WM ffifFSfWfy Vtf'aSar- ' V t11R1KnBq'1VT"(Wl .-" "" '! 'rrrc.-T v ' K ',. fc.r..- T5 r a2.'KK.W'', v " mm m ? l?m. r V. m tW mC". m--'.&ir atffcaaBtta. '3 fl.i.Vt.lv & public Eefcaec ftVMC LEDGER COMPANY NtTJaV H. K. ctnvni; PaaanmN 8., Martin, Vie Praaldmt and Traaaurarj, Sk . 8crUryi Charles It, !.udln-, mjL Ceillni. Jehn H. William. Jehn J. i, uvenr -. ueiaimun, eavia e. Bmiitz, RMlT.KTi .Editor ' C. MAn.TIt.-,.inencral pgtnm Manar WH'iKAy.j .-.. -. t r .. .. pv 'Jir """B ""7 ruuLie i-renici uuiiamg t'....rL- .'ndewndenca Square, l'hllaildplila. J L.lt '.ASuKTta On. k . . . r r.r.'in niii,nn. I t JJWT' Tet ) ,...,..304 MHdlnen Ave. ' VMBOtT:......i ...70l Ferd nulMlns ;tr.'tiew.. ,013 alone-Democrat nulldlng ivyiMMMiwit Prate, ,,.. 7 .Si 'itTJ;. -or. t-ennarivama, jve ana ntn St. '1J,,!f'TWK Hctr.i.;....,,...Th l?n HulMlns S"ilMmi BDU1B Tnfitfir rtnllillnr Ei J&t2j'v suna'cnirneN TFmi3 K VlTM;lKifiira Pcblie Ltnern It nervM te eub- v.W?"'' u raiiaeeipM and lurreumnc tewni i,i'H.JP ,'t of twelve (12) cents pr week, payable Vil.'"lfcm,'J t0 Plats eutalde of Philadelphia In , tit United Rtateft. C?anailn. nr ITnllnil Mibim rm. VS S!"il5.f 'JPt free, flttr (.101 centa per month. fjt ! "' Hra per' year, pajalile in a.lvnnce. g(3 ' Te all ferela-A countries ere ($1) rtnllar a month. niniw-euracnmn wuninf nniirens cnanteu Bunt give old aa well an new addreas. Kit. 1000, WALNUT KEYSTONE. MUX KOI KTAtdrttt all communications te Evrnlne Public Ltdatr. Independence Rquarr, Philadelphia. I Member of the Associated Press TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS It exclusively en VMUm te lh u or rrsmMleatten of all news aVatArt credited te (t or net etheruttr credited fj thif paper, and alto the local news published '.411 riahtt of republication of special dispatches mrtt art alie reserved, Falladtlphla. Frtdar, Mirth K. 1932 THE CONVENTION HALL TANGLE THE way of public Improvements in I'lill delphla is bard. It 1 en the record that sylts regarding the origin nnd cutting of (tone for the Free Library delnyed the commencement of that project for itcvernl years during which the ce.ts of construction were enormously increased. Taxpayers' litigation is a traditional and frequent check upon the Initiation of enter prise. Questioned constitutionality of en actments is another. This last is new brought forward In con section with the War Memerial Convention Half undertaking en the Parkway. Coun cilman Devclln suspects that the Legisla ture's, net authorizing the County Commis sioners te levy n tax for the memorial is Illegal. Hi contention mny be well founded, since in 1854 the taxing power was trans ferred from the Commissioners in this county te the City Council. The point should be rlenred up by the City Solicitor. Minnwhile, however. It would seem un aecessary te halt the victory convention hall undertaking. There is new mere than 91,300,000 -available for this work and hence It Is unlikely that nsscst-ments by the County Commissioners will be required te augment the funds. This was the view prevailing In Council, which approved an appropriation of S10.000 for the collection of dntn upon which re-a-ulremcnts for the hull enn be based. The danger of calling upon the Commissioners te act under n tnxntien law of disputed va lidity is net immediate. PRACTICE SUSTAINS THEORY THOSE who urseil the establishment of n small City Council of a single chnmbcr in place of the twe-chnmbercd large Council will be gratified with the conclusions of the Bureau of' Municipal Itesearch that the change has justified itself. 'The present Council handles routine busi Bess much mere expeditiously thnn the old Council and handles it just as well. On "ether matters it is no worse than the old ;- Council. It has failed te act en the gnM "r ml Irnnait ouestlen. but it does net need n long memory te rccnll the delays en slmilii'r subjects of which the large Council was guilty. But the City Legislature is far from per fect. Its members with few exceptions nre of the same type as were elected te the old Council, It was hoped that, n different sort of men would be chosen, but men of the right kind did net seek the office. If the reters cheese they can nominate next year A. group of men for the Council who will command the respect of the whole com unity. THE SHOCKING MR. PlNCHOT fnilE rashness of Ulfferd l'incliet lias long X been conspicuous. His reckless exclu sion of polities from the Forestry Depart lent of Pennsylvania bespenks uu integrity of purpose which, In this Commonwealth, is little short of startling. That he has no Intention of abandoning vhb notorious method is n fact new revealed in his headlong warning te his subordinates. Mr. "Plnchet has told these jobholders in the Forestry Department that he will impose no assessment against their salaries In support of his announced bid for the gubernatorial nomination. But net content with this" sensational nov elty.' the chief State Ferester addresses his subordinates in these amnzlng terms: "As members of the department you' must net make use of your official position for or against any candidate, nnd especially net for me." Dees Mr. Pinchot realize what he is doing and where he is? He is In Pennsylvania, where "the boys" co-operate almost auto matically. Dees he despise such mechan ism? As It seems se, the conclusion mny be drawn that Mr. Plnchet is out of his head, evidently preferring te be en intimate terms with his conscience. The conception is one calculated te impart n creepy sensation te upholders of Pennsylvania political tradi tions. Whnt geed Is politics anyhow if it Is te become honest nnd straightforward? THE' LONDON AMBASSADORSHIP WHETHEH Senuter Pepper Is the mun te succeed tieerge Harvey ih Ambassa dor te England is net of se much Interest as the general agreement thnt Mr. Harvey should be succeeded by some one. lie Is net the kind of man we have been in the habit of sending te Londen. Jehn Hay and White law Reld and Jeseph II. Chente, te say aefhlng of Walter II. Page, were representa tives of whom Americans could be proud. And Bayard, of Delaware, was another of the same type. When President Harding is nt leisure te consider the Londen pest he would de well te, give Colonel Harvey an opportunity te resign gracefully and then appoint te the pest a man qualified te fill It with credit te the Government". DEFEATED DEFEATISTS THK treaty dcbtructlenlsta already are beaten. This Is the cheering slgnlli slgnlli cknce'.ef agreement in the Senate upon limit ing debate am fixing the date for balloting upon the four-Power cempuct. Itcpuhlicnn leaders are convinced and there lN ample Jtrttiicatien for their. forecast that the Ail. MSit. wWstratlen will have nn iron-clad margin E"ttJ"fi three for ratification, with possibly n aWWIrth favorable vote, ite ranus or tne majority party the unionists nre jteran, J -a Follette, ten and France, un inviolate quartet. 1' apparently failures ns preselytise. -L m'Z' ..." xi. n .ll . I .. .1 1 l ., ., . iif.f jjerpii" ie iiuumb ui iMiuaniiiiuii nun nicir IOT' vehemently expressed fears, they have gained f aa.Kepuuiican rfcrunn. i' Jt is, plain that Underwood will carry : with- Mm fnr the treat v at least a nunrtnr fe' ml .thm Democrats. Narrow partlsniishln t.r "i" 77 -" :' . - - . '? nwM fpverh the balance, of his party ,v who Kl vtM-'M' negatire vote. . Werej tbe tables !Mlt',f t' Hi turned and did the treaty emanatVfretn a Democratic Executive, most of these rotes would' also be. reversed. Jehn Bhnrpe Wll .Hams has exhibited the case In his most cut i ting nnd brilliant style; nnd nothing can 'be added te the acuity of his candid analysis. The early roMepse of the irrecencllablcs linpllcsTnet only the passage of the four ,1'ewer pact, but of the ether- treaties framed In thu Washington Conference, The ex pected, Indeed the assured, vote of March 24 may be taken as a sign that the de de strurtlenlsts have been championing n' lest cause. 'It is safe te assume that their sorrow will be. cither blgetedly partisan or strictly personal. The Natien ns n whole Is out of sympathy with methods which wrecked one Administration's foreign policy nnd streve te ruin that of its successor. IS FIRST AID FOR BOOTLEGGERS r NEW WASHINGTON CHARITY? The Dismissal of Mr. Walnut Brings the Attorney General'e Office Head long Inte the Prohibition Scandal ACTING ATTOHXEV (5FNEKAL GOFF'S explanation of the dismissal of Special Assistant District Attorney Wal nut, at the moment when Mr. Walnut was engaged in letting daylight In upon the head quarters of the Pennsylvania Whisky King, Is n wnnten insult te common intelligence. The Washington telegram which ordered Mr. Walnut out of the Federal Building could net have been better timed If Intended te frustrate the efforts of n Federal Grand Jury which has been trying te get nt the truth about the underground liquor business In this Stale nnd the men who have organ ized it. It was it monkey-wrench in the machinery of the Federal courts. It will be generally viewed as n shocking cxnmplc of the brutnl and cynical misuse of official authority in the interest of lawbreaficrs. The Incident is by no means closed. Mr. Dnughrrty will hnve te' add nn explanation te Mr. Gelf's. And If the Attorney General himself ennnet clear the nlr immediately nnd prove that the tactics of ward politics have net become fashionable in Washington, the question raised by Mr. Gelf's telegram will grew and survive te haunt the White Heuse. Fer It is n question larger than prohibition. It Is a question that Involves the honor of the Administration and the Integrity of the Government. Can the office of the Attorney General of the United States be used as an agency for the frustration of law? Cen it operate boldly in the open ns n sort of first aid te bootleg syndicates without exciting the nnger and derision of the country nnd the disgust of all people, whether they be wet or dry? Isn't It time te admit thnt the spectacular sleuthing after "half-pint men." the little raids en muggy little bars and the jailing of vagrant whisky peddlers comprise u far cical and ridiculous nnd shamefully mis leading business se Ions as there appears te exist, close te the seat of the Federal Government, suspicion of a conspiracy of some sort for the protection of tbc Big Ones of the bootlegging gnme? A long time age the worst that was feared by thoughtful observers of the prohibition experiment happened. Whisky ami whisky money became almost hopelessly tangled with politics In this State. It hes.been plain for months thnt If the truth became known, if the facts of this ominous partnership of In terests were revealed, nt least n few men of large political and social pretensions would go te jail. The Investigations directed by Mr. Walnut nnd carried out with the as slstnncc of that part of the State enforce ment organization which has remained in corruptible were lm?artlnl, Intelligent nnd relentlessly thorough. What the Federal officers nnd the Special Assistant District Attorney learned about the men higher up would have been revealed te the Federal Grand Jury yesterday. Mr. Gelf's telegram arrived In the niek of time. Se unexpected, se without justification or reason was this stroke from the Attorney General's office, nnd se flagrantly opposed te the public interest, that It can be ex plained only upon the assumption of panic in the region of Harrlsburg and consequent intolerable pressure exerted through politi cal chunncls upon Washington. And it is worth remembering thnt orders recently issued out of Washington made It impossible for enforcement agents in the field te step n flood of alcohol that has been pouring un restrained from some of the biggest plants In the country. Hns the ferment of corruption created by mingled polities nnd whisky spread at last te Washington? The precedent established by Mr. Gelf Will help, of course, te nullify the Velstead law and te confuse nnd thwart the efforts of gcnerul enforcement agents. It will de mere thnn that, nt It is te be ncccpted as n guiding principle It will encourage law breaking, revive the whisky business nnd concentrate it exclusively in the hands of privileged peliticnl groups. The rights or wrongs, the wisdom or un un wiseom of Velstendism hnve nothing te de with the case. What we need te knew new is whether the chiefs of the bootleg Tings were right when they boasted that they were making enough money te "rench" any offi cial In the law departments of the Govern ment. Mr. Dougherty must take the witness stand new. It remains te be seen whether his first nsslstant acted under his Instruc tions or without his consent. GHOSTS: NEW FASHION RETUIINING from his vigils in the ghost house nt Antlgenlsh, Dr. Walter F. Prince, director of the American Institute of Scientific Research, virtually admits, In the cautious language of a weigher and measurer of realities, thnt there nre such things as ghosts. He believes, for example, that nn external or disenrnnte spiritual force possessed little Mary Ellen at Intervals and moved her te start attractive little fires in the house.ef her fester-father, Mr. Mac Donald. Dr. Prince Is reasoning upon ground worn hard by the feet of exploring psychologists. Many scientific men no longer doubt thnt mysterious forces may influence the mental nnd spiritual processes of some sensi tive individuals. They hnve traced back word, as a matter of fact, until they nc nc tuelly arc ready te acknowledge the sound ness of the ancient theory that men .and women may be "possessed." Seme students of occult manifestations the late Dr. Ilyslep for one have seen In the manner isms nnd even In the temporary and phe nomenal dexterity of an occasional medium the dominant ami pci-uiuir cmiracieristics or men or women long uruu. xntis it lias been believed by Mime of the enthusiasts of spir itualism that what artists cnll inspiration the desire and the ability te work success fully through ,nj sudden and unexplalnable creative mood due te the return of a JN JdN Ufa? K tJ mm spirit te a' transient ahHatfe. In eon genial individual whynaMMas .without knowing it te be VmedlaW vV . Dr. Prince, with his eaeculatiens upon Antlgenlsh, opens !a Tatt'aM for troubled speculation. If, as be Days, Mary, Ellen is net in the least te blame, though Wic started the little fires and frightened her fester-par erits half te death, the people who started the $15,000,000 conflagration in, Chicago might summon Dr. Prince te defend them when they ere brought te' court, . They could blame It en a ghost. .Any one who does anything wrong could blame his crimes upon nn evil spirit and mere thnn one scientific man of standing, would willingly fly te his nld. . , It is'ne longer fashionable te laugh nt these who believe In telepathy. If a voice, 'can be carried .through a. thousand miles of space by electric energy ordinarily imper ceptible, It is net tee' much' te assume that deeper wonders may be revealed before long'. "They won't let me ulerie7! cried Mrs. Eddy, wringing her hnndsr She was' talking of people n thousand miles away whose enmity, 'she said, she could feel. Thereare se litany wonders under our own, and' ether suns that It Is foolish te deny what merely seems Improbable, , , .,.,.., Only people who, "knew very little profess te knew everything. Scientific men nre ac tually demonstrating the possibility of mira cles. They are net cynics. ' They nre merely trying te examine some of the miner-rbMles of life in the light of new .knowledge. The attitude of the wisest men of science was clearly suggested by one very nble investi gator who, when he was asked whether he believed in Immortality, said: "I don't knew. I only feel thnt anything is possible. Anything may be true!" THE HOUSE OF COWARDICE WHAT the Heuse of Representative lend ers think of the Fordney Benus Bill is indlcntcd by the plans which they nre making te jam the measure through next Tuesday. The bill was net completed until yester day. It wns reported te the Heuse today. As Speaker Gillctt will net co-operate with Fordney nnd Mendcll In getting unanimous consent for Its pnssnge en Monday, it is planned te hnve the Committee en Itulcs make n special rule te bring the bill up en Tuesday nnd te provide thnt there may be no amendments, nnd te limit debate nnd te permit no motion save te send it back te tne committee. Here, is a bill which involves the possi ble expenditure of $.',000,000,000 which is te be passed without serious discussion by the Heuse, nnd passed merely because the Representatives arc afraid of the political effect of their failure te pass some sort of n bonus bill. When they have voted for It they will be, clear en the record, se far ns the service men are concerned. It cannot be charged against them thnt they did net "de something" for the soldiers. That Is nil they enre about. Indeed, one of them hns said that If n secret ballet could be taken the bill would net get mere than thirty-five votes. The task of killing the bill is te be put up te the Senate, nnd If by nny chnnce the Senate should refuse te nssume this respon sibility nnd pass It for the same reasons thnt Influence the members of the Heuse, the President himself will be compelled te nssume the responsibility of protecting the Trensury nnd preventing the creation etWw obligations which will make It difficult for the Government te meet the old obligations amounting te $0,500,000,000 which fall due before Mny of next year. DIMINISHING INCOMES . IT WAS expected thnt the Income tnx pay ments en Wednesday would be smnller than en the corresponding day Inst year, but no one thought there would be se great n slump ns the estimates indicate. In Philadelphia and New Yerk nnd Chi cago the amounts received by the Internal Revenue Collectors are 40 per cent less than a year nge. At this rate the returns for the yenr will be only $1,800,000,000, while the Government was expecting at least $2,000,000,000. But even If the Government cxpectntlen Is renllzed, the returns will be the lowest since 'the War Revenue Lnw wns passed. In 1010 the sum of $2,000,000,000 was col lected. In 1020 it rose te $.1,050,000,000, nnd In 1021 it fell te $3,000,000,000. Seme experts nre estimating that the yield of the tax this year will net exceed $1,000, 000,000, or only a little mere than one-half the amount collected last year. There are two reasons for this fnlllng off. The first And most influential Is the stagna tion, in business last year. Incomes which were large In 1020 were radically reduced in 1021. Factories were closed nnd earned nothing for their owners. Men were out of work nnd had te curtail nil their ex penses, and this reduced the Income of the retail merchnnts. Many of them had great difficulty lust year in raising the money te pay the taxes en their incomes for the yenr before. As business has improved somewhat since January 1, they will find It easier te pay their smaller taxes en tbc business done Inst yenr. The second reason for the decline In rev enue lies in the transfer of wealth from taxable securities Inte Federal, State nnd municipal securities which arc untaxed This transfer hns net diminished the amount of outstanding taxable securities, but it has taken these securities from the possession of men with Inrgc Incomes subject te n surtax of from 25 te 50 per cent nnd put them into possession of a much larger num ber of holders with smnller incomes en which the lnx Is 10 or 15 per cent, Ne man, if he can get rid of it, will continue te held a 5 per cent security when the Gov ernment tnkes by n tnx se much of the In come from It ns te reduce it te a 2V& per cent security. And no amount of damning by n demagogue will make him de It. Hungarians In Vienna A Jeb for Charles arc raising money for former Emperor Charles, said te be In destitute circumstances In Madeira. Outsiders will persist in thinking thnt the money could be better spent at home. It should net be hard for the deposed monarch te get n job in his Island rctrent. He might make n lilt ns a hotel clerk. That is, of course, If he were nble te assume the necessary majestic air. What the Scnnte seems te need Is u dictionary. Already there has been debatw concerning "between," "among." "alli ance" nnd "treaty," and every debate has, shown some lack of knowledge concerning "courtesy" supposed te be distinctly sena torial. Words nlc potent. The phrase born ei nn Iden makes an idea. The child Is father te the man. When Otte II. Kahn speaks of new national boundaries and spite fences he presses and melds Inte n compact phrase a complete economic principle, A Pale Ponte, Tex., septuagenarian is serving thirty days In Jail .for having "quietly approached a young woman and kissed her." After this the old rascal had better hire it brass band and au announcer when he gees n-kUslng. There is reason for the declaration et the telegraph and telephone officials that the radio will new wholly supplant wire serv ice. The automobile has net wholly sup planted the horse. Each fits into its own particular niche. Laughter is one Infection that shouldn't be laelated. -., MaTwlrV ' A' Fa. TsCTT'-'sffcHl'A . J mvm&wmmft At ONE. WOMAN SEES IT Idloayneraalea Innumerable Manifest Themtelvae In tha Matter of In- i Vmt, ajavlnai and Expendlturea By SARAH D. LOWRIR A BROKER belonging te it well-known , and'1 leng-estnbilshed firm remarked the ether dny that for the life of him he retttd net Imagine from where nil the money came which tb wild -cat and plunging and even tually bankrupt brokers were squandering Instead of Investlnr Ivcltlmatclr. He said I with considerable glumness thnt tils' investors iwi norsiiewn any sucn rcauy cssu ter manj a month. Yet every dnyNer twewhen there is a smash, and. ene or mere "buckct-shopsV-Ue Inte the .hands of n receiver, it appears that they hnve been Intrusted with millens from Investors that have anywhere from $500 te $80,000 easy cash lying round loose te be pluiiked'dewn en nny mahogany counter that leeks solid and that has a brass.cnge with smiling man back of it. N 'But most of the'brekers that have fleeced their clients have been out te fleece, and could have been pretty well sized up, by a few careful questions elsewhere as te what was 'a safe rate of Interest te expect'en an Investment' and whnt were the actual .stock dealings of that firm for the day or week. BUT," the pcrsens thnt Invest with these. chaps de net apparently nsk questions, except .of the smiling men themselves back of the brass fittings of the solid mnheinny counter.- Lets of them from ether cities Invest here or in 'New Yerk with' entire strangers rather than through their home brokers. I think the reason for it is very obvious, and probably the brokers that nre out te fleece count en their knowledge of human nature when they send their prospectuses te the men and women of distant towns. Per sons who havr n little money te Invest, from $500 te $50,000 saved up, or Inherited, or f;et as a gift en the qulft. nre net keen about inving it known by the people at home, or even by the agents et home who usually de business for them. They invest It sons te make a quick turnover with the Idffl that they will say nothing about it until it suits them te'. IT SEEMS te be just as instinctive for .the genera'ltv of people te conceal thelt savings and their gainings ns it is instinc tive for n deg te hide a bone. "A woman who was left n very large for tune, by her husband nnd a most complicated business te settle told me that his sole Instruction te her was: "Never tell any one what your income is! The income tnx ha somewhat cross cress sectioned thnt .ndvlce. but beyond the In ternal Revenue official, I doubt if she has ever taken even her sons into her confidence. There nre numberless icnsens why that secret should be better kept than most. Men nre afraid if their wives knew thev will want mere. Wives nre afraid If their husbands knew they will allow less. Children nrp afraid if their parent'' knew tlicv wll criticize the way the money Is used. Rela tions keen the matter from ether relation .for fear they will be thought stingy or at east uniiDcrai. Business men keep it from the world ut large for fenr. they will be dunned by business associates and philanthropies. Em Em peoyes keen it from eimile,-ii,s for enr their wages will be lowered. Employers keep it from empleyes for fenr these thnt work for them will nsk for mere pay for their work. And se lt'gecs ! Even the beggars de net tell the ether beggars .hew much their cornet is worth n dny. OF COURSE, there Is the reverse side of the secrecy. Meq nnd women and even children nre just ns apt te bt secretive, about owing money nnd losing money nnd spending money, nnd for every boastful spender of money there are a score of reti cent ones. In fact, It leeks as though, with nil the Importance of money, It Is net n subject thnl I even nn ngreenble one between nenr nnd cTcnr friends. Ne one vnlnes menev in quite the same way; no one saves it or spends It in quite the same way nnd one Is very sensitive of criticism spoken or un spoken concerning one's economics or one's extrnvagnnces. A lawyer who has had much experience in divorces told me that there were mere separations due te money differences than te unfaithfulness. And one of thamnst devoted wives thnt I ever knew once said with a little' sigh thnt wns n hnlf sob -of rcinlni cencc that she hnd thanked Ged she had her own inherited income many n time, when between bcrluisbnnd and herself there loomed up some threntcned rift en the subject of expenditures. VERY few men "let go" .their held en their fortunes enough te prepare the nni nni er the ones who ere te Inherit se thnt they mny inherit wisely. If one is going (e tiu-i one's children or one's wife or one's near of kin with the expenditure of one's snvlm; nnd gainings nfter one's death, why net at least observe their ways of doing business before that separation, se as te rectify some of the mistakes of Ignorance ! I was amused net long nge en being tin recipient of confidences during the same vMl from a man nnd his wife, ills wife ten! me thnt during the war 'they had net eniv spent their income but gene a little beyond', I assured her It was a very common fate for most nersens en snlnrics or divine en n fixed , nnd invested income. But she could net be comforted, because sue explained her liu. band was' se humiliated and worried. "lie has always lived within his Income," she said, "nnd it has nged him very much te feel himself slipping behind.." Somewhat later in the snme day her hus band, nettled nt something I had said about money and the spending of it, read me a lecture en the felly of net saving regulnilv "Why," said he, glancing hnlf-uncnii sclet'sly at the deer te make sure of net being overheard "I de net consider that you can cnll It living within your Income unless you can save." "Hew de you mean save?" I said. "Yeu should decide what sum you can save yearly nnd consider thnt ns part et your budget." ,'Oh. come, who does thnt?" sold I. "I de!" he snapped. " nnd'I would he mighty ashamed if I hnd net put back some Inte capital every year. Every year but this year." he amended gloomily. "This year I have just come out even, and 1 con sider it living beyond my Income." "But," I said, thinking of his wife's nnxlcty. "you really nre still nhend. for you have nil these back savings and nil the Interest en them." "Thnt is new capital, and I treat it as such," was his firm rejoinder. SOME dny he will die and leave nil these savings from income te his wife, who will net differentiate It from the rest of the In vested capital, se she will never guess hew many qunlms he gave her all for nothing en the subject of living within their Income. He probably would have told her the truth about nny ether thing he did but just that, and yet just thnt would have made all the difference between anxiety nnd pence for her. A MANX times millionaire enmc down te his breakfast tnbleNnet long nge nnd during the cmirse of the meal began te lecture his wife en the cost of the rolls. The eggs from his fancy form probably cost five dollars each, and the cream from his wonderful herd way worth its weight In geld, and the cress from the het house and the oranges from his Herldn place all be longed te the snme cntegery, but the rolls were from n French bnkery nnd delivered fresh out there cost five cents each. And it was upon the ruinntlen of Jiving beyond their means en these that he waxed elo quent. It ensed his mind te threaten bank ruptcy because of the rolls, pertly because he knew se ridiculously well It wasn't true, and partly because he chose te consider It " last, straw" in a money crisis Involving some millleM. ' - UTbh iPfcVtMaMateMWr?w; ftVA-y-y:ffBfftff .-;, w i im.LmemLsm , f w ; . ' a yrQfl '' YT -.. '. ' ' "'-, i ' , ViA VS'VAW4rW ;'vViilfMa ." '$88mM "...:.-: v ,'M4fffii;:'':, tmmtis .i3-?!bimmwtii V V ' "VyferiM ' ' flaaK''illiTr "' Pntfc' ''fit cfiaw a ' aVaVaVaT v wHataVflHBBwaASa!, V - ?'.;' 'nt- K hi y trVf'ifr3SltfHiyi lWagaWWaWW3am3 U if JLl J? II Wlfl(fi5 ' " " i te fif. NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Knew Best M. F. MIDDLETON, JR. On the Bucket-Shep Problem THE Philadelphia Stock Exchange will make every possible effort- te wipe out the many bucket-shops new existing In .this" city, says M. F. Middleton. Jr.. the newly elected .president of the exchange. "I took up the matter the firt'l thing nfter our organization recently," snld Mr. Middleton. "The bucket-shop problem is n serious matter in every' .lnrgc city new and it will take. a great amount of. time, eFert Olid-energy te .stamp It out. .. r "The .evil is, se widespread and bin at talned te such strength thnt t.nni' con vinced thnt It cannot be eradicated by nny one mnn nor by any one' group and it cannot be accomplished nt once. In my opinion, publicity Is the grcntest wcupeu that can be used in making this fight. "But there nre several ways in which much can be accomplished. One of the mostimpertunt, if it could be brought nbeut, would be te hnve the newspnpers refuse te take the advertisements of nny known bucket-shop nnd nnether, nnd perhaps mere Important one, would be for the banks te refuse te accept the accounts of these men or firms. Twe Important Measures "It fellows thnt If the advertisements are cut 'oft the patronage of the bucket-shops would be curtailed, and, en' the ether hand, if these men nre unable te obtain thinking facilities, it will .be impossible for them te carry en u brokerage business. "Anether equnlly impertnnt feature is u enmpaign of cducntien for the juibilc. car ried en through the press and by talks by bankers and ether financial men whose statements will carry weight with the people ns n whole. These speakers could tell the people the differences between the bucket shop nnd thu legltlmnte brokerage business, tell whnt the bucket-sh,ep does nnd what it does net de. A little Information of ti n kind would go n long way with people who have n sufficient regard for their money te de a little thinking. "One of the strongest points that 1 make te persons who often complain te mu that they nre unnble te get stock which they hnve ordered through their brokers is that they ought te be glad in one way that this is se, because it shows beyond nny doubt that their brokers are honest. If they were dealing with brokers who were net strictly en the level there would be no difficulty In petting a ccrtlllcnte saying that the stock had been purchased. Public Largely Ignorant "Tim public ns a whele Is tremendously ignorant as te the functions of the bucket shot) nnd hew It works. One thing strongly In favor of the bucket-shop getting a large amount of business Is thnt It will give very much mere favorable terms than nny legiti mate broker will de. Almest any bucket shop will accept a 5 or 10 per cent margin, whereas the legitimate broker will demand 20 per cent nt lenst. This feature appeals te fliesc who like te play t(he market with with eutlputtlng up very much money in actual cash. "The buckcters have discovered a trick which we cnll the 'new bucketing,' which, technically, cornea within the lnw. The old style, of bucket-shop operation wns te simply take the money nnd mnke no pretense of buying the stock. The 'Improved' method Is te take the money of the customer and then go te n legitimate broker and purchase the stock. Almest immediately, nnd always the same day, the stock is sold en a house ncceunt or In the name of n dummy, and the money comes back Inte the possession of the bucketcrs. "The rules of the stock exchange nre strict ns te dealings of Its members with known bucket-shops. 'crv often this dummy, or 'steel pigeon will Vc summoned and Investigated, but he simply insists tliut the account is his nnd often It Is impos sible te prove te the contrary, although we hnve every rensen te believe thnt this is the case. When It is cleurly shown that anv member of the stock exchange hns had (killings with n proved bucket-shop that member Is Immediately expelled. Hut fre qucntly this is a very difficult matter te prove. ' Runs In Cycles "The bucket-shop evil runs in hjierj periods or cycles about live or six years upart, as will be found if the nnanclnl Ms. tery of the country be examined. It a' wins comes when, the market is a declining one, because that is the only time when n bucket shop enn make any money; when thu market gees up the bucket-shop automatically gevs out of business, .The bucKet'saep tne money of y ' . ...,-,. . ...... J. n.v r,.. mi Maw whip hi i I i aa the customer nnd buys the stock indicrttcd, selas te have a record that the order was actually filled. Then, ns I said, the stock is immediately sold en a house account or in the name of some one actually but net nnparently affiliated with the buckcters nnd tne latter get the money back again. They nevers actually buy nnd held the stock sub- ject, to,the;,ordcr of the purchaser. If the !'I? 5tK0?fl:,e,wn t,la margin, of the cits- !mi T.'i 'wn?.(1 ,out nml tlie' bucket-shop People keen' nil tin. mnnnv ., .i.-.. - .. S?it?'Vuwl"1.,s ',lny ',re,,S1' ,hp Immediate sale of the stock. If the market gees" up and the .customer dcmaWdShis profit there ,U, "J "f tW0 "!'"' ta ' ' tW'cr get the menej from j,en,e iutcr ncceunt wh, h , come in or. else fall, nt ...,; Vi" '". 'rf mnklft " TCrVe f,1",, for " Prpe.4 IfliT,800'1 en ncennt" .which show u ,; , ' ,'". v . aenerniiy rising market i.V ,?Jfl. lnCl n.bl("- LCC",W! "' """TO te madeI,themseli?h ,,,C' ,,aM "0t ',ct,'fll "With each return et widespread bucket shop operations the evil becomes greater than the last time. This time it witsnet only carried en upon n larger sci lc, bl It was'made Infinitely worse because of 'the modern 'method' of which I have s eke". T is feature has made it additionally dlffl cult for us te wipe out this evil feature of our financial system, despite the fact tha he bankers and the legltlmnte brokerage houses are bitterly opposed te the bucket- ltlnn,A M tl!?f U 'n'ntH and will de everything possible te eliminate It. Largely Public's Fault "But in the end most of the blnnic for these conditions must be placed une i thl public Thousands want te dial 1th he bucket-shops because of the ensier tens they offer; they want, te put up the smallest margins possible and would rnther put up ,-, or $10 a share and take the chances of losing their money than te pay $20 n ahnr t S legitimate- broker nnd Lve the "tort "carried for them nnd whatever profits they ,ak0 absolutely guaranteed. And the liersnns who tnke these long chances are the eZ who howl the loudest when they lese "One of the things which should be" par ticularly stressed In the cducntien of the public is that any person contemplating e purchase of stock of any kind should go te n banker, preferably ).! wn. but nny banker Is qunllfied nnd willing te g ve "ih "ih "ih informatien, nnd find out whether the broker te whom he Intends te go Is sound and a member of the stock exchange ,nnd hence subject te the rules mid regulation.! ' of tm? exchange for the protection of investors "It would net be strictly true te s,,v that every dealer in stocks who Is ,,et a member of the exchange n bucket shen man, but It s nearly 100 per cent true There nre n few exceptions, M.eh ,, 1: meters and some of the bend houses, who occasionally buy stock -as nn ncconimela l n te their customers, whose business is aV,u ,the,exce,ptlen,:eH"' b,,t """ ' Failures te Continue "We have seen whnt n rising market will de te the bucket-shops in thest m u b r of failures of firms net membera e, the stock exchanges which have eccurreii in the country in the last few months J1! these failures are likely te con. ' In", e' as l" g ns the bull market continues, of ,L ?"k some of the strongest ones will weather Mi storm, but these net se well fertlfir.i n.2 likely go down, as se many' effa'ShlE "The Philadelphia Stock Exchange i. working hnrd en the problem lecnllv ni.,i i believe that we shall get geed resu ts wl certainly shall if the three things which i have mentioned con' be brought nbeiitii, newspapers refusing bucket-shop advertiL lug, the banks refusing bucket-shop necnnnV, and n campaign of education for the. m il as te the two different methods of trail i.J the bucket-shop method and that e ' uZ legltimute brokers." u,t Today's Birthdays Lady Patrlcln Ramsay, formerly PrlncesH Patricia of Connaught, born thlrty?sN years age. """y-six Charles V. Brush, inventor of tin. i,.., arc light, born nt Euclid, ().. eveiity.thSS- seventy. three jvnm UKUi Dr, Stephen S,- Wise, the eminent New Wk rabbi who H..VH modem society etVI moldy nnd deformed, born in it,, ! Is Hungary, fifty years ugel ""dapest, The Ut. Rev. Edward p, Allen. (Wi,,.!, Bishop of Mobile, born ut Le we , Mns"t' sixty-nine years na-e. ' """,, Themns M. 1 ell, Representative in Cen greys of the Ninth Georgia District. born at Cleveland, Ua alxty-eue years nge years age. Ctf Ain''Vriri . OTtsjw VV9 , .j Cracking Walnut iii only going te show f$ wuai'is in. nun.; . ,aj . : r- i-T-. .' . Mm Financial nete: 'Even n year of dolor. 'J tins ieur quarters. . s,i : 1 : '- .rv-K The only possible crop from bonus free,, ''.i seeds Is discontent. ' - la . , Tip te Belfast and Limerick: St' 3fl .uii4.i nns ii BCJiiieiiiuii. Doea .the; hint of n.dark horse presage al eiiiuie Kuvcrumi-iii ia unrriauurg ; The Pettsvllle woman who smelled a ; ; burglar at work had u nose for news. ' ' "1 ' May the ships lying up' aTHee Islaae' be spoken of appropriately as a floating VJ It tnkes the slew of nnrrleHsin 1mm of -. 7. .. i-T.:v"- ,:"".. jt i .si viutiRtuijr iu uinKe nn .income tax Aim popular. Jl The' average citizen ttetH nn W nf ijh the fact that his .income- tax grows nute- M mnflrnllr 1cm. ' " ifa Wonder If Dr.'Prlnce jeuld be induce; tlM ti ti.it lt.nf !. Mt... . II i .1.- , . .w .. iiiui i.n: iiun. nuina in me cuaix regions nfter April 1? Z .. :! i &l Insurgent directors, slowly receverlngfflli .... x, einnnt mc iiiiwv luitrtuuuu lucre wi ym n brick In that Mitten. i J . J..M President Ilardlnv hint unnCnn unfttv' Itf ' 'Vl the matter of the bonus. Congress Is neW;r '.? Congress Is peWl'r '.ill ready for the big stjck -M "In union there is weakness," sighs tar deposed directors, "and the P. R. T. is greater than the whole." a' Police nre listing the names of these. '. who pntrenlze Camden saloons. Why aet close the places at once? ' ', ', The drop In the nmeunt received by the Government by Income tax Is net Without, ' its nppllcatien te the Benus Bill. , , ' 1 In order te enforce prohibition earnest Pennsylvania believe te bring te book the .' running Brooks law is as geed us anything. ''-, The boy serenaders of West Chester- r who were pinched because the girl they sang,. .' for hnd the toothache new don't care howl much It hurts. ',' i . , , . ' i . There is a feeling here and there that' Dr. Prince has net knlvnri llie nivsterr nf' r Antlgenlsh, but that he has simply glren i .h M..w.v. .iniiiu. ff t In the matter of our" demand for psO for our troops en the Rhine, it is net exactly ' njini no muiu inni appears te nave Hurt i' Allies as the bloeinlngway we said it. What De Yeu Knew? ( 'i QUIZ , . 1. Where ts Mount Hecl'n? ' . Inte wuut two great sects are the ad- nei"nt8 te ln Mohammedan rellgleu' 3. Who wrote "Mr. Sludge, the Medium"? 'n J 4. Name two Important treaties passed by,J mu ncnuie unaer me present AammrA titration. . - C. What Is a pterldoleglat? . . S . wnat la spikenard t. S ,,,"; I 7. Hew many legs ,had,' or. 1ms, a plil-'.. 8. In what' century did .Macuath, King et'- 9. Who we Murllle?: - . A 10. Hew muclibjgger la the earth than the ,'i moon 7 ' v ' , vt . -r - ') f: Anawara te Vaitariliu'a Quiz 1. The prefix "sesqul!'. Jh auch words at j r- ocenuiconienniai aim. 'Sfsquiicuiui,i , . . niespa one and a half. l .f 'f 2. The Bayet Bengal -Is that' part of tMU Indian Ocean which. lies between Jnji! 3. The Hues Canal was ebened In '1869. TV A. Tarrnnftn l& a ninni' 111..1 in norm' .', Weed, nnd tin1 In ''mnlclna' tnrraaQQ vinegur. '' "' ". ' ' .Vjt; 5. Merlin was .the mvthlnnl enchanter or,, v. maglclen who- figured' In the cycle eiyr C. Tbree British generals prominent In tht' Wnr of lata were 'Procter, Breck, na - ...Pakenham. , , ...jl.Vi 7. '.'Men are imt children et a 19?'. ji . Growth" Is from Orj-den's play, "" a, itoeert nruis Is. the present pem srim . rente of England. ' ,; . f ,u vtuittSl v. ii'' uamxy in in neavens I ' fv; 10. h ,fnremba' efr a, vihnle.nrf i i 1H1 'fl K&falVs. r jf fcftTfl .lULaaaaVf V KrfViMti ixiM .M.raaBBBamYx.. . . r.uM r.1.-.. tfta .ttriifc42tf li.feV'V.i nei.js.i Wi..h7 "L A.'. aiftfiiW . M . . f paddles. . ,, JL'fc..-b