-. '-l KS-vTi W& C - - -sa4 EVENING LIUDGER-PHILADBLPHIA, SAUEDAY. JUNE 17 1010. entng d8SSt Heiigcr fUBLld LEDGER COMPANY rtfja ii, k, conns, psnsiowtT, ' o SllnnJ V!o Prealdentj John "t1. i."i"'f.B,,a rvasurr, 4'miid b. -imams, Directors. Sf John B. will tbtTpnrAi. noAntJi tax JSRF '' K Conm, Chairman. JJWMALBY... ... ....editor fffiM C. tAn,Tm. .General Bualnea:Mana;er froMlaliM dally t Pontic Tjtcoiit nulldlnr," Independence Square, Philadelphia. 5,SEi.?LVt""1Srod fnd ChMlnut Streets 'vK.J3lT,""",ii.-'V"4t"lon Building fiXj","',,"',,"20 Metropolitan Toer the result of r Mo-up In traffic this Ml. The precedent for Intervention has been set. Why not extend It to conciliation before tho fact7 . THE DONKEY'S BRAY A POOR MOOSE CALL 7tAi:y',",'iX!.'w.'l-B2a "rt Building CbIOioo........... ....ljoa rrilane Building Newb duueaubi 3fn4fl0-!?'n,J,,"n """ Gliding tYe5.K Bomub.. . The r(mM nulidlng rIL nniMO ....0OPrledrlth.tra.sS '?,.3ciu"0..... ..Marconi House, Strand Finis Busr.nl 32 Hue Louis is Urand sUBScntrTioM temis By rarrler, alz cents ti.. .,. postpaid outside of Philadelphia, except when! foreign postal; la required, one month, twenty W? .c1n?.' on r. three dollars. All rrlall auoscripuona payable In advance All rrlnit. ftoTICB -Suhserlfief-a rl.Mn,, ..Mm.. .k.i..J fciust giva old aa well a nvr address. Democratic efforts to win the Pro gresslte vote nre iloomeil to failure be enttse the Progressives are committed to n tariff for protection, Hie mn nte rmnee of which Is the grent Isshe of Americanism In this cnmpalitn. Tom Daly's Coliimn 8 ELI, 10W VAINUT KEYSTONE, MAW J00O KT Adtrtst on eommiinfentlons fo r.vrnina Adoer, ndejxmdcnee Square, Philadelphia. I xntoikd at th ritiUDrtrtiM rosrorric x I ssco.nd-ci.is jutti mnn. TUB AVEnAOD NCT PAID DAILY Cm- CULATION OP TUB EVE.VINO LKDQElt FOn HAT" WA8 JSi.Oll Phlltlelphll, Stturdsjr, Jons 17, 1918. God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him. Voltaire. Greece Irritates Allles. Also vice versa. -Headllno. The Colonel probably realizes that at such a time as this no American has the right to bo sick. The country wishes him well. Perhaps the proposed automobile ordinances are urifalr to tho motoilsts, but tho motorists' disregard of the public eafety Is certainly unfair to the pedes, trlans. America has been stretched to mean o many things of late that a word of wider significance was trotted out by Mr. Wescott. It wns Civilization, ho said, that was nominating Mr. "Wilson. Why not the Cosmos? . Former Director Cooke, who with others financed the fight for lower elec tric rates, deserves to get the $40,000" Councils voted him even more than Doc tor Trlnkle and Mr,, Sowers deserved to be "sat upon," ns they most effec tively were, for suggesting that ho be "Lexowed" for his services to tho city. It needs no argument to prove that. If tho city can afford the land on which to build them, one-story school houses are better than schoolhouses of two and three stories. Every physician knows of young girls who have had to leave school because they were unable to climb the stairs several times a day In going; from classroom to classroom. , The gifts to Haverford College dur ing the year more than half a million in all rank with those that are tho portion of somo largo universities and servo to emphasizo certain truths which those who .flock to tho institutions which count their students by tho thousand rather than by tne hundred often forget. There aro two strong points In favor of tho small col lege tho closer Intimacy between In Btructors and the Individuals of small classes and the predominance of the study of the "humanities" over the pro fessional courses. The strength of Amer ican scholarship lies In tho many small colleges. They are drawing the picked men, one evidence of which Is the num ber of athletic victories they have been winning from the "Big Four" in recent years; for, as a rule, the sound mind Is in the sound body. TIID eagerness of the Democrats to nt tract to Wlliion tho oto of the Pro gressives Is a confessldn of weakness. It Involves an admission that this Is not a Democratic country, and that the party can win only with the stlpport of the votes of those who belong to another pollt leal group. Tho Democrats won four years ngo because tho opposition was divided. No person who wants to under stand political conditions should forgot, however, that ,tho division wns nmong thoso who are fundamentally opposed to tho principles nnd pi notices of the party now In power. No fraction of tho opposition of four years ago can bo won over to tho bup port pf Wilson unless Its Individuals turn their backs on tho principles which they profess to believe. The quarrel which split tho Republican party has been set tled. The grievances of tho Progressives have been removed- Thoro remains no provocation to bolt the Republican ticket or to voto for a Democratic candidate In order to punish the men who misruled the Republican organization. The Chi cago convention was nH open nnd free a political gathering as over nsscmblcd The nominee was the undoubted cholco of the party as a whole tho choice of the voters beforo that choice was ratified by the delegates. The Progressive lead ers, who aro Interested In the defent of the Democratic party, know in soon ns Mr. Hughes was named that If they should run n ticket of their own they would piny Into tho hands of tho oppo sition without gaining anything for tho country. They aro arranging now to co-operate with the Republican Nutlonal Committee. Scores of them have al ready lined up for Hughes nnd tho rest of them aro saying with truth that they aio seeking the course which will benefit the country tho most. They nre ngrecd that the defeat of Wilson Is necessaty. Befoic tho month Is out nil pretense of nn Independent Progiesslve ticket and organization Is likely to dlsnppe.tr. Thero aro likely to lemaln a few dis gruntled Progressives. Tho hope of Winning them over to Wilson was tho compelling lenson for tho selection of Vnnco McCoimick ns the Democratic national chairman. If that hope extends so far ns to Include the expectation thnt enough Pennsylvania Progressives can bo persuaded to vote for Wilson to affect the lesult It will be unrealized. The Pro gressive party believes In n protective tariff. It declared so In cxpiess terms In Us platform four years a-;o, nnd the pro tective plank has not been rescinded. In tho platform this year the party declares for a tariff that would build up rather than destroy American Industry. The Demociacy is committed Iirevo cably to a revenue tariff with all pro tection cut out. All thieo platforms favor a tariff commission But no Progiesslve and no Republican who believes In a Secretary Lansing Is a candidate for no office, and seems to lecognlze as first allegiance his duty to the United States. He speaks, therefore, without reserve concerning tho gravity of our Mexican Situation. On Monday the conditions were, dangerous.',' Tuesday they were "worse or unchanged." They have not grown better since. The Administration seems at last to recognize that there Is no honesty In Carranza, nnd, what la worse, no authority. It.Is not merely Car ranza's failure to capture Villa. One bandit In a na.ion of banditry Is of small Im portance. Inefficient ut the start. Car ranza has; passed through various stages of apathy. Indifference, lack of co-opera-Uon, until now he, Is at the point of down right hostility to this country. He haa failed to grasp an opt ntunlty which most people believe should never ha. e been put Into Ma hands, He has spoiled a plan which was always de&-ute, but which might have worked out tvo salvation pf bis country (and of the Administration Which proposed It). There Is precious Httla good In continuing negotiations with him. There is no other leader now In Mexico who gives promise o. better things It Is man; moons since the Pres ident asked, "Are you ready to go In?" I here; any policy at hand which would make "going In' unnecessary? In the railroad Btrlke situation the only hopeful vfeature Js the evident dis inclination to strike on the part of the Brotherhood representatives. Failles to come tq any acceptable compromise, the representatives of the' trainmen are about to submtt a strike ballot to every worker, regardless qf his affiliation, and It will be nld.-Au$ust before'the result p the ballpt IsScn&Wjn, In tha. time some fuller rea)l. zatlon. pf what thu strike 'woujd mean hould ppme to both parties,' and should come, If t can, to the mhida of those Administration officials on whom the teg ulatlon of our railroads, most depends. ?rhere Is very little sense In the present yoliey of opportunism, of hounding or threatening railroads, of waiting, until the test moment fo intervene between striker BA OToployer- The amount of business 4b$m by many railroad, in the country slunnjr th.e last year has, fceen enormous, wul U;a roads- are entitled to a profitable Mto. U they are not getting H MR& $ nfford to jy ihIr men a fair u, U4i the InUrsLite Commerce Com miaWn few ovta-atepjitil its. bounds Jn i awkiitm The alternative, sufficient ! Mat -fmml fart of enthusiasm tV yiaff. imm oe considered. tariff to build up American Industry be lieves that a commission appointed by President Wilson would recommend tho sort of a tnrlff which American protec tlonlsts favor. And no Democratic pro tectionist and theie nre many such will have any confidence In a commission composed of advocates of tariff fcfr reve nue only. In the twenty weeks remaining before election there is time enough for every protective tariff Amei lean, whether he be Progressive or Demociat, to think tho matter over and decide to voto with the Pepubllcans for the kind of a tariff In vhlch ho believes. Vance McCormick may be a shrewd political campaigner, but It will require more skill than either he or Mr. Wilson possesses to entice any piotectlonlsts to support tho party responsible for the Underwood-Simmons law. The donkey's bray Is a poor moose call. There Is a much better prospect for the Republicans to win tho suppoit of the Democratic protectionists. There are so many of them that whenever their party has tried Its hand at a tariff law the Republicans hav been returned to power by a large major ity. The Democrats are tat Iff bunglers, Their theories compel them to ignore the facts, and the more damning the facts that can be assembled In condemnation of their theoiles the more persistently they demand a revenue tariff. The whole world Is committed to protection with the exception of Great Britain, and the British statesmen who aro able to fqre Bee the commercial destruction of Eng land If Its free trade policy Is continued have long been demanding a law which would enable the Government to control foreign competition with British pro ducers. Before the war began that com petition was becoming ruinous. When oeace Is declared England is likely to turn Its back on Cobdenlsm and adopt the policy which has made America great and which developed German Industry to a point where British commercial suprem acy was threatened with destruction. Protection has been the American pol. Icy ever since Henry Clay so character ized it. It Is the great issue of Ameri canism In tills campaign, OVIt VILLAGE POET Borne day iohen U'a a Saturday here' ichai we're' pOlnp to dot A lot 6 us old married men, each leadtno forth a crew Of children of assorted makes, will go out to the Zoo To hobnob with the animals an' sea what gnus Is gnu. Or If thoic funny animal should all be too sedate liecausc thct'te had no visits from the blessed stork of late We'll icalk 'round to the monkey house that's full as It can hold Of frolic comicality that never will grow old. .Voto, teicn this notion came to me at first, It was my plan To pick out on my tailing list each gay young married man Whose brood Is of an age tc get most pleasure from the trip An' call on htm to come along and Join our fellowship. An' so I thought of Malcolm Moore, Jim Fogarty, Tom llaby, An' half a dozen other guys that have at least one baby (An' planned to let one bachelor In the musical Art Samuels Whose melodies might smooth the humps of all the savage camucls) But then thinks I : "Why should I scheme for entertaining you folk? "Twcrc better to reverse the thing an' entertain the Zoo folkl" An' so, I thought, 1011 not the joy that such a paity gives To let these folk in cages see their hu- ntrtri relatives? .1 grand Ideal With telephone directory In hand, In search of proper candidates, page after page 1 scanned. 1'trst off, among the animals, I came upon A. Deer, A. Lion, (.Tames) A. Hull, 1. Moos, A, Vox, an' (John) A. Steer, Then follottcd several Hears and Minks, Lambs, Beavers an' C. Whales. (The Whalen are mammals an' not classed with little fish with scalci.) Hut while we're on that subject, come, let's make our little song Include a few more finny folk that ought to go along: Veils, Hcrtng, Sturgeon, Flounders, lioach, Perch, Salmon, Pike an' Trout ll'crc all upon thoic pages there for me to single out. An' birds that wing the wide blue air ucie gathered there in plenty. I looked for all the different sorts an' stopped when I had twenty. A. Chick, A. Crow, A. Peacock, llaicks, A. Stork, Swans an' A. Crane. Pour Sicallows, Hoblns, Finches, Swtfts an' many mote again, All eminently fit to join our little family party; So, to them all we here extend an In vitation hearty. To fix upon a Saturday when we may seek the Zoo An' hobnob with the other folk an' sec ichat gnus Is gnu. "N0BOD5T LOVES ME!" .. ,. .iy&w if m. r . 1 1 WiriM r y SEVI me ERAL contrlbs hnve asked us to mention that A. Coin Is a dealer In novelties on 11th street; and one asks If we can match It. We never gamble, but we'll be Inclined to toss tho next one who bothers us about It. . . 1 i . ,t 1 ,,liMJUHStA - ..,.,.. .' tlltiu'llll f, J I .ft! IV 1 M' 'Kj.:-, !)'-.',. ' fotX-mm'J : mmmmHm mmci t pshi m U'tsmuim. -' .-- hi ra'?,;r. ,- am. 'iriiiLi n-rfi'iaK.a urn 1 1 ms m r m i J'"- ' usnrr"- ,r-C3 ,Mi I ill 7 r Tl j r mm ) i 1 ' v 1 as ni if N 4SmrMB& .,-, UVvlBSssssssY ' S iff wWk BMHBite& -x& i WT r.w:si9flQassak.0, m t?. mazsmtimmmmmpr s a. vjF? Srlr WSFm hYPME atmkm. dlrWMmm e?.JSS6- JflliPfil f I II" 'Ii TTirOiM1 tliirTTT 1 " --frjmi awPra MAM v SP si -"t-zMrngMBssmmBm -"smmmMsnss, mmmmffli FimmmmmM'MmtMWMmMmm I " -, . THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE Tipping From the Point of View of the Tipper Why the Secretary of State Is in the Presidential Succession Other Matters 77i( deportment ft free to all readers uJio lusft to rrpress (heir opinions on subret 0 ciirrenf infrrrst It (s an open Jorum anil the Kveninp Ledger assumes no responsibility for the lieiva of its correspondents. Dear, but the days are drear and dunt What hai become of our favorite sunf AT LUNCHEON in the Players' Club, l Now York, the other day, Bert Boyden told of a Smith College graduate who had never heard of Francis Wilson. To some of us who remember Wilson In his Ermlnle glory this sounds unbeliev able, but wait a minute. Francis Wilson has been off the boards virtually ten years. The young woman we're dis cussing Is 21 years of age, so she was only 10 or 11 when the press agents ceased to Interest themselves in the fa mous comedian. Similarly It might sur prise us to discover how few know who or what were Coin Harvey, Coxey, Dowle, Mary Ellen Lease and Mary MacLane and what has become of them. The announcement of Dr. M. T. Cunning ham, Dentist, In his ad In a certain the atrical program, "Teeth extracted with great pains," doesn't greatly surprise us. but "dental nurse in attendance" does. What Is a "dental" nurse? Anything to do with milk teeth? In the N. V. Eve. A RECENT blurb u World says: The Evening World's nt circulation In New York and environs consumes in a 3 ear approx imately JOS 000 0()0 In wearing apparel They read The World from choice. They do, does It? Qossirjvr IUSEfegfe TIPS BUY AUTOMOBILES To the Editor of Evening Ledger- Sir I note with Interest the letter In your columns, signed Abe Myers, In defense, of the tipping evil I think his argument is like a bucket that has holes In the bottom It won't hold water. I nnalzo money se cured by tips us wages paid the employe by the public which should be paid by the employer. He says that he has two broth ers who nre traellng men Let mo ask him, Does any one tip them for their hard and well-earned services? Not at all They have to hustlo for oery dollar they get. Does the mill employe who by his or her skill produces goods for the public get tips? Can a manufacturer, like the restaurant or hotel proprietor, hire skilled help for a few paltry dollars per week and tell them that "what I will not pay ou you can make up on tips"? No. He Is compelled to pay a decent living wage. It must be a poor rule that won't work both ways When you go Into n barber shop or restaurant where they hae fixed prices and you are poslthely en titled to the best service, for which you pay In full, you don't get It tho second time un less you come up with jour little tip. You are dubbed a cheap guy because In many cases you did not give because ou could not afford It I know of a light lunch cafo on Market street where tho tipping evil thrives splendidly. The poor devils who patronize It are well trained by tho wait ers. Very few of these fellows who dine there, I venture to say, have any more money than they know what to do with, and I'll bet my life that many times the baby or wife at home Is In need of new shoes or stockings. Yet I know It to be a positive fact that at least three of the waiters in this establishment have their runabout automobiles, while those in many cases who tip them couldn't buy a tire for a car Is it good and sound business to gia to those who have more than you have and who Lun run nil around you In nn automobile when you rouldn't afford to hang on to the rear end of one with your eyebrows? I'll bet my life that many men who lavish their tips freely squeal like a stuck pig when their wives ask them for a little extra money. ONE OF THE SUCKERS. Philadelphia, June 18 gress may by law provide for the case of removal, death, resignation or In ability, both of the President nnd Vice President, declaring what officer shall then act as President, and such ofllcer shall net nccordlngly until the disabil ity be removed or a President shall be elected It Is by virtue of tho authority conferred on Congress by tho nbovo-nuoted clause that It has beon provided by act of Con gress of tho 19th of January, 188C, C 4, 24 Stat, at L. 1. that In case of the death or disability of both President and Vlco President, the following officers, In tho order named, shall net as President or Vice President until the disability of tho Presi dent or Vice President Is removed or a President shall be elected: Secretary of State, Secretary of the Treasury, Secretary of War, Attorney Genornl, Postmaster Gen eral, Secretary of the Navy, Secretary of iiib imenor. This letter Is not written ns nn un gracious correction Its purpose Is to point out what was undoubtedly an oversight. D. ARTHUR MAGAZINER. Philadelphia, June 14, 1916. The word "constitutional," of course, ought to have been "statutory." The point on which we were laying stress was not tho original provisions of tho fundamental law, but the recognition by the nation of the Importance of the offlco of Secretary of State. Editor of Evening Ledoeh. What Do You Know? Queries 0 ocneral Interest will 60 asu.ercd in this column. Ten questions, the misu'crs to which even loell-fnormed ncrioil should know, are' asked daily. QUIZ 1. What Is the menntnir nnd orleln of the phrase "to lexow nn oflichil"? S. Who Is John GnIsnorth7 3. Mho wrote "Ilynntln"? 4. What Is an orntorlo? B. What lire ejetreth? 0. Can w liter be boiled without applying heat? 7. Who was "Old Tippecanoe"? 8. Wlmt does It mean "to lie quixotic"? 0. What was the Illark rieiith? 10. Who are the "Little Knslanilers"? THE DISAPPEARING HYPHEN ISNT It entirely possible that the campaign issue which revolves around the mystic word "hyphenlsm" will sud denly drop out of sight one of these days and never be heard of again? Following the equally satisfying demands for Amer icanism which all candidates and parties Which have eo far appeared (and disap peared) have made, it should bo high time for the average citizen to look about him and fry to visualize soma tangible "hy phen who. if the descriptions of him by extreme hyphenophobes are correct, should now eee no place for him In any party and bo prepared to stay home on election day. But interviews with Ger manAjnerlais reveal no such, thing, u appearSr-on the contrary, that the Repub lican German-Americans are going to vote for Jlughea and that the Democratic Ger-ruan-Amerlcana are going to vote tor1 Wilson And "both wilt be very glad to get their votes. So why should there be any more si-atultous 'nsults to mea and kWfiMr. mmm 4Mftoyiw and au- J women whp happen to to of German an- -4fcr jstlfls ofietryt :a,- Tk? " No, I was no here yestaday, I was to da basaballa game. Sure! an' eet maka ma seeck. Too moocha politics. Eh? Alia right, w'at you gona say for 'dees? Ees com' to da plate blgga steeff dat's call Mollwltr. Easy he could keella da ball. But waltl Ees com' leetla, dark, skeenny man an' wheesper heem een da ear, Mollwltz he looka round like he ees scare'. t)en he go wan, two, three strike, out! Wat you su'pose ees da fallow dat wheesper heem een da ear? Blacka Hand! Sure! ONCE we had a dear old cousin who used to .boast that we were the scions of royalty, but none of us quite believed It One of -the family, however, seems to have achieved the purple. The Journal of the Southern California Retail Grocers' Assor elation prints hU picture, with this cap tion "Richard Paly, otherwise known as Dick' paly, the Corn King." who Is "get ting numerous write-ppa in papers through out the country," Here's another, O, royal brother ! BURIED on our desk, somewhere is a note sent In by an observant contrfb announcing that YB MOPRRN T4RUG SKOfc haa its sign out somewhere in this olde fahyntd towns. THE PRESIDENTIAL SUCESSION To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir I read with much Interest your edi torial entitled "Vlco President Should He Secretary of State," which appeared in tho Evening: LEnaen of Juno 13. Although I am heartily In sympathy with the substance of the editorial, I feel con strained to call to your attention the fol lowing statements: The most Important officer of the Government, aside from the Chief Magistrate himself, Is the Secretary . of State. This ja recognized by the con stitutional provision that In the event of the Incapacity of the President and the Vice President the Secretary of State succeeds to the presidency. It was my Impression, which I have con firmed by Investigation, that there Is no Buch provision In the Federal Constitution. Article II, Section 1. In case of the removal of the President from office, or of hla death, resignation or Inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said pfflce. the same shall devolve en the Vice President, and tho Con- OPPOSED TO PROTECTION To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir I read the editorial headed, 'The Enemies In Our Own Household," and, as I have always voted In presidential elections the Democratic ticket, I take very much ex ception to your statement. It would take too much spaoe here to prove conclusively and clearly that the Democratic Idea Is right. However, if you will permit a few lines I would like to say that whatever rool helpful and humanitarian legislation we have been able to secure has come mainly from Democratic sources, as, for Instance, the Income tax. The condition Inherited by the Wilson Administration, and which came through Republican Incompetency and neglect, or both, was something calculated to test the patience and the thinking capacity of any man. The tariff for protection which you and every other person who argues for It seem to think so vital to our prosperity has never benefited the worklngman. It has been used to make millionaires nnd multimillionaires. The majority of work ing people who come to the United States do so under a mistaken notion that they can get rich quickly But they soon find out how badly they have been fooled They find out that Individual effort Is balked In al most every line of business. They find that the big companies "freeze out" the smaller merchants and call (t "business" Between speculators In railroads, real es tate and food products one can never tell what the price will be tomorrow1. We find that the protection we need most of all Is not from foreign "cheap labor," but from our own "get-rlch-qulck" Wallingfords. And this Is the reahon the party of Jackson Is so cordially hated by the people who talk about "urotectlon to Am.,imn i,,., 'tries." Roosevelt Is a good samnle of a product of the great Republican party. He tried to make the people believe he was working for tpelr Interests, but "my dear Harrlman" fixed him for keeps, jf the cap-, tains of Industry who constitute the Repub lican party think the people don't know what they want or can't get It they have another think coming, X.U.. , u. . J?!lN J- FLEMING. Philadelphia, June l. Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Iceland helons to Denmnrk, 2. MrCnrmlrk, who run for (ioiernor of Penn sylvania on the Ilemocratlc ticl.et. It the President's choice for imtlotml chnlrman. 3. Credentials nre letters of Introduction that xlve the heirer hU stnndlnj: as nn ac credited representative, messenKer or del egate. 4. The courts Imve power to disbar lanjrrs. 5. The wife of nn earl lias tho title of Count ess, 0. (01d Illrkor" vrns the nickname of Andrew Jackson, 7. Shelley was born In 1792 and died In 1832. 8. The first German Emhrrnr un. proclaimed nt Versailles, nenr Paris, during tho ler- m-vn occupation In the Frunro-I'russlun Mar. 0. A mnndarln Is any Chinese official, civil or mllltur), who Is entitled to wear n "but ton" on his official hat, 10. Ilarrhtis. the rod of nine. Tom Paine 1 Editor of "What Do You Know" Will you kindly tell me why Thomas Paine, the great American patriot nnd author of the Revolution, was not accorded a more prom inent place In Amcrlcnn history? D. G. Pnlne lost his popularity chiefly on ac count of his virulent attacks on the deeds and character of Washington. It was gen erally accepted that he was subsidized by a foreign Power, eager to Involve this country In its dlsputea His religious opinions differed very little 'from those of several other patriots of that time It 1st barely possible that his lack of restraint In expressing those opinions had something to do with his present place In American his tory. He Is not generally considered the author of the Revolution, FOOTBALL HERn PLAYS Pfaj-Nrjj Vance McCormick. WII....I .-.1 . ... . . ' "u 1 unoice tor Manager in Chief i Is a Pennsylvania Pt-nr,. ' 1 sive Democrat -t.'t4 "ved j "TTD PLAYS politics ilko ho -. loownii." hio a reporter who v.i trailed Vnnco McCormick In hi, cZJ for the rmvprnnrahln cu .... 'npalfa estcd observer of tho Democrats 2S' 'I THE BROMIDIOM There is a type of mind which cannot express itself except 4n stale and threadbare words and phrases. The more ancient and outworn the language the better It pleases puch folks. To them all brides, are blushing. all banknotes crisp, all citizens prominent. To them the by-and-by Is ever sweet ; their tombs are musty, their decorations tasty and every fire Is a conflagration If not a holocaust J. Pluvius makes rain for them, their sun Is Old Sol. their future dim and distant and heir tomb silent. They are be pleased, too, when they can clap quotation marks around, a word or phrase, to set It off with the unctton that makes a born gos fclp's inflections, a torture to manly jnj. Bromide wa the nam? Gelett Burgess gave to these unhappy fragments of lan guage, overworked ""til their savor has gona from them. But Burgess' clever notion has become Itself bromide, since the bromfdlots have taken It up and made a bromldlom of It Barrle, In the days when his style was forming, dreaded this falling Artistic sen sibilities as keen as his shrank from the trite. In his room he kept only a few books. One of them was Partlett's "Quotations." When, In hla writing, a phrase or line came tripping off his pen that seemed tp him to have been said or beard before he turned to Partlett If ha found It listed there among the "familiar." out It went He was - writer. Albany Knickerbocker Press. A RIGHT IDEA Now and again Mayor Curley. of Boston, Is seize I wr. the right Idea. A. for ex ample, on Monlay. wheji he sent a, telegram to pretdent Wilson ursine the aonolntmane of WUiiam Howard Taft to the Sunnm I bench to succeed Mr Hughes Springfield i aueror, 101 Valon. 1 0r orange, )l. War Dates Bdltor of "What Do You Know" Kindly state (1) the order In which all the bel ligerent nations have entered the war; (2) hpw many republics there are In Europe, and (3) whether any of the Balkan States are' still neutral and why? M. If. July 28, 1914, Austria declared war on Serbia, August 1 Germany declared war on Russia. August 2 German troops en tered Luxemburg, virtually a declaration of war on France, The next day the French announced a "state of war" with Germany, August 4 German troops entered Belgium, Involving that State, The next day Eng land announced a Btatp of war with Ger many. August 15 Japan Bent an ultimatum to Germany, Twelve days later the coun tries were at war, October 29 Turkey de clared war on Russia. May 23, 1915, Italy declared war on Austria, San Marino fol lowed,. October 4, 1915, Russia presented an Ultimatum to Bulgaria) which was rejected two days later and on October 7 the two countries wire at war. October 14 Bulgaria- declared wqr on Serbia, October 19 Italy declared war on Bulgaria. Monte. negro has stood beside Serbia from the first Portugal and Germany have been at war since March. (2) France, Switzerland and Portugal are the great republics of Eu ropf. Andorra, In the Pyrenees, Is also a republic So Is San Marino, the oldest State In Europe. , The free States of Germany might be called republics by a stretch of (he Imagination. Albania has a presi dential claimant. (3) Greece and Rumania alone of the Balkan States are still neutral. The reason Is that they have not found jt to their advantage to go in or, possibly, they haven't picked the winner, and-do not care to fight on tho losing side. Five Historic Landings Editor of "What Do vYai Xioj."WI!1 you. kindly name the "five great landings" In England, to which I have heard frequent reference, a B.C. (1) The landing of Julius Caesar, 55 B. C , which revealed the Britons to the civil ized world, and a civilized people to the Britons, (t) The landing of HengUt -and Horsa, traditional leaders of the first suc cessful Teutonic invasion of England, 4)9 A D (3) The landing of St Auzustlne. 59? (4) The landing of William the Con- m The landing of William Palgn consulted the records and found that Vance Crlswell McCor mick, who was born' In Harris, burg m 187Z, wns fullback and cap tain of his foot- ball team, nt Yale when ho was 21 years old, that be ing his third year of play, Appar ently ho played footballwoll, In his laBt year Yalo beat Harvard 0 to 0. VANCU M'COmtldlCii But as little children are fond nt ... K lng, "that doesn't prove." Neither rf.. d tho fact that Mr, McCormick Is sunnn.' to know moro about and possess mora He." examples or mo .ferciieron breed of horsss provo- mat no is ntted to engineer the? iremenaous upnm task of tho Democratism party for tho ro-electlon of President Wfl-1 son. nut Mr. Mccormick Is not withour other qualifications. Tho greatest of them Is hla disposition. When he vrai1 running for Mayor of Harrlsburg, and wnen no was running for Governor of l'onnsyivanla In 1014 (ns a Proitresso.? i.cmocrai ntier wiuiam Draper Lewli dropped out), ho made many enemies, He mauo many moro friends. The in. thuslasm with which his political adver- snrles speak of Vartco McCormlck's per-j sonniuy is truly remarkable. He Ijffl ..... ... ... -a always "ono or mo most" ngreeable, affa ble, pleasing, courteous, thoughtful what- ever tho ndjcctlvo Is, Vnnco McCormick stands In tho superlatlvo or pluperfect class. Of course ho has had advantages. Ukn never was emuiuereu oy poverty nor a mado suspicious of tho world by a hardlS struggle. Ho vvus born with the McCor-3 mick millions ready for him. He dldsi what not enough wealthy mon do, for-vi sworo a mo oi nisgracerui ease and Indo- lenco for a llfo of energetic devotion tet what ho considered tho oubllc good. HU' ' enemies tay ho Is but perhnps'a quota-, tlon from a campaign speech will prove It j better: "As'a corruptlonlsf his equal has never been bornj hs a hypoctlte his peer does not exist," said an opponent In 1514 Without question somo people believe thoso words aro true. They aro quoted hero because, after nil, they can't hurt Mr. McCormick if they are not true. A Wilkcs-Barre Event Tho group of teporters that happened to bo nt Wllkes-Barre In the 1914 cam paign tell a pretty story. A "loverfeast" was given one night at tho hotel In which Mr. McCormick was staying. He was a candidate on a platform which IncluM, local option, and either by intent or accl dent the "entertainment" nt this ttiAipi Included an Injudicious nmount of liquor," Mr. McCormick wns not tesnonslble. buffi when the bill was piesonted he was asikfll to pay some $90 for "entertainment." HM manager made Inquiries and discovery tho nigger In the woodpile. McCormlc had tq choose between being called j "cheap spot t," "a piker," and being mliell up with tho liquor Interests In a parties larly disagreeable way. Neither was easffl but he choso the harder one and refused! to pay the bill. Thoso who had enjoyelj tho "entertainment" with possibly an Idea of Its after-effect were forced to dig deep and pay tho fiddler. t.m The McCormicks aro what is knowrt . a good family, and the Camerons, vyftirj whom thoy are connected, have supplied two members to tho United States Senate The family Is probably the largest holder ' of agricultural lands In tho State, enda Mr, McCormick owns besides one of thM best coal mines in Dauphin County, elwr trie companies nnd other property, H Is unmarried and has devoted himself for j many years to his mother and his sister, J with whom he lives. In Harrlsburg aUf home Is on tho Susquehanna, about fourj doors away from the Executive Mansion; but he owns a large estate not far away.,; which ha calls Rosegarden, and on whlcif he raises puro stock, pure plants an4J pure policies. At least, that Is his pur-. , pose." Other Interests Mr. McCormick has a vast number ofa interests besides politics, but that always comes first. He has long been a memoer of tho Young Men's Christian Assocli.- tion's Executive Committee at Jiarrw hnrcr nnd is now on the reorganization. committee of tho Yale athletic governing board. In the latter position It may W, hla rtntv in tnr-kla a lob at least as nam. as the one he has just accepted that Ii how to turn last year's 41-0 defeat at thr. hands of Harvard Into one Of his ow time victories. At Yale he holds another nncltlnn. thnt of trustee. If the DnW erats nre looklnr for a good omen thejn maynoto that he won that position ovft the dead (administrative) body ot j lam Howard Taft. He Is the own' i the Harrlsburg Patriot, a morning papw i and the men who work for him n ,M" n,i urn vnrv fnnrl Of him he COBU , aroupd bo seldom that they never 8" M auhieet to his bad days. If he pas Bi-J In 1900 Mr, McCormick became a met ljer of the Common Council of HarrUbur nnd Visfnra Ma form was OVer hO WM elected Mayor ot the clty.e According one enthusiastic report. Mr McCormw found Harrlsburg mud and left it Mg adam. Sewers, clean water, parks, pa streets are all credited to him a famous Ideal, ''taking the police out o ..,.... ,i. ..nt. Hva you tr. Imnreanlnn that If hs took thW PU ? their polities he quickly put theni toe Intr. hla nwn Ha ia one of the prUKSf1 bankers Jn the capital and haa pf director of the Federal Reserve K tho Thllr1elnl,ln rion. That JOlT-A8 ' have to jrive ud as soon as heAM? Job of being Wilson's pilot nprnnNiTiON SSIp Tlmr.r fajmrnsilt has. SUntnWMJt Philadelphia lawyer to his asauttw ( j would eem to meet the. rrtulrensf nU j-jj case Toromo sjuwj ran, jmum.