m ilTii'j WlllMn"flrL: 'n'V .- (,"' f Rt ft? V h, . K r 'TT7m.'-,w ., -,, in IHMWM M .rt F ?nina Btthlic ieiWr I (lUJBLIC LEDGER COMPANY r ,CTRVfl H. K. CtinTIB. PiutDKNT jW it, T.uflinmon. vim President; ri iJJiifil" v'"?r.,rlr,a Triar n. unuina, John 23. Williams. John eon, Directors. . - KPTTOniAtj HOARD! ,'WiwT.?T2.",. " CtHTTi, Chairman f x-" tyuum Kdltor JOHNO. MARTIN... General Business Mir, inn.un.11.. a...... Tiku..i.v.1. xVVJif" ''r'JJ.u!J!J, ?u"?'!,r Bmtrtrt ...701 rord nulldin pt: Iinm loos Fnilertnn nuiidinc .iChicaoo m02 Trllmite Uulldlnit "L NBWfl RUREAUS: 'MWn'-Vi?! av,. n.i uih p. Sarndj, iB&S" mmnt The Evi.vino Pcai.to Lkdom Is served to 'embaerlhArs In Phllartlnhlii ami ttirmnnrilne ffwrr lii'S, .iv.tom t th rate of twelve (t!) centi pen ' I?' PyW to th crrlr I " . ?. m'l ! points outld of Phllsdelnhls, J'ji Jnfhi Unif.; RtsUs. Cansrtn. or tlnlt -toerna t the rat of twelve (t!) centi pen "; , ji bijh" -H , ' tle poisloni. poiitst; fre. fifty (80) p..j cents Ir month p J - To nil foreign i ctfiu Mr month Six (10) dollsrs per year, ) sdvsne i foreign countries one (ID dollar ' ttt .month. &WMKZtSr. r.TK n'A," rtss, BEI,L. iftoa valnut KKYSTOME. M Uv iOdO '.-1 ... .. . . ' . PnbHc Ldr. ndfitemloice Swore. rwiMelpMo. Member of the Associated Press ' THE ASftOriATRD PRESS h 'ecluive1v entitled to the uie for rrpuhlhation of nil neies ditpntchc J-T?ii ' '' or "i" ?thcu,e rr,1 " VvbUihfnre " '"" AH rinhik nt mwMmlM nl unrrial 4ipatchc3 herein art, nho teerved. Phllsdetphls. FrM.r. June It. 1:0 A FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Things on wlilfh the people ipeet th new ndmlnUtriMlnn coneen- trate Its attention: The Delaware river bridge. A. drydork U enough to accommo date the largest ship. Development of the rapid transit sys tem. X convention hall. X building for the Free Library. Xn Art Museum. Enlargement oj the water supply. Home-j to accommodate the popula tion. THE LICENSE MUDDLE r' IS not likelv thnt Judge Hregy's of logic nlone. Man has made many ruling that no malt liquors may be I Invent ions and endured torment inde Old without a license will be enforced ""' in, h" n,t-BW rffort to fin. !riiji. .....ii u. ,.li.m l,n heen nnsed substitutes for simple truth, honor nnd ft upon by a higher court. riftiUIJ uwwi nr. ...in...... -r..j. Tf-nM .. .tin. .1,n Ihtc sne- ouurc intnj '.' awnv: Clfically provides that all persons who Kn,p,r,s hnv ,)lftrnl ,, fnrn , desire to sell malt liquors shall get a , thiU odf, q(IrBt From th nok nf thn(sq .regular snloon llccn-e. And lie nn- thpy mnj. ba2,p nm, fn aRn,H Mr noUnces that there is no reference ,n Pnttpn ,, np of n Krpflt mnnv prnp)p the law to tho alcoholic content of the whf) ,mvp v,pwp) thp ,i(,ni( of ,hp tim(1(1 v malt liquor. wjt, c0,ncthing like despair, rmlntiht- Xet before the sale of beer with more ,jv n(, )ms heen rending the political than one-half of 1 per cent of alcohol j speeches of recent weeks nnd the for tyas forbidden there were .everal malt j mulns by 'Willlnin Jennings Hryan for beverage on the market which con- the world's salvation. Hut bricklayers talned little if any alcohol, and they w,0 demand nnd rereive SI." n dny were sold freely in grocery stores, nnd nm a,hmcn who will not work for less matt extracts with considerable nlcohol thn S10 were for him the lnt. un in them were sold in drug stores which benrable straws, had no saloon licenses. I Against them he rebelled with the Now if the court is going to insist ' angry assertion that civilization is that no malt beverage may be sold standing on its head. without a saloon licence, the question at once arises. Why did it not so insist Kifteen-dollnr-a-dny bricklayers nre. before the sale of intoxicating beverages in their wny, quaint. They nre a was prohibited? If it was legal for n cheerless sort of phenomenon. Hut on grocery store or n drug store to sell n j the whole they nre net half so danger -nonintoxicating malt beverage without i ous or undesirable ns some of the ex -a saloon license last year, why is it not 1 a'ted folk who sit in high plnres nnd legal this year? draw about 51.ri a mluute for fumbling The only reason thus far advanced I di'asfouslv with the mechanisms of t for 'insisting on a license from nil who el! such beverages is that the saloon -keepers who have taken out licenses must be protected from competition by the unlicensed. Tint it is doubtless true i-thafthc saloonkeepers who have taken out licenses have done It for the purpose of Jcecplng their places open in the hope that there will be such a modificntion of the Volstead nctas will permit them to sell malt drinks' whirh the grocers are'not allowed to sell. Judge Bregy's view of the law may be correct, but to the layman it seems 'as if he were stretching the statute u long way in order to bring under it a bevcrago flavored with mnlt which was formerly allowed to be sold ns freely as bottled soda water or sarsaparilla. THE MEANEST CROOK THE meanest crook of them all bas unquestionably come to light in the wan who took S12,(100 in "ransom" money from the distracted father of little Blnkely Coughlin, with the prom ise" to restore the missing bnby. To raipe the money Mr. Poughlln, it is aid, virtually exhnusted his own re sources nnd then borrowed ?2000 to make up the sum. Kidnappers in the pnst hnve usuallv had sufficient "honor" to return the '"" jt ''n1" also tne knowledge and nssur chlldren safely when the sum demanded ' aarp ot "r,,nt (le,,'ls n"d great purposes was paid nnd nil other conditions were that stand like towers of light above fulfilled Mr Coughlin fulfilled to the " ,nf'an scuffle It hns, and nlwnyn will letter nil .ne conditions sot forth by the hay"' n'"n "hose very presence is a kidnnpper. only t find his money ns 'hnllenge against nil wrong. These nre well as his child stolen. I thp constant nnd perpetual things which TCJHnnnnino. ia .he ..,,, -,i . I actuallv direct the course of civilization. cowardly crime on the calendar, but - uuu ,.,....,. ... .... .ttn.(ir.L II, JI. 111111, thls cdminnl, whether he actually is the j Hfclnnpper or is some other who connived "" "' u '", ; . '" ''""" to turn the pnef nnd aorie.r nf ,,, i speares nnd Hrethovens. "VI hot Is more. parents to his own base .irofit, ha s gone even n step bejond It is doubtful whether the pennl code contains n punishment spvere enough for such a criminal. A DISAPPEARING BUGABOO TJflOK years the .Tnpnnophobes have -N bee been telling us thnt if we went to, war with Japan. Oront Britain, under learned from the wnr and whnt np the terms nf the Anglo Japanese nlli- parently they hnve not Ienrned is thnt ance, would be compelled to g to the intinite truth was packed into a few assistance of Japan. Observers who words by the ninn who first said thnr had not lost their poKe never accepted wm can't get by with it. You can't this view, nnd now Viscount Knto, who Kef bv with it, when, whether as n negotiated the treaty with Grent Brit- , minister of stnte or n bricklaver. io Bin, Is reported ns saying in Tokio that , try to grnb what is not properlv vour, an article wns inserted in the treaty I The most certain law of nl'l ),,. M for the specific purpose of releasing I the law of compensation. It works out Great Britain from any obi eatmn tn ' ... .. ,..!.. . ... ' . j . ... , " v 22". rll1. ''npan in nuy ,vnr uuo" the, United States This is interesting In two wavs- It shows on what a false foundation the fears of the Japanophobcs were based, and it nlso makes it certain thnt Jnpnii Will never seek a quarrel with this country. The Japanese bugaboo is dis appearing quite rapidly. BRISTOL'S BICENTENARY IT IS peculiarly tilting that the cen sus figures of the town of Bristol, showing a gain of ll per cent, should have been made public from Washington on the eve of the liOOth anniversary of the founding of that municipality. The new figures show that Bristol has now a population of 10,27,1. Bristol, mhich opens Its bicentennial today, deserves the congratulations of all the other municipalities of the corn i t monwcalth, both for what It in today nnd for what It has achieved lu the 1100 years of Its incorporated life. Tho town Is rich not only in com- mcrcial achievement, but also In Its long record of atiiniy Americanism, from J.t.t. .. .... . M - tho moni(.nt 0( ts blrtlt down to the present Bristol has maintained the best traditions of the country and has stood loyally by in all the national crics of two centuries. I be cotiEratnlntctl nn dor nnsl record unci Rl,p mny 'ok forward to n uture as ' bright In promise as the paxt lins been ' In achievement. I " ' RAINBOW CHASING NOW THE UNIVERSAL CRAZE ' I Because urvhnriv la Dnlnn It. Mr. Because Everv """" cvcry Patten Hs r-axxen n, as Wearied or a Very Likable World TTWEU since men developed n con- i J-J science they have known the mood n -h the world seems merely a Sood plnce to get out of. ' TVindltx of an ancient time found life bearable only when they withdrew from ' "', human proceiilon to meditate under I wayside tree. The cne of J. A. Pat ten, nn Illinois millionaire, who sud denly cut loose from affairs and went into seclusion because he was tired of the world, tired of its censeless strife , nm discontent." Is no new thins in , history. Ty Cobb, when he misses one "' enl inning, unquestionably ."" "" "" "'"' ' " "oi'i-.. sphere. Hut Mr. Cobb and Mr. Patten nnd all the others who let exasperation ' overwhelm them cannot but be repnrded as amateurs nt tho business of life. I If. in the ordinary course of oxist- i ence. a man turns to slam a door be tween himself and the nctive world, what words nre adequate to tell of the feellnit that mut have come to those j who had to lie for four years In tienrhes where tempests of lire blew ' night nnd day' What of the men who burn them selves out In elTorts to befriend nations and rare that in the end Jeer and re ject them? And what of the poor of Europe who have to begin life all over ngnln In the desolation that onee was green peace? These nre difficult times, rertainiy. for minds that can trnvel by the light j peace of heart things thnt nre his nt I the beginning nnd until he throws them government In Europe especially there are states men who have been setting a bad ex ample for everybodv ns the lenders in a rainbow chase that bas grown to the dimensions of an international nnd univeisnl craze. If they hnve not learned the lessons of tho wnr, how enn bricklnyers he ex pected to know- these nme lessons? There nre times when it seems thnt the war had nn opposite result to the one intended. Once upon n time klugs were few nnd relatively powerless. Now everjbodj. big and little, seems determined to go into the king business in oue wny or another. A raisin king is rising to glory in Pittsburgh to join the dried-npple kings nnd the sugnr kings, the shoe kings nnd the wheat kings. If bricklayers and nshmen are in the imperial mood, if they feel that they nre qualified to con quer nnd grab, it can he said for them thnt they nre following nn example offered conspicuously iu some of the high plnees of the earth. Despite nil this, the world of which Mr. Pntten bus wearied hn much to recommend it bn a plnce of residence. If it has party platforms nnd the speeches of Mr. Hryan and politicians '" the places where statesmen ought to If the world hns produced Bryons. Prah,s- r"ons and f'lemenceaus it ii win I'duiiuui' iii proline,- ineni. it lins Rummer rains and it has mornings that, If they were not so plentiful, would b appreciated as things worth in themselves a great deal of work and ns recompense for many hard perplexi ties. It would be the most cheerful of places if it were not for some of the people who try to run it. What these neonle should hate mm m"ci uun-.nn fin niucij an it HOrKS out for men. It is impossible to en the natural and ordained visitations of retributive justice. If some nations are now in difficulties, it is because thej are making an accounting for wrongs done by or for them in the past. Diplomatists have always been af flicted with the delusion that it is pos sible to get by with it. It is possible to get by with it only for a while. At some turn of the road a state or an individual is appallcu ot finding the piled consequences of crimes or dis honesty waiting to be accounted for completely and in full. The cost to a state may be war nnd defeat. For nn individual it may he a mind In agony or a bullet tired in the morning, ni( ,t was fired at the New York clubman whose name is now conspicuous in the papers, Life has become for the time being a evening -wtiSm LEDHiibEil-HM:, v&J;Mra 'ajDito!-' general disordered chase for ,the rain how's end which i not td be found. It Is by experience that mankind learns nil things worth while, nnd experience is n politely conventional term for pnin And disillusionment. After n little suf fering by nil the people who escaped suffering in the war we shall descend from the nir nnd get our feet again upon the solid earth. People will no longer demand what is not theirs. They will get rid of the belief thnt they enn obtain whnt does not exist. Honest work will again be come fnhlonablc. . Fifteen- dollar- a -day bricklayers are nn crazier tlmn some gentlemen of power who am trying to grab lands nnd terri tories that belong by right to others. Hetween the two extremes arc nil sorts of people going nt existence ns if it were a joy ride in n clockless tnxlcab. Hut every mile is being checked up and will have to be paid for in solid work, sooner or later. If the people of the enrth nre to continue to be clothed and fed nnd sheltered nnd kept warm. There will be nn end of the economic jazz, of political futilities nnd internn tionnl hedevilment. Rut it will not be brought about by angry or dispirited gentlemen who retire to seclusion with the announcement thnt they nre done with the world. It will be brought about by the men who stick around. There nre countless such men. They will continue to nsk whnt war nnd diplomacy nre for. They will demand to know whnt colleges nre nlming at nnd whnt government nnd business nnd rlnnnce nnd labor are nlming nt. 'lliey will continue to make n row until there is n settled order on the earth nud until decent nlms nnd purposes, just to all people, are formulated nnd clenrly de fined as objects of modern civilization. These men who stick nround will view the world ns n very liknblc plnce. nnd they will see to it that better uses nre mnde of the extraordinary nrrny of talents nnd good instincts thnt mnn klnd hns brought to it. They will not let it be burned nnd befouled by wnr or devastated, in nny part of itn life, by ignornnt and selfish men nccidentnlly in power. The job Is n big one. It may tnke n loug time to necomplish it. Hut when one fighting crowd falls or vanishes nn- other will tnke its place. Thnt is the wny of the rnce LABOR AND STATE SOCIALISM TUOSK believers in stnte i-ocinlism who are planning to ask the Demo cratic national convention to demand the government ownership of railroads will not fail to call the attention of the delegates to the action of the conven tion of the American Federation of Labor. ' By n vote of 2f.0r.f to S.110. that convention has Indorsed the proposition thnt the government should both town nnd operate the railroads Those voting in the affirmative were the railroad workers, the members of machinists unions, textile workers, garment work ers and metal workers. The impelling motive wns et forth by the president of the machinists' union when he said that "under the three oar- of government control more wns accomplished for orgnni7ed Inbnr thnn in all the years under private owner ship." He might hnve said that Mr. McAdoo gae n more generous incrense in wages to the railroad woikers than they had been able to secure from the owners of the roads, and that they preferred n svstem of control nnd operation which would ennble them to use a politicnl j lever lor prying more niouc uui ui im railroad treasuries. It is known thnt the railroad work ers and the telegraph workeis were plensed'with their tieatment under government control nnd thnt they favor government ownership of the telegraph lines nnd the railroad". The politicnl wisdom of pleasing this large body of voters will be set before the Democratic convention in moM nl lnring terms. Many Democratic lend ers fnvor government ownership. Mr. McAdoo himself urged thnt the period during which the rnilronds should be under government control should he ex tended in order that the expediency ol making it permanent might be tested. Mr. Bryan hns long favored govern ment ownership. After his return from his trip around the world he made a speech in Madison .Square (inrden in New York in which ho demanded it. The late Senator David H. Hill, of New York, during the miners' strike of 1002, urged government ownership nf coal mines. Pemm ratic statesmen hnve for years heen hospitable to the idea. If the Democrats wish to go before the countrv on this issue the Repub licans will welcome the opportunity to defend the rights of private property nnd the benefits ni cruiug from the con duct of grenf enterprises on business principles. Hut for the sake of the freedom of our institutions it is hoped that the tnnservntives in the Demo cratic conention will succeed in pre venting the adoption of nny platform conininiug a deinnnd for government ownership nf rnilronds. It will be bet to allow the Socialists nnd Amos Pin chot's pnrty to fnvor stnte socialism of every ort. ORATORY IS NOT DEAD TO THOSE who say thnt congres sional oratory is not whnt it once was we commend tho tribute of Repre sentative King, of Illinois, to Frank Mnndell. the Republican floor lender. Here is the peroration as it appears in tlie Congressional Record: The vletorv Is his Extravagance nnd wnstn has fled before him. He has leintreneheil constitutional privi leges of the, people. The dragon of tratmy hns before this modern 8t OeorRo withdrawn its talona from the horizon nf our destiny. Tho full .ff'ct of his work in this cntaclybinln period cunnot be. truly comprehended bv his contemporaries, but the future student of our times will write In a high place on tho pioscenlum of his tory the name of this citizen, states man and patriot Frank Mondell. of Wvoming ' The spectacle of Mondell forcing the dragon to wlthdrnw its talons from the horizon of our destiny must have been awe-inspiring. But one has to go bnck to the period when orators exclaimed that they could tee the footprints of Clod's hand all nbout them to find n pnrallel to this outburst of the Illinois rhetorician. I.lfo bas its com pensations. Candi dates do not always win; platforms are lint Worms Won't Enthuse not always strong, drinks sometimes lack kick ; Supreme Court decisions do not 'always nntlsf) ; the nineteenth hole is sometimes dry , but, thank heaven, straight bait is still procurable and the Pennsylvania commissioner of fisheries says fishing is going to be good this season. SIDELIGHT VIEWS Odd Phases' of the Republican Convention The- Wornen From Kansas and Some Other Women Uses of the Coliseum By GEORGE NOX McOAIN THERE were sidelights on the Chi cago convention that in n wny were quite as interesting as anything con nected with the big show Itself. Against a side wall about half wny down the wide vestibule of the Coliseum Annex was n railed inclosure containing n lint -top desk with pad nnd telephone, nnd hnlf n dozen or so choirs. A po liceman wnB never nbsent from the desk nnd rhnlr. Occnslonnlly n lleutennnt with velvet collar nnd gold star ap proached and whispered some word of Instruction or inquiry. Three nnd sometimes four women, fashionably but unobtrusively dressed, occupied chairs Inside. They were female detectives. "What's the idea?" inquired n Washington newspaper man of n po licemnn who furnished the informntlon. "They'll be handy in case of any trouble In which women might be In volved." replied the officer. "This crowd is n mighty fine plnce for fema e dips' to work. If one of thetrt is cnught these lady members of the force would make the cxnmlnntion to dis cover if she had nny stolen 'leather' on her. 'Tlsn't a man's job. Sec?" ONE of the noticeable figures In the annex was a mnn pretty well up In venrs who slouched nbout in shirt ileeves with unbuttoned vest nnd swing ing n cane. For the most pnrt he snt iu n chair tiltecf ngnlnst n wnll surveying the crowds with n contemptuous nnd blase .t l.n nH.niflnnilt nf. eve. lie was on m w i"""1 .-. - -taches of the building. "What's this building used for be sides nntional conventions?" he was asked. , ,. , . "Most everything. sec. this plnce used tn he whnt wns known ns Ander sonvllle PrUnn. They took down the old prison nfler the Civil Wnr and hrmiffhr It mi here. The compnny built the stone walls nround It nnd it wns n show place for a long time. "There wns no roof to it then. Alter n while the how played out and then n compnnv bought It. put a roof on it nnd mnde it just what you see. "There's snmethin' going, on most everv week nere. p'ticulnrly in winter. The'nnrnum circus shows here when it comes to town," he concluded. "Is the Barnum circus much different from the one they've got here now?" inquired his interlocutor, attempting to be funny. .. , "Yep. somewhat, was the unsmil ing replv. "They got real nniinals there." AT THE Inst session of the conten tion on Saturday afternoon a couple of hatless women in the gnllery imme diately behind the newspaper section twirled a enrncraik at every mention of Johnson's nnme. A corncraik is a wooden ratchet on a handle, which, when whirled nround, produces nn tinmusicnl rncket. It beenme particularly annoying, but repented cries of "Cut it out." "Cnn the mcket" nnd the more emphatic "Shut up'." fniled to produce any effect in mitigating the nuisnnce. "You can't do anything with them, remarked an eastern correspondent after n while; "they're from Kansas." ... 1. 1 ...1 flmiii.Aj n pKoptical neighbor. HOW HO .TUII nuwit i .uiiu.n u I saw one of them eating hnlf a pie ns she held it in both hnnds n while ago. That showed they were from Kansas. Everjbody eats pie that way out there." THE women who were in evidence as delegntes nnd spenkers mnde n pnr ticulnrly tine impression. With one exception. . As for the female orntors. they caught the crowd. Not because they were women, but because of the manner in which they sustained their pnrt. They were dignified, self-possessed, spoke slowly nnd distinctly, indulged in nn extravagant gestures or i-cx nrtifices of direct nppeal. AH of them had taken a lenf out of the experience of the most successful public speakers. They confined them selves to the mntter in hand and spoke briefly. . ,. The one exception was when the women delegates and alternates went parading around the aisles, bare-headed nnd sandwiched in among the men doing the lock step and yelling shrilly for their candidate. It was anything but a dignified or edifying picture. THERE was one woman who, next to Theodore Roosevelt's sister, Mrs. Robinson, attracted instant nnd re spectful nttention The nnununcement of her name wns lost in n bnbel of sound ns she stepped forward on the plntform. She seconded the nomination of Her bert Hoover At n distance she seemed little more thnn n gtrl ns she stood pntlently wait ing for the hubbub nnd hurrah to sub side After n few moments she rnlscd both hands above her head, nnd nt thnt instant one might hnve fancied she was some Druidie piiestess waiting to make her obeisance to the sun god. Her hair wns worn straight back from her forehead and gnthered in an old-fashioned bag net. She wore a straight robe of some Foft. creamy material, bordered around the bottom with a two-inch band of blue nnd gathered loosely at the wnist with a belt of the snme material. Suspended nt the back nnd reaching below her wnint was a Hussar cape of the some material and border. She spoke less thnn five minutes in n rich voice of moderate pitch nnd in impecca ble English. She wn the unique figure nmnng those of her eex who fnced the vast audience. IT WAS one convention nt which there were no complaints about inability to hear the speakers, not even in the extreme portions of the grent Coliseum. A new sound-transmitting device had been plnced in the hall as an experi ment and it proved a phenomenal suc cess. Directly over the chairman's head. suspended by ropes from the arched ceiling, was a device like four huge triangles joined together at the top and descending to a point. Above this and resting on its upper edges were four squnreshaped transmitters resembling megaphones. In front of the chairman nt n dis tance of ten feet, and suspended slightly nbnve his bead, was a smnll box in size nnd shape rebcrabllng a telephone trans- t"ltler ... .... , Wires reached from this Into the huge hollow apparatus aboic, nnd by some devlre unseen the voice, grently mag nified, was flung out to the four points of the compass. If some inventor will oply discover a wav in which to enlarge to those in re mote seats n view of the platform, fu ture national conventions will he n de light to the most distant spectator of its passing scenes. SHORTCUTS Third parties blow off steam, but turn no wheels. Herbert Hoover Is In n position to consider the saddest words of tongue or pen. It would appear that the French Ilcl conference is mapping out n Salt river itinerary. One joyous thing nbout the coming presidential election is that It will bring us another postmaster general. Would It be overstating the case to say that Doctor Butler is perhaps not so good n loser ns he might be? Members of the Straphangers' f.enguc nre growing cocky. First thing you know they'll be demanding scats. A competent corps of "I-knew-hlm-whens" will now conspire to give Senator Hnrdlng the requisite publicity. The decision of Judge Brcgy nt lenst demonstrates the fact that the Volstead act didn't wipe out the sa loons. A thing we have n right to expect from the next Congress will be adequate steps toward n rcnl presidential prefer ence primary. The law ought to have some extra pennlties for the skunk who would swindle the. sorrowing parents of a kidnnpped child. "The Butterfly nnd the Boob" sug gests comedy rather than crook melo drama, but for the Penn Bank princi pals it is tragedy. In view of the fact that the pence treaty hns not yet been rntlfied. will it be a war President thnt wo nre going to elect In November? One thing Harding campaigners will have to fight ngnlnst is the prone ness in some quarters to damn the can didate with faint praise. One can readily understand why the P. R. T. objects to the motorbus. Sooner or Inter the motorbus mny do away with all trolleys. One great job Senator Harding has before him is to prove to the disaffected nnd the disappointed thnt everything is for tho best In this best of all possible worlds. Bergdoll is now reported in the Adirondack. It must be admitted thnt the neighborhood hns more inducements for n summer vncntion than Leaven worth. Kan. Apart from the fnct that it is a face-saver for norali, Johnson and the other hitter-renders. Mr. Tnf. l.n demonstrated that the Republican plat- i or in is nil rignt. There nre times. t,o to speak, when one gets the notion, ns it were, thnt Colonel George B not to put too fine a point on It, hns the idea that the ship of state is of Harveyizcd steel. A Sun nnd New York ITemM nn. respondent speaks of the ticket ns a good team for n good race Hnrdy nnd fool. Vo hnsten to give ndded circu lation to so apt a chnrncterizntlon. The denial by the French foreign office of the rumor thnt Ambassador Jusserand is to be withdrawn from Washington confirms the opinion that the French nre n wise as well ns a brave people. He who steals my jewels steals trash, says Caruso, "but he who robs mr- of the contents of my wine cellar takes that from me which, under ex isting conditions, is exceedingly difficult if not impossible to replnce." A dispatch from Reading tells nf n bundle containing ."5.7R70 being kicked around on the state highway for severnl hours before the owner, n Philndel phinn, returned to look for it The men who kicked it nre now probnbly kicking themselves. ' ... iT m. W ,rk ,Am"icnn condemns ."T U1V,ylc,nn P'ntform because It con tains 030(1 words, and prnises the pint form of the Committee of Fortv-eicht becnuse it contains onlv Uo. If this be merit, here i n plntform thnt hiii-1 passes either: "Be good and you'll be happy. An Old Harp mHE hnrp is built of cassia and cord " And In its strings lie flnelnnf ngs He ancient melodies. Forgotten tunes of wisff,, emptiness. Thin, quavering sonatas, that nfford keyTr h plpinK minor T 'dVas' n"Pr ""'" nnd stra"Ker TllP dust UPn th" "P'' U I''n', nnd Lies mistily upon the sorrel strings- The soul of it hns rotted will T ,c ?""' Anu,ove t? SP Vf VPrrtisrI' nrn"t; clings. ''nr " ,'0M' rIpnr m rlfl,Vnrsr nt; y0"''1 HUrry bt0 I You nsk me' why Its melodies must pass' Hark to the blatant jazzing of the brass' KENNETH SLESSOR. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. What mnn Is known as 'Th oi,.. Mnn of Poland"- lne Slrns 2. Whnt year of the, Indenenrlen- -. the fnlted .States I, this' nco of 3' WPllSrims- ,h M-fl0"r land Us 4. What is the average pie vn Hon . .Inland of .heKeaCrnnlb0nveOfsnea1 R. Who was r.catherstocMnir' 6' Wr,nUed,,S,,a,,,;a-0n,re,,t C"naI '" " 7'indu1ra,elr-meanlnR')f ' word R. Who were tho Lilliputians'" 9' Vr' "An 'S ,hc Per'tlon of 10. What political campaign was Wnn, ns the Hard Cider Campa"? n Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Jncli London was in hia forty-nrst year when he died. November 2s! 2 The first attorney general of the 1'nlted States wns Edmond nl dolph, of Virginia, who entei Washington's cabinet In lTxn 3. The Hudson river was first v ulored In 1609 rst ex I The diameter of the eartli nt .h. poles Is 7899 miles tne 5. Hans Christian Andersen nunc 187M was a Danish poet ,j writer of fnlry atorles. ' l nnd " -.,-. rf'.l'i-rr ne Don- ulatlon of r,o 'luR nniiKiKm, Pa., as 7. "Argot" Is jargon or slana tlcularh of thieves "' par- 8. The author of "Pollynnna." Kleanor Ilodgman Porter (ib 1920), n direct descendant or n rnor Willie ,n nrAr.iK "' UOV- Maj flower ' ot ",e Shale is nn Indurated cla comii dated chleth bv the prV,?Eft MfrMnc sediments ami ni.T. i with 10. Bach's Alans In H minor In ccie. i brated ana work for chorus and miniy neuueii structure orchestra. I I A . "DON'T YOU -a .1 HARDING AND AND WHAT THEY STAND FOR Mr. Taft Sees in the Senator at Answer to Wilsonian Autocracy, With Doth Candidates Standing for Americanism vs. Radicalism The folloirinp illuminating com ment on the Republican nominees by William JJnward Tnft i taken from a coprightcd tutorial in this morning's Public Ledger. rpHE nomination of Senntor Hnrdlng at Cblcngo wns n happy outcome of a doubtful nnd difficult situation. Men who knew Oenernl Wood nnd fJovcrnor Lowden knew that the chnrge flint they countenanced in nny way the improper use of money in their campaigns was wholly unwarranted. Yet the inevita ble tendency of the presidentinl pri mary system was to bring nbout n de mand for large amounts of money to organize their canvasses nnd give them duo publicity. They were made respon sible for the acts of their representa tives, however unauthorized. Tho body of the delegates as a whole resented tho use of the Senate probe committee ns a mere political instru ment for the benefit of one candidate. Mr. Harding was nominntrd by the delegntes of tho convention ns the best mnn to be tnken in the interests of tho pnrty, in view of nil the circum stances. Tho convention wns not n boss-ridden convention. There were those who attempted to mnke it so, but fniled. ' Senator Harding is n modest mnn. Ho did not seek the presidential nnm ination. He was content to be senntor. He indicated a desire not to enter the race, but his Ohio friends nnd others who deprecated General Wood's securin the lirizo by default urged him to enter tho lists. Most hesitatingly he did so', nnd whnt he wrote in his fetter announcing his candidacy and his reluctance in doing so wns only the literal truth. When however, it wns sought to have him con sent to n men fnvorite-son support from Ohio, with Wood ns its second choice, hn resented the proposal and bid Ins opponents do their worst in on position. j1- Mr. Wilson, his methods nnd his re sults nre "In the Inst nnahsis." as Mr Cannon would say. responsible for Mr' Harding's nomination. Mr. Wilson'n nuLncrntic rule of his party and the country, his exclusiveness his refusal to consult or to be informed' his intciihe personal and partv partisan ship in the presence of i( nntinmil exigency that should have compelled him to open his arms and to fake to his nid Republicans, his ungrateful and un just depreciation of the patriotism of Republicans who. forgetting party, held up his bands In every wav nnihin during the wnr all these things turned me m-puiiiiciiii iieiegntcs by contrast townrd a regular Republican who kuows enough to know thnt he (c not know everything, who respects the opinions nf others nfid does not mnke up his mind in absence of needed consultation who in so constituted Unit arbitrary methods mo impossible i, j,lu (1I,jj who believes that the machinery nf gov ernment cannot fulfill its puipose uu less thf various co-opernting agencies properly defer to one another bv rea sonable (onsiderntion of differences und by concession. Senntor Harding is n man of much experience in public afliiirs. As n jour nalist he bus had the ii'spnn.sihllity of forming nnd cxpicsslug opinion on all current issues. He is a clear thinker nn able writer nnd bpcakir mid n ciue fill student of public questions. He ,ns made himself. No fortuitous circum stnnces linye nlded him in his progress The writer can testify tn the tenacity of his loyalty when it cost. He does not seek controversy. He lulieves in the softer method of accomplishment, nr McKinley did; but one of the common errors is to suppose thnt n mini who is geninl and nnxious to accommodate lucks iu will power and grit when occusior requires. The political cry of the Democratic puppet hi the hands of n dominant group of senators has uo foundation IU-M mm " i.i-i iiiiiiiiiik u up He will be President. .He iwimicvtr . ' .- " :'-yJ"". -' rf' jjii WISH' YOU WAS DONE, LIKE ME?" COOLIDGE knows the rights, duties, powers nnd responsibility of the office. His taking personality, the evident absence of him self in hiR thoughts nnd conclusions nnd his considerate attitude townrd nil will cnnhle him to frnme nnd enrry through needed measures by softening asperities and creating, a desire in would-be op ponents to comply with his wish. He is u man of the highest character. He hns no vulnerable past. He will seek the strongest men for his councilors, with no fear that they will also cast n shadow. And now what of the campaign? Wiiere docR Mr. Harding stand on the issues likely to be prominent nnd con trolling? On January 1. WM. tho writer in discussing Mr. Hnrdlng in these columns ns n candidate snid this of his nttittide toward the league: "Senator Harding has been n mem ber of the foreign relations committee of the Sennto nnd hns generally voted with the maiority of thnt committee, though he did oppose them nt one time in their action cnloulated to postpone indefinitely ennsiderntion of the treaty. Ho is not n bitter-ender and voted for the league with the fourteen reserva tions. One mny feci reabonnbly as sured that, with the other Republican candidates, except those from the Pa cific slope, be would be glad to bate the treaty nnd league rntlfied with com promise reservations, nnd will flnnlly vote to thit end." This is true today. The discussion ns to the league iu the campaign in the end is likely to settle down to a question nf the reservations. Mr. Wilson's pnrty, it seems probable, will adopt n plank in favor of the league without any reservations which will impair its usefulness. There will be, nt first, violent nttneks upon nnv league nt nil by some Republican spenkers. but in the end the issue will be this: AVns Mr. Wilson right in killing the league with the Lodge reservntions? That is t tin concrete issue which will emerge. The bitter-enders nre not going to be nhle to give the fight n different turn The greatest protagonist of "bitter endism" is Senator Johnson. Tn snv thnt he is plensed with the results of the Chicago convention is not to adhere to historic truth. He heat Wood nnd Lowden nnd he nvolded express repu dlntlnn in terms of his course against the iencue. but thnt is nil. He cot neither u enndidnte nor n plntform to his liking. He is not likely to mnke himself n very conspicuous figure in the cam paign in support of the Republican ticket, becnuse the great issue will prob ably not be the League of Nations, but one in which Ills sympathies are not so wamly enlisted that ngainst radicalism. A candidate looms nt San Francisco who increased the -wages of railroad men all over the country. lie took the side of the mine laborer in the grent conl strike. He will nnturally hnve behind him the immense orgnnfzatlon of administration officeholders who will gather in that convention. The Democratic pnrty will seek to mnke cnpltnl of the Inbor unrest nnd to bring to its support nil radical groups. The Hearst papers scent the coming of this, and they will support tho indicated candidate. The issue nf the league will bo minimized nnd the fight will Inevit nbly become one between progressive conservatism nnd radicalism. On such nn Issue Mr. Hnrding and Mr. Cooliilge hnvp already indicated their stand. It will be for Americanism n against Socialism. It will be for tho rule of the majority as ngnlnst Soviet nnd orgnnized Inbor direction of whnt concerns the public nnd In which it lias (i right to bo iienrd. It will be for thp'Jubt interests of nil the people on ngnlnst the selfish and Inconsiderate demands of n small but powerful or gnnized minority. Those who now doubt ns to their sup. port of Harding will be glad that they linvo a chance to support such n can didate. The fight must come. It is well that it should come now. Americanism iiiliunM SovicIImii and unpatriotic "ed" radicalism will be the thief issue of this cnnipniKii, and on it llninitif nrwl l nnlMim lm .-.. ... pect ot winning. "' pros' '-fj suit Market St. ab. 10th. 11 A. M. to 11 P. It John Barrj-tnore In First Showing of Paramount'i "Dr. Jckyll and Mr. Hyde" PA! AfX? xsi Markt Btrwt I rl-VjLli 10 A. M., 12, a, 3149 I 5:45, 7:45, l):30 P. It NAZ1MOVA ln '"rHB HEART nu-i.miw v A up A CIJILD.. NEXT WKEK ANITA BTEWArtT In -THE F1UHTINO BUEPHKHDEflS" ARCADIA crinM "MISS HOBBS--tu;;30 NEXT WEEK ROBERT VARWICkT"' In "THE CITY OF MASKS" VICTORIA ""M " 8tt r-w .. 11:15 P.M. Dangerous to Men wiijn Next WeU GEORGES CARPENTIER Is "THE WONDER MAN" C A PITfM 7I Market 8trt In "ttnchartwl ChannI" RFnFMT M"rk' st. ni. itik JAIlAjIlilN 1 DOROTHY DAI.TON "THE DARK MIRROR GLOBE MARKET AT JUNIPER Continuous VaudtrWt JI A. M. to 11 P. M "OH TEDDY I" CABARET D LUXS ' AND OTHERS CROSS KEYS BOth Market att, ,, . - L 3:80. 7 Bnd 9 P. U. "Little Johnny Wise," with Ed. Rsjt BROADWAY j!j " S OVERSEAB REVUE" :' oiliern, nl' WM. FARNUM In "The Adventurtr" r A DDTf'iV"' four shows dailt Llir.lslS. 1 :.10. 3:00 25e, Me 7 & 0 25c, COe, 7ta Mae Murray & Hobart Bosworth IN INITIAL PRESENTATION OF A MORMON MAID ' Added World's Gretttat Motor Ru WILLOW GROVE PARK I-aat Dnya of CONWAY AND HIS BAND Vocal and Instrumental Soloists Each Conctrt HnturJny, June in GRAND ARMY DAY I'tatler Dinners at the Casino Dailv METROPOLITAN I AST 2 DAY? Mi". 2-Jr " DORIS KEANE ROMANCE Tim WO PHOTOPLAY OF THE SEASON Attraction DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS In "THE MOLLYCODDLE' Academy of Music. Bat. Kvr.. June 28 FirttJT VISIT OF FAMOUS Italian Lyric Federation ALFREDO SALMAOai. Director Jn brilliant iiroductlon of OTHELLO With the celebrated Italian tr NICOLA ZEROLA Magnificent chorus and nuperh "rchtj Tlcketn from 1 to 1.1.60. Box ej I teppo'a, 1110 Cheatnutjjt rt CHESTNUT ST.,?oot Coolest Theatre In Town 3 Shows Daily MAT,NSJ Prices. Mats., 25c, 35c, 50c. T.yf . S"& Ne:1 By HAROLD BELL WRIGHT XIMINQ "THE FORTUNBJW.MJSl EITH'S HARRY CARROLL & CO. .ft'iA' In 'rlell- ''', .i-e Sylvia Clark; Harry VM r lUrklna A Monarch! of M- nuw, uumu, ,r ! V Larry me tor the tli .v. I ft ' Otbr Of . 4 WH iSihitjMAsmi alli K ; , . .