fil! . r v adi 'jm.s!i'5T'C?-if,,i ?VWP rvsr j- i - -- ,' "1 k ' " - . fftiity '. ' ?Vv7ji'.',iTtrM W& -J v4? J"J i rfWy - "'w ",'w ' 'f3Tr MftfH I ; it ftnmihs public Hcba PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY I CIWI8 IL K. CUIXTia, Phisidsnt CTiarlM II. Ludlnrten. Vies Pr dfnt: Jehn C. ftrtln, Btcmtary and Treasurer; Philip a. Cellins. Jehn II. Wllllnnn, Jehn J, Kpurscnn, Dlrrcters. EDITOniAI. HOARD! . Cries IL K. CuiTis, Cbalrm&u PXVTD B. BM1LEY Editor' JOHN C. MAHTIN... .Central Suslncss Mansccr i Published dally at Pcnue Lemeb Building ..il Indspsndenctj Bauar, Philadelphia, AfcUrma CrTl......,...,..rYis-lnien nultdlnc Mnr Teix 4 301 Madisen Ae. ,Bneit 701 Ferd Building T.. Letus ,....618 aiobe-4emeerat llultdlng Caicaae IMS rnimn Bulldlns , . NKW8 BUnEAUSl N. E Cor- Pennsylvania Ave. una 14th Rt. Heir Tens ntTKBAD Tn Sun Building Jmkdeh Denim? Txmden Timet T. HunscniPTieN thumb ' Th Btekise Pcnue Lenoira Is served te sub tMrlbera In Philadelphia and surreund'ns towns tl tha rats of twcKe (IS) cents per week, paj-able 1 Ih carrier. By mall te points eutilds of rhlladMphla. In United States Canada, or United States pos. sessions, posture fre. fifty (ISO) cents per month, V l") dollars per year, paynhls In advanee. Te all ferlm countries one ($1) dollar a month. Nence Subscribers wishing address charmed fciBst give old as well ai new address. BZLL.IQaOWAmUT KEYSTOSE. MAIN JOOO tSTeVlress oil eommun'fcftflens te Evening PuoHe IjtietT. Independence Square. Philadelphia. , Member of the Associated Press 'TTJI ASSOCIATED PRE8a Is CTCluslieli m WHUd te tht vst for republlcoflen 0 all news fUfntchei credited te it or net ethcrulie crniltcii f tht peirr. and also the local news published tMcreftt. XII riehtt e republication of special dispatches Isfrttn. ors also reierved. PUI.d.lphli. Fridij, Mettmber 13, 1910 A FOCIt-YnAK PROOItAM FOU riiii.Mi;i.riiiA "TFilncs" en which the people expect the new administration te concentrate Its attention) Tht iitluiear river bndee, -a drvdeck bio tnoueh te accommodate Ins larpitt ships. Jrvclepmmt of -tht rapid transit tutttm, A convention hjlf, X bulWlnp ter tht Free Library. An Art Hutcum. Xnlarsemenl 0 the lcater tuppty. lienet le accommodate the population. SEEING PHILADELPHIA JUDGE BROWN did net Issue n command te the members of the City CeuuHl who re te fellow him In n personally conducted tour of the Municipal Court. Graciously the judge put his summons in the form of an invitation. Of course, most of the mem mem bers'ef Council will turn up, if only for the purpose of greeting the multitude of their friends who nrc warmly placed in Judgi? Brown's paradise for the politically Indigent. .The court, which spends as If It were the kipping beard, needs still mere appropria tions, and Judge Ilrewn is getting ready te ak for them. Se the tour of inpcctlen may be viewed as n preliminary survey arranged te let the members of the Council knew what they can get for themselves in return ter some additional gobs of the public money. A VITAL NEED TN HOLDING up attempts te prevent the A condemnation of ground en Itace street between Eighteenth and Nineteenth streets Mayer Moero has helpfully contributed te the convention hall project. Other sites se -doubt would serve, but here certainly is one sufficiently near the renter of town te bt worth careful consideration. It is the fashion occasionally te decry a city-owned permnnent convention auditorium. We have jogged along many years without one. Is it really necessary? Visitors te the physically comfortable, ad mirably arranged Democratic convention in the great hall in San Francisce have their enthusiastic affirmative answer ready. It is part of the firm convictions alee of nny enlightened believer In civic progress. The aoencr the convention hall program is ex pedited the better will the metropolitan pre tensions of Philadelphia be juhtilk-d. JURYWOMEN, OF COURSE FTIHEItn is no reaben te believe that women will perform their duty as jurors any less capably than they ciercised the fran chise right. After an Inevitable season of snore or less condescending jesting en the abject, the public will adjust itself te the ner order, and what was novel will take en the aspect of authorized normality. The innovation will seen be manifested. Names for the first drawing from the jury wheel in 1921 have already been listed. The basis is the assessors' rolls, en which the proportion of women te men is as two te fire. Later en this ratio will be changed, for many women net enrolled by the as sessors under the exceptional rush condi tions of last fall will have the opportunity te pay poll taxes before the next election. The exemption of women from serving in court en cases of an embarrasetug or un pleasant nature offers no prebum. The application of a little discretion and common sense is all that is needed. "Ladies and Gentlemen of the Jury!" will seen arouse no mere astonishment than many another formal phrase of the courtroom. DUELS, SMALL AND GREAT FIlIS condemnation of dueling as "a foolish practice" and his refusal te meet hi challenger upon the se-called Held of honor, Loen Daudet, one of the lending trwerdsmen In France, cites the war as the cause of his conversion. Te this prominent Royalist deputy the idea of killing or the attempt te kill is barbareuIy repugnant. Ills position Implies n wholesome respect for the law and the processes of the courts. In France perhaps M. Daudet will iSt accounted a stickler for principles. Tatnli tlcs in French duels are rare Mark Twain once whimsically declared that he had re ceived the Legien of Hener ns the first per non te be wounded in a Parisian sword bout for years. Nevertheless, the theory of dueling is grounded in romantic medieval brutality. Individuals prone te admit this de net, however, always applj the same reasoning te national conflicts. That M. Daudet has closely Indicated th analogy Is net the least Dignlflcant fenture of his stand. ADRIATIC PEACE AT LAST BY THE reported settlement of the long standing Adriatic question Ituly seems te have been the gainer. Zura Is te be hers, the railway te Flume and the corridor through which It runs. The city of Flume itself Is te be erected into nn Independent utate. Jtige-Slavia surrenders claim te cer tain islands in the Adriatic, but gains some compensation in the favorable rectification of the Istrian frontier Te these persons who are net Interested Socialists In the subject, however, the word "settlement" lends the most Mgiilfi Mgiilfi cancete the negotiations The prime cause of mere than it ear mid a half of obstruc tion and delay has been the fear that high lisndcd disposition of ti veed problem would Implant iu Europe the seeds of a new war. J was alarm ever such u prospect which tiudeubtedly moved President Wilsen te deny support te the Italian claims te Flume at the Peace Conference. Later the Interna tional perils of the case became extended, and' Inst March the Amurlcau .State Depart-a-nt outspokenly resented nttempts of Italy. Great Urltaln and France te reject A plan In which official American opinion bad-been, represented. jLt''that time the alternative suggestion rande by the European powers was the rigid enforcement of the secret treaty of Londen. Mr. Wilsen emphasised the virtue In a third course, "mutual agreement between the Italian nnd Jtige-Slav Governments," with out outside Interference. It is precisely this policy which Is re sponsible for the present tangible results. Evidently restraint has been exercised by both parties. Neither one acquires Flume. A fcense of realities has developed faith in compromise nnd adjustment. The pact of Londen, while observed In most cases, has been changed In some ethers, in accordance with reasonable adjudication. The remaining riddle is Gabrlele D'An D'An nunzle. At present he commands an outlaw state. When the little new nation Is offi cially organized It will be Interesting te note the effect upon a position thus far main tained by armed force and enlivened by ro mantic pronunciamentes and an exception ally poetic constitution. AN INSTITUTION TO DO WHAT NO ONE ELSE DOES The Bureau of Municipal Research Jus tifies Its Existence by Its Achieve ments for the Taxpayers rpiIOUSANDS of citizens are doubtless wondering what Is this Bureau of Mu nicipal Research which is about te make a survey of the Municipal Court, and why it troubles itself with such matters. With the knowledge they have they can not understand Its latest activities, nor can they appreciate the significance of the big advertisements about it which have lately been appearing in the newspapers. In the first place, It should be said that the bureau has no official standing. It Is n voluntary organization of private citizens maintained by private contributions. In the second place, it should be said that it is net n muck-raking society. ' It maintains a staff of technical experts who establish working relations with the different city departments. It gets nil the facts about the duties and methods of these departments, subject te confirmation by the public official in charge. Then it makes a constructive report, pointing out defects and showing the way te remove them. It sedu lously lef rains from offering any criticism when It cannot suggest a suitable way for curing the defects. When the head of the department affected desires te make the changes recommended It assists him. On Its staff of experts are accountants, engineers, technical investigators, lawyers, social workers and statisticians. They in terest themselves only in the business methods of government. They have no po litical ends te serve, nnd they have proved se many times that they are impartial and disinterested that they ure welcomed In nl nl mest every department of the city govern ment. The nrrangements made for their survey of the Municipal Court, which Is just new under fire, is n tribute te their demonstrated fair-mindedness nud Impartiality. Ne one who Is aware of what the bureau has done in the past thinks for n moment that the investigators are going Inte the Municipal Court with the purpose of serving the ends of anything but the truth. With their cus tomary thoroughness they will study the problem of the relation of n court of this kind te the people who are brought befere It nnd the success with which this court fulfills its functions. The survey will doubtless Include n study of the laws creating the court, the propriety of the control of all appointments by one man nnd the bultabillt of continuing Its independence of the City Council. The report will be framed, net in n spirit of hostility te nny one, but with the desire te point out the way by which the people can get the best bervlce from the court. It will be such n survey as it made prier te the reorganization of the Bureau of Com pulsory Education, nnd it will resemble the survey which was followed by the creation of the Bureau of Weights and Measures. The activities of the bureau are continu ous, whether its experts are called in by the city or net. Among the subjects en which It has been gathering data for years are municipal street cleaning, the budget sys tem, the classification nnd standardization of the salaries of civil cmplejcs, the correc tion of the mandamus evil and the freeing of the city from meddlesome interference by the stnte Legislature. When the city is rendy te move in these matters the bureau lias the information nt hand for its gilidnnce. There must be changes both In the statutes and In the state constitution befere the mandamus evil can be wiped out entirely nnd before we can have that measure of home rule which is required if we are te be able te carry out a consistent policy In the management of our own affairs. The classification of the civil bervlce em em peoyes and the standardization of salaries has made borne progress. A report en the sub ject has been made te the Civil Service Com mission by its own special investigators. The bureau is committed te the adoption of such a plan as that recommended by these Inves tigators. It can back up the principle of the recommendations with convincing data that are new available te any public official who wishes te bring nbeut the reform. The experts of the bureau have been studying the municipal budget problem for a long time. It was with their assistance that the original budget section In the charter was drafted. The Legislature amended that section in such a way ns te weaken it In vital respects, because the politicians did net wish te give up altogether the old prac tices. The campaign Is still en and the bureau is en the front line with Its ammu nition dry and rcadj for use, The bureau also hud n hand in the street cleaning section of the charter. Its experts discovered lung age thnt the Philadelphia sjstem of cleaning the streets was bud, both politically and financially. It attacked no man or group of men. It has merely pointed out the evils iu the old practice and indi cated a better way. It will continue te supply the responsible authorities with facts net only until the contract sjstem is wholly abandoned, but until under the new system the streets thtniselves nre clean. New it may be asked why private citizens should butt in when officials hove been flirted te de the work. The answer Is that the bureau serves the same purpose for the people of a city that an etpert accountant serves for a private business man. The expert accountant audits the books. The bureau, acting in belinlf of the people, audits in a bread sense the books of the public officials in the interest of the whole city. I'liiladelphla is net the only city In which such an organization Is working. Public spirited citizens have Joined themselves to gether in a large number of ether commu nities for the purM)se of doing a work which otherwise would be left undone. These organisatiens are Independent of nil political control or bias and are In terested solely In the conduct of public busi ness iu the most efficient manner. They are equipped with professional experts qualified te decide where there Is efficiency as well as EVENING PUBLIC LEDGERr-PHILAPELRTOAr EKqbft NOVEMBER, &?; 192ft r i - - --.--.. in , ,' I,,, - . -.. . . . where there is Inefficiency. Their recom mendations are based en a study of the facts ascertained at first hand and inter preted in the light of bread knowledge. The accuracy with which they work is well illustrated by the fact that the local bureau in the eleven years of its existence has never been sued for libel. Still further, the work of the bureau Is continuous and Is net interrupted by a change of administration in the City Hall. When the study of a problem Is begun It is continued until it Is finished. This may take six months or six years. There are certain sections of the new charter, inserted en the recommendation of the bureau, which were framed as the result of five years' study. The Institution Justifies its exlstcnce both by its purposes and by the efficient way In which it carries out these purposes. Just new, when the Council is al work en the budget for next year preparatory te fixing the tax rate, the bureau Is devoting special attention te the Sinking Fund nnd is back ing up the demand of the Council for exact Information concerning the status of that fund. The statement has been made that the sinking fund commissioners have in their possession a surplus of $1,000,000 turned ever te them out of previous tax levies, and that this amount is in excess of the legiti mate needs of the fund. Ne ene but the commissioners knows the exact truth, and they have net yet been persuaded te tell. If se large a sum raised by previous tax levies is in the hands of any city depart ment, it ought te be turned ever te the city treasurer te be applied te the payment of current expenses. It would provide money enough te keep the tax rate at its present level and justify the Beard of Revision of Taxes In cutting down the horizontal in in crcase in assessments made this summer. Then the small householders would have brought home te them the value of the work done in their behalf by the privately main tained Bureau of Municipal Research. JOURNEY'S END "pOETS and n great many journalists are and will continue te be profoundly moved by the spcctocle that attended the burial of an unknown British soldier In Westminster Abbey yesterday and by the thought of all France fallen quiet while nn unidentified pellu was carried te a grave' made for him under the Arc dc Triemphe. Toe much of what they have been writing reveals a sort of passionate admiration for what they frankly regard as supreme magnanimity or fine condescension en the part of govern ments that permit such wide departure from the rules of ancient precedent. And by this you may knew that poetry and journalism are net yet quite what they ought te be. Why, after all, is there anything awe inspiring in the thought of a martyred Temmy In the Abbey or a pellu under the Arc de Triemphe or a doughboy In a tomb such ns ordinarily is reserved for the exalted of the earth? Great poets are burled in Westminster. They only wrote epics. The soldier lived them. Kings are in the Abbey, tee. They reigned. But they reigned only because of the strength and the patience and the generous faith of men like that ene who new shares their resting place. If Infinite knowledge wrung from the fires of hard experience makes for greatness; if service done in travail and long jeurneyings amid nameless terrors are proof of valor, then the soldier who wns burled in West minster Abbey fairly deserved the honors that were done him. Wisdom came te him in strange ways, and it is net likely that he would have experienced any new emotion by the sights and sounds that filled Londen at his homecoming. Flags blazed against the sky. But they were net se beautiful as his snerifice. There wcre tears everywhere. This man, whoever he was, must have seen eyes he loved blinded by them when he went awny. Great guns rocked the forts at Dever. This unnamed soldier walked Inte fire such as theirs te find for ethers the peace that he himself never was te knew again. All the world that stayed snugly at home and read the papers and danced nnd made money and walked In spotless uni forms honored Itself by honoring him, end showed merely that Its soul Is a little nearer te salvation because its heart has become a little mere sensitive te the fundamental truths of this life. There has been a great denl of talk about the White Man's Burden. The English nnd the French have merely done full honors for the first time te the man who actually bears It. And It Is futile te draw lines of na tionality or race between the groups of sol diers who fought and died en the allied side in the war against German aggression. They were a nation in themselves, with a purpose higher than any single nation ever had be fore or since. They wcre the plain men of all lands, the sinews of empire nnd the hope of the world. They have ranged and ven tured everywhere and they have endured every sort of pain. They have made nnd broken kings, they have built and tern down, they have settled continents nnd devastated them, they have mode great sac rifices and they have been guilty of great follies ever since the dawn of civilization in their restless search for better things and better ways of life. They are the elect because, when they have gene farthest, they have gene net in nnswer te commands or In search for glory, but In response te a voice that is within their hearts. They are the force that was prophesied, and kings are honored who share the tomb with one of them. Toe much publicity cannot be given te the declaration of the executive secretary of the California State Tuberculosis ASso ASse ASso elatien that California is net n cure-all for consumptives nnd that money spent en rail SS5 Travel would bring health If spent en treatment nt home. It Is a Point that has frequently been made by high authority In this city. Knut Hamsun, the Norwegian author who has received the Nebel prize for liters tiire. was once the driver of a horse car In Chicago. These were the days before the sneed mania afflicted the populace and the embryo author had time te dream as he drove hi" hacks. What u lessen we have here, my children I If this Knut had been a geed driver! had loved his Jeb and had given it all his best efforts, he might have been a motor meter man today I The Baltimore woman who declares her husband is merely a boarder, paying no mere than her ether boarders and being in finitely mere objectionable, evidently has never been impressed with the belief general In Europe that the Great American Husband mistakenly subordinates himself te his wife, caring for her whims und permitting her te neglect his comforts. There are sick veterans who enn't get medicine; veterans Incurably gassed lacking ntteutlen ; wounded veterans shy of adequate clothing; and bureaucratic red tape Is keep Init them from what they need. Uncle Ssm I nist pay bis debt te these who suffered for him before distributing meager largesse te ales' and well alike. New that the New Yerk Call admits that the "Russian experiment" Is a failure, It may be that the parlor Bolshevists may eventually see the light; AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Outslde View of Philadelphia That It Is a Gerles of Connected VII- -lages Is 8emewhat Berne Out by the Facta By SARAH D. LOWRIE A WOMAN who has been off doing war f- work and then reconstruction wprk for four years and has just returned assured me that she found Philadelphia changed I She said that she had met whole families of us swarming en the coasts of New Eng land in the lste summer just after she landed, and the expression of our faces was different. When I urged her te be mere explicit, she said t "Well, befere the war if you' had been met in bunches nt a summer place your eyes would have been indifferent, verging en te hostile, as though you were murmuring at sight of a stranger: 'What new enemy is this?' " , "Wherens new?" I asked. "Whereas new, you go out of your way te talk te strangers, as though you had much in common." , I asked her why she Judged us off our own ground at Northeast Harber instead of Chestnut Hill. She said that she always felt humans were at a disadvantage out of their environ ment, and that only when a person was at a disadvantage could one really get the essence of him, I REMEMBER an interesting outside view of Philadelphia by a' man who had every reason te knew It well, nnd who cer tainly judged It very kindly. He said It was a series of connected villages, each village having had an original life of its own, and naving kept certain et its qualities intact. Se that West Philadelphia was net Seuth Philadelphia, and North Philadelphia was net Gcrmantewn, nnd Gcrmontewn was net Chestnut Hill, neither wns Ovcrbroek the West Park, or Manayuuk, Conshehocketi. Bryn Mawr could never net like Swarth Swarth mere, nor qeuld Darby feel like Jcnklntewn. Each section of the town and each suburb of the town kept the tang of its original villnge, yet all of them had this in common, that they were settled by persons who had spread out from one main village en the banks of the Delaware, the first village of Philadelphia or, If they were n6t settled from that main vlllnge altogether, seme family of importance from that main village had been a factor in the making et the out lying village, se that there was a certain family resemblance. As for Instance, he went en te explain, most of the villagers of the connected vil lages that mnke up Philadelphia and its sub urbs liked geed feed, and insisted upon the best quality of feed ; they are very fend of outdoor, open-air sports. The farmers have hunted for generations, rowing and cricket and tennis nnd golf nnd horse raring and gardening, fl'-hing and sheeting, relay rac ing, hockey, soccer ball, stock farms, deg fanciers, cattle breeders, dairy termers in fact, outdoor men of all types and outdoor games of nil types come naturally te Pblla dclphlans. There nre mere country clubs and mere spaces for exercise In the open near Philadelphia than nny ether city in the world possesses. Its foreign populations swarm In the narrow streets in intersecting alleys ; the veritable Plilladclphlans make for the country as early In the year as is pos sible and stay as late as is possible. These who can afford only ene house go te mere ample streets in outlying sections. AS A RESULT, the kindly critic went en te explain, though the main villagers of the first Philadelphia are scattered new from Whltcmarsh te West Chester and from the Main Line te Terresdnlc. they can always be counted upon te rally back te the center of things which is net far yet from Inde pendence Square; te help or te enjoy any thing that belongs te the life of the old Philadelphia. He insisted, by way of proving tills theory, that the old village famines wcre still tlni ones te take, the most Interest in the old village; that you saw the same names en (very charity and public undertaking from i lie erchestru convince t" the new woman s Republican committee, with only new and then an outsider or newcomer. And he main tained that the newcomer was generally there because he had married into en eltl village! family, or was by friendship cr by business Intimately connected with one. Well, it is a pleasant theory. Maybe it is true I SOMETHING happened last week in my little neighborhood that seemed te carry out the theery that it still has village in- tit- inptti 'A woman who kept a little stationery shop a bleA or se away died suiTdeuly of heme disease the ether morning. Her first cus iimier found her very 111 In her little room back of tiie shop and summoned two of her neighbors. Something like consternation has been felt since then by us nil. )e de net '.mew hew tc get along without Miss V,on V,en ilcrly or without her hop. Her mother kept It before her. and when she celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of the little store nei long age most of us cither wrote or stepped in te congratulate l.er and ourselves. Bin wns "Miss Bella" te seme of ub, and she pawed her notes around for our enjoyment. Geerge Pepper's, whom she called .Mr. Geerge," was specially appreciated. THE newspaperman and the dry cleaner nnd the apothecary and the postman and the umbrella merchant, the tebacccnist. the comer grocer, the upholsterer nnd nil tha rest of us who live up nnd down and across nud back have met and shaken our heads. Wp are pleased and excited. She had left everything te the cripples' home because she wen ilwajs Interested In shuL-liis and helped us te be when we stepped In te get our desk rnpplles. We nil feel sorry for thnt last lonely suffering night she hed when she wrote n little diary of he. sufferings te thnt oil of us -night knew just hew she felt lurln? the attack. We exchange theories as te whether the fall down the stairs nt the Pennsylvania Station the week before may net have brought en the ncnte end. We are all agreed that it is a mercy she did net have te be laid aside or miss a slngU dny behind her counter. We deplore nil her bteek being sold, yet would resent a Btranger New If that is net village Inntlnct te the fore what 1? it Is the xme neighborhood 'nterett that Impelled mv oppenite might cr n night or two age te call me up and te tell mp that a lamp was turned up dangerously high In the third-fleer front. He it was, and I had been sitting under it when the phone rnne. all unheeding my danger. In what ether city of 1 .100 000 inhabitants would nnv one bother te de that or knew the name of her opposite neighbor? TTTHEN I arrived home tee late te regis -YV ter for voting en the regular days I was helped by the whole nciehbirhoed'to find lb". mftntbe son of the tlnBmlth who would knew what I was te de. He did knew and I did it and en the second day of October found all obstacles smoothed for my regis tration. We did net knew each ether, but he bad known my father and I had known his, se it was all right I EACH winter there is a great coming and going of snow carts at either end of this block, nnd what leeks like two manholes are used, down which snow Is shoveled by the wagon lead, PaBsersby stare In amazement nt the rniidlv disappearing snevelfuls Wi the Inhabitants of these sheets tnat enee was nn outlying village of the town, are nit amazed. We knew that between the rows of houses nnd built ever by street and trolley track is the stream that encp meandered be tween green banks down te the river. Tt flews en unseen new, but 1( is there. It is like our instinct for old ways, old ties. We may be slew In acquiring new Ideas, but . Ma nnf easily fercet -e'd -friends or break old tits. r;rbp waVaxe iet,.a'vIJljttl' 1 NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Knew Best GEORGE E. NITZSCHE On Working Way Through College TTE WORKED his way through the XI University," is a slogan that nppllcs te a large number of University of Pcnn svlvania students each year, says Geerge E. Nitzschc, recorder, who for twenty years has given enceurngement, sympathy and as sistance te ambitious undergraduates who entered college en a shoestring, plus nerve and resourcefulness. "Bccnuse the University of Pennsylvania Is part of the third largest city in the United States and only seven minutes' ride from Its business center, It offers unusual opportuni ties for the student peer in purse," says Recorder Nitzsche. "Hundreds of young men new high in business nnd professional circles worked their way through ; hundreds of ethers con tinue te de se. tvuub .a iiiu ui'Bk-imyiUK uiiuk -uu de?' Is a question I am often asked by the student who must work. Newspaper cor respondence, I can tell him, offers splendid opportunities. There nre six dally news papers In Philadelphia, each with corre spondents covering University departments for local news and another set collecting sporting items en Franklin Field. Newspaper Werk Profitable "These University correspondents, as they arc called, earn comfortable sums in n man ner that offers slight, if any, conflict with their studies. The limited number of these newspaper opportunities is, heweveri a fac tor te be reckoned with. "One young man that I knew of worked bts way through the Wharten Scheel and the law school en newspaper work, helped te support a widowed mother and bad $1200 saved te meet exigencies when he bung out his hlngle in a law office this fall. I recall several who earned as much as $3000 a jenr without letting such outside work Interfere with their studies, and that was years be fore these high-price times. "Quite a number of students, especially these In the professional schools, act as tutors In their leisure time, for which they are well paid, and In addition become ac quainted with well-known Philadelphia fam ilies who are anxious te help them in ether wnjs, often putting them In the way of profitable openings after graduation. "Acting as University agents for firms that supply wearing apparel, selling books, clerking in the afternoons and en Saturdays in department .stores, nnd even writing motion-picture scenarios and short stories for inagnzlnes have supported students. "Waiting en the table at fraternity and bearding houses has helped ethers, giving them their meals, hut tills work must usually be supplemented by some ether means. A student who later became track captain and one of the most nctlve and popular members of his class started In at the University by serving meals te fraternity men. Tending furnaces and carrying papers, although sometimes given an exaggerated Importance In fiction and magazine stories, are resorted te by comparatively few undergraduates. They don't pay enough. Seme Cannet Stand Strain "Of course, net all working students are successful in keeping up with their studies nud eventually graduating. Some lack the phsslque. Some nre unable te adjust their work te fit In with their studies, due. per haps, te the nature of the work they cheese. Others cheese a work which proves mere alluring te them than studies and they re nounce the classroom. "It has been argued that only a low per centage et working' students really get the most out of their attendance nt the Univer sity, lnusmuch as frequently, it Is said, they have no time te make friends with the ether studeuts, and they miss. the excitement of playing or watching an intercollegiate sport, arid are necessarily excluded from active participation iu college activities, such as publications, debating societies, theatricals, etc. On the contrary, my observations have been that the working student tastes college life as fully as the average undergraduate. Even If he mUses the opportunity of going In for this or that campus activity, he has gained that breudenlng, cye-enenlng contact with the workaday world which his mere prosperous, classmate has yet te experience. Many Werk in Vacations "Just as mere students are working in school term, the number working out of term la increaslug. Each SeDtember sees score. 1. It.l... I. .U l L f .l.lMM t of- fellows, bronzed and fit, .fortified .with a HweU'flHed. purse fretmsummtr 'employment "LEMME DO IT FOR 7OU!" i Viir?" back en the campus ready for the new school year. Werk in the summer, with perhaps some extra work during the Christmas holi days, tides these students ever the winter, their bed and beard assured. Seme of them even have a rollicking geed time nt this Rum mer work, for instance, ns lifeguards at re sorts, the admiration of the vacation girl and the envy of ether males, "Certainly the young man of meager cir cumstances should net hesitate te seek a college education, though it means outside work of some kind. He has nothing te lese and everything te gain." JOHN BURROUGHS Jfi'is Ursula Hums, who lives in Call Call fernia and is just twelve years old, has written the folletcing little poem aleut Jehn Burreughs: ""VUT in the wild where Nature Is queen, y Clothed In n beautiful robe of green, Jehn Burroughs sits in the shade of a tree. Is there ever a thing that he docs net sec? Seft blows the wind through the rustling tree, It brushes the coat of the weed pewee. It sweeps back the brandies nnd sighs ns it cees. I'm off for n place where the sea -weed grows." On Jehn Burroughs' shoulder a squirrel is sitting. While net for away a spring frog is skipping. "Caw, caw." cries the crew as he flies over head, "Chirp, chirp," calls the sparrow from his messy bed. On the face of Jehn Burroughs the sun is playing As o'er mother earth his keen eye is stray- And every one asks as he passes by, "Is there ever a thing that he does net spy?" J What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1. Who web Pleter de Hoech7 2. What sum wns paid by the United States . te I-rnnce for the Iyeulslana territory? 3. What Is meant by n "ralsen d'etre"7 4. What Is the largest city In Mexico, after the capital? 5. What country Is ruled by Klne Haaken? . Who wrote "The Blglew Pnpers"T 7. Hew does breadfruit grew? 8. In what century did Jean of Are live? 9. What French general wsb wounded at the battle of the, nrandywlne In the Revolutionary War? 10. What are ephemera? Answers te Yesterday's Quiz 1. The only American President lnaugu- rated In April was Oeorge Washington The ceremony took place in New Yerk en April 30. 1789. There are no formal Inauguration ceremonies when Vim Presidents beceme President threuiTh the death of the chief executive c5n theso occasions Blmply the oath u administered, ,s 2. A mesalliance Is a marriage with a per son of Inferior Beclal position t. The word should be pronounce ',... zal-ynns," with the last vi KL he last syllable sounded nasally y. Cornelius VnnderblU, born In Htat.n t. land, 1794. was the founder of ts fortunes e the Vanderbllt famUy. Tt the nBa of sixteen he established n freight and passenger ferry between New lerk and Staten Island. Later he became n large owner of atcamshlns and a dominant figure In ralirenlP. notably the New Yerk Central S he consolidated will, the Huften rtw.r Railroad In 18G7. He died In 1877 6. Tarragon Is a plant allied te wormwood and used In salads nnd in making tarragon vinegar, "mains; 6. Amnesia Is n defect or less of mnmn.,, Aphasia Is total or. partial les? nm lLy' use or understanding of langutg- En Vecal organs remalnlnc Intact 7. General llutler, military governor of Vew Orleans after Its capture by h0 ilni0, forces In the Civil War, wA2 kne ?S by his opponents as "Old Ceck yWR ""Wayside In" Wr'e "" & a Th,n.rsPOant,afln?ngher,r1!e,r-!ve?Bhflt8her'n ,n n.POimi,1 -""VM 'V'1' !lx feet100 10. The omplre of thB IncnH, principally in i .Peru, was conquered ,fir SpalnA bv Plzarre'ln the -sixteenth-century" by SHORT CUTS Se far the only cut in bread is with the bread knife. .-. Only a Public Service Commission can suppress a Snow storm. Baseball magnates have postponed cel ebration of Armistice Day. As a mirth-provoker, the theatre ticket; scalper considers the law a headllner. Considering the pap en which they wcr fed, it is no wonder some war babies thrived..' Ever and anon the shrewdness of knave hides itself In the frankness et a feel.. It must be confessed that the Armistice Day celebration lacked something of glad abandon. The shipping beard investigation proves that truth is net only stranger than fiction, but nastier. Among ether things, the American poe-' pie voted Senater Harding a 1000 per cent salary boost. Veterans are new reaching the point when they are willing te declare that it was c pictty geed old war as long as it lasted. Kind Cern, as usual, will be master of ceremonies nt the Thanksgiving celebra tion ; but Barleycorn will be an outsider. Herbert Hoever has greater interest in the fate of 3,500,000 children in Europe than in the likelihood of his having a place in President Harding's cabinet. Is there any likelihood that decreasing living costs will cause public utility cor porations te cease agitation for higher rates? Ne, we don't think se, cither. v United States marines are alleged te have killed Haitians at the rate of three day. There is something wrong with the schedule when tragedy runs en vaudeviUl time. When Mayer Hylen blames the press of New erk for the crime wave which is hit ting that city in common with the rest of the country, he is merely giving an imitation of n worried civic official passing the buck. The, secretary of the Notional Coffee Roasters Association has figured out that, as n result of prohibition, lO.fWO.OOO.OOO mere cups of coffee have been consumed se far In 1020 than In the entire year of 1019. Seme bean, seme bean 1 It is extremely fortunnte that Leen Daudet, who has just refused te fight a . duel en the ground that dueling is a foolish tf practice nud that there Is no place In France for It since the war, has fought eleven et them and there is no posslble ex. cui-e for misunderstanding his declination. ' A pugilist has been sued by his wif for divorce because, she alleges, he used her for a punching bag. But is that any worse. we ask you, than for a poet te insist upon reading his stuff te the partner et bis occa sional Jeys and multifarious sorrows?' New Is It? Vvhen a foolish knnve in Wilmington, Del,, tried te rob a house occupied by five sisters three of them screamed from as many windows and two fired nt him with pistols. It may be taken as axiomatic that everr knave Is also a feel; there is one who new will admit 1 Somehow we can't work np any sym pathy for "Sylvia Pankhurst'a girls" who wcre thrashed by the women members of an augry Londen crowd because they had sud( and beaten tin cans during the mlputts of slltnce dedicated en Armistice Day te th i fullen dead. A geed spanking seems te hart 1 been what they meat needed, Bolshevist Propaganda ' Frem th Les Anstles Tltrss. The Chicago barbers announce nn advsne In the price of hair-cuts te an even dollar. There nre a let of Bolshevists In the Illinois city new and this will net tend te reduce tbs number. There nre plenty of men who fl that no hair-cut Is worth a dollar npd they will let their decorations grew before shtd- 1 ding this exorbitant sum. The barbers as sert that they have te pay $10 a gallon for hair teulcs that used te cost them $2; but that doesn't explain anything, as they Disk V a separate and a fancy charge for bathing a man's deme in that stuff anyhewi The' principal -reason for theilncreaie Is thattnt' baib.crs think, they con ceJlect' it. Maybs fi they can. but long hair is apt WW fa s ienable this winter. . 1 I &X&Z- V- T&& '