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AMERICANS IN CANADA A Political Stalking — Cab clenism and Tariff Reform. London, August II Moribund Cobdenism needs allies and •welcome* them under any guise and from any quarter. The Liberal press magnifies the sisrns of Canadian disaf fection with Protection, and contends • •--.- the trend of public opinion in th- Northwestern wheat belt is toward Free Trade rather than toward preferential trade vith the mother country. Th* new- converts to Cobdenism are the re patriated Canadians and American col onists, who have been crowded out of Minnesota, the "Dakota?. Idaho and sj tshtßCtaji and are opening sections of virgin s"il hundreds of miles beyond the frontier. TVitiTea.sy-y r »irig credulity the Liberal editors assume that these immigrants from the Northwestern State? have left their Protection principles behind them --- become the evangels of Fre<» Trade In the Canadian Tvilderness. Their in- Hwnc?. it is gravely argued. Is already suSiriently powerful to offset the self ■jnter^sted policies of Ontario manufact urers and the traders of the Maritime Frovinces. As -he reaches of 'Western Cenada -■ filling up with American sot tl«?rs there is a growing -•volt against protectionism! This is the conclusion vith which Radical writers console themselves while waiting for th« idea of November and a fresh onset of the Tar iff Reformers in the next general elec tions. <*>n the Unionist side the American fan giante are regarded with suspicion arsd distrust as conspirators against the British Empir**. If they are not ann^xa • an eta barf upon breaking up the Do rr.lnion and --_--••- — of ■th«= srrest Republic until Alaska shall no •-.-£»- be isolated from Minnesota and Michigan, ■-.- are. -■ least, missioners cf continent-.] reciprocity and commer cial absorption. •-.-..- of welcoming reinforcements for Free Trade from protectionist Amer ica, as the Cobd«ni=t press is doing with more zeal than discretion, the Tariff Re firm editors ar" sound a loud and rathrr frantic warning against unpatri otic -.'-nrairr.Mig against imperial trade and federation. "What will be the ef feel — ask with undisguised alarm If Americans offer reciprocity on the most generous terms, while the mother country gTudsingly withholds preferen tial trade? "Absolutely fatal. " is their tr.swer. They consider it inevitable that Canada will b*> drawn toward the nearer and ----- market, and that its Ameri cariization in policy and sentiment -will be rapidly completed. The only weapon ■sj Bji imperial wreckers, in the esti .— - of these Unionist croakers, Is Tariff Reform with the closest possible commercial and political alliance be twe«=M the United Kingdom and the self prrvem:ns: colonies. These vagaries of British opinion are not perhaps to be taken too seriously in th« dogdays. when politicians are scat tered among the four winds, and there jp much ado about nothing in the news paper nißceg It may he a ssfe inference That there are no illusions among Enc lishmen respecting the adventures of the American immigrant across th Cana dian frontier, and that he is accepted for •what he is — a restless wanderer in i — of new ids rather than a con spirator against th« British Empire or a fanatical pioneer of Free Trade. The importance of the exodus from T.hp Northwestern States ard of the in filtration <-<f American ideas -•.--• re mote reaches of Canada is obviously ex aggerated by partisan writers for their own purposes: and yet jud'eious fore casts of party policy may be based upon these fictitious appeals to prejudice. The AmTiran immigrant is the com mon stalking horse behind which the Free Trader and the Tariff Reformer conceal themselves from th«» snght of the frame. The screen may be a hollow pre tence, but it will •■ be long before the Brine is rapid and deadly. The coronation will draw the colonial premiers to London next year, and when The pageantry is over there will be re r.ewed attempts to bring the states of the empire into more intimate relations ■tvith th* 1 mother country. If Mr. Bal four be Prim*> Minister the colonial con ference will be a most serviceable in strument for forcing riff Reform upon the kingdom. Ther** will be a revel of loyalty after the coronation, and the ration and its remote dependencies will "be* in a c-^ngerial mood for osidering conr^ESK'ns for mutual in tag* Min isters and premiers will be. in readiness to.tak.' 1 up imperial federal as the r>s!?sifner from Birmingham used to say. on th** business side, and King reorcje, ■who is as broadmind^d and convinced en imperialist ac there is in the empire, ■will be in full sympathy with the move ment. In view of the appro* - <. nnfer^nce end of the probability that Mr. Balfour •will be Prim*' Minister, if the election tomes on in January, the Unionist dec larnaticn over the Americanization of ♦Tanada is timely and intelligible. How r-pportune and plausible la the. warning that the empire may be broken up in the -<■ ilds of Canada unless the Tariff Re formers come in "» ith a precipitate rush &nd baffj*» the wily Americans by bind ing together John Bull's scattered es lates with businesslike preferential con '.r acts'. The Liberal government, Milch has Fccmed to have a. charmed life during the last six months, may survive both "he vicissitudes of the veto question and the exigencies of the general election. Mr. Aso/uith may -:.:! be Prime Minister ■^ hen the colonial conference assembles, end ministers may not be in a position To make- any concessions to Canada and the other commonwealths. 'When the last fission was hfld tax played with many vafe subjects, esta - l -.<-<! an in :«Tmation bureau under the direction of ihe Colonial Office, and provided tenta iiv*> nrpasur'-s of naval and military co ufieration. The vital question of trade relations on a preferential basis was left in tij€ air li*>caus*? ministers were com mitted irrevocably to Free Trade and an ♦■fvn door for the commerce «<f all liations. If th"\ are in powrr when the colon is' premiers reassemble in conference. thf'S «il! t>" equally unprepared to — ui> the only question in Which Canada and th«-r • - confederations are deeply j rtrr^Eted: and ' hr will require an e - X cus» for thHr n°gl«vt. That is where in* migratory Am*;.; -rt farmer in Can ada wil! s> »ly win he be a -rampant Fr^ • spite of his protection record i = -tares, but he -wil! also be a successful advocate who v a = co«vr"-t?d the dorr.iriicn to Cohd*n ii,pu« »«d urdeSled! Tht Mcrtixv estern refugee promises tc play an influential part in the storm and straps of English tariff politics. The Cobden Club used to bewail his griev ances under Protection, but he did not seem conscious of them himself, tor he voted regularly for the Republican' patty and kept it in power for fifty years, with the exception of President Cleveland's two terms. Possibly, he will be a more efficient ally of Free Trade now that the border ha.? been crossed and he holds th« destiny of Canada in the hollow of his hand. Certainly, resourceful poli ticians in En-land will make full use of him whether as a full-blown Free; Trader or an audacious, scheming An nexationist. The new levies of direct taxation are to be justified for the sake of financing social reform: or a tariff la to be adopted as a practical measure for uniting: the empire and preventing over-bleeding of <-apitalistp and land owners; and in either case the American farmer in Northwest Canada is the most useful pawn in political chess. L N. F. OBITUARY. PROFESSOR F. A. GENTH. JR. [By T^'.ecraph to Th« T — me Philadelphia. Sept 2.-Profe?F"r Fred erick Augustus Genth. jr.. chemist, who held the chair of mineralogy and essaying at the Medtco-Chirurjsical College here, died at his home in Lanfdowne to-day from Bripht's disease. H<= was fifty-five years old. Professor Genth cave expert testimony in .many murder cases where poisoning was suspected. It was he who examined the body of Mrs." Carrie B. BrouVer. the wife of Dr. Frank Brouwer. of Tom? River, X. J. Professor Genth was the son of the late Dr. Frederick Augustus Genth, founder of the F. A Genth laboratories here, one of the best equipped in the world. He was graduated from the University of Penn sylvania in peoloßy and mining: in 1*76. and in |gjf, he was craduated from the same Institution in chemistry. From then until ISSI he was assistant chemist for the Pennsylvania Geolopical Survey, and from 1881 until 1883 he wa.= instructor in analytical chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania. Later he be came assistant to his father, who held the chair of chemistry there. For awhile he was abroad, actine as private secretary and technical aid to Lord Kelvin, at the University of Glaszow. He also was technical aid to Dr. Joseph Henry, of the Smithsonian Institution, dur inp the Centennial ••■ this city. He was chemist for the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture from 1*97 to UK. and from 1300 to 1902 was the chemist for the Penn sylvania pharmaceutical examining board. He was the consulting chemist for the Pennsylvania Dairy and Food Commission. Professor Genth was a director of the "West Philadelphia Title and Trust Com pany, and a member of the Franklin In stitute, the George K. Meeker Analytical Chemistry Society, the American Chemical Society and the American Philosophical Society. His wife was Miss Miriam Dv Eois. HECTOR FABRE. Versailles, Sept. — Hector Fabre. Cana dian Commissioner General in France, died at his home here in the Rue Commerce to day. His wife was with him. He had been ill atnoe January, but insisted on keeping up his duties, goinc regularly to his office in Paris. The funeral will he held on September 5 from the Church of St. Fhilippe-du-Roule. in Paris. M Fabre's death caused a 'hock in of ficial circles here, where he had many friends. Throughout his vice of more than thirty year? be had a wide acrjuair* an ■-» with public m«n of France, and was highly esteemed both personally and as the official representative of Canada. M Fahro was an authority on questions af- Fectins; interpellations, and took a promi nent part in the negrotiat ions of the Franco- Canadian treaty. Hector Fabre was born in Montreal on August 9. ISTS4. He was engaajed in journal ism for a number of years, and in 1853 was an unsuccessful candidate for a seat in the House of Commons. He was called to the Senate in LBJS, and was appointed asrent for the Dominion government at Paris in B2 In l*C he was editor of •'I/Ordre," in Montreal. He edited ■T> i''a nadian." "■' Quebec in I*U. and "L'Ev£ne mont," of that city from 1867 to ISS2. He was made an officer of the Legion of Honor in I??*. WILLIAM T. GALEY. Philadelphia. Sept. 2.— William T. Gaiey. a well known manufacturer, was found dead in bed at his home here to-day. Heart disease i= supposed to have caused his death. Mr. Galey was born in England, coming to this country when a young man. He lived for a time In Brooklyn. He was a business associate of Charles Lord, of Tar rytown. v V . was president of the Aber foyle Manufacturing Company, and the Galey I Lord Manufacturing Company, of Chester. Perm. and was a partner In the firm of Lord. Gales <* Lord, of v«» York. COLONEL B. J. CRAWFORD. [ By Telegraph to Til* T 11 in» | Mansfield. Ohio. Sept. 2.— Colonel Benja min J. Crawford, of ny York and "': oasro. founder and president until five years aeo of the National Biscuit Company, fell dead while playing jrolf on the links of the Westbrook Country Club here to-day. Hardening of the arteries, from which he had suffered for some time, caused his death. He was playinj? alone, but friend" who saw him fall found him dead a few minutes later Colonel Crawford was -seven years old and served with distinction in the Civil War. In 1£73 he started a cracker factory here which developed into the Crawford & Taylor Company, the United States Bilking Company, and then the Xational Biscuit Company. He and Mrs. Crawford were here on a visit. THE REV. W. F. POTTER. ■ By T'lrjrranh to The Tribune ] Boston. Sept. 2.— The Rev. William Frank Potter, sixty-nine years old, a Unitarian clergyman, died at the Lafayette Hospital. Chelsea, to-day, after a lingering illness of several years. Mr. Potter had made his horn* In Revere since his retirement five rears ago. He was a native of Btocfcbrldsje. Mr. }.■■. was a member of the Winthrop Lodge of Odd Fellows. JIEWPORT HORSE SHOW TO DAY Good Entry List for Annual Affair- New York Well Represented. [Bt Telefcraph to The Tribune. 1 Newport, Sept. -2.— Everything is in readi ness for the fourteenth annual Newport horse show, which will open at the New port Casino to-morrow afternoon and con tinue on Monday and Tuesday. With a jrood entry list, the exhibition is <■■'' to be one of the best. The novice classes will, as usual, be a feature of the opening day. and the New port Fire Department will also hay»» a chance to-morrow, which has been a cus tom for several years now. The chief ex hibitor this year is •■ '"I to be Alfred r Vanderbilt. »ho will reach Newport to morrow. The New York exhibitors are also veil resented this year, with Hnpm'r Barrett, the Florham Stud Farm. Georpe. Watfon. ■ gcnaU Kenny, Mr. and Mrs. W. A McGibb^".. Mrs James R. McKay, l!-ron ■Rbein J. J Sharkey, Lehman Sirauss and Mrs. J S. Walsh- NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 3, 1910. PLANS OF THE SHUBERTS Will Direct More than Fifty Companies This Season. Lee and J. J. Shubcrt announced yester day that they would have more than fifty theatrical companies under their direction durinr the coming season. Among the actors under their manage ment will be Sothern and Marlowe in their former repertory and a new production of •"Macbeth": Mme. Nazimova in Ibsen's "Little Eyolf" and "'A Doll's House." Arthur Schnitzler's Th» Fairy Tale"' and Sudermann? "Johannisfeuer"; Maxine El liott in 'The Inferior Sex" and a new play in which she will open at her own theatre during- the holidays, and Mary Manneringr in "A Man's World." Mme. Bertha Kali h will also open her season under their management in a new American drama by Samuel Shipman. en titled The Woman of To-Day." Later in the year she will be seen in "Youth." trans lated from the German of Max Halbe by Herman Bernstein, and in "Sold." trans lated from the Russian of Georjre Eras to^• by Mr. Bernstein. Marietta OHy will be seen in a new play and in Henri Bern steins "The Whirlwind." in which she made her firs' English speaking appear ance last winter. William Faversham will return to New York for a preliminary season in "The World and His Wife" and in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's new play. "The Hou?e of Temperiy." John Mason will begin the season by going on tour for six months in "The Witching Hour." after which he will return to Men York to he seen in a new play by George Broadhurst entitled "The Price." Harry Conor and Mabel BarriPon will go on tour in "Lulu's Husband." which will also be presented by a second company. Cyril Scott will jjo on tour with the orig inal company in The Lottery Man." and three other companies have been organized to present this play. Florence Roberts, Theodore Roberts and Charles Richman are among- the .-tars who will appear in "Jim the Penman" for a limited road tour.' Mis." Roberts will then b«= starred in a new play by Edward Sheldon, entitled "The Murder." George Fawcett goes on tour in "The Great John Ganton" and a new play entitled "The Fisrhter." There will be three companies in Clyde Fitch's last play. "The City.' The original company willl be headed by Wilson Mel rose and Tully Marshall. Clyde Fitch's "The Blue Mouse" will go on tour with Grace Merritt and others Charles Cherry, last seen in "The Spit fire." will return to the Shubert manage ment in an entirely new play. Minnie Dupree will once more be a SbubeD star, appearing in "The Lady from Oklahoma." a new play ifcy Elizabeth Jordan, which will be presented for a run In New York. '■Boots and Saddles," a play of army life. by Eupenf Walter, will have an early pro duction, and later in the season, in con junction with Mr. Walter himself, hi- two latest play? will be produced. "The Assas sin," a psychologic problem, will come first ard will be followed by "The Trait Un speakable." a drama based on the "white, slave" traffic. "Th« Family." by R. H. Davis, in a new play of domestic life which will have an early presentation. 'Keeping Up Appearances." a new play by Butler Davenport, will also have an early opening on Broadway Th* musical attractions to be presented tiiis coming season under the direct man azement of the Shuberts will range from the revival of "The Mikado" to the latest thing in American musical comedy, and will also include American presentations of notable German and English successes. Fritzl Scheff will open the season with a brief tour in "The Mikado," and will then be seen in the new musical version of "Trilby," by Joseph Herbert, with music by Victor Herbert. Sam R»r".ard will appear n a now musi =. imedy by Mark Swan and Edea^ Smith, entitled "The Duke = Understudy." T c yrics are by Mr. Swan and Edward Madd»*n. and the music is by Ben Jerome and Louis A. Hirs^h. Lulu Glaser is to be si^r-pd in "The Girl and the Kaiser." adapted from ' ho v.«»nnese success, "Die FSrster Christl." .Tfimes T. Powers will rr B stime hi= tour in ■Havana." and early 'n January will be seen in a new musical 1 omedy entitled "Th' > Astrologer." Frank Paniels will go on tour in The Belie of B-'-ntany The Girl and the Drummer." a musical version of George Broadhurst'a "What Happened to Jones," with music by Au gustus Barrett, will be another musical at traction to hay» an early New York pre miere. A new Viennese operetta, entitled "The Barefoot Dancer."- and "The Glass blowers," the latest comic opera by John Philip Sousa. the libretto of which is by Leonard Li*>bi]ng. will be produced in No vember. "The Love Waltz" is another new musical comedy ■which will be se^n during the winter. Miss Ida Brooks Hunt will play the leading soprano role. "The Prince of Morocco." an Oriental opera, will be an other offering new to New York. "The Balkan Princess." the success at the Prince of Wales Theatre, London, will have Its premiere on Broadway in Novem ber and will be the starring vehicle for Miss Louise Gunning. Eddie Foy and Emma Carus will go on tour in "Up and Down Broadway" at the end of their pres ent engagement at the Casino. "Madame Troubadour." a Parisian vaudeville in three acts, will be seen parly in October. Bailey and Austin will be starred in "The Aviator GirL" Other musical pieces accepted for produc tion axp Madame Flirt." a Viennese suc cess: "Menld," a new Chinese '> P p r a. and "The Wash Girl NEW THEATRE'S NEW PLAN The East Side to Have Plays There at 10 to 50 Cents. William K. Vanderbilt and the other di rectors'of The New Theatre have arranged for a series of repertory plays to hr given at The New Theatre, at reduced prices, for the benefit of residents of the East Side and other sections of the city who do not car to pay Broadway prices for their en tertainment. A series of four plays will be given by the regular members of the company, be ginning with "The Blue Bird" on Monday night, October 3. This play win have its first performance on the opening of the second season, on September 26. Other plays from the repertory will be presented on Christman Eve. February 5 and March 13. The second play will be one of Shake speare's. The others have not yet been se lected. The prices to be charged are from 10 cents to 50 cents. Course tickets for the four performances will be sold for 40 cents to I- Tickets will be sold on the East Side and in other neighborhoods. in an < ff ort to reach directly those whom the directors desire shall profit by the experi ment. Arrangements will be made to de feat the ■peculators in case they should at tempt to secure ticket! A number of rep rrßeentative citizens of the East Side have been invited to meet Wlnthrop Ames, di rector, hi an effort to make the venture tiip success that It merits. "I am pleased that the arrangement could be made, and I trust that the experi ment may prove a success," said Mr. Ames last night "We would have b»cn glad to Inaugurate such a movement last s«ason h»d it been possible, but It was not. We row - see our way clear to make the depart ure, which Is in strict accord with the aims and purposes of the Institution As soon as (he rommlttee has been formed and the matter has been gone over !n detail, 1 nil! b< ; able •■ announce just how "■• tickets rra" be obtained, where and by n. horn. As tcr the plays- I can on!; 6a> that ' Aft riD gi\-e during this series th» begt in our rep ejtory " « When asked whether performances at from 10 to 50 cents could be made to pay. Mr Ames replied that they could not. He added that although the theatre would lose money other projects of a similar nature mierht be laun^hpd later THEATRICAL NOTES. Robert Man'ell and a picked company gave an outdoor performance of 'As You Like it" on the Deal Beach go!' links last night for the benefit of Bt Hary*s Roman Catholic Church at Deal Beaca "The Upstart," whl^h opened at Maxine Elliott s Theatre on Thursday night, will be withdrawn to-night. Marie p^ro began rehearsals yesterday in William Gillette's new corned: "The Elec tricit\ Jack Singpr. a well know-, producer of burlesnue productions, has offered $2.^00 earh for two burlesaues. each to be in two ar».= . and a similar nvsjnt for scores to a< company them. Mr. linger will use the librettos and scores, to be selected in com petition, for his Behman show *nd his Ser^nadcrs. YACHTSMEN IN MINSTREL SHOW Atlantic Clnb Members Sing and Dance at Sea Gate. Black faced millionaires, the merry nau tical minstrels of the Atlantic Yacht Club, twenty-eight of them, gave a rollicking show last night on the spar deck of the big clubhouse at Sea Gate Commodore Sweeny, with the skippers and crews of the racing .-raft, the landlubbers and their sweethearts and wives, sat on the brick quarterdeck under the stars and applauded. Herbert L. Jones was the Interlocutor The songs in thf opening medley were "Has Anybody Here Seen Sweeny?" "Whoop I* Up fc-r Atlantic, Boys," "Sail ing." "While Wings." "What's the Matter wit), Sweeny and a stein song. This was followed by songs by each of the eigi t end men and a quartet. The olio included "A Bunch of Rag." by Lester Reardon; a monologue by T. E. Hardenbergh, Jr.; "The Rollicking Rocking Chair Fleet." and a musical idyl, in one art. by Lamß Percl val Knight, entitled " Neath the Pom Pom Tree." The ?how was under the direction of Umh Roy Atwell. with Richard F. Weeks and Fred Roycrott as assistants. EARRYMORES WEDDING QUIET Takes Bride for Honeymoon Visit to Home of His Sister Ethei. M- and Mr=. John B. Barrymore are spending their honeymoon with Mr. and Mrs. Russell G. Colt at the latt^r's sum mer hom-. at Mamaroneclc N. V.. and the bridegroom is not allowing the fa<*t that he was married on Thursday to interfere with his appearance as the star in "The Fortune Hunter" at the Gaiety Theatre every even ing. The rpremony tookpla^e at St. Francis Xavier'S, in West 16th street, the officiating clergyman being Father Thomas S. Harlin. formerly of Boston. Among the few relatives and friends pres ent were Mr and Mrs. Russeil ■; Colt, the latter being known on the stage a.- Mi?.- Ethel Barrymore. Mrs. Sidney Harris, the mother of the bride, was also on iiami. and likewise the bride's grandmother, widow of Judge John R. Brady. Sidney Harris, the father of the bride, did not put in an appearance, although he recently arrived in this country trom Paris. Voting Mrs. Barr\ more returned at the beginning of the wpek from Murray Bay. •"anada. where she had been staying with friends since she visited the City Hali with her fiance to obtain a marriage license, on August 12. NO TRIP PLANNED, SAYS PEARY Explorer Here on Business— Worried at Death of His Dogs. Commander R F. Peary is in the city for a few days. He rame down yesterday from B«ele T«=land and will attend to some business before returning ■■I f? e \ splendidly." he said last night at thf Plaza. "I never had a better summer although it has been a quiet one. What worries me more than anything I Wave had happen to me this year is th«» death of mj dogs. I foolishly sent them to a deg show in Boston and they caught distemper. I have 'list eight of them. As long as they lived in the An- f i<- zone or even at my home, they were hardy and strong, but on. * let them get into *team hear and a different climate, they weaken and begin to he susceptible to ail sorts of aer.Tis." When some one asked the explorer if he contemplated any trips in the near future. he said: "I have absolutely no plans a present." A WEDDING IN LONDON. London. ?epr. 'I. -Helen, daughter of the late J Harvey Dunham, of New York. whs married yesterday at All Saints' • "hurch. Weybourne, Norfolk, to Holmes w T. Bpicer, the weii known London ilmii surgeon THE ISSUE IN THE STATE. ALMOST UNANIMOUS. From The Watertown Times If Republican newspapers correctly re flect public opinion in the Republican ranks the judgment against the "old guard" is almost unanimous. It has few defenders. and these are owned by itself. "NO BOS8ISM." THE CRT. From The Binghamton Republican The tariff issue has been crowded to the background before the flood of indignation against the "old guard" leaders Nearly afl the talk upstate now is against bossism. and the direct primaries issu*-. which was on the \ erge °f being shelved, is coming to the front again PRINCIPLES. NOT MEN. From The Jamestown Post. The choice of Mr. Sherman, under the circumstances, was a bad blunder, and the state committee should retrace its steps with Mr. Sherman's consent. While it is not of great consequence who shall be chairman, It is very important that the Progressive forces of the party should con trol this convention and make an explicit declaration for direct primaries. THE PEOPLE WON'T FORGET. From The Buffalo Express. Roosevelt is as uncompromisingly for di rect nominations as Hughes, and appar ently he is equally determined to keep up the fight until the reform has been accom plished. And with Roosevelt taking this ground, the most sanguine of the opposi tion must despair of being able to hold out till the people forget. They will never forget and they will never relent until a direct primaries law is in force. A PLAN OF CAMPAIGN. From The Albany Knickerbocker Press. Perhaps the delegates [to the state con vention] can b*» reached by letter as they are elected, but It would be easy to inter view them personally, and we believe there are enough of Colonel Roosevelt's friends so interested m the success of the battle for representative government that there would be no dlfficu.tv in getting men to call on the delegates and present forcibly and clearly the xide of the case from the viewpoint of President Taft. ex-President Roosevelt and Governor Hughes. BOUND ADVICE. From The Ontario County Times. The issue [hetween the "old guard" and the Progressives] should not be in doubt It will not be In doubt if the sentiment of the Republican voters or Ontario County is a. fair in<iex to that of the party masset throughout the state. . . The Repub lican party came into existence as an or ganization for the advancement of the highest ideals in humanity and govern ment, and it has founded Its splendid auc eesses at the polls upon achievements that cannot be paralleled in the re. ord of any other political organization Now, if it is to retain its prestige and continue to rep resent the Progressive force? of the state and country, it must stand for the public interests as against individual or corpora tion interests for popular primaries »s against boss rule, ami or honesty and ef ficiency In every public office. The "old guard ; will do wisely tf they recognl« this fact and surrender their personal ambi tions. CHILDREN ARE GRATEFUL Actions Speak Loud.r than Words in Showing Feelings. REVEAL AMUSING IGNORANCE Attendants at Fresh Air Homes Contribute Stories of Their Little Guests. "Not one told me he had enjoyed our hospitality immensely and that he could not rind words in which to express Ida ap preciation." " The words are taken from the bi-weekly report of an attendant at tie Tribune Fresh Air home at Ardsley. X. T.. and relate to the behavior at departure of the boys who ad been under his -charge at that place during their two weeks' outing. Bui the report continues: "Had they any sense of gratitude? Cer tainly if the stilted, formal expressions of convention are its only evidence, they had not: but if long, lingering looks at the de serteU swings; if eagerness shown to he near "teacher' for the last few momenta, to grasp his hand, to assure him they would write as soon as they got home, and ask if the* might come again next year— if these things betoken gratitude, then these little children were not lacking." Showing Their Appreciation. A little further on the report tells how the children, just before leaving, filed through the attendants' room to get the treasured bouquets which they were to take back to the city with them. Then follows a typically childish incident: "As each little fellow picked out hi? bou quet he hand?d me— shall I say a token of gratitude? It may cause a smile when I say that the token was either a stick of candy saved from the day before, a postal card or a marble. One little fellow, being minus candy, cards and marbles, dove into his bag and brought out three 'mosquito punks." which he sheepishly ?ave me." The laughable mistakes which their igno rance of the country and Its appurtenances causes the children to make are a peren nial source of amusement to the attend ants. One of the young women in charge at Tenafly, N. J., where Happy Land is. relates several such instances. "Yesterday morninc I pointed out two windmills whose wheels were turning quite rapidly, whereupon one little girl asked. 'Teacher, is that what makes it so coo] out here in the country "A few days late<- tve were passins a ear den in which there was a row of white bee hives under a canopy nt crape vines, when a ten-year-old maid exclaimed soberly, 'Teacher, look at rlie children's coffin?! "vVhat are they there for"' A Queer Sort of Puppy. "On another occasion, while sitting out in the grove, a Hiiid shouted. 'Oh, teacher. look quick and see the puppy running; on the fence!" The 'puppy' proved to be a very small chipmunk." Another girl— this one at the Shepherd Knapp Home. Litchfield, Conn.— lnsisted that the redness of her arms and face, which was In reality due to gunburn. was caused by the use of soap in washing. Evidently poap and she. were new friends— if friends at all. From the Eunice Home, down on Sandy Hook, comes the following illuminating in cident of a first nisht at the home: "One night after the lantern had been removed from the dormitory a firefly flew nasr the screen. A pair of bright eves spied it. and in a whisper the owner of them a?ked the girl in the next bed what it was. "A tire bug.' « as the answer. "Another child who had overheard the whispered conversation was immediately all excitement and piped up: O-o-oh, where is it . I never sawed one in my life!' "At this her older sister, who occupied a nearby bed. sleepily admonished the one who had never 'sawed' a 'fire bug' to 'keep still, ye did so; ye saw one git arrested down our street day before yesterday!" " ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. Millie Katz . $5 00 M. L.. Cuu.=. Stamford Conn . . 568 Mr*. James Powers Philip '"arsklll. NT I^OO Mr?. Anna M. Kin*. R.~i«epank. N. V... on "In memory of S. T. D." 10 00 "Please do not publish in The Tribune" (C. C. W. ) WOO West End Presbyterian Church. New- York. through Margaret Conover 3<5 'TO Mrs. Sarah E. Qolntard, rir»«fie ! d. Mass 8 00 Mr* Pa > son Merrill White Mountain?. N. H. B« Children of the Denewav Home, claver ark, V V 508 F. T. P. •> Oft Previously acknowled2<*<i 38.313 78 Total. Eeptember 2. 1010 $33,410 78 Contributions, preferably by check, money or express order, should be made payable to the order of the Tribune Fresh Air Fund and mailed to The Tribune, New York. TWO MEN UNDER TONS OF SAND Buried by Collapse of Overloaded Warehouse in Philadelphia. Fhiladeiprua. Sept 2— Two men are burie/i under tons of sand in the Delaware River a- Greenwich Point, this city, as a repul* of the collapse of a warehouse belonging to the Typert-Allen Fertilizer Works. The building, which was a two Htor' frame structure, was overloaded with sand. The bins on tne first floor had been filled and the two men were at work levelling the sand Without .v;irning the light structure .-rashed through the piling 4r.t'> the river. ( arryir.g rh<- two workmen with if THE WEATHER REPORT. Offlrial R^cnrd and Forerast. — Washington. ?ept. 2. — Showers again occurred during Frlday tn the southern and central pontons of the coun try. Disturbances have developed in the middle state? reaching from the Lake Superior r"*:on souihwestward to Texas. There is also a dis turbance developing ■wrest of the Rockies. The temperatures remain nearly stationary in all »ec tior.s. Scattered «hrnv»rß will probably continue in the Southern States and -he centra.l valleys, except that It will be mostly fair west of the Mississippi River. In the lower lake region and the North Atlantic States fair weather will prevail, followed by increasing cloudiness during Sunday. The changes in temperature will be Blight. The winds along the New England coast and middle Atlantic coast will be moderate variable, mostly easterly; south Atlantic coast, moderate variable; east Gulf coast, moderate variable, mostly southerly, with possibly squalls; west Gulf coast, moderate southerly, with possibly ■quails: on the lower lakes, derate east to southeast: upper lake?, moderate variable, shift ing to northwest. strainers departing Saturday for European ports will have moderate variable winds, mostly easterly, with partly overcast weather, to the Grand Banks. Forecast for Sperlal I^M'ailtim. — For Western New York and Western Pennsylvania, fair M day, probably beroming unsettled Sunday; mod •rate variable winds, mostly east to southeast. For New- Kncland. fair to-day and probably Sunda> : moderate variable winds. For Eastern New York. New Jersey and East ern Pennsylvania, fair to-Uay; Sunday, prob ably Increasing cloudiness, moderate variable winds. For - .... District of Columbia, partly cloudy to day an.l Sunday; moderate \ariahi» wind*. Official observations of United States weather bureaus takes at 8 p. m. yesterday follow: C'tty. Temperature Wentnrr. Albany M Cloudy Atlantic City •»♦> «lear Boston *' Clear Huffalo m cipar Chicago ■ ....... TP Cloudy >,"** Orleans "S Cloudy St. I>oul». • - . . TK > 'toady Washington *<■ Rain Local Official Rerord. — The following official record from the Weather Bureau shows the chanjff in the temperature for the last twenty? four h"'ir.«. in comparison with 'he corresponding dat» of last yeir: u>oo. into, j in<>!> i!»io 3 a. m ,-.4 01 • p. m. 7" n « d m '•- ••" Ip. m XT fiT gam.... ■ • S* « n p. m >v — 12 m «« 73*13 p. m «2 — 4 p. m . '" 73 : Highest temperature j-esterdaV. 7« degrees (at 2:30 p. M.i; lowest. V. (at 7 a. m.»; average, T'» average for wrrespoßdliit date last year. 92; average for corresponding data '**? thirty-three yeqrs, 70 Xjaetki forecast : Fisr to-day: moderate varlabl* '■•-...: probably Increasing- cloudirssss. SHORTAGE OF SERVANTS Employment Bureaus Have Sad Story for Housewives. BAN ON IRISH GIRLS Cook-Laundresses Complain of Hunger and Employers of Too Much Religion. Servant stir's should be ordered early. It promises to be. a hard winter on persons who must have them. Other yean have be«n" fraasfht ■ II anxieties to the nousewlfe caused by the scarcity of servant girls in New York '!•■•' Th« situation this year, however, promises to he more painful than ever. There may 1 c eno'iKh «;irls to go around, but mo^t of them will be Irish. Ttm i.« why there is uoina; to be trouble. It is declared now to be a tremendous stumbling^ block to all such negotiations— that a maid should be. of Irish pedigree.. New York women are sayinz. almost simultaneously. "No Irish need apply.'* As there are three time? as many Irish twirls as of all other nationalities open for oppor tunities to perform domestic service in this city, the "No Irish" postscript contains food for tho'iEPt to the woman of the house, the girl who Is tins excluded and the middle woman, who tries to operate an employment acency at a profit. . Servant Sirl3 are returning to town each day from vacations they have spent in Europe. Others are coming back, with and without employer-, from mountains and seashore. After I-abor Day zreat numbers of city homes will be opened again, and their owners, in many cases, will (?in the hunt for a variety of helpers to run them. There are always plenty of butlers and valets. It is always easy also to secure * housekeeper or a gUfeißesm But the com pound servant technically listed a.-= cook laundress will be more scarce than ever, and— unless the embargo on Irish applicants is lifted— will not he found in sufficient quantities to satisfy the demand. "Not Enough to Eat." The most universal complaint of cook laundresses and other maidservants in this city when they quit one place and apply to an employment agency for another is that they have not had enousrh to eat. Fifth avenue has felt the bjsdl cost of living, it is said, and one phase of -he ser vant problem was declared yesterday to be closely allied with the price of esr?s. "Housekeepers are not nearly jo much to blame for the practice of keeping lamb chops and eezs under lock and key as the woman of the house In most every case that is brought to our attention." said a well known authority yesterday. "Girls will not stay at a place where they cannot Ket enouyh to eat. One would not expect to hear of a famine in Fifth avenue, hut the fact remains that the women who pre side over such homes frequently portion out the most meagre fare for the girls who have been working hard while the housewife Slept. "It is coin? to be peculiarly hard pickin? for those who want servant airto this fall and winter. A determination to boycott the Irish Maid has taken a strong bold on the minds of fashionable women. The priests are largely to blame for this condi tion. Too much selfishness on the part of the fashionable women comes into it. too. "You see. It's like this: Irish servant Sirls are Catholics an a rule, and also as a rule they oversleep on Sunday mornnt? until it's too late for early mass. Belnaf religious and desirous of doing as the priests tell them, these girls are bound to go to the 7 or S o'clock mass, having: missed the first one. and the fashionable family saunters downstairs to find Its Sunday breakfast. If -he breakfast is dis covered it is late. It puts the household at sixes and sevens generally, and all be cause Mary and Bridget, and perhaps Mary Ann. are religiously inclined and too stubborn to control. Off to Church Early. "When the head of the house — we are speaking, of course-, of the mistress — re monstrates with the girls about the sad results to her family that followed their insistence on attending mass she does not always do so in dulcet tones. "The Irish are not inclined that way. either, when aroused, and— that hi about all for the time being. The Irish are pert and witty and they can't help it. and their tongues get them into a lot of trouble. If the priests would tell the girls not to -- : ••■> atend mass when with their employers in the country for the summer, for instance. it would save many a hot tear. But Irish girls scurry for early mass if the nearest church is five miles away — and something really must be said for the hungry em ployers in a case such as that." Asked what nationality was the most popular just now, the manager of on* of the large employment agencies that sup ply the. Fifth avenue circles with their servants promptly replied: "The Swedish girls carry all before them. They are cleanly, good cooks, quiet, re spectful—good servants. When the family is away and they are keeping house they keep it full of their friends and the-, see that the ice box Is well supplied for such occasions. They are good servants, but sly. They are quiet, but expensive. "English girls are very popular— very popular indeed. German girls simply hate to pay their office charges and they don't mix well with the Irish, although the Irish seem disposed to mix with them on the least provocation. They do that among themselves. "A customer of our« on Long Island has just joined the 'No Irish' brigade. He had nothing but Irish sen-ants until a week ago. He said they were fighting among them •elves all day long. We have just supplied him a Greek butler, a Scotch chambermaid and a Swedish cook. We haven't heard from him as yet. but we trust all is we::. It is a new combination for our firm Prefer Work in Stores. Girls will work In stores for small wages because of the liberty they can command after 6 p. m. rather than enter a home a3 a domestic assistant, the manager com plained, and then added : "I don't know, thougn. whether I blame them. Some women know how to treat servants, but the majority do not. It isn't pleasant, for instance, for a religious girl to work for a woman whose husband drinks, perhaps the woman drinks. "And then, again, some women do every thing for their servants and get not a bit of thanks. "It all gets back to the servant problem, and that i« mighty dull. Perhaps the solu tion will he found before perpetual motion, perhaps Japanese men servants will be the answer. I know several hom"s where such a servant is chambermaid, cook, hostler ami washwoman." FIGHTING 808 IN TOWN Admiral Inspects Hotel Kitchen and Talks About Aviation. Admiral Robley D. Evans anal in New York ovemlßht on hi« wag to Washing ton. He took a trip of Inspection through the kitchen of the Plaza and seemed much interested. ••Humph." ssi o&served; "looks Ilk* a ship's galley, only more spread out. Things are shipshape, too." The admiral has been readlns a l r *ii' deal lately about airships and aviation, but has not entirely made up his mtnd on the subject. "It* timw the biplane may come to mean something in warfare, but It will have to be in a much higher state of de velopment than at present." be said. MAYOR KEPT IN BY RAIN Cautioned Again3t Talking, He Reads Most of Day. St. James. [/•'i Island. Sept 1— The rain this morning kept Mayor Gaynor Indoors, but the storm passed about 11 o'clock and It was thought probable that he would be able to take an automobiT* ride this aXter noon. Soon after the weather cleared he came out on the porch of hla home and remained there a while. Mr Gaynor passes a great part of; •-% time in readinsr. Hi 3 --I?nn h*ve -«■; tloned him i-'i is* -i~_ hi* voice too ranch ar.d he refrains from talking at any length with the members of his family or the f* 1 * friends who have be?n allowed to -><» him. CAME HERE TO BE MARRIED Pittsburg Man Weds Indiana Woman at the Waldorf. Miss Florence E. Barrett, of Fort Wayrs*. Ind.. and George T. L M, of Pittsbur?. were married yesterday rr.ornln? at 11 o'clock, in the V.'aMorf-Astoria The Re . Dr. J. D. Watson, of No. '■■ West ajar street, performed the ceremorrv. Mr. ami Mrs. J. M. nett the father and the mother of, the bride, had been :it the Wal dorf-Astoria for several days, -with their dauzhter, and Mr. l^add came here yester day morning. He is a manaser for Hal Carnezie sts«l Corporation and is the son of Dr. Oor^ Trumbull '.ad.i. formerly professor of psy chology and philosophy at Yal*. p-afes.-*or Ladd la a widely known authority, and has been personally decorated by the Erspero of Japan. He ha? travelled in many coun tries and is the author of am snl works. Mr. and Mrs. L*dd sail for Europe this morning. FORM HORSE AID SOCIETY" Hope to Secure Humane Treatment by Means of Education. The Beat* of incorporation of Ota) Horse Aid Society, which has Tor iv ob ject the better treatment of sick, -ore and disabled horses and the education of driv ers and horse owners ---—.-« humans treatment of their animals, was approved, yesterday by Justice Brady, in the Supreme Court. The incorporators M Stella Ehrlich. "* No. 540 West 14Sth street; Josephine Red ding. 227 th street and Arlington avenue; William H. Powell, of No. 123 West WCa street: Dr. Sidney 3. r.raber. of No. 135 Baal 1713t street: Gertrude I Harrison, of No. 2020 Broadway; gene Christian. oc No. 43 Seventh avenue, and Christina 3. Foster, of No. a Bcekaaas Place. MARRIED. DfXH.Uf- PPICER — At W«vbcisn». Vr>rr.-»"ie. Enajland, on ?e P tetnt>-r 1. Helen Bl!»« dauuht-r of the '*•*■ i— -* -**-■'-- Dbsb ham nr<i Harriet Lathrop I ahaaa to w. T. Holmes cpicer. Xotlre« nt marriage* and death* mart be accompanied by full name -tod addreaa. DIED Banta. Jchn. Ker.-eir. Edward. Conner Cromwell M. Sisson, Eliaa H. Draoer. '..••■> 1 StrahJ. John. Kolbrook. Sl?ar H. ~ "~~ ~~~ In Memoriam. Germoni K»v. Philip. ; BANTA— September I. Joi-sn Ba^ta. *e«* 42. Lvin* in state. The FMn»r*l r-hur-^. 241^" ••* C3d st. iFrank E. Campbell Bulldi=*>. aaV'W-^ of funeral hereafter. CON'NBR — At Saratoga =?rlnss. septen^^r t. 1!MO. in Ma so- year. Cromwell M. Ta>--«- Funeral »-■■•« trim the Moravian Church. New ' — Sunday, 2 -«•> p. m. DRAPER— At Bedford. N. T.. August SI l^izzii Eldre<jjre. dauchter of the late Rev. •■"••'■>rf» B. and m i B. Draper. Funeral =-- a -arM m held- at the church of the ~-i-»-*z- — East -J>- st.. on Sarurriay. -»-• • m 3. ■ II a m. Interment at Woodlawn. KOLBROOK — Suddenly, by accident. August at, Edarar H. Holbrook. son of Benjamin F. and I the late Prodi OJ. Wool [m — ■ pri vate. Phifarielphia papers copy. ! KEXEELT — w»r*. M-; «2 rears, father of Charles and John. Born in Limerick. Ire land. WTO be buried Sunday. September 4. from his residence. No. 507 W«st I3th «t. i 3IS?ON— On Wednesday evening; turn ' 31. V>lO, at his r»a .--- s Tenafly. V J.. Silas He wit | ?l?soh. in his M year. Funeral *=- | vices Saturday. September .>. at 2 a m.. trom his late residence. Train leaves Brta depot. Jerser City, at 1:27 p m. STRAHL-— On September I. John ~trah:. c—r vices The Fun^ra! Church. No. 241 r«at ad st. ■--..■- Campb»!l Building', between Seventh and Eighth av»s. IN MEMORIAM. GERMOND- Sacred to th* rremory r-f the Rev. Philip il-rrHorrt: April 17. -■- September 3. I!**?. CEMETKRIES. THE VTOOVIAXTS CE3IETERT iis rssHfllt? acres«thl» by Bat ■ traam *"">r?i [Grand Central Station. *V»b*rer and '»-- -» I ..-■:• trollers and by carriage. Lots JTSO ap. | Telephone 4«." Grame fir Book at Views i or representative. Office. 20 East :~1 ?;.. !a*w T^rk City. rVDERT%REFW. _____ FRANK E. CAMPBELL. 241-3 Weal :- St I Chapels. Private Rooms. Pr: > • k.mbti!aaca« Tel, 1324 •" v --- ■»». MOXTTMENTS. TOHB«. bwad for "9 br»eltf«t. : MO'OrEVT*. Pre«breT-C«rrkeadall Csv MACPOIJECMS. 19* Broad-* »r. v T. SPECIAL NOTICES. __-____________________________________» TO THE EMPLOYER. Do you want desirable help quickly? SAVE TIME AND EXPENSE by ccn sultini? the tile of applications of sel-cted aspirants for positions of varous kinds which has just been installed at the Up town Office ->f THE NEW-YORK TRIBUNE. No. 1364 Broadway. Between 36th and 37th Streets. 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