?i ..JT a -,tt A tu -T - JEuening public $e&ar . 'f J PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY i crnua h. k. cuiitib, pkiidint l Joan C, Martin, Vic President and Treaeuren ,,iV Charles A. Tyler, Secretary! Char'es It, Ludln. ' ten, Philip 8. Collins, John B. William, John J. . feurteon, Oeorge F. uoldimltti, David E. smner, 'jJVtw'' . . fcAVin K. BMIT.RT Editor -T " JQtiU C. MAnTlN'.... General Duelness Manager '' , Published dally at Public Lmin Building- Independence Square. Philadelphia. ' Atuktuj Cin..,, rretftnlon Butldlnc K.M Via IrtJ t atlann tV .... . Al " " ' '.. , V'.iV, - ut" VKnciXtti , ,i,,(Vl oru jiuuuins .4 K. T Afta All HaW. nMA..A Yli.tlAtn E Ctltnifin 1309 Tribune Tlultdlnv 7 . NEWS DUItCAUS: ! WAtntNOTOX Ilcnuc, N. E. ror. Pennsylvania Ae. and 14th St. NW TOIK BcallD The Sun Building Lomdon BCBiiC Trafalgar Dulldlni SUHSCniPTION TEIIMS li The Eyikino Pcrlio Lido t a is served, to sub orlbera In I'hilaaelpnie and surroundlnr towns . at the rate of twelve (12) cents per week, payable ' to the carrier. it By malt to nolnts outside of Phllednlnhle In (he United Stein. Canada, or United States pos. eeslons, poetace free, fifty (SO) cents per month. I' Six (10) riot are per year, payable In advance. rl Tn all fnrelrn -ountrlfta nn fill rfnllar m. mnnth Iff Notios Subscribers wishing address changed F Inust ile old as well as new address. 1)1 BELL, iooo WALMJT KEYSTOME. MAIN HOI C7Addrres all communications to Evening i'uollo LMdarr, lnArvtnitne Square, PMIaittlphla. I- Member of the Associated Press THIS ASSOCIATED FRESS U exeturivdy tn- V V H'wo to Ine use for republication of all news urarcnej credited ro It or not otheruiie credited In iMs paper, and also tht local news puctfsArd 'thtrein. -411 right) o repvbUcaHon of iptctal dkpatchea Ij, nrrein are Olio reserved. rhUxItlphle, Sitnnliy, July 16, 1MI ONE WAY OUT rlK adjustment of the labor situation at the League Island Navy Yard, made necessary by the curtailed appropriation, Is similar to that adopted by private em ployers in many instances. The plant at the yard is kept in opera tion. Some of the men are laid off for two weeks and all who remain are to be employed for only five days a week. Under this, arrancemcut the sum available for wages can bo stretched out over a longer ' period than if the men were kept at work full time. In the present state of business this- is a humano plan. It means that the amount earned by tho men will be decreased, but they are still kept at work and are getting something. It Is a." recognition of tho human obligation of the employer to his employes, a recognition that is becoming- much mors general than formerly. CLOGGED COURTS mllE congestion of court dockets in many JL cities with a multiplicity of cases for violation of prohibition laws is riven as the specific excuse for a conference between Attorney General Daugherty and Chief Justice Taft, with a view to expediting legal procedure. It is unnecessary for the cause to be thus narrowed. Legal procedure, Federal, Stato and municipal, has been notoriously slow in the United States for many years. With dry lfrws or without them, the courts have been clogged. The condition is chronic. That it is remediable, at least to some stent, has, however, been convincingly proved by reforms which have encouragingly Increased the tempo of legal procedure in England since the days of Jarndvce ts. Jarndycc. The American reputation for quick action and prompt results has been lamentably disproved in the judicial affairs. Even the suggestion of a speeding-up pro gram by Chief Justlco Taft will be accept able. One of the salient defects of the sit uation is the widespread and pedantic belief that conditions are incapable of improve ment. NO TEARS FOR THIS 'LANDMARK' CONTRARY to Philadelphia practice, tears ure unshed, taxpayers' suits un filed in connection with the rapidlv matur ing plans to tear down the South Street Bridge. Even the scrupulous guardians of tradition arc mute. The present wholly discredited structure is neither old enough t6 be venerable nor new enough to serve adequately and securely the public interests. A low bid of $."10,000 bos been received by the Department of Public Works for removing the tottering edifice, erecting new piers of the tower variety and doing some incidental dredging In the river. It is promised that the new bridge will be one of the finest spanning the Schuyl kill, Almost any sort of structure would be an improvement upon the present decrepit one, the impending demise of which elicits not a sinelc wail from the communitv in whfeb what exists is so often automatically regarded as preferable to what might be. JAPAN WILL PARTICIPATE PROM the standpoint of realities, it is difficult to describe the reply of Japan to the American Government's call for an international conference in Washington as a qualified acceptance. That Tokio is reluctant to have the prob lems of the Pacific reopened Is the inference that may he drawn from tho absence of any reference to this subject in the note just received by the State Department. The situation is such that the preferences of Japan and the courses which she may be obliged to take do not nacessarily coincide. There were only two ways of dealing with the invitation of the United States. It was possible to nccept the call or to decline it. Japan has adopted the affirmative attitude. Tho privilege will be hers of withdrawing from the sessions when topics of the Pacific arc broached. Rut the likelihood of such behavior is small. Her position, none too good as it is, would not in the least be benefited by her absence from discussions by the lending Powers of the world of sub jects intimately affecting her ambitions and prestige. The Japanese cannot be blind to such n possibility, and the acuteness of their vision may be expected to incrense rather than diminish when the sessions are in full swing. Willing or unwilling, Japan has agreed to sit at the conference table with hor sister nations. In the Island Umpire belief may exist that the Tokio Government has dis patched only a partial acceptance. The in exorablc facts nro otherwise. CONTEMPTIBLE GRAFT THE present almost unworkable Immigra tion haw and tho pedantic manner of administering it render the harbors of entry into the United States anything but ports of cheer for aliens entertaining credulous be liefs lna land of liberty. To cap the climax of disillusionment comes the talc of a peculiarly contemptible form of craft sold to have been long practiced at Kills Island. Augustus P. Sclieil, head of the law division of tho Immigration Service. 1ms been suspended on charges of extorting money from incoming foreigners and of crossly capitalizing to his own advantage their pathetic Ignorance of American cus toms, language and monetary values, The abuses are said to include the accept ance of bribes from Immigrants not legally en. titled to admission and chicanery involving ! desirable foreigners subjected to the indlg- R nlty of deportation. An instance of "bor- M rowing" ?1000 of a helpless and perplexed immigrant Is cited. The accusations, moro- over, do not fall niton a solitary ofliolnl. l ife Dozens of inspectors, interpreters and waicumcu iiuru uirruuy oven irirfl UIKI (IIS- charged. Some were arrested for preying upon aliens. The situation plainly demands the most rigorous Investigation. Tho substantiation of the most serious of these charges would constitute a shameful indictment of a service under particular obligations to uphold the standards of justice and decency. As it is, tho branch of the Department of Immigra tion in New York is exhibited as an offense to tho Nation. HALL GAS ORDINANCE POSTPONES THE INEVITABLE City Must Face the Issue of Whether It Should Make a Profit Out of the Sale of Gas TUB decision of Mayor Mooro to give the public an opportunity to be heard before he acts on the Hall ordinance increasing the price of gas to $1.10 a thousand cubic feet and giving $1 of this amount to' the U. O. I. for a year is strategically prudent. The pcoplo have to pay for the gas. They are tho first party in interest. They should be consulted so far as possible in any modi fication of the price at the present time. Thoso of them who havo given any atten tion to the subject know that the Hall ordi nance disregards the recommendations of the Gas Commission, They know that the commission recommended a modification of the lcaso in such a way as would provide for meeting the needs of tho city and for an arrangement by which thero could be adjustments in the price to meet the varying cost of manufacture. It should not take more than two months to negotiate a new lease In which provision for nil contingencies could bo mado and In which the rights of tho consumers could be protected. Tho Hall ordinance fixes the price for a yenr from the date that it be comes effective, regardless of any lcaso that may bo negotiated in the meantime. It gives to the U. G. I. $4,000,000 more than it would get under the existing arrangement. But the U. G. I. does not need that amount of relief at the present time. If It were allowed to postpone the payment of tho sums duo the city on July 1 until a new lease could be arranged it would be inconvenienced In no way. That It needs relief of some kind is well known. The prices of the raw materials that it uses, which rose during the war, aro still high. But they are declining and it is hoped that before the year is out they will be down to somewhero near the normal figure. The Hall ordinance is subject to serious criticism on two points. The first is that it gives relief to the U. G. I. in the wrong way. And the second Is that it Increases the cost of gas to the consumer. The city has made a large sum out of its gas plant, and this has been taken from the pockets of tho consumers. It amounts to $32,000,000 in the period from 1S0T to 1020. It began by taking five cents from every dollar paid by tho consumer, and it is now taking twenty-five cents. The larger amount yields a revenue of $4,000,000, as already indicated. This is 5 per cent on $SO,000,000 or 10 per cent on $40,000,000. It means that the city Is making a profit out of a public utility, and an exorbitant profit at that. No such financial arrangement can be defended. There is no justification for public owner ship of any public utility unless its services are to be given to the people at cost. The only argument for such public ownership is that it eliminates the profits made by private capital. Rut in the gas business in this city the people have had to pay Tiro profits one to the operating company, and that has been at tho rate of S per cent on tf generous capitalization, and the other is to the city itself. The Hall ordinance continues a tax m the consumers of gas for the benefit of the City Treasury ; that is, it continues a profit without any attempt to discover whether the sum levied is equitable or not. It is a mere guess and a compromise of principle. Tho hearing before the Mayor on Tuesday and Wednesday of next week will afford an opportunity for thoso who know to set forth the facts for the information of Council and for the guidance of the Mayor. They can be stated so convincingly that all fair minded persons will bo forced irresistibly to the conclusion that the only wa out for the city and for the gas company is through the course outlined by the Gas Commission.. If a committee of the Council, the Gas Commission and the City Solicitor should meet representatives of the gas company to negotiate a new lease all the issues could be considered ou their merits, the price of gas could be fixed at such a figure as would enable the company to manufacture it at a legitimate profit, and it could be decided whether it was necessary for the company to add to that prico any sum to be paid into the City Treasury for a sinking fund, but not for current expenses. This is the only scientific way to go about it. It is the course which vs. i II have to be adopted ulti mately. PROGRESS CONTINUING tests of the efficiency of aircraft pitted against battleships, in which army fighters have been engaging with tho navy, rcvcaV some suggestions of the tactics which in the future, will govern combats between forces of the air and' the forces of the sea and land. It has been contended that an airploue could be but it futile sort of weapon in a sea fight, since, if it were to get within striking distance of a battleship, it would go to certain destruction. That, apparently, is just what airmen in tho next war will bo required to do. In maneuvers of army planes directed by General Mitchell against naval targets off the Capes an advanco or "shock" squadron of planes was assigned to clear the decks of the battleship attacked. The duty of the advance planes was to drop close to tlte target and fire, the theory being that though in nn actual battle thev would be destroyed, they would last long enough to put the deck guns of the enemy out of action. In the wnko of the fast and agile "shock" planes the heavier bombers approached and dropped toward the battleship to finish it off at leisure. War isn't to be any gentler in the future than it has been In the past. That, at least, is certain. OUT OF THE AIR IN 1020 the jlcld of the anthracite mines in Pennsjlvania showed a decline of some hundreds of thousands of tons from the figures of the preceding year. Yet tlin. esti mated value of the hard coal produced In 1020 is, ncpordlng to the Department of Internal Affairs, $71,0J,n00 in excess of the valuation of the anthracite mlued iu 1010. Tlte wages of mine workers were increased slightly in S020 and the decision of the EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-.pHIL'ABELHlk, Federal board which made the award was the cause of a great outburst of grief anJ resentment among the coal producers. Yet a survey of tho official statistics jiow mado available shows that in 1010 approxi mately 57 per cent of tho cost of anthracite was turned over in wages to tho workers in tho field, whllo in 1020 tho wage outlay of the inino owners represented only about C3 per cent of the valuation of their product. In ofhcr words, tho public boro tho burden of tho wngo incrcaso ordered by the Gov ernment and a good deal more, Tho excess of $71,080,000 was not the result of any Increased cost of coal at tho source or of any practical work of tho lessees and owners of coal land or tho mlno owners or tho distributors. It is safe to view it as velvet obtained by tho simple, expedient of shoving prices upward by organized action and keeping them at a point approximating tho uttermost limits of human endurance. A VICTORY FOR MR. HUGHES THE Hughes brand of diplomacy, as firm as it Is unscnsattonal, is obviously ro sponsiblo for tho negotiations upon the vexed boundary question now progressing between Oosta Rica and Panama. Tho Isthmian Republic, which Is In a senso our ward, Indulged in a refractory mood last March. Pledges categorically as sumed In the past wcro violated. Chagrined because of its obligation to abide by the lato Chief Justice Whito's award, tho little republic proceeded to threaten Its neighbor and actually did provoke n b'rlcf war. Vir tually all Central America was arrayed against her. After a few days of hostilities tho State Department of tho United States addressed both belligerents emphatically but not un kindly and peace was restored. Since that date Panama has been pursuing tho arts of persuasion, but to Uttlo purpose Tho frontier problem resolved Itself Into tho simplo yet vital question of the will ingness of Panama to submit to an arbitral decision which she bad originnlly promised to respect. Secretary Hughes in one of his vigorous notes recommended that Costa Rica and Panama should discuss their dif ferences amicably and reach an honorable conclusion. His advlco waa excellent and It is, happily, benring fruit, Mr. Hughes' policy is not In the least darkened by the shadow of unwarrantably dictatorial methods toward weaker nations. Unllko tho majority of International diffi culties, tho Panama boundary case was conspicuously one-sided. Respect for judi cial arbitral award is a fundamental without which the present earnest efforts of the nations to dwell together in amity will come to nnught. The recalcitrancy of Panama was a manifestation in little of precisely such out breaks as tho League of Nations or any other peace prcservstivo is designed to prevent nnd discountenance. It is stimulating to note that tho Panamanians aro thinking clearly at last. ONE PRICE TO ALL THAT is a significant decision made by tho Superior Court invalidating a contract for electric light supplied to buildings owned by the Frick estate in Pittsburgh. The estate had a contract for light which contained a provision that tho rate charged was not to be changed except at five-year intervals, and that it was to be based on the cost of producing tho light. The Court holds that the electric light company is n public utility and that its rates aro subject to the approval of the Public Service Com mission, and that it cannot escape that supervision by any privnto contracts with consumers. The decision in effect is that rates of public service corporations must bo uniform to all consumers. The point at issue is so Important that it is likely that the Supreme Court will bo asked to pass upon it, but tho rule laid down by the Superior Court Is so reasonable that it is difficult tf see how the higher Court can overrule the decision. It is that "when one's rights are subject to State restrictions he cannot remove them from the power of tho State by making n contract nbout them." AN OLD AND DELICATE SUBJECT rrUIE division of the Twenty-second Ward X is one of those stock subjects which recur periodically in the political history of Philadelphia. Theoretically, the idea is commendable enough. Rut its proponents havo usually been inspired by the same mo tives which gave birth to the original gerrymander. On the whole, it is wiser to let the ward boundaries of this city alone until they can be revised upon somo scientific and ethically unimpeachable basis. It Is useless, of course, to pretend that this is not n remote Ideal. Councilman Roper, who lately supported tho notion of dividing the disproportlonally large Twenty-second Ward, appears to have realized tho difficulties and delicacies in volved. Having deserted his own program, his project Is unlikely to take on much im petus nt this time. The status quo is undoubtedly preferable, so far as tho general public is concerned, to a scheme of gerrymandering in which voters of similar political complexions arc segregated in ingeniously devised districts. ANOTHER LOST OPPORTUNITY WHEN the trials of German "war guilty" were begun in Leipzig it was supposed that the German courts and tho German people would seek every opportunity to prove tlint the criminals formally accused of un civilized practices in war were not in any way representative of the German national will or conscience. Rut the courts have been studiously lenient and forbearing. Civiliaus seem always to lean in sympathy toward the accused. Sen tences havo been light In almost every case thus far heard, though somo of the most ruthless of the submarine commanders have passed through tho Leipzig tribunal.' Admiral von Trotha, former chief of staff in the German Navy, was tho most recent conspicuous witness. The admiral has not changed. Glibly he defended tho U-boat commander who sank allied hospital ships and fired on lifeboats. "The battle does not end for a submarine boat until her home port is reached," said he. "Her commander must think of hidden enemies. He must think onlv of his own country. Ho lins ono obligation, and one only. That Is obedience to the hlgherom mand !" The world may move. A part of Germany obviously is standing still. Daniel O. Held and wife, of New York, recently divorced, are spending thousands of dollurs over the ownership of a Pekinese pup which each claims. It seems a small thing to go to luw nbout Let us hope that tho wheels of Justice will steer its bark to some happy land of Canine. Not, of course, tliat we care a whoop. It may go to the iJctnnltion bow-wows for nil of us. A new Wisconsin luw gives woman every right poss-essed liy man under the civil law, including, as Senators put It, the right to "wior trousers and chow tobacco." We expect, however, that nny man who chooses to wear skirts and tialnt his cheeks very properly will be pinched. Where is this here now sov cqunllM ? A New ork Judge has pointed out that the mother in-law, instead of menacing marital tiaiiiiiilllty, in many cases protects it. It is tlte truth, but most people will consider tho statement another mother-in-law Joke. METEORS MAKE IT HOT At Least TKat Is What an Astrono mer Says Our Own M"oteoro Sup ply Somo of the Placo Whero It Is Torrid By GEORGE NOX McOAIN ACCORDING to his irresponsible custom, the sun is cutting up canticocs again in tho matter of heat. Prof. See, tho Government astronomical authority, says that tho cause of this un usual display" of energy is because of the swarms of meteors that are falling into tho sun. It's not a new theory, though it is re freshing. Bun spots, the Gulf Stream, the con tiguity of tho -comet and other, shopworn theories aro thus relegated to tho highest shelf in the darkest corner of the astronomi cal annex for tho tlmo being. Far bo it that a layman should Inject himself Into the controversy, but the Prof. See hypothesis Is so interesting that it is worth a brief examination. Tho sun is so vast ns to size and its capacity for meteors is so great that the interest injProf. Seo's theory would havo been heightened had he dilated on tho sub ject even to a limited extent. fTlHIS little old earth of our own is some J. thing of a meteor grabber. Prof. J. N. Lockycr, tile astronomer, somo years ago estimated that not less thanv 20,000,000 luminous meteors fall upon our planet daily. , This number, however, by no means rep resents tho total number of minute meteor ites that enter our atmosphere; thoso that arc invisible to the naked eye. It has been calculated that the total num ber of meteorites, including those visible to eight, should bo increased by twenty-fold,-giving the grand total of 400,000,000. And this number, It "is estimated, falls on tho earth every twenty-four hours. Every now and then n huge aerolite, weighing tons, comes hurtling through the Ml. Al .-Hl-ri.. ,,.. ,---111 -lit, A- A ,1. or clso falls into tho sea or buries itself deeply in tho ground. Thero aro scores of authenticated cases llko these. i rpHB British etoamshlp Tropic onNAprll 6, JL 1880. when off Cape Hattcras, barely escaped being hit by a meteorite. Captain Barber, In command, said the wholo heavens seemed on firo. The crew distinguished on incandescent ball rnshlnf out of the skies directly toward tho Troplo. It plunged .into the sea a short distance away, filling the air with showers of tiny sparks. The object was as large as a balloon. Meteorites figure largely in history. In tho Smithsonian Institution in Wash ington there is a meteorite weighing 1500 pounds. It fell tn Mexico in A. D. 1500. A "sky stone" weighing more than C000 pounds is owned by the Royal Museum of Stockholm. Wiicn off the const of Newfoundland on Janunry 2, 1800, tho steamship Gieadowe had a mast shattered by a meteor which ex ploded and scattered fragments over the deck. Hundreds of other instances might be cited. Iowa for years merited the name of tho Meteor State because of- the number that fell and wcro recovered within its boundaries. A great meteor on 5Iny 10, 1870, burst nnd scattered over a good part of northern Emmctt County. The cabinet of the University of Minne sota contains a piece of it that weighs 170 pounds. IF THERE are 400,000,000 meteorites falling every day on the earth nnd their heat and light are unnoticcablo by the ordi nary individual, It is difficult to account for the increased heat of the sun from this cause. Tho number of meteors that will bo at tracted to a globe will doubtless be'according to its size. , In the ense of the sun, owing to its vast size, the moro vehement will be its attrac tion nnd the greater the number of objects that will be drawn into its extensive nt mosphere. The See theory is not, ns stated above, it must be said, distinctly new. It was ad vanced first many years ngo. One estimate advanced was that for every meteorite nttractcd to the earth at least 1,000,000 would descend into the sun. As these objects plowed their way through the sun's gases both light nnd heat would be evolved. It has been a part of this theory that the friction of the meteors which are continu ously rushing into its fiery embrace, may produce light and heat sufficient to nld In the maintenance of-tbnt body's ordinary ex penditure. IT HAS been supposed, according to tho earlier exponents of this idea, that the quantity of energy thus generated supplies all thnt is wanted to explain the continued maintenance of tho sun's light nnd heat. Prof. Richard Proctor estimated that the amount of heat that flows from the sun every minute is equivalent to the heat de veloped by the combustion of 000,000,000, 000,000,000 tons of coal. Of course, there must bo allowances made for errors of calculation. Particularly as it is now affirmed that thero Is n possible error of 100,000,000 miles in the size of the star Retclgcusc, the new giant of the stellar universe. ASTRONOMERS nil along have been puzzled to account for this continuous supply of heat and light from our great cen tral source. The two theories, the meteoric nnd the contracting, have always been the moHt popular. It Is supposed that by Its own vast at traction the sun is gradually contracting in bulk. This condensation or "squeezing together" would produce heat the same ns n falling body. Hut no such contraction has ever been detected in the sun. Jacob Reese, of this city and Pittsburgh, also advanced a theory of his own some years ngo which is almobt as difficult to understand, if one isn't a scientist, ns is tbj Einstein theory of relativity. Rut here it Is ns he formulated it: "All the energy exerted by the phenomena which we call nun light nnd sun heat pri marily comes from the potential endowment of the Initial elementary atoms," It requires considerable explanation to define what the gentleman means by the above, nnd the use of Btich terms as dy namic force nnd static force, tho physical structure of molecules, the saturation of space, nnd what not. Then, after nil this, he sums It up tints: "We thus reason that not n particle of heat comes from tho sun. Not a particle of light comes from tho sun. Nothing is thrown out from the sun. "Whot we cnll sun hent and sun light are phenomena produced by the dynamic forco which our cartli draws from the sun as the gnat potentinl storehouse." B UT whatever the cnuso or whoever is right. Prof. Sen or Mr. Rccfo. our at tention to the nrcvnlcnt hent is held not hv its persistence, but becniisc of the drought which, in the 'Eastern States, accom panied it. Wo have had the "drjest" summer, in more than ono way, since nbout 1807. That eor witnessed tio dryest weather for many a year before or since. The drought affected tho whole country. It wis accompanied by a water famine as well. , . Rut nfter all, wo of the Eastern States, nnd Indeed of the entire country, do not know what reul hot weather is ns com pared with that extreme in other lands. In Bengal tho extremc-hent has been 150 degrees. Horgu, In the Sahara, takes the prize with a record of 153. Persia hns had 125 ; ; Calcutta, 120; Cape of Good Hope, 105; Greece, 100; Arabia, 110; and 8jnln, Cuba, China und Jamaica trot along with 110. We hould be thankful it is .no warmery SATURDAY eJTOY ltf, NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia on Subjects They Know Best DR. THEODORE J. GRAYSON On Free Higher Education A TEARING down of the Chinese wnll of higher learning, so that a liberal edu cation may be desired by more nnd ac cessible to as many as want it, is sought by Dr. Thcodoro J. Grayson, director of the Wharton evening nnd cxtrn-murnl courses of the University of Pennsylvania. "Unless," says Dr. Grayson, "provision Is made for something more than to 'catch the nearest way' to success nnd the earning of n livelihood, the future is frnught with grave dangers to humanity as n whole.. "For instance," ho muses, "a flood in Colorado, one dark night in Mny, bereft n world wrapt in sleep of a little multitude of its most useful citizens. Among its numbers were n distinguished physician, an eminent lawyer or Judge, several kinds of cnpablc engineer nnd a college professor of sorts. "This led me to figure out, from motives that every father of a family will under stand, exactly how much it would cost, for instance, theso days to turn out a first class medical man. This Is easily enough done, so far as figures nre concerned, but management of tho result would be the difficulty for tho father of a family to bur mount. What an Education Costs "From Uiis result, It appears that to bring such a man tb the moment when lie may hang out a thoroughly respectable shingle of his own costs, under favorable conditions, twenty-seven years of life and some $1800 worth of university learning. In addition, there will have been other costs books, instruments, unavoidable ex tras and a bite to cat during that time. Pro vided ho may not havo indulged himself in niutrlmony, children and such like frivoli ties, the chnnccs are thnt at something .over thirty ho may bo able to relieve ills family of the major part of his support, "Much tho samo might ho said for the other distinguished men who wero taken off on thnt fateful Mav night. The thought, therefore, keeps intruding Itself that if such holocausts happened frequently the land must sooner or later come to a most painful benso of want. "In the case of medical education, for In stance, tho best education is possible only for sons nnd daughters of fairly well-to-do parents. As nil the brains of the country nro not nbsorbed by this class, it seems only reasonable that every obstacle, snvo the task Itself, should be TCinovcd fiom such an edu cation. , s When World Needs Help "As the number of self-sacritlclng -ou1b, who would go to a remote place, spend their dnjs in healing and their nights in the pur suit of science Is small, nnd the world cries out for help when it is a matter of life and death, it is easy to see where the quack, the empiric, the half-trained practitioner of strnngo prnctices takes the place of the trained physician in the land. "We mny develop sound medical schools that accept and train candidates of less pie llmlnary schooling than our great universi ties have come to require, who make first rate medical men. But such- men will not have the timo and the equipment to carry on that patient nnd unromuueratUc research out of which new science grows. Education however elaborate and prolonged, cannot make n great Inventive mind. "Tho ignorant patient who has been re licved of his pain by tho knife of the surgeon would naturally think that he hud that sur geoiwto thank. lie might nrgue that His support should go for surgeons and no fur ther. But j ou know that from the point of that Burgeon's instrument leaps as it wore from nn electrode the accumulated science of the ages. Tho Genesis of Results "This knowledge has only been gathered by hard nnd patient toll in the laboratories of biologists, physicists and chemists in the closets of mathematicians nnd the 'ob servatories of astronomers. These men must bo tjrfilned that others mav be relieved, yet tinworld is not likely to hear of them and therefore no immediate returns will be dis cernible. "There aro economic conditions that can crush the boul, jet the sufferer must learn enough letters to spell out his misery. We depend on science for our lives, but how little of our life Is just living. "There mav bo many reforms necessary f?r all our ills, but to ray mind the first should bo to make all the higher learning free. The cry is, Where is the money to F 1921 TAKING A FLIER come from? But thcrols always money to be had for necessary things. "When I conic to compare the willingness of people nt large to accept tho burdens of forced primnry education with their unwill ingness to assume tho smaller cost of free higher education, this epigram often comes to my mind witlt a new Impersonal meaning. "Should we assume ns readily ns we do that what affects immediately and obviously tho muny Is therefore tho proper care of all, but what shows Its first effects in tho very few is safely left to few or none? "I accept the princlplo of universal com pulsory educntiou ns n principle proved by experience, but I nm not blind to its dan gers. Least of nil do I think these dangers to be of the kind that clear themselves by ferment from below and need no intelligent removal from above. "Edwin Markham snjs of his 'Mon With tho Hoe' : " nowed by weleht of centuries he len Upon hie hoe and sntcs on the ground. The cmptlnosB of asee In his face. And on his back the burden of tho world.' What the Stato Can Do ,."JVI!,n,t t,nn thc fcoverclgn State do for him .' Ihe answer is, tench him ! The ques tion, tench him what' Teach him to sec his own condition Aomewhnt ns we see it. No master teacher cfluld be found tojjet that much in his head. No, but teach him n little, forco him to learn n little, just enough, let us say, to understand beforo we lenvo him tho meaning of tho next lines of the poem, to ask the tame questions: " 'w,!2ima1S nlm .d'1"1 t0 rapture and deepalr, A.YiJin,r !hiu "levee not and that noer hopes. Stolid. rtiinnwl t. h.mh.. ... .. Jho looMMicd and let down this 6rutal Jaw Unoie was the hand that slanted back t 7 this Vhosebbrejiih blew out the lleht within hla "If he understands that much, no longer s he a thing that grieves not nnd that never hopes. He has learned at Hist to grieve, but has he learned, can ho ever learn for himself, to hope or think out n way to better things? It Is not likely. More likely he will turn nn eje of supplication to those of higher learning than he can as vet even dream of, and cry to them to think him out of his life. And if we know no way to help, if wo refute to study or help others to study the way out, how think you tho last lines of the poem will fall on our careless ears somo day? As the poet sns: 'Oh masters, lords and rulers In nil iuj. Is this the handlwSr'k JXu " to Ood 11,18 "'A,'"Lr",u,', thln.u,.lKom,l,and, nds, d: nur.noh.,11 " v" ""u "OU1 &VtU!,r.o?,aU,i,,,!!hla 'h nrhl? will It be with kingdoms With those who shaped him to tho thing ho Wh'n .'it115 !!uml' '"ror shall reply i0 Qod After tho slletico of tho centuries?' " ' Today's Anniversaries 18 10 Congress resolved to give ,i col.l mednl to General Znchnry Taylor for hi Victory on tho Rio Grand... r hiH 1857 Pierre Jcnn do Rernngcr, "the na t onal song writer of France," died ii Pari, Rom there August 10. 17S0. r Sl 1801-Gold reached 28S per cent, the max imum flgtiie during the Civil War 18.7 A earlier pigeon won i' raco with n fast express train from Dover to London. . l" 1802 The President Issued n proclama tion command na nil ner.rmu i ...' .. '.'..'' J. 7i ii "'" "'" ""memorial of nfumlos l'erlldloui wronira nnd Immedicable T woes? O mistem. lords and rulers In all un,!!' How nm tho future reckon with hie man j nrn'ffl,, ,rU'V'u'n t?.t "hour world? ""'""" 8nal0 the and with In Idaho to disperse. ..rccuon 11)05 Lieutenant Peary sailed from New 1015 Panama Cnnal used for thc first tlmSU,.y Y"'?'1 Htates battleships. "rSt 1020 In County Donegal two courthouses wero burned by Sinn Fein. "'"tisca Today's Birthdays Captain Rnold Amundsen. ,ROoverer of tho South Pole, born nt Snrpbbure, No? wnv, fortv-nlne years ago. Dr. Wlllliim D. Mnckimlp iireuM-i,, . Hartford Tlieologlcal Senillmry.WSC prango River Colony, South Africa h xtv two years neo. ' NI'J- ai'SucthcteyaSS 1 ' .1 T3B SHORT CUTS Navy yard vacationists are not etreuf' for this naval holiday idea. Because of his refusal to pay tax, tit ex -Kaiser is in Dutch and on the carpet. The lesson of a nation is the lenoa of a shopkeeper: Ho cannot have contlnuW prosperity unless his customers art pros perous. Perhaps the burial three in a grsrt of soldicTS who died for us is designed til curtain-raiser for tho tragedy to be tttpi. at Arlington. ' ' At the suggestion of St. Swithin, Jupt tcr Pluvlus has taken a good grip on -If watering pot. "Rain Halts Milk Shortage." Hetd line. No comment needed from this deput ment. Mix your own. Maybe St. Swithin figures that even if Jupiter Piuvius proves him a fabricator of yarns during the month to come, people, will forget it long before July 15, 1022, rolls around. Thero are golf playerB at Van CortltnH Park, New York, who wait four hours fof a chanco to drive off on the public count. Seems to us to be more of nn exerclit B patience than a game. Thc rum-runner, presumably, its at objection" to newspaper talk about pirtn ships. It may servo to divert suspicion from what is said to be n lively trade betrrtw this country nnd thc Bahamas. Canadian Pacific Railroad train Itt now equipped with smokers for women, tht company .declaring thc equality of tht c should be recognized In traveling. It Is It mny be, but n vanity bag is a poor substitute) for n hip pocket. The President has taken a step towtrl making our drenm of pence come true, re marked thc Globe-trotting Publicist tp provingly. At nil events, the second react Conference (for thnt is what it amounts to) will be free from the nightmares of RumIU bolshcvism nnd German revolution. Becnusc the Rocky Mountain locuil, commonly called tho grasshopper, "",,I' fondness for brun mash flavored with nrieniCi El Paso, Col'., farmers have been able exterminate the swarm that threatened wir crops. Wonder If the Jopanesc beetle nit a taste similar to that of the grasshopper! What Bo You Know? QUIZ. , Where was tho largest and most famoot llbrnry of nnclent times? ., Of what State Is Corson City the capita" Who wrote the words of "Onward, l-n" tlnn Soldlers"7 4 Who was Sir John Tenniel? , 6. In what century was the attraction i gravitation theory first propouniieai f C. What was the middle name of "l"'0?!! 7. Whnt Instruments nre necessary to'" composition of n modern orchestral 8. When did tho Byzantlno Umpire come an end? . , , , 9. Whnt Is the holy land of China? 10. Who is tho present Secretary of tin " torlor? Answers to Yesterday's Qui A tabard Is the dlstlncthe garment - hern Id. n. Hlnaveless cni6 or cioss. 2. Tho Breat siege of the frlmran war ' " that of Sobastopol. -ventiiallv taken iJ the nllled armies French, HnglUn na Turkish from the Iluss ans. . . 3. The first aviators to make "on.''a, fllKht over the Atlantic were Aic and Hrown. In 1010. .,i-njlt s. An f-c!lcol Ir n. letter for '''?, J! circulation. The word Is uauallj Piled to onen letters or bulletins oi " 6. PhllHs"Hvheatley wn nn Ajnerlcsn NM poet, born In Africa. She was broui to America In 171 nnd was VrtM by John Whentley. of D"8tf,V0liJ "i'ocms on Various Subjec s, M' nnd Moral," wero published during n visit to Iondon In 1773. wnrarln 0. Mont Illnnc forms with M?;! ft heights nn Independent ridge Western Alps on the 0""d"luyrnrfl tween Franco nnd Italy. The sumim , Is In France. d y,. , 7. The tune of "For Ho's a Jolly Oh0(1 r low" Is that of sn old Jrejifh !Sl song, "Mnlbrook s'en va-t-eii uu"rj,. "MaUrook docs Off to War." nl,J tho'' soldiers nfter the hatt e nr J" War wfi plnquet. Tho composer is """""irniHf. 8. The Uind of Cockaigne Is the Jmsfinaew land of Idleness nnd luxury, .,-jlifii e, jvrmur juoikucii " " - oj Canada. ., 10, I'urreo In yelhjw .colorla wUr India ana Cfcia. J x i av . n- .V. '-" ' J 1 i.'rtKA ,t.n!.tr.