m ?, mw- : !. f srasras V r.S!W5WK.'-' Tiyi, " "'V' "7 -' imcv t' p r,n?c.TSSWa.. ' .','. ".vitr'p'V .JT.W t'i't .. I f 1 '-. ': ' TWl' . "'.'' ' & A- . - i , i-, " (' '" tfi BT '.' ' &- F"? . lav M i. t-SL. 1 K "' EC 10 jRuening public THzbtz mmi.ip i.iiinnvn rnwnAW Piini.ir i.Knr.En rnMPAKY ' crnuB it. k. cuiitib. pMidit -2 John C. Martin, Vice Pruldsnt and Treaiurart 9rlfi A. Tyler, Secretary! Charlee Hi l.udlnr A; Philip S. Colllna, John b. Williams. John J. wrfon, Oow r, Goldsmith, David K. flmller. fnjMiorp. Jfcxvip h. bmiletT .editor JOHN C. MAHTIN....Ocncral lluilnm Mimor Publlahed dally at COSMO La-flls Uulldlnr - Independence Square, Philadelphia. Atlantic Citt rrras-Vnton tlulldlng Nr ToK 3114 Maitlsnn Axe DSTSOIT . 70t Ford nulldinit St.. Loch 613 Globt-Dcmocrnt nulkllng Cnioioo 1302 Tribune UullUinc NEWS lintKACS WltHltlOTON nciCAV, N. E. Cor, Pennsylvania Axe. and Uth St Nsw Tobk ni'RCM' The Sim llullillnc London Utriuc Trafalgar Uulldlnr suusonii'TiON Ti;itMs The ExtNlNo Public I.mica la served to sub ecrlberi In Philadelphia nnd surrounding towns at. the rate of twelve (12) rents per week, payable to the carrier. .'Br mall to points outalde of Philadelphia In the United States. Canada, or United States pos session, postsce free, fifty (BO) cents per month. Blx (10) dollars per ve.tr pa) able In advance. To all forelsn countries one (It) dollar a month Noticb Subscribers wishing address chanted must rive old as well as new address. Bltt. IM0 WALM7T KKYSTOSE. XA1M IB01 (CT Address alt cepmnunlcatfons In E ottiip Tiiftlic fjdprr. iirfepcridftiff Sfiuarr I'll lailriphin Member of the Associated Press . THE ASSOCIATED PHESS I- rxeltsive.'j; eu titled to the tue lor rrpuh rn . -.' ,;'' "' (fltpafehes credited tn l or ,-nt others n- c 'rf'1'rt (n this tapir and atso the tnent neic vib! ifc'd Oierrttt. AH right republication of speruil di-pntcie herein rrr alio rrserred. rhlltdrlrtilt. Mondir, lun in, l:i A VEXATIOUS TRANSIT TANGLE THE etlncs of the quarrel ngitiitiiii: t m V, It. T. and t In- West Chester traetinu companies are dei-ideilly rs a matter of public concern Hum the prurtienl eone. Quences of the nntlii-i. I'opittnr interest is tiel npoti the -ul i.'--t of efficient and convenient connections he. tween the metropolitan and the nlii rliin Hues. Despite it-(j erection of the sixtj ninth street terminal, it cnunoi he nid 'hat the through -niiiiniiiiiicatinii problem lia- jet been worked mil upon a reall. eointnictite nnd common -sense basis The conlention of the transit corupanj that the West Chester line has failed for nearly two jenr. to render am service whatever over its trackage between Sixl ninth street and Sixty -third street is made in answer to the suburban company's com plaint regarding the turning back of many of the elevated trains nt Sixtj -third stret. Obvioub. each corporation would be pleased to compel the other to earrx the burden of expense in the intervening territoij Meanwhile, however, the public i victim Ixcd by obstructionist tactic which scrimisiy retard the proper development of irniispo tation facilities that are actunlh in e'si. ence. It is in such complex questions n,. this that the services of the Public Serviie Commission are mor.1 web-otne. So far as physical condition.- are eon cerned. it would be perfectly possible to route cars directly from West Chester. Ard raore or Media into central Philadelphia, and vice vera. In a s(.u,.. the Sity ninth Ftreet terni'iial station created a problem rather than solved one. since It gave specious force to llip contention that a change of cars was n necessity. The commission, which will continue it hearings this week, has responsibilities which do not merely end with apportionments of praise or blame to one or both of the con testants. The transportation snnrl in the western frontier of the city will not he im tangled until some adequate system of through routing i established. "POLITICS" IN DELAWARE GCn KRNOR. DKNNY has oiinoui.oHd thai he still is determined to appoint Senator Volcott as the next Chancellor of Delaware It Is bis firm belief, lie savs. thnt appoint ments to the bench 'should in no spnvo i,0 political appointments." In view of the common impression about the reasons for taking the Democratic Mr. Wolcott from the Senate, thus creating a vqcanoy which could be tilled by a Repub lican, and putting him on the bench, many persons will be curious to know what kind of nn nppolntment liovernor Denny would regard as political. WOMEN AS PARTISANS THK presence of women for tne first time otiiciull.v in the Republican Stat" Com mittee und the accession of a woman to the vice chairmanship is a novelty that will (oon subside into a commonplace It is safe to assume that the energetic par tisanship upon which the American system of Government operates will appeal no les ftrongly to the newly enfranchised Hn- of voters than to thosr with an older preroga tive. The futility of a women's party, exclu sively constituted as such, scarcely needs to be proved. It i as components of existing partisan machinery that the distinctive abili ties of women will be most serviceable. 'The extent of their influence, as with that ot the men. is dependent chiefly upon per sonality and ' the eapacitv for consistent work An auspicious beginning has been made in the elevation to the lice chairman ship of the Republican State Committee of ko active a party spokeswoman as Mrs. JIarclny Warburton. According to a resolution formally adopted, her role in the matter of appointments tlII, State patronage is duh lecogni.eil Met influential position is an inle thnt male politicians nre accepting the realities of the niw order The enfranchisement of women ha passed out of the merely complimentary singe into the domain, of practical politics h, promo tion as tfiev are unafraid of that term, which S Bonietltms invidim-sly used, will the rsnncn "f Ponnshanin qmlifi as ns.et. in the complex functioning of (tovernnunt MELLON'S OPPORTUNITY AUDIT .Til. .(MlU.uuii ..f tin Hinount raised by the lioUTiimcnr through the f-iflo of Liberty anil Victor Ponds- was lent . to foreign ioernments. (ireat liritnln got $4,210.KVUIoii; France. .-?:.. Toll .(Ml 1.(11 10 : Italy. ?l.(l.-i0.lin(i.(i0O. ami llelgjum. S-Jiiti.. 000,000. The i-eicnlnder went to Russia, Jtlgo-Slavia and the other Alli"i-. The only security which lie- Federal Tieas l.'ry has for this money Is what amounts to demand notes. No Inteiesf has been- paid lieeuil'-e tin borrowers haw. not been able tJ rnle the funds. uSecretary Mellon, who is an experienced financier, has been working on a plan to I'liange the demand notes Into time bonds bearing such a rate of iutere-t a will at tract Investors. His purpose in doing this Is to chunge the debt from an obligation to te tiovcrniui-nt of the 1'nltcd Stales Into h lebt due tn private inxestnrs. The reasons for this arc economical and political. It is admittedly unwise to permit the debt to remain nn obligation of foreign (Joiern. litcnts to the I'niteil Slates any longer than in absolutely nccessarv. So long as this s-ondltlnn prevails the debt is liable io be a - roiiree of irritation. It js of the highest political expediency to clmngr it ns soon as libsslhle. Economically, the change would relieve tn? Federal Treasury. The bonds of the fdrelgn Oovernnienls would, of course come f rst. Into the hands of the Washington dm -rrnment. Hut the.v would be negotiable ceeilrlttes. As fast as (he inniket war luiitcil IPI'V coulil uo lllllonileii on prlviltc s ,. llu'ilers of large blorhs) uf I iw lie induced to exchange tho4c bonds for the foreign nccurlt.es bearing a higher rate of Interest. This would nt onee reduce the Interest obligations of the Treasury. Such nn exchange cntinot be made, however, until the solvency of the foreign Governments Is restored. As soon ns the Washington Government can unload this foreign debt lu such n xvoy thnt the Interest will have to be curried by the debtors the 'Federal budget citn be re duced by nbout half it billion dollars n year. If Secretary Mellon can bring this about lie will achieve u triumph of financial states innnliip which will lift him Into n secure place in American history as one of the most iiccesful Secretaries of the Treasury we have ever had. PLANES VS. DREADNOUGHTS; THE GREAT TEST THIS WEEK If Aircraft Proves Superior to Battle- ships It Will Displace Them. Whether Naval Officers Like It or Not THK further development o uiroinft as an Implement .of wnr cannot be pre wined by the opposition of the olliceis of the army and the navy. There has been no radical revolution in methods of w arfiii e which has nut been criticized by the tni-ii who were brought up under the old tradition". Hut the dub gave way to the spear and the speur io the bow and arrow and the how nnd nrrow to the gun. The boat pro pelled with oars was superseded by the ship with sails and sails have given wny to steam. If it shall prove that aircraft Is superior to the battleship It will tiltlmutely vindicate itself. .,i,d ecn the pullbucks will have to accept the situation. For some .reaon the development of the air wing of the national defense has lagged in the I'nited Sl-ite.s since the wnr. Other nations which learned what could be done with it have been enlarging their air force and pulling it on a permanent basis. They haw been experimenting with wirlnus forms of flying machines for use over land and mer the seu. and they are accumulating a 'ast mass of inlunble information. Vet. in spite of the lack of enthusiasm for aiicr.-ift In the attitude of the naval and military authorities m Washington, a series of experiments begin today which may prove much or little. The first test is to discover the relative efficiency of aircraft ami gunfire in destroy ing submarines. One former liermnn under sea boat bus been assigned t0 the airmen ami two to the crews of torpedoboat de stroyers. This may be because the aircraft demonstrated its efficiency during the xvnr in this Mirt of work. It could detect a sub merged hont which would be invisible to n boat on the surface. A week troui today the aircraft is to make an attempt to find the old battleship Iowa and to bomb it. The ship will be somewhere within a hundred miles of the const between Cape Untteras and Cape Jlenlopen. Two xvecks later the aircraft xvlll be sent out to sink an old Herman destroyer, and gunfire from ships xvill be used to destroy two other d'ermnn boats, and the week after this test an attack xvill be made on an old Jerinnn battleship from the niv nnd from battleships. The aircraft will be required to remain 1000 feet above the surface of the water in order to meet the conditions which prudence would require they should observe in actual combat. Vet tu the war dnring aviators approached much nearer the surface than this and dropped their bombs and esenped in safety. The conditions of the tests, however, are such as to put the airmen on their mettle. If they can hit the targets under the cir cumstances the .Titles of (he nir forces xvlll lose one of their arguments against the ex patislon of the new- branch of the service. The public is not deeplv interested In the Invnlty of the officers of the army and the navy to the old methods. What the people xvlsh is the most efficient machinery for nil lionnl defense that can be devised. The submarine has not driven the battle hlp from the sor, nnd no naval officer lodny thinks that it can do this. The.v nearly ail insist thnt the great floating fort xvlll still he serviceable. Whnt most of us xvould like I- the development of aircraft as a supple tnent to the floating se forces and as an auxiliary of the land forces. It seems to have qualified itself for such service. If It shall prove to be useful in a more extended range, even the conservatives xvlll accept it just a they have accepted the turbine engine nnd the use of oil in place of coal for making steam. Hospitality toward progress is the proper attitude of mind, nn nttltune characteristic of most of the men in the nrm,v and the navy. P.ut thev wish to he convinced that any new device means progress before they will com mit themselves to Its adoption There are exceptions, for fienernl Mitchell, of the army aircraft bureau. Is so enthusi astic thnt he irritates the men xvho are still xvniting to be convinced This eicess of zeal has got him into trouble with bis superior, and Secretary Weeks has had to rend a fleeture to the two men in order to induce them to work harmoniously together. I lie hopes of the adxocates of disarma ment thnt the series of experiments xvill demonstrate the futility of spending more money on battleships s not llkelv to be realized, for It xvill take more than a single si ess of aircraft to break down the force of the arguments in support of armored ships carrying heaxx guns with a long range. Whnt such ships can do In scouring the sea for hostile vessels was demonstrated by the Rritih Navy so convincingly that so long a nntlnn. find it necessnrx to have a navy they wilt be likely to insist on hnvlng vessels that mil do hnt the Uritlsh ships did to tin driiinn lessels off the Falkland Islands, y thing thnt aircraft lonld not very well haxi Hone STEERING THE SHIPPING BOARD TIII-J reconstituted Shipping Hoard, nl though heir to past blunders and facing obstacle which probably not even a super human genius could have diverted, has noxv the advantage of functioning under clearly defined general principles. fioverninent ownership of transportation resources on sea or land Is held in distinct disfavor hv n large majoritv of Americans. Relief that the experiment in shipping could owntunllv siiiceed to a considerable extent has i vnporated. President Harding has echoed ihi-. sentiment in bN instructions to Mr l.asker. the new chief of the board According tn this incumbent of one of the most responsible of public offices, -the Presi dent stronglv believes that the ships should he turned over'to private ownership as soon as possible at, fair prices, but thai it should be done only In communities prepared not only to operate the vessels, but to help de velop markets for the goods carried by them The accompanying presidential admoni tion xxas to the effect that the prestige and scope of the American merchant marine should be re-established under the present Administration. Il Is, of course, one thing to demand a comprehensive reform nnd another to achieve it. Nevertheless, the policy outlined in gen eral terms by Mr. Harding has the virtue of heme intelligible ie change from the Mud innde It difficult for the liethcr the Government going i remain tin n potent factor in the merchant marufio busjnesn or was seek ing t" llouidpfc ft. .venture. nrttIi b'ecu cUU- V ' 1 fti.1 EVUN'IXG PUBLIC LEDGER PIJILADKLPHIA, lUlied, and thlsMissuredly must be helpful in the power thnt have been nsked to gl-c it renlity. CLEAR VISION IN THE LEAGUE rnlllv position which Secretary Hughes hns -- taken regarding the disposition of man dates is perceptibly strengthened by the valedictory of Dr. Du Ounlin. retiring presi dent of the Council of the League of Na tions. At the thirteenth meeting of this body, held In (ictieva last xveek. Dr. Da Citnlin declared that he had urged the principal allied Powers to come to some agreement xvitb the Government of the I'nited States In order thnt the Council might act with un questioned authority. Here is significant intimation that the former German terri tories xverc somewhat hastily apportioned among the Allies. Mr. Hughes has asserted that, ns a co partner in the xvnr. the t'tilted Stntes retains a proportion of rights in this matter, und t lint these have not been forfeited by our refusals to send representatives to the League to discuss the terms of the mandate. Op portunity for this Government to explain and justify its position is furnished bv our present participation in the Supreme Council and the Council of Ambassadors. The parleys already opened with Japan auspiciously forecast a clearing up of the mists enx-eloping the tntus of the little Island of Ynp. The Mesopotnmian trndc rlghts problem is n subject for adjustment between the Dnlted Stntes and Grent Rrlt ain. These are the two mandate questlohs in which America is primarily interested. If answers can be found for them this summer, the League will he extricated from a qunndary which it noxv fenrs. The As sembly, the fully representative body of the association, xvill reconvene next September. Naturally, the Council is desirous of dealing in realities when the entire organization is in session. Herbert A. I.. Fisher. Rrilish reprcsenta tixe in the Council, observed the oilier day that the Assembly "may not understand why (he mandated territories are not yet enjoy ing stable civic iidministralioii." If the international difficulties involving the major League poxvers nnd the greatest power out side The League are smoothed axx-av. the formal decisions of the nssoeintlon xxill ac quire a validity heretofore lacking. Curiously enough, by a keen appreciation of conditions outside the League. Dr. Da Cunha has taken steps which may materially enhance its prestige. Moreover, in realizing the trend of Mr. Hughes" diplomacy the League, through the retiring president of its highest body, hns evinced n measure of sympathetic understanding which may serve to xvin it additional friends in this country. Afranl.lx hostile attitude could scarcely fail to augment existing prejudices. PERSHING'S HOPE GKNKRAI. FLUSHING hopes Hint nexer again will the Nation liuxe to pa- through such an experience with untrained bodies ami minds as it did in the nist xvnr. It xvon't if xvnr can be avoided : if may not even if xvnr cnme. Unquestionably unrestricted immigration had something to do xvlth the physical nnd mental unfitness of many of the conscript". ' There Is disposition tn mend this matter. Habits formed in nriny camps have un questionably improved the ph. 'Ique of young men of the present generation. The civilian .summer training camps xvill do much to keep them fit. Such organizations a the Roy Scouts are also important factors for physi cal, mental and moral betterment. There is abundant reason for believing thnt the hope of General Pershing will be justified. Governor Sprout char acterizes the nomina tion of eight xxotneb to More Room for Stride the Rcnublienn State Committee as "n significant step forward in the political progrc. of women." Which gives added Interest to the declaration of the thirteen yenr-ohl girl pupil of the Rhiine School that women of today are more pro gressive than fhelr grandmothers because their skirts are shorter. Mayor Moore xvants II distlmtly nn derstoori that he has just begun to fight. The moment Keonomy passes your doorslll he becomes n Cheese-Paring Policy. The one thing developed at the bridge hearings Is that it is impossible to please everybody . Will it be considered amis- to ask if the bloc heads are responsible for the sug gested tariff on lumber? Happily the One Rig I'nlon which the American Federation of Labor favors is the one fought for in the sixties. The Rartenders' League has become th Beverugi Dispensers' League. The new term seems to luck the kick of the old. There is reason to suspect that the kitu1 of Anglo -.Inpanc.se treaty the Rritlsh xvill favor will make little appeal to the .Inpa- ?iese The tax on lumber is perhaps designed to divert some of the gains of the building trust into Uncle Sam's coffers. Rut that provides no remedy for the building short age Those xvho nre forexer piedietiug the overthrow of Lloyd George may console themselves xvlth the fact that some of these days Old Age xvill creep In on him and do the trick. Ambassador Harvey's refusal t0 speak at the dedication nt the Washington Manor House suggests the pou.-Cbilit that the Ad ministration hns equipped bun with n silencer. Arc we right in surmising thnt the eleven rnttles In the tail of the rattlesnake killed at Waynesboro. Pn.. are to he used to entertain tin; bnln octopus raptured at Cnpe May' There is no likelihood that Uncle Sam xxill seek to drive out the bootleggers bx the method being adopted in Vancouver. It. C. There the Government is selling Scotch whisky nt Si a quart. ( Perhaps the populace has been clamor ing for increased armaments; hut it Is u safe bet Hint I he clamor has been heard by nobody bill the politicians. The populace must have holleied in its sleep Members of the Massachusetts Chirop ody Association were told In Boston last week that if women insisted on riding In stead of walking and persisted in wearing high-heeled, narrow -vamped shoes their feet xvould eventually become hoofs. We take it, therefore, that It behooves them sensibly to hoof It. We lenrn from the report of the meet ing of the Republican Stole (.Vuumlttec that the two men xvho escorted the vice presi dent' to the i-halr had plenty of sartorial dash. One of them, the story goes, wore a vivid purple cravat and the other a white carnation. Well, it wasn't much, just a sartorial dash, as it xverc. but. so far as it went, we hnxc nn doubt It was effective. We see in the papers that the vice chairman of the Republican State Commit tee at the opening session of that body xvore a black channelise gown relieved by n string of pearls and u jaunty black toque. Gra cious sevens' Flow times have changed I V have seen the day when the vice chair man wore a tiiacK ni'isminc ami a jaunty fi bVl i li ttndlstii'bcd byjj string of oalbs, AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Primer of Politics Containing Infor mation That Every Voter Ought to Know, With a Hint as to Who the Bosses Are and Why By SAKAII I). LOWItlK I WAS talking to ti foreigner not long ago who was very much confused about the difference between our State ami National Governments, and our conversation on the subject became so nnlinaleil thnt eventunlly the whole group at the table stopped their vnrlouR tcte-n-tetes and "fell to" on the fifty-seven varieties of ofliciuls that do Gov ernment. business here in Philadelphia. Of course, there arc not Hint many vnric ties, but there are enough who nre function ing to make the matter of keeplrg trnck of them no light tnsk for n nexv and conscien tious voter. .Ar a matter of fact, unless the limelight of publicity I" thrown on one or another by some misdeed or signal virtue the ordinary citizens cannot keep track of mnny of them. They arc not nil elected at once or appointed at once, so one can be nxvnre of them gradually. Like the Carpen ter In Alice: "We need not do xvlth more than four To give n hand to each." I doubt If any xvell -ripened voter feels much confused about the poxvers und func tions of the nntlnnn! and State officials, hut it Is a wise man xx ho knoxvs the. difference between the State and the county govern ments, or the State and township or the State nnd municipal. And yet for the every day affairs of life it is the loenl government of one's county or township or municipality thnt counts. TF PIIILADKLPHIA is regarded ns n L county. Its form of government w-oiild be that of n first -class county. The State of Pennsylvania hns sixty -seven counties, gov erned according to the amount of population ench county contains, dm- county of Phlln dolphin comprises more than 1 .."00,000 per sons nnd belongs to a clnss by itself. There are eight other classes lu the State. Rut the generni form of county govern ment, our own among the rest, isby a county board consisting of three County Commissioners; two of these represent the majority party In the State nnd one the minority party. The other county officers nre n Sheriff. District Attorney. Coroner. Register of Wills. Recorder of Deeds. Treas urer nnd Controller nnd the county Judges. These officers nre elected by the vote of the people nnd are pnid either bv fee for each service or by salary according to the class of the county. Knch county hns four courts of Inxv pre sided over by county .ludges. These courts are: The Court of Common Plens, for civil cases: the Court of Quarter Sessions nnd the Court of Oyer nnd Terminer, for criminal cases: the Orphans' Court, for decedents' estates. AS IT happens, this year the spotlight falls somewhat conspicuously on the county, for nt the November election xvr are to elect in this city a District Attorney. Register of Wills, three Judges of the Court of Common Pleas and one .fudge of the Orphans' Court. And in September of this year each party in the State xvlll put up various candidates for these offices, which the party members xxill x-ote upon, in order to decide xvhnt can didate xvill be the party candidate nt the November election. That Is. since the various factions of the Republican Pnrty niny not lie nble. without help from the voters at large in the party, to decide which is the most popular candi date to head their ticket in November for. let us say. District Attorney, n number of names xxill be submitted to the Republicans thnt vote at the September nominating elec tions calied the primaries. The name re ceiving the majority of votes will be the Republican Party candidate for District Attorney in the November elect ions. TF PHILADELPHIA COUNTY were like 1 Delnxvore or Montgomery Counties, I.e. iiirnl counties comprising a number of towns and villages, it would be divided into bor ongiis and townships. A borough is nn incorporated part of a township. Thus n toxvnshlp may contain one or more villages or hamlets or clusters of houses; the largest of these villages may wish to control Its own tnxes and police its own streets nnd run Its own xvnter nnd lighting xvorks. and niaintnin its own local officials xvithout interference from the loxvn ship at large or the other villages or hamlets or groups of dwellers of the township. It then becomes n corporation knoxvn ns nn in corporated borough by an net of Legislature. Toxvnships having a population of more than 1100 persons to a square mile huvc the I'oiloxving local government : Township Commission, consisting of five commissioners: Township Trensurer, As sessor, txvo Assistant Assessors nnd three Auditors. These officials are elected for from two to four years. Toxvnships having a population of less than .'100 persons to a square mile have the folioxving officials : Three Supervisors, three Auditors, one Asaex-or and one Tax Col lector, These nre elected for from txxo to six years. THK toxvnshlp is further divided into elec tion districts for purposes of Stnto and Federnl representation This year the spotlight i on the election districts, ns owing to a regrouping of the population nnd lo a giowtli of the popula tion there is to be an additional number of election districts added to the State and a consequent addition io the number of officials that will preside at the polls. In the counties outside Philadelphia and in the second nnd third class i-ks of the Stnte. besides the county officers to lie elected, there will be sonic township officers to lie noml nnted and elected. For this reason tin- icsnil of the election is very vital Io each locality., ospecinlly ns at present the bidder of ascent to political power Is generally from the Township Com mission to the County Commission, and o ... i. S3 r ....:. i i... .,f.. on to iii- oiiiu- i e u is"u in e or no- x ny Councils. Il I really important who voui County Commissioners are, although in a large city like Philadi Iphia this fact is apt to be overlooked ami much gi eater stress laid on the municipal official and the City Council. THR municipal goxernmeni is yet another form of government within government that is confusing to the looker on. Being in the county, as the county is in hB Stutc, il is under the county and under the State and yet has n government of its own. Phil adelphia, being a first -.-lass (qtv of the State. has a dinner irom tne htale giving It a form of government that differs from that of the other cities. It has a City Council and u Mayor and n large number of appointed officials. This year three of these municipal officials arc to he elected in November a City Treasurer. City Controller and Receiver of Tax"s. also judges and inspectors of ejec tion districts. These Inst will hnxc the responsibility of presiding over the elections In the next two years, when xxe eh t n Governor and a Mayor nnd legislative ami coiincilmanic rep icsentntives. so that much depends on their icllabllity and intelligence Sixteen of the Magistrates presiding over our police courts are also to he elided. The ordinary voter iuKht well look Into the police courts of his own neighborhood and see the ty f men he ban elected for that office in the past e will find food for thought! If his curiosity impels him to seek further, he might penetrate the head quarters of his political party or pay a social visit to his xvard boss. TIIKFIK are ward bosses who rule the city from llnrrisburg and others xvho rule it from Washington ami other xvho rule II from the nexvspiiper and lobm-co store around the corner, lu cities, where the rank and Hie of the citizens are not politically minded except on nn occasional election dux, the ward boss rules the city or his little piece ntMt- for he is the man xvho really noml iinieu ine cauuuini" lor me olllclnl positions ind-he is tlm mnii who se-s io jj Hint his candidate ur'Utove ,-n; iKros; MONDAY, JUKE 20, PSHAW, WE'VE - 5rr iiXM,2riaz'5vziimimmLivxjw,&,r- ..,. zz - - -. - n J9XSwJmt NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphiais on Subjects They Know Best MISS ANNE HEYGATE-HAUL On Re3toratlon of Bartram Gardens AL1TTLF, public enterprise backed by aid from the city xvould make possible the restoration of the John Bartram bouse and botanical garden nnd perpetuate a shrine of International interest, in the opin ion of Miss Anne Ileygnte-Hnll. president of the John llnrtram Association. "The city oxvns the garden." said Miss Heygale Hall, "nnd should take care of its charge. For thirty years it has been in its possession, yet in Hint time the place has been shamefully neglected. Many of the most beautiful trees in the garden, some of which arc of exceedingly rare xarleties nnd would be hard to replace, have been alloxvcd to die. "The house, built by John Bartram him self in 1731. hns fallen into a pitiable state of decay through lack of intuition Archi tects linvc been nt work for some time en gaged In research In determine tin original condition of the place, so thnt it mav nccu rutely be restored. But If the city and the public do not combine to put the house In order and help restore it to its original con dition much of tills xvork xvlll simply leave the house in a worse condition than before. "We luix-e succeeded in getting the Civi' Club, i he Colonial Domes, the Butunlcnl Society and various other horticultural so cieties Interested, nud hope lo gel mnny of the city's substantial citizens tn help. Haxc Historical Vnlue "The house and gardens have historical and sentimental value of the first importance. Thus, Washington and Franklin visited the place during their heyday, and the 'society has letters from both attesting to its value. The remains of an old cider mill hewn by John Bartram from the solid rock still stand on the grounds. "My vision would sec the banks of the rixer put in order. As it noxv is, the river at this point Is a dirty, unsightly stream. This could be cleaned nnd dredged and the old river wall Improved. I xvould like to see a line of boats run from the center of the city to the landing on the Schuylkill. Such mi improvement us tills xvhole project would be an exhibit of which the city could well be proud at the time of the Scsqui Centennial in 10-0. When you consider the internatlonni fame of the gardens greater abroad, in fact, than It is here you can sec what it would mean to the city to have this work completed by that time. "A reasonably small sum, when you con sider the importance of ijie place, would tiring about this desired object. "John Bartram rode on horseback from one part of this country to another to collect the rare plants and slips and seedlings of trees that guvc this garden such unique im portance. He carried them from place to place, braving the then unknown wilds of ninny plmes "with their attendant danger and made this place a .xleccu ror naturalists'. Royal Botanist to George III "He xxas not only the pioneer botanist of this country, bill be was well known to nil the great botanists of Furope. He was royal botanist to King George III during the reign of Hint monarch nud served for u small salary until the time of his death. "Not only did he bring rare plants and trees heic from all parts of the world, but he also look abroad specimens of American plants and insects thnt contributed much to F.uriipeans' knowledge nud earned for him a lasting regard from all parts of the world. Some of the plants In Hie famous Kew Garden in London are his gifts. "Many sketches of plants and trees made by Biirtioui nre boused in the British Mu seum, and so highly regarded are they Hint they are kept under lock and key at all times. "When Lord Howe came to tills country lu command of the British army during the Rexolutlon, King George guxe strict orders thai the Rartram properly was not to he disturbed. The botanist dlci shortly after the Rattle of the Brandy wine, His son. William Bartram. was Hie first professor of botany at the University of Pennsylvania. "John Bartram and his xvork are valued far more highly abroad than nl home. Pen. pie come here from all parts of the world to see the garden- and the house, but for the most pari go away disappointed. The house. is nwnni oy uie city and Is not open to the I'llllliC 4 I al, fiiiis. nunc or in nny cvi licrc is no cue about e an iiiti-icst und show them any H l liy foml-st Inipe (j:;it w near fu. ,1021 ALL TRIED THAT NAVY fs v -:"- turc will see the house nnd gardens restored, the house opened to the public, the original furniture restored and in every wny fitting notice and tribute be paid to this one of the shrines of the country." HUMANISMS By WILLIAM ATIIERTON DU PUY Til 10 story is still told in chuckle circles in Washington where old cronies get together of the night when Iv. W. Pettus. the -enernble Senator from Alabama, then eighty-txvo, stayed out too lntc. The day after the escapade the Senate xvas droning nlong and Mr. MrCumber wns mnk ing u speech that xvas xvell studded xvitli statistics and entirely denuded of thrills. The Senators drifted into the cloakrooms. Only Scnatcr Pettus remained. Suddenly his shoulders were seen to begin to shake with mirth, and some observer xvent over to lenrn xvhnt. in so dry n speech, could ba-c snade him laugh. lie sniq ue nau pinyeu poncr xvun inc ,ioe Cannon crowd the night before and when the hour of 12 arrived, the lime nt. xvhich Mrs, Pettus required his presence nt home, he hnd till the blue chips and could not grace fully get away. So he played till 3 o clock. When he got home he pulled off bis shoes nt trn front door, slipped into his room, undressed In the dnrk nnd sought to go to bed. Mrs Pettus, unfortunately, hnd cast anchor in the exact middle of the bed. So he bestowed himself most uncomfortably on I he edge and courted Morpheus in vain. Just nt daxvn Mrs. Pettus nwokc. The Senator pretended thnt he was sleeping. She got up on her elbow and looked at her pnrt ner for fifty years in the increasing light. Instantly she detected his discomfort. "Mr. Pettus," she said, "you xvould rest at greater ense if you xvould take off your hnt." It xvns nt memory of this that the pa triarch laughed. Mrs. Hnvilnnd H. Lund, head of the Forxvard-lo-tlie-Land League and student of rurnl reconstruction for the Department of tho Interior, says that Americans are too busy to be grnclniis They haven't time to stop to observe the amenities. Many of them feel that they can't even take time for friend ships. Two or three hours of an evening for visiting cannot be spnred. They are friendly, sociable people nt heart, but the speed mildness interferes. l-ifty xears ago. says Commissioner Thomas F. Robeitson. of the Patent Office, an experienced examiner of patents re signed because he believed that nil the patents hnd been taken out and that he would soon he left without a calling. He wanted to acquire a new profession before it xvas too late. In the decade that followed n score or such inveiuinns ns the telephone and the electric light were made. So many patents nre being tnkcu out now Rial the Commissioner has to sign more thnn 100 of them every day. He is n dignified gentleman, this Com missioner of Patents, xvlth n grny goatee nnd signs busily with n big fountain pen while he talks to you. John D. Rockefeller used lo leave his homo In Fifty -fourth street, near Fifth avenue, and walk across town Into what Is known as the San Juan district, bordering on the Hudson, and occupied largely bv Negroes He liked to wander around unrecognised In this humble section. One day he came upon a group of small boys, some white ami some Negro, down on the pavement shooting crnps. He stopped to remonstrate with them to preach them a bit of n sermon on Hie v'ices of gambling. He ended by making a pro posal that, if they xvould give up Hielr gniue, he would bestow upon each of them a dime. "Huh." said one of them derislvelx "we are shootin" for four bits n throw."' Compressed Wheat I'rom ihr s. lentlfli xiiir.irmi All odd suggestion comes from Kiiglaud as to conserving wheat, 1 1 is proposed lo crush or rough. grind wheat, .then softe,, wlt, IT"1 I" hard MlPIt II --lit! .1.. rrusliin- nrocet'N would lit It im Hour m,,,.,,. fncluvi!, EXPERIMENT! I What Do You Know? QUIZ J. What is a burnous? . 2. What la meant by a trimmer tn polities and who xvas the first person to bear that nameT 8. What Is a lanyard? 4. TV-nat Is a kepi? 6. "What color-Is lake? . Whnt position does Lord Curaon hold In the British Cablnet7 7. Where Is tho ctry of Urgn? 5. What wns tho eventual fate of the German submarine Deutschland, which xlslted the United States during the war In 191G? 0. Who xvas Ktelka Grster? 10. What is n supine position? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1 The Battle of Waterloo xxas fought on June IS. I81C. 2 Samuel Gompers Is president of the American Federation of Labor. 3. In the metric system a hectare Is a supr. flclal measure, 100 ares, equal to 3.471 acres. 4. Ashlar is hexvn stone : masonry con structed of this ; similar masonry as s faclntr to a rubble or brick wall. C. Phoenician or Punic, n Semitic tongU akin to Hebrew and Arabic, xvss spoken in ancient Carthage. 6 In Franca vehicular traftlo on ro.xds keeps to tlse right, while railway traffic keeps to the left. The latter Is the case be cause England, a pioneer In rallxxMy construction nnd an Influence by ex ample upon tho general development of railways In Europe, observes the rule of tho left. 7. "Rn bloc" means In a lump, xvholeaale. 8. Billingsgate Is abuse, violent Invectixe, so called from the scolding of the fish women In tho Billingsgate Market, London. D. Grnt Britain contains more inhabitants than any other Island in the worts. The population In 1911 was 40,831,398. .tava. Is the second most populous Is- tnrtrt -iH.1, 1C All A9K In 1 A 1 10, The curule chairs wero ornamental can'P stools of Ix-ory placed by the Romans In a chariot for the chief magistrate when he xvent to attend the council As dictators, consuls, praetors, censors nnd the chief aedlles occupied such a chair they were termed curule marl- trates or curules. Today's Anniversaries 167 Sir John Dalrymplo. the Knglph Ambassador to France, who foiled the plots of the Pretender, born in Edinburgh. iil there May 0. 1747. , , 17011 Theobald Wolfe Tone. Irish patriot and revolutionist, born in Dublin. ComintttM suicide tn prison. November 10. 17uH. IMlV Emamiel Joseph Sieyes. one of th chief political thinkers of the period ef lie Frcncji Iterolutlon, died In Paris. Rorn Ms 3. 174fi. 1R50 -The first Hnndel Festival " opened in London in commemoration o. U' centenary of the composer's dentil. 1R07 City of Mexico surrendered to t Junrlsts after n siege of sixty-nine. days. 17.'l Shah of Persia was Invested with the Order of the Onrter nt Windsor C nstie. 1800 Madagascar was formally declared a colony of France. 1020 Two persons killed nnd many in jured in n race riot In Chicago Today's Birthdays Lord Hurdingc. former Viceroy of lnilin now Rritlsh Ambassador to France, bo"' sixty-three years ago. , Prince Juan, third son of the King and Queen of Spain, born in Madrid eight yea" Mrs. Helen M. Shcpnrd 'formerly Mis' Helen Gould), noted for her deeds of philan thropy, born in New York City fifty-three years ago. Charles F. Murphv. head of the Tammany Ilnll organlr.ntion. born in New lork ( m sixty-three years ago. Francis E. Warren. I'nited .Slates r-cn-ntor from Wyoming, born nt Hinsdale. Mass., seventy-seven years ago. Hugh Duffy, manager of the Rostoy American League Rnseball flub, born at River Point. R, I., fifty-two years ago. A Narrow Range S'rnni Hie t.os Anueles TlniM. . The motion -nlcture neonle are at In'!' wits' ends for scenarios with new plM Don "t they know that there nre but thinJ -l eve ,io (iniin ,01111 ntiiiiictioi'i ,,..- , . jj llinan experience and set the limit jr i rnnintlsl and story nnd novel xvrttrr? .-', b Ing by whnt we have seen op the screen. " a do7.cn have been used, The Real Embarrassment l-'rom .Im UuMxIlle Courlur-Juurimi. The CrtiuiiUuu xvho suys the Ami'ih'"". .1? embarrassed by (belr wenlh should WW ft ituii mc nviKiiijurs i;i ', a i...fciifiTil!l in.im.. ft.. ..... Amarlean huseaw J7fl ( Htvas 14 fTl s" ii it. and father,; i,xi'fvy -A. r & ga'...y.,, WL1W (ViMir..