tt?1 aaiae WBKlNGh LBD0KH-IHILAE(ELPmA, THURSDAY. 'SEPTBMBfiB L4, 1016 SBs Vtfcger PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY OVKVa H. K, OUKTM. hMHM ifJH'ESsS P 8. BDrTOfttAt. BOARD I Ctsos H, K. Cmtm. Chairman. WlUMTiitMiiiii itoMHtr .. aa.1.' WWW C. MAWT1K iSMl? BvWVa tt1iikil Ifc f 'WVTB nw"etr1virV osasTwIHaCv . ...Bma.l ana Cn.amui WfM ,.,.. i. mrra mHianr in rin nuiiainr w rTicancnav rta lA-Pr-M-lalAn rtuilsin M M'troyHtan Tovrtr i.M FnM HuliiVlte M. .,.(,.. uHfic.crat DulMltiK i .M.Hnl'.t: Injima luildinr KXWB MIRXAUSl HUH Triwv. ....... . Inju ntiHVi.i,, tiMrronl jlou. Mrand sst JMIUO.kt.i H Rue Lent 1 grand . aVUflCRtTTIOK TETtMS Br afirrVw. Ux -reals wr week. Br mill. a mm or rnusneipMa, except vvhvra mi m requirtu, on monin. wenir ona rear, thrr- dotlere. All mall ueecrfWra within aiidreaa ehanrM M ee well ai new addreas. M VALXUT KEYSTOE. MAW MM mil Hi.! i , , - ,-,';, 7- -: A Mir i n nit ronmiilrnt(m (9 JTmilaa MaMii4 Bguart, Dttladtlptila, -I aananua it ma rniutiPLrait roTorrtci 11 rcoxB-cLm miil mnu, TincAAVBnAon net paid daily cm. CUUITION Or THE KVKNISQ LEDOER r ron AUQUST WAS U7.U r PWUJtlpil., Than.f, StsWaatr II. 1. 1 1 1 TWO YEARS OLD ITIHE Evening Ltsnqcn Was first pub-. llshed wo years ago today. Its recep tee, by the community has been con astoierttly more than cordial. 1 The average net paid circulation wan: For the first year 70,406 ' For th second year 109,368 The volume of advertising, measured tor (rate lines, was: -Ferine first year 1,717,705 For the second year. . . . 3,575,80(5 The" Increase In circulation was 55 per at. The liicreaso In advertising was 107 Ber cent. This healthy-growth Is tho result. It la fcetleVed, of 0. steadfast devotion to high principles of Journalism, based on a defl Blte purpose to servo this community M4 further unselfishly the Interests of ttt people as a whole, without regard to Btttrlor Influences. ' It la an achievement of no little dim why, in those rapid days, to make a feo4 newspaper, but the functioning of a Journal ts decidedly Imperfect If soul Is Hot" "breathed Into Its columns and char acter stamped on It by the sincerity of erviee which permeates the dallyflssuco. The Evenino LEDacn Inaugurated in America tho full back page of pictures, which is a distinguishing featuVe of the ape"r Tho visualization for readers of urrent events Is a service they may Mtumlly expect under modern condi tions. In the extent, variety and aptness f Its Illustration the Evening Ledger to believed to be without a, rival, and tho Ffeejto Patrol maintained by this news paper has become a distinctive Phlla Wpfcta Institution. fT)CB Eveninq LKDani ts fully aware Vwt the deplorablo political conditions wW have existed in Philadelphia. It ku no patience, however, with "knock es." Too otten all they do la "knock," mi when opportunity presents itself for M-vle? they vanish. We do not bellevo tkaU conditions here are materially worse thn la other great cities, nor do we ave much for comparisons. To make Mlaalphl& the best city that we can, ir fmotlve of what other cities are; to Jt Jungs with which to breathe; to our citizens with all the facilities modern invention makes nosslble: , . . , B (pkihe uttermost value from our BsaWMpafUMeU, of which we reckon the Brt not the least; Jjo clean up the dirty ! ie eradicate bad housing; to make llBBUBpwductlye. placo for grafters j4 pteeVhunUrs; ih a word, to strive towfjraV the secompjlshment of those ktoaUer the realization of which William JNaw BMved prison and ocean and sudden (4 led his herole and strong- 4 people Into the precious htsta vre have these aro the things Wwiii while, toward whioh In steadfast f)M Vft newspaper lifts its eyes, dedl- itseK without reserve to their ae- nL M taWilaW (a; Phlta4e'jW nert lift his I assf wepMt Mm X-nm Lkdqw net 1 a whack at It. An elected official I a tawant of whom faithful service Is IC K he faH ahwt eMher through or ineffioieaey, no matter how hiCh We ataYtfeti, be n4 expeet nothing ut emtaaetire an4 Ji erftleia. The JPVBSIUM tJWMlaW HM M PfltlWM With nor will it Induce la that , artvately r by HibHe rrwim- r- tor 'the purpose ef getting ae" Jar ay e4har pwy Thaya U oly m W a!"I 1"naBVpv eVfpam I Usat tap vkriWat. hanit """"Jw JB "'w laMppaJ Bff hMM enate. Hmm paparlar "f m, m hamw tW manGtl BotUioi Um knmrn , Pailavtai BMtaotlon. parttouMsr f 1Mb tiwm. to h aaawntial to rbe wB H "rtton. it, wspv, - tba saoataaaaey of Mr. M ttil etty & pile up tur hun a trepMudovar W PPHf t PV WHHMiP MM alwaaaBaaaBaap waajsafiaa; BteKtaHaWa an4 alt the Mker "hen" that prey ett government ana knew no patriotism except that of loot. What PhH 4elphl needs ts not a reform adminis tration, but a business administration, it wltl never get such an administration from a Mayor nominated and elected by the Organisation. The first duty of such a Mayor is to that Organlmtlon; only sec ondarily does he sit to serve the people. It may be doubted If the cry for 'reform" la a rallying cry for anything but defeat Fundamental conditions- must be changed before tho disintegration of the Organization can reasonably be antici pated. Wo shall have "dirty" politics so long as wo havo dirty streets and dirty houses nnd dirty sections. Sordid sur roundings breed sordid men and phan tom voters and a long line of Ills. A new park means an accretion In the corps of conscientious citizens; a paved street means better voters along that thorough fare. Beauty In environment Is a meas ure of civic progress. Men who are ac customed to good things, to a neighbor hood well taken caro of, will not vote for bad things, as a general rulo. The way to sideswipe the politicians and grafters is to strike at the conditions which produce them,, and that Is possible through wise concentration In behalf of specific public Improvements which pub lic sentiment can be educated to support whole-heartedly. Indeed, oven the most flagrant of corruptlonlsts can often bo lined up In a battle for specific improve ments, as was evidenced In the transit fight when, at one time or another, each of the warring factions was supporting the program. ABIDE from politics, which Is on Incl- dental rather than a decisive factor in municipal growth, tho big tiling In Philadelphia Is the production of wealth and the earning of prosperity. Wo have no sympathy with those who deride the dollar. It is tho yardstick of energy, of thoroughness, of servlco, of capacity. It is something worth striving for because It is tho ptcasiiro of accomplishment, Penn, with his high IdealB, never doubted that In tho skill ot his artisans rested the foundation of happiness for his col ony. Tho dignity of work Is enhanced by Its rewards. Philadelphia has) never boen a financial parasite, as so many cities are wont to be. It has, Instead, given value received; Wo regard a busi ness success as of as much Importance lri the community's progress as any political success. The man who can gather up the threads of Industry and weave from them a fabric of accomplishment Is a good citizen, doing his part for the com munity. It is the policy of tills newspaper to en courage business, to support enterprises that increase the number of jobs avail able, and to commend Investment in wealth-producing instruments. If an A. Merrltt Taylor can turn from his private work and evolve a mighty transit system for the city, It Is worth Philadelphia's while to have an A. Merrltt Taylor among her citizens. If an Alba B. Johnson can conduct a business so that 20,000 men find employment In It, it is worth Philadelphia's while to havo an Alba B. Johnson. If an E. T. Stotesbury can sal vage a transportation wreck, such as the transit interests of this city presented a few years ago, and restore It to service. It is worth Philadelphia's while to have an E. T. Stotesbury. If an Eldrldge It. Johnson,, over in Camden, can take a needlo, a box and a black disk, and there with delight and Instruct a nation, giving employment meantime to thousands at high wages, It Is worth Philadelphia's whllo to have an Eldrldge It. Johnson on the other side of the river. Better one man who can build a factory and give employment to hundreds than a dozen men who can do nothing more constructive than pick flaws in the methods by which the other man has worked out his achievement. Labor be comes a misnomer when there are no jobs for labor to fill. w: s B BELIEVE that healthful recrea tion la requisite to the efficiency1 and well-being of a community. For that rea son we encourage sports of all kinds. Not the least worthy distinction of Philadel phia Is the universality of Its outdoor life, as evidenced on the diamond, on the links, on the tennis court and in general summer sport at tho mountains and the sea. Atlantic City and the Shore are, in fact, one of Philadelphia's greatest assets. TIIK charity of the city is proverbial. It Is, on the -whole, well directed. The Kybnikq Lbser seldom solicits or re 'selves contributions for charitable enter prises, but, It invariably, when conditions warrant, lends its support to worthy cam paigns, , THK XVBMIM4 lMQwti enters on its third year In a period ef great material prosperity. Ite achievements, while net paitflanttofr have beep substantial. Even yak a simple thiag as the Upbtiaa; f C4ty HJi Tower, as suggest 4 by this newspaper o4 eertMly adapted by the! Mayer, if an evidence at the proeraes on BBewpepsr aaay Itwlwea. Other tMaps ec pvore tonpertaaee we have teuh$ far, pat uveueecealttMr, wHh the tteif support ef our reaaers. The isirfiilmns ef the Bvaaatta, TiWaePH to the eeseatu nlty however has only begun, its aetiy. tut will hroadsn ae it grows outer, it 9 Tom Daly's Column THE B. h. AtfA7VErtqAtl Stirs the Old Keporter to Belie the Oattn Pipe of the Village Poet and niow Thereon These Woodnotes Wild. Whenever U't September, an' tho Ulh h the date I hope they"n ahcavt lot me stick around an' celebrate, . For when ar man' to vcru old hl$ tcorX ( olmojt through lie likes to din a to xomcthlnp that is wonderful an' new. In youth (whose tcxlcon contains no "pout" or "rheumatism") When first I jumped the "'running Iroad" right into Journalism, I used to prance around the town so brassy an' so bold, With button-bustln' pride because "my paper" was so old. It' great to be a gay young cockalorum, yet adorn The roster of a Journal that toas old tohen you were born, But when a guy gets old himself an' work la still to do He likes to cling to something that is wondcrul an' new. I used to think in those old days that uc were full of pep. That every civic enterprise would find us right In step. Hut note toicii get lookln' incfc it kind o' seems to me "Wc weren't quite the lively lads we thought ourselves to be, 1 know we had some duties then that never did get done; We felt we needn't bother; for, you sec, our spurs were won. But when a fellow's wiser an' there's stil so much to do He likes to cltng to something that is wonderful an' new Bo when September comes to toien the Hth is the date) I hope they'll always let me stick around an' celebrate, For when a man's so very old his work is almost through He likes to cling to something that is wonderful an' new. MORE THAN HE CAN CHEW? DEWAltE THE BUNKHOUND! Serving tho City Bcautfiul Ho Bites All Unlovely Things AVERY curious thing happened yes terday. We took tho Bunkhound out for a little run around the town, lie was on a leash, of coursa; and, for tunately, It was a strong 0110, for sudden ly he made a leap for tho door of n Jewelry store, We had our own trou bles to hold him, and such a bark Ing as he set up! Dear, dear, ho fair ly frothed at tho mouth. Finally wo dragged him back to his kennel, marvel ing mucli nt his behavior. Then we opened our1 afternoon mall and our mcdltatlvo eye rested upon this from an anonymous contrlb.: The lady who 'tells me when I do wrong says that the harm done by drugs, liquor and Immorality Is noth ing compared to buylnu an engagement ring on the Installment plan. Then we remembered gome ads wo had seen In the street cars and areat light broko upon Vs-" Wo have a' notion we won't be able to hold that 'Bunkhound the next time we take him out. WE hope the Deeper Waterways dele gates will read this: Unseen wraiths were at work In tho west ern sky above the laxy reek of the town. They flung a slab of Guinea gold, coppery red, across the bluo horizon. They flung knottier bar of brighter gold uporrthe flat tening copper gold, and upon this another bar. Through the Interstices of tho piles peered the opal sky. Then, ns In Jest, a silver cloud was flung over all. Ix! as when the magician withdraws some unlooked-for thine beneath mysterious folds, we saw the shores of the Nevcr-Nevcr Land. Golden were Its sands for leagues, golden In a myriad ways for miles and miles, lively were the waters which flowed toward the shores and beat upon the purple, rear ing cliffs. They gleamed, those waters, as they gleamed In years which have long flowed Into another sea, with color of pearl, mystery of opal and dazzle of diamond dia dems. Burly purple mountains ranged Into an eternal far-offness, and the very valleys of that range called across the brows o the hazy mountains. But Just as our gaze returned to the foreshore and Its lights, and Just as we could see upon a horizon the bulging sails of returning galleys and the trickle-gleam ot their hastening oars, some teasing wraith drew a filmy curtain across the scene. I should like to have seen the 'home-coming of those beflagged and be pennoned fleets and heard the beating of the drums mingling with the roar of the shouting people ashore. But the curtain was a scene. It was decorated with ham mered saffron, flaked gold, ruddy copper, flaming braim and with the gleam and glint of a thousand volcano fires making an ocean of South Seas, The gaze traveled along the Indescribable beauties for endless leagues past Invisibly changing radiances, plains and plateaus of sparkles, rivers and rifts of beauty and oceans of pearl cooler than crystql, until there came Into view a soft silver stretch of peaceful water, a soft golden sliver sea. It was like the spirit of beauty herself and as though across her shoulders the playful wraiths ot evening flung clinging drapery of melting gray. This was the end of the play, for then Ave heard the lap of waters and saw the dark, the jet dark the dark, dark, dark Pennsylva nia shores and above them the thin silver line of the sinking day. What's thatT Oh. It's Just a sunset I saw over the town of Chester from the deck of the Wilmington boat the other day. 8HON BBA. JOURNALISTIC EVOLUTION Newspaper Activity Has Synchronized With Times of Re volt Defoe, Pioneer Reporter The Change From Pamphlets and Broadsides THE ovolutlon of newspapers Blnce tho latter half of the seventeenth century, when publications worthy of being colled newspapers began to exert a serious In fluence, has been a gradual democratiza tion of their appeal. It Is significant that bursts of Journalistic activity havo como In times of revolution that Is, in times when tho common people icalizo, or nro made to realize, that thoy amount to something and aro capablo of playing a tremendous part In tho affairs of city or nation. On the very day after James II was driven from his throne. In Eng land's '.'Glorious Revolution," three nows papcrs made their first appearance, and in a few days more a half-dozon new ones. In France, which had Its revolu tion a century later, the beginning of revolt was the beginning of many news papers; in fact, Journalism could hardly be said to have started In Gaul before the appearance of those flaming sheets, whoso editors rather regularly ended their careers by peeping out the little , window of the guillotine. Defoe's Pioneer Work It Is not generally realized how thorny and stained with blood has been tho path of tho Journalist. It was while ho was Imprisoned In Newgate for a political offense that Daniel Defoe, pioneer Jour nalist, started his famous paper, tho Re view, In 1701. Defoo Is well worth study, not only because' of his remarkable uso of the Infant art In pamphlets, broadsides and essays, or, as wo should Bay today, "editorials," but more particularly be cause even In his fiction ho Is tho born Journalist, and the realism pf his novels put Into our fiction a Journalistic note that It has ngver lost. Defoe, keen oh server, made fiction read like fact. "Rob inson Crusoe" has a convincing Bwlng to it. as though tho writer were recording things that actually occurred. The ner vous energy and simplicity of his style Is the prototype of the modern reporter's. Zola, among the moderns, Is the nearest approach to tho Defoe mixture of literary man and reporter. The Frenchman ac tually got his inspiration for his most successful 'novels from the newspapers. He saw that many thousands of persons had" never read anything else but news papers. They had been brought up on 'the reports of dire happenings, and Zola simply translated the news of the police court Into realistic Action. To get an Idea of tho early groping! for the form of our papers, conceive a number of little sheets containing only the various "features" that are now com blned In one publication. The "society page" was a separate little newspaper, and very early appeared in the form of newe letters which recounted the gossip about tho king and court, the chief "news YESTERDAY morning the office boy rushed into our room and handed us thlaj Have Just learned that Rev, R. J. J, Watt earns frem ,Ware (Bnglandlt U B, a The Philadelphia Rhyme If Dtonam, ef .Chicago, sees our paper revwtoriy he muet Ve petting- a let of fun ept ef the,rto ef Philadelphia tHoe a rhpaWfoV Heel. One eMtestaat pays hie reapecy to the Chkepp maq In thjfe. to tweet 'H.ewti 1 -n ."lUW1 rliU 1 SOT Hfc. Mof cafatoetentai toaeft the rule which ealla lor occreepoaeWnce ff sound la all tvt ytlabass, Huping tbe clience only iq apUshto, 0m M w mmfmm minf22s1FL?Z center" until tho time of our revolution and In England even later. News of crlmo and blood-curdling punishment ap peared In sheets that told In lurid lan guago of the death on scaffold or gallows" of noted criminals, usually with their cbnfessions, which were usually more readable and accurato accounts of the crime when tho perpetrators hadn't con fessed. Soparnto also wero the "edi torials," tho broadsides or pamphlets. Of ono of these, which Defoe' wroto In verso In vindication of William III, no fewer thnn 80,000 copies wero sold on the streets of London a "circulation" whlch If repeated today In tho same proportion to population would be around the million mark. ( The Thirst for News Thero was, then, the reading public patiently awaiting the co-ordinated news paper which would comblno nil these fragmentary features. Tho difficulty 'that oven prominent men llko Samuel I'epys, with wide circles of friends, had in getting tho ordinary news of London in the days of Charles II seem to present day readers ludicrous. Tho nine volumes of Pepys's diary aro ono long thirst for news. Ho seems forever to have been hanging around the vestibules pf White hall asking questions and 'being usually entirely misinformed by exaggerating friends. Tho things he believed would cost a reporter his Job for outrageous "faking" If they got into a paper of to day. And If his credulity was so abused, how denso must have been the Ignorance of tho average man. This ono thing lack of news-Hjxplalns more than any thing else the amazing ease with which the tyranny and treason of the Stuarts continued. . Ono had to go In person to make sure that Important ovents occurred as fore casted. When everybody went to an exe cution or other public treat, there was a constant tendency for crowds to gather and crowds become mobs. So that, when tho feat of bringing the news dally to the citizen was accomplished, a notablo serv ice toward preserving law and order in communities was rendered, because peo ple could stay peacefully at home and yet keep well informed. But more important than this was 'the aid which the combining of the small and special sheets gaveto the growth of de mocracy. For tho pamphlets were the personal opinions of enterprlslsg individ uals writing on their favorite themes, while the newspapers which succeeded them, in being comprehensive enough to fill the needs of all sorts of people, had' to be representative of public opinion. They might bo ahead of the times, but they dared not bo behind them. NATIONAL POINT OP VIEW "President Wilson Is one presidential candidate who finds It necesuiry to dis cuss some thugs een more serjous than politics," says the Washington Star Right, from start to finish! But the trouble ts.that he does nothing but discuss. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune, Edison says he was for Roosevelt, but now U for W)lan. n science Edison Is a leader, but what he doesn't know about politics would make a larger sized volume than any one will undertake to print with paper at present prices, Knoxvllle Journal and Tribune. ( We thought It was very foolish for Mr. aarrisHi to resign as Secretary of War be cause of the supplanting ot the army by the National Quart, but It new oegtns to appear he was far-lplted and took the Hdtt ground la the Matter. The Federal management of the Mate !!ltla won't work. --OJiUi Plata Journal. r ....,..., The tread of the thpes Is toward ieeressed Oawernment ! all over' the earth. Hi what we have ft rtoht to eWect to, what in ail oomoUaae should ha etoptnil. is the refusal of Cantjreac m aeeaaiBte buaeet yatsen of appyeprlatlwM aatf Its failure V lstlst upoa the letolUpeat, ssenmakml use of fttae by Oeeerniawat paiotau, Oresst lutde ve- TOO CLOSE FOR COMFOUT towr new ur the length of tOO feet and may have a beam of 10S feet. This great beam would leave but a five-foot margin to clear the locks of the Panama Canal. Uncle Sanx'ls figuring pretty close, for comfort, and It would ap. pear tp the layman that some one blundered In the plans for the canal locks. Columbus Citizen. PEOPLE I aro sorry for them all Whose ceaseless footsteps rise andJfall Along, earth's hlghwey endlessly. The people i tha workl with me ; . , Who have dreams, and yet must take The gifts life has for men awake. Who bulla" their lives eeh dsy eatiw On hepes they k.iww shall Ret eeme true. Wbj walk the wertd till lp, and then At daw must walk the wM again, Wbe ask Gee's fsver. knowing M11 ' lie do Dot break his changeless will For ay faulty ehanglng ery Of h mekee to live and die, I am sorry for them all, So serryl Until I recall Hew IU' adventure pwlaps afar , above tomorrow Ilk a star. S ' -And howvour dreams palat ggldui tuuu POray wprtang-day ana retina 41 Ana ait tee kv each man who ItoM Hay buy tor merely- love' he toves And how St comforts tie to attar WnetUer Oo4 hears pr tunisaway. And bo fo work, and eltp, and waka is soon w, um mare Uetug s sake ; 1 PtU&ttt -Bailee WIMisjsr, tfn t&f jfiattJto J What Do You Know? Ou fries of general intertat will t an$wrd in this column Ten que$tton, tho antwtri to ichich every well-informed person thould know, ore asked daily, QUIZ 1. Of every dollar gpent br the coimnmer on milk about what portions so to dairyman, Inbor. railroad and for material? 2. At hat Is pnratjpholilf S. Dearrlbe the military moremf nt called flank Inr. 4. Hhtre la KnbUT , 5. Who wna PaleatrlnaT 0. What Is the appearance of an angle of ISO desreta? t 7. Xame the meat Important doabtfnl BtateaT 8. What la the atsnlflranro of the phraae, "a caae of diamond cut diamond"? 0. What la peat? 10. What an "phantom totcra"? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz-'' 1. Cnntom-made arltrlra are thoae made by hand and on order, rather than by ma chinery. t. A tobrt a small Jus, pitcher or nor, ren e rally uaed for ale, and abaped aemeivhat like a atout man with cocked bat form Ins the brim. 9. Doctor Jrkrll and Sir. Hyde: one peraoni the rood and the bad peraonalltr of n char acter fn a atory by Robert loula Bteven-aon. 4. Gralinm flonrt named for Sylreater Graham uivi-ioou. a pnyaic writer on dietetics. (HB4-1HS1), tr on u Ie of tube. physician, vesetarlan and erftirr In a S. r-rlnclple of the barometer! mn slaaa tube, the open end of which reeto In ft IMUl of mrrcury nnA fn ih. ! there be Inr. o vacnnm at the cloaed end. The air preaaure holda tho oolomn of mer cury SO Inrhea hlsh. The moat minute jarlatlona In the preaaure are reslatered In the varying height of the column. 6. Artemua Ward! pen name of tbe American humorlat, Charlea Farrar Browne. 7. Itronklyn la not a aepnrate city. The conn- tlca of Greater Hew ork are New Vork. llronx, Klnsa, Queens and Richmond. 8. The combined man-power of the. Allies la &i .VlSSPlSS0 tnd, ot their enemies about 14.000.000. Calcnlatlsna vary, the percentage of the Population counted aa effectives being 8, 10 and It, 0. The boomerang returna In Its flight tone. tlmee nearly to the, place from which It U thrown. 10. in refracting teleacopes the rays ef ll.ht an reflecting mad opes to 1 1 converge to a focua by lenaea. In Iff tl HrAIIH. I.v Ka,,v .lA..a from tbe surface of a slightly concaved mirror. Britain's Food Supply H. It It Is difficult to answer your ques tion wlth accuracy, as even If thero were reasons for fear on the part of Great Britain for' her future food supply It would not be likely that she would publish the grounds for such fear. It was recently re ported that the cost of food there had In creased sixty per cent An official of the Board of Trade made this statement: "It Is rldlculoui to ' or the reports that are being sjic-' cbout that England Is on ths verge of being reduced to a black-bread-and-no-meat diet, Nothing could be further from the truth, The actual fact Is that the material for black bread, hardly exists In this country. We have amnln whmt n ,make white bread. To show exactly what ureal nrnains position is regarding bread, all I need to do Is to quote figures of the Im ports of wheat and, flour now aa compared with those before- tho war. For eleven months to July of this year wo have Im ported approximately 200.006.000 bushels 2! yAat Bnd flour D"le haying produced 75,000,000 bushels of our own. As against this take pre-war figures of 1913-14, when we Imported 195,000,000 bushels, while growing 68,000,000 of our own. That mean's that wlthithe war on wa have had thi. .year .75,000.000 bushels of wheat and flour. as against ztl.ooo.OOO In 1913-14. That shows on Its face that fJreat Britain laW ter off than before the war. I might re mark that while people talk of bread being high, It Is really costing four and one-half" cents for a loaf of on pound, whllo In America today I understand they are charging five cent for a loaf of the same weight. So our price, even! with the war on, is less that, in America.'1 A Question of Birthdays Quid. A. person born shortly after aid-, night Pf August 35-S5 is said to have been born on August Si, Notes Sent by Messenger KdMer ef "What Do You Knout" Is it against the United Plates postal laws to send a nee by mMger bey from" one person to another without tearing the eer" nr eft th envelope? , M, B It is eertalnly net against the law new to send an uamutllated net by messenger. Interstate Commerce N P. in the UtnMsets seta um ' whleh ye refer JusttoTHughe. held tkit "wasa Ck ,, JeahYaSt Vl? eowneree tt was acquainted with the 1 eey.Uiiw4.at of railroad oenstruE tie, at with th exerets by thTaJtate ef the rate-making new,,. nd jf J!I the feet that NlVUii fiS oeatrel there lay a, yj iSHJ ui.rJJ tated activity Jr the Jta ef tau SU.7on7rX &( mmmsM $ W)1I,S H1 Y TO STUDY? William T. Foster Analyse Coll, oiavisirsa But why strive for high rank Ir) eottettf Why not wait for the "moro prkvr' studies of the profession.! school? Hob, dreds of boys the country over declar to day that It makes little difference whether they win high grades -or-tnerely baabL grades In th liberal arts, since then courses have no definite bearing on their InteeeW life work,f, Kvn tho sport who mv- u.. 1 grade of mdeerlty hi highest aim a 7. 1 wv.. v.. ... --., ."i intends tt strive for high scholarship in his crow. slonal studies, poes ha often attain th, aim 7 inai is ne question, And that, fortunately, Is a question w may answer with more than opinion, w, 1 may take, for example, all th student wh graduated from Harvard College durii . oerlod of 13 years and enteral it. t -M um... UV..W,. wi vim wno received no distinction a undergraduates, at per 5 graduated with honor from the Mealoai ' School. Of th 11 who received degree of,- . . ".,.. ,,... uuuui, more mn 92 p,, cent took their medical degrees w.U honor Still more conclusive are the r.. A the graduates of Harvard Coller. k i.'" Ing the period of 30 years entered the HaiTn vard Law School. Of those who graduatS'1 from college with no special honor onS4 eti per cem -aitainea -distinction in Ijiw School. Of those who graduated wlti honor from the college. 32 ner rwm 01..1-.T distinction In the Law School j of those wwl graduated with great honor, 40 per eenV of those who graduated with highest honor ' 60 per cent. Sixty per cent I Bear that figure In mind a moment while we consider tho 310 who entered college "with con). linn.1' Vtn la In I.I . -""Ml- , ....... ...... .. w .,, -runout navin passed all their entrance examlnntln,..! and graduated from college with plain d 5 grees. Of these men, not 3 per cent woaH honor degrees In law. j Apparently the "good fellow" In cr.lt... - the sport who does not let his studies Inter-'l iero witn nis euucauon, oui wno Intend t : settle down to hard work later on. and whe'i! later on actually docs completely change 1 1113 nanus 01 1 ue, is almost a myth. presj-J uenv wiiiiam r. roster, in Harpers Migj. BIllO AMUSEMENTS CHESTNUT STJ OPERA HOUSE' Reopens Mon. Aftern'n, Sept. 18 TWICE DAILY THEUEAFTEn 2:1B and IsH'i D. W. GRIFFITHS GIGANTIC SPECTACLE 2 riUUyfl 2': Weeks I j FA J Week- W1 SYMPHONT OnCHESTKA OP SO PIECES POSITIVE FAREWELL. TOUR LAST CHANCE TO SUE TIH8 MOST FAMOUS OF ALL ATTRACTIONS lrinH-r. rf,i" Ann TnitiT.n nninva Matinees, except Saturday Lower Floor, "4 and 70c. Flrat IJalcony, 00c and 75c Secoat u uaicony, 2M. -J Nlshti and Saturday Matinee Lower Floor. 50c and I1O0. Flrat Balcony, 00c and I! 0a,',- SEAT SALE OPEN'S FRIDAY. SEPT. II a AT 10 A.M. ' c4 FORREST Now; A VERITABLE FURORE TWO VEEK8 ONLY Nlfhta at 8:15, Matinees Wed, and gat KLAW & ERLANGER'S NEW MUSICAL COMEDY LITTLE MISS SPRINGTIME By the Composer of'"8ATU" CAST AND CHORUS OF 75 Beat Beata $1.00 at WedncadaV Matlsoa, Scata tor Isoxt Week on Sale Today The Moat Wonderful Play in America EXPEDIENCE- 9 moo. In N.Y.,7 moa. In Chicago. B moa.lnBoi T -UTitn TONIGHT AT 8 '.15 JUXXV-U-r MATINEE SATBItDA' "A HKt WINNER" The I'reaa cam ROBINSON CRUSOE, JR. Th N. V. Winter Qarden'a Dent Muitcal $ aJsVaKnllSBt IT Ull AL JOLSON THE KINO OF FUI 'fl o to Tr:vu rni.j-' x, x?. xvcalu jmeatCiv, A Bill That Pleaaea Everybody I Stella Mayhew & Blllee TayV "THE WORLD DANCERBt'i pnOSPERII UL.CUI VIU1.11 ALL-STAR BILL ANNA CHANDLEHi AND Today at 7. 2Bc tt 50c VIOLlNSKY, Tonight at 8. ISO to I .-..-. . 1-1 lmw. vn n I nriTI. UKUAIJ SEPTEMBER -10 I TOPAti THE ItESERVE PRODUCING1 CO. Pretaat THE TWO JAN A MUHIL.A1. tTAKUlS BUl-l-Usa , Joat Laushs Pretty Olrle Jolly Tupta POPULAR 1 MATINEES WEDN'K8PAT TUB m..i.i. ot. rt.l tfaa 1 -.. lUIVilkOI. Uh JUIC. .T-T", t-farrciYT " A. M. to 11 r. XvCK CI 1 1 Metro Wondarplay VIOLA DANA ,n """rr "THE LIGHT OF HAPPINI Tir.l X, Matlnea Todav. 25c. m3 Bickel & Watson " who's hkm fflS, EugenieBlair 2KSST I ARCADIA ?!W?;K Tts-AtTI Xf APSH AND ROBKRT HAMtJflJ In "THE LITTLK LIAR" SPORT OF L A Wi SEATS FOR N8XT WBS1K ON BALK TOj .-wrr, trnvrn MARKET Balea! I uituaa iViuxBiij 'i a o- DAILT l0. lOo -vTWV. Aet ft mivulvnu' T . a I TV Ilrirc.V" nUU Than tr JSJfs. ITIIIIIH --."! ?X " " t. imiiF'v&ip. BERT LES1 In "MQgAK IW LOKI :e THK OF VICTORIA TioErDAJ , . l . ... i.rKv4ai in r)m usowvaa; oc aaavro rvi-i TTI. T.TfSHT ftlT HAPPIN ADDBP-XoystaM .Cwair, -A 10 gWfWf' ptywr wjwywwsi w a..rH A SV a. - UlUVBT IRnVL 1 KTAXNliHiX "7"tTyjUu WANLY OONCiWT OJ.CHfTH iAnj-ieirt8ra ana uieo mat "VJCTORY OP CONSC1ENC tjat A rrmtnTxAKKKT umiam' W am 1 aam 1 ,tii . "" V-M Senaue Htty l THK HONOHAtvLt JfiIh.NDT stei-