T"ft 1 -V -i ;i! , t4i I ' ft V .;,"" PUDLIC LEDGER COMPANY V , CVnUB II. K. CURTI0, JPBMisaalt hn O, Martin, Vie Frcatdant and. TraaaoraTI ! .. Trlar. saeratArri cnariM II. maiof- rnlllp B. cainna. jonn a. wiuuma. Jon j. taon. Oaorc F. Qoldamlth. David E. Omllar. Itttora. B. 8.MIL.ET Editor sTQHN C. MAnTIN....anral Bualnaaa Manarar rublnhed dally at Posuo Loon Building Tnitiuni1aii fliiat- Phtlaritlnhlft. ,; :io R7 AlilNTla Cut Prett-Vnkm nulldlnr ' Is'ltr York, .- 80 Madlion Ave. ', DsnotT 701 Ford Building- "' At. Loci ...013 0ot Democrat Dulldlnc CUIO10O J302 Tribune Ilulldlne NKW3 BUREAUS: wiam.toioM Bnuc, N. E. Cor. Pennaylvanla Ava. and 14th St. 'NlW T0K niHRAB ... ...Tho Sun Building "B-atoftKiTte.-i-TiS"r Bu,,ain Tha Btsnino Fi-bmo Lkdoei la earrsd to aub cribart in Philadelphia and aurroundinr towm at tba rata of twelve (12) centa par week, payable i tba carrier. V ' Br mall td points outalda of Philadelphia, In tba United Statea, Canada, or United Statu poa MMlona, poetaare free, fifty (80) oenta per month, M (16) dollara par year, payable In advance. To ail fortlm oountrlea on (fl) dollar a month. Mono Subacribera nlehlna; addreaa chanted Uniat artva old a wall as new addreaa. MIX, 1000 VALrtUT KKYSTOXE, MAW 1111 B7 At&rtli alt ooanmunloatlom fa Ertntnj Public Ijtdptr, Indeprndmoe Square, Philadelphia. Member of the Associated Press TBB XESOOUTBD PRESS la exelvivU) try tttltd to tht utt lor republication of all ntu-a 4ttatehti credited to U or not olkmclt) credited n thit paper, ami atro (H local netvt published thtrtln. 411 rights of nepubHoatlon of apodal dipatc hermin art aluo rrvtd. PhlUdtlpbli, Vttnf.d.y. June . 1,11 UN8ENSATI0NAL GOOD HEALTH rpllB Chinese custom of payment to pay si -X clans by patients only wheu the latter are in health exemplifies a regard (or the spirit of progress which Occidentals arc seldom inclined to imitate. The fruits of such reasoning applied at home would logi cally bo vivid publicity for the fact that no epidemic nt present grips Philadelphia and that the community is freer of typhoid fever than at any other time In Its history. As it Is, however, Dr. George E. John ston, the nsslstant diagnostician of the Bureau of Health, simply makes the modest announcement and gives the corroborating figures. Ten yenrs ago the number of typhoid cases here annually used to run up to 2000. There were only 350 last! year. For the six months ended June 1 seventy-four cases have been recorded, as a en Inst 188 for a similar space of time In 1020 and 150 in 1019. According to Western ideas, these facta arc unsen'-ationnl. since they foster not In the least nny morbid Interest nor the curi ously perverse pleasure which the public appenrs to tnke in chronicles of woe. Sensi bly viewed, lion ever, they should be thrilling. Were we as wise ti Chinn. we should be unafraid of npprec iating good fortune and of excitedly extolling the energetic clean-up mensures responsible for health security In a populous region. WHAT DOES THIS MEAN? MANY persons will think thnt Secretary Weeks said too much or too little in his Tufts College address on disarmament. Here is the significant part of his remarks: The present Administration ts most de sirous to have, disarmament as far as it Is safe to go But we must ask that we be the judges of just what this degrc Is For we have Information which we cannot divulge obtained In a reliable and com plete manner which makes us the only competent judges When we see nations preparing for war. making greater preparations In times of peace than during the war, wo must alt, up and take notice. When he says that nations are arming and that he has information which he cannot divulge he excites curiosity and interest, and when on the day that the address was made Secretary Denb) orders a large fleet of dreadnoughts to the Pacific men will begin to speculate about n possible menace on that side of the continent. There may be no relation between the two incidents', but if there is not the public would like to Vnow what Secretary Weeks means. TWEEDLEDUM ANDTWEEDLEDEE TIJE neu women voters are probablv in telligent enough to understand what the men in control of the political machinery are doing. The Republican Stnte Committee, which has voted t admit women to membership, has decided that no woman may be chairman, secretary or treasurer. This means that the Republicans intend for the present that their organization shall be directed by experienced political leaders. Thev do not desire that the management of anv enrapaign shall be directed by a woman who is an amateur in politics The Democrats, however, are letting it be known that when their State Committee meets they will admit women to full mem bership and will place no bar upon th' election of a woman to the chairmanship or to any other office. Km there is not the slightest probability that a woman will be come either chairman or secretary or treas urer of their State Committee. The difference between the action of the Republican Committee and the contemplated action of the Democratic Committee is t In difference between tweedledum and tweedle dee. The Republicans say that a woman is not eligible to the chairmanship and they will not elect her. The Democrats hay that a woman is eligible to j,hc chairmanship, but they will see to it that no woman is elected Jn operation the rules of the two committees will produce the same results But the Democrats think they run fool the unthinking by their greater hospitality to the women voters. The Republican women are not downcast Thev know that the rules of the State Cm mittee are made by the members of that committee, ami that if the women voters develop enough political skill aud interest themselves in party management it will not be long before thev can have the rules changed to suit themselves. And we are Inclined to the belief that the Republican women are reasonable enough to be willing to learn to play the game before they demand that they he allowed to direct it. COMPERS AGAIN AT BAY TIME and again in other eni-s tl, nti-noum-emetit has been mude at conventions of the American Federation of Labor that Samuel Gompers was to be displaced, over thrown, dynamited if nccessurv, out of his niche Plans of campaign were i-arefullv made bv his enemies. Assaults of terrific force weie launched and the heavens seemed to shake with the fori e of the drhe Hut when the thunders and lightnings were doni mid the dust of battle cleared. the old leader was disclosed in his oeciis tomed place - unshaken, unafraid, per fectly at case. Mr (iompers litis ways of concealing bis defense He has won repeatedly against powerful opponents without seeming to lift a hand. He may be unseated in the war now being waged at Denver bv Mr. Lewis anil his friends. Hut those who have seen him tn action before will not be surprised if he holds his place. In the past the radical elements the clothing workers, some of the building crafts and the smaller unions which, like the sea men, were new and hateful of discipline -used to lead the drives on the Federation's ivarhdrsg. The war now on 1 not being made ob- irtouftljr In jlie Interest of radicalism. Mr. Xtfrls hap a reputation for conservatism. Some, of the unions flghtlnr for hltn have not. If Gompcrs has lost influence with organ lied labor bodies generally it is chiefly be. cause the A. F, of h, has not been winning victories. There is a cry for new blood nt the top. That means more aggressive blood. If Oompers is unseated the Federation is likely to become more radical than it has been hitherto. There nro powerful unions which hold that there should have been a closer affilia tion of American workers with European organizations and a more aggressive general federation policy in relation to the railroads and the open-shop fight. A defeat for Oom pers will be in effect a victory for the unions with that point of view. IN THE SCHOOLS AT LEAST DEMOCRACY IS A REALITY In Graduation Days Children Often Appear to See Farther and Clearer Than Tholr Elders PEOPLE with tired minds and those In fected with the modern disease of cyni cism, and all the ovcr-nophlsticated folk who hare concluded that there is little good In humanity and nothing but black devilment in the accomplished order of human affairs, ought to go occasionally to the graduation ceremonials In the public schools. An escape, from Bedlam that can be: an Interlude to remember, a vivid experience In tho light of fundamental truths. Youth always Is In ways miraculous. There are times wheu It seems to hold nil true wisdom and to be nlone capable of fully understanding the things that really matter in this life. It has no fenrs, no doubts, no hatreds. What does youth know that the elders have forgotten? Something of Importance, surely. For In the printed rosters of the school classes that arc now going singing out Into the world of affairs are names reminiscent of almost every habitable land, every notional tradition and every race, and those who hear them have achieved unity of feeling, unity of aim. Among themselves in a small bright world where democracy has assumed its truest form they have accomplished something which Governments still find impossible. They move together In generous nnd friendly association. The old countries are only a few genera tions behind many of them. Yet in classes like that which wss graduated Monday eve ning from the South Philadelphia High School for Girls you can find no lingering trnce of the racial ami religious bigotries, of the "natural antipathy," of the insaue dislikes and suspicions thnt divide the larger world. The cultivation and encouragement of such things ore left to the kings nnd the plenipo tentiaries, the ambassadors and ministers of stnte of this queerly organized world men far less wisp in essentials, seemingly, thau the children of the public schools. Changes that hnve been brought about in the tone nnd color of graduation dnys show clearly that the will to progress and a habit of frank and rational criticism nnd inquiry are Inherent in the schools nnd even In the lively and curious minds of thoe who study in them. The pose and artificiality of older graduation days arc vanishing. There nre few long nnd agonized and stuttering declamations any more. Fewer nnd fewer grow the woeful imitations of Daniel Webster Brutus and Cassius have gone altogether from commencement pro grams. The schools have left Congress to be the last great unapproachable stronghold of the sounding nnd hollow metaphor. lie children of today turn curious eyes upon their contemporaries and they can discuss significant events of the hour with naturalness and tranquillity. They are doing it now in all the schools. And some sort of wisdom of the heart a qunllty that often is trampled under and buried under the doubts nnd surmises of progressive experi ence nnd the high"r education leads them to take one another for granted, to be gen erous and believing and to make among themselves the best uses of the traits and talents because of which the great nntions cannot .find peace or securitv or hope of escape from successive conflicts. There is something beautifully rational, something supremely wise, in the unwritten laws by which children live in their schools. Faith has not been educated out of them. They tnke things and people at their face value and thev can be amazingly shrewd in their instinctive assessments. Well to the front in the graduating class at the South Philadelphia High School was Marian Anderson, a young Negro girl, ob viously n heroine of sorts to her associates. At the nppointed moment Marian walked to the footlights, turned upon the nudience n smile of gentle nnd perfect friendliness and lifted her eyes nnd flung out, in a moving little song, n voice that was glorious, a voice of gold. It was not Marian's voice alone thot caused every sensitive heart in the audience to skip a beat It was the voice of a race thnt. more than any other in the world, has found in music comfort nnd consolation, n mode of intimnte expres sion, a sure relief In a wilderness of sorrows. A wistful voice it was, for all its power and beauty, and it was clear thnt Marion's asso ciates loved her for it. Irish and English. Russinn nnd Pole, French nnd German. Armeninn nnd Greek all contributed to that bright company of American schoolgirls, and they all sang to gether in a way that mnde you think of the lights and winds of April in open field". Alike they felt. Alike they talked. Even accents had been ironed out. The wrnth. the madness, the bigotries, the manufactured delusions thnt torment man kind had no place in the scheme of their relationships Going away, you instinc tively felt like lifting your lint nt the thought of them nnd of their teachers and of youth at large. And you hnd to feel ngnin that the public achools of the I'nlted States are, with nil their defects, one of the great wonders of the world. AN APPEAL TO AN UPSTART THERE is something almost ludicrous, were it not so lamentable, in the appeal of the allied Powers to King Constantine tn accept mediation to settle the complex sit uation in the Near East. Britain, France and Daly, which have dispatched the supplicating note, are tho onticallj quite competent of ending the dis turbing remnant of the World War which has prevailed in Asia Minor ami of com pelling the restored King of (ircece to pocket his florid ambitions. But the Western Powers, which were n unit ngaitist Germany, are weakened b violently conflicting aspira tions in the Levant. Brituin is unquestionably the controlling Power in Constantinople at this moment. Itnlv fixes n covetous eye on islands of the (ireek archipelago. France is sympathetic to the Kemalist Turks in Annt-ilin in so far as they are foes of the pro-(icrman Con stantine The reason whv the Near Eastern question remnlns nlarming is thnt no policy ever yet hns been formulated to which the strongest nations in Europe have been sincerely willing to subscribe. Constantine hna made the most of this disagreement, mid it is no secret that he visualizes himself us "Emperor of Constantinople." vested heir of the Byzan tine glory nnd traditions. The obstncles in his path are tho distrust of manv of his compatriots, weariness of the (ireeks'for further fighting and the strength nt the Kcmalists. exhibiting that eleventh- hour reserve powr tjhnt ever has been char acteristlc of Ttirkey n the race nt possmie military dl!atrr. th(1 flrccK monarch may EVENING PUBLIC LEDGERr agree to discuss a pence ncttlcmcnt. But then the really vital questions Involved will be still the burden of tho Western Govern ments. Three options of proccduro will remain enforcement of the Treaty of Sevres, revision of that unsatisfactory pact or negotiation of n comprehensive new agreement covering all phases of the Near Eastern problem. Tho last-named program will be difficult to work out in detail, but unless a courageous attempt to deal with its realities is made the equivocal status of the Turk In Europe or Western Asia will continue to be one of the raoet troublous Inheritances left by the nine teenth to the twentieth conturr. SUNDAY SPORTS THE pollco hnvc acted with Intelligent discretion in denllng with Sunday ball players. But if the ball players do not act with equal discretion they nre likely to moke trouble for themselves. There is little objection to nmatcur sports on Sunday conducted In an orderly mnnner nnd far enough away from the churches so that the worshipers are not disturbed by the noise. There nre some persons, it is true, who object to the use of Sunday for recreation of any kind. There nre not many of them, however. The great mnjorlty look with tolerance on golf nnd tennis. Thou sands of persons play these games every pleasant Sunday. There Is no reason for raising objections ngainst baseball which would not lie ogalust either tennis or golf. It is more wholesome for boys nnd young men to go out Into the open nnd play ball or watch a game thnn to- spend the day cooped up In a room or to hide in nlleyways and gnmble. When ball playing first was permitted In Fnirmount Park Inst year tho police reported that they found it much easier to maintain order than when no such sport was allowed. But there is a wide difference between amateur sport and commercialized sport. The sentiment of this city is undoubtedly opposed to opening the professional ball parks on Sunday, just ns it is opposed to Sunday performances In the theatres. Yet men mauaging Sunday ball games have begun to charge admission, nnd when they do not charge admission they have been passing the hat among the spectators. When the men were nrraigned before the magis trates for violution of the law against Sun day games they wero treated leniently. One magistrate said he hoped he might see tho accused before bint next Monday on a similar charge. In one instance,, however, the men were held for trial because It is thought best to get n court decision on the issues in volved. The chnnces are all ngainst the men who wish to make money out of Sunday baseball games. So long as the matter is In lltign tion. however, they may be able to have their Sunday games and get off with a nominal fine on Monday morning. In this way they may win enough to pny the expenses of a test of the issue in the courts. But they are running the risk of stirring up so much popular sentiment ngainst commercialized baseball on Sundnv that the police will find it difficult to permit the boys nnd young men who play the game for fun on the only day that they are free to continue to enjoy the sport. Yet after nil, now thnt there is nn extra hour of daylight every afternoon wheu men do not work, it might be argued that they have time enough for their sport during six dnys without encroaching on the seventh. THE BACH CHOIR'S VISIT THE appearance of the Bach Choir, of Bethlehem, in Philadelphia next season will not, as was feared, "take the edge off" the spirit of the famous spring, festivals on the batiks of the I.ehigh nor impinge upon the associations nnd traditions of those unique events. In accepting the invitation extended on behalf of the Philadelphia Orchestra by Ed ward Bok. Dr. Wolle has agreed to bring his singers to this city on November .. The Philadelphia Orchestra will also participate in the concert which is to be given in the Academy of Music on that date. The compromise between artistic and tra ditional considerations hns been thus felici tously made. There are numerous Philndel phians who scarcely realize the wondrous qualities of the Bach Choir. Accommoda tions in Bethlehem nre limited. It is fitting thnt a musical center such as this city has come to be should enjoy the contact with this exceptional art at home. Both devotees of the out-of-town festivals and persons hitherto unacquainted with their henuties will welcome this note of inspiration in the musical season. SEA MYSTERIES IN PROFUSION THE misfortunes lately nttlicting the American merchant marine have passed the stage in which they can be dismissed serenely as coincidences. Within the last few months fires of un known origin hnve endangered seeral of the finest new passenger liners of the Shipping Board Powdered emery was found in the engine and bearings of the steamship Delisle, which arrived in Boston from London last Sunday. The enrgo carrier Hewitt, which sailed several months ago from Sabine. Tex., for New England ports, is missing without a trace. Two other freighters, whose names are not disclosed, have similarly vanished. To cap the climax, tin- large five-ninsicd schooner Carol Deering was dis-covered aban doned off the North Carolina coast with all sails flying and untenanted by n single officer or member of the crew. The ullegeil discovery of a note in a bottle purporting to have beeu set afloat by the mate told a vague and brief story of capture by "nn oil -burning tanker or submarine." Piracy off the North Atlantic coast is a conception repugnant to the most florid imaginations. Even more extravagant is the ndvaneed theory thnt Bolshevist activities are at the root of the mystery. But the re jection of fnntastlc Inpotheses will not solve the riddle. That the Gm eminent is not tnking the situation lightly is shown by the fact that live departmentH In Washington hac instituted investigations. The case of the great naval collier Cyclops was cventuallv accepted as an unfntliomidilc mystery of wartime Moreover, the. tragedy was Isolated The strange chain of events involving the damage and disappearance of so many American vessels within a compara tively brief pfrlod con hardly be ascribed to mischance without a severe strain upon the sense of possibilities. The sea is capricious, there is scarcely a shore of romance which it has not washed, but its fantastic energies are seldom or never expended in wholesale fashion upon ships of a single nationality nnd almost Iniulta-' neouslv. Ofliclnl Investigation should not cease until some clue to an ominous juxtapo sition of cireumstnnces has been found We look to Congress, woman Robertson to use her influence against the npfnrimm Alice, Where Art Thou? plan of Congressman Paul B. Johnson to prohibit women in the District of Columbia from smoking cigarettes In public places. It Isn't that we want to see women smoking In public places nny more Ihon Cousin Alice does, but we see In the hill the thin end of the wedge which will eventually tenr open the bulwarks of society, if you get what we mean, and eventually throw the hooks Into the tiipes of men, If you don't mind mixed metaphors, (let busy. Cousin Allie' The men of America will auxiouslj. watch jour "inoke, r - PHILADELPHiA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT The Living Members of the City Troop Have Dedicated a Tablet In Memory of Those Who Died In the War liy . By SARAH 1). LOtyRIK ONE hears n good deal these dnys about tho dull future facing most men's clubi owing to tho unconvlvinl entertainment now prcvnlcnt there. In two or three of tho older nnd more conventional clubs of this city, for Instance, the habitues have dwindled to n mere handful In the late aft ernoons nnd In the evenings. At best the aro good lunching places where tho food is well nnd quietly served, but rnthcr expensive lunching places when one considers not only the yearly dues, but the yearly assessments foe deficits. THE clubs thnt seem likeliest to survive nro those which depend on other nsscts beyond tho mere meeting of men with men for the enjoyment of sedate meals, or con servative periodicals. Certain enthusiasms for various forms of sport hunting, fishing, polo, cricket, tennis, yachting, rackets, squash will attract new recruits nmong the younger men and keen nn organization dedicated to them perennially young nnd prosperous; certnln connoisseur shin In palntlngsor music or other arts will make a happy nucleus of a club for gen eration after generation of artists nnd mu sicians, actors and writers; even n repu tation for culinary feats can be made to form the rnlson d'etre for a little group of good eaters who keep their original minibet intact by carefully selected newcomers. And there arc business clubs and professional clubs nnd scientific clubs that can nlwoys sustain n waiting list. There nre even here and there very exclusive conversational clubs, but I thought the other afternoon thnt the club which In this (own hns survived the longest nnd hns dinwn Its members the closest and kept their memory green the longest was curioush enough a club chiefly devoted to the art of war the or ganization known ns the City Troop. rr SEEMS odd that n clubhouse, where the mantinl for killing is taught with a matter-of-fact directness and where those who join its membership must face from their initiation the possibility of sacrificing their lives In order to uphold its traditions, should have an atmosphere of complete good fel lowship and loyal comradeship not, I think, to be duplicated, nt least to the same degree, in any other clubhouse in the city. Even to a casual visitor the effect of the mementoes nnd portraits the hundreds of photographs of groups of men about camp tires ,and on guard, or at drill, or at war is nn effect of singular congeniality and of well-tried friendship. The very tones of men's voices when they speak of the "trooj;," or refer to some past episode in its long history hns n fond, eager loyalty that very few other enthusiasms have tin power to inspire. T WONDERED last Sund.iy ns I Hnt listen J ing to the brief ineinorini speeches of Judge J. Willis Martin and Colonel George Thayer nt the unveiling of the tablets to the men who hnd died in the lole war what there was about the whole ceremony that made it so touching and so reverent thnt more than nny ceremony of the wnr it seemed to epitomize the wnr's solemnity nnd its sincere sacrifice. Coming so soon after tho uncouth refractoriness of Harvey's London speech on America's reasons for going into the wnr. it made that bit of In temperate bnnter sound like n schoolboy's moody exaggeration, not worthy of nny serious refuting. As the list of names of the men who had died nnd were cnminemorntcl on the tnblets was read by Colonel Thayer, stooping over the tnblets as he read them nnd pausing reminiscent!' at ench name, n vision of most of them came to us who were spectators of the troop's commemorative act. Most of them I knew only by sight, the war record of only one I knew succlncth, and of the manner of most of their deaths I was onh vaguely nware. The members of the old troop were Phinens P. Chrystie, captain ,112th Field Artillery; Norton Downs. Jr.. first lieuten ant. Air Service: Thomas Graham Hirst, first lieutenant, l.'.lst Field Artlllerv: Ed ward Ingersoll, captain. Air Service; Harrv Ingersoll. captain, ,11.1th Infantrv. and Frank F. Battles, captain. .114th Infantrv. The volunteers were James Albert Bon snek. William Stokes Bonsai. Richard Stockton Bullitt, Orvlllc Samuel Kidwell, Dallas Walker Knons. Nelson Whlteman Perine. Frederick Borvodnile Prichett. Carl Daniel Scholze and Taylor Everly Woltour. THE boy whose record I knew was Tom Illrst Thomas Graham Hirst, son of Dr. Barton .Hirst nnd EMe DuPuv (5rn hnin Hirst, of 1S1.M SMuce street. Wheu he was killed he was First Lieutenant Hirst of the lT.lst Field Artillery, Batterv E. Rainbow Division. tils nriei nnd active experience well stand for that of the others might lie served with the First City Troop on the Mexican border, having been a mem ber of the troop for five years He was at home three months hefore being commis sioned second lieutenant. Reserve Corps and sent to the official training camp at Fort Mngnra May 1,1, IfllT. He was pro moted in August to a first lieutennncv in the Field" Artillery- ami sailed from Hoboken September ! for Havre. He went to the artillery training camp at Sauinur October . and from there wns transferred to Coet quidnm. Brittany, the first of the icar BUS. and assigned to his battery in the Inrt -second Division. FiKltK with (he Rainbow Division, he arrived at the front in Lorraine Februarv 12 mm i: wounded in the Argo'nue October 10 Wis. nt Cote ile Chatilloii while serving ns'llnlsoi," oiurci . llO.spitll lie W1IM nwiifiVPfl tn nn npnmi !,... and Inter transferred . i,. hospital nt icliv, but survived onlv unti November J. 1!1". The following Huh tribute of one of his constant companions sums him up : "1 served with Tommv Hirst ns his In timate companion from October 1 11)17 t, October 10. 101 .. when he , Nvoumlc! Ac were together the entire time. During the periods of training he was a conscien" tlous student, in nolo,, hl, nN , , und level-headed. He never lost his nerve and his men worshiper) him.. His fellow -officers admired nnd repected him. At M times he was a gentleman." THE slow step of the troopers in nil their glory inarchiK s.fj,Ko file with anherx presented past the tablets, the "rc,ro,.i" sounded by the buglets, the short nnd tensely rontrolled speeches f n,c two older officers the prayer for men-v and for blessing liv . , ,iii V"t in i i " """ ""'""n who sat with folded hands remembering their dead and proud of their service, and the large upper mom filled with memories of past davs and cvcilmgs l)f tron Kt1Pr. scl that afternoon ,,,, nnd mnde it high and solemn o.-cn.on In which mnro than one of thofe picsent must have dedi cated himself anew to larger nnd m re countRry.hr "" '"S f"llnw '"' ""d his Tl".r'p l" something inlghty heartening in The C'ountrj's Safe , , , , ,tnP slnr of the nine year-old Imv s.-n,,l fro, drowning In the Delaware bv n twelve vear-ohl companion. When be took orninpM and sk everv ,0i . ,1... 1 rnui ini.rxi nv,.... i.r... . v " .- " ""'i nun ne w-as nn .ni,i Hive., niter Mm He was im ions when pull, d ashore, hut the vouug gave hfTii nisi nid and pulled ,li igh. v hen n crowd of I, ,i .... .1. cons sters through. vv lien a crowd of kidi m the river bank show such coolness, courngc mill skill we hnve no nuse to worrv over the fate of the country . We'll coinn throu-'h all right. .leanette Rankin, who Some nifferenrc was once in Congress Of Opinion says there ought to be two hundred women there. Alice Robertson, in Congress now and making good, says her presence there is an nceideiit and one not necessary to repent. If Jcnnette's wish Is Justified, our bid Is for two hupdrcd Alices. X?&et m j-i t jt9RT aMaa4 tfaJfffBBIM! Jf nit?!irsy .. pf,Vi ''j'-"ewasJwHeiraTif !1 n- 1 mMv. j F:ii2?S3S3!f T HUTiniiSISii l. XX nrTT'T1.angitlallni Ja - i i'-iv.A'J t R-a33Sr -tafljrv siSin?!?! smsz NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Tanking Philadclphians on Subjects They Know Best FORMER JUDGE SULZBERGER On the Great War's Results T7K)RMER Judge Mnyer Sulzberger, who to JL day receives the felicitations of his friends nnd admirers upon reaching his seventy eighth birthday, does not believe thnt the pessimists who insist thnt the Great War will leave permanent scars upon the civil ization of our own, nnd other countries nre justified in the rather extreme views which some of them hnve recently expressed. "We must admit thnt the I'nited States is nt present in n somewbnt disturbed con dition, but it is also true that this dis turbance exists in a lesser degree than in nnv other of the Western, and by Western I mean civilized, countries. When it is con sidered that millions of men have for nearly four years been trying to kill nnd malm ench other. It is no wonder that the ideals of peace have suffered some disturbance. A Phase of Primitive Brutality "In fact. If such were not the case, war would be impossible; a consummation de voutly to be wished, but one not to be ex pected in n short time. This phase of prim itive human brutality will pnss, and that the struggles nnd achievements of thousands of cars towards the attainment of civilization cannot be totally lost. I firmly believe. "While memory Is 11 very valuable func tion of humanity, ns it is by the bye. of some other animals, the value of forgetful ncss is vcrv generally under-estimated. The passions tliat excited men in time of war tend gradually to fnde from the mind, and gradunllv oml unconsciously a mnn relapses Into bis'pre-war condition of mind. "Movements f M"''' magnitude cannot take place In a day, but nevertheless they ate certain to come. Notwithstanding the differences and tho bitter conflicts between nntions, the) have all had 11 sufficicnc) of war for n good ninny years to come, l'his, therefore, will constitute a period during which men will gradual' cultivate the 1(1 tltude of mind nnd the practical arts of peace. ... No Great Wnr Soon "I do not apprehend an) great war in the near future. In the last analysis, all great .nru ,.n. oi-oiluicd bv economic causes. It Is true that nations are apt to disguise this fact bv using tuner wonis. mho r- ..moi.. , national honor,' 'our place in the vvnild and other things of like tenor. "In this last great war, there was but one nation which risked loss without any hope or desire of compensating advantage, apd that was our own. If so tragic an affifir could have its Mimic "or burlesuue side, it lies in the fact that nil the other nations participating in the war have always held us up ns having but one Ideal, to wit, our Today's Anniversaries 1SH7 P.111I Morpby. the greatest chess ... i. u.irlrl hint known, tioru In New li.Limii. Died there. July 10. 1S84. lM'.:t Confederate advance column entered Pennsylvania. " M',il Picsidcnl Johnsons message to Congresn adverse tn presenting the Fifteenth Amendment 10 the states. jS74 ('.ingress nppiopriiitcd tnonev to purchase and restore to the family of l.ufny ette the vviilch presented him by Gcueiul Washington lsii'J Willinm L. Wilson was chosen per manent 1 hail man of the Democratic Na tional Convntion in session nt Chicago. INK! Opening of the railway between yuelici . St John and Halifax. liiOd Coronation of King Haakon anu Queen Maud of Norway, lill.V Govminr Slaton, of Georgia, com. muled the sentence of Leo Frank to life im prisonment. lli'Jtl Two shocks of eiirthqualiu felt in Los Angeles and vicinity. Today's Birthdays I'rinicsh Beatrice, eldest daughter of the King and )uecn of Spain, born in Madrid twelve years ago. Sir 11. Rider Haggard, author of "King Solomon's Mines" anil other popular winks of fiction, born in Norfolk, Eng,, sixty -five 5 Mils ago. . Sir Martin dlnrvey, n celebrated actor of the Eiulish stage, born in Essex, England, lift) -four .vents ago. Major Satitvoord Merle Smltfl, former Third As-iNtum Secretary of State nt Wash ington, bom nt Senbrigbt. N. J., thlity-two jeurs ago. Porter Emerson Brovvue, well -known novelist nnd piny vv right, born at Beverly, Mn-sV. foil) -two years ago, i92t IN PURSUIT OF PIRATES TVt mm&& PSjj- .Lilr-nt m material ndvantagc, or as they would have phrased it, 'the Yankee desire for the al mighty dollar.' "It mny be that our example will hove an educative Influence on some nt least of the European Powers, nnd to whatever extent this tuny happen it will tend to promote the peace of the wurld." What Do You Know? QUIZ 1 What Is a colleen linvvn? -'. What was the Boxer Rebellion and when did It occur? 3. What Is u protagonist? I. What does the Seventccjitli Amendment to tho United States Constitution pro vide? 3 Wlint Stnte does Senator Frellneliuysen represent? What place Is called "The Eye of the Ualtlc"? What was the "I'nrlghtcouw Hlble?" Hctween whom and when wtvs tho Wattle of Marengo fought? What was the largest city In the South ern Confederacy? What Is a brlndlsl? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. tieneral Sheildnn Is accredited with having made tho observation thnt tho onl good Indian Is n dend Indian. 2 "Ye.'' w hen used ns tho definite nrtlclo In such expressions ns "ye shop," slioull be pionouncrd "the,' ns ')" In such cakes Is n rendering of the Anglo Saxon letter "thoru," which has tho value of "th." 3. Che.veime Is the capital of Wyoming. 1. riu- Audi s Mountains nre snld to have derived their name from the ancient I'truviau word "nntl," meaning copper, whli h hns long been mined In tho great 1 angn G Siizami.- I.i-nglen. of France, Is the woman tennis champion of the world. li. The little Republic of Andorra Is situated In the Pvretu-fs Mountains between Km in o :mil Spain. 7. "Wilte inc as one who lqves his fellow men k a line spoken by Abou Ren Adhem In Ix-lgh Hunt's poem of that mime S 'I he Appliiu Way Is the most famous of the ancient lloiniin lilgliwav-8 and ran from IliundlHluin (Hiindlsl) to Rome. Umg sii-itclieH of Its pavement remain piifn.t and hIiovv that the width of tho ,, i",i,.lwn.v proper was only fifteen feet. 0. riu- siMeentli Amendpient to the United States CnnHtltutlon provides that "tho Congress "hall have power to lay and Milini t,ien on Incomes fiom whatever soune derived without apportionment imoiig the several Stales and without , , "B-ird to nny census or enumeration." 10 A liezoiiinii Is 11 now reciult Tho term s orlglnnllv npplled In dirlslon to 0u11g Holdlers sent from Spain to Italv (, w). landed lll-accoutered nnd in need of everything, and Is derlvod from the Italian "blsiigno,' need. A famous up. pllc.ttton of the word occuik In Shake speare n "King Henry IV." Part II, Act .. The passage Is as follows: t nder which King, bezonlan? Speak or die choose your leader or tnke the cnnsioucncfH Caesar or PompcyT Speak or die " ARRIVED ON SCHEDULE T HIE haves on the trees nre i. l,n,,,,Hf..l green Anil a beautiful green Is ihe grass. I He te .-plume pen strings along with the benn ,..." ,"''.'-01"11 s salnd days bring us Miss I he bird on the wing Thinks it proper to sing. While poetical pigs push a pen. And what is the reason ' 'TU simply the season For summer Is with us again. The spirit ne'er (lags while the flag's in the bree.e, .MIU I lie breeze has the coiiili.'nwi I. i. The dog's iritindiici.il to n fiun'ti- ..f .1 I'l.ut i..kl.i 1.1 1- . -.. ' ""'i ,. mil. lll-liri) 10 ucntli. I he girl wears her furs; One Infers what she wears Is her rlBlit, though ti puzzle to men. 'Ihe world uia.v laugh at her But what does it mutt. r. Since summer i with us again V G. A. Hecause In Youngs- town SOlllC fat women Common Offense III bloomci-H r(. i,,,y. M) or has bee,, petitioned He has declined on the liloiiliieis Hie 110 worse II Ing baseball tin to take action ground that th. the short skirl- J win b) some of the petl- 11 Hie Ill-litest Were ,.l. tinners. Even cMlietie Hither Hum I " " . """" "II l-oMtloi, appears tobe well lake." "'" U'8 ' J&r&LL ssiPSTT? -imw ra-ffl TCuO W '. .-i JsP-rl' mmssmi-- - H".i.t.AJ.w '"ITOll kNiw .- 31 ii'wCSt's!ev,-wv;j; SHORT CUTS Money never talks in a dividend that U passed. We hntc to brag about our nuvy plans but oh, U-117! Spite of all lumbering along. obstncles, Fordney i Rose fever victims include IHni-Around-u-Rosy nmong vicious circles. There Is no liootlegger able to east the thirst of Mother Earth this present dry spell. The reason the public isn't buying coal is because, perhaps, part of it hasn't tie price. Grover Bergdoll may be assured of a very lively reception when he gets back home. As n publicity promoter for n big army, Secretary Weeks appenrs to be a successful alarmist. The gencrnl opinion of Admiral Sims Is thnt as n technician ho is a bird; hut that he sings too much. Tips hnve been nbolished in ninny hotels in Itnly. nnd the custom is spreading. Whj should America wait? There mny be no truth In the uimor that among the improvements planned by the P. R. T. is n return of the five-cent fate. Bureau chiefs with n desire to help the. President reorganize the departments r presumably working In the quietest kind ol way. The Itnllan Immigrant who swapped picture of Michael Angelo for n banana wis not the first mnn to sacrifice art for the stomach's sake. One thing thnt helps the I' G. I. jtut now Is the memory of whnt dul) elected rep resentatives of the people long yenrs nno did with gas when they had control. So many people talk too much that those who talk too much nnd "get In wrong by getting into print nppenr to have ft just grievance against nn untrnmmeled press. What effect, if nny, will the vvillingneii of Great Brltnin to consider disarmament, as voiced by Llovd George, have on Ameri can nnval appropriations? And how come: Those who criticize Lloyd George t; cause he Is an opportunist may or may not sometimes forget that Britnnnln herself M been 1111 opportunist in the building 01 en plrc. The Young Lady Next Door Hut One, discussing promised styles for next winter, says longer skirts and higher necks will w welcomed by scrawns necks and spinuu shanks, Don't the cr)ptlc utterances of ?"' Weeks make you wonder just what the m formation, reliable and complete. Ii justifies elaborate preparation for "' We'll sny it does. The New York ship icportor ba demonstrated that while the original ",", Allghlerl mav hove hnd tints lu 1 wliry. the modern Dante Alighierl undoubtedly M rats lu her hold. ri.n 1 ..u ru.it. nr Vbw York, with P" 'Hie l.ntos lUUO, 01 iew j-.. "' .1. priate ceremonies, hns put away U' ,' e motto. "Stuy me with IJS"'' . V..' ler, it Is as you supposed. It propri lime reade causu tho flagons could not stay That the test of nircrafjt agnlnst nava -1 1 ...llil..l nffnels ollt 01 an vessels may have political effects out of proportion to the demonstration in, strictly In accord with nil precet cnt i ' opinion. like some bombs, is liable cltner hung lire or to explode premnturei). New York proposes to ban the. toy j loon because chemical tests show- that j will explode with a flush If touched M cigarette. The toy balloons, therefore, better fly at once to I'luli. where M will protect them ugoliibt the deiull) io nails. Perhaps. The disappearance of four S elrlfl well thought-out deductions of two W illiKliown to each otner, nmi i" ,r.t.rmp been captured by pirates ; and "A "TI hl 'fl nation of the Government to l"vV,VrT WJ theoiles, all go to prove thut !""' J dwells upon the waters, w t &4&J rN. A , ,Jmj..-jvV tMtmmkm: S-i