if.-. r. 8 Euemng jj$& ffielirjer PODLIC LEDGEIt COMPANY CinUS H Jt Ct'RTlB, rtllDI.VT. CheHe I! Luillnitton, VIcotVMlnt; John C.XUrtln, FfeitUrr t4 Tt-Miroteri Philip S Colllna, John B. William. Dtrmteri. GtltToniAL DOAHDi CtaoaH K Ccima, Chairman. T. . WltAI.KT Bjecutlve Editor JOHN C, MAftTIN flenral Bualneaa Manager Published dally at l'catio I.trons IlulIJlnr, Independence Square, Philadelphia,. Lntan-CxftTiiii. Hrosd and Chestnut Streett Atuktio Cm... I'reta-Vnion nutldlnr Nw ToK , IiO-A, Mrtropolltan Tnirer Urrnoit t 820 rord riulldlns RT. Lorn 09 Olofce Dtmveral nulldlnc Chioaoo ..,1303 7liiiti llull.llnr tONDOM 8 Waterloo Place, Tall Mall, S. W. nkws nunn.M'si WjamtOTH nDo... ThD rl niilldlnir New YoK Ilium u The Tlmrt Ilulldlnic Bnus llt-Krll- no Friedrlchatramn Loanon IUhkio 2 Tall Mall Earn, a. W. rials Ucbiau 33 Hue Louie le Grand Rt'nscrttrTioN Tnn.MH By carrier, Djii.t O.nLt, alx cent. Br mall, poalpald -outalde of Philadelphia, except where foreign potae la required, DAILf O.vt.T, one month, twentr-me cents: Dill.T O-d.r, on year, three dollar". All mall nub errlptlona payable In advance. Nonrie Subscriber wlhln addreea chanted mint five eld a well ae new addreea. BELL. JMi) WALNUT KEYSTONE, MA1V UM (Cy rfrfrea all rammunteatten In Evertna Ledger, Independence flfluore, rhUndelphia, gxTratD at tui rmi.Anr.trnu roTorrici i aacoxn- CUM MAIL MATTta. TUB AVEHAan NnT TA1D DAILY ClnCULA- TICW OF T1IK KVENINO LEDOEtt POn JUNE WAS 02,837. rillLAIICM'IIIA, THURSDAY. JULY 22, 1913, An empty stomach Is not a good buttress for free institutions. Gorlzla Mc-mb More Than Warsaw THE Italian campaign began with a rush, then settled down to a monotonous report of small engagements, which has only Just been broken by important advances on tho Isonzo front. Ilcasons and consequences aro plain enough. Tho swiftness of Italy's first advanco was the naVural result of her ability to tako tho offensive. Thero was nothing but small forces to stop her till sho reached tho forts of Austria's first lino of defense. This happened at varying distances from tho frontier. Whero such natural avenues as tho Lako of Garda and tho Adlgo Illvor opened up Into tho Tyrol Italian forces ponotrated to within fifteen miles of Trent. At other points nlong tho mountainous Western front the presence of well-situated forts halted tho advancing columns sooner. lut In all this area tho first lntropld advanco brought tho Italian artillery to points whero they could domlnata tho fortresses which barred tho way. Tho weeks slnco war began havo been occupied with consolidating such positions and preparing for further advances. Tho eastern half of tho front, from tho Carnlo Alps to tho sea, follows tho Austrian first lino of dofenso on tho Isonzo. Tho Ital ian forces rapidly occupied tho country to tho west and crossed tho river both nbovo and below Gorlzla, tho objective. South ward they took Monfalconc, and now only await tho fall of Gorlzla to advanco cast ward and Isolate Trieste and tho peninsula on which Is tho naval buso of Pola. Tho railroad north of Gorlzla Is already cut, and this week has brought advances at Podgora and Sagrndo within tho shortest of striking distances of Gorlzla. Tho question of Gorlzla's fall Is crucial. It Is tho main fortress of that Tu-mllo front, from JIalborghetto to tho sea. Onco It Is Xorred tho Austrian forces will feel tho dis advantage of their smaller forces on tho open plalm They will havo to retlro to tho Carso plateau nnd ultimately to tho lino of the Julian Alps. Tho coast land will bo freed, and tho Italian forces will advanco still further eastward to cut tho railroads at Lalbach and Vlllach on tho road to Vi enna. Tho fall of Warsaw can bear no such re lation to a successful German offonslvo as the fall of Gorlzla will hold to Italy's further campaign. Duties Above Rights AMEniCA has talked of her rights. When .will Bho talk of her duties? There can be no denial of the legality of our trade in ammunitions. Tho only ques tion left Is ono of moral Justice Should wo supply powder, cartridges, shells, weapons of agony nnd death to any fighting forces not our own? Should wo dally sell pain and" mortal anguish for our profit? Or should wo stand aside to "let the best man win"? Tho consequences of nonlntercourso would manifestly be a lengthening of tho war; tho slaughter would go on and on. Whether It would also mean an ultimata victory for Germany, or at least a deadlock by which that country would profit almost as much, Is a dubious matter. Cut either a long-continued slaughter or a triumph for that spirit of militarism and national aggrandizement which wrought tho conflict would be a dis aster ultimately to bo felt as keenly on ono side of the Atlantic as on tho other. Tho Interests of humanity, of liberty and progress, as much as tho interests of Amer ica, nro bound up In an early end to tho war, and In an end favorable to tho Allies. If American ammunition will bring It nearer, then American ammunition must bo shipped across the Atlantic, no matter what under sea power bars tho way. Laying the Train in 1900 GERMAN preparedness seems only equaled by German Intuition. Way back 1p 1900, o they Bay, the prescient foresight of Berlin divined the Great War, the Lusttanla affair. u. Demooratlo convention at Baltimore, some election results and the investing of a $llddle Western rmtleraan with tne port folio of State. Berlin laid deep plans for the future by backing tho antl-Imperlallsm of Candidate Bryan. If any one cares to be lieve that all this Is false, that the Kaiser was out only to stop our expansion Into lands where German colonies might spring, then he has to admit one grievous truth, Ger many's judgment In backing presidential candidates Isn't to be compared with the military ratiocinations of Its general staff. Blazing the Scholastic Trail TUB private school was the pioneer of education in America; when States and Ration were poor it showed the way. The private school Is still the pioneer In Vtv technique of education; for while the. ymttlle Institutions must depend upon triad methods rather than endanger vast invest ments and large responsibilities, the pri vately owned school can go ahead in the v&lusbls but pften dangerous work of ex-p3-tga!italioa Bettt-r endowed and without tte constant pressure of demands for stiffly specttiJlxed voettoual .ufes, they are bound lu ket the standards for public Insti tutions n4 tu voyaajs far Into seas that are ii.v Li-t. tluu uXivu teld neb irkosui. EVEKIKG Hurli In the undeniable truth, as a symposium of col lego and school authorities has voiced It. Yet It remains truo that, oven In pedagogy, governmental Instruments have made prog ress that !s almost comparablo with the ex perimental advances of various departments In Washington, and of Various States bureaus of scientific and Industrial research. It must never bo forgotten that the most promising advance In pedagogic methods and organiza tion havo been mado In tho public schools administered by Mr. Wirt, of Gary. But there It wns tho public schools' problem of large scale Instruction which supplied tho Initiative Strict Accountability for Councils STRICT accountability that Is tho word which the Chamber of Commerco sends Philadelphia's own Prussians In Select and Common Councils. Through Its general sec retary, N. I). Kelly, It appeals to tho citi zens to mako so emphatic a protest ngalnst further delay that tho first business of Councils In Scptombcr will bo to swab the brlno riff tho convention hall bill and rush It through. Mr. Kelly's letter docs more than ask aid In the debt. It sunnlles ammunition. It points out tho tremendous gains In commerce that every convention brings a great city, tho money that tho 20,000 delegates and guests of tho Allied Advertising Clubs wilt bring next season and the still larger sums that would bo spent here If a great conven tion hall nssurcd others besides tho Repub lican convention of tho best of treatment. Millions have gono clsowhero In tho past for no reason but our "unpreparodncss." Further still, tho Chamber of Commerco promises action wh(ch will bring convention after convention to Philadelphia If only wo supply tho hall. It Is organizing a Con vention Bureau with an expert at Us head to exhibit tho advantages of Philadelphia and to keep tho ball a-rolllng when Councils comes out of its "small town" tranco and begins to do something for tho city's namo and welfare. Waiting for tho End of the Farcc-TraRcdy MEXICO CITY ovacuatcd onco moroj Carranza out, Zapata In; tho momen tous clvlo reforms Including a modicum ot law and order temporarily promised the capital, now vanish. If Carranza's forces meet Villa's north ot tho city In a final defeat for ono faction or tho other, then pence may hover for u moment or two. Meanwhile, what about Washington? Tho American public has been pretty thoroughly disillusioned over Mexico's nttompts at self government. Is it to be ns thoroughly dis illusioned over President Wilson's two-months-old threat of Intervention? Reconciling the Boy and the Cap JUDGE MacNEILLE, of tho Juvenile Court, Is a bold man In trying to dissolve tho natural antipathies supposed to exist between tho small boy and tho cop. Krom tlmo Immemorial man has bellovod that It could no moro bo accomplished than ono could causo water and oil to mix. Tho mil lennium will not bo far distant when every boy considers tho policeman on his beat his best friend and when tho policeman recipro cates by being a "big brother." But seriously considered, there Is room for an educational campaign waged on both sides. In this city tho boys' clubs and set tlement houses aro trying to teach their small members greater respect for tho law and not to view every policeman as tholr ln vetorato cnomy. Tho Department of Public Safety has Its part to perform, too. Tho lato Jacob Rlls onco remarked that "ono boys' club Is worth a hundred policemen's clubs." Probably tho Juvcnllo Court can accomplish Its result as -much by tho proper education of tho policeman as by laboring with tho boys. Seeing Europe's Horrors THE horrors of trench warfaro as It is now being waged on both tho western and eastern fronts of Europo cannot bo ade quately portrayed In all Its cruelty. Corre spondents smell tho smoko of battlo or view the struggle from afar, but their vivid de scriptions fail to convoy tho terrible realism of It all. Even tho wounded back from tho front stop short of Its reality when they try to plcturo tho hand-to-hand struggles In tho dark, tho sinking of cold bayonets Into hu man flesh, tho lacerating grip of tho as phyxiating gases. Tho description given to Ellen Adair, tho Evenino Ledoeh's special correspondent, by a thrco-tlmes-woundcd Canadian soldier of his experiences and the atrocities ho saw makes tho reader shudder. To reallzo tho accumulated horror that now grips Europe, JUBt extend his experiences along a doublo front of moro than 1500 miles. Lloyd-Georgo, M, D. Bayonno Is pouring trouble on the oily waters. Warsaw wasraw or It Kaiser gets through. will be when tho Clarion County gavo tho Women's Liberty Bell a ringing welcome. England Is saving her tin cans to tie on the tall of tho dachshund. Tho man with tho 31 axe murders almost has the record on the submarines. The Kaiser should have endowed a' War saw hotelkeeper Instead of a Parisian. The bona, fide citizens named "Pearce" will soon be objecting to Us use by all the cranks of tho nation. "Turks send peace envoys." Is Turkey to mix metaphors and zoology trying to cave its bacon? If tho Kaiser believed In past history, he would make no preparations to enter War saw In triumph. When a lookout sighted a submarine off Nova Scotia, his probable sentiments were, 'Go to Halifax!" ' ii ii .a i i i na In spite of the large demands of the war scare, there are just as many plots in cur rent notion as before. f ' "Germans within range of great key to Warsaw," says the New York Tribune, evi dently expeetlng a "turning' movement, I 1 ,"i lu i Schopenhauer once said that his aensepr turn ot an Ideal man was one who never hesitated and was never In a hurry. Doesn't that fit the present occupant of the Whlto House! n ' ii ii ii'ii' ' It is said that American Arms oonsujne in smoke and gas every yr ft9,Qe)Aj0Mi worth n the eot-ur by-products m century far iwkAIbx dyes- And yet we were (jBtlgiiat when James J- Hill called us th iqgsj; waste ful oat too im eajrtbt EEPGElt - PHICADBEPgiypTHTrBSPAY, 3VKY 2JM? A ROMANCE OF MODERN CHINA A "Now Woman" of tho Orient Shvcd the Life of Her Hero, Mnr ried Him and Brought Him to America Living In Media. By COROLYN BOLLEY ONE cannot visit tho little colony of Chi ncso revolutionists In Media without dis covering that thero Is romanco in tho Orient ns well as In tho Occident. General Hwang Using, who led an unsuccessful insurrection, is thero with tho woman Who helped him to escape and then married him, and ho Is sur rounded by n staff of ablo Chinese men nnd women who aro studying English nnd await ing n favorable opportunity for returning to China with safety. General Hwang haB not learned much English yet, and ho spcakH through Mr. Tong, of his staff. When I called General Hwang wns uncommunica tive, but Mr. Tong was voluble. While Mr. Tong talked tho General would wnlk about tho room listening to the strange tongue. If wo Imaglno tho Chinese women nro shut up In their houses and firmly suppressed by tho men of tho country, wo nro much mis taken, says Mr. Tong. Men nnd womon nhould balance each other ns a pair of scales, Is tho Chlncso saying nnd Mr. Tong thinks ho sees a little, too much tipping In tho feminine- direction In modern China. At all ovonts, In tho recent revolution women played a far moro Important rolo than tho outsider Imagines. As n mnttcr of fnct, thero was a troop of feminine grenadiers, who took a dashing part In tho nctunl fighting. Tho woman who afterward married Gen eral Hwnng Using (tho Chlncso wrlto Ha and pronounco It Sh) almost entirely managed tho financing of tho whole revolution. Sho wns a revolutionist, a rcpubllctst, long before, that and used to address nudlcncos of 1000 souls or moro on tho subject ot governmental re forms. Thero you nro. Ono could hardly call her a bottled-up woman, with nothing to say for herself. And ob for being confined to her parental house, when General Hwang (this was bo foro Bho married him) had takon Canton with about 110 men from several thousand Impe rial Boldlcrs, and then, naturally unablo to hold It, had been subsequently cornered In a small section of tho city, whero ho nnd a llttlo handful of faithful compatriots woro putting up n hopoTcss fight and courting ex termination, this daring young womnn ac tually penetrated In person to tho house whero tho gencrnl wns barricaded, argued him out of his determination to dlo thero for his causo, which was as difficult as reaching him In tho first place, nnd spirited him awny to Hongkong. Prefers Media to tho Cemetery So that Is really how It happens that Gen eral Hwang, with his wlfo and llttlo son (and with "a price on his head"), Is spending a quiet summer at Media, learning to speak English, Instead of an ovon quieter ono In "Tho Sacred Besting Placo of tho Seventy Heroes." Had tho Ideas and tho Ideals of tho compa triots been carried out In tho supposititious republic now established, China might bo lending the world In tho feminist movement. It wns certainly tholr plan to give women a pnrt In tho government, and for a tlmo thero wire. In fact, feminlno Senators. But by this time women's rights havo gone by tho board with tho rest of tho truly republican meas ures Instituted directly after the revolution. Mr. Tong claims, by tho wny, that tho first suffrage paper In tho world was cdltod by a rtoman In China. Mr. Tong says wo Americans aro often grossly mistaken In our Ideas of Chlncso social customs becauso wo hear of tho facts, but not of tho conditions that Justify them. For oxample, tako tho soiling of girls into slavery. Now, ho says, tho Chlncso people look down on that custom and hato It Just ns wo do hero, nnd It Is only tho terribly poor, tho starving mnn, who would sell his daughter. Also, when sho bocomeaof age, at 18, sho Is automatically freed anyway. So selling her Into slavery only means having her temporarily adopted, ns It wore, by peo ple who must clothe and feed her In return for the llttlo work they can get out of her. At ono tlmo tho Manchu Government tried prohibiting this custom, with tho plctttresquo result that tho deadly poor to whom tho stork presented femalo Infants trooped up to tho Infanticide rock and dropped tho disap pointing parcel over. "A Very Unattractive Bunch" If tho women of China wanted to go about moro In public they could very easily do It, Mr. Tong thinks. But It Isn't so pleasant In China; It Is dustier and conveyances aro less convenient. Besides, thero nobody wants to go off Into tho sparsoly settled parts of tho country, as we do hero. That Is because those places aro full of pirates yes, pirates whom Mr. Tong describes as a "very unat tractive bunch." Thero Is governmental efficiency for youl "Land nnd sea pirates galore, and assassins and cut-throats In tho cities. Tho compatriots were endeavoring to clean tho country of these nnd other pests, and they do not feel that good government for China Is yet a forlorn hope, "But we are not a people like the Mexi cans," says Mr. Tong, "always1 complaining and tearing down." The Chinese aro, most of all, a peaceful, thoughtful lot of men, not from Inertia, but because they have learned from experience In the same turbulent ago of Europo In which the French had 14 revolutions the Chinese got away with 171 that wars are a devas tating, foolish Indulgence. So the Chinese compatriots, like our own President, are going In strong for watchfully waiting. In the meantime the autocratlo Dictator-President, Yuan Shl-Kal, seems to be breaking up every good thing started or accomplished by the revolution, It may all end well, but It looks like a waste of time to me. MODEST EDITORS All hall the modett editors who grace the Keyatone State, And pas up fame and laurel wreaths and .will not be sailed great. Who. given ehelee of Junketing to the PatlHe eoast. Or sweltering: In ometi, decided on the roast. But yesterday our Governor announced the name Of three, "The greatest men within the State, meat noted, too." said he. "I knew they are the sratet, for I asked the edltere Whs !d this State of William Pepn In Jour- nalttlc wars." This mush annoyed the Oevemer-but there Is iae to tell Ot FeMMflvaate' editors who pieked the rt i wJL Thsr 4 JJ . thus editwre, fr graft nd Net use of all the msay named as greatest hlmwlf TUy. s i .- f . , nllif nasa I n n JSjII I m .cITXl GSixRES7 m i MEN OF THE MAYORALTY CAMPAIGN Congressman J. Hampton Moore's Name Headed the "Harmony Conference's" List of Possible Candidates He Has a Long Record of Honorable Service at Home and in Washington. . By HERBERT S. WEBER This ts the eighth hi a series of sketches of men who may figure in ttib mayoralty campaign, intended to let the voters know something about who they arc and what they havo done. J. HAMPTON MOORE has been an insti tution for so long In Philadelphia that comparatively llttlo Is known about him. That Is tho way with institutions; they aro taken for granted and rarely subjected to scrutiny. Ho mado up his mind very definitely soma years ago about politics, and ho has never changed it; a courso which has great ad vantages; but it has Its drawbacks, too. For, if a man's views aro fixed thero 13 no use In arguing about them, and what Is not argued about Is not talked about, and what Is not talked about Is forgotten. 3 j. hami'ton Moona 'J-no average ciuzcn has this impression of him. Ho will say, "Hampy Mooro? Yes, he's all right. What's he for? Well, Hampy's for a high tariff always been a strong Republican. And then that other thing what do they call It? Oh, yes; waterways, Inland waterways. He's. strong for that." Thero Is another thing which ho has al ways been strong for, but which Is often forgotten. That is the Organization. Ho is a great deal better than tho Organization, and his personality Is distinct enough not to sug gest tho Organization every tlmo his namo Is mentioned. But ho bellevos In It, nnd his political philosophy Is Imbedded In the ccmont of Its foundations. And that has been so much taken for granted that It Is often forgotten. However, It was forcibly brought to mind tho other day when his name appeared at tho head of eight to whom tho leaders had narrowed their field of pos sibilities for Mayor. Tho tall of that list was William S. Vare. Needless to say, It was a Penrose-McNIchol list. ' Touch nnd Go With Varo Powder Here Is tho situation: Varo has virtually thrown down tho gauntlet to the McNlchol faction. He has all but announced his can didacy for Mayor. Ono unguarded and Inso lent remark from McNlchol or Penrose, and tho die wpuld bo cast. It Is touch and go with tho Varo powdor. So tho ochr sldo Is keeping tho matches In a safo place. Mean while, It has shrewdly pressed forward the boom of Mooro, and the Vares aro feeling about to see how strong he would bo. An Indication of this ,1s tho Varo flirtation with tho labor vote; for "Hampy" Mooro has cer tainly offended labor, has shaken his fist at tho labor lobby on tho floor of tho House of Representatives. This explains tho Vares' smiles upon labor, and shows that they take Mooro's candidacy seriously. They havo good reason to take It seriously, For prob ably no other man in tho city could make such great Inroads Into t,ho Vare majorities In the downtown wards where foreigners abound, Moore Is popular among the Ital ians; tho Baldls are his good friends. He has also & stronghold on tho hearts of the South Philadelphia Jewish voters, And he is not afraid of labor. For even after his defi ance of It, ho received 24,000 out of 30,000 votes cast for Congressman In his district. Tho "friend of the Immigrants," as the Con gressman Is known downtown, strengthened his hold on the Imagination of the foreign element by fighting the literacy teat for Im migrants. It had been hoped that Moore would be a compromise candidate, because of his long and well-seasoned Organization record; but It would seem that the Vares are not so zeal ous for the Organization as a traditional body, but rather are determined upon found ing an entirely new Organization in whloh tha only question of harmony would be the harmony between Brother Bd and Brother U Not a Political "Tool" The WoNlohol people are not altogether "ornzy" abput Moore. The aggressive and astute Congressman knows the "game" tec well to be a political tool, and all they oould hope from him would be, first, the oonttnua. Uon of the prestige dt the Organization; second, the defeat of the Varea (by no means certain b my case); and third, the feeling that bauw of his tong association with Organization leaders be would agt have the heart to "turn down old friend." It would not hrwoalw with his past, tbey TIMES HAVEN'T CHANGED think. If ho should turn reformer at this Into day. For ho served Ashbrldgo faithfully, and Ashbrldgo rownrded him bounteously. It wns Just fifteen years ago this month that Moore, prlvato secretary to that Mayor, first figured largely in tho nowspapor columns. When a nowspaper man goes Into politics, and Mooro was a nowspaper man, ho usually becomes prlvato secrotary to tho Mayor. Tho young man was an affable and popular sec retary. Ho was 3G years old then. Ho wns llttlo known to tho city at largo when tho Mayor decided to mako him City Treasuror. An outcry of protest followed Ashbrldgo's autocratic action In slating candidates bo foro tho primary. There had been aggravat ing circumstances which Increased popular Indignation. McNlchol, then a Select Coun cilman, had publicly announced that the nominees for City Treasurer nnd Register of Wills would bo whomever Ashbrldgo desired. Insuranco Commissioner Durham also blunt ly admitted that tho Mayor was powerful enough to dictate. Jacob J. Seeds had im agined ho had a chance, and had Innocently called himself a candidate. Ho went to Dur ham with his grievance. "If any decision has been reached about tho City Trcasurershlp," ho said, "I ought to bo Informed, as I do not caro to bo posing as a candldato if somo ono else has been slated." Durham gave him a hard stare. "Mooro has been agreed upon," ho snapped. Tho prlvato secretary had wanted tho place threo years before, but had withdrawn In tho Interest of harmony. Ho knew tho Treas ury well, had been chief clerk thero from 1801 to 1897. Tho Mayor's choice- for Register of Wills wa3 Jacob Singer. Thero was some thing sinister nbout tho fact that Ashbrldgo had demanded theso two offices for his favor ites, for tho fees they brought to tho Treas urer and tho Register amounted to $200,000 during tho terms of ofllco. Tho Independents set up tho cry. "What aro you going to do with tho foes?" Mooro refused to say what ho would do with them, whother ho would keep them for himself or turn them over to tho Treasury. It was a presidential year and McKlnley carried the city by a plurality of 125,000, but so great had been the feeling against Ashbrldgo that his candidate for City Treasurer received a plurality of only 48,000, or 78,000 less than tho head of tho Re publican ticket. Settled tho Feo Question Mooro soon showed tho right spirit about the fees. He sold he did not want them nnd, what was more, ho did not want any other City Treasurer In tho future to appro priate them cither. Ho wanted tho matter settled and ho placed all tho fees In a sepa rate account In tho Treasury. He Instituted a test case and tho courts decided that tho fees should revert to tho city. His wide knowledge of manufacturing con ditions in tho United States was recognized by President noosevelt, who appointed him chief of tho Bureau of Manufactures, De partment of Commerce and Labor, In 1905, Ho soon gave up this post to become presi dent of tho City Trust, Safo Deposit and Surety Company, and was appointed by the court receiver of tho company Bhortly after ward. About this time George Castor died and Mr. Mooro was elected to serve tho unexpired term of tho Representative from tho 3d District In the 69th Congress. He has been eleoted to every succeeding Con grees by overwhelming pluraljles. His dis trict Is spread over the bailiwicks of the Vares and the rival faction, Including the 2d, 3d, 4th. 6th, 6th, 11th, 12th, 16th. 17th. 18th and 19th Wards. Demanded a 35-foot Channel tp tho Sea The month Mr. Moore took his seat In Con gress, In 1906, he made immediate demand for a 35-foot channel from Philadelphia to the sea. Ho aided In forcing an early com pletion of the 30-foot channel, and agitated and organized for the greater channel until Congress, in 1908, approved it. in 1907 he organized the Atlantic Deeper Waterways Association, of which he was the first presi dent, being re-ajected unanimously eaoh year. A part gf this project Is the improve, ment of the upper Delaware from Phlladel. phla to Trenton at a depth of 12 feet, for whteh he secured an appropriation. In 198 Moore gained the passage of a bill for a new immigrant station at Phila delphia and later for an enlargement qt the station, the total appropriations being t45 -000. He waji in the thick of all tho tariff lights, opposing the Underwood bills stren uously. He ottered an amendment to the Underwood-Palmer Iron and steel schedule providing that "No article of foreign manu facture upon which labor Suu bew puy4 MUCH for moro than eight hour's per day shall be admitted to tho United States," but was, ot course, opposed by tho Democrats. ,'; A WORD FOR THE MIDDLEMEN , To the Editor of tho Evening Ledger: '' Sir I rend with amazoment In this pvcnlng',! Evening Lcnacn tho nrltclo under the healnsy w. ....u vu.u .vu ,,.-,...,, u, .a.,.,. iMj ,t u,, a Victor II. Lawn, and to do Justlco td broken? 3 jouuers ana retailors, K wjouia do wcii to state that Mr. Lawn has vlowed tho subject fromTl nnn nnrrln nnlv TiVi, 4!m nnlrt ,.? Iltim,..,!.... I may sny that you can form the opinion thnt Paris Is tho most beautiful placo by vls Itlng tho Champs Elysccs. or that It It Is tha heart of poverty by visiting the MontmartiVa ocuiiuu, tvticiu na il juu ivuuiu UIKC U run Up to tho ton of Eiffel tower on a clenr dnv nnr! patiently view nil parts of Paris through ac'a formed would be nearer right. Mr. Lnwn ha npunrently not studied tho different functlona of 'brokers, Jobbers and retailers very carejl fully or lie would not mako such broad nnd uttf Just statements. s. SI. x Philadelphia, July 20. A PROTEST FROM TEXAS To the Editor of tho Evening Ledger: ,; Sir It seems that tho tlmo has come when i person cannot think along pro-German lines, or United States Government officials do their; sworn duty In enforcing tho neutrality laws of, this nation regarding tho enlistment of men te be used In warfare against a friendly natlonSj without Incurring tho displeasure, not to txjl&L Wnitti. nf (Mini, nntrlnfo nu 'Amnn,n T AtMX.rfl No. 2813." My Impression hns boon that tho American? region is organized lor tne purposo or the de fense of tho United States in tlmos of war, but it seems that I am mistaken and that In addi tion to their many duties hero the legion has rallied to tho defense of Eneland in the tlma of her need, thus showing that, at least zmongm certain or its members, it Is International la scope. "No. 2613" makes charges In his letter ot July 2 In tho Evening LEDOEtt which, Includ ing tho one of "Germany operating a wireless station with Oerman military nnd naval offi cers in charge," surpass tho wildest dreams o( tho "spy-catchers" in dear old England. I feel satisfied that when the pro-Dritlsh con tingent of tho legion becomes strong chough numerically another ono of our prized liberties will bo ruthlessly snatched from us tho right of freedom of speech for No. 2613 objects in no uncortaln terms to our German-American friend's discussions of "Tho European Mad house" Now. No. 5B1S will Tiroh.iWv hln lilmaelf to litat trusty typewriter and assail mo as "Another I one of thoso German-Americans of the hyphen- ated variety." To set right this modest patriot, a who blushlngly hides his Identity under the folds' J of the American Legion, I will say that I am not 5 German nnd have never been closer to Germany a than Milwaukee, Wis. i It Ib my desire to see tho least bit of fair play Introduced Into the controversy now raging J regnrdlng tho rights and neutrality of our na- jj tlon. To the mind of many Southern cotton ralsors the fact that tho producers of this non- j contraband necessity lost 180,000,000 because q ot England's blockade of Sweden, Holland, etc., J and will probably lose as much more this year on tho snme account, leads one to believe that nil tne "Illegal Measures ' are not to be found In Oormany's camp. E. A. CREWS. Fort Worth, Tex., July 15. THE HENRY JAMES STYLE From the Boston Transcript, Henry James says he will renounce his Amer ican citizenship and become a British subject,; but then a Henry James subject always was' a long way from Its predicate. THE NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW AttacKs on unarmed passenger ships have not vmou. vjcuiiuHy la lu UD juuficil uy una .avws. than words. Cleveland Plain Dealer. , Senator Penrose's auto may have brokemM uuwii turn uum&iii nre, dui you never jiiu of anything happening to his steam roller5 Boston Transcript. ! Why not? If poisonous gases are to be uied In war. the conquering generals of the futU'; may also employ disease breeding bacteria. Iiuntjiieiu Mtjjuuwcun. :i. A reserve army Is the most serious C,efenj9 proDiem we nave, .-Naval defense is not a prunes lem in tne same sense at all, it is a rnuisfi of doing things. at. Louis Star. Some college professors who have been flr$ ror exercising the "right of academlo rre dom" would never have been heard of If ttiC hadn't been subjected to that ejectlvo proc tuenmona. va., isews Leader, In this event (the success of the United States In keeping out of the war), we believe the suDreme issue of 1918 will hn "Whnt nnrt shall the United States take in world politics, WiM now snail u prepare to taKe ltT" in oinir words, the campaign will turn on the deflnl' tlon of Americanism In Its world elgnlncanctvS Thtrtn cm T?uri4n Tne !Xtfl 3 AMUSEMENTS m B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE! OHBSTNUT.AND TWELFTH STREETS SPECIAL! Miss. Swan Wood WILL ACT AS BARMAID TODAY 1;M TO 8i0 P. M. TODAT AT KBITII'S BAR IN THE CRYSTAL LOI1BY A CORKJWfljBMp 8UOW IN THh CuOLBUT tlUUSS TUB WORLD THE 1IAHKKT ST AlUlVli lOT. Stanley 11 A. M. TO 11.16 e ' LEONORE ULRICH In " K I I. u t. N " tnteUONY OaCUMSTKA and SOIOISIJ KtXQN'S O-BBIJBN. 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