SS&ilB 'W"mw$m;w: r.j EM u t. '!'. I" IStf' 5 R r .j h '4 s. !t ft' Ci Iv -E IV- fi ,W f 14 ' ; i IW IVV l't tf"2. m 5s v w t&. m K7 w EKrvt U",f ,t E'.jiB.. ml a iflmm cnine llubltc Heftgcr b&YUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTRU3 II. K. CUIITIS, Pnr.sitir.NT fcn C, Martin, Vic Preald'nt and Treasurer; rue A. Tyler, Secretary: Char'ea II. I.udlnc. Philip B. Celllna, Jehn h. Williams, Jehn J. eon, Oeerca F. Goldamltte, David K. Smllay, etftta. MVID B. BMM.f.T. ..Editor INC, MARTIN.. ,Ofnral Dualnaaa Manater I.M Published daily at Poilie Lideb Building tc'f WMtfAtupna Cut Prtm-Vnien Building '... inaftDpnainn Hanaro. I'm nn nmu. ;!i,l!w xeix ,1H4 Madlaen Ave. t XnHVOITt... 701 Ferd tlulldlnff ftD" ST- Loci 013 Olobt-Demecrat HulMIni .'1 CHIC100 1303 Tribune Building W-fN . .. NEWS BUREAUS! AMI WlkatKema llriuti. NVE. Cor. FenniylvanU Ave. and Nth s. iflr Teaat nmain Th- su tmiMinr Alt . fcONPON Bctsiu Trafalgar Building ?llu .. -. SUBSCRIPTION TI.BMS ,.VSf JrY Tha EviNINd PeBLta Lccnsa la served te aub- .ertbara In Philadelphia and aurreundlng town? T'4 ''e of twelve (12) tents Bar waak. payable fv8Jn carrier. DM,.. Br mall te pelnte eutalda of Philadelphia In Mia United Stataa, Canada, or Unltf.l mates pea. ST!"'.?"!!' .peataga ire, ntty inei cenia par nienin. ',tIiini aeiiara rr year, payable in advance, l Tfl Alt IrtfAltn MAnnt.l.. An. Itll nlta a, mnnlh Iwiv Tvv4tni a.,K....,i..K ki.ki.. ....t...- ........ tT. abitiat i.7A .u . ..t .. ...... .jj.... . WIV wen H IICW KUUIOIS, ?J ML MiWM WALNUT KtYSTONF.. MAIN 1601 avXiMriu all communimtietu (e A'ltnlnp J'ublle imagtY, ln(t(vrnilrnc snuart, rnllnaelplila Member of the Associated Press TUB ASSOCIATED rKESS exctuJIcrti en Iwlad te the ma for republication of all nttc$ mtipateht crtdlttd te It or net etneruue crtdiUJ fMj paper, ami obe tir local new published tksrrtn. 411 Hffhta e reruSKoetion e apeclal dlipafcJie weretn ere olte rfmrd. Philadelphia, Saturday, l'tbtutry H, 1922 THE FIGHT IN THE P. R. T. OF FAR mere interest te the gcncrul pub lic than the underlying causes of the split In the P. It. T. directorate I the pos sible effect which the fight will hnve upon future street-car service in this city. If the insurgents In the Beard of Direc tors should win there will be nn end te the Mitten system of management, n disruption of the existing co-operative scheme between the men nnd the executives and a return te the elder-fashioned theories of operation. The tightly organized empleyes of the com pany will be left te leek out for themselves as best they can. They may continue te act a a unit nnd te oppose a less liberally minded manage ment by strikes or they may move as u mass Inte the Federation of Laber. In either case questions of wages and policy new Mettled by agreement would be settled, in all prob ability, by lockouts or strikes. In most minds a feeling persists that the P. It. T. directors ought te let well enuugk alone. CONTROL OF THE PARKWAY THE preposition te extend Fnlrmeunt Park ee as te Include the Parkway, ap proved by the Ceramlttct; en City Property of the Council, should be carefully cxnmlned before It Is Indorse 1 by the Council Itself. Mere big questions are Involved than appear en the surface. If the plan Is finally adopted, the Park Commission will have authority ever the character of the structure te be erected en the Parkway. It Is desirable that some au thority should control thh matter, for the intention is that the Parkway shall be given OTer te menumentnl structures of one kind or another of admitted architectural beauty. It may be that the best way te bring this about Is through the extension of the power of the Park CommlKsIen. But the're Klmuld be a definite understanding en this point at the beginning. A TAX ON BACHELORS rnOO little attention has been given by B X social reformers te the tax en bachelors in the Federal Revenue Laws. They have urged such a tax for jears en the ground that it would encourage mar- 'r rlage, reduce the number of unattached , females and Increase the population. I But the bachelor tax in the Revenue Laws went through without arousing that enthusiasm w'hlch tlw-e who had prevleiihly . adveiated It were sure that it would stir up. Under the law a married man is exempt from tax en an Income of $L"00, hile a t bachelor is exempt en' only 51000. If the . bachelor has an income of SL'eOO he has te pay en $1500, or 00 a year, while a mar- ried man with the same income is untaxed. But se far as has been noted this tax has net Increased the number of marriages perceptibly, perhaps because the bachelors thought that single blebsedness was worth all that it costs. Still further the law taxes childlessness, for it allows an exemption of -100 u jear for every dependent child. Thus a married tnan with three children and nn Income of ,93700 is tax free, while a childless married man with the saitie income is taxed en , $1200. The tax amounts te -!S a year. 'While the bachelor tax has net encouraged marriage, the tax en childlessness has net Increased the number of children. What r. -have the social reformers get te say r about it? r .,..,- STILL AT IT rj WAS remarked in these columns the ether day that the public utility corpo cerpo corpe v rations were deeply interested In the plan ji te amend the Federal Constitution se as te an permit Congress te tax State and municipal , i, bends. These corporation find it difficult in these duys of high taxes te float their bends In competition with the untaxed mu A nlclpal and State bends. They want these j bends taxed In order te make a better mar 1 Icet for their enn bends. The latest issue of the News Bulletin of the Illinois Committee en Public Utility f Information, representing the Illinois public utility corporations, contains n summary of remarks made by Dr. IMwin R. Sellgman, . professor of political economy in Columbia 4'1 University, before the Heuse Wnjs and Means Committee in support of the taxation plan. Prof, beligman estimates that there are lO,000,UO(),uoe of State nnd munlrl pal bends that are wholly or in part ex empt from taxation, and that then- are 120,000,000,000 of exempt Federal bends. And he told the Heuse committee that if the Federal bends alone were taxed the nn- mini rnrpnilfia nf flip flnliiftimnn, tn..l.i i 4.? increased by 5:100,000,000. $JkW But Prof. Scligmnn did net say that the nf&" An 1......1.. .. i... i.'...t.. .i ..... '.US uutuiL uuuue iil iim i'ruuj.li WOVlTUment MS4, pannnt be tilled lnp.ini,i i.vi.mt.ti,.., tv" ;- .--..., I.. ",, iiuin ' taxation is pan or tne contract en which bi,m iue mimey was uunuweu. .eitiier did he rXVar .. !.- it i... .,,.. ....t i r. .. ... . . lit sAi-nun uumin hith reiumied iviXl r into taxable bends the rate of inrrut tv r ... . weuiu nave te tie laiseil nigh enough te re. , Imburse the lender for the tax hu would have te pay. lint every banker known the rate of interest would have te he raised and that the iucniese of WOO, 000, 000 in revc JitltH would be offset' by an Increase f J3P0,000,000 in interest, and the net re turn te the Federal Tiensury would be Mthing3. The only people who would benefit jreniu be the owners of the public utility iS&ffef, .corporations, who would find it eatler te WJ "float their leans. j-i'r- TAMnFWR r.riHnni pdatr i VPYTIf fnpllnna In (he Vim. .Inr.n.. I ,.t Ifrlj latum ure Hwenllne with nnxlntv T'l,.,. distracted In a conflict of issues that wn from the routine preparations for eampalirn ami the general elections, . temp wnat tney may de wjtb. aM'MiiiM Maaemwai m saM &Mmmmm& ; Scheel Beard of Camden te outlaw all secret fraternities In the public "schools of the State. Hut the bill ought te be passed in, the interest of thi'Jersey schools and as an cample te Iiear(Jrt)f Education in this and ether States which have net hnd the cour age or the initiative which Inspired the school authorities in Camden te nn aggres sive attack upon organizations which are opposed te the whole theory nnd Rpirlt of the public educational system. Oddly enough, the Camden Scheel Beard has met with most resistance from parents who encourage in their children a spirit of petty snobbery. Only the law li adequate te deal with that sort of unreasonableness. SMILE WEEK DIDN'T CO BIG, AND THAT'S CHEERFUL NEWS At Last the Bettem Seems te Have Dropped Out of Canned Opti mism, Incorporated WHEN Americans became tee lazy te think or net seriously in the presence of serious problems the professional opti mist pepped lute prosperity. He hud n painless substitute for thought nnd be be came n natlennl Institution. "Feci cheerful!" cried he. "Then noth ing will matter!" When the war raged and no one knew hew we were te come out of It no one knew'H even new this herald of joy went about demanding that we sing in crowds. A very large number of people were ex periencing nctual want because of the ilmlticfs greed of profiteers. The merchants of canned and commercialized optimism wrote crscs nnd sermencttcs te tnke the pang out of hunger nnd recommended that the mlsferlunate leek upon the sunny side of life. Smile Week, which Mr. Bryan welcomed with n gust of praise and which w-ns duly Inaugurated with wnrm rhetorical outbursts from a number of nubile men who appear te hnve been tnken off their guard, seems te have represented a last desperate effort of the Optimists, Inc.. te keep their soft niche in a world that hns grown pretty sick of them. When there are things te .smile about it Is net necessary te coax or goad nny consid erable number 'of people Inte nightmares of imitation geed humor. Why shouldn't some one have started n Law Enforcement Week? Or a Ne Hold Held Fp Week? There might hnve been a Dry Week, for the snke of that variety which is the spice of life. A Speechless Week In Congress or n Week for the Promulgation of Americanism among Americans or n eek of Hate for the Ceal' Combine would have added mere te our national reputation for common sense than a year of Smile Weeks. Beit of all would have been a Week for the Dipping of Professional Chcerers-l'p Scvcnty-scveu Times in the Salt Sea. Optimism Is well enough in Its rational forms. Cooked up by the efficiency method nnd administered as sedative dope te the easy-going multitudes, it Is about as bad as anything can be without bringing the patrol wagons. The systTnntlc promulgation of nonsense became for a while an extremely profitable business in the United States. When you remember the amount of hard work done In the last few ears te dlstrnct the attention of the American people from the realities of the course into which the Natien drifted, jeu will no longer be amazed te find the country looking nt the hard and compli cated problems of 'the plemcnt as If It had just w-nked fiem a dream. Ne one can smile or smirk a way out of the crowding difficulties of thej-c times. Straight and honorable thinking nnd a willingness te face the facts as they arc rather than the shabby Imitations et up by gentlemen Pellynnnas are necessarj In any one who wnnt te help himself ami the human race out of n wllderne-s of doubts nnd discomforts that igmr.mce and false eptlmlun created. Brjan may smile bis head off without proving anything. He isn't cold or hungry or out of a job or wondering hew his tent Is te be paid, nnd, fortunately for hlimelf nnd the iest of us, be is net burdened with the responsibilities of nn important political office. Nothing grows se quickly inncld ns the synthetic geed humor and geed will that hnve been served up in commercial quantities in this and every ether American city. Less than a year'nge the Mner ami a let of ether well-meaning people were moved te generous works in behalf of the jeung men and the young women and the bejs nnd the girls vhe were supposed te be drifting te the pit en the wave of jnz.. Some dances were held in the open. They continued te the point nt whlrh some gen uine geed will, n little of real earnestness and ingenuity and, perhaps, u little of sac rifice were required te keep them going. Then they stepped. It seems neer te have occurred te nny one thnt, with a little trouble, that sort of rrcrentlen might hne been continued in doors, as it is established In Chicago and elsewhere. What ii being done new te draw the youth of the city away from dis reputable dance halls? A Council that hag gles ever a few thousand dollars necessary te provide feed for the hungrv couldn't be expected te think of an thing se abstract as the normal needs of youth. Who but the churches Ih doing nntthini generally helpful for the euth of the city new? Who is sincerely and humanely in teri'sted In the multitudes who have had te endure long sieges of unempleyment'' Be cheerful, by nil menns, and forget It! Te nn expert smiling Is easy, It requires almost no expenditure of physical or mental energy. It Is ensier thnn the drawing up of resolutions, that ether favorite Indoor sport of the inept. Smile Week didn't go, as the saying is, big. That is.n geed sign. There are some extremes of foolishness te which Americans cannot be driven. And, for all jeii knew, the jelly chaps who, for a thumping profit, undertook te help us through our trinls during nnd after the war, mnj new have te hustle fertli and get work VACATIONS AT THE SHORE rplIE coast resorts in Southern New jfr. X e. that is. below Atlantic Citj need nothing se much as better railroad 'service. Their natural attractions aie admitted! The hove fine beat lies, the climate is agreed able in the summer and still nunc delightful in the winter. Thej have paved streets, sewers and electric li;hts, And the nn se varied In character thnt satisfactory sum nier quarters eiin be found somewhere for families of moderate means as well as for the wealth). The premise of Jjetter train scivlec made te JiOO permanent residents of Ocean Cltv by the irprescntntlves of the Pennsjlvnnla and the Reading Railroads nt the dinner at the Mnnufni Hirers Club en Thursday night will be gratifying te thousands of Phlln delphinns who hnve suffered In the pnst be. ciiisii of the preference In train .schedules ghen te Atlantic City. There Is patronage enough for a the ce.ist resorts. The smaller place, hare suf fered because of the railroad discrimination in favor of one of them. Atlantic City, which is nlwnjh crowded te capacity In the height of the season, need net fccL any jwieusy or tne ether resorts, ucean City, ;M4 City, Artlea, gteM Harber ui Wildwood attract families which cannot find accommodations nt the larger place. But it has net been se convenient as it ought te be te get te these smaller resorts. And In recent years the rnllrend fares have been se high ns te dlscduragc travel te them. Even Atlantic City hits suffered from the falling off in the number of commuters from this city. Before the war, when fares were low, the morning nnd evening trains were crowded even in winter by men doing busi ness in this city nnd living at the shore. But the trains that nrc running this winter have fewer cars than in 11)14 and these cars carry fewer passengers, A reduction in passenger rates te all the shore resorts is ns important ns an im provement in the train schedule. If the rates could be reduced te the pre-war basis en the shore lines there would be a season of such prosperity as has net been known for years and the net earnings of the rail roads should be largely increased. There is n population of 2,000,000 in this city, the greater part of which can be in duced te make scverel trips te one or another of the const rcsertR each season If the rates are made low enough, and tens of thousands of them would live at the shore in the summer If It were made possible for the head of the family te trnvel back and forth en fast trains ata modest commuta tion fare. The Ocean City people who came here te celebrate the attractions of their resort have started a movement which might well be Kept up by the citizens of the ether com munities nil the way te Cape May. ANOTHER ELWELL CASE? ARBUCKLE, when he was en trial In San Francisce, wns defended by lawyers who ordinarily are rcgnrded ns leaders of counsel for some of the lnrger moving picture Interests. Thnt fact and Its general implications have n peculiar Interest new, in view of the peculiar difficulties which the police of Les Angeles have encountered In their efforts te penctrnte the mystery created by the murder of Tayler nt Holly wood. The detectives themselves and the District Attorney hint broadly that efforts are afoot te keep the truth from the public and from the courts. People who huvc many millions stnked in the moving-picture business cannot be blamed for trying In all legitimate ways te safeguard their Investments by protecting reputations which they have hugely capi talized. But It ought te be remembered that responsibility for their present plight is largely upon their own heads. Hnd there been in Hollywood anything Hk the strict censorship of public nnd professional opinion which guides people elsewhere In their social life nnd relationships there would have been no thundering scandal. Had the promoters manifested a sincere and Intelligent regard for the, general integrity of the film profession they would net new be harassed by the prospect of a new scandal of large dimensions which reflects unfavor unfaver ablyand unjustly en the movies. Se. in cases like the present one. sup pression will de no geed, even if It were possible te bring it about. The essential trouble will remain. The film financiers will be wicr te strike nt the source of succes sive Holljweod scandals without delay. That source is In the inner community of highly puid and undisciplined actors and actresses who. though they are u minority een among film celebrities, manage te get themselves first into spectacular trouble nnd then into black headlines. If the mystery of Tayler's death remain unsolved, if Les Angeles Is te develop an other Elwell case, the shadow which the movie promoters fear will extend in time ever u lnrger area of the movie world. Hollywood will be better for n general clean-up such ns would fellow inevitably after an airing of the circumstances that preceded and attended the deatli of Tnjler. A few actors nnd nctresscs, made reckless by sudden wealth, are nt the source of Hollywood scandals. But the whole movie world needs n better system of Interior ethics if it is net te be disrupted sooner or later. The Tayler case and the Arbuckle case have recalled te the minds of the read ing public a roadhouse pnitj near Bosten which included some of the best-known promoters in the field when it was raided by the police. NOW IT'S UP TO THE SENATE PRESIDENT HARDING has put up te the Senate the final act in completing the work of the Disarmament Conference. The seven treaties drafted will net be ef fective unless the Senate intifies them. In submitting them the President ex plained that their sole purpose s te Insure the peace of the world, that they de net commit the Government te armed force or te nnv alliances, or te any written or moral obligations t join In the defense of nil body except in accordance with established con stitutional methods. If the President has thus found n formula which the Sennte can nccept as justification for the ratification of the treaties every friend of u better international understand ing will rejoice. The treaties ought te go through without prolonged delay or doubt. In initiating the Arms Conference nnd steering It te a suc cessful conclusion the Executive Department did n big j"b well; It is new up te the legislative branch te mnke as geed a record for expedition nnd intelligently directed effort. . When Senater Heflln Clapper-Tongue sas William Boyce Thompson borrowed S'i, 000,000 from the New Yerk Federal Re serve Bank en a dummy note he sn)s some thing that may be definitely pnned or dis proved. But hen he refers te the gover nor and vice governor of the beard ns "a half-hammered Democrat" and a "Hiekery-nut-hended Republican," tespectlvcly, he writes himself down, less epigrninmatlcnlly but mere csnetly, ns something equally sillv. Cotten growers in the Seuth may hav'e' a legitimate grievance, but they nre unfortunate In their spokesman In the Sen ate. Whatever virtue there is in the cause he espouses. Senater Ileflln has weakened It bv his billingsgate. A New Yerk dispatch I'etdUll Zeal sets forth that Miss Mary Garrett Hay told women of the League of Women Voters te neclrct their homes, husbands and children, if necessni', and devote all their energies te a campaign for .10,000 new members, Se that thev. I""- w'c suppose, may neglect their homes, husbands nnd children. "Tell jour husbands te he geed speits and cut at the dcliente-scn store," udjuies Jllss Hay. Frem which we deduce that some estimable, ladies ere losing their heads. Hew can ihev rxpect consideration from the men if they don't feed the brutes' Tli farmers represented by the ngricul. tural bloc de net think it right that prices In this country should be dominated by world market prices, guile se, quite se. It Is net right thnt the world market price of watercress should dominate the price for luune consumption, because, en the one hand, we are net menaced by the puuper-produecd watercress of Europe; nor. en the ether hand, de our experts of watercress affect the markets of the world. But, just nt thu moment, we cannot think of any ether ar ticle that Is precisely in that position. In variably the price of our excess product when exported affects foreign markets nnd our mcrkrt Is affected In Its turn, And always there is danger of amputating finan cial fingers when one ieiey with aa too teo toe nonie Nm ww . WILSON ON THE MEND Fermer President' Improvement Said te Be Se Rapid as to.8aver of the Miraculous Stories of Washington By WILLIAM ATHBRTON DU PUY WOODROW WILSON is en the mend. In fact, his condition is improving se rapidly ns te be little less than a miracle te these who have watched it closely. His old-time nctlvity of mind, mobility of fen fen ture, Is reasserting itself. He wnlks almost as does a well man. The turning point for tlie stricken former President was Armistice Day, that occasion en which. the Natien paid homage te the un known soldier. On thnt day Mr. Wilsen rode in the nnrndc in Washington nnd even the solemnity of the occasion was Insufficient te suppress the feeling the throng felt for him ns n soldier broken in n fight for his ideals. That throng let fighting regiments pass without npplnusc, let the "commander of the overseas nrmy, the President of the United States, go by in silence. But all nlnng the line In n reversion te fairness, the hush was broken by the clapping of hands when this private citizen alia his wife went past In n herse-drnwn carriage. That ofterneon many thousands of people crowded into the residence street in which Mr. Wilsen Uvea, having come spontaneously te pay him homage. They steed there un covered before his house, their spirit seem ing te be best voiced by n leather-lunged man en the terrace across the way, who called intermittently: ' "We understand, Mr. Wilsen; we under stand." Se constituted ere we mertnls that the mind of us has much te de with the well being of the body. The' glow of It Is like sunshine te the plant. May it net be true that the miracle which doctors failed te perform was wrought by n simple citizen, who trumpeted ; "Mr. Wilsen, we understand"? Here is nn individual whose political career was bullded en no mere stable a foun dation than it cnrbjinclc en nnether man's neck. He is none ether than Representative Burten Erwln Sweet, of lewn, the man In Congress who has had charge of the various measures for the rehabilitation of the dis abled soldier. Mr. Sweet lepresents the district from which came David 11. Hendersen, two decades age Speaker of the Heuse. Nine times had Mr. Hendersen been nemlnnted for Congress, nltematcly by a spokesman of cneh of the nine counties in hi district. The convention wns te be held that would name him for the tenth term nnd I). T. Gibsen, of Bremer County, who hed nominated him eighteen ears, earlier, was te make the great speech. But Gibsen get n carbuncle en his neck. Se n young luwyer mimed Sweet wns drafted te take his place. Sweet made se strong an impiesfien that he came near being nomi nated for the pest himself when, two months later, Hendersen wlthdiuw. It was this speech, made possible by n carbuncle en nnether man's neck, which eventually led him Inte public life. Dr. Herbert Werk. First Assistant Post Pest master General, used te be associated with Mujer Gencrul Enech II. Crowder. new down in Cuba helping te get that sugar bowl of the world en a steady keel again The two of them were together In Cuba twinty j ears age. "Crowder is the most delightful nnd lov able man in the world." said Dr. Werk the ether day. "Lovable nnd ns mad as a hornet nil the time." Never in the nation's capital has there been a mystery which remained se per sistently n mystery as does the authorship of thnt much-tnlkcd-ef book, "The Mirrors of Washington." There hnve been writing men who have hurried into indignant denial of having fathered it, while ethers have slyly cn cn ceuraged reports te the same effect. It rc innins n fact, however, that even the initi ated nrc unaware of the source from which it came. Many incidents have resulted. There is the case of Senater Hiram Jehnsen, of Cal ifornia, for instance, with whom the author dtalt in n spirit somewhat denuded of charity and kindliness. Senater Jehnsen read the book and seethed. He ran back ewr the incidents set down in it and the men with whom lie had talked en these subjects. Yes, he knew the man. There was but a single Individual who could have known what was here written. He would triturate. lambaste and demolish tills scribe. He would J write him such n letter os would make him hang his head for shame. He would drive him te oblivion, lie dictated n letter in tended te accomplish all these ends. And what de you suppose that newspa perman answered? Well, here Is the letter that he, in his callousness, wrote back. "Dear Senater." he said. "Yeu (latter yourself. Had I written the 'Mirrors of Wnshltigten' I would net have mentioned you ut nil." T. Frank Appleby, of Asbury Park, N. .T., is the most extensive operator in real estnte in Congress. Hu hns an office in each of these splash, splash towns from New Yerk te Atlantic City along the Jersey Const. But down in Washington his special mis sion lies In averting the impending stroke of tragedy as it se fiequently hovers with re lation te the immigrant. There was the case of Emilija Brenlkn, sixteen and fair, lustreus-e.ved daughter of Poland. Emlllja had two brothers in Jersey nnd one who hnd gene te war and failed te come back. Many obstacles Intervened te prevent her getting te America,' and then, finally, at Ellis Island, shu stubbed her tee en the literary test. She could net de the amount of rending required. Se Emilijn was te be deported. The day of her sailing wns set. The day arrived. She was te depart at 12. Already It was U:'!0. Representative Appleby was nt Washing ton working just ns these In the movies labor with the Governer for a reprieve as the deemed mnii walks te the electilc chair, Just as the gangplank was being pulled up a hurried messenger appeared, waving n pnper. It was a reprieve for Emlllja Brenlkn. Fer one mouth she was te b'e placed under the protection and tutelage of n geed priest at Perth Ambey, after which the literary test would again be given. The reprieve had been made possible by Mr. Appleby and the long-distance telephone. A friend of mine sat by in Geneva net long age when n conference wns being held between Albert riienius, head of the Inter national Laber Office, created bv the Ver sailles Treaty, bearded, explosive French man, and Elliet Goodwin, typical American dliccter of the Chamber of Ceinmcne of thn United States and largely responsible for the existence of the International Cham ber of Commerce ucently established in Paris. These tvve cenllemen nre representative of two nations quite surprisingly mixed un l the nftalrs of the wide, wlde world through the developments of the last half dozen jenrs. As a consequence, each has been boiling up en the language of the ether. Se when tbev met nt Geneva. M. Themas spoke In voluble French, which wns quite veadllv understood by Mr. Goodwin, of the I'. S. A. When that individual re tmted. however, he used the Inngunge of his own country nnd talked right nut In the tongue in which he is nccustemed te giving cn-prcsslen te his thought, M. Themas "get him" readily. Thus they chatted along for half n day each hesitant in attempting te enunciate the language of the ether, but each suffi ciently familiar with it that he could quite well get the meaning of the man ncresu till! IMUIC. lirir uiu KIMHi p.m vviftim Uens as'thls taklnjt place tedsy. eonTsr eenTsr eonTsr ktien. that bas tb h It et ,Mpf twetM aVilWA j i. 1 ' " ft. , ','ifn' 'i.. I ?. Kl l ' i t' A i " - -... -c ' i si, ll; ' tlsh. '''... n-M ,-ti- i ; f'i rnuf mv Tn&A i.q rmsr shortcuts JL 1 V m J.tJLJl. JLMp JLfl. JL X VJ JL JL AM. Kf .... Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians en Subjects They Knew Best J. W, SPARKS On Protection of Investors THE elimination of the dealers in worth less securities Is one of the greatest finnnclal problems of the present day, te the solution of which the best efforts of these agencies most Interested should be. mnde, according te ,T. W. Sparks, head of one of the largest brokerage houses of Philadel phia. "The sale of worthless securities," said 5Ir. Sparks, "Is one of the most formidable mennces of the public today. The amount of money secured in this manner annunllv Is large, and it Is a business which should be wiped out by these agencies most directly affected, nnd who are best able te de it. "These agencies are the bonks and trust companies, the newspapers, the stock ex change, the telephone companies, the owners of the properties in which this business is transacted and the lnw. If these interests would combine the evil could be eliminated in n short time. "The bnnks nnd trust companies could aid by refusing te hnndle the accounts of persons whom they suspected of being im plicated In this kind of business, the news paper's by exposing It wherever It occurs, and the stock exchange by placing any in formation which It might obtain In the hands of the papeis. The telephone com panies play nn important If unconscious part In this business, for most of the solici tation Is new done ever the phone, nnd I have heard that certain of these houses have regular batteries of phones nnd search the directory for prospective 'customers.' Then again, the phone gives quicker results and there Is no documentary evidence In the matter as Is the case with a letter or cir cular. Landlords Could Help "The property owners could de their pert by refusing permission te such tenants te remain in their buildings nnd the law would play its nnturnl role In quick nnd thorough prosecutions. If these severul agencies could njid would unite In nn effort te wipe out tills business, the market in worthless securities would buffer n fatal slump iu a very short time. "It is perhaps needless for me te say thnt this dealing in worthless stocks nnd bends Is done by persons who nrc net mem bers of thu stock exchange and ever whose actions the exchange has no jurisdiction, but a large percentage of the public Is net acquainted with the facts in these cases, uud in the minds of n large number of persons the exchange is unjustly held responsible for transactions for which it Is net only net responsible, but which It would gladly end forever If It could be done. "Anether element which enters lnigely into the sale of worthless securities Is the Ignorance of the public as te the stocks and bends which they purchnse. A great many persons buy first nnd investigate afterward, when it is tee late nnd when their money bus gene. Many persons will take the un supported word of a mun who calls them up en the telephone nnd recommends certain stocks as geed, and will place un order te buy them without any fuithcr cffeit en their part. "The vcmedy for this Is te consult a bank or n trust company or a brokerage firm in which absolute confidence may be placed. This is just lis effective u remedy for these conditions as it is possible te get. and it lies in the hands of the public itself. But the history of the worthless securities market has shown that they will net apply it, iv0. pie continue te buy securities without the proper amount of investigation, and se long as they de this theie will be worthless ones sold. It is difficult, Indeed, te protect pee pie against their own inclinations and actions. Bucket -Shep Evil "Every stock exchange has waged war for venrs en the bucket-shops In their own cities, but the evil Is still with us. 'hlln. delphla Is particularly bad In this respect and the bucket-shops uppeiir te flourish here te an unusual degree. A new device has come Inte existence nmeng this class of dealers, A sale of stock will he made te a customer and the stock actually purchnseil Then it will be Immediately sehi bv some one, generally a member of the biieket-shen firm, trading under another name. ' "On the face of it the transaction leeks pvfertly legitimate, but It, Is bucket ffS Just the same, because the 'stock Is nev.r delivered te the customer whn ,,.i.i .. .r But the apparent legitimacy of the tni' action makes It difficult te'dwl with T" sum. If tba Method deea St?ii J "l Jvve '...' ' - - T """ " imtofeY '.. FINISHING UP a within the law, it makes it hard te invoke legal action. "In this connection I cannot de better than te quote the words of Seymour Crom well, president of the New Yerk Stock Ex change. In a recent address when he said: 'Against this new peril the stock exchange has set its face. The stocks of clients, bought for clients, must be carried for cli ents, net only by members of the stock ex change, but by nil brokers who have the slightest connection with the exchange. Ne stock exchange firm can evade responsibility for the names which it places en its books. Hew can the exchange successfully repudi ate the bucket-shop en the outside when some stock exchnnge firms nccept the ac counts of houses doing this dishonest busi ness? The excuse thnt they de net knew will net held. They should knew, nnd I be lieve thnt nny house taking such ncceunts with proper diligence would knew. Protecting the Invester "Mr. Cromwell hns the right idea, and I hope the time will come when a practical working out of this thought will be In force all ever the country. It will menn a saving of millions of dollars n year for the public. "At the same time the public nt large has little idea of the measures for its pro tection which arc in force in the stock ex changes. Every reputable house has Its hooks audited regularly, net only as a pro tection te Its clients, but te safeguard it self as well. The Beard of Governors can call for an audit of the books of any of its members nt any time, and this is done fre 'luently. Of course, in the cases of houses vyhieh nre net members of the stock ex change they have no authority. As a result the violations of tthe very strict exchange laws by members of the exchnnge nrc Infre quent nnd they nre invariably followed by the severest punishment. "The penalties Inflicted by the stock ex change itself en these of its members who violate its laws nre such us te deter unv but the most foelhnrdy or reckless from even contemplating such action. Net only me the offenders expelled from the ex change, but their careers as brokers are utterly and irrevocably ruined. Advantage Over the Law "By administering its own punishments the stock exchange hns n certain advantage ever the law, especially In the matter of speedy. action. Legal measures may be de Injed sometimes indefinitely bv skillful law crs, but the penalties of the exchange ure net only severe, but nre also immediate "There are also ether protective meas ures, such as the fund which must be main tained with the stock exchange clearing house, ami In every way possible the ex change endeavors te protect both itself and these who de business through Its members by severely punishing these of its members who are guilty of practices net In accord with the rules of the exchange "Tim stock exchange has a great nnd im im pertnnt work te de in the distribution of the securities of the great corporations of the country. Considering' the Immense nmeunt of business done annually, there are verr few who fall te measure up te the standurds of the institution. As n class the stock exchange people try te render honorable, efficient and intelligent scrvice te the neo nee p e nnd try te fill adequately the Important pluce which it occupies in the financial community." fll Any man who has the foolish notion thnt one man is as geed as another In a iepiiblc should listen te the walls (nt ti.i. late day!) of United States Senators bceas0 they were net away up front nt the funeral of the Unknown Soldier en ArmlsMce Da? It may easily he that the War Department made an cr.er ; but. en the ether hand, there seems n foolish hurt pride In thn eh h int of Senater Stanley im bureauch". Zuni department clerks nowadays can tell u Se n nter te pe way buck and sit down. Aw shucks. Senater! We knew office boys who could de it. ' ' ' A moving. picture firm will anneal in court the decision of the New YeRnUw barring certain newspaper jokes from the screen. U have no direct inteiest i e mutter. One of thu jokes cited , thing. Of either It nilght he inld ?t ' n In peer taste. But It Is a grenT ,f "J? thV motlen-plcture people can't di their Vvvn censoring ns the newspapers de. tL m -. - ., T taW "g, w' erfp-K" - . s - giaV .j". S t " yz dc ' i m v. . '"B , "m WHEN Baker dispenses The Federal cakes His prestige immense is And progress he makes, "lis dough that Is needed. They'll get it or bust. Pretests nre unheeded; Xhese chaps hare a crust. But Wrong is n. faker Who rurnrrentlv allna When RIter raps Baker' The firmament rips. ' One of the first results of the big fair li oratory. ' ? Girls nt Penn object te being called tf i .' W,h.y thp P0"? tnc- inquire. All right, girls. WeMljnnke it "coo." ? It Is no mere coincidence that the dle! tntes of humanity nnd sound business Is-, tertsts ure hitched se often te 'the iim niSl,e ?.fu 'IV t,hinR" t0 consider In cesl nectlen With Vnnl'u nfr - r i. el.il wd1'aUseffer,r,ed1?0ly Wnnt " and ,f "'' t.-i1!!l'.t from. t.hese who make It flntl "7 iV8 e bet that the second choices ,.?!,", fv.n,r..Mt n M fair-site boosters nuuiu uv uiu raricway. TteifIf,',Iraipi,n,f .f clnM A constable, li"' nll m fe,l0,u:J by kidnapping of CliMl of A?b. CN' Ve..trurt ,here ' no Gratia, of going threughjhe entire alphabet. i J-'ir.?!0? K."!,w.!'ck. . tailors 1 nVi,.r i,., " minniic uity. Takleg as nrnmliJE1 C.Y, ns U wer( 'creased demand premised this summer for safety pins and r..hl inMr t rem M-000 te 40.000 'OOOO rnhiV"1 te havc il "starched, :u0;,rfer,bs,ae;.'cdges.eXtra We tlen V'eTS,i'?.?r..tilt W. J. Bryan's ebfe.! tienrr . """'i '" " nt according te tM rathe? ,n ""?"! .! .I?P ce..tTA.ne;.;rr ' ' .reu-u,oeuc" 1W '. Joed1 Pnr?feS".er. lI('c'"es, n whipping k tr'li'ncelnn'deype0'" """" '' What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ i' w'h2i Is meant b' Saerstatt? ? nt.,a,f mercn? a i- he ls Mahatma Mobendas K Ohandlf 4. Name the author of "The Virirfnlani ' W,e WmtT9 f tl,e "lOTl'nTSSRSStr; c' W1isrit 'iiw- I',lan(, nnU ter wW s ml!' ils t.,; Pronunciation of "sheik"? ' T?ni2,itl!f .Dl2ecra,l Ieader " tin e iTTKUnlt,ea,stfttH Senate? 10. What is the nickname of New Yerk State? Answera te Yesterday's Quiz 1. Downing street Is In Londen, and one 1,1 l.!,1uwJ! nn u ,R tha residence of thi Isrltlsn Prime Mlnlaier Tr.na (ha phrase "Downing Street" is sometime) . llRurf an n .liWikAl .. ...... ..lal DO lev. " 2. The prayer, "Pre Papa," u ene recited in ine (jatneiic cnurcli for the spiritual guidance of the Pepe. The words mess "Fer the Pene." 3. Washington Irving wrote "Knlckerbeckv . or.". "'S'ery or New Yerk." i 4. The Keystone State U ih niebnnma ar popular name for the ConimenireaKa' or rennsyivama, D. Beth r simile and a metaphor are alia1 in that they convey comparisons. The former Is an expressed comparison In troduced usually by "like" or " i the Intter ls an lmellerl rnmnnrlsen. 6. Field Marshal Lord Allenby Is the Erlt'j' se iiikii uomnussiener who is ueuiuit . nun UIU 1.)J1IIU BIIUHHUO. . ,'Jl 7. The lines "I fain would climb hut that I rear te fall" are ascribed te sir vw! Tfn1al(rVi lit It n la . Iil limtn 1i1 P01M aHtiuinii, miiu i iwim iu unto wae---.j i them te Queen Kllznbeth. She Is enjlt te VinVA nlniMiil lil linneu it n maul' I menlal nlllknte with the renmi,: ceupiet, -ir my Heart netn ran -de net climb nt nil." .. i 8. Pairs of cities, separated continent ww. having the same names, ure J'ertlami and Huleni, Oregon, en the l'aclltu tK heard, anil Portland. Maine, ana Slein, Massachusetts, en the Atlf" Kefllinnrrl. A J. The Heuso of Savey Is the reigning,"? uy ei iimy. . .! 10. A cucurbit Is one of n family of v.nj J uunis. producing catame WW neluding eggplant, cUcunibjrl Wl JB-C . $ '- M'. Wctf: "-.wis a-t.S't lifttftlnV ...,, 4 .U. k.tTk MjLmi.&W?&Ali Ji v .. v lUy tAtrfi'f" ldt M.