o 10 sisSi tLK2 ltGR COMPANY CTHU8 H, K. CURTIB, rtiti,H1. ?r'W H. tudfnstan,, Vice rresMiWt John . Mtttin,. Secretary and Treasurer: riilltp B. BttlnsyJohn U. WlIllAms; Director. EDtTOnlAti BOAltDl Cthbh M.-K. Ctnris, Chairman. P. , H. trHALny.. ......,..,...., ...... Editor JOHN a MArtTIN.. General Business- ttahar "' i ir urn. rn . 1. ,ra , i .Published dally at Prima trmjtn Bull din, Independence 8qoar( Philadelphia. Lra i pKXTsib,,.. Broad and Chestnut Streets AtUntio C1TI.......4... .rrj-InIon Sulldlnt Nsj YoK.. ...... .....20(1 Melrtrwlltan Tower tvmoiT...................820 t'ord nulldlnsj . L0CIS.....i..09 Olotr'-Drmeemt Building Chicago. .......... 1202 Tribune UulliMna; N15W8 -imEAust W8Btori)!f UtissitJ..., ....... .ntinrs Building XT TOOK nrttltr.,...,...Th Timet Building B ii.m rrRn. ........... .00 Frledrlchstrasie Ix)iDO! ntmrlUi. ...... Marconi House. Strand Pill Domeid. ......... .32 Bus Louis la a rand SUBSCRIPTION TETtMS Br enrrler, six cents per Week. Br mall, postpaid outsldo of Philadelphia, except -where foreign postage Is required, one month, twenty lira cents on year, threa dollars. All mall subscriptions parable In advance. Notrca Subscribers wishing address chanced must (Ira oltf as well as new address. BELL. 3M0 WALftUT KEYSTONE. MAIN SHOP CS" AddrrsB alt communlcoflons to Evenng Ledger. Independence Bquart, Philadelphia. Einsaxn at tiis rmtiDitLriiu rosrorrfoa it ancoKD-cLiss ituu m.tteb. TIIS AVERAGE NET PAID DAILT CIH- CULATION OP T1IE EVENING LEDGER FOR JUL.T WAS 121.009. rfcUadtlphli. ThonJtj, Autnil II, 1916. To understand all is to become Very lenient. -Madame de Stael. Vfhon the schools opon there will be E00O fewer part-tlmo pupils than last year. This la progress In tho right direc tion. Once It was tho high cost of living. Now li Is tho super-high cost of living. Tho next Btage Is It the soup house coat of living? Administration hopes tho strike wilt be delayed. Headline. Tho rest of us hope that It will he Indefinitely postponed. Hughes motors 10,000 feet above sea level. Headline. Yes, but he never goes up In tho fclr so far that his feet lcavo tho ground. The Pennsylvania Railroad has put an embargo on the shipment of explo sives, but this will not prevent the po-llce-ln-polltlcs lssuo from traveling back and forth from tho shore to the city as usual. Tho Mayor says ho will send those policemen who refuse to patrol their beats properly to "Siberia," meaning the fringes of Philadelphia. Crooks who mako suburban rcsldenco burglaries a specialty will be grateful. Tho President told Congress this was no time to (place tho blame for fall tiro In tho past, to enact the legislation V which ho says would bo valuable and necessary even If there were no railroad crisis. EUhu "Root's speech before tho Bar Association glvc3 ono cluo in the mystery of fixing the blame. He finds our youngest and least experienced law yers getting into Congress. Such legisla tors aro simply not equal to the task of far-sighted legislation1. Contributions to the Children's Country Week Association have fallen off greatly, due to the mistake of many patrons in believing that its -work for the season is about through. As a mat ter of fact, tho Infantile paralysis 'situa tion has made the activity of tho asso ciation more necessary than ever. It is taking: city-ridden children Into the vital izing air of the country and preventing, no doubt, many of them from contract ing disease- The Country Week Associa tion la an enterprise well worthy of the support of the community. The destruction of the Memphis by a. tidal wave In San Domingo harbor re calls the wreck of tho warships Trenton and Vandalla by a hurricane at Samoa a few years ago. Bach was due to condi tions over which human beings had no control. The San Domingo tidal wave woo probably causod by a submarine earthquake of which it is 'impossible to get advance Information, and the sea lifted the 14,600-ton mass of steel and burled It upon the rocks as if it had been a chip of wood. This sort of thing hap pens often enough to keep man from getting- too vain of his might. Berlin was rather too quick to dis count the effect of the Rumanian dec laration of war, and was evidently far from prepared for the emergency. The chief of staff. Von Falkenhayn, was bo opposed to sending troops from the hard pressed zones, where they are badly needed, to he new theater that his dis missal was necessary to co-ordinate the readjustments in strategy. The fact that there is such radical difference of opinion In .the staff la significant enough. More significant Is the Inference that In the yes of German strategists the fata of Austria now hangs in the balance. The President lias said that new taxes have to be levied because the fall ing off of importations on account of the war has reduced the returns at the cus tom houses. The total Importations for lbs. Jat fiscal year wero 12.197,833,310. The total Importations for the Ascal year ndlng June 30, 1914, the year before the war began, were Jl,893,925,567. There seems to have been' a considerable in crB in importations. The revenue pro ucad by the Payne-AIdrlch law in the Uitt year when it was In force was $318. 14tt344. or 17.8 per cent on the total im parts. The revenuo produced by the TJnderwoodSLmmgna law last year was $211,863,222, or ,9.9 per cent on the Im ports. If the 17.8 per cent duties of the jUpubllean law had, been levied last year th custom houses would have yielded TJS,000 more than was collected. The J)ocrst!will have to find some other r9a ir lbs allure of their revenue lattitiztUm thUM the falling off in lroports. Cta of tba comioonest bromides la Um hbm 4tm et ib railroad, wage qua. Man J t&x & gearR4teW r pal tm miim we ww run tn tranw leo HMfc. W jam toW that no jean U pMfe mM ytr. Tbwa an not ;' mm wnrtk titat ww, K U true, - kw m&tm ntB tat mibiMd. tta ks MR teii." t W imxt MM PUW it iat feet so that it earns dividends on Its common and preferred stock he deserves nit that the grateful shareholders feet like paying him. There are many such Business geniuses In charge of the rail roads today. If they have not rescued a road from bankruptcy they have pre vented it from going Into the hands of A. receiver In these times when both the State and tho National governments have been making it difficult for the trans portation companies to do business at a profit. Thero aro somo men who can't be paid more tlian they aro worth. It would bo cheaper for this city to give an executive genius $lOo,000a year to rescue It from tho tangle In which Its business affairs aro Involved than to worry along with a commonplace cx ccutlvo who receives only $12,000. INCONCEIVABLY NEFARIOUS TTTE TRUST that every citizen of Phil- ' ndelphla, particularly thoso who havo not taken tho trouble to vote In recent years, has read and Inwardly digested the following statement by Mayor Smith: 1 have been" In politics for yeara. I know what things aro done and that knowledge Is guiding mo now. But I never dreamed that politics could leftd men to do such thlng3 as 1 have dis covered havo bcon dono In Philadel phia, My mind Is made up, and I am going to teach policemen that they cannot tnko orders from tho outside and expect to get away with It. This ndmlsslon that tho pollco have boon taking orders from tho outsldo Is interesting, but it la not news. Yet tho pollco were not taking ordors from tho outsldo a year ago. They wore not In politics then. Thoy got Into politics be cause tho Mayor appointed as their chief a well-known politician. Ho appointed him for political reasons, and that was as much notice as the pollco forco needed that a political reglmo was in the saddle, wherefore holding ono's Job depended, In the event, on obedlonco to tho instructions of politicians. Wo say in nil seriousness that tho Mayor invited tho situation of which ho complains, and ho knows, as everybody elso knowa that thero Is not tho remotest possibility of changing that situation so long as Director Wilson Is retained In office. To try Superintendent Robinson Is meroly to trifle with tho Issue, for, what ever his delinquencies, they flowed from and had their origin In tho acquiescence of tho Director of Public Safety. Either so, or that Director Is a babo In tho woods, utterly incapable of filling tho office which ho holds. - Tho Evening Ledoer can havo no con fidence in tho professions of the Mayor, nor do wo bollevo any fair-minded citizen can, until he has mado thoso professions good by tho ejection of tho politician under whoso reglmo tho monstrous con ditions to which the Mayor confesses havo reached their fruition. But far more important to Philadelphia than the Mayor's declaration that tho police force is ruled by politicians Is his nalvo announcement that even he, hard ened in the roughest school of politics known and inured by long acquaintance to its immorality and lawlessness, could not conceive that men would do such things as "I have discovered have been done in Philadelphia." So often have tho newspapers pointed out the nefarlousness of the gang that each now revelation of wickedness has almost fallen flat. High-minded citizens simply would not bellevo that the things It was declared wero being done could be dono. Yet hero Is the Mayor himself, elected by tho gang, confessing the fact. It is enlightening; It is illuminating; It Is humiliating. Wo have no comment to make. If a city deliberately votes for such govern ment It gets what it wants. We doubt if there can be Impartial and honest en forcement of law with a gang Mayor in City Hall. But we do venture to hope that Mayor Smith will oust Director Wll Bon and, having done that much to clean things up, will devote his attention to the great community enterprises for which money has been voted. The electorate will take care of the gang when the next election comes along. Meantime Phila delphia Is waiting for the Mayor to get busy on business. There will be a con ference today relative to the floating of some bonds In the near future. It de cency In government cannot be obtained straightway, at least S50O a day can ba saved by paying the mandamuses which now bear interest at 6 per cent. A LITTLE GOOD IN A BIG BLUNDER TTTB HAVE no faith in the Government YV shipping bill as such, .It is a mis erable effort to purchase an Industry which can be developed and matured only by the native enterprise and devotion of business men. The American has never yet failed to grasp an opportunity for profit. Show htm whero his skill can ba productive of returns and he la game for a try. He has been legislated .off the seas and In addition the development of his own country has offered a fairer chance for investment. But his forebears needed no subsidies to carry the flag to the far seas nor Government money to get them vhlpa. There was a carrying trade to be got and they got it. We vew with soma hope, however, the creation of a shipping board. It has long been apparent that a commission of ex perts was necessary to advise Congress as to the best means of rehabilitating our niaiuie, It may ba that this shipping board will be able to perform the func tions of such a commission, to derive, in fact,, from its own experience a knowledge of the fundamental requisites for a- res toration of tha Hag: on the high seas. Its jFftcoamwidatloaa would have behind ttwt tt TrJht of, aatkority which might wy b provKtlv oi caod, EVBNIHG iiEDaBE-lILADELPHlA HUBSBAY, AUGUST 31, Tom Daly's Column TUB BUM OF BUMMER Done tho dash-dinged days dulled "dog"; Ucre'a the Slit of Aug.t A3 LONG as we can remember one of Xl our most vivid notions of tho acme of luxury was to bo traveling somewhere on a cool autumn day that Is to say, nfter the heated term usually associated with tho holidays of tho common people and to settle back, nfter tho Pullman porter had Intel our light overcoat and now fall hnt In tho rack, to tho leisurely leading of tho Atlantic Monthly.. Wo used to think tho Atlantic tremendously literary, but every onco In a while of lato years wc'yo had that notion Jolted. Oc casionally It prints poetry sufficiently human to bo classified ns "newspaper verso." Such a thing Is In tho current number. It's called "Newark Bny," and It's got stuff In It too good for Newark, in splto of tho fact that It's freo verso and In splto of such low-tldo lines ns these! Hut 1 like Newark Bay. You don't know whero It Is unless you are a Jersey commntorl And no cllfts encircle It. . . No famous cities lend It a llttlo of their renown. No beautiful bulhllnen are reflected In it. No typhoon ever toro It out of Us bed. Nor Is tho color ot It very wonderful. Never mind. , It has n wonderful war of catching color from tho sun. YOUR correspondent, C. C. S., opens up somo forgotten floodgates of memory, or words to tho samo general effect. Thus It Is remombored: Cy Hall was translated to other worlds in tho courso of human events. He was a Baptist. Tho Daptlst minister was 111 and could not, naturnlly, conduct tho services nt tho funeral. Good old Eldor Blakoly, of tho Presbyterian Church, was called In hurriedly. He be gan his prayor: "O Lord, as Thou know est, when I left home this morning I did not even know that this our brother was dead." TAB. Inheritance In Donegal, whero old romance yet blows O'er hill and hearth, tho children In the blast Of storm hear cries and clashing arms of thosa Whose dreams wore deeds, In Eire's liv ing past. And looking on tho fields with clover spread, Thoy never stop to pick tho wind-stirred bloom; Thoso flowers might be tho blood their fathers shed Now come to ruddy blossom on their tomb. They loot: upon tho lifted sea that flows In mountains shoreward, breaks and piles again; '. The winds, they say, thus heap a calm for thoso Who have God's acre in the unmarked main. I never saw the fields thoso children see, The fog-scarfed mountains, nor the hilly deep, But shared their every dream and memory Only tho age-long hates I cannot keep. For there they lay, my fathers and their foes. As in ono grave they watt the trumpet call; O'er some the foam, o'er somo tho clover blows, Tho while they'ro sleeping long In Don egal. CHARLES L. O'DONNELL. WE don't know what spell Krlcghoff wrought in his sketch of Miss Sykes as she appeared in court though wo fancy the secret lies in the treatment of tho oyo3 under the hat brim- but It lent a distinction to our front page yesterday, that's all. THE sharp eyes of W. T. Door, aboard U. S. S. Connecticut at League Island, detcotcd this premature explosion on Tuesday morning, wherein a Democratic morning contemp. was "hoist with his own petard": "Mr. Daniels shows that our navy lost second place In the world In 1911, when Mr. Roosevelt was President This pricks the Oyster Bay nubble." ANOTHER morning contemp. and I. F. G. Is the Informer was guilty of this: He was overcome by smoke and badly burned while trying to extinguish the fite In the boiler room. At the Jewish Hospital small hope was held out for his recovery. Mr. Steffy has nine lives and children at 1589 Lom bard street. Very likely a member of tho same re markablo family Is Fireman Ambrose M. Sherman, of Engine Company 63, who, according to o. o. dear paper, "has sacri ficed his life many times to help others, and who now offers his blood for ex perimentation in infantile paralysis cures." Passing through Albany, George A. Fernley, of this burg, was delighted to read in the Knickerbocker Press that Al bany lui-snds to send a big delegation to the convention of the Atlantic Deeper Waterways Association next month, and that the Albanians expect, among other things, to visit "Benjamin Franklin's house In Falrmount Park, the largest nat ural municipal park in the world; the treaty oak In Kensington beneath which Franklin signed the treaty with the In dians." Heavens I Is It Possible? That's what we said and right out loud, too when, sitting at our desk, we read In the Springfield (111.) News Record: Twenty Years Ago Today Auiutt IS, 188S. Mrs. Mary Piper left for a visit In Mon mouth. Tt. II, McAnulty returned from a business trin to (micoro. deorgo M. Buck, a clerk in the Leland Hotel, left tor a visit In Chicago. Ml Bertha Buck raturned to this city after a two months' visit in Philadelphia and other eastern cities. BILL Rocap wasn't too busy vacation Injg to do a little scout work for us, He says he saw this sign outside a restau rant on Falls street, Niagara Falls; A LA CARTE WAITRESSES WANTED And, sez BUI. maybe they'd prefer peaches In pairs. And Bon No. 3 reports that a friend told htm of a sign under a Reading (Pa. Dutch) doorbell which ran : BUTTON WONT BELT BUMP n addition which the Lkdobr dassl fled ad. depL supplies evidence of a, firm which advertised for a bookkeeper Mnot taller than five feet Avo Inchea." This was a necessary qualification because, the bookkgeplng dopartmant was located la a mossatUae gallery. Yr):- ' Jv---"" ' . ...'.-aga.Miw'w" 0wgrff(it moi -r.jwirtji!-i""S- -" -""' v ,iTrJ7SJ37 PfFniSiP ADMlMlSTR-ilil -REVELATIONS OF Confessions "Filthy Beyond Description" Found in It His Friends Denounced as Ireland's Worst Enemies. Sinn Fein Outrages By ALFRED NOYES Believing the American people Jiavo a wrong impression of the Irish re bellion and tho British Government's attitude thereto, Mr. Noves, after a personal investigation and a perusal of Sir Roger Casement's personal diary, offers this message to all Americans. Mr. Xoycs holds tho chair of English literature at PrincetoH and has spoken in more than S00 American cities as a poet and- publicist. CERTAIN features of tho Irish rebel J Hon have been overlooked by many friends of the Allies' cause in tho United States. In this particular matter whatever the blunders of England may have been In the past It Is possible that hero mod erate estimate of hor own case In the Irish rebellion may eventually redound to hor credit as did her first moderato es timate of tho Jutland battle. Neither Ireland nor Irish-Americans desire to mako martyrs of men who, by the "sudden publication of cortain records quite unconnected with politics may mako every Irishman ashamed of the day on which he helped to canonize thorn. ' Tho cry "God help Ireland" will take on a new significance If Irishmen begin to think that any political Injustice done to them in the past allows them, for In stance, to murder their own countrymen Indiscriminately. And these rebels, be yond tho shadow of a doubt, did mur der, ruthlessly, deliberately and Indls crlmlnately, men, women and children, their own kindred, without even tho slightest attempt to discover whether their victims were in political ngreement with them or not. This new method, devised by Irishmen of the very lowest and vicious personal character, was a criminal tyranny of a kind that hag been unknown anywhere in civilized Europe, even in Germany, probably even In Turkey, for more than two hundred years. Wen the Germans do not exercise their "frightfulness" Indiscriminately against their own people. They do not shoot Herr Dernberg in cold blood, because they see him posting a letter in Berlin, Nor do they massacre their own wounded sol diers for riding on the top or a bus. Nor do they shoot their own women and chil dren for the mere fact that they hap pened to ba alive. Nor do they fire on ambulances, carrying their own wounded; and every one of these things the Irish rebels were convicted of doing over and ove,r again. I ask these persons In America who accuse England of "ruthlessness" what steps she should have taken, under the existing machinery of law, to deal with certain cold-blooded murders that had no 'relation of any kind either to politics or to nationality, - "Qod help Ireland" In NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW From the West comes the news that Mr. Hughes's tariff speeches are most enthusi astically received. Yet tho Democratlo man agers are not satisfied. They declare that he is "talking time-worn, tariff twaddle." Reports from Maine indicate that Republi can votes are being made there by the dis cussion of the tariff and of a true Ameri canism that will make an American proud of his nag anywhere In tho world even In Mexico. Bridgeport Standard. "i '' "' " The publlo generally believes in the eight hour day for workers, but there must b grave doubt as to the wisdom of the uao of tha presidency to force It upon employers and then tell tha employer to go and col lect from the public, It Is an assumption, Of power that may prove, d&sgerova 1 the precedent Is followed. ac4 max work as PILING UP CASEMENT'S DIARY deed, If her friends can look through a mist of rbmanco at tho spectacle of Irish, criminals deliberately firing on tho women who wore attending wounded. Romance and beauty and sorrow havo clothed Ireland like a garment in tho past; but thero Is not a ribbon, not oven a red ono, to bo added by thoso men who, fully nrmed, approached tho unarmed Irish constable at tho castlo guto and shot him,1 without warning, through tho heart. It was a daughter ot Ireland only eighteen years of age that another felon shot In tho name" of Irish freedom, out side the Dublin Postofllce, for no crlmo but that sho was young and helpless. If this bo a subject for tho harp of Erin, tho sooner that every string bo broken and every echo of it dead tho bettor. When the rebellion began, It took tho unprecedented form of an attack by .armed men in tho streets of Dublin upon crowds of absolutely unarmed people. Nono of tho soldlere, none of tho police, wero armed. Tho Sinn Felners deliber ately fired on wounded and crippled men, homo from tho front. A poor carter was Bhot dead In St. Stephen's Green because he did not at once hand over his master's cart to a Sinn Felner. Does any true Irishman glorify this? At Castlo Belllngham, a young man motoring through tho town was mado to stand against the roadsldo with an un armed policeman. The Sinn Felners, with out oven the" court-martial neutrals have1 characterized as "ruthless" when held by England, shot the policeman dead and he young man through the lungs. Wo might, of course, have sent thoso who killed and wounded 400 of our sol diers a handsome Invitation to the funer als, with an emerald ribbon attached. One Irish soldier In a London hospital on. hearing of It, cried, "By God. It's the Irish themselves aro shooting men and women now for the wearing of the green!" And the chief Jeader of these rebels I cannot print his own written confes sions about himself, for they are filthy be yond all description. But I have seen and read them and they touch thelowesc depths that human degradation has ever touched. Page after page of his dlaiy would be ap Insult to a pig's trough to lot the foul record touch It The Irish will canor-ize these things at their own potil. Let not Ireland be "too late" In re- osmizlng the burning fidelity to their tru's cause in what Mr. Redmond has told them of the nature of this foul blow pot at England but at Belgium, at France, and at Freedom herself; for It was delivered In collusion with the most sinister enemies of all that Ireland pro fesses to believe In. greatly to the disadvantage of the workers as of, the employers. Springfield News Record, There . Is one issue that dominates all others and can awaken tho Interest of voters, and that Is the subject of adminis tration. The country can do without poli cies and legislation for a generationbut It cannot get along wlthqut an honest and efficient administration, Ohio State Jour nal, Underlying this question of . arbitration Is the Question whether those li charge ot the railroads of the country and that means both sides to this eight hour and overtime Pv question are at to bo trusted with antral nt Rl Vital ami unn-..,M pubtto. Interest s the maintenance ot thj wuitry dz-J-Uw-uk Eiwl, 1916. What Do You Know? Ourrics of general tntertit iclli lis answertd In this column. Ten euemons, the answers to which tveru wcll-inlormed serton should knoie. are aiked dally. QUIZ Ahont hotr mnny lawyers ore there In the United .State? What nillrouds are comprised in the "Biff Tour"? Who uas Whtstltr? Who was, Oarlbaldl? Drnrrlhs tlm iroccus In the arts called "stliwllnc." What are riparian rights? Whrro and ultat Is Parnassus? What Is the crow's nest an a vessel? What Is a fortnlcht? What Is a dcmltasst? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz Transylvania: the southeastern part of lluncury, now Invaded Ir the Itusso lttunanlans. Coollesi unskilled laborers ot India and eastern Aslu. Gobellnt a famllr of French drrrs. part of whose property heenme the homo of tho fumous tapestries which bear tho mime of the orlstnul owners of the place of manufacture. Mercerized coods: those treated by n chemi cal Drocpss which Imnnrts a nermanent silky lustre to the fabric. (MiMlmo I'orto or l'orte: seat of the Tur kish (lOTcrnment nt Constantinople. Sapphires are usually a transparent bine. Thntrhed roof: one mnde of straw, rushes or (In tropical countries) ot cocoanut and other leaves. Terpsichore: the Muse of danclnr. Golferlnc: to make wavy or crimp with a neuieu iron, utunur rrierrin? io tne treat ment oi plans or irius. 10. Ukulele! o Hawaiian strlncrd Instrument, small und shaped like n. cultar. Inheritance Tax It. J In Pennsylvania estates of less than $:E0 are exempt from Inheritance tax. Bequests to parents, husband or wife, chil dren or- lineal descendants, stepchildren, adopted children, wife or widow of son are exempt, but bequests to all others are sub ject to a 5 per cent tax by the State. One-Armed Attendants Editor of "What Do You Know" A. friend of mine says he knows of a one armed man who Is an 'attendant In an In sane asylum In this State. I claim that the State would not allow a one-armed man to bo an attendant In such an institution. E. J, P. Many of the attendants have their hands full subduing violent patients, but, ot course, all Insane persons are not violent, some needing only supervision ond no restraint, and It would not be a calamity if a one armed men were placed over those patients who are incapable of doing harm to them selves or othevs. However, If you will state which asylum 13 referred to and what ward In that asylum, it should be possible to learn whether or not a one-armed man Is employed there. Incomes in Porto Rico . L. I. S, Only one person In Porto Itlca had an, Income In excess of J 100.000 last year, according to Income tax returns re cently received by the Tax Bureau of the Insular Treasury. Of the largest individual Incomes recorded for 191S there are 0 in excess of 150.000. and of these 20 It range between fBO.OOO and S7B.O0O, Ave between 576.000- and 1100,000 and one above 1100 -000. Sjxty-slx Individuals are assessed o'n personal incomes ranging between 120 000 and 150.000. In all there are 957 individ uals and 1J1 corporations taxed on Income. The total revenue amounts to 1120,000 as compared with 177,000 for the previous year, United States Aero Service Editor o "What Do You KnoWJ-Where can I get Information about the united States Aero Service; how to join, the pay of members, the training school and so forth? k H "u A letter of inquiry addressed to the Sec retary of War, Washington. D. cT, will sa. cure all the Information you wUh, A Quotation From Browning: - W. L. The lines you quote ar ,-. Browning's "A Soul's Tragedy." The com plete passage Is as follows: "Ever iudgs of men by their professions. For thoufh tho bright moment of promising! but a moment, and cannot be prolonged.' v i sincere In Its moment's extravagint rood, nej. why, truat It, and know th?? by It-Hot by hU wrtormancTwhlch teSg the world's work. Interfere as the www needs must with Its accidents and clwum stances the profession. wa m$$?uZ man's own, I judge ppi$ by what tbi? laigH be o,q. are. or ! ?. ' ls,y THE VOICE OlA THEPEOELE iAn Analysis of tho Railroad Sit uationConcerning tho Iden. tity of Gibboney TM Cfpnrfmoif. I fre to all ... Ivlsh to express their opinions in S5tes current Inleresr. It is fin open fnum'Wf.tf vaHvo htdper assumes no rerm?il,i57'M the wlctos oi its correspondent, 5,,1'' ? be sinned bv the name ana'aMiV,PrK,'un A PLEA FOR THE RAILROADS To the Editor of the Evening Ltiaer- Sir At this critical Juncture of th" road situation, when both sides r Iami i for publlo sympathy, I believe "comr?,?. son between tho trainmen and th ." gers would not bo amiss n Wan' Let us conslSer first the employer,, th havo met tho 1 arbitrary demnnds of iu men In a conciliatory spirit. Thtr willing to arbitrate, but quite naturaii .' fuso to bo held up. ' n' Thus fnr they havo shown a great ri.M for the public welfare by not reiCiiIS tho ultimatum Immediately, which, ilw respecting men, they hnd every moral tltto to do, Contrast this spirit with tho attllM. of the employes. " From tho outset they have shown lli they to uso a vernacular expression "dW glvo n hang" for tho public, Just so' tWi. demnnds aro granted. Indeed, thoy nra taking advantage of lKt ; very fact, to forco tho publlo to bring breu sure to boar o;i tho railroads. The offw to nrbltrato was met with nn obstnti refusal. All that tho trainmen ask must bo granted, or tho public will suffer Thst Is their code; tho "Inw ot tho Medea arnt Persians which nltereth not." It Is qulto obvious, who, In the event of a strike, will bo to blnmo for tho terrl. bio calamity. In which case tho publla should not bo permitted to suffer wlth6ut railroad facilities for oven a fraction ol a second. It should then be up to our "Gov. ornment of tho 'people, for the people and by tho people" to call out the army, state mllltla and all nvallable Government efti ployes for railroad service. Congress should provide nil necessary authority. It Is tho duty of all fair-minded, public spirited citizens, who have the love of liberty and fair play at heart, to do all In their power to ' defeat the shameless men Who visit destruction upon the coun try, merely to further their own selfish la torcsts. R. M. a. Philadelphia, August 29. WHO IS GIBBONEY? To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir As you havo of lato quoted Mayor Smith and D. Clarence Gibboney, I am somewhat In doubt as to what city posi tion Mr. Gibboney holds. If he does not hold any official position, what does he gala through all this publicity? Is he connected with John Dunk and Wil liam Coin in tho detectlvo business or what? Has ho any more legal rights than any other citizen? Kindly print this and perhaps some per Bon can glvo tho, people Borne Idea hat Gibboney gain's through his theoretical work. GEORGE 3. QRANTLY: Philadelphia, August 29. NO SAFETY WITHOUT FORCE To f ho. Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Our country is the first In wealth, population, manufacture and agriculture and Its greatest need Is power enough to protect Its pcoplo and Industry. If we wast to stay the first nation of the world must Increaso.our fighting strength as tht population increases, and there is only on way to do this, and that Is to have military training in the schools, to keep the children In good health and to have every' one la s position to protect his country at a mo ment's notice Wo all know that a country cannot t money and prosperity and no' armyasi! navy and have it long. So what we need, is preparedness, and tho sooner we get this' tho better. PAUL L. BODQEE3. Mexico, Pa., August 30. "' AMUSEMENTS STANLEY MAItKET AT 10TH 11:13 TO 11:15 t.ast .- nvu SESSUE HAYAKAWA In the SENSATIONAL rHOTODItAMA "The Honorable Friend" ADDPp ATTRACTION BURTON HOLMES "Climbing the Austrian Alps" TA T A rT7 12U JIARKET BT. PALAOHj Marguerite Clark - - .rs-f-rm T T-V WIT VFV J,n JtlA-i- - "--' Ladelphi tonight I . . .-:. -. t-r rtTH VM1 (SPECIAL, IRVU'A'IiUJI . " "" eil.7 FOR CLERGYMEN ONLY. No Beats on Sale.) Tho Most Wondorful Play in America EXPERIENCE First Publlo Performance Tomorrow Nlrht Evgs. & Sat. Mat.. OOo to SI. Darwin t Thurs.. SI. Extra Labor Pay Mat. Hon., 6M to S1.60. B. F. KEITH'S THJUATJSK WHOLE BILL OF HITS! Geo. white & Cavanagh LucJl9 Willie "ve.tonTBIdani.TTho,rBWlft Co., H a, -''fol: ToYht at 8. 25o t. II ' ORPHEUMM!T'TAvlrV&n J "Little Peggy O'Moore ' MATINEES TUES.. THURS., SAT., WITH " gBATS AT 28o ,M nn Offlco Owsn Now. 'I'hone. Otn soa LYRIC Tadav SEPT.4 the N. YEIEroAf RiaaE TUB n. l'MU8JCAll TRIUMPH "ROBINSON CRUSOE, JR.' WITH THE KINQ OF FUN ALi JULiOUiN rUho Theater "A MAIDS OF THE MOVIES in "ALL AT SEA" . n,TFnMiTir.NAI. BEAUTIES AND OTlgM Knickerbocker mabket -f REOPENS S& SEPT S" . MR. DOOLEY n ; """ r 17,1 'nnAn Tbls & Next Wek. Ev,-;.s'1' BROAD SsUaew Wl. B-t-jM in th Owr-tta AfARBANELL ElltA "B?i u-t. Labor Par end. VjtMgttr- oeasatt-vM is&iion . ttz. "S.If. for Next WeeU on Ban o 7T5m P.Tf Mow ,(MiT Matin.... 250 - "i jV?,' WAVBU T VM ANrl. HOWE'S FE&VAt Biat. for Next Week on Bait Totoy- yvcllllMU nJfcur MaUnss gawrffy. BlnriW Monday Mat., 'un C11B "Mnrlnme Sdv" Tnd kmm cut VktoriaT WB& i ' ' ' hi In "LIEUT. Jjx. w. - y-af ARCAMAIaS WOODSIDEt5Hban& VVJHKWORK8 EVERT wmjw, BwncMXtra VsiTi "-- rnvruaasavoob AUAMn ""--st So ---unri sr. - lagm7 " , II At