- Sf !? "J V." r-" l'sfHjJsSewvffi,fiiii'i'''' ivwjjgy'twi,' 'ijvffg'ii--- ' i.v r. '' lfs'. jpr-v S'Jty' ''f- v i.1 f ... As( -!j'Vp'J5TS'iJ'-r " y" V 1 .s ' ', . : I " " I .1 t 1 I R u ft ft Mar :! 1 turenmg "Public IKeDgcr Public ledger company crnus it. k. cimns, mniDBM Cnarlei 11. Ludlnxton. Viro President John C. Martin, aeerelar)- nnd Treasurer Philip 8 iVIllin, John . William, .Tolm J. flpurtxin. Dlrctori. RDiTontxt. no.vnD emus H. K. Ccnm, Chairman JVVIU B. FVtll.nV, ; , .Editor JOHN C. fAnTtN. Ornrnl tlu-lni- MunlMriT rulilldlua dully nt Tcrtio Iiiihjmi UntUlng Indcpenc nco Squiife, I'hllndolphu. AtuntIo Citi rrfjj-rmon Tlulldlnj ,rscr V.UKK .. ,"IU4 Mn.lli.on Ave W-Tttoir Tilt Ford ltulldlnr AT. I.00U Ola 0(oir-Df mocrof rtulUllnjr C'iiicaiio . .... I3(V.' Trflncn. UiilMlrc ni-.wb nrnrt.vrs. 'niNotoN rti'iimr, N. 15. Cr IVnnsylionU Ave m ! Hch St K'rir Yoiik lit iipai- Tho Mm Uti, Minis LoinuN llvncit .. I.nilcn Time si-n?cnirriu.v TLn.M. Tho KirNtsc. 11 in ii LniNirn Is ten est to tub crlbcrs In l'hlUliphla and irrounding town at ii'o in.t of niv da) cents p-T wrk payable, to tho inrrl-r 11- tr.all to points online! vt Piiliadt'iplila, In ti o t'ultetl Sut', canitaa. or Vnltnl Muiti pos- 'Minis, pott a ire frr lltlv (S0 cents per month. S -e (til) dollar pr v T nHiMe In advance. To all foflcn coun'-les one (SI) dollar a month .N'oTK-r Subscriber- c i-hlnc addreM chanced ten t iri"o old as we' i t-mv addrees DM 1.. JOOO TU.M T KrvsTOM-. Ml JfrOO II- .ltlrrs n't rite . u ra loni to Firming rublle 'Mot. hut cv'n time Squar. 1'hiladrhnlra - - ... , .. Member of tho Associated Press :1W ABSOClATrn r?KST ti r-r'iiilr'.- nt f( nd f. fan in '. ....,' o nl .- t rfUpflfc" crdltnt to i o. iiof ofhrnrlif tfdit'tt in this 1'ijpfr, o .il rti fho loool nrtf ot -' I' XII ijyiM ' fubriraif " o irjcmol rf i;Hifrlij hfrrdt ore do i-ir- vfl. I'hlladrlpliia, Tliiiti.lir. I)rrrmli-r 2), 1""0 THE BATTLE IS ON Till) Majoi-'v aiiiKiiiin cini'iit tlmt iiviiiicr Thomnx W t'linimnjliiiiii mr JftirKi W. 'nlest "is ni'crpilltcd b) tin- lulinitilKtrutlnu" if- tlm lugienl mitconii' of tin- lioniliiuii in tin ('oiincil, when tlic idti who wcro cleitcil on b tli,k"t plcdsi'il to liii "iipiwrt turned mil t ' i.tiii over to I lie niMiij That tho men ulio loteil to Kill tin1 vein n not iiccri'ilitril In tin nliiiiiiitrntiiiti ivns iippnp'iit on the fm I- of ill.' fj u Mr Ciin niliKham nml Mr. Culfs are the mngtcry of t-oni"" of the turn wlio befrnji'd their con ftltncnt.i If the erefltiirt'H nte to be turned down it i miieh more impnrtnnt that their rrentors bo deprned of whatevr intlnenee thej inni haio hud or mav have hoped to liavi. with the Maioi Tho Mnvor ay 'n effort lo thevc mi,i, : "(teiitleniHn. mii haio alij;ni'd iuirplve wth the men who an- dome their bovt to ruin mi udminWtratlon You must aeeept tho 'ono(iiicni o of vour .oute Tho Major leforsto n rcidjtiMnii nt which bo e-;nei t to make to proteet his ailniinii traiion 'ittistrnetneli- and politiealli." In this ilolii'ato ai doo .. u,o notiec to ritlii-r men who luiie boon dickorinj; with the oneinv that the tinn of reehoninc i ap lironrhinu nnii tha" those of them who aio hohliuif jobs under him might n- noil look for son o other oeoupation in the near tutttre. ll !n has to ilo to soi ore the overwhelm Ine s'lpnorf of t ic best sentiment in the i t v Is In I'lintinue ihi ticbt in the vim ho Imi bfcun 't THE SHORT-RUN NUISANCE T1IK pnmtii'i. "I tiii- I'ublii Si'ivnv I 'oiu mission is nieuratoh r'Uh.i'd in the rom plaint jiiHt n'Bisiered with that bod atrainst hhnrt runs of 'the Maiket stioct elevated tiains. It i uniloiiinb'ii ilint the plan re.'entl.i eei uted of tmikitip Sixtt -tnud instead o' Sixty ninth Ntroet the wesiern torininal has o.ca'ioned scijims inconvenience, esjiocmllv to passonpers obllKeil to make coune tions ivilb the suburban service radiating from Sixti ninth streii At the other end of tho route muni trains ,110 booked to run only to Set mid Hirer I lio dub s nt '!n I.ind are assiireillv un favorable to the ausi of rapid and uiodcn .ed transit. Iiei-isim- on the matter is in contestabli .ililiin tue liehl of the Publii Sen ice Coinmissinn. which was organized, anions otbei rensntis. with .1 view to v. -amlntn; allojed abuses bv quail public mi l-oratioiis and nilni'.' iie!initel upon Iheni. It is sisnitiinnt flint the I' It. T. with Irs fondness for referendum- uistitiitid none upon the snbji'i 1 of 1 1.1 1 led runs ti puri the lone hijb spi ,., line in I'M' uloliihia THAT OLYMPIC APPROPRIATION Cii-. 11. man Di:vi:i.i.vs oh-. ,tious 10 the a 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 r . 1 1 1 1 1 of SI." mill t,, a . t, .,.r tin ilon. it in the fund pruiidul for the p.ninent of the e-ipeiisos of tin lii.-nl finti'Mlailts in ho illimpic Kniue. Ii.im . en sustained In 'he iiti so'icitor 'I'll.- Ciiiiiii-1 pass.-d th npprnprintioii in pit. of iig doubtful lesalin N'iiw Ibe legal ntliiir .if the ct Im, nihlseil the controller that there is in. warrant in bin for the aprnopriation of publii niono for a pru ate piirjin.i This advice i.s in ! i.e itii piei ou deci- nous of ih ,rts li has noiliinc 10 do with the merits of no .ntis. fm wbnli the inoinn was aiiprnpruitei) li ni'Toh n'th forth thr iiti p-i.pi r 1 ih- tha public muni-v is to be used for p.iblii purposes onv Use it for ..tlor 1 i-p..( 1, ,1s indefensible lis for the pru ite , ..Indian .. u trust fund to us,, the nonev . p;n the automobile bills of Ins nei-.nnnl c n st Now if tin .iit'o,!,.! i,a si mo inotiei oier to the (llvt.ipi. iMinni tier lie will do so at 'its own risk hi d mil opos( hime!f t taxpayer- mi i ver tin fun. T'n n "iieht. Iiowev. t 1 N onuiik'h )uhlic.spiriti-il " e i" '' ' ' "! t,, nhs, i-ibi lf"i "I"' ' ' ' ' lleiio( to pi 'li. -'fioiT is r-i s 1' UNJUSTIFIED BOARD BALKING rpllltl'l . 1 .. t the Hoard m I' l'ai'i' a'. 1 ,1 of low 11 an , ,. , tnoM s h M hi .i F.unipe Thri t. ,m hi-i in lori'i'i- ... of 1'' bon'tii I'p . .. - till 11 Ca I - .' " .110 .1 - f I ., r , tin- siipinm 1 i,in Htimi .ire thirefnt,. not bright Willi. !III,.. HI r,l!M, n .. .llbllltll-. ei.gh' ""l ' cd. the ',. ' iMimijis ilia' 1. spojisinl. ,. 1i1.tr.1t.!. l,oinw are upeited t. tnn'iv -t .it iinf,ir,.o(.i or 'ortuitoiis . i.ntmgen, ,,.j Ap. logins for t'i 'nabiliti "t 11.. I , d . ,. . i. a ii.int. r of 'he utmost inipmtiii 1 o the enrnmiinitt are somen ha' 'ackmg t ..num nu- a'ipiiil It is the dun of 1 11 lt,.ard of I' M, , VA iciitioii lo sob 11 m.i.!i iiihI a. ,i. J. as pnsMl'Ie a sin ,. tnti-nd. 01 of p'lWi. ., ,,V 11 thi- 'ily t-t'iltitn at, 011 i, l..,..S n-ti 'iliuio!.' , 11 1.1 1. ,1 mifi .,, ! ,, .x.ikrnss Iit tb"se no 11 "ers m .r en.. ..', .-, t 1 m ' eimi.gn ,. be ut Inoir s.st THE SALES TAX Wl. Mil! I'k.h to hear ,1 !,., 1 ,.U !,,.,, . about 1 -i'i.i- o' eiiii.innptiMi ,llx ,,.f,,r,. I'ongresn linislioH its work "f revi.mp t,i. tax laws Tlieoroticiil.j .1 .11 . . 'a. -, udiiiiraliie It has been estimni'd In sra'istn inns sitting ir the isolation nf tli.li pop erttlge tables that 11 ta of cm . nt. ii tl,,. ilnlln,. would ralsi nt leust I nun iiimi (mo ,wll. ,ll. (. 1111 1 li as th gin ei nment in oils to pai its lulls Ititi bi'sm.ss men sa tl al tin 1 nib , ion of the ta would Is. ditli'"ilt and o ?wnsive It would I"' ik nintuinied In a'l sorts of atinowincos ti, the publn and would bf unpopular inil the politinuiiH who do not wish to . 'tate the Iiushush men need 'cssly, haio been saying that no sales tai law would be passed There is a disposition, howeior nmons eertnin congrosstnen to experiment with the Ut Thei sav that we already haio a per cent tax on drugs which is collected In Hie druggist when he inakci the sale, and 1 hat an extension of the system could be iimHe without erent lneoinentcncc to nuy otic. Otto II. Knliti, one of the best economic expertu in the country, has appeared before the ways and moans committee to iitrc. n Reneral vales tax of one-third of 1 per cent iii mi experiment. If this ohould prove suc cessful, then the rate could be raised and other taxes bo abolished. Mr. Knhn was listened to respectfully, for the membem of the committer are aware that he speaks with niilo knowledge inspired by a broad public spirit. IF YOU AREN'T A CYNIC YOU'RE OUT OF FASHION Does .in Occasional Grafter on the Grill or In Jail Prove That the Country Is Off to the Dogs? AXOTHllIt dollar-n-jenr man seems to have (joiip wi-oiik and crafted a million or more for himself and his friends by tislim' 1 ontldeiitial information available in one of 1 he federal departments In the hchenie which sent coal to S'.'O a ton in New Iliiitland a I little while ago. This news- tossed out by I the Senate's committee, will clc the ci tiles mother short interval of complete happi ness. l'verj body's doini; it. they will tell you. And certainly a rasiial survey of the current news In this city might make it appear that 11 pood many men in some of the govern ment's bureaus, like the dollni-.n-joar nun of popular legend, are working not for the government nt nil. but for themselves. Tlittt is a fantastically unjust assumption. Hut it is the nteepted one just now. To he fash ionable, to be admired as one of he true 1 ogtioseetiti, ion must declaim at dinner thnt vou buy your gin trnm a revenue ngent and that lour stock tips come bang from n mem ber of In- cabinet or from Tumulty himself. A gdt mnu.i people will be foolish enough to believe you The,! are the people who smile wisely wl "n thev hear that a telon in McKenty's peni tentiary is tepoited to he the brains and driving power of a complicated and highly profitable drug syndicate and that an agent ot the Hovenue Department is supposed to have been standing guard over Slifi.000 worth of narcotics sobod by the police in a house fiom which he stufT was to have been peddled to tho underworld. They Know, these -sophisticated folk, that the jolly old world is going to the dogs. So thev are loudly saving And thev make sensible people intimtelv Meat! Simple hiiiiesiy is not a diainati.- qualni It ought to l,o so regarded, but it isn't It is no more astonishing, no rarer, than the kindly rains and quite as necessary to the continuing life and older of civilization. It is because personal rectitude is the com monest of virtues that it is never set to mink' or advertised in newspaper headlines Crowds do not assemble in the streets to stare at an honest man. Crowds are inter ested in the i xceptionnl and surprising things. Crowds nn entrnte their attention on lawbreakers bei aue the lawbreaker i a significant phenomenon as full of moaning as the straw on the Miifacc of tho current. 1 1 is the current that really mattirs. t 'looked dollar a-war men and crooked feih-inl agents such es ura can occasionally find nre random tloatei. i-at up from below. Thei are interesting enough in their nay, but they move nlwai. in obedience to silent and mighty forces that cannot be easily do lined or dramatized in the day's news. They move to jail, to dUgt.i.e. to a dismal finish of 0110 son or another When investigating 1 oinmitteos no longer pursue ami punish men who bet raved the government nnd the public, and when crooks in the federal servb e learn to sloop enslly, cynicism of the sort that is fashionable now will be justified Kor one dollnr-n-iear man who became a grafter and a cheat then- were thousands who left their own businesses, gave the best tln'i had to the government and returned to private life without oer getting a lino of blame or praise in the dis. patches Thei did the expected and tho conventional thins For one emplnyo 111 a federal department who ',mn Ins authority dishorn stir, tin re are iinmy thousands who maintain the old stand ards of honor and integrity even against g'eat odds and lianl-liip.. Weto it other wise, government in the I'niteil State? would bo impossible and a time would have arrived when we could lime nothing to do but hand back the land to the Indians iinie nic uiaiii noil-mi an.ng p.opie who pin in about the tone and the .triplications "f newspupii headlines. Y. t every day in the wiek those same headlines make it clearer that 1 rookedin-s ami dishonesty do not pay. The dollin ,1 war man w no.o name is soon In be giwii out" In tin- Senate coal 1 nminitti . doiib'l-ss would give the million he in. nb ami another million along with it to be .,11! of 'no miss that he got himself int" And if half tlmt we hear i true, the b.tt.ti.t .in inns ,,f rnokod unployes in the revenue seniio nn tin- Inmost men in that .aim sorvn 1 , who tmd thnt their own honor is impugn. i by 11 i.udit! of the necn- sio'ial . iisid.-r 1 iignged in the i-morgeni i s.uii'o tieii'ssitati'd In the Vnlstiad act The sunp,. fn, t nf t,c. matrcr is tliat tin goiernn 11'- ,,i let un say, Congress at t united tu a, 1 1 mplisli too much in a sh,,rt s nco of time Al! the resources mailable t.. in, fm ot tin . -nt in minimi times .mulii lai'. been necessary to enforce the dr l.n ..iii'i'. ti-ly and d.eontlj An attempt as 1 i.nl. in force something like a rein'iifinri in 1 ri.'iia! tl slit and national habits at a ruin win n many inlliieuces wore s,i,tli at oik t" disturb vi, ml equilibrium 111 m mi piiii'ei- Hundreds of thousands of i- u nic ink 1 si dilen'i our of the fan I'uir w,i! s f Iif. . il.pi tn to new and distiir'ci; m tluonios and thrown back again n siii'ib-nly t ri'iidjust flieiusi'lvos to changed .midiiion's for w hic'i they were unpri pared M n sni, ! t. d to tin s. d h n pressure of 'n..i, ,,,-,, ,,, md 'lie itti ihIiiii' Hume! hvstMii won- on flnl ted. bor ills, of w 111' i nlldlt loi . ntbop ,o t initios to saittlbo their Inn or f, r ,ll(,f. protits.' Win'!, 1 in iiisiii ip-t was r nssed the ;n ' I'liiin iii was in the position ,,r ,nal) ii'.. liming an enormous. mnp'ii ntcd l.oi'aiism ,.n his haiuli' and 1 oiling a vast '"i of skilled and dependnlib ni"n in keep n going mild find only untniiind labor to .r!. for Inni, If a mini in hip '1 a position had 'miipioinisiili bv sending tin unskilled and mdi-i iplineil men to do t... wotk that whi'iI bni" required the nttniiimi of ton tl.iiusn'iii oxtnrls bo would hm.. ,ien, about a- Ciigrfs 11'. I when it passed tdi drv law :m I 11 . ih hi provision for ils pioper rn for, 1 moi,t 1 oufiiMoii u- iiieiiiuble nnd we ai in no i-iid't of it Not onlv in the world of industry nnd liniiine. hut in the minds of all sorts and 1 mditioiis of men. the processes of readjustment nie going on As it proceeds the tut' iral detestation for the crook is makit.g lUelf detiniteli felt Tho average man's dioition to respo, t tbo Jaw rntlur than nni thing that n small forre of rovi nin agi nis can do, is tending eortainlv to restrict nnd 1 limiriiite the iMoit whUkv bunnesi There is meanwhile a vcrv rial danger 'lint, while the polire forces of tho govern 1'ii'iit are oin entrating their efforts to en force the proi isinns of the Volstead law a worse evil is developing in the background The ditlieiiltlos encountered bv government agents who have to contend with the Illegal t rathe in narcotic drugs are vividly suggested in the news of the rnld made bv Captain Teminst Cocaine, morphine and heroin are uisilv transported, easilv smuggled The 1 ustoins authorities will nlways find it ox ii'cmelv hard to deal with those who bring these dangerous substances from ships in port Ilefore the drug traffic can be ellml EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER - nntcd or really checkMl In this nnd other countries governments will hnvc to control the manufacture of nil narcotics and super vise their distribution. If the traffic still nourishes in tlilR country It is largely be cause in (he rush to eliminate the snloons Congress paid no attention to the Inade quacies of the Harrison net, nnd In tbo vvnr on alcohol quite forgot to concern itself with the question of substitutes that arc far more dangerous nnd deadly. Appropriations mnde to enforce the dry laws were wholly Inadequate. The men as signed to the job nre underpaid. They nre offered bribes nt every turn nnd they deal for the most part with men who, making money so fast that they hnritlv know whnt to do with it. nre prcfeclh willing to share with nny one who will give them any fort of protection Yet violators of the liquor Inws nre actually going to jail. That is something. It proves that the federal depnrt incuts nnd their men nre going seri ously about nn extraordinarily difficult Job. Henenth the siiifnce there nre signs of .'ishonesty nnd corruption. lint they nre rot nearly so numerous or so significant ns some people suppose. The men who do their duty honestly nnd they nre innumerable npifsciit n stabilizing force thnt still doml t.niis in nil the departments of the govern ment You seldom hear of them. It is the crook who gets the advertising, which, in ni'i'H ways, is not the '. 1 1 tmrt of his punishment. PEACE ARMOR IS NO ARMOR T.V PRINCIPLE there is Hale distinguish -JL ing the Rrltish prime minister's pre scription for pence from thnt published by the mitorrnt of nil the Russlas more than twenty years ngo. The famous rescript of Nicholas II wus basically n idea for international disarma ment. Its direct consequence was the first Hngue conference of lSIHi. giving rise to nn International arbitral court. Hut although the powers of this tribunal were subsequently enlarged, the elastic nnd familiar phrase "outraged national honor" plnyed its customary und dninitging part. It was generally understood, nlthough not nlunjs frankly admitted, thnt the very mat ters supposedly compelling nations to take up anus were beyond the jurisdiction of the court. Thi- i!crI,p!,s wns shockingly exposed by the world war, when the tribunal wns pow e.n'.s. The conflict wns begun by nations armed to their full capacity. The ancient argument that armament wns peace insur ance wns tragically exploded. It Is the destruction of that delusion which enhances the significance of Mr. Ijloyd Ooorge'R definitely expressed views. While there Is nn utter" nbsenre of novelty in his doctrine, the bnckground of 1 ileum stance has markedly chnnged. In its eighth nrticle the covenant of the League of Nations declares that "the mem bers of the league recognize thnt the main tenance of peace requires the reduition of national armaments to the lowest-point .in sistent with national safety and the enforce inent of common action of international ob ligations " It is. of course, arguable that possible interpretations of the phrase national safety" nre perilously numorou. The meaning of the article depends vitally upon the nieasute of co-operation of the various nations in 11 simerc nnd specific disarma ment policy. The Rritish premier recognizes the situa tion in hi oolemn warning against naval and inilitarv competition. A single nation unsympathetic to a reduction plan tan ren der it negligible in practice. Opponents of the league signed at Ver sailles are logically sound when thev insist, as Senator Hornh does that disarmament is the fundamental safeguard of peace. Hut not without n complete perversion of truth can ir be maintained thnt a workable ma chinery for reductions is not eontnined in the covenant It is this point whim Mr Lloyd Cieorge emphnsizod yesterday in tho presence of the Ilntish nnd dominion delegates returning from the ficneva meeting. Nnturnlly, since his government is a mem ber of the league, the Ilriti.h premier favois the development of material already in ex istenro. It is probable that mankind in general cares less about the paitlcular appa ratus employed than the measure of its ef fectiveness. Disarmament hohih anil consistent Iv car ried out appeals to humaiiiti on two im pio.sivo . mints : It has never yet been uniiersnllr tried, whereas all other pence plans have failed. It appeals overwhelming!! and incontro vortibh to common sense. WOMEN MAY HOLD OFFICE TT IS unneoo.ss.iry to change any laws ,,f tin' Mate in order to qualify women for hold ing pibln othee, in-cording to an opinion of Attn! in y lieiierul Alter Tin Governor had asked him whether he 1011I1I appoint a woman as dork of the Lu-s-uin iiiuntj courts The nttornei general tells him that he can. The constitutional nmetnliiw.nt gmng the into to women has apparent?,, imiforreil on tin' women not only the privilege of voting but the privilege of sharing with tho men in all the activities of government. Women are eligible to membership m the -tut.- Legislature and for seats in cnr.. and for the presidency They art- also eligi ble for the mayoralty and for memboiship in the City Council. If thej ,.nn g,.t the noiuiiintloii for aiu office, and if they poll more lotos than any other candidate " there is nothing now in the way of their perform ance of the duties Cif am office. No other view is tenable unless nlc t0 attempt to nullify th pial suffrage amend- inent of the constitution The privilege of voting curries with it all the obligations of 1 itizenship LEAGUE COURT PROGRESS Plto.Sl'LCT.S Hint the International Court of Justice will soon be more than 11 fig ment of hencvohnt Imagination have been matct mill enhanced by the signature bv tuotitv -two nations to the protocol giving executive approval to the plan. As tho nin jotiti of the delegates of nations registered apprm al only after consultation with theii home governiin nt. it is expected thnt sanc tion bi tin. vai lou. Parliaments will not long be delayed. It bus been plain from the outset thnt intifidenci. in the league will be emphatically strengthened by an exhibit of practical ma ohinuy Although on tho whole the per formance of the comic il and the asseinhli in fieneva was creditable, more discussion does not entirely satisf, the longings of those who hope for n tangible organization of peace Especially is this true of some American clitics of the league When the world court actually comes into being, the best of nil the arguments on behalf of a socioty of nations will be nvallable All but the incxl cantankerous iriecorn iln bles are in hearty sympathy with nn int nutionnl arbitral tribunal, endow id ( powers vastly initio vlgmous und conn .n sive than those of The Hague com '.lore, over, when the judges are duly (y c-d and nre aetunlly lit their posts sonn , tb,. con fusion now existing regard! n .ne coercive functions of the legal strue .0 nre certain to be dispelled In the presence of one actuality it will be easier to grasp another, and sincere exami nation of the text of the league covenant will show that the obligation of the nations to nrbltrato their differences is stated four or five times To incorporate n compulsory clause in the court plan is mere redundancy, and it is r i1" r puz.lins to find no much furor rnls"1 . er the omission PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER THE ANTHRACITE GOUGE Will Pennsylvania Follow In the Steps of New Jeraey? The Fartlcal Brumbaugh Comtnliilon and Whnt It Didn't Do v GEORGE NOX McCAIN THE next Legislature has its work cut oirt for it. Yet the question of most vltnl interest lo Philadelphia Is not, ns yet, n part of its program. It affects the pocket bonk of every home owner nnd housekeeper in Philadelphia nnd east of the Alleghanles. The newspaper-reading millions nre dnllr regnled with the snplent dissertntlons of Senator Penrose on cabinet possibilities, nnd the detniled story of the Incomings nnd outgoings of Governor Sproul. It is kept posted on just how Joseph It. Grundy 11 nil State Chairman Crow propose to wallop the eternal daylight out of encii other, nnd when Mayor Moore will lay righteous hands on another crooked cop. Hut the proposition that Involves million 4 of hard-earned dollars of the public has been lelegnted to the limbo of neglected things. IT IS the vltnl question of tonl of profi teering by wholesalers nnd rctnllcrs in anthracite, the univcrsnl home fuel 01 Philadelphia. New York has beaten Philadelphia to it The district attorney of llrooklyn lifts stnited nn investigation thnt is still on. The Sennte committee nt Washington In also taken up the issue. It threatens the coal dealers with government supervision nnd criminal prosecutions. New Jersey s Legislature has been called uion to net and queer revelations me promised when the Inquiry gets under wnv. Massachusetts has tnken steps through its fuel administrator to turn on tho light. Pennsylvania has done nothing. It will have the opportunity to redeem itself within the next sixty days. AS FOR Philadelphia, It has done notb ing. It has made 11 feeble protest, nml let it go nt that; but there bns been n.) public demand for relief. The citizens of the third city in the coun try nre seemingly sntisficd with the sltun tion. They ure content to pay exorbitant prices nnd thank the extortioners for tin privilege. In Washington they have started to cleau things up. The Colder committee on Mon day raided tbo licndquniters of the Nntionnl Coal Association nnd seized its books. The committee menus business. Philadelphia, which is always the object of discrimination, metaphorically holds out Us pocketbool: to the conl bnrons, big nnd little, with the words, "Help yourselves, gentlemen, to what you think is right, nnd give us ns much coal ns you enn spare in return." BUT Pennsylvania its anthracite coa hns not been without 1 commissions in the pnst. I'sunlly they have been merely white washing squads. Some of them have been actually apologetic lo the coal companies. "Hy your leave, gentlemen, we would like to have some information about your busi ness," has been the sycophantic, almost groveling, attitude of these commissions. If the coming Legislature nets to dis cover the cause of the existent price condi tion, it should be by a commission of real investigators. The lust anthracite oomtnlslon, appointed under the joint icsoliition of June 10, 11110, by Governor Rrumbaugh, wns a farce. It belli meetings, summoned officers nnd representatives of various wholesale nml re tail coal concerns, examined coal trust ofli cinls, and then mnde its report. It wns nn apology rather thun u report. It found nothing wrong. It wns n weak, watery. Hubby affnir. from start to finish. It confined itself to the operators' side. Not n miner or other individual Interested in the actunl work of digging coal was put on the stand. Tho only commendable thing thnt a lead ing of the llrumbaugh anthracite coul com mission report discloses is that it served without compensation. It didn't deserve anything. HERE are a tew gems from this rcmaik nble document "Hy reason of a lack of time and adr quate means the commission has not under taken to verify any of the figures." "It is respectfully suggested that the average margin of profit per ton i. substii'itiallv reduced by the sale nt u loss of the .steam sizes." Also: "Hy prepared sizes ure meant those sizon larger, than pen nml which sizes the oper ators are able to sell nt a profit the remaining smaller or steam sizes bclnj, in every instance, produced nt greater ex pense than that at which such sizes can Lo marketed." The indifference or ignorance displayed by the Hiuiubaugh commission could not b' better set forth than 111 the above statement taken from its "iirelliulnarv conclusions." Steam sios of anthracite are a by product. It was so testified under oath at the llrooklyn henrlng of the Cnldcr com mittee a few days ago. W. H. Williams, vice president of the Hudson Coal Co., tes tified that stoam sizes of anthracite, being 11 by-product of mine and washer.!, were, therefore, s() much "velvet." PHILADELPHIA has a ton) exchange. It is supposed to have been organized to protect the public, ns well us to conserve the iuteiests of its members Prom ncent experience, it bns stood idly by while tin public was living mulcted. It is an instunee similar to that at City Hnll. where policemen on the force have , stood In and watched a victim being "fiiskcd" without offering any interference. The alleged reason is that the coal ex change dale tint speak above n whisper for fear of offending the big producers from whom it receives its supply. That is the testimony. Neither hope nor help, therefore, can ui expected from this source. If the Legislature can be aroused by pub lic sentiment to take action. It mav be able to affoid relief. vnd the Legislature should net ' THE HA UITED STREET WIT II OCT. the night is quiet as the grave ; The moon has set: the clouds like phun toms Ily ; I sit and shudder, for along the pave I henr a wailing banshee passing In. No sooner has the banshee ceased to sob. And nerves once more their normal quiet take. Than, coming down the asphalt stiect, a causes them again to twitch nnd quake. Nor is this all; the bobcat s scan civ still When through the dreadful night, right past the house. oine hepless souls, long lost liynontlng shrill : Then demons, shrliking in their mud ca rouse. ' least, they sound like these, slnicks, groans snd walls, Fiends' laughter tierce; hoarfc sobs of those that mourn ; No wonder thnt n timid mortal quails Ilefore tho varied tvpis of motor horn II. II. in the New York Herald Charity Where It Paya I'roin ilc nichmond New Leader The great heart of America cannot escape the obligation to provide Europe with conl not while Europe offets four times what It Is worth O.. c,i,b,i. ne Explanation Krom ths Nw VorW Ik-rald. 'I'h linllHsf malls are not at nil conerstoH. Optimists will explain that this is not on account. 01 nnru uiini um uciuusc, mier ro much prosperity, nobody can think of a gift that tlic favored friend iinsu t already. A IT.' '. " " rw k Tk.Y VI"''tfT'C1WT"1 IT1TT A Hk.T "IVT 1 T "i nflTl tr A ' ' "" i$m,Wgf3 imicSfra3p mtostfr n plSr,"-!i' MMfffid V Ja& f ' " Lm TFPHf NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians on Subjects They Know Best DR. MELVIN P. BURNS On Fields for Church Work ONE big field for the churches to work iu is thnt of the districts cbnnging from strictly residential to semiresldentinl nrrns interspersed with foreigners or more espe cially with cheap boarding houses, nccoiding to Dr. Melvln P. Hums, superintendent of the deportment of city work of the Hoard of Home Missions of the Methodist Church. Dr. Hums has divided his program here Into four larger branches, following the plan adopted in other cities since the beginning of the city work of the board, in connection with the opening of the centenary drive three years ago. "The four divisions," declares Dr. Hums, , "nre (1) downtown, f-1 industrial. (''I foreign speaking, subdivided into American ization and Chrlstinnization work, nnd (4) seniiresidentiul. "For ninny years the church bns been on the retreat from all of these communities. The 'downtown church' is seldom n vcrv thriving institution, and it is only recently that the different denominations hnvc awak ened to the importance of this field. In fact, it took the war to open tin- eyes of tbo church to the grent necessity of work among the foreign. Ilefore thnt no denomination bad given this work serious attention. Hoarding Houses Replace Homes "Then there is one grout section of nil cities which has just begun to be consid ered; I. -.. the area of shabby gentility, formerly filled with the houses of the well-to-do who have begun to move out into the suburbs or at least into the outer districts of the rltv . Foreign born begin to creep into these localities or, more frequently still, they become the area of countless boarding houses, tenanted by young people seeking work in the city. "Iustend of remaining to woik nmong these classes, the church has pretty generally followed the former inhabitants' out into the suburban or outer districts. Only just recently bns the fight Is-en taken up nguin lu this very nciossary field. "And in Miming buck nn to the biittlefield the churches must necessarily disregard for mer stnndnrds. precedents And statements of theology. They must work out u new fundamental program broad enough to cover the uctual needs of every poison in these variously populated districts. "Such n campaign was attempted in New York city not so maiiv years ngo in respect to the old I'lilon Chinch, which once had been popular nnd well-tilled, but which one day woko up to find itself lu the center of n hotel, apartment house and theatre (lis trict. Instead of selling the chinch and abandoning the ti.-ht. the board installed u lighting, progressive minlhter and spent a great deul of money on welfare work. "As n result the tin tit o people und the hotel people were attracted, (ilrls flocked to the noonday lunch which was arranged, the young people of the neighborhood came lu great numbeis to the recientlonnl rooms and from n membership of fifteen the I'nlon Church Increased that number to from .100 to noo. Surrcss ( an He Krpr.itr.il "What the Rev John Henson did there, and other up-to-date clergymen have clone in other downtown churches in many cities of tho United Stutos, ran be done elsewhere. "In addition to the foreign born, which hnve probably been thoroughly discussed in connection with nil founs of welfare work, but which still cuiistiiiito nn Important chinch work, tbeie is the question of the most central part of the dt, tho region of big hotels nnd clubs, containing Inrgelv n transient population, but with just enough permanent residents to muke it an Integral part of church work "These hotels can be reached and their occupants brought to church. This Iuih been proved in n number of iui.tnneeH. Hut there must bo more than the Sunday service nnd the Wednesday night prayer 'meeting. There must be social work of nil kinds. In cluding the provision of cheap lunches rest rooms, gumes, eutertaltunents nml the' like The hotels can be leached by invitations distributed to every room, and the dubs In iln. .nine way. Hut Huh will not uniiio. It Is more than n question f K,.tnK t. people once to uttend a church service. Thnt service must be vital and compelling onou-h to bring them again, nnd, above all, It must be backed up by real, up-to-date welfare work with n purpose. Once the tran sients lire brought in. even if only tempo, ruiily. the residents will come to tho churches l. .. .I.a ul.n.iln rnnuni. ,1. . .L . ,.. iiip" r i" o.."i"s iiwuu nun mey wl sc ,,.... ,hf)80 churches stnnd for L.mi,iiL definite and progressive "Then of course, then, lu 1V .,i.,. . work among dercllcts-nu entirely different pngc 01 me noon, one one just as vital, The supplying of work for such people, at the same time iuculcutliig Christian and Amctl- - 23, 1020, ,' ' u ' r . . . . "HtfUfrj- vW ti can ideals in them, is a work which the churches can nnd must do. People in Hoarding Houses Lonesome "Finally, ns before mentioned, there is tho boarding house nren. This is really u simple ns well us a very vital field, for the reason thnt young men nnd women. In fnct, nil persons in boarding houses, are usunllv lonesome nnd long for companionship. If the progressive church in the neighborhood can offer thnt to them there will be no diffi culty in getting them to church, "Hut in order to do this the churches must forget old-time prejudices nnd narrow mindedness. Pool tnblos nnd billiard tables nre Important factors, ns is dancing and the atricals. If they are scorned, thnt manv handles to the problem of soclnl welfare work are broken, nnd without the incentive of social intercourse, most of the young people will not be brought to the church." The Fact Remains Krorn (he Incllsniipolls News, The senators who nre investigating the coal situation nre finding out a good manv things that other people suspected, iust ns other Investigators have found out such things, but whnt good does thnt do ns long ns the coiil men nre determined to keep prices Hard to Recognize I'rotu the Cincinnati i:nqulrtr Along with the difficulty of recognizing Mexico will come the difficulty of recogniz ing ( hicngo in her new robe of righteous ness. In Reduced Circumstances from the Oil-land Plain Denier The former kaiser has Inst n large part of us wealth, nnd hns now an Income amount ing to a bare $000,000 a yea?. Still, be ran do pretty well with that in Holland, which Is nn Inexpensive plnce to live in. A Guess I loin Ihe C.-vUrs'.nn Notva xr!r r"V'i1'? .thn ArRcntinn nnd Senator M.Cormiek intend to join in forming nn outlaw League of Nntions. What Do You Know? QUIZ "' ""'Lu.lol"a lh0 B-lnnlnR of this ancient hr stnmn caiol, "God rest you merry gentlemen" bo punctunted? '"crr " Ivo?"'"" Ta,nerlnnc nnJ when did ha X Wa'rneleiramy,tl;o.ollnl0n f PoM'"" '" 4 In whnt famous naval battle did tim IrmTo dn'te,,w" "avc "nly '" '' 5 lloinmny king, of Bn.land were named 0. Which, of the four gospela wero vvntt.n by original disciples of Jesiw- Mrl,ten ' 'n.aV.ll""" WhCre '" ,t,e ".Ntaiwrtt ot s Name four fnmous operas by Verdi ! What part of tho country wan tlm iir c. express olllclnl approval of tho const.0 tutlon of the United States' 10 Where la tho Rubicon? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Abraham Lincoln delivered hi. en.... aettyrtwrir addrca In Nowlnbcr ?A" 2 ' Dr. I-austuB" and "Edwanl II" n'ro two Pber,"Mrtrwefft,"0UH ""'"' of "'o :' ''VEL'V-ffi'''1.".9 ' of Hal,, on -" - "- ,.i mime. i'ln!rn nnru llt-faii, . jng from the n", rcear vldere, to see. by way of the French 0 Kricnu'itlc Is the naniii applied to paint lugs executed with vehicles of w d! wax Is tho chief Ingredient, TiiB term fro... tho Greek -burnt In," , ap propriately applied to the ancleau methods of painting x 'J" beat was required to effect them 7 A cymbalo or ccmhalo is n utrlniced mi. slcat instrument played will, namtneVs" g. Tbo l'nrlu newspaper named after the 1 art.er of Seville Is the Figaro. kUVo the Seville barber, an created by jeau.' mnrchnls was tho repository and dis penaer at current gossip, news and gen. oral information, " 9. The height of tho dome of the Capitol at Washington from the base lino of the enst front Is 387 feet S Inches. 10,- Walts are bands of pernons singing enrols from house to house on Christinas, U T.1 ' Hli MArviifw -t - I A proa Is . cloublo-ended BWift salllnu canoe, with one aide flat, which In kent to leevvnrd. and a lateen sail It u uaed by rmtlvea of the, MruaY arch I pclngo and the Mariana Island, V' SHORT CUTS A few more drug raids may reduce aiitJ un nui t.v. v Hurglnries arc combinations of slurp and tints. Let us hope the auto bandits won't hole, up Santu Clans. Protected vice is chortling ovci the wr handed the Mayor. Stocks may be going down, but stO' k ings will go up tomorrow night. Curious how n conviction sometime! places n halo on the head of a criminal Cnndy dealers nre nppnrently the la: to discover thnt money is growing scarce rue rouuie wit i ran net inn kin.? in ton the work hns so frequently to bo clone over. Perhnps Judge Landis hns now readie the stnge when be con nfTord to be tempcm mental. The operations of the drug ring seen: designed to prove unit trum Is stranger Ilia melodrama. May we deduce from the Christmas trt at Citv Hnll that Santa Clans is tho Mnln (!uy thereabout? Mnrnr Monro linu n lin-,1 firlif i,l.na,l i him. lie hnsn't a soul back of him but tha people of Philadelphia. Heing so justly and painstaking i roasted, the Municipal Court ought to l)el done when it s lirown. Hefore directing homilies at W.lmine ton, let it be noted that it wasted no time! in sending its embezzlers .to jail. The enrcful elti7cn will do his bu inl nid the starving babies before the vegsmanl has a chni.ee to hold him up nnd get tie money. Congressinnn Cannon says he is oppofcdl lo the government doing anything luat prl vute individuals ran do. Except talk 1'ncle Joe; except tnlk. Overheard on Chestnut street . Not much chnnco for SuutJ. using III slc.cli this weather. No; but vvu can ut least see the raiuT dear. New York's police commissioner -jnl there is too much conversation between po I Ucemen on post nnd it must cense Un thei other hand, If silence is golden the icegsl may cop it. If it should be proved thnt an auwl lmnrllt irm onllootlnf funds III culler to 111 0 I vide n well-laden Christmas tree for IilJ children, n nentlmciitnl public would dcuor less be Tcauy to applaud him. Thnt charming little ditty, "Lcl - Oftl It While tho (Jotting's (iood." sung mtlil immense success by the Hrown Quince e ' " 1 may, unfortunately for the warmers, no lo the ax that is being sharpened for them Hoses nre still blooming in NantiKlcl. Mass., but this has absolutely nothing "' "" ,,.1.1, 11, n fnof tlinf thn Mn mo. ohltsetts I.Ogl" laturo has njnde women eligible fur "Uic anil mac mere are nineiy-xoiir uim... -i pobs ns policewomen in tho state. Is the coul scandnl due simply t "i"1 ..:....., ,nd, .?u-) Tl, ,, ,il, 11,. that nil PI bu tntlnciv nvvnltH the nornu of the patriotic! niiiin-sv iiiLiiiu iin t iu 1 1 u i .- ,lnll,,r.',i .vonr mnn who bended a ring tuail gathered iu n rake-off from every govern ment coal trnnsaciion is lnciiueu kj -" crate, "Not by an anthracite!" .Inclc Ilomnsev told ItoturiUllS lit rJ"."l i an ciiv ilint lie couldn't mnke n epeecO' but just to be sociable be would fight nurl i.it.. nn.si.nf. And that's ii 1 1 there was Wl It. 'News items are ho disappointing W'l to-date fiction would have bad the e!ialleMl ncceptcd and tho champion defenteu. A freo trnn'slntlon of the Hiown smi' ..... ....... . M......I. ... aiu r.l.ri.lM ineiii rvuim miiiiuniis " ii" " ,l, Now thnt it' has been alleged tlmt j municipal i ouri. in iiiiiiiukcu .. - - . - . that money is being wasted there and m one of the court's chlefest functions 1 provide Jobs for the jobliss so that a how muy be kept on city politicians, it is ' for us to renllzo that charity Is n iw;",1'?' thiug i that Imitation is the slncert I tery; that Lincoln may have hod tho riyj dope about fooling the people, but H " yet ueen (lemousiraicu -, iiiui mi""" i rompllcated for ordinary peojile to grasp. a" tliat ii is n mean man who hiiuii - ,. tit-. To Which may bn lidded in the Ui of the poet, "E Pliirlbus Uniim.niiil MH"7 iu Pano, uot to luvutluu Tool SJvn-cL ffc. i&tth M-ijUhW-.. H ..iWl.V.VfcsWiffiM, ...iJMmM 'uwIIIIIIIIIIIIIL,i,aaHaMHBi