m JFTJ ' tJ" iH TV. &T1 '. . Jr. p' , t " - i A ,-.. '!. I ' J 1-4. "S . 'sV? nuW"J,tTlT"J fa J ". , ' 'aw 1 Vi f ' - , ir- , l i'MKJV '' M- laxrin-vrTva.' trrror.Trt T,TP.nm?.T?tTTTT:AmTJTTTA. TTTt7K8TAY. TUNE "24, 1920 1 1 vS , tt JU V XilXJ.lU O- UJLfJUXV .AJJUiJU V JUJJLV JU JLO.J.I-iX J. JU----"- .w--.--u-. --, . .-wt. w , -- (. . ; " mv iv. W- KB '.t &.- II iV- iv l? ! Pi ' ...'W ' f-lanR ; g ", ' " ' Vrfll ij t.. fcfcnmg public HcDgcr PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY fT CVIIUB II. K. CURTIS, PRMinrNT harles II. Lurtlnstnn, Vice President: R G. &tsMln MnrtArv mnd Treasurer! Op' B. Collin. John II Williams and rl J, 8purron, Directors. tenrmmAT nnAnns farra II If rtnTi f'hnlrman 1 'J.f t-)jgAVlD B. SMILEY . Editor 1 vfOHM O. MARTIN. General Business Mir. ftr;."..i . . .. : r-rr riiCUHhM daily at prune Lrnoi uuiiainr, t. ' Init.n.Hila.M Anna,. DhllarlAlnhla JAtla.vtic Cut . rrrjs-lnlon llulkllnr; janmvnosK .1(14 Mailbon Ae IICTSOIT t . 701 Ford llullillng ii Tjittfa 1AAQ l.-iilliirtftn TltllMlnP AClticucio . . " UIO'.' Tribune Uulldlnr " NKW9 IIUREAUB: TVAHItlVnTOV fllTRffifttt. f N. H, Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. and 14th at. wKtw Yosk IU'dbai The Sim Uulldln BCIIHCniPTION RATES . Thn TStr.MNii If nt 11 l.riMittn fin serel to ubcrlbers In Philadelphia and surrounding: J-j towns at the rate of twelve 112) cents per JweK4 payADie to tno carrier. . .. . , . . ii My raall to points outside of Philadelphia. :k the United States. Canada. United mates possessions tioiaite tree, mix imi irents per month Six (10) dollars per year, payable In advance i To a)l rorelRn countries one (It) dollar per month, N o T I o Ifr Subscribers wishing andres . charmed must rive old as well as new ad dress. jBELL. J000 VALMT KEYSTONK, M Kit 3000 T AMrnt all communications fo Evening 1 Public Ltdatr, Independence Sauore, I rntladelpMo. Member of (he Associated Press ( TIIE ASSOCIATED mnss m etcluivclv entitled to the uo for renttblication of all ncirs ilhnatrhei l ' err dited to it or not ntirnriir rrrrfifcrf in IAM nnnrr. nml alia the local news published therein. All riahti of renublication of special ditpatches herein are aha reserved. fhUidflphls, ThunJiT, Jun. 21, 1929 A FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Tlilnis on wlilrh the people expect the new ailmlnlotrutlon to concen trate Its attention) The Delaware river bridpe. A dryt'oek big enough to accommo date the largest ahlpt. Dcvflopmcnl of the rapid transit ayi fern. A convention hall, A oulWinu for the Free Library. An Art Museum. Enlargement of the catcr aupily. Horn's to accommodate the popula. tlon. I THE TEACHERS' VICTORY SIMON GRATZ'S intimation that "the teachers will he pleased" with the action which the Hoard of Educa tion is to tnke concerning increased pay for tcachevs may he taVen ns marking the end of n senson of long and not too creditable wrangling. The nnuounce- ment also confutes the contention that HO relief could be expected before tuc meeting of the next Legislature. It is unfortunate that the financial Rapects of the case could not have been Wore freely admitted without all the pressure, mass-meetings, investigations nd camnaignings. The whole pro- (cedurc was rather undignified, but it ! a satisfaction to learn that it is prob ably over and that the teachers will be rewarded with at least some approxi mation of their just deserts. REROUTING TALK IQUGGESTIONS for rerouting the IsJ trolley s.stem in this city nre the- loretically welcome, for the problem is ancient, eomplicated nnd vexatious. A trial of some of the numerous proposals I would, however, be still more cheering. Kl if ' Months ago discussion centered in the fpjan involving tne relocating oi ihp tracks around the City Hall and the diversioti of some of the westbound Icars out Filbert instead of Market jatreet. Yesterday A. Howard Jones, 'assistant engineer of the Public Service ! Commission, recommended to that .fcbdy the abolition of all rastbound ' trolley service on Arch street and n new development of Race street for astbound ears. The ue of Filbert street for turning certain cars of the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Tenth nnd Elev enth street Hues was also suggested. Council has jut passed an ordinance authorizing the construction of a single trolley track on Sansom street between ! Twentieth nnd Twenty-second streets, to enable the transit company to relieve congestion on Walnut street. Neither ' talk nor new privileges alone will, J however, cope with a constantly deep ening muddle unless' accompanied by action , Some of the plans advanced may prove 'to be impractical. Some may work benefits. The public is not profoundly Interested in the icademic aspects of the questiou If oorcrowdlng can be (relieved by rerouting comparatively easy to accomplish, if the traffic block ade on our narrow streets can be eased by certain simple chunges, trolley riders will greet such reforms with satisfaction and will quickly adjust their habits to 1 the new order What is needed is some ' tvidence of performance. UNHEAVENLY TWINS , TJIUAM JOHNSON, if he is luing ' JLJ. np to the gorgeous promise which ' lie made to the world after the conven tion at Chicugo, is sitting Ruddlia-like ' under a tree in silent meditation What will Mr Bryan do after he Johuaons ' his own folk nt San Francisco? lie will not be silent; that is sure. He will not meditate unless he medl i tates aloud upon a stump Once the s country used to worry nbout what it t should do with its ex -Presidents. It If has n real concern now. It will have t to find a quiet and dignified refuge for t frustrated and embittered presidential " candidates. There nre a great many of .hem They clutter up the front yard and. . because their pence of mind seems gone I forever, they get on people's nerve 5 Has uuyboih an islund a far island 'beyond heniing thut In would like to ( put jo II good use''" DR. McMASTER RETIRES THE prestige which the 1'nlversitj ot Pennsylvania has long Jenved from 'John Bach Mc.Master will, fortunately, f be) retained, nt least in part, by his (connection with that institution in the f Tolo of professor emeritus. Nona the less, his resignation of the chair of I American history is u loss which it Would be insincere to minimize. a In point of distinction, Doctor Mc. Master easily takes rank in n field of literature in which this country has attained especial eminence, thut of vivid, fasciuatiue historical writluir. i In 'thut senso Bancroft, Prescott, Mot ley are his artistic confreres. From I another point of view his methods differ radically from theirs, for It Is the do wlnnment of u neonle. their habits. ' (heir Diodes of political thought, the multifarious phabes of their existence, I rather thun the procession of dramatic Tents ana tno marcu or signal ouics, which hns interested nun most , Illn mointiuentnl work, "A Histom nf the Piilple of tho United I States," Jsf to Ur tno It humanize! the chron teles of this nation. It mnrlcs a now jepnrture In the study of history, the influence of which hns been b marked that the procedure today hardly ranks ns a novelty I'lillndelphlnns will wish for Doctor Mi-Master the ripest enjoyment of his new leisure The. I'nlverslty, which will miss his dry humor and the in spiration of his exhaustive learning, will cherish n particularly grateful memory of the man who "did so much to justify Its reputation for scholarship. THE KILKENNY CATS IN SAN FRANCISCO Historic Feline Conflict May Look Like a Purring Amiability When the Democrats Get Going UNLESS ail signs fall, the antics of the Democratic romentlon next week will add to the gn.icty of the Re publicans if not to the gajety of na tions. The famous affair of the Kilkenny rat. supposed to represent the peak, the acme, the superlative of destructive conflict, was a peaceful and purring amiability in comparison with what is likely to happen when the contending factions get together. There is an impression In certnln quarters tiint President WiNon will tell the comention what to do and that it will doellelv follow ills directions. Hut the available evidence does not wholly justify this tribute to the President's powers of persuasion. Take, for example, the question of indorsing the League of Nations cov enant. The Democratic senators are supposed to icprescnt the feeling of their party, save when they subordinate their own Uews to the views of Mr. Wilson Twenty-one of them oted for the Lodge reservations in spite of every thing that Mr. Wilson could do. Of the twent) -three who oted ngaiust the Lodge reservations there were several who, if left to their own choice, would have joined the twenty-one. Indeed, it is a mnttcr of common report that the modified treaty could have beep ratified with the aid of Democratic votes if the President had been willing. Now, with one-half tr more of the Democratic senators opposed to the President's position on the trentv, it will be some task for him nnd his friends to get a plnuk in the platform indorsing his cour-e Mr. Bryan is not likely to consent to it, and Mr. Bryan is Ihe most skillful and resourceful con vention lender in the party. He can pump up more moral enthusiasm on short notice thnn any other orator who has stood under n sounding board in a (onveution hall for a generation. The fact that he has waxed eloquent on the wrong issue time after time does not affect his power to moe the crowds. He broke with the President on the treaty issue nt the Jaiksrm Day dinner in Washington last winter and he lias been busy ever since in lining up his friends. The philosophical spectator in the gallery can await the fight oer the treaty plank In confident certainty that it will be worth the price of admission and then some. The inexnlicable light ness of Mr. Bryan on this issue ma handicap him somewhat, but it will not dampen his moral enthusiasm nor will it destroy the sonorousuess of his ora torical periods. But the predispo-ition of the Democratic party to go w rong makes the result of his tight uncertain. In fact, in this Democratic predisposi tion to blunder lies the hope of the President to put over his plans. But the real fight Is likely to come when the convention takes up tle "dry" issue. The Democrat ic partv has been known for generations as the whisky party. Mr. Brjan is going to ak it to sign the pledge, wear a white ribbon and curse the demon rum and the' demonettes, light wine and beer. Can he persimde the convention to do it? We shall see, we shall see. Albert S)dne Burleson, the political adviser of the Piesideut, thinks he will not succeed. He sas that "the ridicu lous nnd unncieshan restrictions" in the Volstead net should be stricken out. Governor Edwards, of New Jersey, who was elected on n wet platform, and Judge Bonmwell. of Pennsylvania, who tried to get elected to tlte governorship on the same kiud of n platform, will back up Mr Burleson. And unless all signs fail, the New York delegates will not be enthusiastic for any plan which commits the party to the proposition that America should be made a Desert of Sahara Still more important, the President himself is not an enthusiastic "dry." His record is one of consistent opposi tion to dragging the liquor questiou into politics He wanted the wartime re strictions on the sale- of intoxicants removed. He knows that there are votes in a moist if not in n wet plank in the plntform And nil the delegates ! aKo know it. But the nls know that I if they adopt a platform which even . squints in the direction of real beer and i light wines they will array against them the church vote the Anti-Saloon ' League and all :b moral condemnation that the W. C. T. U can bring down upon them. The Republicans dodged the issue, for they decided that it was not pru dent to engage in the exciting und some times unprofitable sport of baiting sleep ing demons. Mr. Bryan however, has read the "Pilgrim's Progress" and he is aware that the lions in the wny seemed more formidable nt a distance than when viewed close nt hand They could growl at the wayfarer but they could Lot touch him if he kept in the middle of the road. If Mr. Bryan does not de liver himself of a crown-of-thorus and cross-of-gold speech on the imperative duty of the Democratic party to aline itself v,n the side of sobriety he will disappoint all expectations. And then if the platform plank is built in the shape of a catamaran, so nrrauged that tho wets and drys cau both rldi on it without rubbing elbows, he will doubt less insist thut lid won n wi tory for temperance. But however the struggle come out, It will be preceded bv a di verting monkey-nud-parrot interlude, which will uot tend to the early re sumption of amicable relations between the parrot nnd the monkey. And there remains the task of agree ing ou a candidate Mr. Palmer has kindly aunounecd that he is willing to staLd it fall with the administration flag, but the New York World bus per tinently asked whether the administra tion is willing to stand or fall with Mr. Palmer. Mr. McAdoo has withdrawn his name, but a Kansas City delegate Insists on nominating him Governor Cox, of Ohio, is willing to run on a wet platform, nnd so is Governor Ed wards. The vast expanse of water which separates Ambassador Davis from the convention hall tnayinake the dry delegates friendly to blmif And thero Is always aut. xiryao, w Deecwnea wiin He would like nothing better than to wrest control of tho convention from the mnn Aho kicked him out of the office of secretary of state and to repeat his achievement of 1SD0 and nominate himself. Next tfeek Is certain to bo diverting to those who can appreciate tho com edies and tragedies of politics. DRIFT RESPONSIBILITY 'or trouble of any sort Is seldom so general nnd widespread ns It appears to be in the new rail Rtrlkes. When the Esch Cummins lnw was passed It was clear that a wage tribunal of a special sort was necessary to deal with questions then high in the nir and threatening to come to earth with destructive thuds. But Mr. WiNon took his own time and let months pass before he established the Railway Labor Board for which Con gress liad made provision. Slmllnrly the rnilwa managers knew that pre liminary and regional boards had to ho established as basic nnd indispensable parts In the new scheme for wage nnd labor adjustments of which the federal labor board Is the head. Such minor boards, acting with the authority of Congress to investigate causes of trouble at the source and re port. If necessary, to Washington, are nbsolutel necessary for n sane nnd just approach to problems that culminnte in strikes on the railway lines. The cor porations and their men were supposed to provide for equnl representation on committees established to co-operate with theso regional boards and to for mulate their claims und counter-claims for peaceful hearing nnd adjustment. No move to that end wns ever made by the rallwajs or b. the unions. More over, some of the stiikes recently called nie not onh for higher wages. They are intended to he protests against the theory of labor adjustments provided for by the Esch-Cummins law. Every one has been drifting. The theory of wage settlements to be observed on the rail lines hi the future, if the plain intention of Congress is to be accepted as a guiding rule, was pretty clearly outlined in the recent voluminous report of the President's industrial conference. It was contended in that report that a flat nud general rate of wages, even if it should be ex ceptionally high, could not always be fair, since what might be an ndequate or even a liberal rate in one part of the country or in one community might prove to be insulhcient in others. Mr. Hoover and his nssociates in the Indus trial conference recognized the fact that living costs vary hi different localities, and they sought to find a plau which would insure fair wages and working conditions rnther than lived and in dexible scales likely to be unfnir to some nnd more thnn fair to others. In denling with a labor question of uational scope some such departure from older methods seems to be neces sary So the scheme of arbitration finally worked out for the Railway Labor Board would nwmallj have its foundations in local and regional boards authorized to make investigations of the most thorough sort after effort! for arbitration had failed. Such investiga tions would supply the information upon which the Railway Labor Board, as the iinal court of appenl, could base its binding decisions. In ordering the board to act, nud act at once, Mr. Wilson has asked it to settle questions with which it has no thorough acquaintance. Yet under the pressure exerted from the White House jesterdny. and because of the threat of the brotherhoods to abandon their atti tude of opposition to outlaw strikes, some decision favorable to the strikers is pretty sure to be rendered. This will not menu that we arc done with trouble ou the railway lines. Nothing hns been thoroughly investigated. Nothing hns been settled. The country is merely muddling along. Sooner or later settled pence will come on the lailronds. But it will come oul after the companies nnd the unions quit .spuning for advantage und recognize the .uitue of the plan pro posed by Coiigns-. or nt least the wis dom of giving it a fair trial. WHAT NIPPUR SAYS TO US CONSIDERING how badly the huiiiuu rnce U inclined to behave, (here is a kiud of withering irony in the excel lent code of laws uow in the possession of the I'nnei-itj Museum. This recent acquisition embodies the oldest set of legal regulations ever discovered. It consists of claj tablets found nt Nippur and said to lie about ."000 jears old, antedating t v n millennium the famous rules of Iliiiiiinurabi. Mot of the offenses in this ancient code nie committed today. This is un questiouablj saddening unless reflection is accompanied by the thought that there is, after all, something elevating and epiial in this constant and con sc ion struggle of frail humanity against wrongdoing .Mark Twain, when his subjective pessinmrn was most acute, defied man kind to be anything else than Inex tinguishably cheerful. That perhaps is one reason why the codes of Babylonia have been re-enacted In varying forms as thp Mcles have rolled on. Furthermore, one feature of them can be contemplated without discour agement Control of property in slaves whs rigidly regarded by the Mesopota minn lawgivers. We have passed that stage nt least. But as it required nearly lite millenniums to reach that height, it teliooes us not to be impatient of our I other multitudinous backslldlngs. The true cbnrrn of an ideal is the pursuit of it. Cool weather js holding back Kan sas und Oklahoma w heat retardinr but Wheat and Politics uot hurting the crop. And the curious condition therefore exists that for the moment farmers there have more help than they tieed "Watch for the sun, then come a running," is the word sent to all employment agencies. Ever and anon thoughtful observers get the notion that wheat-field bulletins are perhaps more important than political conven tions. You might not sus- When the Bike pect tho fact on Conies Back Broad street or the Parkway, but the fact Is being noted by athletic instruc tors bicycle builders, economic stu dents nnd observers of social phenomena i tnt people are beginning to use their lees acaln. This may be due to the in tcresting circumstance that shank's mare eats no hay, and the further en lightening discovery that the silent steed uses uo gasj African golf has lost Come Seven, some of its popu Come Eleven larlty Iu Ablngton township since eleven men, seven of them well-known busi ness men of Germantown nud Jenklii A....... i, lnnlfAfl .... nn.l n.nwlla AmaI' Are the numbers slgulHcant? W thoujht co, too. THE GOWNSMAN Bringing Home tho Cow TIIE Professor Is a dignified elderly gentleman. But In the country he makes certain concessions to rural con dltlons. These consist In knickerbock ers, neglige collnrs nnd neckwear that he would not appear In before a class. When he walks In the country he car rles a cane, not for support, for he Is still quite able afoot, hut ns a species of sign strnngo custom handed down the ages of n dignity if not n station In life. When it wns suggested the otlif r day that Genevra was going down the hill nftcr her cow, the other men of the household being otherwise em ployed, the Professor offered his serv ices ns nn aid and abetter in this lnud able effort. For what could be a more ngreeable prospect than this wnlk 'over the hill, mostly down grade through winding paths of woodland nnd meadow? Moreover, Genevra is pleas ing to look upon nud plcnsant to talk to, for she Is n wise little country womnn, without guile nnd possessed besides of marvelous culinary attain ments. On the wny down, beguiled with chat and accompanied by n regu lar swing of thn enne, it developed that (ieuevra's cow consisted really of Madam Bovinn herself, her elder daugh ter, Bovinorn, r yearling heifer, nud little Bovlnetta, as jet too joung to trnxel much on legs. The Professor had not bargained for quite so much, but he nwalted developments nnd de elopinruts came. THE inrriage of Bovlnetta hi n bag as to her legs, in a box ns to the ret of her anatomy, on a working Ford -had already been arranged for all this the Professor was happy to leain. Boinettn was already weighing upward of sixty pounds, howsoever she seemed all unsteady on her legs, each with n tendency to go otherwhere. So Bovlnetta wns left to await her limou sine nnd the nttentlnn of Genevrn, who knows a tiling or two, nnd the nt tention of the Professor, who knows nothing nt all nt least on this sub ject wns centered on Mndnm Boviua mid her amiable daughter. The Pro fessor had been assured that Madam wns n kind cow nnd the word "amia ble" was the word employed, perhaps euphemistically, ns to Bovinora. The problem, after nil, looked simple enough. Cntie jour "klne," for both were teth ered iu the barn of a hospitable neighbor. Drive them up the road "a piece," let down "tiii' bars" of the pasture, through which the toad lay down the hill. "Head jour cattle" to the path, through the bars and "herd" them along, turn ing to the left when you reach the top of the hill. The Professor rather prided himself on the ease with which lie acquired for immediate use technical words like "head" nnd "herd" and "kine" and "cattle." It seemed un duly cautious to him on the part of Genevra that she insisted tiint the kine should be roped nbout the neck nnd nose, at lenst until the pasture wns reached and the bars passed. The Pro fessor would have liked to begin the "herding" nt once, nnd he remembered that there wns n cowherd in Homer or Theocritus or somewhere else. But Genevra was firm ns to the ropes nnd knew nil about them. Genevra is an accomplished rountrywnman; wlint kind of n countrjmau the Professor is it is not important to inqiihc. SO MADAM BOVINA nud Bovinora were duly and skillfully roped by the clever hands of Genevra and led suc cessively oht of the barn The Professor stood at attention, his cane In linnd. He received Mndam Boinn first and held her, or at lrnt the rope where unto she wns attached, nonchalantly In the left hnnd, his cane in his right. Bo Una wns, as remarked before, a kiud cow, ami jet the cane was embar rassing. It occurred to the Professor that it might not be good form to receive under such cliciinistances, cane in hnnd. As he was meditating whnt to do with his cane, Bovinora catapulted out of the barn door with Genevra aliantly but somewhat innfusedl in tow. And the Professor on whom the situution had at last fully dawned, with the bravery of a Bajard and the gullantry of a Raleigh happily combined, insisted on exchang ing ropes with Geneira in one of the instanU jf i aim in wrict Miss Bovinoru with head down was thinking what to do next I T WOI LD be far easier to rernrd what Bovinora did not do next thnn what she ,j.i do , for she left very little conceivable to the professorial mind not undone First the Professor discarded his cane, then his dignitj, then his hat. as Bovinoru plunged u thr right or bolted to the left. Now she wns horns down with heels in air and off on a full run. the Professor reluctantly dragging after with accelerated strides; and anon she stopped in full career and the Professor went on, only to be hurried wilh udly in another direction To tlu credit of his profession hi it recorded that the Professor held on to the rif.e and shortened it until he moved with greater uniformity und less diversity of action us Bovinora gamboled and gal loped slid nnd sidled, romped nnd renrtd us Bovinora backed anil whirled and pranced apd danced. It was a pus ile deux in which It cannot be truthfully said ihat the Professor danced gracefully A great Alpine climber, who wa likewise h scientist, under a shower .1 fulllnf stones once calculated the P'lruliolus ii their flight. It cannot be said that our Professor was ns Interested in the curves, the wlgglhigs, the in wdutiotis. the spirals and contortions of his flight with Bovinorn, It is said thut the way of r maid tvith n man is n thing past divining. Tho way of a hufer with n professor lr its unex pectedness is its peer and suns pareil. ON PASSING the bar, the voyage went more smoothly Loosened and untied from her professor Bovi nora behaved more decorously, and the furmer now undertook the leading of Bovinn, no verj difficult matter except where a particularly succulent plot of grnss delayed The only disadvantage of this arrangement was tiint it leit Genevrn behind to encourage Bovinora at need with the end of tho rcpo; and Genevrn flushed Is pleasing to look upon and ut all times agreeable to talk -to withal. The hill was made with the turn to the left, and the best thing nbout this bringing home of the cow was that In the midst of all the ridiculousness of the cone and the professorial gambols with Bovinora. Genevra, wlso llttlo countrywoman that she. is, never turned an eyelash, Hhe did more. She retrieved the cane, and brought it up with Boyl nettaubagwd ,'? od In her Hmouf '."rjBK.t SHORTCUTS AM Small Town Stuff Warren Harding. Germany will soon know Just how much she will have to pay the piper. The "wets" hnve received another smack In the face. Burleson favors their cause. When the Pennsylvania' Horticul tural Society "says It with flowers" it rises to heights of eloquence. Opponents of the governor of Ohio for the nomination simply can't see nn other Cox's army marching on to Wash ington. We trust Mr. Borgdoll Is being sufficiently entertained by newspaper accounts of things appertaining to his getaway. The four stowawaj-s who escaped from Ellis Island In a rowboat appear to have had enterprise enough, at least, to make good citizens. In the opinion of Colonel Sheldon Potter nnd William Hancock the plan mapped by Mr. Mitten consists exclu sively of intemperate zones. After a cursory scanning of tho sordid tale, the Cynical Cuss opines that the Elwell murder myrtery is n cose of much ado about next to nothing. President Lowell, of Harvard Uni versity, sajs that the story of Jonah Is a parable nnd few nre shocked. This shows how far the world has moved in a generation. Yeast is being used by a Brooklyn man In the manufacture of n substitute for gasoline. For the auto driver ns for the friend of John Barleycorn the sun of hope'iises In the jenst. One vote-winning feature of the Republican ticket is the fact that both Hording nnd Coolldge are presumably familiar with carpet-beaters, frozen pipes, lawn mowers and snow shovels. The pnssage by Council of the boulevard bill brings to mind a curious bit of carelessness, not to say callous ness. Nobody for days past has in quired concerning the health of poor Mrs. Schmidt. -By the ruling of the deputy com missioner of public works, women's bathing dresses arc to be regulated by their consciences at Chicago bathing beaches. The Cynical Cuss sees In this more lntitiidc limn longitude. There is distinct encouragement for the school teachers in the fact that the mntter nt issue has long ago passed the stage where the advisability of an increase of pay was open to argument. Tlte question now is simply one of how to raise the necessary cash. During 101!) in California Japa nese increased 111 per cent. Hindus more than .":$ per cent nnd whites only a trifle more than 8 per cent. There mny be no yellow peril in the United States, but the figures nre assuredly a little startling. ' The Democrats don't blunder nil the time. Champ Clark's declaration thnt "the unfortunntc part Mr. Cool idge had to play In the policemen's strike iu Boston will help the Demo cratic cause" is proof that the Great I'nterrlfied mnde no error In defeating him in the 1011 convention. Assuming ns correct the declaration of P. R. R. officials thnt the strike Is failing, nnd the further declaration on the part of the strikers that the strike is gaining, there nre reasons for be lieving thnt there arc no grounds for belief; and beyond that, on the face of the evidence, no fair mnn can be ex pected to go. "Only three children burned to death in a jenr!" Naturally, with so fine a iccord, Council could do no other thnn kill the ordinnnce forbidding the sale of "harmless" sparklerk. Still, come to think of it, hero and there are to be found people who think children even more important to civilization than "business. Elegy IN THE days of long ago At conventions Democratic Liquid amber ued to How ; Cocktnils' kicks were most emphatic. Platforms often were erratic; OratorB were far fiom slow At conventions Democratic In the days of long ago. Now. alas! the country's dry. Kickers nil too long have tarried. Those who for a kick would cry By the Brynnites nre harried. Frisco is a desert arid And there's no oasis nigh. Kickers all too long have tarried ; Now, alas! the country's dry. Democrats without a drink! Patriots whose pants nre painful! Burleson's too sore to think. Cox has grieennces a train full. Bryan ut Ijceums gaiuful Swift has put them on the blink Patriots whose punts nre painful! Democrats without a drink! G. A. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. When was Maryland settled? Who rtas the father of Chautailnut.7 wizard?" 'S kn0W" aS lhe plant Wha Italian city la famoui for It macaroni .sausage, and liquors? Who as Samuel Pepyg? What lusticcH of tho United States Supreme Court were member S tie electoral commission that de- of llaes- " 0t 187 ln ra"or 7. What is a corona? 8 W!.'L B,re;,t, w,r'ler wa known an "The Inspired Idiot"' 9. Who wcro Ihe ItoBlcruclnns? 10. What Kreat composer was the father of twenty children? tamer Answers to Yesterday'a Quiz 1. In thf. Republican convention nt mnn wnen Lincoln was nominated there were eight candidates, but there were no nominating enreehp 2. -Manhattan Island was first settled In lOJO y 3. Sarn K Hlddons was n tragic nctres of tho Ilrltlsh atage. born Ju y 6 175B. died Juno 8. 1831 y B' 4 "("'abater originally meant in old French a place Inclosed by trellla work, later, a tavern E, Flag Day lias oeen celebrated Blnce 1889, when Hoorire Rolen, u New Yoilc teacher with his klnderuar. ten pupils held patriotic exercises. t Ilalkh Is a town nnd district iri Afghan Turkestan. l m 7. Montnna according to the director of the department of education of tho RubscU Sage Foundation, has the best nil-round school system in the United States. ' m ln U A canabotu l a very large shark In- iiuiuiiiiK uueji Yvuicra ou ine coast tt Europe, . Baint Chfld of .ceaclUa wa nn Knir. Ush, prelateMhoTdled In tft. Australia wa discovered,, by . the ioriurueae in iei.- w 1 jliU DR. EDGAR F. SMITH SEES BIG FUTURE FOR COLLEGES Retiring Provost, of U. oj P. Predicts Wide Expansion of Uni versities Overcrowding a Temporary Condition. Says West Should Serve as Model SUPREME faith and great optimism for the future of American colleges is Dr. Edgar Fahs Smith's final word as provost of the University of Pennsyl vania. The distinguished educator, seemingly ns busy as ever in hiv office in the Chemical Laboratory Building, yet al ready serene in his freedom from the cares of his arduous office, tnlked quiet ly nud freely on the subject he knows so well education. His optimism extends farther than the matter of colleges nnd universities. He prophesied happily concerning edu cation ns a great fntor In Americn's future. He pictured education as a stanch ship, under full sail, uow bent lug through heavy seas, but always pressing steadily on, and bound to reacli quieter waters, and her destination n newer, broader nnd more perfect ideal, now only a promise and n hope. No Fear for Future "If she will keep a steady keel," he said, "and if those interested in her will not let themselves bo disbiindcd from the accomplishment of their tnsk, we have no reason to fear for the future." The retiring provost predicted a steady increase In college enrollments, but be declared that that increase would not be as large in the future as It has been for the lnBt few years. "The war has been responsible for the recent leaps and bounds in attend ance at universities," said the provost. "That same war has set the world to wondering and marveliug ut the effi ciency of home people jes, of the Ger mans, In particular, who accomplished o much by speclolizcd training. It is being renllzed that education con tributed very largely to that efficiency. "People who have never heretofore taken any Interest In higher education have been attracted to it. Many who never had money enough to purchase It have suddenly found that money In thoir pockets. They have spent their war earnings, home of them, to give their sons nn education, and they have been RfltiflftCtl, "It is a mistake to think thnt this class will lose their suddenly aroused interest in institutions of higher leurn ingt These groups of people w ill ilwnys in tho future bo a source of plentiful supply for the colleges of America." Sees Collego Expansion To tako care of the ever increasing enrollment, Doctor Smith predicted a proportional enlargement nnd espan aion of colleges nlrendy established rather than the creatlou of new insti tutions. State, universities und pri vately erdowed colleges as well as those of a 'denominational character, will be those which will expiud to meet the demands "The question ot unnnciai huppou, the provost admitted, "will continue to be the most vital obstacle, but 1 fee) sure that people will ake up to the necessity of paying for their educa tional ndvantnges. The West hlinuld serve as our oiodel, both in the matter of public education nd the establish ment of large state-run unherslties." Asked ivny it m mt est uas been more willing to loosen its purso strings for this purpose, Doctor Smith "I think It is a fact that in the East hero we huve a condition, not exactly the class system oi Europe, out more or less approximating it. There is t. large group bo wealthy, and whose fathers nnd grnndfathera before them were, so wealthy, that the matter of worrying over educational privileges is unkuowu to them. People on One Plane "In the West It Is different. In the past, nt any rate, people have been more nearly on one plane. Education has been a common problem, and every man, in planning for his own son's educatlou. has naturally been Interested in inoi, ni nw uit,uwi vumi, inn rwult. h been.that everyone; , bcm nxloUH to t;qutrHuU 'to education. in that of hlB neighbors' chiUlren, TJm ElOUH IP rquvnuiiir io munition. "Annruw iacuc ai nag neineii iin- WONDEp. "West is that the universities hnve been more generous. They hnve been more willing to let down the bars to those desiring to enter. Their curriculum hnve been freer. Coeducation naB been n common feature. Thu old, staid nnd conservative institutions in the East mny have to follow suit. I am not sure, but I believe they will not be found wnnting in tho crisis." Doctor Smith shook his head Bhrcwd ly when asked If ho believed that the suggested merger of th three big in stitutions of. the state, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania nnd Penn State, would become a rcnllty. "I've considered the matter thor oughly, and I can't say if such a mer ger will come to pas's iu the nenr future. It might, but there is much Bcntlment, especially among the college alumni, against it. Worked Out in West "It would seem much more satisfac tory to contribute to one great insti tution rather than several smaller ones, nnd, on the fnco of it, the plan would seem to be nn excellent one to provide the needed equipment by htnto aid, but well, its nctual fulfillment is another matter. We do know, however, that It hns been worked successfully out west, in such states as Kansas and Okla homa." No radical change in curriculum? of colleges is foreseen by Doctor Smith. "I do not think there will be any further specialization such ns wo have seen in tho Inst decade," he declared. "But I look to bee the colleges .run nlong, as they are now, maintaining their academic nnd arts courses for those who want them, nud giving such technical courses as they seem fitted to glvo. Schools of business llko tho Wharton School will continue to flour ish, ns they nttrnct n class of men who would never think of nttcndiug college under the old conditions. To give you nn idea of tho popularity of such schools, I need only mention that there have4 been more than 1000 applicants for admission to the Wharton School next year." A question as to tho future of ath letics caused the provost to smile re flectively. "Yea, ns you know, I've always been an advocate and a friend of college ath letics. I see no reason to believe that they will not assume mi even more prominent position thnn they now hnve. PLonrniih St Opra House V-neatnUtOt. Coolest Theatre In Town MATINEES A1L.Y B:ao- 20c, 35o and BOo nVENINOS, 7 and 0 25c. r.Oc and 7fio A Photoplay that Is dramatic, romantic, leautltully acted und superbly screened. By HAROLD BELL WRIGHT COMIKO "THE FOKTUNB TELLER." METROPOLITAN ?& Last Three Days , Mat, S..10 2Ba tcs , 1 tt II -23c, BOo k"i?KS ?CorwA IIIH NEWEST AND CJREATEHT PICTURE TODAT IS HERBERT DAY - AT 1 tII 1 CMT CUCWt: DAnt ' WILLOW UKUVfc. I'ARK 11 JCrtrt Programs r n pv"", ..fy..,,.. f , " ' . 4 Professorships in sports nre by no means beyond the hounds of possi bility." As the shadows deepened in the cool quiet of the doctor's office the talk drifted ine'vltnbly to the situation in Philadelphia's public schools and the tenchcr's salary question. "Again, in this case. I have great faith," the provosr said. "I feel thnt the shortage will be overcome and not only that, but that the public schools will get a better class of teachers. The present situation arose unexpectedly, out of a clear skv. Thev weren't nre- pared for it, and for the time they were i swnmpeu, but they'll never let them selves be caught in such a position again. The colleges and universities' will provide more nnd more teachers to the country, Mnny have nlreadv es tablished choirs in education. Others will follow. Incidentally, the colleges themselves will continue to improve their teaching forces, becauso they are beginning to realize and again the West led tho way that money must be spent if the proptr men arc to be pro vided " Doctor Smith paused here and shifted in his sent with that tireless enerjj peculiar to him. It was easy to nee that he was profoundly stirred br the hope which was in his heart of thi future of learning Quickly and feel ingly ho brought the subject to his be loved Pennsylvania, whose work he had guided for so many years. "Tho University Is all right," he said, his eyes lighting, "she will go on. She's only getting ready to do the great things -planned for her. The fulfill ment will surpass even the expectation. I see for her expansion, added prestige, added glory, illimitable promise. "You nnd J will live to see it." Market St. ab. 10th 11 A. M to 11 P. JOHN BARRYMORE In Paramount' Production of "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" NEXT WECtv EOUEMS'O'llBlKN In "A TOOL AND HIU MONEY" DAT A r"L7 12M MARKET STltH? 6.15, '., U.3iKlt Anita Stewart "FI0"J,KRdE8S N't Wk Pert Lytell In "Jimmy VsIenUM A J CHESTNUT ST Del. 16TB Arcadia 10 a. m n. s. s . 6.45, T.43, 0:30 P M. Robert Warwick "T"G $.vMA8gr NEXT WEEK "OLD LADf 31" V . MARKET STItEBT Ab. MB ICtOria 0 A. M to 11:18 rM. Georges Carpentier wonde$an NEXT WEEK PAULINE KnKDF.niCK in "THE WOMAN IN KOOM 13" CAPlTOLSlliJ REGENT MaB0 globe -;3 Con,nuou.EV.uaev...e.;;0;. UN CROSS KEYS 00T"-AnTMVtFV sia fpanz Tnourn BROADWAY JtfUZWffJ'' "cindeuella." M.'sirALron.m METRO PIIOTOPLAT 'flI10ItEAiii2 GARRICK ,.,-,., unnivs DAll '.","" Suisse, m 'V nRc. Me, TJ of sensatlonil rirttt'J, Ist Three Days or """"":'i a irv A MORMON MAID EITH'S second a. '",- , rn HARRY CARROL & ca , . .... if 1 T, WEEK in " -"- 'Varieties oi '- ROSc?bA.nANDfl WITH MIDOIE WIW'K". ""nSifAN. ' VINIH DALYl CLAUDIA COIXUA DAVIQNBAU'S CELE6TjALSJc A ' . . , n r "xfTrTT.ER TUB J, r.-.-- fl OANQNS nsrafr 1' . T-!.. J ocnMS mim.ii',' yjv'v- - 'pHYBJCAf' ij VWHYA " 2,",yrCAL CflfflTito ' ? Xiii r. . J. . .. I. . UmSBBBBBBBBBBV: V r.s.vjSt' Xi'.'i V-.. :jj