'-- , , f. tf . r; r n- . "t . V - -v ' 4 !. " . 1 r V W,' .! 4W "!Vj5T" ' EVW&"WiBLlQ? t Xtep '" V'ft tv. WK . 'iv. inkwft f"?fc tt- T r,i' rj It t .A .iR'E , . El rft- if )ftiettmUubtic Hcbijcr PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTtlUS Jt. It CUIITIH. PmtMnR.1T ChtHcR II. LiMlnKton. Vice President! nn C. Martin, Hecrelnry unit TreAaureri 'nuip a. uoiiina, John u. wiiuame, jonn j Bminrenn. Dircct6r EDITORIAL HOARD Cine II. K. CcnTH, Chairman PAVIQ R SMILEY . Editor JOHN C, MARTIN Oeneral Iluslnean Mitr. Publlahed dully nt Pt'nt.lc t.Ennrn rtulldlng;. Independence Squarp, Philadelphia Atwktio Citt rrem-Unlnn nulldlrg Nw Yoiik B4 Mollann Ave. Dbtsimt TOI Kord HuMdlnR Bt. Locia . . lOtlfl Ftillertnn HiilldlnK vniCAdO . I.1U2 Trtoitiir nunuinB NEWS Ill'ItEAUS WlMiixaTOH Hkhbap, N. H. Cor Pennylvanla Ave and 14th St Niw Yoiik tlmrvr . The Kim nuildlnc Sl'tlSl'IttPTlON R.VTFS The Kvinino Pfmio LKiniRit la aprved to uhacrlhra In Philadelphia nnd surroundlnj towns nt the rate of twelve (12) rente per week, payable tn the carrier By mall to points outside of Pht!ndlnnlh In the United Slates. C'nnadi, or l'nli; States possessions, postnire ff't fiflv l.vn eenta per month Six (111) dollars per yenr. pvble In advance ..... To all foreign countries one ill) dollir per monin HTInl Ki.tiRcrlher ulxhinr nd lrrss cnanited must sive old At well in tf nr Iress. DELL, JOOO WAI MJT KF.YTONK. MMN 300D ,. ', - --;, ' tne Presidential Campaign ICT A (litres all rommiin(Mtlons In Ernunn . r " iv!.'h.u? I'flvf. Indeptndcnct Swart. , A MOS IMNTHOT loathes processions. I lie )refers to walk magnificently Member of the Associated Press I I'v blmself. So does Senator I.a Fof TITE ASSOCIATE!) VltUSS ii '""" ." ' i'"!Us ll,nv, ,0 '"l ' s ow,i Mcisii-ff rtitlr,l tn Ihr ,,sr , l-ai a. le. band drum major and admiring republication of nil unci ilisiitchri crowd when the spirit moves him to a credited to it or iiof nthmriic crcilitnl iliiiiiuistriitioii on the lloor In Wnsli in thh paper, and also the local nrir ington. published therein. It is the most natural thing In the All MjiM o republication of special dispatches herein are ahn reserved. rhllldrlphll, Wf,tnr.dr. June 16. K9 A FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Thing on which the people expect the new mlmlnlstrntloii tu concen trate Its attention! The Delaware river bridge. A tlrjdoek bin enough to accommo date the largrst ships. .Deuflopmciit vf the rapid traiMtt ayj fern A convention hall. A buihlina or the Free Library. An Art Mvscum Enlargement of the vatcr supply. .Homes to accommodate the popula tion. BRYN MAWR UP TO DATE WOMICN with peculiar gifts have loug demonstrated their ability to man age large numbers of cmplojcs. but they have haif to solve their problems u.s they arose. There have been training schools for men in which the opnirtunity was offered to master what bail bon learned by others through hard experience. A spr -iul coure for women was of fered to students nt Itrn Mawr College during the war. for tin- reaxui that large numbers of women were going into war work and trained women were needed to supervise them. The announcement thnt John P Rockefeller, dr.. lias given SIOO.OOO for the endowment of n course in indus trial supervision and cmplnwiieiit man agement insures the perinaneiiie of tho course. Hut it does more than this, for It broadens the range of subjects in which instruction is offered nnd equips the college for trainiug women who plan to engage hi industrial as well as scho lastic work. Every one interested in the higher education of women and in the prepnin tlou of women for self-support will be grntitied that tins local institution 1ms seen fit to prepni'e itself to nuet the demand glowing out of the increase in the number of women who are planning independent industrial careers. HELPING McADOO -: Wc ORD comes from Frenih Lick Springs that the lender of Tam many I In 11 is conspiring with others to prevent the nomination of Mr. McAdoo in San Francisco. The Tammany lender seems to be tinnware that his opposition to a can didate is sure to win support for tha't candidate. There is a large section of the Democratic party which can be counted on tn oppose any thing which Tnmmnny favors and to lavor any tiling thnt Tammany opooses. When Tam many swung to Champ Chirk in the Baltimore convention Mr. P.ryan. who hnd been voting for Clark up to thnt moment, took the platform and de nounced Tanunnuy nnd its Wall street supporters and shifted his vote to Wilson. Mr. McAdoo, who lias been say ing that he is tint a candidate, may find himself demanded by the delegates in order that they mav once more rebuke Tammany Hall No one believes tlint ie would refuse the nomination and many believe th.it he is the man slated by the powers m control to be nnnieil when the turn comes to unite on one man. His liaines are bettered bv what is going mi at Thomas Tuggart - fa mous Indiana resort. THE WORLD'S OTHER SIDE rpiIOSF, who rummage aiming the - books of the hour nnd nsk bitterh concerning the whereabouts ,,f p, t need not go far for an answer nt tins time of the year. The pons aren't dmd of starvation or pining in attics for the want of publishers. They wiite ad Tertisemeuts for summer n sorts Thcv are fat and well fed. as the lUve a right to be. Free winds and i h.ijds. n.omis that sail penloiish i i jet do nut fall. far bills and gr. m. the pea. ,. of forests and open water t'e m.igic .( distant places these are things ,,f w !,(,., happv and well-paid ( r- WP1t,. in these times with iimities, enthusiasm thnt does not relate simple truth. They are, after all. nunc important than the things upon whbh human attention is ordinarily (oncentiati d They existed in the past for comfort and recompense They were before war nnd politics, nd they will remain urn hanged when poli tics Is foigott. n and the last wars are lost They are real and permanent. All the rest is in p.isSjg llight. WHEAT AND BREAD PRICES THE cessation nf federal iontn.1 of wheat and wheat product, throws the wheat nnd lonseipn utly the brtnd price situution back on the Inw of sup. ply nnd demand. This ligation menus. first of all, the passing of the govun ment guarantee of ,U' lid a biielnl for wheat, established during the war a a means nr stimulating production Few things bring dome more strongly to the average man the general increase in prices tnnn to consider the pic.ent and the war price of whent (ompnred to the days when people spoke of "dollar wheat" with bated breath and consul . red it a prlte beyond which the grain could never rise. The I'nited States Grain Corporation was one of the most beneficent and sue CMful Institutions established by the eovcrnment during tho war. Without It wheat would Hnve oarcd iar bpyond the rench of he average purse nnd there would have been unlimited speculation nnd corresponding hardship. Just whnt tho course of the when! mnrhet will he Is hard to predict until former market conditions are' estab lished and the relation of the libk supply to the demand Is known. Trad ing in futures may now he rcsuntedi but there are several important obstacles in the way. Chief iuiioiik Uicm' will be the dancer from the efforts 'if huge uncoil tlollpil deniliiRS by representatives of foreign countries or by unseriiui1ous big speculative inteiests. Jt was nee essnry for the best Interests of thT people to close the wheat pit during the war. Now It Is ngain to be opened; but It is up to thoo who control It to ee Hint it is never made a source of menace to tlie public. THF iqAiAWQ nc pm irinc i f',ul" nm' littl1' plv,('t n'"1 J,r- (!n I nt ISAIAI-lb Uh POLITICS I ,,, ls ,l)illK lis utlI10,t t0 )11Mk(, 1P ARE DONNING THEIR ROBES interests of the federated unions p.nrn- Third, Fourth, Fifth and Even Sixth Parties Can Do Useful Work In woild. therefore. Hint Mr. I'lnchot should be first over the line with plnns for a third-party campaign and that Mr. I.a Kollette should be his candidate for the presidency. The I'lnchot committee of forty -eight is ininle up for the most part of men ttlni like to walk by themselves. It will hold a comention in Chicago on ,JuJ 10 It is prepared to woo all the ills cmiMilnte. the dissiitistled and the dis illusioned. It will woo the farmer and Mr. (iompers, Mr. I'ornh ami Mr. .Inhhsnn. the suffrngists and the inde pendents generally, the iinti-McAdoo licmocuits ami the nntl-IInrdiug lie publn ntis. Of Mr. I'indiot it may be said that he has slight regard for Mr. Wilson's party, little belief in the New Free dom. When the news of Harding's nomination came from Chicago he. Mr. I'inchot. moaned aloud and called for the tnohllmitioii of all unhappy voters, old nnd new. Now. a great m my of us are dis contented nnd sou f us are unhappy nbout a number of things, but we aren't Kiting to walk with Mr. l'inchot's nun. niittee of fni ty -eight. A pnrade of the old-fashioned sort which the old parties hold once hi cery four years has one supreme advantage. It gets .somewhere. It goes in a stmiglit line. Hlvnl demonstrations nunc always m circles. A third party, .if ii w actually organ ized, will have mnl. The single tnvrs nre already biisv with plans for a fourth party, and thin hae decided that Itnind Wbitlock must lie their presidential candidate nnd that Mrs Carrie Chapman Cntt will be houoied with their nomination for the vice presi dency. Mrs. Cntt lias mute luiiius t linn some of the men who have gone into the pcrpctunl political twilight of second plai e in Washington. It i- comforting tn know that she couldn't be elected hi cause she is of more use to the coun try as ii critic and innimcntutor than she (mild be as uu assistant president under a Whitlock single-tax adminis tration. The Senate, too. is very sensitive about some things. Jt might not like to he ruled and callid to attention by a woman. Fancy Mrs. Catt in the role of presiding officer ordering Mr. Lodge to sit (low n ' The fouilh party will not go far. Nor will the tilth party or the sixth. I'm there is no reason why all of them should not be sincerely wel omed or why there shouldn't be chei i for a seventh pnrty. an i ighth or a ninth. Facb will be in some wav animated by the energy, the enthusiasm and the sincerity of virile Humilities. Fen cut voices will speak for them. Men like Lincoln Stef feiis and white h.i I.iinoln been nil these mouths'' will cry out with one crowd or the otlnr. They will do a very teal sitviie to their countrymen bi cause they will keep the older fash ioned politiu.ius key id up and on their toes. The Isaiahs of politics, and there are groups of thein in eory national cam paign, ate extremely inipoitnnt in their way. Tiny stand fiercely aside to chal lenge and loiideinu They utter threats and dreadful prupliis-ies. They bawl out the nm egi-m-i nte and rend their garni' nt- Inaiise this is not n perfect world. These cners out iii the wilderness Lax the one immeasurable advantage thnt If huig- to the hopeless. They luiw in thing to lose, Speaking ns they do for siiii'l and exclusive groups, tlie ..in afford to he explicit, frank and i v en reikltss. They hnve no rosponsi l.ililies, no real cause to endanger, no tiibt to win. The imn who bear the real rcspousi luiiiies, in olhi e mil out of it, have to speak and think for u whole vast coun try that has many miiids and mam concerns nnd an endless -iriety of per ll xities Thev are the men who haw to Know the inclining of etiategy nnd decint prudem e nnd the Uses of spirit unl restraint. The i lino mi the outside has all tin odds In his fiiMip. He doesn't have t, make hi- promises good. The man who i nrrii s the burden knows thai if he fails gnat hopes, great plans and gnat issues fail with him. Kvcry President in our history, from Washington to WiNon. learned in some bittemis. n,,. truth uf this rule. I'olitii iaus of experience who ha. ti.eir own ends to serve darn all t ,i. by ob.ervatioii rather than by th.- . '. perience which they are too i,iit,.. to ri.k. That is why you neur ti, .ni.oned warriors in pnrtie. m, I, a. the Pituhot lomnuttee is piipniiug io m g.inize."" Ardently Piiu hot ba. wooul l'.inli. And ally he has worn d Johnson an.! ardently he is wooing Mr. i.ompirs, A tliird, fourth, fifth or sixth party may go fishing for Mr. Hrynn In fore we nre ninny weeks odd r. And, though Mr. Hrynn is dissatisfied and though, without knowing it, he is one ,,f the i.hle.f mix, t,i tlio f'niti.il 0...1.. t never parades by himself. N.'ither'does Ilorih nor .lohnson. These men know that nnv oiip can form n dan thnt any one inn KPt n following if he is content to .peak Io a small group nbout its own exi 'usive concerns anil forget the i,.t of the voting public. To think in national terms is not nn easy business. j-Vw people attempt it. Harding will be called ultra -conservative and the nomi neo of tho Democrats will be denounced as: n reactionary at tho iisscmblages"V)f the specially organized nnd vrtrlous minded minorities. Yet if Bornli or .loliuson. lMnchot or Steffens or any other of the amateur Isntnhs were sud denly to be made the candidate of one of the renllj representative parties he would Instantly and automatically find himself in the stnte of mind tiiat Is called conceivntlve. i The reason for this is simple. The countrj Is, In the larger way, conserva tive. It is Interesting always to observe tlint these minor groups which Insist that they have found ultimate wisdom ire neer nble to agree among them selves. The slnglo'taxers will swear li) one rule in the present campaign, u nd the riiunb IMnn fojk will swear Just as ardently by another. The farm ers are concerned with the (Imiiices of mount I'itichnt would lop off all the old heads in th" Republican party and look for the millennium to arrive )ike n Ihisli of glorious lightning. The suffrn gists. to whom some strong appeals will be made b the guerrilla leaders, are thinking chiefly of the vote. If one of these independent groups is right in its general views, then all the others are wrong. Anil if cither ciowd elei ted the President of its choice what would uecome oi tne rest of the peo le? The fni t iv that the experienced guer rilla leaders desire only to harass and wt.ny the mote powerful among their opponents. Their nim Is to contribute salt and seasoning to the political phi losophy of the I'nitcd Stntes. Tliev do tliis. and do it well. There Is no tlieorx of mod ru politics that lias not nunc gliiumi.' of light in it, nnd as campaign follow- liiminigu the o'der parties ab sorb ,i I ti'e ot new wisdom here and a little ,lieie. nnd in the process neiitiali.e elements that in the raw arc dangerous or d( uuly. (iompers. Iloinli, .Johnson nnd llrynii will stay in the big piocesslons. So will I.a Follelte They know .that they will move thereby They have something to gain.. The lmiu who is bis own parade is the one who. for one reason or nu mber, is willing to lose nnd lose every thing. The old patties know that it "i casicr to get into a mess than to get out of it. The new parties don't. And they cannot understand why the old parties prefer to go slowly about all tii.r.gs. SENATE AND PRESIDENCY HOSTILK critiis hnc been say ing that the nomination of Mr. Hard ing was brought about by u group of senators who wished to lift the Senate into u position of dominance in the gov ernment. The evident c. howewr. does not sup port the cliaige. Ii H'sts upon' the fact that Mr. Hurdmg is a member of the Senate and upon his support by certain Irlendly colleagiiis. The situation is interesting, not lie cause of tiny effort of the senntors to magnify tiieir office, but because it has lifted the hoodoo which for vears has prevented the nomination of nnv member of the Senate for the presidency. Conventions hae been in the habit of nominating governors or members of the House of Representatives or former senntors. The nearest pat'allel to the nomination of Harding occurred in 1SMI. when Cnrfield was named. He was n member of the House of Representu tiw's. but a few months before the ctm M'lition met he had been elected to the Senate to take his seat in Issl. He was nominnted bemuse tl (invention was unable to agree on any one else. Fight years later ISciijnmin Harrison was nominated, but he bad been out of the Senate for more than a year before the convention met. Cleveland neer had any legislative experience. Neither hud Taft nor Wilson. Ho rt had -orved two teiius in the New York I.egislatute ttfuity years define he wn eleited to th- piosijcncy. M, Kinley was a meinbtr of the House of Hepre sentntiw's for w,its, but it was after he had be, n governor of Ohio thnt he was nominated. Hayes served one term in the II, us. but he was prmnoti d from the gowrn. is,i,7pf Ohio to the White House. Hm han. in and Pierce and Van Hureii I a. I I., en in the Senate, but it was vevctal years before thev became Prcsidtnt And Lincoln, who had served in the Hoiis,.. attracted national attention in his unsiic(ossful campaign for the Senate against Stephen A. Dougla. Hut in n cry convention for years ni live mender. f the Senate hnve' been camliilnte. fr the nomination, and they hao been turned down for men who .eemed to 1... more available. This has happin. d with .nd, regularity that the inifii'e.sioii i,,M btconie general that it was imp,,., ,,,. t nominate a senator '' '' f Senator Harding i. proof "''" I'" !"is I n skillful enough to avoid the political antagonisms which have iestp... t,,. chances of success of tl... is. ten, r, , , ,), ,,( MV(, soll(jir the nomination lie has demon. trotd 1 .s adilitv to work with other men without mnking enemies of them. Tin', kirn ,,f aliilitv is what luis been n.eib.l in the White House for the hist s wti Mars, nnd the luck of It is what till. )!' llto.I action on tonne imn..... 'tint matt, is, yt tbe Detnocnits are nlr. a. h ' charging" thut Mr. Harding woul.) liave a working agreement with , the Semite, a, though that were n hciu l mis offense Thev are forgetting that .iii'ir expi riment with n White House iiuio. ra.y has not been brilliantly suc- . ci... fill. ' u m a lid, Senator lllble Names In Harding's middle the bi(i House n a in e, comes from . tbe Bible. Which mind, one that most of the President, hme dad Bibb, names. In fuel tl....... In ve b. .11 onlv ten with mime, not tiikm from Holy Writ. The two .Aidiu... . nnd T ler weie named John Miidl.on. Monroe. Polk. Biiehnnnti ami I (lot-field were named .fames, Jni kson , and Johnson were Andrew. Cleveland wns Stephen. Harrison uns Hen in,,,,.. and Wilson i. Thomas. Cumuli. a. the man who trained Paul, and he must hno been n man of considerable .,l,;i,',, If pieced, nt counts, W. (inmaliel Hani Ing has a nretly good chance of cirrr. ing liis Bible name into tbe White House, A paving contractor Dark Days has been barred from for Contractors further bid. ling on city woik hi-cau.e he fniled to keep in repair some of the uiement he put down. Otions are getting such tpieer notions thnt tir.t thing we know it won't pay n contractor to have any thing to do with politics Note Before growing culled, d't the fact be noted that tliis particular con tractor is in Kansas City. In the Political Menagcrio Pussyfooters are for ever using weasel words, doggone it ! yt, -A CONVENTION AFTERMATH i Pennsylvania's Part In the Na tlonal Gathering Tho Story of Her Fealty to Sprout A Vain Search for a Flaw In Her Armor ny OKOuVin NOX rfrvOAlN TIII3 part that Pennsylvania and Oov ernor Sproul played In the Repub lican Nntlonnl Convention Is now his tory. Hut It Is mighty interesting history. There was n vast amount 4tf criticism of Pennsylvania and her course inithe lust two convention dnys. None of it was justified. It came from lenders V)f delegations who were fighting for n lost candidate and they knew it. They were angry, disappointed nnd disgruntled because Pennsylvania did not smash her line and destroy her chances In n vain effort to pnt their man to tiie front when tlyy hud no chnncc of success. GKNKUAL LEONARD WOOD was the popular favorite for the nomi nation. Judged by gallery sentiment. The Wood people were the most bitter critics of Pennsylvania. If Pennsylvania had turned In for I Wood on the fourth ballot, when he was ' leading the ticm, there would have been no need for nine tmllots," said nn nr dent Wood follower. Anil that was the sentiment. I dis coxcred. that generally prevailed in the Wood camp. Hut it wns an erroneous one. If Pennsylvania, at any time before her delegation broke up on the ulnth ballot, had attempted to swing her vote to any particular candidate she would ,mXl' dissipated her strength and gained nothing dut the derision of the practical politicians, tne iieiiuncintion of every other 1 iinilidiite and tho merited charge that io ernor Sproul's interests were in the hands of n lot of nmnteurs. The combination opposed to Wood was so powerful nnd teniicions that Pi niisyhaiiia tould not hnve altered the 1 cult at 11 in stage. Besides, only u fraction of the Pen'n syhimia delegation were for Wood: the test would have been divided up among other candidates, BFCAI'SF Pennsylvania declined to desert Governor Sproul and sacri fice herself upon the nltar of some other and, as would hnve been demonstrated, unsuccessful candidate, the charge wns once or twim made that the Governor's interests were mismanaged. Nothing is further from the truth. The fiet is that Governor Sproul rnn net k and neck with Senator Hardingiis the final choice in the now famous mid night confcii nee nt the Blnckstone oji Friday, up Io n certain point. Only one mistake was made, mid it oc. lined ut this point. As to the chnr m ter of that mistake, not more than .'hi If 11 dozen men nre aware of it, and it is for them to disclose just whnt it was. Thoe 111 the Blnckstone inidiiiifbt, con f.ience were nearly all personnl friends ami sinatorial associates of Senator Hauling. They knew Governor Sproul personally but not Intimately. That fact had a potent inlluenee upon their final decision. Moreover, It was iiigued that Untiling had been con spicuous 111 the convention of 11)1 L' nnd was nine widely known over n greater poitimi of the country than Sproul. this may nine been a specious argu ment, dut it carried weight. It wus admitted that Sproul was a perfectly safe man. big and upstanding, nnd the acknowledged leader after the "Big Four." as originally mentioned, weie out of the way. But the senatorial junta preferred one of their own colleagues to any out s.dcr. Tims the die was cast for Hard ing. TVFN nfter a decision had been -' tea. lied the combination was doubt ful of l heir ability to nominate Hard ing. Some one of the number, or some one delegated to do the work, staged the final piny. It was nuess.iry for sonie'state with u good-sized dt legation to lend the break to Hauling. Kansas was .elected as the scape goat. It had twenty votes, seven more than Connecticut, which led the bieak from Low den. The bnit of the i, .. pie.ideiitinl nom ination ou the Harding ticket for Gov ernor Allen was d.ingdd before the eyes of the id legation. It wus snapped 'up instantly. Allen was popular. The delegation dad consistently d. In 1 ten votes for Wood. Wood wo. out of it. Lowden was on tlie sbding board. Wlint more natuial tliiui that Kansas, the great Middle West, should have the vice pres idency? But Cooli.lge had been slated even while the .Inker over Allen was being coiisiiiiiuiati d. Kansas bioke away with n great roar and paiiule ,,r Hauling ns agreed to. 1'hen the manipulators gave her tlie grand laugh uud turned in for Coolidge. TpROM beginning to end the friends of -- the other candidates, excepting those of Hauling and Poindexter mid nieiii I'r.oflhi .m oik delegation, were dipt diis ...nching for some peg upon whdh to dang a i barge against Sproul. Hoy found what they imagined to be one in the .. ... ti.u, of General Atter diii . Mei pi i. li nt of the Pennsylvania Itaili.iud. n- liii.oii ofliier of the Penn sylvania del. giitnm. 'Corpmat, inlluenee:" was the howl of the Johnson m. u and the Wood and Low. I. n fo'loweis; the former partic ularly . It wn- the lutib of the drowning at the pioeihial straw. It wns the visible eiib nee of desperation. Tde Johnson following disregarded the heart -dieaking efforts of tlie Cnli imiim i.ipitalist. and the inillionniie Heiii.i and In. iliiiin of publications to dm. I lie ir man. i he W.io.l managers conveniently I'.igoi that tlpy weie notoriously in j"lt. wiili the moneyed and corporate inti i.-ts in . wry stnte thut gave him a i pit sc htntioii in tin- convention. her the Lowden candidacy hung the gum shadow of the Pullman Palace t nr Company and some of the g" cutest inmiii ml inteiests of Illinois. 'I'll.- wbinnu plaint against General An. i bury ddibtrately overlooked dis ini'.u.iieii ns on) in the world wur mid "" Inn Hint he had received, uuso iii Med, in hi, own state the highest in doiMinent ever given it cundidate for iddgiiti at -lilt go on u Republican l i. kt l . The foolishness mid fallacy of this ry ioiiple.1 with the inherent wenkncs in th. ir own case, caused the Atterbury (Ik l.iration (o dd.- yery shortly I the deatli it deserved. TN (INF of my dispatches from Chi - t.'igo I said tlmt Pciinsylvunin would do a- .he dad done in the pn't, put the laudiihite of the convention before the P'ople. whether he ciiinc from her own or some other soil. And she did. I'oiiusvhiiniii put Harding over. Her nttion was all the more impressive be uiiise si,., stood with dignified serenity by liei candidate, to the admiration of the uiibiosid, (ill the psychological mo ment. The men who managed the Sproul campaign at Chicago from tlie inside have nothing with which to reproach themselves. There need be no heartburnings over inc result. 4WU ' ' 'jjtewk '? ' !, , Tho. headlong advent of Aumhier suggest thls.ndvlco: Put in your coal." . ' After all, Palmer and Post nre but P's In n Wilson pod. Recent experiences of Caruso savor more of melodrama than of grand opera, San Francisco will not bosntlsfled unless the DeihocrntH put a boost for the California climate In their platform, A few Democratic blunders In San Francisco may help Harding to make his platform, . In th mntter of the Tageblatt the President may forgive, but the public on't forget. On the Llttle-Kiid-of-the-Horn ticket, how about Rurleson nnd Vol stead? Public Interest In the near-beer strike is probably about half of 1 per cent. The hnrmless. sparkler is going to live up In the first part of Its nitme In Philadelphia ntflenst. Perhaps Borah nnd Johnson arc merely accepting the platform with reservations. Harding's manager wnnts n "snnppy" campaign. Oh. well! Just so long ns It isn't "nobby ' or "classy." Now if tlie Democrats enn only be induced to nominate Palmer nnd Brynn Republicans will hnve easy picking. ' Wluit we need now. says Governor Kdwnrds. is uu iimeiidnient to the Vol stead enforcement net. What we nil need, governor, is resignation. Not even P. It. T. pntrnns wnnt to be hard on 'cm. All that is desired of the underlying companies is that they gqt from under. When the cnndldnte has put life into some of the dead phrases of the platform we may consider the campnlgn fnlcJy launched. The Young Lady Next Door Rut One declares that so far as she can see the provisions of the Lever act nre just ns expensive as those you get in regular giocery stoics. The Chicago convention nt least demonstrated that straw votes don't show how the political wind blows. Harding ilum t win in any of them. The fnrt that Senator Harding once played a sliphorn in n town band sliould not be held ngnlnst him. It wns merely one of the indiscretions of youth. Caruso robbed of 'his jewels. Ca ruso, bombed in n theatre. Fate ns n publicity manager exacts too high u commission io win tne singers up provnl. Still another argument for the in dustrial court is furnished by the deci sion of the New York Supreme Court that discrimination ugniiist the open shop by port workers nnd steamship lines is unlawful. As Kdltor Harding's exchnnge list nns without uoiint received quite n boost us the result of n recent happening in Chicago. Candidate Harding limy ie ceivc innuy alusible hints from the edi torinl coliinuis of bis esteemed contem poraries in the mntter of interpreting the platform. , The pint form is perhaps less of a declaration than n compilation of themes to he elucidated by the candidate. The substitution or "simple for complex tax laws," for Institute, affords it line op portunity 'for a brave man with con structive ideas. Or it might piove a beautiful pitfall for the unwary, Harding and Coolidge e.xeinplifv the simple life, homely virtues, plnin living, hard work. Fach proves the fact that America means e.piallty of opportunity. Their lives show that honor mav come .to men of stern simplicity. Simnlicitv Is a crown in itself, the crown of Amer ican sovereignty And those who are clothed with glory do not need to put on frills. Prayer tn Our Lady T OOK kindly wheie poor people nre. LMary of Homes. k(ep tumble far. Shelter beneath thy prayers' wings, Mary of Ho.se.. all young things. Keep children warm through winds nnd ruins Of cold nights, Mary of Counterpanes. Send us high skies, blue days uud fuir, Mary of Swallows, bless the air. ' All wandering nun. abroad at night, Mary of Candles, give them light. Mnke a wide space behind their bars For prisoners, Mary of the Stars. Shed balm on aching eves that weep In woods of summer. Mary nf Sleep. Pray for me as I ring thy chimes In my 1 i ludfiy. Mar of Rimes. Rev R. L. Gales; "Sk.vlnrk and Swallow," What Do You Knoiv? QUIZ Whore .11.1 Alaska get Us name? i. 2. Who was the Ilrtu postmaster gen eral of the I'nited States.' 11 When w ns, Shakespeare born'.' 1. What is tbe dlnmotcr of the earth nt the equator? r, Wlm was Jean Ingelow? fi. Who wiote man who h.is nn cestrj Is llko n repmsentntlvo or tbe i ast '; T. What is Joseph Conrad's IckiiI name? s What Is shMc oil? y. When and by whom wns the docu ment written tlmt precipitated the world war nnd what wns itn nntuie-' 10. In what book did the story of Wash ington nnd his llttlo hatchet first nitpeai .' Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. "All Sorts and Conditions of Men." a novel, was written by Walter He-.lMt and James Itlte 2. The first sterct.ny of tiKrlculturo was Norman J. Column, who en tend Cleveland's cabinet In 1K8W. J The llrsl Knallsh Bible wus printed In lfi.15. ). The I'.teille ocean has an area, of us.t.iH nun squnie miles. 5. John James Ingulls ( isiis-ifioo) was' nn American politician who won i fnme In iho United States .Senate by lliu brilliance of his Intellect, tl. Tho principal mltieial pioducts of Alnskn nio copper, gold, silver and con I. 7. Tim census of 1020 gives the pop. ulatlon of Chester. I'n . us r.O.uao 8. Tho nime "argosy" comes trom ltagusn, the name being tirst an. ....! ,n n. a .nl. ., nUlu.. m ... .. . ii...., .u ..1CII.IIUI11 ouiim irum inai '"' v.i.i.iih .". .us wiie, VYlttiout n port and from Venice. word the iiueen walked over to the be' 0. TschamovvBky'B "Symphonie Pa-. of the typhus victim, saying. "H,1(, i thetlque" lg written In II minor am," and knelt nnd embraced the inn. i. Schubert's "Unfinished Symnhonv" . who died In her arms. hnnm. "' ICf In IhA aft rrlo Iiah " I tilU OMItlU AVi I -' 'UdWtf'm SEE' HOW THErOTftER GUYv ET SeSAMN' . '.4Vfw Smp-rvaST' u i. i;t5oawiioBHmw,nttaC . . , i , , ,j,j.w .iN.ufcr y,.--.;.;,. ?Z -. TaaSHBWaSnTI3amaSiieaici '"SSSSSSLais... t t -, ii f' pinf uti '- -"t- - - . - ttun-1- " s---w-..i-- - ( ri3rrpa jg'nVyiwrwTrtfrtyplHffiTji 'iw'""t"iiww.Hjiwnni4tz:LHiM-thf .. " i'V' .m. . "iniiiJttuwurr i infiHivt,irrBFwtJfj;ir8-i' u?fa. -.?ui ffeti ..ijn.iwi iiiii-.w i QUEEN MARY OF RUMANIA TELLS RULES OF THE GAME Says the Chief Implements of the Queen Trade Are Courage and Courtesy and Smiles, Smiles, Smiles Bucharest, June 1(1. ' It is some thing of u trade to be a queen." says Queen Mary of Rumania, "nnd the chief implements of the trade nre cour age and dilutes." Sde wns proving her couitesy by es saying to answer for your correspond ent the question of how to be n success ful queen. Her views are those of an ex'pert. "You must know bow to smile," she said. "Smile when your head is aching, smile when you tire ready to drop from fatigue and worry, smile when every thing is going wrong, .smile at good news and at bad news. "Always keep yourself Interested in others. The habit grows uud i. bene ficial. "Affect nn interest though you have it not. A bore mny strain your pa tience, but it selves no good purpose to let him know it. If you make him think his conversation is vital, who knows? It mny become so. "It is a part of the queen trade to think not of yourself but of our coun try. If n man fights for his country, why should not n woman occasionally lie bored for her country ,? A good lis tener makes fiiemls. "As' you say in your country, per sonal (troubles are no ice-cutters." She smiled. "It is not pait of a queen to profess ignorance." slip "went on. "I never own up when I don't know a thing; I simply make it n point to go and find out." Naturally that kind of queen rules. Ask anybody in Rumania, peasant, peer or politician, the answer is tlie same. It is tlie queen who rules Ru mnnin. Qelieu Mary is the scene shifter, the silken bnnd, the power behind the throne of Wing Ferdinand every minute. Since she cnine out from Kiigliind, nearly twenty-live years ago, she has been learning tliis trade of being queen, nnd now she lias been at It for more than five yenrs in place of Carmen Sylva, and she bus made it her business to know her country nnd her people. She nsplres to be queen in every sense, mid she i. quite as willing to take the duties of tlie job us well ns Its pleasures. As for its 'pleasures, she gets all the fun she can out of it, dresses us well ns she can to enhance her beauty, which is famous, "If n queen goes iiiouimI shabby mid icd nosed, i( makes a great deal of differ ence, I think," she snb. "It is not expected of us, mid so why shoudl"'l do it? 1 felt rather mm tided when in Paris just nfter the armistice ami I hnd to attend receptions frequented by all the beauties of the woild, and wns not able to wear some of my splendid jewels, which had bceil sent to Moscow. Just to think that I bad four or five crowns, some of them Inherited fro'm my Itiis slan mother, mid not a one to wear in Paris!" That the queen is quite ns willing to shoulder the duties of queendom Is tes tified to by thousands of men and worn..., who met her during the Germnn necu- piitlon of Rumania As a lied ('io,. nurse slic was vltitiug the lui-iitii I of me inciiraiui's in .ius.v. wiieii hM. nn, tbe suigcon reached the door of the hopeless, "there's no need of going in there, it is too dangerous," snbl the surgeon. "They are dying It Is my uiiij, iin-neri-ii me ijueeii, ,nist ufler K,1,( entered the queen heard a dying Mil- .lion 1.1 .lll.tr. f..H l.l.. ...It.. 1,.... The queen is a practical queen. In TO SEE' H6W.'THt0.TftERGlJlS:;;SET xxiivuuun ax z-3wz,f5m.ttteKMjteri,-"-r ' "-" nifiifimsMBsae"! ti ..tt..w;iHni,i;is;yji s-wfr. j--- - .. -J&83B&?!!2 a"-''-sssiaaiBsiVuv,W3Jn-'' --rrrT--uir--,.-.sTssst-, , - SZZX&sxxw tlie sninc city of .Tnssy this fact was discovered, and when the mayor wonted to get the snow cleaned off the streets be timidly nppiied to the queen for help. "Why, bless you, of course I will help," said the queen, nnd she led the gang of snrwshovelers. After this whenever medicines nnd instruments were needed in the hospitnls, or extra nurses, the queen wns called upon. Once there wns a brend famine. Tbe queen got her own private motorenrs scouring tlie country for flour and then she organized the bakeries of tlie city. She did the same when there wns n wood nnd coal famine. "As a child I was taught to live for others," said the queen in one part of the conversation with the Associated Press correspond ent. "So whatever 1 do I do natu rally, without effort. As n little girl I was told thnt this wns part of the ttade." "Sliould the queen get n touch of internationalism and go on strike some day, that would be a hard dav for Rumania." said, laughingly, Tnke'.Ton escu, one of her admirers, n man re gnrded ns the keenest minded lnvvver, finnncier mid politician In the country. HOOVER ADVOCATES NONPARTISANSHIP War Caused Distruct of Old Political Methods, Ho Tells Rutgers Graduates New Itminswlck, N. J., .Tunc m. "The wnr has caused n widespread dis trust of the old methods of political action, nnd n consequent demand for tionpartisausliip in politics," declared Herbert Hoover, former food controller. In nildresslng the nliimni of Rutgers ( ollege yesterday, following the l.-.ttb commencement, nt which he wns award- vii i lie iirgrec OI 1.1.., u. 'There lias conic a demand for n bet ter justice and a higher standard of political conduct," be snid. "and it would be well for the old-lino politl clans to pay heed to this." He declared that the economic, trou li es of the country nm caused bv faulty distribution, which is due to over, specialization in industry, nnd that this problem must be solved. The other g.ent question facing the nation today, ho declnted. U that of intcrnntioi.nl relations, and he said tha Honicthing must be acconiplisl ed ?o liui t uruinmeiits nnd overthrow nil -tnrls,,,. Th , ,, Ip lire. Lit about only by international co-opera! .V.? in J ,tl ''Ii1 ,K'. -niillBhi-il with, out loss of nntlonnl integr tv and in,P. PMiiIenr-o, which nre good " things and should be encouraged "'"' ami Siipreine Court .Tustleo Ollbert I) Hasbro.ick. of Xevv York, who also re- Wde, t nVl '''", '1"K'"t'' n"''l iiesident AMlson for making the -engue of Nations n part of 1 1 e pence treaty, and i ts'ln.-..,! ti ... i.. . .,'..'" ." ;;th,;cw a monkey wrVucb hdo the" negrees w0n. awarded to eiglity-nine "'" In the grniluutiug class. B. F. Keith's Theatre Harry Carroll & Co. In "Varletltm of ln-'i." ..,.. -. .. THE BIGGEST AND' BEST musiuAL SHOW That ms$mw SYLVIA CLA RK -II ARR YS DELP WI,LJi9W GROVE rARK LAST KOI H davh ni" CONWAY AND HIS HAvn FolnlatH Ttilay Corn Trnpi' n ,,. 02$. -??ta&...?!2V; TSSrSSS nV. M"""i"i ta(llUllU l,' JJIUi, FRANCE AIDS GRAVES VISIT Arranges to Assist Relatives American War Dead New Haven, Conn., June 10. ti French Government bns arranged w the Knights of Columbus overseas ( gnnlzntlons to nssist relatles of med bers of the American expedltlonai forces who died nt the front to vW American cemeteries in France, at cording to n cablegram received ycstoi day by William J. McGiuley, supreri secreinry oi tne order. The knights have opened n gran visitation bureau nt 0." Rue Hocb' Paris, and have been given nermlimlo to place posters In nil French railwJ stations announcing routes to Amen can cemeteries. Market St. sb. 10th i'v A. M. to II ?, John Barrjitnore In firm Snowline of r'arnmount't "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" 'lti Pineal l'ttw, or Individual achi Which tliii bcrten liaa Yet Shown." Ltdi PAI AfC lai Mrht Street A1.-VJ1, 10 A. M.. 12, 2, 3:1 J a:io, 7.40. v.M r. NAZIMOVA ln "Tiiis itiSAiij ivt.mvuv Qy A CHlLD.. A TDr A rI A Clicatnut St. Bel. : rl WJ-LU- 10 A M , U, 2. 3.(1 . . ono. 7 .in, uiau r, "MLSS HOBBS" KMHf' . Wuljdn 1U. VICTORIA ""JKr 11:10 e. nnr..vn... n M WITH (4 "" i" -l VIOLA DA.V Next Week aEOHOES C'AHPENTIEIl TUB UONUBR jrA.N" C A DITW V- Market Street rLl 1 VL. 1.K1V CODY in Tho Hulterfly MuH DTP17MT Market SI. Iiel. Ill" "THH DARK MiriB01 O A DDlrl' 1'OUIt HIIOWH DAllj VJ-lllV-'rV 1 :30, 3:30 L'ftc, 5 7 II 0 25c. HOC. 7J0 . Mae Murray & Hobart BoswortB IN INITIAL PRESENTATION OF A MORMON MAID Added World's Urtateit Motor H rI ODL7 MARKET AT JUNIl'EH ULUDL Conllnuoua Vaudirlt 11 A M io 11 H. "OH. TEDDY I" S'oTiiEM CROSS KEYS 00th 4 Market ajj O'M.I 7 nnrt It r. MMl ItlALTO & COMPANi" RROAnWAV DrOMl Snyder A'J w.w. . ., . . . 2..10 Mj , j r, i Norma Talmsdre In "The Woman BIIH METROPOLITAN 8KB LAST 4 DAYS , "j DORIS KEANE ROMANCE THE 1310 X'UOTOPIA.y or TUB SEAb?J N"L DOUGLAS FAIRBANM In "THE MOLLYCODDLE" CHESTNUT ST. 0I'UA boom COOLKST TIIEATHB IN TO". "EMPHATIC SUCCESS ".V ., Now 3 Shows Daily , 7" Orlcea. Mhta . 2r,r-. 35n. BOo Eves SC Mc'T! 1 Vy HRROLD BELL mGHJi "Evea of the World a Hit '' 'nAuLrS'. CO.MINU "THE KORTl'MS Tfcl'". II HO A DAD STREET TIIEATHB HIE HAVOY COMPANY Thur THE HAVOY Gilbert and Hullt'vVn'a'FavorlU 0tt for the hn(lt '. 'TIIR JIIKAUU i(1t of , tnitllute. J Offlet. j 8et on aale at the Hoi Pj?,?'. The Seamen'a 1'1 J&. M T?2i .' ''is... . ' f v t