m jLggyjjBji,; i(j"ll' UiliX iinii.iln i,..t,i mMi.J 1 n'.ir. i, I I. hi. J',f WA.H....II, , ,i . ,. fchJ.Wif,i WM! .n.nrii,, TlintlG LEDGER COMPANY fiTtttm rr. r. eim-ris. Fhhbint. , tMtlitlli l.txJfniton.'Vlee-rrOldtntiJehn C. . fftTtrr pn Trraturori Philip 8, Collin, JTHiums, virttioh MArttn. John B. BdttonrAiiDOAttui f to It K rctl, Chilrmin tt, H. -WltALF.T , mwuthe Flller VJOmt G. MAIWIN. ....... .Qierl busIikm JUntrer SuMUhed dally at TttUo Lewis Building, InJtMtnltnct Sauare, Philadelphia. ,tMii Ctx-rmt, i .Broad and ChMtnut Btreta An.iNti Cm ......,...rrJ-tTt(oi Bulldln roK ...1T0-A, Metropolitan Toirar Cmcito ...... .,. . ,. 817 Homo lnturanc nulldlnc LONtOM. ......... 8 Waltfloo Dace, Tall Mall, S. W. WisnWdTOS Bcaio!!ir.?.?.li"h rott lluiwin Kiw Ton ntrnriu.. ....... Tho Timet Hulldlnr Sui Jlrtc .............. 00 Frldrlehlrf LoffM Dinitiu. .............2 Tall Mall i:t. 8 TV. Faais Btiuu... ...... ...83 Hue Insula la Grand 80DSCniPTNTEnM3 . rftrtl.r mir.v ntT. ate rnf n. nr mall. ttOKtnald iouuida of Philadelphia 'Kept hd foreign pomato ila'iTHalfsdrDAttt Onlt, ona month, twenty.flvii cental ADULT, OftT, one. year, throa dollara. All mall aub kacrlpttona payable tn advance tfefitu nooo walnut KF.YSTONF, MAIN 3000 IMT Addrvts all communications to Eimtng IttAevf, Ittdepenitnct Bquan, rMtattlpMa, NTiBArinr)!iLiprLrnu roarorrics as arcoita cum i. UATTia. nilLADEU'lllA. SATUI1DAY. MAY 1. 1913. Htf clathes aro worn for icarmth, then wool Is better than silk. ' War Is Not Murder W vNE docs not need to bo tho sovonth son of a seventh eon, nor oven a first year student In a law school, to know that IGoncrnl Pearson's suit to provont tho snlo tot munitions of war to tho Allies on tho rkrountl that a conspiracy to commit murder ila Involved In It, will bo thrown out of tho .courts. Tho right of neutrals to sell guns nnd ammunition to belligerents Is admitted In Itho law of nil nations. But If thero were precedent for It, a precedent would havo "to bo established If smalt nations woro over tto survive Without such a rulo a nation iVlth a big supply of ammunition could wlpo 'out all tho Uttto nations nnd nil tho largo unations, too, which hnd not taken tho pro- Kcautlon to build' munition factories of their iown capable of supplyng nil posslblo noeds. s Tho logical conclusion of tho promises jlald down In this action, begun in Milwau kee, aro so Imposslblo that It Is ostonlsh- tlng that any lawyer who cared for his ropu- tlon for Bound Judgment could havo been I found to draw tho pleadings. Tho First Guess on tho Coal Tax kFTlHE validity of tho hard coal tax Is sus s'JL talned In tho llrst skirmish In court. I'Judgo Kunkol finds that, although tho law ft is loosely drawn, It provides for tho exor- Kcleo of an undoubted power of tho Com- ; monwealth to tax commodities nnd busl- tnesses. But this Is only tho first guess. It Is llkoly Sjthat tho dispute will bo taken to tho Su- ipremo Court of tho united States before fit Is finally settled, so that all tho lntor- KjYonlng courts may havo an opportunity to Speculate about tho meaning of tho Con stitution and tho statute. In the mean- jtlmo tho coal counties, which will profit fby tho tax, aro hoping that Judgo Kunkel, yiko tho boy In tho song, "guessed right tho Hvery first time." K Take Her Out Once In a While r"tT7HAT aro tho wives doing every day W while their husbands aro filling tho & seats at tho ball gamo? Tho men aro having an outing, but tho Women nro hard at work at home. Thoy sdo" not caro for baseball, but thoy do caro jfor relaxation. And Micro is no reason for sdenylng It to them. Tho husband may bo tlrcd when ho gets homo at night, oven If ho S'doea not go to tho gamo, but tho wife. Is i tired also. She has not had a chango of , scene to relievo tho monotony of life. A '.trolley ride, a Jitney Jaunt, or an hour or Stwo at the movies, would do her good and 1make It easier for her to take up her burden athe next day. And it would do tho husband good also to "beau" his -wife about again as She used to do before ho married her. But it It is not convenient to take her out fcln tho evening, thero aro half-holidays every rweek In summer for most workers, and sov- leral wholo holidays beginning with Memorial 3ay. when many hours aro available for excursions to the various places of Interest "wJOtln reach, oven If tho Interest consists cnieuy in u view ui uio unuuairaciea Ky II and a wide stretch, of Held and woodland. it every man wno icaus mis win resolve -to take "her" out onco In a whllo this sum- pner, and will llvo up to his resolution, ho will 'bo surprised at tho rejuvenation of his wife, and will bo delighted nt the discovery that she can still smllo as sho used to do. And jthe wlfo who meets her husband halt way Un his bungling approaches of this kind will galso discover that tho man is really con- siaerate. ana is as mucn interested in her kcomfort as ho promised to bo in tho begin ning- MI is, Modem Progress Rests on tho Straw Hat PANY and dlverso reasons havo been ad- . vanced to explain the progress of the rorld since tho beginning of the 19th cen- pury, But insufficient attention has been jfven to what might bo described as the real (Cause. That there has been nrnirrpBH nn mm jdlsputes. More has been learned of tho mys Iterles qf naturo In the past 115 years than iaq been discovered In the previous 40 'centuries. And the material comforts that kmako.Hfe agreeable today have been almost Lall devised since tho beginning of the last icentury. The railroad, tho electric car. the (automobile, the sewing machine, the tele. phpne, the steam radiator, the coal stove, etectrio light and even gas light are all mod- rn Inventions. Jiil Krett of all, from many points o view, is the straw hat for people living in the temparato tones, The first hat of straw Ifoibe worn In tho United States appeared in 1800, Straw had been used before to thatch, muses, but not the heads of civilized cltl- js. It made comfortable bedding for iitle, and Waa Stuffed in Backs tn inr-ronm iJPfT'softnejis of tho pine boards used by men Bwyi women o sleep on. But ptraw for the pad rMever" It might do for the tropical vasm, but not for the inhabitants of the rreat zone in which the progressive nations f. rovlous to wOQ men had worn felt and gpth natg. The Puritans, even though they tea wim contempt on Bairn Clement, the ivtntor of felt and the patron saint of felt iU, wore severely simple hBad, coverings ih yeflegtad the austerity of their spirit. t was not tilt the time of Elizabeth it men began to wear hats at all, in d s- ctitn from f-uve and bonnets Th blo 3$ of literature lu the Elirabsthan IHo4 was eoiuejpwry with the building 'iKtiMf on twisui coverings and th4r trans - "-aMMfcAUan ito h,a.ts. And tb subsUtu B" MtMn tion oil straw for felt for summer wear has teen accompanied by sUch an expahslon of tho inventive nnd Investigatory Ihtellect lis makes tho nchlovements of all tho past seem trivial in comparison with what han come slnco tho first palm leaf hat mado It possible for Americans to walk about in tho heat with cool heads, howovor hot the stln may havo been. Tho sociological Investigator would find a fertile field for his Inquiry In tho relation between tho summer hat of tho present and tho progress of tho century within which It has grown from a curiosity Into a common place. It would not do to dismiss tho whole subject by saying that post hoc ergo propter hoo does not apply, for there nover was a propter hoo which was not preccdod by a post hoc, nnd tho skill of tho Inquirer s dis played In his ability to dccldo which post was propter. Indocd, what better proof Is needed of the popular faith In tho value of tho straw hat as an aid to progress than tho Joyous" cere monies with which tho day on which It may first bo worn In spring Is welcomed, and tho contumely which Is dealt out to tho man who wears tho hat after the date on which It Is agreed that it must bo called In in tho autumn? Marching Through tho Streets THEY nro marching through tho streets today, mothers, wivei and sisters. But it would bo undignified, we are told, for them to march to the polls. If tho polls aro such leprous places that to enter them would dofilo womanhood, by all menns let womanhood bo given the right to enter them that they may theroby bo mado clean. Thoy noed tho prophylaxis of a woman's prcsenco. Women oo well on men aro bipeds. Thoy possess tho fivo senses and most of them a sixth, Intuition. They cnit, thoy drink, thoy read, they wrlto. Thoy do everything but vote, and oven that they havo bocn doing for many years In somo of tho most progressive and enlightened parts of tho world. Tho women rtrudgo along tho streets today. Thero is no doubt about their enthusiasm, tholr courago, tholr insistent longing to bo put on a political equality iwlth men. They, too, want to bo emancipated. Thoy have to combat the Samo prejudices and tho somo argumonts that were formerly advanced against granting a gonoral franchlso to men. But tho twontioth century Is not so afraid of an Idea no tho eighteenth was. Then the fight for tho voto was on tho battlefield. Now It Is a peaceful contest. In tho streets of tho cities, and constitutes an appeal to reason. Tho parado really Is the opening of tho campaign for woman suffrage, a campaign which will bo waged with vigor and enthu siasm until its purpose has bocn accom plished. Cowardlco of tho Sons of Adam NO MAN can mako a criminal of another man without tho other man's consent. This obvious and elemental fact Is in dan ger of being obscured by tho outgivings of a man who Is trying to Bhleld hlmsolf from general condemnation for robbing his em ployers, by charging them with leading him astray through drink. It Is as Imposslblo for a. man to make a drunkard of anothor without tho other's con sent as to mako him a criminal. Tho responsibility for crimo rests on tho shoulders and tho conscience of tho criminal. Man Is not a dummy or a tool. Ho Is a free agent. If tho fundamentals of uprightness aro In him It Is Impossible for any outside forco to mako a criminal of him, or a drunk ard, or a libertine, or any other contemptible thing. But over slnco Adam It has boen tho habit of man, when found out, to try to place tho blomo on some ono else. An Envoy of Futilities PAUL, FULLER, who conducted an Inves tigation In Mexico for tho benefit of President Wilson, will go to Haiti next month to Investigate tho finances of that populous and povprty-ntrlcken country. Wero ho required merely to count its money ho could arrive In tho morning and get away by noon. But a more difficult task awaits him. Ho must strike the rock of Haiti's resources and forco therefrom abundant streams of revenue. Perhaps a battle or two staged by the revolutionists for tho benefit of tho "movies" would bo moro productive of cash than anything else. But Mr, Fuller cannot propose any con structive program of that sort. Ho must deal In futilities. Thero Is some consolation, howover, In tho thought that his salary will come not from Haiti's, but from Uncle Sam's treasury. Thoy are using Iron coins in Ghent, not iron crosses. That roport from New York that Mr. Car negie has the grip Is uninteresting. He never lost it. Tho respirators sent to the front are not intended to make it easier for the soldiers to take a breathing spell. Ambassador, Bernstorft knew after all that his latest note was foolish, and refused to deliver It without most explicit orders from Berlin. If Germany Is already whipped one cannot help wondering what she would be doing if victorious. She Is very much alive for a dead one. The Dean of Canterbury refuses to "swear oft" to please the total abstinence advocates in England. He says he tried it once to the great Impairment of his health. ' What would happen to the clergy in the United States who should object to giving up alcohol and defend its use in publlo? They do things differently in England. Speaking of transit, Senator McNlchol says "every true citizen of Philadelphia will be gratified with tho result " A lot, too, will be gratified with the vagea on Saturday nights when construction is actually begun. Judgo Bufflngton la not the only one who admires the horses ridden by the mounted policemen. No one knows how many men and women carry a Jump of sugar from the lunch table every day tp give a favorite horse standing at the curb. As to the sen timent of the officer thBmtSS well, the men have been seen coming from candy stores with chocolate creams to give to their mounts, and ibfy have been heard to say, with a fl!sWIt. la irtty expensive, bona VAUDEVILLE ON MONDAY MORNING Weekly Rehearsal Which Is n Show In Itself How tho Lender nnd tho Singers Put Together tho Week's Entcrtnlnment. By KENNETH MACGOWAN THE houso was decidedly cold both In the thormomotrlo nnd tho theatrical sense, An audtenco of ono gazed Into tho gloro of a "bunch" light whoso bulbs sprayed out from n china reflector up on tho stage. Other wise, no "foots," no curtain, no scenery! Just a welter of ropes from tho gridiron, "wood wings," "props" nnd gymnastic apparatus. Down whero tho footlights should havo boen a mlddlO'Dged woman tn a mannish coat sat sldoways on on ordinary kitchen chair, say ing things, Keith's was going through Its regular Monday morning rehearsal. Ordinary players lump all their times of tribulation Into a bunch and go over and over their linos and scenes nnd acts in throo or four furious weeks before tho "first night" Not so with tho "two-a-day." Every week 1b a now production with It. Every weok tho vaudovlllo theatres havo to put to gether their shows and synchronize orches tra and porformera. In somo ways It's moro fun to watch than tho regular performance. "Frank," tho Hero Tho hero Is tho orchestra leader; though sometimes tho performers mistake him for tho villain. During tho regular show ho has to bo ready with tho proper nslnlno answer when tho comedian leans over and says, "Hello, Frank, how's business t" Therein Is tho dark secret of this hero's tragedy. Mr. Schrador, who leads Keith's orchestra, hap peni to bo named Charles, Mr. Schrador has a lot to do. Ho has to sco that all tho bundles of muslo handed him by tho performers havo enough parts to go round. If they havon't, thero may bo a strike. Ho has to satisfy tho technician of tho band In this caso It's tho cornctlst that ho can play tho muslo tho way tho acrobat wants It even If It Isn't written that way. Every now and then ho haB to put In a full rest or add threo measures of "vamp." And always, all tho time, ho must listen to everything tho singers say, tako down nil their cues, remember Just whero to slam In tho tempo, nntl mako tho wholo business como out ovon 12 times a week. How They Do It Hero is a fair sample of tho way ho does it with a singing and talking toam: Tho lady on tho chair Is Bonnlo Thornton, 63 this wools. Sho kisses her husband, "Jim," at every performanco and thoy sing somo of tho famous old songs, liko "Annlo Rooney," which ho wroto when ho was not "tho youngest of tho old-timers." "Good morning," says Mrs. Thornton to Mr. Schrader's shirt sleovcs. And thon, "Wo'vo resurrected a wholo lot of dead ones." "They'ro sometimes tho best," replies the courtly leader. "Well, wo couldn't stand out hero and sing grand opera. Wasn't it awfully hot yesterday7" Thon tho orchestra gets a look at tho music Its first look. Tho natural advantages of playing old standbys liko "Annlo Itooney" Instead of tho usual now stuff "at sight" aro compensated for by somo vory minute direc tions from Mrs. Thornton. "Now bring us on," says sho In tho clear and careful tones of ono who Is sending tho office boy out to chango a thousand dollar bill nnd buy a bank. "Now bring us on very forto and loud, and dlo away when wo reach centre. Then you don't play a thing till I say, 'Tho tltlo of my song Is "Tho Same Old Place."' Got that? Then I go over hero," and sho gets off tho chair for tho first time, "and you play Just as piano as possl blo for tho end. I do somo talking after that, but my next cue to you Is 'Annlo Rooney, No mattor what I say, that's my cue. Do you got me?" Back of her, things are happening. Tho stage crew have hauled up the big black backdrop on which the ambidextrous Jap writes backward and upsldo down. It threat ens to get tangled up with tho rubber tubes of a. talking machine which tho Jap is test ing out as to length nnd position. "Annie Rooney" Ad Lib. But all this tlmo Mrs. Thornton is singing. It's "Annlo Rooney" In sections, with pauses to listen to tho orchestra and to put It on tho right track. Tho result Is something liko this: She's my sweetheart I'm her beau. She's (not too forte) I'm her Jo. Soon we'll Never to part. Little (a little louder, please),. Is my Bweethcart. Thero aro 10 minutes more of Instructions while tho femalo Impersonator stands fldget tlng behind the bunch light. The principal results are; "After that chorus I generally como back, and say, 'Can you stand an other? All right, that's what I'm here for.' Now, Mr. Cornetlst man, come in loud whon I got to "When sho wub sweet sixteen.' And when we get to the finish of the chorus you can all choke us out as loud as you con. Or they'll get our number." The female Impersonator Is Bolemn and AN ANARCHIST OF MUSIC THE cables brought, the other day, news of the death of Alexander Nlcholaevltch Scrlabln, the Russian pianist and composer, who was one of the most striking figures of the modern musical world. He was 43 years old, and it la some thing of an Irony of circumstances that he should have died now when his fame has JUBt begun in Amer ica. About two months ago bis "Prometheus" was first performed in America. This as tonishing production received a wldp no toriety because for the first time muslo and color were Joined In actual production. 8CRIABIN It is an established fact that certain chords; when struck on the piano, will bring; up the Impression of cer tain colors to those whoso ears are eum ctently sensitive. Scrlabln pushed the prin ciple of color-sound to the farthest point by having his orchestra play while a special Instrument threw the proper colors on a screen placed at the back of the orchestra's platform. Tho result was puzzling; the critics were, plainly baffled, but the expert HMmt.piWfBrt fntweaHnff p. jfont yhft pit lift "1 THE STANDARD BEAftBR I mmwt I ih1 Mm I f&m $mf ,t s ffmm' f V ill I MkM-i m ifly? m 1 JS wsShm WWi wlhwr 1 saturnine nnd very earnest about his work. Ho lets out his remarkably high, fine volco with considerable vlolontc. Ho sings all tho words. Ho ovon takes off JiIb collar aB woll as his hat. Left hand and right kneo get to beating tlmo, and by tho end of his rehearsal ho Is down on his knees to got In touch with tho leader's spirit. Ho seems to npprovo of "tho boys." Ho vontures only ono extra In struction and one criticism. "Just a bit moro attack, If you can get It, boys." And to the comoti3t, "When I look down at you Just swell It up. You needn't bo afraid of giving mo plenty of orchestra. I'm Just off a night train." Somo Trimmings After that tho "lady specialists," that hang from their teeth, and danco between times to glvo their Jaws n rest, explain a few things In secretlvo tones, and mako way for tho acrobatic dancer. Ho knows ho "opens tho show," and Is consequently a llttlo nervous. Ho doesn't help matters any by rattling oft: "Number two Is an acrobatic danco. Go Into number throo very forto. Cut through fast to number six. Play It Just tho way It's written till 'Over the fenco Is out' then very forto." The dancer hums "Deodlo dl dl dl, decdly dl dl" a bit and then begins- a sort of anemic carlcaturo of vaudovlllo violence, saving all tho exertion ho can but keeping In time with tho orchestra. Ho makes somo symbolic motions for tho backward hand spring, and then gets Into serious troublo with that lmpeccablo musician, tho cornetlst, by stopping short to say, "You swell out too soon. It's markod piano there." After tho fracas Is over, tho dancer retires to "drum's" corner nnd explains somo of tho fine points of his kicks. And so It goes for about two hours every Monday. Thero aro variations each week. Sometimes tho candy boy has to rehearse tho slot machines on tho backs of tho chairs, and sometimes the performers worry a bit over which of tho Pullman car-named dress ing rooms they've got, "Zara," "Yale," "Ulva" or '"Zeno." Onco in a whllo thero aro gaps. And ovcry now nnd thon tho head liner disappoints by sending over her colored maid to rehearse tho music for her entranco. Life in Keith's of a Monday morning I3 Just liko life in gonoral only moro so. THE FRONTIERS OF HUMOR The curse of Babel only fell among men When they learned to laugh. Laughter Is the real frontier between races nnd kinds of peo ple. We are agreed the world over ns to what precisely is grievous. Laughter Is another mat ter. A Joke sets all nations by tho ears. Wo laugh In different languages. Tho Frenchman violently explodes into laughter at something which leaves tho Prussian cold as a stone. An Englishman sees very little fun in Alceste. A Frenchman sees In Falstaff no more than a needlessly fat man. Try to be funny In a for eign land, and you will probably only succeed In Insulting or disgusting or annoying or shock ing somebody. A Joke cannot be translated or Interpreted. A man Is born to sea a particular sort of a. Joke: or he Is not You cannot edu cats him Into seeing It. In the kingdoms of comedy there are no papers of naturalization. John Palmer. and Baw the performance. So far there have been no imitators In this country; but the perfection of the necessary Instruments and the progress of sensitive sight-hearing are very likely to make Scrlobln's experiment a real contribution to musical enjoyment. Students of tho technique of musical com position think of Scrlabln as an anarchist in muslo because he has experimented far and Wide -with strange harmonies, has made strange and sometimes alarming innova tions in scales1 and chords. But to tho man who knows how to listen to music, who knows that tho real thing is the thought and feeling which the muslo expresses, Beriabln will appeal In a different way, Why did he have to experiment in harmonlo progres sions? The answer Is that he had something to Bay which had not even been suggested before in muslo. He had penetrated behind the veil of coarse thinking and feeling; ho bad gone -where, no composer had Bono be fore, to the soul of man and to the soul of nature, not as we conventionally know It. but beyond to what we often think, la the inexpressible. As one writer has said, the wind that blows through the pages of his muslo is not the ordinary air of the concert room, but Is "the veritable wind of the cosmos Itself" And when you come to ex press the soul of mysterious and awful Na ture itself, thera is somo excuse for forget ting th set rules of th conservatories. WOMEN AND WAR IN AMERICA Patriotic Heroines of the Revolution and the Struggle of 65. Some Reflections on the Brute Strength Theory of Fitness to Vote. 0 By RAYMOND G. FULLER DEFINITIONS aro sometimes Inadequate, often unavoidably Imperfect, but tho strangest aro thoso which aro formulated In support of a weak argument. In a circular Issued by tho Pennsylvania Association Op posod to Woman Suffrage a concoptlon of government, which fortunately Is not hold by tho majority of American men and women, is put Into tho follotylng words: As long as wo MUST HAVE Government, though, to physically FORCE somo pooplo to bo good let us leave It In tho HANDS OF THE MEN. Government Is not a sociable or Sunday hchool matter but a great organization of LAW nnd FOrtCE to protect HONEST per noiis from CRIMINALS. A woman has less placo In politics than sho has In mining coal, running trains, sailing ships, or build ing bridges. Nowhere has tho forco theory of fitness to voto been better stated tho theory which survives from tho period of ancient history when man arrogated to himself tho prlvllego of tho ballot by sheer bruto strength. Its modern protagonists delight In challenging tho woman suffragists to show themselves approved as good policemen and good sol diers "If you aro to vote," thoy say, "you must bo ablo to back up your ballot with an effective bullet." Apparently they have never heard of division of labor, nnd certainly their idea of governmont is a rollo of the tlmo when, In Doctor Claxton's words, "the Stato was primarily a military organization and was best symbolized by tho marshal's baton and tho headsman's axe." Today wo havo a term, "police power," which means something very different from tho power of tho police! Or of tho army and navy. War nnd Welfare In his recent book on "Organized Democ racy," Doctor Cleveland, after grouping tho functions and activities of government ac cording to welfaro relations, comments on ono Horn In tho list as follows: "Both sexes are concerned In questions pertaining to national defense. Whllo In case of war men aro drawn Into armies and Incur tho greater personal risk, tho Increased burdon of civil Ufa falls moro largely on women. Tho ability of a nation to survive when at war depends as much on the one sex as on the other. Both aro equally con cerned In International relations, in the pro tection and maintenance of friendly relations with foreign powers, In obtaining Informa tion abroad in tho Interest of extension of trade, and in providing for International co operation concerning matters of health, edu cation nnd morality." This Is only tho truth. It reflects the com munity of Interest which exists among men and women In the conservation of the State. Ardent idealists, however, have asserted that if women wero armed with the ballot war would become Immediately Impossible, They are wrong if they ore thinking of less than all of the great nations of the world. They misread history. They misinterpret the qual Ules of womanhood. They forget that women stand nobly with men in patriotism and In national defense. They forget that not all wars aro materialistic. Yet they are right If they aro thinking of the socializing proc esses to which the ballot In tho hands of women would give a new Impetus. Whllo honoring women for their part in tho promotion of peace, and working to tho end that they have a moro effective part, let us not neglect to pay tribute to tho part which thoy are playing In the present war, and which thoy havo played In past wars. In wartime they have shown qualities of cltl zenshlp which are at least consistent with tho qualities deslrablo in voters. Wa may say that -woman's' place is not in tho army or navy, we may say that tho heroism of a Joan of Aro or, a Florence Nightingale, or of a Molly Pitcher or a Sister Julia is not a title to thofballot, but we cannot say that women have failed country in the duties and obligations of wartime. Doctor Cleve land was,. merely quoting history when he said tha "the ability of a nation to survive when a war depends as much on the one Evajj the war spirit may animals women to their overia.tlns siory. An ttmrnnattog ' Incident Is recited by Miss Reppller In nnj ossay, "Women nnd War": "In tho town ofJ Lexington, Massachusetts, where was shedj tho first blood spilled In tho Revolution, then Blept peacefully on tho morning of April W, 1776, a young man named Jonathan Har rington. To him in tho early dawn cams his widowed mother, who aroused him, saying, Jonathan, Jonathan, wako up! Tho Regu lars nro coming, and something must be done ' Tho something to be dono was plain"-) to this young American, who had nover . fought, nor seen fighting, In his life. He rose, dressed, took his musket, Joined the llttlo group of townsmen on the Common nnd fell before tho first volloy fired by the British soldiers. His wlfo (ho had been 31 married less than a year) ran to tho door. Ho crawled across tho Common, bleeding heavily, and died on his threshold at her! feet." That was defensive war. Read the story of the Revolution and you will read of heroines as well as heroes j heroines of tho battlefield, of tho farm and; plantation, of patriotic toll and devotion. All Mr. Bruco Bays In his bpok about "Women! In tho Making of America," "Not a few' women paid with their lives for tholr sub-, Hmo devotion to tho demands of pity, char-' ity and patriotism." Women of tho Rovolution Tho antls. In their uninspiring literature,) thus: "As women, we do not want tho strlfej bitterness, falsification and publicity -whlchl accompany political campaigns." It might! do remarked that properly tho question is not so much whether they want to partlcl-i pato In politics as whether they oueht to want to, but never mind It Is qulto as ln-'J terestlng to wonder why American wohienj could not go through a "battle of ballots" J wiui as iiiue norm to womanhood as re-, suited from tho War of the Revolution! Th" American woman of Colonial times did not; shrink from hardship. "She was," to quote Mr. Bruce again, "pre-eminently courageous and resourceful, able to depend on herself and think for herself. Whether in tho older , communities along tho Atlantic, or among? the straggling settlements of the mountain frontier, she displayed a wonderful readH ness In adapting herself to conditions and Inj meeting emergencies. Thero was no perlll which she did not face dauntlessly. no obsta cle sho deemed too great to be overcome. If j occasion demanded, as was often the cas,jj she did not shrink from tasks and danger! usually falling to men. "And for all her hardihood and energy.i she remained essentially womanly, finding her chief interest In her home, her husbandi and her children. It was for them she toUeal and sacrificed, directing her every effort to the upbuilding and preservation of a happy nome me." The Revolution did not make the AmerJ-' can woman less a -woman. In tho Civil "WW she was equally glorious. Thero was Mr, tiixoy, to whom Abraham Lincoln wrote that' famous tribute to the women of wartime. -The noble, martial lines of "The Battls Hymn of the Republic" they were written! by a woman. THE BOAD TO MAY When we were young In Eden, Remember how we'd stray From out the April shadows Into the sun of MayT " every year the Eden XnatJ0Ve knew comes again, 'XJf en, ?lay walk down the morning To kiss the lips of men. Te argoale have vanished That plowed the Aegean deep; But still upon the Nllus The oars of Cupla sweep The barge of Cleopatra Along its pristine way Through dead Egyptian gardens unto tho mora of Mayl All things awake and tremble, The lark on vewles wing Takes up to God's blue heaven The love that helps him sing. And we are young in Eden As we were yesterday. When through the clouds of April Wo found the road tn May. -JiUr WtSOnw. lAGmxit St 'A