B w 1 ffedger PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY cthua il k. curtis, rMir.!T. Char tea If. Ltialnirton, Vic rreeldent John C. Martin. Beefttary na Treaaureri Thlllp 8. Colllne, John B. WlHIame, Directors. EDITORIAL BOARD! Otnts II. K, CcRTid, Chairman. P. It WHALEY.... tKecutlre Editor JOllN C MARTIN. ....... .General Dmlnen Manater Published dally at Pcstlo Lsmeb Building, Independence Square, Philadelphia. LiDorn CxHmt.i,ii,,,Droad anil Cheetnut Streetn MUktlO CITr........ ,.,.,,, ...'rftj-lmon riullcTV.nc Nftw Tobk. ........ dm. ,.,170-A, Metropolitan Tower CiIIoArto,. i 817 Horn lnnurance Building London.,.., ,8 Waterloo ri&ce, Tall Mall, S. W. NEWS BUnDAUSl Viiihoto Bbao ) Th TojI rtulldln (. Von it ncitiutio) i The rime ltullrtlng iImmn BtiacAO.D .....fio FrledrlchstriiMe Lo.Nrtoy nujuuu.... , ... a Pali Mall nt. H. W. Pirns Brwuo 33 Hue Louie le Urand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Brcarrler, DAar Oxlt, lx cente. By mall, roetpald euuide of Philadelphia, except where foreign poetege l required, DiiLT Onlt, one month, twenty-live cental Dtt.T ONtr, one year.. three dollars. All mall bud- Notio Subscribers within addrcea chanted must five old an well aa new addreaa. BELL, 1000 WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 3000 W Address alt communication) to livening tedqer, Independence Bquare, Philadelphia. tfitiatD at TnariiiUDELniti ros-romcK ab SECOND CLASS MAIL MATTSR. THE AVERAOE NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA- TION OF THE EVENINO LEDOER FOB APRIL WAS 82,104. rillLADELrllU, MONDAY. MAY 17. 191B. The impulse to do well frequently loses its force when you stop to think it over. Rapid Transit Squarely Up to the Organization RAPID transit Is now In tho hands of tho Organization. It controls Councils absolutely. Tho pcoplo In tho special election havo authorized n loan of $8,000,000, a sulllclcnt sum with which to begin work on both tho Broad street and tho I'rankford projects. Work will be begun unless Councils stands still and refuses to enact tho ordinances necessary to mnko tho loan effective. Councils will not do that un less under specific orders from tho Organ ization. It Is well for tho people to understand absolutely that tho track has been cleared and tho lssuo put squnroly up to the Organ ization. If thero la further delay In the be ginning of work, no excuses from tho Or ganization need bo listened to In November. It will cither iet tho city have rapid transit or It will not. Any Impediment to provent the achievement of tho project will bo a worked-up Impediment, devised by tho Organization for no other purpose than to deprive Philadelphia of this Improvement. Thursday will tell tho story. Tho tlmo Is short and the enabling ordinances must be considered this week. They must provide for tho beginning of work on tho Frankford elevated as welt as on tho Broad street subway. It will bo well, too, for the people of Frankford to keep their eyes wide open. Thero Is moro than a suspicion of plans under way to sidetrack that particular undertaking. Tho Organization Is for transit or It Is against it. Its position will bo disclosed by the action of Councils next Thursday. The Transylvania Got There A LI, moral probabilities ver In favor of - tho safe arrival of tho Transylvania on tho other sldo of the Atlantic. Tho officers had been warned of danger by tho barbarous assault upon tho Lusltanla and were on their guard even to the extent of sailing to tho north instead of to the south .of Ireland. And tho Germans, condemned tho world over for their Lusltanla feat, wero not anxious to repeat It, even if tho oppor tunity had offered. Tho Transylvania nrrlved safely in a Scot tish port yesterday, instead of going on to pelting K Liverpool. An Adequate .wavy THE platform on which tho Democracy appealed to tho nation in 1912 declared for ''an adequate navy." Secretary Daniels, In his speech In Now York Saturday night, said that tho Administration Is "thoroughly com mitted to tho policy of taking leavo to bo strong upon tho seas." It is no secret, of course, that the mobiliza tion of tho fleet for review in Now York was decided on by tho Administration when at tacks on the present direction of the navy had become so caustic and general that a dramatlo answer of some sort was" Impera tive. Thero is nothing moro Impressive than a great battleship, unless it bo many of them, and ordinary citizens, who are not experts in naval matters, will consider tho New Tork parade a demonstration of great power qn tho rfeas. Yet Secretary Daniels himself warns tho nation against placing too much confidence "on this visiblo and outward dis play of our strength." Ho says that tho aL navy is gopd, but not good enough; strong, but not strong enough. We havo no patience with chronic pes simists' who distrust tho fighting strength of the ships wo do have. Thera Is no better naval school in tho world than Annapolis, and no men who rank higher in tho knowl edge of their profession than its graduates. Qur designers and butlderB can invite com- lfr parison with any others. Ship by ship, class fpr class, every American can be proud of tho fleet. It represents no money thrown jftway. but is a magnificent asset, worth Very penny spent on It. Nor has the morale degenerated to the extent soma people sud- JV Ppse. It is not in tho power of any Secre tary of tho Navy to ruin so tfplendld an establishment, even if that wero his pur pose. Secretary Daniels' weaknesses are jjWinff, but therein ho has had many rivals Among- nis predecessors. .Tho review will emphasize tho lesson .taught by tho present conflict in Europe, that the destiny of nations, commercial and otherwise. Is on tho oceans, and that this country, above all others, must write Its in. surance Jn Neptune's company. This means the adoption by Congress of a comprehen sive building program, the enlargement of tho entire establishment, and a definition in dollars and cents of that vague and hitherto tmdly abused expression, "an adequate fcavy." "Public Convenience" and the Jitneys fF THR lawyers hired by the would-be ,, monopolists of transportation can find yhere in the statutes a provision un- 5r which the right of a man who owns h .automobile to carry passengers for hire Ufjjj be attacked, they will surely do it and t the jitneys m every court that will insider their argument. The Public Berv He rvtjwnisfiop has already been asked to ao ! the prime of a man who Is operat ic tw.7 jtcneyg without first having received fjwn tb oemmisutlm a. ywtiflcato setting forth that tha publld convenience will be served by tho new transportation line. Although it is ns foolish to attempt lo pre dict what tho commission will do as to try to foretell tho verdict of a Jury, It is not likely that a group of intelligent and disin terested men familiar with tjio freedom al lowed to owners of public hacks and taxi cabs, which run In all citiea on alt sorts of Irregular routes at tho call of the people, will conclude that a five-cent taxlcab run ning on a regular routo must bo controlled In a radically different way. It is possible for tho Public Service Commission to settle tho Jltnoy regulation lssuo by a broad minded rule, cither dismissing tho petition entirely or by declaring that every roputablo Jitney owner may recelvo a certificate of public necessity for tho operation of his car by simply writing to Harrlsburg for it. Let the Chamber of Commerce Get Behind the Convention Hall Project A REQUISITE for a Convention Hall is accessibility. It would bo worth little If situated so far from tho centre of tho city as to deprfvo it, and thcrcforo tho city, of tho advantages inherent In adoquato hotel facilities closo at hand. When Philadelphia bids for a convention It must bo ablo to show not only that It has a convention hall, but that It also has con venient hotel accommodations. Tho two facilities' must supplement each other. It Is community stupidity, however, to wranglo about it site and deter tho begin ning of construction work. But a year re mains beforo tho Republican National Con vention assembles, Philadelphia wants that convention. Such a dedication of tho struc ture would stamp It with historic Interest Immediately. Tho hall, wherever it is built, must bo built by next Juno. Hero Is a splendid opportunity for tho Chamber of Commorce by a spectacular and worth-whllo achievement to fix for all tlmo Its status ns a servant of tho community. Let It throw Its great lnfluonco to tho sup port of a dcfinlto slto and a defintto tlmo for tho completion of tho building. It can voice authoritatively tho sentiment of tho city. It can bring order out of tho chaos now exist ing and nssuro results. Philadelphia wants tho Convention Hall and tho Republican National Convention. It will not get the latter unless It first gets tho former. United Italy THE outcomo of tho Italian Cabinet crisis is the demonstration that all Italy Is united and determined to resort even to war If need bo to attain the ends sought. Former Premier GlollttI, who has been tho leader of tho neutral group, precipitated tho resigna tion of Premier Salandra by his- arrival In Rome. Tho attempt to And a successor luiicd, GlollttI Issued a statement, In which he declared that, while ho was In favor of nrmed neutrality, ho was not opposed to war as a last resort. Salandra consulted his personal friends, and tho King, and appar ently concluded that ho and GlollttI wero agreed on tho essentials. Ho then consented to remain at the head of the Government. Tho Irresponsible war party may demand war at once, but the Ministry, which must conduct tho operations and flnanco tho cam paigns, Is no moro eager for war than tho leader of tho neutrals himself. Tho longer war Is delayed the bettor prepared the coun try will be to wngo It. Tho Government be gan preparations Immediately after tho out break of hostilities. It has been accumulat ing arms and ammunition for moro than nine months, and It has been calling tho re serves to the colors and organizing Its armies for work. This, of course, was tho part of prudence Whatever disagreement has nrisen nmong tho politicians has heon over the conditions under which tho coun try should throw its weight Into tho balance with the Allies. Tho Government has been deliberately seeking to extend tho frontiers. Alt Italians aro committed to tho policy of including within the kingdom nil the ndja cent territory Inhabited by Italians. If this can be brought about without war overy one will bo satisfied. But If a display of force Is necessary, It is apparent that oven tho ad vocates of armed neutrality will not hold back. Dolly Madison Day IT IS not likely that tho colebratlon by tho Democratic women of tho anniversary of tho birth of Dolly Madison, wlfo of tho fourth President, will over rival tho celebra tion by tho Democratic men of tho birth of Thomas Jefferson, yot tho first political cele bration of this1 distinguished woman's birth day next Thursday is likely to be the fore runner of a long series of observances. Dolly Madison was ono of thefew women who impressed herself upon tho history of tho country while presiding In tho Presi dent's mansion. Traditions of her graclous ness and diplomatic skill still survive. Sho was the typo of woman who would have risen high If there had been equal suffrage In her time, for sho had all tho attributes of a successful politician. New York mermaids are not in the swim with those of this city. What difference does It make on whoso accord Doctor Dernburg goes, so long as he goes? Some newspapers have begun to express their opinion of the Kaiser by spelling it with a small "k." A kingdom and mora of it or no kingdom at all seems to be the alternative offered the King of Italy. Mr, Taft becomes the guest of former Sen ator Crane without being afraid that be will be accused of hobnobbing with the bosses. It is not a question of whether the Rlggs National Bank or Comptroller of the Cur rency Williams is right, but of which is leas wrong than the other. Yet these Portuguese anarchists insist on calling the thing they bring into being a republic, A few more dictionaries and a few less guns would do that country a lot of good. Consent to a compromise housing bill did not contemplate a betrayal of the agreed upon measure In the Senate. The Governor was not blind the first time and he is not likely to be now. Local option is winning In Ohio, where the Legislature has passed a bill making the liquor licensing officials elective instead Of appointive. An officer chosen on a, no-license ticket will refuse license, and that la what the people wast. STkEET TALKERS AMERICANS ALL The War in Front of tho Bulletin Bonrds Patriotism nnd Cosmo politanism In America A Re birth of Nationalities. By FRANCIS WARREN SPORT Is not forgotten, but tho crowds aro reading tho war bulletins, I paused ono afternoon and listened to tho wisdom of tho shifting groups, I think it was earnest young Socialists who set thofashlon for theeo street-corner symposiums of democracy's own theorists for tho Socialist missionaries aro unlike somo others In Inviting criticism nnd In trying to meot It, and In tho course of tho spontaneous debates which spring up at their open-nlr seances the Man In tho Street wears off his shynens; oven learns not to be nfrald of his own volco in public nmong folks to whom ho was novor so much ne Introduced! , On tho afternoon I nm thinking of thero was somo ono lecturing on tho economics of that war somo one whoBo unrehearsed nd drcos may havo drifted later on Into social ism, for all I know, but began with tho assertion that tho Russian sotdlor Is tho lowest paid of any In Europo, nnd Is treated like a. dog. The speaker had tho war bud gets of all tho combatant nations nt his fin gers' end, or else "That feller's all wrong, but ho certainly has the dope, all right, all right!" as somo body remarked. Curbstone Explanations Somo ono clso was explaining tho differ ence between tho true German nnd tho Prus nlnn. "Tho aermnn," this populnr lecturer explained, "Is a dreamy sort of person, in dustrious nil tho samo. Ho writes tho muslo they play at tho Metropolitan Opera House. He's a sentlmentnl bccr-drlnkeri wo nil know Germans wo llko. Tho Prussian ain't German so much as he's Slav. He's less human than tho Russian; less civilized (ex cept In gottlng ready for a big war) than tho dirty Serbs, William Hohenzollcrn Mlncsolf nnd Gotl' Is a crnckerjack Prus sian, but a bum sort of Gorman." Perhaps tho speaker had ro.ul Dr. Charles Snrolea's "Angfo-Germnn Problem"; then ngaln, per haps he hadn't. Somo of tho crowd ngroert with him; somo of It very vociferously did not. Another amateur of oratory, belittling tho tragedies of Termondo, Rhelms and Louvnln, reminded his hearers that tho British wero burning Washington only a hundred years ago. "They're overy bit as bad as tho Germans, tho John Bulls are," was his sentiment. "Worse!" shouted tho volco of a stout Teuton. "There's over a million Germans In Now York city alone, counting Brooklyn. ' "Don't bellovo It!" yelled a younger man, but tho Teuton came back with, "Then look It up In tho new 'World Al manac' at tho Public Library." And though thero Is no Immediate connec tion, perhaps, between tho superior vlrtuo of tho German peoplo nnd the German pop ulation of Gi cater New York, there Is as you reflect a sort of logic In tho citing of thoso figures. Doubtless It was the German's hazy notion that our having nil these neighbors, fruit of the Fatherland, and getting on with them famously, docs somehow show that Germans nro not the complete barbarians that editorial writers sometimes depict them. It Is a tlssuo of so many peoples In this country. In times of peace, one la only half conscious of It. The "peoplo ono knows" aro for the most part peoplo very much llko oneself. The fact that ono's boots nre pol ished by a Greek, ono's onions grown by a Pole, one's dinner cooked by a Frenchman, ono's fruit sold by a "dago," one's boots mended by a German, ono's clothes mado by a Jow, ono's coal mined by a Slav all these Httlo circumstances count for llttlo bo yond their plcturesquencss. It even gives ono a sentiment of national or personal Importance: Lo, nil tho nations cross tho sea to do our chores. But tho war comes tho reservists sail off tho streets aro filled with nnxlous wntchers of the bulletins: ono suddenly realizes fns never one realized It In rending the statistics) what a. hodgo-podgo wo nre, wo who nro nil In one boat; how Httlo digested nro the foreign Importations. War Is ever a tragedy, but let us not for get that for America to be dragged Into tho present war, of all wars thinkable, would bo a tragedy of tragedies. Moro than over ono Is grateful at this hour for tho Man In tho White House; tho grave President who is not a citizen of his parish only, but In tho finest sense Citizen of tho World, Nationalities Reborn in America For If thero Is over to bo a cosmopolitan Ism, If over patriotism Is to bo merged into a love of society that will bo constructive, nnd not, llko modern patriotism, something that pulls down oven moro than It builds up, that cosmopolitanism must be preceded by the rebirth of tho nationalities as Americans. We aro not Pan-Americans in tho sense that somo Germans havo been Pan-Germans wo have no wish ovor to dominate tho earth and tho fruits thereof; no desire to Impress all peoples with tho stamp of our own commer cialism. But Pan-America Is, In another sense, the movement of tha future: that Pan-America which means tho forgetting of old hatreds and old Jealousies in the insist ence upon wider opportunities for all, with self set below the folk, tho lesser tradition humbled below tho greater: tha Pan Americanism which Is founded upon the Divine Right of Man. We would havo tha newcomers proud of their country of origin and its best heritage, but prouder yet of a country where they have attained to a fuller freedom and a wider prosperity and a richer service; wo would havo in their America a beacon for tho older world, a shining exam ple of tho possibility that there is for men and women to live and to prosper without bearing tho yoko of militarism, without wor shiping at tho altar of hate. In Ireland, last summer, men and women greeted me with friendship when I told them I came from tho United States and this was not only thoso who had a hope that they might sell me something. "America is a grand country," was their word. "'Tls a grand country surely, for there is a place in it for all." That is what we would have America and that Is why this war must not be permitted to bring us too to hate. America has a higher mission on the earth than hating even hating In a good cause. BACK FROM BARBARISM From the Clnclnnttt Enquirer. Deliberate, neutral, impartial, our country can and should adopt and follow a cours that will command the respect of all nations, that Will enable us to recall the belligerents from ways of barbarism to thoso of civilization, bringing them back to the recognition of the right of humanity and to obedience to the lew tbty once acknowledged and promUed ta support. While resolutely doing this, we can most effectively acert the Republic's deter mination to protect our own rights upon vntty sea. nd ta every lutd. BEST THOUGHT IN AMERICA DIGEST OF THE MAGAZINES (1) Cosmopolitan "Punches." (2) Puck "Grlnlgrams." (3) Atlantic Monthly "Tho Mechanics of Rovlvallsm." (4) Outlook "Tho Spcctntor Sees 'Billy' Sunday." REVIVALISM STANDARDS of vlco and vlrtuo chango from one generation to tho next, but tho princi ple of tho struggle between "good" and "bad" persists through tho centuries. With tho evo lution of tho race, our notions of good and evil are radically altered, but the principle of tho two opposing forces between which wo must choose stands out as ono of mnn's most permanent Instincts. For some centuries religion hns had estab lished headquarters for moral struggles nnd questionings In tho churches, and has sought to strengthen the standards of good and bad with doctrinal teachings and laws. Tho su premacy of tho church as an authority has been threntened In recent yenrs, however, by tho growth of Institutional churches, settle ments and numerous ethical cults. Tho old line, orthodox religion has found nn nrdent do fonder In "Billy" Sunday, and tho contrast between the strict old-fnshloned supernatural Ism of tho evangelist ("hell-flro-theology" It Is called) and the newer nnd moro liberal Interpretations have given nn almost dra matic Interest to his career. "Billy" Sunday signs his name to some epi grammatic "Punches" In the Cosmopolitan (I): All Bins havo blue eyes nnd dimples when they nro young. A man with good gray matter under bis hnt can learn moro bv stubbing his too In the dark than a fool can learn by going to college. Tho right kind of a man never loaes more thnn one linger by fooling with a buzz naw. The young man who 1b willing to go through life snwlng on tho second fiddle will never lead tho band. When tho devil wants to run his claws clear through a man and clinch them on the other sldo. he makes him believe that fooling with booze won't hurt him. The devil hates a happv home ns bail ns a Baloonkeeper hates a prohibition preacher. Tho man Is headed straight for the pit who Is living as the devil wnnts him to, whether ho Is a gambler or a pillar In the church. Nobody Bpends much time looking nt wax figures In store windows, but a live man there who Is doing something always draws a crowd. The higher you lift a llttlo man tho moro ho shrinks. The woman who marries a man to reform him hns moro faith In human nature than St. Paul had. Puck suggests a list of titles for hymns, which perhaps might have struck us as Ir reverent, beforo wo became accustomed to "Billy" Sunday's vernacular. Puck (2) writes: Certain ministers not only defend "Billy" Sunday, but glory In him. They mildly classlry as slang the evangelist's rough-neck vocabu lary, and refuse to be shocked at the means ho employs, when the "results" ho obtains are so Inspiring. But why confine slang to sermono7 Are not the hymnbooks suffering from "dry-rot" ns well as the pulpit discourses? Tha words of somo hymns are beautiful, but what Is beauty compared with punch? Let hymnals be revised to suit the times, as: Abide With Muh. Onward. Sawdust Trailers! Come Ye Disconsolate Ginks. Get Hep, My Soull My Days Are Beating It Swiftly By. Sacrilege? Undoubtedly, according to old "dry-rot" standard?, but no more sacrilegious than the average "Billy" Sunday sermon. The punch, gentlemen, by all means. Taking a Revival to Pieces An Interesting analysis of "The Mechanics of Revivalism" appears In the Atlantlo Monthly (3). Ita author, Joseph H. Odell, Is well fitted to write on tho subject. For 12 years ho waa pastor of a prosperous Presby terian church in Scranton, Pa. He left tho ministry to go into literary work, and as edi torial writer on tho Evening. Ledoeh had a first-hand opportunity of watching "Billy" Sunday's work in Philadelphia and other towns. He writes; Gospel 'hymns play a tremendous part In modern revivalism. Some of them have a hypnotjo Influence when used by a skilled di rector. "Just As I Am, Without One Plea" and "I Am Coming Home," sung with a di minishing cadence, have a lure that few emo tional people can withstand. Such pieces are Invariably used softly, appeallngly, tenderly, at the time when the revivalist is seeking his results. Unfortunately there is a mercenary side to this use of music Hardly any of tha great standard hymns of the Christian Church are copyrighted, But nearly all of the ef fective ones of the present-day revelations ara copyrighted and Jealously guarded. Not be cause they are valuable as rnusto or as poetry, but for the simple reason that they ara a lucrative side line of profit for the evangelist or bis musical director. 'Billy" Sunday is not a scholar, not a thinker, not a sophist, not an actor, but a healthy, frank, fearless and Irrepressible man, who offers no apology for doing the one thing that ha feels his God has told hint to do. He Is easily the most compelling personality In America. Judged by a pragmatical standard, tha results are rather confused, bad and good. The first thing noticeable is a tone pf ap parent irreverence In the churches, An-c-tber difficulty ilea In the artificial conacUac "JUST GROW, OLD BOYI "" r- - ja Hint Is created. In tho stress of tho enm nalgn, many converts, particularly youths, pledgo thomBOlves against nil worldly amuse ments ns deadly forms of Bin, "lending plumb to hell," In tho rovlvallst'o pungent words. Hut In numberless cases tho vows nro broken before many months pass, nnd dancing, card playing nnd theatrcgolng nro resumed. This tampering with tho conscience leads to n lower regard of nil tho sanctions nnd sanctities, nnd ministers havo serious trouble In bringing their young pcoplo back to a healthy ethical tone. Unitarians, Universalis, Christian Scien tists and all who differ from tho medloval theology of tho evangelist havo been so ridi culed, denounced nnd consigned repeatedly to hell, that It Is extremely difficult for any ono to be tolerant or charitable. And with this teaching thero has been so much pre-mlllen-narlanlsm nnd prophccy-mongcrlng taught, that tho BIblo has become a fetish, which only thoso who havo cryptic keys enn understand or Interpret nrlgbt. Even thoso who aro cnger to concede everything that Is good In modern revivalism, ns represented by '"Billy" Sunday, havo much to rcgrot and condemn. But that positive good does come from It hnrdly nny one closo to tho facts will deny. Employers of labor have asserted that they could afford to pay Sunday very liberally out of tho funds of their corporations for tho In creased olliclency that comes to tholr plants In the reduction of nccldents nnd enlarged pro ductivity caused by the men's cutting out In toxicating liquor. Putting' It Together Again A simpler and moro undlscrlmlnatlngly ap preciative point of view toward revivalism Is revealed by tho Spectator writing In a re cent Outlook (4): Not Savonarola nor Peter tho Hermit, nor Wesley nor Whitefleld, nor nny man In the world's history has preached to such vnst nnd continued audiences ns "Billy" Sunday docs today In a tlmo when religion Is said to bo declining. Tho Spectntor has heard many great orators, but not ono who got ns close to his nudlence ob this dynamic, torrential, yet curiously wlnsomo speaker. Mother wit and common sense make the wholo world kin. and "Billy" has them both raised to tho nth power and "soaked In prayer," na his ox presslvo phrase goes. His Illustrations aro un forgettable. r "Can't I be a Christian without Joining nny church? Why, yes; you don't havo to take ony ship to go to Europo; the swimming's good." Ho la eloquent, but always In the vernacular, bo that hla most uneducated hearer Is ablo to follow hla most ardent flights. The GO.000 whom he talks to dally hang on his words, nnd undcrstnnd every ono of them. His slang, though tho nowspapers play It up, is only oc cnBional after nil. Ills baseball gestures and absolutely Infectious laugh nro part of his per sonality, nnd his vast audience cordially ap prove them. He Is truly "personality plus," tho mighty plus of spiritual power. IN A SUBMARINE What It la Like to Voyage in "the Bogey of tho Seas." Oliver Madox Iluetter, In Harper's Weekly, It Is very easy for the landsman to realize for himself exactly what It feela like to voyage In that bogey of tha seas, the submarine. He has only to pay his nickel nnd adventure In that moro dangerous contraption, the Now York subway. In tho submarine, It Is true, you are less crowded, but you have tho same unpleasant sensation of being shut in. Impris oned, so that you cannot get out except by the ability of certain men who you aro In clined to think know little more about It than you do yourself. In both you have the sensa tion of being surrounded by all kinds of intri cate maohlnery you do not understand and which Is all the more alarmlrg that you can see very little of It, In both you havo the feeling of lack of air and an omnipresence of smells unfamiliar. Thera the submarine has tha advantage, for the smell Is Innoxious, more or less that of plain lubricating oil with a faint suggestion of ammonia; at least you are spared that of hu manity dirty humanity, for in a submarine, I cara not of what navy, every one Is scrupu lously clean and In tho subway everv ona Ir not. very far from It. Also you have plenty of fresh air In the Z-142. even granted that It came out of a bottle, many bottles. On the other hand you havo no rails. Vour subway driver may know little of where ha Is going at least the rails will take him and you there. To me, quite the most poignant disability of tho Z-I43, on the occasion that very much against my will-thank goodness my pride held fast I formed part of her complement was that no ono had any very particular knowledge of where they were going-or so It seemed to me. It is true that with tha fascinating oock Bureness of tho very young naval officer youth and submarines seem to go together, In tha British navy at any rate the Haroun al Ras. chid of tha moment would not admit it. Ha would not admit any defect In his periscope either, To use a periscope is rather ilka sur veying the world through a hollowed-out stick of asparagus. THE ANCIENT MJSITANIANS From the Sprlnrfleld Republican. To tha suggestion of tho American Agricul. turlst that the word "lusltanlan" be adopted nto all languages to denote tho "acme of human atrocity," the New York Herald replies that this would be "rather unfair to ancient Lusltanla, the territory of which is now com prised in tha new republic of. Portugal " If tha Herald had gone further into history it would have found a parallel in the past that glyea a certain kind of support to tha freakish, but well-meant, suggestion, in tha Bncyclo. pedla Britannic, under the name Servlus Sul, plcius Oaiba. one reads that this Roman gen eral and orator, who served as praetor In far ther Spain in Ul P. O , "mads himself infamous by tha treacherous murder of a number of Lusltanlans with their wivo and children" For hla misdeed he mi hmn.ht .- ....,. U, but escan4 puaUhmtnt by holding up b own children before tho pcoplo to gain their! sympathy. Tho I-usltnnlans woro subdue! b1 P. B. Crnasus when ho was Governor of Spahu CneL jfl somo CO years later. Evontunlly, under Auiui'ffl tus or Tiberius, when tho Government of Bplni was reorganized. I.nnltntiln wnn .at . .' iS province. It was known as a fertlln ntvi r,.....Pffl fill country, and It did lncludo that territory JS ! which In tho Middle Ages becamo tho klni'Mi dom of Portugal, though It Is said that thta lnlinmt.'intn nf I'nmifrnl nm nn. lartnHj.j . tho nnclent Lusltanlans. All the Cunard steira.ia ships havo been named after nrovlnren nr a. S trlcts of tho old Roman Empire, nnd melodlou,"jH iitu-suuuuinK jjuun names incy nave MtafsiJ ending, ns tho public Is well aware, In "la." ,Jm A YEAR WITHOUT A SUMMER M From tho St. Louis rost-Dlspntch. tM Tho year 1S16 was known throughout thiW unuca amies ns mo yenr witnout a summirJ jnnuary or mat year was so mild that meit pcoplo would havo let their furnaces so out had thoy had nny, nnd Tcbruary was only oe-1 caslonally colder. March nnd April coaxed the buds and flowcis out, and May was a winter' mnntli ivlth inn nrytl anmir Tl, If.. AnJ a. l,.' ........... ...... .ww u..i. a..u... ij w,u Vliu Ul DllJ jm AUam'llllnl. nnrlehnltln t.n.1 I....... I.llt.,1 L. .... iS , j ....... bii.nuuiu .it.u uetii miicu vy ins toiu, imu tuo yuung leaves una Decn Stripped from tho trees. Juno was as cold aa sia" Both snow and Ico wero common throughout the month nil over the corn belt, nnd nfter havlnj; i'iuiiivh uuni mu ur mice nines ino larmeu tnrew up their hands. Snow fell 10 Inches deep In Vermont. Tho following winter was the' hardest tho pcoplo of tho United States hayi ever known. One had to havo a stockadi around ono's smokohouso. This scorns to bo without any probable relation" to tho cold winds which whistled through thi' sirceis or at. .ouis yesterday, out there wm ono possibly alarming coincidence tho Demo-' crats wero also In powor In 1S16. Jefferson's ollrf tart, Madison, had atlll a year to serve. AN OLD MOTTO REVISED From tho New York Independent. Tho twentieth century version of Cromwell'! motto Is "Trust In God and keep your armr dry." HUNGER Tho starving men they walk tho dusk, With hunger In their eyes; To them a lighted house is like A lamp of Paradise. It Is tha window In tho dusk That marks tho drifter's coast; ft Is the thought of love and light That mocks the drifter most. Now I havo been a starving man And walked tho winter dusk, And I havo known how life may be A nAOritn r -i 1 n VkibIi- m Tho fainting hands, they pulled my slews, , And bado me ourso tho light. But I had seen a rich man's faco That looked Into tho night A hungry face, a brother face. That stared Into the gloom, And starved for light and starved for love Within a llcrhtrri rnnml Dana Eurnet, In Harper's Mintlo iW AMUSEMENTS FORREST Tonight at 8:30 Matinee Tomorrow. Twice Dally, 2:30 anJ BitX uuot jveraarKaDie juouon I'JCiurea &vt imco SIR DOUGLAS MAWSON'S Land of the Unknown EDUCATIONAL STARTLING MAnVEIiOCI A QQ H(( People Vlelted Weber's rtOO. I JJ Theatre. New York, to Wonderful Motion ricturei BroadwiM See Tiwii Prlcea SSo and BOc. A Few Choice Scati. S!0&. ifriiFtt B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STREETS EDITH TALIAFERRO & C0,J CLAIRE ROCHESTER: HANS KRONOLD! W1MJ NORTON & PAUL NICHOLSON; ntlKOWSKia TilUUl'lS, AMU UTJIKRS, GARRICK 10c, 15c, 25c CONTINUOUS 11 A. M. TO 11 P. H THE 8TH WONDER OV THE WORLD SUBMARINE S T WOO T II IS n DIG V E A T U R B Si T.VRTP FIRST PERFORMANCE JuXXVlL TimnsriAV EVENINO, 8fJ OWINO TO DELAY OF THE SCENIC pEpARTJ MENT THE INITIAL BlUWru "' T?Trn rpTJF, wrnvrAN" Has been postponed until Thursday eenln, i'T'i Tickets rurcnaiel lor tonight will be honored T"" day evening without exchange. . a A "nT?T "PTTT LAST 8 TIMES. EVGS. AT lljl AUihIjf Xll LAST MATS. T1IURS. "JI "THE LOVE BTORY WITH A LAUUK ' KITTY MacKAt. Dy CATHARINE CHISHOLM CUBHIML--T ATiri ""MARKET AND JUNIPBl Jj U 5 111 PHOTOPLAYS, Jl W U 1UO UU uj Albert Chevalier "The Mjuaiemw Ballibury'a "WILD LIFE" """" A Rl C A D I A J CHESTNUT. Below lBtb 8t. Pbotoplay Contlououi 10 A. M. to 11:30 I. M WA'.Rl. njlWN in NIOBE" THE MARKET BT ABOVE Stanley h'am. t?i!,5PAa. tub ftiu.'r.r 'the flamed "SIX PEACHES AND A Py ci.Kwmni!. VENUS. JS5H NIXON'S GRAND OAN & EDWARDSl JKSiJ BENJAMIN KUSVABi gng KEATINO, LaiblnKS Today. 3:15. TtC NEW WOODSIDE PARK THBAS TiT MTHE RED W1W' inc. auc. auo, aiats. weanoaaay no ot! Troeadero rSSSFi Girl