Xa3T i jPV r! . 8 gtmrttm fljtfjfty ffeftarr fCttlC lEDCKX COMPANY TUh H, K CVhTlB. .ParkiMcsT iRlrhiH lArttiwton, Vict rrr.l.Unt, John C Martin, acl'lMtrr and Trtaiurtr, ITilllp 8 I'olllai, John II. WBttatfM. TXrrctors. , KotTorUAblixJAnn- " . ttpca II, K Clans, Chairman r-M.WHAL.EY... .. .fcxullv Editor C MARTIN UtMral pualnM Manactf rnWiheJ dally at rvsuo LtsetB Uulldlnf, ItHlpnHrH. Squirt, Philadelphia. Crtrat. .llroad anil Chftlnut fttrota KO Cur .. ....... JTria-lnhin Uutldlng tv. , . ..... . IIW-A, JiIFtrepulllan Timrr . 2(l kVrd llullillnr rl.,( .. ..... .4WJ Ololw Democrat lltillrttnjr 1S03 Trlbuna llulldlna- n.x ... Waterloo I'lac. I'all Mall, B. W. J.rWH BUttEAfBl ?WOv rvalue Thf r nulMInc OftlC tlLklllt! Th. Hmh lli.ll.lln l9t IJPaKlE... no l'rl1rlrh.lrn. lfil-ov llrtriv , .. ..J p Mall Kant, B. W raw ui'acitt. . .. . .... .B Ilua Louis It Grand CUE?njrTION TK11SH Vrnrrtf nT ot.T. afi rtnl. Wv mill pnatpaM MMt of Ph'ladtlnhia crept whjre foreign fwtaitt -qprrrii. uiii.x uxn, i,n nmntn. iKtMr-nrirenta; MtOm.t. on? year. ihr dollar All ma.ll ub MlQn fifttralll. In im.m thmcp (tuha?rlbra wlahlnc addrras ehanfJ mart rtv fid- vcji at Mir addrctr. 'jjftiL. I'm vALmrr KEYSTONE. MA! I0M Cy AtArrtM all rnnnutritlln to Kmilna lAcptr, Independence aitvore. mta&tlphla. e HaKTRBto it tub rtiiUDn.rnu ro'Torrice is icokd- CUII IUIL UaTTFB the averaub net paid daily CIRCULA TION Of TUB KVEM.Nd I.KDtilCn FOU JULY WAS MMU ) PIHUULLrillA. UIUJI3BAV. SUTtSIIIEn 2. 19I5. if old tuuei ticcc'.rst because dlttrwcc lend enchantment to the mtmicf . The President's Great Victory NOTHING can be sold of President Wil son's magnlflccnt victory In his contro versy with Germany which vvlll atld In tho sHghtcst degree to Its elTect on the people srf Ihls country. Thoy trusted him In the Ktavcst of crises with a confidence and una nimity thnt woro Inspiring. At the very mo ment when old nntagonisms might well have . sprung to new life, the President found him self supported by an overwhelming number ot his fellow citizens. The United States found Itself In thnt crisis. Uy tho privilege of democracy it found Its detractors at the same time. Those who would' have ruMhod to war, who spoko with sardonic words of noto writing, of national cowardice and of national betrayal have now ,to rejoice at tho failure of their worst hopes. Without the Slightest force to make good his words In blood and desolation, the Presi dent has wrung from a belligerent, and ruth leesly bel'lgcrent, country a complete dis avowal ot its acts. Ho has, In the simplest (term, reasserted tho rights of humanity. He has accomplished this ustoundtng thing Ithout preaching or prating, without hypoc ,rify and without condescension. He has saved his own country from war and saved all olher countries from a new barbarity. With an instinctive precision he has read tho hearts and minds of his people Getting Ready for Its New Life THE removal of the headquarters of the Chamber of Commerco from the Bourse to the new Widencr Uuildlng Is likely to be coincident With tho beginning of a larger activity of thu organization. Its oftlccrs and oacrabcrli tiro, alert and have perceived the Kfgt J)fOkthat such a body can do In boom- .,1 inu .ny ooruau ana in improving con ditions at home. When 6000 business men j4l pull together Something has to move. An Opportunity for the Alumni THE election of a member of tho Hoard of Trustees of the University of Pennsylva nia alTordii a splendid opportunity for the beat sort of criticism on the Dart of tho talumnl. The varancy la to bo filled by the oard front a list of four presented by tho 'Alumni Association, and even Bhould no ono pf the four be found available. It would still .remain w Ith the alumni to Buggest the proper man. The University was the object of a very kovcre attack this summer. The attack wai led not by Us enemies, but by lts.Xrifnds by those who lpved it too muph to see it do what .they fejt was wrong. The same spirit will Move them to nominate for trustee an alumnus able and competent to spealt fur then In the councils of the University. hi 'i Border Outbreaks In TexnR THE repeated ravages of Mexican guer rillas across the border pf the United mates onouiu not cause violent surprluo 'Thslr- leaders nre logical men, If nothing pjef nor is their' logic obscure. "t our godd Americans have placed these xcellent guns In our hands," they nrgue, 'IW the purpose of shooting each other," ors tM. they put It, of restoring orderly govern ment, "why ahould wo not go n au-u fur jfher? Jf we cart loot American homes In j.laVsIco, why should we not ciosa the rlverf urely no good American would put ii loaded fun in our hands und then proteit If we HocV' The Americans defending tho Texan border re oeing snot uy American guns, loaded with American ammunition. N Politics in National Defense Today NATIONAL defento can become u par tisan issue only by the failure of ope $4 IhO parties to pcrculve its Importance. j!ien nuve oren nomuacKs in both parties the pant A little navy procrom has been ltfd by Congress time after time be- of the PPPOsltlOn of both IlcDubtloan Democratic Congressmen to a big navy. w.to wro uemwrais as well as llcpub- who fnvnr hnth nn nmu anl ,. nUv. f- ttiaugh to meet all tho -needs of the as they are understood -by exoerta ;bsuU defense. increased the number of anch "H pnrtle. Jt li pioved, however tM PrOStKCtS for Ueaen mnv ho. sfsi' 1 Ukely to come when it Is least mm. v.wipoi) irunee requires that Ue4 lUtes nboUW lu o well Dronnrod youna mH may huve at least a rof nre wen jHtcd against Olllltrs Of a nubile er.aanv Pnh. tsiit will ipt yet sitsism tlve wnd ivt the trtny and uw. 'it tm H that amount e mnmiy eu)d te tsbly at thai btihw ilmm u,,. tor Kern toM ther4t.t this week'. favors euhuwemnr nf ih mud furtcs of the cation. The tout , ha-is l way ii fvwed tt. i aaaatr li.ft'M .arl..iArii . .i.. "-,- W.-K4fl. Aiftl 1(IQ Ih Lv.mium t stuck (We A4mln uu i .M ii, inaiarencp to tii ponl t4 t .rOtflui .' ttalflAiru 'h&. -- t ! It. V i t Urlni l....u f -" "VT Ij fcj"' "" "Jl mmh orainnpaMi v -lMff,'4 lo tvu- wm iutt!t- - , -Jb TS -aTWaTaS .... . . . t . lap "" w"wf w mm f v " r EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, IMS: than advsnee the caune for which they are working. It In understood that the Presi dent favors a standing army of iO.OOO men. and Is considering the ontnnlMlluii of som kind of a reservo forco for a second line of defense He needs no urging And there Is an undoubted, disposition In the Navy De partment and In Congress to build as many ships ns cAn bo manned at the present time, with such Increase In tho personnel of the navy an conditions Justify. Hut nftrr all, the duty of acting In the present emeigency Is up to tho Democratic party. It It falls. Its Incapacity will, of course, become n political Issue. Deceit, Infamy, Humiliation! THE ICvr.vi.vo LcDoun published last Sat urday a statement to the offcet that Gov ernor nrumbaugh and tho Vnrcs hnd per fected nn alliance, the object of which was the elimination of Senator Penroso from con trol of the Republican State Organisation, and that "Bill" Vara would run for Mayor. Thc.informatlon camo from rellablo sources, oloso to the Eecutlve Mansion In Harris burg. It appears now thnt tho Governor was hog-ttrd and delivered over n living sac rifice to his bctrnycrs. He tried to play poli tics, ho put the Varcs closest political ad viser Into his Cabinet for tlut purpose, and he has had his reputation tut from him nt one blow. Ho has been a. child In the hands of wily polltlclann, thin man who was elected bceauvc of his Independence. His Innocence Is no excuse for the foul In famy heaped on Philadelphia by his con nivance and assistance. If the bult r.rfcrcd him was the Ptesldoncy, from thnt gnl ho has been removed so fur that he will never oven gllmpM: It. The Vnrcs, tricked Into tricking him, perhaps, have also taken tho count nnd kiscfd the hands that bctiaycd them. They desorvo whut Is In store for them, and none need doubt that thoy will get It. Treachery, when once given a start, Is not easy to stop. A ruined reputation for the Governor, an Insulted and humiliated city, nnd "har mony"! Truly there has been enough tragedy for one day, and men mny hide their heads In shame. They mny do that or they mny gnash their teeth and gird their loins, and resolve that at any cost they will prevent tho achieve ment of this Infamy and preserve the city unharmed from the claws that aro ready for their prey. Kentucky Democrats Perceive the Olnious THE Indorsement of President Wilson by tho Democratic State Convention In Ken tucky seems to have given the delegates a great deal of satisfaction. But they have not doile either a wonderful or a heiolc thing. Thcro is nothing else for the sane Democrats to do. They must tie thcmselyes up to tho President, under whoso leadership alono there Is any chance for them even to hope for success next year. The Kentucky Democrats, may claim credit, however, for assuming the nttltudo of a drum major prepared to lead the pro cession which is already forming In the side streets. The Colonel's Weak Spot THE German Krlegcrbund o. Worth Amer ica must have thought that it was saying something nasty when it charactcilzed Colo nel ltoosevelt as a "monumental egotist." Such a charge does not hurt. Tho Colonel himself admits it. If tho German war veterans wanted to say something "real mean." they might have de clared that when the Colonel discusses the Belgian situation he does not know what h Is talking about and does not know that he doeB not know. Best Thing to Raise on City Farms THE fourth annua1! Uyberry fair Is more Interesting ns an outdoor entertainment than as an agricultural exhibition. There uie furms still within the city limits, nnd when they nre cut up Into building lots the city limits will be extended to include other farms. In tho meantime, potatoes and chickens, corn and pigs, cows and cucum bers flourish whero in u few years Intensive development of real estate hereabouts will produce two-story hou.es Inhabited by In dustrious working men. There may be profit In tho crops rnlscd out of tho ground of tho farms within the city, but there will be a greater proHt when a crop of houses is raloed where rows of celery and beans aic now growing. Those clty-bred folk who have never attended a country fair ought not- to all to go to Uyberry this week In order thnt they may see what a country fair Is not llko. CuMhroat Competition A COHUESPONDENT of the New York xXSun Informs the editor of thnt paper that s rooster has been discovered which cannot crow. It-or he-can hies, hut the bright chantlclerlcsl call Is not for him. Huch are the marvels of scionce! Each day it conserves a new strength, cuts out waste, diverts energies into useful channels. Tho mntutlnal salute of tho rooster has long been an example of .criminal waste and Inelll clency. It announced, at great expense of energy, a perfectly obvious tlilng-thut the sun had risen. Itoosters. besides, have been in the habit of trying to "scoop" each other, to score a beat on the sunrise as If any on9 were passionately interested In tho mntter and the result has been a distressing series Pf "Extras" called at 2 a. m. Cut-throat com petition has killed the rooster. Kate is trying to conceal "Harmony" by naming It Smith. What would Matthias Baldwin think of the "locomotives" that the works he founded ar now raakfngT The International PItryTales Company Is not ihe only company that has Called to make money raising chickens. Thomas Molt Osborpe, warden of sing in, Is not the first mB to .be boomed for a governorship by a tt of crooks. Only the chf knew whether It was a reed, bjnt that you got served hot with a cold bpttle last ntht. It may have been a nmrrow, i ' 1 1 , German merchants hv offered to pay J5 cants a foU4 for l,m,6W bales tit Amer, taw cptao delivered In a German harbor Tly wlat U wUlter t fy n cents any wU M n way to wak th. MuuHftde ind kp it lrvky. HENRY GEORGE'S TWO UNIVERSITIES One Was His Varied Experience in California; the Other, the Uni versity of Books His Boy hood in Philadelphia By ELLIS RANDALL WITHOUT question "Progress and Pdv crty" Is one of the world's great books, You don't have to oak a slnRle-tnxer about that You don't hnve to believe In Henry Goorge's economic philosophy, or a tenth part of It, or a hundredth part. It Is the book of a downright thinker. No economist knows his .subject unless he has read "Progress nnd Poverty," and every econo mist, from Herbert Spencer and Thomns Huxley down to the present day, has taken u stand for or ngalnst Its teachings, It Is a book to be recommended to young men as patt of their reading, whether Its teachings be approved or not. Tho effect of Its pub lication which was not so Immediate in America as In Europe was to stir the con servatism of the world, It took ecnnomlc literature nut of the pessimistic mood Into the optlmlAtlc. It hns been translated into almost every living tongue, Including the Chinese and the Japanese. Such u bonk Is n landmark, however fallacious Its premises or Its conclusions. " The author of "Progress nnd Poverty" was born In Philadelphia rcenty-ls years ngo today. The anniversary will be celebrated by Hlngle-tnxors of Philadelphia and other parts of the country. A pilgrimage will bo mndo to tho house on 10th street, south of Pine, where their prophet flist saw tlio light of day. Henry George's father In 1839 was In the book publishing business In this city. His grandfather had been ono nf the best known shipmasters of Philadelphia. , Around the Horn At the age of 14 Henry left school for good. The financial condition of the fam ily had changed and Henry resolved to go to work. Ho obtained employment In a china nnd glass Importing house on South Front Btrcct nt $2 n week. His duties wcro to copy, to tlo up bundles nnd to run errands. Afterward he did clerical work In the office of a marine adjuster. At the age of If! his Inherited yearning for the sea proved Irresistible, and after some difficulty he obtained his parents' permission to sail as foremast boy on an East India mnn bound for Melbourne, Australia, nnd Calcutta. On his return he learned to set type In the oirice of King & Iinlril; but In ISfiT. nt the uge of IS, ho ct out to seek his fortune In California, working his passage on n ship that rounded the Horn nnd reached Snn Francisco In the spring of the next yenr The career of no other American Is more Impressive than that of Henry George, un favored as he was by accident or tho help of others. Neither schools, nor votes, nor money contributed to his success, but only his genius. Much of his education was ob tained In what Is popularly called "the school of hard knocks." During tho years he spent on tho Pacific const he experi enced many ups nnd downs of fortune. Ho drifted from one employment to another, usually in financial straits In tho early years, but through no lack of effort on his pnrt Ho was a clerk In a store in tho Frascr Itiver gold fields of British Columbia. Re turning to California, he was weigher In a rlco mill, a farmhand, a printer, a peddler .of clothes wringers, an Inspector of gas meters. Finally ho began to write for the press. In tho courae of a few years ho be- " enmo one of the best known Journalists on the qoast, and the story of his newspaper ex periences Is ono of tho most Interesting chapters In his life, As correspondent for the New York Tribune he wrote an article on the Chinese question which 'gained the warm commendation of John Stuart Mill. Tho long, hard, bitter struggle in Cali fornia, often humiliating, often Incensing, often discouraging, but never crushing nor dishonoring, was, as a filend once wrote, "Henry George's university." Preparing a Masterpiece But another large part of his education was obtained In the university of books. His son writes, In tho "Life of Henry Genrge," of his boyhood days: "Though ho had left school, his real education suffered no in terruption. In school or out of It, ho had acquired a fondness for reading. Or per haps It was thut nt his birth, while tho Fairies of Gain, Fashion nnd Pleasure passed him by, one came and sat beside his cradle nnd toftly sang Mine U tho world of thought, the world of . dream; Mine ull the past, und all the future mine. "First, ho had a grounding In the Bible; nnd tho Puritanical familiarity with book, chnptcr nnd verso, which In tho elders molded speech, established habit and guided the steps of life, filled tho young mind with a myrlod of living pictures." The boy lead omnlvorously of the books in the old Quaker Apprentices' Library and the Franklin Institute Library. He attended the popular scientific lectures at the Frank lin Institute. Bomnnce, adventure, poetry nnd science were his early loves, in later life George ascribed to this ' fondness for reading his real education and tho com mencoment of his career. When at the age of 38 he began woik on "Progress and Poverty" he had accumulated, despite the thinness of his purse at that time und the hardships he had undergone in his vurled career, a private library of S00 volumes They related to political economy, history and biography, poetry, philosophy, the sciences In popular form and travels nnd discovery, with but few works of fiction, though ho wob an ndmror of George Eliot's novels. These bookB were his chief pos sessions In the world. Indeed, for a while in the house on 1st street, San Francisco, where the main work on "Progress and Pov. erty" was done, thcro was no carpet on the parlor floor, ns the family could, not afford to buy one. In addition to his own library George made use of various publlo libraries in the preparation of his most famous book. "It amazes me," said his wife ot one time fresh from rending proofs of a new edition' "how the rnnn ever' found tho time to da the reading and the thinking bound in that book. I'm not speaking of the intellectual ability jieede ,0 dQ n alli byt JuBt he wofk It stands for. He was a busy man, punier than anybody knew, In soiling for us yet he read endlessly, und must have thought about these things wth one part of his head while he used another part every day to muke a living." ' , y l , THE SOm7gV0RK ' 1V!he.WPrk that mJhassJKa great and trut Or the true ol taaiTwi ; T It eii 'T 4 W ' SETTING IDLE DOLLARS TO WORK Wlliam A. Law, a Philadelphia Banker, Is Taking a Leading Part in Solving the Financial Problems Raised by the Euro pean War A Bankers' Banker By WILLIAM APHILADELPHIAN will play a large, per haps the largest, part In shaping the financial policies of the American Hankers' Association at the an nual convention, which begins next Monday nt Seattle. The man is William A. Law, pres ident of tho First National Bank, of this city, and president also of tho associa tion. The policies aro part of the enterprise of preparing tho United Stutes for tho Job of world banker. This year the bank ers wilt seek to find a solution of the great problem of putting to work millions of good WILLIAM A LAW American dollars, mado idle by the war in Europe, Until a few years ago these con ventions, nnd, in fact, tho workings of tho as sociation, wcro more or less perfunctory, but this year tho eyes of tho world will be on Seattle. Financial questions raised by tho war give to tho convention an international importance. That the bankers recognize what Mr. Law has donefor the association was proved two years ago, when tho delegates threw aside tho precedent of having the chairman of the Executive Council automatically succeed to tho vlco presidency and elected him from the iloor. Last year, at Richmond, It was proved again, when ho was made president. Curiously, Mr. Law Is only the second Phlladelphlan who has been president of the American Bankers' Association, although it was founded in this city In the Centennial year, holding its first sessions in the Cen tennial buildings, In Futrmount Park. The other Philadelphia president of tho associa tion was Morton McMlchael, cashier of the bank which Mr. Law now heads. The latter has been devoting much of his time in the last two or threo months to tho preparation of tho program at tho convention, What he considers the greatest problems tho bankers will have to face is best told In his own brief statement: The Convention's Task "The American Bankers' Association," he says, "will face tho greatest plethora of un used funds in Its history. The problem of unused money is the great ono today. Then, too, tho Federal reserve act will have been in operation Just about a yenr when the convention starts, and reports and discus sions of its operation will be of great Im portance. That is the subject the bankers are interested In more than any other." Tho success this Phlladelphlan has had In his avowed effort to widen the scope and in crease the efficiency of the association, mak ing the service more valuable to members and especially to the smaller banks, is prob ably due to tho experience ho has had in bankers' organizations. He organized the South Carolina Bankers' Association in 1901 and became its first president. Nine years later he was made president of the Penn sylvania Bankers' Association, ond t, ik .r" .1' .WU.8. a mmber ot the Executive Council of ne American Bankers' Asso- elation. Mr. Law is a Phlladelphlan by choice He well that ho has resisted the lure of Wall rfEf! .L1 !" co,nmon ""owledge in financial circles that he could have haJ nn executive position in one of the big banks of that famous thoroughfare years ago had he been willing o leavo this city. The rpethpd of I. tt0T,uer Und thB Bteps ' " eer In- , ?I" a" "-''ns a story as that of his apd rise In the dozen years he has spent here. Colled Up From tho South inMn,.,uVVaS,,b0rn n ft cotton Nation In Darlington County, Bouth Carolina. His father was the Hey. Thomas h. Law D D pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, of Spartanburg, who later succeeded the father of President Wilson a. stated eleVk or the Southern Presbyterian denomination Mi Law graduated from Wofford College He tautht school for two years In Wilmington, N. C,, and then became oWplat stenographer CarSn U",cUl C,rcu,t t "outr, apartaajtKnr paW,, Jfc ,n m WJ--Ha m-Mlita-i nl.i ..... V .. ' "nm' W ,- ,. ,, nu am MttkUf , flaaaHT tjaatm aaaaaaaKtiS H IT) BHskaBBKi HssaaaaaaaaKjflH "'THANK YOU. WILLIAM. N6W, m A. McGARRY perience. In two years he had become presi dent of the Central National Bank of Spar tanburg. Some Insight into tho character of the man is given by the story of what he did after graduating from college. He had received free tuition as the son of a minis ter, but after getting his diploma he imme diately went to work to earn enough money to reimburse the Institution. Before tho Civil War relations between Philadelphia and the South were more close than they aro today. It was through an effort by tho old Merchants' National Bank of this city to restore these relations that, Mr. Law was brought to this city, and it Is interesting to note that a continuance pf this effort has been one of his hobbles since his residence here. Tho Merchants' National sent one of Its officers Into the South to And a man to build up Its interests. He found William A. Law In Spartanburg, and ho was so deeply Impressed by the ability of tho young Southerner that shortly afterward the Merchants' National made Mr. Law an offer to come to this city. A writer describing Mr. Law has noted that it took nerve to give up tho presidency of a successful bank In a small city to become an assistant caBhler In J a large bank in a great city. Probably it did, but Mr. Law had the nerve. He also had ability, for in BeVen years ho advanced through tho office of cashier and vice presi dent to the presidency. The First National Bank of Philadelphia took over the Merchants' National in 1910 and Mr. Law became vlco president, and early this year ho succeeded to the presi dency. From court stenographer to presi dent of tho bank holding the first charter issued by the United States Government is somewhat of a record for 25 years, A School of Banking Bank clerks have found Mr. Law exceed ingly helpful. Ono of tho largest activities of the American Bankers' Association is the American Instltuto, of Banking, an allied or ganization of between 16,000 and 17,000 bank clerks who study, through the means provided by tho association, the problems of banking. Perhaps it Is the teaching in stinct acquired in his younger days, but the welfare of tho Institute and tho Buccess of Its members Is one of Mr. Law's particular interests. As to the American Bankers' Association Itself, it is a much moro Important (Organi zation thnn many think. For instance, its membership Is given as 15,000 banks; but these institutions average from three to twenty officers each, and this means that moro than 75,000 banking ofllclnls are inter ested in the association nnd active In its wprk. Mr. Law married Miss Lucy Lathrop Goode, of Savannah, in 1889. They have two children. Their home ' is In German town, where Mr. Law has a library moro like that of a literary man1 than a banker. He has given some tlmo to charitable work In between his other duties he likes to play golf. Some of the young men he has quietly helped Into better Jobs nre now executives n large banks. Mr. Law is a member of the Philadelphia Itucquet Club, the German town Cricket Club, tho Huntingdon Valley iU..nn?. tt tru8tea of tne F,ro Association of this city and of the Central National Bonk of Spartanburg. 8. c. PENNY LUNCHES FOR SCHOOLS Considered in tho Weekly Bulletin of the Bureau of Municipal Research As the expenditures for governmental m.r. poses rapidly increase year by X It mK tLUrfKtd SerhP1' thttt Bovernmenu, L tw too far flung, too deeply ramified and toS deeply extended Into the life of the oeoolA Whenever, therefore, government a,.Um..P en.U,nnotte , vS57" when they open onVpptSSbJ t "W" 1-mu. as, a ,w. d ArHaflSS JOHN!" which originated in England about five years ago. New York and other cities In the United States have also experimented with serving nourishing food In schools. Each of tho 25 schools, all of which are in the southern section of tho city, will have a kitchen and a lunch counter where, for 3 or 4 cents, a wholcsomennd nourishing luncheon may bo secured dufihg the morning recess hour. Thcro will bo no expenso to tho school district beyond tho original outlay for equip ment. Tho lunch counter Itself will bo self eupportlng. even to tho extent of tho super vision. With the extension of the setem to the other schools. It will be possible to give larger portions at the same I flees. The wholo scheme, then, Is to bolster up the educational system by making children, otherwise "dull" nnd unreceptlve, able to take advantage of the opportunities afforded them, so that they may become efficient citizens and productive members of the community. By further extending "the function of the schools In this manner, tho tremendous annual ex penditure for education will be more effective and productive of tho best results, Whnt may at first Jjlueh appear to be n new Item ot expense may be an economy In the best sense of the word. ' THE NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW A sensible State would have a State constabu lary as a police force Chicago Tribune. The hope for a better and cheaper food sup Ply rests with tho agricultural schools. Chi cago Journal. The campaign In behalf of the ship-purchase bill should be dropped. Then the way will be rleared for the possible enactment of soinu really sound piovlslous relative to our ship ping needs. Springfield Union. If we cnuld only get rid of the women-and-chlldran-destroying Zeppelins and the fighting In trenches, along with tho expulsion of the eubmailne, wo would be making war right re spectable again. Ohio State Journal. Ellhu Boot in his speech on invlsibfe gov ernment has made to American political litera ture a contribution of permanent value, and at the same tlmo won the respect of nil advo cates of more decent and less costly govern ment. Hnrtford Post. AMUSEMENTS FORREST ? Mats. 2:15 Beg. Next Sat. Evg. - Evgs.8:15 D. W. GRIFFITH'S THE BIRTH OF A NATION 18,000 People 3000 Horses World's Mightiest Spectacle BEATS ON BAI.K TODAV WALNUT i A nEOUI.AH 12 SHOW KOR .WALNUT 744 ROBERT EDESON BUPPOUTED BY THE WALNUT I'LAYUIIS In "FINK FEATHERS" NEXT WEEK EMMA DUNN . in "UOVKItNOn'B LADY1' B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNUT L TWELFTH BTHEETS You Can't Victor Morley & Co. Beat This B"iM T,KvmWj Showl - J&e'aHA PEOPLE'S ESSUS? Sat. Evg.. Sept. Matliwa Won., Tuta . Thura and Sat Tho Winning of Barbara Worth J'eMleopaT- ,0" THE " MK.,!.BI ABOVE 10TH otanleV , hhn Banymore Hympironr 0rcn JiS .MS.!. DuV"M" PALACE M MA1WOT llwh-Diacuasrd and Kemark'ttbla I'hoto-l'iiy THE SECRET ORCHARD Blanch Swee Carlyla UlacUwell . Thtodora Ilobtrla Gli O T V, MAI'K1 and .tUNH'EU WTU. J- v i- J-J t'etilluuous Vaudtvillt lOfl ISo "Broadway Revue" J0 gZf ila Garrick Xli HOWE'S TRAWftv80!- A"T Ai.J TT i-l 3 California Knpoaltlona I OTHER NlXON'B I Hi;,nttv En,er'ln"l Da by PT? A "NTT itif?.' Y1. J5"1' Stanton J SJL!i!S?lKun YViU"" a'bb0,,' LYRIC "SST" MONDAY E VG oTK?alBR0THE lADE&PHl" Sat, Night 1 MASONS J THEATRE DUMONT'S Si-wonts iinstki. National gj; B?ni www oij. TtoortpQ TB&Z? Oro-Entai