8 lEueufngi ittyvt PUBLIC LEDGEtt COMPANY crnus it k crnTis, paraicr-n Oitl II t,itlnf;tiTIVlrrrnMent, John 0 Martin. Kterrtniy Rtiit Treasure, l'hlllp 8 Codlno, John B. Williams, Directors " BDITOniAt, BOAHDi Crane II K Ccstis, Chairman. P tl TVHALUr faetmlva IMIIot Jo7iVF1aStJN ..... General Duelneee lianas! 1 1. i " ' Published dally at Public Ltrata Dulldlnr, Independent Square, Philadelphia. ttt)ra CewrL .... .llroad and Chcelniit Rtreeta ATMNTie Cm. Prm-Unton nnllamf Mtr ToK. ............no-A, Metropolitan Wi DmntT. ., MB rort IiuiMin St. I-oru...... ........ 400 diet flemocrot Bulldlne Cmajrco...... ...... 1802 Tribunt Building London, ........ ..6 Waterloo Place, Tall Mall, S. W NEWS BUItBAUSI WAimKOTO BositAtr..... ..The rear Bu 4 n Naw YoK Bono. ........ The rimM Hulldln IlnttIN Bessie . ................. 0 FrlMrlohetraata Ixwov nnuDn.,1, 3 Pall Mall l-est. JB W. PARI) HuaaD. ..82 Itua Leuts la Urand SUBSCRIPTION TEItMS By carrier. Dmlt O.mi, six cents Ur mall, postpaid eutelde of Philadelphia, eicept whara forelsn poitaee l required. DiltT OKti, one month, twentr-flve cental D1I1.T Oklt, one r'ar, three dslleri. All mall aub tcrtptlona parable In advance. Nonos Bubrerlbere -wishing aadrese chanced mutt (Ire aid at well aa new addreea. DILL, I0W TAINUT KKTSTOmt, MAIN I0M far Xiirttt all rommnJotloiM to Rwnlne LtifT, MtptrUtne Jtuare, PMIadelyMa. axrn AT tn raitisrirntt roeTorrroa le rtooxd OUII MlltMATTia. TUB AVOTtAOH NOT PAID DAIT.T CIHCULA- tiom or thb bvbnino r.nDOHn 1-OR MAT VfXD ss.au. rnnADjarmA, rudat, juke as, lets. TJm oeword tnmtkM lefere opportunity, out opportunity U oliiUmt to the commands of the man of eourao "We Will Not Do Thin Thine" THERU sure some Oouncllmen who do not Intend to have tho crack In the Liberty Bell opllt their political fortunes wide open. Then will be plenty of lnnoouous desuetudo for any political meanderors who In Borrow and anguish bring; back to Independenco Hall not a Liberty Dell, but disjointed pieces of metal that wero once that sacred relic. The danger of such a disaster Is real. There Is not a metallurgist who would sanc tion the long Journey for tho bell. There is a menace In every thump, overy Jar, and it will get thousands, literally millions, of thorn on tho trip. If Councilmen must Junket, surely they can Junket without tho Liberty Bell. If they must Itewo a trip to the coast, it wero better to pay their way by popular subscription than to pny for It with the ruin of tho most precious of our national relics What a splendid thing it would bo If all tho other Councilmen should stand up like men and say: "We will not do this thing. We will not participate In this unspeakable proceeding." That would be patriotism, that would bo tho kind of loyalty that would thrill tho heart of Young America. The Balkans Next Door THERE was to be peaco In Mexico when Huerta was driven out. But almost Im mediately the Constitutionalists were flght Irifj each other more bitterly than they had ever fought the Dictator. Now tho star of Villa seems to bo meeting tho horizon, below which It has not sunk before the Carranzls tns are at loggerheads. The Balkans of the West run true to form. But between Mexico deluged with ruin a year ago and Mexico seething today there la a vast difference. Tho name of that differ ence la Robert Lansing No Progress Without Scraphcaps THE scrapheap Is a place of honor. It la a monument not to the Dead Past, but to the Living Present. Without scrapheaps there would be no progress Without prog ress there would bo no scrapheaps. Tho great moment In the life of an Invention la that moment when It Is thrown Into the dis card, for thus Its destiny Is fultllled. The world goes on with something better. This, properly speaking, Is "the way of tho world." Civilization advances toward Us visions. The first steamboat was once a vision. The first locomotive was once a vision. The telegraph was once a vision. Every one of the many Inventions which men havo sought out was onco a vision. In vention succeeds invention, but progress in mechanics and science Is not civilization. The two lines sometimes touch, but they are not Identical. Both are pushed forward into the future by the same methods, but tho forces are different. Civilization is a succession of Ideals. Tho Holland has gone to the scrapheap, but the submarine continues. Tho Holland ftas found Its place of honor, but tho sub marine is only an Invention, a means of war. War itself will some day go to the scrap heap. Ideals will send it there. It will then have found Us place of honor. Tho world will go on with something better. Lot Experts Diagnose) the Case Tina merchant marine may be anemlo from atrangulatlon or from malnutrition. Probably Its present deplorable condition Is due to a little of both. All agree that tho Industry Is sick. It Is not likely to be cured until an expert diagnosis reveals accurately the causes of the decline. It will then be possible to find the proper remedies. Wo know already, of course, that the navi gation laws are obsolete and burdensome, that seamen's labor has been heavily sub sidized by enactments fixing wages and that the lack of a definite program by the Gov ernment has read Into the situation such uncertainty that Investors have hesitated to finance the rehabilitation of the industry. But a commission of experts must reach to the very bottom of tho whole trouble and find a means to overcome these and any other difficulties. The first thing la to get the commission; it will not be so difficult thereafter to get the ships. The Beginning of the Fight for Russia THE! victory of Germany Is not the cap ture of Lemberg. It Iff the saving of the great Hungarian plain on which now flour ish th crops whleh must feed the Teutonic allies najct winter. Had the Russian advance continued, had the vegetable rlehee of Hun? gary fallen Into hostile hands, the food blockade would have driven buHttec into every German camp and would have at tributed appreciably to ultimate victory for the Allies In n " respect has Qarroan efflelanoy been more prnoune4 than In the seizure of ter ritory which supplies the setweetus, In Belgium an 1 Fnuaee she graefted Hob ooa.1 and other metals She has protected the oil supply In Galtola Her artnlM have fought not only for their stomachs sake, but aleo ir the Mtutla-tlou of the mw tbt de EVENING mands coal hrtd Iron and the other minerals that can be molded Into munitions of war But Russia Is not conaucrcd. Bho cannot be conquered Tho great distances between her Inrgo cities prevents a successful In vasion. Prom two continents spring millions to fight for her. She gather strength In the recoil. Tho farther buck she la pushed tho moro torrlflc tho backward pressure she exerts. Through Siberia and down from Archangel a steady stream of war suppllc-t has begun to flow. There has been no cowardice In her armies, but heroic deVo tlon Gradually she will bo armed as her adversary has been armed. Russia can say. quoting tho great John Taul Jones, who so nobly fought for her, ns he did for America: "Wo Have not yet begun to light." Not a Neutral, but a Militant Mayor THAT philosophic believer In tho doctrlno that the gang sort of government Is tho best sort of government and protagonist of the. program to glvo Philadelphia another Ashbrldgo administration. "Davo" Lane, an nounces from his cool retreat In New Jersey that "the boys" aro rapidly adjusting their differences. He thinks a "neutral" candidate will coon bo found, a candidate who can bo depended on not to lot ono faction of tho gang do any more robbing of the municipal ity than the other section does. There Is no argument, It appears, ns to tho wisdom of raiding the treasury! the only difficulty re lates to tho division of tho spoils Vice, long looked upon, becomes attrac tive. Familiarity with graft breeds acquies cence In It Apparently there Is no great public Indignation that a few sleek men, who have grown rich on public funds, meet to select a Mayor for Philadelphia. Not a king In Europe Is so wantonly dlsregardful of the wishes of the peoplo as those men nro. There Is not an autocrat In nil mo world who would dare do what these men do. They do not pretend to be looking for a candidate who would best servo tho lntoreats of Phila delphia, They openly onnounce that the Ideal candidate Is tho ono who can best serve the Interests of tho Varca and McNlchol. It would be funny If It did not connote a prac tical downfall of democraoy. Tet there Is a good omen In the situation. Whom tho gods would destroy they first make mad. The arrogance of the BO-called leaders has already convinced thousands of citizens that they must stand as thoy havo never stood before against this onslaught on good government. No "neutral" candldato can be elected Mayor of Philadelphia. On the oontrary, tho successful candidate will be successful because there is no neu trality In his soul, but a deep-seated, long abiding purpose to strike at graft wherever he sees It, to battle unceasingly against cor ruption, to be militant In his advocacy of efficiency In tho public service and like ada mant In his refusal to concede anything to exploiters of tho municipality. Lloyd-George Organizes a Home Army PLUTARCH roports that Demosthenes, when asked what was tho first essential to success In oratory, replied "Action." He might have said it was essential in every other nrt without straying far from tho path of truth. Lloyd.Qeorgc, tho new British Minister of Munitions, Is demonstrating that the way to get ammunition for tho armies In the field Is to get it. British victories must bo won on British soil If they aro to bo won nt all. Am munition has been lacking ever since the war began, and It will not be until the British and the French are as well supplied with It as tho Germans aro that they can hope to achieve victory. Real Social Revolution JERRT SIMPSON, of Kansas, rose to political distinction because of the wide appeal of his socklessness It Is true that when he went to Washington, and drew a Congressman's salary with Its perquisites, he donned silk socks and oven wore pajamas nt night, but tho rest of the country got the Impression that In his sockless state ho was a typical Kansan. Good crops havo changed all this E. T. Meredith, of Iowa, told the convention of advertising men In Chicago that tho farmers are not only wearing socks, but that an In vestigation conducted by experts has dis closed that BO per cent, of them wear gartera also The socks do not roll In wrinkles over the shoe tops, but are held In place by na tionally advertised supporters, as comfort able as they are becoming. The real social revolution Is virtually ac complished, for men and women with fash ionable and comfortable clothes are usually content. Garterlesa we come Into thta world, Garterless and red) O&rterleas wo go out of this world, Garterless and dead. In the first state we are walling with un happlness. In the Intermediate state Ufa looks rosy to us, especially when we have reached the condition of the gartered farm ers who wear HO suits of clothes and ride In ItOOO automobiles. And in the last state t does not matter what we think. The end has come. The garter must be recognized as a Bymbol of progress here as it la a badge of royal honor In England. Obregon may have lost his arm, but he has not lost his head. Why pun on Nearlng when it is so much easier to Jump on hlmf President WUson'a secretary denies that he was the one who put the tumult in the Cabinet. Once more they are crying "On to Parts!" In Berlin. But they took it out in crying last falL Heat and wet may be bad weather for peo pie, but It'tf the next thing to heaven for backyards. Resuming pstal servlee, in AJaaee after 5 yrs, VfHim remarks that It's a Ipnr tjmp between Barriers. I ,1 I Inn II mi If the House oould not find time to go to the Preetdent, the President sou Id And time to BO to tb Hoe. ' The laeturtag statearaan wh deal Uat lie le for peace at any priee, ilt, hew ever, that he le opposed to war under aU (.lxcuaietancea. ptttt.ADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JUNE LEDGER ARMS MAKERS ARE FOR PEACE POLICY Manufacturers of Arms and Ammu nition Companies Have Not For gotten the Sportsmen Who Built Ifp Their Business. By ROBERT HILDRETH FREEDOM of speech Is almost unknown to the officers of the arms and ammuni tion companies. For Instance, thoy must keep silent on the question of hattonal pre paredness. "Wo would be misunderstood It wo tallteu about preparedness," said one of tho prom inent men In the business tho other day. Two things aro certain. The arms and ammunition companies are In business to make money. They regard tholr business as entirely legitimate. Also, the mon who conduct this business regard themselves as good American citi zens. Most of them aro ardent supporters of Wil son's foreign policy. "Wilson," they say, "will keep the United Statoff out of war If anybody can " Again- "We aro not war-makers" I am referring to the arms and ammuni tion companies which aro widely known In the sporting world and which In tho last few. months have been struggling to keep up with war orders. Why nrn the arms and ammunition com panies behind President Wilson In his effort to preserve peaco? Tho answer Is obvious. That Is the trouble tho answer Is altogether too obvious. Moro money In supplying warring Europo than In taking enro of Uncle Sam. Tho Embargo Question Now what would becomo their attitude If tho Administration Bhould establish an em bargo on their production? "Such nn embargo would be a violation of neutrality," 13 their view, and thoy add, "It Is a sheer waste of money for tho advocates of an rmbargo to advertise In tho nows papcrs and on the billboards, asking tho people to petition tho Government to Btay tho exportation of arms and ammunition. Tho public has already picked tho winner In tho European war. America's Interests aro with the Allies.' Further, tho opinion seems to bo held In tho snmo quarters that If Undo Sam should decide on nn embargo It would probably bo becauno ho wanted to keep tho goods at home. It would not mean a restriction of output, at lenBt not Immediately. "In case tho United States became engaged In nctuol war tho Government would need all tho arms and ammunition that this coun try could turn out, and more, too. For pur poses of preparation, on tho basis of calling Into the Mold an army of a million men, tho Government should havo on hand at tho be ginning of war at least four million rifles, 1200 machine guns, eight billion cartridges, 4000 field guns and eight million rounds of field gun ammunition Theso aro not my fig ures, but I think they aro approximately cor rect. Tho regular arms and ammunition companies are today making only rifles and cartridges. When the conflict In Europo broke out tho total facilities In this country for manufacturing these goods wero totally Inadequate for keeping such an army sup plied during a campaign. The output then possible would havo to bo multiplied ono hundred times In order to meet tho needs of a fighting army of a million men. Helping the Allies "Now this brings us back to the question of how much we are really doing for tho Allies In furnishing arms and ammunition. The fact Is that tho maximum output of tho factories has not been greatly Increased Blnce tho beginning of tho present war. Floor space has been doubled and new factories have been built by many of the companies, but still It remains true that tho output has not doubled, or anywhere near It. Highly perfected and very expensive machinery 13 required for the manufacture of arms and ammunition. It cannot be made and In stalled In a Jiffy. Moreover, tho facilities for making military arms and ammunition are not the facilities for making the ordinary sporting arms and ammuntlon for which we have always found tho largest market. It Is only the high-power rifles and cartridges that aro of any great use In modern war fare. Under all the conditions, a doubling of floor space cannot bring a doubling of output Inside of a year and a half or two years. At present we are doing little moro than utilize our facilities of last July to their fullest capacity. With artillery, shells and shrapnel the situation Is somewhat different, and theso goods are what Europe orders the most of, but even so I think It is true that America Is supplying the Allies with not more than one-twentieth of the war ma terials which they are using." The arms and ammunition companies, of course, are looking ahead. They are figuring out the possibilities In the business of mak ing war supplies. They are enlarging their plants, Perhaps they expect a long war. Perhaps they are merely to try to sell all tho products possible while the selling Is good. But evidently, also, they expect that govern ments, war or no war, will be In the market for war supplies for a good while to come. They see nothing unpatrtotlo In their un precedented activities. A prominent' official of one of the leading companies expresses the opinion that America will benefit by the development of the business to such propor tions, not only from the present commercial profits, but also from the experience gained In meeting so great a demand and from ren dering manufacturing facilities more nearly adequate to meet the emergency that would arise In case of an American war. "It Is better for us." says an official, "to boost the sporting game than to boost the war game. We will meet the demand for war goods to the best of our ability, but we look for the future of the arms and ammuni tion business to tho sportsmen." AMONG THE NECESSITIES Prom tba Waehlncton Ttmea. In spite o( the high cost of living, even the obronlo klgkers loalat on doing so. . DANIEI BOONE Weatward. forever westward, like a a tar. .He strode the night of forests, giant, lone- ' impaaaionen lover o me wiue unknown. He stepped HI" BOme strange, mystic avatar In virgin wild, through travail and through war. He heard the tepipest or the mountain moanj He felt the red foe's fury match hl own; Bt weaewerd, ever westward, rode afarl AM( fa tnJ1 t0! With ewjpgtng blade THow teejeiBg eUlea thunder to the !. Xk 80U ot eonunerc and the rear of trade HM pe forth bis ancient victoria, WMM nature fashioned tor berole mood ft patriot of bar primal aoMtudaa. Ofawur yirtlaa. S . .r ,n i i .a MEMORIES OUT OF TWO OLD READERS An Evening's Adventures With Some Boyhood Books That Are Battered and Torn and Stained With Gingerbread, but More Delightful Than Any Novel. By WALTER PRICHARD EATON I HAVE Just come across two battered old books or rather my mother has come across them, and sent them to mo which havo given me nn evening of moro delight than the most popular novel of tho day could do. They aro battered and torn and Btalncd but what memorlos thoy bring back! Yet thoy aro only two of "Swlnton's Sup plementary Readers," tho second and third readers at that. I never used them In school. Indeed, I didn't go to school till long nftor tho third reader period. But I porod over them because they wero full of pictures and tales, and ns I pored over tholr pages again this evening every picture was llko an old friend long lost and found again; nnd as for tho poems and stories, I was amazed to dls pover how much of that mental background we all possess as a result of our childhood contact With art came directly out of those two battered brown books. It was almost a terrifying revelation to me of the tremendous Importance of tho booka wo give our children. Tho Elves nnd tho Shoemaker Even today I can tell largely by memory which stories I liked best. But even If my memory had failed mo, tho books themaolvea bear physical evidence, in tho form of thumb prints and gingerbread smears. Most popular of all. It would appear from tho evidence, was the story of "Tho Elves and the Shoo makcr." This tale Is Illustrated with a cap tivating cut, In tho Crulkshank manner, showing the two elves dancing gleefully In the clothes tho grateful shoemaker's wlfo cut for them or rather one of them Is dancing, while tho other Is hastily thrusting his baro legs Into the tiny breeches. I can still re call my delight at this episode, and the warm thrill of pleasure I always experienced at the genoroslty of tho elves and the gratitude of Mr. and Mrs. Shoemaker. I find In the same voluma a highly proper poem called "The Better Land," which la Illustrated by tho picture of a Rollo-llko child sitting at the feot of a sad lady In widow's weeds. Thero Isn't a gingerbread mark on the pagel Grimm knew his business better than the Sunday school poetesses. In the earlier of the two books Is the tale of Hop-o'-My-Thumb, with a picture that almost terrified mo again tonight a picture of the family procession advancing Into a deep, gloomy forest, with tiny Hop-o'-my-Thumb at the rear, scattering his crumbs. How Important pictures are to children Is at tested by the fact that all my life I have thought of the tale of Hop-o'-my-Thumb as a tale of terror; Its atmosphere has beon tl)at of a gloomy hemlock forest at twilight; and when I saw the old reader again this evening I realized It was this" Illustration which had been In the back of my consciousness all the while. Other stories in the same elementary reader are the tale of "Dick Whlttlngton and Ills Cat." "Hans 'In Luck," "The Man on the Chimney" ("Unravel your stocklngl Begin at the toe!" we all know that one!), "The Ugly Duckling," "Diamonds and Toads," "The Christmas Tree for Cats," the Immortal "Three Bears," and a dozen of Aesop's Fables. Of course, you Bay I would have read all of these stories somewhere else. No doubt I did read them somewhere else. I had a whole volume of Aesop and another of Grimm. Yet why Is It that I remember them out of thla particular book, associated with these particular pictures? For Borne dim, childish reason, this book was dear to me, and because it was dear It was my real In troduction into Imaginative literature. When a child shows attachment to a booki be sure the book Is worthy, and then give every pos sible encouragement. The child Is storing up Immortal memories The Lilliput Levee Next to the tale of "The Wves- and the Shjgtnaker" the meet glngerbready passage, la that containing a poem, or Jingle, ealled Lilliput Levee." I suppose it has been K or 30 years einee I saw or heard that poem, yet when I saw the pleturee and read the first line tonight tlje whale thing eamjj bvek ut me with a flash, and each suseeeaW line wee fully read before my eyes had taken in. half of it "Where deet Pinafore Fala.ee staodT Right In tba wWdlo Of LiuW Landl" the Jlngl begins. The leUclous. the never- A PINe'sUBJECT FOR A "BABY-SAVING CLINIC" to-bo-too-much-onjoyed plot of the poem la simple the children capture the government, send their parents to school, put them sup pcrlcss to bed, and In general have a high old tlmo. Possibly tho poem would today be considered highly Immoral by our educators. I can't discover any children of my acquaint ance who know It now. Neither can I recall that It caused any attempts on my part 30 years ago to put my father supperlesa to bed! Do you recall it? Do you recall tho lovee, when "Ono fat fellow, too fat by far. Tried 'twinkle, twinkle, little star.' Ills voice was gruff, his pinafore tight, His wlfo said, "Mind, dear, sing it right!' But ho forgot and sold Ta-la ' Tho Queen of Lllllput's own papa!" I can still recall the chortles of delight with which my sister and I hailed this em barrassing eplsodo. Of course, the mortlflod queen had to send her too-fat papa right up to bed, In spite of tho fact that he cried all over his shirt bosom. Children mny not know much about art, but they know whnt they like! Gingerbread nnd Tears In tho upper reader were tho second voyage of "Slnbad tho Sailor." an episode from "Tom Brown at Rugby," and above all, "The Heroic Serf," a talo of the Russian steppes. A wolf pack pursued a sleigh, and tho mas ter and mistress wero Baved only by the serf's Belf-sacrlflce In Jumping out and giving him self to the pack. On the pages of this story what look suspiciously like tear stains aro mingled with gingerbread smears. To this day, when I think of Russia, I think of that grim story. I remember definitely that it was the other two stories which first caused me to beg for copies of "The Arabian Nights" and "Tom Brown at Rugby." Tho book contains ballads, too, which I fancy today would hardly find place Jn a third roader though I may be wrong. There wns "John Gilpin's Ride," for Instance, and Gilbert's "Bnb Ballad," "The Yarn of the 'Nancy Bell.'" Tho latter I have always known by heart, and often wondered where I learned It. Now I know. I learned It by absorption. But this old third reader Is not all frivolity far from It! Tho last prose article la Lamb's tale of "The Tempest," and the book closes, on the final page, with "Our revels now are ended a We are such stuff As dreams are made of; and our little life Is rounded with a sleep." NThls strikes me today aa "going some" for a third reader. Yet, curiously enough, I find the page besmeared with gingerbread. (You navo no qoudi guessed by now that I was somewhat fond of thla confection!) I recall, also, that at the age of 8 my favorite poem was Tom Moore's "Oo Where Glory Walts The-," It was printed In a leather bound "Complete Works," and was the only poem in the volume I ever read. Tho rest left me cold. That one always made me weep dell clously, I haven't the faintest Idea why for I couldn't possibly have understood It. Some thing in Its cadence, or In its refrain, how ever, touched me. Recollection of that haa made me ever since shy of sitting In Judg. ment on the mysterious spiritual adventures of children. I am more than ever Bhy this eyenlng. after bridging backward over the years, on realizing how much of my mental background was acquired long, lone- ago, from the pages of these two battered old Swlnton's Readers. BATTLE CRUISERS NEEDED Prom the New Tork Tlmee. " ' The kind of markamanabjp attributed to th. gunners of the British dreadnought Quwi w abeth In a letter from a BeEsi? tSvaTVmi!: quoted In the Tlraee dliMtJhw yeauu?r probably the kind that oWSKtiS in A.,!f 5,W,ler ttnd "or tor six moTSl Wrarf Vef WUi t0"' SK tht: oWe Wh?&i to 4M. the QtzaK?h ,frr,,1MM waisr "-"v.jis.3 i navies, however, havo modern battle cruljtnv tho former ton, with heavy batteries and tajif bio of steaming from 2G tn 23 knots an how tho German navy six. Wo have no war vti? sels of this type. Undoubted! we aholt coo? tlnuo to build the great lloatlng forts, but vT want the fast battlo cruisers, too. We haji only tho beginning of a great modern nan? but It Is a good beginning. We are JustlMi In taking great prldo In Its ships and tn tit zeal and clHclency ot Its officers and men. Tht average of our marksmanship has always Ut high, but It could be marto higher with rnorl practice. j Tho need of battlo cruisers la the first con sldrrat'on, tho need of more men the next. Hit submarine problem should be speedily tohfrjj There will bo ammunition enough for y omcrgency hereafter It ly essentia!, howevoj that tho public Interest In the Increase of tie navy should not subside. Tho subject li off to keep over fresh In mind Every cltlio should learn all thero Is for landsmen to knor about our warships, as tho navy exists for til protection of every clt zen. CONVERTING THE TOWNj Liquor Problem Is Largely a City ProblS What Rural Communities Aro Doing, John S Gregory In the World's Work. The national prohlblt'on cause Implies than a divine nsaault upon the powers of w It represents an attempt of tho rural commuH? ties to regenerate, tho towns, Kansas Is ring on the wickedness of New York! Nrt Dakota and Oklahoma propose to purify PfMj sjlvanla. The liquor problem rn this conutrj nt the present moment Is largely a city projj lem. Whatever varying opinions we may bMl of tho general success of prohibition, one poGI nt loast Is plain and that Is 'ts success In ri3 communities. Those States that have genwj prohibition or any largo "measure of local-optic; have practically driven the saloon out et tb villages and towns. Moreover, they have doti something that Is vastly more Important ttB havo enormously decreased drinking. Ttylj'ii In Itself a great reform; when one BtudleK tht Hltuatlon more closely, however, the gain fc peara to be almost Inflnltes'mal i For the liquor problem Ip this country ll M a rural problem. It Is a city problem. One cojU easily go over the map and pick out 36 Stateij enough to ratify a constitutional amendments that, taken together, do not have as myj saloons as Now York cty Chicago has raw drinking places than all the States southSj Mason and Dixon's line. Two-thirds of aH ttj saloons In tho United States are found Injlj States and these aie the States that have UJ largest cities. In fact, a large centralized p ulatton Is economically essent'ul to the auccnj of tho liquor trnfuc The great Increase lajl consumption of alcohol In the last 20 years ogj Indicates again tho drift of the population tm the country to tho town One great dlvHloao tho business the brewing nnd retailing of laPJ beer would cease to exist In any apprecUW extent except for the large cities. A 13J keeper, to make the draught-beer business P Bible, must sell at lenat a barrel a day. K does not do this, the product goes stals 3 makes a loss. And he cannot do this unless j haa a large purchasing public at his; doorij which ho cannot get In villages and, towisja The one thing that the last 20 years has js Inltely established Is- that the cities, of tbw own volition, will not abol'sh the liquor trsjg Occasionally a good-sized town, like WprctnS Mass . votes dry: but It practically never it8 so. Tne anti-saloon fighters can usuauy State-wide prohibition or a comprehensive J tern of local ODt'on In a State whose rural ulatton la larger than Its' urban. They ei do so, or nt least cannot do so permanw when the city population exceeds tnat i country, SMOKE AND AIR From the Providence. Journal. While one New York woman Is conductli crusade against amoklntr In street cars Is starting a camnnlcn to nermlt WORM'S amoke on the three rear seats. PcndlnrJ outcome of thla curious conflict In reform 2 the men are still smoking wherever iney i a. chance and are waiting comfortably fa J which way the wind will blow. QUESTIONS F"rom Lit. Some people ask questions because they to know more; some ask them Decau t desire to ehow what they already know, pome asx them uecauae tney warn " what others do not know. , AMUSEMENTS R T? TCF.TTR'S THEATRI CHESTNUT AND TWEITIJ ST.B5??1 jipb8j a v it u b n a a om BRICE & KING WALTER C. KELLY pnmcaes haijjah; tioiih & pabette, OALBnTTH BABOOKH ll'.n WOODSIDE PAR NOW 0P8N TO THB PL'til-"- FREE ADMISSION , TO J'ATfiWB OP PAnK TROIXRT GLOBE PHOTO-PLATS u inn 1fin Viola-AUen "WHITE SISTfij tjfvrkua . nrtiftrt-en a IWVRNTION S r,TAXTTODY MONABCHS AND k-KAND KRAMER iTON & oXvibS. wiumip Dubois pictlrb, Woedside Park Theatre &? .1 l "A KNIGHT FOR A DAY Trocadero '"ZizriZ"