Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 01, 1915, Final, Image 8

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FtTftUC LED COMPANY
CVKia . K. CtlRTai. hrK.IM-.-rr.
J CHaiteeM Ultafta,Ttcerret4nti.JohnC Martin,
AtottM-y Tmnnri frMUp 8, Colllm, John n.
DITOWIAb OAM i
W. Ctara H. K CCntH. Chairman
B. WHJi,im .. .. Kircullve Editor
122
HX r martin
Othtral Baelneee Manlrer
raMkM Mr el P BiUd Lxmli nulldln.
, Imtaptinoiaet Square. Phlledtlphla.
u'axat,. ... ...Uroad end Chuetnut fttnete
CltTM ...... ....... l,f'tfl't llulMInt
c ..,,. . ...... 19A, WrtmpBlltan Tower
.................,. .8S Ford liuildlna
'ijf ...... .i,... .400 (llobe Urmncntk llulldlnr
v r.". himom tiatii ran wan, o. w
-p"4 Kcwn mmnAt!hi
UtaeiVt.t ....The fill Hulldlnf
!HJ... ....... ...To Tim' Rulldlnc
'Vl MWV..,., 1 Pall Mall Han, H W
llniil.n.!,. ...... .32 ltua Louie le Grand
v' SUBSCRIPTION TERMS
4frrtr. nin.r O.xiT, alx eente. By malt, potrld
or Philadelphia, except where forrlcn poatata
aired. Dear OkIt. ma month, twenty-fir ent:
at VOit.r n year. thr dollare. All mall eub-
ijrna payable In admit.
HBuhacf Ultra wlnhlne
t . a well aa new addreee.
va
rttwee wtahlnc addrtaa chanted muat
E3lJ "At-Mrr
rjk-
KETSTOXt, MAW J6M
ET AMmae nil temmuHitntl&u f Jfiatnff
Leupttt Imk'ftHitnct Square, FMtadilphla, I
- ': '' ' f.1
KTtaao it ma rrtiUDetrtm roaromca it arconi.
OUM Mitt UlTTta
XHK, AVERAGE NET rAID DAILY CIRCULA
TION, OF THE EVENING LEDGER
FOR JULY WAS I,I34.
ISLMMA, WEBNEoDAY, SErTEMDER 1. 1918.
-- -- '
Hr .'. .,..- . . .. -
a wn enacioics nu own meajurc py iic
8weif(ons Ac oafc.
A Great Republican Shows Philadelphia
the Way
WA3 Ellhu Hoot, statesman and patriot,
with finnntincoil hft nrniibllrn.n Orcnnlxa-
ppn In 'Philadelphia as a criminal conspiracy
MueradlhK under the name of Rcpubll-
anlam.
It ha fallen to Ellhu Root to make many
able contributions to good government.
n one hlstorlo" occasion, when it seemed
lal the rakeat Ot demagogues might be
VHaferf td the1 Governorship of Ncwf Tork,
Ellhu Root who assured his defeat
ntlng out that tho President of the
States authorized him to say that,
l, aA opinion, tho malodorous Journalism
?,t3Red by this aforesaid agitator was
!'
Lderlying reason and cauBe for the
r -
rt "Jjiatlon of William McKInlcy. It was
Y aio Ellhu Root who later, when that
l former President was engaged In
fat. to mako the Republican party his
J property and himself President for
1 d like a rock at Chicago and pre
"Tine consummation of these plans.
jaa'j,; again. In the closing hours of the
S the now currency system. It was
L W a
Oomt
INtK (
Qn,
jfWa-1
Oomn,t v,'no ln a masterly oration dem-
'".the menaco In the pending bill ln
8na m too small a old reserve ahd com-
fe amendment conserving the flnan-
l aitladty of the nhtion.
try owes much to him.
ssi
lu area! stateiman'aald to tha Cnn.
Cfrnventibnu nw sitting In New
ounctng "Invtjstbls r government,"
d the seduqtlon of cities and
riot more of a message to his
&ohwenlth thfin It Is to Phlladel-
l time'.
ri
n all Been with opon eyes the car
fnsplracy which for weeks has been
1y. Dave Lane, unashamed, has
X Into conferences at Atlantto City
epresontativo men of Philadelphia,
readers in trade and commerce, the
Se of Its Industry, Its financiers. Its
in, tho bulwarks of its prosperity.
1 gathered about him graduate
J, odorous politicians, and them
4
" i..ri-ji hta on a division of the
bo tr&rW&K .
u mint. Ed.
OarneKhllter men congpir0 tov ,
ie4 te'nno 11, , J
h. mi WW1 inxTjKoxa worxinga.
slssyanf014 that hv da-
iPT I'maaanelfaaf in (rlA fnAAai . 4m.
SfiisJiu $ tnere n nei-
'a'iBVernl 'that a majority of
$Msi pesr1 acquiescent to the
MS rr tl?a drippInE8-
Vue-adoTp tlle offices between
jV.fSav-"00?'1 thcy eeok ' not
rOSt lJf "It lOVnltV tn th nl
aH'M " '
iJijiff from or that faction and an
' 'C, tor t,lt faction in sea.
JotiJ,
nor.
I
&
were, son.
?. Pine, i
KiAW.
n.-S-r men. we d. They are
VI- irtlman IllrtilriAaa l,..kkt..
if --.. HiHiii,aa uuuuico
.11
iey have multitudes of friends,
r s &ir
Jrr7t'B " l ey aro ,oyft1, Men who
w "ft" earn to ocnevo tnat they
vA to good government. They
XlDt If thav flA flAMa4 r.M.
ffii
hanr ' v..-wi ro,
ncePiiuus xuunu iloot's great
nta", not wncf've of himself aa
TflaJd'-'hiVlalfcle government" Mr.
Xf that Many of these
WEy!' mmk to destroy popu.
iL mm 'Ms CM4 friends.
P ...itlalMaat what tha arniui
s g.o '-. - ----
i waai, em me
MSa. "Tou bava,
ha' aay, , jr.
thajr WMr ft
,T "it
fA jr 4 1 iMt stamp
Mlaws'
ta 4 MM tklAM
Um
to
WNWIm, to MmimiU
U tMr 4e-aW, U ta
HotttMMvM
the men, y lust wllL it
i, lnlir1tur af a. mywUm, Who
MK TfaakiM
Ljnflnt ifl"
JHMfttii4Mr mm4
ItlirKltNlM
'1, -.
L afl HHPS9M VMMt MMUtl
mF
Mpf H kptaw W yta4a
jP"- tMWT. ''I MM a4apai
m a mm 4mmMn ( sjm
3f Jf MMMMt to i limn
fJHMalfcaJg" -.
ll ftlA" J"
;fll ao atweh aa
JVSyiyGr LEPGEB-PniBADEXPHlA,
-t
Twra UtM kimary faUH, the
fltt tltd (rrtHl failure. They havo not had
to fight fof liberty as their ancestors did.
They take It for granted and are easy fn the
use of It Yet a whole people cannot be In
dicted, thcy must be educated, even educate
themselves to perform the duties of citizen
ship Intelligently and fearlessly.
There Is mystery now not ln the purpose
of the bosses, which I to get 'the maximum
power Into their hands, but as to their par
ticular method ot doing It at this time. There
Is doubt as to whether thcy will fight to
gether for tho spoils or fight each other for
them. But there need be no mystery aa to
the purpose of Philadelphia. The electorate
has only to determine that It will select Its
own Mayor and Its own Councils. So, wo
surmise, It Intends to do. There need be no
passion In the battle. There Is a thing to be
done, a thing that must bo done If clean gov.
ernment Is to survive.
Each citizen should bo as careful ot his
vote as he Is to lock his windows at night or
to contribute taxes for the maintenance of a
police force.
Register Tomorrow
THERE Is nothing to bo gained by post
ponement; thero Is everything to bo gained
by Immediate actlonl Tho professionals aro
vigilant; they register at tho first optsjrtu
nlty. The friends of honest government must
bo vigilant, too.
Register tomorrow. The next registration
day you may bo out of town, you may forget.
Tomorrow you can take out Insurance
against neglect. Tomorrow you can mako
yourself a place In tho fight for a better Phil
adelphia. "There Ought to Be a Lawl"
THE wisdom of tho undents has very little
appeal to tho members of tho Industrial
Relations Commission. "Verily" thcy mis
quote the Book of Job, "wo aro tho people;
and wisdom shall die with us."
Tho wisdom of tho ancients, by a strango
freak of fate, did not die with them. 'Thoy
left It as tho record of their experience that,
ln the words of Goethe "The best govern
ment Is that which teaches us to govern
ourselves." Tho members of tho commission
ore rather of tho opinion that tho best gov
ernment Is that which lets us Interfere most
with tho lives of others.
In tho mass of platitudes, accusations, par
tisan argument and recommendations which
mako up so much of tho commission's re
ports, the conspicuous thing Is the emphasis
placed on law-making. "Thero ought to be a
lawl" sounds through every pago. Laws to
limit freedom and laws to force freedom on
those who do not want It; laws to abolish
poverty and laws to encourage home buying;
good laws and bad laws; laws for everything
from morals to the money market aro cov
ertly or openly suggested by this astounding
commission. It was onco suggested by Gil
bert K. Chesterton that thero would soon be
a law forbidding a man to go out ln the rain
without his goloshes.
The frenzy for passing laws Is one of tho
weaknesses of American character. Thou
sands ot unnecessary, ineffective laws are
passed each year. Is It any wonder that re
spect for law. which respects. Itself so little,
should be waning?
There Is another bit of wisdom tho commis
sion might take to heart. It was spoken by
John Sclden ln the seventeenth century, and
mildly suggests that "they that govern tha
most make the least noise."
A Single Fare to Everywhere
THE ground covered ln Director Taylor's
annual account of his department Is
ground over which Phtladelphlans havo trav
eled often and with weary feet. It has, how
ever. Its particular aptness now, when a
better time ln transit Is assured Philadelphia.
The Injustice, tho arbitrary unfairness ot
the 8-cent exchange ticket will be ended
before the new subway and elevated system
begins to operate. "A slnglo fare to every
where" will bo tho slogan.
Driving in the Hyphen
COMING at a tlmo whon the nervous sys
tem of the country Is feverishly sensi
tive, Miss Agnes Reppllcr's attack on "Tho
Modest Immigrant" amounts almost to a
political Indiscretion. Religious prejudice,
racial antagonism and national animosity are
skilfully Interwoven, and a malicious and
deadly sneer looks out from the countenance
of the Atlantic Monthly, disfiguring that
most kindly and genteel of magazines.
It one could be ln tho least persuaded that
Miss Rcppllcr loves America thero might
be soma excuse for this Ill-considered, Ill
tempered article. But what comes out Is
that Miss Reppller hates Germans, hates
Jews, Is mildly tolerant of Irishmen and
Italians, and Is possessed of the extraordi
nary idea that German and Jew, Magyar and
Czech cannot be Americans. Sneering al
ways, she insinuates that tho foreign-born
havo to be paid to take baths, live In
Ghettos because they prefer Ghettos to pal
aces, and are In absolute 'domination of our
body politic. She lumps the German-American
agitation with the, protest of Hebrews
against reading the "Merchant of Venice,"
makes a .farce of religious, mental and moral
liberty, and In a desperate effort to osBert
true Americanism succeeds in defaming
every principle upon which this country was
founded.
Who are Miss Reppllcr's Americans? By
what process did they pr)ng up fn a coun
try of Indians? Are the descendants of the
Pilgrims any mora native than the descend
ants of the Forty-elghters? It may bo
doubted,
( . i , .
l ''-'-- tnr f'VtnAm D.n.1 l n.. .,.,. . ..
.T"IX" . ,.-. .ii utmi licau-
5UiPW Wen.
-Villa, has promised to support the A B C
peace plan. His bread la buttered on that
aide.
The Phils are going to crack under the
same strain that cracked the Braves last
year.
"Oarden of Xds the prize of victory at
tha Dardanelles,- says a headline. Wonder
inw wm. merytnt an tha Kaiser would get
toth.
OrvHla Wright says. "I a no,t averse to
taking oey. But that ) not what I am
MylBg to?." He will be known rather as
a wiuUer of history.
Michael OXeary, y. c, who routed a Ger
wan arasy corps, (according to some stories),
Ma ha ttaeruilM4 In , successor to
"I .- JUS M tk INteHM WM CNW-
IngawMt, to
i.
p M'TW'
"ON THE JOB" AT
THE GOLDEN HORN
- ai, ,! aa)
Ambnssndor Morgcnthnu Is n Man
Trained ln BusincBS for Diplo
macy First Knew America
as an "East Slder"
By ELLIS RANDALL
THE American Ambassador at Constanti
nople Is right In tho thick of things.
"I am hero on tho Job," reported Morgen
thau, In characteristically simple fashion,
when he nrrlved In
Constantinople after
his appointment as
Ambassador, and
he's "on tho Job" to
day. There was
nothing noisy about
that statement. It
merely summed up
his sense of duty.
Morgenthau is pre
eminently a concen
trator. One might
think that anybody
would havo to con
centrate on the Job
which this German
Jew Is fllllnr. osdc-
HKNIIY MOItOKNTHAU. c,ny udcr tn6
present circumstances, but with Morgenthau
It Is a lifelong habit. Ills othor namo Is
concentration. He has bocn "on tho Job"
ever slnco ho was n mere boy at tho age
of 16 the death ot his father mndo him "tho
man" of a largo family la New York'B East
Side.
In 1912 Woodrow Wilson and tho campalirn
managers chose Morgenthau for chairman of
the Flnanco Commltteo of the Democratic
National Committee. Within a short while
ho was nblo to show funds upward of $1,000,
000, but tho way he went at his Job Illus
trated his lifelong hnblt. Ho never tries to
do two things at once, hut centres his efforts
on tho single end In view. When ho was
made chairman of tho Flnnnco Committee ho
was ono of the leading renl cstato operators
of Now York. One day ho put on his hat
and announced, "I won't bo ln tho office until
after November 1." For the tlmo being he
turned his back completely upon the man
agement of his great real cstato Interests,
but ho couldn't or ho wouldn't have dono
that unless he had dono what all good busi
ness men do, trained up a staff of assistants
and associates ln the nays of self-reliance
and clllclency.
The Habit of Concentration
An amusing side light Is thrown upon the
Ambassador's utter simplicity when formali
ties could bo dispensed with. When his fam
ily arrived at Constantinople and It was nec
essary to put tho embassy ln shape, Mr. Mor
genthau promptly shed his coat und set about
hanging pictures In a thoroughly democratic
manner. For tho time being, his problem
was a domestic one, his whole heart was
In doing the work well and with freedom.
Again, he was concentrating, and ln Just tho
same spirit ho has already turned his mind
to tho more serious diplomatic problems that
have arisen during his Incumbency.
There have been many of these, yet the
American people generally know little of
them or the triumphs Sir. Morgenthau has
won by tact, patience and his friendly way.
As a friend has expressed It, "Henry Mor
genthau has probably asked fewer questions
of tho Stato Department than nny other man
In our diplomatic service, and yet, has dono
his work well and anticipated tho develop
ment of events."
Tho American Ambassador to Turkey Is a
man who combines charm of manner and
personal magnetism with wonderful sim
plicity of character. He Is generous and
never bears a grudge, and is the first to offer
an excuse for another man's shortcomings.
But ho is a man of courage, as his achieve
ments In tho difficult situation ln Turkey
abundantly prove. His gift of making friends
Is a personal characteristic which Is of no
little valuo ln his present post.
Some ono asked Mr. Morgenthau Just be
fore he sailed for Constantinople why he had
accepted the Ambassadorship, and his an
swer Is characteristic of the man: "It Is a
good thing to i each out for new experience
ln this busy and absorbing world of ours."
And when It was remarked that his now
field of activity would bo along seemingly
far different lines from those of his past
years, he declared that his business career
had been essentially a diplomatic training,
Inasmiich as he had had to do with all sorts
of men and conditions and had striven to give
satisfaction and to maintain harmony or to
effect an equitable adjustment of difficulties
na thcy arose. Commonly, business Is not
looked upon aa a school of diplomacy, but
what Mr, Morgenthau has already accom
plished In Turkey Is proof of the correctness
ot his assertion.
Born in Germany
Henry Morgenthau was born In Mannheim,
Germany, April 26, 1856. When he was 9
years old his family came to America. Hen
ry's thirst for an education developed early.
He went through tho publlo schools while
helping to support his mother and brothers
and sisters. Ho taught night school while
a student at tho College of the City of Now
York, which he attendod one year, then en
tering the Columbia Law School, from which
he was graduated ln 18T8. After practicing
law for a number of years ho went Into the
real estatd buslnoss on a largo scale. Some
of his enterprises have notably contributed
to the skyline of Lower Manhattan. He has
been prominently Identified with clvlo and
religious work of various kinds, co-operating
with Rabbi Wise ln the establishment of a
free synagogue,
Mr. Morgenthau'a appointment attracted
attention abroad, and the Jewish Chronicle,
of London, had this to say upon the fcub
Jcct: "It Is symbolic of the absolute equal
ity which the Government of tho United
States grantB alt Its citizens; and It derives
ndded Interest from the fact that Mr. Mor
genthau began his career in America aa a
boy Immigrant' The very large Jowlslj in
terests bound up with the Ottoman Empire
Increased the Importance of Mr. Morgen
thau'a selection, and American missionaries
have had reasons for thankfulness that
President Wilson chose as ho did. Robert
College conferred on him Iaat spring tho de
gree of doctor of laws.
I'liL NOT CONFER WITH SORROW
I'll not confer with sorrow
Till tomorrow;
But Joy shall have her way
This very day.
Ho, eglantine and cresses
For her treneal
WW. the beggar, wait v t
Outside the je, '
Tears If you will-but aftsr
Mirth and laughter
4nen, (snm nwuta 0 braatt
(aV B
, WEPyESDAY, SEPTEMBER
"AIN'T HE GOT NO REGARD FOR HIS
ROOT'S DENUNCIATION OF BOSSES
An Epoch Marking Speech That May Make Him President,
Though It Was Intended as the Moral Plea of a
Man Whose Work is Done
By GEORGE
LINCOLN'S Cooper Union speech mado
J him President. That speech proved to
tho nation that Lincoln had mastered the
problem which was perplexing It and could
be trusted to lead It in the Impending con
flict for tho preser
vation of tho free
dom of the States
and tho Integrity of
the nation.
Thousands of ad
mirers of Ellhu Root
today are saying
that his Albany
speech of Monday
will make him Pres
ident. For several
months his name
has been first ln the
minds of many Re
publican leaders tn
all parts ot the tho
ELIHU ROOT country. A canvass
made In July disclosed the fact that the
other men mentioned for the Presidency
wero second and third In the popular run
ning. A New York leader said that Root
could have the delegation from that State
for the asking.
Mr. Root, however, is not a candidate. He
announced ln tho Senato a short tlmo before
his term expired that ho had no expectation
of holding another office. Ho was too old
and hoped to spend tho remaining years of
his life ln honorable retirement; and when
ever the subject of the Presidency has bocn
mentioned to him ho has dismissed It with
the remark that the suggestion that he run
was preposterous.
No Intention to Hake n Popular Appeal
Yet two weeks ago William Barnes said
that Mr. Root could be nominated without
any effort on his part. His Albany speech
has convinced many observers that It will
be exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, for
him to prevent his nomination. The political
value of the speech lies ln the absence of any
Intention to make a popular appeal for sup
port. The nation knowa Mr. Root's desires.
It Is aware that he hopes to go back to tho
college hill In Clinton where he was born
and dovoto himself to rest and reflection ln
well-earned leisure. Ho has lived 70 years
and has been connected with great affairs
and has held high office. It was out of the
fullness of his experience that he uttered
his protest against the continuance of "in
visible government" and called upon his fellow-delegates
ln tho Constitutional-Convention
to be truo to their oath to follow their
consciences In voting for a fundamental law
that would make It easier for tho people to
rule and more difficult for the bosses to frus
trate their will.
The speech Is a platform on which all fac
tions of Republicans can unite, whether he
be tho iead of the ticket or not. In It all
the unrest and dissatisfaction with political
methods became vocal. And when Root compared-
tho system with that under which
Walpole controlled tho British Government
by bribery and said that it could be re
formed as the British system has been re
formed, ha uttered the hope that haa Inspired
patriotic citizens for many years.
Not even Mr. Root's political opponents
deny his fltness for the Presidency. His
great abilities aro admitted, r Ho a on8 ot
the most distinguished lawyers In America,
Althgugh the late William C. Whltney'a
compliment haa been turned Into an attack
by his enemies, It Is, nevertheless, high
feralse. Mr. Whitney, It wU be recalled,
said that he had employed many lawyers
who could tell hlra there was no way to do
what he wanted to do, but that Mr. Root
was the first lawyer he had found who could
toll him how to do that which he sought to
aocomplls,h. Instead of hunting for ob
stacles. Mr. Hoot found a way around them.
PoJnU the Way to Reform
He Is exercising tha same faculty In the
Conatltutlonal Convention when he Is telling
the delegates that the first step toward put
ting tha control of the Government of New
York in the hands of the people Js tha adop
tion of the short fcailot and the concentra
tlen of executive power In the hands of tha
Oowmaor aM en or two HUr elected of-
1. 191K:
W. DOUGLAS
praise Is oven higher, for ho said that Root
was tho ablest man ho had known ln tho
Government service and the greatest man
that has appeared ln tho public life of any
country in any position on either side of
tho ocenn in his time.
Tho career of tho man Is famlllor. When
he was elected a delegate to tho Constitu
tional Convention, now ln session, it was ad
mitted before tho convention assembled that
he would bo Its president. Ho stood so far
abovo every ono else that thero was no
competition. What his fellow lawyers think
of him was Indicated when the American
Bar Association at Its recent meeting chose,
him as Its president while ho was absent at
tending to his duties ln Albany.
His father, who was a professor of mathe
matics ln Hamilton College, wanted him to
become a teacher, and young Root did teach
one year ln tho Rome Academy; but ho pre
ferred the law. When ho was admitted to
tho bar ho started to practlco ln New York
city. Ho vas ono of the associate counsel
ln tho defense of William M. Tweed, and
suffered ln reputation becauso of tho Ingeni
ous skill which he showed In tho conduct
of his part of the cose. Ho then associated
himself with the reform wing of the Repub
lican party ho was a Republican while hold
ing a retainer from Tweed and interested
himself in local politics. Twelve years after
ho was admitted to' tho bar he was the Re
publican candidate for Judge of the Court of
Common Pleas; but, of course, was defeated
ln a Democratic city. This is tho only elect
ive offlco for which ho ever ran, If, wo ex
cept his candidacy as a dclegato to two Con
stltutlonal Conventions. His law business
dealt largely with great corporations, and
he regarded himself as a weak political can
didate for that reason. But his close con
ncctlon with great buslnoss enterprises ac
customed him to dealing with large affairs.
He Reorganized tho Army
When ho succeeded Russell A. Alger aa
Secretary of War he found the War Depart
ment managed ln an unbuslness-llko way and
tho army suffering from dry rot. Under hlo
administration the army waa reorganized,
tho general staff was created and a law was
passed Increasing tho efficiency of tho militia.
Ho drew tho plans for the Government of
Cuba and for tho management of the Phil
Ipplnes. On his retirement from tho Cabinet
tho foundations were laid for the expansion
of the army Into an efficient weapon of na
tional defense.
He was tho natural successor of John Hay
In tho State Department, and after an In
terval lnfho practice of tho law he took up
tho work of that distinguished statesman
and conducted It with such skill that he won
International reputation. Ho made a tour of
South America for tho purpose of cultivating
more friendly relations with tho nations
there, and ho began that policy of Intimacy
which has been continued to this day. The
Nobel peace prize was awarded to him for
his work In behalf of peace, nnd his distinc
tion had become so groat that New York
elected him to the Senate, And, as already
Indicated, he stepped from tho Senate Into
the chair of the prcsjdlng officer of the con
vention which is revising tho New York
Constitution.
To return to the Albany speech, from
which we started, Its Intense moral earnestr
neea and Its high patriotism distinguished It
from every other speech thus far made In
that convention. It produced a thrill In the
hearts of Its hearers, who, doubtless, while
thoy respected tho hope uttered In the clos
Ing sentences, a hope to go back to his
birthplace ln permanent retirement, regis
tcred a vow that they would do their utmost
to prevent that hope Xrom bring fulfilled for
the present.
"- ' I I aal'
VOTING FOR JUDGES
To thp mtor of the Evening Ledger:
8lr-When It comes to the selection of a
Judge In the Common Plea, and other courts
every voter should welt con.lder each cano"
date, because the Voter hlm.elf may Tome b
lV ,Mm. t0 uf"n iu,llc- H behoove,
him to study moat carefully the character St
the row hta Judicial quaiiflcatiSnT hi dipo
lUon and unbiased tendencies, Every Judge
placed upon the Judicial bench who facia in
ilrSl!!lMW, iUMi ?' tha nature
mM a, a. . ? rJZS $
NEIGHBORS?"
those who seek to extricato themselves from as
unfortunato step or an unjust accusation.
Probably no candidate for a place on the
bench of Common Pleas Court No. 2 Is better
qualified In so many ways than Evan B. Lewis.
I am so familiar with this gentleman's ability,
character and his conscientious dellbcrateness
whenever ho Is required to pass Judgment, and
I nm so Impressed with tho fact that If every
voter should receive this Information and charge
his memory to cast his vote for Mr. Lewis he
will have dono his full duty to himself and to
his fellow man. Elevate a man who Is not con
trolled by political manipulators. W. D. M.
Philadelphia, August 31.
THE NATIONAL POINT OP VIEW
England cannot afford to count too confi
dently on the resentment by neutrals of the
Tirpltz program; they resent England's con
duct, too. Springfield Republican.
The wide Interest' In the subject shows that
tho movement toward reform of Stato govern
ment methods is hardly less active than that
looking to municipal reforms. Terre Haute
fetar.
Industrial conditions in this district will soon
be normal and with the approach of the holi
days Birmingham will witness the greatest
boom ln all its history. Birmingham (Ala.)
Age-Herald.
The "white list" encourages and stimulates to
still better endeavor. There Is no man but ap
preciates a Jilt of deserved praise now and
then and will do his work all the better for
having had It. Boston Post.
A Japanese army fighting In Europe would be
an almost unimaginable phenomenon. But the
great upheaval has produced other phenomena
scarcelyBless amazing. It is at least a possi
bility with which the Germans must reckon.
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
AMUSEMENTS
FORREST, & Mats. 2:15
Beg. Next Sat. Evg. T.h'r- Evgs. 8 :15
D. W. GRIFFITH'S
THE
BIRTH
OF A
NATION
18,000 People 3000 Horses
World's Mightiest Spectacle
BEATS ON BALE TOMOnnOW. 0 A. M. S
WALNUT " wAunnwat
A REGULAR 12 BIIOTV POIl T "
AVyH' I0-800- EVENINCB, jR-TBo.
T?5AX!ISJ5, . TONIQHTAT allB
JROBERT EDESON
(HIMSELF') '
BUPPORTED BY THE WALNUT PLATERS
In "FINE FEATHERS"
NEXT WEEK EMMA DUNN
In "GOVERNOR'S LADT"
B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE
CHESTNUT ft TWELFTH STnrKrn
"A BILL
Victor MnrW & Pn
TO SUIT
MANY
TABTEar
Evtr. Ledsar,
SJS.KJS0,. TYLER BROOKB
PElnU.fcY.DI BARRY tWINI
""Xj...i'.,J'iA"rAL'B DOQS.
OTHER FEATURES.
OPENS
Sat. Night
BEATS
NOW
SELLING
Eitra Mat. "
Labor Day
"884 Derrea of Lauahter"
BROTHER
MASONS
""iZ th,n "A rlr of Blie."
ADELPHI THEATRE
PEOPLE'S &wSwSr S. Evg., Sept. 4
Hatlneea Mon., Tue, Thura. and Sat
The Winning of Barbara Worth
NlihU. 10o. 26c, 8Jc. SOo. Mate., JOc, JSo 23a.
Bale of Beau Opene Tomorrow at q ATk
PALACE "" MARKET STREET
" " 10 A. M, to llilB P M
Much-DlMUMed and Remarkable Photo-Play
THE SEnnF.T nT?P.TTATr
Blanche Sweet. Carlyle Plackwell ft Theodore Roberta
erte
THE "ARKET ST. ABOVE Ibtii
Stanley hazel dawn
Garrick & &&&? ?!
Nlrhte 26c, Joe, boc
HOWE'S 35&K ESS&ljttS,
GLOBE ns
"Broadway Revue" i0- 0?h,rWAfi"
NIXON'S
GRAND
La Urathf fi."'. "')'
Today :, TAB
fl.t0FUa.T- " u'01
LYRTfi c?8Cl MHMn a vtST
.OTBsa sty aatfBjjSa
DUMONT'S WiFF"Z
National ou'2?u,,ll jMnMwJI.
M
HI
.l
Hi
V
-TJMaaiai SaW AM risk.
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