1915; 8 Mf14"1 EVENING T.EBftEft-PHILADELPHIA, HtTBePAY, JULY 15, IM ' ' ' "' I II . I ,.H .1 I I I HI ' "" . . .... . - Sumng Singer PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY emus it k. cunns, nasie Chsrlf It. JJodlnxtcrt,VIPrfianl; John C Martin, PttnUrt and Trnrurtri FMIIp 6. Collins, John B. WlllUinii nirftlort, .. EDITOIltAI BOARD I CJies II. H- Cvans, Chairman. r. n. whamst..., usttuUn Editor JOHNC MARTIN .General Business Manatar fubllsntd CaJlr t r cuo Lxraii Bulldtnr, Independence fequtre, Philadelphia. Lrrot CtTjiI. Dread And Chralnut Btrta AthJtimo Cm... Prtti-Vrion nulldlnr Nrtr Tost; i 1T0-A, M'tropolllan Tower Ditfttrr 88 Ford Itulldlns fir Iuil 409 Olobf Democrat nulldlni Cnteiao 1203 Tritutit TJulldlnr Ibsboh 8 Waterloo Place, rail Mall, 8. W. NKW8 DUnEAUSS TVaariijniTOs Briu ........ .T)i Tool Bulldlnr Naw Teas ncaiue. .. Th Timn Building Ilnlis bciuu ..............60 Frledrlehstratta Losrvo n ratio .3 I'all Hall Kt, R. W. IUIS ncinu ,,82 Rut Ixmle le Grand RttnRfmtrTtnw Tmmn Br carrier, Dixit O.-ar, U enta. Hr mall, postpaid llfalrfa f fhtlarf.!.!.! toh.rt fAHtm tw,fa cutalrfe ot fhlUdslphla, except where foreign potato la required, Dial Oilt, on month, twentr-nre cents miLr unit, ana yrar, threo dollars. All man auD- erlptlona parabla In advance. Notio flubircrlbere wlehlnir eddrese chanted muat l old aa well a ntrr address. BELL, iW WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN MM CT Adtrtm alt communication tei Kvrvina ItpT, Initptndtne SQuart, Philadelphia. kKTaaao at in rniunnrnu roiTornoa as sscond- CUll U1IL MiTTCa. TUB AVBBAOH NET TAID DAII.T CinCTBA- TION OP TItn EVENINO LUDOIin FOR JUNK WAS BJ.8S7. PIIlLADELrillA, TIIUItSDAY, JULY IS, 1918. Labor is the great alchemist, for U makea bread out of a stone, cake out of tho earth and sugar out of tho grasses. Playgrounds Closed Frisco Open TTTILUE Is hitching on tho back of tho VV Ice wagons. Mary Is playing hopscotch on tho asphalt. And all tho dangers, physi cal and moral, of tho streets aro lurking In wait for them whllo tho playgrounds aro closed. But tho junkotccr-guardsmon of Councils are off to tho Fair. That Is tho exact situation. Tho Finance Commlttco found without much dtfllculty the $29,000 necessary for Councils' Liberty Boll pas3 to San Francisco. But tho Flnanco Commlttco couldn't nnd tho $15,000 that would havo kept nine public playgrounds open which aro now closed down for lack of paid Instructors. Thero is nothing to do about It, of course. Councils won't bo back for business till Sep tember; mcanwhllo tho city summer takes Its toll. Chalk up ono mora civic achievement on the monument of Councils.- Tho voter will havo a chanco to collect tho llttlo mortuary bill In November. Thaw Is Sane Arc "Wc? THAW Is snne. Tho Jury has sottled It, If not tho Judge. Thaw Is guiltless of murder. A Jury settled that somo years back. Just what makes tho difference? Is It tho neuropathic lnfluenco of Matteawan? Has Thaw been cured by medical skill or legal? Alienists and Jurymen pronounce Thnw sano today. Alienists and Jurymen would doubtless havo pronounced him sano ten years before the crime. Yet tho crimo Is a fact. Paranoia haB loosed tho bonds of san ity on ono occasion. "Will It do so again? What can bo the outcomo ot such thoughts on a case that has wasted human energy and human life for almost n decade? Can It bo anything elso than an avownl that tho Thaw affair Indicts a luxurious society which breeds, fosters and arms tlegcncrucy and accuses an Instrument of Justlco which Is powerless to deal fnlrly and Anally with It? State Charity Begins nt Home C'HARITV begins at home, as much for the State as for the Individual. Until tho charitable Institutions of tho State aro In tho best of shape, Pennsylvania must think twice; about appropriations for private chari ties. This should bo no excuso for deprivations, for endangering worthy prlvato Institutions by a sudden withdrawal of support. But tho very difficulty of determining what private charities are an unjust burden, what chari ties are bolng run uneconomical!)', oven dis honestly, h an argument for tho State's closest attention to Ita own. The whole situation needs a thorough over hauling and Inspection, and then a sano re adjustment of yic support that the State now gives so lavishly. Why Dusy Men Arc Called THE name of Thomas A. Edison Is a synonym for busy efficiency: a man so busy that ho hardly has time to read his mall, much less to get tho sleep a normal man requires. Yet ho Is ready to consecrate his time and talents to tho service of his country on tho Navy Advisory Board that our navy may bo made ready and efficient. The name Is true of tho other Inventive geniuses who either have agreed or are' un derstood to consider favorably positions on the board. H was because he was always busy that Alexander Graham Bel) contributed bo much to tho progress of tho world with the Inven tion of tho telephone; and that OrvtlJe Wright and his brother, the lato Wilbur Wright, were able to give the world tho first practical Hying machine. They are the typo of men who are being enlisted to Improve our naval service- Tq d sure, they are busy, That Is what makes them so Invaluable to science. As the late Elbert Hubbard remarked, whenever the world wants something done It asks a busy man to do It. Putting 10,000 .Children In School Again r' IS a little absurd to suppose that Mr. Grundy and the Manufacturers' Associa tion have made their estimate of Jobless children purely In the publlg Interest. But in the end there will b this much unwn solous Quixotism In their eanvass of the cnll dretj who will lose their Jobs as a reuult of the Brumbaugh child labor act; their figure of 10.317 will be a useful norm to the officers and Inspeotors who have to enforce the law. As for the $11,700,000 a year that ludus trious and often needy families wIU have tost." behind it lie the whole broad quantum ef child conservation which the Legislature aad the prws UrcAed out before pajslns ttw bill. There will be suffering lg ertaln tlaeea, there was bound to be, Sqfferiur U Inseparable frow alnwst eyary wise radjjuk. ' of society. But in tb pretext sa it la a. prfea mitigated by the good, dose tb afctfdren ad elmost obliterated by a tM Ut Mr Orundy um to bo overtook log Pov tHiraon dollwy mm? ho Um&at b paid m cb riM of ysutfc. vkm qwi bw ttacir Job But UlO WWW WVWt Ull b pld aunt Uiowa Job WUM U be mU 1$ osaat tho same demand aa before Only, the money nnd work will to to grown men and women. In the face of such art attempt M Mr. Ofundy'a to stagger tho public mind with massed figures, tho first duty of the press la to point out that tho greater the number of children thrown out of employment, the greater tho number thrown Into school. Ten thousand, a hundred thousand boys and girls without work means better brains, bette health and better Ideals for another day. Given rtroro than half a glance, the figures of Mr. Grundy carry their own answer, their own defeat. But will Mr. Grundy tell us how the fami lies of 10,277 children earning an average wage of IB a week can bo deprived of $11, 700,000 a year by tho transfer of the children from tho factories to tho schools? At the worst It could be only a quarter of this sum In wages. One Moro Doso of Councils THE first day of Jitney litigation brought out a number of Interesting things be sides tho verbal pyrotechnics of Judge Sulz berger. Tho Jitney partisans were undoubtedly most Interested nnd concerned with tho affi davits submitted and tho Judge's apparent antagonism toward them. If tho oath of tho drivers and observers Is to bo behoved a full Ford car driving from 63d street to tho ferries finished a cent and threo-quarters ahead, whllo cars on tho Broad Btrcot routo showed varying losses from ooven to sixteen cents a trip. Judgo Sulzberger's objection that a car may often tako on passengers for only a fow blocks and drop them for now fares took no account of tho number of trips during tho slack hours of tho day when tho car may bo nearly empty. To on Inexpert nnd disinterested observer tho Jitney men seemed to prove their contention that the law Is confiscatory. But that appoara to bo qulto beside tho point which Is tho really Important thing In yesterday's proceedings from the point of view of tho avorago citizen. Tho law may bo confiscatory; it may be only a deliberate means of driving tho Jitneys out of business. But It Is within Councils' rights to puss It. City Solicitor Ryan declared: I havo looked up tho Supreme Court de cisions and I find that Councils have a right to build a cannl In CheBtnut street If they want to. Tho question of tholr right to rcgulato tho Jitneys in this city dissolves Itself Into vapor. Thero is no question about It. Councils may do what they pleaso about tho streots. That Is a thing to know, to ponder nnd to romembcr. "Councils may do what they pleaso nbout tho streots." They may aUo do what they pleaso about housing, play grounds, business and a dozen other vital Interests. The only answer Is that tho voters can do what they please about Councils. If they. don't do something In November nnd In overy November following then ex perience is a futile, meaningless word. Congress Not Needed HANNIS TAYLOR, former Ambassador to Spain, is so worked up over our rela tions with Germany that he advocates tho lmmcdlato calling of Congress In special ses sion. But In what respect would Congress aid tho diplomacy of President Wilson or mnko tho European belligerents fool nny more kindly toward each other? Political ob servers from ono end of tho country to tho other say that Sir. Wilson Is stronger than his party. Isn't ho also stronger than Con gress right now? Tho last thing tho country wants In Washington Is a man with a hasty pen. CIcan-Up for Keeps THE cities aro putting now enthusiasm Into the health proposition every year. First It slmplydldn't exist all this Idea that peoplo can keep their houses clean and them selves healthy If they want to. Then It was a fad. Everybody laughed over "clean-up" days nnd tho spectaclo of grown-ups pro tending to be very much in earnest about looking spick nnd span for a day or two. "Swat tho Fly" was tho movement that really showed tho life and vigor in tho cam paign for city health. People really liked It; nnd they saw results. The end of It all Is that today any number of quasl.publlo bodies are doing genuine, useful work on "clean-up nnd stny-clean" lines. Perhaps it Is the Interest and Inspiration of tho children that keeps It going. At any rate, "Philadelphia saw them out In great force this week campaigning for health with their surplus summer energy. Whllo scores of llttlo girls learned how to batho their baby brothers by practicing on celluloid dolls at Child Federation centres, a hundred chil dren pnraded tho streets with garbage cans the clean kind, tho right kind-advertising the Sanitary League's official covered gar bago can. It's !0 cents with your name and address on can and cover. A "round table" conference? Where's your Sir Galahad? Proud Manhattan bows before the problem of the Jitneys. The garment workers of New York havo taken off their coats. Suffrage Introduces the yellow car fund In stead of the yellow dog. Guard the National Guard I? the anti liquor motto of Mount Gretna, ' ' " Jll wtw Signs of life In the dyestuff Industry have nothing to do with tho ammunition boom. Tho "moonlight schools" of North Caro lina are going into competition with the "moonshine" variety. It will be quite a change for Professor Carnoy, of Louvaln. when he begins his work at the U. of, P. ' '." i, ii , Why lug In "German emlssarle" to ac count for the Remington Arms strike when the absurdity of lnteruwlon flghts la enough? la It possible that our lata Secretary of State Is paraphrasing the remark of Dr. gamuel Johnson that "no man but a block-1 head ever wrote except for money"? 11 " ' ' " "" '"' WILIS ! Mr, Bryan Intimates that the President is lotmd by the one-term Wank, It Is a good , inrne isr me country tn wr. Bryan was net bound to that leagth of sorviee. WtuOda't the dealers In second-hand auto HtflMJrSf be Uoklod to dALb if their sale? could arooao much lntmt at tho auction of ttet -oUatliOy uaod" yotlow ear of Or. Ajma, Howe Wtaw? THE GREATEST JEWISH CITY Chelsea, Mass., Said to Contain tfiet Highest Percentage 61 Hebrews,, and Philadelphia Holds Twico an Many as Palestine. By EDWAUt) R. BUSHNEt.1, WHERE and what Is the most Jewish city In tho United States? Chelsea, Mass. was etampod with that distinction nt tho ro cent session of tho convention of tho Federa tion of American Zionists. Twenty-five per cent of Its population of 40,000 are Jows. Numerically, Now York has the greatest Jewish population cither in tho United States or tho world, but tho proportion of Jews thero Is slightly bolow that of Chelsea, Nearly half of tho Jows in America, and ono-twelfth of all tho world contains, live within tho confines of Greater Now York, Nevertheless, their proportion of Now York's entire population la only about id per cent. Tho oxtcnt to which tho Jewish people maintain their rnclal Integrity though scat tered to tho four corners of tho earth still remains tho most astounding thing In tho history of nation-building, From tho time of their bondngo in Egypt, their flight through tho wilderness Into tho promised land, nnd their wonderful expansion during tho reigns of David nnd Solomon, followed by their subjugation nt tho hands of tho Greeks nnd Romans, this Integrity never suffered. And even during tho last two thousand years, as thoy havo gono with civilization Into every qunrtcr of tho globe, they havo always been n distinct people. Tho study of their world-wldo distribution forms a subject of gripping interest. Roughly speaking, thero nro about 32,000,000 Jows to day. Every country has Its quota. Only 78,000 in Palcstino Palestine, tho original homo of tho Jows, numerically does not contain many Jows, but In proportion to tho cntlro population of that country It loads tho world. Tho latest statistics glvo Palestlno a Jewish population of 78,000 out of a total population of 350,000. This gives tho Jewish raco In Palostlno a pcrcentngo of 22.29 of tho ontlro population, though Its total of 71,000 Is hardly half tho cntlro Jewish population of Philadelphia. In certain parts of Africa and Asia tho Jewish population, although numerically small. Is proportionately high. Tunis In Africa ranks next to Palestlno with a Jewish population of 10S.000 out of a total of 1,023,217, or B.C2 per cent. Europe, of courso, contains tho great bulk of tho world's Jewish population, thero being approximately ten million scattered through out that continent of nearly 600,000,000 peoplo. Russia furnishes a homo for moro than half of Europe's Jews. Thero are 5,215,805 of this raco living under tho Czar's authority. Then comes Austria with 1,113,687 and Hungary with 032,406. Germany has 615,021. Of all theso European countries, however, Rumania contains tho greatest percentage of Jows. Thoro aro 259,015 thero out of a total population of 5,956,690, a percentage of 4.52. Tho Jewish proportion In Austria-Hungary which Includes Bosnia-Herzegovina, Is 4,42, that of Russia 4.15. Portugnl probably contains tho smallest percentage of Jews of any of tho civilized countries. Out of this country's total popu lation of 5,423,132 thero nro to bo found only 481 Jews, representing but .01 of 1 por cent. In Spnln thero aro but 4000 Jews out of a total population of 19,588,688, or .02 of 1 per cent. Atlanta and tho Frank Case Tho Jows nro not nn agricultural peoplo, a fact which explains why in this country most of them havo found their homes In tho great cities. Outsldo of New York, of courso, Philadelphia, Chicago and Boston contain tho greatest number. The Jowlsh popula tion of Philadelphia Is estimated nt nbout 160,000, or a llttlo less than 10 per cent, of the ontlro population. St. Louis, with a totnl population of 687,029, contains 45,000 Jews, with tho samo number credited to Cleve land out of a population of 560,663. San Fran cisco, with 416,912 Inhabitants, contains a Jewish population of 30,000. Atlantn, Ga., thrown into a state of tur moil over tho trial and conviction for mur der of Leo Frank, has a Jewish population of only 4200 out of a total population of 151, 839. This coso attracted natlon-wldo no toriety, and tho charge was freely made that much of tho agitation against cither tho re trial of Frank or tho commutation of his sentenco from death to llfo Imprisonment was of an antl-Semltlo origin. Yet the pro portion of Jows In Atlanta Is extremely small. Tho number of Jows In tho small towns of the United States is almost negligible. An estimate made by the Industrial Removnl Ofllcp shows that 50 of tho principal cities of tho United States, not counting New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and Boston, contained only 287,100 Jews. MORE BLACK SHEEP NEEDED From the Army and Navy Journal. One of the difficulties to be met In the (elec tion of a natural mottled brown for cloth for the armv la the shortage of black or brown sheep. In tho experiments conducted In the Quartermaster Corps under the direction of Brigadier General Honry O. Sharpe It has de veloped that It will require 70 per cent, of brown or black wool to produce the desirable natural color for the cloth under consideration. A leas proportion of dark wool would produce too llsht a color of cloth and would not meet the requirements of the army. In peace time, with the present strength of the Regular Army, there will be no shortage of black wool, but In the event of war It would be necessary to uae dyea In producing the cloth for the uni form of a large army. To provide for this con tingency General Sharpe Is now conducting In vestigations to determine whether a Uooiestlc dje can bo secured for coloring cloth. Unless this can be done the position of the War De partment will not be Improved by adopting the new cloth. The European war hoe called at tention of the War Department to the fact that the preaent oloth for uniforms cannot be pro duced without the uae of Oerman dyeatuffs. This faet la responsible for the effort that is now being made to ae-oure a cloth that can be pro duced without the Importation of any foreign material. Not until the cloth can be found which en be manufactured without the use ot such material will thr be any change Jn the uniform of the army. HINT TO ALJBNISTS The allenlato y, with w)nk or R nod( In wbleb the bm alienists revel, That when a ereuk ayg -i-ve a Bilton from te eoop will be mbMg uie Oovll. Your wurderou fool may be lanitd or net. A sloppy or tjoeest 4rMr; A total abstainer, a mUHaat sot. A cook or a college professor But watea like a. cat hi. nw Innocent move. The momnt he hints of a "mission"; UU fancies are taking a dangerous groove And homicide lurka m hJs vision He'll put some poor Innocent under the sod, Aud ihis is hint, on thji level, RMM the ek with 'a mission from aaO I He eo will be raising toe devil. J- A., lu ita Kroafcly n JUsU, "w ite. - urn mmgfrifMr n 3 .v.v w-m xmm Mimw.mm rMmwMzr, jm'yM mmmw rarrjZLWm&Mmm JW&'jfrM'KZ&&--4i1'' i...jivi ,. JvmSr IWTOW. " . iVl mmmi ",a?-:z" it, " 'r ' ., .JnffHf' XJjTCmW.j eNWfSIV4r AMERICA BREAKS THE RECORD AGAIN She Has Led the World in Steel and Cotton Production, Tall Buildings and Fair Women, and Now Her Hand-made Poetry Has Made Europe Sit Up and Take Notice. By BURTON LITTLE HERB Is an easy way to earn $10. Got any obliging friend who thinks It worth whllo to offer you thnt sum for guessing tho last thing ho has In his mind at tho moment no! not thnt tho last thing ho would over think of thinking of. And then say: Poetry. And collect tho money. If you would mako doubly suro of tho $10, bo distinct and say: American pootry. Tho annoyanco of your friend will be cosy to assuage. Tell him, on the authority of one of our foremost critics, that America la Just now writing tho best pootry In tho world, and ho will be reconciled at onco to American pootry. You will hnvo titillated his patriotism If not his taste. Ho may' go homo to his wife or to his friends at tho club with a now paradox to spring. A Jewel of Absurdity "By George, this is a great country!" ho will say. "Do you happen to know that wo aro Just now turning out tho best Just guess what! Tho last thing you would over think of. Tho best poetry In tho world! What do you know about that! By hea-ons, you can't bent this llttlo old land. Just to show that thcro's nothing wo can't do, wo turn to pootry nnd soy, 'Hollo! Here's something we'd nenrly forgotten. Let's see what wo can do with this darned thing.' And thero you are!" In short, your friend Is Immensely amused with this Jewel of absurdity. Ho has long been proud of our tallest buildings, our biggest bridges, our smartest women and tho like. Ho may know that one of our sculptors nnd at least two of our artists are suro of Immortality. But who besides n fow high brows the kind that wear these rubber tired spectacles would ever havo thought that little old America would be leading the van in poetry? Well, It's true. Not so many years ago, when William Dean Howells had ceased to write poetry, and when Edmund Clarence Stedman, Sidney Lanier nnd Paul Laurence Dunbar had Joined Whltmnn In tho Brent Bllences, thero virtually ceased to be, for a time, such a thing as American poetry. There were, Indeed, In nil the magazines cer tain faithful spaces decorated with symmet rical printed lines. But whenever you wished to damn anything In a. thorough and work manlike mnnnor you pronounced It nbout as funny, about aa serious, about as poor or aa good as "magazine poetry." And maga zine! poots were about as careless of their Identity as second-story men. Now, In 10 short years, tho American mag azines aro printing the largest volume of the best poetry written today. While we are about It, let us pile Pellon upon Ossa and add to tho paradox. As If this Improvement were not startling enough In Itself, It Is, one may truthfully say, largely the work of ono man a young American critic. Real Poetry Once More About 10 years ago the daring thought came to William Stanley Bralthwalte to brave a reading of the magazines, flnd'out how many yards of poetry they had -printed during a single year and how many feet of It were true poetical feet. To his vast sur prise, he discovered that some of this Joke of magazine verse was no Joke at all, but very good poetry Indeed. He published his discovery In a newspaper and ahoeked the country. America, our America, was print ing aome real poetry! He oted chapter and verse, and ealled the wbie country to wit ness the prodigy. And, lo. It was true. Every year since then Mr. Bralthwalto has annually reviewed the output of magewlne poetry, and every year he has found more genuine poetry, moro now and'gefiuine poets ,nd what Is more remarkable of all mora American people reading these poots. It Is not teflmueh to say in JOyears Mr. Bralthwalte has gently but firmly accustomed this country to poots and to pootry. He has emboldened timid young men to venture into verse. He has ealled attention to older poets who had gone uoroad and has stimulated them to gtrongsr endeavor. And together tby b,fcva aij 9t tljom Uek4 up aa iwsMag puWlc tor NOT RIPE YET . . .y:jL'fjr y.frA.im!iM- ".V.- r wM$FiWMMMs 1 Hr . m-h im " ' : ml f,r i I''-. ' i ifM-v $1 till fw ' t ' tf&m mill tiff KsJS ' f"i.iiw TVSEMHE&'vai' ? 'mHBS IBS .y-iy.fcT "VMfiirw.fr -, . .vJ-ar p .-a 1.1 w,, .-, . i 01 n. 1 u&'ir l.-v .Wii.ZJ2"?Z-. yr.iWr'WKSaCW'Weii'-i- wa,w'L rn immtiffi1 poetry. It Is now posslblo to sell books of poetry In this country. Moro volumes of ex cellent home-grown verso wero published last year than over before. American pootry Is attracting attention abroad. After each yearly review now Mr. Bralthwalte receives letters of commendation from tho literary curlouB In France and In Germany, as well na from nil over tho United States. Ho has, to drop very suddenly from tho poetic, put American pootry "on tho map." Making the Commutor Think In tho last two years Mr. Bralthwalte has published In a Bmall volumo tho score or moro poems of tho magazlno year which scorn to him tho best. Into tho second of theso volumes tho man who is wont to con sider pootry either nbovo or beneath him may dip his noso without a blush and with out contempt. In It, on pngo 137, ho will find a poem mndo out of onn nt ihn mnf typical of American things, ono of thoso ex periences wljlch tho average American would tako to bo tho farthest and most safely re moved from poetry. This is Joyce Kilmer's truly lovely and moving poem called "The Twolvo Forty-five." It's nbout nothing but a little midnight suburban train and tho commuters riding home upon It. But no mnn who has ever fidgeted or snoozed through tho usually trying experience of riding homo on a slow nnd belated night "rattler" and thought It tho most hateful ex perience In tho world can take that rldo In tho same frotful spirit after rending Kilmer's poem. Ho will find that a scribbling poet has changed his llfo for a llttlo the better. Some thing that wns beautiful right in his nwn life, hitherto lurking unBecn, will havo been shown to him by that little poet, so that he can forover nfter Beo It for himself. And It will como over him thnt that's what poets are for, and that they nro really worth reading. Sonnets Equal to Keats' . Do you know that In this little volumo of nrnlthwnlto's you will find a poem by Edwin Davles Schoonmaker on "New York" that Is not altogether out of all comparison with nw WT'llm?,a beSt th'Bs-"Crosslng Brooklyn Ferry"? Do you know that a l ,",BO th.er trustwo-thy critics agreed with Mr. Bralthwalte In the discovery that two American poets had written tho best i? ?',n?t!,.dono Slnce Joh" Ke" "ret looked Into Chapman's Homer and made out of his experience one of the few great son nets ever written? True! And why shouldn't It be true! !n J.1,y.8h0U,t,n,t Amerlca nerves and brains tingle in a manner to make Kipling John Masefleld and William Watson In Engfand heritors of all the traditions of the most irreaSuiitr,ture,,n h,stor "x"' " 52 laurels? Here Is a land with every variety of geographical beauty that has ever in spired poets before. Even the business sS; of the life we live teems with th , at least of the gigantic and he daring Our Edlsons nn t,ii., i . . . u""g, Our into nature's mys'tVieT Zf$ wear, a cold people. unfrUnd?y o emoS And ashamed of It, has forgotten ti,. , , n to Dewey and the JRSSl real reason we have had bo llttlo JLT rore a that the stuff for poetry In our L rich to the point of emw,.,l. " ow" lived so much nn, ,. .:,Tr'"0"1- "avlng Indeed, If we do not v,V ' ul' v. W0Jrfu,. I--- .. -- H Will t a and. nnally. theToad eTs to "g ? an audience. 8,v" theP That is PrecUelywharupwtllBij m TWBLVS-HOUR SHIFT FOR PHip.,, ' To fa. der af Bvming Ldgtr: PIREMBN rT"" statement attributed to n m. MyCoaob WM Published; in the i?!? Treasurer otipt. It dealt with an Im?ms! f, Tran tallment of the worklnglrt ?$Y ? "w men. I agree with him for anLtbe C,,V flr but not lo putlog more wLl 'M ot suiK-ed lelaure hours Iwtt?" '" th-lr policemen , entlu "".tnk that the men. Tb, nwm,n 0 ," be Bre Breaur danger. AlUjough Thl f? mtt wlt with dangers. tb.y , JJ leem.n mMt drJ of tMfl walk TuteJ bfLfSl,un, -Mating a, dtartB7r wiu..,(,U wlth U ot i , J ftg ,;.. ) &, mM?i s&&ftM ST I A . rfift sWrttb M'f.xA-r . . gWWCtu VrA-'-viL . j. H .jd; fivi ui uuicr, nut ujuy in iircs, uui niso en TOtiuj to them on their apparatus. In which thuW-A out day or night In nil kinds of weather, ThSyiM very seldom get a decent night's rest, olneJ io mo nro niarm system which is in vogue. Th curtailment df their working hours Is a n.T. sary reform, oven more Important than aa Jj.' ' crease of pay; tho hours nro too lonr. Mora men should bo appointed. Thoy do notlirtu get much so-called leisure hours. The ia oj remaining in the flrchouso 24 hours a iiy, iu days in the week, with every sixth diy oa three or four hours daily to cat and act th' , families, Is absurd. It Is not fair, and tui hllmnnllv1. onl,. aViAttt.4 h. ),..,) rri- " .h...h... u uunw o.iuuh. uv vimiiRVU, Alia pg.i llceman works In eight-hour shifts. FlrfneJ should not only get an Increase In pay, but alw' a iz-nour wonting shirt. A CITIZEN, Philadelphia, July . WHAT A WOMAN WOULD Do If She Could Havo Her Way With ttjjj Milwaukee Public Schools. When Victor Berger married Sfeta Schllchtlm In Milwaukeo 17 years ago he did not then ti-i pect to become a member of Congress. Aoi n Driao certainly had no expectation of pr. siding over the school board. But since thif memorablo date tho husband, who Is now til-' tor of tho Milwaukee Leader, a Socialist dall uovuiiuiJcr, ms oervca, a lerm as a memeer L-i the House of ItepresentatlveB, nnd the wl who was elected to the school board come tlrof ago nnd re-elected for another term in AprjHi became president of tho board by tho vote oljl ner colleagues early this month. A reporjeij found her in her kitchen making Jelly tfiv other day. She turned tho gas down under thill juiiy nuiuo una men uio president or me echkhj board nnd the reporter sat down together tw side the gas rango and talked. "ui "My aim as president of tho board," said itrajt Berger, "will be, as It has been since my tWd tlon to membership on tho board bIx years srl ,n n,n.l. ah .I.a ...... a... .. ... .. .... . . ..u.n. tut wiu KIGUlcai KUUU IV me BTCXICI14 number; to glvo the best nnd broadest cluumj ror educational development to all the children, of nil tho people. I want our boys and linfi to have every chance. I believe that should hiy the only object of a school board. v1l "In order that the children shall have (til cnunce i am open to conviction on all nultt.1 In connection with the schools and educate.! "I shall watch with Interest tho rotarr OA perlment which Mrs. Ella Flagg Young bis brt trodueed In certain Chicago schools and which I understand she proposes to extend stilt j further. It looks like a sane and reasonit'.i means of solving the problem of overcrowdlnj In districts now congested but likely to be iff populated In a few years by the crowding (full ot ino people Dy tne erection of factory ouiia. ings. I havo wanted to make a atudy of this Gary plan, but have not yet been able to do so,1 "The Montessorl Bystem, If It proves to be all! mai nas oeen claimed for It, may in time ee, taken Into the public schools. It Is now reallK In its Infancy, and Its arowth nnd develODmtSt and possibilities for usefulness will be closebjfi 'Just now there Is need for expansion ion tM' part of tho school of trades for girls, not In On. curriculum but In the matter of overcrowdinra There should be a place for every girl whj wma io auena mis school. From time to wi as the need arises, more branches may bij added to the curriculum, as Is being done in the; school of trades for boys, but so far it seems tQ mi iub requirements, save In lack of room. THE NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW Bryan feels tome Interest in the German nil! but more In the German vote. Portland, Ml Argus, German dlnlnmnnv. n- -nrr-nilv llluitral seems devoted to the gentle art of bUmfcj ii an on tne other fellow, Chicago Hernia- We dislike very much to sucrest such thins but It seems to us that the Cincinnati torny came as a nunlshment far that tremendous Bj publican majority Hamilton County gave Uifl year. Houston Post. They are digging up mastodon bones on .j Indiana tarm. But If they want to nna so really immense nkelptnna thv nueht to around In New Jersey for the remains of tB extinct trusts. St. Louts Post-Dispatch. Characterizing General Nelson A Miles M 5 arrogant, self-centered, strutting old peae0! now In his dotage, shows that John I Bulllvi? Is as well prepared to battle Jn words as ! I in tne manly art In the good old aayB--waukee News, AMUSEMENTS B, P. KEITH'S THEATRE CHBBTNUT AND TWBLFTH STHEETS BELLE MASON . BAKER & KEELER ' LADDIE CUFf: FOUR ASiTWEIlP f.IBI 8 WAB THE MARK8T BT ABOVE llfT i RfomlpV VIOLET HEMING Bxuruoicr onoBsstR. am sprouts ni: 8 HARRY imr.UAN k D "ADAH KILLJOY OAXI BABOONS. WARREN ?Si7mI 1-tfc.NK.V A BOYLE Today 3:15. T4 0 VBTTM: OARDJWBR TRIO " . ' TTT-- 7..-Z.T ... . I B LAUlilUNU ri - WOODSIDE PARK Free Vaudeville EV vkninos ;uiKW ryww JTJUM, " 8p DAILY ISO