,fiL" - srw '' 6 fctnmltuj Hsc PUDLIC LEDGER COMPANY . ctnus ii. k. curtis, rnjrtixt. Chart It. Ltidlnton, Vic President; John . Martin. Secretary, and Treasurer) rhlllp a Collins, John D. William. Director, ,. editorial no Wit) I . u Vjfct-n' K. Ctmis, Chulrrriin. P. It wlIALSY, . Editor " ' ' -r . .1 i i - , - JOHN C. MAnTlfJ.. general Business Manieer Published dsllr at Pcmta Lmoitn Bulldlnr, Indpendnc B4uar, Philadelphia. I.iram Cntil. ... Dread afxl Chertnut Streets ATtAMrto CITI,.., IYMl-1nto ,Buli.lln New ToK.. 200 Metropolitan Tnnir TotT , 8So Ford Hulldln HT. Lotus 409 aiobr-Urmocral Ilulldlnic Cnicioo ,, 1202 Tribune Uulidlng NEWS BUREAUS! JVAsmviiTOM IltmiAD ...... Wrm rtutllnir Naw Tosk ntT.tiD The rimes Ilulidln JlrnU.i nrnr.in 00 Frledrlchstrnsse lAnnoit lit-nr.it Marconi House, strand Piu llcatAD 82 Ilm Louis U Orand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Rr carrier, six cents per week. By mall, fostpnld outsld of Philadelphia, except where foreign poslats la required, one month, twenty fiva cents i on rar. three dollar. All mall subscriptions payable In adrance. Noticb Subscribers wishing address chanted must alva oW well aa now address. DELL. J00O WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 100) 'C-lddrea nil communication to Mrrnlittf Ledger, Independent Squars, Philadelphia. zxttnto it tuk riMUbrLHtu rnsrorrlci is SBCOND-CLiSS MAIL MiTTCI THE AVEHAOE KET PAID DAII.T Cllt- CULATION OS" THE EVENING LEDGER FOR JULY WAS 121.000. rhlladclphll, Mendir, Septtmbtr 4, HIS. Wonder is the feeling of a philosopher and philosophy begins in wonder. Plato. Congress has sent out ordors for n atrlko to begin promptly at 7 a. m. No vember 7. No ono is moro delighted at being compelled to work on this holiday than tho railroad trainmen who voted to strlko and were afraid that thoy would bo taken at their word. Ho Is a Mnchlavclll, but when It comes to execution ho lian but a Btraw mind and hands of clay. No, this was not said of the man you are thinking about. It Is Von Mackonscn's characterization of an Aus trian geseral. Tho brotherhoods did not bring this thing hero. Tho rreildcnt of tho United Btntea brought It hero. Senator Hoed In tho debato on tho wnge Increase bill. Just so. Tho brotherhoods held up tho 'President and tho President held up Congress. It Is unusual for Senator Reed to perceive bo clearly. What were tho Democrats called Into power to do? Tho President's speech of acceptance. As a matter of fact thoy wero not called into power at all. The country simply allowed thorn to slip Into ofllqo by a fluke, whllo the Republicans did a little necessary house cleaning. Mr. Wilson may not llko to admit It, but ho Is merely a locum tonens. If any young man thinks ho Is handicapped by his environment let him consider the log cabin in which Abraham Lincoln was born and tako heart Tho transfer of that cabin to tho nation to day la a fitting net. It will now bo pre nerved as a symbol of democracy and as an inspiration to every youth who has tho will to rise. No man ever got rich by taking money out of ono pocket nnd putting it In another. The city as a whole will bo no richer if the Board of Education is compellod to pay one hundred thousand dollars for tho water used in tho schools. Tho water has to bo paid for now by tho people in Borne form. It would have to be paid for by a direct increase in tho school tax if the Water Bureau presented a bill for it. Tho only valid argument In Bupport of tho proposed chango Is that It would clarify municipal accounting. There is great need for such clarification nnd nowhere moro than in tho Water Bureau. But don't let us fool ourselves Into thinking that wo are going to save any money merely by a change in .book keeping methods. Mr. Wilson's speech of acceptance Will delight all his admirers. He exhib ited his usual skill in tho use of words. Tho suggestion that ho had been con fronted by most difficult problems and that ho had earnestly striven to solve themKVas a gunning appeal for Byni pathy,.nnd chajjtable Judgment, And his announcement that the ending of the war will bring new problems which "will require for their solution new think ing, fresh courage and resourcefulness, nnd In some matters radical reconstruc tion of policy," was Intended to lead tho public to bellave that he and h)s party could bo trusted to meet the new con ditions. We mistake the temper of the country if it la In a mood to accept this declaration nt Its face value. While he says that there must be a radical re consideration of policy, he holds out no hope for American Industry, for he sneers at the policy of protection, Which alone can defend American work men( and praises anew the tariff policy which admits foreign trade "upon ome. thing like a footing or equality with our qwn." If the Republican campaign ora tors do not tear his beautiful rhetorlo trjtQ tatters pnd expose the skeleton of Inefficiency whjch It clothes they will neglect their duty both to their party and tothe country. The lata Judge Pennynacker it Will be as a Judge rather than as a Gov ernor that Philadelphia will remember hloii-was a conservative of the pld (school of which the present generation jiaa few examples; the "fighting Tory," rellq of an America where conserva tives were pot tnere standpatters but wero fundamentally democratic enough to ' use radical methods to assert their honest conservative faith. His. finest trait was a quiet Intellectual courage whch he followed even when it made htm H minority of one,' Hla open espousal of jtre-Qerman Ideas lu a letter to this newspaper was a recent example of hla independence and Indifference to the Jnajority- opinion, Hu Incapacity for taoaHfylnif hte own very definitely yiavtytd viewpoints t suit the political ad sooUl atweuphwc produced more iuut one tempNit In wUeh publlo opinion umaly jhBnwt Urn la the wrong. But mm JPfr him. the srwUt I of having hfld public and not private hiotlves. In his "iircw-mi'W-HriR" UgU lation he wan brave enough to act In a way that Bccmed at tho time to bo uulded by personal pique. lint what he lacked In ability to read tho signs of tho Imme diate present ho moro than mado up for by a deep knowledgo nnd respect for tho traditions and institutions, rooted In his tory, which make that ImmeJIato present what It is. Many of his critics made a greater mistake than he over mado In falling to see an urxWIying, ancient vlr tuo In those of his standpoints which wero unpopular nnd in falling to profit by tho corrective conservatism of a cul ture they did hot share. BOTH ENDS AGAINST THE MIDDLE THO fixing of an Increase In wages for four-tenths of ono per cent of tho pco plo has brought a mcasuro of satisfac tion to four-tenths of ono per cent of tho people. This has often happened. In tho readjustments of Industries, now this group, now that, obtains a greater share of tho national output! now by tho vol untary action of employers, now through a. strlko threat, Moro frequently by tho law of supply and demand havo tho tal ents of men. llko tho earth they fructify mid embellish, brought forth their in crcaso their Inci cased Increase, But this Labor Day, which finds labor celebrating n prosperity unequalcd In a century, brings It n new and strango and doubtful victory. An Industrial group, sharply defined ns "employci on steam railways moro than ono hundred miles long engaged In Intorstato com merce," has had Its wagc3 fixed at a higher love), not by tho accustomed processes of lnovltablo readjustment, but by act of Congicsi. Organized labor about two per cent of tho population Is supposed to havo gained a firmer senso of Its power at tho cost of something vory much llko heart dlscaso. Unorgan ized labor docs not quite know whether to giln In patlonco or scream In protest. Tho employing classes nsk what results arc to follow If this amazing precedent Is allowed to stand. Unorganized labor Is an ambiguous term. It really means "organlzablo labor" tho men and women moro or less skilled withtthclr hands who have considered but have not accomplished unionization. But In tho realm of our labor parlanco there Is no descriptive phrase for that atrny which might bo called "unorgnnlrnble labor." This army contains, clerks, salesmen, journalists, professional men (o2 tho great and lesser professions), small shopkeopera, who rank ns employers only by courtesy In fact, most of tho people, ono bumps up ngalnst In tho day's activities. What does a wage-fixing act mean to them? It means that tho only tanglblo organ ization over which they, In their Indis tinct, "middleman" status, havo any control Congress has Imposed a tax upon them which there would be only ono way of equalizing. It would bo to do mand that group by group tho unorgan ized and unorganlzable strata of tho pop ulaco have their wages Increased by Congress. Tho man who Is being "played" "both ends against the mid dle" knows that way -is barred. Yet, Indirectly, ho ultimately dominates our affairs. He It Is who, though ho bo a clerk, will have a lawyer son. He It Is" who, through the weakness of his Isola tion, has learned tho necessity for em phasizing his Individualism py spurring on the ambition of himself and his fam ily. But he who produces the represen tatives is himself unrepresented. Ills Congress has Joined the tldo of economic forces that Impersonally pres3 against his welfare and Independence. It Is up to him the more forcefully to recall that Congress to Its former dis tinction as a Judge above blind economic forces, to see to It that his Congressman, or prospective Congressman, Is aware that Increased fixed wages without rep resentation is taxation without represen tation. THE TROUBLE WITH GENIUS WOODROW WILSON la either a genius or an Intolerably flighty per son, say some Democrats, who subtly Im ply that he must be the former to be President at all. But they forget to men tion that these particular extremes often meet In one personality. LETS KEEP IT UP NO SIAN can study the history of the port of Philadelphia without being convinced that Director Webster, of the Department of Wharves, Docks and Fer ries, Is performing a great service to the city In urging upon the people the Im portance of continuing the work of de velopment both by private and public en terprise. The following figures show the foreign trade of the port at ten-year In tervals since 1860: Imports Exports Total. 1860 1170 18S0 1390 1900 1919 In IX2.81B.403 ,91i,9SS JJ2.630.366 14,183,211 16,9:7,610 31.410.t3l 35.944,600 49,643,893 86.594,193 69.936,315 3T.410.683k 97.346,998 51,866.003 71,406,031 130.272.033 88,403,431 78.366,311 161,689,774 the calendar year of 1915 the ex- ports and Imports amounted, to more than 3200,000.000, and In the first seven months of 1918 they have reaches the unprece dented sum of 3218,295,478. If the busi ness continues at this rate for the year the foreign, trade will be 3360,000,009, or nearly 31,009.000 a day. , Shippers are using our wharves who never used them before. If we do not keep their patronage after the war It will be our own fault. The future la In oijr own Jvanda. If we nave grown a thws fljfureu Indicate without making a vigorous effort, what can't v. do if wo really set about it? EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBEBjg .Tom Daly's Column The Old Reporter Yes, I can eeo you're busy and t'll beat It In a minute, but 1 Just looked Iri on Uncls Jim Chambers, over In tho P. I local room, nnd I can't gel over how fine ho'fl looking, Can't help thinking nbout the strike of the copy boys on tho Hccord yeahs nnd yeahs nnd yeahs ngd, when Jim Nvns tclcRraph editor there. Ono night when Uncle Jim came on duty he found this on his desk! Undo Jim yelled, "BOY1" lrudcr than usual ami that had to ho going some. Ono boy responded, "BOY I" yelled Uncle Jim, "nnd that means nil of you " One by one they sliambled In. When ho had them nil grouped nhout his desk, be B.-ild; "This thing you'vo dono Is called n 'round robin.' which letter did yoil make, Tomtny7" Tommy, taken qulto off his feet, said, "I nincle the cap J an' tho 'a' an' the " "That'll do," Interrupted Uncle Jim, "thnt bench out thcro thnt you fellows sit on wilt bo called 'Anxious' until ii"xt .Saturday night. If you can behave In the menntlmo you can hold your Jobs and keep on jumping when 1 yell 'Iloyl' Now, then, rush this copy up stairs " And every one of those kids lived to thank Undo Jim. "Everybody became hysterical as soon ns the lighter struck us," snld Joseph Tumen, purser of tho Koyport. "Onh man wanted to Jump overboard, hut I sat on him nnd nt the same tlmo I had my nrms nround nt lcnst n dozen women." New York Sun. Might not Mr. P. Mornn find this chap handy nround first baso with that reach? H. B. It. OUR stenographer, having nothing better to do, noted in tho report of n pnrty In Houston, Tex., thoso'nmong the most prominent present: Clarcnco Darl ing and Leila Mushaway, Jewell Ayars and Fuller Boylcs, Agnes Sick nnd Bless Peavy. IT IS common gossip in Ocean City that Assistant Cashlor Marshall, of tho First National Bank, told Assemblyman Mark Lako that a certain woman thcro quit nttondlng church because she couldn't stnnd sitting. REUBCN. ll1.tu..1M . .... tffnwH.. O n..L.a t. tS.Jt hard battle, but lidded In strnleht aeta. at 0-4 u-i una u-3. from o, o. dear paper. Apparently one of those battles that aro fiercer than tho casualty list would seem to Indicate The editor of tho Mt. Pleasant Journal sent to his composing room some edi torial commont upon tho Rev. Harry V. Foster's suggestion that churches build roof gardens so that "ministers would not bo preaching to empty pews on Bum mer evenings," nnd tho Inspired com positor put this head on It: ROOF GARDENS FOR CHURCHES. ON Market strefct near Thirty-ninth poetic painter declares: Llttlo dash of color, I.lttlo dash of pnlnt. Make n thing of beauty Of n thing thnt nln't. ' DESPITE tho Jeers of unappreclatlvo readers wo aro determined to see those white boots through to tho end that Is to say, to tho lower extremities but wo print tho concluding lines lu agate, thus: Napoleon's White Roots (Copyright. 100T. by (Jco. E. Lothrop, Jr.. OS Jlrook uenuo, Jloalon, Maes,) Lorn aa Moll lived there In leisure It was hla de- llaht to show The white hoot" he'd made for tho King-, that Ana then he would chuckle and laugh, his mind uMvt.i duu iwiiiiru ail, lion he would chuckle a U mtlrf It.rnlna mim aria,. Aa he tola of the thousand franca which mads ,,IU(U KIHU, Napoleon mad. He laughed ut the six shoes he mado; ho roared . . ..at his robbler'a hill- And then he ould so through the scene as If ha ..... rou'd eo If sun. "Figure to yourself, my children, the Emperor In , Ills Bt&lS A little man. but ah. bright eyes, and a warrior .hard tn mate." Here llttlo old sioll would struggle, and upon hla 8how how theRmperor stamped them to reject the boots' receipt. Ills story pleased all the people, whether ploua or carouse: for when Stall told of the white boota It alwaya . .brought down the house The King would siy. "Vour bill. Ehl Ehl Do vnn Ihlnlt 1A no. ,1,. u .ha -"' u it,, .i.r.,v"."" -""; "". ;-' iiiijr mwuiu i puy a mi I nnv n. fnmiMianil franna nui..i ftaill 1W iffiSSKi ........ iwunri One thousand franca for Jwo white boots! Do you ....... ,hlnl I am a foolT Whllo you sit still and steal your wealth llko a . , monkey on a stool?" "Then the me back the boots!" I'd yell. "If you do not want to payl " For I may havo a chanca to sell, or else to alva them away." Then he would stamp and yell and shout that I was "a robber bald! A fraud, a cheat and a swindler, who was hunt- tng after gold." One day Moll died, and In hla will tho whlta ,. boots went to tha town; So thus the romantic footwear had their famous upa and downs. Then when Napoleon got caught tn Sedan at ml . seventy. . The town of Alsace 'changed Its King for mora German royalty, ' Then they threw .the white boota away; a vll . lager, picked them up ' And carried them homo In triumph to boast of .over his cup. ne ""iTi.,!1 i.dle.d- "."?.. "te" ,h,J' sold the old The things which cost a, thousand franca could only six dollars bring. So died the cobbler and tha man, and ao pasaed .... ., 'ho old boots, too; r M While Napoleon plunged "onward" till ha met hla Waterloo. llf1"10 " w llD"r over ,h en(l!cta of IVt wonder If all our battles are but whlta shoes In tha strife. (The bitter end.) Dear Tom In case the Bremen comes Into port, I nominate Oeorge E. Lothrop, Jr., for the best seat on the deck for the home voyage. JEItZEL. The O. Henry etorr which telle about a girl who couldn't take tha easiest way out of Eoverty because Lord Kitchener waa watching sr out of the gilt photograph frame on hla dresser Is called "An unfinished Story." Three or four correspondents have asked about It. Chicago Tribune. And other correspondents might ask hoTV she came within eye-range of K. of IC's dresser or was it one of those "long, long looks"? Ye Jncompleat Chronicler What a delicate compliment la .paid to the readers by the editor of the magazine pub lishing the following; "The Frank Story of a Foot, a personal revelation. Intimate and bitterly true, told by the fool himself for the benefit of others." I read this over the shoulder gf one of the "others," -but could not get the name of the magaglne, J. B. Sanborn In Defense of Vera Libre This gratia stuff contrlbs do write To make the gentle reader curso la priceless, pir, and that 13 suite Excuse enough for our free verse. , CASA WAPPY. mi) iiLuiaaji .1 i. ... ONE of our own sign out on the main line of the YpnuMy calls H'Uu "a sensible kind" ot wea&en writer," i SINCE m-j-'t" ' i'i"wm lU"rt a"" IClLrJtlT UJ' L.AJiUK TU UKUAJNlZ.JiJ Combinations of Capital Have Made Unions of Workmen Neces sary Collective Bargaining Is the Result and Employes and Employers Are on Better Terms By JOHN PRICE JACKSON Fcnmylvanla Commissioner of Labor and Industry THE experiences of tho offlclals of tho Department of Labor nnd Industry, especially the mediators, all show that capltaland labor aro learning how to ad Just their mutual relatlqns In a friendly manner, under tho new conditions which havo arisen by reason of great aggrega tions of capital and enormous organiza tions of workmen. It Is now almost uni versally recognized that ns men with capital pro by law permitted to pool their money for tho purpose of obtaining greater power In getting results, so laborers havo a right to organize and pool their Individual Influences In order that they may havo greater power to obtain the conditions which they consider right. The large number of men having their savings or capital' Joined together In tho form of a legal corporation employ to lepresent them as a body the very best legal, technical and business talent tho company officers which Is obtainable. In other words, these men, In doing busi ness, bargain collectively through these experts In their employ. Just so the men who have pooled their influences together in tho form of a labor organization, or union, Bhould bo accorded tho same right to deal collectively as Is accepted now, without question, for their employers usually the stockholders of a corporation. In order to bargain collectively In this manner tho labor union must havo Its committees, officers and other represen tatives through whom it, ns a large body of men may act. These representatives should be the most level-headed and skill ful obtainable for tho purpose, Just as are the representatives of the stock holders. Those engaged In the work of media tion and arbitration for the Department of Labor and Industry have found that a goodly proportion ot the employers of Pennsylvania have come to recognize the inherent Justice of this argument. They have also found that where employers accept this principle, as a rule they have little dlfllcu'.ty In making fairly perma- POWER OF THE CONSUMER The eternal obstruction In the path ot labor Is not capital; that Is In no sense ever an obstruction. Capital has no fight In It and would be easily whipped if It were ag gressive. The chief of Industry, the other leader, often outgenerals the labor chief. It is brain against brain, and the best brain la apt to be at the head of the manu facturing company. Labor would gain points more frequently If, Instead of talking of capital and capitalism. It employed soma term descriptive of tha actual force In the other camp. Neither havo capitalists as such any fight in them. The fighter Is apt to be Jijst another workman called a man ager, sometimes a mere stripling who has a whole future at stake upon winning hla fight It is man aga,nst man, strategist against strategist The real obstacle is not however, the manager. He may be downed often he does go under. The real obstacle is the consumer. HU ways are to some Utopians past finding out. He is everybody Monsieur Ttut-le-Monde and yet everybody a at fault in estlmatcg him and reckoning with him. Labor leaders habitually Ignore hla existence at the wtodb moment and remember It at the wrong; moment. The wild- dream of a Labor Trust la shattered against the defensive armor of the consumer. It Is not strange that this porson Is a stranger. Ask him for advice. He will reply: "Ypu are right, workmen. Strike and I will stand by you' Down with capital and up with the hoary band. IJere 3 am at your back, and I am Mr- Everybody." put Jt jn that way As sure to a strike the professed sympathy of the public. Ignore all the, people, who are auent and thoughtful. In then- eUeace, And yet, at the critical moment Mr, Consumer Will do nothing for labor David Hilton Wheeler la "Our Industrial Utopia," IT'S ALL GOLF THIS -i nent settlements of differences which havo arisen between employers and their labor. On tho other hand, where hero and thero n representative of a corpora tion Is found who does not accept tho principles of collective bargaining, ho finds, when troublo arises, they can usually bo settled only by drastic meas ures, which cause n great loss to hl3 company nnd labor. lie also usually finds that a settlement made in this manner results in continued troubles during later days. With this acceptance of labor organi zations as having equal rights to exist with capital organizations comes tho corollary that the officials nnd experts of both tho capital and labor organizations should bo held equally accountable under the law for their actions, and likowlse that both the capital and labor assocla- tlons should bo subject equally to gov ernmental regulation and financial lia bility. I believe, In view of the evidence at hand, that employers nnd employes are beginning to look upon each other with moro confidence and respect, and to con sider the creation or maintenance of pros perity as dependent upon their mutual co-operation and efforts. I therefore be Heve that wo as a people are going to work out the great new labor problems which have arisen in the last couple of decades In a sensible, friendly" manner nnd without recourse to serious bitterness and civil strife. If this belief is well founded our pros pects for happiness in the coming years look bright. These prospects nre further strengthened when we see workman and employer lined up shoulder to shoulder to fight industrial accidents and disease, and the whole people Insisting on proper care for those who are hurt, upon sens! ble Industrial safeguards for women and children workers and upon their Govern ment assuming the principle that human welfare and happiness take precedence over all other rights. ' NATIONAL POINT OP VIEW rnnl..01,08.' ucclng I" adjusting dim cultles that would never have arisen but for hla magnificent Incapacity Mr Wilson The railroad business la Jn no real sens " bU8le. In so far as cover" went Influence affects railroad manaeel ment, as it muat In periods of grave crisis ltttoB lTh? rTds 8aUa6 !&' L?V.t. owSST "of th1 - ,......, eiiuura aeai. ir means an Increase of rates an h Springfield HepuMlcan that It Er PiV E?Pe; ,h 5ner ftWtUn tUt bet. ter. "has been forgotten, but if it bid m? aw?,d enetl might hav, protecied Mr. Wilson, whom we should love to ie gard affectionately as an ex-PreswJnt daX, "'""Vh ' "'orced'by'1 uU the States and aecttona ot the countrV But it U manifest that the Idea of 2a' South a always to mk the prosperous Northern wmmoaweaUha ditoSSS tleable by Ux -which, shall burd.n T gujas uttl, a. powible. Koehester Post ywW 'fi j nv,, in,li,,,l,.ii,Jiijini ii iiwrHi m nwair WEEK t What Do You Know? Oiirrfea ot acntral interest will be answered In this column. Ten aurstfons, the answers to icMct every well'inormed person should know, are asked dallu. QUIZ 1. When wna the Congressional Itecord first Issued? 2. What Is tho reedblrd? 3. What Is "Indian tobacco"? 4. Ily what body In Philadelphia la Ihe school tax levied? 5. What Is meant by "class legislation"? 0. About what was tho length ot Lincoln's (lettsburg nddrrss? 7. What Is Intenslte ngrlcutture? 8. What was a rlx-dollar? 0. What Ii malt? 10. For what characteristic nre Damon nnd 1'ythlus memorable? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. Walter! legal term! forbearancs to Insist on rljthtH on claims, 2. Retina: layer at back of eye which Is sensi tive to light. 8. Grois earnings, total earnings l net earnings, the rroiis earnings mlnua the cost of con ducting enterprUe. 4. Contagion Is the transmission of dlnensc from onr person to unother. Infection has the ror.re general Im-i'lenti-n r ill ness caused by a germ originating In an other person or In n common houriv. 5. Summer ends on Remember S3. ) 0. Jlggert n Ternqcnlnr term for any contri vance for which It U not easy to find a name! It l urd to describe n certain type of golf club! also a small tackle consisting of a ilouhle nnd single block. 7. Wlndnnnl. the direction from .which the vcina oiovvs! leeMura, tno direction opposite to wlndnard. 8. Mosalrst works of art In which pictures or designs nre produced by Joining together small pieces of glass, stone, etc, 0, Pros and const reasons for nnd against. 10. Agnew T. Dire! president of the Reading Kallwuy. Truth Society I, M. There Is a "truth society," kpown oh the American Truth Society. It was organized January 18, 1912, In New York city. Its object Is "to propagate a spirit ot pure Americanism: to preserve the tradi tions of the United States Inviolate; to op pose and resist by truth all attempts of corporations, societies and Individuals to dominate the publlo opinion of the United States for the purpose of discriminating In the interests of any one race by means of leg'slatlon, literature, education or organ ized propaganda; to propagate the history of the United States and the States com prising the United States among the people of the United Spates, and to combat with truth all attempts to garble, falsify, mis represent or suppress the history of the United States." Somebody Else Editor of "What Do you Jfnoiof" Kindly advise what Is the possessive of "somebody else." Is It "somebody else's" or "some body's else"? a. w, M. "Somebody's else" grates on our ears hor ribly. Usage is certainly "somebody else's." though It la not an elegant ex pression; neither, for that matter, Is "some body else." though acceptable In colloquial conversation. In the possessive It would be better to say "some other person's." The phrase "somebody's else book," even If pre scribed by scholars, could not live In the language. Usage Is the test In such ques tlons. Language was made for man, not man for language. I Qualifications for Voting Editor of "What Do you Know f Can a person getting his citizenship papers out mnMwtthJnJ,.,y5t'!n tha November elec (Ion without llvlne- en d... i ,i, .,,.., where he Uvea now? u he move8 hl 'rJ dence to another division of the same ward after registration day. could he vote at the election In November? c d A voter must have resided' In the Statn one year, and In the election dlvUIon where ho casts his yote two months before thS election. Naturallied cltus may vote If they have the qualifications of Vesldenca in the State and district ar pament of tax.a and If they have been BMiifSEea one month before eleptiqn. To move to another dlvls?on an?' c, STSif D' " election would voting. ' MUV' or framed. (t Damage by Lightning fields, causing aTloaa if Sl'sMX 'tJ" Su4 by lljfctiUnVftnd iffiUESV. y W. occ lbMrty "tuWm I THE VOICE OF THE PE0M a) Wages of the Railroad MGn Paid by the People Am Easy Trade r) ..I To the Editor of Evening Lcdaer; Slr--Tno proposeu railroad strike to me a talk I had a year ZJJ I'enpsyivania iinuroau telegraph hr.iM who found fault with the Inequality onEl IT ... .- nl, ... ."" Wfltaikl wnges iuu uj "in "u unier railroad Wll panles. He said' the trainmen were nMski more pay thnn almost nny other cUsSil laboring men in tne world, nnd while fiwi had to bo out Bomellmes In rough ana2 weather and lake somo risks, they did 2' have to work hard, and It took little thl! or trnlnlng to fit a man to be a W?' man, conuucior or nrcmnn. (f A man who hns never taken any isS lM .,illt-nfi,1tfifr ran mill lit -i. F33BJ farm or nnywhero else, get n lantern 2 start out at once as a full-fledged tt3L! man nt $90 per month, These tralmZ aro guaranteed 28 days work per ramS nnd are paid for that many days etca'i they work ony half or third as mail;." Itallroad freight brakemen make HJ' $105 per month, firemen n little more, iJ! ductors $120 to $140 and engineers liu nnd up. Here are men with little it Z training gottlng $1100 to $2000 n vi nnd ending for 35 to 36 per cent mote, ijji threatening to wreck the whole nation it they don't get It ; Consider their wages In comparison tr!a the wages or earnings ot others. UrV formant holdi a very responsible nnfM ns a telcgrnph operator. It took him fetrj uiiw J.C..10 i ...... K,.u .luninccn, una nehH' been working 30 yearn for tho comics.' He gots nbout $800 per year. The nvertji'l compensation of physicians and ctercrauM throughout tho United Stntes does si amount to nenrly $800 por year, and Um tniiiat imml fh.nllf.nmlR nf r1nllTa n.. -..- V of study preparing themselves for th!r work, and tho physician particularly mutf go nt all hours of dny or night nnd In 14 kinds of weather, nnd, with his Irremtu hours and load of responsibility, mutt w'ctt linrdcr than does any trainman. He geti', little moro thnn half as much as the brat man nnd a third as much as the enelm.r- and tho engineer, who begins as a Ib-enuS' siiends not n ddllan nrennrlntr hlmMip t.' his life work, but as n flrcmnn gc!s remit wages from tho day ho starts on the rtai Prclcht rates nnd nrobnlilv ni,. rates will go up, and nfter tho next atrlkal wiiiii jimj uui uu lull), in luiiiing, iqm will go up again. When will It all's!.. nnd when will tho limit bo reached? Wr the people, the ultimate consumers. S!l that they cannot stand any moro of It. i-j'-l ccaso to be afraid of politicians nnd ;,f- labor unions nnd will call n halt on tit" nholo business. ,:;"- JOHN SMlTtt i Philadelphia, September 1. ? ' f: 3 AMUSEMENTS Stanley s MAItKET ADOVn lOTH. llll.'i to 11:11 ' OWEN MOORE In Edsar Selwyn'a ti 'Rolling Stones" Stage Success ADDED ATTRACTION Scents and Incidents nt tha Lnunchtnr .. ot tho Submarine Chaser Nedeva Thursday, Trlday. Saturday FANNIE WABD In "EACH PEARL A TEAn" e j T) -. 1 12 MARKET ST. ralace vivian martin; "The Stronger Lovs", ADDED ATTRACTION FIRST 8II0WIKQ!'.' Charlie Chaplin in "The Count".' Thuri., Frl., Sat., Blanche Snect. Public Opln'cjil LYRIC TONIGHT "ROBINSON CRUSOE, JR. WITH AL "JOLgON MUSIC! GAIETY! GIRLSI LABOR if DAY ' 4 ADELPHI MAT. TODAY, 50c TO $1.50 GREATEST STAGE SUCCESS KNOWN IN MORE THAN A GENERATION Tho Most Wonderful Play In America , J EXPERIENCE?: Elgs. and Sat. Mat,, SOc to tl.BO. Dargatn Mst Eery Thursday, Uest Seats $1. - ': FORREST Little! $t MON., SEPT. 11 KLAW & ERLANOER'S New Musical Comedy By Emmerich Kalman Book by Guy Bolton Seats Thursday, Sfpt. 7, Miss. Spring Timef GARRICK & TWICE DAILT3 Vgio anassuj Matinees, S5c & 3Sc; Evgs., ise, aso a u"c- i LYMAN H. HOWE'S YvW NEXT WEEK SEATS THURSDAY "SPORT OF LAW" A Dramatic Thunderbolt by Stuart Fox. B. P. KEITH'S THEATER 1 OKil.Vi) OPENING OF NKW 8KASOXI SPECIAL FOR ONE WEEK ONI.V THE MEISTERSINGERS IIavanl nilaslm anrl IVartar Olln rttl ttl Tji Artrantlnn ftruiiii'i flrPBtat Dttncen VOOlJs & Salra; "Korty Vlnk': Kerr & llerko, Othr,g TODAY at 2. TONIGHT at 8, 23c to II- M G-lobp Theater KW VJ 1 KJ KJC VA VDBVtLLK Continuous II A. M. to 11 1". M. loc. inc. w A PREPAREDNESS MUSICAL COMEDY 4 "WAKE UP, AMERICA"- WILLIS BROS. AND OTHERS .5 THE MAnKET ST, Below 1TTH REFURNISHED 1 REMODELED ! Reonons Today j Regent ROBERT WARWICK K&l "FRIDAY THE 13TH" $ Thurs.. Frl.. Sat.. Lionel Barrymore, "Upheawl TT 1 MARKET ABOVE DTH X Victoria BESSIE LOVE WILFRED LUCAS to (HIPI.T'PnTIAVM ATIOTTXT 1 o Charlie Chaplin.a THURS.. FBI., SAT "THE UPHEAVAI" Nt. Vk., Return ot Dessaucr Bros." Orchsslrs-, Arcadia piiDcnvtnt ti1ah 1RTII 10 A. M. to JH15 fr" ! WM. S. HART la "THE PATRIOT-' WALNUT Mat- Today, 26c, We Popular Mats. T". and Thurs S3c, 00c Madame Spy ",$& ?A la hie. rAiJuu, m Added, Ell lie Burke In Gloria's Romance No, 19 -,t i Thurs., WtU, Sat VTho Thorouhbred- j BROAD?l Mat.Today TFm UNA T"lu tha Operetta "'V9,itVit! TonlM'S: ADAUOANELI 8nuftoa BELLA VV f - !?. fivfiuar u ww CROSS KEYSJBert Leslie MARKET Below UOTH I . -i,. B Matlneo DaUr, S :31 I "tar -tm ";r;i - a ALL 6EATB 10c I HOGAN IN LONDOJJ 31 QAYETV r- Returns ot th. WUlUmJ-Brpa. y Chaney-Kllbaiw, o4 Welsh-Whlta flbw ?'l red la conjnnctTon with tb pribx or . taow nun Ariernooa. Knickerbocker v$g?&v&P' TUB FUNNY MR. DOOLEY" wqodsYde '"p.Ki cALvaT uiqu yrtiaf jMnmt m