Newspaper Page Text
tfrtoflork ?Drtbunr. FRIDAY. MAY ti. 1013 Owned and published dally by The Tribun?. Association, a New York corporation: Ogden M. Reld. PlSaldSSt; cnnd? Hamlln, Secretary; Jamea M. Barrett. T.easurer. Addresa. Tribune Building. No. lf.4 Nasaau atreet. Men ^ rn SUBSCRIPTION BATES.?By Mail. 1'ostaf* Paid, outside of QfSAtM New York. Daily and iunday. 1 mo.$ .75 Dcllv only, fi months. . . .$3 nr> Dsilv and Pundav. 6 mo?. 1 :.'. Pailv only. 1 vear... .. a. 00 Dally and Bands*/, i >ea: s ."." Sunday only, fl months.. 1--.? Dai:y only. 1 month.90,Sunday only, l year. - j" FOREIGN RATEs I CANADIAN KATES DAILY tND BUNDAT DAILY AND OXNDAT: onth. $1.35 One month. ai... One year . year .-INDAY ONLY. ' DAILT. ONLY: Six months. . . SOTOn? month. 8.5U M ?.00 D??L.Y ONLY:" SfNDAY ONLY. One month.... 1.02 One month. One year. R . DAILY ONLY: ?Xl One month. lfijc-? mon.... One year. 12.?J?.One ytar. 4-l,s Entered at the Pn?.?ofT?ce at New York a? Second ?as? Mall Matter. Governor Sulzer U Making a Real Hand-to-Hand Fight of It. Governor suizcr's speech .-it Bcbenectady, oven more than big gpeechee al Buffalo ami Eiruira. showrg that lie is a Achter m Im knows the fighting business. He is trying to ?-'divert Democratic Bens iors and Assemblymen from support of the "fake)" Rlauvelt primary bill to support ol his own "state? wide" measure. He realizes thai the way to gel conversions is to make the argument absolutely concr?te and personal. The average Senator or Assemblyman is i politi? cal poppet He is not acting ?>n his own Initiative, hut is carrying ont "higher op" orders. To reach liim it is aeceengry to expose the wires on whlcb be 1eiaf1t1 and to trj to Cut them. The more ener ggtically the Governor attacks the opponents of bis direct primary bill end puts them on record as carrying out Murphy's instroctiong rather than the will of their constituencies the more Invincible he will turn out to be as a boss killer. When the L?gislature adjourned The Tribune said tha? Murpliy bj boating the statewide pri? mary bill had thrust Into the Gortrnor'i hand i weapon arith whlcb a sixteen-year-old In politics could ^'o out end slay linns and tigers The GOI eruor has an Issue now on which his Democratic opponents cannot defend tbemselvee without re sorting \>> subterfuges and Involving themselves in contradictions. All be has to do la to g<> Into the districts of marionette Senators and Assemblymen, pot them on the rack and keep them there. Governor Hughes wss too detached and consid? erate in his primary fight. He sppealed to general principles and named no names Yot the way to win in a contest of that sort Is to name names gnd to leave no doubt aa to influences and personalities behind the hostile action of Senators and Assem? blymen. Mr Sulzer has taken a leaf from Mr Bryan's book. The latter defeated the reactionaries at Bal? timore by plain talk of a highly personal nature. He heaped SCOTO and ridicule on Murphy and Mur? phy's agents. Governor Sulzer is to I.ommended for doing the same thing, for it is only by such tactics that the Murphy cohorts in the Legislature can be put to rout. The City as Iceman. Mr. MoA.neny's suggestion thai -to oral of the power plants now owned by the city be employed next summer to turn out grtJflda] kg bears all the marks of a happy Inspiration. It is likely that the ice supply will tie shorter this yar than ever before and that prices will be more ? than usual throughout July and August The bgalth of the city Is directly affected by the ice shortage, hit ce thi- precious commodity must be depended upon to keep wholesome the milk with which tens of thousands of infants are fed. Scarce and dear ice in g pr - oil might cost the lives of hundred.- of children. The municipal authorities bava g ready means of distributing Ice at est | . those who need it most in the exit-tin? milk supply stations. Even the moder? ate quantity which could be handled at these fifty five public stations would help enormously to ;niti gate the suffering of the r:1 ? eeason in the congested districts, and it might even operate to keep down the prices charged by private ice producers. The dry would do a genuine humanitarian servi-e in putting ice more readily within the reach of the de? pendent end suffering who are especially und- - Itj care. Seven Good Police Commissioners. To have another Shot at the morals commission. since there Ig talk of reviving the proposal, it is worth while recalling that the one utterly unsolved city problem is the getting of a good Police <'om missioner. ? Of com?-" gay the advocates of a morals com? mission, "if the city could obtain a really good Police Commissioner the graft problem might be solved. Rut isn't if time to give tip ending that will o' the -\i*p?" It was a happy thought, then, to propose that the Cat*, get seven good po'ice commissioners Mtid put them tn charge of regulating garubllnz and prosti? tution. That was what the morals commission plan amounted to How that would have simplified the city's task : Where Efficiency Is No Hobby. Washington dispatches say that the Republicans In the Senate will resist to the bitter end?wnic? means till October 31, or thereabouts_Mr. Owen's proposed new rule for limiting dotaste. It was the Republican party which once tried to tnrust a closure rule down the throat of the opposition in tiie Senate and came very near succeeding Rut Re? publican indignation against mich an outrage now runs as high as Democratic indignation did when the so-called Force Rill was uuder consideration. Loyalty t<? the memory and practice of the Sen ate's great filibusters is a. strong in one party SI thf other: it all depends "which foot the shoe is temporarily on. The Republicans are now as will? ing to die in the last dit. h for the IgtlOCOnl privilege of legislative obstruction as they used to he keen to strangle the nulbostssing nuisance with a pre? vious question rule. We hardly expect fo see Mr. Owen's proposal pre? vail at this session. None e'er felt the halter draw' with good opinion of the law. and some of the triumphant Democrats are already talking of the possibility of being relegated to the minority snOl after the Wilson-T'nderwood tariff bill takes erteot. They are not likely to be enthusiastic about String lng a noose whlcb they may soon ht aii\lou> tn escape. There |g only one practlCghJe WgJ to convert the Senate into ? responsible, self-governing body. That Is for both parties to agree to surrender the obso? lete privilege oi filibustering and to try to do biisi. nets ofcrealtei on a coniu.oa sense basis. The Sen i -f-' ate's methods are altogether out of date Why should not Senators Simmons and i'enrose join in Offering a resolution Inviting Secretary Redtield t<> Inquire Into the exressive labor OOSt Of ?SgtfratlAn with ? vjetv t<> drawing: up a bran?! new set ot "efficiency" rules? "When in the Course of Human Events"? If yon trill follow congress long enough you will always find something to repay you. as, (Of ! instante, when tlie Hon. Stanley E. Bowdla, Of Cincinnati, a free-born, married democrat, thus de livered himself: The suffragist? are. ?till harping on ?mancipation for jroman. The first step should he emamipaiion trota the slavery of clothes. When tf:" hook-and-eye item ami reached in the 'tariff liisniFsion some one suggested putting a pro? hibitive duly un the abomination. I objected. I suggested that the importation of hooks ami sySS be made a felony and their manufacture here a capital crime. 'Hiero is not a male voter anywhere, or at any rate a married male, voter anywhere, who will not throw Ml hat in the air at this ?leclaration. A camel and the eye of the uoedle are n<d more incompatible ! than The average hook and eye on a swaying hack. it is nlgn time that the still slightly stronger sex abolished this nuisance. To he sure, in ending the dress that hooks men may well he ending the one Inst lingering need ol husbands. But better far a bookless and husband? lees world than the present hitter slavery. More Power to the Spaghetti House ! I/'iidon's discovery or "near" discovery that STeo . Caruso'l l>on?'s are musically resonant, and the. ; further assertion by a local throat specialist that the Jrreat tenor's phenomena! powers are due lu | large part to wholesale consumption of spaghetti, I must mean a boom for the "thirty-forty-rifty" ;\ la ?carte restaurants with which New York is fottO* i natelj so abundantly provided, "Eat spaghetti and .develop a TOlCC 'if gold" will now appear a-? I t"p i l?ne on the hundreds of menu?; which frame a mid? day or evening repast about the succulent Italian Maple. Those who have scoffed at th?? refrigerated chicken, the "red ink" and the never failing dOOgh >iriiiLTs of the thooaand hospitable boards of side Street Bohemia will return to pray tli.it their bones aud vocal cords may become soooeons arlth the sort of melody that pari from 11,000 upward a night Let the spaghetti factories enlarge th-lr planta. Thej trll] be bard pushed to turn out miles enough of a now golden sustenanco. if they triple their capacity maybe they can create a supply of bei cantoisut sufficient t<> furnish t>oth rJammeratein and the new Century establishment with enure operatic companies at cut price rates. The Anti-Tammany Mo\ement. The Citizens' Municipal Committee announces that "it hopes to name a ticket which will be COtaV posed of men of such standing and ability that ' party organizations in which devotion to th*! good predominates over selfish Internats will. ( without thought of trade or dicker, unit?' In Its support." This end is not ?-.> easy to achieve as it should be. in two out of the last three municipal i campaigns the opposition t<> Tammany Hall has been divided. The committee should no*, let any preconception [of its own as to who are best qualified for the I offices u> be rtiitfd stand in the way of choosing those upon whom a union of the various anti Tammany elements is moot likely. Any one who is certain to meet with opposition from any con siderable auti-T..mmany group should riot he se? lected, however (rood an official he might make ir he could be elected. Call It a fusion or not- and the citizens' commit? tee prefer? not to call it one--there must be s. union of extremely diverse elements representing various shades of popular opinion if there is to be a victory at the polls. The main thine for the committee to aim at i- to prevent a repetition of the mistakes of 1806 and 1009 An Historic Irishman Lord Ashhoume, who died yesterday, had for many }ears passed largolv out of sight In British pol?tica, pivinr place to ".i nun:: lion??'' of a later eenoration. He hehmged to the age of Disraeli, Brizht and Gladstone, snd he was no unworthy member of the unsurpassed galaxy of statesmen which adorned Westminster a generation ago. For one fa^t he has long had an assured place in history. He was the founder of the system of state aid for land purchase wusch, enlarged and elaborated by others, ha*; made Ireland a country of peasant proprietors. Home Hule, in the Parnelllan sense, ha?; had few more resolute and effective opponents; vet Ireland has bad no truer and few more service? able friends. The Rumano-Bulgarian Settlement. The settlement of the dispute between Rumania and Bulgaria over the former's claims for territorial "compensation'' at the end of the Balkan war ough? to be satisfactory to iMh parties. Rumania, gets abOUt half of the territory which she asked for. and probably as much as she expected, it is the batter part Of the disputed territory, and includes the city and fortresses of sillstria. On the other hand, Bui? ?aria's security at Varna is in no flag ISO Unpaired or menaced. The most Interesting feature of the settlement f<> the rest of the world Is the frank declaration in the treaty that the readjustment of boundaries is made in ??nier to redress the injustice which was done t > Rumania under the Rerlin Treaty of 1*7*--under which she was robbed of valuable land which Russtl coveted, with a promise of repayment in other quar? ters, which promise was never fulfilled A Motto for the Old Town. There is a movement ?foot to discover a suitable motto and emblem for enr own City of Neu- York, ! the greatest manufacturing towu in the country. The Merchani.?- Association has offered prizes and IBUSBjeStlOttl are invlte?l. The fine art of boosting has been carried to high perfection in Western towns. The casual visitor Is set upon, and if he survives carries away a very Clear notion that he has been in a seething maelstrom of the busiest kind of boosting, at any rate. Also be bai gained a lifelong hatred for some such harmless ? phrase as "Knukakee Conquers.'' "Dayton Does ' Thlntcs." "Peona the Periwinkle of the Plains.'" Whether such personal Boosting would have a similar effect upon vlsltois to our own little town is i ?piestion of little practical importance. For the .Merchants' Association ould not if it would change the habits of years. It may selei t an excellent boOOtaag motto and emblem. But I roost in g it can newr persuade from New Yorkers' lips. It is the inalienable privilege o? every New Yorker to curse his own city to his heart's content. In fac? the most descriptive motto for the city would be the pithy sentiment : "Sow York Knocks." The settlement of the barbers' strike will bg id news to the court plsstSC trust. "Kaiser Greets King With Kiss." If this episode is to be given a truly feminin- nfanins war may be expected at any moment. According to Secretary Redfioid. even if the Tired Business Man feels tired he ought not to ' omplaun about it. Sheriff Hariuirg'T. who ggyg he i.- "a great lover of the mollusc." ?rants to have his Jurisdiction en? barged so that he ?rill have charge of s sp?cial Mew York oyster police It would be much safer in that case if no lover of the mollusc were put on guard. AS I WAS SAYING With many a heart throb and many a thrill we have followed that glorious series in "T. F'.'s Weekly" ?ailed "How I Regan." MagnifUent! Great oaks humbling themselves to encourage little acorns. (iood stories, too, though not more amaz? ing than that of oui own rise m th.- world. Everything was against us at the start. We had m morals. We drank. We ?TOUld HOI SU] U se pu tilia." We were bald, toothless, undereised, bedridden. Ah. but look at us now! ?letting our living by lumping through hoops' ? ? ? See the rrand theological fox hunt \ heretical young foxes -4. Dogmas pursuing them. ''Id. tZa perienced fox cutting across the trail t.. throe the pack off the scent. Horns tooting, 'I- emus barking. hoofa thundering, the wildwood reverberant with tira?ls>lss and the ungodly bopping for Joy. it strikes us. however, that the ungodl) have hopped too suddenly Whoa! Patience! Lei us pause and consider. Maybe the fox hunters are a bit excited and hast\ and .ros?", luit th' y have had their Pr?s by t? nan ism tor quite a spell and K,nd of gol attached to it. When young foxes come prowl? ing around t?. sai it up before their very face and e\eg it makes them mad, and quite property. For. o.id though it may appear, there are folk.- left alive on '.nth who regard tbeii some* how related to truth The: refuse to d ,,s 'indorsing a lot of things you know aren't *o." They are unwilling t?. declare tl it ' ? :. humbug Is us good ,i'- anothei They have convictions They take Hum seriously. Thev value t!,.m Inct d'til.ill', they have spunk, and primordial darder. | and a flu*, red-blood, d gusto. For srhlch we re i spect th? tn. though personally are suie with the foxes and have placed our naone] accordingly. it says 'n "Life" that "s pider tattooed on a bald head Will keep off flies'' Heggmg "Pife-" pardon, we have our doiit.is- it ?- true, of i that ben sitne, discreet, JudlciOUi flies -thnt |g to say, the more enlightened i isa ??? < ild take warning! but we have read the Immortal trsatis? beginning. I creeping over to thi of* our n* k." and we cannot recall 'hat |fi N I . . ... f that ter ? ? ? a lovely heini: herself woman, \nung and good looking*1 Inform- '.(, that she pre fers hei to remember. ?? quoted a string of couplets on literary fat ?"Ivaahoe." "Robin Rood." "Huck Finn," "Old Sleuth" and the ? ? -, : i bled, modest!] 'We love to steal away alone with masterpieces of our own " Not so this fairest of the fair. Bin] A? aaslp ? afled, vou'H do I've read nay num? In "Who Is f With the e\e of faith ? . n our beautiful ' orr?epond?nt. thro? up our h m.d* and drop the subject before ;t bgglnl to verge upon the personal. ? ? ? Howe\er, it is permitted to pursue her tram of thought lo th? n?x' station can an! '? .der ac? count for the distinct sence of eminence and well being i ? i ? ? on coming upon one i. ime In the Tep-phone T'ttc I I ? . ? Krid of ?n t*. Heie, right in "Judge," aa find the familiar back fence tomcat of leget i as of yore, and the familiar Mithua I ng to his window to "lam said toSDCal lo far. classic. Bui look! What la tha' mieeile in yon enthuaiaat's hand? Is it thi sacred, the time-hon ?red, th? eternally mirth pro*.oking bootjack of sntlqu ? | all the ages* Ah. no! It is h mere boot Awful warning, this' Long had the bootjack Sur? vived Its extinction, raining on tomesta years and years after the last of the bootjacks had been gathered to its father.? In our Kindness we had behoved It imperishab:-- Quick* brethren i chain th? pantophagous goat, Insure th? twins, embalm th? tarro*, ?age the mule and nail down th? mother-in law? ? ? ? How SfSj we going to prend the summer" camp? ing, of courr-e <>r.!y ?u have not fully made up our mind Whlcb method to adopt. Camps vnrv a little. Behold yonder marble exposition building that looms majestic in the Adirondacka! Burs enough, it Is a camp. (,r observe the despicable hovel, with the sign over the door "Hatstoquittlt " That, ton, is a camp Then, if you like, consider the eauivauB? covered mudhoie Whets a "true sport" camps; not for pleasure, but to insult th*e dements Finally, pray notice, how young Tommy Hangs gOSS 'ampin?! Guards with guns all round the ; lace, foi the rascal is undergoing moral and spiritual repairs from the ground up and might weary of camping a' any moment. As at.ove Intimated, we are still puzzled to know which style of camping to go In for. but on on? point we have reached an Irrevocable decision, w* shall take a dog. Leavings are always accumu? lating in camp, and a dog is the best piare to put them R. L. H WHAT IF SHE HAD "TURKEY TROTTED"? Prom The Dundos Sidvertissr Queen Victoria, who waa verv fond of step dancing, one algbl at BninBersJ a.-ked her meld, who she knew bad been taking lessons of an eminent dancing inLs tr?ss. for a little exhibition of her ait PrlBCCSS lb nry Of Battenberg, chief musician to her mother's court, struck up a tune on th? piano, and Miss Lambert forth? with began h?r dance The Queen, delighted, ai-ked her at its close to name som?th!n*t she WOUld like for a re? unid Now, the maid of honor wa> ConservatiVS In the extreme "I ihould like." the said, "th- bead of Mr. -," and she gMBtiOtied a Liberal leader, "on a charger," so "The Gentlewoman" says. A HOT-AIR SHIP. I-'r- tn The Dundee Advertiser. I/.rd Curson'S speeches, as a rule, bear traces of careful prcpSTStlOn But he made BM of a wonderfully nalxed metaphor in addressing the rMnaroes league at the Albert Hall Hen- aif hi.- arOfdSl "The ahtp Of State Is Slowly careering toward the edge of the prOClpBCQi anu tin- brink OVSf which It will go unless It Is stopped is civil war, and the pit into which it will fall Is the pit of fratricidal strife." If bS, as .i cotitiinror.ii. points out, nJSBQSt B perfect example of how not to make a metaphor. THE SUPREME TEST. l-'rom The Boston C?o!. Now that ii 1 ? lupino baseball team In coming to make a three months' tour of the I'nlted i-'t,ite>, we shall have a chance to aee what progress the little brown men h^ve i made toward fitness for self-government. j GOOD WORK! THE PEOPLE'S COLUMN An??.E?fe.'or Public Debate THE HUNGARIAN HOSPITAL An Appeal II Made for Subscriptions to This Charity. To th- FCdftor of The Tribun?. .?o h numl m iritod Hunsjarlsns l< - > herlshed desire of HungBris this ?try to build their own hospitals In the r\[,f-! of Now COTS BBtd ?'hi.. Th? roj ' ngarlaa government ? ? ? plj li ten it? ; In tl nients There are mor?? thnn | 509.000 Hungarian . the T'nlt. ? Mora than ? ??' of thejn live In N- S V li SI I ,. n..ro ;1,.. nor? tas ? ?? Clsvslsnd The Hungarians srhoss Inunl? this country Inersaass year ara food citizens and valuable m this nation N . American hospital physic!.in, etc . erstand our movement \\> resttss fin we?: that thsre nr? splsndld DltaJS In Amerl. a. where our suffer rajrs found s hooptts ? i..i kind '" itmsnt In their ailments. bttl In ?l?vera! .ases th? American physi? cians bad grsal duuoulty tn making them? selves uad? I by their patients, and m man) cat.??- no diagnosis could be mads m rsssi of H lagarlaa latastgraata on ac eouat Of their inability to SSBTSSI them? selves la i he English la?guaga, i tTs appeal first to the generosity of great Aassttoaa enterprises in which a large BOSBbsr of our hard worMng BOBS? patriots OOatrlhutS dally to their wealth. SOd appsal to those compatriots who be ? w? Il t do in this . 0 .(.try to en larri * the fund.? of the hospitals in NVw York and ? llsvslsnd. [MM JOKKX-SBBCVBO Prsstdaat Hungarian Hospital asssslstion, Nn Ml K.i.?t DM street, KSK fortl City, Wi: ::. . ? A DEPORTED IMMIGRANT GIRL The Legal Aid Society Explains Its Ground for Complaint. i To the Editor of ThS Tribune j Sir. In Its l.?-su? of May 19 The TrlbanS - that B nnabsr Of l-tters have been | r.T.Ued bv the editor with rOBPSOt to j th? deportatb n Of an immigrant girl who ?ame here in IMP, und whll? heic gave birth 10 two illegitimate children, one of Whom died BOOB after birth. The second child, a boy, now about eight BMMthS old. is still alive, living In a village on Long Island UpOB denunciation by a rrun who lives la Orange, K. 1?, th? girl was airsstod by the ?mmigratlon SllthOflttSB. taken to B?lts [aland, Snd, Sftsr a hearing, ordered dsportsd Bpon the ground, as ttie record BhosnSj that "shu hasl been permitted three years ago to SBtar the 1'nlted States for Immoral purposes as an assiste?! alien, her paSBagS ttahst having been paid by her uncle." In ordering the dspoflation of the girl the mother was separated from her baby upon the giound of want of Jurisdiction by the Immigration authorities over the baby, who, being born upon American soil. Is on American citizen. The attention or the Legal Aid 8oclety was called to the case In a letter, which was received by the society too lat? to admit of an Inves? tigation before the girl had been deported. In calling public attention to this casa the Lsgal Aid Society never questioned the suflh Icncy of th? evidence upon which the order of deportation was Issued by ths ConunlsslonSf Of Immigration. Con? siderations of Justice and fairness demand this statement In order "to set the record Straight-" a phrase well understood by the legal profession. The purpose of the publicity given by the Legal Aid Society to the case tv&a to past an amendment to or a modifica- I tlon of the ? SlBtBBg Immigration law so as to bring that law In harmony with the demands of common humanity and the snllghtened spirit of our age by making provision for Juet 6uch case* ao this, by i etth?r deporting the child With the mother, the cost of deportation to b? ! born- hy the T'nlted States, or by placing tha mother under certain probationary '.ctlons and allowing her to remain here with her baby THE LEGAL AID SOCIETY. Leonard McGee, Attorney in Chief. ' ? m York. Nfay 0, 191". FACE FRONT; FORWARD MARCH That Should Be the Order for the Republican Party. ; To the Editor of The Tribuns. Sir The zeal of The Tribune in de- ', ? . i'.nr not only early but progressive . by Republican party lenders is very '?? tng Your view of the probier ; fore the P-irty Is correct. I: Is ?mpeiiith i that the beats 3f representation tn the I ! national convention be changed to con? form to the demands made In this respect , by the I tion of a large mass of Republi? can voters whoee protest was voiced In their action ?n refusing to support the laat nttlon.il ?arty candidate for Presl ?:? : t, Judge Taft. It Is simply childish to deny that Judge Taft was the regularly choeen candidate of .Miran constituencies from Republi? can districts sn.1 states. Ignot'.ng a'.l per ItaeS In the case, It Is a fact that Colonel Roosevelt had behind him the sentiments of a large majority of Repub? licans who had bf en gtVOO any oppor? tunity to express their preference at all through preferential primaries. It mat? ters not what policies Judge Taft repre? sented or what poll.:,.- Coloael Roosevelt represented. It c.mr.ot be successfully de? nted that Judge Taft's candidacy r?pre sented politicians and not voter? In the cinvention that nominated him. I was then for Judge Taft on general prlnilpl-.-i cordially supported him. as I have every Republican candidate for forty-five ve?is, so I cannot be charged as a Rooae KrumMer. I thought then It Waa a n.i take not to set the party face along SO called progressive Unes. To my mind It was apparent that the convention could not afford to Ignore too many of the new political Issues and new systems In gear* ernment which were more In harmony with the new spirit that hod come into the field. There were many like myself who did BOt feel warranted tn leaving the party even In rich an emergency. Judge Taft was the, party candidate and so was en? titled to my support and vote. The tactics resorted to by colonel Roosevelt to capt? ure that convention and nomination did not win my admiration or approval, and surely his r-ubserjuent course dl.l not. His I course turned the country over to the I supremacy of the Democratic party, Just na he has now twice done in the State of New York. Kor these things loyal tru? blue Republicans owe him no thanks. Hut If any man thinks that all Republi? can voters alike wdll follow leaders who are pursuing a campaign of vlndletlveness he Is mistaken. It is unfortunate that there Is no system or party machinery by which the organlxation, the enrolled vot? ers, can remodel, so to speak, the com? mittees, atate or national, so that they will truly represent their convictions. Nor Is there any party system which will enable the members of the party to voice their sentiments by votes at this time for the Information and Instruction of their lead? ers. Hence they can be Influenced only jy that hidden or wireless way of trans? mitting their voice. Everybody knows what that voice Is?It Is "Face front; forward, march!" Go ahead. Don't look back. Remember Lot's wife. The Tribune is right. Public senti? ment and party sentiment must be obeyed. The strangle hold of non-progressive leadera must be released If we would win any more victories In this atate or the nation. If such men, or mlBleaders, will not budge or resign, let them be asked to vacate their places and give the party a chance to save itself JOHN' L. MITCHELL. Brooklyn, May ??i, 1913. IN DEFENCE OP PATEBS01N A Resident Asserts That the City It the Victim of Sensational Critics. T- the Editor of The Tribuna .sir; V. ar editorials on lbs Pater$on strike situation have been tlrr.t'.y ar.d In the main Just. To-day, hOWOvST. I tMSl you are in error In your sutoria] !n r?f? erence to New York reporters and th? closing of Turn and Helvetia halla Fou condemn the Recorder for barn-4 from his eourtrocm BBTtala HSV Yori newspaper reportera. I hapi en to Ires* the reason for this or 1er was a perfectly good one. One day recently a gre.it crowd of strikers were arrested ar.d brougM bo fore the court for latarfarlpg ntth per? sons desiring to go to work. Tr.ere BBSJ men. w-omen and plrl?? Tiie New VTk re? porters swarmed Into tits O irtroom. and were so noisy and demonstrative In their conduct that the cour- Par order BSvUSsJ tlmea, but no nttsati s ^aa paid They kept on with t sit aOBPM they laughed ar.d talked to the sirls and mU behaved themselves gi-r.eral'.y. For tc? future they were del arrei. No doubt the BsSSSOai was rot dis? pleased to find that they gas* baSBSaUBB cause for being barred ircm the court* room, lie knows, as we a.I kUSSI M our city, that there have bean a dozen of .fifteen of them In Paters M faff t-? lut ' two or three weeks, BSJUna Bg around the town from plac? to pUOSj seeklnl for a fact or two upon tfhl b Chap coU-4 build up sensational oopy, and B*hStS ?-? facts existed they brought Into p'.ay thalr imagination. This? Invasion or New Totl reporters has been as Injurious to th? town as th? red hSvUstOB Of the Tr.dttf trial Workers of the P ill e,*.tators. I happened to be In New Ycrk on Monday and glanced at the headlr.es of the Ne* York newspapers, which Indicated to SM that my city was In SKtrSBM dar.ftf of total extinction. Whan I g"'- hrr;?e I dlaoovorod that a couple of thousand ol the strikers had be^rv booing tltS pollCS for permitting certain ?raavsrs to go Into a mill where they were milling U) SJSgh In another part of the city a policeman bad basa hit with a brick. As a matter of fact, even during th? strike Patersontans feel much SBfaf ?.<r* than In New York. These wild articles have frightened peoplo so that fh<sp w'-; not come to town. It will pfobabtr tat* us a longer time to recover froi ? ' i ST* cien in the New York psaSpaMBrl ?:*-?r' tO rSOOvSr from the effects of ths stria As to the closing of thSSS balls ?? police have permitted the I dustria! Workers of th? World Sgltators to preach their doctrines for three mmit! ? Recent? ly their talk has been SO wild In fk.utfcf ' the courts and condemning the officers of the law, from the fudge down, 'I--?1 :t was deemed wise to close them Bp. TM' la not the curtailment of freedom of speech from th? oonatltutloi it la often dUBoull t.. draw ?M Uni t* tween freedom of speech, which the Cat BtitUtiOn says must not be sbttsod, SSd * cense of speech which sxdtes rnult?tseai of unthinking people to riot snd tlon. but since Qulnlan was coni der all the forms of the UM? b> S JUIJ ? ln?ol?nt, defiant and profane spSSBBl have been snob that it bsOBOM B mstter of self-preservation to stop them. PATBR80NIAN, Paterson. N. J.. May 22. 1913. A MAINE GOLD MINE. Prom Ths Lewlston Journal. With the Increasing trame in tutos to BS Harbor, and heavy travel to and from Denert, the toll brldKe at tSSStSB ??*?? *** (iect of being a small |old mine for It? *** ers. It It on? of ttis few remaining toll bri??* In the ?t?te, and used to do a M* bunln??? **?" fore most of the traffic cams ?o Bar H*r!?? and other points on the island by train ?** boat. Since autos have come Into u?e. t>u**" ness seems to be picking up at t?ie brl???. * the receipts from auto travel bid fair to MJ very respectable volume. The brllre hs? IBU In existence for a irrest many year? s? s 9" vate corporation, and It will be a queiUen the future whether the ?t?te or county *? conatmot a pubilo bridge across t*s ass-"??*