Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, January 07, 1916, Night Extra, Page 12, Image 12

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fUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY
CTRTJfl K. K. CURTIB, PuitBltrf.
H.tiQdlrirten.VteePrMldentt Jetm O.Maritn.
i!T and Treaeurerj Philip B. Collins, John D.
i, tirvCTorv
EDITORIAL DO AUDI
CTiti It. K. Ccins, Chairman.
P. M. WKALBT.it ...... i.i.i.....EtfcntlT Editor
JOHW C. MARTIN..,., .. General RBslnesa Manager
' PaMtased dally at Pcsuo Ltron Building,
Independence Square, Philadelphia.
Ctimxti.tii.it. i. Bread nnd Chestnut Btreeta
ra CiTtt.. .....tit.. . ...FrM-lRon Rulldlne-
IK... ......... ii. ,170-A, Metropolitan Tower
iiiiiiiiiiiii.Mii .s:o Ford Building
Ii in......... 400 Globs Democrat Building
i ......i 1202 rrlou nulldlnr
NEWS BUREAUS!
wMjfnvsTSM ncimn............. . ...nlr Building
Nr To Rtfiuc... ...... ....The rime Building
MntMR ctD. ........ in...... .00 FrledrlchMraets
LotMir nratjD.. ........ ....Marconi Houae, Strand
FM BnagiO ttii32 Rue Loula le Grand
BtroscniPTroN TEnMs
Br carrier, alx cents per we,ek. Hy mall, postpaid
mttM et Philadelphia, except where foreign nonage
la reejulrod, one month, twenty-flv cental one year,
-Mm dollar. All mall eubeerlptlona payable In
Mranee. ,
Nenoa Subscribers wishing addreee chanced must
it old ai well as new addrtsa.
BHX. H AL.ttrr KETSTONH. MAIN 0M
ITT" JLitrmt all rommunloatton to Bvrnlng
.Ledier, ndfpntdenoe tfauare, rhUa&tlphla.
jsxrats at TBI rnruBirt.rim roiTomo ia moon
CUSS Will. HATTSS.
thb average net paid daily c1rcula
won op the evening ledger
for November was bi.soi.
PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 7. 1.
' L.
lWM never contort toith evil companion
iron never wilt feel ashamed at icing
found among them.
Sweden seoms to be walttnu for a chance
to Jump at Russia's throat. Charles XII did
It once before.
Not even the prohlbltlonlntn will object
when William Pcnn on tho City Hall Is "lit
up every night.
Thero Is no lid loft on tho Tenderloin,
It appears, or It Bwlnss on cosy hlnRC.
Times have changod.
Clifford Plnchot Is tho latcit man to sny
that Colonel Roosevelt Is not a candidate,
but tho Colonel wilt liavo tho last say noxt
June.
Judge Gary Is one of tho fow men who
win not bo caught by a reaction from boom
times after tho war. Ho Is an Amcrlcnn, but
he has Icarnod sense
"The transit question must bo handled
without gloves." Ilcmarks of an Innocont
bystander.
Yea, but not without Mittens.
A correspondent from Oyster Bay writes
that tho prcsonco of tho Colonel at tho
Chicago convention Is problematical. Fear
not. Ho will bo thero In spirit.
It must worry Senator Pcnroso a wholo lot
to know that tho Varcs plan to tako his place
In national politics. Vet llttlo fish liavo
been known to swim In big oceans.
lyot oven tho promlso to glvo an oyster
with ovory drink would nppeoso tho op
ponents of tho plan to ohango an oyster
house at CZd street Into a saloon.
Thoro havo been many taunts hurled at
Air. Ford, but the chorgo that his expedition
was orpubllclty schemo puro and simplo Is
a llttlo wild. Ho sells mors than he makes,
anyhow.
This nation has been willing to go to war
several times, but It has never been pre
pared to go to war. Tho dlffcrenco consists
In tho unnecessary sacrlflco of thousands of
Innocent men, that's all.
An Indignant American desires to know
what tho stationery bill of tho State De
partment has been this year. A little less
than tho cost of pensions for a European
expeditionary force, dear sir.
Representative Kless has much to learn If
he did not know that his candidacy for a
place on tho Republican National Con
gressional Committee without consulting the
senior Senator meant a light. Everybody
else In tho State has known It for months.
The Record seems to be under tho Im
pression that the Directorship of Public
Safety Is an "ofllco under tho Common
wealth," probably on the theory that as tho
Vares are running both tho Stato and tho
city a Job under tho ono Jurisdiction Is not
to bo differentiated from a Job under the
other.
Now wo have tho testimony of Admiral
: Stanford that tho channel to tho Lcaguo
Island Navy Yard Is so much better than
the channel which leads to the Brooklyn
yard that Leaguo Inland Is tho best placo
on the Atlantic coast for repairing laattle
shlpa. This is another argument for build
ing the big drydock hero.
Tho bill Introduced by Senator Gore, for
bidding Americans to sail on belligerent
vessels, Is worthy of some of tho noblest
traditions of the Senate. Officially, If not
In. fact, Germany and Austria havo been
compelled to yield to a principle which all
other countries assumed and which only tho
United States dared to promulgate. It must
be, remembered that there are other neutral
nations which have suffered as tho United
'States has suffered and have dono less than
writing notes. Yet It Is seriously proposed
to Invalidate all thU activity, which will
certainly have International importance after
the war, and to abdicate every pretension
of the past year. Perhaps It Is not without
significance that this bill was introduced on
the very day that witnessed a resurgence
of the munition embargo project.
Sweden's Jealousy of Russian aggression
ha apparently been worked upon b the
annaa propagandists. A fertile Held was
ta4y for them, because Sweden has long
afraid that Russia would attempt to
to the Atlantic through her territory.
commands the Gulf of Bothnia by
. 'Jjaw pwtesslon of the Aland Islands, only
199 miles from Stockholm. These
. tjrlaamlai were once Swedish and Sweden
'fouU like to own them again and remove
tk yuiMlan menace from her capital At
jMTMMit the Swedes are said to believe that
tktt surest way to protect themselves
mpitit Russia U to throw their influence
M ty elAe of the Teutonic Allies. It la
HtflT " that they have 1,000,000 men avail
Spier service. Their standing army la
, put unaer a system or virtually
military training there must be
tkl estimated number capable of
towing arms in a male population of
Mud,0M. The plan to throw ttese men into
yuiiiutd, where they would combine with
revetting; Ftn a take Petrograd, looks
Luitlul e&jpaficr ff.ltto based oo the
EVENING
well-known disaffection of the) ytnn. A
tho Germans have) been going abut their
work with thoroughness, It to unthinkable
that they have been neglecting their
opportunities In Bweden. Whether they
have succeeded so far as to persuade the
Swedes to Join them will appear later.
TKAN8IT
I am not sufficiently Informed to dlteuss
this subject Intelligently. In any contract
which Is entered Into with the company it
Is my purposo to see that the company gets
a square ata ns well as tho people of Phil
adelphia. Mayor smitn.
Tho company wants to co-operate with
the city, but it nlao wants to protect Ho
earnings President Mitten.
A, resolution was adopted by the United
fiualnoM Men's Association asking thnt a
plan bo developed by which exchango tick
ets ahnll be abolished Immediately and
transfers granted on a B-cent-faro basis at
Intersections of the surface lines. News
report.
DESPITE the fact that, transit has been
n. leading Issuo In Philadelphia for
months, an Issuo concerning which columns
of matter havo been printed In ovory city
nowspaper, it Is obvious thnt tho Mayor, as
he himself ndmlts, Is poorly Informed con
corning tho situation, and Is In dense Ig
nornnco of many of tho most Important
features of tho comprehensive plan pro
posed by Mr. Taylor.
This Ignorance exposes Itsolf In such re
marks as "It Is my purposo to bco that tho
company gets a squaro deal."
Ono of the most admirable features of Mr.
Taylor's work was tho spirit of falrnoss
which dominated his endeavor. Nover was a
fairer, squarcr plan offered an operating
company than that related In tho tontatlvo
ngrecmont entered Into by tho P. R. T. with
tho city. An amazing fenturo of tho entlro
transit campaign, In fact, was that no com
plaint aroso from tho pcoplo over tho liberal
treatment nrrorded tho company.
Tho P. It T. Is offorcd $36,000,000 worth of
subway nnd olovated lines for nothing. All
It has to do Is to proldo equipment and
oporato tho system, from which It Is to
dcrlvo a rovenuo before the city gets a
penny. In nddltlon, Its present lncomo Is to
bo protected, under specific guarantees.
What, thon, does tho Mayor mean when
ho talks about seeing that tho company gets
a squaro deal? Thoro Is nn ominous sound
to tho words. Is It In his mind to ropu
dlato tho tontatlvo agreement, which pro
vides for universal froo transfers, and ontcr
Into somo now ngrcoment which also pro
vides for such frco transfers, but supplies
tho P. R. T. with even moro llbcrni terms
than those already offered It?
Or docs he propose to arrango for the
oporntlon ol 10 Broad Street Subway nnd
tho Frankfo Elevated only, under a par
ticular contra t which Ignores tho operation
of tho contemplated system ns a wholo?
If tho latter Is his purpose, let tho pcoplo
understand now that tho $56,000,000 they pro
poso to spend to frco thomBolvcs from pres
ent Intolerable transit conditions will simply
tighten tho chains about them and hand
them over for a llfetlmo"to tho P. R. T.
Tho transit problem must vo considered as
a wholo, and It must bo aolvod as a whole.
Agreement for operation muBt bo an ngroo
mont for tho operation of tho whole, not of
a part. Tho tentatlvo agreement already
proposed nnd agreed to by tho P. R. T. as
cqultablo and Just, is so obviously tho right
sort of an agreement that any nttempt to
supplant It must nnd ought to nrouso suspi
cion at once.
Thero Is but ono way to solvo this transit
mnttcr, and that Is tho right way. And woe
bo to nny man or set of men who through
Ignorance or otherwlso permit tho subordina
tion of tho Interests of tho city to thoso of
tho transit company and betray In this wise
the great public.
The Stato has authorized tho raising of
tho amount necessary for the entlro Taylor
sytem. Lot the system in Its ontlrety, there
fore, bo built.
A tentative ngreoment for operation of tho
wholo system hns been entered Into. Lot
the city tlnd out whether or not the P. R. T.
Intends to stand by that agreement, without
modification of its essentials. To make an
agreement for operation of a part of tho
system only, not embracing tho several links
as thoy aro completed, would bo a communal
calamity.
Tho Evenino Ledger pointed out during
the recent campaign that thero wero two
great essentials: first, that the system In all
Its parts be completed, becauso Its success
was based on an lnterfeedlng, which mutual
Biistenanco would bo a prerequisite to tho
quick earning of Interest and operating
charges; secondly, that the now system gavo
the city tho whlphand over the transit com
pany, for tho first and last time, on which
account the operating agreement was of
primary Importance, and that In many re
spects the city's vast investment would be
wasted If an operating agreement unfair to
tho city wore entered Into.
The Mayor thrust tho transit Issue aside
with 17 words in his inaugural address, Ho
will discover soon enough that it Is the most
important Issue he has to handle. Tho pub
lic Is mildly Interested In the matter-of-fact
announcement that the two projects under
way must be rushed to completion. It Is
vitally Interested In knowing whether or not
the Mayor Intends to support the Taylor
plan as a whole, with' the operating agree
ment Included.
LET THERE BE LIGHT
THE Evenino Ledoer has had the un
usual experience of translating a picture
Into a fact.
On January 1 the back page of this paper
showed City Hall In all the soft white light
which played upon It when the clock struck
midnight and brought In a New Year. So
great was the appeal of this picture to the
Imagination that thousands of Fhlladel
phlans felt that the scene should be
visible not onco a year, but every night.
Acting on this desire the Evenino Ledoer
suggested and Mayor Smith enthusiastically
Indorsed the idea. City Hall will glow with
light, hereafter, a visible symbol of the life
which centres about it.
The surprising thing Is that it hadn't
been done before. The Bell Telephone
Building, nearby, has for some time out
shone a hundred rivals and been a notable
advertisement. The White Way o( New
York, called gay for some reason, has been
the greatest single piece of publicity which
any city has ever had, but far more re
markable, in New York, are the many
skyscrapers and towers which flame up, in
a cold, steady ifght, to the evening skies.
In Philadelphia a centre from which all
light would radiate has been missing. The
city can congratulate Itself that City Hall
will supply such a centre. It wlU advertise
not an article of commerce, not even the
personality of the figure which will be so
Illumined, but the spirit and the la
VlduaUty which belong ta the city.
LEDGEB - PHILAPLPHIA; FfttDAY, JANtTARY 7, 1916...
Tom Daly's Column
GOSSIP on Twelfthnlght with our
Af
friend Charles, son of P. T. Hallahan,
the cordwalner we were lamenting the pass
ing of so many quaint and curious names of
professions and trades used In an elder kday.
We were looking over the Boston City Di
rectory for tho year 1789, and wo Jotted
down a few of tho titles following tho names
of tho citizens listed in tho 88 pages, which
aro all the book contains. Perhaps, gentle
reader, you are one of these things without
knowing It:
Aecomptant
Bellows-maker
Block and Pump Maker
Branch-pilot
Brazier
Carder
Chandler
Cistern maker
Clear-trtarchcr
Cordwalner
Currier
Goldsmith
Halr-powdor-maker
Head-builder
Housewrlght
Innholder
Maltster
Mustard-grinder
Paper-stainer
Pcwterer
I'otashmaker
I'owder-house-keeper
Haw-Whetter
Hcrlvener
Hlop-shop-keeper
Surveyor of Boards
Wharfinger
Whitesmith
Also, wo camo upon an odd typographical
error. Somo poor typo probably caught
ballyhoo for tho misplaced comma hero:
Parker, widow retailer, Prince street.
"The present 'Mr. nnd Mrs Dona,'" say
last night's paper, "continue to enjoy them
selves at Atlantic City, desplto tho elalnn of
Sunbury, Pa., thnt tho husband of tho heiress
Is really Frank A. Donaahan, former hotel clerk
there."
Well, why not? But what bothers us Is
why thoy should contlnuo to enjoy them
selves in tho publlo prints, Including illus
trations. The Ulnyor's Message
Mayor Smith poate "No Marriage"" ln In his
ofllce).
Before wo'ro through with this hero berth,
A lot of things will suro befall us,
And all tho mean names on this earth
Wo do not doubt somo folks wilt call us.
Perhnps wo'll bo nccused, forsooth,
Of murder, mayhem, theft or arson,
But no ono shall arise with truth
And coll us "Parson!"
Every so often somebody rings our tele
phone and asks for "Mrs. Drum." Noxt
tlmo thoy do It wo'ro going to bo rudo nnd
tell 'cm to beat it.
COiW NOW, ADMIT 1TI
Lives of great men ail remind m
What a lot co otcc our teivea.
Little women get behind us
And make something of our lives.
A Typographical Now Year's Tragedy
By SAMUEL McCOY
Copiously illustrated bj tho Intelligent
Composllor.
On Now Year's Bill nnd his friend Hank
Climbed bravely on tho water tank;
Too often during tho past year
They'd drained the glass wo picture here:
v
The clasa:
They kept their noblo vow a week.
Although they grew too dry to speak;
But yesterday they lunched together.
And tho day ended In wet weather.
For, hearing that their host had stocked nle,
They bade the waiter, "Bring a cocktnll!"
Y Y
Two cocktalla:
Good-by, their pledgol They order moro
And quick the waiter brings thorn four:
YY YY
Four cocktalla:
'TIs useless now to hesitate
Forthwith the waiter bring them eight!
YYYY YYYY
Eleht cocktnllai AAA AiXJ.
And loudly now doth Horry holler.
"Fay bill, Blltl I got Jush ono dollar!"
Tho dollar: "P
"Wal'er," says BUI, "wha'eh check? Le'sh go!"
"Five dollars, sir, Is what you owe."
Tho nve; V
BUI pays. Tho well-earned tip bestowed,
They wander blithely clown tho road:
The road, - -. r r
as they sea It : CJ CO CO
At last their own front door they gain,
But here the keyhole gives them pain:
The keyhole, ron
na other ae Itj L J
"Harry." sohs Bill, "kcjholo Ish gone!
Mus' get In bed before It 'sh dawn!"
Tho dawn, as tho f Q
Futurlat oi-e It I V V V. V. '-'"
0)))
BUI dozes off while waiting there;
But, climbing down tho cellar stair,
Hank enters; doffs his trousers Queer,
Ho hangs them on the chandnller!
Tho troueera.
w
eomeuhat pegtop
The minutes pass; BUI hears him imoro,
And bellows out, ''Open the doorl"
Hank rouses, drowsy; colls, "Who's there7
do 'way, bad man! You're drunk, I Bwearl"
Silence again. They've closed the bars.
Bill sleepv, indignant, 'neath the stars.
The atari:
The Dnphno Odora
Dear Sir I aw some of the old-fashioned
daphne odora at the Widener Conservatories
recently. What a lovely winter flower it Is,
and bo dellclously fragrant! Easily grown In
a cool conservatory. It was as popular CO years
ago as the Camellia Japontca.
My love aho wears a whits camellia.
Who has not heard that old refrain? Along
about midwinter you can still see a white
camellia In the select flower stores, but a
daphne never! The odora, like the camellia,
halls from the Orient and Is not hardy in the
North, but there Is another daphne; that Is,
the mezereum, of southern Europe; also very
beautiful and fragrant. That's where we got
the name from the Greek mythology. A
poetical story, of course, rich nnd full of fancy,
like most of them pertaining to the origin of
flowers. Daphne, a beautiful nymph beloved
by Apollo, tied for safety to Zeus, but Just
as Apollo had encircled her with his arms
Zeus turned her Into a laurel. (The common
Bpurga laurel ta daphne laureola.) The most
beautiful and fragrant of the hardy daphnes
are mezereum and cneorum, and these are very
suitable for In front of shrubberies and as
rock plants. McTavlsh.
Appropriate
She was a ballet dancer,
Her poet lover he;
And when Bhe died he sobbed and cried
And wrote her L. E. O.
9
The other day we ran this;
Alas and Alack)
To mUtletoa above the door
Expactant awalna wars vlewlne. """
A maid paiaed through, but aha waa mora
Than thirty. Nothing- doing I
And something seems to have fallen upon
somebody's corn. At any rate, here's what
the mall brought us:
The swains you note were callow youths.
Who cut no ice In high finance.
The maid of tn!rty-pdd passed thrpugh
And gave them ne'er a glance.
Rough-house Is well enough for kids
Who've Just escaped the kindergarten;
The man who likes Miss Thirty-odd
Has brains that much Is sartln.
O, W-S.
We have always considered ourself rather a
rapid reader, yet we've noticed that when
ever there's a man beside us in the car, when
we're reading a novel, he's Invariably ready to
turn the paa bftfera w are.
'TM
TOkfVinwm umtm?
MM rtf? to Sggl xsiCfeS
" tnrcttn uiiS.a; 5s-mt.'s r.
:CUMMINS LOOKS
LIKE A SENATOR
And Is One, Too, Though First He
Was Farmer Boy, Carpenter,
Civil Engineer, Lawyer
and Governor
ONE of tho moat Interesting personalities
in tho public 11 fo of tho nation Is Albert
Bnlrd Cummins, a Ponnsylvnnlnn by birth
and United Statc3 Senator from Iowa. IIo
has been lhtod ns a "presidential posv
slblllty, nnd, ns to thnt, nobody knows
whnt a year may
bring forth. Llko ox
Senn,tor Burton, of
Ohio, a skotch of
whom appeared In
thoso columns tho
other day, Cummins
hns worked hard all
his life, raroly taking
a day off for play or
recreation. Ho Is not
qulto so sorlous-mlnd-cd
as tho Ohloan, but
Is equally dignified in
n rnthor different
wny. He looks the part
finN'ATOK cummins. 0f n United Stntes
Senator to perfection. Not tho Senator of
fat cheeks and globular figure (which Isn't
Burton, cither), but tho Senator of tho
naturally and pleasantly statesmanlike
manner. And back In Iowa a man voted
for him for Governor becauso "ho looks llko
ono." As with Burton, tho dignity of Cum
mins Ii democratic, only moro sd.
Cummins is 61 years old. Ho wns born
on a fnrm near Carmlchacls. His mother
was Scotch-Irish, his father Scotch. Tho
oldor Cummins wns both a farmer and a
carpenter. Young Albert had to go to work
when ho was 10 years old, and his early
schooling was scanty and Intermittent. IIo
learned tho carpenter's trade, and beforo
long was nblo to earn good wages. With
this money and his pay for teaching a few
termi In a country school ho went to collego,
finishing tho course at Wnynesburg In less
than threo years. He was 19 years old when
ho graduated. Then he went West to carvo
out his career.
Ho wanted to bo a lawyer, but ho had to
earn money to pay back what he had
borrowed for educational purposes and for
his traveling expenses. For two years he
practiced carpentry In Iowa. Then he got
a Job on a railroad. At 23 ho resigned as
chief engineer of tho Northern Contral
Michigan road to tako a similar position In
Denvor. Beforo ho loft ho met his future
wife. Also, at the station in Chicago, a few
minutes beforo train time, he met a lawyer,
an old friend of his father, who gave him
his chance to become a lawyer, too. Cum
mins did not go to Denver. He stayed In
Chicago till he was a momber of the bar
of Illinois, then he moved out to Des
Moines and formod a law partnership with
his brother.
Cummins a Cool, nard Fighter
Cummins went Into politics. Hoxran for a
number of ofllces and captured a few. He
wa a good fighter. Defeat never daunted
hint. It was the same way when Cummins,
as a boy, used to drive Into the town of
Carmichaels with his chums to fight tho
city boys. Nothing pugnacious about him,
then or now, but Just" la, game fighter.
Out In Iowa he won a reputation as one of
the best lawyers anywhere around and as a
dangerous entrant into the politics of a corporation-controlled
State. Cummins was
elected to tho Iowa State Legislature. After
ward ho Berved seven years as Governor,
During that time Iowa adopted a complete
anti-trust program, Cummins secured the
passage of such acts, as a 2-cent fare law,
an antl-pasa law, a primary-election law,
a provision limiting the hours of work fpr
railroad employes, a law to prevent corpora
tions from contributing to campaign funds,
a campaign-publicity law, a pure-food law
and a pure-seed-law. He vetoed a whole lot
'of bills emanating from the railroads. ' Cum
mins had begun his fighting career as a pro
gressive In politics. Today he calls himself
a progressive Republican.
Cummins was a railway attorney when
he began his attempt to rid Iowa of railway
domination. His first campaign for Gov
ernor seemed hopeless nd his success at
that time Is still talk., of as one of the
biggest things that ever happed In the State.
Dons Overalls and Jumper
He had come into notice by his work in
breaking up the barbed-wire trust, This
trust claimed patents on all devices for
making barbed wire. Three men organized
a company and started to manufacture
barbed wire, drawing on themselves, as they
had intended, a suit by the trust for in
fringement of patents. They lost the first
battle, and then engaged Cummin as their
GONER SEE FOR MYSEII"
Ofei
aMuVv-
vyvvvv
rZZZZ IL ZZfSjfcBiMYtlP
Is
VvW'"-
attorney. Tho young lawyer donned overalls
and- Jumper, took a Job in tho factory nnd
In a fow.months know a good deal'about tho
making of barbed wire. After his prepara
tion In tho factory ho went Into court and
won tho second battlo against tho trust.
Hard work and thorough work havo been n
fetish with Cummins from his youth, but ho
also has n mind thnt goes to tho bottom of
a legal tanglo with remarkable quickness
and enso. It has happoned on moro than ono
occasion that othor lawyers havo brought
him tho documonts In somo exceptionally
difficult and puzzling caso thoy had been
working on, and that Cummins, with a rapid
glonco through tho papers, spotted at onco
tho way out of tho confusion.
In 1903 Cummins wns elected United States
Senator, to fill out tho unexpired torm of
Allison, who had beaten him for tho nom
ination six years beforo. Cummins was ro
clcctcd at another primary in tho satno year
and was ro-olectcd last year. In tho Sonato
ho Immediately roso to prominence. His at
tltudo toward tho tariff gavo him special
distinction, and ho was goncrally credited
with fathering tho "Iowa Idea." though tho
originator was really Georgo Roberts. Tho
"Iowa Idea" is this: Tho tariff should equal
tho dlffcrenco botween tho cost of production
at homo and abroad, plus a reasonable mar
gin for the protection of thoso employed in
American Industrie. Cummins had preached
that doctrlno in Iowa ns Governor nnd can
didate for Senator. "No shelter to monopoly"
was his watchword, and when ho camo to
Washington a number of people found It
hard to forget that ho had been himself a
very successful corporation lawyer.
A Progressive Republican
It Is ono of Cummins' propositions that nn
nrbltrary legal limit on tho amount of cap
ital in a corporation In any lino of business
should bo established, so that "no corpora
tion should command an amount of capital
which of itsolf tended to establish n
monopoly." Ills views on several matters
of public Interest nro contained In iho fol
lowing extracts from his speeches;
"Tho Republican party undoubtedly will
win tho Presidency nnd tho House. It will
havo to contend with Woodrow Wilson, who
doubtless will bo the Democratic candtdato.
Tho only great difficulty will bo to win tho
Sonate. If wo fall to gain nlno seats In tho
Sonato, that will bo an obstaclo In our
carrying out tho policy of a Republican
Administration.
"I nm a Progressive Republican. That has
always been my fight. Thero Is no doubt
that tho Progressive party is slowly disinte
grating as a party, but tho question of whero
tho Progressive Influence will go depends
upon the man tho Republicans namo for tho
Presidency.
"I favor national prohibition. I congratu
late tho people of Colorado upon voting
for prohibition. If the prohibition move
ment makes the same relative advance
during ttiQtnext 10 years as it has In the last
10 years, wo wjll have national prohibition
in the United States.
"As to national suffrage. I have Indi
cated by my vote In the United States Sonate
for tho national suffrage movement that I
favor it."
NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW
Refusal to confirm Mr, Fletcher's nomination
would not have the slightest effect on the recog
nition question, which Is settled. Springfield
Republican.
There Is not a nation now at war, no matter
how heavily It may lose In the struggle, but will
soon bo on its feet again, In a military sense,
after the war closes. Washington Star, ,
Hard and Intelligent work, thrift, love of
country, obedience to law, devotion to duty and
a willingness to sacrifice selfish Interests to the
public good what better preparedness could
there be? Indianapolis News,
Mr, Wilson may recognize Carranza as much
as he pleases, but unless the Senate of the
United States views the Executive action fa
vorably and backs It up how much good will
accrue to the Mexican deBpot? Detroit Free
Free Press.
AMUSEMENTS
dm A "KTT Tn"7" MA,?KET ABOVB, wu
STAJN JbUi X Pauline Frederick
. i . ,.,n F,r,t Pentat!oa
Bvn!$?v8o'Ta "Lydia Gilmore"
Added Attraction Mummers' New Yeara Parade
Next Monday, Tuea&y, Wednesday. Martvertta ClarU
la "AIICE AND MEN" '
Thursday. Friday t Saturday. 'GOLDEN CHANCE''
JOHN McCORMACK
WILL BlNO AT THE ACADEMY OF MUSlO '
THURSDAY EVENING, JAN. 18
BEATS NOW at HEPPITB, HID Chestnut, fa 00,
11 M. LCO
Acadamy Ml
AmDhltheatro,
13c. too.
cadamy NUM of Concert,
out at
UBTKOPOI. TAN OPERA HOUSB
METROPOLITAN OPERA CO.. NEW YORK
JMS.. The Magic Flute 0, ,
Mmea. Ilempel, RappeM. Uaaon. MM. Urlua. Qorlta,
Relsa. Scott, Scales Conductor, Mr. Bodsaxky
Beats 1109 Chestnut el Walnut UU Baca 87.
NIXON 5ft. i
JULIA NASH a CO,;
DOLLT A MACKS
tVi. U...JHV(YI A "XI
xis , rstik sssraaSsr'
i-k. -. a f yiAACLariui. TWINS!
JiM
j
WfW .
IW . .
u
1
n.
"ii ...
nilli v ii(ii i,
-Mm i. ... ..
v." tur
AMUSEMENTS
ACADEMY OF MUSIC
BURTON HOLMES'
TONIGHT AT 8.15 ,
PANAMA-PACIFIC '
EXPOSITION!
BOc, TRo, $1, at Heppo's, 25a at Academy.
B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE
M
CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH 8TREETS
VAUDEVILLE OF HIGHEST CLASS!
Phyllis Neilson-Terry
BRILLIANT BllAKE8rBAnnAX BTA.R
MANUEL QUIROGA;
MARVELOUS SPANISH VIOLINIST 3
nEATiticn iinnronD: Oliver a olp; doni.i
HUE A STEWART; LEON A CO. Other Featonti
SATURDAY UATINBD CHILDREN'S BPEClllll
GAUTIER'S ANIMATED TOY SHOP ?
j
W AT TvTTTT tonight at sub.
Wil.i-iNUi Pop. Mats. Tuea, Thuri. I
licit. Matinee Saturlu.i
TiAMEsa Last Matinee Tomorrow!
Andrew Mack !V
Nlehta Beat Seats, II. No Higher. Walnnt 11M.1
Next Week "A LITTLE GIRL IN A BIQ CTfr
ADELPHI ?0S- MatTomorrowj
BLUiNAKD SHAW'S "U1KUUS"
Androcles and the Lioni
Preceded by Anatola France's "Delightful FroWjB
The Man Who Married a Dumb WhV
With O. P. Hergle A Mary Forbes
FORREST Last 2 Weeks -
CHARLES DILIKQIIAM rroeents
WATCH YOUR STEP
MRS.
VERNON CA8TLE-
-FRANK TINNTT
RERNARD GRANVILLE
Rrlce A King; Harry Kelly; 100 Others.
GARRICK Now Si'ftXJl
COHAN AND HARRIS Preaent Jfl
BEST PLAY IN 25 YEARS 3
ON TftlAL
Popular Price Wedneaday Matlneea Beat Beita H.
BROAD Last 2 Evgs. V I $
ia. wv, snonocK noiraw
NEXT WEEK SEATS NOW 1
JOHN DREW rnw m 1
By HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL
ACADEMY OF MUSIC 1
TOMORROW (SAT.), JAN. 8, AT 2:30 J
, KREISLER
Tickets at Heppe'a, 75c to $2. Boxea, $13-111
Direction C. A. Ellla, Symphony Hall, Boiton
j-t T-vn mi i MiiutCT and
( 4 .( KH J. neaire "juniper y
um v'i VAUDEVILLE continuoue ii
A. M. to 11 P. M 100, 1JC.
PMiniInhla Pooular Binoino Comtdlan '
BOBBY HEATH
AND BIO BURROUNPINa BILL
CHESTNUT ST. Opera Housflj
MATINEES. 1 :30 TO B lOo.' lBo I BYUPBOSr j
NIGHTS. 7 TO II 100, IDC. ZM I UIIWI1""
DOROTHY DONNELLY in
MADAME X
. .' -r , -,-, 10c 1214 MARKET-HJM
Ti ATA i lit in a m ii p. U. !
JrAJjjCiUJL LAST TWO DATS :
FANNIE WARD
and BEESUB HAYAKAWA In
"THE CHEAT" VI
Added Attrartlon Mummera' New Year's Part
. .- j- a -. v ft .finai'rf!T Htaw lM
AH A' A nffiTiSci Evia, IMjf
XiJ.Wi-J-""- 10 A. M. to lisio r.
TRIANGLE PLAYS FUUJT PRESENTATION
JANE GREY ta "fegM
LYRIC UM,TED StomowJ!
N. V. Winter Garden's Latest inumca
MAID IN AMERICA
Company of 123, Including .,
r nnpunn rrvmn nrt iff.I.H. DAZIX
ALL PUN, UVBIO ai PRETTY aiBLB
ACADEMY OF MUBIC, MONDAY EVO . 'N')'jl
NEW iUKKj iAJmuow
SYMPHONY taTmaN
ORCHESTRA ESiAN
mat, on Bala NOW at Hspp's.UlChatJutgtg
-Seata at Heppe'a. 1119 Chestaut
UNIVERSITY MUSEUM SKTI
Qnf Q.Qft "' Carl E. Aklyj 1JJI
OciU OU African JuncUi. Moy raotloa PJJ
a ri-TYri i It aid ton ... art.
ARVINB PLAYERS In "BROADWAY JOiST 1
4Yfc J! UUIU VfWM. UUA V ,.w
T,XTT"lTrTTJTJ-nT,rT7tTj Theatre Pit
JXViXjXXaiJDJjt.XUl Market
mu xt:4-.. j xt: uats. tum..
AJlCAVUJCLy uuu JLNU1U TburjJ
Tlnmnnr'a Dumont'a Minstrel. 8th k AMft
AJUIHUIlb S "Have Yo Had the Grief
r s
ui. M
. iMii i Jsal,"
jMii 'YAlirFr
,v v.'i n in
i i r hi tiit. r.
''.Ml'n O
K'C
...il
aT'U1 V
ACADEMY Seata at neppea. iui vn"".,
PHILADELPHIA! i Tomor. ,
r ORCHESTRA! aabrlf.&PSM
Trocaxiero Ji Princess Ks
V