f 1 g m sr S lUBLld LEDGER COMPANY cmtiB it. k. cunris, riEiiPEKT. . Chrtrteslt. Ludlnirton, Vlr.Pnslnnt John U Mftrttn. RNTMAr And TrHuiMf. Phllln H. !aU 5T -!"? jBh'' Williams, Directors, EDITOR! At, HOARD! , . f U. 1C CsAris, Chairman. fOHM 0. MARTIN.. General Business Manager Published dally at Ptnuo I.tDosa liulldlm. Strata CintiiAL, ...tlroiid nnd Chestnut Streets ATMNtld Citr. ........ i, rreatnlm Bnlldlnir Nstt York.,., 1J0-A, Metropolitan Toner Chwaod. ,,, . . ,..SIT lloraa Insurants IlulldtnR IAj.won,.,. .8 Waterloo Plan, l'alt Mall, 8. W. NKW8 BUREAUS I wasmnoton ntmiwu.. ...... The Poti BullilInK NkWYoiic Iluitua ..The rimrs llulldlnpt BcbMm HtRBAU. .......... ,io Frledrlehsirassa LoNoofo IHEit........2 rail Mall Rssl, H W. riklS BussAV,., ,.8J Hue Louis la Grand subscription thumb By carrier,, Daily OnM, six cents. tly mall, MAa.HMl J...1.I..A n.ll.J.t.hl. ... . l. it? foreign poalaaa la required. Daily 0ii.y. one . rnonui, iwenivme rents f vailt uni.t, one year, ' thM. rfftllar. All malt Biih.nrlhH.in. r.rtnli!a win advance, I BEt.t, ioto WALNUT KKYSTOME, MAIN 1009 E7" Attdret.i all communication lo Kittling Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia. isteiud at tub riiiMDti.riiiA roinorricie a SBCOND-CLASS Mill. MATTItS. PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY. MAY 3. 1010. Years bring wl.ulnm only to the wise. Let's Keep Our Heads n While Longer milESE aro months when tho United i JL States should bo hunting for rea sons for keeping out of war Instead of for pretexts for mixing In with It. Tho sinking of tho OulnlRht, presum ably by a German torpedo, would af ford an excellent pretext, If wo were searching for such things. Tho ship Is nn American vessel, built on tho Delaware, bound from nn American port with an American cargo, mannrd by an American crew, commanded by nn American captain. And It was at tacked vhllo on a peaceful voyapo. Tho captain and two of tho crow are dead. , Tho pnrt of wisdom Is to learn all the facts, first, and then to demnnd reparation from whatever nation caused tho damage. After reparation is refused thero will ho tlmo for con sidering the next step. Who Is the Wise Man of Camden? THERE is n wiser man Homewhoro In Camden than lives nnywhero In this city. If this wcro not so, Cam don's flro department would not ho equipped with a larger number of mod ern engines than aro owned here, and would not bo arranging to discard all of Its old-fashioned apparatus in favor of motor-driven engines and trucks. Philadelphia has been most forttinato In escaping great and disastrous fires, but this has been duo to the efficiency of tho flro fighting forco rather thun to tho fitness of tho npparatus for tho uses to which It has to bo put. It is Imposslblo even to get now hose to re place that which Is rotten, to say noth ing of nutomobllo engines. But, If Camden can do this, why cannot Phlla- Kdelphla? Who is the wise man ncross the river who has1 persuaded tho city to f use the best obtalnablo flro apparatus, and who Is tho foolish man on this side of tho river who has succeeded in blocking every effort of tho men In chargo of tho flro department to .got the necessary supplies? Trifling With a Buzz-saw THE public was given to under stand that, "so far as Mr. Barnes Jfe.'was concerned," tho court battle with Ir, Roosevelt would bo a fight to a "finish: and, bo far as Mr. Barnes Is concerned, that Is Just what It prom ises to be. Possibly Mr. Barnes failed to attach duo Importance to tho very obvious fact that Mr. Roosovelt has brains. It s usual, of course, for a brilliant law yer to make even the most competent witnesses appear foolish. The attorney Is clothed with an enormous advan tage, and perhaps one of tho greatest abuses In legal procedure Is tho man ner In which witnesses nro manhan dled. Occasionally, however, a gentle man gets to tho stnnd who Is more than a match for the tormentors. The brilliancy of Mr. Roosovelt in a court room obviously wns underestimated. Without prejudging the case at nil, on its merits; It Is apparent that the ex-President hus been making a monkey of somebody, even of two or threo somebodies. Wo were lament ing recently that no Pennsylvania Mr, Barnes was so sensitive ns to apply to tho courts for relief from Just criti cism. The progress of tho enso at Syracuse Indicates that our species of boss through their hesitancy gave evi dence or possessing most excellent good judgment. Great Guns! frTlHE Germans at Liege proved that ' A no existing fortiflcationR miiiri r Withstand attack by tho 42-centimetre r guns which were used in tho siege. Tho shells destroyed the fortifications ,as though they had been wrecked by earthquake. Then the troops ad- vanced and took the city. The great guns aro apparently again at worlr, Tho shells that have been dropped into Dunkirk, tearing holes Il5 feet in diameter and wrecklne ibaiiainEs, have been fired from guns nth a range of something like 20 til??. The use of such weapons Is Unprecedented, not became there Is Sony international agreement against It, tHjt- because they have not hitherto Seen matfe for land operations. The gyarahlps, however, are equipped with fguns with a range running up to IS fjnllea. or more, and the battles fought an the sea during this" war have be igun when the ships were 10 miles apart, jpcj most or them have been, finished without the combatants getting nearer ithan Ave or six: miles to one another. War has evidently entered upon a pui? stage, not only in the size of the tjtfralw employed, but in the power of it ha weapons used. And death and de- jiiS$fon come without warning from jhftt&y, launched on their terrible rals- um from to great distance that It is fpwwlMe to hear the explosion of "barye which sends them on their rwy- .gii grenJ jrns Justified their use tit I4eg, ahn there was a .sempara ttvly aMj&U law of mea to resut Ue nrray thAt followed. It remains to be seen whether they can bo equally uc cossful at Dunkirk, within rcnoh of which arc hundreds of thousands of veteran soldiers prepared to beat back an Infantry rush. Sweeping Under the Bed B ACK of the clean up movement Is tho determination o make this a spotless" town, nnd consequently a town In which tho health and comfort of tho peoplo aro greater than In any other community. This Is tho third tlmo that a week has been sot apart for gathering nnd carting away tho accumulated relies of housekeeping for disposing of which thero Is no regular method. Many families get i Id of their broken furnl turo at their own expense, Instead of storing It In nn untiRod room or letting It clutter up tho corner of a used room. And other families dlsposo of old news papers nnd mngazlncs overy week In stead of accumulating them to gather dust. Hut tho city arranges to cart away without chargo this week every thing for which tho householders havo no further use, no matter how largo or small It Is. Tho clean-up movement Is part of tho general good housekeeping which leads women to go through tholr be longings onco a year and throw away what Is no longer of uso. Tho man docs tho snmo thing when ho rakes tho leaves from his grass plot and flower beds nnd burns them In a cor ner or buries them for compost. In tho courso of tlmo It is likely that the demand for municipal cleanliness will grow bo strong through tho Impetus which It IS now receiving that tho peoplo will htop littering tho streets during the rest of tho year, and it will bo looked upon ns an offenso against public decency to thiow a newspaper on tho sidewalk or to allow a broken ash barrel to stund in tho alley to leak ashes In tho street when the ashman lifts It to his wagon. Clean-up week Is a wholesome Insti tution, whatever way you muy look at It. JUoBt Delicate Mechanism A YOUNG girl In her growing years Is tho most delicately poised picco of mechanism with which any ono has to do. Tho slightest shock will sometimes mako It loso its balance, and then thero is disaster. Sometimes It Is trag edy from which thero IS no recovery; and sometimes It is mcro distortion of view, which, with rest and care, dis appears. Thero Is no more dinicult problem for parents than the discovery of tho propor treatment of tho girl in this period. And when they think they havo discovered it, and everything is going smoothly, thero Is a sudden break In tho machinery. This 13 what happened Saturday In tho caso of tho lB-ycar-old girl who, overwrought by too much study, took her life. WIso parents, with this disaster in mind, will consider carefully tho stato of af fairs In their own households and get expert advice as to tho proper adjust ment of tho dollcato mechanism that Is In operation beside them. Ape the Three Monkeys r statuo of threo monkeys. Tho hands of one nro over his eyes, those of an other aro over his ears nnd thoso of tho third nro over his mouth. Seo no ovil, hear no evil, speak no evil, is tho Interpretation of them. Thero nro great men in tho world, but thero are few great men who talk much. When they do talk, they do not utter Idle words, hence little evil creeps into their speech. Thero are loved men in the world, generous and pitying, but they havo no time to listen to gossip and evil communica tions. Thero nro other men who see evil, not through morbid curiosity, but with nn eye to its correction; nor do they Imputo evil and view with suspi cion all human actions except their own. Evil communications, seeing evil, hearing ovil, speaking evil, corrupt hu manity. Thero are many who can af ford to ape the threo monkeys. Secretary Daniels' Idea of seems to bo a water wagon. a navy Men talk of peace, but there Is no peace. They have to fight to get it. Tho finding of the Syracuse Jury might fairly be a verdict of 30 scents. Even Teddy must have felt friendly toward "grandpa" In Wllllamstown yesterday. There Is comething the matter with the Athletics, and the fans believe it is in Trappe. One week from today the President will attend the christening of 4000 new citizens in this city. The weather man was Just as kindly disposed to the suffragists as he has been to the ball players. Villa says that he has no thought for glory. Bo far his attention seems to have been given entirely to plunder. Just a word of praise for the police. The crowds which turned out to see the great parade Saturday were per fectly handled. Our esteemed humorous contempo rary, of London, IS hoping that while the British are swearing off stimulants for the war they may make an excep tion in favor of punch. When before have 10,000 marched through the streets on a hot afternoon, with no other incentive than "the cause"? For the politicians to get out a crowd of such magnitude usually requires a raid on the breweries, be foro taA after the calibration. EYBtflffG- GERMANS SAVE ALLY IN EAST Close of Winter Campaign Shows Teutonic Cause in Desperate Straits Against Russian Foe, Expert Declares. By PRANK H, SIMONDS mltM ooenlnc movo of Germany In JLtho cost was tho first drlvo to Warsaw, which developed at tho pro clso moment tho lines of battlo woro doveloplng In Flanders. Originally obscured by tho Antwerp and YpreB operations, It suddenly flltod tho press of tho world with reports of tho Im minent fall of tho Polish capltnl. Pet rograd was silent while Berlin wns In full tldo of victorious statement. Yet, looking backward after many months, It seems plain that tho first German offenslvo In Poland wns less consld crablo than wns at first supposed and a direct effort to assist Austria lather than to conquer Poland. In early October Austrian fortunes had sunk to. tho very lowest lovol. Conquering armies wcro sweeping tho ruins of ono Austrian host in upon Cracow, of another up tho slopes of tho Carpathians. Tho mission of Aus tria hnd been to keep Russia In play until Germany had disposed of France, nnd now, at tho critical moment in tho Flanders campaign, Germany must either abandon tho battlo along tho Yser nnd nbout Ypres or by somo strategic combination uso small re serves to postpone Austrian destruc tion. Germany choao tho latter expedient, nnd gathering up an army sho flung It straight upon Warsaw, through Central Poland. It wan u venture such ns Leo mode when ho sent Early to Washington In 18C1 in tho hopo of drawing Grant nwny from Richmond. German command wns seeking to savo Austria, not her own territories. Llko Early's raid, that of tho Germans al most succeeded. Lato In October tho guns of the Kaiser wcro sending shells Into tho suburbs of Warsaw. But as Grant was able to put a corps of vct orniiH Into Washington whllo Early was still beforo Fort Stevens, tho Grand Duka Nicholas In his turn pushed Siberian troops through War saw at tho critical moment, struck at tho German flank and turned it. Im mediately tho German Invasion was turned back a retreat to tho frontier was inevitable. Warsaw, llko Wash ington, Just a half century boforc, wns saved. Russian Advance Stopped But Germany had attained her pur pose. As a consequnnco of the In vasion of Poland, Russian advance In Gallcla stopped. Russian armies flowed back to tho San. Przemvsl wns relieved, Jnroslnv rcoccupled, nn advanco to Lembcrg in sight. For tho moment Austria was saved; there re mained to Germany tlmo to finish her fight In Flanders, to win, If she could, In tho west, beforo a new crisis In tho east should demand a now diversion of her forces. Instead of victory, however, thero enmo defeat. Germany failed at tho Yser, and nbout Ypres tho golden mo ment for obtaining a decision In tho west had passed. Weather, reinforce ments of tho Allies, tho growing strength of their fortifications, tho enormous nnd sterilo German sacri fices, all combined to eonvinco tho German high command thnt If a de cision wcro to bo hnd against any enemy that enemy was Russia. Such blows ns sho had struck Franco and Britain insured thnt they would bo unable to take tho offenslvo effectively for months to come. Thero wns left tlmo to "denl with Russia," to "put tho Slav out," as tho genial Bernhardi would phrase It. By tho tlmo the battles of Flanders had terminated, however, tho situntlon had again changed In tho east. New Austrian disasters had sent tho nrmles of Hapsburg rushing back In disor der upon Cracow nnd on tho Car pathians. Russian advance guards wero In sight of tho suburbH of Cra cow, Cossark parties wero beginning to flow down tho Hungarian sldo of the Dukla Pass into tho Hungarian plain. Austrian corps wero being re called from Belgrade, newly occupied by thorn, nnd Austrlnn disaster at Vnllovo wns in sight. On tho German frontier tho situa tion wns oven moro threatening, A hugo Russian army wns moving upon Czenstochowa nnd Knllsc, patrols hail for tho first tlmo touched German soil BOSSED BY THE DEAD Reflections on the Real Measure of a Man's Worth. It's a wise man who knows when he Is dead. And It Is surprising how few dead men ever mako that useful discovery. Not long ago a will was probated somewhere. It left JIOO.000 to Harvard University. A codicil nttached to the same will promptly bequeathed that same 1100,000 to somn other institution. The man who made that will had read In his paper one day that a few freshmen had, In the incontinent Joy they experienced at one of those formerly Infrequent Harvard football victories over Yale, decided that nothing could express their emotions bo nicely as painting tho statue of John Harvard a brilliant crim son. The paint rubbed off all right; but so did that JWO.000. The roan who had it decided that any college which welcomed and tolerated such n band of freshmen was no safe custodian of his coin. In so doing he made himself still more of a freshman. He Joined the company of the vociferous dead. It Is really scandalous how much we aro boaaed and bullied by such people. They sit all over ug. Thero might ba an other Hhukeapeare but for one small de terring fact. We have already had one. And all succeeding candidates ere dis couraged. The original has refused to die, Uven very little and Inoffensive men have made themselves mischievous when dead Soma years ago there lived in Boston a young vagabond, who devoted all the days of hU life and all the energies of his person to becoming a poet. He never became one so long as he lived. He was wpnt to go about with fringe on his sleeves, with a window-teat in his trous ers and his pockets stuffed with manu scripts. It was not for want of trying that be wasn't a poet And yet he final ly became one and achieved a little fame. This he accomplished by dying. In a seme he never began to live until ha was dead. For the moment he had passed on those who knew how hard he had tried said, "What a pity!" And they tenderly gathered up his manuscripts and published them In a book, and sold many I copies by subsortptton. Of course, the scema were all "impossible, The only EBDGBB-PHIEADBBPHra. In the Provlnco of Posen west of tho Wnrtha, another Russian army was moving southwest upon Cracow, be come tho gato to Germany, not tho outwork of Austria. Finally, a strong Russian army was again In East Prus sia, flowing west toward tho Mazurlan Lakes, spreading ruin nnd terror In Its pathway. Not alone Hapsburg but Hohenzollcrn Interests now demanded an offenslvo In tho cast. Victory Sought on Vistuln By December 1 Germany was com mitted to her eastern campaign. Sho had definitively failed to get a decision In tho west; sho was seeking along the Vistula what sho had missed at tho M.arno and tho Yser. Eastward from Franco and Flanders corps after corps of her veteran troops wcro coming, giving way to reserves; tho campaign of tho west had ended. In tho military history of tho futtiro it Is far from unlikely that Von Hln donburg's campaign In Poland will bo estimated tho finest, from tho purely professional side, In tho great wnr. Confused ns is tho record still, the world docs know that at tho battlo of Lodz tho Russian army wns nlmost destroyed; that by using his strntcglr railways, by making full uso of his troops, superior In morale, in train ing, In equipment, tho groat German commander nlmost succeeded in en veloping tho Russian Polish nrmy. Two factors served to block tho second great Germnn bid for a decision, tho weather and tho great numerical su periority of Russian reserves. By all tho seasonal calculations Polish roads should havo been frozen solid; they wero a river of mud. Winter, whirl) In Napoleon's Invasion hnd begun pre maturely, now held off with equal per versity. From tho closing sides of tho German net tho Russians slipped safely. At Lodz their losses wero enor mous; but when the battlo was over, when they had withdrawn, thoy stood behind tho Bztirn as solidly as tho Bel gians behind tho Yser. In tho eastern campaign tho battlo of Lodz was wholly comparable with that of tho Marno in tho west. At tho Marno tho Germans lost nnd re treated, nt Lodz tlipy won a local suc cess nnd advanced a fow moro miles, but these two conflicts were tho de cisive engagements of tlm war to May 1; In both Germany failed In the battle which was to dispose of a nation. By January 1 sho was nt a standstill in Poland ns in Northern France, tho great prlzo had escaped hor, only tho Incidental advantage had been brought home. Sho hnd sot out to destroy nn nrmy first in tho west, then in tho east, sho had won somo kilometres or versts of territory, captured some hun dreds of thousands of French and Rus sians, demonstrated tho superiority of her organization In both fields, but tho wnr wns beginning, not ending. Greater Prize Lost Tho close of tho winter campaign in the enst shows Germany tho gulner In a number of great battles, holding many squnro miles of Russian terri tory, so far Inexpugnable, on her new iront iron) tho Baltic to the Nlda. Measured by local advantage the prize Is fairly hers, but tho greater reward lias slipped through her hands. Rus sia has not been crushed, decisively beaten back to tho Vistula; Warsaw holds out. But, above all, Russian at tack is now nt tho summit of tho Cnr pathlans, German effort concentrated In meeting Russian offensive. In sum, tho end of tho winter cam paign saw Germnn fortunes in tho enst not less desperate than they hnd been in tho opening weeks of winter. She had won provinces nnd lost time, now sho must deal with nil threo of her opponents, for tho first tlmo prepared as sho had been In August. Hope of a decision against ono had vanished. Only her own nllles wero weaker than In August; France, Russia, even Eng land, wero ready now. Not only ready, but in the Carpathians and in Franco nnd Belgium pressing more and more heavily ngalnst German resistance, German defense. Germany had been granted her opportunity, her chnnco for a decision. Spring saw tho Allies reaching out to grasp their chance, saw tho whole problem of tho great war changing with the season. good poem in the book wns an Introduc tion in prose by Wllllnm Stanley Bralth wnlte. So this excellent young man, who might have gone quietly on to com fortable oblivion, or wealth, or both, In a store or a rallrond, was nble to nttach himself to tho world ns a poet. He had to die to do It, but even he succeeded In bullying everybody nnd having his way. i,n.rti.H nan e.ver truy Ilves t'H be has died. The real measure of a man's worth lies In tho length of tlmo that he can oblige people to remember him when no is fjono But do not forget that a corpse has certain responsibilities. Do not care! lessly leave a million dollars to a town or b college, for a horsecar lino or a medical school, Mnny a man with a head aa hard ns his heart is soft has made this technical blunder. With the best .Intentions in tho world, he has aub 8lbd the worst kind of boss Wie the tyranny of the dead. It does venr tastnfet"!0 eaVe yUr mU"" ,th instructions for use. It may haonen that electricity will come In soon after you have carefully satlafled yourself that lie sTThe e'onl "mlt locomotion (Me is.) The college you present with n Siurium1 S l may mUCh pre,8r m rtllr. M l... I. "-?" u' ' on. S' i.. ""v .Ve.P'a Knw so well .... , ,,, aa W1B jiving, BURTON KLINB. ENJOYED THE ICE WATER From Harper's Magsilne, English men-of-war have no ice-mak-Ing machines on board, a do our shtpa an4 everybody knows how the English fall to understand us on the subject of the use of ice, especially in our drinks. ," J?nsI '?. u0ffl.cer was aboard one of our ships of the AsUtlo fleet, and, on be ing served with an iced drink, commented on the delights of having' cool w"ter aboard. The American otneer responded with an offer of a small cake of Ice whlih was sent the following mornlnil Meeting the Englishman ashore a week later, the American asked him if he had enjoyed the Ice. "Enjoyed Jt, old topT Why, do you know, that was tha tint -aM k,,i, t.... fca since X left EaUsnd." M03JTDAY, HAY 8. iSSiraS5FSrWAY HE CAN HANG AROUND HERE BEST THOUGHT IN AMERICA DIGEST OF THE MAGAZINES (1) Century "War nnd Drink." (2) Survey "Tho English Press on Wnr nnd Alcolinl." (3) Everybody's "Keep Posted." (4) Collier's "Bryan Democracy's Goat." WAR AND WATER WAGONS BUI" Grapo Julco Preferred! It Isn't a speculation, it's a suro thing. Lemons and cocoa factories also aro desirable Investments. Cold, gray dawns of "mornings after" soon will bo a thing of tho past. Thero nro to bo no moro "mornings after." With overy ono on tho water wagon, how can thero bo? England now Is making tho most desperato cffoits to follow Russia's ex ample and get aboard tho waterwagon, even to inviting "Billy" Sunday to como over and help her. It Is a high wagon, nnd requires Fomo boosting. The hesitancy of tho English Govern ment to enforco prohibition is in strik ing contrast to its summary action in taking over nil tho public utilities, fix ing prices of commodities nnd gener ally ignoring tho usual rights of pri vate property, under tho stress of wnr. It also Is significant that tho intensity of patriotism, which induces a million Engllshmon to offer their lives to their country, does not stand tho test of vol untarily giving up liquor, even when temperance Is urged upon them by King, Parliament, church and pi ess ns an urgent patriotic duty. Thero Is an interesting analysis of the English attitude toward tho drink situation In tho Century (1), by J, D. Whelpley, nn American Journnllst who has been sent abroad by tho United States Government on 12 commissions: In Its handling of tho drink question among tho two million citizens gathered ns sollders and wallers for tho defense of British territory, tho Biltlsh Government has shown apparent political cowardice that Is in sharp contrast to the courage of those who rule the destinies of Russia and France. When the party In power admits through Us Prime Minister that from 10 to 15 per cent, of the soldiers nre rendoicd Inefficient through drink, there must bo some vital reason why the country, or nt least the military camps nnd their neighborhoods, are not made prohibition areas; and there is a reason, in fnct thero aro several reasons, not one of which is brought forward in par liamentary debate or In the press, for they affect too closely the political and social life of the nation. The temperanco movement In England lacks to a marked degree one great vital driving force thnt exists In other coun tries. Thnt Is tho unanimous support of tho women, for the English women of the poorer classes. In the cities nt least, are generally ns heavy drinkers as aro the men. One of tho "sights" of English cities, which invariably makes a most lasting impression upon an Amorican vis ltor. Is the drunken woman in the pub lic house and on the street. The right to drink is a Drlvllece so in. grained in the British character that many of the people who ore now writing letters to the papers and otherwise pro testing against drunkenness among the soldiers, would be among those who would promptly rebel ngalnst a pronlbl tlon order which In any way affectea themselves. There is no doubt also that If teetotnllsm were known to be compul sory upon all recruits, the call for volun teers would be dlsheartenlngly small, es pecially among the poorer people. Behind all this, sinister In Us real meaning, Is the Influence of the brewers, political and financial. Political partiality to the brewers la easily explained. To many of the well-known names In the brewing world are now tacked titles of varying alue, The services of these men to their country have been no greater and no less than those of thousands of other wealthy and public-spirited Englishmen, but their contributions to party funds have been notoriously large and their influence with the voters la naturally formidable. That the weight of this Influence would be exerted against any decree of prohibition in the British army Is undoubtedly true In all the centuries of English lawl making a real system of free education has been denied to the people. They have been encouraged, indirectly at least, both men and women, to look to tha .im.r. shop for their only haoDlness. enmtart and entertainment- No blame attache to the many who now do likewise. n it. alternative Is hunger, com m,T ini Jjlgj Tho Survey (2) sums up English pi ess comments on tho situation; Tho London Spectator has come out with a long editorial, in which it advo cates letting Scotland try national prohi bition "of everything beer and wines ns well as whisky," and then If It works veil, tho measure should be transferred to Unglnnd. Truth declares that It men llko to drink their money away, that Is their own affair, but drinking away their country's energy In time of war is nu mber matter. The Manchester Guardian dcclnies that the liquor tralllc must be restituted, and all the papers writo cdi toilals aiound the sprightly speech of Mr. Lloyd-George. "I whs talking with tho Russian Minister of Finance, a singularly nblo man." said Lloyd-George. "I asked. 'What lias been the icsult of piohibltlonV Ho lepllcd, 'Tho productivity has been Increased from 30 to DO per cent." I said, 'How do they stand It?' 'Stand it?' ho replied, 'I have lost levenuo up to 63, 000,000, but If 1 proposed to put It back thero would certainly be a revolution.' " Wine, Woman and-Sons' Everj body's (3) gives concreto facts and figures to demonstrate tho results of prohibition In this country: Wine, woman and Rong has gono up against dollars and cents in Lansing, Midi., and tho result Is one of tho most notable achieved so far in America. This leader of the drys Is manager of the Reo Mototcar Company. In tho year 1910, in tho factory of tho Reo Comnany. In a ne rlod of 10 successive weeks, tho employes lost a total of 323 working days, and the wnges of those das, because of not being able to recover promptly from pay nights spent In saloons. Lansing's changing from wet lo dry has given everybody a wonderful chance to compare costs. First, as for the cost of running tho government: Tho cost of feeding tho prisoners in tho county Jail during the two years while Lansing was dry had been ?C60O, whllo during the two ensuing years of wetness tho cost of feed ing them (at tho same rato per person) was IU.300. Quite a difference for a town of -10.000. necrewry urynn is tno most con spicuous exponent of sobriety and tem peranco In this country, not only be cause of his position, but because of his gift for getting himself talked about. In nn nrtlclo In Collier's (4), Georgo Fitch gives somo of tho rea sons why Bryan Is so unpopular In Washington: President McKInley served water and other flat things happily and safely through his Administration, it icinalned for Mr. Bryan to canonlzo absinthe frnp pe, blltzen cocktails and extract of taran tula in Washington by serving grape Juice. People who had never tasted the stuff rushed out and drank It, In order to loathe It with more vigor. If wo were to take too seriously tho groans of Bryan's dinner victims, wo would think that In times past people went to state dinners for the purposo of being hauled out by AMUSEMENTS CHESTNUT STREET lloma o World's Greatest JVtotojilais 1 TIMES DAILY Afts., 1 & 8 Evgs., 7 & D 10c, 15c, 23a "GRAUSTARK" GARRICK Today 10c, 15c, 25c CONTINUOUS Jl A. Jl. TO U P. SI WonUerfuI I'lioto-l'lay i'rojuctlon WILLIAM FARNUM In EDWARD SHELDON.'fl MASTERPIECE THE NEW GOVERNOR Forrest Tonight 8"5 1 wis1 er. TUB TUNEFUL DIVERTING OPERETTA ' THE LADY IN RED VALI.1 VALLI GLENN HALL KD.MARTINDEL OERTRUDEVANDEnnir T WILL PHILLIPS JOSlif INTROI'IDI T Popular Price Wed. Mat.Bt Seats 11.80 A. K U A D I A CHESTNUT. Below 16th at. A Photoplays Continuous JO A. M. to 11:80 P. M. ROBERT EDE60N Jn iiu Auawt'i'tsty , .. . . KUNO ifriYB"ri CROSS KEYS THEATRE THE SUPERB FHOTO-SPEri T.T U "THE ETERNAL CITY" Mat "..j. inn cttninra. 7 o, joe lSe. tnc legs in a conauion oc niconoiic corns a vhetcas American stato functions ha$ always been comparatively arid aTfnlri.'i It simply became borne In on tho nmalga.f' mated deplorera that thero must bo some-:'; thing blighting nbout sobriety becausi Mr. Bryan Indulged In it. $ ti AMUSEMENTS t, , ru. m, rra uroaa oi. ineairei LAST WEEK 0F WAYBURN'S CLEAN-UP COMEDY SHE'S I N AGAIN. NIGHTS AND SATURDAY MAT.; 50c to $1.50 rVTce WED. MAT. &' $1.00 IC OW1NO TO TUB GREAT SUCCESSJ THIS ATTRACTION WILL OPEN AT THE! Gaiety Theatre, New Yorkl MONDAY, MAY 17TH Every Woman Should Seel THE SPRING FASHION SHOW1 AT B. F. Keith's Theatre 1 CHESTNUT & TWELFTH STS. MATS., 2 P. U. NIGHTS AT S P. M.t, ONE WEEK ONLY! ACADEMY Seats at Heppe's, 1110 Chestnut TONIGHT AT 8:15 First "Pop" Concert BV THE Philadelphia Orchestra1 Conductor LEOPOLD STOKOWSKI SOLOISTS: MILDRED FAAS. Soprano. WASS1LY I3ESEKIRSKV, Vlollnlet, POPULAR PROGRAMS POPULAR PRICES REFRESHMENTS SERVED, auoKiNO PERitirrsD on floor Prices. IS. ".'.. EOi' T;ill . Ilnx heate. lie. Fop. Concerts F.verv Kvining or 2 Weeks. M T "rTlT1 TONIGHT AT RtIS -U X XVI J MATS. WED. & BAT., 21S "RTC ON TTANfj! I "TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT wi ALL-STAR ENGLISH CAST LAURI DE FRCCE FAY COSIPTON EMMVWHELEN MAURICE FARKOA dl From tha Famous Gaiety Theatre, London, GLOBE MARKET & JUN1PEB PHOTOPLAYS 11 A M. TO 11 P. K lOo 160 -oo THEDABARA 3 JN DUMAS' MASTERPIECE J THE CLEMENCEAU CASE Tnurs., Frl., Bt "THE ItlQH ROAD" A TMT1T TITTT LAST 8 TIMES XVXXJXJ1TX1X Tj,,, vBn. 11 Mat. Thurf. Oliver Morosco Presents J. Hartley Manne PEG O' MY HEARTS 400 GOOD BALCONY SEATS H'i 400 GOOD FAMILY CIRCLE BEATS. .....W?l THE MARKET ST. Above, ISO W4 v 1 w 11 .on a .r a h ,1S P. J kJLeallltJV "nTJ7n.iii ? . "THBWOMA.N? yommj -inuraoay, Friday, Saturday-- i Frlttl Scheft In "PRETTY MRS. BMlTgl. NIXON'S GRAND Todays. 13. T9 Th Sorority Olrls"! Martfl and Billy Harti Oat'efWa Four, UarlarU FalrbaB 4 fo , ftit & WMIasW! Rutn & Kuty Henry DUMONT'S TIrfiA-R MAT1NEB TODAY.TOa f 20c ,' misery, cadero&Morientla OARTMO wiftutsthetsTTwiwr. -" ieH msoi flyttOUC