S: 9 ." ;9mw& ISCVT Hebgcr WJBUC UCDCKR COMrANY crl H K. CU1IT1H, l'siarMi . T. l-aSIa on. Tito I'lMlcKntiJshnC. Martin, n rr u T, rniiip o Colllna, John n. FJtrMters. DITORIAk nOAnD! Cir H K cbti, Chairman V '"MAI-Kr . . i:utlt Editor W C. MAHTI.V Central fiualnm Uanater rtMIM Htlr t Puauo LtMti Dulliilnt. tanlaimaanc Bquaia, PblladalfiM. 1 M Camat,,.,. . .Ureti and ChfMnut Ptreata tuim Citlni...) JTcaa-ttilan Building fit Vac. ,..,.,. . ITO-A. Metropolitan Towtr t'mmr . . .. . H20 i-oti llulldlni fr l.CiHa.,.,, .... 00 Ulnba Drtnocrnt llulldlnc i rno, .,.,,, 1V..I., .lltOJ Tribune HullAiia; l4-ox, ,.,,,,, .-,,4 Waterloo Plata, rail Mall, 8 W KEWS BUIlKAUSi WasHtfataK BraC.... , ...Tha roll fli-tidlnc Nt Yew MratiD ., .,,. Tit Tmt nalldlnr niu, mhv. ... .... . . no KriK,."chtri tnmw Seainu,,. 2 Tall Mall ran'. B. W. rtaia snaaac ,S2 nu LnHa la Oram! suBscmrtioN tehms r oarrtar, PiTtT OftT, alt eant Br nwll rtpM eiiteti'e of rhlladtlDhla. irM whar fo1an nutate ta raaiilfed, Daltt oyvt, ona month twanty-flvacfntaj riLT uklt. pn jut, mraa aouara All man aun tbtleaui payabla In arlrane lotlca Bulwrlbat rrlahlna: aHre ehanrel muat nli 4a wall aa new addrm 'w WALNUT KETSTONT. MAtV 0W AUrrtt all nniinilcnHana lo Srfitltfl par, nlBilCA Sljaorf, rniladtlpMo. tit t rnu.ioit.rnu roarorrtcs is itoo.iD tt cuss xiit, umn tVVKRAOH NST PAID DAILY CinCUIV ION OP TUB EVENING LEDGER FOB AUQU8T WAS 63,018. 'BELttliA. SATURDAY, 5F.rTF.MDEn U, 191J. I ' ' ' s tcowM nltcayi have good company, J o vourself e worth companion POSTAL SERVICE iADKLPHIA does not want Ha costal ico Improved backwards. There has Sf much Improvement already In dlf iutches,of the Government admln ?n along- tho lines of savin? 0 cents i spigot and losing 10 timer a touch hunghole. In tho form of Inferior V bean suggested that the threat to tint's pneumatic mall distribution Is r but a trick to force a better con front the operating company. It so, i petty method of doing business, un y of a giNflt Government ladelphla has a right to resont tho sort 1 atal service which has been given the 'or many years. Long: ago the post building Itself should have been lm r d. So, too, there have ov6r and again wholly unwarranted delays In mall de ls, hot only In the residence but also ,5 buslnass districts. jlnes men are right In protesting "ist iiy pl.n to cripple the servlco now, tmae" the pretense of improving it. rimatia tubes tako seconds whero auto- wbl'ea take minuses. The Government is jgtged In selling Jthp transportation of mmunlcatlon. The essential element of ch service Is speed. TRUE AND TRIED SPOKESMAN for the people's interests -. li Councils, Robert D. Drlpps during re nt years has rendered conspicuous serv Ve has been an ever-ready champion of ' geernment, & vigilant servant and sen-;-t ijLyjen who at great sacrifice to hlm plant puted his efforts to the better shades, conditions. Ho has been a the""" the Publlc- often ,n c'roun contl Vhlt'ht well have dampened the the v of -tarLf less nervo and force. Judgeptnnce of"4iio otllco vacated by, tb orter Is an assurance to tho people Thepn,a tnat tho administration of 4 to rarn'nt w"1 continue to bo char than y sagacity, efficiency and honesty, danclracn of this sort welcome the op giU'tO hter the public service no man jjspalr of tho Republic or of municipal pent, ti) .-. - ' JTLING IN THE GRAVEYARD fa - - tnny one heard rumors of a meeting I the Democratic leaders to discuss Isdoip of nominating a full national "next year? most alert newspapers have not yet f& that such a meeting is planned, ler have they said that tho Republican ppr-X Committee Is seriously considering ""tofnerp docide whether It will The cornerstctlon of delegates to a "Wealey AfrW. Church, Qini leaders, however, who M-TlttV that 'their party had White, pr-nd that they would remain Band, of death their doath have Just ley ChULter a con,erence- ot which - churche"nd out whether tho party was , in a cataleptic state, that they convention and nominate a ticket even they, after all their boast- T.aia matter of course. They In- the party Is alive, but this means at thev am wtilatllnrr in kn 4ili J up until they get out of the grave- WOMEN OF AUSTRIA TITBROKEN world will not hesitate to give thanks to the women of Austria, all their slqtcra of Europe, they have suf- the 1!acknesa of war and have worked .Ically to relievo Its sufferings. For that ;x ww.v. , ..., ...-.. at the world must thank them for is "statement, made a few days ago, that have stood by the bedsides of the dying nave heard no humiliating abuso of their lau Neither do thq women speak In 'H- an4 bitterness of heart. Where eor- so great there Is little room for hatred. women of this country have been jV'a ith agonies of Europe. It would be ' the men wouia learn irom Austria's to stand fast against the doctrine of 4. CW KIirifKT RTinPPINfJ irzr "--" rin it1'"'1" wsMu tn bft fihout rina far nn. .-WTrnu murtmg.rjr '- ': ,...., .;. a Uuf yJtvKffllslvil1, au UIA fcfo "Uv).b pmml ! saMsht ronsternatlon to the JontjrkC.AfJrtl, jio. The suspension of gt, ""sr. oi Pittsburgh, by the New 7, YtrZMfrm tor yew or1 the uek filkh brttfffum trm KM bn '" Vl4t ,af -e ntUaurgh ticket lS& t iwva feteia. 4ecsced If there "WMrt rto 1 the prices of the "war too d"ubtWa fajjpoQiiibla for the in m?J,ulr tn" T,Wl,l nKMSii in thi Jil, r Erry legitimate broker Attd t h bucket .shop is merely a Mtoaw where men Wt on thrl 9 " jri-, . without th C tattwi e II in. ar? rtinr o jliila il i ri4t) JioVf Mi WHB aaP 1 -r 1 !a t aA..ll. m flM l.n M iaj as r ftSKlKa LKDOBRPHILADJELraiA, BE'- own to cover th rs.vidulent ,Mture of th regular bustnrss, ftut the New Tork Stock Exchange and the Stock Exchange In Phila delphia have mode atrlngont rules forbidding their membci-j .o havo any dealings with the bucket men. The bucket shop has been Illegal In this State since 1907, when a law was passed de fining the Institution, declaring that every man who maintained one was guilty of a misdemeanor and providing that evidence wt a completed transaction was not necessary to prove guilt, but that an offer to make a bucket shop deal was sufficient. The law further defines all bucket shop trades as gambling, and all contracts of the kind aro hull and Void. Now that the action of the Now York Ex chango has called attention to the stale of affairs in Pittsburgh, the criminal authorl ties of Allegheny County cannot fcegln too soon to enforce the act of 10T; for tho bucket shop Is not onty a gambling houso but tho crookedest kind of a gambling houso, whero the outsider has no chsnee to win. NO DODGING THESE QUESTIONS TwrcNICHOIi and tho Vares have made up J-Vl tholr minds that Bmlth shall go through this campaign without making promises to anybody except themselves. Tho candidate has no platform, unless some generalities which have escaped him may bo so called. Ho Is for "progress," but the trouble Is (that to men of tho puppet typo "progress" too often means pacing back at maximum speed to tho repudiated methods of long ago. Rut Mr. Bmlth is not going to crawl into office without letting the peoplo know Just whero ho stands. There are certain things essential to tho future well-being of this city, so essential that the electorate cannot afford to permit any man to become Mayor without knowing his position definitely and surely. The Evening Lr.Dann has some questions which It will ask Mr. Smith as the campaign progresses. They will requlro explicit an swers and they must not be dodged. LAWMAKING BY INTERPRETATION SECRETARY REDFIELD has begun to amend tho seamen's act by interpreting out ot It the language provision inserted by Congress. He has Just ruled that the section requiring officers and crew to understand tho same language does not mean what it says. The crew may speak any languago under the sun so lohg as the officers havo learned In that language the commands necessary to direct them In their work, or so long as the crew understands the commands of tho ofll cer whether they know his language or not. He says further that the sole purpose ot the language test section Is to secure the safe navigation of the ship, and that it is not In tended to cause embarrassment to the ship owners. This Is a good beginning. Now If the Sec retary of Commerce will continue to Interpret out of the aot all the other obstructive and oppressive features, American shipowners will be under no worse handicap than before the act was passed. Ho would better do 't quickly before- Congress assembles and begins to make trouble for him. THE MESSAGE TO THE NATION THE registration lists are Philadelphia's message of Republicanism to the nation. Two hundred and eleven thousand reg istered as Republicans. Twenty-one thousand registered In tho Washington party. Only 25,000 registered as Democrats. Practically all of the 22,000 w' registered as non-partisan believe In Protection. Ten out of every 11 voters in Philadelphia aro for Protection, by thg record. Dut 1 In 11 favors a tariff for revenue only, or freo trade, or any part of the theory that tho way to assure prosperity In this country is to pauperize the workmen. . , That Is the message tho registration lists carry to the nation. It Is enough. The municipal election Itself will simply tell what ISnd of Republican this great Repub lican city wants a clean-cut, forward looking Republican or a Republican of the crab type, a puppet of bosses, a dummy who Is part and parcel of the masquerade which was for so long the tragedy of Phila delphia. FORTUNES IN FEES NO BANKER ever floated a big public loan without being denounced as a thief bo cause the usual fees allowed In such cases amount to a large sum. The bankers negoti ating with the representatives of the Allies will not escape denunciation. The fees or commissions asked for raising the money aro reported to be at tho rate of one-half of ono per cent. This would amount to 2,fi00,000 on a loan of half a billion dollars. The man who thinks that It Is a crime to pay any ono mora than S1000 a year regards It as a high treason for any one to have as much as a million dot-, lara and language falls him to describe the offense of a syndicate of bankers that will gt two and a half times as much for a few weeks' work. It Is not necessary to defend the fee or com mission system. That Is adjusted by the necessities of business, and the men in busi ness conform to the rules of the game. Thny know that bigness Is not necessarily vicious and that virtue does not invariably clotho littleness In a garment. It may be remarked that however big the total of the fees paid for raising the Anglo-French loan may be, the men who receive them will earn every penny of the vast amount before they finish the transaction. Still another site has been suggested for the. Convention Hall. A no-fuslonlst Is sometimes nothing more than a bl-partlatn gangster. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Is proving In Colorado that he Is a pretty good mixer. When Ja(jnese soldiers fight beside the Russians von Mackensen wilt retreat still faster Vice President MaMhaH la bck In Wash ington again saying nothing to the extent pf a column, as usual, The Indianapolis courts seem to thjnk there is something wrong when a candidate t the- primaries polls more votes than wire cast. Dllg ) olferlng H,H for that National Dtsfteeratto Cvtio. Jt -why ato tk Pesaec?st JajoU eaHtar. Xvwy MM kaows Kat It wiU 4. THE RETURN OF A RUSSIAN GENERAL KuropatkJn, Recalled by tho Cznr in 1005, Is Recalled Again Ten Years Later, But This Time to a Real Job By ELLIS RANDALL THE disappearances and reappearances of men In Russian public life aro of sur prising frequency Tho present wnr Is likely to bring back Into prominence tho man who commanded the armies of tho Czar through most of tho Rurso Japanese War, nnd In the spring of 1905 was recalled for falluro to deliver the goods Alexel Nlcolalovltch Kuropatkln, hero of fights from tho arctics to tho equator, schol ar, historian, geogra pher, statesman, ad ministrator. Already It Is reported In tho Rus sian press that Em poror Nicholas Is com mander - In - chief In nnmA nnlv rinrt 4f.it GEN. KUROPATKIN . manor nt lctt8t one of tho principal men behind tho Slav resurgence that even Uorlln cannot deny Is General Kuropatkln, "recalled" again. Ills namo must bo added td the long lis of sexagenarian commanders In tho present conflict. He Is 67 years old, nn hereditary noble of Pskof. His ancestry runs back to tho Czars of Moscow, with a tradition that stretches across tho centuries to Odln aid Thor. At tho ago of 18 ho entered the army. Ho wanted work, hard work, as always through his long life, and so, ecornlng nn appointment In the fashionable Imperial Guards, ho chose a commission In th'o Turkestan Rifles. And from then on his career Is rich In dramatic color. Tho Btage potting has varied the northern lights over tho fiozon Neva River: the Arabian Nlchts' country of Tashkent and Samarcand: Paris of tho Debacle: n moonlight oasis In tho Fahrra: tro Tartar cities under the roof ot the world; tho blue Danube, Plovna, tho Bal knna; tho brigand-ridden Turcomnn steppes; the shores of the Caspian; tho ruins of Merv, and then ngaln tho wintry Neva, tho war mlnlBtry, tho Russian nrmy, tho Far East and then obscurity. Covered With Glory In theso years he has received every decoration for valor that his sovereign has it In his power to bestow. And he wears them all a carload of Icons, amulets and crosses cover his breast. He knows full well the value of tho theatrical pomp and brag gadocio that appeal to the hearts of his soldiers. Ostentatiously he slaps on the back his "brother" Ivan, tho private. But ho is a cold-blooded calculator, a, student who loses no details of tho problem before him. And despite his misfortunes It Is probablo that today, as In 1904 and 1905, he Is tho Idol of his soldiers. For he la n great "leader of men" like most of the military heroes In history. In tho Russo-Turklsh war ho fought by the side of Skobeleff, and at Plevna he saw 8000 of his chiefs 18,000 men fall In a slnglo battle before the enemy's fire. The only RuRslan officer not killed or wounded, ho led a bravo 300 men In n charge against a Turkish battalion. Only a hundred returned, but the Turks had boon driven Into the famous Redoubt No. 13. This is but one of his many brilliant and brave exploits. Much of his famo rests on his ability as an organizer. As a youth ho helped reor ganize tho French cavalry. This was after the Franco-Prussian War. So valuable were his servlcos considered that he was mado an effleer in the Legion of Honor the first Russian to receive the distinction. After wards he reorganized the Russian army, nnd in 1898 was appointed Minister of War. For soven years provipusly he was Gov ernor of Transcaucasia. He succeeded, after others had failed, in pacifying the wild hordes of Turcoman robbers. Ho built rail roads and carriage roads, churches and many public buildings. Thirty schools and colleges were opened, and a Judicial department was organized. Ho Induced Ihe natives to tako to cotton planting, which Is now the principal Industry of the country. A rare thing for a Russian Governor, he brought happiness nnd prosperity to his conquered province. Among his other works of peace, If they may bo so called, aro several volumes of military his tory and strategy. The Seesaw Goes, Up Again The causes of his removal from supreme command In.tho Far East have been tho sub ject of much discussion, but this seems to be sure, that he was hampered by intrigues and Jealousies and by meddlings of various sorts on tho part of officers at the front nnd In competent advisers of the Czar back in 8t. Petersburg. The history of tho campaign was ono of Imperial orders and orders coun termanded and a whole lot of petty inter ference. Administrative corruption had a part, and supplies and money for suppllos were stolen. The unreadiness of Runsla for war, the childish presumption of Russian diplomacy, the hopeless failure of tho Rus sian navy, the Inferiority of many, of tho troops first dispatched to the seat of war, tho Incompetence of Russian generals and of the Headquarters Staff la the field, the np palling difficulties of reinforcement, supply and transport, and, worst of all, the marked superiority of the Japanese army as an In strument of war, which gradually became disclosed during the course of operations, all served to extend to Kuropatkln no small measure ot public sympathy. But when war between great nations la concerned, and when rulers pr people gamble for empire with men's lives as counters, the question of th Individual Is a matter of Infinite unimport ance compared with that of the achievement of national end. It Is a general's business to succeed, and tho Russian commander failed. And now, It seems, Kuropatkln is needed by thq Czar He came out of the Russo Japanese war without losing all of his repu tation as one of the greatest of the world's military men. He Is a man ot lon will, yet unbroken, and now comes another pwortu nlty for Its exercise. Skobeleff said e-f him that he was the elit aad hardt-Herved man he had ever Uftder Hr. m - ii i ii i a an a- VOTEKrl WITK IINSE OF HUMOR "Woman' rlsht ! tk right of freedom from political duties,'' says an "nti" poter tn New York in hug letters. Why should My ens ask to b reed from a duty? It In cm of the greatrst anewllas of th praau reo-eavly realm that the duty t -wmni' S MHSJSkMM 1 m1U kh4 taw oaMiKr to pwtarm ttas avaty Is 4 dad. Tk year with ny mum or llttaaor May tMWWi mm na awaamnjr M vqt MSSSjSJMP TL-'. '-i i ii , ,,j. aaaNsflMET: VVjBaH aNKSMsWaaatssMaMaMaMassawa SATtJBDA?, SEPTEMBER '23. 19X5. "THANK GOD THAT WE CAME TO THIS SAND IN THE BARRELS OF "FLOUR" r Story of an Indian Siege, as Told by Andy McGilligan, "Who Takes Occasion to Preface the Tale With a Few Remarks on Public Opinion and Why Men Go to War By B. K. LITTLE MORE than onco before I have had occa sion to- hold up my friend Mr. Andrew McGilligan to public, approval. As Mr. Mc Gilligan Is still under .cr, and gives promise, of Improving still further upon tho excel lent man he has always been, t'm occasion Is very apt to occur ngaln. At every election tho cynics among us have plausllilo reason for proclaiming that the average American never thinks; that he has his thinking dono for htm, as he ljns his hair cut and his boots polished. Mr. McGllllgnn refutes this foul calumny. Ho refutes It In himself. I don't mean that ho cuts his own hair. But he certainly docs his own thinking. And Mr. McGilligan la much mora than a prosperous Phlladclphlan. He Is certainly more the typical American than tho traditional Uncle Sam of the dally cartoon. Ho Is forever examining hlo life, and American life, all life, for that matter, with everlasting curiosity and with consid erable skill. And always he turns up some thing of value. Flicking Ashes Where They Please For Instance, ono evening not long ago, McGilligan fell to talking about war. "Do you know what causes war?" sold Andy. "Yes," said I. "No you don't," said Andy. "The cause of war 1b wives." I gasped. "It's true. I don't mean that men like to kill each other. But they do like tho camp. They like to get away together, where they can flick their ashes where they please, nnd express themselves as forcibly aa they llko when things go wrong, and cut away tho foolish distinctions that creep In nmong them at dinner parties and everywhere clso where the Influence of wives is dominant They, get tired of tho everlasting necessity of having to bo slicked up and politepolite to Brown becauso he Is rich and his wife Is In society, nnd lmpollto to Jones because ho Is not rich and his wife Is not In Hoclcty. That's why men go to war. For a chance to break away and be dirty and bo friends with whom they llko. When they get tired of that, too, they get a shave, nnd run home, and take up ngaln the burden and the boro of being civilized." That a profound truth resides In this novel Idea, no husband will dony. Not that It refers to anything In tho day's news. I merely throw it out In tho hopo that a little ot It will soak Into our wives and assist them to temper tho tyranny of their re finement. Lust evonlng McGilligan had been reading the newest murder trial he had seen re ported In his paper. It moved him to sev eral profound observations, and to what I thought a rattling good story. Tho Frank case, tho Carman case and a few other cele brated .trials of recent history passed un der Andy's review. And he came out of It with the opinion that with the newspaper what It is now, no murderer will ever ngaln bo tried by a Jury of 12 men, The news paper has seen to It that every murderer is tried by a Jury of the whole country, "The real Judge In all our courts today," said Andy, "is public opinion. It never mattered for a minute what the 12 men who heard the case against Leo Frank de cided. The- country sat on Frank nn4 pro nounced him Innocent Or anyway, It de cided that he was not to be hangod." ''But," said I, "tho public mar be wrong!" "Why more so than any 12 of Its menT" was Andy's retort. "& single .man and! he not a Judge may be right. Listen to this: One day when I was a poy, Just old enough to remember well, a very old man pf my WHAT IS FOREIGN EXCHANGE? An Untechnlcal Explanation of an Im portant Term Much In th News Many people cenfuve the value of the Kntflah pound sterling or, " vaetgn wh the value ot Arsft on iniofl. The ffeM ia an BnglUh Aoverolfa U wertfe, Mad wttl continue forever ta t -worth, (,M and a fraction In American old. A draft eat L4n, hewever, expracMS enly wht tb AmrieM bunlur. er merchant U Tiy to r fee an r4er esWtltng him to o many tvataTn In L4on, It Is not tho aov. erelm that has fslla from M.M to .W. but the price of drafts. Mrf Smith, M American, stlU a thousand pounds of attrttag worth of cotton to Mr VrowR, an BaflUhmaMi in London. Tha price asra4 ui for all saieh transaction U com ntoatly KfMawed Ifl 'HliigHsti meoey pounds, hllllaaw am) paaaa. In erttaary tlm the aJMtel tthatis If ft faUowtl Mr, Snaks, Mka draft h Mr, Brown r a thousand panaA If aattl, It a oho, a m wy acquaintance took me on Tils knee and told mo a little Incident of his own early youth. I nover daro recall what he told me on a dark night, when I'm nlone In the house. Yet that man lived to bo more than 90. And I remember even now his perfect calm as he told It. A Tear for the Indian "He made me see that little settlement in tho Pennsylvania woods, with Its 10 tidy farms and its central stockade. People squeeze a tear for the Indian today," Andy broko off to muse, with a few graceful at tentions to his cigar. "And yet our good peoplo gavo tho Indian his chance. Not merely that, they set him an example of thrift. "Well, that particular year In the little settlement up-State was very dry. Tho cab bages withered, the wheat was parched and Just ready for the torch, and the settlors' only rain was the rain of arrows Into, their stockade. Yet the' oak palings that fprmed that stockade were not more firm and stout than the hearts that defended it inside, Even tho women could shoot. "And this was the third siege they hud withstood, mind you. Thoy had plenty f powder and ball, a good spring of water nnd a bravo man Bcoutlng toward Philadelphia for help. More than all else they had a plentiful reserve store of flour and hams that they had prudently ordered a month before from a trader In Philadelphia. "But tho siege dragged on. To tho red man It was only a game. To the white, I fancy, It was something more. The arrows multi plied as tho powder diminished. Yet always help was on the way, they felt sure. And always there were tho extra barrels of flour nnd hums In reserve. "At Inst, though, the day came when noth ing was loft but that extra store. And they knocked In n barrel and then a second bar reland a third. "And they found nothing. "That .trader had taken I their money and aent them sand sand and death. That fol low had packed the end of their slego in the first of his barrels. "For three days longer they starved. Some how the devils outside must havo sensed what had happened, It was only a choice then of TVhlch It should be a quick shnt within, or hell outside. Those pnlnted fiends would bo sure to mako up for the long wait they had beon given. ' The End of the Siege "And there wero the women. "The order was given to each father a shot for each one of his family, nnd a last for himself. Fire arrows wore coming by then, and tho time was short. My old friend as a boy saw It all. "Ono by ono tho guns spoke. Only one of tho men balked a father with an only daughter. Ho didn't much care to shoot. "Whon the devils Anally broke In, a lone boy was left. And they took him away, to Improve their race with his breed. But after a month he escaped, and reached Phila delphia. "Here he might have lived on the rest of his life without mord Incident. Neverthe less anothor exciting incident did occur to hln. "One evening, when he wa$ on his way Home from work on n farm, a chaise ap proached him on the road a very elegant chaise:. And In the chaise was that well known trader, the very man. Incredible ye there to was." ' "WcIlT" I said, breathlessly. For a moment Andy smoked In silence "You see," he said, finally, "circumstances had for the time being created that young fellow Judgp, Jury, public opinion, nnd all." T to London and get the thouaand sovereigns but the pcn of uch a method of cettlnir his money would be so great as to be prohibitive Mr flmlth-s olllce la In New YcYk. TheS f, another merchant In New York, Mr. Jones, who owes money In London. He has bought Eng lish good ana waat, to pr for thew. fjke Mr, ftsiMh, he deaa net want to send a men. gyr toUMw with his mey. He is leoklnr about for Wj iami pf paying his Mil eaaily ami chearty- He ft4 et it I felj Tthit th la ahar SMrcnant. Mr. Smith, who haa drawn draft on London fer thousand pounds. He fcuys It of Mm thro.h the Uak and mIU the draft t0 lnion. Mr. Brown throuah his BnaMsh banker, honors the drift Mr, Jones thus easily pay, j,ls dt, and Mr Smith with equal eftieget, the mwl',y ? Ms cot, ton, ' In OHMtMiry Uwai Mr. Jonea wUl not pay Mr akMfh HXht or ftMt.M far tha than atad pound aratt, e will dadtact tha tataraat for tha U tha aaft la in trajwk aaa Ua asaauat far aatna otter ntaar Tantas This raauaa ttat vim af a an tTSmmmim COUNTRY, SON!" London to IS4. which Is the standard rate, with slight fluctuations. Gold is shipped In ordinary times from England to America or from America to England only in small quanti ties, because the barter or exchange of prod oets between the two countries Is such that the builness "betweon them, as In the case ot Bmlth, Jonea and ' Brown, can be settled by drafts. This Is why nil American tourist In Europe are nble to take their money In th form of letters of crcdl or travelers' checks. In this abnormal time of war, however. Im portations from England to this country are Interrupted and checked. Tho large sums of money ordlimrlIvspent by American travelers In England nnd France have ceased. There are fewer Amcrlenn merchants buying English goods, and they have less need ot drafts on London to pay their debts. The price far drafts has therefore steadily fallen from MSI to (4.S0 per pound sterling. Just as with a falling off In demand the price ot shoes or books or furniture or pictures or any other commodity falls. The result is that if Mr. Smith today wants to sell, a shipment of cottbn to London and makes tho price In sovereigns, he must either get the sovereigns themselves from Lon don or he must take the risk of losing money on his drafts. But he cannot get the sovereigns themslvcs, even if he should go over in person, because, while England Is legally on a specie payment basis, English merchants will not pay out large sums- of gold from motives of loy alty. Some means must therefore be found. It American merchants 'are to ship wheat, cotton shoes and clothing to England, ot getting back to a steady and reliable basis of payment. This In Its last and simple analysis Is why. the Financial Commission has come over from England and Franco. England and her ally, France, hae made a futile effort to settle this iirflculty by shipping gold to this country and them have recently been some large nnd spec tacular shipments but England cannot drain herself, of gold, for. while she can carry on her domestic commerce with paper money, she must havo gold ns n basis for her International ob ligations. The Outlook. INDUBITABLY SO Crown Prince Frederick William has sent a wreath fop the grave of Lieutenant Dai on n Forstner, whose efforts at Germanising Alsnce Lorraine before the wnr resulted In tho noto rious Zibcrn Incident rnd other examples of medieval terrorism. Von Forstner's service to Oormany. oald the prince In a letter of condo lence, will be remembered long after tho war. Thero Is no doubt of it. Springfield Republican. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW There may be plausible criticisms of tho loan from vnrlous standpoints. But let us hear no more of tho silly talk about Its "draining tho country of gold." Boston Post. Regardless of other Issues, the tariff will b prominently In the picture next jear. Th existing law Is a failure, and must be revised, both In the Interest of more revenue, and for the purpose of oncouraglng business. Wash ington Star. It Is better to fnco the truth of Philippine un fitness now than to Involve ourselves In much more serious trouble by permitting the Philip pine peoples to make another Mexico for us to restore at an cxccbiIvo cost, perhaps at th coBt of war with a major Power. Chicago Tri bune Of course many of the Americans still re maining In Mexico Will not heed tho President's admonition to leave tho country this time, any more than they have In the past. It will take nothing short of a wholesale massacre to bring them to a completo realization ot their peril. Detroit Times. The fact that every Important working com mittee In tho new Houso of Representatives ap pears likely to be controlled by Southern Dcmorrats argues against both, efficiency and fairness. It U reassuring to know that an effort will be made to break the old priority rule.--C!eveland Pla'n Dealer, NO PLAGE LIKE HOME The wind Is In the pine trees now, and whispers In the corn, And marigolds, are blooming 'round the hous4 where I was born, And there's a little bit of bed, and two old fashioned chairs, Beside tho bed In that small room whore one I slept upstairs; And squirrels scamper on the roof the way they uctd tq do. And 'little clouds are Just as whits and skies are just as blue As what they ever used to be,-and wildblrds slpg and call. And I can't see that the old world is getting old at all. ' The whlppoorwill must sing at night the way he used to sing, I know that there's a barrel sunk around tbt bubbling spring, I know the wheels make thunder tones across the bridge I know, On whose abutments I used to sit fishing long" agoj And the woodpile is by the door, the pigs are la the pen I do not think I care to go to that old home again; This city life may bs all flare, and not muea td the good. But I don't care to feed the p!g or oar wreatle wood, I Who wants to hear the whlwrwll) may hv the wood to ohap, Who wants to haar tha wil4Mr4s shag WW Who wants to hear tha auttMoa. wlada a&ftl-y In tha traaa May o and hear them aak that way have the rigs to area; I love to seo tha woostmoka rise above tha cs- tage small, I love to hear tha whlaaoerwill l th dark waadaavad call I tov to hear thVthundar o tha wheels aba Ma atraaaa, X lava la fM ") tha ni aa4 milk th- -43 MiKamis Law, tm t Immi Fast, . .fe,'