EVEaSTlSTQ LEDaKB PHriiADELPHlA. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 7, lOlS.y Corning gjftjSt "?? rnBUC LEDGER COMPANY CTRU BT K, CURTIS. PazaiPtNT. I) ntM H. LasBiajuow. Vie President (John C Martin, E tmrr ijjjntwifj rbtllp B Collin, John II, BDtTOfltAL DO Ann I tri M K. CraTia. CbeJnflan. W Wi AtSr.... . KiMuilr Editor c. jUtw., General Dullness Manattr I Si llr at Pcstrc Lcmks BuIIdlnc , AmmNtnttnco Square, Philadelphia. CTL ., .Broad and Cheetnut fetreeta iKtlO Cut. ..... ...... .ITf-VnUn Rulidlns Tae. ........ ......lTO'A, Metropolitan Tower ...,.,.. . B2 rora jiuuain .....,.... .409 OloM Democrat llulldlns ,...,.... . .. , , ,1202 Tribune Bulldlne- I...........B Waterloo Place, rait Mill, 8, W. KKWB BUREAUS 1 nT cC The1 rl tlullilnc He TMt RCHlDi,.,..,,!,,. ..The Times HulMlnr mi ntui,, ...00 FriiflcnitrM MMk acitatn.., , ..... 3 Tall Mall Rant, R W. mtatCi,.. . . .. . .33 nue Louie it or ana subscription terms ftr earrw. Ditlr Om.t, alt etnla, Br mall pottpalJ 6 required, Danvr OsLT, cma month, twentr-nve cental PatLT OhLt, om year, three dollars. All mall ut. qrlatlMn MraH In aarance. Katwa. ewecrlbere within add rex hanM muit ato oi aa well as new addreaa Mil. t WALSUT KEYSTONE. MAIN SOW J AMrrtn otl commuKloaNon f Kila ' Z.Mr, fnafiufttr Sonar, PMIadelsAla, At fna rmuDn.mii roirorrtoi e second tun Miib tunc f TMK AVERAGE NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA TION Of THE EVENING LEDGER FOR AUOUST WAS 3,61B. rftKABBLPHIA, TUESDAY, SEITEMBEn 7. 1915. tt,U tfer at well d more righteous to err on the tide of mercy. "UNWILLING TO SCHOOL?" ILL1AM SHAKESrEAKE, who was certainly no authority on tho matter, has gono on record with the statement that the schoolboy, endowed with a shining morn- ilflff' -41- 4A .nwm ....wllllt. In anhnll. fin for aflturles a alandcr ha persisted. Arrant nonsenae, Mr Shakeapcare, For three weeks "school" haa been played on tfont porches and back lawna. For ten daa mothers haVe been besought to buy pencil toxes and pads. For flvo daya conversation has been limited to "toachcr" and "physi ology" and "fourth Grade." And It hasn't ken girls alone. When school opens today the morning faco WlH shine more brightly becauso another jrear has begun. The achoolboy may be omewhat In the dark concerning our great ftem of public education, but ho knows where he gets his fun. AN INDISCRETION, NOT A CRIME THE Dumba affair, following on and com plicating the relations between this coun try and Germany, has not yet developed Into realise for a break with Austria-Hungary. Itlsr at this moment a startling and very unhappy diplomatic Indiscretion. It will make cordial Intercourse with tho Ambassa dor's country perceptibly more dimcult. Tho Ambassador will have plenty of tlmo to ex plain and' will probably need It. Tip to a certain point Ambassador Dumba acted -within his rights. He was authorized by international law to warn subjects of his Government that their aid to the Allies t-Cnl 0 construed as treachery to their ;e land. Ho could with propriety urge IvSuf, and could threaten if urglngs wero oefTectlve. Had ho chosen to do so, he might have, asked tho Department of State to corroborate his demands. Th? letter which Doctor Dumba wrote con tains, however, certain phrases which lndl cte that he haa passed boyond tho proper Activities of an Ambassador. "We can dls onttnlze and hold up for months, If not en tirely prevent, the manufacture of munitions In Bethlehem and tho Middle West," runs bl document. How? Tho withdrawal of 11 subjects of Austria and Germany might "disorganize and hold up," but could not. Kinder any conceivable circumstances, "en tirely provent" tho manufacture of munl- r tlons. The Ambassador must have had other methods in mind. Until he discloses those xpjetbods, or puts a fair and honest construc tion on the words he has written, the coun try ill suspend judgment It will be none the less suspicious, and Ambassador Dumba r woukt do well to hasten his roply before ' fwsfMcton turns to active resentment against H afw KM country. , x WljjPN ASAN ELIMINATOR PRESIDENT WILSON Is likely to enjoy 'momentary, If not a permanent, fame 4he Great Eliminator. He began his reer In Washington "by deciding to ollm , Mt Huerta, and he succeeded after some months, fo the delight of all who are de lighted with hb Mexican policy. Then, with out any preliminary warnings to the notion, ka eliminated Bryan, and sent him sliding on grad plank straight Into tho centre of the congenial Chautauqua circles. Now there are nif abroad tha he has succeeded in limlrmtlug Von TlrplU from the German Admiralty, thereby showing that bis powers ar not bounded by a single continent. It ha long been admitted that he has elim inated all rivals for the presidential nom ination .next year. But unless he showa great discretion thla winter he will be in grave danger of eliminating both himself and his party, for the nation Is not Ilka tho oock in tfce story of the man who wanted tha eliminated from hit order. Its aiimtaator I In good wprklng condition. XOiSON IS RIGHT !HK ln4lrect reply of Thomas A. Edison . to aa lavlutlon from Messrs. Henry Ford jonst wanaxMKer is iikj r clean, clear of air after tha atMHag stillness of the MMaCL TtM invltatkm was to a confer- L.tryvti;jlt Is to te expected, Mr. Ford MM pmw te seeM a milHan for , thy aasaa atrang. paMdox, against Mas, tfrn tfce laU before us," .m. Mtoeis "that we atwuUl have, to wf-io-mmm war mnsmwiry an nation avar aad at' wttl have," UOs aiataaaaai; suraly ftt, aad wa. It is, howavar, m aswaaa C wis- .arr ttMM of foUy. tmm pi aw Meas- ar ttris country to tmuwiia aatanr athar II that U necaaaary ia anawaat ta Ath our auemiis, Vfka wa k that IUMW lll iiyt b jr liatjaf t atUaat aaienn r iniielC kn nsa am naturally iiiertrusu mechaiiirai avMHML IiMih i '' (ar)-4aptris and naval aprts t Wli.l t I i. vi aaikmata tM ainal vahta itn,. rt, ..u.-pitH ice tvatf with- a I. ifi.er 4gfi has yet beea kkown slnr eidncy will be a futile thing. Mr. Edison Is wilting to "take a chanco that wo can put men behind this machinery." The better way would be to provide the men nd the machine and toke no chances, He Is , little wrong, but he la very much right In his basic belief In preparedness. He has, In a fine wny, given his fellow-men a lesson In patriotism. "THIS ONE THING I DO" r' WOULD ba necessary to search long and far to find a better motto for the men who are behind the greater Philadelphia movement than tho words which stand at tho head -of this article. No big business was ever developed the managers of which wabbled In their determination to mako It succeed. No nation every grew great with out the determination of ltn leading spirits that It should not remain littlo. The men who have been studying tho rea sons for the ability of tho Germans to hold thelr'own so long against tho united opposi tion of thrco great Powers and two littlo ones have found It In tho consistent and persistent pursuit of a slnglo Ideal for a quarter ot a century. Tho dominating power In tho German Empire has directed all its energies to fostering Germnn patriotism and to perfecting tho means by which Germany could not only defend herself, but could as sert herself In tho crlols which was clearly foreseen. "Thla one thing I do" has been at tho back of all the thinking of tho con structive German statesmen for a genera tion. As a result we sco today this Power waging war upon Its neighbors and success fully confining the conflict to foreign soil, where Us enemies and not It must suf fer' from the devastations. Say what wo may of the German cause, German efficiency commands tho admiration of all men, savo thoso given over to unmitigated hatred of Germany and everything Gorman. What Philadelphia noeds to lift hor from tho third to tho second city In tho Union is unity of purpose and concert of action in support of a great and comprehensive plan of commercial expansion. Individual busi ness men havo done for tholr own enter prises what all should unlto In doing for ,the city as a whole. Tho decision to mark manufactured goods as "mado In Philadel phia" Is good so far as It goes. But tho work should not be stopped there. Along with this label others should bo used en joining business mon to "ship from Phila delphia" and to "ship to Philadelphia," to "buy In Philadelphia" and "sell In Philadel phia." And while tho business men as such aro engaged In this work they and tho rest of the citizens can justify a growing pride In their community by redoubling their efforts to Improve tha political, moral and intellect ual standards of tho city. When our public school system Is a model for the nation, when our public library attracts scholars here from neighboring States, and when municipal reformers come here to learn how to cure the festering evils In other cities, tho work pressing to be done will bo In a fair way of accomplishment. This Is a great city, but It must be mado greater. Thero is no doubt that the alert business men who are returning to their homes at the close of the vacation season as marked by Labor Day have been think ing of these things and are prepared to carry on a campaign this winter the like of which has not enlivened the city for a generation. THE ILLUMINATING PARALLEL IF ANY one Is In doubt as to tho duty of the United States Government to protect Us citizens wherever they may bo engaged In any legitimate enterprise of trade or pleasure he would bettor consider what sort of conditions would prevail In Philadelphia If the police force refused to rescuo an in nocent citizen from the hands of a gang of thugs for fear the officers might soil their uniforms or got their knucklos bruised. The nation must insist on respect for trestles as the police insist on respect for publlo order. And Labor played harder than It ever works. There ore better waya of disciplining a young woman than killing her. Indignant citizen wants to rhyme "Dumba" with "Governor of Pennsylvania." The echoes from Root's invisible govern ment speech continue to reverberate. Moat of us would think we wero punished enough If we had to eat half a basket of peaches. The Russians have abandoned Dago, saya a headline. Sounds like the breaking up of the Allies. No one envies Mr. Wilson these days; but thank heaven! a number of critics have grown silent, too. t Tho Friends of Peace are sometimes mado strangely happy by an episode of war if ths Kaiser comes off ahead. Those baljot boxes, now being distributed for the primary elections, are admirably adapted for canning the unpopular candi dates. Great Britain, with her 2,000,000 army In Frahea, is still holding 34 miles of front Rut 1.0M.9M men ought to be able to hold 14 iall square I Demons, according to the Vosslsche Xakung, are unas-lmaus la desiring friendly ratatlaas with America. Americans unanl ! raaipreaaie tha feeling. Aiahoaao ha f-oM of sausages or his pwrvam a-wmyhsg wouM not announce that ha Is la AMwrioa to buy 40 toas af caa is, "aaa? f wfttch will caatala sausages ha aata W tha W"." .,.,,,., n,, .I..,..,, Whaa, tha, M patian want awa. a Cma. sm jaapiar alia i ba t hi. tkm mm tha ahei tailia 1 tha watarT It I hoped tiat the Mitt? will mmh, tha (Hum avaeaa at tha rnVtuiiii policy aaa awia ciaartr atoa, "COUNTING OUT" WITH VARIATIONS The "Ene, Mono" Rhymes Go Many Ways, But They All Lead , Back to the Games of Everybody's Childhood By W. A. LAREDE "pOUNTING out rhymes" these chants of J childhood have been called the wonder ful, mysterious and far diffused poetry of youth. To childish use they are never con fined, but they wero when the race was young, they root deeply back In tho past. Most familiar ot counting out rhymes nro thoso motivated In "cony, meeny." In somo localities tho leit-motif Is pronounced as If spelt "cena mecna." A recent correspond ent transliterates tho burden In a third way, "one, mono." The norm Is: Kcny, meeny, mlny, mo, Catch nlitger by the toe, If he hollers, let him ro, Eecny, meeny, mlny, mo Tho correspondent's Version is Ene, mens, mlny, mo, Catch a nlCKcr by tho toe, If he asks to lot him go, Mako him holler "mlny, mo.' Rejection of tho refrain plainly Indicates less antiquity for this form. Hoosicr Catalcxis Variant readings show that the "oeny, meeny" school of poetry Is still a living or ganism, and offers a field for the research of the curious. Hut tho old forms aro moro In teresting, lens conscious. Another correspondent quotes the follow ing, with a variation In the refrain: Kile, mene, mono, ml, lluska, lane, bona, ntrl, Ilulda, Rulda, liOO! Out goes ou' Elscwhcro this Is used to "count out": En, mccnv, mony, ml, Tusker, liner, boner, stry, lluldy, guldy, goo, though "boo" Is sometimes the ultima, tho one receiving tho syllable bolng "out." In Indiana, wo aro told by a Hoosier author between novols, that this Is tho fa vored form of tho "cony, meeny" legend: Eony, meeny, mlny, mo, crackaffeeny, flny fo, Opltoojcr. popltoojcr, rick, blck, ban, do, Nolo tho swell nnd Burgo of tho lino. Tho practiced metrician will find In It catalcxis, syncopo and all tho fearsome figures found In the prosody section at the stub end of tho grammar book. Down In Louisiana tho "kids" havo much tho same form, except that tho rhythtnlo movement Is more sonorous, with tho sub stitution of "omlnoucha, poopltoucha," sin gularly reminiscent of the metro celebrating tho exploits of tho Finn giant, Kalova, a metre transferred by Longfollow to his nar ration of Hiawatha's career. Sailing around tho Gulf from tho bayous nnd Creoles and okra, brought to memory by "omlnoucha, poopltoucha," we get to tho Cotton Belt, whero tho variant Is "appaloochce, popatoo cheo," terms also with memories,, memories of unpronounceable and almost unremem bered rivers and creeks of tho "Joggerfy" of the Southern States. Another rhymo from those far off, happy days, begins with tho familiar "ceny, meeny," and continues: Happy, hoppy, hippy, ho, Ham, scram, mulllca man, Bo, Bo, Bo, the last "bo" meaning "It" In hldc-and-scek and "out" In counting for the so-called "ring games." It dorlves from the West Virginia mountains, at least tho boy who brought it to Delaware came thenco. His brother had tho alternative "medicine man," but he was older and a rendor of wild nnd woolly yellow backs, which Edward S. Ellis used to write under a nom do plumo. This "Injun" in reading Is too mature for the Juvenility that "counts out." Mark Twain said there were three root Jokes at least they say Mark Twain Bald It and James Hunekcr has mado a valid dem onstration of tho eoven plots of drama or was It thlrty-seven7 So far as Is known to tho present writer there ore two motifs In "eeny, meeny" poetry, the one that gives name to the school and the "ickery Ann" themo. The norm seems to be: One-ery, two-ery, Ickery Ann, Phtlllson, pholllson, Nicholas, John; Quevy, quavy, English navy, Stlokory, sank, sock. Vestiges of a love lyric, with the senti ment worn to attrition, aro visible here. Sometimes tho feminine name Is "Nan." Maybe tho sense of tragedy brooded over tho original; noto the monntkers of two rivals. But this Is all surmise. Compare as tho savants say this with a Celtic touch: Wlnnery, wannery, accory, ham, Phlllosy, pholllsy. Nicholas, Jam, Queby, quorby, Irish Mary, StlnUum, stankum, buck. Common source Is certain, but the devia tion Is marked. Tho lines move swiftly the last smacks of tho witty Dean of St. Pat rick's. Probably tho spelling of "phllllson" or "phllllsy" is too literary, too, but there Is nothing of the affected about tho quatrain. It is ingenuous, by and largo. But what sounding words they are, how rotund, how ample, what a mouthfull On "The Birth of a Nation" ' Tho same cannot bo said for thla, which Is blamed on Michigan, though It hath a sound of "carpet baggers" and the Southland dur ing Reconstruction: nolllka, bubllka, dovil-a.pot, Bolllka, bubllka, helllka lot: Boll black blood of big black man. Bolllka, buhllka, Ku Klux Klan. This Is a pretty study In alliteration, but It la the neologism pt maturity. It haa a aophlstlcatlon which doea not belong to tho authentic specimen of tho school. It does not aound as If Lewis Carroll had written It And that is aa near a crllerlon as moderns can get to Judge the historicity or prehls torlclty of the mystic moglo survivals of th childhood of the race, now the verbal play things of real romping childhood. SHADE Oreen templM, closed against the beat Of noontime's blinding glare and heat. Open to any pilgrim's feet The white road blisters In the sun: Now, half the weary Journey done. Enter and rest, O weary onel And feel the dew of dawn still wet Beneath thy feet, and to forget i The burning highway's ach and frat This la Qod'a haapltaUtr, Math causa to thuklttM MlMP Thaaiuata OWrUaa. THE KITCHEN STERNLY INDICTED Andy McGilligan Presents An Argument for Woman Suffrage as He Discourses on the Cooking Combine and the Value of Trusts An Anachronism Awaiting Its Edison By B. K. I AST evening I called on my friend, Mr. J McGilligan. Ills wtfo has boen away for tho summer. So has mine, Tho mlnuto I got In tho door Andy and I exchanged a look of profound sympathy and comprehension. He took mo out to bis kitchen, where I be held an Impressive pile of stewpans, skillets and dlBhcB, tho whole neatly crowned by a coffee-pot. "There," said Andy, with a fitting gesture, "Is tho wholo argument for equal suffrage or anything else they want. Let's have a smoke." 'Andy and his cigar lighted up simulta neously. I don't know of anybody who Is more completely the American citizen than Andy. Ho Is an cpttomo of the United States. His observations on that account havo always scemod to mo irrefutable law. They certainly seemed to mo so lost evening. His mind was full of skillets, even as mine. "Often," said Andy, "I have told my wife that woman's place Is In the home. Often sho has told me that household cares are an unmitigated boro and drudgery. I believe I have always agreed with hor pn that point. I could afford to, for business Is pretty much the same thing. Tho great moments, tho moments when you rako in a profit roally worth while, don't come every day. Tho rest of tho thing Is Just plain, tame routine. I've said as much to my wife. I was per fectly willing to agree with her when sho oamo right back and said that her routine was a leetle mite worse than mine. But I never gave her that whole-souled, complete accord, that unconditional surrender, that I havo since I've had to ellck up that pile of skillets and dishes twice this summer. Eating 15th Century Meals "You and I, Blank," said Andy, "are living In the twentieth century. Our wives are still living and still working In the fifteenth. "YOu know yourself how you'd roar If you had to lick your own stamps at the office, or sweep out, or shoo away the book agents. We have offlco boys to do that. But our wives are their own office boys to this day. By George, it's no wonder they are in re volt and want the earth. They deserve it. "They've been sent to college. They've had their minds and their desires licked up to meet the complicated interests ot these times. We train them for Bythlng else on earth except the one worst thing on earth there Is left to do. They're the most in tellectual offlco boys in captivity. Captivity, precisely that "In tho outside world we have Introduced every possible Invention of the mind of man to lighten work, to speed up production, to save human strength. Imagine what would happen if I tried to take my shoe factory bock to the old hand methods! Where would I he In ono week! Well, I'm the man that keeps that shoo factory going. I my self am kept going by my kitchen. And at the very basis of all this progress of ours there's no progress whatever. I'm manu facturing shoes In the twentieth, but I'm eating my meals In the fifteenth, "I tell you, the kitchen la a survival of the Dark Agea. We have deliberately per mitted It to he what it la. I tell you, the kitchen is .calling for its Edison, its West inghouss, its Henry Ford, for any man who can make it a contemporary of the times." "But what would you have him dor said I, appalled before this stern indictment, "Do!" said Andy "Do for the kitchen at least as much as we have done for dentistry! A hundred years ago, when the world and the kitchen were younger, we used to read by candles. And made our own candles, at that When you and I came into this room, what did I, doT I turned an electric switch and Edlton gave us tight." Dinners by Wire "But you dow't expect Edison to give you your dinner and wash your dishes by the turn of a switch r said X, aghast "Why nstt" el Andy. "If ona Edison could knook out tha candle, why can't some ether Zdiaan knack out the stewpot and tha dish pan! "I see," aM L "7u want your dinner sent to yeu ovar a wire, tiut doesn't nature stand In tha way? You may hear over a wire and ae ovar a wire. But how eat oyer a wirtf Tha thing atrnak ma aa afeud, 4 I tatiotataa as sauen. "Daa't ba atUy, aUak aak Ke. "Tha tils If sajaaaM a rat partaeUy aarioua OUR POSITION , ' r-aKJSr'. LITTLE about it. If we have a central lighting plant, why not a ccntrul cooking plant? It's being started already. A London department store run by an Amclcan, by tho way has bo gun to advcrtlso neatly cooked dinners, served at your door, plplpg hot, by Bpeedy autotruck delivery. The menus are attract ive and tho prices aro low. Can't you sco tho cost of living reduced by somo glgantlo cooking combine, able to buy Its oysters by tho million, Its steaks by tho ton and buy ing on Bhort tlmo and lurgo discounts? All tho economics of big business aro posslblo In tho cooking Industry. And your dishes called for by tho samo autovan next morn ing. Why not?" "It's a glittering prospect," I admitted. "But," I grudged, "what about the poetry of tho homo and all that sort of thing?" "Won't tho poetry of tho homo get Us chanco only when you've knocked out tho proso of tho home?" ho came back at me. "Poetry!" he sneered. "Just look over tho situation. When I come home tired nnd tho steak Is tough, I intimate as much to my wife. Couldn't I really curso It out much moro effectively If I wero railing against somo Rockefeller of tho roast? Ond reason why tho American people tolerate the trusts Is In order to havo something to flail, some thing to 'Indict' Would tho evening be spoilt and my wlfo mado unhappy If I brought tho responsibility of that tough steak right straight to tho door of tho cooking com, blno? Shakespeare and the Coffee Pot "Besides, tho chances of a tough steak would be fewer. The comblno would bo ablo to buy its steaks by the carload, 'hang them tilt they were 'green' and cook them when thoy were tender. They might havo bar gain sales In steaks. They might own their own radish farms. I see In my mind's eye a wholo State planted In radishes by tho cooking combine. They might buy up the sardtno output. They'd employ cooks bet ter than you and I could nfford to hire. We'd have Rltz-Carlton fare right in our own homes, oven on Monday evening. They'd corner the watermelon crop a year In ad vance We'd hear of futures in beets and carrots. They'd havo schools for waiters. You might havo sent to you, along with your meal, a waiter ablo to spring a few vaudeville bits or talk a little Plato. "And meanwhile," said Andy, In italics, "the burden of planning the meals, of keep ing your cook sweet-natured, of seeing the dishes well washed, would be gone from the house and gone from tho world. Poetry? Poetry would come in at the door, along with tho dinner from central. I would up root the kitchen entlrelyl" Andy declaimed. "I'd send It back to the Pharaohs, whero it belongs. I tell you, I marvel at thev patience of women. Thoy havo stood still in the kitchen nnd watched us pass on. Why do we havo the servant problem? Because of the kitchen. Why do we have so much divorce? The kitchen's largely to blame. Our poor women llvo with ono . hand on Shakespeare and tho other on tho cortoe pot. Their aspirations soar to tho clouds, while their feet aro in the kitchen sink. They cry for emancipation. Emancipation from what? From the lard can and tho dlshrag. Where was the equal suffrage movement born? In tho pantry. Giving them tho bal lot Is a mere trifle. Tho Important thing la not what wo give them, but what we take away. Pluck out that foul spot, the kitchen, from the fair lap of civilization, Every rung on the ladder of Women's success is slippery with kitchen grease, " Andy was still talking on like that when I left at U o'clock. But I will say that I agree with htm. WHEN THE HALTER DRAWS .ThM.e, Jh0 r. iir.ecly r Indirectly hurt by thi "M"" f; fearlesa and efficient pubUe official always believe or affect to believe that they are the vtctlma of official persecution. Nor doea the tyndenoy to criticism, stop with them. "The publlo official who goea about dla, charging his duty without fear or favor must be prepared to ba liberally criticised from mi. meroua other quartera. There are those to whom the apecUcle of vlgoroua action in publlo omca la alwaya for some reason unpleasant ThaV find In it a savor of tyranny or parsecutlon r high-handed injustice or dlacrimlnCutweS the various "claaserf- of .oclety or something equally unpleasant uhu Huch oltUena see very clearly ths dWcultla of the prlaanar In the dock and Tth eara humiliation of hla family. What tW talMi aaa, as a ruU. tha dimoultlat t vS iSitJ M a aaU will ha MUnul mUp? SSSSL 1 to go unchecked. They feel keenly the pains and penalties to which the individual in the hands of tho law may be aubjected. But tha pains ot the great mass 'of cltjzens who may ba left exposed to lawloss outrages is not so prom inently before their vision. However, these are assuredly In the minority. Over and against these Is the great body of sober, scnslblo and humane citizens who look nt things a littlo more In the large: who are Just as humano ns anybody, but a little more wide In their view of the situation. And these citizens, as has boen shown time and again, will always rally to the public official who does hlB duty as ho sees It. Chicago Herald. NATIONAL POINT OP VIEW Senator Boles Penrose's denunciation of the short ballot wai just the Indorsement It needed. Springfield Republican. We see that It is much easier to begin a var than to end It, and that Is a truth which the American people might ponder with profit In dianapolis News. Public opinion in this country will not fall to justify vigorous measures by our Govern ment for the restoration ot peace and order In northern Mexico Hartford Post. Maybe when Freedom shrieked In Poland at Koaclueko'a fall sho foresaw that Poland might become an "Independent buffer State" between Germany ond Russia. Kansas City Star. After this cruel was Is over there will be Inter national and industrial arbitration established. Both of these great reforms are born of the same parents the love of truth, the love of Justice and the love of humanity. Ohio State Journal. Other States should copy New York. There should be legislative records as there Is a Con gressional nccord, carrying full details of all that Is attempted and accomplished In tho mat ter of law making, and giving every citizen a chance to Inform himself. If so disposed, ot what Is going on In tho different fields of legis lative endeavor. Washington Star. AMUSEMENTS FORREST Now l-Vll twice dailt lw" Evgs. 8:16 D. W. GRIFFITH'S THE BIRTH OF A NATION 18.0Q0 People 3000 Horses World's Mightiest Spectacle Beats for Neat Week on Bala Thursday. B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNtJT AND TWELFTH BTREET8 SEASONOPENS WITH A BANG1 ALEXANDER CARR & CO. IN HIB TltEMEKDOUS HUCCESS "AN APRIL SHOWER" a,VgaBcI,AiSSf5ig,, AND OTHBHB. WA Tj N TT T T"HATn.E i u xn u x phone walnut son MATINEE EVEUT DAY EMMA DUNN EnB"', in THE GOVERNOR'S LADY Matlnee.ra WALN"T Mff.V GLOBE THEATRE JulS $ CONTINUOUS 11 A. M. TO 1 P. M. ONLY POPULAR PniCB VAUDEVILLE THEATRE ,.,.. N THE HEART pF THE CITY rmcEB ., , joo, jso, jsa Drawee Friaco & Hambo. NIXON'S GRAND Hoyfa Mlnatrelsi A. Havel a Co. John La Vler; Bell RM Ineonj Clarka a Gerard, Sun Mr, 4 Rene j Fun Fota Today 8 HB T Knickerbocker T"T5. flayers FROHUAN'8 BUCCESs7"DLbMAcy'' Matlntea. TueeJar. Thuredar. Baturday" 10o,Toe. 3fa ADELPHI Tnnifrrir " " 'Tbura. "Brother MaBons'Tm 'jfiPUSamn LYRIC Mat. T ' $1,00 asg gB-The PrlnceS Pat'' Nixon's Colonial S'foe . DUMONT'S WiE? f,i?f,T2 j3 , Burleaqua- Atjaatla w'ffl'nASfifi.ffl; NATIONAL ?,rilm Burteut poldea Tteadro & Girl in Purpla