8 EVENING HEDGER PHILADELPHIA', THtTBSPAY, 'APRIL1 22, 1916? - - - ' . , i i i . i . i 1 1 i ' I uenhtg Sml& ttttytt I'tJBLlG LEDGER COMPANY rtnffl . K cuitTie, rtiB."T. , ChaHet II. i.jainatoA,Vlce.PMmdntiJelin C, Martin, ftrreui-y pnrt Trmmirer; FMHp 8. Cellini, John B. Wl!lljim. IJIrrftorii KDitonTAii no Ann t" ftcn H. K. CcTi, Chairman. T. rf WMAMlr Eiecullve Miter JOJuTc MAnTIN iCJeneral Diulneet Mnitf lfttlhed dally t rcMO UNU Bulldln, Independence Square, Philadelphia t,rrnmC'lSTt...,,,,(,.. Broad and Chestnut Street AtuKtic CiTt ,,,..... ....rrets-Vnlan Bulldlnc Mtn Tour i 170.A, Metropolitan Toner Itttcian st" Horn tnnufance Building- tCON 8 Waterloo Place, rail Mali, 8. TV. NKWB BUnBAUSI XVi-stNATO! TlonfAD. .,.. The Poet Hulldinn Nrw York nocAD , , .. .... . .Th rimn Hiilldln- n-iiv Unfn ........ ...no FrledrlohstraMa toMs nidiAC....... 2 Pali Mall ni. H. TV. riH3ciUAU. ... ....... . . .32 Hue Louis Is urand 5unscnipTio.NTr.nMs Ilr carrier. DutLT OM.T, lx cent", nt mall. polpal1 r'UIld 6f Philadelphia, except whcf fnrflxn pootate required, Dailt Oit.T, on monlh. twenty-Ate centi DA(t.r Only, one ar, three dollan All malt ub eriptlon parable In advance BFJ.t 9600 WALNUT KnSlONF. M UN 3000 ej Atdrvia all roinmuiilcolloni lo JTifnln Lerffffr, tnitptntenrt Squarf. Philadelphia , -j, ; ! -MMtD at Tilt rHit.irjri.rntA roAtorf tea a rces. CUM MAIL MITTF.R. g-- ' ' ' rillLAUMJIllA, TllllllSDW. API1II. 22. 1913. The tcamy tide of llfr is In disrepute only be cause the teams nre not ucll made. Put a White Feather In Respectability's Cap THERE are many gentlemen of undoubted respectability who resent the action of the Houae yesterday In rejecting local op tion. But these sumo gentlemen last fall swelled the liquor slush fund by contribu tions of their own and In November marched to the polls and voted a straight ticket. They wnnt good government, but they al ways vote against it. Let not some poor lickspittles, kicked into otnee by the Organization, be blamed too much for dolus what their patrons had agreed they should do. .Many of them were etected by the nod of "leaders." They feel that they represent these "leaders," not tho people. They are our American serfs, act In? as serfs always act, pitiable rawns, basking for a moment in local publicity and soon passim- Into oblivion. What do they know of statesmanship, or public duty, or anything except orders? But let the Industrial leaders, the social leaders, the religious leaders of Pennsyl vania shiver under the lash of their own consciences. They are tho ones who de feated local option. On their shoulders rents tho blamo for the completion of the contract entered Into by Republican leaders last fall. They knew all about the con spiracy then. They knew that the Legis lature had been sold for a slush fund. They were fully acquainted with tho nefarious agreement. Yet they inarched to the polls and voted for the guilty men. What did they expect? Virtue from .rapacity? Truth from the deceitful? Honest service from those who boaBted of' dishonesty? Vi'e may pity even the "lenders," thoso men of stunted conscience, trained In n dis reputable school, enamored of vicious pro cedure by long acquaintance with It, prac tical politicians skilled in the tricks of the trade, adept in padding voting lists, "slick" In promoting Irregular registrations, fat and pudgy from long feeding at the public trough, veterans from old campaigns of pil lage and plunder, trade and counter-trade, citizens of the Catnllnlnn type, ready at any time to drive a dagger (deep Into American institutions for an ofilce or a share In the spoils. Aye, they are deserving of pity, for they, perhaps, arc unable longer to differ entiate between good and bad. But for gentlemen untainted, of moral training, with apt ethical perceptions, theie is nc- excuse. Bad government is their child Just as certainly as it they had legally adopt ed It. They are our civic mollycoddles, sweet talkers, perfumed knights of decency, ready enough to tight when there la no fight, champions of righteousness In the off season, who never hesitate, to lock the stable after tho horse Is gono. They had tho chance of a lifetime last year. Boldly Doctor Brumbaugh refused to be a beneficiary of tho slush fund. Courageously he backed local option. Had gentlemen proved their Republicanism and respectability by standing squarely for him apd Just as squarely against other leading candidates who were wanton conspirators, they would have put such power In the Gov ernor's hands that nothing could have pre vented local option. But they did not. They supported Brumbaugh, but they supported the conspirators, too. By so doing they shackled him and set him to a Herculean task -with his hands tied. They Invited the debacleof yesterday, made it a moral cer tainty, and all the yelling and howling they may now do will not lift from their shoulders one scruple of responsibility. Jt la clear that the liquor interests have made a fatal blunder. They have nourished tnn fanaticism which they should have sought to avoid. Particularly have the brew era erred in tying up their Interests to those of the distillers. Beer, as a unit, could never be driven out of Pennsylvania; strong drink isj becoming more and more generally re- Bgarded as a common enemy. Vet the shame of yesterday, which was not the defeat of local option but tho method of it defeat, may be the beginning of a new era in this State, even of a new leadership in the Republican party. It may be doubted M mtn with large interests at stake will be u willing longer to have the great economic IMdleiM) of government confused and Im periled by conspiracies of this sort. They n.ut see the utter folly of tfucb procedure. For them intelligent direction of the party is wsmry and leadership that Jeopardises iia tJrupects Is distasteful. The resentment which is sure- to follow yesterday's affair may teach them the peril of their late adventure and open their eyes. If It does, so much the belter for Pennsylvania. The Stale has been loo long the prey of apathe.Uo cllUonry. But let theso honorable gentlemen remem ber that they got yesterday what they bal loted for. The fault Is theirs. They voted their party Into the mlro and sunk It there so deep that not even the brilliancy, the re sourcefulness, the earnestness and tho states manshlp of the Governor could extricate It. It was a great day for "practical politicians," Hie Way of the Hoss CDI.ONEI, ROOSEVELT told the Jury in Hjracuso that after he was elected Gov ernor of New York, Senator riatt, tho Htalo Republican boss, called on him at Oyster Bay and told him that If he wanted the Leg islature to pass any bill to which tho Stato Organization objected ho would bo disap pointed, for tho Organization controlled tho Legislature. This cleared the gtound most completely and let tho Colonel understand that ho was to bo merely a figurehead In Albany, while the Organization worked Its will. But the Colonel had Ideas of his own, and mnde him self so troublesome that tho Organization unloaded him on tho National Republican Convention to get rid ot him. And tho rest irt History, ot which tho Colonel might say, with Virgil's hero, "Pars magna ful!" The bosses have a way of telling Gover nors what they may and may not do. Now and then thero Is a Governor who has a way of doing what he pleases, bosses or no bosses. And when tho bosses try to kick him downstairs things happen. Th point of the remark Ilea in the application thereof. A Two-edged Rebuke THE firmness and dignity with which the President rebukes Germany, through Am bassador Bernstorff, for her latest nofe on the shipment of Arms are worthy of the best traditions of American dlplomncy. Indeed, tho diplomacy of tin great Power ever pro duced a more skilfully worded note. It covers every point with thoroughness and leaves neither Ambassador Bcrnstorft nor Germany, nor any of tho Allies In doubt as to tho position of tho United States. It Is a rebuke which cannot be misunderstood. The Riddle AVcddlnp Invitations W2 HAT Is a postofllce for, it not to deliver eddlng Invitations? This is not a flip pant question, but one which deserves seri ous consideration by those who occupy the scats of the mighty. A wedding invitation Is not a mero commercial noto dealing with the transfer of cold cash or so many bales ot cotton or so many pounds ot codfish. It is a formal notice ot membership In a cer tain social circle or a recognition of the ex istence of a membership previously estab lished. When, therefore, those persons en titled by all social usage to receive Invita tions to a large wedding fall to receive them through the negligence of the pntofTlce an affront has been ortrred. The fact that the affront wa not Intended does not mitlg.ite the slight. Tho family of the bride is charged with all sorts of social offenses because of It, and tho Tostmaster General himself could not exonerate them, though possibly the President might he able to. Real Heroes Arc Heroines WOMAN 1h neither an idler nor a para site. Sho works sldo by sid with her husband and her sons, and when they am called away she docs the work which they have left behind. Tho truth of this fact was illustrated yesterday In New Hampshire, where the women went out with the men to light forest fires to save their homes. And It has been Illustrated In Europe ever since the war began. Although women work In tho fields there more than In the United States, and do what we regard as men's work In mines and mills, women not accustomed to manual labor are now engaged In It. If they do not tnke up the work ot the men In the nrmles their families will have to go with out the necessities of life. Tho photographs of women lnliorcrs which appeared in the Illustrated section of the Evenjno LKDOnn last night show some of the occupations In which they are now employed. Woman is really nian'a partner, his Indus trial as well as his social partner. Her In terests are wrapped tip In hlB and his In terests cannot be considered apart from hers. They build the home together and 'rear the children together, and when the woman has foresight and economy and thrift they nc qulre a competency together. No man fa miliar with what women nre doing In thou sands of homes will ever make the mistake of calling them members of the weaker sex. There ate women In this town at tho present moment doing work enough every day to break down two men. Tho heroes of the battle of life are. heroines nfter all. The Colonel has not had such a bully time since he charged up San Juan Hill. General Joffre In descended from a cooper, hut he has not yet succeeded In barreling up the Germans. Whoever thinks that the ladles do not know how to play politics ought to read the reports of a D. A. R. convention. As the sane suffragists read the arguments offered In support of votes for women by some of Its advocates they may well pray to be delivered from their fool friends. The British laureate, w,ho has Joined the Volunteer Training Corps for Homo Defense, would soon be a captain if he could transfer to military affairs his Bklll In making words march to time. Four thousand hogs are to be killed in South Philadelphia by order of tho Live Stock Sanitary Board, but unfortunately the board does not have Jurisdiction oyer all the hogs In the cltx Tea dealers, in view of the decreased con sumption of alcoholic drinks brought about by war decrees, are planning to bull the tea market so that the cup which cheers may soon cost more than usual. But It will never cost so much as a glass of beer, however high they push the price. While the Russians are pounding on tho German east front the French and English are sending troops to the Dardanelles to assist in taking Constantinople for the bene fit of Russia. It is fortunate for tho Allies that this is not happening In the Unltsd States, for some on would surely bring suit to dissolve the alliance on the ground that it is a conspiracy in rtstramt of German trade. NEUTRAL MEXICANS WITHOUT A COUNTRY The "New Serfdom" for Refugees. Europcnn War Rcjjnrdcd ns De lightfully Glorious Compared With tho Anarchy in Mexico. -.W.-'" li Ul ""n't "' two editorial arllftfa r.J iJ' ,by.fll1 Enwmo Lsmntn ataff eorr fS .....".. wh1,JYM nt t the Melcn bordr lo Miidy conditions 1 rnHERE is no place In Mexico today for -J-the Intelligent neutral Mexican with con nttuctlvo Ideas. Tho peace-loving, fair minded Mexicans havo been driven Inlo exile. In hundreds of cases separated from their families nnd compelled to haunt tho border, hoping against hopo that their wives and children havo falten Into the hands of at least eome seml-clvlllzed bandit leader. They are a pitiable lot, these neutral exiles, nnd It Is no wonder that when you meet thorn they wring their hands and pray for tho time when somo strong hand will Inter vene and savo their people from the ever- Increasing devastation and desolation, Nor Is It any wonder thnt so many ot them comment so bltiorly upon tho "cowardlco" and "selilah aloofness" of the American peo ple. During tho last year or two tho Idea has pervaded all Mexico thnj this Govern ment hns kept out ot Mexico chiefly through fear. Tho attitude of nil tho revolutionary bands has become distinctly an attitude of sneering insolence, and It lias been a simple mntter for the leaders In nil the Innumer able separate little achievements ot piracy nnd plllago that havo been dignified with tho namo of warfare to lmbuo tho bulk of the population with the notion that we have kept out of Mexico mom through fear of tho Mexicans than for any other cause. "Pusillnnhnous Retirement" Tho episode at Vera Cruz did not In the least lend to dispel this carefully nurtured popular viewpoint. Tho withdrawal of our troops was proclaimed In every province ns a "puilllnnlinotiM retirement nf lily-livered grlngops." This Impreslson has heen strength ened every time the waning tribes of rev olutionists havo met upon our border anil carried on their opera bnurte warfare within view of American troops, who scarcely more than raised their hands in protest when fusillades of bullets crossed the nio Grando River and wounded American citizens. Interview our regular troops on the sub ject and you will see somo lino examples ot "raging Impotence." Very naturally army men nre not In sympathy with grapejulco policies or with tho "paiitalctto efficiency" ot our Navy Department. When officers and agents of the various parties In temporary power cross over tho lino nnd derldo them becnuse of their Inability to Interfere this does not tend to put them in any better humor. Our border patrols havo seen the situa tion grow from bad to worse; thoy havo seen the ceaseless tide of refugees flow over fho line and vanish Into the vostness of the Texas lowlands to seek shelter and food as they can often, when they come into tho hands of unscrupulous employers, selling themselves Into a new condition ot peonage. There Is not so much of "new serfdom" un der our flag for the Mexican refugees ns many are led lo believe, for the people of South Texan havo learned within tho last few years to value tho cheap labor of the exiled peasantry ot Mexico for what It Is worth In a raw land that has been held back from the development of immense re sources simply because of tho high cost of labor. In tho vast majority ot cases they aro treated humanely and ns generously ns the law of supply and demand dictates. The Submersed Eight-tenths Tho crime of non-intervention seems greater to our border people when they see how little restraint it is necessary to Impose upon the "submerged So per cent." of Mex icans, to maintain them prosperously In sim ple acts of husbandry. They have given even passible evidence thnt they do not require quite a ruthless hand to control them, and it is no wonder that the Idea has become so prevalent that our Admin istration in Washington could if It would establish a bloodless protectorate In Mexico that would give telgn to swift processes of reconstruction. The task, ot course, will seem insuperable ho long as we accept the exaggerated view ot certain crafty Mexican politicians that to in tervene wo must give battlo to armed hosts greater than our own regular forces. But these armed hosts are Bhowlng every day moro and more of their hopolesi inefficiency. There Is no longer anything that resembles a cause to weld them together. Tho prelim inaries to a battlo aro harder upon the officers ot these so-called revolutionary armies than the actual battle Itself, for the reason that they never know how many of their troops will desert lo the other sldo, or else tako It Into their heads to branch out for themselves into separate marauding forces. Just one battle recently resulted In tho breaking up of the forces of one sldo Into flvo distinct bands that vanished somewhere in tho mesquite to carry on Independent robberies and outrages. It has been patent for a long while that the only Inducements that will now serve to hold any of these groups of "little bad men" to gether aro the same Inducements that pre vailed when the Goths and Huns swept away the beginnings of civilization In Europe. Tho difference In Mexico Is that they are sweeping away the remnants of a beginning civilization in a country that Is unbelievably rich in nat ural resources. It Is because of the wealth NOISE INCREASES A PEW years ago in a gathering at Phila delphia a number of women tollers from neighboring tenements were asked what they considered the greatest evil of their lives. Their answer was not liquor, or unsuitable dwell ings, or any of the other numerous burdens at tendant on poverty, but noise, "Noise," said one of the women acting as apokeiman, "Is killing us. It never atop. No one can sleep until midnight, and the nolsa begins again at 5," A writer In the National Municipal Review maintains that the view of the women of the slums la based on the soundest (dentine grounds, and that the health of the nation Is tlng aertouily undermined by constant and ever-increasing city noise. There can be no doubt of the direct effect of nolae on t)Uh. Dr. Clarence Blake, of Boston, an eminent auriat, saya that diseases of the ear are 10- creasing with the Increase of noise and that It the noise Is to continue wfc shall be a deaf race. He holds that the ear needs periods of ab solute rest to insure its healthfulnesi. Just as the eye needa periods ol darkness. The Journal of Pediatrics, sa long ajo as 1WT, aueetd that much of the startllnr inereu "NOT THAT I of these resources that a condition of chaos and nnnrchy may endure Indefinitely for a decade or moio unless some stronger civiliza tion Interferes definitely and firmly. The at tempt of Carranza lo lay tilbuto upon tho great sisal Industry of Yucatan is just ono indication of how tho warring factions will continue, to wear down and drain every last drop of Rtistennnco tho country contains. Great hopes had been built upon tho efforts of tho A. B. C. mediators, but this effort of constructive got-togolher Intervention proved as abortive as every other phase of tho watch ful waiting policy. It did not leave bohlnd It a shred of fabric to tie 'to, and whllo there may bo some endless, dreary report ot tho comments and findings of tho mediators tucked away In our national archives, tho Incident Itself has vanished Into an envelop ing dimness, like some long-forgotten episode in the decline and fall of Home. Europe a Pleasure Resort The present enduring facts, however, pro sent themselves on every sldo to the Investi gator in Mexico nnd they present as appalling a condition to shock the Imagination us almost anything you will find in Belgium or Poland. To many Mexicans the situation seems even moro hopeless than In the war-stricken regions of Europo. When the war ends In Europe there will bo strong governments lo manage the reconstruction, there will be a social pchenie ot things based upon rigid laws; rights in property and possessions at least will lie maintained. But in Mexico there is not even this to look forward to. The comic opera combination of Napoleon and Garibaldi Villa is down to day, hut ho may bo on top tomorrow. The Huertista agency may manage some shifty llttlo coup while the Carranzlstas nro holding festival to celebrate their victory. General Obregon Is likely to suffer an nttack of mega lomania and hitch his destiny to somo pri vately conducted little comet. Mexico City Is nt last consldeied .so unsafe that Washing ton reports the organization of a special train to carry out American refugees. Fattening tho Buzznrds The Mexican cattlo Industry has been all but completely demolished. The remnant heids that remain in the northern provinces are regarded as the free-for-all spoils of any little group of armed adventurers who care to drive them to the border for sale, or slaughter for their own provcnd&r, leaving the hastily carved carcasses on tho trail for the buzzards. As the herds of cattle have diminished the swarms of carrion-devouring birds havo Increased. Always plentiful, they Stavo grown to great swarmB, and they fol low all tho divers and various' llttlu "armies" and detached "squadrons" of robbers with unflinching loyalty. The buzzards alone ot all creatures In Mexico aro fattening upon the watchful waiting policy, and to innumerable forlorn Mexicans havo become emblematic of that policy. Mightier world problems may havo come to vex our diplomats and smother for the time the Mexican situation, but this cannot long continue as nn excuse for seemingly neglect ing a patent obligation to a distressed and anarchy-ridden people who aro our next door neighbors. Tho best intelligence In Mexico, as well as tho best Intelligence you may find among exiled Mexicans, Is now fairly yearn ing for somo sort of American Intervention. Will their appeal go unheeded, to find no listening ear or sympathy in Washington, nnd must they wait so long that they will be compelled to direct this appeal to some other Power more vigorous In ItB policy or more cunning in its designs upon the tremendous resources of Mexico? THE SICK RATE of insanity was due to continuous nolae Inas much as the ear Is the shortest avenue to the brain. The American Journal of Publls Hygiene, in WA, held that nolae was harmful even to healthy persons, first, because It In terfered with the neceasary amount of sleep, and, aecpnd, because It necessitated concentrated attention, thereby Increasing nervous fatigue. Ordinary attention, It la held, la a normal functioning ot the brain, but when noise Inter feres an Intense concentration la required which produces nervous fatltue In exact proportion to tho amount of concentration, and this fatigue continued day after day leads Indubitably to neurasthenia. The Philadelphia Medical Journal advises all physicians and educated peraons to wage an Incessant war against unnecessary nolae, which, It aay, Is "Increasing the sick rt by murder ing sleep," increasing the death rate by de stroying the vital and recuperative powers of the sick and dulling and brutalizing the ner vous system of those who have to withstand Its pathological Influence. The weight ot opin ion among physicians seems to be that solas directly affects health. LOVED CAESAR LESS, BUT RUM MORE!" STRING BEANS AND SOCIAL CULTURE; Farms and Suburban Gardens Are Different and the Discovery u of Neighbors Does Not Always Follow the Same Course, j out tne unly True uommunity is a JNeignbornood. Ry ROBERT AGAIN and again, lately, . across thnt made worri- I have conio -culture. The qunrrel over tho right and righteous defini tion of Kultur, between Germans nnd Allies, already seems foolish and fur away. I am planting a garden. This Is what I find In tljo books and catalogs I am reading now: CULTURE Beans nre somewhat ten der, but it often pnys to take some risks, riant In warm, loamy soil at the begin ning of settled warm weather In spring, nnd at Intervals for succession until Au gust. Rows may be marie 2 feet npart, and the beans planted a few Inches apart In drills, or 3 or 4 beans in hills 6 lo S Inches npart. Cultivate, and hoe fre quently, always, however, when tho vines arn perfectly drj. In lmclng draw tho soil up toward tho rows or plants. I'or string henns gather tho pods clean iih soon ns fit for ue. Tho plants will icmain all the longer In bearing. This is but ono brief excerpt from tho lit erature ot culture. It contains. In a few sentences, much knowledge. But knowledge Is not culture. Neither Is hoeing or other hard work. Nor Is culture confined to gar dens. Sometimes it goes a-flshlng, some times it goes a-votlng. Neighbors Discovered Gardening Is both a utilitarian and an aesthetic occupation according to a man's spiritual mnke-up nnd his economic needs. Whichever aspect of Its character is para mount in nny Instance, It usunlly presup poses a respectablo amount of knowledge. And often Just supposes! I have gained part of what I know nbout the science nnd art of gardening from books nnd catalogs did you ever discover tho fact that a catalog can bo very Interesting reading? and part from my neighbors. The Important thing Is that I havo become acquainted with my neighbors and by way of my garden. My agricultural erudition is still compar atively slight. I say "comparatively" be cause, ever since I saw that tho neighbors had "got the jump on mo" In the matter of backyard industry nnd enjoyment, I have given my days and nights to tho study of gardens. Thero Is, Indeed, a great deal to consider climate, soli, fertilizers, and so forth nnd so on, Somo seeds should go In drills, somo In hills nnd some should bo sowed broadcast. Some should be covered with the thinnest sprinkling of earth, whllo others should bo burled soveral Inches un derground. Some, I havo discovered with regret at this late date, should be planted In hotbeds In January or February. Ono kind requires a light sandy soil and an other will thrive only In tlch humus. But nil these, I nm qulto nwaro, aro elementary considerations, Thero are greater nnd moro numerous problems with which gnrdeners and farmers have to deal. The amateur suburban gardener ought to have somo appreciation of the vast amount of knowledge accumulated In a farming com munity. Professor Carver, director of the Tlural Organization Service, tell.i us that tho agricultural lore handed down In the country places Is vastly underrated. Urban commen tators are apt to label It "tradition," nnd not a few misguided crltlCB go so far ns to call It "superstition." They deplore It rs the chief obstacle In the way of scientific agriculture. They are partly right, but mostly wrong. This wonderful lore of tho farmer Is some thing which he values' highly becnuse It hns proved workable. He Is not a whit fonder of doing things without return of profit than nnybody else, and when he sees a chance of making two blades of grass grow whero only one grew before he Is glad enough to do It. He Is more willing to see than many of his critics believe. Rural FrogressWism Progresslvlsm Is present In the country, It welcomes college extension and establishes farmers' Institutes. In the State which Is sometimes called the most thoroughly rural State in the Union every county Is well or ganized for tho promotion of agriculture. Nearly every county has a paid agent who consults with and advises the farmers con cerning crops and other farm problems. Thero are more automobiles per inhabi tant In that State than In any ono of 46 other Commonwealths, and, this In spite of the fact that mora people. In proportion to total population, own their homes, free of encumbrance, than anywhero else In New England. The Legislature has mads Its statute books notable for their reflection of the modim social spirit No other Stats In HILDRETH America has so largo a proportion of Its chll. dron in school, and the educatlonal'facllltlu of tho Commonwealth havo been ranked by the Hussell Sago Foundation as oxcelllni v those of three-fourths of tho American States. If tho country places aro so progtesslri, why the "rural exodus" of which wo hear so much? Tho truth Is that tho menace of ttit rural exodus haa been greatly exaggerated. In volume it Is decreasing. Moio than that, its results havo been by no means wholly v harmful. Tho shiftless, tho restless, the tin- fit, these havo gono to tho cities becaust "?i thoy could not mako farming pay. It's a ' very good thing for tho country places. Oth ers have gone the youth who were not farm '. minded. The best thing thnt can happen "J lo rural America Is to man It with a rural ' population, a population rurally fit, rurally minded nnd rurally Idealistic. Kenascenco Follows Humanism t Tho adjustment Is In rapid progress. With A it tlio rural renascence grows In force and effect. Tho tcnnsccnce does not depend to if much on emigration and Immigration as on - ccrtnln qualities of country life. It is founded on humanism. Country life Is naturally co- f opcratlvo nnd neighborly In a thuusand dlf- j ferent ways. A farmhouse burns and the neighbors help rebuild It. A rain threaten nnd tho neighbors get In tho hay. In a rural 1 community everybody knows' everybody eli. The people participate In a common life. They are as closo to humanity as they-ate i to the soil. Tho welfare of the Individual cannot be a mntter of Indifference tQ the ,. rel.n Hatntnmnt nf community 8P!"t and community consciousness Is the real aim J of tho country-Ufa movement. J pi,. nmint i-v.Ufe movement rises from the ' A Ideals and aspirations of the country people themselves. They aro malting u i . civilization. It Is simply because they are J . M,i. ......, nnmmiinllV OrC&IliZS ,. lUlinilll. A lie nuim;ii,uo - . tlons of Vermont, formed in the last ten yes sj nnd bound together In a Slate association, are tho direct outcome ot the rediscovery of JS .-,,., ... ,i,i iri, nnlAhratloni 01 ' neigHDOiM uy imiftiiKuio, -- f,. tho 100th and 150th anniversaries of tM , founding of towns had much to do with It Tho people got together, hem pageanw " Kinvort TMnvinrr together leads to worklnf together: It Is an excellent preparation, M' i .. - An. Vltn T.1 qualntanco and nelghboriiness can .--ders for community welfare. It's a long, long way from farms to sun urban gardens, or the other way round, tw cither place will teach something concern!! nelghboriiness, and nelghboriiness Is the or lng force of social culture If. Indeed, It Is not culture itself. THE NEEDED REVIVAL . . . . .,.. ijimhI. TD we neea a revival m um ...... ir-,,., i question Is not. What are , they do ' . wnat am i noinui .m, ""--, isi- that or the other?-But, Why am I dolnj w"n that or the otherT-JenKen ioyo ""'" LEGEND OP THE SPINNING WHEEL AVhen bedtime came, the ancient dame Forsook her spinning wheel . . - And said: "Now. hear, my children owt All that I would reveal, Know you that I, In years gone by, Made the flrat clothes you worel A shirt I've spun for eaoh new an Born In a mile or more, "Fly candlelight have changed to white These cheeks, once. oh. so red, That the young bride I tnllht provide - With fine sheets for her bed, I never go to church, you know, Tt much I pray alone. As here, within, my shirts I spin. For those who else had none. "On Sundays, too, my work I do, Yet fear I not Ood's wrath. He knows, at least, 'Us for the Priest I make that tablecloth: But, ere long, I must look to die, And so must soon prepare My winding sheet-as Is most meet, Of linen, whte and fair" That very night, ere morning Heht, Snapped was the flaxen thread. As pale and wan stole In the dawn. The anplent dame lay dead. h Alas! she who her whpls life throun Clad others with her spinning, Into the clay was thrust away Without a shred of linen. Th callous clown that nailed her down In coffin of thin dsal. In brutal Jest upon hyr ... Placed br loved spinning w bi Now. if you bark whtn U Is oara. Tou hear a whirr, . . Tie the poor soul in shams nd aois Making a wincing sni- Ttuodetre Botrel, a "pet t SrlUssr." u r jvs weiKir. WWituWrn