uwfc.&-,j. ?wmammfamwww.''le - : t&immiaxx V-W V :vaWr'.''5WBBPBt-f.7T. . . tr-- .S'iebFFF'l9M fSlsW SfflfcSL . j f' rW ujPMi(sjsJfW 'WW1PIB .1 w- ..-- -'-gar:- T ft t J t L PJ t MS lunC fe tV .una . Welc Oalle illewav BECON. flneed of, rered by ' y eui, 8 toning public He&ger I PUDLIC LEDGER COMPANY CtfltUS 11, K. OUIIT1S, l'KBIIDKNT Jehn C, Martin, Vc l'resldc-nt and Treasurer) Charles A. Tyler, Secretary! Char'es II. I.udlng. ten, Philip 8. Cellins, Jehn II, Williams, Jehn J. Bpurgsen, Oeerce V, Oeldsmltti, David K, Bmllay, .Directors. OAvrn n. smit.bt. ..Editor .JOHN -'. MAKTlN....Ueneral Hualness Manager Published dully at Pudlie Lxeaicn Hulldlng Independence Uiuare. Phllndplila AttANTle CITT FrtfVnlen Building NEW YenK , .1114 Madtsnn Ave, DrrnciT 701 Ferd Ilulldlng St.' Lecis... ...... .018 Olobe-D'meerat Ilulldlng Cnioieo... 1802 Tribune Building NEWS HUnEAUS: . WianiseTOV BcncAO, Jf. n. Cor. rennsyhanta Ave, and 14th PI Kw Teme neiuu The Sun llulldlng Londen Bcbuc. ...Trafalgar Dulldlnc sunsmiPTiON' teiuis Tha Eunine Pnnrte Lmnr la served te sub erlbar In Philadelphia and surrounding towns at tha rate of twelve (12) centa pir week, paalle te the carrier. My mall te points outside of rhtladelphla In the united States. Canada, or United States pos sessions, pnstaaa free, fifty (SO) cents per month, 81 (Id) dollars pr year, pnhle In auSnnrr Te all foreign countries one (11) dollar a month Xotied Subscribers wishing address changed must Elve elJ as well an new address. n.I jnoe WAt.M'T KrY"TOr.. MAIN 1601 fTAiiilresa all commnn(if.eit te Kvnxlnp rublle ledger, Independence Knurtrc, Philtidlphin Member of the Associated Press TiriS ABSOCtATED PTirHS (t exclusivity n tiltrd te the me for republication of n'J tines ttitvntchea ereiHttd te U or net erieruMe credited in fM parr, and alie thr local njirj euMftftril therein. All rieht f republication of special dUpatee$ "rrWn are nl'e referred rhll.dflhl., S.tmd.7. Octehr 1, 1921 ANOTHER PRISON SCANDAL? MORE than a casual denial b tlit mil- nlcipnl Department i)f Welfare is re quired iti nnswer te the chnrzes eC misman agement nnil deliberate cruelty fermnlly ledged by the Grand Jury jesterdny against the officials at the Heuse of Correction There are occnslens when the solitary confinement of unruly prisoner Is found necessary. Hut these occasions are rate in any prison. Ne en? ntmiulms can regard the use of dnnk and ancient cells as telemblc or decent, particular!) when they arc set .Hide for the punishment of women prisoners. The llghtless dungeon and a brcad-nnd-wntcr diet have been eliininnted in most jails. But the Grand Jury found both inllictul en Women inmates at the Heuse of Correction. In past j ears scandals due te the Htupid and cruel management of prisons in this city recurred as regularly ns the seasons. It Is geed te hear that the Grand Jury found cause for unfavorable criticism nowhere but at the "Conectien," which nlwnys has had a bad name. It reports conditions at Mint Institution te be "barbarous nnd cruel. The Department of Welfare, with an air of mild BUrprlsc, expresses an opposite opinion. Which Is right? A KLEAGLE IS STREETED - ' rpHK owners of the office building in which JL some kleagles nnd klrnslcttes of Wizard Simmons' organization settled down im posingly when they set about the business of kluxing Philadelphia have just provided an excellent example te these who seels an efficient and noiseless method of dealing with a public nuisance. Kleagle Atkin and his office force have decided, under pressure, te seek ether quarters. Thut is hew the an nouncement runs. " In effect it means that the kleagle and the Klenglettcs have betn, as you might say, trceted. If the owners of ether effire buildings prove te be as considerate of their tennnts as the owners of the Bellevue Court Hulld Ing are, kluxism will net persist long enough te be a matter of concern te Congress or the general public. Gradually, as disclosure fellows disclosure, , the sudden sprend of the Ku Klux is being l explained. The field force of the organlra erganlra organlra tien appears te include all the propagandists, promoters and "drive expertN" who found themselves out of easy nnd profitable jobs when the emergency of the war was ended. Simmons found an army of shrewd "organ izers" ready nt his hand and eager for cumu lative percentages. A kleagle usually is n man who, having made nn easy living out of the war while better men were suffering and sacrificing, hates te return te the normal tasks of peare. "IFFERS" ACTING 1'ROVOST niNXIMAN'S ao ae dress te the undergraduates assembled ,ut I'eun for the opening of the college term ,'hnd n peculiar felicity because of its infermul and human tone. In telling the students that no man ought te "die en third" the acting provost put in a few words a bit of advice that should be even mere useful out side the classrooms than in them. It has been said with truth that the failures nre the men who grew tired tee seen. When he talked of the "ifters" and the problem the present te college faculties Dr. Penniuian added a bright new definition te the slang of the hour an achictcmcnt for the spokesman of n uutveiMty. "Iffer" deserve-, te live. It fills a void in the language. Hnve jeu a little Iffer in your home? Probably you have. Iffers are all about. They are the men and wemwi and the boys itnil the gills who fall because they de net desire te mitcetd, and then go about alng mournfully that the world is a rotten place te live in. INDIAN SUMMER MALIGNED ATTEMPTS te poetize the lettnt tin mourned September warrant tailure. As is invanabl the ctue when high tem peratures outstay their welcome, cheerful idiocies are circulated in defense of Indian Bummer. A delicious season is thus defamed As a matter of chronelogienl fnet, Indian Bummer needs no detense. Its charms are self-evident nnd nre te be sensed in for tunate years en cloudless dnjs. softened by autumnal hnzes In October, November or even ns late us Ueceuiber. The glamoureus period contrasts f monthly with the gray monotones of the waning jenr. It is well worthy the attention of sonneteers or ether versifiers. An excessively v arm September stieh as Phllndelphlans have been experiencing is without this category ami is nothing less thnn nn Ignoble usurpation of the iHmate by nn 111 -mannered summer. A compensatory October is In order, nnd by the time one Is adjusted te seasonable temperatures he can legitimately open the qust for the real Indian Summer, which is WerMi the lileasuialiii' nHi-'tin'-m. THE WOODEN SHIP HOODOO THE pleiibiirc which the Government may hae experienced in accepting nn offer of VJ100 a ship for units of the wooden (leet, which originally cost from $100,000 te 5500,000 each, was short-lived. The proposed sale has fallen through and the Unltul States remains in possession of the grcntei.t number of timber ships ever ,Atiatriift(l fti nnn iirnL-rmti sfm'e Heme t. Wet felled her forests te vanquish Carthage. need a hh Legal experts of the Shipping Heard ul k went e'.-go that no certified check wus ever deposited Inpailgh. !. H, ..........lln tmrxlin&et-H. the Khln Cm. ' . - w villi ii"PJ'viiv !. ,- ""i' "- " t """clVs,''ctlen und Trading Company, Inc. With- eui, ua, pn.iri te ..niavcl the additional com- b ' fcltles of the ense, this barrier te the r.immiitlen of the sale Is convincing. Bi llceurse, a new legal contest Is threat y'mBtetJfe The most involved records of the t Clmucery nre as simple as the New England primer cetnpnrcd with the labyrin thine miseries of the Shipping Heard. Hut intricate as the situation is, its primary factors nre plain. The Government possesses a fleet of ships which private indi viduals or organizations nre unwilling te purchase nt anj thing like a reasonable price. The ?2100 bids were ridiculously low. Nibbles raising the scale te f.1000 per ship have recently lightened the gloom in the Shipping Heard offices. Hut even this price, nltheugh acceptance of It might be preferable te the burden of maintaining the vessels, Is absurd. Only the richest Government en earth can afford te nccept with n certain degree of philosophy the penalty for embarking en one of the most extravagantly futile programs ever undertaVen i n" ninde nation. THE DAWN OF SOPHISTICATION BREAKS AT LAST IN NEW YORK A Heme Rule Plan for Street Cars Which Shows That Cliff Dwellers Aren't Se Artless as They Sometimes 8eem FASHIONS come and go and change, even In public opinion. Te be rcnlly stylish, for example, jeti must believe that the city of New Yerk is the last stronghold nnd abid ing place of the irreclaimable hick. It is a fuct that one of the richest mnrkets for fake oil stock Is in the general region of Forty -second street nnd Hrendway. Felk from up Hurllngten County way nnd from Qunkettewn nnd such like places leek nt the funny restaurant cards when they go te Manhattan, nnd nt the five-dellnr highballs and the Greenwich Vlllngers und Mayer Hylnti and Tammany Hall and the reef garden shows, nnd wink gravely at one an other while they hurry nwny te Stnten Island or .Tcrsej te lnugh In a truly ribald manner. Hut the world ought te be fair te the Mnnhnttnnese. Thcj hnve achieved mere than sk scrapers nnd the stnge bath and the most distressing police administration known te mnn. They hnve five-cent trolley fares en their siirpilslngly efficient lines. They hnve al wuvs hnd them even while the rest of the country has had te dig painfully for mere. They propose te keep nickel fnres and, with thut purpose In view, they hnve formnlnted n plnn for the merger and future municipal ownership of nil street enr systems en their island. Thcj believe that they can buy nil sub wny, overhead and surface lines and re order them in one system for the geed of the city, nnd then retire their purchase bends with future profits from five-cent fares! They have redefined the issues at stake in a hundred controversies nnd formulated n sim ple prlnei1e that sooner or later must be unhcrsnlly ncceptnble. They held, by Inference, that In every large city trolley service is n necessity of life nnd Mint it should be free forever from the depressing influence of political and financial opportunism. The cliff-dwcllys nre Indubitably right in that assumption. Se large hnve American cities grown that you cannot get te work without the trolleys. Yeu cannot get home without them. Yeu cannot held a Jeb or earn a living or de the day's shopping with out the incidental Iielp of the street cars. Street car systems ought te be as free from deliberate exploitation by profit-takers ns the water supply is. Ordinarily there Is no substitute no alternative. The service may be tee cefltly or it may be inadequate or se poorly organized ns te be nn absolute detriment te business and te the community. Yeu have te take It or leave it. Y'eu take it as a matter of course. Who would walk from Germnntewn te Mar ket street or from West Philadelphia te Kensington? The people in New Jersey have been won dering why street car fares go steadily up ward while the quality of the service main tains a downward trend. In this citv few people knew the basic truth about the ap palling tangle of transit affairs which has led te unused elevated structures and rising fares. Much of, the trouble Is dne te absentee ownership of the street car systems. A group of financiers sitting In Buffalo or in New Yerk naturally can knew little or nothing about the transit requirements of Comden, N. J. Hut. ns matters are going Nowadays, they may have full power te dic tate the rate of fare and the operating pelicv of the Camden car lines. If schemes of financial centralization and control new being worked out nre perfected, nn excluelve group of large Investors may obtain complete con trol of most of the big street car systems in the Gust, including the lines In this city. The expanding influence of these ambi tious fmnnclers is largely responsible for the steady increase of street railway fnres lu legions where competitive transit service is net maintained. Knowledge of this general tnevnment toward n new sort of street car monopoly is in part responsible for the scheme of mergers nnd municipal ownership new pro posed In New Yerk. The people in New Yerk want te get their car lines out of the stock market. Can they get them out of politics, tee? Proponents of municipal trolley control have a reassuring answer for that question. They belle e thnt the practice of municipal ownership would be fatal te "the rotten politicians" whose sins are forever being recounted In defense of the private owner ship of bas.ic public utilities. Men who ruppnrt tha New Y'erk plnn insist thnt the public tolerates rotten polities only he long an it feels no direct Injury from the system. The public will net realize that it is beinu hurt eery day Indirectly. Hut translate Tammanylsm or Vnrelsm In terms of street car fares or service and, the New Yorkers believe, you will have the public en the warpath In no time. A REVOLUTION IN TRADE ROUTES SI'P ri'POUTKKS of the quota Immigration ,aw new operative cannot consistently object te inclination of important shipping interests te effect radical change, in Atlantic routes. The program new under consideration in in vehes the diversion of many liners new making ports en the Knstern seaboard of the I'nited States te Canada, Central America, Mexico, Seuth America and Seuth Africa. The majority of such vessels as will un dergo route alterations ate especially equipped for enrrying emigrants. Manv of them, however, receive ether classes of passengers nnd all are, of course, partly cargo beats. According te Londen ndvices, something like a revolution in ocean traffic is new under wny. The results In this country will be mixed. Americans in general are unlikely te view r, EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER with favor n policy increasing the difficulties et communication and particularly trade, between the United States and Europe. On the ether hand, advocates of restricted immigration will te some extent rcnllwj their desires. Net only will the flood of strangers be checked, but the Hmltntiens of service established by tha steamship companies themselves should put an end te the non sensical race of liners from the three-mile limit te quarantine, en the monthly dates when new quotas of immigrants are nd mlsslblc. . Anything thnt will alleviate the injustices of the system as lately mnnlfested should be welcome. As for the reduced liner service, thnt rep resents one of the possibilities apparently unconsidered by the lnwmnkers. I 3 THE UNEMPLOYMENT REPORT MUCH of what the unemployment confer ence suggests In a series et suggestions offered as an emergency program Intended te operate whlle the various committees seek means for permanent industrial stabilization in Uic future is necessnrliy contingent upon n return te the rule of normal prices nnd profits nt the sources of the essential ma terials of industry. Hreadly, it is urged by the unemployment eommlttees Uiat all people who have work te de de It new. Hut it happens that all sorts of people, from Uic executives of Im portant Government departments te Uie man who has only a small house or new plumbing in view, have been waiting for further declines In the cost of mntcrlnl nnd lnber. Seme materials are new almost nt bedrock. Others nre high. Involved with the question of high prices is the question et high wages. That complication can be cured only by time. Meanwhile, no set of rules Oiat the con ference might formulate would be adequate te enae the unemployment situation wholly nnd at once. What the country must rely en new is the public spirit of all sorts and conditions of men nnd the ability of employers and em em peoyes alike te recegnise nn emergency when they see It. Great sacrifices are net neces sary. Small ones will help Immensely If they can be mode by large and small em ployers ns well ns by wage earners. As usual, tha chief source of trouble Is the profiteer, who will net mend his ways. He Is a man who must be reckoned with even by the manufacturers who would fellow the suggestion of Mr. Hoever's committee nnd "manufacture for stock." A manufac turer cannot safely manufacture for future snles If the prices of his raw material nre mnintalned somewhere In the sky nleng with the prices of fuel BRIAND DEFIES AUGURY PREMIER UltlAND'S contempt for re cent warning precedents extends beyond his determination te represent abroad the republic of which he is the actual hesd. Net only has he decided te defy political opposition nt home by heading the Trench delegation te the Washington conference, but he Is arranging te quit the sessions should they be prolonged beyond Chrlstmns. In thnt case, Itene Vlvianl will probably rep resent the Prime Minister. It Is net n little fascinating te trace the parallels between his purposes nnd these executed when America was the guest nnd France Mie host. Although accounts still differ, it is gener ally understood Mint the intentions of the President of the I'nited States were net scrupulously Carried out In the intervnl be tween the Geerge Washington's first return voyage nnd her second trip neress. Perhnps M. Brland, closely pressed by his political adversaries, is in u mood te defy augury. Certninlv his cie-t" 's undeniable. BEER AND TREATIES NOT the obstinacy et a former President, net Democratic sniping in the Senate, net the antagonism et William E. Horah nor the irritability of humbled Germany Is of sufficient ebstrucHve force te forestall a speedy legislative ratification of the peace treaties In Washington. Mr. Wilsen, It appears, has net been posing as an aggressive general of shattered political troops. The results of a conference of Democratic Senators confirm tfie view that the treaties will net be made a party matter. The Helchsrath, or upper chamber of the German Parliament, formally approved the pacts en September 17. The Reichstag, or lower house, swung Inte line yesterdny and voted for the ratification bill. What, therefore, has been Imperiling prompt consideration of the treaties and their expeditious passage through the Senate? Eche answers, "Heer!" The plan for bringing up Uie German, Austrian and Hungarian instruments en October 14 was temporarily blocked yesterday when the fight ever alcoholic percentages and medical exemptions was given momentary precedence ever international affairs. It was insisted thnt Immediate prevision be made for voting upon the much-discussed "Heer Bill," which is already the cause of friction and devastating complications be tween the Senate nnd the house. Later In the dny a glimmering of reason prevailed and the objectors climbed down. While the course of diplomacy seldom runs smooth, there is novelty, indeed, in the tac tics displayed. Even n Talleyrand weuid conceivably have been embarrassed, net te say dazed, by the spectacle In the Senate yesterday. Members of the Amerl Shocking Details can Association for Medice-Physical Re search, meeting In Chicago, were treated te demonstration of hew putients nre shocked, sometimes by electricity nnd sometimes with hammers, In order te effect cures. Ne demonstrations wcre deemed necessary of the shocks produced hv the receipt of bills nfter Uie cures n(i cf,.,nj A Poughkeepsie, N. 1,, street car con ductor who lest his memory .a lenr age as the result of an accident has had it restored by being thrown from a street enr. This, though remarkable is by no means un precedented j nor is the peculiarity noted peculiar te humankind, supplements the Sub urbanite. I have an alarm clock that is periodically afflicted in just that wav. It sometimes forgets te go nfter a fall from the table, but the accident of a swift kick will Invariably restore its memory. Jesse R. Fifer. one of the nine mem bers of the Scheel Benrd of Lyndhurst, N. J., says the teachers in the public schools are like bathing beauties with skirts tee short nnd stockings tee fancy and clothing tee loud. Hut Fifer's toot was no ciarien call, for the ether members of the beard refused te take nny nctlen In the matter. "It is much easier te shorten n dreis than te lengthen it," said one of the teachers. If this is a thrent Mr. Flfcr seems te be due for a shock. When a lawyer In a New Y'erk court tauntingly asked n doctor what nn intoxi cated man's breath "smelled like these dn'vs," the witness promptly replied, "Something like a combination of chlorine, mustard gas nnd garbage." This is net nice, but it is be descriptive and true nnd se discouraging te souses that it deserves all the publicity possible. The New Jersey Penltry Producers' Association has been summoned te New Yerk by the United Stntcs District Attor ney te explain why the association should net be charged with profiteering. We ven ture the opinion that one explanation is that the term hes never yet been adequately defined EiEOXADELPHIA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, LIVING MEMORIALS At the Maaonle Hemes, Elizabeth town, There Is a Tree for Each Here Five Acres In Red, Pepples, Toe Harry Brown's Indus trial Scheel By GEORGE NOX McCAIN XITTIEN Highway Commissioner Lewis S. W Sadler announced his intention of bor dering every arterial highway with trees until enough had been plantrd te permit the State te name n tree for each Pennsylvania soldier sacrificed in the World Wnr, he wn unnware thnt the nucleus of his plnn had , already been established. On one Pennsylvania hillside already there has been planted n grove of trees, one for every soldier of n ccrtnln distinction who went forth te battle nnd came net home again. PASSENGERS en dnyllght trains, east or west, en the Pennsylvania Railroad mny notice at Ellaabcthtewn a Greek temple en an Isolated hill hnlf n mile south of the tracks. Beyond it, ever the hill, arc the square stone structures and red reefs of the clus tered buildings of the Mnsenlc Hemes. The Greek temple is the guiding hand, the indicator, thnt marks the location of the largest institution of Its kind in the Ma sonic fraternity, which Is world-wide In its scene and of almost universal membership. Hut the little Greek temple witl stnnd out In its rectangular whiteness and beauty for only n few years longer. Year by year Its graceful outlines will disappear behind n curtain of living green. In twenty yenrs from new It will be in visible nnd will then fulfill one lden of the nnclent Greeks conception of beauty, sub limity and worship a temple within a grove. OUT of the thousands of Pennsylvania Freemasons who put off the gnrb of pence te plunge Inte the world's Inferno, 204 "went west." Bv shell or hnnd grenade or steel, by deadly gns or disenee, that number of the faithful, from the lowest te the highest In the ngc-eld fraternity, poured out gener ously a libation te death with their lives. The committee of the Grand Ledge of Pennsylvnnln In charge of tbe Mnsenlc Heme! shortly nfter the close of Uie war planned a memorial te the memory of these silent brothers. It was ngrceil that the most fitting testi monial, the most npproprlate memorial, would be a tree for ench man. A grove was planned, symbolic of their association, nnd yet with ench Individual tree ultimately bearing en a bronze plate the name, the battle In which he fell and the number of his ledge of every here. Fer mero than n year new the sloping hillslde hns been transformed. W HARRY BROWN, of Pittsburgh, Is n nnme that Is destined te endure ns long ns the grent frntcrnnl benefaction at Ellzabethtewn endures. I wrote n few days nge nbeut Frank Thomsen's boys; the eight schelnrshlps In technical schools that his family founded in his name. nnrry Brown hns endowed n school en the domain of 1000 acres which, with the completion of the main building nlenc, will nccominedute eighty -five boys. It will be an industrial school. Hand as well as brain will be trained. It wns in December two years age that W. Harry Brown, of Pittsburgh, presented te the Committee en Masonic Hemes $30,000 worth of securities. In the accompanying letter he stated that the gift was te be applied for such purposes as the committee might designate. After cenference with Mr. Brown it was derided te use the fund in the erection of a home for Uic education of dependent or phan sons of Free and Accepted Masens in Pennsylvania. Mr. Brown died unexpectedly In March of this jear. It wts then discovered that he had arranged te add $30,000 te the fund, nnd his executers have since contributed that amount. THE Masonic Hemes nt Ellznbethtewn comprise the largest institution of its Iclnd among Masens in the world. The original purpose of the architects and committee In charge Is being carried forward, with the result that the next quarter of a century will sec this a;temblnge of magnifi cent buildings nssutne th appearance of a huge vlllnge. where art and nature will blend In perfect hnrmeny. Philadelphia Masens are erecting a hos pital, the estimated cost of which is JB30, 000. It will contain 1B0 beds. The entire sum for the erection, furnish ment and outfitting of the wards, rooms, laboratories and clinic' and operating rooms will be berne by the Masens of Philadelphia County. The building will be ready for eecnpancy early the coming year. It will be the most modern and up-te-dato building of Its kind In the State. THERn are ECO guests In Use homes. Their environment is that of a high-clais hotel with a vast number of unique features added, as, for Instance, a splendid library of approximately 10,000 volumes and a motion-picture auditorium. Included among the guests nn forty boys nnd thirty girls, for whom tench era of the highest grade nre employed. The guests consume nt one meal alone 873 quarts of milk, fiOO npple dumplings, sixty dozens of eggs and nther feed in proportion. The homes rcnlly constitute a vast manu facturing concern. It Is all for the benefit of the !!50 guests, however. Scattered ever the 1000 acres of the de mesne, In separate buildings, are 4000 Leg horn chickens, 100 registered Ayrshire cows, 400 registered Berkshire plgB, as well as geese, turkeys nnd ether fewi. Four cows in the herd give their weight in milk every month. THE greve of oak trees surrounding the temple hnve been selected net only for their lnstlng qunlitles. but for their beauty. In autumn, when fully grown, their foli age will present, owing te their different characteristics, a brilliant combination of color. Te heighten the effect, the enttre five ncres covered by the memorial grove have this yenr been sewn In Oriental pepples. They nre n brilliant red and carry out fully the iden. "On Flanders fleldB the pepples crew," All the ornamental shrubbery and trees for beautifying the grounds nre grown and cultivated en the place. There Is one nursery alone of 25,000 white plne seedlings, Eight miles of macadamized reads run through nnd around and nbeut the property. All fruit nnd vegetables used are raised right en the farms. The great truck pntch Is Irrigated by thou sands of feet of overhead Iren pipe that sprajs It completely in hnlf nn hour. A DAY'S visit as a transient guest dis closed these interesting facts : There were 0775 Pennsylvania Freemasons in the nrmy nnd lf48 in the naval and ether forces of the United States during the World Wnr. Of these, eighty were killed in battle and 184 died from wounds or disease. Fifteen acres of the park land arc utilized for water impounds. The space utilized for farm buildings, reads and garden comprises thirty-four ncres. There nre 2100 apple trees nnd 2780 peach trees in the orchards. The greatest number of guests 1b regis tered from Philadelphia County, of whom there nre 140. Allegheny County Is next with twenty-eight. More than 23,000 visitors registered dur ing the last twelve months. ChristmaB is the bublest tlme of nil the year. Every guest receives net only one useful and valuable gift, but mnny of them. Their ledges remember them liberally, The homes hne their own postefnee, telephone service nnd election precinct. A majority of the women guests voted at the last primary. Vl 1 JLjbV "s-, a BUbh I fgNrsWa ? J&r-. 7"""" J vN-SpKJi? ".. . MxmmrG "t is rt: 'w ilAMty in". , .reJ,sma.l-fRWsfi2Sr 7h 5Sf7n i e-;:- ih ... . VsJlyvAa. !ws aiB buflg & e 3( 'Mvf-JW. u7,'Jr ws NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Tallts With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Knew Best EDEN B. HUNT On Induetrlal Welfare Werk TEIAT welfnre work, especially that of great corporations, pays excellent divi dends in the satisfaction of the empleyes and much Improved general morale, Is the opinion of Eden B. Hunt, superintendent of the veluntnry relief nnd pension departments of the Pennsylvania Railroad system. "Perhaps the biggest single thing that our departments accomplish," snld Mr. Hunt, "is thnt this work Induces men te stay with the company. It reduces the lnber turnover, which is nn enormous drain upon mnny of the largest Industries. "Our company is in the market for the beet labor te be found, nnd when these men come te work we wnnt them te remain. Every company has a big investment In ench empleye, and the Investment grows with the yenrs the mnn remnlns at work. "In order te held their loyalty nnd te deserve their confidence nnd esteem It Is net enough thnt we tnkc nn nctlve Interest In their personal nffnlrs while they arc healthy and able te remain at their work continu ously. It is when n man hns been tnken 111, when he hnn met with un necldcnt or when, nt the close of a long nnd faithful term of service, he finds thnt ndvanclng nge has rendered him unfit longer te perform the strenuous duties of his dally work, thnt he needs attention. Human Side of Railroading "When these unfortunate contingencies occur our departments come te his relief. Every man nnd every officer lu the employ of the company is entitled te these benefits. "When each employe of the read Joins the Relief Association he knows that he will re ceive dally financial benefits If he should be come 111 or meet with an accident. He knows, also, that in the event of his death the death benefits will be paid te his benefi ciaries. But of equal If net of greater im portance Is ths fact that every empleye knows that he will be Tetlred en the roll of honor, with ft pension allowance, when he reaches the required age und Is no longer able te de his dally work. "These are the things which haunt every man net of Independent fortune. Wheu these anxieties are removed from the mind of the worker he can and does devote nil his thought te the performance of his work during working hours, nnd he does thnt work te the very best of his ability. In his free hours he has time for his home and his family. Therefore, ene of Uie main func tions of our department is te eliminate the overhead of worry one of the largest over heads in Uie world from the 174,1142 mem bers of the railroad's family. II !g Payments Made "During the first six months of the current year the company has paid almost $l,USft,000 in pension allowances te retired empleyes. In the same period that is, from January 1 te June .10 000 new names were placed en the pension list, which is known ns the roll of honor. In that time 2S7 retired empleyes died, leaving ft net increase of 401) te the pension list for the first six months of the year. "On August 1 the total number of former empleyes en the roll of honor nnd new re ceiving pensions was 0400. It Is estlmnted thnt the average term of service of these men 1b forty years, and the average uge of nil era era plejea en the roll of honor Is a trifle mere than seventy-three jeers. The complete pen sion list represents approximately u quarter of a million years of faithful service rendered te the company and te the public by these vetcrnus. "The pension department was organized January, 1000, and since then the company has pnld almost $24,000,000 in pension al lowances. This sum has been taken entirely from the treasury of the company, without the contribution of a dollar en the purt of any of the empleyes. Are Retired Automatically "All officers nnd empleyes of the read who rench the nge of seventy years are retired automatically. Olficers and empleyes from sixty-five te sixty-nine who, nfter thirty yenrs or mere in the service of the com pany, become disqualified for any reason, are nlse eligible for a pension. "The pension nllewnnces for officers or empleyes are nutherbed en the following basis: Fer each jear of service, 1 per cent of the average regular monthly pay for the ten years Immediately preceding retirement, provided that no penbien shall be less than slfi ner month. "Therefere, if an empleye, hes worked for the company for forty-five years, nnd If his average monthly pay for the last ten yenis has been, sny, .$125, his pension ullewnncu en retirement will be forty-live times SI 23 or $5(1.23 per month. The ncceptnnce of n pension nliewnnce docs net deh.ir nny em em peoye from engaging in ether business, but he cannot re-enter the employ of the rail road, "The relief fund is for the aid of disabled men, and te this fund the empleyes con tribute The effect upon the morale of the 1021 CLOSER AND CLOSER $$$& pU vyvr--t V U v SSufcw j vvA- ' v I r C men of both these organizations is excellent, net only In reducing lnber turnover, but in keening them satisfied with their places nnd with their trentment by their employers. "We hnve found from practical experience thnt it is n geed denl chenper In the end te pension men who can no longer perform their duties en account of ndvanclng nge than It Is te try te find them ether places in the employment of the read, places which thev perhaps would net fill satisfactorily nnd nil the time be longing for their former positions. "But besides tnese rensens, the time hns new nrrlved when public sentiment, which is yenrly becoming n greater nnd greater economic factor, will no longer allow nn employer, especially if thnt employer be s large cornerntlon, te dismiss men after long years of faithful service without some meas meas ure of prevision for their future." A Kentucky Challenge Frem tha Hnrrea'sburg Herald. Add Stoper, who Is In his eightieth yenr, tells us he has been harvesting ever since he was ten years old and hns only missed two harvests in all that time, once when he was laid up with two broken ribs nnd ene yenr with a crippled feet. This yenr he nnd his youngest son put all his wheat In the shocks and when he put the last bundle in place he Jumped up nnd cracked his heels together twice. If nny one can beat this Unde Add would like te hear from them. A Geed Sign rrem the Portland Oresentan. Inquiry is mnde whether a wave of some thing cannot be discovered that would ndd te the sum of happiness, as a relief from the crime waves nnd suiclde wnves with which we are constantly regaled. It is nevertheless a geed sign that a wave of hnpplness still Is net news. Happiness is n geed deal com moner, nnd hence mere commonplace, than the pessimists are willing te admit. Missouri Nature Student's Discovery Frem tha Lamar Democrat. Judge Isenhower, who hns some corn in Muddy Creek bottom, says mu6krnts nre cut ting dewTi the big, heavy stalks of corn, though they nre supposed te live chiefly en smnll fish nnd frogs. Mary'e 8tyle Mary get n little skirt The wny that ethera get 'cm; It was ns long ns nny skirt It went from top te bottom. New Yerk Herald. What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1. What Is the origin of the slanu werrt noeu? 2. Who Is te liead the French delegation nt the Disarmament Conference? 8. Who wns Mnzzlnl? i Name three plnva by Bhakespeare the . acfn.s of w,h!ch are laid In republics. B. What 1b n enptas In law? 8. What Is meant by a LemnlRn deed? 7. Of what St.ite Is Jeffersen City the capital? ' "" 8. What attributes are typified by the color i i4 r j il ( 8. What Is the eymbolle significance of n sapphire? u " aVsemblKJiT1 Wh,I '" I(Kla,atlV6 Answers te Yesterday's Quiz 1. The Japanese delen-ites te the Disarma ment Conference nre Pilnce Teltuiriiw.i. ylcn Admiral Kate nnd Baren Hhldo Hhlde liara. C. real Is te strip off the rind, skin, peel bark, etc. Peal means n loud ringing of bells, especially n. series of chances en a set of bells; loud volley of ?ewn,(VS.I?r.clalIy thu"rt1,i te sound lertn, te utter sonorously, 3' West Wind "th9 fam"S "0,e t0 Ule . The new alrplnne altitude record Is 40,800 feet, ninde recently by Meu- tenant MncRendy. 6. rtlenck Is the oppiebrlous nnme nnnlled by the Seuth African Dutch te British soldiers It means red neck, 8. r.oeeco furniture Is furnltura with much conventional decoration, tnntelesslv XV1 style" the L0UU XIV ",r l'"T" 7. Tellurium Is a rare, brittle Hllver-coler-il element, resembling sulphur. 8. The Chinese practlce of tlnelv cliennlnr or outline Inte shreds feed,, hefere coeklnB them Is due te n fuel economy Ws'v?:"1 C0"'i', qUlkl'' "ni1 h'"' 0. The "I-nlce Scheel" la the name nlven te . Kieiiii of poets, Including Words worth. Celerldne nnd Seuthcv? from the icsldenca or connection with the lnlrn country of IJutrlanrt (Cumlirlnnd AVestmerelaml nnd Lancashire) 10. Kngelbert Humperdlnck was n Oermnn musical composer, noted chleflv for his two fairy operas, "Haensel una Oretel" snd "Kecnlgsltlnrter" CV . ?ermberf VmI1""6 ' " M ,n S""' mmitrmiiiM VV $ r'3 "TOUstt Ixsu'rTsliLf 1 rilaWiisTiii-iiiiirtli llllfia n it 1 1 A SHORT CUTS Woodcock season opens today, Johnny, get your gun. It may be thnt 1021 will go thundering down the nges as the Het Year. Why can't Philadelphia hnve n World's Scries of her own, loser te tnke the stakes? The Irish situation has as many final words as a prima denna has farewell engage ments. The fact Mint there Is a new bogus $103 bill In circulation has merely academic in terest for most of us. On second thought we nre opposed te nny movement te retire Cengrcssmnn Her rick. The world luis little enough laughter. "Harding Shakes a Thousand Hands" Headline. That's nothing. Just in a little while the Sennte is due te see him shake a leg. This eugenics idea, remarked Demos thenes McGiunis, is a geed thing se long ns you don't take it tee seriously. And Den Cupid sees te it that nobody shall. In n Honolulu court recently a Ha waiian wemnn wns fined S3 for beating her Chinese husband. Hasn't a woman any rights in that benighted country? A doctor Is quoted as saying that alco hol befere the Velstead act was designed te kill off all worthless human beings. We wonder why he said "befere the Velstead act." Tnst about the time when the fodder's In the shock the fact occurs te ns that at a poet Jnrnes Whltcemb Riley wns some pun kin thnt the frost never touches nnd that needs no frost te ripen. Fnte, n cynical satirist, never played a mero characteristic trick than when she mnde William Deeley, "n tumbling wkard," meet his denth in New Yerk by ranking a misstep as he alighted from n tnxlcab. We can remedy economic conditions If we have grit enough, says Themas A. Edi Edi eon. True enough j but the trouble has been that some of us have been lettlnjr it get Inte the bearings of the wheels of industry. The president of the Menree County Octegennnnns, In opening ttjelr convention in Stroudsburg, dented that the werid ii going te the bow-wows, nnd declared that the geed old dn)H de net cempare with the present time. He is eighty-nine years old. If he wcre net nn optimist he might net have lived se long. The Amcrlcnn High Commission at Budapest nnd the British Minister nre in vestlgntlng whnt Is snld te be n perfect feed Invented (or discovered) by n Hungarian scientist after eight years of experiment. The soy benn is snid te be its bnse. Of the professor nnd his product nn admiring world may remnrk, "Seme benn!" Whnt the senatorial agricultural bloc wants Is repeal of the transportation taxes, centlnunnce of the excess -profits tnxcu and nmlntcnunce of the present rate of sur taxes. As selfishness Is Invariably short sighted nnd therefore foolish, the bloc heads, te acquire n term ndequntely descriptive, might borrow nn extra "k" from another bunch of zenlets recently discredited. I SARGASSO THE herring gull en tilted wing Is wnry of its winnowing, Ner shnrk nor barracuda's fin AVlll venture 'ncath Its dreadful whin, Fer ever since the world begnn Atlantic currents round It ran, Ner ever crossed its mighty span, Ner counted It as kin. Sometimes a ship that's lest nt sea Slips down the green profundity, Seme, rudderless from tempest (led, Drift te this liquid Limbe dread, Where, though the sky above is blue And sun aril stnrs shlne brightly tee, They stem like birds of brilliant hue Thnt hover o'er the dead. Here treasures from the Spanish Main Walt for adventurers in vain. Peer ships with rusty chains n-cllnk, They cannot snll nnd cannot sink, Wenrilj lurching te and fro, Their huddling squadrons nil n-row Cost en the granny tide below Reflections blnck as Ink, Of nil the shining ocean's fleer This spot Is cursed forcvermere, And ns n sign it's lest te grace, (irent Ged Iiiih turned nwny IBs face, And sallerniin In terror tell When Lucifer from heaven fell Right through the sea he Hunk te hell I poll tills very place. Leen D'Eme in Leslie's Weekly, & " . i RAr - urn uMji f i . i 1 0 lriihisttfe.te-. ..v U (