vr t cv It .-,u 'J' f. ,5 1 I- . n. ... 1 T ' j. Kit,; t" . I' 1. 1" If hi y ii, if K 7 M i. " .,.! . 4u lining public Xedger ,JUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ,crnua it. k. cunns. pbuidkxt - -".harleii It. Ludlnaton. Vice President! i,C, Martin. Secretary nnd Treasureri Pka, voiiins, jonn II. J. Spurireon' UlrcclorV Williams and ' EDITORIAL HOARDt i -A .' -i v. wciitih, inairman VAVn K. 8-Mlt.RT Editor B-JS JQfeNf)C. MARTIN . .Clcncrnl Business Slur. ,MIfJw,l dally nt Pvumc Lr.pnrji Bulldlnr, p.V ', "iiwriiv oiiurr. I lumucipiuu LTtMTIO ClTT. ,N!52122,' ' ' J!.".4 !"J'l?n.Ari A IWj-Tjims "' Ano te..lt. ...... ti..n.u.... P !?? U02 rnbuno xmiMine to. - nws IlLTt WismsoTO.v Ilrsui, K.Cor. Pcnmylvanla K1f ,Voiik Dl SLAV ."' iiuiiunvo, l.i Mr. nnd mti 81. Tho u Iiullding l!lllII9ritllTiriM TtATKM Th Krisixh I'lmtc" iltiZn i wrv.1 to uberlbr.ln PhllndflnhlA nd nurmundini; iph tw wZV S.v.lM.rf1ntth.1 rH (12 ccnu p"" o A mail to points ouikUIp nf Philmiiphia. n ine uniici Tuniea, i annua, nr uniira tha Unltrd Stntpa. I'annda. nr United Statpa lKilsniitnnn. noataan frpp. Aftv f.101 cmta nr month. Six ($(1 dollars por year. payable in ndvancp. . . to ail rorelttn countries one (1) dollar Bp mhnlti K-OTicn SubSk-rltTa wlthlnir addrpra chanced muit gl old an -ll ua nw nd rifVpB. BELL. JOOO VAL?t"T KKYSTONE. MAIN SOOS CT 4WrMj nit commtiiHTnfloin to Vvcntno , I'ublir Mdacr, imirptndcnct Saucrc. PMnrtflpita .Member of the Associated Press xU'llir ANHOrlATKIl I'HKNS ft ".'""l' nillliru l .ni' war or republication of nil itrirt amnafrAri crrdifrd Co it or not othenrhc credited in thiti nnner. hud also the local news puhlhhcd therein. All rlght.i of rcpuhticntimi of uprclal dhpalchct i err j it nrr aho reserved. rhilidflphli. Ttlfdar, Aufiitl 3, 19:0 A FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Tilings on nlilcli flip people expect the new administration to concea- iwmi Urn .!.. 1 "". .W H..CM..W1I. The Delaware river bridge. a. aryaocK otg tnavtgn to accommo data the largest ehlpa Development of the ripid transit sys tem. ,A'!ontvjntton hail. 1 A bViMino for the Free Library. An Jirt Museum. Enlargement of the toater supply. Bomes to accommodate the popula tion. TE POLICE WILL BLESS HIM D1RKCT0K C0KTI-;LY0L"S order against ticket peddling by police and fircmri. ends an abuse long capital ized by comiptioni'.ts. That the ban extends to the sale of pension fund tickets by the beneficiaries Is a hardship more In nppearapce than lir fact. Jt is the province of Council to fur nish adequate pen-ion money and for tunately the appropriation -.ought this 3ear indicates at least a partial realiza tion of this duty. Furthermore, the plan to permit storekeper- to sell the bazaar and carnival tickets is nc which should be stimulating to the self respect of firemen nnd policemen, until now forced by necessity ratlu-r t!:an de sire to play the humiliating role of peddlers. The 'major gain in the ruling, however";- K the extinction of pernicious politica! activities in connection with ticket selling bavins no relation to pen sions. The petty bosses who engineered these unsavory "drives" were actually practicing n system of blackmail, with the policcnud tircnien as victims unless they acquiesced. Director Cortelyou is tn hp mnprntiilntp.l fur itnuinitir- fiitf th.i ki.. ,..... i i. i:L .... i..-n I auuic tui iiiiimi- uinilili imiivuu,i. . MACKEY AND MOORE GOVERNOR SPROCL does not np- near inclined to be drown into Mayor Moore's fight upon Harry A. The railways were askinc for in Mnekev if he can help it. But his re- creased freight and passenger rates while markH nnon the local situation are in- tcresting and significant " ' "As a matter of constructive poli tics," he said, "I really feel that some people make a mistake in fighting the cl(y administration, which has a long. long time to remain in power." If this means Mr. Maekey. that gen tleman will doubtless be mnde nware o It more or less dircct!. If It is , merely a general stnteinent of the Gov ernor's opinion with no speeial appli cation to any particular man or group of, men. then lnnguage hns ceased to have much meaning. As an old football player, the chnlr xnac of the State Workmen's Compen sation Board ought to be quick ut catching signals. THE GREATER ZOO THE recent und prospective additions to the Zoo will validate its standing as, one of the foremost institutions of the. kind in the world. " ,Excelling in many genera, especially birds and the large carnivora, the gnr 2f t .u iVii iV i i i a Molt the highly Pictorial giraffe "nrt the ponderous yet fantastic rhinoceros. pw these deficiencies n,e soon to be repaired. A special representative will ' depart in September to take tribute of tho East Indian fauna. An African I ., t - .1 i;i .., - giraffe, one of the most difficult of the rarer animals to raise, ls now in transit on the Atlantic. "Fortunately popular interest encour ages this policy of expansion. During lftbe last month 57,000 persons patron ized the Zoological Gardens as compared with 30.000 for July 1010. This Is a ,fine showing But not a whit too good. A RIVAL NEXT DOOR A CUP challenge from Canada con tains that element of excitement in separable from neighborly contest. Al- xander C. Ross, who plans to nice for I the America's trophy in 1021, more-I over, enters his bid to the iiccompani munt of a significant warning. He will employ 'Nova Scotin sailors, handy sea folk beyond a doubt nmPtraincd under circumstances and In traditions very Biurh akin to onr own. The test is cer tuln to be spirited. Iu the failure of contestants to lift the' cup it is curious to note the way in vh!c)i tho yucht classic has become "localized." The first challengers wer "- English. Thirty-nine years u;o there vas a Canadian entrant, but that wns an isolated departure. Later came the tindiscouraged Irish sportsmnn, nnd .finally the aspirant is next door. What jm.j ..v - - ..w.. ....... t ver happens, fears of scndlns our boys Li! abroad to brave the complexities of old rr " -,l w A ahIIiiiv milll lsm iniiHilluti wjur'U jruiuui "in vt- ti uuuuicnoi BONUSES AND' BRIGANDAGE AS MILD a bandit as ever burned a railway train or plundered a l.(. r party of Americans, Francisco f' . crsvfi from President de la Hu y'' rmwi to "establish schools," nnd i pKQ -' ,"t rJwwt "bpoks. penclln, chnlk nuc other J, ueHw." Not sluco tho pirates qf r iptswaacp forbore to maltreat orphans '" Jwive brigandage and uplift been so X wlably fused. j T amalgam, However, is Highly , ' tTpto'al. of the iBcwsuavity In Mexico, .V vlnu M-pyyt: mu i,w, jjvbuo. equivalent to n" -ypnr'K pay, Is to bo dUtrlbtited nrnonR the rcmtinntH of I'aticjjo's band. An cight-ycnr-old re bellion wrnnlilcnlly TxplreH ninltl n Koldi-ii glow of bcnlRnlty and a mono tary reward. t Meanwhile, the elections held on Sun day arc terminating In n victory for the Liberal Constitutionalists, the party In power. Very much In power Is the obvloiiH conclusion, and equipped with tin ample purse rilO I In tti it hmn t1 A I hi 1a n.l ' tbc methods employed recall nertlncntlv tile Onelflpntlnn Ntttnm nt tA Infn 1jm. firlo Diaz in the early rtays of hlsl,,,l Democrats passed while they were nsi'i-nuancv. i.un is n eiirntivp nw tin ' tllc,1,1, a-lio ndjustment Is not vprr Ktiinii- ilnlln. 1 ..!.... ..!.... -f ..!..- " """I"'"" i n-piesemnuvr Kovernment. but any government nt all ' '" J'i,xlr0 has rotisoliitorv properties, j providing i'o iinpcrtiueni motallst lu- riirfiM'tiu i . .... L . A HUH NhSS PRORI FM MFT IN A BUSINESSLIKE WAY : The Each-Cummins Railroad Law at Work Illustrates the Historic Republican Capability for Government Ttril WILSON has said that he , XTX .l-,,.,t tl.r. K.l,.r,nnn,tn. fnllpnn.t i , , """ -' . - -. I 'nw a. jt w pnwd so near the date fixed for turning the railroads back to their owners that it was Im possible to get n "sntisfnetorj" law In the time remaining. He accepted It reluctnntlv and he has been tlingin; jibes nt it ever since. No one has said that It U a perfect statute. Perfection is not tn be ex jPvted fi oui any legislative body. Laws nre the result of comnromlsp nnd con- cession niiinug conflicting interests, nnd if they nre workable that is about all that can be expected. ( Tho new railroad law Is workable, for it is working. It worked in the first place when tho Railway Labor Board, created to ad just the grievances of the employes, made Its wage award nbout two weeks ago, and thus removed any excuse for a strike. Because the award was not bo large as the men had nsked for there i.was strike gossip for a day or two. it is true, but it soon ceased nipl lias not been heard since. The men got by peaceable arbitration nnd with no ex pense to themselves nnd without in terruption of the business of the country-more than they could have won by a Mrikc. The satisfactory working of the plan of arbitration will lessen the regrets of tiiose woo wisiirii me kw i" uiii.hu provisions penalizing striker. It is likelv tliat as time coes on public senti- ment will inflict penalty enough on men ' who strike in the face of reasonable and workable rules for adjusting grievances bv arbitration. - But the law did not stop with pro visions for wage awards. For the first time it mnde explicit recognition of the duty of the Interstate Commerce Com mission to consent to suc.h rates ns would gua rati tee to the owners, of the rallronds a "fair return on the money invested. The statute fixes this at u minimum of " ner cent and it gives to the commission the power to arrange for , nn additional one-half of one per cent if it thinks the sum Is needed in order to provide money for betterments. The InnffltnCC of tllC language of the law is Imperative. It wnvw Hint "Hip eninniisKinti Klinll" t I nutnMlul. uiint. mtnu thnt tlio rMirrlors -.- ... " .-.it. l'i.ii r.i.n .... ...... .... -.....-.. j ns a whole when effieleiitlv nnd honestly ' managed may earn "a fair return upon ! the aggregate value of the railway properij. the labor board was hearing the pott- 'pi.I .. .t !.! .. tinn oi hip mii nn ;" t wau-'t, ".",e 1"L;T"':' "h ' :".r-Vi C Vi .... . L...t f nort wi nnn Krillliv. II uhC ...i..r ... "..- n year the roads asked for a further increase in rates sufficient to cover this sum. The Interstate Commerce Commis sion had no discretion. It had. been -commanded to estahlNh rates that would keep the roads solvent. It has obeved the command. Whatever other effect the new rail road law may have it is indisputable that within four months of its passage it has restored the credit 'of the rail roads, and removed from them the han dicap under which they have been suf fering for twcntvfnc years. Now the roads can go Into the open mnrkot and secure the money they need for pro viding new equipment of nil kind. T-llis they could not get in the past because thnr have been starved by timid men in Washington, who feared that if tliry treated the railroads fairly they would be charged with favoring capital nt the PTnense oi uie wuriviu, i.i. It "ill take time to rehabilitate the r,irmM" but it is rrasonublc to oxpect " . d .! . o rnr, ''""J ,i.. th Remands upo n tliora. The new ' '" ' nl fixinB ns Wll 4 u i.h'- ,...o. Of course the public will have to pay the bills. But if the railroad managers are faithful to their trust, the public will get all that it pays for. Thu conn try has learned during the past three years that inadequate railroad facili ties are nn expensive luxury. Business men would have been wll'ing to pay two or three times the legal freight rate if thev could have got their goods when thev ordered them. But the railroads were so congested with traffic thnt evervthing received moved slowly and embargoes were put on shipments be cawt th( unities were alrcudy taxed ,..,. cannplt4 If business is to prosper the avenues of distribution must be kept open. We knew this theoretically a long time ngo, but there is no man doing any consider able business who has not had it 1m-' pressed upon him by hard experience since 1017. And instead of being frightened by an increase in the freight rates nnd its possible effect on the cost of living we nre beginning to study the subject in its details. W. .Tett Lauek, an economic expert, for example, has been saying that the new freight rates will not in crease the cost of a pair of shoci to jine rvllilier morts iiiuu ti ii-um ui iur mosti The retailer, in the present state the retailer moro than fi cents ut the nf the shoe market, is likely to absorb this sum instead of passing It on to the consumer. And the snme thing is true of virtually all other commodities lints, shirta, neckties, underwear, clothing and the like. Coal, which is bulky, is about the only thing In common use the price of which Is likely to be affected at all by the new freight rates Daniel Willard, president of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, is of the opinion that the new rates ore likely to decrease prices because of their effect upon b'ic'.uess as a whole. If their ef. feet upon tho railroads is what every one anticipates, Mr. Wlllard's view is likely to be sustained by the development. When buslners Is active and compete I . - J ' v . tevEimrQ "public tlon brlk prices tend downward. Under such conditions the wholesale markets arc open to the little nmii as well as to the big man. Competition in selling al ways brings or keeps prices down. The, rehabilitation of the railroads ought to ease the pressure upon the public In hundreds of different wnys. If It does not help the housing situation, men familiar with the difficulty in the transportation of building materials nt present will be surprised. Much will be heard during the sum- iiicr nnii nuiuuui noout tne laws which the Democrats nassed while thev were In control of Congress, but none of them is oi t renter importance, than the Ksch- Cuiiiniliis railroad law, passed-by n He- J imuiiraii congrrsM nun signed reliie - nits intimated that lie would have vetoed It If he had dared. It lit k down for the' Hrst time the principle of justice lnthe ! treatment of private capital invested In the transportation system of the coun- try. It is an illustration of the historic ' ability of the Republican pnrtv to solve , a business iirohlPin in n 4iii'lnps.lll0 I manner. PARIS CONFORMS . T)ARIN, without public gumltig tables x and dueling, suggests n mental picture .surprising only to those who ' have failed, to adjust their viewpoint ' to accumulating facts. ItJias been ai long time six jcars. in fact since tne spirit of the I- rench metropolis, even superficially appraised, wus one of frivolity. The bnn just fixed by the upper leg islative house upon the roulette tables In the dainty suburb of Knghlen. ns well as nnvu'hnm u'ltliln nno linnilrpil 1 kilometer of the greatest Latin city, I is distinctl) in line with the prevailing trend of French opinion. General de Cnstelnau. carr.viuc tho reformluc nas sioti, still is fathering a bill in the Chamber of Deputies to make dueling illegal and punishable by fine or im prisonment. Sunday theatres are ,ns yet un touchedj but It would be unwise to forecast tho point at which the zeal for regulation will stop. The enfes throughout the week close with grim celerity at 10 p. m. ' To the social philosopher may be left the task of judging the mornl gains or losses of this persistent development. What will utuiut,stlniinbly strike tho forcignec. is the surrender of the city to, the wave of conformity that is be coming world-wide. Paris is no longer tUnt rcpositorv of self-confident guvctv . . n t where "everything goes. n 1 ti.nT..,..i. VT.if"nV0tc nd the r rench capital Is fash buab e. 11..PI. nt nn ( js n jn mode'nnd i nothing if not : ! PLEASANT ANTICIPATION T HADERS of the Farmer-Labor party - nre hoping while the hoping is good. They announce that they cpcct to carry Washington. Idaho, Wyoming, North nnd Sopth Dakota and Minne sota with the nsistanco of the Non partisan League. But the Democrats insist that they will carry these states, nNid the Re publicans have not admitted that they will lose them. The only consolation the Farmer Labor people can get this year is in the . pleasures of anticipation. No one should begrudge them this joy, for reali zation is still a long way off. THE HUNTINGTON LIBRARY BIBLIOPHILES will regret the re moval from New York of Henry E. Huntington's famous library, probably the finest private library in the world. For some months the work of shipping 'the hooks to Mr. Huntington's home in San Marrno. in southern California. Ims been going on. where they nre being Placed in n building erected to hold of ''is library staff started for the West . , . ,.. nf h T..--U , rr.), whole library will be in place in Sep tember. Mr. Huntington hns caused heart burnings for many other collectors, for he has never hesitated to outbid every one else when he wished to buy a rare volume. When he paid S.'O.OOO for the (iutenherg Bible in 1012 It wns the highest price that had ever been paid for n printed book. He has bought complete libraries in order to obtain for his own the rare volumes thnt it con tained. Notnble among them were the libraries of Dwight Church, the Dukn of Devonshire nnd Sir Thomas Edger ton. n well as the library of Americana belonging to Judge Benedict. He has thus acquired a collection of six first editions of Shakespeare h plays, In eluding the -1'Hamlct" printed in Lon-J dou in ham, tne original manuscript ot Franklin's "Autobiography" and many other priceless treasures. Book lovers from the East who wish to see these things will now have to cross the continent, but many of them will think that the pleasures In store fpr th'em will well repay for tho time and money spent. It may be that Mr. Huntington has removed his hooks to Cnlifornin in order to attract to the state where he mnde his fortune people who would not otherwise go there, but It is more likely that be wishes to have bis library where he speuds the greater pnrt of the year so that he may enjoy it at his leisure. The Night Express (Bridge train. Atlantic City Philadelphia) TN THE eastern night a glittering 1 hpnm Ib piercing the dnrk'nlng sky. Where the Pleasure City's tiny lights Like. Jewels in velvet lie ; . And n roar comes over the glistening rail, Tho music- of mighty Tower. The breath of a monster, panting hard, At seventy miles nn hour ! Oh, she sings the song of rail and the road, The Song of the Engineer, As she hurtles alonj; with her lightning stride O'er the miles in swift career. In the long, sleek coat lies whipt in her train Are the Travelers. Ton and I, From the City of Play to tho City of Toil From the sea to our tasks with a sigh ! Through the slumbering Jersey hamlet Bweeps A tornado of living steel, And the desolnte pine-woods echo again To the thundering drum of the wheel. Now the lights of the Work -City gleam nfnr. With the mirror d river betwee'h, And wo boom o'er tho span flung by hand of Man As n path for tho fJoddess of Steam ! W may leave tho station's vaulted roof Tn (nin In tho city's nress. But dqep In ourhearts rings the Cry of tup tutu, f h Hnntr of th ft JNIclit- Kxnress. . PAUb urfWUtJx uiiujiir. tiintly by n Dfliiioerutic Piesldent, whof-v,l,K n,l(1 Ottering 0f school environ r ' l!f: ledger-pqieXd BEAUTIFYING SCHOOLS 8tolned-Giass Windows In a High School Where Modern City Guilders Make a Mistake. Lower Merlon's Villas Not In Jt Ily GEORGE NOX McOAIN LTIIIILE Dr. Thomas R. Flnegan; su- perlntendent of public Instruction m title should be changed tn commls llmirp nt nlnntlnn l '! nt.n, loner of education is moving nhcad i with Ills plan to reorganize the school system or tne state, there are., here ana; there, little innovations being made j "V , . ' r '"'J1' l,lc i""' ""'" Ir, ' nn evidcTiee of aroused ptibllc ",H'n,nt on the subject. The Northeast High School is hnviug two wings added to the building. The west wing when completed will contain nn """""My om or liudltorlum with a "fating rapacity of 1500. I It is of horseshoe shape, after the. ac cepted architectural idea of the modern theatre and opera house, with main lloor nnd gallery. One of Its attractions will be n great pipe organ built by funds contributed by the alumni, of which Prof. Vincent II. Hrechl Is president, Its tinlnue feature will be twenlv beautiful designed memorial windows in stnlned glass. mWENTY-FIVE years ago such a! -L thing ns a memorial stnlned glass window in a public school building was undreamedof. It would have been con-1 slilered a reckless waste of the taxpny - rem" innnpiv j There would have been indignation meetings, protests by the score nnd con- ' demnntlon of the IdealHts who fathered the project But the world ls,progrcsslng. and so is the public-school idea In Pennsyl vania. It is a long, long trail from the little red schoolhouse, with Its bare and menger equipment, to tbc modern high school building, even in the country. But the taxpayer is not footing the bill for this artistic adornment. It Is n grace added to the ensemble of the Northeast building that is sponsored by the old g:fids. PRO an ROFKSSOR BRICCHT tells me as odd feature that the windows arc being Installed before the auditorium lias been completed. There nre twenty of them. , wo If0 , b' "f"'0"10" J0, UlP nlumnj! nml iiilnila tidi.i niitliiliiaiAil la aim ional.1 I """ l'"l-'" " "ti m iiutn-u i.i mr ..u.iu 1 war- 0uc cn(,h or tlie 1,nv-v "u1 arm'- remainder, sixteen will be me- ' , ""- riimuimer. ' ' "' '"' morlals to classes, while the remaining two will'be held In rrserve to commemo-1 rate iuturc eveuts in tuc History oi tuc school. It is a beautiful conception. So far ns I have learned, it is the first of its kind In the state. LOWER MERION township con tains more beautiful homes, nnd In Rrenter number, than nny similar area in this country. ' It hns the finest roads of any town- ship of equal size. This is because the wealthier residents took the matter in uanu nnn constructed roaus to tneir liking, and Inrgely at their own expense. I The more pretentious residences of ! Lower Merlon In point of cost, beauty. locntion and embellishment, barring, of' course, those located in mountainous .districts and along broad rivers, rival tlie chnteaus and castles of France. For not nil ehatenus In France nre large, and not nil castles nre castellated, with battlements and ancient moats. While. Europe and the United States ninv nrldcitlipinselves on the hesntv nf their domestic architecture and Ihe '''P- We suspect, however, that some number of 'their palatini homes, they "f them nre bagpipe bands nnd somo fife cannot hope to attain the pre-eminence ol"' (,r,,m bunds and harmony is there of Italy In this respect during the Mid- , fore Impossible. die Ages, thnt is. if authorities of that' " period arc to believed. I The annual toll of railroad crossing The Elklns, Stotcsburv and other cs- iitomobilc nccldeuts is u thousand killed tates. Impressive ns they are todav, t nmJ thrce thousand injured, nccording would hnve been striking, but perhaps ' ,0 a rPort "J "T interstate commerce not exceptl onal. among hundreds of othen estates adjacent to Rome, Flor enee and rarmu. Burkhardt, in his work on the Ital ian Renaissance, says the Florentines nf that period revived their taste for villas and spent so much upon them that peo ple of adjacent regions thought them in sane. He sajs: Within n radius of tweutv miles of me 1-u.v mere were paid to oe IJ,UUU esiaies wim ouu palaces whose wnlis were constructed of cut slone According to this Lower Merion isn't in it, nnd County Treasurer Rardman, had he lived during the period referred to, would hnve been the busiest man in Italy In the tax -gathering game. .Of course. It all depended upjin the size of the Florentine estates. AMERICAN tourists, as 1 indicated recentlv in the paragraphs on "See America First," do not have to go overseas to Switzerland or down to South America's Andean chain to get nil tlie thrills that nre associated with mountaineering on Ice peaks and over glnciers, " The mountains of Colorado and southern Cnnadn nre as unique as those of Switzerland nnd as fearful us the Alps In the wnrniugs they offer to tho men or women hardy enough to defy ther heights. Not eten the Colnradans, to the manner born, hnve surmounted them. There nre peaks In that state yet await ing their pioneers. The venturesome individual who hankers to strap a pair of spiked boots on his feet, put nn Iron shnft on the end of an ushen stnff and whoop It up on unbeaten paths amid the snow. . scramble over precarious lee bridges that span glacial fissures and tic drag ropes around his waist to prevent ills tumbling over precipices and cluttering things up after n 1200-foot fall, can do tins to tuc queen s taste right here at home. And the universal gadabouts arc just beginning to appreciate this fact. ONE other tiling they are learning ls that this little old country of the V. S. A. can take the edge off Europe when it comes to the question of min eral springs. They lire dotted all over the country like raisins In it crumb cake. Their mineral constituents are guaranteed to meet every demqnd of broken-down constitutions and physical Infirmities. Twenty years ago I brought East with me the first case of Manltou water from Colorado, bottled at the spring tinder pressure of its own gas. That it lias not superseded Apolllnarls Is be cause tho foreign water can be im ported at less cost than tho Colorado product In the matter of freight rates. Besides, the Apnlllunris spring wns long ngo exhausted, the supply now coining from n neighboring fountain. I refer particularly to western min eral springs. Saratoga, White Sul phur, Cambridge In our own state and others are too well known and popular to neod any reference here. As to the need of our people for get ting acquainted with the Wonders of our own land, I would suggest an addition of threa words to the popular .slogan, '"WK? UP an(f Heo America i tt. ir-A i?j.' ;. .- '.w- ' .'Av-j.-h." y n. -. .j:;.. .'.aA'-.,'' -, v. ?HORT GUTS , "That's he ticket!' say tho po Ice tovCortclyou. Rcclrio for Car Uandltry First sicni your car. Chiropodists measure prosperity at' Even the most unforgiving would bo quite willing t,o forget tho Ucrgdoll cose. ' The corn crop is receiving special attention in Philadelphia. Chlropo- dlsts are In session here. Railroads ,inov now-cet the money i "- nrcii. ncii-preservntlou will die- : inrn (link it i ... . i.. tato thot It bo spenUwIscly. "Perhaps the winds In flic rigging o lie good snip m, H. Quay whispered. "Dear Governor, don't talk." . The ,lro"b! i Poland appertrs to be that the Rolshcvlsts do not light ac cording to London prize ring rules. The original joy rider was the beg gar on horseback, hut through the ages the destination has remained ever, the Mime. -. Now npproncheth tho season of the year when hay feverites will view tho various "cures" with their customary suspicion. The rumor that President Wilson Is going to part with the White House l"'11'0" "'p08 not necessarily prcsngc any """ " me cuoinct l After nil. It Is well to 'ill the discussion, nt Intnmntt, remember onnl affairs ' Ij'lSf'jr '"''JBs 'Hint, worry us most arc I t"igs mat don t happen. , .y?1"0!1 I" the nninc of tho nv i urkish minister of foreign nffnirs. He sounds like something to rouse tho ire of a composing room foreman. ' "Stick to the farms!" says Penn sylvania's agricultural chief and gives excellent reasons, not the least being that the farmer is his own man. The comptroller of ihe treasury assures tho country that there is plenty of money to move the crops. That's fine! Now nil wo need is freight cars. J Lack of coal delajs the manufac- .t,lrc 9 steel enrs .Mack bf steel cars de- ' Iny8 the transportation 'of conl. Just j mle "arueu vicious circle after another, ! , TA -Ncw i"fI 5rcpr has been sent tft I .Oil tfitl ll'Mf li fnii t --.. t ;- ". iti jrarN Ir i !loa,r,IluB "?tlr- Tllc -'"0.0()0 liounds T ,,,?n.n,cd ls ,,ot "Oclent to sweeten tills bitter cup. i "' ' That Cummings should be suc ceeded by White ns Democratic na tional chairman Is not surprising. Cummings ir too big a man for the present ticket. When one door shuts another opens. Varc men ousted from salaried positions muj- mi go to worn tor uircctor Fur bush on n commission basis. Five cents j n rat ought to be easy picking. Increased railroad rates include ' passenger, Pullman, milk and excess tmggoge tariffs. Apparently nothing has been overlooked. -Wonder If the Pull- mnn porter will expect n larger tip? ' r Winter has its compensations, When cold weather comes we shall nt least tlud relief from the Monday morn - t ing story of tho truck smashed bv n icd bv f crossing ,rn,n on a cu' 'c",y railroad Mustapha Keinal Pnshn. Turkish Nationalist leader. Wants all bandit bands to Incorporate under liiu lender. lml"lre "' ""' inonni Safety Council. We nre a great and careless country. Harding makes up a paper: Cox plows; Coolltlge uses the scythe; Roosevelt trundles n babv carriage; Watklns wnshes clothes. All the can didates having demonstrated their ability tn rnrr with tlmti Itnnrlat ft ...nt, 1.1 i.AnM n tna mi hn-n ttinw. n i,.i.. . win There is something reminiscent of pre-convention interviews in the stnte ment issued by the special assistant to the attorney general charging thnt manufacturers and jobbers are attempt ing through carefully prepared prqpn g'nndn to "stampede retailers and the public Into n renewed fictitious demand for clothing nnd thereby force prices higher.'" Tlie declnrntlon of a Kansas agri cultural expert that what is needed throughout that state is to cut down the size nf farms to 100-arre holdings is simply appreciation of the fact that In nil businesses n point is reached when bigness interferes with efficiency just ns surely ns littleness makes efficiency impossible. If the steel trust hadn't long ngo reached that conclusion it would not hnve so many healthy com petitors. Chicken misers learned the lesson years before they appreciated tho principle involved. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. "What Is n spashetto? " 2. What does tho word mean? 3. What is the first recorded dato or the lioldlnn of the Olympic games? I. Who sold "Put your trust tn Ooa nnd Keep your powder dry"? N 5. Who was Itlcliard Craahaw?' C. Who-was Ht. Hwtthln? 7. Who are the Flemings? 8. Wlicro Is the city of Adrlanoplo? 0, What Is Hie science of bulllstlcs? 10. When is n church a dome? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz Vermicelli Is Italian for llttio worms. A Jerenjlad is a lamentation, a dole ful complaint. A philippic Is u ' bitter invective, n denunciation 1. 3. VangtBe-Klane river Is incorrect be cause "ivians means river. 4 Mexico Is- one of the chief sources of vanilla in tho western hemi sphere. 5, Tlie derivation of tho word sterlinc Is uncertain. Formerly n was thought to have originated m Kasterltng, but It has also been said to mean "little star," that Ib starling, because of a star or bird - depicted in the old coins worth a pound storting. , 6. OeorBe Washington died In 17,90. 7 "The Ijisfof Ihe Ilarons" and "The Uist Days of Pompeii" ur his torical novels by Ilulwcr-Lytton 8. Mlddleton Ih tho nilddlo name of Governor Cox. 9. Aaron S. WatkW Is candidate for president on tho Prohibition ticket, 10. The court cry "Oyezl" or "O yea!" Words ara from tho imperative moo4 of theFfcnch verb '"olr.'i to hear... i ' ' ' . .jjfl-" ty vsss. , . ... v - r. -. :. rk ' x -" XfssCsr-JS1 JpaA kv - t, . vvs. .v: . .ewttup.-. Wj .VfK. : iheiLrnutUi. , LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Conditions in Russia Today Compared With Those in France During the Revolution Sunday Baseball To the r.Aitor of the Evening Public htdacr: Sir I have noted our extremely In teresting editorial In today's issue, ontltled. "A Lenlno Parallel " - Any student of present events should studv carefully the French Revolution. " t Is true that there is n wonderful parnlled between I.onlno nnd Robespierre, but tlie rather unfavorable Inference thnt ? uauuuy uuenaeti uy tins parallel is opst) to question. It Is true that ItobeEplern went to extremes nnd wns n sacrifice to the cause. It Is probable that Lenlno will follow- his fate; but it does not fol low that cither their causo or their life is nn error. The parallel thnt usually is not drawn ih mat neiuecn mo causes. Honespierre entered public lifo ns a conservative. His cnrllest oration ns u school boy was In prnlsa. of Louis XVI. lie was a student nnd at the beginning of tho revolution wns lenored and insulted ny other members of the assembly. Tho constituent assembly met to remedy tho conditions In France, chiefly due lo the excesses nnd extravagances or tne nobility. The third estate was composed of men of high principles and nothing approaching revolution was in tacit mind. Kvents forced them to conclusions. At first tho nobility rofusccV to confer with them ; then the klmt surrounded their meetlne nlace with troous nt Versailles, When tho assembly moved lo Paris lie sniii up tneir meeting pinre inis forced them to meet In the tennis court and wns marked by the memorable "Oath of the Tennis Court." Tho Itlpg demanded tho assembly to disperse and was met bv Mlrabeuu's celebrated reply: "Tell your master wo are here by the win or the people nnd notiims nut in force of bayonets shall drive us hence." Then, angered by the king's uilltud". tlie peoplo stormed tho Bastille on July I, 178H. Then tlie ItlnK was r.uiKlit cor responding vlth the enemies of Franco In Austria and Prussia Then follows ills flight to V.trcnncs on Juno 51. 1731. Mvcn after that tlie nation remnlns loyal to the Klne. Then the Invasion of France starts. The manifesto of tlie Duke of BrunswIdK threatens Paris France Is on tlie de fensive ngii'nsl tho world and knows that her monarch Is conspiring with her enemies. Then come the Federes from Marseilles. Brest nnd other cities and demand of the assembly tho dethrone ment of the king. Tho .is&elnbly hesi tates nnd does not dethtono him, Paris and tho Federes cltfo the assembly until the fllli of August. 1702, to dethrone the king, This Is not don. Op tlie 10th of August. 1702, tho FedcreB Willi tho sections of Paris lake the Tulleiles. the Swiss guard fires upon the citizens nnd In turn are unnUiitutof Louis XVI, liko a coward, nbandons bis defenders and seeks tlie protection of the assem bly. Shortly (1'crenfter ho Is made pris oner nnd his trial and dcatli follow! After tho 10th of August, 1702. the examination of the secret papers of the king shows that he wns In continuous correspondence with mcmlcs of France nnd that lie had been corrupting mem bers of the nssembl This Infuriated France, for the French Revolution to August 10, 1702, had been carried on with practically no.wolence. Neither the position of the king nor kingship Itself had hoen seriously threatened until very shortly before this date, and tho Frencli people then wakened up to tho fact that tho government so far nB It wus rep resented by tho ItlnR hud been n traitor to France, that his promises had never been sincere, that lie was continuously looking for assistance from tho enemies of Franco nnd had been simply a traitor. Nothlnpr but a strong central power could sa( Franco, , Under those circumstances this power becamo centered ' the commlttoe of public safety. Robespierre, as a mem ber of this committee, did gather the forces of Frame anil repel the world, and what we call tho Terror wiih tho inevitable result of tho rascality of the king and his government. The present condition of Russia truly parallels that of Franco of '8!i -a corrupt nrlntocracy, a weak king .md a revolution led by men of Ideals An Interesting parallel that escapes tho observer of today Is that, notwith standing the fact that tho constituent assembly, followed by (ho legislative nsseiqbly, had practically assumed tho government of France before August 10, 1792, and the notions, of tho government wero very largely thoso of a republic, yet thn 'nid republic wns practically pever mentioned until after that date Danton, Mlrnhenu. Robespierre and their colle.iKUcH hod not urged a ie, public, and oen disavowed it llefei ring to tho American Ideals of u re public, one oiator of tho time stated that ho "hoped that they would not be Inoculated by America." It may be well to consider today how many men who, though conservatives, are indorsing and wlahlng for tlie suc cess of many-of tho Ideas which pub llcly are being denounced as radical. Wo shun tho name but wo are wot. coming the reality. Thoso who enjoy the wealth and power of today may well compare Robespierre and J.enlne. hut thri would bo wise if they minimi ed tho causes of which they nro exponents, nnd to remember that whllo Lcnine may bo destioyed as wao itobesplorre, the principles for which they stand so fae au they nro just cannot bo destroyed. No moro thrilling BUinmary of tho Fiencli Revolution can bo found than in .Victor Hugo's "Nlnoty-threo," from Which I quote a few. fines i. "To bo a member of that convention was tq he hut 41 wave, or tne ocean, and lie oceun, nnd the srca,t. this wast true ot oven "Wherell We dd?? t .j? There was In that convention' a will which was that of nil, and , which was that of no one. That will wlas nn idea irresistible nnd unmeasured, one which blew from the clouds of Heaven. We call It the revolution. As this Idck passed It struck down one and raised another. It carried one on the foam and broke another upon the reefs. To Im pute the revolution to men is to impute the occn to tho waves. It wns In mallty n resultant of events. Kvents dictated tho cost, man simply paid. Kvents dictate, men merelv nlgn. The 21st of January, 1793. Is slEiied Robes pierre, but these men were merely the amanuenses of fate. Tho nuthor cf theso grand pai;es Is God. nnd upon the face of theso events Is written tho simple name, destiny Above these mysterious compllcajticnsof benefit and 'disaster there arises !ho eternal 'why'' of history. To blame or praise men ror the results Is nn if wc would praise or blama. tlie figures for tho total. Above tho revolution, truth nnd lustlec remain, ns beyond tho tempest tho stars still bhlne." E. CLINTON KIIOADS. Philadelphia, July 30. As to Sunday Baseball To the f.'rfltor of the feeriifito Pullfe t.trtucr: Sir An Issue of your paper some time nco contained an editorial on "About Blue fiundayn." As long as the absurd and puerile statements, jiossibly Intended as arguments, against our American Christian Sabbath, were contained in "letters" printed In our city papers the writer did not care to notice them. Uut when the same statements. In kind at least, are dignified by editorial presen tation tlicy should not pass without protest, You soy: "Oddly enough, llttio Is cer said about Sunday golf, Sunday motor ing. Sunday swimming, Sunday llslilng, or Sunday tennis." etc. The Superior Court of this state In Its decision of July 21, 1015, declaring Sun day baseball games to bo unlawful, ex plicitly referred to tho fact that such games "are attended by crowds in pro portion to tho fame of tho clubs or the interest taken In thn game In tho com munity," nnd further, "there cannot be any controcrsy ns to the natural nnd reasonable tendency of such a concourse of people In tho built-up portion of a city on Sunday to produce nolso ana disorder." Presumably the samo court would de clare that Sunday golf nnd tennis cnme would not bo unlawful because usually played on prlvato groundB and un attended by large concourses or peoplo creating nolso nnd" disorder by giving vent to their npprovnl or disapproval and thtiH disturbing "tho tranquillity and Deuce of tho neighborhood" on Sunday. Theso games nnd swimming uro not in dulged In, furthermore, on our open cltv lots. ' The Superior Court's decision referred to declares "The Christian religion ana the sanctity of Sunday as a holy day is nn Inseparable part of our fundamental law." The Supremo Court of the I'ultcd States likewise declared In formal de cision: "Whoro there ls no Christian Sabbath there Is no Christian morality, and without this our free institutions cannot be sustained." Then the Christian Sabbath 'Is not only a religious but emphatically a patriotic. Institution ay well. Certain It is that without the meaning, content nnd influence of tho Christian Sabbath tho United Status of America, bb wo know and lovo this country, would never have come into existence nnd Its history ivould have been entirely different, tar less glorious and resplendent. As n rollglous Institution the Chrlstlnn Sao bath Is also the very basis on whlcn all the activities of tho church n nnn. tjucted. Shall the mlnlstors of the (Jos- pel remain silent nnd inactive when It Is Bought to be made a convenient day or sport, amuhument or commercialism t oltalrn said! "You can never destroy the Christian reunion as long as the Sabbnth Is recognised by men ns t, dlvlno Institution." When Lenine and Trotr.ky. with thetr Bolshevik followers or dupes, took over the government of Russia thoy lenllzcd that tho Christian religion wns a grin' obstacle in the way of Soviet success According lo foreign correspondents thoy therefore turned churches Into movlnir. picture theatres, convents into garaces and horse stables, and put tho Sabbath such as It was even In Russia, under E I T H ' S 'A TRIP TO HITLAND" With 10 Famous Bong Writers ED. JANIS & CO. I4 0tl ST. Mlliia anl ria ... ''m"-McCarty & pnyeEine ROSE CLARE; MOSS t. KRVE: CIIAnnn1 WILSON and a UH summer Show. ' WILLOW GROVE PARK LKPH AND HIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA TODAY-4ai-Ml.s Hilda Keller. h?. T.4.V Mies JMHIiy Htoktm lluser. Soprano-' 0!4B--Mr. Paul Volltma-i. T.'nor ooprano. TIIl'RS.. AUll O-riULDRKN'-H UAV Amusementn I'UKK to the children V.', ' II In 1 aVIqt-k. - .... Singing Festival nt U P. M Uoui'enlrs, THr- JNK P. C. MILLER " 1 , . ; .,,,-, PRIVATE LlCftunNH DAILY" U JiJg-m, jcaxi.W'lB&g - s- ,-- . .. t " ban. Do you and Mnyor Mootc agrea with tho Supremo Court of tho United States nnd tho Superior Court of Penn sylvania on the matter of tho Hubhath, or with Messrs. Voltnlre, Lcnlnc ana Trotzky? P. Y. SCHELLY. Philadelphia, July 20, Market St. ob. 10th 11 A. M. to H 1 1L KATHERINE MacDONALD in "THE TURNING POINT" NEXT WEEK THOMAS MEIGHAN In DU MILLD Production "THE PRINCE CHAP" A PARAMOUNT PICTUflK, : PAI AfTT 12U MARKET STREET JrALrfAVllr 10 A! M 12. S. 3:43 .... ,, r,!ls' 7:45. u:30 p. M. CHARLES RAY ln "omeu inni)nni COME9 HOME" AmmmB LARRY SEMON In New Comedy "Tim HTAOU HAND" ARCADIA Wrrf ...... ... . 0ir' 7!,' 1,!'1 '' ! "The World and His Wife" FROM PLAY OK HAJH; NAME VirTODIA MurkeTstrent Ab Otli V 1V I WI1-Y 0 A. M. to U:1S P.M. "Xo'rth "Below the Surface" PAPITOI "-'4 MARKET STREET -'" J 1 Wli Constance Talmadgi In "IN HCAUCH OF A SINNER" RPTPMT MARKET ST. Bel. 17TH ILiUON 1 ALICE BRADT In "SINNERS" GI t D TT MARKET STREET LUDCi AT JUNIPER 11 A. M. to 11 T. M CONTINUOUS VAUDEVILLE "PUTTING IT OVER." Olhr. CROSS KEYS m Mrl" st- -'so. n-4n o r. M JACK ROOF AND OIRL8 BROADWAY Broad nn1 Snyder A. " i 2,30 M & n p M MUSICAL MncLARRNH; WALLACE REID AND HERE DANIELS In "SICK-A-nED" PI-IPQTMI IX " opera nousn nilOllNUl 3 Times Daily KVKNtNfSS. 7 0 ar.c. SOe. 7So MATINEES. 2:30 SRp. 35c. SOc A Positive Sensation! 4 lrr the terms in which Philadelphia's critics nrcluim the most beautiful vtcturt evrr vwtlr. WM " K A t Tilt: WEST VTnAOHDHfAIiY iOOO Scenes. 'J Miles nf Film, r,iV)d People Jllshtleat Production Iro tho History of the Theatre "The Picture, to the errfen, la whut narnona," s a book, In In ttnelf as a line torplrco'of American lltrratuie," Evenln Bulletin. "The beat photoplay that has been een heiv In many u day 'Ramona' Is u oul fltlrrlnsr bit of tndHnn nlrttir., nr thnt de. eerve to be viewed by tho mmt ilteptlcal berauae of III. genuine appeal tn the better natures of Inoutrer. tho apevtatoja." Philadelphia "A, aptendM plcturliatlon of a romancs , that la considered as u claaalo nf American life In tho southwest In the daya of the . Spanish-American domination and a literary maaterplcce of world-wide recognition Tho' Record. "In 'Ramona' the pathos, trasedy ana ' romance of the winning of the great West la perpetuated In a lvTd drama with mac plncent scenic erfecta." Public Ledger "A presentation of a rapidly fading- period of American life, replote with sentiment and with Plot cleverly Interwoven "The Press. " 'Ramona' Is the most satlarvlnir photo plav entertainment since Professor May bridge exhibited his first pictures of a hor , In motion " EenlnBrPubllc Ledger. - " 'Ramonu' Is a photographic triumph. Its detailed tesurrecllon of vanished history opens the eyes with wonder at Its accuracv nnd beauty. Its story of the ennuuered nnd dispossessed Indian la heart-gripping This film will tw welcomed lut-the public wlin nnen arms. Those who like ennri nhntnnlaVI will enjoy 'Ramona.' "North American tlClhHWO &mm MOS0AT .illojopa.Psooi i METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE 1 1 S TIMES DAILY MATINEE 2.80 c EVENING 7.00 AND 0.00 P. M...23c 4 60c COMMENCING MONDAY EVENING AUGUST 9TH UP IN MARY'S ATTIC Presented by TINE ART riOTtmES With the FAMOUS OALiruitNIA n.vTIUNO IIBAV,T,ES 1 IN PHRSON, A Comedr Drams w Pep and Tretty Olrls. Showing Wbit Th i ,Wr -attt" tettkprt. -fl . ,'l ryX&T7&1s MBMB-Mn -jf ..... Lj. iii. - Ih ilfcM fair mn i j. tM . 7t b.'Jtk Vu MJLi.