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6 THE SUN, FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1916. I ill miDAV, MAY 0, 11)10. Entered at the I'mt om. e nt Sow vork as Second I'inM -M.il .Ma'ter, fiuhirlilliiui by .Mall, 1'irttpald, DAILY. Per Month MM DAILY. Per Year 'Ml SUWHAY. Per Mnnth 'ill SUNDAY. (In Citi.lclil). Per Month... .VI SUNDAY. I 'or Your ... . . . 2 .Ml DAILY AND KI XHAV, Per Year.... M .Ml DAILY AND SUNDAY. Per Month... 7.1 Kniti.iiiN llitrs. DAILY. Prr Mnnth I S-1 SUNDAY. Per Month M DAILY AND MLNDAY, Per Month... 1 DO THIS nVKSMNO SI'S', rer Month.... ft TUB K.VHNINH SIN, per Year.... 2 Ml TMK EVLNIM! sjt.'N(l'nreli-ti,,PerMo. 1 0.1 All cheek", money orders. Ac. to be BlaJe pontile to Tiik Mrs. Published dully, Including Sunday, by the Pan Printing and Publishing Association it ISO NaMau street. In the Hnrough of Man hattan, New York. President and Trcae urr. William C. Ilelrk. ISO Nassau street: Ylci-Pre'lrttnt. Klward P Mitchell. t..0 Nassau street! (Secretary, C. I. l.uxton. If." Naiiau atrtet. Iondon office. 40.4."! fleet street. Pirla nfflce, it Hue da la Mlehndlere. eft Rua dn Qtiatre Sepienihrr. Washington oflke. lllblis HiilMlng. Brookljn office, IOC, Uttng.lnii etreet. tor fritnrfi irho tnrnr tut iritS innnu terifti nnit Ulmtrotionn nr puMlrntion iris'i to Aare rtlrctfd tttttrtrit rtturnnt thry tnut in mil caara ttnd ttampt lor that purio-e. An Atlom of Accommodation. When neither of two men wnnts tn begin r flpht llirro Is nlvvtivs it pn. ble way out of It, nml Kciierally n graceful nml satisfactory way. This In it prltii'lil(! which up believe will be rot-UK nixed by evor.vbody as Incontrovertible. When nplthpr of tivn tuitions wants to brciik friendly rotations with the other Is the rase fllfToront ? What Would Hare Been Abraham Lincoln's Counsel? The heart of Hip world will Join with John Kkdmono In hoplnp. utul pleading Unit tbp course of tlin Itrlt Ish OoYprnnipnt rpgnrdlm: the great body of Irishmen rpccntly In armed reYolt may b shaped by other con siderations thai) those of n sternly punitive policy. At least three of the leaders brave men, but both tech nlcally and locally In treasonable ro. operation with the belligerent ene mies of thp State-have already pulil the extreme legal iicnnliy of their In fatuated courage. Kvon ns it niitttpr of political expediency It niity be doubted wliPthpr further execution either under mnrtlnl or rlvll process would mill nil lota In the repre.-slp effect of p.tiitnple. No ninn of com mon sense who hits Mtnlicil the his tory and Jll.stly valued the etiuses of IrlMi niitlonat illsconteui can mistake the certain consequences to the em pire's future of an attempt to admin ister retribution by wholesale. John Kkiimomi Is right: and fortu nate It will be for Itrltalu If his lo.val advlco Is taken nt this time. Governor Whitman's Dilemma. In lDlfi fioernor Vim.tN Jusil- fled the outrni;eous appropriations for State administration and maintenance on the ground that about SUi.imki.ihki of deficits from thp piecpiling ear must be met. The appropriations reached u totnl of ..'i9, l,.'!,tii;(.T7. This year the same appropriations, with no excuse of deficit to fall back on. attain the sum of ..'S,SV.!,47S.:u. This Is the amount authorized by the Legislature and carried In tli b'lis now awaltlnz Coventor Whitman's action. If the appropriations for 10ir-10 were 5."9,0i".rO because SIO.ihhi.ckhi tt debts had to be paid, what excuse can bo broueht forward t Justify the appropriations for IPUMT, when no such debts can be nlleced to exlt? It Hps In rjovernor Whitman's power to answer this question. Will he answer It In favor of the taxpay ers, or In the Interpsts of the Rppuh llcan muchlnp? The Nealert of Secretary McAdoo at Port of Spain. Great Rrltaln's apology to Sccrp tary of tht) Treasury William Cuius McAdoo for the fullurn of Sir C1i:orhe Rcthven l.K Hl'.NTE, !. .'. M. O., K. CS. M. G., C. M. tl.. Governor and Com mander In Chief of Trinidad nnd To bago, to return Secretary MrAnoo's call some time ago will no doubt Increase the exasperation of l'cru on account of the Callao.l.ima Incident. Will I'eru now press the demand for an apology by the l.'nlied States Gov ernment because Mr. MpAimhi and his party were not present at the dinner arranged in his honor by the states men and financiers of the Peruvian capital? For the Governor and Commander In Chief of Trinidad and Tobago It Is difficult to Invent any excuse. As a veteran colonial diplomat be knows the conventions. The llrst Governor of tho FIJI Islands, and Inter Gover nor of South Australia and President of Dominica, he must, he familiar with all the forms and nlernnccs of oill clal etiquette. Yet he allowed Secre tary McAnoo to sail away from Port of Spain olllclally unnoticed, In pre Renting thp apology of Great Ilrltain for this slight, which thp Secretary mast have felt keenly. Sir Or.cn, HPHiNO-ItK r. says nothing In exten uation of the conduct of the ruler of Trlnldml and Tobago. Thorn Is of course n reason, Tim Governor may hove been taking a siesta or a bath. His biography In the llrltNh "Who's Who" says under the head of recrea tions: "General." Here Is scope and range for the Imagination. It may have been a case of pleasure before business. The cynical will maintain that Great Britain apologized for the Trln ldml Incident to put tlin 1'nitcd Stales In a hole, Peru slill smarts from Hie blow lo her self-esteem which she as wtrt che received nt Lima, whither Secretary McAnoo flitted from Cnllan to explain that on account of the bubonic phiKue nt the port he must hurry bm-k without breaking bread at the I'nlon Club with his pacer hosts. We see no connection between the Callao.t.lma Incident and the Indig nity at I'ort tif Spain; and we believe that Ureal Itrllaln apologized because she Is solicitous to keep on (be sunny side of (be I'nlted States. The (inv entor nnd Commander In Chief of Trinidad and Tobago hadn't n leg to stand on. There was nothing to do but mnke the amend courteous In dtip course. Knrottraglnt; Statement! by Secre tary Lane. A recent compilation of data by Secretary Lank of the Department of the Interior concerning the Irrigation of land by Government works for agricultural purposes Is gratifying ami In some respects surprising. Secretary Lank takes note of the prevalent Impression that the recla mation projects have failed to reclaim more than it small percentage of tho Irrigable land It was asserted they would make productive by the appli cation of waler; an Impression pro duced by the frequent publication of reports of non-completion of dams, reservoirs and other works Involved. Commenting on this Mr. Lnk says: "It Is well to note the) fallacies In volved In the common u.e of these terms as applicable to larpe reclamation proj ects. Irrigation may henln with the complelloa of tlm llrst portion of the oaaal aystetn, while tho construction of the remainder may extend over a num tier of years and yet keep well In ad vance of settlement and development of the IrrlBahle lands." Kstlniates from time to time as tpc lamntion works have been started un der the provisions of the Newlands law have shown a total of l.rrJ4,7ol Irrigable acres which might be reached by canals designed as parts of the projects. Mr. Link's) data show that of this total more than half. 8."!,0(vJ acres, was Irrigated according to the lOlo reports. Hut the number of Irrigable acres Is largely Increased by new estimates made as the greater possibilities of some projects are recognized. "In many cases," says the Secre tary, "the project as a whole becomes a growing thing and Is not lo be com pared to a single definite piece of construction such ns an oillce build ing, but Is more like a town that In u sense may be regarded as never com plete." lie gives an estimate of land Irrigable when all the present proj ects are completed with the enlarged water distribution realized, which makes '.tt;!),'il1 acres as the total. '1'htis. the Yuma (Arizona and Cali fornia I project originally estimated as serving 7'.M 10 acres anil which Is already irrigating -T,S."7 acres will. as Its sl!illltles me now seen. Irri gate lT.-.YT acres. une more statement of conditions will st.i-(i to give a more hopeful view of the whole reclamation service. The Shoshone, Wjomlng. pr"J'"'t a orig inally estimated to .serve IL'.Sltl acres, it Is ,-,n per rent. Completed, jet it Is Irrigating l!."i,"r.1 acres, and the re vised estimate Is that It will Irrigate 1 10,;!''n acres. These official figures should dispel some tinhapp.v doubts. Citizenship by Ritual. When I'ncle Svi adopts Into his family a foreign born npprecintor of the much advertised advantages of American citizenship, he presents to the new factor In our problems a cer tificate enclosed In an envelope on which are printed the statutory clauses fixing penalties for counter feiting or fraudulently using such cer tificates. That bright and busy bud ding author Pkih v Mackayk, whose poetic muse has an appetite for oll lies, would have the new American treated more considerately. In the preface to "The New Citizenship," do scribed In Its .sub-title as "a civic ritual devised for places of public meeting In America," he says: "A wiser emphasis will take better acennnt of the p.ivi-hc-losry of oar new citizens by ro-osnlilng that to the (treat majority the hour of their naturalization Is a sacred hour, which calls on our part not first for a warnlnc airalnst their possible criminal tendencies but first for a welcome to the honest aspirations whtch they undoubtedly brlnn to quicken our own." To tit the solemn sweetness of the sacred hour nnd the psychology of the Polish pensant, the Sicilian tlltch dig ger, the German bartender, the new civic accession of whatever condi tion In life, Mr, Mackayk has com posed a masque. In which appear the symbolical personages Liberty, a man; America, n woman; the forty eight States, girl dancers; and the historical characters, Wasiunctov, .Ir.Ki'KusoN, Hamilton, Fiivnklin, the Signers of the Declaration, with Ahiuham Lincoln and Woomiow Wilson, IMirrty recites the Declara tion of Independence, "with resonant voice"; H'rrxAfnf'fnn, "with an old time dignity made direct and modern by tho ardor of his deep feeling," quotes seven pages of himself; "In loiiea of hoaielj em liest lll-es," TAlCiiUl declaims the Gettjsburg address, whereupon the Stales dance, and the citizens boldly essay "The Stnr Spangled llanner" nnd sing some su perior hymns of Mr, Mackayk'h com position. H'ooifroin Wihtm, "modern representative citizen," repeats IiIh "living message" delivered to new cltl zensat Philadelphia, .May lit, 101.": "''M.t.ow CiTURNR You have Just taken na oth of alle-jlnnce to the I'nlted States, (if nlletrlanro to whom? Of allerUnee to no one, unless It be Ood seeker lifter Whom, Inferential!)', it must corns to Amerlcal ; certainly not to those who temporarily represent this great (lovernment. You have taken an oath of allegiance to a great Ideal, to a rreat body of principles, to a great hope of the human rare." Thus consecrated to a great body of Ideals, principles and hopes and enlightened as to lis relationship to the national Administration, the as semblage sings a verse of "America" and disperses- brim full of one sub vnrlely of the Spirit of '1(5. Since It Is entirely safe from mis Identlllcatloti as dramn or literature, this truly remnrkable Invention must be regarded as n pure enterprise in political uplift. As n doctoral thesis In "social science" It would carry on the sheepskin "Inslgnln cum luude." If It could by any conceivable freak of chance reach the new citizens for whose culture It Is devised, what "honest aspiration" could It arouse In them except the commcnduhlc one to suppress aberrant poets? If the ad mirers of this sort of thinking had we calculate r,0W,.i voles apiece, they might elect a President and Con gress that would remove from the envelope that holds the certllicale of citizenship the harsh words of the stnttite and substitute therefor the sugared syllables of Mr. Mackyk and President Wilson In this ridicu lous "ritual." Soldier's Heart. A not un-ominoii ailment among men In Lngland who are Invalided from the front Is soldier's heart. To detine It would lie dlllicttlt. Dur ing our civil war a special hospital was opened In Philadelphia to study and treat the trouble. Hut In that day Instruments for testing the con dition of the heart wore primitive. Klectrlcity was not available at. all. Soldier's heart seems to have no direct relation to the "sealed heart" that knocked nt Macbeth's rib. The most heroic men often have soldier's heart. It Is In the nature of plijsical prostration intended with low spirits, the patient being unlit for duly. Sir Jami:s M.vcki.xz.ik, an authority timn cardiac ln-egulttrltles, .says that sol dier's heart Is not heart disease as the term Is commonly understood. The general tieutniont Is fresh air. light exercise, and congenial rceroa tlon. Cheerfulness I- a factor In the cure. Otllcers Invalided lionle rv covered when sent away to si and loaf. Sir .Iamks Mvcki nzii: saw- the linporttino of studying the cases of private soldlerx. and a .poetal hos pital has been opened for them nt llutni'Mead. The stall' Includes, be sides sir J.vmi.s. such well known medical men ns sir Willi wt Osur tind Sir CLtrionn Ai.i.iiptt. Some re markable Instruments are being iisd In the new hospital; for Instance, the clivtro cardiograph, "a piive of ap- lnrattis whoroliv photograph "f the electric wnves set by a heating heart can lie obtained"; the orthodiagraph, ti gift from the Itrltlsh Ited ''reus So cloly. by which the size of the heart Is r'vorded. and Mvkjn.d's Ink poly graph, which writes the Mory of the patient's heart and arteries from day to day. As It Is the business of the army siireeon, tn return an Ininlhl lo Ihe ""-, , --- -- - -- - rront as soon as up is pii,vionn.v 111, It Is; belleveil that the Hatnpstead Hospital by It- -Weill "f 'll11-'""- troversy . annol go on much longer with Ulld treatment will (llcken the cure lout demoralizing the whole service, audi and convalescence of soldiers who otherwise would be on the sick list Indefinitely. Propurtloniitely there must lie many more cases In the srent wnr than 111 the American coulllct between the States, for modern trench flirhtlnc with Its always deafenlnc roar nf artillery, menacing rattle of machine Cns. hnrllntf of bombs, wrecklnt: of earth defences, and enormous slatlch - trenches, since flesh nnd blood cannot stand the terrible ordeal for more than n day nr two nt a time, Many nf them at Inst Riiceutnh to euildler's heart. The 1. W. . HiimhiiK. As the political opinions and toea! philosophy lo which the industrial Workers of the World subscribe nre In every detail op"ised to ilio-e on which the Government of ihe I'nlted States rests, nnd ns their avowed object Is the destruction of that Gov ernment. It Is dlllleiilt lo understand why they si-ok 'Itlyip-hlp In thin country. Yetjnrse nimibers of them aslt to be nnttiralled, and Judge Pbtkr H. O'llovif. of Wllkesharre has felt It Incumbent on himself to refuse p:iiers to those whose appli cations have come lforo him. .Indue fVltoYi r. Is right in his opinion that these renovators nf so. elety lire unfit for citizenship, nnd hl altitude toward them N corns't : but why they bother the court Is n mystery. They denounce the system of covernmenl Ihnt protects private property, assail the processes by which protection Is souclil. and assault the administrators of the laws. They preach hatred of the ( "onsiltutlon, and foment violence against the laws; and jvt they co to the iinlurallzutloti coiirts, forswear nllesliinci lo all other Powers, uiiil present a ietltlon verllhsl hy two citizens who must swear that the petitioners have con tinuously thirlim live yours acted as jiersons of eood moral character, "at tached to the principles of Iho Consti tution nnd well disposed lo the good order and happiness of ihe same." This Is stiff swearing for even an Industrial Worker of the World; It would be an linpois-lhlo oath for an honest man holding the beliefs pro fessed by the members of this orenn Izntlon to take. The fact Is that the ... L n.. . I. n ern. I An1 "iiv,.- lm ' n 1 0 finfl . 11 flflA nr. iini.i v'li-iiiiiMi on'- no- ' in u - j ... i-. ......j..., , , ,, . ... ... . c....., t..- t...... , , n ou iiinonK our near on nnvs r or Mnttertnj; tne nervous syment or,,, nr.,,.h -,. ,..,.,, . , ' r.uss an i cerates, .Neither did he help t is true mat me Kaiser eng neered the - ' .'"' '.' ,; , ' , " "w"'" j the strongest man. Soldiers have to ! re' d 1 .si", ' ( 2ul SS.onTt. .I M "J", ,""'J "r!" I'T Tt h"n "l'"! V XrZl Klf kn f else bn .Lon nwnv In comnnnles from rhe .bvislid, gives a total of 1.S2-5.O00 mm. '?-" W !'"..': "'.,k ?. L. .". HlVkVngh-,,, nal Jf.,, ' I nnl. fl. Industrial Workers of the World ore Ignorant and stupid when they are not criminal and murderous, and their whole creed of reform Is a humbug, adopted to cloak the objects of their selllsh nnd treacherous lenders. Hooskvki.t must be convinced that HaiiNKs Is the same old Hill. Mr HirtttKt.t. first came Into notice as th author of u volume of whimsical es says c.illed "Obiter Dicta," which has been compared lo I.AMn's "Ella." From a tiktich of AL-ni'STlNK ttinREi.L. . , . . , .. . . i This In enough to mnke the shade of I Lamb take to drink. j ,ty, trained In the principles of froo " - - J institutions, not a doctrinaire of hit- For siiyhiir In n letter to n Tacoma , mnnlty. Tho institutions of autoe nevvspaper that GuottoE Wasiiinuton I racy, of militarism, of "frlghtfiilness." was a blasphemer, slaveholder and In veter.tlp drinker, one P.vt:t. II. Haitkii baa been found guilty under a State law of libelling tho memory of the Father of His Country. The maximum penalty for this crime In Washington Is one year In the county Jail, a flnn of $1,000 or both. Hy the same token Tiiackliiav may have been guilty of libelling nil of the Four Gkohuks, but he had his say. Queer State, Washing ton! Tho utillfters have It down. Con-slstenev somehow seems less of a ' attitude toward the Helglum crime Jewel than at some other time when J would have been as clearly and otll lt stands In the way of n detervlng , elally made known as was the attltud beiress accepting a $200,000 legacy of tho Itnllnr Government toward that once scorned. of Serbia, while Italy remained legally I neutral. Progreslves wrfo visited Ovster H.iv When the announcement of the sub on Wednesday snld that If they couldn't marine war made tho policy of mill Induce the Colonel to run for President j ''f' "'"""'V ""' , frlghtfulness n thev would take Hiram Johnson. Hut :llMCt 1,r,,nt "l,,m Property ami after scanning the Cillfornla primary l ,',vrj, . r1"''"" tTt M !,IP n,WV,r,r '.'f il returns the (Jovernm may refuse to 'resident like Hughe-, would have be taken " n,'tlon- not word", or nt leant ! words importing action so certainly Three die In Zeppelin wreck lo con real German secrets. .Vicspnper ir-irf. tlnr Heroism and fannticl.m nre maile of the same stuff. The steamship Tuscanla has Just landed seven hundred tons of Scotch whiskey In this city, sulllclent, expert statisticians assure us, for lS.J'iS.OOO highballs. There Is no demand for the stimulant In Great Britain. Peace hnth lt perils no less renowned than . war. Wa.v for Dr. Charlkr K. Pack, the,e neither wailed nor watched for head or tlw Hoston Health ScIkviI! i want of a policy to bp pursued. He "All this tommyi ot nlwut the germ , vor "p,m .fote,r' whatever tint danger In kissing." declares this ex- .lelectiible ninnse tone emlirnee lli. cellent and -ane gentleman and physl- rian. "Is mere -peculation and loes,,Mt trntglitness rulll r. more harm than good." Well said. sir. nf . ,.,iim... , ..ri.w.i,,!,. Put 'Mseculatlon" Is too mild, robbery is loe worn Pensnnhutst complains because it s kept awake nights by n frog chorus, llrck-ek-ek-ek. co-ax, co-ax Is mo notonous music. Heating the flog jsinds so that the aristocrats might I slumber undisturled helped put the peasants of France III the mood fur revolution. This Is a enous matter. - - The news that President Thomas of ltryn .Mawr has ..m-ii "indorsed" by the nlumn.p of the college Is cheering. Hot wb., b.-...ll Indorse the indoix- tnent" simply t'nileglate wars are never so cttled .Manv cases of megalomania nre checked, at least temporarily, when grntleineil address themselves to thp task of filling out income tax blanks. Clreiimstiinees I'niler Which Jnspphns .should Resign. ' rum tKt .V.i, I hrk U t"td e' I'ttrrdty it seems o lite H'orld that If Secre t,ir iMMil-s aMrtnjns are true, Hear Admiral I'lske ouht to be court 1 marPalled ,,t,, an end made of this per- , MM,,nt Insuboiditiattoti If Hiar Ad - inil fluke's statement Is true, then Mr. 1 Daniels ought not to le Secretary uf the Inrire tti.lt li.irlv nolltln. Ih :ill,oi,..l to enter Into the piancl the worse It will be fr.r t'e n,iv The thing Ins already tiecome a scatnl il, and more even than a scand-H f.., - It ha, penetrated, Into every element of the new naval pro- gramme and Is poisoning the Issue. Where Are (Jre.it Ilrltaln's Millions ill .Nnbllers? I Tothk Kniroa or Tut: so.v-Rlr- How jnany , nen ar. , there It, a "division" of th- llrllloh oemt-" Xte Inni.nlnn I. 1 that a division Is eoual to half a .'ontl - Where are the t.OflO.ftnn men wo have heard so mm h about ' It seerns to me Mr. Asqullh has let the cat out of the has. and Just tied the French feeling that Kngland Is not "pln1ng the game." At the same t me Mr Asqulth told rarllameilt that there were r..000,ono In the British arm and nav. Does, he ex o'e,.; innn nnn in iT, nVi-in t.!I".h " ooft ft'oo in the ,,m,. " '' J. M. Wim.ib. Hiiii.Ar,r.i.i.itA. M.iv . IllstlnrnUhed Ijillnl.t orrrrtnl. Tn ran llnimn nr Tiik Sfs ir- ,v VVanh- Inuton dfpat h Kfvilv Infnrms n Inter- ited' unliers thst ralnnel Him'stlciu Hnm'is went from New York to Washing- Inn, arrived n.ife's end -wmu tn l.sil New Tokk. Msy i K.muiit Irr. For the sake nf grammatical accu racy, I'nlonel Pome.tlca Doinu, If you please Donirstle Itrlirltlnn tn Hanlinry, To tiik HntTmi or Tur Si's Sir: I hae Instructed my fninll that I dn net wish lo tm shaved whlN 1 nm lsp, -'- T. lUMii'm. Conn, My i. Jinks Insnrs-M. Jinks vntrd c n In t scuttle, which he dlitn't like tn iln, "I'm coin' to find It hsrd," he r. "to irM mj point e lew As p ain a I would like II to th mlndi n" m home folks, Who cnlli them I'lllplnn a hunch n' hope. Ifsa mokr. "Hut If Ihry're tnoVieii nrt hnp-lni why should e lesve m bs? We'd oiiKhter te.uh 'em helttr, or to It seem, lo me To run eway and leave m to t along alone Wnulit Jeiipiirillte Ihe harveai from all the send we've enwn. "I'm sorry lint we've gut ein, hut we rn- not let oin go Until we'vn liouhl 'em lots o' thliiKs they reelly might lo know; Of how to run n mucin In the ntle way we do, Of how- lo untie Ihe manv vots to bark Iho rulln' few, "Of how to handle puhlli- funds In our own kerilrsM way. Of how to he a patriot and make the pub lic pay. We mum le. e h theni Tlllplnos what Amerl- 1.411. ahoillil knuu And when they're Jul like ti -I cui we'd better let 'fin fo " V. Josh. . men .xir. Asoiiim mid ran anient mar - . - -. - - -- -- ti,r ii f .Au inuA.i IF HUGHES WERE PRESIDENT Attempt to Forecast Ills Policies From What Is Known of Ills Qnnllttes. To the KhtTtmor Tun StiN--Slr: What are Justice Hughes's views on the questions of the next campaign, on tho. acts and omissions of the present Ad ministration, on tho policies of tho future? As tine of thoso who have followed his rnrcer I would start with the fact that ho Is nn American, with the In herited traditions of America; that he Is a son of educated parents of mod cram means, nni ot me privileged r)nKS. .. , u ,, ......... nf ,.,... erate means, not of the privileged must be abhorrent to him. His trained nnd analytical mind Is shown in nil his public acts. Such a mind would have seen nt once the bearing of the Ihiropean tragedy on American Institutions. Tho sudden prepared onslaught of mili tarist Germany on the Kuropenn de mocracies would have been under stood. Wp would have had at tho llrst a note of alarm, a. policy of prep aration, Instead of a Hole of quiescent ' neutrality, of 'watchful waiting." Our that no doubt ' f their meaning woul 1 huvp encouraged a hope of Immunity In the mind of Prussia. Her ships In our ports would have been the hos tage for her good behavior, the penalty for the first aggressive act. There would have been no Lusltnnla tragedy. F.verythlng In Hie public life of Hughes the lavv.ver ami Governor tends to support this view of his prob- i able attitude toward the Huropean i situation. Always kocnl analytical. mi w. ..t..... 1. 1.. I ",' V,,', " ..; ;.,:' ',, : ' : V.,: ....... i . ,,, appointments, he carried forward the. deflnltu iioIicI'm which he advocnteil j, ,,lrnRU fnlted Stiues, even wlie.i sacnflce of peison'il ( nrnbltloii to the public good I do not nleall.e Governor Hughes He may not have ,he breadth of vision which tolerates nme political evils in the hope of outing others, lie miy sei m narrow In h'.- concentr ition oti a particular reform lint. slz!ng imiIuiiih he hud to "buck no against" the his relative ne rlt in one Is more likely to be right right means to a right given main r i-i.m any ouier man lour public l.fe others lil.iv freely tie- . clare their position on the pibllc que-.- ' Hons of the dnv Hut what are their 1 declarations worth .' Is there nnv - thing that President Wilson has snld 1 on the platform or ' 1. 1.. i.i ..... in- pari -. Pledges or. for m-tance. !n his not.-s , .,,,; lo ,,,., 'v hl.,i nf ff)A,,' 'r ! (.eriiiaii- from wbbh after "ire- ,,,,,, lmllCi u,a.lf of ,t,,. ,tl..ranc, veais experiece we ian siv that I ni fnolhatdltf. of -hi., u-. h'n, little they even ,ipp-o'ini lely fori cast 111.' ' d"g bad to be mined ..vir to the Pc future acts.' . putimrt o.' Ilealt 1 for "lsir.it u. ' I submit to rntflderotion the view I l ll"' '' '" A- was at their ten- tha we can with more certainty fore-,.l,;r f"r ""rn ,ln' .wh7,' "c K,T . , ,., , , ,, ,, , him back, more dead than alive He cast the position of . us! Ice Hughes 01 ,, ,, Vp pIIIlK ,.oull1 ,,arrlv WiVlk, any public quctlcu by our knovve,, j haidly birK at all. and had a t.eklng of the man than We ian fore. .1st the,,ouh am distemper. When we were P sition which President W.lson. or obliged to turn him over to the 1'epart- even .Mr. Iteo.NCveit would take to- tneiit of Hiltli ne whs as sound and 1 morrow from all that thev have done I or said in the past. Assum.ng that , " '" M0 logical c.i"dld.lie. l - "r ungues can oe i-oiuiie.i upon .0 , tepreseut tne ti.olitlonnl Amrrlcin J viewpoint which Mr Hoot has voiced AS Hx-WlUsov 11kmo.'Iht. Nkw Yoiik, ' y t PORTSMOUTH CONFERENCE Mr. Itoospiell Helped Neither Side ,, ,, Meddling Offended Japan. 1 To tiik Kpiti 11 ny Tnv Si v s(r- The amount of nd-onformation tn respect rn I Itoosewitv ,e,ld!.-.g with the Potts- mm th !V-ire I i.nfeien s le.iltv wot-. I prising "An t'nhx phenated Trlend nf ,"''."'..:,:'m :,vv" 1,1 " 'r'" '," 1 Vo, V,V I U XA neipttiK tne lllS.,m ami japmesn ue.e. 1 Fn",V ln . ,l,P r. n!!""" ''.'- etlir three times, urging him to pay a war l Indemnity to Japan and stiffening the backs of the ,l.ii,n lebg.ites, lie) abandoned the Mtter and idvlsed them In eld their claim for Indemnity The! .Japanese delegates were afra d to go , hotne An uprising occurred In Japan,! 1 mobbed and an Ane-r .-an consulate was stoii-d J.i pa neso s, .Idlers were i tiled from Itussla to m. rawe and ipiell the ,apinc-e uisconien, While the conference w is pending the Anitlo-J ipani'se trv.itv of offensive and .lef. niive alliance was negotiated, mil tho vi tiel.an il of Japms ilaitn for iii'b tn- 'nit followed and was doubtless it i i- j tirvly to the making of that treatv. It I will be lemenibereit tint before tin tiled- tiling by Uooscvelt oc -ui led Japan via. feeling friendly lo us. but since then thero has not been the same Kind of frlcndlinos. KPMl'NP It. Dopoe. Nkw Yohk, May I. How the Herman. Got the llaiice. To Till Kiiitoii or Tur S"- Sir' I have Just finished reading "The After math of llattle, nr W.lh tho Ited I'ross1 In l-'rance" by lldward 1' 'I'oland, alt! American nllrs or ernerlll assistant, and In Ii L. the fnllnwlng interest lug para- graph : Lieutenant Kula told me that In II iBlum the) put their battcrv In a certain pol linn nnd alumni Imuieill.iteU the ilermnns 1 located 11. and a doen hi l's aine rlirht nn ' top nf them Thev nlllrk'v moved to nn- other pln.ee The next mnrnlnv hrluht and I early a dozen more ehe.lv I. in, led wllhlu on i hundrrd yards nf them Ths next inuriilnK ,l,ai a t, nnnlh.r i-i.tlpi' nf hlieltd ll?ht (ill ' the rnnse. One nf the in, u nolle, d a (ier man lying on the field sonio distance frnm them lino Ihouihl he e.iw- him move They lnvetlB ited htm. He w-.i. not deml nor wntinli-d, and uii'lerneath hlrn was a tele. p.l-r.C H" hi! I ''Ixe ll,r frtr llt... daye enrrecttng Ihe lire of hi. frlendi. Nnvv Yoiik, May 4 A. ('. Latin at the City College. To Tlir. KniTon or Tiik sex- .sr- A report about changes in the Latin re qiiltenientH nt City College Is likely lo cause muni mlsuudorstandiiig. Tho headline s;iS "Alls Degree In Three Years Without Latin Instead nf Plve " Ihe course for an arts degree at city College Is still four cnrs. Candidates for the arts degree who ruler without any Latin credit will be permitted to take a three year special (oui so covering the same amount of pioiind that Is ordinarily covered In five rars. Aktium, Nkw Yoiik. May 4. HlllIllI-l .II r fH'HUIts 1" ill .(IT IU JUll .III-, J"'irt IMIIIUI 'U lH-iJsitIHl t A N TI.IRISH EPIGRA M. Friends of llnjle O'ltillly and Ire land He-eat II. To tiik KniTon of Tut: Si'N Sir' t have read the letter of Paul West la which he tepeats a stale and ancient epigram tiling nt the Irish nnd other peoples from time to time: and you place the name of .lohn Hoyle O'ftellly Interrogatively nbove the letter. I ant profoundly lmpresed with tho Idea that Mr West never know O'ltellly, never met lilm and never spolte to him in all h s d.i.v. It would be worth while for him lo tell us, approximately, when, where and under what elrruins-tances this alleged conversation took place. I knew John Hoyle O'ltellly. without Inti macy. Itls biographer and clcmest friend for many 5 ears, Jeffrey Hoclie, was my dearest friend. I followed both In time to the presidency of the Papyrus Club of Huston, where the memory ot the poet was green nnd his outgivings were treasured; yet this Is the Ilrt time I have ever known this particularly acrid epigram to bo fathered on Hoyle O'ftellly, a man singularly sweet and M ron it of until, and utterly devoid of the blttcrncM nurh nn utterance predicate. I am tiot U!ipnd tn aoeine Mr. et of either premeditated slander or de - IIV.vPf,A rnUf.ltin, I Tlmrrt l n rerl ill n Phase of literary Immorality, of care - lew disregard for truth, or If you will, a species of literary absorption, which leads men to Imagine things nnd ue imagination too freely nnd vividly Tills Is done occasionally In defiance of tltnn ind place; nnd produces personal tnier- views with persons who arc long deid concerning events which pa.ed Into his tory yents before the Interviewer was born. Quite frequently It Is an amiable and harmless species of sinning; occa sionally It Is offensive nnd mem, as In tills case. Jesrrn Smith. Boston, May 3. To tiik KntToa or Till: sjt'N Sir: The words wh'ch Paul Went attributes to ,tohn Hoyle O'ltellly wc.e current long before the Penlan poet wns born. While misrepresentation of the living Is com mon enough nowadays. It lakes a low type of man to misrepresent the dead. This country was reared on revolution and no genuine American wll' feel In clined to Insult or bel.ttle Irish revo Int'nnl.l. n-l,n hnve nrnbnhle hllllded iw,.,., .V,. ti,,i. Vm - .,,;i The nttem , u form an insh repuVIc i'i i k. ,11 ,1,. B&natn'mw ...Jr'VhJrii.J.',.. The merlcan t eonle are Iri svmntftv ur rumim-ifi iiinr.iii-inifi re, mm mi' i. , misrepresentation as that Indulged In , .. . ...... . ,,,,.. ., n Tories of 'the Involution Is not it extinct Nkw Yoiik, May 3. II S. F"LKT. THE DOG THAT DIED. Was the S. the P, t. A. Iteslionslblc for I i... of Viile- LOSS OI late. TOTHE KptTonnrTiinSl s.Sir- Th s is tne t..ry nf a dog a l.ttle dog to tie sure, but with the stoutest heart In the world and the best friend-that n man or a woman ever had lie wns named 1 a.Hr .,. ureatcot colleee in America. ' Yale but that didn't help him much ie sentence, pels P ' A. Vale was playing 4n front lu-ht and adapt ' "f "''" 01! day with a ball .1 end on at v "'" h belonged to him. He was on a other mo o ! '"n"U ;,,m1 ,": "'Ween my sister s feet, in:,,, , lV,tJ U..,nllis, who eini to be created for the purpose of annoying animals, tried , to take the hall away from the dog and ! got a nip for lo. pam " well known In every or.e -.vth pii-n an nuTn-e ,11 Kiai iiiaiii-r in a in. . 1 ... , .,,. "' ;l "o.iar and ns l.vely and 111 telhgent a 1 ttN- fox terrier in ever IIV ei j Wp ,,, fop v.,,,rrmrv. ,o declared ; hl. M1rferlng fiom pneiimon. 1 and dl- tetnior. and we sent him to that most humane of Institution, the Pog and I'at Hn.p.tnl. over on Wet l-'lftv-thlrd street Thev did ever thing that any animal lner could dn for the poor little fellow, but he (,-d four !a. later, pro ililv blaming us to the ier lnt for the surTerng he had undergone I am not In the habit of writing to the newspapers, but I should feel that I was iintme tn the memory of tm dear little trlend If I did not let those wno love ilogs, as mtici a. I do know how he came to his end It would be much better for them to kill their own pits , than put them In the hands of the S. v '? Vluv. .C , - -. Harton Hkhr ,.., ...... . ,, , , , i Sneetilntlon a. to Results In Ireland. out of the war as Kngland conci rued Plr.t. there will be very little recruit- lug in Inland. S nl.y. It will reoutr s.n army In ! Itself to police Ireland. Tiddly, it m.iken war with Germany I Pourthly. It shows the Germans were ' i ga in right ! n g nigliig I rlsh il i-.s-.ati s f ac- , tloti with Kiisland. Hut Germany did not create the Irish ' revolt That ,n i.iused In forces In the I'.ngllsh H.iipiru dating back mam years True, Ihe revolt has been sup. pressed, but who will s.n that It will 1 not again bn ik out In mighty force at i a more opportui n t tne? Poor Sir linger I'asemeiit. nidile soul and heroic figure that he Is, upon his grave may et spilng forth the spirit that will bring to Ireland the liberty and fr edotu to which she nsplrts, and wllh which all true Americans sympathize, Ireland, our hearts are with you' Nkw Yohk, .M.iv I. Amkiiican. Mr. Se Vlauallrrs the Constitution. Vnu Me St'ltn'flrit Conn ,Tlf -tifierlier When Thotnas Se.-a nf siamferj win on I ' the elan In the .III ell., nf Hie Sipitnr ,'0,,rt et"dxy nfiernnnn, hrlng examined nnn, Uring examined " ,M"J""''"' "'.""u" r',.,!,'" ,'',,r regarding his ndvenlu.e. ' the vei.'ity of Virginia l- H, ,i -i'nlted state., he was aekel h Vllan snbwav V. s.,.,n .u i ..... i..... . - -,., p i; i I'luirch of llo-ten If he ever saw tin. stitiltlon nf the t nl',-,1 Statej. ' "0- ' Yi, iir ' "Well, what . If" No response ant Ion pauee. "Hniv many !ec hua It?" "Tortv -eight, " wn. the prompt re.ponve Tito Vimjt of rutting It. KnlckerAre jou striking because rare) gets more than ynu? Put No, because OI sit le than Cjney, 4 ietmrrdioea CampaiRn, First e voice of fervent sire.., Willi Ihe liiM.eitKil to Impri'Hs, i'r)lns in the w I lil e r n ss, Has to talk and talk and talk Thru awake the uleeplng dead. Heroes who have fought dnd tile t. Spirits who we thought were dead Have lo stalk and tn)k nnd stalk. Patriots of every grade, Housing from the efforts mada Man) thousand strong parade Have in milk and walk and waik Lastly, In familiar t)!e, rmllylng with pork the while, CnnKrem In Its rank and Tie list to balk sod balk and bulk McI-tspriou wuion. WHEN KIRBY DIED. Iterollertlons of Plnys and Players of the OM Ilonery. To THE KPITOn or TUB Kt'N Sir. The newsboys were always nn lintnl when Klrby was to perform the death art, nnd some had seen hlni Very often nnd did not care to see htm except In the death !eene, which was In the lnt net, nnd they would go to sleep and tell their chum lo be sure nnd wake them up "when Klrby died." When 1 wns a boy t went to the Old Hnwerv verv often when Thomas S. llnmbl'ln hail II, about tS.'.O. I h.ivo seen .1 W Lester (Lester Wallack), John Gilbert. J. W Wnllnek. Jr, .lames Dunn, Jack Wlnans, Mlrs Wcmyss, I'.d ward Kddy, C.oodall nnd a host of others. The pieces were "Three Guards- . men," "Four Musketeers," "Putnam the iron Son of '7S," "Wizard of the Wave," where a full rigged ship came on the . stage with J. It. Scott ns captain. In i "Putnam" W. Tl, Purr rode on horse- . bac up the steps from the stage to the wings. T. r,t i,nr sold peanuts and soused Pigs' feet, which the newsboys relished, ' . ... ... I enjoyed the net lie ana tne singing of .tame Dunn ; his "My Pretty .lane" 1 nlH -uonU There a Heart" were flno I . .1 .. ....I .. III.. nAf.,.'A tliM-a 1 v,rv ennil 0n Saturday nights ' ; t,ere ,.fo four or nve pieces on the pro-1 , Krnmme. nnd "J.iek Hheppard" wa the fnVorlte with the bovs. The prices of , ,mssnn : Pit , 1 2 cents : nrt tier boxes. ;f, r,.nts . .econd and third tiers. rt.n gallery, 12 cents. Jamrs II. MACPONornu. Hiiooki.tn, May 3 Owney lieo-rhpitan's Dace. Tn -rue t.nlTrtn nv Tup SlTV Sir- In 'the Itowerv I spent my boyhood and , enrlv manhood. ,Mv recollections do not go bick nnv further than the "TOs. but' me nowery nan rearneu ne opo.iy about that time. As Pnvld Curtis truly finy, t . Ihe ,)arafl, cround for the Hnt Side fine Incident eonie to my mind which Illustrates the character, the true char acter, or owney ceognegan. Keeper or the noted iiortlng resort at 10.1 How er.v . known as "The old llnti-- at IPene ' " '""''" " " throiiKli the tiioiougniaie and gre.u ,,n'"1 Outalds GeoBhegatis place two noted Itowery s"or""!; """' ,nhnny nuy ! V.mdewater. were watching the parade, i Al i,!4 'l"",lu'"1, V "tidewater mise,i his, . . , . . '" " ' . . . " o i. i ii- muni ui'i iu.il --.,v ....... , '''?' ,",h rn'lM O'-l'OPAn si pia and as Owrie y knew them he heartily in. When told of Vande- I welcomed them wnter s loss onney rapped upon uie oar I for order and the bark room full of , IA....1 u eolnb l.,...i.,.1lnlult. ..njua.l ,.m.k, ... ....... - 111, "Mil l-adles and gentlerren,' b-g.in Geo- ineg.u.. my menu i-nu xamievva er I,..,.. Ii.th lnt hi infeh nnit ,-li.iln. nml I ...... .... , want It returned If anybody present can "o"k 11 The three men tinned their backs on ,,;"'k room assemMage and engaged i,h ,, ,.ri..,., Geogheg.ui looked mound and on the end of the bur was the missing watch. Owney Oeochcgaii w a character. He once owned a saloon near the Gas H-ue on the K.ist S,,. nti.l bail a stand-' lug offer of $M0 to any of the brawnv worker. In the plant -,,o could stand' lef,,re him for four round. .V.me nf 'hem ever won the money although doen. tried Geo.'hegm ued to put horseshoe. In ht boxing glove-, and , that wa th secret of hi" prowe. ' Nkw Vor.it. M.iv 3 VrT. Actri'sses of Vpsleryear. Tn tiik Kiutor or Tiik sin ,ie- Por several weeks I have been greatly en I'Ving and lidding to mv stock of dti-j 11 in - s, rar'o.,!, the ). rghtful old tune Sfs' readers' recollections of the "It. werle thoroughfare Will not some chronbler of yesterdav till us lovers of , the other ibsr Howerv the store of Kate ' Flshfr's dashing aiid triumphant ridel down Hroadwnv on her white horse In , the Int.. 'ins, or was It some time In the earl ''Ifts- Is this once tinted pioneer nctre. ' 'x-aie ri"tier, still in mo land or the liv ing, or ni. mis granddame or the early 1 , ' k Pasd to "the bright tie... be.vond'"' If departed, when and where did her eventful life end Has Phnnv Louise Pucklngham passrd onward" 1 hnve seen nothing appear In the public print, for vear back regarding Panny (or Fannie Louise Huckltighnm s once remarkable ' ' " ' am worcie-ng ir s-.e . still living, and If m. where ''oth are dead, can nnv Siw reader '''11 me where their respective remains were nurleil vi" ohi-iatic snTO'T. .xirnioN, Vn., .May 3 " " - "The Only Heal Mareppa." T.. Tim nn.Tor. or T.tr. vs-S,r The ....1 . ,. ... ..... ....., rl. ii unie lias ine generously proportioned and nolehH. , Inch.nm ' ' ' 1 urK IT' HI'.oom v, May 3, I - - We Are Askeil to Hold T'p the .Mirror. i ! T'' Tl"' I-'" for. or 1 nr. Srv-flr: See, , now. what a unique and altogether , a'luurable newspaper Is Tiik SfN. In : uld olio tlud Mich an original expre.. , s,n" " "H euuoriai article entitled . "s.o,,mon iMns,., to Whom We owe oinethlli What other newsnaner lias the iH-i cernment to seize noon an Insnrnlili- iin isli'i phenomenon and make It sigultl-1 cant, with iniaglnatloii. with fancv. with, humor' Is there no humorist, no until of sen nnd eilu. aton. whose charming in, I hitlliant ei ,-. nr rli-ll , ne m. he ni. lowed free play In any other newspaper Mice Inside., that of Tiik Si-m' It H-eins not. Theicfore the thieo cents that wo spend in Hoston for Tub ,nr "f ,h'" Psc!n.iin I St'N Is money well spent I Ward's Islnnd, aj'plicd f -r Frirti:ntc It. GAixotir-c e.uc Lkxisoton, Mass. May 3. j The alms and objects of " I are the coni'erv ation of n To Tim ICniToti op Tiik Son Sir- j nnd the treatment of ti enteied upon ihe breakfast hour to.daylf'om jirrvous ,m, n In that peeved condition Hint we some- Among the dlreitot. ,t, tunes Hinl outsiives In at tl at se,tion the div (Inrnli,.- ,.- s,.. . i,....,. mv eves atli-'lite.i ' no.. r n ' , . iiii no- ,,,i, eiiii i-iii, I. i.,,im, , I meat 'of the matter 1 fell better, and! .soon toy chiiciih-i scrionslv dist in bed xtriiTTUT A v wjxrrc tvtitvV Tltv the ret of the familv. It was regular good old tune "Si .s stuff" Nkw Yoiik. May I T Total I he Phonngriiphle Itecoril for IMvnrce ('asps, , ,, , ToTin:I.PiTo.torTiii:SrN-..so- Since Ills, sin has polnle, out the new method of bteaking the news of elopement by sending to the paieiif of - ., .,- ,-,., ,, 1,1-oius of the song "Good-by everybody. I got in.irrlnl to-diiv" unit asks If It'u xw. possible thai some wa.v muld t'e found to cull music into play ,n a publldt) agent lor divorce" I tiiusi sugue.t thai ton old time song "Thev never speak as they pass by. ihourh they were lovhm man and wife," be mule on phono graphic recotds These could be sent out to the fl lends of the purling couple, and so emlunii'slng him ikes, so often made idiortly aflet- a divorce hy ,. meaning tail Ignorant aciiiaintance, could be iiv cried This musical w, il' to iv m . I nave re fericd wan popular in the rarlv vn. i im curious lo Know how the ,.i.e . of Ihnt da.v tn.nle Ihe wuds ' bv ' and "wife" ih,v inc. New Yoiik, May 4. T P. WHITMAN IS URGED TO SAVE $14,000,000 New York Pity r.ii,iiiiitP0 Asks (iovornor to Slush He. cent Apiii'oii'iiiiions. DlltKCT TAX OTHKltWlsK Ai.imnv, May 4.- FormilL - . Gov. Whitman to veto nearl 1 4.or n(" of teeent legislative appropriate--, f,p. Fi-vtant n I tt-rt lnvhine. , opened to-day a campaign to r. dn -. '..,.,,..-.,. , ,., , , 1 ; CWJ ur s o f he h c nlPr,M . 'V,, ,,P ,'c ''L , , ; ,."". "- ' ,."""V". '" ,,,,(1,1,1, , . Ill , f . ,( Al.n. . . ., . . " i ii, i in iiMMrrn oi uie .Mcr 1, n , , : j ' "'" . , '.,... ' .. l- - ' ism.i.-i riejil IIIHI i , ., n, ' "'"" lwfrn Kre',ll' 'X''1 d t ,, . '1'"" "'" "t"1" to the rei ir' t n '!'""'' ominilli e. which i-'.n.-.l i , '", " ''" a lax . pcunoncr ueciaieil that utile-., t,, (i , ii our u-iuui inu .(ppiopn.it, out i ., , .. would have to raise lo-:hrl i direct tax of nt least 1 1 i.0-' -ioo ' ' the next Legislature would b.. n ,,.,,', to Impose. "Unless the appropriation. ari- mt. ii.iii iniutni, wie .l'W Vljrlte 1 slated, "It Is evident that atiolhr- i rr State tax must be Inipai.-d b 1 , .,, t.eglslatuie. The total of Hi. rr ijr a- t uniun; yuur gria-nre 1 $51, ,2,i7S. This total ininp.ires u- a total of .!. 4!;i..H3 fie tin rr, f;,nfi ing !iiiiMopri.iiion mail, nt ,. view of your statement when), i . , Hpproptlatlons uvie bcn.g m.i i i j uus j..-.i,-;;i.i,i;i included ,ipp- ., , , for nearly i I'l.OOU.Qiji) to iin.v, .j, dellcleneies for the pi,.,.n ,,', - ,... - nil re.lfn nh uus years appiop. i.it .,i,s -., . , i ,..ry Bpproxu,..,t thus, f 1h. i ,t The committee took the p,.,n , . Whitman had alre.uU . ,?n! .', himself of the opmlon 'hat the I, , . .. iur,. apiiropnatioiw w.u. t,, . , '! 'l liru.-J I vlv llltll'lillP'l 11' Ifli ! " , '". n." l'PfuPn.tioii i. !-,;., u mi. iiuiiki'I coi.nreli. e i.i.' .1 e and compared hin le .- i- ie i, the api.topri.itlons a. n. illi e..F 'comparison sho.ved that ihe iii...,. , tlona were $:,0io;.0im; huuer "..i , (lovi-mur's recommend ti mi 'iip ......... ..... . ... . .. ( niuifu aisu ueciarea tllal tne i'pr lions for the rimtiititr , ..t state Government had iurael . " u n00 over 1115 and tha: Ihe i:.!', . .. .. - i ,.t. . .. f-.u"J.vu'j .re.iiei mill II. i- 1314, The pelilioners obje. ,! M ! e , prl.itloti of f I.901.2T2 in the up ,etause. as they po.tit. d out. the , Mn of WuSlt atlj I( , , 1 t 1 1 ,.v nl.i m.'.i ii. e l"f 0" ' ear uti the glound that there no supply bill In 111:. Tie. coxernor to veto th-' appi, Vi c tWi , for lt.a,fiauve oi.i.ti-' . t,,e I.egi.l.itUi e of last .,; , ,345.l),1 mor for tilla r;...:.. Leuislnturc of the ear bef n urged the veto of $3';3.f"'n for to coui.t treasurers for State unpaid t.ixts and of !55o.'mi r cultutal falr. Other specific Ve'oes reii,'-'i ' !3""iu" for omiiibii. repair pi -"Oil for inaliitalnlng ,-oimt. h -i 19n,iiu4 appropriated for nn purpoe and I "" fo- the tiance o t ,w n h el ,i ?. ,o W'h.tn-.iiti dtd no see e-. , to the suggest on, aside ft, in . I gardlng the state sinking fund. the surplus I. greater than the re, incut for the loming y.i' "If this can be done 1 am r. i do It.'' the Governor declared . - know, Attorney.Gener.il V. . car declired such a pro, e 1 ir. stltutional I think t rati be ' way and I shall do it if I ian GARBAGE PLANT TO BE CLEAN fiiiitrnrtorft lronitsp smten Islnint IbereMI lie .Nil (Idols. Gaffnev, Gabigdti ,". Van K" bale the mtiti,!' t with the .., , . ,, ,i , ,,,,, ... r , d.M o.s.il ;i.ant on Arthur K i isi,,,, a statement ' for the Ii stru Hop of reside" Itnrough of fti-hmond who ' po.etl the locition of the j , as a nulsaiue. i ti, eoniractor. say that th to erect a steel, stone and epi i , at ,i cost of about t2.r I'1'1 ''T'iir.'" I',":"1:.". ' ' lll.ll- S.. 1 olov-iirnt of from .tfift In .. ..... I'OHin. inai me OIHIU rseineni s .-ta'i Island from this plant nlnn w gate Jl.'oiO.OOft n ar In 'h inont to the residents of St,it, -,1 the contractor, say. "our HVetem for the redut' " r' gv bage Involves the most soro " rmc. ess, which Is now- denmt s'ra ed w ". the greatest success In the i i-'s f the cities of New. Hedfnrd. M. s"1 Ix). Angeles, t'al "I'nllkn Ihe Unrren Is ar-I ' dissolvent, arw emploved "t. s- . ' " eptacles under steam prep, r ! Mils nil odor, prevents th. from ents " , CONSERVE MENTAL HEALTH. , ' r"- w. I. Xnndcrblll, sr., Vinnn Ineorporntor. of Hi-i'. ,. ... -"U"'r"e -out t Ju-ti e ! P1'04-1 eetirday the m, " i r ..iiionai v oiiimu ii-e ior .m, "f l'"l"l iquate i condui nng business ,i i organisation. Dr A'.rf', 1 1 of mule! hilt. Sr. Smv.-oi ... f il,.. I- i ,.., !ii,... Pi....',i, ,,i via...,,,,, I Hi'it.o i.-o-i.... - ' ! Governor lleslgontev xin I ' . ' j lnvva ' I'lip siin'i." siiim, -ii. oi I A: hasv. May v p.i',. jtnilal nlgBr-.t'oll In to - - Whitman this aftcino'M -r , ' , desgnati- Mo " ,,,y The pio. I im.it ion . 1 1 . .., ,,er. bv .les'gt.it. Mix ' Allien,, n Indian da.v ft . ' - the (lesceii-lauts ni me tir vi mi inorl.il and honor of t 'i" f .and invito the attention '''' this S' ile of N'i w Yoik lo ' the eo, i.il Institutions ot t1 , and ispei.ally to the pr. sent , needs of the ,",noo ri si-rv i' ' now ii,.eiii In this State ' Ilrool.li o vlay Hare Mulll ' nurl Tin ijullv of the Hrimklv tr.ite are Iji favoi of ihe r-' ib of 1 night 1 ourt in tl at I 01 "i lepnll to fiat ett,,-t ui'l l-e C'i ef M i-l ll.lte M, A loo w n , e'v, I 'l, u,v , ononu Ml Ii I I' 'he ' I'shed o -i II! be lo ntiM ' Adaii, street in ilie Gn'is a' Il g. bo, a now used as i0urt. J