year tho plunder ot tho City Treasury caused tho tax rate to rise, whllo tho enormous assessments on property holders forced hundreds of the citizens to loso their homes. They wero unable to pay the tribute exneted by the contractors. Roberts already had an unsavory reputa tion in Terro Hauto as a contractor. It was ho who had paved Maple avenue and Lafayette street and waged a bitter fight ngalnst tho Board ot Works for refusing to accept his Inferior material. It was he who broko into tho city cisterns to save money in hauling water. It was ho who had mulcted tho city on intersections and cheap curbing. These contracts, however, amounted to no great sum, but they wero Indicative of tho typo of work to bo done when the contractor gained more power. During tho Roberts campaign ono of tho principal cries was poor streets 27 miles must bo paved. The Organization's original project of eliminating the leading thorough fares from tho city plans nnd placing their maintenance on tho township was popular with the citizens, as tho wealthy township, and not tho city, would havo to pay for the paving. Tho Organization did not caro who paid so long as it gained its point. When tho Pennsylvania Railroad, tho largest town ship taxpayer, fought this scheme on con stitutional grounds tho contractors were stuck only about $100,000 work had been completed. Then Roberts nnd his friends turned to the city streets as their salvation. Philadelphia History Repeated Tho disclosures made during the investiga tion by tho Cntlln Commission In Philadel phia In 1912 were Identical with those which have como to light in Terre Haute during tho last month. There wero the samo contractor poli ticians. There wns tho samo fraudulent ad vertising. Thero were tho snmo supplemental contracts, the same Juggling of accounts, the Bnme substitution of material, tho samo faulty work, tho same fako Inspection, the samo political pull which gave millions to the Philadelphia contractors, but only thou sands to tho Terro Hauto contractors. The courts of Philadelphia condomned the meth ods of the Philadelphia bosses; three of tho leading experts In the country called the work at League Island Park a contracting crime; but tho political power held by the contractors kept them In power and has secured additional contracts. In Terra Haute this has not been the case. Tho citizens in that city have started suits to prevent tho completion of the work, and ore about to begin proceedings to compel the contractors to refund. The Government's In tervention has been the great city saver It has completely and for all time ended the contractor regime in that Indiana city, Roberts and his partners on the Board of Works George Ehronhardt and Harry Mont gomerysaw that all the contracts went to the Cain Construction Company, of Gary, Ind, In Terret Haute four fake subsidiary companies were formed to deceive the citizens. High-sounding names were given to them, but the potltleal sharpers forgot to havo them incorporated In Indianapolis, Now, In the letting of the contracts the city officials as In the case of Henry Clay In Philadelphia made all kinds of substitu tions and changes, apd so tied up the sub. contractors that they would be forced to purchase supplies from firms named by the Organization and bo absolutely under their control. The work began; an 1500,000 contract was let, This was for asphalt, concrete and brick streets. One of the leading engineers In the Middle West recently went over the entire work and presented figures showing that $100,000 extra, profit has gono Into some body's hands probably $150,000. In other words, the asphalt contracts, which were let at $1.34 a yard, could have been fulfilled at 95 Cents a yard and then yielded a IS per cent profit to the contractor. This showing ' strangely resembles the famous; 76 cents to $186 asphalt rate by which the Filbert Pav ing and Construction Company mulcted this elty under Mayor Heyburn. A trip to League Island Park and a view ef tb wai te'ofcW concrete eurfee and wall lvd excellent, le, of the iyjie. CONTRACTOR RULE IN TERRE HAUM IjOSU -.lieu i-uiuea jdco,ub uj. in tuuiani in City Politics. By IRWIN L. GORDON IV. work done by the Roberts clique, of Txa Haute contractors. They used 'onlytS thirds of tho cement required In constnlcffl pavements and curbs; they used the Doiffi gravel possible: they got In their extnH every possible point. J What wero theso extras? Tho idwtS schemes worked by tho Philadelphia,, tractors on their South Philadelphia uj ivortneostern boulevard contracts gjj worked by theso other political contract Whllo the original contract was supptitlli tho citizens to cover everything, it -wai oS; tho start. "Extra excavations" wasOMJS the most flagrant abuses. Along on fi&t? alone the contractors managed to semfyi extra $3000, whllo In toto some $50,000 3 Into their pockets for this supplemaS work. Manhole covers which had to be af Justed brought $4 Instead of the II vM non-political men received. Expansion & In concrete strcots wero set every 30jf,15 instead ot every 50 feet. This savedatS) contractors $50 for every city bjocfcjra course, it was necessary to reset all curg along tho lino of the now street. Thlj e! as a supplemental contract. Streets in tho Wilderness Great stretches of streets were pats! through sections which will probaMjrjS bo developed for 25 years. Property,' )oS sure, was owned In these regions by the,H tlclans. Thus in Terro Haute another NortS east boulevard scandal began. Ai iw5 the taxpayers had to foot tho bills, i!Ej tho valuo of tho politicians' property'!. enhanced tremendously. This was $ tho case In this city when David ilartij Peter E, Costello and many of tho Count!; mon bought up property along the boulevari Only In Philadelphia they sold most at tH holdings to the city. In Terro Haute fe wero contented to havo tho Improve- mado without pay. This was usually attgK pllshed by changing tho boundary of the. Wherever now streets were to 6e"lM sewers must bo placed more contracti.-p through cornfields these streets were fuM the city authorities forcing tho property M ers to pay for tho lateral sowers. It no difference ns to tho size pf the ,!$l lateral sewer must bo constructed evujjjj yards. Under all other contractors tjg cost $6 to $9, but under the Cain-Rote men It was $18 to $22. Another eitraiy was charged each property holder wbwl sewer was tapped. In tho brick atrcets some clever were worked. Roberts owed a certalpM company a bill of $13,000 on old coptnp This company received all the contract! the new streets. Of course, the prlco'j more than ever charged before, tW!J Is In hand to show that the brick cqwg contributed snmn SKOon in defend H0tS! , ... .. T .- , during his trial. As the contract was based on the ro'J used, the contractors saw to It that MJ concrete as possible got Into the wort man from whom the concrete was pur was a ward lieutenant and a faithful !V worker, Sand costs 85 cents a cuble Cement coHtn 11(1 fid n nnhfn v3J'd. Tha y versal formula for binder In bVick trejtl one bag of cement to one bag of pane. contractors, used pure cement, thus h"J Ing the cost 100 per cent. The League Island of Terro Haut The political contractors of Terre Hj did exactly what tho contractors League Island used river gravel. T6f saved tens of thousands of dollars. TPjJ rtArtn whn Tmlni.il thn Work at 15 Island for DirMtor PnokA nhowed ltw! Inferior gravel that sDolled It. In M Hauto the Wabash River gravel ! s This la how It was done. With extras, some of the asphalt contract nrlces soared in 1S.!5 a yard. extra curbing, paving and sewers, t sessment for Improvements to the Pf holders went JntQ thousands of dollar peoplo whose properties were heavily gaged wero ruined they could not P4 the Improvements. Hundreds lt homes. Thu3 the contractor bosses of 1 Haute slowly tied the noose aheut hiiaria which uinn eventually to '' them. A NATION'S BEST INVESTM tusla t g, -atten'e bt invests gSP-Sf$tJVMt tUlf --'" N t