RJ Wtytt PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY cYnus it. tc ctrn-ns, rairsiDMT. hChirlM II Ludlnirton.vlce-Prtiildent; John C. Martin, Pc.rftafr4lia Trtaaurtri Thlllp 8. Collln, John n. Wllliami, Dlrwtnm. EDtTOnlAt. boaHd i Ctaca II. K, Ccmis, Chairman. t. H. frHAtCT Executive Editor JOIIK C. MAlfflN. general Builneae Manager Published dally at rcsua l.r.pam nulMlng. Independence Square, Philadelphia. Lroora CrrTL,..,. ,.,,. Broad and Cheetnut strerta Atlantic Cut.... ............ ..rrrsj-tfnfon Hull. ling Nkw Toik ....... ..170-A, Metropolitan Tower Cmoaoo., ....... . .....817 Home Insurance tlulldln? London ......8 Waterloo Place, Tall Mall, S. W. .. NEWS BURHAL'S: wisiiiKQTON Tlcnruo. . . 'iii 1'o.it Huiiciinir Nrw Tokk nuEAU The Tlmn llullillnx tmi.m HcHt.tu. ... . no rrledrlchstrnxre !,onpon Hemic,,.. .. ... 2 Tail Mall Kast. H W. fills EynlMli.,,, !)2 Hue Louis le Urand sunscnirrio.v Tnnjis Br carrier, Dailt Oxlt, alx cents. Dj mall, postpaid eutsld of Philadelphia, except where forden posiars la required, Dailt Onlt, one month, twenty-five cents; DAti.T ONLT, one Tear, three dollars All malt sub crlptlona parable In advance heix, 3000 walnut KMSTOMr, MAIN 3000 W Adilms all communication) to r.rcnlng Ledger, Independence Squire, Philadelphia. zNTtxiDiTinExntLADEiriitA rosTorricn as second CLASS MAIL SIATTr.n. rillLAUFU'lllA, H1IIU., MAIICII 20, 1913. Patience will often telii where push rushes one on to disaster. Time for Alertness, Not for Alarm THE publicity Riven to the facta about the smallpox epidemic In Mlllvillc, Now Jersey, la a sufficient guarantee for the protection of the adjoining communities. It Is unfortu nate that the disease was not recognized ns Boon as It appeared, hut since It hns been Identified the authorities have acted with energy and decision. Tho vaccination of all the people In tho community will Involve a smaller outlay of time and energy than was devoted to preventing tho spread of smallpox In tho negro quarter In this city last year. It Is likely that the disease will bo confined to the district whero It Is now prevalent; but if there should ho sporadic cases In tho sur rounding communities they will bo discovered beforo tho contagion has a chance to spread far, as every physician in all southern Now Jersey Is now alert. Tho few cases that have appeared In Camden may or may not have originated from tho Mlllvlllo source of contnglon; but tho Camden health officers have taken steps to prevent the spread of tho disease. Tho danger to Philadelphia Is slight Indeed, for Its Health Department has, tlmo after time, demonstrated Its ability to segregate tho disease as soon as It appears. Hut even if thcro should bo a large number of cakes, which is morally impossible, modern meth ods of treatment are udequnto for Its cure. Wo know how to stamp It out and how to nurse it now, so thnt tho terrors thnt It once held have practically all been removed. It Is a time for alertness, not for alarm. Twice Dead MORGAN ROBERTSON, writer of sea stories, is dead; pathetically dead, for time had stripped him of his genius and left him beggared even of hope. His life had in It much of tho tragedy that is associated historically with literary genius. For years he served at sea, and as a land lubber poverty haunted him until, with a tub as a writing place and on tho backs of circu lars he had been hired to distribute, he scribbled the first of his Inimitable talcs. Success was swift and sure. Monoy came fast and went faster. Then one day' ho awoke to find that ho had lost his "punch." Perhaps he had exhausted his material, as his tales were based on personal experience. At any rate, pathetic In the extreme was his story of how ho walked Into an editor's office and offered a manuscript. Tho editor refused it. "If yau want to write 'sea stories," he said, "study the masterpieces of that man," and he pointed to a picture of Morgan Robertson hanging on tho wall. He and his work, too, were unrecognized! Sometimes men live too long, and some, tnoro fortunate, slip Into the rest of death at the meridian of their power. Poor Robertson! "What a pity that his weak heart did not fail before genius fled from his skull and left but the shell of greatness. It was his fato to dlo twice. ' "Standinff Aghast" Docs No Good JUDGE UMBEL'S newspaper In Union town is very much disturbed over tho resignation of that gentleman, whoso friends advised him against standing trial beforo tho Legislature, on the ground that there was a frame-up and ho did not havo even a fighting chance. "When all the details of this infamous piece of business nro pub lished," says tho News Standard, "the peo ple of Pennsylvania will stand aghast at the depths of depravity to which tho Republi can machine In this Stato will descend." A bravo and Innocent man does not usually quit, even If the cards are stacked, particu larly when he has a chance to present the facts in tho form of evidence to all the world. The people ought to be aghast at the spec tacle of Senator Crow holding a Judgo in the hollow of his hand, preventing his Impeach ment at one time and making It certain nt another. But they seem to care very little about it. Moreover, standing aghast would not do either them or tho Commonwealth any good. They have been standing aghast too long. Nothing will bo accomplished un til they get fighting mad, quit "standing for" anything and v'oto the whole vicious ma chine Into the discard. Judge Umbel probably knows a lot of things that would arouse fire in the olector- : ate, for he has been in Fayette County a long time, and this Is no time to keep his mouth shut. The Rights of Motherhood GOVERNOR WHITMAN of New York has not yet decided whether he will sign the widows' pension bill which the Legislature has sent to him. Pennsylvania has a law of the same kind, passed after Its value had beep, demonstrated in other States, but the Legislature has been, only half-hearted in supporting It with appropriations. Tho solo question Involved in legislation of thU kind Is whether dependent children shall be maintained by the Commonwealth In their home with their mother or In public institu tions. The Commonwealth has to maintain them anyway for their mothers are unable to carry the. burden The institution-reared child is robbed ot all the human affections to which the ypuns are entitled. He Is sent out into th world maimed and dwarfed, morally and intellectually. If not physically. But argu twilit la not needed to prove that the proper pUc for a child Is with Its mother, provided th othr ta half-way decent. Th mother Wv th child to society and the child saves t Is atWAbM from UerwJf. It Witt l a Cartuoat day fr the Common I Aliening EVENING wealth when tho public Institutions for chil dren can bo razed to tho ground and when each child may have tho caro and comfort of a mother during Its growing years. Who knows what might have beconio of Moses If Pharaoh's daughter had committed him to the caro of n hireling Egyptian T Even though the Stnto may not think It prudent to nppro prlato all that Is needed to support the de pendent children, motherhood has rights which It Is bound to respect. Tho mother's pension system is based on tho most hu manely Intelligent Idea that has emergott from the ruck of philanthropic discussion In n generation. Know the Governor by His Enemies ON the groat Issues he has espoused, Gover nor Brumbaugh need not fear tho antag onism of Senators McNichol nnd Crow or any other men. Tho rebound to conservatism In this coun try (liuls the public still determined and fixed In Its resolve to obtain certain requisite re forms. Pennsylvania, above all, proposes to escnpo tho fanaticism of prohibition by tem perate treatment of tho liquor problem. To that end n vast majority of citizens havo de cided that thcro must be local option, not only because It Is tho obvious and wise method of dealing with tho problem nnd In cntlro conso nance with American principles, but becauso It Is realized that otherwise tho Stato will bo plunged Into a qtiagmlro of liquor politics, as has happened In so many other Common wealths. Sonntors McNichol and Crow stnnd for tho Organization nnd tho Organization stands for "booze." It turned to "booze" for monoy last fall and gave, It Is assumed, definite promises In roturn. Yet Dr. Brumbaugh at thnt time specifically refused to permit any of tho funds so collected to ho used In his behalf. Ho dedi cated himself to local option, desplto tho Or ganization, nnd because tho peoplo believed In him they elected him by a great majority. They will stand by him now, when the light Is thickest, no matter what elements aro ar rayed against him. Ho enn appeal over tho heads of tho bosses to the electorate and bo sure of vindication nnd support. Ho Is armed with a Just cause and tho enemies ho Is mak ing may readily become his chief asset. So, too. In relation to tho child labor and compensation laws, It Is obvious that wlso enactments at this time will prevent radical enactments later on. It Is Important to manu facturers that tho Issue bo settled now, when the Chief Executive Is n man unswayed by passion or prejudice, sincerely desirous of se curing the best possible law, fair alike to em ployer and employe. A hybrid measure will be worse than no measure ut all. The Vares, who nro displaying these days more political acumen than they ever beforo exhibited, glvo Indications of standing by tho Governor. That Is what they ought to do, for there Is no sturdier figure just now In our public life nnd none more richly Impregnated with the longings of tho common people. Tho destinies of tho Republican party In tho Stnto nro wrapped up In him nnd the leaders of to morrow will bo tho men who now tie to him. But to stand by tho Governor means to sup port his local option light. Tho Vares must not forget that. The battle Is beginning to develop and the legionaries to show their colors. Tho cards are being laid on tho table, where all men enn see them, and the public will havo no diffi culty in deciding Into which hand wagon It wants to get. Reward for Merit? VINCENT ASTOU has been honored by tho award of a mednl from the New York Chapter of the American Instituto of Archi tects for erecting tho best six-story apart ment houso in New York. Possibly the Legislature of Pennsylvania would be glad to provide a rich financial prize of honor for tho gentleman who proves that ho manages and collects rent for tho worst tenement building In Philadelphia. Mountain Laurel Turned Down PENNSYLVANIA must worry along for some time yet without an ofllclal Stato flower, for the Governor has vetoed Repre sentative Gelser's bill raising the mountain laurel to that distinction. Tho Governor ob jects because the mountain laurel Is tho of ficial flower of Connecticut, because there Is no sentimental association with tho blossom and because tho leaves are poisonous. But tho failure of tho laurel to receive the executive approval will not prevent It from adorning the thickets In all corners of tho Commonwealth with its beautiful blossoms. And the other flowers which havo been turned down by successive Governors when pro posed for high honors will also continue to gladden the eye every season In their turn. The trailing arbutus makes fragrant the spring and tho wild aster glorifies tho fields In lato autumn. In tho months between wo have tho goldenrod, tho daisy, tho blue violet and the anemone, Jack-ln-tho-pulplt, lilies of all varieties, both tho lilies of tho Held and lilies qf the hothouse; hollyhocks, morning glories, trumpet flowers, wild roses and roses that have been tamed, and the fragrant and promising blossoms of all tho fruit trees, to say nothing of the flowers of the potato vine, the cucumber plant and tho pumpkin. With so many to choose from It ought to bo pos sible to find one thnt would commend Itself to a Governor. The Penrose still remains as the only of ficial State flower. Perhaps President Wilson Is trying to con quer the Mexicans by kindness, There Is a man In New York who would give a Roland for an Oliver, or two Rolands, for that matter. The Panama fair Is now dedicated; but it IS Just as Interesting now as beforo the Vice President made his dedicatory speech. Whoever is behind that bill providing for State Inspection of upholstering evidently wants to provide soma easy berths for hla friends. The jitneys will be popular In Atlantic City, provided they do not carry blgns showing how cheap it is to ride In an automobile at the seaside. Representative Beyer, who Is a handsome man himself, ought not to be criticising the Philadelphia Judges for their vanity, It is an amiable ailment that does no one any harm. If the Senate committee really Insists, Col onel Roosevelt will doubtless be glad to tell It exactly what he thinks of the ship pur chase bill, and in language both emphatlo and clearly understandable. Admirers of the man who wrote to the New York Sun last June that ho was blessed If he., did not believe that Mr. Wilson could "transmute the present order of things Into original chaps" are now writing to tho Sun ttJWtgratulatlng him on the verification of bit tl$aa.te of the President's genius. tiEPgER - PHTLADgLPHrX FBIDAY, MABCH ZG,19t GIVING SHAKESPEARE BACK HIS BEAUTY How Granville Barker Has Mad Micistimmnr Nicrht's Dreamt! Beautiful and Novel Play Scoheyjj? Almost as Brilliant as the verse t . i i By KENNETH MACGOWAN ' - SHAKESPEARE'S finest testimonial from 20th century) Amerlra Is his popularity In tho faco ofho sort of ungracious pro ductions glveihls plays. Philadelphia has Just had a fortnight of samples from Mr. Mnntell; It can still remember the scenic ntrocltles of Mr. Solhern nnd Miss Marlowe. The Beauty Shakespeare Demands Now It happens thnt of all the plays cur rent on tho American stngo nono domand scenic Illusion so much ns Shakespeare's and none get so little of It. Tho demand Is easy to understand. Writing for a stage with practically no scenery, Shnkespearo larded lilt text with tho most beautiful and lmnglnatlvo of descriptions, All but tho work of a finely Imaginative stago-artlst will fado to taw drlncss beforo tho warmth of tho verse. What palo stago-dawns wo seo with our eyes whllo cur ears drink In: Hut look, the morn, In russet mnntlo clad, Wnllci o'er the dew of yon high eastwnrtl hill. Night's candles ate burnt out, nnd Jocund dny Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain-top. Wo gaze upon the forest backdrop of soma English park with neat square "wood wings" dividing tho sides of tho stngo, while "Tho Merchant of Venlco" tells us to believe thnt wo see: How sweet tho moonlight sleeps upon this bank! Hero wo will sit ntitl let tho Bounds of music Creep in our enrs; soft stillness nnd the night Become the touches of sweet harmony. Sit, Jessica Look how the floor of heaven Is thick Inlaid with patlncs of bright gold. Drear brown walls, stones nnd shleldi painted with equal freedom on them, are all wo get to suggest tho awesomo brooding cham bers of "Macbeth." And the next night nnd tho next, tho same walls turn up In 'Ham let" and "Romeo and Juliet." Silly, flnppy, canvas atrocities, neither beautiful nor ap propriate, trying to keep pneo with Shakes peare. It Is simply ludicrous. Even If one of our Shakespearean produc tions could nchlovo real benuty; even If by some mlrnclo our narrow stnge-realism could approach tho verse, tho result would still bo miles from the real Shakespeare. Rccauso tho ordinary srenery Is hard to move, and because tho modern play hns evolved Into threo or four long, continuous scones, tho producer of Shakespeare cuts nnd rearranges! the swift, short, varied scenes of tho fluid Ellzabethnn stage so that tho curtain can stay up as long a time as possible. The least harmful result Is utter confusion of tlmo and place; but worso than that, Shakespeare's dramatic construction Is ruined, climax de stroyed, balance annihilated and tho nwlft run of tho narrative Interrupted by a half dozen ten-minute waits. Shakespeare "Remade in Germany" It Is to tho now stngecrnft of Germany that we owo release from such silly conventions, and the rebirth of Shnkespearo ns a really entertaining and expert dramatist as well ns poet. Llngston Piatt Imported a little of it for Margaret Anglln's productions last sea son; but Granville Barker, tho English pro ducer, now in New York, Is tho first to re store a Shakespeare play to Its original order and completeness and to set It all In an imag inative and Illusive background tho work of Norman Wilkinson, an English artist. Tho play Is "A Midsummer Night's Dream"; tho theatre, Wallnck's. Tho former ho leaves as Shakespeare! who may bo sup posed to know what ho was doing orig inally wrote It; nil ho adds to tho words is a very swift, lifelike and yet finely lyric dic tion, Instead of tho lubored pomposity of blank verse oratory. Tho theatre ho com pletely changes. He annihilates tho foot lights and throws his light from balcony and gnllery In a flood that leaps Into new Ufo by tho angle at which It Is reflected to tho spec tator. Tho picture-frame stage goes with them. Whero iho footlights were he places a couple of broad steps leading to a platform over the orchestra pit from right box to left. Tho first boxes become entrances, always In view. Tho "foro-stago" Is divided from tho part behind tho proscenium by a cream cur tain In soft folds, which Is lowered during tho two Intermissions. Tho Double Stage For tho short "front scenes" this curtain i replaced by others just as soft, on which aro painted suggestions of tho places represented. Thus for tho audience chamber whero tho play begins, tho curtnln Is pale, with formal flowerings of gold and blue. In front of it la a square black seat us throne. For somo of tho shorter scenes in tho woods it is a green forest suggested by angular edges of trees against a deep bluo sky spattered with stars. Another, not so successful to my mind, is a pinky plaster wall 'of one of tho "mechani cals " houses In Athens. When ono of these scenes goc3 forward on the "fore-stage," they are setting tho next solid scene behind tho curtain. In Mr. Barker's production there aro only two Buch, Ono is tho bower of Titanla; tho other, the court of Theseus, whero the burlesquo of the mechanicals Is acted. Tho Curtain Forest The bower Is easily the most brilliant suc cess of all Norman Wilkinson's scenery. It Is posslblo to quarrel with many parts of his work as Is true of any new art worth Its salt many critics have objected to the formal wreath of greenery which hangs high in tho nlr above Titanla's couch. Yet the whole effect of this scene Is as undoubtedly right as tho whole method. Tho ground slants up to a three-cornered mound directly below the wreath and tho filmy curtains of the bower suspended below It. Tho mound forms an excellent point for many of Puck's capers, around It race the fairies, darting in and out of the woods. These woods are the triumph of the scene and the play. They are formed by curtains draped In a semicircle from proscenium to proscenium, silt more or less regularly by gap3 that show other curtains behind. Painted in moist greens suggestive of vague boughs and foliage, they glvo a feeling1 of forest Bhadows and leafy vistas far more lovely than anything hitherto ac complished in America, The scene of the court has its virtues, too. By making the background tho steps lead ing to a pillared terrace, the audience of Prince Theseus may lie with their backs to us and facing tho mechanicals, whllo these actors upon the terrace Itself are able to play directly at both groups of spectators. Its colors are the black and silver of night,' The "effect of all this on a not very inter esting play la to galvanize It into rich and beautiful life. This or that bit of color might well havo been applied differently, this or that speech accented In another way. But the whole result of Mr Barker's Innovations Is to make tho narrative wlft-runnlp and vivid, backed fcy a taaaginatlva bauty mt dtcora- GREAT STUNT, SENATOR, BUT IF YOU'RE TRYING fa J .J T!, FW ST-A NWNHtrJjffW Hon that consorts with tho beauty of word, Tho whole Is an artistic creation designed to match Shakespeare's. What wo get from Mr. Mantoll nnd Mr. Sothern Is a device for hiding tho brick walls of tho stage, whllo still convincing the audience thnt they nro In a theatre. And a very ugly theatre, nt that. OPINIONS ON THE JITNEY The 5-ccnt Bus Unlikely to Take the Place of Trolley Systems. THE beginning "tho jitney bus Is a free TN l in lance, with no restrictions on Its route, run ning or rates. Is there not hero somo sug gestion of needed municipal legislation?' Quickly comes that question. Quickly come& tho Public Service Commission to niako rules, or tho City Council to establish regulations, or maybe tho State Legislature to take a hand. Comes also the definition: A jitney bus Is a motorcar of nny description that 1b operated over regular routes and on regular schedules, and carries passengers for G cents each. Chargo 10 cents and tho conveyance ceases to bo a Jitney. Exnctly what function In transportation It will eventually and permanently fulfil It Is per haps too early to say. Tho prophecies from various sources aro various. For Instance: "It will develop Into an Institution for short haul trnfllc." "Judging from tho past history of tho nuto mobllc. It will provo a great road-builder." "It Is easy to seo the trend of things In ln terurban transportation." "It Is serving In many Instances as a most effective public scrvlco commission." "It may end tho agitation of public owner ship of urban transit lines." "In the long run tho Jitney bus peoplo will find that running a motorcar for tho public nt 5 cents a trip does not pay. When tho real charges begin to como in maintenance, tires, depreciation, etc. the operators will begin to check up and learn tho truth about their Invest ment." Somo moro opinions: "The Jitney win soon disappear to bo replaced by an 'automobile ex press' cars built especially for clty-passengor trafllc, with capacity for 10 or a dozen persons each, and operating regular routes, with branch lines and transfer stations." "It Is not Inconceivable that tho traction in terests will find the motor bus a valuable fac tor In solving the problems both of congestion nnd of tapping districts not served which for reasons of expense, street regulations or other wIsj, cannot bo leached by tracks." "Tho Standard Oil Company Is still In tho business of selling gasoline." It Is of con siderable Interest that a chemist in the Bureau of Mines has found tho jitney brand of gaso llno-for by his now process 200 per cent, moro gasoline can bo obtained from a gallon of petroleum than by any of the previously utilized processes. A BOON TO VERMONT BOYS From tha Cleveland Plain Dealer. Before the Legislature of Vermont Is a meas ure which merits the Indorsement of every boy In the United StateB. it nlms to relieve boy dom of the Green Mountain State of a handi cap which has long hampered Its natural de velopment. The bill In question proposes to reduce the license tax on circuses which enter the State In the pursuit of business. The present tax Is $1000, which Is declared to be practically pro hlbltlve. In addition, each town where the big canvass Js spread levies Its own tax, running from $25 Into the hundreds, A State virtually without circuses from one year's end to another cannot live a healthful existence. It is not surprising that Vermont threw away her electoral votes three years ago, nor that the State was visited by an epidemic of infant paralysis last year. What Vermont needs is circuses. The Legis lature Is on the right tack. And the approach of spring furnishes a psychologically happy background for the consideration of this boon to the modern Green Mountain boys. Reduce the State circus tax? Abolish It ANGRY LETTERS This at least should bo a rule through the letter writing world that no angry letter be posted till four and twenty hours shall have elapsed since It was written. We all know how absurd is that other rule of saying the alphabet when you ara angry, Trash I Sit down and write your letter; write It 'with all the venom in your power; spit out your spleen at the fullest; 'twill do you good. You think you have been injured. Say all that you can say with all your poisoned eloquence, and gratify yourself by reading it while your temper la stilt hot. Then put it In your desk, and, as a matter of course, Tmrn It befor breakfast the following morning. Believe pie that you will then have a double gTatlncatloh.-Anthony Trollop. WISH AND WJLL Wo would have inward peace. Yet will not look within; We would have misery ceaie. Yet wW not cease, from sin. Katthrw Arnold, I -T BEST THOUGHT IN AMERICA DIGEST OF (1) Metropolian "Today nnd Tomorrow." (2) World's Work "Pork Barrel Pen sions." (3) Now Republic "The Rota." (4) Leslie's "Tho Plain Truth." (5) Collier's "Wo Shall Meet, but Wo Shall Miss Thorn." THE PEOPLE'S BUSINESS OUR Idea of what constitutes the people's business is slowly expanding. In feudal days It consisted exclusively of paying taxes and fighting. Today It 13 much tho same, except that, In tho meantime, tho people, by dint of a couplo of revolutions and much struggle and bloodshed, havo gained a sort of loft-handed control of what becomes of their taxes'. Theoretically, of course, this being a democracy, thoy havo overythlng to say about it. But, ns a matter of fact, tho "soverelgn-pcpul" havo mortgaged them selves hand and foot to local machines and a couplo of national parties that spend their tlmo playing chess with each other, using tho people's votes nnd monoy for tho rooks and pawns, nnd so it Is rumored making ducks and drakes' of them. Optimists hope that somo day tho peoplo will tiro of being pawns, nnd will dccldo to tako a hand In tho gamo for themselves. In fact, they nro already trying to do this in tho West with tho Initiative, referendum, recall and similar measures. In tho mcan tlmo, however, tho national pastime of see ing how full tho national legislators can stuff their pork barrels without "busting" them rolls merrily on. Tho March maga zines contain a dozen articles touching on various phases of the people's business, nnd their efforts to swing It. An nrtlclo by Walter Llppmann In tho Metropolitan (1), points out analogies bo tween business' and politics: The old theory that a business exists for Its owners Is going the way of the theory that a people exists for its king, George V, in his proclamations, still talks of "my peo ple" as somo men talk of "my business," but overy ono knows that it Is an empty fiction. It Is no great prophecy to say that In a fow years "my business" will seem Just ns anti quated a phrase. Tho best clue to the con dition of business Is to recognlzo that within It tho samo forces aro at work which havo transformed cities and states from crown colonies and dependencies Into moro or less self-governing members of a national feder ation. These new democratic experiments nro often ignorant, sometimes corrupt; they aro easily betrayed; they shun tho expert and they fear power. You cannot have an Industrial system go ing In ono direction nnd a political system going In another. Either thoy must rein force each other or they will destroy ono another. Business and politics aro so close together they cannot live on two contradic tory principles. Wo sometimes forget tho absurdity of that contradiction. All the year long a man may work in a factory and If ho criticises the boss ho is fired. On ono Tues day in November he helps to decldo the hir ing and firing of tho President of the United States. What Is in tho Pork Barrels There Is a disillusionizing account of pension-grabbing methods by Burton Hendrlck In tho World's Work (2), which accounts for what becomes of a share of our taxes: In tho 60 years since the Civil War ended, the American people have paid to its sur vivors or their dependents more than $4,500, 000,000. For 40 years Congress has prac tically abdicated its control over pension leg islation. Tho Grand Army of tha Republic has a pension committee of seven members, which publicly boasts that It has written all tho pension laws of the last 40 years. What Is the power back of it? First, of course, are the old soldiers, their votes on election day, and the votes of their sympathizers rep resent the considerations which political Con gressmen have received in exchange for tills franking privilege on tho Federal Treasury, Back of this there developed In this country, In the years succeeding the Civil War. cer tain professional classes which made a living out of the pension roll the pension attorney and the pension doctor. The business of tho first was to scour the country for pension candidates and to discover some niche In the pension laws that would admit the most un deserving; that of the second to And some physical disability that could be traced to Held service. Both advertised far and wide in the dally press, in circulars and pamphlets and old soldiers' magazines. Occasionally they became so notorious that they got into tho criminal courts. They frequently made the claimant swear to blank affidavits, the lawyers afterward flUlng In the details them selves. Personation of old soldiers was a common practice, thousands of veterans went peacefully to their graven not knowing TO GET SOMEWHERE- 1 THE MAGAZINES their names were on tho pension rolls, other' men, In somo cases pension attorneys, draw-i Ing and pocketing tljo quarterly checks. The' United States, with Its notoriously small and i Inadequate nrmy, spends moro on pensions than all tho great military establishments? "' .uiuiju put logoiner. tho united States uuvi-iuiiient is mo oniy ono that has pen sioned not Olllv lift fnlfhflll Htlnr .nlJI.w but Its deserters and its dishonorably dls chnrged. , Tho Now Republic (3) calls attention tl tho general rushing through of appropriations bills in the last days cf tho G3d CongresJ: S iMoiwunsianuing hh excellent general rec ord, candid Democrats themsolvcs admit that It mndo In ono respect an egregious failure. It was shamelessly and flagranti prodigal In the appropriation of public! monoy. In not n. slnglo case did the (3d ', .-oiiKress auempi to eradicate any of ins ancient grafts or fall to fill any of the regu lar porn unrreis. - - - Tho public buildings bill for 1913 provided for 327 now buildings. Tho supervising architect reported thnt "tho last ot the buildings will not havo been placed under contract until about the beginning 61 the yenr 1920." Nevertheless, the sundry civil impropriations bill ut tho present session au- ' thorlzcd about 150 new buildings. Postmaster General Burleson dislikes the' buildings thrust upon tho department he- i causo thoy aro unnecessarily elaborate and expensive. Jasper, Alabama, with a population of 2500, whero tho Government Is now spending $372 a year for rent, heat, light and janitor service. Is In tho bill for an appropriation of $107,000. Its case Is not exceptional. Wilmington. N. C, where the? gross receipts of tho Custom House aroj $28,000 a year, got an appropriation of J6M,-'S uuu tor a now building to House a ousintai which employs four otllclals and at present, costs tho Government 25 cents for each dollar collected. Another County Heard From A Lcsllo's (4) Is moro disturbed about an.' other extravaganco: Incredible! Whllo tho Stato of New York is on the eugo of bankruptcy, with JlSiWv, 000 needed to fill tho gap, tho Legislature at Albany is puttering over bills to further our" don tho taxpayers by making new require,- ments for pensioning widows, ror wontm1 meti'H rnmnonsntlnii niwl other nrolectS Cal eulated to bcgullo tho elusive labor vote. Hi Is also busy In imposing now uuraens e telonhono and other companies. So, at, Washington, with tho Federal Treasury f Ing a deficit of $40,000,000 and new taxes on, a bond issuo in sight before long, -on'J" unonr Ha flnnlnr- linnra In framing UP a tUl to double tho cost of running ships undefl tho American flag, Collier's elves nn amusing glimpse ofi eomo of tho men who play chess with ourl tax moneys, in an article by George wa (6): Over 100 Congressmen folded up tM' careers when the late Congress came to j close. Somo of them marched on into w, i. . ,-... .i.i -. nrp Batlsnta ouuu.lt?, uilltua j cms;. u... "oy, i"..,,.-.! Ono of tho greatest bereavements was W"l gressman Charles Bartiett. ot ueun. -, was noted for his temper, his KnowledM wi consuiuuunai taw, i ' "- ii,iBI Georgia. Ono tlmo Dartlett was Ml posterity and ono or two members wJn j tonso earnestness during the lunch """TJl delivering a beautiful apostrophe to M?$ Ga., his homo town. Merely to help W wj bate. -long. Smith, of Iowa, rose and wmm rupt ." the speaiter. "itus i.. ""Atm ever heard of Red Oak. Iowa?" h "No." said Bartlett. with treroendou -basis. Smith then proceeded In Kinaiy ? , i to inform the Georgia Congress!.- td Oalc had moro street pavlntr. more ", phones, moro cnurcnes, im ?:& braries "That1 treme earnestness, -i neve. ..-- w Oak. It'B a one-horsa town. .j uaf clapboard huddle of shacks )n a ?7tMf Hole." tLoua ana reticuic . -, -AioV n other three auditors. "i B"f V had bees nhmited Smith, whoso Iowa loj alty n u awakened. "I don't care f you "-aenl.i Bartlett. "A better man than yo th, Christ.". UPn WW-, hav ng , J enemy, no umnaereu w.n;... . THE RETURNING ft,.. nt Arrnrlv aro fair tO .. . E dreamt ..VTwIth sunny slope o gg b. .i.i.n H'renms and song-bira With golden dGsk and silver shlnU Rut never hearts have found the ""f, So dreamers say. Into these "JJfM They are Deyonu our ;""""". -.7 and CM Ueyond our narrow life of ton an Yet here I saw go down thU dty street Jf A maid whoso eyes i"" u.'Ca with tenderness, and he with glance) m m Looked down to hers with hsppmw ?j Around y.em .wept the din of TlSS that they had been in A ArtttW WaUo yeb ,a P,aB lieu.