KK6V ,-WaMeM-ttewJif wr r-T I Yx 1, ,& T (, 'T'l: H w.. B i J 8 V fjn iITJ e V It w f VA Mtnt f P.- 1 D E i 'k 4 f l 1 H I Jfcr s s f. J; ji M it 1' t; iicttlhglittbfe IMisce PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY craua jr. k. cuivns. rntsinuNt ! Charlr II. Ludlnsten, Vic President! Jehn C. tlln, flecretary and Treasurer) Philip 6. Cellins, Jahn II, Wllllame. Jehn .t. Kpurneen. Director. KDittiniAii no Ann i Cmta IL K, cnm, Chairman bAVm E. BMtLEr... Editor - 1 , t t t JOHN C. MARTIN.... dencral Uuiinets Manager ,f j. Published dally at Pcaue Lehid Building &1&'i 'XtLAHTXQ ia. i i in Independence Se.uar, Philadelphia, S.II1, . ..Prem-Iiilen hulldln 001 Mndlien Me. pexKerr. . . t. Leets. Cuioaeo... .....,,, 701 Ferd llulMlim 013 Oebr-Memucrnr 'lulldlnir 1M02 Tribune uulldlnr nmviB DUIlliAUH! WHJIIN0TOM BCBBAU ., N. 13. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. and 14th HI. Haw Yemt ntrarac The .Vim nulldln Le.NHOS BntrAB Londen Times -. . HUIISCnlPTION TKRMH The Dtrnine Prnue Lmwjra Is acrvM te nib serlbera In Philadelphia, nnd ourreundlnir town at the rate of tweUe (12) cents wr week, pnvabln te the carrier, J,y..n?a". ,n Mint eutelde of Philadelphia. In the United Rlntes. Cenndn, or t'nll'il Htntra pn. K,I.1M" J"!f tl"te ,TK'- ntly (",n) ""I" 1"' month. B15. " dollars per yenr, pnyeH" In ndvnnce. Te all fnretim countries nnn (I dnltnr a month. Isetjcit subscribers wishing nddrees chanced must elve old in well nt new nddress. BFLL. 3000 WAtSfT KEYSTONE, MAIV J000 VAiMren e;i commsntcnflein re Ecrnlnc rutlle l.tdatr, Ind'prviU urn Rguare, PMledeliihla, Member of Hid Associated Press , THE ASIOCtATnn rrKPS rjclujli r Iv en. tlfted fe tne vie for rtiiuMlca'len e all iru dlerntcies crrillf.-il In it or net effirrtrlte rrr((r( in (fiU paper, and aha the local aticj vullithcl thtrtin. All rielitt e rtnu&Mcntien of aptclal illpefclif ntrrm art alie rcsrrvtil. I'h.bclflphU, Mtindar, nvrmlVr 22, 1920 A iiirnvi:it pitnimAM nut I'liii.Mini.ruiA Thlnrj mi hlfli Hie neiiplr eierl Hie nrw niltnlnlMr.lllin tu rnnrrntrnle lln ntlentlem l'lie litUnmti river brlilvt. .1 ilru'jclt biO innuuh le nommeiia tit larmtj nhiui il 'SfeeUJlV. ".I r""'' ""'"" '"'""- A EiulMlne e- the yree Ubaru. .In Art .UiMruni. Anrai-ffrmfiit of the ualtr tnrlu. iiamrt te ecrnmmnilnt" t , v"vnntljn PENNY WISDOM rpO THK over-nn.fiuili(iiw member of thu Delnware lirMjre onmmlevlnn It seeineil KlioeklnB tlmt tlie niBlin'erx niipnlnteil te mnke prellmlnnry siirveyx in this ritv mill Cnmilrn slieitld Ineluile in lliclr liudcet n niiiii for the niirr-hiMe nnd innlntcumire of nn nii nii nii tomeblle. Tlie riiiii'xt wiih refiihed. Thin Keems like n hnd beglnnlnK. KiirI Beers wln linve tu innke survi-.vs fur n erk Ol tlie elmnieter ennteinplnted in thl in atanet mut move nnniinl a Inrge aren. Would the hriike eenimlsainii be hnppier If the engineers traveled with u horse nnd bUBSj- or in wheel chnlrsV If the reininlx loners are te be xe rlcnrmiHlj wutehftil n( the pennies, the people here Mini in New Jersey will prebnbly be rldlnic in ferryboats for n koeiI many years te i-enie. m PASQUALE, A "LIFER" 5J AW'l'STO I'AKQUAI.K. a eoiupeiiml of . dancereiii. low- cunning nnd bnlTlliii; innrnl Inieniiblllty. beeemes a life prisoner g !n the Kastern I'enltentlnry. Frem the rrenture who e.teeuted the de pleable mnek ransom i heme, productive of geni7.ni',' fnls' hepet In the distracted par ents of Mliikely CeiiRhlln. publle pitv Is per Binncntly and deservedly withdrawn." A despicable siiccesilnn of lies still, hnw every lieelnud one nf the most peicnant of kidnapping atrocities. Powerless te e-eape the law. "The Crank" has been Ironically enabled te (lout the course of full retribu tive Justice. The fate of the (Yiushlln child has been variously and contradictorily de scribed by him. It r-mnlns. after the trial and n series of "confessions," 0 mystery. The public, while certain thn Pax.pmlc's punishment Is wnrranted h proved facts, while appreciative of the difficult task of the police, still hopes for further light upon one of the most loathsome crimes ever committed In this region. CUSTOM AND CONVENIENCE fpHK ingrained local custom of crowding "- the south side of Chestnut sheet has aenietlini'N been compared te ineilicable metropolitan hnbits elsewhere. Just why tl - elite of Iluenes Aires insist en wnlklnc In the roadbed of the Calle Flerida and ousting all wheeled traffic therefrem en fine afternoons remains n mvs terj. Imden nud Paris have their prome nading perversities whose erijlns are wrapped In obscurity. It would be tlaverful If the predilections of Philadelphlaim en one of their main business streets were equally bnffling. Truth, however. Impels the belief that our local beulevardlers have thronged the lower Hide, of Chestnut street for the eminently practical reason that the pavement) were wider there. But n test of the vitality of habit is new bout te be applied. .Majer Moere has or dered condemnation proceedings compelling the demolition of several building fronts pro jecting mere than six feet into the sidewalk en Chestnut street below Fifteenth. Com paratively few Infractions of the revised Chestnut street building line are te be found between Hread street and Sixth. The remaining term of privilege is prob ably brief.' With wide pavements en the whole thoroughfare, the contest of fictitious inhibitions and convenient realities will seen be en. It will be Interesting te watch the bbnvier of native sons and daughters. CENTRALIZING CHARITY miHC centralization of the charitable and J- social welfare activities of Philadelphia has happily passed beyond the theoretical Btnge. Hepreseiitatlv- of mere than 100 Hclnl agencies are new .rganizei in n single body, the prime object nf which will be v elimination of hundreds of diffeient cam paigns and drives after the m thru mi suc cessfully introduced by the War Chest. The sjstem as applied te charities has .worked well in several ether cities. The.e .is every reason te believe that Philadelphians will continue te be as generous and philan thropic an heretofore, while rejoicing in the scheme of simplification which at once re moves the Inapprnpiintc spirit of compel! a tien from Immune enterprises and cuts down wantc and duplicating administrative ma chinery. The state of Pentiiiylvnnin has occasion ally considered adopting a mere compact and equitable method in making its appropria tions for charities. Fertunutcly, by the time the next Legislature ends Its sessions the t central welfare federation in Philadelphia ' will be fully under wny and its ipieta pro pre grain reudy for presumably faveruble In spection. The charities and social undertaklngn is this city are te be congratulated for the spirit of sympathy which they have brought te the development of u welcome reform. PETER PAN AT TRENTON DEMOCRATS of various sorts, geed and bad, of the left wing und the right, have been doing fine and awful things for many yearn In New Jerney. The contrast of Jim Nugent anil Jim Smith en one hum! and Woodrew Wilsen en the ether will continue for generations te dementtrate the meaning Jesaness of purty terminology In the United Btates. In New Jersey, tee, the people are learn lt rapidly that the Important thing now new pdaya la the difference between man und man rather than the difference between party and party, .Fer that reason Mayer Harry Run Run yen, of Warren county, who will be the only Democrat In the State Assembly, has oppor tunities greater In many ways than these thnt might fall te the member of a majority. Mr. Riinyen bus made a geed start in what luay be a spectarular career In Jersey poli tics. He has put his faith In the young men. Youth has courage and It has Imagination. It Is net hypnotized by hnbits nf Introspec tion, nor Is it hlnderut by a tee greut rever ence for traditional rules and traditional evils. The Isolation of Ilnnyen will have the character nf drama. And If the youthful assemblyman knewH hew te dramatize the advantages of his. solitary state he may go far In a short time. Mere men with n habit of looking forward rather than back are needed In public efflcex. nnd mere people ought te be willing te put them there. That Is why Kuiijeii of Warren It a geed omen for the future. FAIR PLAY FOR THE PEOPLE AS WELL AS FOR THE U. 0. I. Contract Rights of Gas Censumers Are as Sacred as the Rights of Gas Producers THK predicament In which tlie Cnlted Has Improvement Company finds Itself In this city Is similar te thnt in which every ether' producer of n commodity sold at a fixed price has become Involved through the luctcasc in the cost of labor and raw ma terials. Relief, however, is in sight, both for the l. (i. I. and for nil ether producers. The peak of high prices has been passed. The coal used In the Manufacture of gns, which n few months age was selling for .$10 nnd :J12 n ten, has recently been offered nt .$5 and ?ll n ten. The prices of feed and cloth ing are coming down. This means that the rate nf wnees will be reduced as the pur chasing power of the dollar is restored te something like its pre-war state. Yet. In spite of the general tendency downward of all the materials used In the production nnd distribution of gas, Mr. Hedlne, president of the gas eempan, is asking for a revision nf the terms of the lease. He hns Informed the Mayer that the company l losing SlO.niM a day en its Philadelphia business. This Is nt the rate nf ,$,'!,l!"0,0fln a year. He says that no com pany, however strong, can sustain such a less for any considerable period. Ne one Is Inclined te dispute him nn this preposition, although it Is known thnt the holding company has a book surplus of if.'U, 000.000. being the accumulated nnd In ested earnings nf tlie company net paid out in dividends. The survey, which Mr, Undine asks for, should be nmile In the Interests of the whole community and net alone in the interest of the C. (!. I. New let us consider for n moment the lease, the terms of which Mr. Hedlne wishes te hne modified. The lease was entered into in 1 Si J l T for n period of thirty years, t'ndcr it tlie company was required te inxest .$15, (100,000 in impievcmeiits within the first three years mid $15,000,000 mere within the succeeding twenty-seven yenrs. And It was te supply public buildings and street lights with gas without charge te the city. In return it wns te receive eighty-five cents for every 1000 cubic feet sold te private con sumers until Jnnunry 1. ini!l: eighty cents until January 1. 1II1S. and thereafter seventy -five icnts. Tlie ce:iumerH are charged .$1 for every 1000 cubic feet. The difference between the sum paid by the con sumer and the contract price is turned ever te the city treasury, and te thnt extent re duces the amount which must be raised by taxation. I'lider this arrangement a little mere thnn .$.'10,000,000 has been paid in during tlie twenty-three yenrs since the agreement went into efTcet. In the early jcars of the contract it was possible te manufacture gas for about thirty-five cents n thousand feet. This left fifty cents te the company te paj overhead expenses and divideuds. Fer five years the company continued te have this money. Fer the next five years it had forty-five cents left nbeve the actual cost of production. The prices, of raw innterinls began te go up when the price the company received for its predurt was reduced te seventy -five cents. The net earnings of the company amounted te .$(1.(I00..0.- in 1017. tlie yenr before the last reduction In price, and after paying dividends there was a surplus of S'J.OlT.TeO. In 101S the net earnings were .$."i,Slll.ri(IO, and the surplus a hew dividends fell te .sllTO.'Jil. I.nst year the earnings fell .$.'IO:i.-0-14 short of being enough te pay the divi dends. Hut the usual N per cent dividend was paid as It had been paid for years. These figures represent the earnings of the company net in Philadelphia alone, but in all the forty cities In which It is engaged in business. Mr. Hedlne Is, of course, anx ious te continue te pay dividends en the shnres of the company. Yet, ns the company Is paying out te Its shareholders at the rate of h per cent en ever dollar invested the sum of .$1,M''1M1 every year. It will be np parent thut If the less of .$10,000 a day in Philadelphia should (eutiuiie for a year it would net exhaust the sum set aside for the shareholders. A reduction le the dividends would nfTcct the profits of the shareholders. Their trus tees, the president and directors of the I. (!. I,, would prefer that the people should pay u higher price for gas rather than that the profits of the shareholders should be reduced. It Is the business of the Majer and the Council, who arc trustees of the people, te be as solicitous of the Interests of the people as Mr. Hedlne is of the inter ests of his shareholders. When the gas corporation's profits nre threatened the president of thnt corporation has no hesitation in suggesting a modifica tion in the terms of u enntruct with the peo ple. He does net insist en the sunctity of agreements, for apparently nn agreement affecting the public interest is inviolable only when the private parties te it nre making money out of It. If the public suf fers, ns it is suflerlng under the contracts of the P. II. T. with the underlying trnnslt companies. It is outrageous te suggest that these contracts should be modified. Haven't certain Iawjers und certain bankers been saying this for months?. Yet the survey of the l O. , which Mr. Undine hns asked should be made in the interest of fuirnesH. Thnt survey, however, should net be confined te the business of the cempnnj for the past twelve months. It should go buck te the beginning of the con tract, in 1M7, and should disclose the profits made in the early years, when It cost only thirty-five cents per 1000 cubic feet te produce gas. Kxpert accountants should be put en the books In order that the earnings nf the company In this city may be discovered for every year from the beginning, nnd se that the prebuble profits for the remaining seven jenrs of the life nf the contract mny lie computed. Then facts will be available from which ii trustworthy oplulen may be drawn concerning the propriety of going te the relief of the company in the present tem porary and disappearing crisis. The mere fact that the company is losing money this year Is net sufficient te Justify n demand that it be allowed te retain for itself a larger part of the price paid by the consumers of gas. If it shall appear after Investigation thut the average profits for the life of the contract arc reasonable, then the demand for a modification of the contract will uet buve a leg te etuud en. It, may be thut the Investigation will evening fti&fafe iiEaiSBiawiM Justify the demand' of Mr. Dedtne. The case should net be prejudged, In that event and in the event of the decision of the city te go te the relief of the company, net because It must, but because It desires te be fair, It should be definitely arranged that net a single dollar of the extra money turned ever te the company should go te the shareholders in dividends te Increase the value of their shares and te make profits for speculators in these shares. The Inquiry Inte the condition of the company ought te go beyond Its financial affairs. In seven years the contract with the city expires nnd then the gas plant re verts te the city en the pnjment te the com pany of the money It has Invested In Im provements, provided the city wishes te exercise Its option. The Inquiry should go into the Issues Involved In the retaking of the plant by the city. It is net tee seen for the Mayer and the Council te begin a con sideration of this matter. Ner is It tee early for the gas company n begin te make plans for the future. "BUT ONCE A YEAR!" TTTIIKIIK there Is n great ileal of smoke there must he fire. And where floods of color are spilled and bells are persistently rung mid echoing legends fill the nlr te nttett that there Is a world of faerv and that the wise are always and Inevitably gentle; where n continuing song In praise of kindness seems te be justified and ex plained by corroborative human experience longer thnn any individual life, there must be something mere te existence than Is apparent en familiar surfaces. Se the average man, touched by the sound and color of approaching Christmas, Is apt te reason almost against his will. He will be awnre again of many things ordinarily forgotten but tee nobly believed In te be otherwise than true. Fairies? Well, It Is nstniiishlng te knew hew many wise men have believed In them. And many hooks hnve been written In their pralje and filled with most convincing pictures in full color. The star nnd Its premises? Who knows? What Is it that hnpptns te the world nt n time when everybody Is In a hurry only te be kind? There has been a conspiracy of opinion te establish the notion that Christmas Is a time exclusively for little children. It has been Inspired by the diffidence nnd sensitive ness of people who, growing away from youth, have net the courage te admit their loneliness or te let ven themselves knew hew eagerly they turn back te the land c,f realities from which the years have exiled them. Children, if the truth were known, are only the guides and spectators at that annual adventure, Wonderment makes all .their dajs beautiful. The elder world Is ashamed te wonder about anj thing until It threw off the mask nbnut the middle of December and Is led by the finger baekwnrd ever a read cluttered with treasures which most people abandon In the rush for nowhere in particular and presented finally In regions of murmuring bells and laughter und a welter nf things that seem unimportant until j mi remember that they are made of nnd for pure happiness of heart. Then for a time we live again. A me chanical railway train in miniature, "with landscape, slgnnls, flagman and tlug com plete," breezing untroubled ever bridges and through tunnels, will refresh and exalt the smil of almost any tired business man who, In eleven nnd n hnlf months of the year, must sternly cencent a real and passionate interest in such things. Tlie dignity of ma turity must be preserved, though whatever it is for no one knows. One who Is net young mny merge his Identity with the identity of n crowd and snatch occasional moments of ecstasy nt the windows of toy shops. Further he may net go. He mny piny with the fiscnl policies of rnllrends or with their stocks or their programs of ex tension, but the delights of actuality are net for him until, with a lifting sense nf blessed reprieve, he returns nt this time of the year, trooping In the vast straggling army of per petual refugees, te live In the world of children. They, being the wise ones of the earth, core only for things thnt make you Kind. The very colors of Christmas us they are reveuled in the hooks, in the uniforms of toy armies nnd through the sjmbels of the season nre the reverse of subtle. They lire as bright and as honest us life Itself can be ut bottom. They nre us stlmuluting te weary eyes ns a trip te a far country. The pig seized and carried away by the Piper's Hen lhcs in an environment of red und yellow nnd blue colors us unmistakable and cheer ful as the simple truth Itself. The skies in the Christmas story books are always filled with stars. The snow is always lm maculnte und untredden. Soldiers nnd cru sndeni go always upon noble errand, and the very cows and horses ntpl the Indispensa ble reindeer seem In the literature of the greatest of days te have the friendliest of understandings with the folk about them. Yeu may search all through and among the books nnd the things that make the Christ mas of children without finding anything suggestive of ugliness or cruelty or cynicism or lack of fine faith. These, then, must be things thnt the normal mind rejects until it is forced te uccept them. Since they arc se prevalent in the world, it Is no wonder that tired business men nud tired business women nre glad once a jeur te be led In places where they nre taboo.- That may be whnt children nre for. At Christmas they seem like the guardians of nil the enduring realities, dwellers In reulnis from which beauty and belief hnve net jet been cast out. They de net knew this, of course. They will net knew It until after they hnve grown up. Then they, tee, will return with marveling ejes for occasional glimpses into the lest country. IMMIGRATION RESPONSIBILITIES A1V PARISIAN shnrper hns disposed of a batch of -."0 bogus stenmshlp tickets te uninrtunnti' immigrants, who nre new stranded en the decks at Cherbourg. The trick was shameless, contemptible. It Is questionable, however, whether the moral obliquity displajed was any deeper than that contained In the present wholesale methods of corralling Kurnpcnii populations for shipment abroad. The Immigration authorities In New Yerk are painfully aware of hew ruthless and commercially greedy some of these practices ere. Ceses of passports Incompletely vlseed and of Infractions In Kurepe of clearly specified health regulations are numerous. In principle, America welcomes the stranger. She is properly loath, however, te rcreive victims nf systematic delusion. Te say that Samuel (iempers Is a mas terly politician is te say nothing te his discredit. Politics clenrs the ground for constructive statesmanship, and the masterly politician ill foreseeing events helps te frame them Laber and the country at large may benefit by his present conciliatory attitude. - s When two Chester men went te law ever n pig the Judge was surprised te learn that they didn't knew that keeping pigs was net allowed In the city. New if it had been a blind pig It would still have been against the law, but the Judge would net have been surprised. A man may reasonably fight shy of try ing te solve another mun'B problem, for It may possess angles of which he is Ignorant; but assuredly that Is the problem he attacks with great vigor; which Is doubtless why It is se easy in tlie Kast te settle California's Japanese problem. AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Mr. Bek, the Academy Peyar, an An dent Mirror Frame and an Old Tlma Pageant Prompt Seme Interesting speculations . ny HARAIt D. LOWRIK YOU may have u constructive wind which is the mind of the builder or the engineer or the Inventor and yet net have n reconstructive mind which Is the art of the historiographer or the archeolegiat or the collector. Anil you may have both, like Mr. nek. I SAT gazing admiringly en the very agree able stuge setting of a rcenc in the house nf Relay Resa, where the lady was receiving a visit from (leneral Washington and an other military gentleman relative te her de sign for the ling. This was down at the Parish Heuse of Christ Church, en Second street, during the celebration of the anniver sary of the founding of the parish In the days of Penn. There wns en afternoon de voted te story telling old talcs of the col cel col onics of n casual, chatty, personal nature, by Herbert Welsh, Miss Wharteu and ethers; many of the descendant were Bit ting about me, some whose ancestera had been Teries, some whose ancestors had been Americans from the word "go." The tea that was served, the little cakes, the aspect of the hall, the quietness of the old street leading bnck from Second street, all lent n 'certain nlr of reality te the tnhleau en the stnge; but once I had wnlked from the dark stillness nf the little street and met the netse nnd traffic and quick, home-going crowds en Second and Market streets, once I had Joined the obstacle race across Market street, the old town they hnd nil been talking about thnt afternoon vanished In the night, T TRIED te make It come back by walking up Chestnut street past Independence Hnll and then ever te Walnut street past the old theatre nud se en up te Hread, looking new nnd then nt houses that had still an nlr of "has beens" about them but it wns no use! The eighteenth century stayed where It belongs te most of us, bnclc' In the history books and historical societies, as far removed from the noise nnd glare and rapid movement of the twentieth century as a canal beat is removed from a hydroplane. AT LKAST that Is what I felt as I walked home te dinner that evening. When I get te Hread nnd Walnut streets I thought hew ridiculous It seemed that an IrUh great great uncle of mine had paused about there en his walk up from Chester, where he had landed, te Inquire the wny from a man dig ging in a potato field hew far he wns still from the town of Philadelphia. I thought Gracious. Kven our grandfathers would feel "Lawk a mercy en me! This Is none of I '"If they hnd te cress this street at 5:40 p. m. of n dnrk. early winter evening with the whole world hurrying and hurling by. Yet the very next morning a man told me n story about the great, great, great an cestors of his wife that made me feel that human nature had net changed In spite of modern Inventions. rnHIC story Is of the first woman lawyer J- nnd suffragist In the colonies. Strangely enough, she come from Maryland. Or rather, she lived In Maryland. She came with her father and slater end their servants from England in the daya of Lord Raltl Raltl mere. The first governor of Mnrylaud was one Leenard Calvert, a brother of Lord Haiti Haiti mere. During his governorship there settled In St. Mary's county m gentleman by the name of Rrent, with two daughters, one of whom was known ns Mistress Margaret Rrent. Possibly the fact that "Silence and Dil igence" wns the motto en the Rrent coat-ef-nrms may hnve accounted for certain traits In Mistress Margaret Rrent. possibly the traits accounted for the coat-of-arms. I de ret knew! Rut nt nil events when the governor died nnd his will was read, It wan found that he had left the bt:lk of his estates, with his Maner Heuse of St. Gabriels, St. Mary's county, te Mistress Margaret nrent, with this sole public message appended; "I make you my sole executrix. Take all. Olve nil." Whatever story lay back of these words, the lady gave no clue. "Silence and Dil igence" was her motto. In RHO she ap peared before the Maryland Legislature and demanded two votes, one as a cltlxen and one ns the executrix and trustee of the Cal vert properties! True te form, the Mary land Legislature turned her down en the ground that she was a wnmnn. Fer yenrs. In the administration of the estate, after that Mistress Margaret Rrent appeared in jiersen In the courts nnd was her own lawyer when necessity arose, being acknowledged te lie better versed in the law than most of the legal gentlemen of the colony. The descendants of the nrent family, who still held part of the original estate in St. Mary's county, Maryland, were, te Judge by the one I knew, for suffrage as lately as last sprlug when, ns firmly as In tlie year 10-10. their legislative assembly voted It down. AND Maryland is net the only place that runs true te form the form of an other century In spite of outward changes. I wns in Suybroek. Conn., Inst week ever a night In the Inn there nnd during the course of a desultory conversation with the owner and proprietress, she expressed surprise that the form of popular government known us the "town meeting" was net practiced or prartlcal for Pennsylvania. "Why we decide everything in our gen erul town meeting from who shall he the presidential electors te who shnll mend the town bulletin beard!" wns her complaisant announcement. "We could net de thnt In Pennsylvania," the woman I waH with said opelogetlcnlly, "because you sec we have se many foreign born voters who have te have the issues ex- f dallied te them by their lenders. It would ic dreadfully confusing te them If they had te decide at a town meeting," The Connecticut wemnn looked amazed. Then she looked superior. "We have ferelgn-lmrn citizens here in Connecticut, tee," said she. "here In Sny Sny Sny broek ! Rut I never remember te have seen one at the town meeting, Just the old families vote that hove always voted," SOMRTIMER modern Inventions and old customs meet pleasantly, however, and nre both the better for the change. There, for Instance, is the return te Philadelphia life of that charming posses sion, the Academy Feyer! Modern invention hns made it once mere a quiet place. Rrend street might be a vll lage green fpr nil the noise that percolates In. It Is a well-ventilated room by modern Invention and as charmingly lighted and be comingly aa though these beuutlful chan deliers actually held wax cundles, also by modern Invention. Thanks te Mr. nek and his clever com mittee, the mirrors that fill the window siiuces, and the color of the woodwork, and the lighting of the celling belong te the very noble period of the room, In spirit, if net in the original design. These responsible for the adaptation of the new tt the old have been both constructive nud reconstructive. While they have restored nn old pleasure te an elder generation, they have, in a sense, created a new one for a new generation coming en. Rut there are still persons about who can neither reconstruct old possessions nor value them. I picked up n very lovely old gilt mirror frame oval, Inld across an ash bar rel en Kleventh street today. I hope some day anethrr foolish person will put the mir ror te fill It In my, path. NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! ' Daily Tallcs With Thinking Philadelphians en Subjects They Knew Best JUDGE NORRI8 S. BARRATT On Women and Jury Service WOMEN called for Jury duty will net be Inclined te shirk this most important civic responsibility ns a great many men seem te de, according te Judge Nerrls Stanley Rarratt, of Common Pleas Court Ne. 2, who believes that women are .going te assume their new privileges with just as much success as they have displayed In war work. "Jury service," declared Judge, Rarratt, "is the highest civil duty a man can render te the state. In the performance of that duty, the Juryman has In his hands the de ciding of disputed facts between all classes of his fellow men. He, as a member of that Jury, hns jiewer te take away a man's money, liberty or life, n prtlver grarited him In no ether way according te our legal ap paratus. "But the businessman does net appear te take this matter of Jury service seriously. He feela that It Is a sacrifice te leaye his business te serve In the courtroom, and he tries In all manner of means te escape this duty, HIh excuses are Innumerable and often amusing. He is forced te be in an other city te put through a big business deal, he Is Just starting out te sell a stock of goods en the read or he must remain close by his business te put through a certain financial deal which will menn a great deal both te himself und te his family. All Want te Serve, Rut "Many of these reluctant Jurymen get suggestions from the! physicians, and the prevailing sentiment of one and nil Is, 'I enlv wish I could serve. I've always thought it a very necessary duty und one which I weuiu iikc te perierm, out you ve picked Just the very worst time for me, I cannot possibly get away right new; If only the call had come a little later,' and the like. "They seem te think that the sheriff and ethers, who have the picking of names for Jury service, can arrange each individual case te suit the whims of that individual. The peculiar thing is that it very often hap pens that the very sume big business man who has evaded Jury duty by some weak ex ruse afterward criticizes the decision ren dered, because the make-up of the Jury, composed of mechanics und workmen, mekes it Impossible for them te understand or ap preciate problems Involving finance and big business, "In the case of some worklegmrn it is very often a sacrifice for them te take three weeks out for Jury service. I had one case of a man who hud been out of work for a long time, nnd whose family was In very great need of his support. This man had only Just secured a position which returned bim $12 a week nud he admitted frankly that he could net afford te take three weeks out for Jury duty without ruining his chances of putting himself en his feet and paying his debts. I excused this man, and I have always made It a point te try te render Jury service as light and as com fortable as possible. Haa Educational Value "Anether great feature of Jury work is Us actual educational value. Every phase of life passes before the eyes' of the juryman as he sits In the courtroom. Every con ceivable question of man's activity, what he wears, what he eats, what he does In work and play hours, his relations with his fellow men and women, his ever complex personality, his dally habits, all of these things nre threshed ever and acted out In court. "Despite undeserved criticism, I de net believe tnat mere coma nc anything much better than our present Jury system. Through It we get men for only three weeks, during which time they cannot stale or lese Interest In the cases. Furthermore they are all men who are earning their own living In some line or ether and hence have a wider perspective than If they were nothing but Jurymen year In and year ut. "Ne Judge Is capable of deciding the trre facta In the Innumerable cases which come before him In the clear, Intelligent nnd un. biased way which the ever.changlug juries can decide them, It has very often hap pened, In my knowledge, that a Jury has rendered a decision contrary te that ex pected by the Judge and the court officers simply because ome member of thut Jury was tee keen 'or tee well versed in some ' f 'i' J a " t XeaaBBBinu fcf'V fcataaaaaaaaaakl! si 4H SkVlPSaBBBVBW H t'f Ai?M aVLLS j,i' lfa'fi' sgggBspaja JUEfer CflHjLE Va 1 Y lH artif tUD aai aWH iJBv peculiar feature of the case te be taken In or befuddled by the 'testimony of se-called experts or the cunning but superficial argu ments of lawyers. Women Mean Changes "The entrance of women Inte this field or Jury service may mean all sorts of changes and new standards. I firmly believe, how ever, that women will carry out their work here, as they have always succeeded In doing nnythlng they have mode up their minds te de, thoroughly, faithfully and well. Es pecially. I believe they will net shirk this particular duty. It is one of the troubles or the American people that they love te talk nnd wave the flag, but cannot get down te doing their own part. ' This has been the case of the men who said they were picked for Jury duty 'at just the wrong time.' They were like the men who snld 'The wnr wns se short and caught me se unnwares thnt I did net hove time te enlist.' I firmlv hope thnt the women will never allow themselves te drift Inte this state of nffnlrs. "As te just hew women will act when members of juries, and whether of net thev will be stricter or mere lenient. It Is very hard te sny. Time alone can tell. 1 de .think, however, that the only successful method will he te mix Inen and women, just as they nre drawn, en Juries. In time, of course, some special legislation may have te be passed In this connection, but I think we will find thnt. us u whole, the women comport themselves pretty much the Mime ng men." Slightly Inaccurate from the Pert kind I'reits. "The triumph of the workers' cause in Russia Is n historic milestone In the progress ,f fK w.erMl eml "" Influence for geed has ''WT '"J."1 amI 8lm" 'Hreet the course of the future." proclaims Eugene Debs from ftf Cik rs,",n. I" A,lnn!n- .","l the fa that the Soviet cause hasn't yet triumphed and that the only Influence eutslii" it hns ...... r invii uuu. uie statement Is nil rli.t statement is all right. What 'De Yeu Knew? QUIZ ' '"timeUlr.lw'JaT " ,re Preh,"' 3' V: vvheCr,a7Mt ra"B0 f "ns 3. Who wrote, the story "Dnlsy Mler- 4. Whnt nrlllsh general In th. Zi ' was captured by Ihe. Tufk! ffthi 5".r " P:,n,a?,verkwne0, jf T ' WnshlnKten hi December' " 6- 'arpieSnu's:1 ube ef',h "" 7. What relation Is the nne.n , Greece te the late WnJ'Xf&XV "' 8. What Is the origin of the word buch.ne, 9. Which Is the youngest of thesVe.e ? Iluddhlsm. IJrahmlnlam Alf1 ?"'nH! Mohammedanism? m' chr,Hlanlty. 10. Who was DaphnlnjIasBicai mythology Answers te Saturday's Quiz 1. Bel'hevlkl means members of tn ,. 5. A heath Is a bare Oat want peeially If covered wUh bs1' e0' a. An Isejceles triangle Is en. i,,.. sides equal. one navliur two 4. Punjab, a vast plain In i,..,., meani five rivers nehwet India, 5. The Americans wen their ,i.iei ever the "rltlsh "ft Hur fSl'Ve v,c,ery properly Ilemla' Helnhtl "r mere 1777. ""Bnia, en October 7, . The transcontinental canal mm. , urged In opposition T, he 'n""1" canal route ran through Keim,Aana"1R aragua utilising Uke S5ji?.-'NJ part of the distance. ',cftrlfua for 7. A cenotaph Is u spulehrnl men,, a person whose body ea.whnlent ,0 I. The Merris chair Is nan led ItZ Merris the Engllshand 1 1 Um decorator. l ana artistic 9. '"M la u Mexlcnn fermented h,, , from the sap of the agave ,nk 10. James Marshall, ai carnent.e . Jersey, In th emptoy'ef jehiT e!v ter. u Hwl. whA i,.i .:..mi. A- Hut- valley of the BacramTnte ' " , '" " coverer of geld in CallfeiriVlM?.18, SHORT CUTS As a repudlater, Germany still holds first place. The news from Oreece waa read with ,avld interest in Deem. The Mayer apparently doesn't care hew blue blue-law advocates feci. New we alt knew the chief constituent of the soup in the Yale bowl. Recaiisc life has a way of confounding logic, flermany's sentence may yet be com muted. Taking it by nnd large, this yenr there lias been no reason te complain of .November weather. Extremes met in forcing Lloyd Cleerge te (virtually) recognize the Russian Soviet Government. It ought net te be difficult te get a unanimous vote in a New Jersey Democratic legislative caucus. If it is thrills they nre after, the auto bandits are going te have nil they want in the near future. Net exactly a harpoon Fair-Price Com missioner McClaln put Inte the retail meat men j merely a skewer. Refined sugar has taken another drop. Relng refined, we may feel assured that It will never take a drop tee much. When It comes te providing oil te pour en the troubled waters of future trade it may develop that Uncle Sam haa exhausted his supply. An Omaha woman ninety-five years old says that some day we shnll live te be a thousand. Somebody is always taking the Jey out of life. Rrlndell's private excuse is deubtleu that his victims were se darned easy te bleed that it would have been a shame net te take the money. Perhaps the speed developed in selvlnc the problem of the shortage of houses is de signed te remind us thnt the s'lull carries his house en his buck. A nuffole, N. Y Judge who has fined muny speeders has hliiiNclf been fined for speeding. Justice Is swift and is sometimes swutted for being tee swift. V hen Teledo, Ohie, housewives began te bake their own bread bakera' prices came down. "Seme crust!" snld the bakers. "Saves dough!" mid their customers. hen Harry Runynn begins te make a record for himself In the New Jersey Legis lature somebody will proceed te get hunk ea him by calling him the llelvldcre Apelle. Thieves stele five barrels of whisky from a Hfth street saloon. They may have been the outlawed Tem nnd Jerry. If se, their next raids will be en a dairy and a anlce factory. It must appear te the fair-minded that u case has been made ugalust the Pooh -Rah of the Municipal Court since se far the ar gumentH In rebuttal have been merely Pooh ainl Rah. Secretary naker says he will be gUd when he pan lay down the cares of office. It Is u gladsome moment in which we find ourselves in sympathetic accord with Secre tary Raker. There Is strong possibility that New Jersey s single Democratic legislator will stay In politics long enough te revise his platform. "Youth" has its appeal, but It doesn't stand the wear of years, A Blgnbeard In Van Cortlandt Park, New Yerk, objected te by nearby resident!, has been burned by masked "nlKhtrlders.' Which gees te show that even esthetic sen sibility may be allied te lawlessness. Ne fault will be found with the Kansas Industrial Court in suspending decision In the case of flour milters charged with if creasing production. The millers were abli te prove that they were grinding ten tlm the amount of grain consumed In Kansas, and that the disposal of the surplus was a matter of flnanclnl life or death te them. Fer n court te try te force flrnin (7 i? business at a less would be te put them out et business altogether,