Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 18, 1916, Night Extra, Page 8, Image 8

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    1
burning j$& Hc&gcr
PUBUC LEDGER COMTANY
CTM H. K. CURTIS, hwrnit
SDtTOMAti BOARD I
Crao X. K. Cmw, Chairman.
TlKWNAUntttoitMM win
, Miter
C. HAKTtMo.OMWtut Bnslness Manager
:
' ,
.$.
fiiMtpfcfil .tty at r-cstio T ctv tlulldlnr.
IwemsMenes) ftowan. rhHJlBl.t
Catrtsul.1... Broad and Chtstnut streats
ltt ........ ,1 .!"" InWm Bulldln
.4....k.36 Metropolitan Towtr
tiMtiMii.ran Ford Bulldlng
a ew-innXTOt nulldln
..1202 Tribune Uulldln
NEWS BUREAUS I
'llilKT9tt BetelO,. ,,,,... ...RlfTS Btttldln
iou nuug mi 7imrf liuiiams
if , Jtraatu ...... .00 Krledrlchetnu.e
Mr ntiaaatl ... Marrmit ltnu... strand
'JMt Besaio.. ,..83 nut Louli I Grand
SCBSCRIFTION TERMS
9f earrWr. elx rents r ntk Br malt,
Tortwld outside of Philadelphia, rjreept hir
tfinlgn miuii la required, on month, twenty
Mr Mfrfat one year, three dollars. Alt mall
aakaertptlena peyabl In' adrance.
Wtw subecrlber wlthlna- addreis charred
BWMi lira old as wall as now addrass.
' &sa
DilHir,.,
OarrSa i.tii..i
L S
MIX, HW VALNUT
KETSTONE, MAW 1004
ft7 Addvtaa oil rommvwfro'ttons to Jfrealnfl
httgtr. Independence Square, Philadelphia.
rrntco it th rnruncLrnu ronromca s
acooND-cLiaa iuil uirru.
THB AVKRA0R NET PAID DATLT CIR.
CULATION OF TItR EVENINO LEDGER
FOR AU0U8T WAS 117.M4
PhUtdtlaaU. Mnd.r, SaptMsVir It. 1)16.
TU
euleet lo fitar tha Watch-dor'
honeat barh
Bay deep-mouth'd ivtlcom at we drain
near iom. 'Byron,
It la not a question of what
Hughes would have dona, but of what
tae'a going to do, and that's a plonty.
t Pennsylvania manufacturers have
to obey a more stringent child labor law
than the one about tho meaning of which
there is so much dispute.
Professor Munstorberg, pro-German,
of Harvard, declined to attend the
funeral of his colleague, Professor Joyce,
pro-Ally, lest he be understood as approv
ing It
Tho report that Mr. Ford will put
a cheap fuel on the market to keep pace
with his new machine Is encouraging.
It may be, after a while, that tho things
will run on hot air.
It will be time enough to believe
that nearly fprty men havo been ad
mltted to the bar through fraud In the
last six months when proof la submitted
to the Supremo Court.
Wo have no patience with those
Who assert that there is no strength In
the United, States Navy. Any Institu
tion which could survive three years of
Daniels must have the goods.
The French have shot a German
woman guilty of espionage, as the Ger
mans shot Edith Cavell In Belgium, but
the English papers have not yet begun to
denbunco tho French for their barbarity.
Ambassador von Bernstorff wants
It to be understood that Germany will pay
no loan that Belgium may contract in the
United States. It has not been understood
that Belgium expected Germany to pay
it unless through the Indemnity which
he must give up when the Allies win.
Tho plan of selling twenty-five car
tickets for twenty-five centa may seem
to the police to be legal and simple, but
the most simple thing about It would
aeem to bo the simpletons who btto.
Didn't they have a shoe-buying scheme
of thla sort, whereby a man could get a
3 pair of shoes for & feW cents? They
did, and those who were left holding the
bag are still holding It But there Is one
born every minute.
Direct service between Philadel
phia and South American ports will bo
inaugurated with a sailing on October IE.
"We have no doubt that ample freight
Will bo offered for the trips south. The
success of the venture will depend largely
en the ability to secure return cargoes,
nd the Increasing strength of our finan
cial representation In South America
Should moke that entirely possible.
WHK
st
A newj epoch In German official re
Jfrort writing lis marked by this message
i from Berlin, "We were forced back
through the villages.' Hitherto the motto
there seemed to have been, "Never con
'teas." More confessions will probably be
tn order this week, aa the Anglo-French
i drive gains momentum. The British on
Friday captured more ground and took
more prisoners than on any single day
adnce the big drive began. Aa they plow
deeper Into their foe's llnea the taak be
tcomea easier, aa the Germans have not
the time to construct adequate defenses.
Never has there been such a aat
ternaHa of tax-levying aa In the last
irear or two. Until the Wilson Adminis
tration earn Into power there was no
'men thing aa burdenaocne taxation In
tse United Htatea, certainly not In time
of peae. We are rapidly becoming the
.most Ux-rMden people en earth? In aplte
ett unparalleled Industrial prosperity. Mr,
PordJUonewe estimate, under the new
teooajM tax law will contribute annually
set Jean than M.im.OOfl to the national
treasury. Penalising success may be
, aje4 polities, but heretofore America has
f naat opportunity, and opportunity baa
eMMMit MtOC6al
,. , " , i,
,. About tea bHUon dollara' worth of
' wealth, to Fat4 jvery year on the
flu-ma. The prosperity of the country !
WMhjr'ut ,)q the prosperity of the
sawao. Governor Brumbatjgh fa, there
for, headed in tho rtat fMreoUen when he
flora, m ho, at CfoarfteM, that "We
kM to mtod fbe VMeortoooe t of
w poaaue etooa to we soil: we
gpriiat confer rw Hie," W, as he
add, wtt&lp ton yearn the Mate has tost
Vty yer mat of 'those who tHl jbe sotl,
ao Mum son h kaot in geUIng men.aod
wgm hook m the land and in making
4ko aVW, prvducUve- The 'taak of tho
Ptoco Opruootit of AaTHowUnro ta aot he,
' It. No BaaU In the Union la hotter
ifffr than PonnextrajUa to dMreraiaed
J-
iWJWtfJLfltt Lii3k-JLJhULAj3j5JbVldlA, MONDAY, ttmTJfiMBTSli 18, 1916
in tho wee( and the greater manufactur
ing etty of Philadelphia In the east, and
there is a large non-agricultural petmi
Hon engaged In mining In both the west
and the east. These people must be
fed. We have the land which will pro
duce the needed food. We are building
good roads Sto get the food to market.
It Is up to tho farmers. Instructed and
guided In Improved methods, to rite to
the occasion and show what they can do.
THE GRAND JURY ON "DOPE"
lack, of futfts.
the commission,
AnoUSED by the gravity of the sltua-
tlon, the Federal drand Jury last
Friday took unprecedented action In offer
Ing a written presentment to the Court
In reference to the Illegal traffic! In nar
cotlo drugs. It urged, In particular, the
two things proposed by Investigating com
mittees and this nowspaper, namely, the
enactment of laws, both Federal and
Gtato, which will give the police better
Instrumentalities for the prevention of
tho drug traffic; and, secondly, the es
tablishment by the Btato of an Institu
tion for the care of unfortunate addicts.
The Legislature In 1913 provided for
a commission to secure a site for such a
hospital, although the Impu'te behind
the movement at that time contemplated
the care of alcoholic rather than drug
victims. This commlsslont was Intrusted
with the expenditure of 120,000. It has
already secured a site. The location It
wisely refuses to divulge, on the princi
ple that not enough ground haa yet been
secured and speculators would advance
prices for adjacent and necessary plots
were thoy Informed In the matter.
The last Legislature did nothing to
further tho plans, owing. It appears, to a
Nor Is It apparent that
which Is still In ex
istence, Is particularly active. Its mem
bers seem to bo rather surprised to learn
that there Is a "drug" situation. This Is
not altogether remarkable, In view of the
fact that the spread of the evil has been
somewhat stealthy. We suggest to the
commission, however, that It would be
worth Its while to begin a comprehensive
study, particularly of .what such States
as Massachusetts havo done In the care
of drug victims, with a vtew to submitting
to the next Legislature the kind of re
port that cannot be Ignored.
There aro two things in which society
Is vitally Interested: tho prevention of
waste and the recovery of waste.
Efficiency In manufacturing first cuts
down waste and then exerts Itself In the
utilization of remaining waste products.
The first object of the State should be
an effort to suppress the traffic in nar
cotics, and the second object should be
to cure the victims. Tho traffic never
will be entirely suppressed, and not more
than a part of the vlcUms will ever be
cured. The most that can be hoped for Is
progress In each direction. ,
It seems reasonably sure now that leg
islation of some sort wll be enacted next
winter. It Is important that the statuto
conform, to tho recommendations of ex
perts, police and medical, and that It be
written In strict accord with the Con
stitution, so that no further halt In the
fight against the evil may result from
devitalizing court decisions.
THIS IS WHAT YOU VOTED FOR
IT WAS .inevitable that political ma.
chines Bhould be affected by the high
cost of living. The price of everything
else has gone up, so why should not the
price of power follow suit? The demand
on the city employes for an Increased
payment to the Republican City Cam
paign Committee means that the old
standard of expenses has had to be aban
doned. Now, why should not the city
employes make the payments demanded?
Elections are fought for tho sake of the
spoils. The workers deserve the offices
for whlcjh they have fought. They are re
warded for their services by appointment
to fat Jobs.
Is It not better that the syndicate that
does our governing for us should be self
supporting and maintain Itself by an as
sessment upon the sums taken from the
publto treasury than that It should be de
pendent on the contributions which It can
extort from outsiders who seek favors
from lt7
We know there aro citizens who do not
like this system, but they vote into power
the men who do like It and when it Is too
late begin to object.
The Campaign Committee has a deficit
and It needs funds for conducting future
campaigns. Tp expect It to abandon Its
old methods Is to doubt the high authority
which has assured ua that figs do not
grow on hlstles and that grapes cannot
be picked from thorns.
' i '"
ANY CHANGE IS FOB THE BETTER
TUB failure of the combined county
and sKate system to care for the In
sane la notorious. There are eleven alms
houses In tho Commonwealth In which
insane paupera are maintained In dis
graceful conditions. According to the men
who made a survey for the Public Chari
ties Association ''they are treated more
aa wild animals than as unfortunate hu
man beings entitled to evry considera
tion and sympathy,' and "they constitute
a class of Individuals for whom no possi
ble future misfortune can have any tery
row." '
The State Board of Charities, which has
been oonalderlng the subject, li to meet
In this oity en September SO to deelde
what it ia best to do. It Is agreed that
something must he done. There are ad
VoeoUs of an enlargement of, tho State
hospitals to aoooramodate alt the unfor
tunate and there are also equally expert
sntetaHata who favor improving the
oouaty hoonUahj." What they agree ueon
I aot linoortaat so long aa they And a
way to ot tho taeano n koopHala, large
W silll, who their can receive Proper
lawdtet UooiatoaH. wharo tho sosm oan
Tom Daly's Column
BATbRDAX'B WOnjC
Both trickit
Our Stick'
Dig ttteki
Thev Uckt
CM Mck
Three-fix
An' tlx-nlx.
The Philadelphia Rhyme
Wo despair of getting any one to fol
low the rules we have laid down. For In-stance:
"HEY, WHY DON'T YOU CONDUCT A DIGNIFIED CAMPAIGN !."
Tt Patmoran
VhlI In tna y
and ITu
ror tna iaa ;-
htr clan ara raelns
fah!
In tha van ara . Alaxan and Trrua. Man
'ii
at floMl. fc-Tahl
Should l'atrtck win tha Tlrra' akin will hn
In l'nlladrjphla,
But Huh and Tx will aurelr rr to stab thalr
fill o' pair, Eta-Tahl
nvn.
4 g
TF 3vTfI
And yet again:
In ouah back yabd
Wm' ah Bullln1 ha'd
Foah Philadelphia.
If Moran wlna.
ve-u kick ouan amna
And aplll yell fo' yen I
C. H. Ij.
And what's Infinitely worse:
I.laten, Tom. Tou alllr,
Hera a a rhyme for Thlllr,
MOIUARITT.
QUOTINO our comment upon "J. Bar
ton MacPherson, acknowledged embalmer
of the U. B," the ofllclal organ of tho
Walnut Street Business Association says:
The MacPherson firm la the only un
dertaking establishment having repre
sentation in our association.
And, lifting our deltcatoly arched eyo
browB, we pause to Inquire that proves
what?
Dear Tom What's in a name? These
are culled from the telephone book: Doctor
Shoemaker, Seventeenth and Chestnut
streets. Is a dentist, while Joe Dentist, on
Fifty-second street, is a shoemaker; Wil
liam Clothier, Fourth and Walnut streets,
Is a banker, and H. P, Banks, of Frank
ford, Is a clothing dealer. W. F. M.
w:
BEWARE THE BUNKHOUND!
Serving the City Bcnutlful Ho Bites
All Unlovely Things
B TOOK a long chanco yesterday
and allowed the Bunkhound to run
about tho streets without any leash at
all. He made straight for the City Hall
courtyard, and with loaps and snorts
approached the
w o o d o n exhibit
building there.
We thought for a
moment that he
meant to tear It
to pieces, but he
probably d 1 d n't
consider It wor
thy df his tusks.
At any rate, he
didn't blto It at
all.
Well, the Bunk-
hound Is In fine
condition, and ho expects o be busy all
day tomorrow eating up two Iron dogs,
couchant, on a tiny lawn at Thirty-ninth
street and Woodland avenue.
MJx(C S Sj
-TWiT wootel
UniBIT BUUAIK4
M CITY l-OU.
COOHTTMD
lhpf
In an article In the Inland Printer
upon "Cultlvoting the Ugly," Stephen
H. Horgan takes a crack at the Modern
Art Collector, the mouthpiece of the wild
ones, and presents theso four wallpaper
designs for your consideration but let It
not be too near your bedtime:
BC9nffft9tffizn 85VsY..ASr h
AND here's that sweet sjnger of "Heart
. Songs and Home Bongs" back again!
AMERICA FIItST
Whatever the shores that your forefa
thers hailed from.
Whatever the flags that they fought
for afar,
Whatever the lands that yourselves may
have sailed from.
Today you must cherish the land where
you are.
Today you are sons of thla nation of
nations,
Untroubled by war and its spirit ac
curst; So, guarding your aouls against racial
temptations.
Let this be your motto: "America
first! " '
This nation of ours every people has
greeted,
Haa welcomed them In to partake of
her cheer)
And even the humblest, despised and de
feated, Have felt themselves men when they
found themselves here.
The victims of 'systems and dynasties
royal
With h'er have found freedom, their
dreams to fulfill, .
And surely such hearts will not now be
disloyal '
To her and her spirit of peace and
good-will.
God keep from our shores the dread Issue
. of battle; '
God keep from our country the curse
wo abhor. '
They speak not the mind of the nation
who prattle
So lightly of plunging the land into
war,
But if, proving futile our peaceful en
deavor, The tempest of war on her borders
ehould bUrst
Then, then, whatsoever yeur raoe, yon
Maafcaassat fisarVoaaT
aMaaauBsf .A anrBsVat WABaltMBBBBBSAy 4UaaaeaBojBflnAf.
F "T"aow a" aj7J aaaraji aw-BaeBaaBBS'BBBBBrBjp ejaaaBanpaBBB)SBaBaft'
THE VOICE OP THE PEOPLE
Why the Clearview District Objects to the Way the Car Tracks
Are Laid on Island Road Jamaica Ginger and ,
the Drink Evil The Single Tax
This Department ii fr to art reader who
u?iH to erprj their opinion on subject 9 of
evrrtnt interest. It it an open orum. and th
Evening Ledger aa$ume no responaibilitv or
the tietoa of if corrftpondentf. Letters mutt
o
signed
V
the name and address of the
writer, not necessaritu for publfoatOi, but aa a
7uaranictr vj pooa aim.
ISLAND ROAD CAR TRACKS
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger:
Sir So many different accounts of the
Injunction proceedings taken against the
Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company by the
taxpayers, citizens and residents of the
sixteenth division of the Fortieth Ward, as
reported In the dally press, that I take
the liberty of requesting you to publish
this letter:
It was Incorrect, as stated in the news
papers, that the residents of this locality,
the part of the Fortieth Ward known as
Clearview, from Elmwood avenue and
Island road to Lyons avenue, objected to
a second track being placed on Island road,
nor were we concerned because the tracks
were laid twenty feet apart Instead of
twenty-one feet six Inches, j
But what was of most Interest to us was
that from Elmwood avenuo to Lyons ave
nue, on Island road, there is no aldewalk
for the pedestrian.
For a distance of several squares the
tracks are laid on the (extreme sides of the
street, with a bank four feet high within
two feet of the track. The bank Is sur
mounted with a fence, and on the other
side of the street, within two feet of the
track, there Is a ditch from about two to
three feet deep, and with also a fence on
the other side of the ditch, and persons
traveling the road from Lyons avenue to
Elmwood avenuo must either walk In the
Btreet between the track, or on the car
'tracks themselves.
By actual count taken for twelve hours
on paturday, September 9. there were 700
automobiles arid teams, 425 cars and 1191
men, women and children passed through
one square on Island road, from Bulit
avenue to Elmwood avenue, not taking
Into consideration the persons who must
cross the tracks at Bulst avenue ta board
the cars.
The tracks are laid on the road In such
a manner that teams cannot go on them
should a congestion occur, for the reason
that they are five Inches above the street,
with nothing between tho rails, In the same
manner aa steam railroads are laid, a high
rail Instead of a flat rail being Used, or a
flat grooved rail as Is usual In city streets.
These are the reasons why we have ob
jected to the operating of another track
on Island road, and we are Informed that
the city of Philadelphia has granted a per
mit to the transit company to create these
dangerous conditions, therefore, the trac
tion company can proceed to kill and malm
because of the permit granted.
If any of us gets killed or hurt through
being on the track, out of the way of
team and automobiles, we have no redress
we have no right there, and If we get
hurt or run over 10 the roadway, there Is
nothing we can do. WhyT Because we
should be on the sidewalk, and If there are
no sidewalks, where, nay I ask, are we to
walkT
These are the conditions that have
aroused the resident.
JAMES WAIWEIl.
Philadelphia, September IS.
INSISTS IT 18 A PANACEA
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger:
Sir Let us hope your designation of the
single tax as a "panacea" was not given
In an Ironical or flippant manner. We claim
It Is a panacea for the evil of Industrial
slavery, because, aa all men must draw
all their sustenance from land. It naturally
follows that If access to land Is made easier
and cheaper more land will be profitably
used and the production of wealth would
Increase. This the single tax will do. Let
u ooni.der the situation of today. In all
the large oUlea hundreds and thousands
et vacant lots abound. No labor has ever
been expended on .them, they furnish no"
shops, factories or homes to the oommunlty
at customers lor we existing capitalist
"and laborers, but the prlee asked by tho
owners may be very high, because these
owners know that If the. pljy continues ;to
grow In population some on .will pay
the pries t gat tha landlord out'.of'th
way. and than fte oan put to vacant iota
to work, la furnishing employment to la
borers and oapiUlM in erecting sho
faMtmrkm and hopes, wolsfc wUl soon he
tmMwmmm th.
BfOBDBIBBflBBBhUft&UHka JiL Mt . jj
"aliii' V, J
of labor and capital and would levy a tax
(to the extent of the full rental value) on
the land. Land would then only show a
profit to the holder when used. Compe
tition among those who would use land
would then be so great to employ laborers
that Industrial slavery would cease to ex
ist. It would then be the employer, not
the employe, who would go around hat In
hand asking for consideration.
onvnrt m. KNiairr.
Philadelphia, September 9.
THE DRINK EVIL
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger:
Sir No sincerely minded temperance
man, realizing the blighting effect of the
drink habit and the terrible enormity of
the drink traffic, can read without some
degree of resentment Mr. Qllmore's letter
In the Eveniko Ledoer of tha 12th Inst
In Its effort to bring into disrepute the tem
perance legislation which has been enacted
for the suppression of this monstrous evil.
Ill does It become any man piese days
to attempt to defend strong drink. It has
long ago been repudiated by those who are
In a position to speak authoritatively upon
the subject, among Judges, philanthropists,
scientists, physicians, preachers, penal ex
perts and criminologists, and It Is a serious
reflection UDon a man's lntilllrnp h-.,
days for him to question the evident Justice
-- ...v vuncitui uuii.iiiioui mai society nas
already placed upon the booxe bablt and
the booze business. No one can plead
Ignorance of the formidable, array of sins
that lies at the door of the open dram shop
Mr. Gllmore's reference to the use of
Jamaica ginger In Kansas Is only too sad
a commentary upon the shameful weakness
ttemaZWh? ""I?1 S Wl" t manclpau- ' AW. oT aVKSSS!
themselves from the demon of the still, but '10. Ba.tb.ll haa sraduallr
... u uuicnta 01 inai aemon are being V7- . M" "aid ty aoma to hare been
tae modern same
In JSS3, but moat uutboMlea
Inaultnkli .l...fl .a -
"'"""j umuaTou uown to xne aeath In
perdition that knows no resurrection.
Tha good people of Kansas and other
States who uphold and sustain the salutary
prohibition laws, and the people who resort
to any dangerous expedient to gratify their
unnatural passion for tho destroying stuff
are not one and the same people. The for
mer are the conservators of the best In
terests of the Bute, its welfare, Its morals.
Its progress. Its health, Its happiness. The
latter are the debauched, manla-potu vic
tims of a vicious demoralising system that
long before this should have met Its doom
at the hands of a free, enlightened Chris
tian people. Kansas wants to take no back
step on this question. There may be some
few alcohollo degenerate, in Kansas as
elsewhere, who openly, publicly, as well as
svrrreptltlously. override Al the safeguards
that society has placed in their way to
prevent their headlong rush to destruction.
It Is only too sadly true that after so
oiety has done Its very best to save men
from disaster, there still remains enough
of the Initiative to the Ill-disposed as to
enable the latter to wreak .misery, woe and
disaster upon themselves and upon others
as well. Never will such conditions ever
obtain In an state of society that will
transfer the character-making factors from
the Individual himself to the corporate body
of the State. But one question I should
like to ask our friend Ollmore, and It Is
this. How can any man professing any re.
gard for the welfare of his brother-man
ally himself In an attitude ahUgonlstlo
toward those forces that are calculated to
conserve the highest good of the people
to shield and safeguard the weak from their
own stlf-destructlve, suicidal hand, and save
the Innocent and the helpless from an end
less amount of sorrow and sufferlnrT
WALTEIt ,W. liUUBAUD.
Philadelphia, September II.
NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW
Mr. Hughes has not only ollmbed the
mountain nelghU, but he haa.moat compre
hensively overturned the Democratic Hopa
fast Cincinnati Commercial Tribune,
Birmingham is th ieglea! plae for the
Government armor plant and deserve the
prize, despite tha fast .that It 1 lsoatad
in th "oond outh."lrmlnghaBi Aa.
Herald, .
should be plao4 BOMMwhsr In the central
territory, for H than will h safer trow at
tack and It atoe wilt b sler to tkT'e?
A14 MMTtav Mtuaalneo coal Mir7' It
reasonahiy certain that the wlUlag attv
must be on the lmt,Utium or ea aatW
QWo or
nuiaojBaaBBguauB.
imZSamimiamm
AtfUs&n
tfttSk
What .Do You Know?
OurHes et central interest urfll t answered
in tnla column. Ten qutationa, the anewtra lo
WAIch .every leell-inormeii ptraon ahould know,
ore ashed daily.
QUIZ
1. Hew la Coneord, tha name of the Maiaa
ehnutta town where the ReTolntlonarr
battle waa fooiht, pronounced?
X. What la a f'pocket Teto"T ,
8. What la meant When It Is said that on ves
sel blanketa another? ,
4. Explain tho phraae "the Idea st March."
5. What la a Timet
6. What States, or porta of States, are now
Included In what was once the Lonlilana
TerrltorjT
Nam three members of the United States
empreme Court.
What does the "ration d'etre" meant
W1JaA. ', . I1!9, latitude and lonzltade of
l'hlladelphla?
There are three arks, told of In the Old
Teatament. Una waa Noah'a. What were
tha ethersf
Answers to Saturday's Quiz
1. naahlbaxonkii Irreiular TnrkUh troops.
X. A enperdreadnoufht ean hit a turret at a
mailmam distance of about eloTen or
. twelve mllee.
3. Thomas R. Marshall U Vice I'realdeat et
the United B tales.
4. Small cotton crop mean tilth prices and
arte ones mull profit. Pari of the crop
haa aometlmea been destroyed In order to
keep up tha price.
5. Prlntlnc and publUhlnc leads as tha Indus-
trr here with the larseat taloe of annual
product
0. Fretsi plecea of wood or metal placed
tranaverkelr on the nuBer-boards of
ftrlnced Instruments to mark off the Inter
Tail. 7, Sir Henrr Bessemer (IS1S-0S)! Kntllih In
ventor who originated and developed a
process (or maklni steel.
S. "Crocker Land") reported br Tearr ta hare
been eeen In tke Arctic res Ion. A mlrate
la an optical delusion rauaed br certain
atmospheric conditions which make dis
tant object appear uearbr, upslda down
or multiple.
D. rarthenoni the templo of Athene iSn the.
i '
evolved durlnff a cen-
WIlAfS BU NAME
IN CITY DIRI
Suffragists Insist jUiJf
InThafcPubHcatW
Suffragists want the ,
nVini. Vp"-"'y. they WM T
"'' r-a recognition. efTiT',1
woman that she does net uJH 1
far as the directory hi. St
ihin7V"th.,taA7.
the unmarried woman CI .Y"W1
in the lists with th. -' "?,
. urtragtst." said v,
lutimijin, execut ve secnSaX 5
Equal Franchise Society nSl
rrrnrtilHnn ... V?l . ' ""linn 1
in the housekeeping nrrn.?
stand why women should b?J
uoina omiuea rrom public doeiz!S
directories while unmarried l!!
,..u .,, i viui triiirri in1 t w
CTlavanc. hut AY?.nTi"0l
fight. V " "'" ,""K,n'
"Surely If Mrs. John Jon'i-'
material for di,..i" oa?' V
whl!.hh.B,h,."h0..b V
documents-wherV'TdVr?
human h.nr a ..... J7..CB'fi H
William a. Torchlana, president vi
Directory Publ shar.- A.:J!ri'"1 1
to gather and pabuh thTnlSS 51
would be Impossible because of th.
The city directory of noehett,, '
.., H..aVM, vuutains ths a
married women. The Rochester
of r!nmmrr 1 taat, A
the Innovation In ..."" ""W
the amount of divorce miration
.decided that, by publishing th. nJ
man's wlfo rllr.rtlv or... u ""!
directory, he could not deceive uS
ROOelhY.. "' "
THE UNKNOWABLE CITt
urooKiyn js me Asia of ths dtleri
mysterious, cnguinmr. Prom ci,Jl
Brighton, from the Narrows to &m
Av.n, ii oiivuiuijttsses a mna and ii
iuu mrso jor one mina to com
Many may know a few parts tt1
Fulton Btreet. where all tha -iJ
different time and tha roar of ir.nu I
ens the traveler from Manhattan, XJ
limy wiow uiuuy ia.rui o li; tntst )
are chronic movers or else veteran t
conductors. But a man may know il
sand places In Brooklyn and yet not
uiai no Knows u an or even a Zat I
01 11 xssw xorK Hun.
AMUSEMENTS
B. F. Keith's Theati
FLOriENZ MAIUON
TEMPEST and SUNSHW
Presenting "A BROADWAY DOUQr
TfAnUY BERESFORD A CO Ml;
OSGOOD EMMA ROUS; TUB
OTI111.K DIU f l&AiUUKSi
Globe Theater"
100 ISc SSo-Me
11 V. Al. 10 11 P. 1
UUL.DU1N UKL.UKK TK01
Tha Famous Russian 8 lns:ers and Di
"The Pool Room" "SffSi
STANLEY MKiM
10c lie T1
The Beat Theatre Orehtttra nmcsitij
iUUiNA UUUD1UUH
"THE HOUSE OF LIES'!
-i Thura.. Prl . Sat LOUISE BlR
in "the iiBWAim or tatienc
TAT A rCl 1214 MARKET. I
jtauxxj FANNIE m
In "EACH PEARL A TgAn"
Thurs , Frl., Bat. IXJU TELliBQBX
ciuu iuLuiii.i in "victory 01
GARRICK Cit
"SPORT'OF L A If1:
A Dramatic Thunderbolt by Stuart 1
NEXT WEEK SEATS THURSDAI
THE HOUSE OF GU
With MA11Y ItTAN and OrUlnsI W. 1
T VDTP TONIOHT AT 8H5
XJ X J.VXVJ MATINEE WI
"A BIQ WINNER" The Press (
ROBINSON -CRUSOE,
The N. Y. Winter Osrden's Dot 1
Extrsvsssnxa. AT T1T DflXT TBI
with "- v-uoyiN orl
TONIGHT Cf ir. (
UUt IU
A 1 T T
AUKlUill at 8:15
Pop Mat. Thurs Ueit
Ths Most Wonderful Play In Am
EXPERIENC
cmos. In N.Y..T mos. In Chlcaro.5 pei.li
Chestnut St. Opera Hi
D.W.,
Griffith's
Gigantic
Spectacle
turr. tlmt I
Tlriusllr the
II. H nlurfrf 1
sir the date far "th. T bisUulSi of th.
national same a. 18o.
Reserve Banks
n. A. (I) Every naOonat bank ia re
quired to become a stockholder In the Fed.
efal Reserve bank of th district in which It
Is Bltuated, and any State bank or trust
company which compiles with certain sped,
fled, requirements Is permitted to become
a member bank. (2) Each member bank Is
required to subscribe to the stock of the
Federal Iteserve bank of Its district In the
amount equal to six per cent of Its paid-up
capital stock and, surplus. The Federal
Reserve bank does not do business with the
publlo In the sense that banks usually do
It la mad a depository for a certain pro
portion of the reserve of all the member
bank, and. In addition, may also be a
depository for Government furids. An lm
TiorUnt function Is as a bank of lasue and
redemption of currency, for Jt may secure
from the Treasury Government notes known
as Federal Reserve notes, which It is au
thorlxed ta Issue against commercial paper
with a minimum gold reserve of .forty ner
cent. Besides this, Federal Iteserve banks
are granted certain powers In the matter of
op.rs.tlon i in the open market, silch as the
purchase tof commercial paper, foreign ex
change, etc, and In a general way are ex.
pected to perform Important functions as
bank h0UM" betwen U"'r 'member
Area of Alsace
a. McaThe area of Alsaca Lorraine is
SsOS square milts. ' "
The iDeuUchland
to. S. F. Your doubts as to the return
.of th, submarine Peutschland to fJeriaw
ans hardly well founded. There would be
no reason'for the Oerman to keep her at
sea, as she I. not armed, and Jf ihi British1
had captured h.r ths fact wouMoubMeaa
have been made known. The captain
the vessel waa reported to have h.in iU..q
ViW by. w5nn,?,t5 and "thU
H1ctln &f Judge
untv T&TZt.VT",
oandldatM b.lng ptaeed on the hSEF ?'
Wtltlon. If n u tetwd tbaba iJ'
I t ouanntd for TSilXarUr Sf41.
wry. a law provhti. that t l" K '
aaU be tIM by olrJ2 I1TT
r-..aJV T
2 Weeks
Ohljr
I.A8T
TIMES
HERE
BYMPIIONT ORCHESTRA OT V) '
MatlriAMj MMnt Aalurdav LOWir
and 78c. First Balcony, BOo ssd IA 3
tsaiconr. oc.
Mlrhta ami Ratnnl.v Matin. L
C0o and 11.00. Klr.t Dilconr, Wo I
otcona uaioonx, aoc.
FORREST T0NIG"V,.
A VERITABLE FimOBB
LABT WCUK ,
KLAW & ERLANGER'H
NEW MUSICAL COJIBUJ f
MISS '
SPRINGTIiM:itl
By the Composer ot ' SAnr
Be.t Beats U.BO at W.aneaaaru
NEXT WEEK SEATS THU?
JULIA SANDERSON I In tns
DONALD BRIAN (Muilcsl
JOSEPH CAWTlIOnNjComedr
DTrvAT TTitrlif at IJWS.J
uiwjtxu v"e."su
FUNNIE8T FAnCE EVER JfJUt
THE TWO JA
Ju.t Laufha Pretty Olrls 3Mt '
POPULAR It MATINEES WIEDM
TUB
ninrKRT. fit.
T?OrYVT- "A.MK.U1
l?iatitaa TST.ii'o.-.r. Jtr Artnlir J
"THE REVOlt'
Thuraday, Friday, Baturdajr '""
TT' "i ' MARKEIT ASMW I
victoria &
."THBrA
M?TXnXKSS!SKJm
a, Thurnday, Friday, gaturday
ire.ii'PMflT '.
William
... niWffl
Add'piorU'.Kom.n-2JjM,
Arcadia CA
Th.. Vf gat.. Nawia Talroad.
Walnut prSAS
. "'"'.T"" I. T
EUGENIE BLAlIiT
.Cross Keys iT
. ... - an sVlll
"Sow of Abraham'
"SfflSSPii
Duwoafi MijMtr
MAM.'