iMlA ps?wir 3nraMaxgw- '- "X" Til'AcI, rT. 7. . ' "J -'TV ? '.njwm T 9 "lv- .. ' . - v - -v R u" jmcnlng public 2Iebacr ft. PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY "tSl, crnus il k. cuirris. 1'rkiidi.nx vMfen c, Martin, vice irsia nt na -i'rensurrr t Philip B. Colling. John H.JVIIIIms, ,onn J nrson, ueorc t, uoiasmun, utvin a. omini gtors. n. SMtt.KT Editor . MAHT1N.. .Ocngral tluslnsss Mnns-tcf Published dlly at Public Lruara Ilulldlns ina,TnJnc yquare ruusii 'lt'iuii AtHntio Cut PreifVnion Building Nw Your 3D4 Mmlli-.il am.-. DSTKOIT "01 Ford Uutldlr.K Bt. Lorn 013 alole-Demotrnt Iluild'nK CntciOO 1302 Tribune Building NKWS Xlt'UEAUSi WimiKOTOX Dent ac, N. E. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. and 141S S Ifxw TorK llcatiD Tha Sun Ilulldlng London BvaiAU Trafalgar Ilulldlns SUIISCntlTtON TEH.MS Tha EtiNlNi Pcbmo LiPdEn la served to sub , Krlbers In Philadelphia and surrounding towns at the rato of twelve (IS) cents par week, nuyable to'the carrier. Br mall to polnti outside of rhlladolphla. In tha United mate. Canada, or United Stiles pos. tssslons, postage flee, fifty (50) cents per month, CU (10) dollars per year, payable In advance. To all foreign countries one ($1) dollar a month. Nones Subscribers wishing address changed mutt le old as well as new address. BILL. 3000 VA1.MJT Kl YSTONE. M AIV 1601 CTAddreas all commutilctUImn fo Uvrning 'nolle iMdqer, Independence Rnunre. Phllnrlrlrhln Member of the Associated Press TUB AS80CUTED MESS n exclusivity en titled to the use for reimbltratton of all new ilf patches credited to U or tint othmUse credited Ms paper, and also the local news published Aerein. .All rlphts of reruo'lcotloti 0 special dispatches Herein ore also reserved. rhllid.lphli, Mondtj, Autuit 8. 1921 REMEMBER REGISTRATION DAY IU FRANCE they nro considering a law to make voting compulsory, with penal ties for slackers. The French hnvo n knac!: of unmasking hypocrisies nutl least of nil are they likely to listen to"pretciiders of faith iu democracy who are characterized by laxity In practical demonstrations. On the other hand, we have been kind to delinquents, and especially registration shunners, vexed nt being deprived of their Tote at election time. The professional politicians rejoice in such sluggishness. It plays directly Into their hands. Champions of better government continue to hope for increased realization of the need of safe guarding the right to vote, but the results do not always justify such ingenuousness. The Voters League is not merely dream ing of the desired change, but is proselytiz ing In a way which will render the nrglect to register difficult to defend, even by the most determined kicker. A statement issued by the Political Ac tion Committee of the League 13 clear in Us Injunctions. It calls for prompt atten tion to the first of the three fall registration days, which this year falls on August 30. The division places will be open ns usual from 7 A. M. to 1 P. M. and from l P. M. to 10 P. 51. All previous registrations are void. In order to participate either in the im portant primaries, which will be held on September 20, or in the autumn election of State and city officials, every elector, male and female, must sign the registration book and answer n few identification questions. The performance is as easv as it is vital. Thousands of Philadelphlans arc dis franchised annunllr through failure to com ply with the simple provisions of the reg istration laws. The Voters League is thinking clearly in launching its registra tion campaign now August 30 is only three weeks nway. The vacationists, who may be obliged to rely upon the two subsequent opportunities, form a nmall minority, when the entire body of citizens is considered. Set aside August 30 for a visit to your division polling place. It will reduce the pressure to invent futile explanations later on. KENYON'S FOOLISH PROPOSAL THEUE is no emergency of sufficient gravity to justify such a breaking down of the independence of the States as is in volved in Senator Kenyon's proposition to amend the Constitution so as to permit the Federal Government to tax State and munic ipal bonds. The investment of money in such securi ties in order to e-eapp the Federal income tax Has affected the yield of that tax nnd will affect it still more. The remedy lies not In the destruction of the power of the States over their own indebtedness, but in uch a revision of the taxing laws as will not force capital to seek to escape their confiscatory provisions. Under the present arrangement a Stato .exempts Its bonds from taxation, for it knows that if it did not exempt them it would have to pay in extra interest all that it collected by the tax. If the Federal Government should be allowed to tax all bonds issued in the future the States would find It diili'" to borrow money, for no Investor would know what the return on his money might be. And even if he ilid know he would not buy the bonds until the State had made the interest high enough to include any possible Federal tax. The States would thus have to pay the tax. It may be that such a constitutional amendment ns Senator Kenyon proposes can secure the approval of Congress, but it is doubtful if the States would ever consent to it. USELESS, COSTLY SHIPS SUHVEVINO the wooden ship situation, Cholrmau Lasher refuses to compromiso with facts however unpalatable. The war venture of converting the forests of America into cargo carriers lias proved a gigantic and costly failure. The cost of maintaining tho vast fleet of timber ships in idleness last year amounted to $1,000,000. Tho vessels are unfit tor river and ihallow water coastal trade be cause of their comparatively deep draft fourteen feet. Thev nre twice as heavy as steel sl(ips of similar tonnage and hence their operation eats up fuel in a formidable, expensive fashion. Mr. Lasher asserts that, failing to sell them, the Government would be better off to sink the ships as they stand. While it is melancholy to reflect that tho wooden fleet experiment has cost the Nation $230, 000,000 for construction alone, nothing Is to be gained by paltering with realities. Had the war continued, tho wooden ships might have served some useful purpose. , During the conflict money considerations were not balanced with the zeal for victory. But things being hk they nre, the vessels, the -majority of which ure now crowding the James ltiver. are an uncolhrtable debt. It Is profitless to renil Into tliem merits which they emphatically do not possess. ALIENS AREALIENS irpHE decision of the Supreme Court of X Connecticut that the constitutional guarantees do not extend to uliens Is in ,llne with other decisions on the same ques tion. Certain aliens were accused of en gaging In propaganda intended to bring bout a change In the Government of the 1,'nlted States. They Insisted that they Vjre Immune from prosecution under the iirovlstons of the CoiiuecHi-ut fnnxtitjitlnii , y "& ' s im 4 rt i C cuarniitprlirj freedom of speech. The Court BH . ). that those guarantees nre intended to K$ UrWoteet citizens of the Cult d States nnd . A4'f '" MW ," m n, -r.k. mi,, litifll-t;i!llK .i-jj ttens wuo nre 1101113 uieir nest to upset i Jt.Uovernmnit ot the I nited Slates. MlitHT U ot(nd common sense In this point i ,,l(7tf. ThI Is our fiovcrwacut. We tQtjm ,w j arranges jraeriy ways MI by which Its processes of functioning could he changed when we wished to change them. We guaranteed to ourselves freedom of tpfech that we might say what wc would about tho Government as well as about other things. Hut we also hold one another responsible for any abuse of that freedom. The foreigners who nre coming here to nlr their revolutionary views do not seem to understand the genius of the American democracy, a democracy which carries Into effect the will of the majority, as fast as that will can be determined. HARDING'S CONTINUING LABOR FOR A NEW PEACE CONFERENCE The President's Addresses Are Intended to Halt the New Race Toward Cataclysms In Europe TX SOME of the foreign capitals obvious attempts are being made to narrow the scope of the proposed disarmament con ference at Washington. President Hard ing reveals iu eacli of his public addresses a desire and n determination to broaden It. Xot once during his stay In New Hamp shire did the President talk merely of dis armament. But he did talk repeatedly ot a hope to see the world permanently at peace. He would like, he said, to see our Nation "committed to the task of reforming tho world and teaching mankind that it is not good to make war." Mr. Harding knows, of course, that man kind does not need to be taught that lesson, tbnt peoples left to themselves do not wish to go to war. He is addressing himself with such directness as the official restraints of his office permit to the leaders of gov ernments ever where and the people who have it in their power to Inflame and stam pede peoples into mude-to-order catas trophes. In broadly implying that the Washington Conference should attack questions left un solved at Versailles and even attempt to take some of the high explosives out of the Paris plan, bo has moved forward to a new battle for the causes and ideals that have guided the United States since the first days of the Hepublic. And that is as it should be. It was not supposed that tho President would so soon throw himself into a conflict that brought the preceding Administration to an end in tragic confusion. It was prettj generally believed thnt the new Administra tion would be content to drift for a while and observe the treacherous winds of polit ical circumstance at home and abroad. Tho President himself may have had some such intention. It seemed for a time that a policy of watchful waiting would be justifiable. So we may be witnessing again the operation of unconsidered forces that arc never abated iu Washington the forces of suggestion nnd tradition that crowd the White House and often silently change the purposes nnd the temper nnd the plans of the men who, in successive generations, live in the midst of them. Tho very v nils of that place have voices that make it impossible for anv man to be passive or even patient when any great issue that may affect human destiny for good is iu the balance. There was the Gcthsemane of Lincoln's spirit, mid there many other men have had to sit alone and decide between the course of practicalness nnd expediency and ease and the course of hard and heroic nnd often thankless effort and sacrifice that the saints and pioneers of all times walk for the good of the world. And no President ever chose the easy way! Congresses anil Cabinets sometimes would prefer to do thnt. IJut in rooms and cor ridors where the proudest memories of the Nation ore concentrated, where the voice of magnificent tradition is never still, where . great souls always have given themselves unquestioning!)- to pilgrimages for tho light without n thought of the pains nnd dif ficulties of .that quest, no man will find it easy to do tho easy thing. President Harding follows naturally in the footsteps of his predecessors. He is not the first President to revise his plans and concepts because of the sense of obliga tion and opportunity that is inseparable from his office and that cau be felt nowhere else, In no other walk of life. The great past is speakiug through him and so It will speak through ull the Presidents who come after him. All the moral advantages are on his side. No one knows better than he the difficulties of the task he has undertaken. Thus far his tactics have been flawless and simple. The race toward new cntnclysms had begun in Europe, and the plain people whose lives and futures Wf.e involved could only look on in despair aud bewilderment. Suddenly the governments which rule over nil people have been given an opportunity to stop nnd look and listen again. They nre permitted to seek other wajs to desired ends ways that need not be drenched in the blood of the innocents. The Power thnt refuses to make the best of the opportunity soon to be presented in Washington will be indicted and convicted in the eyes of the whole world. The chief value of the President's invitation to the foreign governments was thnt each hud to accept or refuse. None has had the courage or the recklessness to refuse, and each must now submit to general scrutiny its reasons for desiring to go armed to the teeth. We need not teach mankind that it is not good to mnke war. Hut if we can teach man kind why wurs ure made ami let mankind know just who the war-makers are, we shall have done much for civilisation nnd we shall have gone far to get incurable paranoincs out of the seats of the might) The President has achieved one victory. The need for another and a more difficult one is great. The disarmament conference should be public. Its nims and all the subjects of debate should be kept in the open light of day. For that Mr. Harding should fight to the last ditch. "BACK IN EUROPE THE Supreme Council, which reconvenes in Paris today, has been defined us an extra-legal body deriving its sole authority from the force with which, through the various governments concerned, it is enabled to support its fiats. Nevertheless this or ganization, which with the re-entrance of the United States is truly representative of the principal Allied and Associated Powers, is grounded in realities thnt nre sometimes ubsent from the most logical manifestations of what is termed international law Without the United Suites the ability of tho League of Nations to enforce its decrees is undoubtedly seriously embar rassed. ' This is demons'rated just now iu the plight of Austrin, for which tho League some months ugo devised a remedy. The cure, however, was inapplicable chiefly because of the delay in obtaining America's consent to the proposed suspen sion of the general lien on Austria's assets. The loan, which was the major feature of the financial reconstruction plan, was con sequently held up, Austrian exchange has grown steadily worse iinil the toplienvy littlu republic has now determined to appeal di rectly to the Supreme Council. The petition will be made to a bndv that, whatever Its origin, is at lust rqu.il to treating practical questions in n prue tlcnl way Colour Harvej, who Nits iu the Council for the first time tod.n , is a plenipotentiary. Ills voting privileges are equal to those of the Premiers. This time It Is highly probable that some definite aud workable machinery for rehabilitating Aus tria will be imt In motion, for the quea- EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEkHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, tlon, though complex, Is one which it Is to the Interest of nil the Powers to settle. Itegardlng the Sllcslnn tangle, conditions nre otherwise. Tho programs of Great Britain and France nre violently conflicting on the Issue, nnd this division renders tho participation of tho United States of tho utmost Importance. Tho full report of the Interallied Com mission, which supervised the plebiscite held ninny months ago, should now bo uvallable. Further delay In determining thi boundaries of Upper Silesia and In basing these as nearly as possible upon the results of the voting will simply prolong the unrest that unquestionably menaces the fragile peace of Europe. The voice of the United States acquires a special authority from the fact that our only Interest' In Silesia Is founded upon tho desire to see the status of that rich Industrial and mining region removed from the sphere of trouble-making. It Is fantastic to imagine that all the complicated ethnological and historical fac tors of the case can be ideally adjusted The most that can be profitably sought ii a judgment guided by sincerity nnd honelty. Colonel Hnrvcy has been entrusted with high responsibilities. The alleged prayer of Colonel House, "Give us this .day our dally compromise," recommends itself as n. serviceable motto for the whole Council. In attaining such devouMy wished con summations with regard to Sllesln, it Is for tunate that the concern of the United States Is selfish only If purposes directed toward world harmony can be so classified. Tlic arbitral position which wc have attained In the Silcslan dispute Is one of the prime justifications of our return to the counncls of Europe. PENROSE DISCUSSES HOOCH SENATOR PENUOSE anil the new Pro hibition Director for Pennsylvania, ,Mr. McConiicil, have broken their Ions siwnce. The result does not thrill ns. When Mr. Penrose and the Prohibition Dlrcctdr for Pennsylvania say that "they have ecason to believe that the dry lws nre violated, " and thnt they "understand that prohibited liquor is being sold in mnny places," and that they have "heard rumors of whisky sold freely in some cities," they nsvime on air of arch-innoeence that Is tolcraHe only on the stage with an nccompanUient of light and frivolous music. Mr. McConnell is back from Washington after a conference with his pntron, nnd he announced thnt there will bo a gnxU purifi cation of the State after he has enrolled a great many now assistants. Mr. Penrose is the financier of Congress. He knows thnt prohibition enforcement money hnp not been available, nnd thnt, even though (the job of dry enforcement agents seems to offer peculiar attractions to nil sorts of peopU, It is dif ficult to find men willing to work without even the pretense of a. salary. Perhaps money will be fouaii to pay the new nsslstnnts to Mr. McComaell. Hut If the Prohibition Ditector la ns conservative and ns innocent as he pretends to be, one may safely predict not n purification of the State, but a sort of grand opening for the hoochers. We should like for the moment to direct the attention of Seuator IVnrose nnd Di rector McConnell to the text of n letter written to this newspaper n day or two ngo by nu indignant and thirsty render, who demanded governmental action to stop heartless proiltecring in t"he saloons. This eloquent correspondent ddmnuded that tho price of whisky instnutly bey brought some where near the earth nwl within reach of the plain person. The prevailing rate iu all saloons, he said, is fifjty cents n drink obviously an outrage! in Keuaington the price luis sagged to thirty-five cents, but one gets too much water in one's poison. The writer had no words with which to express his hatred of druggist-boot-loggers. Even they have overstepped tho bounds of decency, it seems. For the flavoring extract and the horse liniment and the roof paint ond the leather polish which once offered some comfort to the bereft no longer contain the customary amount of honest n'cohol. What they contain our correspondent did not know. Hut he did know thnt after drinking any one of these stuffs one does not have time to sing n song or hit a policeman. One falls un conscious to the ground. All this the writer accepted as proof of enduring heartlessncss nnd selfishness in the retail whisky dealers. Hut he doesn't kuow his people. The' bootlegging druggists and the retail dealers in underground hooch would be shocked nnd genuinely pained if they were to be thus assailed to their faces. Of course, they do not sell real whisky! Hut they kill only n few people a week. They make only an occasional patron stone blind for life. If thnt i-n't proof of honesty nnd kindliness of heart, what is? SOUTH AMERICA'S SILESIA TIIF Chileuu indignation aroused by the alleged remarks of Alfied Douglas, head of the special United States mission sent to Lima to participate iu the celebration of 100 years of Peruvian independence, will probably subside. Already the sympathy which Mr. Douglas is said to have ex pressed for Peru "in her relations with Chile" is now thought in Santiago to hnve been misconstrued nnd the American legate himself declared that he was misquoted. Hut the theme which lias been reopened will not down.' The dispute concerning the possession of the valuable nitrate provinces of Tncnn and Arica has rendered our rela tions with the two neighboring Pacific re publics excessively delicate. Peru claims tho territories by virtue of the Treaty of Aneon of 13, which stipu lated that u plebiscite should be held ten enrs later. The balloting never took place, for reasons which both Peru nnd Chilo. ex plain differently. In consequence it has been difficult for the United States to manifest friendship for either of these nations without some show of displeasure in one of them. It is not in conceivable that tin' perfecily justified at tention which Washington lins manifested toward the Peruvian ceutennry is ut the root of Chile's vexation. The cohesion of the New World has been greatly regarded by what might be described ns the Silesia of South America. The United Stntes has no deslro to take sides, but is naturally keenly Interested In any hopes of settlement. Mr. Douglas, It np pears, merely expressed a long-standing wish, and in so doing lie violated none of tho ethics of friendly diplomacy. Munlerers, it seems to Declining ns. nre not whut they Criminal Artistry used to be. Tho gentle nrt of knocking 'em off is losing some of its romantic interest and operators ln--lc the artistry that provided tho groundwork for worth -while publicity. Tho LUlsburg murder Is a case in point. lie is n mean murderer who slanders Ids wife to snvo his neck. Murderers of finer Instincts don't get that way. Criminals with an ap preciation of the nuances of effective adver tising would instinctively sense the immi nence of a blur note nnd automatically avoid it It Is a degenerate age. Crime Is hemming as prosnlc anil almost as respec table as purograph writing, and wins no inure bouquet-' The drelnintion if a prison keeper that Sdiiick nnil .faui"s "do not look like men of the inurilpritr tvpc" might cause one to wonder what tho type was Ilka If one were not convinced that no such typo exists. Hut if it did and wo had to make a guess at It we'd suggest minion with extra black caps. AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Two Instances Cited Where Woman's Intuition Playa a Poor Second to Knowledge and Experience Dy SARAH D. L0WKIE THE first board meeting I ever sat through was a woman's committee In charge of a sectarian orphanage. I was on a sub committee of thnt board, not officially a board member, but one of the junior officials of an auxiliary known ns "The Young Ladles' Aid." I was fdxtcen and full of notions how orphans should be token care of, and scorn ful of the way they were being treated by the matron nnd her underlings. My ap pearance at the board meeting was to testify what I had observed as to the way the' children Wore punished. Some of the boys were much too old for the matron to tackle unaided. Whipping was her most success ful form erf punishment, nnd she found It easier on the whole to "get" the bigger children while they were, in the bathtub. I had not seen this performance, but the tales of it hod reached inc. nnd I w-at askert to produce "hearsay" ns well as first-hand Information. Tho children had apparently been freer in their talk with me than .-.with the "lady managers." The point about the episode was that never from the first wns the matron allowed to have a part In the proceedings ns bear ing hor testimony or giving her viewpoint. It was mnny years ago I do not know If the institution still survives and no one thought In those days that a paid official tafely could be admitted to the councils of a board meeting. Any Information she had to give on the orphanage alwnys came through one of the board, generally tho same one of the board, who was cither her sworn enemy or her prejudiced friend. IT WAS not until considerably later In ' my varied career as a committee member that I was made aware that to intrust an official with the -responsibility of an organ ization and then banish him from the councils of the directorate cave him an anomalous position with his subordinates and mado his position with the board more often defensive than co-operative. It took an actual experience of seeing the thing worked to convince mc that the old-fashioned way of regarding a paid of ficial as some- one to be trented as different in trustworthiness from a volunteer official was unfair and clumsy. The organization where I sow it tried out against my vote nt first nnd finally with my relieved approval was the Public Paths Association, and the official In ques tion wns H. F. Ross, the superintendent. He was a young man' who had been. I think, n clerk or accountant In a grocery business and who had become "on the side" very nctlvc ns u follower of Henry George in the Single Tax propaganda. I have the impression thnt he was Fomo wlint radical at that period, certainly very enthusiastic In questions pertaining to labor, and that when he mine Into the employ of the Public Baths Association ns the boss of Its first bathhouse he was perhaps at ii crisis in his career. He promised to become an ndmirablc superintendent nnd a very fair and sensible employer of men. There also seemed n possibility thnt with those gifts latent, but not encouraged, he might persuade himself thnt his duty in life wns to become nn ugl tator along socialistic lines. I do not say this was actually the probability, but viewed from the outside It seemed nt least a possibility. ' It wns nt this point that tho subject of his being included in the dlrcctorntc ns a menus of giving him gicnter scope and n more personal interest In the cntcrprl-e was discussed by the Executive Committee, and because wf my ignorance It was peremptorily opposed by mo. To my nstonlshment I wns serenely over ruled, and li. F. Boss became a member of the bonrd that was emplojlng him ns super intendent. He is still n member of thnt bonrd and Is still superintendent, nnd it is probably due more to him than to nnv other factor iu the organization that It Is the most suc cessful institution of its kind in the coun try, probably, in the world. T RECEIVED a report from Mr. George X Hnrrlson, Jr., only today, giving me the data as to how the plan had matured thnt wns set going moje than twenty years ago, with kindly but indulgent skepticism on the pnrt of some of tho then authorities In pub lic enterprises ns to its ultimate success. Our theory thnt tho thing could ever be self-supporting, for instance, was scouted. It is more than self-supporting now, the money needed being today simply for more bathing centers. Kvery cent of money given to the enterprise now goes for new buildings ; the old buildings pay for themselves nnd a little more. Consequently every one who pntronizes those bathhouses makes it pos sible for some ope else to have n hntli in a new center, and every subscriber who has sent in his j early gift is increasing the possibilities for more buthers. Tho first bathhouse had about fiftv showers, nearly 200 baths hu"e been nihleil since then, nnd there nre three centers. The patrons of the.p centers paid S.'S,. 13'J.iri for baths in 1010. This year there will hnvo been half u million baths taken, nnd mnny hundreds turned nway from lack of room In tho three centers. A new center must shortly bo built, which will yield a larger percentage of profits, perhaps n fourth of a cent a bath, and thus make yet still another center eventually possible. If it wns u business, the Interest paid on the capita' Invested would not yet hnve rcoohod n money-making bnsls, but iu the course of another twenty jours nt this rnte of In cieose it should bo. able to build new routers on the surplus Income of the old ones, and ns a business philanthropy rijlit now it has prmed Its practicability up to the hilt. DURING the fearful heat of July It wns a mitigating circumstance to many a child and older boy that the city bathing pools were open and there -wns always np pnrently room enough for one more. Itnt thousands of persons, to whom bnthlng after work made all the difference between the bearnbleness of life nnd unbearableness in those trying duys, could not use the city pools, even though there had born room for them. Tin city pools are meant for recrea tion, not for cleansing; they are impossible plates for most adults. Hut the public baths of tho Baths Association provide n clean nnd private nnd comfortable lmth nt all hours of the day and Into the evening hours nt a price that Is within the means of very poor patrons, and under conditions that nre perfectly feasible for any self-respecting citizen. It Is a groat enterprise, public spirited, practical and far-reaching. It is worth in vesting money lu ; any one of the bath houses Is worth a visit that ot Fourth ond Gaskill streets, or nt 1103 Gprmantoivn avenue, or nt 718 Wood street. I do noi know where tho not one Is to be, but I fiiucv tho management Is open to suggest tions. A HARBOR DAY A FREIGHTER listing toward the Brook lyn's shore, Fresh from tho hot Levant with spicy baled ; Past Heilloc's Island, with n siren roar, A liner swings with Triins-Atlniitic mails Off in the Kill von Kull, with dropping sails, A barkcntlne dings on a towlino short; While with her topmasts lost lu screaming gales A clipper from the China roast makes port. And there are stretching tows that soon will 1 1 nil The inland waterways from Hudson's flows ; On far canals across the Mohuwk vale, With skylines burning In the suiifcet's rose, All these In vistas, to our sight are swirled it- thin u-et rnteu-nv of the western world. Thomas J, Murphy, iu the N, Y. Herald. V i I uk. . ,.- .. '&!.. W Aw NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians on Subjects They Know Best GEORGE W. COLES On Preventing Bootlegging WAR on shady liquor dealers ond boot leggers was declared today by George W. Coles, new T'nited States Attorney for tho Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Tho purpose of Mr. Coles' administration is to instill in the hearts and minds of the people n respect for Federal luw. Mr. Coles took office Monday. "All violators of the liquor laws will be prosecuted to the limit," Mr. Coles said. "Time wns when the people nil over tho country had a healthy regard for the Fed eral laws. "It is plain to sec that the enforcement of the prohibition amendment bus thrown some of this high regnrd to the winds. It must come bnck and everything wo enn do to bring it bnck will be done. There is great danger in this disregard for tho Fed eral law. It leads to disregard for all laws and It must stop. "Bootleggers, big and little, will feel the forceful arm of this office. They will bo prosecuted to the limit, and there will bo no let-up. These people must be inude to see thnt the Federal law Is supreme to their own mnliclous designs. Law Must He Enforced "No mntter whnt our personal views on the prohibition question arc. one thing re mains, and that Is that the courts have said tho nmendment Is constitutional and all right thinking citizens will help suppovt It. "Not all the bootleggers are supposedly disreputable citizens. Many men of high standing iu their communities nre engaging In this .illicit traffic on u wholesale scule and it must stop. "People must respect the law, because it Is the law. Leniency granted to offenders has. n bad effect. It makes them think that the risk is small, and when caught they will bo handled lightly. Mnke the punish ment seeie nnd the risk is Inerensed nnd mnny will be deterred from engaging In this illii It and nefarious business. "Bootleggers nre no different thnn mail robbers or bandits. If thos,- people arc prosecuted to the limit, whv not the boot loggers V They arc committing us much a crime ns nny other violator, and I rnnnot make it too strong that they will bo hniitllcil with u mailed fist. "Repoits are rampant that several former prohibition iigents nre engaging In boot logging on n largo scale. These ngonts are being Investigated and wheie the charges What Do You Know? QUIZ WVn Is the official head of the United States Department of .Tuntlco? What West Indian volcano destroyed 4o,.n0ft people? Who was WUIInm lleckford, and for WU.lt U lit' IIUl' II How did the Scotch hninn of Stuart hap-'; iirji iu u---uiiiu ti luj.u iiouse o i-.ng-land? What Is another name for tho star Polaris? Whnt Is the meanlnc of Zlon How mnnj States compose the Ameri can Union? Whnt is meant by the Judgment of Pails? Who was second In command to Colum bus on his first voyage to the New World? What American President lived In Mon tlcello? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 'I'll- l-st Trans-AMantc nlMilp record is 10S hours twelve mlnut.n. i107lm" made by the Ilrlbh dlrlulbln N.14 In .lulv. 1019. The route wn8 trim i:ast Fortune, Scotland, to Hnzelhurst Field, nr-nr New York. "-"einursl The Dnll Klrennn Is the Irish nepubll can Parliament. uu" A "coup d'etat" Is n violent or llleirnl change In KOvcrn-ient It ghouni 1m pronounced "coo-dny-tah." B"oum 1,e Tho famous declaration. "HIchard'H him. self again." . by Poll.y'nhw ' nppenrs In h's revision of Shako. penr'n "Richard m annuo. Giovanni Irenzo Bernini was a noloil lt.ilian painter, sculptor and nrchl. tec;, patronized by Pop Urban V and I n-.'s v IV of Franco mi dli . nro 1BDS.1G80 "' ,,ll, Mmoii T Heirlck is the present Ameii. can Amhnmulor to France "men- liiiiMi.u lu ttm Sinn n.t it..... U...1- 7 8. 9. 10. ..."... ... ..... ............ r .li!f, A,bards.,e " " " C0"Brt8!i or Welsh TominiiBso Tlttonl Is tho present president' America"""" SCrmt' Ho " 'v n "MltoM-J MM- .? bom In 1883. """ "' ven'c 1921 WHOA! nre substantiated they will bo prosecuted to the full extent of this ofliro. Wntch Former Dry Agents "It is bad enough toxhnve bootleggers ex ist, but when they exist with the support and backing of former prohibition agents, then the nftnir must be stopped ut all haz ards. Probably a few prison sentences for these former prohibition ugeiits will be the cure, if there Is connlvniicc, wo will find it out, nnd when wc do tho guilty' parties will be haled in without delay. "I am counting upon the support of Wil linm C. McConnell, the new Prohibition Director for this State. I feel that 1 have it and with our two departments working lu conjunction I feel wc will get good re sults. "We cannot end bootlegging In n day or a month. Gradually, however, we will guin our ends. "Offenders will be brought to justice. This Is the cardinal purpose of tho office. Bringing them in without delay follows. In this way, and in this way only, can the respect for law be upheld. "Political affiliations of offenders will avail them nothing. If they nre guilty we will do all In our power to see them off to jail just like any one else." HUMANISMS By WILLIAM ATIIERTON I)U PUY A FRIEND of Mrs. Sawyer, wife of Biig- adier Geurrnl Charles 13. Sawyer, phy sician to tho Pu-sidcut, u short time ugo asked her this question : "After n lifetime spent with your bus bnnd in his -prm-tieo of medicine you must have become very accustomed to culling him 'Doctor.' Now thnt he hns acquired his new title, do you still ,-nll him 'Doctor," or do you call him Geuoial'?" "I call hltn neither." responded Mrs. bnwycr, "I call him 'Briggy Dear.' " The work of the scientist (os ,,0t always hnve to do with cliciniriil lenrtiops and the juggling of multi-syllabic Latin names. I'oke the npple crop, fur instance, nnd the man who saved that part of it which grows in the West. It was not laboratory scleiico but llguiing 01,t how t g,.t u drop of liquid under u leaf that saved it. Dr. Elmer Darwin Ball, who is now As slstant Secretin y of Agriculture, did the job Apple- growers lu the Fast protected tlieir appe trees pretty well by spraying them w th an Insecticide. Bt out West the cod til ng moths were too thick to be exter minated iu this way. The end of the tipple where the bloom had been was its vulneiiibl, part. No mat ter how often the tires wore spiuyed the q""oh Cr"wltMl in lK'l' 1"1 HiioIIctl the To get the Insecticide hack of the leaf-like fiber ut the end of tm apple so the worm wcu 1,1 get t hen ho crawled li.-thnt w" the job. It wns a small task of u median! cal nature. The liquid must be shot Imr Jr had been.0 ' C' "l'l"U whcrc ll' b,00 So Dr. Hall rigged up a more vigorous srrnylng device and shot the liquid fVoin t !o direction fwun which the fruit got Its fight for It ajwajs pointed its blossom end thnt lie got tho poison where It did the work nStJon."8 0I'l"L' cr1' of ,m "" lo'FVnnkili'h'-VK' to I'lUIIKIIIl, ., II whole Mm full,,,,. Baptist minister, had I'aKrn J a ato" '1 hey got to talking with nu old geiiil, ,?,,,; mimed Austin F. l who lint , bee,, chosen United Hut".? a "Vhe'n of tMMPro"" "' li0U WUS b01" '" tilu '' Eight x'ars later, otter graduating from Dait.nouth. he won offered tho r ml " .reek in an American college Atht i hi had to refuse it because of ,l" f, imlh , '.' nation and take one of S!l a wee i porter on u newspaper t Conen.d. Ho of on tht.ught of Athens as ho cv rod his ass,' " mrnts on hot M.in.nrr days. n, , ,' varatlons ,, t. Mr-tlit,.., .... , ,', h have .re,, his at this t,u. of m,' Hn"! solve. lliat he would go to Cvoce and l indbflSi,nf0?Urb conc'c blt!ons SHORT CUTS The Rainbow ticket ought to bring out the colored vote. Confidence is nn nssct thnt no politician admits the lack of. Do the Black Sox now speak of'.Tudge Friend as Friend Judge? SInrrled life Isn't always one grind 'I sweet song tor the prima donnn. Rats arc fond of music, snys Dr. Green. mnn. Perhaps so. But their finest musi clan Is u piece of cheese. One comforting thing about Secretary Mellou's tax recommendations is that tbey might so easily have been so very much worse. The disarmament conference will itself ho iu the nature of nu Informal conversation preliminary to un honest-tn-goodiicss peace conference. The State treasury is tcmpornrily era barrassed. according to Treasurer Snyder. Its embarrassment isn't u marker on that of the taxpayer. , It is fair to assume thnt the Voters Lcnguo, which senses n return from Elba of the Vnre oshenrt. olbo smells a rat and will nip it in the bud. Of course. Mr. Borah hadn't the slight est idea who wns going to walk in when h opened the disarmament door. He may jet have to welcome the League he botes. The reaction of the Bibulous One to the campaign planned by Federal Prohibition Director McConnell is Unit additional risk is going to udd to the cost of bootlegger hooch. If wo nro reolly In earnest in cutting " expenditures we might begin with the arrajr nnd navy. It would nlso he u heartcnir.i gesture with which to enter the disarmament conferenco. Tho Polos nro now planning nn im movable barrier against the. irresistible force of the oncoming hungry hordes fiom Russia. This should give us a line on the answer to ii classic question. SlrThoinnsLlpton, it is said, will again challenge for the America's Cup. But the yachts will never arouse the nld-titno en thusiasm until they become callable vcs-sels nnd not merely racing machines. Two members: of the British House of Commons who have born Investigating pro hibition in Now York have arrived nt the conclusion that then is no liquor on sale in thnt city. Haven't they any friends? Conditions nt the Old Soldiers Home nt Johnson City, Trim., ns disclosed by Director Forbes, of the Wnr Risk Insurance Burruti, suggests that Sherman's assertion should be amended to read, "The oftriinath of war, etc." There arc 1201,fi."3 women farmers In the United States, We have aforetime hePil treated to pathetic stories of funnels' wives who wcic overworked. The next crop may concern farmers' husbands who ure being trodden upon. " v Now thnt citizens of Canada ond Mex ico may enter tho United States without passports, Americans may hope thnt the time Is not far distant when they will he pounltted to cross the Atlantic without sub mitting (o cross-cxauilnutioii. If, ns Samuel Gouipers avers, the Fed eration of Labor cannot Investigate the Central Trades nnd Labor Council of (renter New York, becnuse every local conn v oil Is supreme in its own community, then what Is the good of a federation? Parisian dressmakers sny thnt the oval decollete, which gives the effect of continu ally slipping oft the shoulders, is perfi'ctly safe to dunce In. 'Tis the necessity for ns suniiico argues danger: hut tljo young per son of tndn Is apparently always iwnly 'u t.ike o onniire. One feature favming the Penrose bill Is that nobodv appeal's tq have a better plan. What Dinkes one wnry of It is that It hns all the punch of a war measure, ...I.H.. .1 I... - f. .1 .....,,rtl'(l. wiiuu inu iii'1'i'Baii.v inr it remains uni"- -l(i Next to tax revision no measure befor? jii Conrrcss demands fuller discussion. Ill i . , 1 !arii .-. -j . .