' STS' ? . ' ;Tff v - fV i n-Y fv si , J - vC jii j r wf,i . w m i fr IPti'A1 Tail 8 Euentng public ledger PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY I CYnUH H. K. CU11TIH, PnMIDEM John C, Mitrtm, Vlco Prfsld.-nt nj Trurer Chrle A. Tyler, Sertry, Chsr'M I! I.udln. ton, rtilllp H. Collins. John II. William, John J. Bpuritton. Georsa V. dolditnliti, DMd E. 8mlly, .Dlrtetof. . ,TAV1P B. BMH.EY ' . .KJItOf JOHN C. MA1VT1N.... Central Huln?3 Manr rubllnhed dally at rtnuc Lrmini UutMltm . Independence Hnuiire Phllmlelpnln Atlintio Citi rrtat'Vnttm Hulldlnr New York 1(14 Mnillmm A.e. Dbtimt T01 rord null line BT. LcVcil 013 fllobr.Dfmocrnf HulMlnur CltlCiOO 1302 rrltmnr Ilulldlnc SEWS III 1(12 Al'S. WiinixaTON nciuc, . N. K. Onr. rcnnsy'vtnla Aee nl 1l"i S' Nut Tone: IloMic Tim V'n timeline London Bcnun TrnflAr lliilllln suiiscHHTiu.v Tnnns Tht Etixino I'cblio I.tixitn Ik KnH to nub erlbra In PhllmleliihU nnd surrounding: t'nvm at tha rato of ivrelva (IS) cents ttr week, pitle to tho carrltr. By mull lo rolnts outside of PlilliaVphla In the United Htatea. Canada or I'nitpl Hutu lo Ion, poitaca free nfty (. centu per month six (10) dollars per )ar, pavb'n In adeance To all forelrn countries one (tl) dollar a month ftOTloto Subscribers wlahlna; address changed must glva old aa well aa new addieM, BELL, aooo TTAlNt'T M.TOM. MUN 1601 HZTAtUJreat oil coinmunlmtwni to Ktrnliiu I'ublio Tjf&Qtr, ind'ptitdtnce Aqiiciir. Philadelphia Member of the Associated Press TJB ASHOCIATBD VltKSS ft rzehiMvely en titled to the ur for republication of all iiein altpatchta credited ta It or not otnrruite c edited in thtt paper, and alfo tht local ttetn puMfahnl therein. XII Hpnf o rrpuHfraflo?) of special dtipatches Herein aro also rrsentd rhll.Jtlpl.il, Wfdnn.l... Animl IT, 19:1 JUDGE BROWN RECANTS rpUU noteworthy thing about .ludse I Hrown's resignation from the position of front lees of the hoi so in the l'iftv-l'iftv circus is tint merely tin- fm-t of a weakened Vnrc combine. Jt h th" n.tttrc of 1 1 "interviews" issued iu cxilatin(inii nf tho new turn of nffnirs by the Judge hinit'lf nnd by Senator Vate. It is dillicnlt to bclicc that nny poli tician of skill nnd erprienei' could lime the effrontery in these times to imply that nil voters arc without the milinu-nt of common sense or a sinfjlo slimmer of critical Intelligence. Judge ISrnwn nnd Senator Varc assume all that and more They talk as they might talk to a kindergarten cla-.s in pronouncements solemn! is-tiril for the ndvice and guidauce of oters in I'liila delphia. The Judge took hi? orders. He took them from Washington. It va under pressure from Senator Penrose that he abandoned a scheme in which two faction-, were join ing to run the city for their own cxcluic benefit Now, however, the boss of the Municipal Court wants to be viewed as an idealist, as one who for seven long jears held nloof from politics anil took part in that distressing business only to hrlp townrd the electiou of Mr. Moore! He isn't a politician, this Judge II" is a gentle philosopher and a friend of humanity! Similarly drools Mr. Vnre. In tills to ins hour he puts his faith in the plain people, the plain people whose stieets were left dirty and disease-ridden in order that con tractors might b" a little richer: the plain people whose children were to be exploited by the drug peddling and gambling nnd rice wings of the I'iftj -Kiftv combination. The amazing thing is not that voteis are asked to believe stuff of this sort. It is that a good many of them, including a eon niderable number of women toters, nctuallj will believe it. WOMEN REGISTRARS ALT HO l' OH the appointment of omo 0-7iO UnniOM FltniGtPIPu I. tliic nl ..HI i not precisely shake the politioal structure to its foundations, their de-itc to sere is i an earnest of the right sort of consciousness of their recent enfranchisement. Registration day work is by no means difficult, but the hours 7 in the morn ing to 1 in the afternoon, a three hour hiatus, and then duty again from 4 until 10 at night are long, and in periods of political doldrums waiting for "customers" is a sometimes dull nnd dreary business. With brisk "trade" tesulting from a stiff local contest, or tie imminence of a presi dential election, there are compensations. The Registration Hoard has definitely ruled, that "over twenty -one" will not be ac cepted as a valid answer from electors, male or female. Although the list of epics tions asked is not tjraunically imiuisitorial, the details sought are pertinent and specific. o Not eery masculine elector, if the fact exists, admits without gulping that his resi dence is in his wife's name There will be more reluctance than oor when a woman ( propounds the query. There is, moreover, no taboo on division gossip in the rcgistin tion place. The ten-dollar-a-day wage does not repre sent tho full compensator value of the job of cheeking up oting citizens. MORE WASTE "VTEAU Iinstol, in the dnvs of the war. J- the (Jovernment built one nf its 'model villages" to house workers drawn to the shipyards No orv appears to have loohid beyond the necessitj of the hour. St, one seems to have given a thought to the safet of on enormous investment of public money The duelling') cannot be s dd at ti reason able price. And groups of buildln','-. which house -7S families are u-eleas b"c,iuv the central heating plant, another bit of s'up ping Hoard work, cannot be made to func tion economically. It is natural to suppose that the heuting plant would be repaired and that the agents of the Shipping Board would make an ef fort to obtain for the Onrernmeiit a normal rental for the living quarters in the ,iih Ings. Orders issued from the Shipping Hoard headcpiarters in this city indicate, however, that nothing of the sort is contemplated. The families ooeupvin? the apartments ue been oidered to find other ilveiims pre sumably the beating plant and the series of buildings which it senes an to bo left to fall into decay . The people who live in this model vil lage have done right in organizing to bring the whole mess to the attention of the Shipping Hoard chiefs. 1,'nder the reorgan ization there must be a few competent minds in that vast and mysterious organization. MEXICAN RECUPERATION IF Tlili present (ioveriiment of .Mexico is to be recognized it is inconceivable that Hccietary Hughes will not have some thing to say about it. This prospect contributes nn element of Inconsequentialitj to the Senate's discussion of this theme. The debate, howeer, in which Senator Ashurst. of Arizona, defended President Obregon against the attacks of Senators King, of I'tuli, and Watson, of Georgia, is illuminating The (evolutions are indices, for the fiist time in more than a decade, of the existence of a conciliatory ttltudc in tint border States toward any regime In the neighbor republic. "If there be a State that understands the Mexican situation." declared .Mr. Ashurst, "it is Arizona " Proof of the new friendli ness of this Commonwealth is at hand in the unanimous petition of its Legislature urging Congress to recognize the Obregon Government. Texas and Oklahoma have also rccom Mended such a sten. Senator As'iorvi nn,-. Heularly pointed out the security of railway twTel, asserting that recular Pullman serv. 71m la aww restored between Mexico City and SX . i the United States and that freight is being systematically nnd efficiently handled. The Administration in Washington is naturally Inclined to move slowly in tho affair on nccoiint ofMie alleged confiscatory proviftlona. of tho Mexican Constitution re garding property holdings by foreigners. Hut the signs of tho return of order, em phasized br Americans in n position to con tiast them with the former chaos, arc not to be dismissed lightly. The recuperation of Mexico seems to be n fact nt once hearten ing and substantial THIS YEAR'S $32 TAX BILL WILL BE $4 NEXT YEAR The Reduction Will Come About Be cause of Changes In the Revenue Law to Benefit the Man of Moderate Means T1IK new tax bill, which the f louse will begin to debate today and will send to the Senate on Saturday, contains provisions for icllof which will benefit n laigu part of the population. It does not do all the things agreed upon i the House leaders who confer! ed with the President last week. It does not go o far in some respects and it goes farther In others. The piowslon upon which there seems to be unanimous agreement among the lenders .if the party in power increases the tax-exempt income of men receiving less than S.'IIOO to s.'.lOO for married men nnd to 51(10 for ctcry dependent child regard less of the amount of the income. The present exemption is S'-'OOO and .'-MM) This will benefit nine-tenths if not fort-nlne fiftieths of the income taxp.-ners It will ei nipt eniireh fioui income tax about one half of those who nre now paying it Tl xrmptioii is to date fiom January 1. 1!'M. so that it will apply to the incomes lecoixul this yenr. As the tax tli.it is being p.iid now is on last year's income, tho ebnngo will not nffect nnv payments to be made before January 1. but it will reduce consldeiiibly the tax liability next year. Tor example, a man with a wife and one chihl nnd an income of SU00O will be taxable on 5100, whereas he is now taxable on !?M)0 His tax this year is ?rt'.'. Next year it will be ?4. This is the kind of tax relief that will be appreciated. Accoiding to the agreement hist week the transportation taxes were to be l educed ."() per crnt on January 1. 11)22, and to bo lepealed altogether on Jnnuarx 1, licit. The bill as agreed upon and reported re peals all transportation taxes on January 1. llf-'. This includes taxes on lailroad tickets and tickets for seats in parlor cars and berths In sleeping cars. It will reduce nil traxelmg expenses by ! per cent, including the cost of commuta tion tickets, and will thus directly benefit the hundreds of thousands of business men who live in the suburbs of the large cities and travel to and fio every da. The bill nlso takrs the tax collector's baud from the purse of the consumer of soft drinks and ice cream nt the soda-water counter and from the purse of the purchaser of medicines, perfumes and toilet prepara tions. And It will no longer be necessary for the wearer of eye glasses to pay n tax every time lie gets n new pair. The tepenl of the excess-profits tax to date from last January . agreed upon at the White House conference, was strenu ously opposed in the Republican caucus. It was announced that there were 100 Re publicans xx ho would join xwth the Demo crats in opposing it if the repeal was put in the bill. It was argued that the manufacturers have been charging this tax to their cus tomera and xvill continue to charge it until the bill is passed. As it is not expected that linal action will be taken until Derember a retroactixe repeal of the tax would leave the sums collected in anticipation of its payment still in the hands of the manu facturers. The soundness of this argument is open to question. It would be difficult to find many business men who nre making nor mal profits this year, and the man whose profits are o large that they would be taxable under the excess-profits provision of the law is n curiosity . Yet the official estimate of the return under the tax' is .f:t."0.000.000. The reasons fop postponing the repeal until next January are clearly politicnl. They are put forth chiefly by the repre sentatives from the farming districts, where the doctrine that the rich must be made to pay the cost of government to the full extent of their ability is popular. Thee amateur economists, however, were not stiong enough to prevent making the repeal of the heavy surtaxes on incomes above ?0(!,000 retroactive to January 1, ID'JI. This tax is fixed at 31! per cent, which is large enough in nil icnson It will yield considerable revenue without forcing men who hnve had to pay 7.1 per cent of their incomes to the Government to seek tax-free investment in order to protect their necessary business reseives What the bill will look like when the Senate gets through with it no one can foretell, but it is not likely that the Senate vvil! be so foolish as to forget that the Nation is xpecting some such relief us it provides for There are certain to be changes in some of its details There ought to be no i linage in its grneial p ii-pose. HIGHER FARES; FEWER RIDERS IN Till! Intel pretation whu'i Mi Mittui makes of the Julv lepnit of tin' ICupid Transit Company not a great deal is left of the arguments against five cent trolley fnics Ten million passcng' rs were lost during Julv, 11)21, ns compared with the totnl for the corresponding month last venr. Hid tlic average ir Tease m rnrningb for the ten veur peibl 1011 1020 continued last month, it is estimated by Mr Mitten that the gain with a five-cent line would have been onh Ml l."7 less thin thnt ob tained through the present chaige- The seven-rent and six-iind a-qiinrter-cent fares therefore hue been of s,im bene fit to the company thus far Short uders have been dis mraged by the rates, and a further decrease of this patmnuge is pos sible. It looks as tho.igh little save inconveni ence has been obtained either In the public or the P. It. T. as a lesult of the Public Si rvice Commission's luling. Transit nffaiiH. however, remain in such a state of comnlexity that it is always ad visnble to look behind the returns. In instancing the present depression Mr. Mit ten is obvioiislv seeking to mnke out as good n case as possible for the negotiation of a lense turning over the I'rankford ele vated to Ins oignni.ation upon the utmost favoiable terms It will be interesting to watch his ntti tude upon fans on that road when the senil-mirncle of opening it for service has been rialii'd. He is on recnid as n friend of the five-cent fare. Insistence upon n seven-cent fiat chaigc or higher for the new "L" will cither denote inconsistency or belief that that road will carry nothing but very long dlstnncn riders. In New Jersey, where virtually all tho municipalities ami most of the business Interests ha1 r had to exert nil their strength to keep ti'oln-y fares from going to ten cents, it is pretty clear that the street car cor porations arc in financial straits because the rising cost of their service has eliminated a large part of Jhclr normal patronage. The loss of patronage by the P, K. T, is so great that IU cannot be attributed wholly t, EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER to what the P. 11. T. directors call "busi ness depression." . In other words, people who have n right to look to the city and to the P. H. T for consistent and economical transit service are forced to walk. They hnve to endure the nddltlonal labor of n long or short hike to nnd from their places of em ployment nt the beginning nnd at the end of each working day. It costs no more to operate a full trolley than nn empty one or one half tilled. The spectacle of a half empty car Hitting along n street where many people walk because they hnve to is altogether Incongruous. Yet there is con tinuing tnlk of a demand for a seven-cent fare in Philadelphia! I'p to last fall the tinnsit system was operated with n view to increasing the number of car riders. The easier jou make it for ycople to ride. Mr. Mitten used to sny. the more money jou will make. The experiments "f Mr. Ford piovc the validity of that rule. Mr. Mitten's experience when lie worked tiiitinmmelcd proved it. The facts now vindicate his judgment. Latterly the P. 11. T. has swung to the older mood of the monopolists. If the present tendency continues we may sec repeated in this city the confusion thnt now exists In Jersey. Seven-cent car fares arc but n preliminary to ten-cent car fares. The loss of business which results from seven-cent fares makes ten-cent fares neces sary. THE WOMEN WANT TO KNOW THAT was n commendable curiosity mani fested by two delegates nt the conven tion of the Women's Republican Club yes terday nfternoon. Harry Ivuenzel was urging them to do their utmost to have the Chatter changed so as to make the Citv Solicitor responsible to the people by being elected by them in stead of being appointed by the Mayor. One woman intciruptcd to ask what party framed the Charter which makes the City Solicitor responsible to the Mavoi. After some prodding she got him to admit that the Republican Party in control of the Legislature passed the Charter. "Well, if the Republican Party made the Chnrter. what nre they dissatisfied about now ?" the woman wanted to know, but she did not find out. Another delegate asked whether "we aro Republicans or are we split?" Mr. Kuenzel informed her thnt they were nil Republicans. "That means you're for the Mnvor. I tnke.it," the woman said, nnd Mr. Kuenzel dodged the blow ns best he could 'Hie woman explained that she only wanted to know who her boss is. And all this happened iu a convention supposed to be controlled by the Vnre inn chine. The leader of the Women's Re publican Club has announced that the mem bers must take oulers from the City Com mittee, and that it is nlmost treason for members of the committee to consult with tho Mayor. Under the circumstances It is not surprising thnt some of the women nre beginning to wish n little light. If they are Republicans, whv arc they not supporting the Charter which the Republicans passed, and why ate they not supporting the Mayor nominated and elected by Republican votes? Is it something else than Republican vic tory that they are supposed to be interested in? Well, the way to find out is to continue to nsk questions, and to ask them of tho men who are supposed to be able to nnswer them. THE RASH BRIAND mi ;HI! Trench estimate of the significance of the Disarmament Conference is strikingly disclosed in the persounl ac ceptance of Aristide Hriaud, who is to head the delegation of his Government. The I'nitcd Stntes will be pleased to welcome so distinguished a statesmnn. Thus far there are no reports of dis content in France over the fact that the active, responsible chief of the Republic, as distinguished from the figuiehend President, has seeu fit to appoint himself to n mis sion involving a departure from his native land The French, it mav be remembered, were not particularly surprised when Presi dent Wilson decided to go to Paris. Per haps they entertain the notion over there thnt a nation can he well represented by its foremost official figure. As is well known. Anglo-Ameritan opinion sometimes inclines in the opposite direction. 'Iliis time the United States is out of the aigument, since Secretary Hughes has al ready been made head of the American Com mission, nnd Lodge ns an associate, while the President will remain a potent influence in the background Hut Rritnin hns been greatly wrought up by the mere discussion of an overseas journey bv Lloyd (ieorge. Lord Northdiffe is appalled at t thought. Now that France has taken the initiative, as the first foreign nation to name a delegate, n con tinuation of lively journalistic times in Lou don may be anticipated Will the rash Republic over the Channel be permitted to set the styles for nil the other nations? THE ERIE'S BOLD MOVE AVHHY huge part of the working organ ization on eyerv inilrnnd is engaged in the shops in linn, iifrn Hiring nnd repair ing rolling stock The labor rulings issued bv the fiincrnment and formulated lifter delibeintioii in Ciingnss and in the reient industrial confi ienn s m the interest of economic progiess nnd industrial pence apply to the shop nun as well ns to the older brotherhoods The Railway Labor Hoard i establish! d to keep peace on the rails by maiiMaming woiking lules satisfac torv to the men The l'rio Itailroad. bv the simple ex pedient of abandoning contiol of its shops and turning its pnsonncl and equipment over to a new conip'iny independent of the Hallway I.nboi Huiwd, lias made the opein tion of an important division of Its system independent of I'edernl control. How the plan will vvoik out can be Imagined after Valuing thut n ten-hour day is contemplate! for the Flip's shop wo'rkers ns well as tlu abandonment of rnaiiv of the working rules established be tween the unions and the management on other lines. Itnltimore dispatch to Orioles hand boosts jazz. Pro- Sing Jazz fcpsnr of Fiigllsh at Johns Hopkins snvs jazz is helpful In creating Interest in miisV . probably another instance of how extremes meet. Judge of Orphans' t'ouit snvs jiu. has cut forty venis from bis age; thnt lie feels that much v onager slme he learned to dnine Cynical Cuss avers average nge on average dance floor wns originally forty five. A burglar-proof safe Well. Hardly I'!rr lined with lead ami a series of lead plates two and a hnlf inches thick are being placed In position In the Philadelphia Gen eral Hospital in anticipation of the nrrival of the two grams of indium puichnsed for S15 1,000 by the city for the euro of cancer Never has costly gem received so rnre a setting. Chairman Lasker, of the Shipping Hoard, has a whale of a big job, but that Is no icnson for considering him a Jnnnli. He Ik bound to make mistakes, perhaps has made them already; but he nmy yet bring health to "a sick business gasping for life;-" The least tho public can do is to sit tight and glVu ill "4 B" PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Yankee Thrift and Yankee Shrewd nets Apparently Have to Be Treated With Some Cere mony If 8elf-Respect la to Be Retained Hy SARAH I). LOWRIE 0NTB In York Harbor I took n walk with my hostess. She Raid she had an er rnnd at her laundress' cottage, which would take but n moment, after which wc would amuse ourselves with more Interesting sights. I was not exactly amused, but I wns Interested and nstonished nt the sight I beheld nt the laundress' cottage. It was neither more nor less than my hostess and the washwoman arguing over the price of the doing-tip of n white petticoat. The dis cussion went on nnd on and entailed mental arithmetic on mv hostess' part that did her credit nnd n firm determination to hnve the extra cent come her way that did the other woman credit. I could understand (lie washwoman's haggling, but I felt chagrined at my friend's hnggllng. 'When wo had resumed our walk I expressed my chagrin. Whereat my fiiend gnve mo n quick bird -like glance of pity and impatience mingled. "We nre both Yankees," said she. "thnt woman nnd I, and we would feel we lind not done the situation justice if we hod not haggled a bit. She would think I was ilch and careless, and I would think he wns poor and careless, if we did not bargain with each other." I FELT duly rebuked and very much en lightened, nnd since then I have tried to piny up to New Fnglnnders whenever n bargain was in the wind. Today I had another eye-opener ns to their ability even in early youth to carry out o money trans action with finish and aplomb. The boys of iny fiiend, the professor's wife, nre perhaps seventeen nnd fifteen. Socinlly they nre speechless in my presence, but ns men of business they display coolness nnd strategy. 1 felt that 1 was being firmly handled by them. The subject under discussion wns nn an cient single buckboard. with an extra spring sent over the rear wheels. It had seen great services in my youth In our family, but on the deuth of its owner had been put nwnv in the recesses of the barn,. and in the course of years had been taken apart and piled, with other left-over tilings, in a disused box stall. The hnrncss that had been used for old Topsy had hung so long ungrensed that it was stiff and cracked and had been gnawed by mice, and there was an umbrella top that had been rolled up in the garret anil become bent by long sag ging between rafters. I had hnd two nibbles for the purchase of the outfit, one fiom the mnn who hauled the garbage, nnd the other from the mnn who brings the milk. Neither would quote n price nnd both seemed disgusted with the one I quoted $1.". THIS spring two former owners of notable stnblcs were disciissitij the juices they had got for their town carriages. A brougham had brought .?2T and a (ileus Falls thrcc-seatcr $20, the double harnesses from $0 to ?3. I tucked this information away in my mind with nn eye to the old buckboard, nnd when I got back to our farm I casually let it be known thnt I would sell our buckboard for $10 or n little under. The "llttlo under" wns the bait for my hook, nnd I waited with no very great ex pectation of a nibble, since both the garbage and milk man had acquired wheeled vehicles of an ancient and durable vintage elsewhere. But this morning tho nibble came! Feeling the occasion to bo n momentous one I treated it with all the solemnity I could command, although I was so nnxinus those boys should possess that dear old vehicle that It was all I could do to make them buv it nnd not give it to them. Hut they hnd obviously come, as purchasers and also as hagglers and ns they were agents, and not Hpendcrv of their own, I realized that it would be n great come down if I presented them with what they wished to bargain out of me. So we began afar off on quite another subject. They were in fact-or rather the pro fessor's wife was in fact renting the old barn from me at $1.1 for the season, sub ject to its being left clean when the boys removed their old white pony for the return to town. Tho haggling began on the subject of the barn. Thev felt that they only needed half of it and in that case what rebate was I prepared to offer? I said that they were using the whole of it. having the pony nnd the white horse ami two carts and their bicycles. They gazed at me with expressionless faces and said, "How abou the other things stond there, not theirs?" I asked them if they meant the buck board Thev nodded solemnly. "You mean by that," I said, "that al though you pny for tho barn you lmvo not the intire use of it?" That was what they meant. After a due silence they took up the matter of the buckboard They said they might not have n horse another year, so that buying seemed to them pioblematical. 'J hey might con sider ruitlng it. I moved too rapidly for them at thnt point. I said that they could hnve it for ' I meant buy it, but they thought I meant to nnt it for that. iliev leuiniked therefore that as I had tiny understood, put SIO on It as a sellltiK prlie. st) as mj 1PIltH f01. nnrt of t)lD j. p seemnl too much. I saw that I would have to bieak it gently jo them that the selling pi Ire was now M,, including harness and umbrella Jo sue my reputation with them as u fe male of some sense I fell back on th" fnct of mv using the barn as n stouige pla, e ummor luivm,, tt i,...l,..l .1.... .!. . "i'""''ii mill, llgllt cm leasing the pinpprtj, so thnt a icbnte was in order I would therefore take .? ,,y tin rental and sell the bucklmaid for Sp) or lake Si ff the buckbo.iid and sell it for Mj whichever they piefcircd. TIIFY withdmw to consult theh mother In about an hour there was the tattle of wheels on the drive and the professor's two sons and two giils and u third boy nn a sagging buckboard rounded the cuivc" They had dime for the cushions nnd the umbiella. While the mnles withdrew to the gairet in seamh of these things the two fairs dis mounted and chitted "I am glad thev got it!" I said. , "V', va"' "n' "f tllr K'''ls' "and so aie thev. They said thry pickid it up at n verv low prb e ' ' Just then the bovs appeared with all the old belongings, and tn buz, of pleasant chaf fing from the gills oiithtted the vehicle As thev drove off down the hill I ,.,,; hear thnn boasting of its possibilities as though they had owned it all their vouii" lives, ' " Win Fame for 7helr Town l"i m ib' llcjguion Kin, llonnoi Again we are proud of (i0i Hp, ,), Hiui.ry won first prie m the sack Hue and Julian Allen took first piize in the time, legged race at the Fouith of July ,,.,,. bullion. LUTE STRINGS Il JAPAN I PI!()NY nnd lotus and still waters, steeped In green : Shadow and bird flight, nnd Its song be- twten ; Golden the geisha's gown, golden tho sun. Ah! What a day to live! Sigh when it's done! Down the long garden pnth Innleins, alight Gleam with the fireflies In the moon's white; Song of n geisha falls clearly and sweet. Soft, like the plum flowcis Wlieie branches meet. 8ilver the gclshn's gown, silver well spun. Ah! What a night to live! Sigh when lt'n done I Elsie C. H. de lestctlcs, in the New York -ximei. i WHAT THE MONEY SPENT ON ONE WAR WOULD DO IF APPLIED Toll - - - PEACEFUL PURPOSES , u, It would criss-cross the continent It would irrigate and reclaim an with boulevards our arid spaces. It would re-forest all the denuded It would build ship canals from timber lands. the Gulf of Mexico to the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence. It would supply every farmer with It would build hydro-electric a tractor which will plow SO acres plants capable of supplying the na- a day. tion with power. It would give us a self-supporting It would eliminate the slums and merchant marine, without which we afford wholesome bousing for every- cannot be independent. body. Vk&'.V&&' -"TE-y a "SS- --iT fORAMceJ It would provide every seaport It would build landing Seldi and It would provide old age insur with a deep and well protected har- moving piers for a system of trans- ance, which would rob the creeping bor. continental air routes. years of their terrors. NO W MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia on Subjects They Know Best JOHN FREDERICK LEWIS On the "Three-Mile Limit" THOSi: ambitious booth ggers who arc seeking legal nid nnd cniiifoit In.n "tluec-mllc, limit" or even n "twelve-mile limit" from which thev may with lawful safety defy the laws of the United States lie building thcli hopes on a foundation of sand. This Is the opinion of John Fied etVk Lewis, who is piobablv the pic-cml-nent nuthority of the. country in mntters of maritime law. "The question Is n complicntid otic In some respects," said Mr Lewis, "but tin laws regarding it nie clear and specific. Self-preservutlon Is nn absolute rlu'ht of the sovereign Government of the United Stntes, nnd. nssumin; that the defendants are guilty ns chaiged with riim-runiilng from vessels anchored off the Ameilcan Const, there is no question as to the iurls dlctlon and povvtr of the United States to stop It. "The three-mile limit lias nothing to do with the question. Thnt limit was fixed bv the general consent of the older writers of international law as the utmost range of a cannon (speaking, of eouise, of the tunge of the cannon of that day). It was oilg inally described as tluee mnrine leagues, and tho purpose of the limitation was that bel ligerentR should not tight or i ome within that limit because their guns might shoot to the shore, nnd on the other hand, they might be within range of guns fiom shore to sea. "The limit fixed was not by international agreement, but wns meiely set up by gen ei.il i onsent of the older willers us il ic.l sonnhle extent of jurisdiction. "There was nlwavs liitisilictlop over livers and bays, and hence the lurisdiction of the United States over the Delawrue Hav, for example, or over Cliesipenke Hav. has never In en questioned, although the enhances if both are more than s miles wide. . Liberal Interpretation Needed "As a matter of fact it ha been cluimed thnt, with respect to the American Coast, n liberal IntcrpU'tntlon of our jurisdiction over the sens is ncitssnrv, and that our Government should exc rcisij juiisdiillon over such cuives or iudentuicb of the coast as between Cape Ann nnd Cape Cod, for Instance, or between Montnuk Point and the Delaware Capes. At anv rale the imls dlctlou of the Government is ample to pic vent any vessel fiom iiovcnn.' on the coast and conspiilng with those on shore to violate our laws. "As long ngo ns the time of King James I nnd King Charles II, the Hiitisli Govern ment prohibition by law the 'hovering' of foreign vessels so near the hntbois of Gtent Rritnin as to disturb homewaid or outward bound vessels, and the Hutinh 'Hoveling Act.' passed bv Pailiament in the ieign of King George II, expicssjv assured for icve one purpose a juiisiIii Imn ut four Vagues fiom ihe c oast. 'A provision to the same effect Is reason able in the revenue liws of the United States, and such juiisdiclion was upheld In Chief Justice Marshall i" a decision of the Su pri me Cotiit nine than loo y.ars ago. Twelve Miles Not nimugli "Lvcn u limitation of twelve miles is not the limit to which the Government arm can readi to prevent (1 vlolntlon of our laws in conjunction with persons on our shores. It is a familiar principle In luvv that what eiu do by the hand of another you do yoiii self, and in my opinion a shin twenty miles off shorn eould be arrested and brought Into run I'oiuts If she connived with the' owneis of motorhonts or the mas ters, of them to unload a cargo at sea and run it Into our ports without innkinir due entry and In violution of oui laws "Our Government could stop sVh m Hon just ns It could slop it If a vessel nnchi. e three miles or twenty -tin..,. ,i,.H fr Ku,,e nnd then tired guns whose hmt would laud on our coast and Injure our people or dam. ngo their property. iif t 1 I i yur Aiuoricui. v. oast waters are generally shallow and a vessel can anchor with ren- r aonable aafcty many mile, off store -hence IT, 1!)21 ef1 - " - pi iffy 11 ii II tlie reasonableness of such power vested in our Government to prevent tmnsgrcssions of our laws. Act .Must Ho Illegal "Of course, the uct of the unested xcssel must be unlawful. If she be innocent our (ioveriiment would doubtless mnke due restitution to tho owners for the anest of their propcity; but if the vessel were guilty no foreign Government would, in mv opin ion, claim for a moment thnt it was en titled to either Immunity or Indemnity." Today's Anniversaries -Puchess of Kent, mother of Queen 17SG- Ictorla of Great Ilrltain, born In SaxeCoburg Dleel near Windsor -March 1G. I8fil. 1817 Gregory Thurston lledell. third llplsco- pal Uishop of Ohio, born at Hudson, N V Died .March 11. 1892. 1810 National Whig Convention met at .Ve.Nhvllle. 1871 A statue of Sir James Outratn was un veiled on tho Thames embankment, London 1877 Tercentenary of Petr Paul Rubcna colclirated at Antwetp 1894 Chailes Itnblnson, first Stnte Coventor of Kansis, died nt Lawrence, Kan. Horn at Hurdwiek, Mass, July 21, 1818. 1919 Former lJmperor Wllllnm bought thu Doom estate near Utrecht. 1920 The great clock strike In New York was ended. Today's Birthdays Former L'mperor Charles of Austria-Hun-K.'iry, now living In rxllu In Switzerland, bom thirty -foui veals aim Vice Adnilr.il Kdward W Hlierlej, the mvv coinmnneler-ln-ihlef of the United States P.uilU! I'leet, born nt Denton, Te., fifty scveii veiin nRo. Julia Marlowe (Mrs rj H Sotliem), one of the- most distinguished nrtiesses of the American stage, born In England fifty-one yeais ago What Do You Know? QUIZ 1 Nam eight kinds of conifers 2 What fltato does Senator Glass renre- bent"' S. What Is the original meaning of tho word aluebra" 1 Who wa the first translator of tho "Arabian N'ghts" Into a European lan KUll,e, B. What finplre vns conquered partly be cause of the fe.et with vvhMi the In linbiuuits ifgnnleil the. horsc-s of their Invaders .' fi Whnt Is the cipltal of New '.ealnnd'' 7 What was the Mint city of the United States to use tiolley cars'" 8 What Iri the last n.uiKi of .Michelangelo'' 9 What Is niennt by the A Be' Powers? 10. Who was Harriet i'ies(.0tt Spoffoiil? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. On a direct voyage from New York to Now 111 leans vessels pass through thev Stialis of Morula between Florida and i ulin 2 A gavi.il is a particularly savage Md of crocodile found in tho Congo region of I entral Africa 3 Chita Ih the administrative capital of the Cistern Siberian ltepubllc 4 Kara Uernbatdt iH sevtnty-six vears old f. HalnbrldR Colbv was .he thud' ami llBt SK SUUo o l,le Wlt,0 fi Comic dc Iliiffon, Coorges Louis Icleic was a eclehii.ipci .r,.nc, niitui.tllst! HIh dates are 1707-1788. ' 7. The first name of Mile Lenglen tho ii-!,!V,,.tnn"ls thani'lon of the world, 8. A snare, drum Is bo calVd from the Annlo. Saxon 'Bnear.' later "snaie," a nervo eir sinew. Tho . rum Is built of tt hollow body mad of biass, over both ends of wlile i a membrane is stretched " hl.ii uin b tightened or loosened Across the lower membrane nre stretched v? era! strings of catgut, uhlelf vibrato and act up,,,, the lower me nibraiie very much like drumsticks Thus n l)iK,ty pleiclng sound produced l,,,t' 9 The play of Hip Vi, Winkle" was .dapted from Washington Irvine- story In 18(50 by nion Horn' caul t'utb HUKKtstlons from ., sei h ,ie f"r"u ,i, lntti,e"piece.,,tr "m,,u ''' "w-lJnS 10. Six materials 'used In mnklne row iru hemp, nax. cotton, mfilltof JSff AH rate1.' 7?- n . -r-v, "" rC . S OLD Arc- SJfCGtZxtW I, it wouia suppiy tree education o the highest and most modern type. &J It would electrify all railroads and give them the speed of the mod. em interurban systems. I It would buy all the coal mines of fJie country and have them owned by the government. It would supply the poor of the nation with the best of hospitals and promote anti-disease research. SHORT CUTS The weather mnn has nt last decided to take tilings coolly. The Society of Little Gardens deserto to grow and to become a blooming success. Hy way of compromise the Disarma ment Conference may use English with 1 French polish. Life is just one roast after another for the Vares. Their goose U cooked. 'llicy're done Hrown. These nre not whnt one would call hot dog elays, though those who have sweltered consider them nil to the mustard. If mosquitoes could be voted they would probably be overwhelmingly in fuxor of short skirts und onc-plece bathing suits. it nen i.uiiL'iieioru. Lirceiicis a new il ..... .1... ..... I..... .n .. ...!.... J....4 1.1.., .tttl.S 1 OIIU II'IUS JIUl illU III MIUllll'l JMSL l)UI lUUW. the wish is father to tho thought. When T. H. Mitten points out the ,' les of the tlve-ccnt fine the populace H isly acclaims his "I told you so." I virtu joy on Tho presumption is that the Supreme Council hadn't heard the declaration ol Senator Lodge that the League was dead. Cunningham says he is "tight as clam." Meaning, ns Little Denny would nj, he doesn't know what moment he'll land U tho chowder. Hope for Irish pence remains robtut becnuse of tho grave responsibility that wlu i est upon those who bilng about a ureal in negotiations. Washington Society Note Senator Pen rose 1ms hail many pleasant callers ilurlni the lust few days and some of 'cm had au unpleasant time. Hv nnd by, when we have time to think of it. we'll begin to icaliu that the (ov onimeiits of European countries were imici lmpiovcd by the war. Fcidinnnd is said to be nlanninj tt return to his throne in Hulgarln; butt" best the IJalknn fox can expect U to lea" liis brush with tho enemy. "Seems to me," snld the Tuneful Spott, ".!,.,! tl.-a l.n.wlltd 1,1,.. Ilsi'll inllll'SiVO r'"' ter to ston the yawps of their victim inmU A uceu icguiar suck -up t")", f'.,-.,t l.oo , ..nntn.l , hlllk" lO be knOWl ,,u ci... "T.v sihniiiiiieiitliiii Hoard. 30O .1 ,.. nmiin.. CnniTins immv annolllt a COW' i inittce to straighten out its complexities, jj necistiatlon Commissioners, have rule! 'J thnt women voters must give their corijv age. Huh! Other wibe guys In the P hiivo made such rules ami wheic did tw get off? The flight of the 7M- of less ill; nificanco ns tho initial tiip of a P"'J wor engine than as an earnest oi : freight and passengers may be -,'irrleu the future. In the matter of high kicking nuilrtl comedy has nothing on tenn If ;" in the mutter of "nothing on worth m tioulng them's little to chooso between stage nnd the beach. , Under the Volsteael net a buildi which liquor Is sold may be c low if year. If tho law wero enforce, vvc.ro w iinve n houso shortage that would m" tit up and tnkei notice. Triplets hnve been born J" Jlr,i.'Uf Mis. Paul Poriipcnnsky. of Hnzleton. i,g out libations nn.l fill UP the eiiiij.lt ii health to 'em. May thc.v ever be com H'" that three of a kind brat two poll. i .... ns t'l Doubtless .Mr. Iinguc- M.U.." V itfii I ns Mr. Iloiiih that ills.umomeii 'Valljl eleliiKd If it wiilti. u the fceUleiiia M, national dl(ierence2, but If It fan; '?.?. ieW6 J ,to It main object bring obput ifc " wO faent of tome differences, why, all tne wf h F rn , SWJ Vi-fl . l?-'tuf?r&i WMy va H?. f fegt.y etrfcl