JWW'-T k-i wl V-, m n sj I i: baft m ilutnltt$j ICri&gcr TUDLIC LEDGEtt COMPANY CmUS It K. ri-RTlB. FlfcaiMXT. OiM K. LuiJlnirten. vice PrteMt nt ; John C Martin, Bjeptirr and TrMMirer; Philip S. Colllna, John B. i -j i .1 i in i ,. , .. . . EDITOMAt. BOARD: Ciara H. K. Certta, Chairman. tH. W1IALET BiMUtlw Hdltef John c. martin. .General Bualneaa Mnaer ruWIehea Jltr t PcttW LtDsnt Bulldlnr. Independent Square, Philadelphia. ttoe CiMTait. Broad and Chestnut Streeta AJfcAigie Cm Pret-Vitto DulMlnjr R ." ,170-A. Metropolitan Timer OniqAoo siV Homo lnetirnne IlutMIr ""Mil 8 Waterloo Place, Pall Jlall, 8. TV. NEWS BUREAUS I Ti?.u!j,Jn n" The Po nulldln SJT.V, P"o- The Ttmee tlulldln fCTU BtmMB.,...,,. no FrledrlehiitraeM Lo.ioog noiuo 4 Pall Mall Ban, 8. W. Plan llnut.,, ..82 nue tx)ul le Urand subscription terms ?)JJrriCu1R1,.LT Om,r, ell centa. By mall, Jiompald inKalde of Philadelphia, except where forelan pot la required. DilLT Oklt, one month, twenty-five centa i "iP-7. 0tr, one year, three ilollara. All mall ub MHptlona payable In ndrance. NoTtca Subtctlbere wlahtn addreia chanied muet Blr old aa well aa new addreea. BttL. IW -TAUtUr XETSTOrtE. MAIN UN 99" Addreit alt cemmanlcaKona to Evening tdper, Independence SQuare, rhtladtlphta. cxmxD at ih rnn.iDin.rnu rosrorrtcE ar becohB" cMt Mitt. Minn, THE AVERAOB NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA TION OF1 THE EVENING LEDGER ion afril was sa.toi. Philadelphia, Wednesday, June a, 191s. ittf sole ambition U to have opportunity of fighting a battle under my own new flag that vAll teach to the world that tho American flap means something afloat and must be respected at sea. John Faul Jones. Vetoing Fundamentally Unwise Procedure THE Governor yesterday vetoed tho bill providing that tho Municipal Court should be given cxcluslvo Jurisdiction over all houses of detention established within tho city limits and providing that tho Board of Managers should bo appointed nnd re moved by the President Judge of tho court. "The court very properly," says tho Gov ernor, "should have tho power of appoint ment referred to, but the power Bhould bo given to the court, and not to ono member of tho court. This proceduro is funda mentally unwlso." It is not only fundamentally unwise, but It would be exceedingly unsafe, in view of the orgy of appointment which has char acterized the operation of the court up to this time. It has provided loafing places for a groat number of political hangers-on, at handsome salaries, in spite of tho protests of a few members of the tribunal. The President Judgo need not bo given the opportunity to mnko any further ap pointments. In a matter so Intimately con cerning tho court as a whole, tho power of appointment should rest In the whole court. Economic Prohibition THERE Is ono kind of prohibition that prohibits. When 22 liquor dealers quietly and unostentatiously slip out of the trade, there Is a reason. Economic law needs no policemen to en force it It achieves results without Juries or constables. "We will not employ men who drink," says business. "We will not drink, anyhow," say more and more men. If men will not buy "booze," dispensers cannot sell It They are not In the trndo for pleasure. They want profit and If thero is no profit they will quit. So, slowly but surely, the number of saloons is adjusted to the demand; and tho demand, fortunately, decreases. Next year 2?, maybe more, liquor dealers will also- go out of business, in time even those who are left will be changing the entire customs and methods of the trade, realizing at last that there can be no survival of the fittest unless the Attest ore (it. Needed: A Place to Dance WHEN the Evening Ledger epoko against the evil of the "saloon cabaret" last week a reader who agreed with the stand taken bemoaned the lack of any place where dancing can be had on decent terms. There is plenty of dancing as a byproduct of buying cocktails, but no dancing to be bought for its own sake except in tho danc ing schools, it Is a condition which the Evening Ledger regrets quite as much as It abhors the cabaret saloon. Dancing has come Into its own again with ajl the energetic, vital and varied steps which are generally called "modern." Peoplo are ready nowadays to dance any time and any where. But so far the corruption of the cab aret has fastened Its deadly fangs upon It In Philadelphia. It U different In a few cities farther West. The leader of them all is Chicago, whero the city established "municipal dances" last fall with marked success. Cleve land, also, has recognized the necessity for decent daces for a decent pastime. Danclna Is a Una expression of natural vigor. It needs proper outlet In Philadelphia. Race Suicide Cannot De Justified HOW many children ought a family to haver There is an Increasing number of families answering this socially Important question by declaring, either by word or by practice, er by both, that the number should be limited by the financial ability to give each child a college education and such advan tages as the rich can provide for an Indefinite number of boys and girls. No more destructive doctrine was ever for mulated and proclaimed. Colonel Roosevelt understood whither It tended when he began his campaign against race suicide. The dls position of families as they become educated and prosperous is to become sterile. They have one child or twp, and do their best to t'f. J1-3" tD,r offBPfng dependent or others for S-Thiarr nnhrtnirlna- it,. ,. ..- .. .. .. m-'Cam --- miuw oi mo small jTXaroily Is a recent product. It has accompa- " " mmivtwmii m jemwism and the demand for a life of ease. It tuts remained for Miss GUdersleeve, the dean of Jternard College, to tell the Columbia TJntveridty Phi Beta KaDDa Bcwletv th.t .teerels no longer need of a large birth rate I x-vvp io pepuMUMj numerous, g be thinks ttwt the decrease in Infant mortality has been 't&mt, to Justify the derea ln the birth yifct among (be eduacted a&4 weJM4o. If . mi iwwwiBg wu sort ot thing to the yHRff wowen in Barnard CoUege, the velfbe4ed tsuetMa Of that institution nieH reH caH upea her to eease her efforts t mm the wtrol f America c-ver to the tfcMdfww of the Ifftwant and the peer. There has Ma no decrease in the birth rate among tb JawMsTants. The Slavs, the Poles, the n. the Armenians and tfee Hungarian ajta !. eos m are reynAteiaMT Ubr MM ft, ittty that tsr tt tk schools La Un Iwfc. Tfce m ; jj erewalig wm j EVENING Tl ths offgprlnjr of parent who are not Infected with the notion that the hlrth rale must bo kept down. H I of vital Importance that the Americans whose Americanism dates back three or four (fenerations should neek to preserve their race Instead of deliberately condemning It to ft slow nnd certain death through strangulation nt tho source. A Pnn-Amcrlcan Pocket Nerve THE strengthening of tho tics of amity which bind together the nations of this hemisphere Is n desirable thing. A common purpose In diplomacy, In regard to Europe, and a Joint support of a deflnlto American program would be a natural result of tho Monroe Doctrine, which has been maintained almost a century by this country alone. "An Irresistible union of unconquerable nations" Is a phrase with a swing to It. Communication, however, la what brings peoples together. National enmities are too often tho result of misunderstandings aris ing from a lack of Intlmato knowledge. Had Intercourse been as freo between the North nnd South In tho 60's as It Is today, It is doubtful If thero would ever have been a Civil War. Tho way to tlo the two Americas Inseparably to one another Is to link them by steamship lines, to promote their recipro cal trade, to glvo them, In fact, a common pocket nerve. The representatives from South nnd Central American republics hnvo given every evi dence of tho warm feeling of their respcctlvo nations toward us, particularly of their de sire to Increaso greatly their trndo with us. It Is a golden opportunity. It has been neglected and It is still being neglected. To be sure, at last we have American banking facilities In South America, but that Is a recent development, and considerable expan sion Is necessary. But wo havo not mado tho study of tho situation wo should havo mado. We havo not accommodated our trado practices to the customs and hahltB of our prospectlvo clients. Wo havo not gone after the business with true American energy. Wo havo waited for It to como to us instead of going after and getting It. Now, despite our neglect, it is whistling a welcome for us. Wo have, wo aro told, three billions of dollarn avallablo to finance our poorer neighbors. That Is a sum sufficient to tako up their aggregate debts, owed to Europe, and also to furnish a billion of new capital outright. We do not need to tako up tho debts, but wo certainly do need to show our faith In South America by extending to It liberal credit. Let ub Pan-Americanize trade, and nil other forms of Pan-Americanism will follow Just ns surely as night follows day, or cruelty war. Breaking All Records THE automobile races over tho Indianapo lis Speedway on Monday were concluded without a serious accident. They thus es tablished a new and noteworthy record of safety of far greater Interest than tho suc cess of tho winners ln covering ajl distances from 100 miles to BOO miles ln shorter tlmo than any other motorists ever did. Three minutes and sixteen seconds was cut from tho best previous time for 100 miles, and half an hour, loss a few seconds, was cut from the 500-mllo record. The averngo speed was 8D.84 miles an hour. Progress making toward the annihilation of distance has ceased to astound oven tho men of science, whose predecessors were convinced that the first steam railroad trains, unning nt less than 20 miles an hour, would nover be successful because It would be Impossible for a man to breatho when moving through space at such an In credible speed. We havo grown so accus tomed to marvels that they do not, even metaphorically, take our breath nway. Praise Senator Cummins For It WHEN you miss your train for Delaware or New Jersey because the baggage master insists that you must elgn a declara tion of the value of your trunk and Its con tents when it is checked you should thank Senator Cummins for it. The Interstate com merce law has been amended nt the instance of the Iowa Senator so as to rcqulro every traveler to state the value of his baggage. The purpose of the new law, which went Into effect today, is supposed to be to protect the public. A hundred thousand travelers are to be compelled to unwind a lot of red tape In order that one man who loses his trunk may have less trouble In persuading the railroad company to pay for It. The Cummins amendment Is typical of the mod ern business reform legislation. Tho Sena tor la proud of It, and he should not be allowed to escape any of the glory that la coming to him. A little common sense would not do Amer ica's humanttarlanlsm any harm. Thero Is a Pan-American Union already, with a hall of Its own ln Washington. Mexico has no troubles that money ex pended In the right quarters cannot cure. It is no time to be washing dishes when Incendiaries are pouring kerosene over your front porch. The President demands that the relgu of terror In Mexico shall' cease, but he does not nominate any one to succeed htm. Now that harvest time Is near Uncle Bam can afford to let his surplus stock of grain be shipped to Europe without fear of famine at home. The rapid progress toward completing tho fund of jseo.ooe for the Sisters of Mercy Hos pltal suggests that there are many brothers of mercy also. wai The Pinehots insist that they are still teyat They kww they will rise higher tied to the tail of the Colonel's kite than the CatoaeJ will rise tied to their ty bailee. The latest Ferd Joke: To leave your car in frost of your house and then eoete out to find It gene. But It is being perpetrated so often that it will sooB eease to he funny for the men who steal the oars. Belgian aviators have been literally drop ping a line to their countrymen to let them know that Italy has entered the war with the Allies. This is the sort of dlseeialeetton of whvs wkks tt Qerawit wuer wttj tad it tttSevK ta rat. - R - navPTrTTrA - nEL'PHra. WEDNESDAY. SOME YOUNG IDEAS THAT MISSED FIRE Schoolboy "Howlers," or Curious Results of Mental Reaction to Knowledge A Collection of An swers to "Exam" Questions. By ROBERT HILDRETH r P HUMOR Is Indeed "a collision of two Ideas marching In opposite directions," then It seems as If schoolboy "howlers" must be classified as humor: nnd yet sometimes this mlx-up of Ideas has more tho appear ance of a football scrimmage than of a head-on collision. Last week we looked over somo examina tion papers In search of "howlers," but saved a few subjects for today. Let us see what wo can learn from history. History Entirely right was the distinguished his torian who said, "Not a clause In tho Decla ration of Independence sets forth the real and underlying cause of tho American Revo lution," For a schoolboy has discovered that "the cause of tho Revolution was that tho colonists wanted room to pasture their cat tle." Of tho Civil War a high school pupil wrote, "This war tho soldiers had to deal with vicious characters, and I think this Is why this Is called tho Civil War, because after tho war the different races of peoplo were moro civilized." (Cf. tho present Euro pean war.) Q. "What happened ln 1492?" A. "Dls covcry of America by the Spinach." Q. "Wlint happened in 1776?" A. "Dec oration of independence." Now a bit of ancient history: "Romulus obtained tho first citizens of Rome by open ing n lunatic asylum." Hero nro somo "liowlers" from Harrow: Itorkc's Drift was a b.ittlo at sea. The Whlto Man's Grave Is the grave where General Gordon died In. Kcllahs are donkeys. In William ill's reign Dysentry got pcr mltslon to worship. Elizabeth ascended the Throne ln 16S8 nnd died 1560. Bho did not have a long reign. The Black Death was terrible for the la bourers, becauso they were forced to do all the work that was left by tho thousands that died. It was nn English BChoolboy who wrote, "Tho King was not allowed to order taxis without tho consent of Parliament." (An excellent restriction on royal spendthrifts.) Language "An abstract noun Is Bomethlng you can't seo when you nro looking at It." "Gender shows whether a man 1b mascu line, femlnlno or neuter." "Two legntlves mnko an afflrmatlve." "Tho masculine of 'vixen' is vicar." "A clauso Ih a group of words distin guished as to sex." "Inflection 1b to cast a Hhadow on a sylla ble." Latin and French III Horsecollnr according to O. Henry translated tho opening words of tho well known Commentaries of Caesar, or rather tho well-known opening words of Caesar's Commentaries, as follows: "It will tako all of our gall to devlso means to tree them parties." Small Latin nnd less French ap pear ln tho following schoolboy translation: "II pleut a verse Ho cries at poetry." "Le coeur purine Tho disinfected yard." "Ad hostea suppllces saccrdotes venerunt The priests, came to tho enemy ln their surplices." "Terra tribus scopulls vastum procurrlt in nequor Tho earth being laid waste by three scorpions runs into tho sea." "Cclerl sauclus malus Africo Celery sauce Is bad for an African." Mathematics "Algebra was tho wlfo of Euclid." "Algebraical symbols aro used when you don't know what you are talking about." "Geometry teaches us how to blsex nngels." "The line opposite tho right angle In n right-angled triangle Is called the hippo potamus." "Parallel lines nro the same distance all tho way, and cannot meet unless you bend them." Science "Horsepower Is tho dlstanco one horse can carry a pound of water In an hour." "Gravitation Is that which if there were none wo should all fly away." "A vacuum Is a largo empty place where the Pope lives." "To kill a butterfly you pinch Its borax." "A ruminating animal Is one that chews Its cubs." "Etymology Is a man who catches butter flies and stuffs them." "The earth Is an absolute spheroid." "The Zodiac Is the Zoo of tho sky, where lions, goatB and other animals go after they are dead." (Herein the makings of a literary man are apparent "the Zoo of the sky" Is an excellent phrase, Is It not?) Conclusion "The salaries of teachers are paid from the dog tax." "Tho Eustachian tube Is so you can hear yourself talk." "One great modern work of Irrigation Is the Panama Canal." "The Rhino Is bordered by wooden moun tains." "The Pyramids are a range of mountains between France and Spain." "A working drawing must be a drawing picturing, a person at work." Addenda to laBt week's Biographical Notes: "Shakespeare founded 'As You Like It on a book previously written by Blr Oliver Lodge," "Henry VIII was very fat, besides being a Nonconformist." "Andrew Jackson was called 'Old Hickory' because when he was a boy he was a little tough," A freckled youngster who was sent to the blackboard by his teacher to write a sentence containing the word "income" evolved, after considerable dtflloulty; "I opened the door and In come a cat," Another lad on another occasion used the word "Tlmbuctoo" orally with gTeat success. "I played with my goats yesterday, Tom busked and Tlmbuctoo." Don't ever doubt a "schoolboy howler." Ask teacher. NEW USE FOR AEROPLANES yteat lb Jlrtf4 CauHtt. Aeroa)an may have as Important vw in pence aa they are devetewiiir for timaMives in war. Since the autmvarifMa became aedve it le etelmed that one ef these war veeeels can be HUd by an aereptoas even whn the ship Is under water. It le pjropod to cand out aeroplane to seewt for seal, and when the herds are located the Ashing Oest can sail di rectly for team, instead of westing time In the bunt. Oprtlea of the ealttag alfa duriag the last seasoa were not suet4fui, and th bells in Newfoundland le that te uttMaallen ef the aeroplanes ss scouts will add Materially to ths catch la the Quit at St. Lawrence uttt year. WAITING FOR U. S. . ; A;bC mm mm I IMMIGRANTS FIGHTING ITALY'S WAR How the Italians in This Country Are Furnishing the Sinews of War in the Millions of Dollars Which They Send Home Every Year. By ADALBERTO CAPORALE THE Italians residing ln this country aro financing, nt least for n. good percentage, tho war which Italy Is now waging ngnlnst Austria for tho recovery of tho "Unredeemed Lands." Tho Immigrants will simply loan to the Italian Government tho money they havo deposited ln tho savings banks' of Italy and especially In tho postal savings banks, becauso the Government will ln this way Invest their savings, which, It Is fair to say, will not be ln danger of being lost by those who have tolled hard to send them to their country. Let us see, from statistics furnished mainly by the Italian Government, the truth of our statement. Emigration Is one of the most conspicuous assets of Italy. The host of toilers that every year leave the home chorea to cross the Atlantic aro respon sible for tho making up of one-half of tho J2i0,000,000 doficit that thero Is In the Italian economical budget; that Is, the difference be tween Importations nnd exportatlons. Emigration ns nn Asset During tho year 1906, which was tho record year for Italian emigration, 788,000 persons left Italy to seek better conditions of living and better wages abroad, and nearly 500,000 of them crossed the Atlantic and landed in the United States, Canada or South America. It la believed that thero are now ln tho United States not fower than 3,000,000 per sons of Italian birth of parentage, though the oillclal figures are below 2,000,000. These Im migrants or natlvo Italian-American citizens are distributed In overy State of the Union, but mainly in tho States of New York and Pennsylvania, In somo of the Middle West and on tho Pacific coast. According to tho estimate made by Prof. Lulgi Rossi, ex-Commlssloner General of Emigration In Italy, tho Italian emigrants send every year to their mother country not less than $100,000,000, tho bulk, perhaps $80, 000,000, according to figures recently pub lished In this country, being sent from .the United States. A moro recent Inquiry mado by tho Banca d'ltalla, which la tho greatest financial Institution In Italy and Is under the control of the Government, shows that Pro fessor Rossi's estimate was correct. According to Rossi's report, the money sent homo by the Italian emigrants is Invested ln the payment of rim all debts, In tho savings banks or other financial institutions, in tho Bmi trade, and In tho purchase of small houses and email farms. But the Influence of the savings of tho emigrants' Is mani fold. The deposits made In the postal sav ings banks go to swell the funds of the Cassa Deposit! e PrestUI, bo that loans to cities and Btnall communities are made possible. The money sent home by the emlqrants con tributes to the reduction of the Interest rates, and, In fact, has mado possible the conver sion of several hundreds of millions of Gov ernment bonds from 5 to SVi per cent, bonds. It has made possible tho return homo of an enormous amount of Government bonds which was In the hands of foreign Investors, and, as we have already stated, goes to make up one-half of the difference between Im portations and exportatlons. Statistics published In the latter part of 1913 show that In September of that year the postal savings banks of Italy were holding deposits to the amount of $403,000,000, while $510,000,000 was .deposited in private savings banks and $373,000,000 in other financial In stitutions of the country. These figures show then a total of $1,186,000,000 deposited ln the various savings Institutions pf Italy, not Including the money Invested In com mercial or Industrial enterprises. Millions Upon Millions We have not available statistics to show exactly what portion of this huge total be longs to emigrants, and more difficult It would he to discover the percentage belong ing to Italians residing in this country or those who have made their mosey while working In the United States, The only available figures in this respect are. in faot, those publlihed by the Banca dl Napoll, an other big financial institution controlled by the Italian Government and taking charge ef a good percentage of the money sent ta Italy by her emigrants. These figures, which refer only to the Banca dl Napoll and, there fore, are aecerUy meoplte, show that JTTNE 2, IDlfr during tho year 1912 the Banca handed over to the postal savings banks nearly $2,400,000, which was sent to Italy by Immigrants re siding ln tho United States. But this Is only a small part of the total Sum sont from this country .to bo deposited either in tho postal savings banks or in other financial Institu tions of Italy, and wo must tako Into con sideration tho fact that tho bulk of the sav ings' of tho Immigrants Is sent to the wlve3 of the latter and by them deposited directly In tho savings banks. Wo can safely assume, thereforo, that qulto one-fourth of tho money sent homo every year by Italians re siding ln tho United States goes to swell the funds of tho savings banks of Italy. The Government usually turns tho money received for safe keeping over to tho Cassa Doposltl o Prestltl, which, as wo have seen, Invests It in loans to cities nnd various com munities of tho kingdom but tho Govern ment may ask tho Cassa for a loan should tho necessity to do so arise. Moreover, tho prlvato savings banks usually Invest their deposits ln Government loans, which are tho safest Investment, and leavo them a profit of about 0.70 per cent., that Is the difference be tween the Interest they pay to tho depositors and that paid to them by tho Government bonds. It was mainly in this way that the bulk of tho Italian bonds held by foreign In vestors could bo recalled. Many of tho depositors of the postal sav ings banks convert their deposits Into Gov ernment bonds directly, deciding not to run tho risk of a commercial Investment. The recent loan of more than $200,000,000 launched by the Italian Government to cover the ex penses of the military preparation for the present war was In a good measure covered by tho savings of tho emigrants held in tho prlvato banks, and It may not bo Impossible that the Government took advantago of the two billions or moro deposited ln the postal savings banks to complete that loan. Cer tainly It will use tho money If Its needs In the present war make that necessary. They Also Servo From tho figures given above It can be seen how great a contributor of prosperity to his mother country Is tho Italian emigrant In time of peace, when his savings are used mainly to advance the development of the fatherland; and ln time of war, when the money saved by him In foreign lands Is used for the realization of tho national aspiration and probably to savo the country. This fact explains why Italy Is not very eager to call to tho colors, at least not until that becomes an Imperative necessity, her emigrants tolling abroad, especially those who, are working ln this country. In fact, they will continue to send home their savings, supplying the money needed for the national war, and in this way they also will serve their country. And this without taking into consideration the money which will be sent to Italy to lessen the sufferings of tho destitute families of the soldiers. To clto only one Instance, the uanan coiony or pmiadelphla expects to send to the Italian Red Cross, to be distributed to the wounded or to the destitute families of those who are fighting for their country, not less than $100,000. What will the Italians of New York, who aro four times as many as those of Philadelphia, do, and what amount will be sent by the remaining millions of Italians scattered all oyer the United States? SECONDARY CONSIDERATIONS To th Editor of Evsnlnp Itdptrf S'T .uW?en wm thI hubbub and whining about the Lualtanla affair cease? Wo know, o far as the less In human Ufa U con cerned, , it U a horrible calamity, but I cer tainly do look at this part of It aa a secondary consideration, under the conditions. There la no doubt in my rolnrt but what the Lusltanla vae loaded down with ammunition. What I condemn la those people going on th Whether the paeeeugers knew of the srarounll Ueo being on board. I do not know; but the Gjrmsn i Government must have known it or why did they do all in their pew,? to .top it from sailing No matter how hard we trv to put another construction vwa th cj.,7 have the cold facte staring u in the face We were caught with the good H America wantS ; . M her take what I? ffl out to her. We have a rljht to send aiSni J!"i- The Mut.I,, wwMes he warring aa! Uone. to fay as private BUuufsotur.r. so but when we pil tmmw UUj, o 4 veMel teadid down with war munitions and deliberately taVi 'i tnem into a war zone anu run tno ris or trend ing them to the bottom, after duo warning be ing given, I want to know where we set ortf Calling the Germans savages nnd barbarism does not alter tho situation one bit. It Is not a caso of thinking Germany would not dare do such a thing, or would be eo Inhuman as to eend hundreds of peoplo to a watery grave. Philadelphia, June 1. AMERICAN. ANSWER TO "COLD FACTS" To th Editor of Evening Ltdger: Sir Although tho Lusltnnla tragedy has besn pretty well hatched out, I would like to reply to a letter signed "Cold Facts," dated the 28th, I fall to seo where tho Cunarder was making any breach of maritime law In carrying pai- congers, American or otherwise. Also as to ,l tllllJJilK titly LUiiiiuunuMi it nob ui aiubivcb bm and shells was given out by the Cunard people. JB? Tho Collector of tho Port of New York's state- if ment that sne was not armed, it teems, should i every thinking' person Bhould know that any ship built in the United States Is also liable for seizure by the Government for the above pur poce. , The Lusltanla, being still In the service of the Cunard Company, I think Is sufficient evi dence that she had not been requisitioned. If ths United States would spend moro tlmo In build ing up a merchant marine of her own there would be no need of American lives being en dangcred ln English ships. The seas are God'i own. nnd are the one place "where the honor. able admiral should not bo replaced by tha j atnlthr nAflatnaln " 1 AMERICAN SEAMAN. , Philadelphia, May 23. MUSIC IN THE BUSH She sings' a wild, sweet song that throbs with pain. The added pain of life that transcends art A song of home, a deep, celestial strain, The glorious swan-song of a dying heart A lame tramp comes along the railway track, A grizzled dog whose day Is nearly done: He passes, pauses, then comes slowly back And listens there an audience of one. She sines her colden voles Is mission-fraught. I As when she charmed a thousand eager ean; j He listens trejnbllng, and Bho knows It not, 4! And f!nwn hie tinllnw tiA.t,. fill hlte t.nH 'J " i She ceases and is still, as If to pray; j There Is no sound, the stars are all alight uniy a wretcn wno stumbles on his way. Only a vagrant sobbing In the night. Robert W. Bervlea. '1 AMUSEMENTS BOTANIC GARDENS AFTERNOONS, June 8 & 9, at 4:30 Lilian' McCarthy Granville Barker Aiuplcts of Vnivenitu of Penntvtvanla GREEK PLAYS wS&,m 12, ll.SO, $1 and 80c. Srata at Glmbela. -I B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STREETS "BILL HITS DOUGLAS MlhL-A. ?- FAIRBANKS & CO. .r. J.eaer. Erneat n. Ball; Ahearn'a Corned; Cp.i Avon Comedy Four; Mleeee Campbell, as: i GARRICK "S , to p. FIRST TIME IN PHILADELPHIA JAMES I1ARNES (Hltm.lf) Prtaenta THE WONDERFUL MOTION PICTURES THRO CENTRAL AFRICA atott Dangeroui and Thrilling UtptdMon ! Evr Undertaken by White Men Mr. Barnea Apptara rerionally at 2:1(1 & 8:15 P. it GLOBE MARKET AND JUNIPER 11 A. U. TO 11 P. M. Plnsl Rlinnrivn FLORENCE REED 1N omanI0" B HER OWN WAY lomaaica rravoioruei Draraaa Educational. Playa Ohtalnad Thru Stanley Booking Co. THE MARKET ST. ABOVE 18TS . I' I O T U R E S 11 A. M. TO UtlS P. M, Marmiftrltft fllnrk Stanley ... " - ,-USTTY BISTER OF JOSE1' t .W1.Wf .-. -0"----. " -" ,',? JS'i1fi.B,ur,,y. "JM TUB PENMAN viHi a MAnatiij, BATURDAX. 10 A. M. goss Keys Theatre ""ISl .ora "HYPOCRITES 1" "o-iyV and . A R 0 A D I A CH8STNUT. Balov 18th St PDMonUya- Centlnuoua NIXON'S (CALIFORNIA nmvnti PACK- 1 GRAND ?0AtnSiM M ..,.. Till. . Slfcki-PKIUV CURR1SB1 11 Hfco TudaytilB. T&9ILAUOK PICTURES. LYRIC SP01- MAT. TODAT. 3:30 4iviu Bvaa..a.sn t.rt wbbH "FTNn TWT?. WnMAMi' win. raltb " ' " "- II ""! IV HERj5 Srtey Ctoplin ?5KKiEtf2.t JVJUUAY MGHT CASH PRIZES Kniri New ticei.'ad NEW WOODSIDE PARK THEATK WATINBH TODAY. :M trm, 0 J TJ.o" TowtouT at sue IneKed Kue Troeadero JiVi Princess WacluU 11