niH Pllpflf sjey WfWwp mr m ft f L V K i" 12 Aliening public Ue&ger , pOrlic ledger company f- evnua ii. k. curtis, rsBsmsxr Jehn C. Martin, Vice President nd Treasurer; Chnrlet Ai Tyler. Secretary: Charles II. l.udlnic tnn, Philip H. CAIIIns. Jehn n. William", Jehn J. Ppurrreen, Oerg I'. Goldsmith, David K, Smiley, T)lrerter, PAVID E. SMtl.nT Editor JOHN C. MAP.TIN. , . .One ral Business Manager Publish! dally at Pcntic I.trera Building IndcnentlcncS Square. Vhllndclphta. 'Atlantic Citt rrr-7nfen Building Naw Yerk .1(11 Madisen Ave. Dmeir TOt Ferd Itulldlng Br. Letus 013 alobe-Demecrat Itulldlnc Chicago 1302 Tribune Llulldlns , NT.WS nunKAUSi WasIII.-.OTON TJlSEAU, N. II. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. nml 14th St. Kaw YenK Hchiau . .The Sun HuiMInK Londen Bcsiai' Trafalgar BullJInjt sunscniPTieN terms The Evr.NlMi l'uni.ic l.mieu i nervM te sub scribers In rhllndelrhla and surreundlns towns at Mis rate of twete (12) cent per week, payable te the rnrrler. By mall te points outside of Philadelphia In the United States. Canada or United Htafe rns. sessions, postage free, fifty (SOI cents per month. Sir ($11) dollar per ear. imyelde In advance. Te all ferelen countries one (11) dollar a month. Netice Subscribers wishing address changeJ must ee old as well an new address. BELL, 3000 WALNUT KEYSTONE. MUV 1S01 tTAddrtts all commieifcnffoti te F.ve"re PiiMIe Ledger, Independence Square. Philadelphia. Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS J exclusively en titled te the use for republication of nil tifiei dispatches credited te U or tief otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local nws published therein. All rights nf republication of s.ectal dispatches herein are also reserved. . . I'luliilflphli, I"riiU. June IS. 1:: THE RUMOR FACTORY IS ANYBODY et City Hull qualified te speak with authority for the Municipal Government? Why should I he Hall he a house of mys tery n ml n source of iiinmr suggestive net of order, hut of tin official riot? Who Is hnslng the police depitrtment? Will the public ever be permitted te knew why neither the Majer nor the Director nf Public Safely can liud any one te obey their official orders or why. If rebellion and in urgeney are being carried te their very doers, thej cannot or will net light back? What mysterious inhibiting force pre vents men in the positions of authority from telling nil they knew? Of whom or of what are they afraid? Hew long will the public be content with conflicting, smothered rumors instead of th significant truths which, ns they knew, lie Immediately below the surface at City Hall? BARBARIANS THERE Is an unwritten law of the read which requires meter drivers te help ethers in serious distress nml it eperntes almost universally. That drivers of auto mobiles and their passengers eeuld find It In their hearts te refuse assistance te Injured nnd dying victims of the Absecon grade crossing tragedy is almost unthinkable. Yet, according te evidence presented te the Grand Jury, some of them did, nnd mere than one driver behnved In n manner that Infuriated the watching crowd and led te talk of lynching.' The license numbers of some of these barbarians are In the hands of the New .Jersey police and general opin ion in the State 1 properly demnnding that if verified the licenses be summarily revoked. First aid such as meter drivers were nsked te render in an emergency se gruesome as that which followed when an express train struck an automobile and killed or fntally Injured sis persons may menn hard ship or inconvenience, nnd even great nerv- mis strain te the Samaritans in the ensc. 'V.Jvut any one who is net eager te endure such miner troubles te save life Isn't fit te operate n device like n motorcar en any open read. PUTS THEM ON THEIR CUARD WHEN dishonest policemen are In part nership with the purveyors of vice It need surprise no one nt the charges that ether dishonest policemen are In the hnbit of working with lawyers' runners In the courts In securing clients. The announcement by Superintendent Mills that nny officer found working with these ngents of the lawyers will be sus pended nnd ordered for trial en charges will force the offenders te rover their tracks a little mere carefully. It Is net likely that It will step the practice. The summary punishment of a few men would de mere than a dozen proclamations. The officers knew that they are doing wrong 'nnd need no proclamation te Inform them of it. There nre some cynically Inclined persons who will be disposed te think that if there were a determination In the City Hall te brenk up the partnership between the run ners and the police the work would be done quietly, while the suspected were unaware that they were under surveillance. WISE MR. WEEKS SECRETARY WKEKS. of the War De partment, spoke se wisely and se tem perately and yet se penetratingly of current social and political follies in the I'nlted States when he appeared us an orator at Western Reserve I'nhersm yesterday that his address ought te be published as a tract and circulated te nil men in authority, and especially among the pteplc who believe that they have n right te police the national conscience by force if necessary. Fer half an hour .Mr. Weeks talked n- ,i the spirit of the elder-fashioned America i.f u bjgeue time hnd taken h.ild nf him. anil he seemed like the voice of all these Amer icans who still trust In the inherent decency of the average man and object te the growth of n system of repression and es pionage that might have been borrowed from the extinct Germany of the Kaisers te enrage and irritate a people who be lieved themselves free. The Secretary of War deserves special praise for breaking the rules of an unspoken taboo and drawing the attention of his audience te the mischief done by the in creasing army of professional reformers. Any one who calls 'llmself n reformer thereby escapes public questioning or criti cism in the United States. It In net yet generally known that reforming the public hns become a profession for specialists and thnt the land is crowded with n class of reformers who work net alone for the sake of righteousness, but for the fat salaries that are availuhle te any clever ptepagandlst who serves a richly subsidized cause. Yet, ns Mr. Weeks Implied, no movement for social or political reform can ever amount te much unless It rise from the conscience nnd out of the convictions of the people themselves. When the process Is reversed nnd when zealots of one sort or another manage te impose their own will upon a majority, even for geed ends, we depart from the essential principle which Is sup posed te govern the life and feeling nnd destiny of the country. Secretary Weeks did net overstate the case' when he said that there Is In many parts of the country increasing dissatisfac tion with people who force the Government te successive Invasions of personal rights. Hew that dissatisfaction will be expressed it la bard te sny. It may never find definite expression, though it would be better for the country If It did. As u people we have our faults. But we have been given less te VtJJuHHilwal license and lawlessness than uny jg& -imHwr -yeple In tbe world. vSm -Kii IfclVi te be that It was altogether tee strait-laced te be happy. Naturally, there nre very many persons who resent the Implication of laws made frankly te direct their personal conduct nnd Improve their personal morality. These arc the people who, according te Mr. Weeks' assessment of the situation, nre In danger of losing the sense et trust In the wisdom of their Government which, mere than anything else, is the very foundation of our spiritual integrity and the first source of our national strength. HOW "THE BOOK OF SNOBS" IS AMPLIFIED AT ANNAPOLIS Chapter and Verae Are Provided In the Caste Prejudice Against Mid shlpman Kaplan VrEW and enlnrged editions of "The Boek " of Snobs" suggest thnt Thackeray began something which he could net finish. Ills attempt was courageous, but narrow. The partlculerly stupid vice whch he sought te smite was ,,net confined te VIcterInn Eng land. It nourishes or rather festers In countries dedicated te the basic equality of mankind as well ns in these In which tradi tions of artificial nrlstecracj supposedly prevail. The latest chapter te the bulky and ever ever geowing volume ronfpetwlcd of prejudice nml crass bigotry was prepared at the I 'nited States Naval Academy at Annapolis. As personalities, the authors of the offense de net deserve the publicity they have re ceicd. The same thing may be said of the object of their attacks, a I.eennrd Kaplan, it member of the graduating class and a Jew. Kaplan was lampooned nnd insulted In the undergraduate publication termed with perhaps unconscious Irony "The Lucky Hag." Kaplan, who may or may net he the grind described by bis fellow students, is unimportant. His classmates are unim portant. I'nder ordinary circumstances the "Lucky Bag" docs net warrant serious consideration. It Is n student record of the se-called humorous type common te mnny universi ties. The fun-mnklng in such works Is net celebrated for subtlety. Youthful satire is ungentle, nnd ns a rule nobody but a prig would be tempted te complain of Its heavy hnndedness. The nverage college boy Is thoroughly hardened te such bludgeoning. Snobbery nnd fnlse pride of birth or race or religion play havoc with some supposedly accepted proportions in the social or politi cal structure. The Kaplan case has Invaded Congress. Hear Admiral Wilsen, superin tendent of the Naval Academy, has charac terized the perpetration of the offense as "a low-down, miserable trick." t Senater Sutherland, et West Virginia, has dlspntched a letter of indignation en the subject te President Hnrdlng. J. L. Olm sted, editor of the year hook, has been compelled te relinquish n letter of commen dation addressed te him by the academy head. The Incident has been set forth in the official reprimand administered te Olm sted by Acting Secretary of the Nnvy Roosevelt. The censure, however, Is net sufficiently comprehensive. Olmsted was by no means the sole culprit. He stands simply us the symbol of a system et caddish discrimination deserving of the severest suppression. Were It net for the vitnl significance of the principle Involved In the affair this attention te n burlesque might itself be ridiculous. Reys will he boys. This is easily and often thoughtlessly said. Hut boys, nnd especially in Institutions of higher learning, nre, for all their fond ness for foolery, also expected te be manly. The adolescent snob is a disgusting creature. Superciliousness and the elevation of so se elal or racial barriers nre disgracefully out of place in the Government academies de signed te provide officers for the American Army and Navy. The indignities inflicted upon Midshipman Kaplnn lack the physical horror of the tor tures of which Cadet Reoz was n victim at West Point twenty years age. Rut the moral charge against the group of upstarts at Annapolis In equally grave. The case demands rigid official Inquiry. Jew-bnltlng or nny ether form of class or race persecution at Annapolis smacks of cruel and Ignorant medievalism. It has been reported that young Knplen was socially os tracized by bis fellow students throughout virtually the whole of his ncademic career. The loutish flings at his race nnd religion came ns the climax of a systematic manifes tation of snobbery. If the Naval Academy is engaged in the production of cads, the reflection of the principles nnd ethical standnrds inculcated there are obvious. It is en the officers In ehurge as well as the cadets. The present instnnre is net the first where midshipmen have been known te Ignore the cede which stamps n gentleman. Possibly because official rank Is se vividly defined, many nppendlces te "The Reek of Snob" have from time te time been devised in the Army nnd Navy of the United States Fermer Secretary Daniels, who was perhaps none tee tactful, endeavored te eradicate excessive caste distinctions from the navy, and succeeded in stirring up u hornets' nest! The schools for geed manners nnd mastery of the fundamental principles of honor nnd decency In the armed forces of the Govern ment nre at West Point nnd Annapolis. Youth requires guidance. It j9 incurauent upon the directors nnd instructors nt the military and navnl academies te stamp out the nbsurd and ignoble artificiality nf caste. As has been indicated, the boy actors In this unpleasant dramn nre net the prime factors. Heavy responsibility falls upon the management which has permitted such perversion of the principles of democracy te thrive. Punishment of the guilty In this case should he condign. Rut the heart of the offense Is net merely the barbarity of boy boy boy heed. Ry allowing such prejudices te take root and urew the school authorities are primarily te blame. THE NEWEST CROP THE conventional thing te sny about the new crop of cellege graduates Is that the young men and young women nre going out Inte the world confident thet they knew hew te run it' much better than their elder. Rut this Is nljeiit as far from the truth as most conventions of convertntlen. Somebody s.ild It once, und it was thought te be smart. Others, tee Indolent te think of something original, have repented It for yesrs. It is llke the joke about the man who dreamed be wus tlnkeri!" wjj" ue engine of his auto- mobile an elf under his bed when he jke in one form or another ! ,j comic papers, in It 1 years since it -iy one te get under a plte of became' n V EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, . t motorcar te tinker with the engine. The early cars, ns every one knows, had the fcn glues under the senf, se arranged that it was impossible te get at them snvc from below. The French were the first te put the engine under n heed in front and te make It easily accessible. Rut the humorists have net yet discovered It, or they arc hound by the con vention which forbids the abandonment of a fermuin which once provoked n laugh. The young college graduates, ns every one who comes in contact with them outside of their Immediate families has learned, nre a modest nnd unassuming let. They apply for their first job with timidity nnd feel their way with caution until they acquire some dearer of confidence through experience. They apply (e the innstering of their new problems the same methods they used while In college. They did net go Inte the clnss clnss reqm confident that they knew mere ll.nn their instructors, nnd they de net go Inte business offices nor into the classrooms where they will tench with the assurance with which they arc conventionally credited. They may mnke a bluff nf confidence, but they nre trembling In their beets nil the time, fearful lest some one will find out hew little they knew about the ptactical problems before them. Of course, they have n ecrtnln degree of audacity. Youth without this admirable quality would cense te be youth. The Sykes cartoon en this page last week came nearer te truth than Is common. It represented the new graduates as fledglings pushed out u ,lle "cst ,0 tr.v "'clr wings nnd showed them flopping nnd floundering about In the TWO WRONGS DON'T MAKE A RIGHT UHEN a Senater of the United Stntcs 11 shows himself se isnernnt of the nnture of constitutional government In the United btetes ns Ln Fellctte has done in his speech before the American Federation of Lnher it may be assumed thnt there mnv be ethers suffering under similar misapprehension. Sennter Ln Fellctte Insist that the Su preme Court usurps power net granted te It when it declares nets of Congress te be unconstitutional. He says that "there is no sanction in the written Constitution of the Lnited Stntcs for the power which the courts new assert." and he insists thnt Congress Is the supreme legislative author ity, as the Constitution pievldes thnt "all legislative powers herein gianted shall be vested In the Congress of the United States, which shall censlt of n Senate and a Heuse of Representatives." The vital words In this prevision are "herein granted." The limits within which Congress may legislate are definitely fixed by a series of prevision setting forth whnt may be done nnd by nnether series setting forth what may net be done. Senater Ln Fellettc has evidently evei looked the two vitnl words. He has also misread the grant nf powers te the Supreme Court. The second section of Article III provides that "the judicial power shall extend te nil cases in law nnd equity nrising under this Constitution, the laws of the United States." etc. This means that the court is empowered te up up eold the rights guaranteed by the Constitu tion and the laws, and te enforce the penal ties prescribed by them. In ether words, it Is te interpret nnd apply the laws nnd the Constitution. If Congress passes n law In disregard of the limits fixed en Its power and n citizen finds himself injured thereby be disputes the validity of the statute and takes his case te the Supreme Court, and thnt court, nct lng within the grnnt of power te exercise jurisdiction in cases arising under the Con stitution, simply says that the law was in valid because Congress -had no power te pass it. There is no mere usurpation in this than there Is when the Supreme Court enforces the previsions of n valid act of Congress. Senater Ln Fellettc proposes a constitu tional nmendment which will provide thnt If the Congress repasses a bill which the Supreme Court declares te be invalid It shall thereafter be valid. That is, he wishes te hnve Congress empowered te override n veto of the Supreme Court ns It overrides n veto of the President. The adoption of such nn amendment would ln effect nbellsh the Constitution, for it would remove nil restrictions nn the legislative power of Congress by providing thnt if it passed nn unconstitutional law twice It became constitution!!). And yet Senater La Fellctte argues with a straight face thnt an arrangement should be made under which two wrongs would mnke n right. An orderly process Is provided for Increas ing the power of Congress, and that Is by nn nmendment te the Constitntlen. Presi dent Hnrdlng has suggested thnt the ndvo ndve cates of Federal regulation of child labor endenver te secure nn nmendment which would give Congress the power te legislate en the subject. If this amendment is rati fied by three-fourths of the States it be comes part of the fundamental law and the Supreme Court will enforce It ns It enforces the ether previsions of the Constitution. It does net seem te dawn en the Intelli gence nf these who denounce the Supreme Court for usurpation when it invalidates an unconstitutional law of Congress that they are defending Ihe exercise by Congress of powers net granted te It by the Constitu tion nnd that they are insisting en the In herent right of Congress te usurp whatever powers It pleases te exercise. THE PUBLIC'S MUSIC CITY COUNCIL is te be commended for the cheerfulness with which it appro priated $."0,000 for n slimmer series of or chestra concerts in Fnlrmeunt Park. The orchestra In thli case will be n miniature of Mr. Stokewskl's organisatien. And Its work will help te lift the standards of ether open-air conceits, which have tended te decline in recent years. The fifty members of the Philadelphia Orchestra who will play ln Falrmeunt Park nre skilled musicians nnd It will be ensy for them te piny beauti fully without playing beyond the under standing or sympathy of the multitudes. Whnt might be called public music hnH already innde one or two ambitious starts in this city. It premised most nt the time when the late Stanley Mnckey recruited from the Philadelphia Orchestra n band much like thnt which will play this summer In Fnlrmeunt. Mr. Mnckey Insisted that lie should have a strictly non-pelltieni band nnd he hnd one. Ills concerts en City HnH Pleza were perhaps the most enjoyable eer given out of doers in Philadelphia and. of cetirte, they were the most popular. This summer, therefore, we shall have another opportunity te see hew useful a geed puhllc concert organization can he when it Is or ganized with nn eye te music nlene. Rnby Kelly has been Like Kelly Did finger-printed in New Yerk nnd the print hns been filed with the Bureau of Vital Statis tics. Never, by nny chance, can Kelly (lie hasn't any ether nnme yet) be mistaken for anybody else. He is of record. Doc tors prcbent declare the practice will even tually become general and every baby will be finger-printed immediately en arrival in the world. Se Ruby Kelly, ut five days old, has already begun te make history. Ocean City fireman made n quick run from the church where his baby was being christened te a tire whan the tire bell rang; from one water cerpmeny te nnether. Ywj.fvCvJ.i'-. fehfc. AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Small and 8elect Party le, Treated te a Surprise by Alert Yeung rdan "Who Stages a Modern Mlraele Solely for Its .Benefit Ity SARAH D. LOWRIB EVERY nev nnd then you have n sudden sense of the miraculous In modern in ventions thnt gives you a fellow feeling for the men nnd women of ancient times who saw burning bushes and heard voices out of "the midst thereof," who walked in fiery furnaces and were net consumed, who crossed rivers dry-shed nnd who listened te, councils of wisdom from unseen visitants and were fed by ravens. I always used te.be struck by the calm ness of these fnvered mortals, who answered the voices nnd crossed the rivers nnd flte the ravens feed and went their ways elated but net tee frightened by the miracle, In tent upon finishing the particular errand upon which they hnd set out. Yet the ether evening, when something quite ns inexplica ble ns some miracles nnd nil fairy talcs occurred in my presence, I just sat still and went en with the conversation with iny neighbor as though nothing mysterious, nothing se wild as Arabian Night genii wonders was being enacted before my eyes. WE HAD been talking nt dinner of nero nere nero phenes in general and the newer devices thnt nre portable in pnrtlcuhir. and two of us comprising the small company confessed te net having seen or heard one of uny description, l'crhaps because the ether per son who confessed Ignorance and nt the same time an Interest was Mrs. Plnehet, there wns nn Immediate desire en the part of ethers present te make geed thnt deficiency. I noticed that the younger of the two men who were our hosts left the room for n few minutes or se, rind his expression en re turning nnd settling down te his belated dessert was a mixture Of elation and mis chief. The tnlk was geed and amusing ns It is apt te be when that eager and quick-witted woman, Mrs. Pinchot. is en hand te give and return volleys and we lingered pcrhnps twenty mere minutes ever the coffee nnd dessert, nnd then, still pursuing our dis cussion nt full tilt, we drifted cnsually and In u body Inte the ether room. Seme one 'was playing n violin ns we entered, and. of course, I looked for a Vic Vic eor machine, net seeing the player. There was a case about twice the size of en ordi nary Victer phonograph, und beside It wns a stringed spindle that wns nbeut as high as n hnrp, u delicate wooden frame that looked like nn old-fashioned towel rack strung with thin wire. The thing was what is called technically aerial antennae of a loop variety, und the small cabinet wns the amplifier. The violin was playing down In one of the department stores en Chestnut street, and the sound hnd traveled nbeut eight blocks west, kept itself distinct from nil the ether city poises In between, besides going through two thicknesses of stone wall, entered the drawing room where we snt and sounded clearly and with deliberate sweet ness In our ears. At the same second It wns perhaps sounding in the enrs of persons ln Pittsburgh, in Newark. In hundreds of places te the north, south, cast and west of them and of us. AT A quarter te 9 a bit; voice boomed out a message of geed night, nnd for 'a moment there wns no sound. Then some body turned the antennae slightly te the north nnd quite n different voice began te speak te us in the room and te nil these listening hundreds up and down the world. The man -who wns speaking might very well hnve been coming through the portieres into the room from the hall. He called each one of us by nnme, beginning with Mrs. Pinchot, nnd said that he hoped we would enjoy his program. And then the Schubert Serenade began. Thnt greeting, the pause before each name nnd the ninused note of bnnter in the voice, nnd then the different nnd mere public tone with which lie announced the program mnde me distinctly aware of a new sensa tion. There were four or five stntlens from which thnt sound might hnve ceme; It de pended upon the time of day nnd upon the direction in which the antennae were pointed : The Westlngheiisc nt Pittsburgh nnd nt Newark, the General Electric nt Schenectady, the Philadelphia Radiophone Company here nnd locally also various de partment stores. Each of the recognized stations has its own time for sending out u program nnd its own type of program : The bnschell news, the bteck quotations, pnlltlcnl propaganda, press news for some nnd music nnd oratory for ethers. Once lenrn these times and sen sen sens nnd the delicate pointer can be moved an inch ln this direction or thnt nnd hear only Jiem the stntlen t lint is chosen ; a few inches off from that direction and the sound is shut off ns though It did net exist. With the amplifier turned off there Is only the very shadow of sound, one, indeed, that the ordinary ear could net translate as n sound, let nlene a sequence of sound making words or n tune. All one hears Is the multiplicity of sounds of n great town with the bang nnd jar of passing trolleys and the whirr of meters, and then just n touch en the antennae and the ether faint articulate sound from far away dominates the room. That very nftcrnoen as it happened I hnd been reading nn autobiographical sketch of Bell, the inventor of the telephone, nnd nbeut the telephone he made for the Centennial here In 1870, and I hnd recalled what my father told me of the incredulity concerning It at the time. Well, here was n thing with even greater Implications tlinn the telephone! If the telephone and meters have changed civilization te quite another pattern since 1870, what will this wireless phonograph net achieve? THE quick, clever chap who had devised this little miracle for his two guests and had carried it out all in the space of twenty minutes or se had used heth the telephone nnd n meter te accomplish his surprise, for the instrument was net In the house when tve begnn te tnlk of radio messages. I fancy the particular one he hnd brought ever for our benefit Is one of the latest inventions as well eh the most portable. The cost of them vnrles, he told me, from the crude but practical ones boys enn con struct for $15 or less te the latest equipped ones that need less mnnlpulntlen -thnn a phonograph, but which cost somewhere in the $500 list. He confessed thnt he did net understand hew the miracle hnppened ; mere thnn that it wns like a slenc being thrown into n pond nnd the ripples going en nnd en te the shorn unless they were Interrupted. He called them "electric impulses" and rather gave me the picture of their beating like ripples against the walls of the room in which we snt and net being deflected, hut passing through. I confess Hint though all, through this experience the political talk of the men nnd women In thnt room wns en vastly Inter esting topics nnd wns what one would nl nl met call the "head Iner" variety, the glimpse of that new vista Inte the eternal verities nf the natural world dimmed for the time being the impnrtnnre of what is te happen thl week and next nnd next year here In Pennsylvania. I listened te the "Ills "Ills cwslen. but the thing I felt nnd remember new poignantly ns I write was that slender mechanism that was strung like n Ilttle harp and that pointed with delicate pre pre cislen n little east or north nnd caught the sound of n woman singing n Hussien song. Xew that England's gloomy dean. Inge of St. rnul's. says hi recalls that Geerge Washington boasted of having thrown n silver dollar 'across the Potomac, nnd sug sug cests tluit Geerge lied nbeut It, pcrhnns he will tell a curious world where he get the curious bunch of misinformation. "Without foreign labor." demands the New Yerk Herald, "who will de our work tl.e work that falls te the hands of un'. skilled labor te de' The morons, perhaps. Regret at the coming retirement of Senater Jehn Sharpe Williams achieves ? ,nnncy with the possibility that he win ne succeeded by James K, Vardaman, ,-.fii FRIDA, 'JUNE 16 , . ' 'is8m2mMmmiims&f:..-?7-, - tt '.r-m "v aiiia vr-.rr r- isnum i- t.is.'jar-sj V Mlf ... hff i 1iLLUa1.we SSfiil ?rr-xj...i- ' -ii-l 3.- .AtiszixTfjasA, "VTr 4rm .. 3SEnS-i: rrittssSJarfrt'' fe--1: :;'5-;riss .lsrT-a Tffi imPCw uAt&v' it7itmmLe-.7m "''Jijutmytintsm. nst -- , w:'-"; lUTini'i. iiu NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Knew Best BRUCE M. WATSON On the Child-Laber Situation THE recent. decision of the United Stntcs Supreme Court, declaring unconstitu tional the Federal Child-Laber Law of 1919, docs net in nny way affect the validity of the Pcnnsvlvnnln law regarding child Inber, according te Bruce M. Watsen, managing director of the Education end Child Laber Association of Pennsylvania. "The only effect that the decision of the Supreme Court can possibly have in 1 enn sylvanin," said Mr. Watsen, "will be that the working day of the children may possibly be extended te nine hours Instead of eight, ns the Federal law provided, because .the Pennsylvania Child-Laber Law permits a working day of nine hours. However, most of tie Places In Pennsylvania nn. already werking1 en nn clBlit-heiir dny en d J te net -believe thnt many of them wi J incase this because of the Supreme Court s action. Conditions In Pennsylvania "Child labor rates pretty high in Penn sylvnnia as compared with some of .fet',cp Stntes. The children here nre chiefly em em pleyed in mills nnd factories, mine labor bj children being forbidden by the law of 1010, under which our Stnte is operating. "This law was satisfactory, according te the Btatus of 1015. the year when it was passed by the Legislature, but some of the ether States have gene nwny nhead of us in the time which haselnpsed slhco'eur Stnte law was adopted. The law today remains prac tically the same as when it wns passed. There ere many persons who believe that the Pennsjlvnnln law should be amended se ns te compel nn eight-hour day, and every one knows that eight hours is long enough for any person under sixteen yenrs of age te work. "Our Stnte law does net apply at nil te children in domestic service in houses, nor te these who work en farm, these two classes being excepted at the time when the law wns passed. They are the only classes of occupation exempted from the previsions of the net. The Continuation Schools "There Is also n very strong bPntlment manifesting Itself throughout the State in favor of requiring nttendnncc nt the con tinuation schools for employed children up te the age of eighteen years Instead of six teen, as at present. "There Is n general popular misunder standing ns te the scope of the Federal Child-Laber Law nnd some persons hnve the Idea that the national law was Ideal and covered everything. This Is n mistake. The Federal Child-Laber Law did net prohibit child lnber in any class of occupation nor in nny place ; it simply put a handicap upon the employer who used child labor. The Pennsylvania law, en the ether hand, de clares that child labor Is illegal end pro vides for the arrest end punishment by fining of the employer who violates its pro pre visions. Federal I -aw Did .Much Geed "At the Mime time, the Federal law, while it reached only about 15 per cent of the working children of the country, did nn im mense nmeunt of geed. It wns a great been te the small, children in the cotton Stntcs especially. Seme of these States had no child-labor law et all, ethers had laws en the subject which were unsntisfneterv nmi meager, nnd were therefore laws of low standards, net nearly equal te the Fed eral law. "The Federal law also accelerated progress in the matter of the opposition te child labor. It caused the individual Stutcs te raise the stnndnrds of their own laws en the subject of child labor and encouraged these Stntcs which did net have nny such laws nt all te pnss them, furthermore, It helped materi ally in the enforcement of the Stnte laws, through having the Federal nnd the Stnte officials working in harmony te a common end. Where It might sometimes be difficult te get prompt State action, this difficulty was often removed by an appeal te the Federal authorities for un Investigation, Public S-'iit linen t and Child Laber "Public sent ment against child labor is becoming stronger and stronger every year, and It U scarcely an exaggeration te say that iimuj hiv tvciiiis ugmiint n m un cmpnutic ; iJf'd'ti.t.iilt.'-' (...,.!,. ... ...in 1 ; rfj rmir urdDDV ZJ A JUT A f XX1J lYJLsUiXVnX ilXX-AUX. at? . R. ,'t'B jwrtsmnttLi ,v -ia ;fe:WiUfiI"cJiZ3Wr iSWSSSSS w"Esjr,rtF r ,. .r i vritt tr"' -,. .1 jaullln .....riflMMftTtltCfrft" BferiSWrW3 -P ssBWiW ". "" vtwv ., LiT MBtaBw-err-,f . - s - ffii "SAC, ta" tiSI nrtnr- . .t'"V1 Mrt-J. MgiBgf? '?;aM ni,i"l.CT.., tUi,F ",Tl(ra-.,.rnj(im. rt'1"' " - 'SJJKMW4Hj,v(,jj4t -"TBts""1" naiwiiii i !- -.. ns It Is ngnlnst human slavery. When the first Federal Child-Laber Law was declared te be unconstitutional ln 1918 It created scarcely a ripple en the surface of public opinion. Hew the feeling hns grown Is shown by the pretests ngainst the decision of unconstitutionality of the second law last month. "The enforcement of this law in our State lies with the police, the inspectors of the Rurenu nf Industry nnd Lnber and the at tendance officers of the public schools. But between these three branches of authority there are a geed many slips. 'It should be snld te the eternal credit of the Philadelphia Beard of Public Educa tion that thnt body assumed the responsi respensi nllity of (ontrelling the street trades nt night, such os selling newspapers, 'boot 'beet blacking, etc., nnd the geed results of this supervision hnve been very npparent. It is ngnlnst the State law for children under sixteen yenrs of age te sell anything en the streets nt night. Before the Benrd of Public r.micfitien took up this mnttcr there were mnny flagrant violations of this law; new there nre relatively few. Dodging the Laws "There is one curious violation of the aw which the Federal statutes in the past have fulled te reach, but which I believe can only be corrected by a national law. At present there is no way te prevent n family living In one State from taking their chil dren, and jumping ncress the line te nn nn other State, working the children illegally hi the .beet fields and after the first of November, when the beet crop is harvested, moving hack te the former Stnte. nveldlnc prosecution by claiming u lnck of jurisdic tion en the part of both States. There nre in the country hundreds, If net thousands, of children who nre thus get ting only two or three months' schooling u year and frequently none nt nil. through the application of this system. We ourselves have mere than a touch of this by families in Pennsylvania removing te New Jersev during the cranberry picking season and back te Pennsylvania after the season closes. As he laws of the States stand at present. here is no way te step this and a Federn law covering this point would be n valuable !;;','?".,'' the child-lnber laws of 'he What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ Whnt Is a Soviet? W s'en, tf'ceTcKrJV' ,he eXpre88,en' WherVVehunXmfpus? uiie Is the present Premier of Tnnn7 t'zechMnr1''1 ""net Who In Capahlanca? Whe.re nnd whnt Is the Staked Pliln? paBanVh0 r'glnUl mt'anln "' '" word Answers te Yesterday's Quiz "Prlrte Rectli before a fall" u - . . quotation. The correct form nf "i1,8' S betre" a17atirU'?UOn """ W PrC,ar;efh1enn,e?;rrblr?BnSX1l Mexico""01 State8 SenatorrfreS! New The Drhm Is n river of Juire.s!iI,in Ine 180 miles te the Save U was"" scene of severe "Bhtlnif between lh WUe8r,ldaw,ar.nn,, U'Q 8erblan '" the A dromedary has one hump Jeseph Leula Oay-Lussae waa n i.. 'fftf,7,..,PKnft.S," anTpiUVsV French working girls were called n settcs In nlluslen te the jrrav .Birl" dress fnh.ie nn.i, h.'."!' W'oe en cue" is a diminutive of ih """Z word "grls' meanlrw Krayh Frcnch 7. T I'he famous Krupp steel and inn .... 1887. """" nre 1812- The term "mndure," nppiied i means matured tl at V0n?lg?r? strength and color. 'Wdtire" ufUl' Span sh word, mennlmr matured ft Mansuetude means awustemed Itn flr'.nti a "r1ml,Unes?1i't'neness. ,0 BentI A cotsweld is a st etch of eiun .. . used for sheenrMinV "ntFStJSWl iV. !l Jwaueestersh re', KnlnW noted for excellent breed of Rm' . ' ', ' '; - t . 1 . V ' vF . a m . iz itrfc- rrm&m-p:.- .: r .!-.". :. Jfe M ...jr. 4XLl'Vn i mK.w f d . .JW "-Mifig-! uTMrtiM- t .'5rr33HCTs'1-Al! 1 Pi iiJUt Ml a jbwsteie iKtaiit.atftiktii? u .aAAWlifiTSt'f !?? .MmmK0nifaw,i':sax - M "TT7I MM. ,.m fftsr..''---0f Jr"- "taut HSBPJ"-.rr .AT '-SVaiiMU - E." ' K,1(r5.i - rr Aktir-rH, mBr 'WVi- mm jnisns 9 -nm ttttmptt SHORT CUTS Kick-off for June's second halt. As a financier, Ladd, of North Dakota, has a kind heart. v Mr. Laskcr Is firmly of the opinion tUt geed wine needs no Busch. We trust the income tax Installment put no crimp In your vncatlen plans. "Hent nnd Rust Give Wheat a Bi; Spurt." Ne, child, net in the field. Shipping Benrd Sea Chantey: Water, water everywhere, but better stuff te drink. In the Discredit Stakes the court run ners appear te be runners-up with the rum." runners. When a freebooter gets after s boot legger the ordinary guy has te leek out for his leather. Sing Sing Is justifying its name. San Carle Opera Company has been entertaining the convicts. ' "Congress .May Mnke American llenu IJry. I here nre'sllll optimists (or crept hangers) nbrend. Hew, demands Mr. Lnsker, can von ci pect nn American' ship te roll merrily home without n wine list? The authorities would have us believe thnt progress in n ecrtnln murder myster; is upWurd nnd enWnrd. At n recent operation In a local hospital the patient, It Is said, was calmed by radio music. Counter irrltunt, we surmise. , lteccnt nriny order relieves soldiers of the necessity of weming the deg cellar wlille off duty during the deg days. Het deg! ' Battle between rebels and Government troops near Asuncion, Paraguay, may prompt ti brief Investigation of the eW jegcrfy. ' ', Congress plans Investigation nf prebt-. bltlen enforcement en American ship. Thli may resemble a chanter en Snakes In Ireland. There nre believers in evolution m Cllf1f -Ulft. A.I lltn. I.. .i..Hnlr,l.. ,l.A Vl H . I uuui.-i.it.iiiti, nun ill lffl(liniiip; IIIU ut.- damentallst they can't see beyond the tlir I iirai ii-iivm. If the Ferdney-McCiimbcr Tariff BU will de anything besides Increase the cost of . living the fact has net yet been conclusive!; demonstrated. Paris dispatches give one the Idea that the girls nttcudlnir the art students' btnn perhnps thought they were ut ,t Cnlifern'uJ bathing beach. . 1 . (; Every once in u while the plain cllj ; begins ,te wonder whether It Is n tariff of an emoprge Mr. Ferdncy mid .Mr. Mcub ber are framing. When the wrlnrt blows en the sub'ldj5 from the mouths of the Congressmen, then , the sails of the Bulling ships will bwell out in the hurricane, The measure of the Tariff Hill will net' be adequately tuken until the women u",l dcrtake the job with their muruet eussc", and shopping bags. Of twenty-five Vassnr girls ew'nj the daisy chain en class day, two nan ueuu"i hair. Se, naturally, we de net mention W j wrote Chairman Baker te Mr. Pinchot. is the munifeat duty of some grninmariflft knock Ilarry'b I out. 'l We nucBtlen If Edisen's new question',. nnlrn deal will net him a iroed hand. "'"'Ml If he had Included another poker '!"; bed have had n pair. The vacuum cleaner Is being used tjj collect potato bugs. A great and wen'J field Is here opened te tun ngncm"" And wnat a tremepueus saiemn viuvu-f 31 agent could make In rural dlslr'nS' J" f fr. tfttl S"T!S3 Kf isfc H - I, ")VSf A MBssnWAMsielrj.sufii iinfsMsaesi - n.jttr.i