MP1 'II 'iPWHiB ' ll'iWIW'H llllW Ulill Ill1 I i i i WW I MMilaaaaaaaaaaal II Wll'l i"IH IM'"M A. V I B ft.. 1(1 WPW". ' - ' ' ' :' i"'."4i'. i n iT r'ni i t'. . v ' . ' 1' . ' i "' ".' i ' " '.. in '.gBBBHaHLLi XL ''i,'"'1? ..AiHBHPiLlf JLlT5T3WMEaaaaaBBaaa7Eliaaa lubKclebeec 10 LlOGkK COMPANY MttfKJsVaT. X CURTIS. PattrassT kC, Martin, Vtce PraaldaM and Teaaaurar: fJiTt. aaeretaryi Charltt M. I.udini XTTitr.; aacretarri atrlu H. l.tKllnc- up B. veirnia, a. time r, i pa. jnnn.ii, wiinamt, jenn J. aeiaamitn, David E. Bmiier, . BWtKT, .EttlMr C. MArVHX... .Cieneral HuilncM Mnirr hiMUhtd dally at Pue Lkdecs Bulldlnc ItV VlM Indtptndenc Square; iTiUadelphU. M,.VKmt Tn i ... AAA rrilAn a I FlMtMl . Trtl Wt,t Vital 1.1 lata CIS........... 013 Gtoke-Demecrnt nutldlrr m ... 1302 Tribune Building A.y KKWS DUnEAUSi ;w.i ,":. ' ...-.. ... .. ...... . .' p. r. .-or. I'ennHrivama. aq. nnri iin ni. t.Sf'lWwn Tni RuttAD.. The Sun nulMInc I'tiKiw snuii iraiaigar uuuaint Sv&l? BunscniPTtejj tfrms , a"f!T KTKNlNa Pt'itic LEDOtn la aerved te mm- fr.ltY iHifcMi In PhllftrfAlnHla mnA llrAi.nlM (Nana Ctt H !. nf twaHanftMnl. n wwlf Mv.hU RSJK Srfiir. ' ..-.-.- v A. ?. m" te celntt euttlde of PhlUdtlphla In t fh lTnlt4 Rtiln, Canada, pp United Statea poi. fMMvna, peatat in, tiny (00) ctnta rr month. If ln dellnri per jiir. paynMa In adianca. "m all ferelan rnuntrlci one ($1) dollar a month. Notion Buhtcrlbtri wlahtng dars ehanej WUit lv old aa well a new address. ItlU JW4 WAL.MT KEYSTONE. MAIN 1401 fTAtdrtii all eommunlcatleni te Evening Publle Ltittr. Independenct Wquere, Philadelphia. I Member of the Associated Press I THK ASSOCIATED PRESS it txclurtvelu tn- tUlatf te tht ute or republication of all newt 4itpatthtt endued te it or net otherwise credited in IkM rater, and alae the local neus published Mr4a. . 411 rtehti of republication of special rfttpalefict herein art alto retereed. Philadelphia, Tue.d.y. Mitch :. 192: MONEY TO INVEST EIOIIT bidders elTcrwl te take nil of the new bridge lenn of $1,050,000 which nn old yesterday. The btmds pn.v 4'j ler cent interest and arc rcdecmnblc en nlxty dajs' notice any time after twenty jcars, nud they tre exempt from city taxes. The fact that there was mere than 98,000,000 rendy te be iinected in the pocuri pecuri ties indicates that the city will have no trouble in fleatin: ether leans in the fu ture. The money market is easier than it Was a year age. DR. THOMPSON IN HARNESS rE return of Dr. Rebert Kills Thomp son te the Central High Scheel at lecturer en ethics under the Barnwell will Js gratifying te all friends of Dr. Thomp son and of the school. The course in ethics was originally in stituted bj Dr. Thompson In the belief that the students should hove some instruction ,ln the subject te prepare them for life. lie Is well qualified for the lectureship te which he has been appointed. It is hoped that no quibblcr will raise the question of age in his cabe. As a special lecturer he Is without doubt exempt from the regula tions of the law retiring teachers at a cer tain age. The Barnwell will left $320,000 te the school, the income from which is te be used for its benefit. Dr. Thompson is the ftrtt lecturer te be engaged. It is announced that ethers will be Dr. Butler, president of Columbia University; Dr. Penniman, not ing provost of the University of Pennsyl vania, and Senater Pepper. UP A TREE 'A WASHINGTON woman has been up a tree for mere than eighteen hours, and all the Inducements and persuasions of the police and firemen have been insufficient te Induce ber te come down. 1Tai Ifiiatlnn ta atmnlA In enmnnpUnn ikwith that of the Pennsylvania Republican yeuucians. xney nave eeen up n tree ever since tne ueatn or senator 1'enrese. They want te get down, but they don't knew hew. Se they stay up there, each insisting that be has the only ladder long cneush tu 'reach te the ground and every ether one Insisting that the ether ladders will break under the weight. They .are all mighty uncomfortable, and nothing would delight them mere than te are home one come along who could tell them hew te get out of their predicament Without any less of dignity. : ' ANOTHER DEMAGOGUE FLIVS fPHB Nen-Partisan League has appnr- Jfently run its course. A. C. Tew nicy, t. it! founder, has announced thru ht will re- ABlm as president at the annual meetine in , Minneapolis next Friday. u Townley has te get out because he has lea bis influence, and he has lest his in fluence because the League itself has fliv tered. The things which it set out te de lTe net been done. Its experiments in State aedallam have resulted in disaster, and the farmers who were expecting great things from it are disgusted. The League may have a fitful life for a year or two longer, but according te present indications it linh lest all its vitality. Its neme was always n misnomer, for it as a party. The issues which It espoused "cut across the old party Hnes.and the formers Joined It, paying their dues te Townley uud Ills' associates, becaubc they were innocent enough te believe that his remedies for the troubles that afflicted them would bring them relief. It was a farmers' bloc in the Stntei f the Northwest,, n little mere radical than the farmers' bloc in Congress, but an or er or ganisateon professedly formed te help the farmers nevertheless. It will net have existed in vain, however, If it has taught the farmers that there Is no quack remedy for industiial depression or for low prices when there is n big crop, ami that tee organization can repeal the fundamental law of supply and demand. A RIBBON TO STICK ON HIS COAT GOVERNOR SPROUL lias just received word that he has been mtidr n com cem seander of the Order of the Crown of Bcl irtua. The decoration which gees with the fceaer Will be presented te him by the Bel 'fian Ambassnder. The Governer doubtless nnnreclntna rim A Bittinctien whicli has tome te him through the grace of King Albert. But there Is nn nn ether honor which he would doubtless up up preclate mere. If some one would make bin the cemmnnder of thu Older of Little Besses of Pennsjlvanlii he would net lmvp te ,'Jsltup nights trying te find n wnj out of the . iiBfie into wuicn pem tea i Kiiairs litne get .-' tore. It betins te leek n8 If UI fclinll l.nvn In .Wty until after the Ma primaries before ; w shall knew who is te wear the decoration, if n4 eren then it may be decided thut it is te i be conferred en no one. '(. "' ' SILLY SHIFTERS i',,rpHE "Shifter" fad must have gene fur- ' -J. tuer in M-w lerk thsn hi this eltv. nr V!m there are n let of liystcriiul persons in e-i New Yerk. Dispatches from that city have H.llu tnJtMntlnm lwi tl.n Ul. If...... .. aaaa "" " v muiirm iirr n iuen- rSrrre me niuruin tu ine junnj people, fcjfeiUrc they are regarded ns u liiiriuliM '.flfayrt " "" vievvumviiuvnt et ,..,.. l'. 1 nJ.l.u .1... .A I. n (Jl.ie... t,,t;.apiaiMi( uuhmie ii no u mailer anu f S:)We ut the alarmist dispatches from our ! lKtaan pepuieus Mimire. xne whole tiling he as a passing erase mat will reue L-Jm a few months utter Us novelty has tjerebably the sensible view. There anon anu mere can ee none. ,'ara held ateel every Shifter can initiate 'aa many ethers ai he plees. They nil take It as a geed' Jeke and after -It has been played' en them they play it en some one else. It is like the IIew-Old-Is-Ann problem which spread ever the country and occupied the attention of men, women antl children for months, new se completely for fer for xettcn that few today can tell just what thi problem was. SENATORIAL OBSTRUCTIONISTS RECOGNIZE THE ZERO HOUR Sudden Collapse of the Opposition Guar antees the 'Swift Ratification of All the Washington Conference Treaties rnilE emphasis of n decisive football score Is contained in the 73-0 verdict of the Sennte upon the two supplements te the Four-Power Treaty. Fer the first time since Mr. Wilsen imported the League et Nations the "interference'' Is routed, utterly discomfited. It has been a protracted and agonizing contest, this struggle of the elements of sanity in American statecraft te attain the goal, always in plain view te thee spec- 4- tnters who have chosen ta use their e.es The irrcspenslbles, irreconcilable, the wanton opportunists call them what one will have been persistent. But the narrow margin of ratification by which the quad rilateral pact slipped through was mere apparent than real. The. 'passage of that compact was n specific accomplishment, laying the founda tion for n new nnd heartening program of international co-eporation te safeguard peace. It marked the frank return of the I'nlted States te the ranks of international comity and demonstrated the impractical felly of obduracy in subsequent stages of the program. Mr. Hitchcock's eleventh -hour effort Ui dislocate the machinery was typical of a certain east of the senatorial mind In the hour of defeat. The upper house tradi tionally delights in technicalities nnd has exhibited nt times nn unholy joy in creating perplexities and confusion. But this last gasp of ob'tructlenary ecstasy wus short-lived. The problem was essentially tee simple te be lasting. It hns been solved by the perfectly legitimate attachment of the declaration regarding free dem of nctien in domestic affairs te the geographical-definition treaty bounding the Japanese mainland. The vote en 'the Four-Power agreement was quite sufficient te illustrate the helpless ness of the frothy demngegues. In the full sense of the term, this Is their zero hour. The cnpitultttlen is the most enlivening evidence that all the ether covenants framed in the Washington Conference will be ac cepted. The Naval Limitations Treaty, a beacon en the nrdueus read te authentic civilized progress, is fortified by solid bas tions of public sentiment. Net even Mr. Berah, unless he has spurned all acquaint ance with consistency, can oppose the reduc tion of navies, cxhibltivc of n principle which he was among the first te sponsor. The stage has been set for quick nctien upon contracts stabilizing the Fast, mate rially reducing the burden of naval nrmu ments nnd substituting the muchinery of arbitration for senseless devastation by war. Hopes arc being fnst converted into facts of which the entire nation save for a handful' of embittered 'marplets may be proud. AN ALMOST INCREDIBLE TALE A PITIABLE tale of violent intolerance and merciless prejudice is revived by the death in Londen of Ernest Vlzetelly. When Emilc Zeln was a name te shock and startle complacent Victorians of the seventies and eighties, Vlzetelly, scholar, journalist, belligerent literary radical, shared equally in the notoriety. The publication of "The Seil" (LaTerre), which Vlzetelly had done into English, was the signal for nn orgy of persecution which has few parallels in the annals of literature. The translator was fined, imprisoned, financially ruined and the great publishing house of which his fnthcr, Richard Vlzetelly, was the head eventually collapsed in bank ruptcy. Doubtless much of the intense indignn indignn tien against the outspoken qunllties of Zela's novels was sincere. Doubtless also Vlzetelly was an intractable and ungovern able champion of modern realistic art in fiction. But considering the ultimate high position achieved by the writer of "La Debacle" and thp defender of Drejfus, nnd especially recognizing the later trend of lit erary endeavor, the punishment and misery heaped upon the brilliant Vlzetelly seem cruelly out of proportion te his perform ances." Three jears age he was discovered In the sick ward of n North Londen work house. There are net a few prosperous novelists of the present day who would be incapable of defining Vizetclly's offense. Whether the world has grown better Is n matter for de bate, the conclusion depending upon the point of view. But certainly it has changed. PATCHING UP THE TURK WAR weariness is unmlstnknble in the prompt acceptance by the (ireek Gov ernment of the proposal of an nrmistlce with the Turkish Nationalists. There nre indications that the Angera Government Is also eager te subscribe In principle te the program outlined b the Near Eastern con ference new sitting in Paris. While it rnnnet be snld that the Near Eastern nreblem is settled It Is at least apparent that the desire for some sort of accommodation is keen. The Greek campaign In Asin Miner is, in pnrt, an outgrowth of two flagrant delusions that the Treaty of Sevres, in nil its previsions, was enforceable antl that the Western na tions of Europe could unload their responsi bilities upon tliP Hellenic military power. The French, ns is clinractcilstlc of them, were the first te view the situntien rialls tlcully. It has been asserted, and perhapi correct!) , that the Trent of Angera nego tiated with Mustuplin Kemal and his Na tionalists en the Asiatic mainland was n bold attempt te acquire profitable conces sions in the Near East. Its Immediate effect, however, has been the awakening throughout Islam of a new spirit of friendliness te France. This senti ment is obviously net one te be misprized by n nation possessing large Africun terri tories peopled mainly by Mehammedans. Great Britain has been less fertunnte, or less shrewd, as witness the present stntc of Moslem feeling in India. But the formulation in the Near Eastern conclave of n definite prngiam designed te clarlfj and rehabilitate the status of the Turk both in Europe niiii Western Asia ex hibits among all the majur Powers a uni fied endeavor te fine fiuts. Some of thesp nre unquestionably un palatable. It had been thought in 1010 that the total exclusion of Turkish rule from Europe could be accomplished nt lust. Re ligious considerations of world magnitude have clouded this view. The Ottomans in Anatolia have dlsplajed something of the remarkable recuperative powers of their race. Decisive victory has been denied te both belligerents in the Turke-Greek supplementary war. The Greeks arc anxious te cease fighting, pro vided seme of the gains can be erganised nnd preserved. The Kcmallsts regnrd the present moment as a favorable one for enpi tallrtn,; recovered prestige. The plan of the allied Ministers in volves n new division of territories in the Near East, the restoration of a part of Thrace te Turkey, the cslnbllshmcnt of Turkish sovereignty ever virtually nil, of Asin Miner and the retention of Adrinneplc, tVjutrrn Thrace nnd all of the Galllpell Pe ninsula by Greece. It Is proposed that thc4 territories adjoining the Dardanelles be tie-' 1 militarized and that control of the straits should be vested in nn International com mission, Insuring free navigation. The prnimsnls cannet(bc called Ideal, but nt least they reflect n revived acquaintance with actual conditions In the Levant. The most nebulous of the suggestions concerns Armenia, which Is left te the core of the League of Nations. Ah this organization has net developed these military forces, the mcre conception of which cccnslened se much distress te League opponents in the United States three J ears age, the prospects for Armenia cannot be called bright. As a matter of fact, the Near Eastern conference hns simply ignored the unending Armenian question. The nttentlnn of the councilors has been focused en the Turks, who cannot be dismissed from the reckoning, nnd upon the Turco-Greek War tragically protracted and nn increasing menace tp the stabilization et the Levant. The ncccptence by both belligerents of an nrmistlce could scarcely fall te exert a bene ficial effect upon the proceedings in Genea when delicnte nnd dangerous Near Eastern topics arc breached. ANOTHER AIR TRAGEDY MEN'S habit of restlessness, their desire te control and explore and their dis content with slew and safe ways of exist ence are costing them heavily. Aviation, for cxnmplc, has been attended with consequences mere tragic than nny ever recorded in the early days of any ether system of transportation. Fliers, whether they were in or out of the mllltnry service, have experienced hardships nnd risks of n sort which even deep-sea sallorsknew noth ing nbeut. They have been burned te death In the nlr nnd blown te bits with their own explosives. They have fallen mile after mile te a terrible deatli which they had time te contemplate before it came te them. And the less of the passengers of an ex cursion plane bound from one of the Flerida resorts te Blminl shows that as air raachlnea nre put te commercial uses some rigid sys tem of control and inspection will have te be devised te safeguard their passengers. The narrative of the "Miss Miami" is awe -inspiring enough te rank with some of the famous horror talcs of the sea. Yet the, vessel was lest only a short distance from the coast of Flerida. Had she been equipped with wireless her company would have been saved. Brigadier General Mitchell, of the Army Air Service, suggested long age thnt all commercial nlrplanes, especially these which de their flying ever thp sea,i should be compelled te carry radio equipment. A bill te nutherlzc Federal regulation of private airplanes is before Congress. it embodies Genernl Mitchell's suggestion with relation te wireless. Had that bill been passed n month age there would net have been a less of five lives a few minutes out from the' gay beaches of Flerida. We are cheered and Air Voices solaced by the knowl edge that William Jen nings Br.vnn indorses the radio. We have been nfrnid he would dump it with Darwin's theory of evolution. The nir is filled with the spiritual voice, lie says. Net "spiritu ous" be it noted. That would imply thnt the voice of the bootlegger was being heard in the laud. Recognition of the voice is important. It shows there is growing hnr hnr meny in the Democratic Party. Voices in the air were a noteworthy feature of the Wilsen Administration. Spirit of Les Angeles Presy Spirits centenarian sends mes sage declaring there Is no rheumatism in heaven.. That's the trou ble with 'most of these spirit messnges. While there is se much we should like te knew of the ether side, thev waste time prosing of the obvious. Of course there is no rheumatism in heaven. There couldn't be. AVith rheumatism it wouldn't be heaven. It would be rheumatism. Moscow is snld te be Jingoism alive with war talk; war in the spring, war with Poland, Finland, Rumania, possibly Involving Germany and eventually Franci. It isn't impossible; nothing is impossible; and .vet the chances are that the Soviet Gov ernment will hesitate before anv nctien of theirs shall automatically shut off American famine relief supplies. The Sublime Perte appears te have had its kick reinstated. A turtle weighing a ten has been cap tured off Argentina. Who enres for your piffling pleslesnuriis? This menus soup. Dr. Broeme admits he's a shifter. Mr. Walnut thinks he knows of one. Senater Crew has refused te become u member. Enster styles from Paris Include alumi num hats. Hubbies will probably find they're considered worth their weight in geld. The Rhine wine crop for last year is the best for several generations pnst. But the record Is still laid by the Rhine whine crop. Geerge Sylvester Vlcreck accuses Daniel Cehnlan of being un-American. Well, nobody te date has accused the Pet of lyingi about the Kettle. Music Hnll wen the Grand Natienaf Steeplechase at Alntrce, Liverpool. One of the favorites beaten was Clashing Arms. Peace hatli its victories. A reformer, said Demosthenes McGln uls judicially, Is a snthetlc politician of possibly superior metal (mettle?) but in variably inferior durability. The Jumnica. L. I., man who dubbed women "the battling sex" is mistaken in mippesiiig he has discovered something. But he snld something all light. The Fordney Peiuwuent Tariff Bill is te be reported te the Senate next week. If opponents knock the tar out of it there will be much virtue In what remains. Atlantic City Chamber of Commerce considers preposition te have nil street cars painted with tne city colors, wliltu nud blue. Accepted us rcud. Three cheers, etc. Twe hundred plunge into the surf nt Atlantic City; two thousand at Ceney Island. But you can't call them crime waves simply becnube of the numerous dips there present. Grapevine from Pittsburgh casually mentions as a passible belated linibinger of spring the mere or less immediate llkeli llkeli llkeli hoed of a crocus nppenrjng en the grounds outside of the Mercy Hospital. Samuel Untennjer seems te have dem onstrated that Rebert P. Brindell. serving time In Sing Sing for robbing his fellow workers, still dominates the Carpenters and Deckbullders' Union of New Yerk. It is about as sad n commentary en the quality or mass meraiuj as yat can- weiiMmagine, . tern ef thi Gentlemen WKe - Vv -', ''' - l,,V',A ' lM-' S4Wft!?VtfV V Ail4y vn,1 Like te 8tep the Sheet of Oov Oev Oov rner Sprout By GEORGE NOX McCAIN . A DISTINGUISHED citizen et Pennsyl- vanla handed me three pages of type written manuscript 'the ether day. ' 1 He ia widely known for bis Independence In Republican politics. Alse he Is a publicist, a philanthropist and a member of one of the learned pro fessions. ' The manuscript, I found, was a clever sntlrc en the present gubernatorial sltua sltua Gen the candidates particularly. It is printed herewith without alteration, comment or suggestion of any kind. It doesn't need any. IN THE welter. of candidates for the Gov Gov ereor's chair a shrewd observer has token the pains te investigate the early lives of the men who are new among us for our judgmentvwitheut' either fenr or favor. 'As the boy, se the man." It fellows, therefore, that nn intimate glance backward will very greatly help the independent yeter te reach an intelligent conclusion upon his choice for Governer. we have taken up the "early lives of can didates" in. the inverse rntle of the Im portance of their candidacies. The render can readily appreciate the patience nnd labor devoted te this task, reaching bark into the past. Where it has been possible we have depended upon the testimony of the nurse. Of course, where se many candidates have sprung from the very peer but honest home devoid of luxury, there was no nurse or at least none surviving.. In such a case we have fallen back upon the testimony of schoolmates. Again If the candidate is se extremely democratic ns te have been denied the usual opportunities of education nnd te have lifted hynself educationally at odd and uncertain moments stolen from his dally tell, we have te fall back upon mere rumor, hearsay nnd local tradition, Remembering the order given above, we proceed immediately with HARRY C. MACKEY, of Philadelphia. Mr. Mackey is the friend of nil the working classes. His old nurse, new nn aged woman in Susquehanna County, has told us that baby Harry's first intelligible word was "com "cem "com PensnGen." and. the second two were "pub lic office." ' While still of tender years he become the j jr et,hlB. Wows In all kind-hearted deeds, and when he wrote his first message te the public, he described himself as n human engineer of a naturally retiring nature." He has been forced Inte the limelight by n grent swelling volume of voices of men nnd women who are calling te "Harry the Workman's Friend" te stand for Governer. :J. has, become almost n sacred duty with this tribune of the people. 9 flip UITE antipodal, te the "tribune of the People." With nn unhrlnetnir nl1v posed te the Simnle life nn the MnnWev arm, uem wjinu geiu spoon in Ills mouth, nurtured nt tables luxuriously spread nnd breathing the rarefied nnd pure nlr of Pike County, is our next candidate, Gilferd Plnchet. Always distinguished In appearance, al most te n mittinee idol degree, with n native hauteur of manner net easily acquired, Glf Glf ferd Plnchet may well count upon the vote i the ,w,0,1cn ,or nt ,eust tllc J6 nnd susceptible female vote. Yeung Plnchet had two nurses a day and ?i.nigJJLni,e- We htve lt irem them both that Gilferd was always a distinguished and aristocratic baby; that among his playthings he always chose the Btiff little green trees of his Neirh's Ark; thnt his first real word was "forestry," and the next, a few days later, "conservation." His entire nnd expensive education was directed te the thought of becoming United States Ferester nnd he did. The only rcnl drnwbnck te Pinchot for Governer Is the fact that his idenlisin is se ideal that when he is faced with a real situation he is apt te be "up a tree." TE NOW come te another rough diamond, at least rough, a rugged, straight forward county leader: A real politician Edward Bcldlcman. Ed Beldleraan nnd Dauphin County nre almost synonymous. There are ethers, but Ed is pretty nearly "it" around the Stute Capitel. .What he and Harry Baker de net 'knew about the ins and outs nnd areunds and nbeuts of politics is net worth knowing Of French Huguenot descent, Ed Bclille mnn s forebears settled long age In the capi tal city te give Ed his chance for the gov ernorship. If the decision rested with Dau phin County alone, if the plain old Hugue not families of Womelsdorf and Werners vlllc nnd even as far as Allcntewn hed the deciding vote, It would certainly be nH ever with the rest of us. f.- i ...ii -i . . . . - I Eddie never required the services of n nurse; nc was always a strong boy. Perilous he was allowed te walk a little tee early but he was nlw-aya self-reliant nnd sure and had a bass voice. A boyhood friend of Ed's put it tersely when we inquired nbeut Ed for Governer. The boyhood pal renmrked "Fd Beldleman Is geed enough for Lieutenant Governer." OUR next in order is from the real coun ceun try. One of the Interior counties where the folks nre kindly nnd neighborly nnd go te lectures nnd church seclnis, and where a man is known through and through. Such a man, nnd one who hns wen the united support of the home folks, iN Jehn Fisher, wne is neither nrlstecrnt, plutocrat tribune of, the people nor astute "politician " If he were mere nstutc lie would avoid the entangling alliance with the manufac turers. Jehn had a geed nurse, wns educated at home, lived at home, was sent te the Stnte Senate, was a valuable member of the Con stitutional Commission nnd n very useful AHlIinillK vwUimiiiBniuiji-r, If we had been his nurse we would cer tainly have whispered in his ear innnv times a day the cryptic letters "N. G" -s ( ' May.Fishcr be delivered from the hands of his friends. WE NOW come te the man, the peerless, fearless leatW of .Schuylkill County, the knight errant who wins te office by his happy disposition, his carefree manner nnd his tetnl lack of appreciation of his own limitations, leu hnve guessed his name also n "French Huguenot," Charles A. Sny der. Charlie was n rosy, rubicund bnbv that gave very little trouble te his nurse. " He wns fend of flowers nud always were ii carnntlen even in the days of bib nnd tucker. Ne one could be nngry with Charlie for any long time, and It is this statesmnnlike quality that will push him Inte the Gover Gover eor's chair, Ne one ef the candidates hns held public effice we, long, W) continuously, se tena ciously as Charlie Snyder. He is 111 this respect well equipped by temperament and habit te go en from office te offleo until there is nothing left but the Governer's clmlr. We mny all as well ngree that sooner or later Charlie A. rlnyder will be Governer. Why net new nud hnve it ever? We present, therefore, our next Gover Gover eor, Charlie "Attlt" Snyder. Today's Anniversaries 1822 United States Heuse of Represen tatives misfVl a resolution recognizing the independence of Seuth American provinces 1847 United States sloep-nf-w'ar James, town soiled, from Bosten for Cerk with sup piles for the starving peer of Ireland. 1871 The Commune was proclaimed in 11)21 UMira muic euyrcmai vuurt H(ld I capital gain taxable., . all We-Wil Llkt te 8tee Inte 4'i JfiXV''X Ihe shoe. flf oev. :T' rVV JKIi --i' u kt, ? -af ' JT"J" l (iA Vv ' i tXawEvV BaBs-""'" 4aauLnL P' ' W ' la'aBBVaHfiPalLaBiivfiCft BHBaaaaaBfllBBVMwuTNiMiMBBaaaa aai& -aMaaaaaBwaaaaaaaaaap t?i vVPHLPVawaWaafeifcAas-- HBlQjV ymJfflMt " ' 1.1'" 'v"."ttt5' v IswTVk. "1 . KJaWaaflBaMaLaKaaBaaaBaMaaaaaaaaaw aaafca"aafBM"M1sSST'""My5ay ,--'" ataaaaajaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaawWaap " '" ' 1aafjB''PstaaaaaaaL B&KKKKKKBnHIKBBtHGKnr V! JbbbbbbV. "aailaa'MMaaaaa aaaaaal s- ec-T aaMaSaaaaMJKaul imaaaaaaaaBraaaaaaaaaSalPaaaaaari MPpiMiMhfcaiawv1 .T aV. aaaaaaa.i,i,...p s,JaiaawX. aav xL.J,.PW"'aaaaftaaaaaaaaaaaaa ' .-JlMlvk JlV" ajflflar Y -iiMwiiaii ,ii, , . t ' -'SMBawiafflaaaaaaaaaaaw.aatataJtBaaa JWPPlr"' hi eiBaaaTE?'l'-TWMwP'TPBsep iaaawT w !1 , m","1' r ,ij i?SrUtirii'-4t-ii4iv2HS2t4.4( FIBsjjSjejaaJflaafllaaajFjajliP1'. .rliiE& -ffle?P'' eMtianiiiaajuj'f'l1"'" ag s StS fca" r rr -4 ,jBarBaaa a 1 1--,. '" t iUaaitLfaaM' aa" 'p ta? aaaaafc-. "'aes1'aa(aa em hi aaaiajaaiaaa4sav. H. .aj u. .. .. .. . JaaaaiaaaaaaaalBaPaW ' m 'a 31 ay """ r.VrW-isaaaaaaaajjg5j(. , ..J.. i, y5aBppy9 '"'r-ffOT'---.,.,. ,, w wpn'rW-"'' "-- j , w. . 1 -:;; NOW MY IDEA IS THIS ! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Knew Best CAPTAIN HARRY L. SHULTZ On Phlladelphla'a Traffic Preblema THE greatest problem which confronts the traffic police of Philadelphia is the edu edu catien of the genernl public up te the point where they knew whnt te de nnd hew te conduct themselves in the midst of the city s traffic with the least danger' of accident, nccerdlng te Captain Harry L. Shultz, the head of the Traffic Squad of the Bureau of Police. "There arc two great things which the traffic police of the city hove te de," said Captain Shultz. "One Is the prevention of accidents and the ether is the handling of the enormous traffic of the city with the least possible congestion. The accidents directly concern people, perhaps, mere than does the congestion, und we use every menns within our power te decrease tqe number 01 them ench yenr. A . "We are succeeding pretty well. tee. In 1020 there were 5447 accidents in the traffic, nnd in 1021 there were f422. But there wus a big drop in the number of fatal dlsnstcrs. T men iiiern were 2."i3 which resulted (totally, and In the following year 108. This yenr nns suewn a muituuuun un.....-, there having been about one hundred acci dents n month fewer than last year. Educating the Public "But our main difficulty is te get the public educated te the point of taking care of themselves. We have mere difficulty with pedestrians thnn we have with the motor ists, although I de net deny that there nre some very careless and reckless motorists. One impertnnt tiling which we hnve much trouble in teaching the people nt Urge s te cress nt the crossings nnd net in the middle of the block. "The pedestrians should learn te watch the semaphore and net the traffic. There nre very few motorists who disregard tlie signals of the semaphore, and when the signs nre turned against them they nil step nnd the crossings nre safe. But there nre no semaphores in tne miueie 01 tne moths. "The matter of the children is another thing which gives us much trouble. Parents should teach their children te keep out of the streets and, above nil, te use the public piny grounds and net the streets for their recreation. They should also be tnught the dangers of automobiles, nnd all of this in struction should be given at as early an nge as possible. As an example of tills, I wns driving with a friend through one of our smaller streets n few days uge, ami within three blocks we snw nt least 2.TO children plnvlng en the street while the parents sat en the steeps or perches nnd watched them. When conditions like this exist lt Is little wonder that there are se many accidents te children. , The Truck Traffic "But the grentest trouble is still nt the street crossings. There nre a number of reckless and careless truck drivers, nud the motertruck is the most unwieldy nnd dan gerous of nil meter vehicles. We get these drivers whenever we can and talk te them nbeut the necessity et using the greatest care In the handling of their machines. Most of them pny attention te our vvnrnlng because they knew thut it will be followed by Fevere penalties if they have accidents' through cnrelessuess of their own. "We heuld hnve n lnw in Pennsylvania demanding thnt every driver have some knowledge of the trntnc rules and regula tions of the State and city befeie he is granted a license ns a driver. Many of ttiem knew only enough te start and step their cars. Then they get their licenses and go out, especially en n Saturday or Sunday, when the traffic Is congested under any cir cumstances, and, of course, many of thorn have accidents, net se much through their Inability te drive ns through their ignorance of the traffic conditions nnd rules. Whnt we need is the thing which they hnve in New Jersey, where it Jh required that nn nppll emit for n driver s license show that he can handle his car in the traffic. This could be easily done by requiring that the new driver go into the traffic with some experienced person nntl leurnlhe things which Jie must knew In order te drive safely. "Anether dniigcreuH thing is the prac tice of se many children iu 'catching rides' from automobiles. It is dangerous te them selves, n nuisance te the drivers of cars und te the public, nnd a practice exceedingly hard te break up, Here again the parents could give us tremendous help It they only would de se. "We hnve increased our traMc poets bjr I a large number durjng the last year or 3, but we still could use mere men te geed ad vantage. However, the public has had a considerably better service, as' we new have mere men than we had en Bread, Walnut nnd Arch streets, nnd arc going te nut merp en these streets as well as at ether congested points. Traffic conditions have improved greatly in the last couple of years, and we leek for them te get still better. It is getting te be n great problem in many districts nil ever the city, and with the paving of certnln impertnnt streets these have becemp the outlet for an Immense vehicular traffic, which must be cared for. Delaware uvenue, for example, has been greatly improved, nnd the number of block bleck udes of traffic there and all ever the city hns been largely reduced. ' "We nre handling today about 40 per cent mere traffic thnn we were five years age, nnd the grentest increase has been In the truck traffic, the hardest of nil te handle. It is the most difficult te hnndlc because we hove se few streets ether thnn Breed street where this traffic can be placed. In the same way Chestnut and Market streets get n let of truck traffic because we have no ether streets for them. "As a matter of fact, there should be no truck traffic en Brend street, nt least be tween Lehigh avenue and Washington ave nue; til's piensure-car traffic is quite suffi cient te tnx the qtrcet resources te the limit. The business wngens nnd the trucks have really no place en this street, nnd yet we hnve no ether place te put them. Compared With New Yerk "Mnny of the streets of Philadelphia, like some of these in Bosten, nre tee nar row te accommodate the immense amount of traffic which passes ever them every dny. New erk Is much better equipped in this respect, because there are se few cross cress town street-ear lines there. But iu Phila delphia we, hnve n-strect-cnr track en urac tjenlly every street, nnd this cemplicntes the matter of handling vehicular truffle enormously. . "The llghllng-slgnal system is working out admirably in New Yerk, but our condi tions here are be different that 'a decided modification of it would have te be made te have it weik efficiently. Our great preb- lc!n. ,,n ,.th.1? re!iI)ect ,N Clty "all Square, which 1 divides the traffic. It might be pos sible te weik two different lighting systems, one north from Arch street nnd the ether south from Chestnut, but City Hnll inter feres with nny such system ns Fifth uveniie has ,n New erk. In Philadelphia, owing te the City Hull Square, we have both the Bread street traffic and .the Market street traffic moving at the same time, which, com. .pllcntes the situation. But we shul have e come te something of the kind some day. und the whole mutter of handling the vchicu Inr traffic of the city will have te haw mere the'paat! f"tUrC thaU " h bed liS A Congested Area - "In Philadelphia the traffic zone extends from about Girard avenue en the north te Seuth street en the south, and fm ,lw Delaware River ter the Schuylkill In v, Yerk this traffic Is spread out ever a dls tance of six or svveu miles. In this wav their problem is easier then ours, and added p that fact is that theirs runs in straight ncs, where ours iu broken by City Hall Square. " "uu "Our entire traffic force consists of hnt TOO men. We hnve 20.1 feet officers dft into tin ee nlntoens. Jin ..we.i ."' .V ylded into two platoons, and there nre 211 In the meter squad, divided into three plutoens, iintl stationed in every district for emergency calls. These men hnve proved of the utmost value te the city. They are Jie?d only for the purpose of answering emergency calls and go in motorcycles te the acena where they are needed. We have net yet solved nl the traffic problems of Phlladel phin, but we believe that we are en the Today's Birthdays years age Mortimer H, Ceeley. of IInive.Ui... . Michigan, president of the American Enal- ncerlng Council, born et Cnnendalgun. N Y., sixty-seven years age. ' "' Nerman Hamroed. 'author .n.t .".. United States Minister te Denmark, bar. Hill rh t Mfttf-fniie. MJWamn . "M nrCh!:afe nfty,feur ycarc age. ' 08r Arlstlde Hrlnnd, the French Premier wh attended the Washington Conference? born at Nantes sixty-ene jenrs age, Dr. William Allan Nellson, president .,r" Smith College, born in Scotland flf v.' L"' SHORT CUTS ,ii Listen te the springtkne flowers Dreaming of the April shewers: "Politics ain't worth a ruble," Sold the Crocus te the Bluebell. "And the newspapers provoke us," Said the Bluebell te the Crocus. The calendar has' received belated, in in eorsement. Spring is really here. When the coal-strike horse is well, eut-Vd T ilaaa. taLla A. I. ..A. .1 (II I JV 4 . vi tuc niuuic luuiuuer will DC nxcu. tf ' Areaiy treaters are new oppreacbing the mainland of Japan through u thick fog et talk. Northwest business men ere of the opin ion that a simple remedy for the skip-step is a step-skip. The only thing the public positively knows concerning the coal strike is that it loses, whoever wins. Perhaps De Valera aims te prove' the old-time allegation that Irishmen are better scrappers than executives. Velivn of Zlen has forbidden the use et anesthetics when teeth nre pulled. Here's wishing him the toothache. IrresnerrivA nt elm marten nl t . the slogan of ce'al consumers ,the country & ever Is "Back te the mines." iK Fer se supreme a disaster, se sublime a tragedy, the name of the flying beat, Miss Miami, was pitifully frivolous. , A New Yerk University professor has decided that the male of tne flapper is a Hepper; but which is the flipper? The Quiet Hours HOW brief the quiet hours always seem! I wait upon the doorstep et a dream On tiptoe, sure of entrance. If some Grace Would thrust the world aslde a little space I ft Sun, sky and summer wait befere my cye, " ,-j Thn nmvei. In fnlel, thai,. Knnii, tnm waii S cries Loud in my soul, and then the hour Is done With broken dream, nor nny bong begun! Edna Mead, in the New Yerk Times. , Shifting Taxes rrem the fiurlngfleld napubllcnn. ' Taxes mny be shifted this way or tlint, but it Is much ns n tired nedestrinn shift) his burden from one shoulder te the ether. ' It may case some sere spot, but lt makes a new one. What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1, In what city was the separate treaty of "; , peace between the United States and '- Germany drawn up? , z. Who was Marie Baahkirtseff? y 3. At what age does a citizen become eligible -6 for the United States Senate? ' 4. What Is a hatchment? 6. Whnt Is the chief sugarcane-producing State, of the Union? I- r, What is a calery? 7. Who was Themas Nast? 8. What is a calender? 9. What Is a polonaise? . 10. What winter did Washington and the , Continental Army spend at Valliy Ferge 7 I1 i ! Answers te Yesterday's Qui j 1. The colors of the nag of Denmark art red and white. 2. Maryland was the first American State te mine soft coal. The production m- ! tween 1107 and 1120 amounted te 3009 3. Theode'r Memmsen was a celebrated Ger man historian, noted especially for Ids histories of Berne. , He died In liOI. j 4. A perimeter Is a circumference the out line of a. closed figure 8. An earwig Is a. harmless little animal re sembling the rove beetle ,1?ern,,Ajj 6. Abraham Wnceln married Mary Tedd, s of Lexington,. Ky(' , , . ,.,, 7. A caret Is a mark like an Inverted "v 4. placed below the line te shew tne place of emission. . . . . , A 8. Geerge Washington attended school in Fredericksburg, Va. , . . 9. The President of France W elected for , seven .yeara by an absolute majority of the Senate and $ Cbmj"r.m: ' Deputies united In a .National Aasem- 1 10. Et&t. Wl.lha.ly a French word. ) maaninv ticket or card, and refers, if. & T. "-.": -T M a.H...i m taitfl BBM "' eaa.i'aii Miainm nr eaaiivmriiiBK bb ar - ' iiSM .?i MjM&aWi taUaCieit.tMea tan. YBrUlat.011ai tO F'Js' wrsj-VMWS.a. wet- W Z -..-. .VI Hit. M i : jjj j'f if J Ji t l &4Meiilli Mrt"i