wmww-r' HLBKlI i a f K. . l ?v ' g . ,i-7 '!! ,V ' Jjl. x -t""r - - n... , v-.j I V i . "'IB ' . 1 y'. ", msm r s dfe.. L t i" rv PiiMuniii wwnuc rxmuc i&dMbii company - id CTRU8 II. K CUUTIB, PuiHincST Mtrlt II. Miillnntnn. Vice PrMtdantl I C, Martin. Secretary nd. Treasure! i f .' j;un, .innn 11. Wllllnma nnl Spnreon, Director. ' ' KDITOniAt. HOAP.DI .Cflttta II. K. Cittern. fThalrntnn TIt K. 8MM.KT Kdltor tf C MARTIN.. (Icnernl Dulnr Msr. lUlied clHlly at rinlio I.veurn Jtulldlng. inaopfnatnce square, l'lillininia,., fJNTIC C'lTT.. . . frr.i;.llnu llultdlnC 'w Tirnr. . . nni rn.ti.nn At. panon ' "ni I-nrd liuiMin rr. Loi'ta.. inns Piiitrrtnn milldlnc i&X J- .,nft CsiCiaOn,,, ,. , ,inr2 Tiibunt llulldlnic 1 ,, Kinvs nuiuuust y v .' WaaittKntni UfRKAii, ?. k. tor. rcnnnyivania Ave. ann inn ni. , ' mtrr York Ilcitem. Tlie nun llulldlna t. .- ..-M"?S".'l:r'"is..:B i. aiiriBiiniiivfiiv ntrcd f.i- uirltia in rhUadrlnlila and aurrounuinu '- iown at th( rut of lwrlo (12) cinia twr -ik, pavRh. tu th rnrrlcr .,,, it i Dv malt to nolnls mnoM" nf PlilladMohls 4' fclR. ?." ""!'"!,..?L-l,"-..!:."nnA Si.S,,B'S ... r ii i. - -.;... , .." nuinn . ? A rrnla nrr monlli. Rli CO) doilnrf for rnr. fa '' 5wj:l,'l' I" advanci-. ... , WmSith. rl,n counm,a on9 "' uo""r rhfttiirtd must rlvo old aa well ni now nd- .ton! inuvitMir ftvatnir iAtvtrfin. I'i- '' - " ,UL-V - ' - w ItT-cUrM, all rommtinlrnttoiM lo rifnlnff ' n5."':. t'rtocr. iHdernutrnco Sauarr. i, I'j'Sf ....; ' S. Mmhcr nf tlip Aomirlntrrl Press t 7 . . .. .. repu Miration of all linn dinpairne i credited to It oi' not oAcririr rredlted fit mi pnprr. and also I1 locnl ncw ! A FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Tilings on wlilrh (lir peciple nxpnl Hie new mlinlnMrntlnn to rumen irutr It, iittrnloii! tne I)rlairar iiiv u'ot A dtilocli hlfi mo r;i I'i uccouiiiio- dale tliv r ci htm Vevttoii,.icnt oj the rapid mwll tw it m. A eonvrntion ha t -A biiW(nr; for the rree Mftrory. l" Art Museum. Knlargemtnt of the tcf.Jtr tupplv Somes to accommodate the popula tion. BEHIND THE FOOD MARKET THE richest farm land in New Jersey is about thirty miles from Philadel phia. It Is now in full production. ftwi..r(, .. iv, iih, .icons nun a iirnnnn ciiincror iniuiucu """, ci ironrnii'in ., down this destructive route. Jlore than CiOMi:iU)I)Y once snld thnt ui. nre horns of those who seek to pass them. , " "ercsi pin .i. it. mis u. Unatcht hcrcm air aha icrrtW. t ,lleiitilunm ago Xerxes, the Per- O n nation of extremist, V " ' nm fnr ,n,',,M nt n hitetch U"'-v ''"'"I"" Vo ?, I i ll0. ,fnc,t. ","', """If carrd "teSrt 7i- I - , -"' . "'' then" thm: to'bo'rmc J, in' '' 'rr.SrT'lXV ,Eo!i!rmUrkSr " "i." "' "" ,0k g-,. - .- parallels cannot, of course, h- pressed til)I1 fr tint Mipi Only trPm,- n l J I II ..'.II. .1 . ... .. . a.....:... .. .. I . - too closely, ihe pliilosonhy ol human (iii,, t.initui.. - i.. . . ...... . I ....... .... ... Tct food prices In this grnernl tcrrl-jnn tory advanced almost - per cent in the last month. Teople who study maikct tables nnd pay from twenty rive to fifty cents for tnall portions of fresh vigetnbles in the average restamant will he n lilt ruockpu to, hear that some of the fnrnieis nenr Mnorestown are plowing string beans underground because their egctttblcs cannot be marketed tit ven a meager profit. Something wrong some. where. Tt has often been siigg Med that nn organized effort is made to keep down supplies In the Philadelphia market in order to keep up prices. Conditions on some of the Jersey farms might be cited i tn annnnrt thnt view. It is interesting. (oo, to observe that farmed' oigani.ii- "lions in the West are constantly trying to formulate a workable sj. stem of direet I "lessons" of the universnl upheaval iiarkcting. If such a system were in , and in direct contravention of the operation here there could be no scarcitv pievalent thought und spirit of an un of food at this senon of the year. i easj age. OVERDOING IT TOO much 7enl in any cause is as bad as not enough. When, during the war, the Department of Justice hired vast numbers of the friends of .politicians, gave them badges of au thority and sent them out to do the work of secret police, the general public was Irritated beyond measure by the blim 'dcrs and officlousness of these ama teurs. The Department of Justice wns roundly criticized fnr a condition that It could not well help. A condition somewhat similar to that which roused general resentment against espionage methods is becoming apparent among prohibition enforcement agents In .some parts of the country. Judge Charles P. Orr. in the fnited States . District Court at Pittsburgh, publicly reprimanded drj ngents who entered the home of a foreign -born citizen without a warrant In some parts of Massa chusetts privnte motorcars hnve been held up on the roads and searched. Thnt sort of thing will do the dry cause no good. It will help the wets in the end. AMERICA IN ENGLAND mHK account of the beginning of the X celebration in Southampton of the 1 Thor s morPnTcri strong possi terccntenary of the sailing of the I'll- 1 bilitv that the highly effective reorgan grlms to America indicates that tho . jr.itiou of the Red nrmv nnd its series British have become familiar with 1 0f renllv brilliant military successes American history nnd tradition. I ,,re not accurately indicative of the A pageant scene cnlled "John Alden's , strength of the Soviet regime. Indis Cboicc" was given which might have,mtnblj the war ngalnst the Polish in been arranged nt Pljmouth. Massachu- vader has been n national war, a con setts. They bad representations of the flirt the inspiration for which is at Boston tea party, which once would I tributable fnr moic to putriotic in have stirred the indignation of the stlnrts than to hnrmoulous subserlp Brltlsh, nnd they showed Lincoln Hon to the theories of nn Impractical making his Gettysburg address and mmniunlm. brought the historical story down to ' ,p names of nrusiloff nnd Pavll the present by u representation of nnotT. formerly soldiers of the czar, in America Intervening in the vvoild war ( the new Itussiun unuy are sufficient to This celebration is the rilst in a series stmt the fascinating, if not always de to commemorate the most momentous I pendable. gnme of historicnl nnalogies. undertaking in the history of the i:ng ( The French revolution, which began Ilsh-speaking race There wns n mi-1 with iconoclasm and the practice of gratlon .100 years ngo of independent extreme and bloody radicalism, ended men seeking individual freedom. If 1 in foreign military triumph und domes, th.re ran be u union of the Kngllsh- tic dictatorship. It has b en intimated, speaking peoples today in the inteiest and it Is worth considering, that Ilrus of world freedom the outcome may be , siloff und his group are only outwardly. ns mnrtrelntis ns fho oni-l!,... r. 1 . -..- ....! 1 mi-i luit'Ul In liberty. r.lFTq FOB THP QTDriM GIFTS FOR THE STRONG miVO members of the Pres f. -L cabinet have been giving udvite to 1 1 . 1 the young of this land. ment to stark arms Is easily explicable "On to the farm," savs Secretary! The revolution of 17S0 was later Meredith, of the Department of Agri- traduced by some of the very men who -culture, "then is n future theie." contributed most to its success. In the There may be a future on the furm. ease of that upheaval, however, the but it is by 110 menus a bright, one if world wnr was the sequel of the rndi you believe some of the fanners. , en outburst. The Fremh nrmies uPrP Secretary Daniels bus another sug- , comparatively fresh under the ineom grstlon to offer, lie has nddid some parable leadership of Napoleon to chal thing to the phrase made famous bv lenge Huropc. ITornce (Irceley. "(!o west, voung Conditions todav nre reversed The man," sa.vs Mr Daniels, "uiin when I universal conflict spent its foiee. pros you see the ocean turn to the right trated humanity. It wns amid the most and go north to Alaska !" No better J intense loathing ot military strife that advice was ever offered to the rising .the llolshevist republic was born The wen of nn.v generation. I Hrest-I.ltovsk treatj emphasized nu Romancers like Hex Peach and the the Hussian side this detestation of scenario writers for the flicker drama j armed conflict. It Is unt so much a re- ntve given ine w 01 111 some ourj ami misleading notions about Alaska. In the movies and in the light literature of recent years the mention of that far region Implies icebergs, dog sleds, seal meat and supermen battling for life In a wilderness of snow. Alaska, as a matter of fact, has a fltlper'. climate. The gi cutest of Its ports, and It has man fine natural Jiuibora, U only u little uorth of the! 1nHwte et MverfHrtii. VVhen the gov Wmrnt railway line are completed the far northwest will bo a land of op? Dortuulty grcatcC thnn any ever devcl- oned bv lilonrcrn (n Hint irciiernl rrnlon. IUchcs ylll not lie ditft out of the ground or made in wild adventures. They will come to the men who go out to grow up with n country thnt In suic to liavo swift nnd marvelous develop meirt. Tltn iritlfl nti.1 otlt nt. Atwl pnnl niHl ,-.... p..... ...it, m... . ...... .-. , other inlnernl deposits of Alaska, the , waterwnyH unit the almost llmltleit arens of wheat land will bring great cities Into being nlnuMt before you '"' U . , The newct section of the 1'nltrii StntPd U n tilni'o fur viiiltiff IiliMI WH ni not iifrn d of work. Those utio i ' . ". .... !!. t ..t t .- Hi, ..If . iiikc ,ir. liaiUPlH nuvirp lire imi , iiikc .ir. unnieis niivice lire imvi. i ( nn, i,,,t ..f nnnnrtunltlcs in V """ '"."l K'flt opporiuniuis m ' Amcrlcu nic no h'Ms plentiful ti" than Mhev cr,. tlftv VM. no. , i . IVIILITARY AGGRESSION lb AGAIN DIoUHtUI I tU . n.,-j Ll....il U-. CmIIu mH I """ """"""I "-' ""' Soviet Russia's Victories Are j Shadowed by New Perils rr. miuli. i , r-iuill vvilmiii - roinnii, iiiimmy sccHing a xrucc wim the armies of Soviet Hussln. has been .traveling this rugged road. Two Napo- . icons nun a Herman emperor iiiuiik1" And the inoinllst with an eye on ulti- . .. , .. . ..... .. ..ll. mate ,-um.eii enee can usunll piove his point, tnterpi-etntion of historj le-ives n wid" margin for rellecttve dl- rcpancics. Dei isiouallj. however, the world en ters upon un eta the domluant temper of which is uol susceptible of variant readings. Sueli, with all Its innumer able failings, is the present aftermath of world strife. Aggressive wars are In exceedingly bad public favor. It is ob vious, ethics aside, that they do not pay. The cade of Poland in in many ways significant At the outset the recon structed nation unrjuestlonably enjoyed abundant e of International good will. It w.is this spontaneous indorse muni, mtiilitil with the oilliiin with which nmt of the world viewed the! llolshevist methods nnd tenets, which ' confused the natur of the lamentable , -I r,n.,Tl.. wniriM e.ist nf Wursnw. -niihi ....ft... ...-v Possiblv nn uninterrupted series of Polish il'tories would have perpetuated the delusion P.ut defeat is the sharpest nf all spins to critical investigation. The fncts of the reckless Polish venture have swiftly nccumulntcd Propngnnda. drend of Bolshevism, factitious or others. wise, are now powerless to color the truth. The Polish Invasion of Hussln was pushed far bcond legitimate ethnic boundaries. In other words, n dc liberate war of onipiest had been undertaken ill gro-( tesipie repudiation of till the nllegeils How nuicli' the Kntente governments weie to blame for the venture is n ques tion which cannot be settled ollhand. 111 the ligllt of scant information, 'htlW- ever, it nppenrs that the Poles weie encouraged when they won anil that official warnings nrainst their course j were inaudible until the disnster. " I----. "'"" . ... . of (irabski's Imperialistic ministry, suggests that tho desperate Poles huve outgrown, through bitter experience. their ci tn inning tendencies ol snniorf ... .. 1 months ngo. when peace was repudi- 1 add because of a dispute over the , meeting place of the armistice eom- missioners. From the standpoint of the Warsaw government, a truce is an Im mediate necessitj . Put the promptness with which the Soviet Oovernment has responded to the Polish appeal and the repented pro posals that hnve emanated from Russia somehow lack the ntmosphcre of nu-' thentlc nnd satisfying victor? . Xntions thnt nre winning easily seldom halt in mid-course. RviduiHj this new war, which has so grievously stained the world's struggle toward good behavior. is no longer popular with either bellig. 1 etent. Out of the depressing implicn- tlons of the conflict arises this gleum of sanity and hope 1 - Ji . ' iiuii .ui iiuiivtt;-i til i-iii.-tiii:iii;j , sviu- t pathetic to the Soviet system. Hints of nu imperialistic coup on the 'tide of n victorious campaign, guaran t.in, thp ,, tr.rritorinl integrity . nre mnlHnlvlnir. If thl vleu- is tnV,l ' ' -""- -- ---..- .. , the readiness of the llolshevist govern pudlation of this view as a suspension of it in n time of natinnul peril which bus, according to some accounts, char aeterized the war with Poland. Speculations concerning the course of the coining negotiations ure, of course, futile. The fighting bejond Warsaw has inufnsed tne piophets and confuted the alleid seers Contrary to prognobticutious, the Bolshevists have evciil., U eiiilmrrnssliiirh' Intrlcnte The ""'"". ,""" "".miiiiB couiu rrUl. stnte llcparum-lit 01 Kuans and nils is the Hay on Wliieh Hie of tr umnhnul unt ounl wrone-dolng. ' n '" r"n" poucenuii ns nn u unuiiinii . ,, .'."W.V Kuropc ix opposed the fact that nho lia bern a source of peril nnd weaknesi to tlic continent The uncicnpalite fact Ih. howeter. the Intrinsic unlitneRH of either of the belligerent" to continue the struggle ' without plunging not only Europe, to he fate of which both nMm Kccin to have been indifferent, but nlso them- Helve Into Irretrievable ruin. Poland nnd KtiMln are both bankrupt. Without i pence not even the humblcHt bcgluhlngM ' of economic nnd industrial restoration nr.,l0!,f,lblt"; , lh i regn rd prestige of llru-s llofT 011(1 rnvltvniioll ronrpiVfililv uHr tntrivl .... w cmoiions m the UrcnstH of the Sox et ..l..,lnAH jiuiw-hih-h agnifflq 'pMe vMies efurther, ,vktprle wcenied-wlthln their jtfasfi. Aualnut th? vicw'tliat I'dlnnd n'ns the bulwark of As for armed intervention by the Miuiet little lecture on the suttjeet ot ex major Kuropenu powers, that may be 'ceding the speed law. grandlloiniciith threatened, but it is i They were not arrested. The. uere more thnn doubtful If ny mltilstrj nrne.l and the serious danger of their i .. . . ---- ... such',. ;ZJC "0l:K f ntta "tirls the most unpopular of earthly enterprises today. The Polish mUad- ventuie accentuates this fact with startling force. It Is the very mngnitiiili of the peril lonfroiitliiB n trlf...Hti.1. ened world that may perhaps hasten the recovery. A lesser fray, lcs omi nous in Its possible by-products, might hn. lucked the ncccssnry sobering effect THE TIP uiope. Ihe tipping habit wns developed on ' " ".'- ..." iiv.t-iiii.'ii i, ii t)ie Continent of Kuropc. where It still ,, , ,,rti-n the i-.uitncts between j((, m,lip)(, lo k,.,,j M,,,n KrrV(.t. mi those who lender It. In this counlt the tip habit lias hciomc utmost a Am (.in who travels on n vacation n the lulled States nowadays finds hat he must tip almost every one but that the engineer and the switchmen. Tips nrc growing larger, too. InKuropc a waiter will feel grateful for n fee equal to about rive cents in American money Here a wuitcr feels swindled if ho is tinned nnd lectured and wns not with not given a tip equal to 10 or It" per'nut fair warning. cent of the bill. Dread of appearing to be n "piker" sometimes makes the American nwny , from home look . odill foolish. A mnn who would ibeerfulli chaise u trench or light a man twice Ins size shudders and shrieks nt the suggestion that lie I withhold a tip from some one who ex , --. . t iilli pects it. He is nmed u nat-cnecu boys und hnt-check girl, by barbers devils and tioottuaeus ami i.vraiiiu'iMi I over by taxlcabbles And why this is no one knows. PORTUGAL COMING BACK STATKS.MHX lime at last arisen iu Portugal who s, - the possibilities for the tepubllc in the development of its colonies. Tho new government linn n program of colonial reconstruction. Its details have not vet been cabled ncross the ocean, but the mere an nouncement of tho piogram appeals to the imagination tuguese colon.v. Tl... ..nnnlnMnn ,.f flu. Portlll-lll.se I Portugal was a. one time a " n , colonial empire. t had lesion in ?haS of T Phihule ph V Ju" " with himself. South America, Africa and Asia. 1 ra- VW1P rollrti Tllnv(v int(,r,lst(M,' , ..,. j - 7.11 for more thnn 'MM .tears was a lor- among hoys and slrls in IVtrnerml In. I There was historic fltno.. ;.. thn C0nnP4 today is 8.700.000, or nearly only a detailed working plan of the j ( 000 (M10 greater than that of Portugal ' 'nra' 'ourt. but forwarded blueprints i ',,,; , ,,,. nn,n of th(, .00I1PH N;Jf '" Vhy;ic.al operation thnt the sub- .xm.ooO square miles, ns ngalnst :..! mlBht be madejierfcctli clear. i hi fur t it hioi ut riuinirj. i The Afr.cn ti, J describe "" ,X Si cutest In area and population. 'lh..,of tho juv,.nlll. a,llrt, .TJu, human Asiatu colonies are not lnrge. but they i touch." occup.v strategic commercial points Mnny-tif- the bojs and girls who are "iiiii'.t nii.iiih '- i ,,,,.,, tan bp utlllzoil. in nnv program (op ,, vKaHlng of the trade of the b Macao commands the mout.i can be utilized, in nnv program 'OUUlir. .uuunu uuiiiuiuima int.- iiitiui.il ..f il. fnntnn river, nnd in the dav s ; , : ,' , ... I of the greatness of Portugal it was ' one of the most important centers of Kurjnean influence in tho Hast At ' the piesenr time more thnn lll.OOO mer- delinquent plnv a major part in the i chant ships 11 tear anchor iu its 'proceedings of this unique trlbunnl. 1 '"'1. of '"ourse. Mr. Mitten is not waters. The Africnn possessions are, Hr '' "i'ouhl he jailed a court of i "nnwaro of the fact that his fight for thn most Imnortant at the nresent time conciliation and friendly advice. If ye-uiit fare, with the splendid tho most impoiiant. at tne present time. s ,mp n Crown tells me I backing of his employes, is a Kre,t step 110 '"t"' ",0 w,1nIou,I,t-f a boy wns brought before him fnJ ! toward the working "out of his trauVfw ing to SI 4,000.000 n year nnd that of r eorrifriblo. The lnd insisted that he was ,,,nl,K Moainhliiue in the east renihing the not responsible for his nets. Tr wn' - sum of .sllO.OOO.OOO. There are possl-nn unusual plea and Judge Ilroun dl hilitle.s of great expansion which seem I reeled his examination by one of the to have begun to attract ttoe attention ! of the home government. LINCOLN AND THIRD PARTY THK plutform of the new Farmer Labor party declares that "under the prevailing order in the United States wealth is monopolized by a few and the people are kept In poverty." One cannot help wondering who "the people" mo to which this statement refers. Women who go out to do housework arc asking and getting from S3 to S-l a day. Carpenters are get ting 10 and pninters and bricklayers a similar wage. And in the depart- 1 inent stores women shopping for their husbands crowd the counters where silk 1 Milrts ere sold and barely look nt the I cotton shirts. It would be difficult to 1 persuade the reflecting person that these I people arc "kept in povertj." Lincoln in nn nddrrss in 1804 to a workmen's association said some Wings which the present fomenters of discon tent would do well to read. "Prop erty," he remarked, "is the fruit of I labor: property is desirable; is a posl- tive good ill the world, That some t. tl t It. I. . u !... ... t10"1'1 be, ,r'Ch '?,W 1 ?. htcomf rie1'' nnd "l"" is a ,Pn- ''"""K"'""'' t0 I,lnd,lrt'jr ,"'"' Pnt.cr r-, I'0tun',t h,m fwh0 '" h'"'l' P '!""' hc llou8e ot n.n?th" i but ot him work diligently and build one for himself, thus by example assuring that his own shull be safe from violence when built." To uny ordinary It Sounds mind it seems that Reasonable the long and elab orate formulas ad vanced for the restoration of Industrial 1 peace and prosperity in the United j States are more or less superfluous. The job that every one Is talking about would be dimply nnd efficiently done If workers and inanugers ulike would Bimply make up their minds to work hard, piny fair and tell the truth. When It became It Was plain that he could neither help nor hurt Mr. Harding, Senator III John son Issued a fervent statement expres sive of his approval and pledging his Biipport. Xow, wasn't that Just like III? One may safely as- It Is More sume thnt many of Comfortable Now the people who are Hocking to the bat tletie ds of Fiance ouldu't have been dragged there wlaii thu wur wnui on, MAKWa traWjjrXpe Motorcycle Police Are Regulating the Road Hogs Petrograd Qeta Useful Tip Prom Philadelphia!! I ny GEOROK NOX McOAIN MAI) auto drhrra who burned up the lyl . .... ., Rtn,c ron,'', around I'lilladelphla yesterday experienced n new nenita- I tlon nnd one Hint hnd, upon thoe ' amenable to reason, n sobering effect. ' lMtrollIng i.ome of the most frc .,, thoroughfares -were uniformed ' - . . nfunnra rn flnnr DinrnfKVfilmi ulm rtt"r ....w.w..v. ...... hauled the speed fiends nnd rend them a ,. ill ll. il linn in.- r.ii.iru-1 .iniif.- .. ... "tlnUfd Eolation of nrndntleaNntalaIJ I. consider it a ",. ,.,..,, , I N"w l""1 """ ,,,,, t,rlvcr of " ltttL grinding, thunderous truck carrjlng half a ficU.it enr load of merchandise, mil "hogging" the mad utterly ob livious to the warning horns of nuto ists, was brought up with n sharp re proof. TltcM' latter me ipilte ns dangeinus to the nntomohlle trnflic us the racing en- ' , Intuitu, Thn .i.iluit ittt.l t.Htin tt.ttt nf their ponderous Vehicles drown the nuto ifentuie. It assumes the position that most of the lolntimis of road laws anil IJMIM 111 llie iimhuimis in iiiiiii nut-i nun the lack of ordlinr.v courtesy by certain I '"'to d-vei. are the icmlt of thoiirht nsni.s, nnd .nulosstiess ratliei than fal disposition to do wrong. ' Willi this Men us n basis, these joun,; lueii on their last inolmc.teii's are in- I sj"ieted on first instance, unless the vlnlation Is pnrticulail llagrant. to . n'nu wa'rn' ahIs7a,1Vepetmo'nn,N gainst a repel To be sure, numbers are taken and duly recorded, so that in case of future arrest there is documentary evidence to nritrn lltnf iIia ttiitlvMttnl hnrt ttftnn eim. i The salutary effect of this is already apparent. The camaraderie that main- ' talus, particularly among the Jounger ' i fellows who diive cats and arc inostlj prone to forget that rules of the road are an established fact, was exhibited I on the nidge road. J Within an liniir. nnesililv. after n ' stnte policeman had warned several of Bi' iiiiiieriiiiiii iiuii wiirnru sevei.u oi tIl(. ri.ril,MS 110s (10 wnr,i wns ,,a,vw 'nlong fiom City line to Xnnistown. i And it had gciicrnlly a very salutan J effect in clipping the wings of Mime ol iiiu inonerii .ucrcurys. A .ir'i:XIIK deilinpient uiirr pit- " terneil after the Plillndelphl.i ! Jnieiiile Court is In onerntlnn in tln Husslan Soviet citv of Petrograd Complete directions for its establish tneiit went forwarded from this ilt some time ago mill by this time posslbl the brand-new judicinl wheels arc mov ing iu that distant and disturbed citv. Dr. I). J. McCarthy is responsible for this benign and philanthropic in- viti-d him to explain its operation. Upon I his rctUl'U to tills citv he nreiim-n.l .ml I Tinrn, Hnnwv ... i.- -.1.. , -.... ". .... ...... u.iii kiii tt no ari haled Into the courrever.v month as in- corrigible nre not incorrigible nt nil. "ie of them nie suffering from some niiieii into rue courrever.v month as In-I .. .. . , . . --.-............ i''""".. .""""" '"'"oei. or pnysicni de- ieci. uopareiu oni.v to the phtt clan or psychologist. A ml the phvsician. the psychologist nnd the pntlent student of the inv-enlle ,;p,'?. Tell me." said tl)(. nhvsiclnn bln.i. ly to the boy. "just what is the matter with jou?" "I've got a cricket in 111 v head," was the surpusint; reply. The physician made an examination and discovered that some time before a fly had lodged in the chap's ear. ltd bui7.lng and struggles to escape were responsible for the cricket iden. The dead insect was removed' nnd the victim was restored to his normal con dition. What Bo You Know? ! QUIZ 1 What famous klnff iul.'d on hln enuncinted principle "I ?' thrt 2. What Is n padget' river which has no existence? 4. Whero Is the Crimea'.' r, Who was Merlin" e. Who crept crt the character of tho sprightly Lad,. Teazle? 7. When niu the .Suez canal' oponcd? 8. What Is tirrngon'' 9. What ancient nation based Its cn. c?$,nr., on ,ne occurrence of certnln ntnletlc contests' 10 What was tho drat stnte to ratify , tho United StiiteB constitution? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1 Hie ndjutnnt Is said to bo the hln-h-st living of nil birds. 2. Tho "hot pollol" means tho many, the multitude tho masses. The words ere. fireeli. 3. Pips Is tho ffeneric name for the diamonds, hearts, clubs, spndos on plujlng cnids. 4. Tho lnt.t RmpresB Eugenie wan born In Granada, iu Andalusia, nouthern Spain 5. Th-s poem. ' Abou Hen Adhein," waa written by Leigh Hunt. C. The mvjorlty of the Inhnbitnnts of the Philippine islands belong to the Malay race 7 Mercury nnd Venus are thn planets which revolve in their orbtta be tween the earth and the sun. 8 The Latin Monotnry Union Is com posed of nations which agreed to adopt Identical standard of money based on the decimal system nnd with the chief coin equal to about twunty cents of American money. In Krnnco 100 centimes make a fraiR. in Italy J 00 centeslml makw u lira, but the par value of tho franc and the lira la supposed to be thi same Among: the mem bers of tho Latin Monetary Union an Fiance, Switzerland, Spain. Uelglum, Italy and Oreece. 0 The French nnd Indian Wur ended with the tieaty of Paris lu 17:t. 10 T 1 1 word blaucnmiiKt) la derlv.t fro 1 tin- Frciit.li "liliinc," vvhllo and ' uanger," to eat ivi.it.. .-. n ... , ... mission tnnt we onlne thnt tnntmv nii.. V. T. i miGum T ' Still liWiuiJfli4 jflelb. trey, Ilfuo Slondny continues to bo a weak end to a week -end. Memories win mnke Victory medals more valuable' each succeeding jenr. . . 1' 'r 1'homas loses today he may take another car's time allowance The Misplcion glows that l.a Toi lette Is only radical wbcir his mouth Is open. 1 . - .... 'f .V.10''' ,R oiiJthlng in' n name. PilsiidskiH nrmy will never vote Tor prohibition. The motortruck mas ct help to MJlyc the problem prc.-ented by the freight-car shortage. If Hlipimr.w.l. it- .. 1 ..!.. ul - - --..-....... n . . t. I IJ lllllll.t '. I T , The man who said there was not!.- lug like leather was very evidently not familiar with cheap shoes. bonder If the high cost of custard pie has anything to do with the strike of film laboratory workers? ,The man who hews to the line let the chips fnll where they may very fro (llicntly finds one on his shoulder. '''ro U ciidence that somel as stung in the announcement In Kansns City Star that Josephine ciidence that somebody the lice us Mini Clarence Hee for divorce. Henry Kord la-t week bought a milrond. n forest and two coal mines, Wouldn't be o bit surprisid if that man '"" "' enough to buy a steak. About tho time we shall have con vinced ourselves that there is no prob lem lo Armenia that concerns us the specter of Armenia will appear to mock us. If political campaigners wish to l"""'."' ' "i"c ""- '"" "ore me .",, "Tl,n1,T;iiV ' "".. . .i..L " "" .' " """" '"" """ ""' '" "V tlnd no fntilt with the Yiinkee skipper who sillied on the Hliniiirnel.- Ho is the emblem of the courtesy the ' . .iiun-ni in iim- i-uuiiert.v in country wishes to extend to the dial lenger. After contemplating some "strlk-I mg costumes thnt hnve been delighting ! l'nrls" we liave come to the conclusion' that it takes mighty little to amuse.1. """lc ,,0"I,1C Mr. Mitten knows there me more wnys thnn one of killing a dog known as Inadequate Hccelpts. Mr. Htote.s burv probably hnd his own rensons for choklug it with butter. r, : . ,..i , ..... , ?l$; iTTZ, I, '" celebrntlon in Southampton. Kngiand Oil Sntlinlnv nf tho Knlllnn. nt tl... f..- Power SOU rnrs ngo. The celebrants wrc descendants of those who missed the boat, .. ,"V":'.v. 'v,n"". ." v"""ik fT ffYdln n'K X" that there is need of siich action it is 'to he hoped that he will pick the light I man tills time. Me hnve it on the word of the special writers thnt the yacht race caused the blood to race through the veins of the onlookers. A somewhat speedier course, we tukc it, .than the one nt Sandy Hook. When the increase nf railroad wages is met by incrensed rates and the Increased rales are met bv higher prices for the necessaries of life, the higher prices may demand incrensed wages- unless sonic appnrcntly forgot ten economic law succeeds in snunring the vicious circle. Oerinany has not surrendered her wnr criminnls; s,P hns still 11 million 'n re, I., T "VJ .,M"' '" uow TB- ''ether for speaking or com ersution, a 2 rini. .,rn,TW'' ".",.,,, ""i1,0 ",n "Ohoiee rich nnd various In tone. Cut hnrHni ti,!!. ?" ,I,'mnm,('!1 f 1,",,r - He has a smile of unusual gracious- ..... -........ ...,, ,.,.,, u ,,. ouier inncs n little while the Allies may be pajing . """' ,"" I'criuuiing nerseif to re main licked. A noteworthj feature of the cur rent of events is thr met that pretty nearly ever thing that happens on n large scale, whether It be social, Indus trial or po Iticiil, drives another nail into the old leniocrntic doctrine of htnte rights. Ihus even the matter of granting iui reused wages to railroad cmploves menus the use of the hummer on another nnll Incrensed wages will mean incrensed passenger rates nnd in creased passenger rates menu n conflict with the Htnte laws thnt will have to be fought out lu the (ourts. Troubles of a Pearl If we as a nation were less cocksure and not so fond of tendering snnp judg ments about all things under the sun. we might learn nnm.v a valuable lesson from the nations that nre struggling in the throes of every sort of crisis nnd experiment left over from the wur. Russia. Spain. Italy. Kngiand nnd r ranee are testing grounds for highly explosive theories. And there is Culm. Cuba likes to be known ns the Pearl of the Antilles. y, ,,rnri wnH ,,m. in greater danger because of nn extraor dinarily fortunate situation. Prosperity swept oyer Cuba like a devastating wave. Sjigar made almost all Cubans richer if not rich .1 Itni-levi.nn ..,,.1 his friends have mndc them richer still. Stevedores nrcfei to play the races when tney nre asKca to work. Men vvho used to toll on the sugur plantations toil no more. They are rolling In what to them seems limitless wealth. So It Is almost impossible to get ships loaded or un loaded, to move baggage or to have, a Job of work done nnj where on the is land. Hut even on tho Pearl of the Antilles sugar will not plant und harvest Itself. Trunks will not climb out of a ship's hold nnd roll themselves to the hotels The tide will turn. Mennwhile the Cubans are developing n profound dis taste for work. In a year or so the world will have icalUcd thnt toll is the fust leqnlrenlent of 11 peaceful exist on And viheie will the Pearl be then? "' " i-sB'TsigiHS!S3iw ' ( . I ' Z 1! 1 . " " HOW DOF1 IT Democrats of Marion Show Genuine . . foirH Neighborlincss in STRIKE YOU? Iloostino Harding By KELLA3IY fTlO GKT some idea of small town neighborlincss it is necessary to know that the chieV men of Marion who made the big notification of Hunting possible are Democrats. Marion is a Democratic town In a Democratic county. The richest men in Marion are Democrats. The men who organized the Civic Association which had charge of the arrangements for handling tho crowds in Marlon were Democrats, all fi lends of Mr. Harding, who will probably vote for him in November, but nolle the less Democrats. . And it was n big job they did. Marion hns a population of 2l).(H)U. It had 100.000 visitors on notifica tion day. who arrived by train, oj trolley, on foot and by automobile. Imagine adding to n city for one day more thnn three times its normal population. Prohibition somewhat .simplified the problem of handling the crowds. Hut it was a big job the Harding Democratic admirers did. J q ij THIC Republican candidate is not a man of much egotism. In fact, his whole theory is that this nation should get nwny from the egotists in the presidency and back to the nonegotists. He is modest. They say thnt all his life he has been tisheil fonvnril b.v those who hnd more confidence iu him than he had In him self, by his wife sometimes and by his friends. Ills friends hnd to urge him into the race for the picddcucy und more than once after he got in the) had to keep him In. Vet he hns some of the attributes which ordinarily muke men vain. He has an unusually distinguished appearance. lie is the handsomest of our public men. He hns that rare possession, nbovi all rare in America, a fine voice, ncss. With a little more fire or egotism in his personality he would have mode un orator like Iliynn. As it is he is just 11 good .speaker. q I PHRHAPS there There usually ar HRHAPS there are (ompensntions. Perhaps this is it bad vear for egotists. Perhaps if Mr. Harding were a little more self-assertive he would not have been nominated for the presidency. He is the tjpe of man ordinarily called safe. A ver.v large number nf the jobs of this world go to the men called safe: the modest, cautious, unassuming people who take few chances, who conduct business conservatively nnd who arc usually sought to manage going con cerns, Most bishops nnd most corporation piesldents nre of that sort. A party is like 11 church or 11 cor poration; it prefers 'the safe cait of men. , The bolder fellow, who tukes long chances, rises if at all b.v his own efforts. i q i TIIH great unsettled question of national politics is, May a candi date piny golf? It troubles Mr. Harding. Probably It troubles also flovernor Cox. It tumbled Roosevelt in 1II0S when he hnd a golf-playing candidate on his hands in the person of Mr. Tuft. It hns been settled that a Piesident mny play golf. President Tnft played golf. President Wilson played golf regu larly until illness overtook hlhi. The physician of both of them or dered them to do so to keep iu health and tho country thought none the worso of them for doing so. It used to enjoy seeing pictures of Tan oenuing over cnreiuny and study ing a putt, and now and then It read of a score made hy Taft. Wilson wns more secretive nbout his golf. There were few pietuies and nn pub. lislied scoics. Most of tile suiuloib plu.v jioli. 1111 mil limn who i- not pcriiiiiiid plu golf is a candidate. ll - P$i. WHAT? t It was debuted all tho way to Marion bv the Henubllcans coininir there for the notification whether Mr. Harding might piny the gnme. (ienerally it was thought to be bad polities to play it. q q q IT IS objected against golf that it is an aristocratic game. An one seeing it played on the public iiiiKs in all Dig cities would not suv so. What is a democratic gnme? Is tenuis, which hnd the authority of Sir. Roosevelt and wlich Mr. Arthur James Halfour kept 03 playing after he was seventy? Hut in tennis ,vou wear white flannels nnd the popular description of tennis according to reformers of the game is ".dssy." , .. I'erhaps baseball is our only truly democratic game. Might n candidate for President play baseball? If he could hit homo runs with the ebllity of Hube Ruth his election would he nssurcd. In the interior cities of the country far aw ay from the New York diamond It is not uncommon to find a seven column line in two inch tall letters de voted to sn.vlng "Ilnbe Ruth makes thirty-third home run." (iolf is good training 'for candidates. A lost ball is ns hard to find ns un issue. The issue of this lampnign doubt less lies right in pluln sight, jet no one can see it. Roth sides 111 e looking for it with a host of caddies. Yet there it lies white and shining in the tall grass to be sure but eus.v to see. When one side or the other gets the e.ve on Ihe bull the game vvill 1 cully go on. BERLIN FREES DORTEN, SEPARATIST LEADER Germany Heeds Warning of High Commission Regarding 'Rhenish Republic' Promoter Herlln. .Inly 2(1. (Hy A. P.) Dr. II. A. Hoi ten. the Separatist leader In the Rhiueland, who was arrested re cently l (lei man autlioi itics, has been set free upon the government's order, the I.oKul An.ciger nnuouuees toda.v, Paris. Jul., 2(l.-(Hj A. P.) The nllleil high commissioners In the Rhine land last evening informed the (ler m a 11 Impel lal commissioner theie that unless Dr. II. A Dorten. the Separa tist leader, was surrendered and hi ought back to the Rhiueland the commission would take the most energetic inens ures, uccoidlng to news received nt the foreign office today. The commission In formed the (ieruiiuiM that the first meus tire would be the cancelation of nil eon cessions previously mndc (o the (iermnn civil administration In the territory on the left bunk nf the Rhine. The com missioners decided that the urrest of Doctor Dorten wns in violation of the regulations governing the occupation and n blow to the authority of tin commission In the Rhlnelund. ' Doctor Dorten camo Into piominence iu June, 11)10, when he bended nn nt tempt to organize n Rhenish republic nt Wiesbudcn, lu the Rhlne?,und, wheie he was nrrested by the Hermans Inst iTidny. The movement pioveil uiisuc cessful, but Doctor Dorten has been reported at various intervals since us still agitating a separatist policy for the Rlilnelnnd area. E I T H ' S Henrietta Crosman & Co. , 1 I" '.'KVI'IIV HALF HOUrt" Lt. Gitz Rice & Hal Forde In Original Honed EU.iA AVrt..HEHT MELHOSK. KIKKI'y t COHlNNPi JAMES J MOHTO.V. Oiheri. WILLOW GROVE PARK LEPS and ORCHESTRA With VK11A CPHTIS Dr.imatln Hn,,m TONiuirr , HVMPIKINy l'lt'ICn.Xf Iuini; A-r 'i hi; iwhino "wwe." Altcrnoon s - S1MONE QIMOXK in the doorwa, as calm, and . wl unstirred As the luster that burns on the silk . of her hose. Close-hatted, suug-ioatcd. all muffled' and furred To the little pink tip of a velvet nose. So straight in tho doorway she stands, so slim and so denr. So surprisingly young, so incredibly dear 1 . Why should" 1 wonder nt seeing her there? Save that I thought, und remember It ' Ct, That sometime, nnd somehow, soinc' . where, She hnd stood so. und looked so. ami smiled in u life 1 forget. Kenneth Slessor, iu the 8dney llullctln. : Markot HI nl. lOtli, 11 A. M. to 11 V. M. D. W. GRIFFITH'S Latest Terminally Dlrcrtid Photoplay "The Idol Dancer" A Line Htory of thu Houtli Sea Iulen D A L A C F ten M.uiKET Mrnnnr - 10 A M., 1L', L', a: 15, oll.'i, 7:4!, 11:30 r. M Clara Kimball Young In "lOU THU SOUL or IIAl'.VUL" ARCADIA CIIEST.M'TST. llcl. 10TI1 10 a St., ia, a, a:4., .-:-i.-. 7:io, t:."to r si DOUGLAS MacLEAN and DORIS MAY In New Paramount risture "LET'S PE FASHIONABLE" VICTORIA I Market Hired AImvo N'lntli II A. M. to 11:15 V. St. JLAoNDONH'Burni"B Daylight" Added, C'hurllo Chaplin lu "llehlnd tho Bi.eiics' f A P I T O I 10 A M. IS, '.'. 3:-t 'i:4r. 7:45, 11:30 V M ROBERT WARWICK 13 J Cunt iiiriiMi's ur.ui: danii:ls R E. G E N T V MATlKirr KT. Ilol 17T1I 0:4.1 A M. lo lt:IB 1'. M. TAYLOR HOLMES '" t"iw' GI HD C MAKKKT BTIIIU'.T L. J D H. AT JL'NIl'KH . .. A M to 11 1' COSTISVOVS VAI'DIJVH.M: "THU I.OVI: NOTt:": OTHKIIS CROSS KEYS nTlfAND MAltKET . S.MO. 7 and 0 1" M. "PUTTING IT OV'KK" BROADWAY ro.i.l"nnT Snyiler A. s so, n'4n n 0 r M HLATKO. TlOT.UCKnilS. "OLD I.ADV .11" CHESTNUT" BTnJKAlioUUB " !l TIMKK UAIL MATINKIl IMII.Y. S .10 r.VUNINOH. 7 4 Prlceii, Mts . snr.n'H'.nflc. Kvirs . S.'ic Wc.T' Tfl mwm M lulflid wrnimvi MftoysoHE mmim Rid MMtaJ. tviaI v4tr.u l1 tK AlUi nnn. dfifpi A fVINl A ftiSo&nd. iiiMivJiuJiA Bv hslpt Hunt Jto" . WALTON'ROOF 0.30 AND 11 l.'i CLEVER SONG AND DANCR PEARL REGAY niULUANT PAHIHIAN AUTIHT. IN TANTASTIC DANCKH WENQNAH and MAZZOLA Hyncopatnl Dunce" IRENE JACQUES m b.. '". HOMER SISTERS in s..n w NINA PAYNE a u,i d Am my cfflrfflir MM sad Evening Concerts . ' J7, I 1 f t j$ti$ftfcxtti ."Sv WttfM