RTRTT nrvrr JST- TT5WT"l,ipW &W3 ws 3&T .-,' . TfWdJ9 i . iV 5 r umm 'J sfv.f i'- . H BSTr I " 1 ,i Qubluffteft&er TPtJBLIC LEDGER COMPANY t CTRUB H. K. CUIXTI8. PsmiMnt s'yjwwj H. LuStntton, Vleo Prtant: P ' ;fl. CoUtna. J. Bpurtoon, Secretary ana. Treasurer; John IJ. William and Director. EDITORIAL BOARD; 'iffl Jj i y.jBAvro a bmilet caitor V i.OHN C. MA11TIN. .General Business Mtr. 4" f . M..t.f.t a j. . . n..lMln r' if" ( 'u'"nro aany at i'UBMO L.imjnx uuwui.ib, .. Indtnenilenc., 8nunr. Philadelphia : . i! AttlKno Citi Prfwl7nlo Building .i. , nw xoxjt, ,..,,,,,,,, ,,3(H sionison ah pemoiT 701 Ford Hulldlnic we. Leuii 1008 Fullerton Building Cnjcuoo 1302 Tritium Building NEWS BUREAUS: WABtnUOTON IlracsU. . .... , W YOK BCIUD.. . . for. Pennsylvania Ave. ana iiw.,'"j The ffi.ii Building nnnnMn.MfAU nftnna The BrrNiNo I'coLio Limps I served to Subscribers In Philadelphia and surrounding towns at the rate of twelve (12) cents por I wee, payaox payable to th carrier. ... V - - . or man ic :ha United State. Canada, or. United mall In nnlnta mitaldft nf FMiaaf ipnia. tea possessions, posta free, fitly ljji 12, ' wnt tier month. aix iiu; aoiiar .. " .a aartni in anwanjt. iTo at) foreign countries one (11) dollar M i ir . eiiV.nihAa wlchlnir addreft fO hanged rauit give old aa well as new ad ores. BELL. JCOO WALNUT KEYSTOISE, MAIN J00O 1 T JLddrtaa all communications to Evening PttMti T.ttAnt. Inttftndcnca ffauare. PM!aJfpM. l B Member of tho Associated Tress THE ASSOCIATED PRESS is eeclutivelu entitled to tho use for republication of all notes dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local nctcs published therein. , tAll rights of republication of special irtpatchct herein are also reserved. Philadelphia. Monday. July 12. -fl A FOUR-VEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Thlns on which the people expect tha new admlnUtratlon to concen trate Its nttentloni The Deiware river bridge. A. drydock big enough to accommodate- the largest ship. Development of the rapid transit sys tem. J. convention halU X building lor the Free Library. An Art Museum. Enlargement of the water supply. Homes to accommodate the popuw tion. COX AS A LITERARY STYLIST AS A newspaperman Governor Cox's views on simplicity and clarity of etyle may be said to carry a certain mount of official weight. It is inter esting, therefore, to note that his opin ion of the phraseology ot the League of Kations covenant is exceedingly low. Of the two reservations which he re cently suggested as necessary to the i document, the first takes this forms 'That the United States signs with the agreement and understanding that all the signatories are bound together for only one reason to keep the peace of the world." According to the preamble , evised in Paris, the various nations Mcribe to the convenant, m order to A- Infnmnrlnnnl ro-oneration and fr7VA?!lwfa5lef Intprnntional neaco and se- V ' 'iawtvh .h. nMn.rtA fit K1!iattAna sot to resort to war." How far apart in meaning these two declarations are may be left to the pub lic judgment. If the hazy impression ihould exist that the sense in these in stances is identical, the excuse for Gov ernor Cox's reservation will have to be x Bought elsewhere. And the search nat urally raises the question of style. Is It more elegant to promise "to keep tho peace" or "not to resort to war"? The thunder of debate which this .qnery inspires is likely to be quite as r '-lris. oo nnn ,.. ..-...., .. ..I,IaI. )!. 4MW OUjr LUU.IU.C.SJ 1U1.U UJ1UI Be -waged over the distinguishing marks of Tweedledum and Tweedledce. A GREAT NAVAL OFFICER fpHB death of Lord Fisher removes I J. one of the most brilliant officers the British navy has had since Lord Nelson. Fisher was a fighting man, who re made .the Britibh navy during the period of his supremacy. He fitted it lor the work that it had to do during ttao war, and some of Its most brilliant exploits were achieved under his direc tion. If the policy of audacity which he advised had been adopted it is likely that the nar would have been ended sooner; but the ministry was unwilling to take the risks which he insisted should be taken. But be bad the satis faction of pointing out in his reminis cences, recently published, that the revelations of German naval weakness, which came in the course of time, proved that the risks which he wished to take "would not have been great and that the German naval power could have been destroyed so completely that allied troops could have been landed on Gcr ban soil. He is dead now, full of years and full of honors, and will become a tradl itlon among British benmen along with Drake and Nelson. the best league of all rnHB Greeks, until the wrecked their own civilization in the Pcloponnc eian War, had the right idea. Ath letic distinction transcended in their minds the uncertain courses of political history. Marathon was a mere battle In a mere war, a victory, of course, to bo remembered, but the great games at Olympia gave Hellas her calendar Time was meahured by Olvmpiada, the four years intervening between each lusty contest. Tho competitions planned for Ant werp this summer, fail unfortunately to establish a modern parallel, yet tbey should oe insplringl healthful, stimu- aunjr to the sane and true nrni?re.s Thirty nations have now entered foi the contests a number greater than L that; of the original bignatories to the League or nations India and China .will be represented in the revived classic ' for the first time ' Perhaps some day we may come to etui., U uiuuiim hi mo uuoareu-Tara ( dash or the polevault as equivalent in . i m ....... ,u. -i t.1..' t .... ... tlefield. When that date arrives modern ' Civilization will be decidedly les afraid of Its critics than it is at the present i ijoment ' ' ' STREET CAR OF THE FUTURE ."1XTHEN Major Hylan, of New York, i V" said that he failed to see thc equity or Justice in compelling the public to pay further tribute to the street rail way monopolies In order to preserve thm from the effects of their own mis i management and tho effects of Wall ! j iwunicuirui un mo vurcn vi it air f Street Stock Jobbing operations he put in words what many people in this city as V:f wall aa In Km- Vnrk hnv haan Mr,l. yi. nis remarks were made in connection ilh bis suggestion for a system of bus 'WW to serve the people at a five-cent f'JSJM. Hg rtlnn ( fnn rh tnpninninflrt 'jSi" r " " """ "r' aiC company to operate tho busses fiY- W"f-th8 dlrectlon ot thl city. He pii'ii.'ufa 4ioujo uu uuciumu return on me r-Jmmtml amount of money invested with . r ." .2i1-iiL " i.i '..,.. '.. r ' obwwiijwuuh vi irancuiss privileges. y?-!. H 4- foper.mel.ae been mido with busses In New York for many months and it teems to have been demon strated that they can bo operated at a profit with a five-cent fare. Tho Mayor ,of that city insists that the street rail way systems have broken down and .must give way to a moro modern and flexible system of transportation sucb a can be secured by tho use of automo biles, running without tracks and with out overhead or underground wires. He may be ten or twenty years ahead or tbc times, but it Is inevitable that a ehlcle carrying its own motor power will ultimately supersede tho present street cars operated from a central power house just as the electric cars have superseded the horse cars of twen-ty-flvc or thirty jcars aeo. But while New York is agitating the question, J I'fttiadelphla seems disposed to frown upon the motorbus. AMATEUR EXPLORERS GROPE FOR THE SWEET MILLENNIUM But They Stop Every Few Minutes at the Third Party Convention to Fight and Turn Back "ITtfHEN the Republicans and the " Democrats wero fighting and floundering at Chicago and San Fran cisco and trying to bring themselves to a clear understanding ..of their obligations in a reordered world other groups of radicals, zealots, faddists, visionaries and crusaders stood on the sidelines in attitudes of grim detach ment and sneered in unison. They moaned about the shamo of pussyfoot ing and evasion. Loudly they moaned. With one voice these insurgent souls criod out for audacity and frankness. They chanted upon tho themo of conse cration and great ends. "Bo splendid," they cried to the multitudes at the con ventions. "Bo sublime!" Now theso self-appointed advance agents of the millennium are having an opportunity to show what they them seies can do. They havo reasons to know how a child might feel who, having wept for tho moon, had the moon thrust suddenly into its hands, xno conven tion of the politically disconsolate called to form a third party and launch a third presidential candidate is in full swing at Chicago. It is not splendid. It Is not sub lime. And we shall sec what we shall see. Now, it is right and proper to deride the old-fashioned pnrty bosses. Cer tainly they are an affliction. But they havo a wisdom of their own that was wrung from tho fires of hard experience. They know, for example, tfiat though a platform were written by saints and seers it could be of no use to tho coun try until it was translated into action. They know, too, that a candidate wear ins an authentic halo could servo only an ornamental purpose until you were nVilo trv elect him. The old parties learned long ago that It is one'thing to formulate great pians nri nnnther thine to executo them. So fVi,r Vioirln loeieallv enough with flmi,r.hts nf nnd concerns lor iae roajur ity. When bosses talk of harmony they are talking of a fundamental require-m.ni- nf Riircessful nolltlcal action Without unified aims nothing Is possible tnr lenders In a democracy. The zealots, ..i.Unarina fniMUta and radicals at Chicago still have this simple truth to lenrn. Thero is no harmony among n,m Ther nre snlit already into vio lently conflicting groups animated by w-idelv divergent views. They have no hope and no apparent desire for com promise. Amn Plnehot. leader of the Commit tee of Forty -eight, has volunteered to ride the whirlwind and give it direction. He would name Senator La Folletto for the presidency. But Mr. Hearst Is in the way with the American Constitu tional party, an organization made to order in his behalf as tho vehicle of dim but enduring hopes. Labor is represented at Chicago by the Labor party, which Includes only a few of the aggressive unions tinged deeply with the philosophy of the I W. . The garment workers of New lorlt are well represented. But Gompcrs, the wise old owl of the federation, is con hpicuously absent In a far place. Mr Gompcrs doesn't want a Labor party. Ho prefers to convert ono of. tho big parties to pro-labor views be cause he knows that realization is bet ter than hope and that a bird In the hand is worth a flock in the bush. It is not easy to analyze Mr. Pin chot. He appears to believe that Colonel Roosevelt formulated the only philos ophy of gou'iument suitable to this side of tho world But it isn't on record that he knows of a method by which the Roosevelt doctrines of 1012 can be npplled for the solution of problems that confront the United States under the changed conditions of 1020. Mr. Pinchot is credited with a willingness to compromise on Henry Tord. Mr I oid is said to believe that as a third party president he could get capi tal and labor out of the trenches by Christmas. But he will not havo an op portunity to express that hope at Chi cago because the Single Taxers and a powerful element in the Nonpartisan League are nrrayed stonily against him. Delegates of these factions view Mr. rord as a capitalist with economic views hopelessly opposed to their oyn and therefore intolerable. It is tho Single Taxers who have been ndvertis )ng Senator La Follctte as a tool of the interests. They said they would have nnm. nf T.a Folletto. But their coneern was needle". Li Toilette has refused to acrept the third party nomination. II has a smattering nf Gompcrs's wisdoir Glenn Plumb, originator of tie plurab P.la? f?r c?eral ra.lL,l?irP; is one of tho looming possibilities But the Nonpartisan Lengue and the I'm ted Farmers view Plumb with distrust. , ,, i..ni,i T,lPy rC,gard hi? V uJr an ? Z tiin of orcanlzcd labor, and in the tcrn, "cultural areas tho PstISe whlph thc industrial unions gained dur- lnS,the ar crc?UdRLTn. tC f!? nd ome unrest. Some of thc farmers groups will bolt if Plumb Is nominated Tho Single Taxers win Doit it a Single Taxer is not nominated. They have served notice to that effect upon Mr Pinchot. Tho Nonpartisan Leaguers aro credited with an ardent desire to nominate Boss some call him Bishon Townlcy, their chief and prophet Tho Socialist Labor clement is for Eugene Debs. But in many of thc f0r i;ugcne JJCDS. iius in many oi me delegations thero are groups pledged to ficht Debs because of his war record La Folletto would be fought on similar grounds by Single Taxers and others. Honors may go to a Mr. Beach, of Hartford, Conn., who has widely ad vertised himself as one with Washing ton and Lincoln in the most exalted triumvirate of human history. George L, Record, tho niram Johnson of Now Jersey, will figure la,rgo at tho third party convention. Mr. Record is vividly typical of his V oaftSBiNXfetd: ,:JLfo associates in this instance. Ha kfiows what ho doesn't want. What he wanta he docs not know. The dlsconsolatcs at Chicago sincerely believe that tbty can teach the old par tics much. As a matter of fact, tbey themselves will have to learn the rudiments- of political action from Repub licans nnd Democrats beforo they can bo even effectual voices of protest in tho wilderness of public affairs. Of the old fashioned leaders it may be said that they continue at least to regard this country as a democracy. They would not dream of nominating a presidential candidate for farmers or garment makers or labor unions or Single Taxers exclu sively. They know to begin with thnt farmers or garment workers or labor alone cannot elect n (President, nnd that it a single group can ever impose its will upon the country we shall havo abandoned every governmental principle that now holds in America. It would be unfair to deny that there is a great deal of sincerity below tho surface of the Chicago hubbub. Even Debs, now in jail, is warm-hearted. It was a dominant emotionalism that car ried him to wild lengths-in tho period of the war nnd into nn ugly conflict with a government that had enough to do without having to fight near-traitors in tho rear. But at a second clanco it is necessary to ask whether tho dele gates at Chicago represent anything like the rational liberalism that is leaving its impress on politics everywhere in the world today. There is insurgency at Chicago and little else. It is scattered. It has no philosophy generally acceptable even to those who speak for it. Thoso who recognlzo the constant need for a party of protest cannot look toward tho third narty convention with- out misgivings. They are doing better abroad. The British Labor party began to advanco only when it ceased to bo a party for labor exclusively nnd became a wiaoiy inclusive movement representa tive In many ways of democracy in its ocsi sense. Tho Conservative Libernls who rlliwt it know what they nre driving at. The warring cliques at Chicago do not. WHY DON'T PEOPLE VOTE? A BOUT 4,000,000 women were en--" tided to vote in the last presi dential election and 25.000,000 men, making a total of 20.000.000 eligible voters. But only 18,500,000 votes were cast. Less than two out of every three voters went to the polls. In Illinois, with a total adult population of 3,600, 000, tho presidential vote, including that cast by women, was 2,200,000. It has been estimated that the ratification of the suffrage amendment will add 25.000,000 to the number of qualified voters, but the most euihiKustlc suf fragist cannot find justification for the belief that the vote for the presidential electors will be doubled. The men who have been interested in politics for years do not go to tho polls with any degree of unanfmlty. The women, many of whom are in different tc politics, have voted whero they hate the suffrage in much smaller proportion than the men. If the women, after they are politi cally enfranchised, can discover why men do not vote nnd can then induce them to go to the polls, they will serve their country well. Most of tho po litical abuses arise from tho indifference of the electorate. We delegate govern ment to the professional politicians and then damn them because they misbe have. The women may change all this and then again they may not. AN AWFUL RESPONSIBILITY TTHILE it has for some timo been obvious that daintily tinted cheeks are incapable of blushing for their of fense, it cannot be said that the other sex has been seriously alive to any re sponsibility. Mrs. George F. Pashley, of New York, state superintendent of tho Women's Christian Union, is, how ever, a true daughter of Eve. "Men," she declares in her excoriation of the increased use of cosmetics by "nice, ro fined people, young women and mere girls," "got us into this fix and they ought to help us to get out." Here for once is flat contradiction of Scnor Blaseo Ibanez's opinion that women are the dominant' forco in the American community. Is the sterner sex aware of this nwful power? Does it know that it mentally cried "lipsticks" and femininity in one concerted gesture lifted them to outdo naturo? Docs it know that the mere command "as you were" will restoro the blush of charm to the cheek of modesty? If it doesn't it is time for mere males to decide whether it views tho present fashion with prido or points to it with alarm. For the old Adam, at least according to Mrs. Pashley, is still the tyrannous director of the eternal Eve. The delegate of the The Ltire of Belgian shipowners Romanco to the international labor conference in Genoa charges unfair methods on tho part of America because the attorney for the Seamen's Union of North America appeals, it is said, to seamen to join tho American merchant marlno and offers inducements. In the absence of all the facts, we are unable to say whether or not the charge is well f' inded. On the face of it tjio solicita tion seems as though it might bo per fectly fair. Tho one sad note is that suefa Rolicltation should be necessary. Before wo can rule the waves our boys must have a longing for deep water. What tho country needs is a school of writers of stirring sea stories. Washington, July 12 (By Ouija Board) President G. Washington Honored Wilson, having di rected tho award of a distinguished eervlco cross to General P. C. Marsh for extraordinary heroism In action be fore Manila, P. I., August 13, 1808, has decided to justify his position as historian by going back a little further. He has, therefore, today awarded a distinguished hcrvlco cross to George Washington (deceased) for gallant service during tho Revolutionary War. Tho citation refers to tho crossing of tho Delaware and tho capture of the British forco at Trenton. A classic, at once Alcoholic Content modern and anti quated, tells of a tentatively reformed tank who, oftor swallowing his beer, declared with self satisfied unction, "Well, heaven knows I asked for buttermilk 1" Tho story now needs rovlsion. Delaware's state chemist has found as much as 8 per cent alcohol in buttermilk. With beer containing only half of 1 per cent the stnrjc should wind up with the man drinking the buttermilk and declaring, "Well, heaven knows I asked for bcerl" If the yacht-racing The Tee-rot game again proves a disappointment to mr 'JLnomas ijipion no might try a comoinauon or gou ana poker. COMMONERS DOMINATE Delegates to Third Party Convert tlon In Chicago Aro Bent With Toll Intellectuals Likely to Lose Control By CLINTON W. GILBERT Cowrtoht, Hip, ly Publte Ledger Co. Chicago, July 12. Aro wo witness-, ing what thoso who attended the 'first convention of tho Republican party in 1850 .saw, tho birth of a new party, or are wo not? It is sixty. four years since a per manent new party was born. In that, time many temporary parties havo been organized, some of which have shown strength for one campaign. Tho best guess is that this third party being mado hero la Chicago is another Popu list party, but no ono can tell until tho voto is counted in November. La Follette, If nominated, will carry two states, Wisconsin and North Dakota, Ho may carry Minnesota, Nebraska, Mpntana, Wyoming and Washington. He probably will get 1.000.000 votes and his most optimistic supporters hero say he may get 4,000,000 or 5.000,000. which, with women casting ballots, will not bo an extremely largo number. No ono knows what tho people are thinking. The Republican and Demo cratic parties havo just voted that the people wero thinking conservatively on soolal and economic questions and that they desire, above all, to got back to tho old-fashioned party government of tho nineties. Tho peoplo who are gath ered here say they are tired of both parties and that they don't want to be govorncd by either of them. They point to a lot of signs which they say indicate this discontent. They point to tho Nonpartisan League and tho revolution it has brought in tho govern ment of North Dakota, and which has sprccd through Minnesota, Nebraska, Michigan, Washington, Idaho nnd Montana. They point to tho big vote for Johnson in tho Republican pri maries. They point to the Watson voto in Georgia, to tho La Follette vote in Wisconsin and to tho narrow margin by which Senator Cummins defeated n radical larmer candidate for nomina tion to tho Senate in Iowa, conservative Iowa. Declare War Was Unpopular Theso third narty delegates gathered here come from Alice through a looking- glass country. Tbey express views that aro uttorlv the reverse of thoso com monly accepted. La Folletto's anti-war record, tney say, will ue nts greatest source of strength. Look what has happened, they say, whenever the issue has been presented. Look at the La Folletto voto in Wisconsin. Look at the Thompson voto in Chicago; look ot the Watson vote in Georgia. The war was an unpopular wai. The West never wanted to get in it. The West feels that it was tricked by President Wilson's fourteen points and huni buceed by the League of Notions. To have opposed the war is a point in a candidate s favor. J. no men gathered here come from tho farms and tbc shons. They are moro nearly average citizens than the professional politicians who gathered at thc Republican conven tion here or at the .Democratic conven tion in San Francisco. The League of Nations is the Issue, say the Democrats; and the Republi cans agree, but not so emphatically. The League of Nations, say theso peo ple gathered here, is a sham battle. The two old parties don't want to deal with realities. They want to do a lot of shadow dancing. The League of Na tions is dead in Europe. It never lived. In place of thc League of Nations is the Supreme Council, a survival of tho war organization. Is tho election to win on the tcims upon which we shall enter a league that is dead? The only real issue is just division of tbc wealth that is being produced, so as cither to reduce the costs of living or make it more possible for earners to meet the cost of living. Tho two old parties havo avoided tho realities. It Is neces sary to have a third party to deal with realties is what they say. Few Politicians in Convention Tho people who say these things are not politicians. Thero probably never was a political convention which had so few politicians in it as this one. Tho progressive conventions were made up largely ot ixepuoncan politicians who had belonged to minority factions of their party; this convention is full of tho sunburned faces of outdoor work ers, of farmers and laborers. On the front row of seats to tho right of the speaker's platform sit among the South Dakotans two old farmers' wives with worn faces, mabsivo frames, shoulders broadened by toll. No horn-rimmed glasses aid their vision, but old-fashioned small lens, gold-rimmed spec tacles. Their hair is parted in tho middle and brushed flat to each side, leaving the full forehead baro. Near them arc two sunburned mon, blondo, with gentle blue eyes of visionaries. Back of them is an unmistakablo crank, who, out of order, insists npon making a speech nominating La Follette. Not far away is the man who, when it was proposed to tako two hours' recess for dinner, rose and angrily insisted that half an hour was enough for dinner and certain caucusing called for at that time. Ho was in a hurry to bring in the new social order. In the background are intellectuals, the Records, tho Plnchots, the Mc rWrlva. the men of means and social position and the women thev gathered abOUb mviu, uiuauy riuur now .luik, New England and New Jersey, who rnrted the committeo of forty-eight. who aro steadllj losing control of It and who, it tne junction is cuccieu wuu the labor unionists, will be displaced by thc nblo politicians labor has de veloped nnd bv the skilled leaders of the radical farmers. Tho intellectuals, who look radical enough to most of the country, don't like the rising tide' of radicalism aoout mem. c AT SUNSET E V'NING gathers shadows by the way, Just as tho splendor of the sun slnkR low : ' Youth, with Its buoyant courage from the day, Breaks forth beneath the tender, dusky glow. And, as I gaze in wonder at the sight, While yet the shadows darken on the bills, A sense of awo steals through the veil ing light ; My heart leaps up to hear the Soul that thrills. Thereon my fancy sculptures things most rare, Where He erects a gold and silver throne Man's goal of yearning; past our world so fair We build a dream of silence, deep unknown. The purple lighted islands are no more But heaven's Jeweled crown forever glows ; Thero is no cruel eolltudo in store, Dream fai-off stars, till tho great" Brightness flows I Charlotte Carson-Talcott, in the To ronto Mail and Express; L'e B- W v-jw. ' , SHORT dVTS Suffrage 'appears to be meeting with inclement weather in Vermont. lit Our guess Is that It will be a case of "Back to tho porch, Hiram 1" , . The High Cost of Living is but an incentive to tho panacea business. There'is at least reasonable hope that frisky Fritz has been frisked at last. There is danger in tho island down the river that Hog will bo turned into Scrapple,. , Tho front-porch habit is at least conducivo to tho careful reading of'the newspapers. , Ono thing on which tho Allies are happily agreed la that Germany is not to be trusted. Panaceas aro popular at third party conventions. They can't live anywhere else. 1 , As though the third-party idea Is not sufficiently dead, thero is still talk of nominating La Follctte. The administration says in effect, "You may trade with Russia if you will, but wo daro you to do it 1" The campaign to prohibit the mar riage of divorcees may be construed as an attempt to queer the show business. v No maiter how much the P. R. T. may disagree with various legal rulings, you never hear it calling, "No faro I" Of course, tho P. R. T. realizes that rates are liko chairmen, and thoso that aro "temporary" are frequently made "permanent." As an aid to General Humidity In tho matter of taking the starch out of you, plcaso remember that nobody cares a continental how hot you are. Hiram, you havo strong opinions. And you do not always minco em. You assail opponent minions, And although you can't convince 'em, Faith, you certainly can tire 'cm, Hiram I A local magistrato asks a wbman it her husband was in his right mind when ho married hor and sho replies that he told her he was; But are men always truthful when they talk to women? ' Elaborate means have been devised for tho selection of the judges of the high court of international justice; but real interest is going to center on tho appointment of its sheriff and sergcant-at-arms. With difficulty wo keep back the salt, salt tears when wo think of the poor kids who nre forced to play ball or go swimming just because tho schools aro closed. Mr. McAdoo says truly that all Americans revere the constitution "even with the eighteenth amend ment." But there are, of courso, thirsty ones who insist on interpreta tive reservations. Brave men havo lived nnd died sinco the world began, but history fails to record a caso more stoical than that of the Chicago surgeon who sliced twelve inches of flesh from his lee and grafted it on the foot and anklo of his wife, the victim of an automobile acci dent. If Cox is elected President and appoints Edwards head of the Depart ment or .lusticc, remarked tbc Man With tho White Apron, oh," how very, very happy we shall be! Tho trouble with the Man With the White Apron is that ho used only ono "if." No Re publican wants to see Cox elected, but no American believes that ho would do other than enforce tho laws, including the ono fathered by Mr. Volstead. So that they might not go hungry to Harding. General T. Coleman du Pont cooked and served breakfast for his party on arrival at Marion, O. Though Senator Harding has not yet met Governor Cox's lead in the matter of cooking lamb chops for newspaper men, it will bo seen that thero are those among his adherents who are able to provido for the hungry. It would really appear as though the presidential btnkes were not wholly un connected with Ptrnlfj nf ntintti,. Mn.1 and that ability of party leaders to cook" is to do a iactor in the coming cam paign. The immigration law is being criti cized in somo quarters because under its provisions a Yucatan merchant and his wife, whose daughter is being edu cated in a Massachusetts school, are being held at Ellis Island because they cannot read thirty words in English or any other languane ; and this despite tho fact that tho law fails to keen out tho agitator or tho confidence man. Apart from tho fact that no law was over framed that did not work injustice on some person, it should bo remem bered that tho literacy test never pre tended to solve the question of fitness for citizenship. It was frankly a plan to reduce immigration at a timo when such reduction seemed necessary. And since no lawmakers can bo expected to foresee all contingencies, custom sooner or later sees to it that every law is sun plemented by tho application of common sense What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. What is tho femlnlna of viceroy? 2. How could the eighteenth amend ment to the constitution bo re pealed 3 "" !?, tt i?rB,est American city west or tho Itoclcy mountains? 4. Whero is tho Bay of Bengal 7 6. Who la the present premier of Italy? 6. What Is the meaning of tho IVench phrase "sans soucr? " 7. How should It be pronounced? 8. What Is a quiddity? 9. Who was Henry Gaasaway Davis 7 10. What number has been regarded as unlucky In association with Uinga? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. Ltndley M. Garrison waa tho first 8CrBi!,a.rf wnvar ln tho cabinet of President Wileon. 2. De la Huerta, the name of tho pres ent provisional president of Mexico, means "of the garden." 3. On July 17. 1780. Lafayette pro- posed tho combination of the colors of Paris, red and blue, with the old royal white, Into the combination of tho famous tricolor of France. 4. Four generals prominent on the American sld In tho Revolutionary ya.r. Wne5V'lu,nln8ton' Greene, Gates and ajne. 6. Tho French expression "a baa" means "down with"! 6. Sixty geographical miles make a degree. 7. "Hhlnplasters" were formerly places of depreciated American paner money, or paper money of denomi nation less than a. dollar, 8. A corbie la a raven or a carrion crow. Tho word la Scotch. 0. The word molasses Is from tha Por- iuyeB?.6laco,-," l0rlv from the Latin "mel, melts," honey. 10. It Is a plural word, treated as sin? ffulan I ',4 -4 v"oh, ymiAj, isn't 6dbb eyesight. A blessing?, a m -a w ' . AIL ' xMtm , ni ivv j-wmivnmt jr ksbi - 1 : z a ui4-i .r fTfttacHMura t awj "f AUmjf:. p mmfjdswmtm -kiM ' DR. THOMPSON IN NEWER TEACHING METHOD Retiring Central High School President Says Tendency in Edu cational Systems Is in Direction of Bolshcviki Idea, "Along Line of Least Resistance" TR. ROBERT ELLIS THOMPSON, who, under tho age -limit ruling, is obliged to rctiro as president of tho Central High School, sees peril in the tendency of some educators to meddle with nnd reviso fundamental methods of teaching. "There is something disquieting and disastrous in this inclination of many educators -who aro anxious to progress, he said. "Tho real trouble so far has not been so much with the teaching in school ns with tho teaching which tho pupils re ceived at homo beforo they came to school and, in fact, whllo they were attending. This has been most severely felt in English. Tho great Influx of foreigners in the public schools has re sulted not so much in their learning English as in their modifying thc Eng lish languago to American. , "A few years ago tho 'quest for knowledge was mado difficult. Tho con tention was that tho school was a gym nasium for tho mind and that one learned to think by exercising the mind. Tho examinations were severe nnd tho requirements generally, particularly in tho higher schools, much higher than they aro today. Followlnc tho Bolshcviki Tcle.i "Th'o tendency now is to teach along tho lines of least resistance. That which a pupil regards as iiksomo should b'e disregarded in favor of something which ho likes better. We are really going in tho direction of the Bolshevlki, who, ac cording to this, havo the ideal method. In Russia now anything which a pupil don't liko isn't taught him. ' "After all, it Isn't a question of what you do In school or tho marks you get, but what you carry away with you that counts. , "Tho object losson method of today has been pushed to extreme limits. Tbc blackboard and tho moving plcturo have taken tho placo of tho lecturo method. "It Is a fundamental fact that the eye is not nearly so dependable in edu cation ns tho car. Thnt delicate organ, which can at onco distinguish sex, tem per, raco, culturo and kind of person, is far moro permanent in recording im pressions than tho eye. "Dependence upon tho henring also develops concentration. If I had ray way, blackboards should be eliminated from 'the schoolroom. I belle. thnt- n person, beforo seeing anything educa tional in scnoois, snouiu nrst hear it." ' Pays Tribute to Doctor Snyder Doctor Thompson paid a hlch trihnr to Dr. Monroe B. Snyder, professor of mathematics and astronomy at tho Cen tral High School, who is also In charge of tho Philadelphia Observatory, and who, liko Doctor Thompson, will be automatically retired under tho legisla tive retirement act. "At an aee. well past seventy." TW. tor ThomnBon said, "ho has nil trtn vigor of a man of thirty, both phys ically and mentally. Ho has dono and is doing invaluable work at tho school and nas mauo somo important scientific discoveries nnd is well on the way to other achievements of first importance. And now tnis situation has to develop." Doctor Thompson believes the Board of Education is much maligned, though ho says it may bo in need of more ballast. "The board has taken up all reforms that havo been suggested In the course fE I T H ' S NORA 8 A YES America's Clavtreat Comodlann HENRI SCOTT Phlladolphtn'ai. Opemtlo etar .luwsEfl u ukxaa and amiaul If 4 . j -- . i J.f.lffflil - Alhftl fffi'l - ( mwW'' " v' i IllaWi ai V . XISMJ aanftVM MURUiiiHT' lit.' 3M1 - t. V -n!' Xiami w i y. SEES PERIL of years," ho asserted. "The trouble is that it has had to work along on an Inadequate income and thus hampered to meet tho exigencies of a chancing condition which has transformed Phila delphia from a city of homes to a city of factories. Sees No Hope In Electing Board "I can see no hope for betterment of tho educational conditions In this city by the method often advocated of elect ing a Board of Education by ballot. Ono reform that wo need Jjadly is the short ballot. "Tho history of elections in this city has shown that a Board of Education chosen in that way would not bo one from which wo could expect real benefit along educational lines. Of thc last fifteen mayors elected in tho city prob ably not moro than two would be com petent to act ns members of tho Board of Education." SAYS BOLSHEVISTS SLEW AMERICANS Chauffeur of Dr. Friedlander and Dr. Cantor Tells of Re lief Workers' Deaths By the Associated Press Warsaw, July 12. -Dr. Israel Fried lander, professor of biblical literature at the Jewish Theological Seminary, in Now York, and Bernard Cantor, nlso of New York, who lost their lives on July 7, near Yormolinco in the Ukraino, wero killed by three men wearing Bolshevist uniforms, according to Information re ceived at tho Warsaw headquarters of tho .American joint distribution commit tee, to which both thfl victims were at tached. ( , Doctor Friedlander nnd Doctor Cantor had distributed Tnoro than 1,000,000 marks in their relief work, and were preparing to leave tho region in the Ukraine near which General Budcnny was operating with his Bolshevist cav alry. According to tho story related by the chauffeur who wbb driving tho car in which they wore traveling, tho armed bandits stopped tho automobile and de manded money. ' Tho chauffeur, who spako Russian, explained to tho bandits that both tho WALTON ROOF DISTINCTIVE DIVERSION 0:3011:15 Extra Added Attraction! ROSCOEAILS The Sliding, Danclnr, Syncopatlns Come- dlan and Ills Jazz liand In ''A Conslom- eratlon ot Melody and Pep" HELAINE LYNNE &.. The Cosmopolitan Trio 'ns MissWileng-w CHESTNUT ST. ?ffiF LAST 6 DAYS 4 c5 IU-JU - 5WJB nst's-p'rvis f SSHOWt 0AILV-NUT3 EJS lJC,i.,t&0 sob NEXT WBEK Marjorie Rambeau in "The Fortune Teller" a WILLOW GROVE PARK CREATORE BAND SOIX)l8T.S Ltna Palmlerl. Soprano Coilnnra Ambra. Soprano - Concert Daily at into, 4:80. 7 no and PUS I'. M. ' n fcrfal riar JfttMer t ,th4' Ctuko '1 , i. Uj'.jSft i , l f v &&nV um men he was driving, and who wore tha khaki uniform of the distribution com mittee, were Americans. Tho bandits persisted in their search, however, and whllo they were going over the car, tha chauffeur escaped. As he ran ho heard a shot and saw ono of the Americans fall. Tho chauffeur gave this account on his arrival at Lemberg, and other trav elers reaching Lemberg reported having seen tho bodies of the Americans and the burned automobile. Tho American legation here and tho Joint distribution committee will make a thorough investigation ot tbo affair. Both Americans had been connected for the last six months with the Jewish re lief work in Poland and had planned to return homo in tbo near future. New York, July 12. Dr. Bernard Cantor had been connected with the work of the Frco Synagoguo here under Dr. Stephen S. Wiso for three years before entering the relief organization. lie was born in Buffalo and was twonty eight years old. About two years ago he was placed in charge of tho Flush ing, I). I., brandi of tho Free Syna gogue and held that position when bs joined tho distribution cjmmlttve's unit. TAMPICO WORKMAN STRIKE Railway Lines In Two Mexican States Cut by Rebels Mexico City, July 12. The' railway lino between Mexico City and Nuevo Laredo has been cut by rebels at Santa Elena, in the 6tate of Coahuila, near the northeastern boundary of that stats and Zacatecas, according to newspaper dispatches today. A dispatch to tho Heraldo reports t striko of considerable magnitude at Taraplco, the street car men, bakers, carpenters, longshoremen, oil workeri and loaders having gonoout, it is de clared. Market St. ab. 10th. 11 A. M. to 11 P. H MAURICE TOUHNEUH 1'resenis TREASURE ISLAND By ROnEIlT LOUIS BTEVENSOM . A PArtAMOUNT-AnTCIlAFT PICTURE Children's Euay Contest CASK PHIZES Added MAROI n 1 I OYD no". Attraction - - - - - ronw CoroeJ; man AND DIZZY" AT BOTH THESE THEATRES PALACEIARCADIA 12U Market Street Chestnut St. bel. Mta 10 A. M.. 12. 2. 8:45, 0:48. 7:45. 0-30 P. A PARAMOUNT PICTURE WALLACE REID and BEBE DANIELS In First Showing of "SICK-ABED" From Farco of Sams Name EXTRA ADDED FEATURE Sir Ernest Shackleton's Trip to the South Pole INSTRUCTIVE AND EDUCATIONAL VICTORIA V Market Street Above Ninth 0 A. M to 11:15 P. M. ALL-STAR CAST IN 'THE SEA WOLF" By JACK LONDON f"!uT1 HAROLD LLOYD in "man AND DIZZY" C.A P I T O I v 724 MARKET STREET U 10 A. M.. 12. 2. 8:45. 0:45. 7H5. 0.30 P. H- ELAINE HAMMERSTEIN In't'THH SHADOW Or ROSALIE BYRNES' REGENT MARKET ST. Below 17TH 0,45 A, M. to 11:15 P. M ETHEL CLAYTON ""uw G LOBE "TuNffJ VJ 11 A. M. to 11 r. CONTINUOUS VAUDEVILLE West Phila. High School Band LEAH VHITE'B ENTERTAINERS! QIC"1- CROSS KEYS a0T "A",31 HAZEL GREEN & CO. BROADWAY' Dread & Snyder Ave. REX COMEDY CIRCU5 )1 JiA Smwioja. In "Dr.-JekJ-U it Mr, Ui' , Jj .. H!HO. B!rt It u r. w it v. t jU i 4 d t,r XVVL'6 i i .j m. . j ' -.. tf. .ifi . ... rffltsna