a PUBLIC LEDGER COMFANY C1HUS K. K. CURTIS. PMilttnT. Ctertae R.t.lMliitii,VlcrmMtnti Jehn O Mirtln, gaemary as Treotnrerj millp 8. Collins, Jean B. ywt. Director a. XDITORIAIi VOAIlDt Ct ft. K. Cnin, Chairman. , . WHALTir ..ExrcutlT B4ltet KMtN C WARTIW........,Qnrl ButlneM Maaant rnfeiutixi 4iir at rmuo lihu Buiiainr. lnlriianf Sahara, Philadelphia. tMN Cmnit. ........ Dread and Chetnut Rtreett ATUXTtO Cllt... , .rrttt-Vnlen Bulldlnc r -. banott. .... S2 ford nulMIni f. Icie. ..... ...... .40 Olaae imcrnl nutldlnc Clca.... 1202 Trlenne Mulldlnr IfiMH...... S Walerle Place. Tall Mill, S. W. r. NEWS BUnBAUSl W.emwaTOK Bcaain Tli ! nulldlnc rjr Yaic Bnuv. ., , Th T(mf nulldlnc mil Jtctus.. ...60 rtledrlchitraiM Lltaf BEHiV. 3 Pall lUll Kilt, R. W, Wttm BCMMV S3 Iue Loula It Oraad SUBSCniPTION TERMS . Br arrl,r. DiiLT Oxli, ill cante. Br mill, pettpald WtaM cf rhlladelbhla, except where ferelm pwill it rlrd, Diilt o.ilt, ane menth, twenir-flre rente f XtollT O-ai, en year, thru dotlara. All mall me irtptleaa parable In adrenc. .Nortca Subtcrtbera wlihlnr addreie chanted muit (It aid at well aa new addrtia. JHX. MW TAUTCT KETSTOKK. MAIN HM tT Aiirtit all eammtmlraMeiw f JCvtnlnt L4etr, lderfdtnoe Stuart, rhilaHphla. ' wHTna At rni rmt.itiit.rnu roiromca is icoh- OUII M1IL MiTTM. THE AVEIAOE NET PAID DAILT ClriCUkA- TION OP TUB EVENING LEDGER FOR JULT WAS M.SJ4. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, AUCUST 36, 1915. 'o man tctthout an Ideal has ever teen It realized. Why Should Wc Pity Mexico? VILLA. Corrnnza and Zapata have rav aged Mexico and divided the loot. The spoils In all Mexico are not so rich i as the wealth the city or rnuaaeipnia win expend during the next four years. The op- portunltles for graft are not so great, tho possibilities of pillage not more attractive ' and the wantonness of the leaders who have led their country Into the depths Is not more sheer than that of tho eminent gentlemen Who are now openly conspiring to kidnap tho municipal Government, and through It lend the splendor of legality to their nefari ous ambitions. It is humiliating to members of a great party, renowned for Its humanltarianlsm, its long service In behalf of the people, to see It yoked to the selfish ambitions of mere "leaders," men who have done nothing and have sought to do nothing but acquire for tunes through administration of tho public funds, men who conceive of government as a thing to be milked, a till from which to draw gold. It Is even moro humiliating to this great city to perceive these petty lord Jtngs quarreling with one another as to the proceeds, each fearful that the others will play him false. Why, In the name of all that Is decent. If "Jim" McNIchol dare not trust the Vares. should the city trust them? Why, If tho Vares know so 'much about "Jim" McNIchol that they put respirators on When he comes nround, should the people of Philadelphia trust him? These "leaders" know more about each other than the ordi nary citizen knows about any of them, and they are as wary of each other as a mouse Is of a cat. Good reason! They tell us that wo must have a Mayor Of these men's choosing. They meet at the seashore and inform us that the question Is pot whether Philadelphia shall have a gang Mayor, but whether It shall be a McNIchol gang Mayor or a Vare gang Mayor. For the Word has gone out that there Is to bo a re turn of "the old days." Their Instruments are tuned to play "Hail. Hall, the Gang's . Xll Here." There is a promise of milk and honey to the hangers-on. They are told that there will be no hard times in Phila delphia this winter, because for every man who "votes right" there will be a share of money from the public till. Dut who aro these "leaders" to tell the citizens of Philadelphia anything?, By what . warrant do they Issue their edicts; by what mockery of logic do they pose as patriots and hope to delude a whole city Into the belief that efficient government has been In efficient, that It Is in the interest of tax- jpayers to turn tho wolves into the fold, that the time has come for a return to barbarism? The "leaders'" attitude Is a challenge to r, Philadelphia, the challenge of Lilliputians to a Gulliver, There is no place here now, o tolerance for municipal Kalserlsm; there Is no time for conspirators to clothe them selves in a cloak and conceal their Identity. ,Th people tasted blood when they won the t transit fight They saw what they could do. They know at last their power. There is no cancer politic that the white light of pub licity cannot dissolve. And In this cam paign, it may as well bo known, let every . inan who raises his head be sure that his1 hands are clean. There are great Instru mentalities dedicated to the principle that Philadelphia corrupt cannot grow and that Philadelphia uncorrupt cannot help growing. SJy glimpse the destiny of the city, and heart and soul they are determined that no Ifislj ambitions shall prevent Its consum mation. There will be no sneaking Into the .City Halt Who enters there must go in tyr$M the front door with his shoea on. ClUsaww for weeks have been watching the nanuvernss of politicians quietly, but with w(irst nevertheless. They we ahead not a xJndiMfr, endless nath, but a c)ar-cut ave uev Thsy km willing, even Htuciou. to elect HepubUcsn, although national politic hg no purt la a munlcl))! campaign; but he jBust be a real republican, one whom the "te4rs't must support, not a manikin with u chain en his, la. If such a Republican 4hy .biinot t. if tbrf party Is so tie u by jBiu.. ,u macalnators that In the gre1( erf juiu i"i CHI only a playtlilmr fee jeuna '. t.. tk flt, thtt the ia4ti4 t,t ' ' Um inHBunity will sMrrt lUalf. The .n .h. tri subws Mwty of ami At EVENING T,EflQBB-PHlLAPBLPHIA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 1015., to be Mayor He knows where and how to find them. You have a chance, you gentlemen who think that you have this city tied up In tv bundle and ready for delivery? you have a chance yet to get on the right train. Tour own blunderlngs and distrust, your hate of one another, may checkmate all your en deavors and compel your support of a decent man, an efficient man, a strong and hon orable cltUcn. Therein lies your only hope, for If you penetrate to Warsaw, If you fling your mercenaries Into the citadel of munici pal power, then will your final defeat be the more certain, the moro Irredeemable. Prog ress Is always forward. It steps backward, If ever It does, only for a greater leap onward. Let no cltlten be discouraged. The doings of the "lenders" have filled the news columns. The sober Judgment of the great masses has not yet had ajiearlng. Unless It Is truo that defeat Is certain for these mon who aro planning to put the city In pawn: unless It Is true that neither the Vares nor McNIchol can name the next Mayor of Philadelphia: unless It Is certain that civilization means efficiency and good government: If, In fact, our own Villas and Carransas and SCapatas can stalk crowned through the great halls of government, why, indeed, should wo pity Mexico? But they cannot. A Recommendation to Be Pigeonholed IP WE grant that tho Government should operate tho postofllces, there Is no logical objection to Government operation of tho telephone nnd telegraph lines. What ob jection' there Is to Government ownership of the telephone nnd telegraph Ih directed not against tho principle of public control of the transmission of messages, but against the expediency of extending the activities of the Government In a branch of service where It has not succeeded in demonstrating Its ability to do business on a business basis. The Postoince Hepartment has always been conducted at a loss. Manipulating bookkeepers, under orders from their political chiefs, have figured out a profit two or threo times, but there has never been any real profit. The Commission on Industrial Rela tions, which has recommended the purchase by the Government of the telephone and telegraph companies, urges the change on the ground that the companies are over capitalized; that their employes aro over worked and underpaid, nnd for the addi tional reason 'thnt they aro engaged In a public service, nnywny. These arc reasons that are not reasons, and we come back to tho question of expediency. Governmental service is notori ously inefficient. The BrltUh telegraphs, operated by the Postal Department, charge less for messages than Is charged In Amer ica; but thero is always a deficit to be made up by a general tax, and when this tnx Is apportioned the cost of the messages to the people Is creator than in the United States. When the privately owned telephone companies were taken over by the British Government two or three years ago there was nn Immedlnte falling off in efficiency. Tho high salaried experts were dismissed and low salaried civil service appointees took their place, and every one was dissatisfied. It may be admitted that If the American Government should take over the telegraph and telephone companies tho employes would get more pay for less work; but until tho Goverpment succeeds In doing In a more businesslike way the business In which it is already engaged the country will bo better served under the present arrange ment. "Gallopscious" MARK TWAIN once wrote that the casual observer upon seeing a woman's lead pencil would conclude, she had sharpened it with her teeth, but he would find on In vestigation that she had used a hairpin. This Is a tribute to the ability of women to accomplish their ends even under diffi culties, as well as evidence of tho universal adaptability of the wire utensil found on every dressing tnblo and on every woman's head. The number and variety of things that can be done with this Implement are doubtless greater than nro possible for any other human Invention. There Is nothing which she carniot do with a hairpin, from buttoning her shoes to repairing an auto mobile. The last achievement was accom plished the other day by a young woman whose electric car was stalled In the street. A wire was needed and there was none aBout save in her hair. Sho forthwith ex tracted two or threo hairpins and they were used with success nnd the car moved on. Every mother knows thnt there is noth ing so effective for cleaning the ears of her children, though the doctors object to tho use of such unscientific instruments, and every boarding school girl has discovered, as one of them felicitously remarked, that "Plum Jam eaten on a hairpin at midnight Is gallonsclous." We have no doubt that If put to it a woman could build a house with no other tool. Possibly Villa could gather some recruits In Georgia. , It is not well to be too optimistic. Con gress meets In December. There are two or three roads to fame, but Infamy is not one of them. If the Germans are not careful they will drive the nusatans Into Constantinople, The British will take care pf the cotton. Let the planters take care of themselves. f A Mayor Is Important, but the capacity of a people for self-government Is 'more Im portant. i i - The mortality would be less If they shot men out of cannon Instead of shooting can non at thepi. When Josephus Daniels gets through with the navy there will be nothing left of Josephus Daniels. .AKer all. It Is not sex so much as coat petency that should determine an election to the Board of Education. ii H ii.ln.ni ip. ii Anyhow, the American flag gives more protection than mpat any other these days. But Washington Is not to Vis me for that. ' ii It has Uen pointed out tht tfc wewst PMdlctto arf th Wtfcr Burau Kays cos through. That U the way with r-rrtmtr. THE PORTSMOUTH'S "TATTERED ENSIGN" Sloop-of-War Which Brought tho Stars and Stripes to San Fran- cisco Burned in Boston Harbor By GEORGE 0. THOMPSON PERHAPS It's because tho United States Is a youngster among nations and has nut yet grown up to a proper respect for tradi tions and relics that every now and then some foreigner seizes occasion to accuse us or Irreverence, ns If It were a national trait. Tho domestic observer sees a difference be tween our East and our West In this matter. It Is. Indeed, a subject of many ramifica tions, social, political, and so on. It finds a placo In discussions of constitutional change, and the Liberty Boll has lately furnished a text for civic sermons. The proper function of traditions nnd relics Is to servo ns ballast. Too largo an accumu lation might result In tophcavlness. If speed Is the American Idea, and some say It Is, overloading Is to be especially nvoldcd. California has Its fair share of hlstorlcnl memories. When It comes to romnnco one might think from the bibliography of the Stato that It has something npproachlng a monopoly on that more or less sentimental commodity. The story of the conqulstadorcs and the missions and the establishment of tho twenty-four day "Bear Flag Republic" and the conquest of 1S46 and the Forty-niners Is romantic enough. No visitor to the great fairs can fall to see that tho present glories of California aro wonderfully colored by tho past. It Is a colorful State, historically as well as otherwise. Now a "tattered ensign" associated with the American conquest of California and the ndmlsslon'of tho State Into tho Union has been lowered and laid a way to speak figura tively, for tho way of It Is not at all senti mental. In other words, tho old sloop-of-war Portsmouth was burned yesterday on tho mud flats of Boston Harbor. The Conquest of California For sevcrnl months before the outbreak of actual hostilities between tho United States nnd Mexico tho sloop had been cruising along tho Pacific coast. Its commander, Captain Montgomery, had no means of knowing what Washington Intended to do, for means of communication across tho Continent were not what they are todny, but ho scented trouble nnd was on tho alert. Tho Ports mouth sailed Into the harbor of San Fran cisco some months before Commodore John Drake Slont with his flagship, the Savannah, and two other ships, the Cyane and the Le vant, reached tho scene. Commodore Sloat had gone to tho Pacific coast with Instruc tions of a year's standing to take all Cali fornia ports and hold them In the event of war with Mexico. Tho captain of the Portsmouth knew no more than Commodore Sloat of what had de veloped In the negotiations between the United States and Mexico, but the presence of his now-famous sloop In tho harbor, then known as Yerba Buena, was enough to give htm control of the port and to assure pro tection to the Inhabitants of the little village that has slnco grown Into the city of San Francisco. At tho same time, while await ing news that war had been declared, Cap tain Montgomery was careful that his vessel should not take any warlike step which might embarrass his country. In the meantime the "Pathfinder," General Fremont, had not exercised all these scruples, and on lund was doing some vigorous fluht Ing. Although the Portsmouth had taken San Francisco, Captain Montgomery refused to interfere with the escape by boat of Cap tain de la Torre's party which Fremont was chasing. But as soon as the news was re ceived that war had been declared the Ports mouth figured more prominently In tho ex citing events of the following months. From tho moment California was seized until It was ceded to the United States at the close of the Mexican War and admitted as a Stato l,n 1850, It bristled with excite ment. When gold was discovered there Im mediately after the war nearly a hundred thousand adventurous men burst through tho mountain passes or reached tho new State by boat around Capo Horn. Into this land was poured 'the motllest collection of men Imaginable. Then that wonderful transportation system of the pro-railroad era came Into existence. It was tho pony express which carried letters from Independence, Mo., across tho plains and mountains to California In ten days at a cost of five dollars per halt ounce. That was when our famous "Buffalo Bill," William F. Cody, came into his fame by ono continuous ride of 3S4 miles. The best record of the pony express was the accomplishment of 1950 miles In seven days and seventeen hours, by means of relays. Then came tho Merchants' Ex press, which employed D000 men, 2000 wagons and 20,000 oxen In carrying freight across the Continent. "Old Ironsides" It was because of the part that the Ports mouth played In the events of 1845-60 that the nppeal to save It from destruction met with so much popular approval. The vessel, perhaps, was hardly entitled to the same consideration as the famous frigate Consti tution, now moored to a dock In Charlestown Navy Yard und dally visited by scores of people, but at least it suffered the same Ignoble fate from which ''Old Ironsides" was saved when Its fighting days were over by the stirring poem of Oliver Wendell Homes: Ay, tear her tattered ensign downl Long has It waved on high. And many an eye has danced to see That banner In the sky; Beneath it rang the battlo shout And burst the cannon's roar The meteor of the ocean air ' Shall sweep the clouds no more. Where was the laureate of the Portsmouth? KINGDOMS Kings of a hundred preadnoughts, ruling tne Seven Beat Parked artillery, powder and steel shall ye endure by theae Keeping an armed lordahlp of earth whereto your sentries itandT What are Akkad and Assur nowT Shards, in the drifting sandl Kings of ft thousand forges, king of ten thou- sand men Liner and limited, shuUlewUe thrown, from port Unto aeiport again, Weaving a web of Infinite threads, giants of hand and of brain- "' ol Where are the galleys Phoenicia sailed: Ooze, In a desolate malnl Kings of the soul's out-searchlngs, kings of the far Ideal Toeta philosophers, prophts-the Christ-lift- lng men nearer the Heal Not unto t as the war lords go, not a the lords of greet, But rising Jfpm fe to llfe-KUmi a4 I MM " Pl WHY NEED THE STRATEGY OF An Explanation of the German Which Began Near Namur a Year Ago and Ended on the Marne, September 5, 1914 By GILBERT The dlafrramii ore reproduced by courtesy of llearxt'n International Library, puhliaher of "The Elementa of the Great War," by llllalre Belloc, from which material for the following article has been drawn. PRECISELY a year ago yesterday there began In Franco the mllltar movement known ns tho retreat from Mons. To tho readers of newspapers the outstanding feature of that retreat was, In fact, not a retreat but an advance the almost miracu lous advance of tho German army, drfvlng before it the flower of the French army and the British Expeditionary Force, until it came to the very gates of Pnrls itself. Yet Paris was saved, tho great drive Bpent It self, and after a yenr the battlo In the west Is still indecisive. How and why did theso things happen? What was the strategy of the Great War a year ago? Tho simplest way to arrive at some an swer to these questions Is to consider, with out reference to the belligerents, two armies Ono of them Is superior in numbers to tho other. The two can bo represented so: 3 ) jo laaacj It is clear that other things being equal, munitions, transport and quality of men, the larger force will shatter the smaller, bending It on both A sides, tearing It through tho centro for an utter rout. Tho problem of the small er force, then, is to effect an arrange ment by which a greater force can bo met nnd held in check. Such an ar rangement is that of the open strategic square, which is shown herewith. (It must be understood from the first that these diagrams merely repre sent, but do not picture, what, actually hap pened.) In this strategy we will say that 12 units are opposed to 16, precisely the numbers shown In the first diagram. Tho units In A may be called the operative corner; the three other units nro the masses of maneuver. "Tho Operative Corner" It Is tho duty of the operative corner to go' forward to meet the enemy, if a de fensive campaign is to be waged. The first shock of battle must be absorbed in that group of units, and their object must bo to engage as many of the opposing units as possible. Now, if the black units, In the first diagram, may be considered as num bering 1 to 16, It is clear that A, It it at tacks opposite 4, 6 and 6, will also engage 2, 3 and 7, while 1 and all tho units from 8 to 16 will be mere onlookers unless a flanking movement sets In. If these unltB were of 100 men each, such a movement would be possible. When they compose 40,000 men each, the movement is practically impossible in less than three or four days. (Unit 16 will have to move forward at least five places before It can turn without step ping on the heels of unit 16, which has been forced to move four places, and so on. Over a distance of 100 miles, with a quarter of a million men Involved, such a movement is impossible In short order.) As a result, the three attacking units of A aro actually fighting some six units of the black army, and are holding some 16. Numbers fell, and eventually the opera tive corner A is forced to fall back. Then follows the hardest, the most critical time, of this plan tjie retreat In close contact with the enemy, It means rear-guard fight ing flight and day, leaving the wounded, preserving the morale of the soldiers In the face of successive and probably terrlflo as saults from a conquering army. But this retreat Is only a time-maker. The three units B, C. and D, which have been called the maneuvering masses, are coming up. Obviously they can swing either to th right or to the left, without a change of face, so that they are not Imperiled by their own numbers, as were the black forces. The attacking (black) lorce. mean time, cant loretell the direction which the maneuvering ma wlU take. In either case, at the rlfat or left, the three iuum WE PITY MEXICO, MR. J0 THE GREAT WAR i Advance and the French Retreat, V. SELDES (the operative corner), and attack one half of tho black nrmy. Tho other half, for the reasons shown above, Is Incapable of com ing around In tlmo to outflank A, B, C and D. And so, under favorable conditions, tho communder of tho open square can throw his army partly nround his enemy, attack In overwhelming numbers (12 to 9, to keep to our original proportions), and force tho black lino back. The black commander, compelled to keep up communications, must retreat not only with the half which is under attack, but with his 1G units, nnd, as Mr. Hllalre Belloc, tho historian, hns said, "you then have the singular spectacle of 12 men compelling tho retreat of nnd pursuing 16." Ono thing moro. Tho entire plan would fall to the ground if tho operative corner A .could not resist tho flrst great shock. If It were cut to pieces, the bldck units could penetrate the open square, Isolato each group and destroy it. If tho render thinks that nil this has noth ing to do with war, let him look at the map of Belgium and France. Let him realize-that the black army is tho German force sweeping into Belgium and France, that the operative corner, A, is tho allied forco which met the Germans nt the confluence of the Meuse and Sambre Rivers, below Namur, nnd that tho maneuvering masses are the bodies of French soldiery, and tho arriving British expedition ary force which came up, swung to the left, precisely as indicated in the diagram, and halted the German advance on the River Marno. Like Xenophon's Retreat Tho German war theory was that no opera tive corner could withstand the terrific blow which its splendid armies were capable of de livering. Tho French theory was that the French operativo corner could withstand the blow. The German plan of operation was for a quick, declsivo blow at the operative corner, penetration of the maneuvering masses, and Paris! The French plan Involved tho sacrifice of Paris, but the saving of France. Once checked, the German plan was doomed to revision. It resulted, In the end, In trench warfare. Tho terrible retreat through France was, after all, a highly successful, almost in credible, military maneuver. The French un derestlmated the numerical force against them; they overestimated the strength of fortresses, Liege, Namur, Maubeuge. There was a signal lack of co-oferatlon between tho . V V "V "--:-rS ts! trsy' L : French and the army of General irr.n. " C TJ A B I "l t t i i i i '- " i K r -TT- -r-r-r,k ----j3Ciiai J ." leading to tho Indescribable mlserlea of tho British retreat from Mons, a feat so brave that It ranks, perhaps, with the retreat of the Ten Thousand under Xenophon. In the course of the German advance, the who e marvelous strength of the Kaiser's armies was shown; In the final holding of the enemy the Frenchman restored himself to a than all the Napoleonlo campaigns had won for him. Efficiency and science, military tac tics ahd strategy, generals and cabinets, all came In for their glory. One thing alone was forgot en-the individual soldier who. in the operative corner, in the maneuvering mass and in the attacking body "did his bit ' it was eyen said that the individual was lost In the present war. It may yet be shown that ho Is not lost-thai he may even find himself. STATE AND CITYBUDGETS Considered In the Weekly Bulletin of the Bureau of Municipal Research. The eyes of the country are on th m York qonatltutlonal ConyentJoS Sow pa,.in?W forms. Whatever action I taken .W re" nut bearing on thK. In pVJr lpJST 5 he country. In budefrin" tne L"!,"' I taking a progresave m, by nrov!d?n! . 1 the state budget be Prepared by thin5 ,ht and his department tieadi. and bv Sf that th. lecture may reducS & mMf increase the, amount, propped, and mv imiu?1 bM te. loatfimuutal i brigu &. CITIZEN? adoption of this plan. After making, In co operation with the Commission on Economy and Efficiency, a survev of tho organization and functions of the State -overnment, the New York Bureau perparcd a rltlcal examination of the present form of government fn New York State. Among other things, It submitted two proposals (1) to reorganize the executive branch of the government, and (2) to provide a sclen-. tide budget system. The following system and procedure was recommended: First. The regular ndmlnlstratlon appropria tion bills, with estimates for annual expendi ture, to be submitted by the governor to the legislature during the flrst week of the session. Second. The legislature thereupon to resolve Itself Into a committee of the whole, not less than ono day a weok, at which tlmo the gover- ' nor nnd-executlve heads may be present to ex plain estimates and Items and to answer ques tions. Third. Not later than sixty days after the beginning of the session the governor to submit a budget containing a financial plan for the next fiscal year. Fourth. Final action of the legislature to be on the complete budget as presented by the gov ernor. Many American cities have ndopted a budget policy. New York City has made considerable piogrcsn along this line. Philadelphia, too, Is working toward a scientific budget. From Its Inception, this Bureau has co-operated to this end. It Is a difficult and complex problem and Involves much study nnd experimentation. Ths action of New York Constitutional Convention , j therefore of great Interest to all cltlzcna con- ' cerned about devising ways and menns to meet the rapidly Increasing expenditures of govern ment, and to make these expenditures conform to revenue. GREELEY AS AN ARTIST N WORDS To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Your correspondents have not yet estab lished their assertion that some one else, and not Horace Greeley, eald that "The wny to re Bfino Is to resume." The discovery by "John Bogers" that Salmon P. Chaso Bald that "The only way to resumption is to resume" is in teresting, but It Is not to the point The theory as applied to conditions in the United States may have been first stated by Chaso In his let ter to Gretley, but It was Greeley, an artist In compact and forceful expression, who put the idea In the form of words which has become famous. S. G. B. Lansdowne, August 25, NATIONAL POJNT OF VIEW Savings banks deposits nearly $20,000,000 higher than a year ago suggest that there are people who know better ways of ueing money than gambling In war stocks. New York World, The Invasion of Russia by the Teutons wns a brave undertaking, but for downright Intre pidity the Invasion of Kentucky by the Prohibi tionists has never been excelled. Kansas City Journal, If organized labor could substitute the Roman or civil law notion of prosecution on "Informa tion" for the Saxon or common law Grand Jury, It would lose more thamlt could possibly gain by the change. Brooklyn Eagle. Haiti has had 100 years in which to prove Itself Incompetent, and has done It, If for no other reason than to save It from wasting itself away, a protectorate government would be beneficial. Hartford Post. Having nothing to speak of to show for Its work and time, except the expenditure of about 1500,000 of tho public's money, the Commission on Industrial Relations may close its career with a sense of thankfulness on the part of the peo ple that It has done no worse. Springfield Union. It Is the business of this Government to stand up for the noncontrapand, or at least the strict ly conditional contraband, 'character of cotton. Some day even Great Britain may be glad we declined to acqulesco In her putting cotton defi nitely in the same category with arms and am munition. Chicago' Herald. Iluef Is said to have made a study of prison life and has formulated plans for organizing convicts and released prisoners Into mutual aid societies. If he could prove such a power for good as he was for political evil, it would be well worth the experiment. Colorado Springs Gazette. AMUSEMENTS B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE mfHHTNITT iNn irmulwpll mnftmi Wholo 7i.m Xi " ...-. a BUI . New Jftatum rom Lewis & Co. Grace FWher; Chtrln Olcottt Ameut "ilyaterla;" Tna Meyakoa. nil AII.A. ! w a . r and other Faatura' Acta. Garrick Now&&W& HOWE'S TnAVKE'I8TVf?'Al8OD0CilAN rJr K; 8. Navy of 1018 OTJIBR Next Weak California liipo.ltlon Beate No THE MAHKKT ST. ABOVH 16TH A N. TO 11 IIS 1, H. STANLEY George Fawcett Law Bymphony Orcbeitra and BoloUti. NIXON'B GRAND Todar a US. T k s -TUB KAItt, AND THB OIBt" JVAKHEN 4 CONLKVj BOOTH I.KANUKK, WAltO A HOWKM.1 CAKL STATZKK A CO j 7VHSI LVi FUN CTO VlLMd. ri LADIES' MATINEE TODAY. UaSinO ROSEY POSEY GIRLS and LA BEjfcERE TtllTVIfWie-'n DIlWnNT-H UlVtTKKl.1 1 1 il !,... c..., .. ?,n d Arch 8U. fir. . ;-. - j'". rC J . O sjad D, Jola with, what Js (eft of X Trocadero 'LH UUI' M1XO VUOCANBSM