ft i MlHMtai 1 CDeuittg, Uti&sn MHlLtG LfcDGEU COMPANY WiHm H.t.udlnrtnn,Vlc-rrMldntt John K.Msrtln, feMftafy AM Trmutri Philip S. Collin. John n. Wbm. lJlKvtom. ' Mbj-fOMIAI-fiOAftOr CtftrsH IM'bstis, CtiMttnftn P H IVltALfeY Biwullte lMltor JOSW C. JIAKTIK Dnrnl UulnM ilMiAirfr ' l.l I,, - . I'ubllahM flally lit rtnuo LEWira llulldlng, InapWtit6 Square, Philadelphia. Li!ttn rKtt. .Broad and Chestnut Street ATUwTIC ClTt m&i-l'nlon ItulldlnK NUtV VbAK 170-A, Metropolitan Tower rttliftOd 817 llnmo Inurnnc Dulldlnn Virtues 8 Waterloo Place. Pftll Mall, 3. W. lyiartfrotON ntJK"o1 N-RWH lltlUt!Al:Hi . --- --'.A ... ...... .. ...., inn r'oflr minning NBW TOUK DI'IUMU .The Ttmrt llullillnir ninu.tn jiiiBi;. (10 PrIe"lrlohtrae) . ...2 Pall Mall Nam, S. W. . . ,.32 Hue Louis la Orand itiilf hvaiuti Piis iluntAB.,. srnscmrTioNTEnMS yw.ArriW. pAit.r OntTi air rents, fly malt. nntpal1 niUl.t or Philadelphia, etwpt vihero forelRn pnMAitn In TKlUlfed, Dllt.T ONI.T, ono month, tnentr-dve rent, Iii.i OsT.r, ona jear. three dnllara. All mall auh rcHptlCna Wyalle In advanr HBLUaooo VALNtrr kevstomi:. MAIS anno W" Attilnbs oil communication) lo Kvtuino T.tSatr, tiMtptniencc ffijunrr, rhltadclphta. axtkikli xt tits riiiUDEtriit roaiorncs as SECONn CUSft MAIL MATTER. HllUntU'ltU, u:i).MapA. MAHc.11 .11. mis. Ott'd soma men a gallon of gasoline and then wilt pour It in the putter: plvc it to other men and they will gel an automobile to tr.tr It In. "What Shall It Profit a Jinn?" THE EVUKincj Ludokii publishes today n comparison of the present housing law With tllo substitute measure which 1ms lieen eht to the Governor It roveulH tlic utter P4y 1 Inferiority of the proposed lnw to the ex isting law. it snows cicariy now rutne or remedial effectiveness the "toothless" stat ute would be, devised as It Is. not in the In tercut of tenants, but for the Greater profit of landlords. These landlords, to lie sine, aro entitled to protection, but not until they havo protected the people to whom they rent, tt is an axiom of modern civilization that no city should permit dwelling to bo tented Unless they aro decent habitations, and no citizen hits n light to receive money for any other hind of habitation. The Governor Is nn advocate of decent living nnd nn apostle of cleanliness. lie lias let It be known repeatedly that he would tiqt itcqulcsce In any stntule devised to pic vent rectification of existing conditions. Most of nil Is he unlikely to join In a consphaey to uphold City Councils In Its policy of wan ton nulltllcntlon. A veto is the only thing that can reason ably be expected, nnd that veto will lie up hold unless the Legislature has lost nil seliso of public duty. End of Bigclowism BlUELOWISM has ended, for Ulgclow him self will hereafter be dissociated from the public servlc?. To his conduct of his ofllce, ns much as to anything else, could bo laid tho defeat of the proposal to expend $50,000,000 for good roads in Pennsylvania. The electorate was not so enchanted with the kind of roads it EOt And the cost at which It got them ns to bo enthusiastic about spending millions moro In a similar way. Good roads have become a public neces sity. They are no longer a tail. They must bo built scientifically and economically and they must bo maintained. Tho road system of tho"' State tends more nnd more to he coma ono of the greatest nssets tr the Com laOnwealth, requiring as expert enro as tho conduct of any of our other great Institu tions. Instead of Bigelow, an expert: Instead of Inefficiency, efficiency; instead of haphazard methods, scientific construction. Blgolon goes and there is nono to weep. Better Bight Than Impetuous EXPXiANATION for the delay In demand ing reparation from Germany for tho sinking of tho "William P. Fryc Is found In the announcement from Washington that the cargo was the property of Englishmen and not of Americans. It was at first said that the grain on board belonged to Ameri cans and was on the way to Knglaud to await orders. Tho owners of the ship. It Beems, have made It difficult for the State Department to learn the facts. Their courso discredited their good faith and made tho Government suspicious. It was, therefore, important that tho exact facts should bo learned before action was taken. In all these matters, from the Uacla to tho Frye, tho Government is In tho position of tho plaintiff's attorney. If Its client is not frank with It and conceals, the truth tho re eultff aro likely to bo exceedingly embarrass ing. There are men who would llko lo get the United Stntes mixed up in the war. an the State Department Is very well aware. The claim of the owners of tho Fryc will not be Invalidated by tho delay necessary to discover Just what tho claim Is. It is much better to be right than to bo Impetuous. The Band Wagon Is Filling Up An ynil know I am in favor of local option and will be delighted If our bill in enacted. Senator Oliver to Governor Ilruiiibnugh. TUH Senator is unable to be present at tho hearing on the bill next week, but ho sent the above cheering message to tho Gover nor Indorsing the measure. Ho has set nn example to his colleague in the Senate that deserves to be followed. There ate men who believe that It Is bet ter o. be different than to be right and at tain consplculty by their idiosyncrasies; but few practical politicians care to be so differ ent that they are In a lone minority. The band wagon la about to start, aud whqn It moves It will be going so Tast that laggards will fln4 It difficult If not Impossible to whip on behind. Jt la much better to rido with the procession than to get covered with dust at the roadside while It moves by. There Is mill tftne for Senator Penrose to get a back bBCUt ,(vCentjal But Limited Control TTtJlQWING the example of the oxecu- JPijye officers of other cnrBoratlnnu which j Jj&vtf been compelled to regulate their bus uc according to the wlqhes of more than two eore of different State regulating bodies, j'teiileiu Carlton, of the Western Union Teinph Company urgea that more power h lodged. In the Interstate Commerce Com m !! u. Th argBirtiejit, of course, reals on the aa tnilHpttou tlfat thla control would meajj r9, lue tram he exactions of State bedits, T jiai.-B .iI4(9ft statements annually to. IHlftllst ou!h.trttla Ee a tk of "e magnitude apd. wi. t w utterly unnecessary Kte iirtPWi''' etnt omr..iiio dy. ' MFfMMWJUott Rjflv weM de.r? t" be under lite jurlstlletlort of tho Interstato Commerce Commission only nnd yet oppose utterly Hie right of this commission to fix rates, wages nnd everything else connected with tho business. There tiro many, for instance, who nro convinced that tho dilatory luetics em ployed by the commission In tho railway rale cases proved absolutely the folly nr confiding td any body too vast nn authority. 11 " ... . Wash the Ltiten nt HarrisburR AUESOIjOTION which begins ns follows has been Introduced In tho House; Whereas, tt has been nllcgcd In the public press and public discussion that large sums of money were Illegally collected nnd ex pended by tho liquor Interests In tho polit ical cninpalgn and the election In rcnnsjl vnula In 1011, and etc., etc, During tho pi ogress of tho campaign tho EvfcNiNO I.r.tmwit published comptcliclialvo articles, specifying the modes of contribu tion, nn estimate of the nnioiuitM collected from the lltiuor Interests, 11 summary of the presumed agreement between these Interests nnd the politicians for whoso advantage tho money uns collected, and presented, like wise, circumstantial and other evidence of a slush fund of largo proportions. It 'Is now hn open secret that there was such a fund. It Is seldom denied In private. It is notorious that local option Is held up at Unrrlsbutg only becauso men who prof iled, directly or Intllt eclly, from that slush fund nro ondcnvorlug to fulfil tho letter of their contract and do for tho lliiuor inter ests what they promised to do. tt seems to ho n clear u ensu of baiter and sale ns wttH ever known In Pennsylvania. Doctor Urumbaugh would havo nothing to do with that fund, lie refused lo lei penny of It bo used In his bolinlf. At all times during tho campaign ho Iterated and reiterated his support of local option nnd flung out bis challenge of opposition to tho liifamoiiM alliance between the whisky ling nnd tin1 politicians, llo tofused lo be biandeil with alcohol nnd ho did what he could lo keep Its mark off tho hldo of the parly. Glenn, who introduced tho resolution for nn Investigation, Is a Democrat, but tho resolution should puss, nevertheless. It is tlmo for Pennsylvania to throw off her lethargy and strike 11 blow for political morality. We need not wash our dirty linen In Washington. Wc raunot afford not to wash It In llarrlshurg. Knr the Legislature Itunlf stnmls Imiiencliril and besmirched. It j Is the Legislature Hint was offered for bar ter, and every man In It who votes against local option, whether he does so from con viction or not, stands within the shadow of suspicion. It behooves the innocent, there fore, to prove their Innocence by voting for a thorough Investigation, that the black sheep may be sorted out ami their de bauchery or trickery exposed. Pennsylvania Is mightier than the liquor j ring, on the methods of which a searchlight should bo tut nod. The Republican parly. now that It has a leal Governor at llairls burg, can purge Itself by boldly ascertain ing nnd publishing tho truth, oven If In so doing It has to bcsmltch and 111I11 a formerly trusted leadership. An Investment Worth While NO HUSINIOSS man expects to cam divi dends on an investment Hint ho does not make, lie known that he does not get profit out of nn cnterprlso unless he puts capitnl in. If ho uses his business sense when considering an Invitation to Join tho Chamber of Commerce, he will Know that the benefit that he anil his business will I ilerlvo from the creation of a large and alert commercial organization will be in proportion to the Investment of his time and energy In co-operating with other business men to Increase tho prosperity of this city. Liquor or Victory? THR British Chancellor of tho Exchequer has Joined with Lord Kitchener in urging the British workmen to show their loyalty to their country by doing their utmost to equip me nrmies in ine 11cm wiin mu necessary munitions and by rushing construction nnd repair work on battleships to tho full ex tent of thnlr nbllity. Tho soldiers cannot fight without guns and ammunition. But the British workmen nro spending their money on drink nnd neglecting their duty in the factories. At the shipyards it is dif ficult to got ": or 40 hours a wcel nut of them. L'nless there Is a change for the bet ter David Moyd-Gcorga announces there must be compulsory prohibition while the wnr Insts. The public houses must close their bars and tho men must be kept sober. Temperanco Is nn economic and not a moral question In this crisis. Anarchy on the Sea ACCORDING to tho ex parto statement of XJlUio circumstances attending tho sinking of tho merchant ships by German subma rines oft tho coast of Wales ono of tho ves sels was bunk by a torpedo whllo tho life boats wcro still on the davits, and as a ! suit u large number of passengers wero drowned. If this Is a fair statement of tho facts tho course of tho German commander has Justification neither In tho laws aud cus toms of war nor In the necessities of tho case. It may bo granted that Homo of tho passengers were British officers and engi neers on tho way to hervlco In Africa, but that does not excuso torpedoing a ship car rying nonenmbatttnts without giving them nn opportunity to escape, oven though the Ger mans had announced that they Intended to do Just this sort af thing. This incident Is only tho latest in a long series which proves that there Is anarchy on the sea at tho present time. AH the old guarantees have lost their force, and those who have the power are doing their will without let or hindrance. Only superior power can stop them. No amount of hys terical protest from the neutral nations can prevent n continuance of tho unprecedented operations of belligerent ships, Is not tho flag tho best monument to Betsy ItossV Where Js the road builder who ran make the highways of tjils State famous? Will Charles Frohmait explain how much worse Jt Is to sell theatre tickets at cut rates than to let speculators get them and charge two prices? If any one thinks he can fool the Gover nor about the housing bill he would better study Doctor Brumbaugh's record on the housing niisatlanj UnsJe Sam wakes, up every little wblje and asks Mexico, in the words of the man who heard his wife's voie In the middle of the night. "Are you rioting again or yet?" Why dpea not Secretary Garrlaon follow jlm JUysPle at the Seorotary qf State if he ffite SuIfJapr ' oot big tnqugh to jajjjjw Hying eacpwswi lo Wablngtpn? The Chautauqua, societies would Day him to tail them what Us thinks about war, fctil.iiiiiVwii CITIZENS DUTY TOWARD HOUSING Why Ihe Grnnsbatik Bill Should Not Become Law A ftenclionnl'y McnBUrc Prompt Action by Peo ple Is Necessary, By HELEN L. FARRIS1! Secretary of the Octavla Hill Association. IT IS with consternation and tllsnliiy that those who havo been striving for many cnrs to bring about better sanitary and hous ing conditions In tho poorer section of Phila delphia nro confronted with thefnet that tho ljcglslaturo has passed the Gransback bill, Jt. II, No. 205. tt docs hot seem credible that a body of men chosen to legislate for tho best Interests of their fellows should by one such net decide to sweep away tho results of ears of slow but steady progress! to do this also without an opportunity being given for 11 hearing or without submitting the bill for Indorsement to any of those qualified thiough their official positions or through their epcclnl knowledge nnd experience to judge of Its merits. The bill divides tho icsponslblllty for tho vltnl questions of housing and sanitation be tween three bureaus of tho Department of Public Health nnd Charities. It expressly repeals tho lodging houso net of 1893, tho net lor tho licensing and Inspection of tene ment houses of 1007 nnd tho housing codo of 1013. It exempts from the flrc-cscapc law, without matting other provisions for flro pro tection, n largo proportion of tho tenement houi-cs of the city nnd seilously weakens nnd exposes to litigation tho original tene ment houso law of 1S03. The acts thus ruthlessly handled havo marked successive and distinct singes In tho forwnrd progress of Philadelphia, Kach ono means Incalculable benefit to those who aro crowded Into our many rear court nnd alley dwellings, our countless houses built for ono family and now "con Vetted" Into tenement houses where many families dwell. Their repeal would set us hack for SO years. To thoso who havo fought tho grim light for better conditions ngnlnst tho greed of land lords, the hostility or apathy of City Coun cils, the Indifference r many citizens, tho changes Hint these lawn havo wrought havo been full of encouragement. The Gransb.ick bill offers nothing to tnko their plnco. it establishes no standards, makes no rules or regulations. It creates n "sanitary boaid" consisting of the Director of Public Health and Charities- and tho bu reau chiefs, who are empowered to mako rules and legulntloiis, which Select Council must approve. It provides for no oversight or Inspection of dwellings. Study ll Is the Insistent duty of every citizen who has tho welfare of our great city at heart to write to Governor Brumbaugh, in whose hands the momentous question Is now placed, urging him lo veto this destruc tive and reactionary measure. HOW APRIL GOT ITS NAME The Custom of April Fooling Some Fa mous Hoaxes of the Day. THKItlC Is still dispute concerning tho origin of the name April. .Most of the other months of the ancient Itomau calendar wcro named, either dliectly or ludlirctly, from tho Itonian gods and heroes. Jacob Grimm, reeking an application of the general rule to April, suggested the name of a hypotheti cal god or hero, Aper or Aprils. Others havo suggested that A prills camn from tho Greek nnmu of Venus, Aphrndite. April among tho Itomnus was sacied to Venus. Still others find the origin In tho Latin "aperire," to open, signifying the opening of tho trees and (lowers. The enrly Anglo Saxons called tho month "oster-monath" or "eostur-monnth," after Eoster, goddess of tho spring, from whose name comes our word Kaster. But whatever tho etymolo gists may decide, tomorrow begins tho first full spring month, which "puts tho spirit of youth In everything." On an April day old Wotton wrote (and If his was 11 different age and place from ours nn matter): This 'lay Panic Nature seemed In lov; Tho lusty i-ap began to move: Presh Juice did stir th" embracing vines, Aud birds h.id drawn their valputlncs. The Jealous trout that low did lie, Hose at a wcll-dlssembled fly; Altcady wcro tho eves possessed With tho swift pilgrim's daubed nest: Tho groves already did rejoice, In Philomel's triumphant voice: Tho showers were short, tho weather mild, The morning fresh, the evening smiled. Joan tnkeB her neat-rubbed pall, and now Kbo trips lo milk tho sand-red cow. The fields' nnd gardens were beset With Ullps. crocus, violet: Thus nil looks gay and full of cheor, To welcome tho new-Ilverled )ear. Not Keats, perhaps, not great poetry, but Wotton nevertheless mentions it goodly num ber of tho characteristics of April. As a month of lovo May or Juno Is not far nhead of April. And for n simile Shakespeare: O, how this spring of lovn rescmblr-th Tho uncertain glory of an April day. As nn old book says, "Tho first of April of all days In tho year enjoys a character all Its own. In so far ns it, and It alone. Is con secrated to practical Joking." Tho origin of tho April fool custom Is disputed. Ono of tho ludicrous solutions Is that It Is a farcical commemoration of Christ's' being sent from Annas to Calaphas, from Calaphas to Pilate, from Pllato to Herod nnd from Herod back, ngaln to Pllato, the crucifixion having taken place about tho first of April. The custom, however. Is doubtless a relic of once uni versal festivities held at tho vernal equinox and ending on the first of April. The exact counterpart of April fooling Is found to havo been an Immemorial custom In India. In Scotland tho custom Is called "hunting tbn gowk"; thatJ If, tho cuckoo, the cuckoo b ing held In contempt. In Trance the person befooled Is called a "pohsson d'Avrll," April flsh, In April the sun quits the zodiacal sign of the fish, but the French term is probably derived from tho fact that In April fish are small and easily caught. One of the most famous April hoaxes was done In I860, when many people In England received by mail a card bearing the follow ing Inscription, with a seat marked by an In verted sixpence at oge of the angles, thus giving the Invitation an air of officiality: "Tower of London- Admit the bearer and friend to view the Annual Ceremony of Wash ing the White Lions, on Sunday, April J, I860. Admitted only at the White Gate. It la particularly requested that no gratuities be given to the Wardens or their Assistants," The trick was remarkably successful. It U reported that "oab were rattling abim Tower Hill all that Sunday morning vainly endeavarlns to discover tha white Gate7 Americans remember a story published by the New-York Jlerald one April Focls ay in the time of the elder James Gordon Bgn-, "DID nett. The story described the escape of nil tho wild animals In the zoo and what hap pened In city nnd suburbs in consequence, winding up with the assertion Hint it might have been true if It bud been true. April Fool: OPERA SINGERS ON SALARIES To tho ndltor of the .'renin; Ledger: Sir Itefetilng lo your nrtlcle In today's Issue, "Inflated Salaries Paid to Grand Opera Sing ers," 1 oncoming the lato Chlcngo-Plillnilelphln Opera Comnauy, of which I was a member for four jeais. I beg to say that tho nitlcle In ques tion Is Incorrect by renon of an omission which I am constrained to ask you to set right. In several Instances mention Is made of tho Increase In the salaries of certain ai lists. For some unaccountable reason this statement, which should have been made in connection with mv name, was omitted. The salary men tioned In the article was that which I received the first jcar, which was afterwards raised twice until It was practically double tho oilglnal amount. Also, In each of my contracts there was a clause allowing 010 to sing In concerts during the cpoin season and retain the money there for myself. .Moreover. I frequently fang moro llriu the requited peiformanccs per week, meaning extra compensation. At the clove of the rcgulnr season the company tnnilo a trans continental tour of about two months; which also meant additional salary. I did not, as nearly nil foreign nrtlsts are obliged to do, pay a commission of from 10 to 23 per cent, of my salary to an agent or repre sentative abroad. Tho Chicago Opera Company contained more than one singer whoso foiclgn reputation neer rose nbovo mediocrity, nnd who received '"In flated" salaries while Americans wcro obliged to accept less. During my connection with tho Chicago Opera Company I sang the lending bass roles In "Faust," "Aldn," "Don Giovanni," "flaiber of Seville," "I.n Glocondn," "I.ucla," "Girl of tho Golden West." "Itlgoletto," "Martha." "Jong leur do Notre Dame," "Dlo Walkuere," "Tristan and lolde," "Lohengrin," "Cricket on tho Hearth," "Nntotun," etc., etc. While not receiving the salary of a Maty Gulden or a Tltta ltuffn, tho management must havo had a sufficient appreciation or my merit to assign to 1110 these roles which cover a a r'cly of sebools lit addition to being sung in four different Inugunges. As to tho success with which my work has met at tho hands of tho public, that Is a matter of history. I am ronvlnccd that tho lime has arrived when nn American artist can stand squarely upon his own merits and. nil other things be ing equal, hold Ills own with the foreign singer. HI2NIU SCOTT, Loading Basso, Chicago Orand Opera Company, 1!I1-H; Tentro Adrlftno, Home, Italy, lliio-ll; Manhattan Opeta House, New York, 1900-10. Philadelphia. March 25. STEPHEN GIRARD'S BIRTHDAY To the Editor of tho Evening Ledger: Sir Stephen G Irani displayed his foresight when he endowed such a noble Institution as GIrard Collego for poor 01 plum boys bom of American patents. Many of these boys educated by his generos ity have becomo great and powerful citizens, not only In the city of Philadelphia and State of Pennsylvania, but havo becomo nationally prominent, commercially, lluanclully and po litically. It would be a mark of esteem for such a benefactor as Stephen GIrard for tho citizens of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania to commem orate his coming birthday by wearing a violet, which Is the emblem of America, Honor the memory of a man so thoughtful for the future welfare of poor American boys. ALEXANDBIA VICTORIA WILLIAMS. Philadelphia, March 27. WHOSE THE LEADERSHIP? In every age of the world there has been a leading nation, one of a more generous senti ment, whose citizens were willing tft stapd for the Interests of general Justice and humanity at the risk of being called by the men of the moment chimerical and fantastic. Which should be that nation but these States? Emer son. THE LOST LAUREL By WILLIAM A, McdAnilY The Pennsylvania Mountain Bay Or Laurel, as you will That twines the trees by rock am rill In regions wild and bushed and still, Alaa! Alackaday! Our noble, stately brow Shall not adorn but mind ye, now, 'T!s not for us tq query how The fiow'r was laid away. But some one went and killed the bill Because the little Dowers Put forth officially as ours Crow on a poisoned vine where towers The lofty mount and hill: 4 In fact, with firm Intent, The laurel bud they swiftly sent To pickle with the. cpmilmant Some one has christened dill. Shall heroes In the State of Pent) Become extinct at last? The State that In her noble past To all j grand defiance wjt No more reward her mnt Must she now turn awaf 1 Her trtately head and siujly &y "The Governor has caasvf m liay?" e must? Well, let her, t2a. HE FALL OR WAS HE PUSHED?" BEST THOUGHT DIGEST OF THE MAGAZINES (1) Harper's Monthly "Tho Hrand of tho City." (2) New Republic "Tho Utilities Bu reau." (3) Atlantic Monthly "Tho House on Henry Street." (4) Survey "The Junior Police of Now York City." THE CITY TtlK country Is known by Its dnyllme. Work Is accomplished, calls aro made, meals nro eaten in the daylight hours, nnd as twilight deepens the birds and the beasts nnd the people all go to bed, Tho city Is known by Its night. As darkness fulls, tho city bursts Into 11 now splendor, blazing with electric signs and white nro lights, strident with clanging cars and sirens, crowded with gaily dressed peoplo lit holiday mood. II Is after dark that tho cltv rouses itself to Its remembered activity nntl charm. Curiously cn&ugh, In spite of tin slums and sweatshops, its concentrated misery nnd vice, It is this gay, Irresponsible night life of whlto lights and lobster palaces and chorus girls, which for tho out-of-towner fairly symbolizes tho city. To suburbanites and visitors, the name New York Instuntly calls up vision of tho dreat AVhlto Way. Whether It Is that most of the magazines nre published there, or becauso It is our metropolis, most of the articles on city llfo In tho magazines refer to New York. Of 10 such articles In tho current magazines flvo aro about cities In general or groups of cities and flvo refer specifically to Now York. A discriminating analysis of what con stitutes city life, nnd of Its proportion of Influence In our national life. Is given by Walter Weyl, writing in Harper'n Monthly (1): Tho America of Washington's day was primitively, racially rural. Tho country out numbered tho city 30 to 1; It outvoted and out-Influenced the city. By 1S20, ono in every 20 Americans lived In cities; by 1900, almost ono In three. Within HVo years thero will bo moro peoplo in tho city than in tho country districts, Tho city nttracts becnuso it offers much for little; becauso, heretical though the statement may seem, living thero Is cheap. True, city rents nro notoriously high, hut you get moro for ench dollar spent. Tho city is the homo of wholesale and thereforo cheap amusement. Tho moving plcturo show, tho variety theatre, tho .open trollej', tho boat ride, tho amusement park aro won derfully cheap becauso so many share tho oxpensc. Much Is offered for nothing. The fr-o lunch, tho public library, tho constant snectnelo of tho "dressed" windows of flno stores aro all gratuitous. To economic attractions social attractions nro added. Men aro incurably giegurlous. They love to work, cat, loaf and read poetry In crowds, nnd tho city provides tho crowds. It permits an cscnpe from alio rut of custom. It spells Independence, Individu ality, solitude. Tho American city, which arose out of a precipitate, unordered, ultra-lndlvldualistlo exploitation of vast natural resources nnd grew up parentless and without traditions, is now evolving a new Ideal of democratic co-operation and Is gradually Impressing that Ideal upon the whole American nation. Thero Is an echo In the New Republic (2) of an exceedingly significant move on tho part of American cities this winter, when, for perhaps the first time, they effeptlvely acted upon a recognition of tho practical vnuo of concerted action on their part. In the creation of a Utilities Bureau for the benefit of all cities In their dealings with the public service utilities) Suppose the citizens of Jonesvllle mako up their minds that tho rates charged by tho gas company ought to be lower, Jones vllle has 40,000 inhabitants. Their gas com pany Is capitalized at $700,000. Tho contest does not lool; unequal. It would not bo un equal If tho gas company were really as isolated and self-dependent as Jonesvllle. But the gfo company is not dependent upon Itself alone. It Is controlled by a hold ing company capitalized at $110,000,000. Holding companies control nearly five and a half of the eight billions Invested in Amer ican gas, electric, Btreet railway and Inter urban railway companies. The Middle West Utilities ' as an example, oporates In 12 states and 316 cities. Naturally, these companies bave their own bureaus for col lecting the facts they need. The Mayors of American, cities, at their conference in Philadelphia, on public policies as to mu nicipal Utilities, decided that jho tlmo had come for attempting a like work for cities on a national fiCale. Tho result is tho Utili ties Hureau, The functions of this Utilities Bureau are to cojlsftt and collate data, s to rates, sr - IN AMERICA terested citizens, to help by study and advice cities that want help in solving their utility problems; to encourage the Introduction of cost-keeping methods, similar to those fol lowed in tho industries, throughout tho utili ties whether publicly or privately ownid to serve ns a national agenty through which American cities may co-op-crato by exchanging data as to cost factors, service standards nnd rates. Deep in the Heart of tho City Lillian D. Wald, founder of tho famous Nurses' Settlemont on tho East Sldo of New York, and for 21 years Its head, knows the city of tho other half, not only with tho familiarity of her years of residence there, but with tho subtler, closer intimacy of a woman of Keen sympathies nnd delicate per ceptions, which have enabled her to enter into the lives of thoso about her nnd become a vital fuctor In her adopted community. Her story of "Tho Houso on Henry Street," . Which Is nppearlng in tho Atlantic (3), gives vivid glimpses of child life In the" tenements! v Happily somo of tho early prejudice , against hall playing on Sunday has van ished. Wo Wero perplexed in those early days to explain to tho lads why, when they saw tho ferries and trains convey golfers suitably attired nnd expensively equipped for a day's sport, their own games should out rage respectable citizens and causo them to be constantly "chased" by tho police. The. saloons could be entered, as everybody knew. nnd I remember a father defending his 8-ycar-old son from an accusation of theft, instancing ns a proof of tho child's trust worthiness thnt "all the Christians on Jack son street sent him for their beer on Sun days." Tho woeful lack of Imagination displayed in building a city without recognizing the need of Its citizens for recreation through play, music nnd art has been borno In upon us many tlmfes. Now Yorkers need to be reminded thnt tho Metropolitan Museum of Art wan effectually closed to a largo pro portion of the citizens until. In 1891, It opened Its doors on Sundays. It is Inter esting to recall that of tho 80,000 signatures to tho petition for this privilege, 60,000 were of residents of tho lower East Side, and were presented by tho "Working People's Petition Committee." Tho report of tho museum trustees following the museum opening notes, thnt nfter a little confusion lnt tho start tho experiment proved a success; that tho attendance was "respectable, law-abiding and intelligent" nnd thnt 'tho laboring classes were well represented'." Thoy were also obliged to report, however, that the Sunday opening had "offended somo of the museum's best frlouds nnd supporters," and that It had "resulted in tho loss of a be quest of $00,000." I cannot effnee from my memory the plc turo of a llttlo 8. year-old girl whom I once found standing on a chair to reach a wash tub, trying with her tiny hands to cleanse somo bed linen which would have been a task for an older person. Every few min utes .the child got down from her chair to peer into tho next room, where her mother and the new-born baby lay, all her little mind Intent upon giving relief nnd comfort. She had been alone with her mother when tho baby was born, and terror was an her face. I think tho memory never left her, but It may be only that her presence called up, even after the lapse of years, a vlBltin of the anxious little face Inevitably con trasted In my mind with the picture of lr responsible childhood. "Checsit, tho Cop" The Survey (4) reports a pew method of reaching and Influencing the boya of New ; York's East Side: "Folks have the Idea we're rearing a bunChj$ of toughs and gunmen down here on iD East Side. We've got to show them they're wrong," This Is why Captain John Sweeney. of the 15th Police Precinct, hos organic the "Kd Cops' Captain Sweeney know8 East Side ypungsters. For 29 years he has watched the mimic warfare between boys who shoot craps on the sly and police trying to Catch follows shooting craps. 80 ha has recruited the Junior Police Fqrce. There are now about 300 on the force, and as these prove their efficiency, the number will M gradually Increased from the 200 or more names on the waiting list. These youthful "guardians of the peace" help keep streets clean, fire-escapes cleared, garbage cans in proper condition," Captain Sweeney points out: "Since the force was formed we have bad few complaints about street bonfires, whereaq we used to have a hundred ft nlgnt Bometlmes. We expect to save tbo city thou sands of dollars In asphalt." . "Cheeslt, the cop" may yet slip from the,. vocabulary or tne cast oioe- uumn a I know where'er the dear wlnts are1 The spacious silences Have closed around, stillness profound. Aut im rettm ut That untorgojUan aro the hllb Tngy us$a to now q aear. The first gUtt note from Itpbln Must tbriU them tber as here. -Mtiy Uui WowJwwtl, In Uf Kn tnaKilt,' M - - OiZSg.