em'jm H9 $' 6 . ' M fc :- m 1 s wTHWKmrw J. MMf-MMHWIMIM 1 KUcnina Muhltc -lucftiKc i...Vl!-f ' .. v ' , t'JllX PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY W: CTRUS It. K. CURTIS. Pnrjinr.NT mm Vifc5 . V' .'""' vive i'rc-inpni ana ireisuren !ij"lWrl A. Trier, flc-crffltrv. I'hetrle- If. I.n.llni. X... 9 . . .. ( ., .- . i. . . Phllln n. Cellins. Jehn II U'IIIIium Tnhn .t. 'Jhveti Wen, Oeri V. Goldsmith. David E. Smiley, ters. vtty B 8nt.BT. .Editor JOtm C. MAntt?T....Otnrl Pmlnen Mnr I .Published dally at PcbUO Lrixits BulldlnE ' Independence Square, Philadelphia. ATTJXTIO ClTI rrest-tXen RutMInc ,KftW Tots 3H Mmll'en Ave. OTtieit 701 Kenl llul'dln t.'Lecis 013 aiobt-Drmecral I'ulMlr.g Caioise 1302 Tribune llulldlng . NHYVS DURCAUS! ITAIIIIMITON DlIEAt', . w V. 13. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. and Hth St. Iw Tens: lies me The Suit DulMIr Londen Dcbud Trafalgar Ilulldlns SI'IIXCRIITION TKllirS , Th EtEMtMi Pcblie L-jwirn, Is served te sub erlbera In Philadelphia, and surrounding towns t the rate e( tvlv ll-.') cents ir week, payable teMhe carrier. By mall te points euUlde of Philadelphia In Wl United State. Canada, or United Htatea te. ssslens. pestaaTi free, fifty (50) cents per month. IT (10) clelli-.ni per er, pajable In advance. Te all.fereiirn countries one ($1) dollar a month. Netice Subscribers wlshln? address changed feast give old as "ell as new address. BEtt. 3000 WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 1601 KTAdSrcss nil coiamtt(ce((ots te Evmltie rcM(e ledger, Indeprvdrnci Square, Philadelphia. Member of the Associated Press . TUB ASSOCIATED MESS Is rxcfMSh-Wv en. tilled te the or trpuMfratlen e nil Hems 1(satehes eredltrd te It or net etlitrwlae credited n this paper, and also the local urns pullishtd therein. All rlehts of republication of special dispatches Herein arc fllje 'esrrvfd. rhlltdflphU. lriJ.r. Julr :: A SCHOOL TO BE PROUD OF SCIENTIFICALLY nnil artistically, the Scheel of Architecture of the Culver sity of Pennsylvania is pcrhnp tlif lead -ing institution of its kind in the I'nltcd States. This view ix net parochial. It Is appre ciated t the Heaus Arts in 1'nrK It U uppertcd in I'nglaiid and Ims rwpntly r etived concrete e.proslen In the M-rdlet f Kebert AtI.inen. of the neynl Institute of British Architect-', whee roinnicndatien of the work nccempli-hed at l'cnii was in.ule after n close inspection of all fimilar schools In tbe land. "" Heavy endowments have contributed llttle te tbe resources of tbe Pennsylvania Architectural Scheel. Its prewth. new fairly rapid, wus nt the outlet sradual. and dtle mere te the enthu.lnm, unselfish labors and co-operative and individual abilities of . its faculty than te financial bnckini;. The spirit of endeavor whcli h.i" been abrerbed by im-reains niimbiTx of otudents has made the institution rii h in merit ami apiritual values, but net in the funds hit Mary te its practical expansion and de velopment. The gift of a graduate scholarship te th" school which has ju.t been made by 1". T. " Stetcsbury is a laudable recognition uf p!j'' tplcndid achievement In the fare of -eme PJLw frying difficulties. Paul C'ret. the talrnlcd )!M Jlrftfcsser of design, is te tiv the (.oimitleiis i?JV3 under which the new facilities for advanced Studies will be conducted. Toe frequently yeuns architects are 'itl'dl sercea dj pressure irem lean purses te rur- l w "" 'h0'1" education iirematurely. The Mwfi achelarsihlp will enable epeciall brilliant Students te enrich their equipment before ntcring upon the practice of an art glori fied by its inspired masters and traduced by many who have dabbled In it unworthily. .FOUNDER OF GOUCHER COLLEGE MOItE than pasitij notice should be paid te the death of l he Ue. 1 lr. Jehn Franklin (ieudicr, of I'dltlmere, for he was Be ordinary man. Bern In Pennsylvania and educated at Dickinsen College, lie entered the ministn of the Methodist Church, in which he was remarkably sueccsftful. lie interested him self in missionary work and orsanl.ed the Angle-Japanese College in Tokie and founded missions in China and Korea. He and bis' wife made generous gifts te the Weman's College in Ii.-iltiir.en and en his lectien te Its presidency in lss is njme iras changed te (Suuchcr Cel!ee. He r--Balned its president until 1!)0.". This college for the education of women' developed under his patrenaye until it i tie of the met cen-iderable of the wemen'' colleges in the country. It has neatly !M)u -Students and a large farultj ami excellent equipment. This would net have come te pass if it had net been for the Christian public spirit of Dr. (lonelier. And al though the college had a long existence be bo be fere he became connected with it. he is properly known as its founder. He was net unique, as there are ether pubh spirited and philanthropic men in the Methodist and in the ether chun-hes. Put there is none tee many of them. DENBY AND THE CHINESE WALL THE most gigantic defenshe work in the world is a monument net enlv of pre tensions but of futility. Secretary Henbj, Who, after a risky air tour, has been in specting the (ireat Wall of Chin 1, has doubtless been impressed by the sheer mag nitude of that venerable structure. If he j, liven te moralizing and has a taste for history, he may echo the thoughts of thou sands of precedent isiters with the quc-rv, "Wbnt for?" Back In the fcceihI oenturj ft. C. original builders of the colossal barricade were per haps convinced that such u question would never be posed by any person in sight of their handiwork. The Great Wall was Intended te render China sufficient tint') Itself, te repel th" outer barbarian.", their geed", their chat tels, their armaments. Its miserable fail ure te observe any of these purposes i Oriental history. China, no less than any ether nation en earth, has been subject te invasions of all kinds. Her dj nasties have been out whelmed, her peoples, for centuries at a time, have been subjected te conquest from abroad. Despite the notion that the for mer empire was long impervious te change it has undergone threush the centuries vast alterations, material and spiritual, through contact with abroad. One of Its great religion. Buddhism, was imported. Mengel hae occupied ,,i thrones. Western civilisatien is at present ffectins swift transformation in the re public. The Great Wall is in part in ruins, a Cyclopean curiosity, a mocking symbol of the obtuse madness of attempted isolation But what the Chinese knew, what Mr. Denby, if he Is n philosopher, probably knows, is net common knowledge la the Senate of the I'nltcd Stntes. In 'the upper, fctuse en Wednesday Senater Geeding, of '. IsUbe, consumed two hours of leeislative rhsjtisae with an appeal for the exclusion from fltlis country by prohibitory tariffs of every rticie mat can ue maue nere. ills Great Wall la a barrier of unscalable 1-mini.te f ri.... , - ... ,. . .! m air. vioeiiuir is ei uie opinion mat, snve ler certain minerals and products of the s sau. every nrticie neecitsi in the I nlted :. skates can be produced here. The centen- fi'j tMB.ls capable of theoretical proof. But it gftjls, also demonstrable that trade would be vf Cftubed by se atiamantlne a bulwark and t Ifcae. Rtirnne. without recourse in enmmn.- Hfffstl exchanges, would be hopeless of satli- Mag , her huje Indebtedness te the United ma-M li her own wares were pennunently .pPHaatineu without the tiiree-miie limit. 'ftU h Uie very rudiments of eco- uoeuiiig nu Air, iiauu, e of North Dakota, who has been seconding the most nonsensical tariff argument ever advanced, have been displacing rudimentary mentalities. The protective policy has the approval of the majority of Americans, But the Goed-Ing-I.ndd program is, .the betrayal of a com cem com inendnble principle.; It seems n pity that these foolish and ob eb ob structlenary legislators and n few ethers of the kind In the Senate could net have ac companied Secretnry Denby and have be held with him -the world's most impressive ruin of an exclusive policy. UP OUT OF THE UNDERWORLD SPREADS THE DRUG TRAFFIC A Menace That Has Grewn Swiftly Through the Organized Deviltry of Protected Outlaws 17HAT is the actual inner nature of the ' drug traffic, which wns brought again Inte the headlines by the affair of Irzlc Gins berg? What Is dope? Where and by whom Is It used? Questions such ns these must have nrlsen naturally in the minds of most people nfter even a casual reading of the experiments in humnnltarlnnlsm of Jehn K. K. Scott nnd former Judge Patterson and the tender-hearted members of Mr. Scott's law linn. Te the average citizen a dope tiend Is little mere than a legend, a shndewy figure of an Imagined "underworld" that Is supposed te be safely shut oil from the normal world In which the vast majority lives and gees ra tionally about its business. But let us see. Prance. England, Belgium, Germany nnd Italy, as well as the United States, have been mexed te make occasional systematic surveys of the illicit dru-; business nnd its results. And It has been demonstrated that drugs of tin sort which Izzie Ginsberg nnd his nssciriiites peddled have been the cnue of swift nnd widespiead social degeneracy in every iwlized country . They are the stimulants which criminals use before they go out te commit highway robberies or burglaries or murder. They supply the courage which the underworld "rat" requires when he sets out te steal motorcars or te rob a pedestrian. It might be better te say that they provide a crazy imitation of courage by making their victim temporarily insane. The illegitimate use of narcotics is net peculiar te any r'n-. High -rollers among the ever-rich are becoming addicts, and It has been found that school children in crowded sections of many American cities have been developing the drug habit In Imi tation of victims In their neighborhood cir cles or under the guidance of boosters sent out by the drug rings te expand the dope market. Any one who acquires the drug habit will he n physical and moral wreck within a enr. The addict without his drugs is In agony. The police knew that most of the crimes of violence committed in the streets are the work of drus victims drhen te des peration by the need of dope and willing te go te any lengths te obtain the money neces sary for its purchase; from the peddlers. Se serious a matter is the underground drug traffic- that it was brought up for dis cussion at Versailles, where a proposal was made te have the manufacture. s;l!e and distribution of all narcotics regulated by ati international commission. The devastation done en the Continent by dope has been such that the j'reneh Academy of Medicine has just demanded that all persons found te be implicated in the traffic be excluded from Kra nc e. America has been bit as hard by the drug rings as any ceuntrj in the world. Students of the genenil subject say that if the traffic is net broken up it wjH he in a few j ears as L'reat a curse te the rnltcd Suites as the opium traffic was te China. The state, despit,. an) thing that their political friends and their lawyers mn de, will haie te find vay te keep the dope peddlers in j.ul. Wohe, moving in packs would net be se great (1 menace, te public safety as half a de7.en ,npe magnates op erating with the- protection of highly paid lawyers with political drag. The drug rings mak enormous profits by systematic ally creating and enl.ir.Mng a do de generate and criminal c 'ass. 'J-1P Meney paid by the rings for pro-ectmn of one sort nnd another i- obtained .j prostitution, burglary. l,igliw:ij rebberj . petty thievery and innumi inbli ether crimes te which ad dicts turn afier drugs h.ne ruined their capacity for tj stein.it (, work of any son. Narcotics jire peddled in poolrooms, en street ionic)-. In the crowded sections of a dtj. in dance halls of the lower ijpe, in cigar stores frecmentfd bj underworld loung leung loung en and in innumerable small restaurants. Drug enders have r-en been caught work ing at l he gates of public schools. If the courts, the police nnd the Mayer permit the impure started by Judgi Qulgley te end with Iz.ie Ginsberg, the organized traffic in narcotics will n , ,10 ,()pe magna'es will continue te ride in motorcars even a httle mere expensive and luxurious than these that the bootleggers go about In. Public attention is new directed te an other as-ec-iate of drug peddlers, one Hills, who, like (Jlnsbc-rg. was turned loose after serving a few months of an eighteen months' term. And. as In the case 0f Ginsberg, the IHstrict Attorney',, ffu ,. wn, no, ,.onste,j about the parole. Sterner laws are needed in this and every ether State te punish drus peddlers nnd re strict the traffic. And there Is no reason why. when exlstln-j "irntes -iri revised, i hey should net be tmee bread enough te bilng into the class of crimir-ils liable te legal punishment all these who deliberately me! anel encourage individuals ei- groups on en gaged in the illicit drus trade or conspire, under any pieter.se, te make them Immune under the law. THE SUICIDAL LUSITANIA THE report that an American salvage rempnn.v is contemplating recovering the treasure chest" from the f.tisltnnin Is provoking in some quarters in Germany the kind of comment which might be termed pre pre pre postereiis had net the war and its conduct revealed many abnormalities in Teutonic psychology. One newspaper complains because Ger many is net te be representee nt the sug gested salvaging and is fearful lest "evi dence" showing that the liner wns carrying munitions should be destroyed with the con nivance of the Entente, The Tnegllsche Hundscliau e)luntcers the theory that the I.usitanln bad only herself te blame for sinking se suddenly te the ocean fleer. The milrninrine torpedo, contends this journal, would have caused only two com partments of the vessel te 111! with water and could net have produced explosions, ThLsjis an ingenious conjecture, which if V J WBWJW'' vsninw ' (public ledger-p&iiabebphi logically extended could ee made te cover the cases of most of the merchantmen at tacked by the Germans during the war. Ships with damaged compartments can sometimes float. Tllcrefore hundreds of cargo and passenger ships of America and the Allies blew up of their own accord. Thcre is absolution for the imperial sub marines. Q, E. D. As for the possibility of explosions en ships struck by torpedoes in vital parts, in, say, engines, boilers or oil stores, that must net be considered. Fer several years boasting concerning the sinking of the Lttsltanta was common in Germany, Scheel children celcbrnted the deed nnd a bronze medal with Death selling tickets te Cunnrd patrons was struck off. Pride in the original performance has apparently evaporated new. It is mere fashionable and certainly easier en the post war conscience te attribute the U-beat depredations te their victims. THE FIGHT IN BUFFALO THE real issue in the Buffalo street-car strike is whether the Mitten plan shall be adopted or net. There is no dispute ever wages, as the Mitten management in that city agreed te the demands of the men. It refused, how ever, te make a contract with the union. Thereupon the strike wns ordered and the representatives of the union announced that the men should be hired through them or net nt nil. There is nothing strange about this atti tude. It is known throughout the country thut the empleyes of the Philadelphia Rapid Trensit Company, operated by Mr. Mitten, are net affiliated with the national street railway men's union. They have their own Independent association nnd they deal di rectly with tbe management of the street railway system and come te amicable ngreements regarding wnges and conditions of work. They are consulted through their committees, and a system has been estab lished through the operation of which the men participate in the profits of the com pany. The men recently have become shareholders and they own the largest single block of stock recorded en the transfer books. It has been the desire of Mr. Mitten te persuade the Buffalo street car men te adept the Philadelphia system, which is really the open-shop system, with no discrimina tions made in favor of either union or non union men. The only requirement is that the empleyes shall be loyal te their work and shall co-operate with the management in the economical operation of the cars-. Sneral hundred of the Philadelphia con ductors and njbtermen have Stene, te Buffalo they ,elunteered the suggestion that they should go in order te explain te the men en strike hew the system works here and te held their jobs for them until the strike is settled. There are ether than union labor com plications in the situation, however. Capi talists generally with money invested In street railway properties de net approve Mr. Mitten's methods. They think he pays tee high wages and that he shows alto gether tee much consideration te the men. They did their best te block his plans here a few months age, but they did net suc ceed. They did succeed, however, in forc ing an !ncreae in the rate of fare against his pretest because the successful main tenance of a five-cent fare in this city when the street railway companies in ether cities were insisting that they must be allowed te charge mere put these ether companies en the defensive. It will surprise no one aware of what has been going en if it shall eventually he disclosed that certain capitalists and' the union leaders are working together In Buf falo te defeat .Mr. Mitten. Mr. Mitten has had experience with strikes in the past and he has broken them, but he discovered that breaking thorn left the problem where Jt was in the begin ning. He sought a plan which would pre vent strikes and keep the relations between the empleyes and the managers friendly for the benefit of both. The result is the plan new in operation here. As the years have passed it has commended itself te the judg ment of the men until, Uh already Indi cated, they volunteered when the Buffalo strike began te go te that city as mission aries of the new Industrial gospel. Seme ccf them have been stoned. But this is net a new experience for missionaries. It is worth while for observers te recall ih.it no man resorts te violence until he has let faith in the force of his arguments. OH, MOLLA, MOLLA! THE -shall we say high? temper that afflicted Mis. Mallery when she lest the tennis championship te Mile. I.englen hasn't abated. And, reflected in the stormy sen tences of the interview whlih Mella granted te reporters who met her ship In New Yerk harbor yesterday , It isn't the nicest imagi nable thing te see. "I've been misquoted se often-" cried the former champion, "that I'm afraid te open m j mouth. The newspapers are the vilest things in the world, nnd If they don't leave me alone they'll drive me out of tennis and hue k te Norway !" It Is the painful duty of reporters for the press te seek out celebrities mid the great of the earth in moments of crisis nnd under circumstances trying te the nerves. What the celebrities say In such intervals, Inter vals of trial nnd emotional stress, does net alwajs leek well In print In the calm of the morning after. That is why you hear se many people loudly denying sentiments at tiibutecl te them In the Vnpers. The fact is that no reporter worth his salt ever mis mis queteil anybody, nnd most reporters are worth their salt nnd a great deal mere. The journalists who patiently listened te Molln's angry outburst might have made a mero-than-fitting reply. They might have said that If lady tennis stars who lese im portant matches de net learn te hear their afflictions with a better grnce they, the re porters, will be driven from the tennis ceuyts altogether te seek refuge In the relatively peaceful realm of politics or the tranquil nlr of city police courts. r, ..... T,f vn" ,,en,t knew what Can t Help cheinotreplsni is, write Themselves Wlllem Rudolfs, Ih Se They De D., New Jersev agri cultural experiment, Btn Btn tien in New Brunswick and go right en swatting mosquitoes. It appears thnt the NVw Jersey mosquitoes are summer birds and are prompted te sing nt a temperature similar te that of the human body. jPSS ihnn that fails te satisfy; mere is a burden But given just thnt temperature they, in-' texlcated with the exuberance of their own virtuosity, kiss you, tap you and pass en That's all there is te it. Mr. Rudolfs has explained it all In a pamphlet. WJicn the Railroad Laber Beard, born of the Transportation Act. Ambiguous Instructions was instructed te base wages en the rate paid for similar work in the open market and en the relation between wages and the cost of living it was In effect told te use its own judgment ; as one "standard" suggested is never static nnd the ether must needs be merely theoretical. Juarez, Mexico, school children recently stormed the City Hall demanding that the schools be opened. This spells morn bepn for Mexico than half n dozen political proclamations. Because brevity is the body of conven ience the children of beudllne writers ure all and always tots. ABEBPHI AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Leve of Animals Means Possession of Trait Responsible for Many Happy Hours Hew Charlie Chaplin's Cat Nearly Get a Monument By SARAH D. LOWRIE rriHE ether day a woman whom I knew a rerv pretty woman with a great faculty for making friends with all the children and animals that happen her way was doing her errands down n crowded street la C.eruiantewn when her attention wns sud denly riveted en n group consisting of n man with n camera, a deg, a girl and an inter ested crowd of spectators, among whom was a police officer. New anything about n deg was apt te interest her, se she stepped te observe. The camera man evidently wished te take the deg's picture, and the girl was evidently trying te get the deg te pose for the purpose, but without success. Presently the police officer edged his way te the lady en the opposite pavement and saluted her affably, explaining that the deg was the famous "Allen's deg" nnd the camera man was taking the pictures for the newspapers, or trying te rather, the deg up until then having been quite unmanageable. "It leeks te me," said the lady, "as though the trouble was net te much with the deg as with the girl. She acts afraid of him." The officer knew the lady's ways with animals and a very bright thought struck him, which be presently confided te the dis tracted photographer and grewingly nervous girl. The photographer was delighted with the idea, the girl was relieved, and even tually the lady was persuaded te try her powers of persuasion-en the deg. With the result that after a word or two from her and n long moment of quiet inspection from the deg, he was perfectly delighted te make friends. Indeed -re than delighted, insistent! Se that he put two paws upon her shoulder and was presently thus photo pheto phote gruphed, much te the lady's surprise, for that had net been part of ber original bar gain. However, she accepted her fate with u pretty grace and went her way, gazed upon by admiring bystanders and a grateful newspaperman. THAT little knack of understanding ani mals and making th. i at case and happy and confiding is something in a person that I've never heard explained. It cannot, I think, be cultivated ; one is born with It. I bad an uncle who was noted in the army for It and was sought after by all tbe livery stable men In town. The. implored him te "gentle" their horses by driving them. He need never have been without n berse free, If be bad succumbed te their i glngs. Nene of bis children inherited that pecu liar knack, but all of them cared greatly for horses nnd were wise ubei. their points. He saw te it that from their earliest child hood they were both fearless and sympa thetic with them. These I think are tbe two qualities one needs in en1 te get all the pleasure that is possible out of an animal, but It is surprising hew many persons arc without one or the ether. Fear of animals, can be planted very early and Is dreadfully difficult te eradicate. I knew n man whose father and tr.ather . lite unconsciously made him timid with dogs before he could speak. There wns this ex cuse for both of them : They had each been badly bitten by strange dvgs in their early childhood and can led the sears of these en counters both en their bodies and in their memories. The boy tried valiantly before he ws a grown man te overcome his timidity, nnd managed te bide it at nil events from all but dogs themselves for most occasions. But It se happened that one day he wns preach ing for he was u clergyman in a suit.'! country church en the virtue of fearlessness, when n deg swirled Inte the dierc and trotted up the alsle. and scenting the spasm of fear that the preacher was "Tllctcd with, snapped mischievously at bis feet nnd the folds of his surplice. It very nearly ruined the; effect of that sermon en fearlessness I Fer neither his gestures nor bib voice in ordering the deg out were as confident s the preacher would have liked them te be. AS A CHILD I was taught te plant ray hcellcss baby shoe en every living thli.g that ran across my path which could be exterminated thus decisively, nnd te mash every snake with a stone or lock or whack ing stick, no matter hew harmless, te avoid cats and te cress the street te escape strange dogs. I have a picture jet in my mind's eye of my mother hiring a very small boy te conduct her past an equally stnall deg who was japping and at the same time wugglng his tail bebinel a gulden fence. Frem ants te cows, our attitude toward animals wns one of armed hostility or cau tious avoidance. And I might have passed en without ever having an inkling of the joys of animals and their little ways If a tiny toy terrier had net fallen te my let in very adult jenrs. Her name was "Bunty," and te Bu'nty I ewe an open sesame te nil t. c animal kingdom upon which I formerly slammed u violent deer. Fer. of course, one anlmul is very like another in Its gen eral traits, differing us thev de in personal characteristics. When I disturbed a little clilpperlng sparrow en a hydrangea bush just new thnt I supposed was mine unci she supposed was hers, and she sat tight and determined and game en her nest of tiny fledglings, she was for all ihe world like Bunty guarding one of her precious bones that she suspected me of coveting under thnt same hydrangea. I backed away from the little nest with the same quick apology and helpless desire te be understood just new as I bad done years nge with my fiery yet for giving Bunty. APART from all their loving, willful, faithful ways the comic side of the creatures that people the earth, their laugh ing ways, give one a rich harvest of amuse ment thnt is at once a cure for loneliness nnd n stimulant te one's own powers of laughter. The ether evening the gaiage man's deg came nnd looked at the family at dinner through the open French windows. lie made no effort te join us, except by way of re sponse te our chatter and general com fortable jollity; he grinned and grinned, and sat there enjoying us as a spectacle of family unity until his master called and whistled from the back premises The children of this generation in America are being Introduced mere civilly nnd with better success te the animal world than were their mothers. Possibly it Is the In fluence of England, possibly it is our grow grew ing geed sense about children. Certainly the interest of a whole audience in the screen the moment an animal comes in view gees te prove that te a great many of us thev are "like folks." A FRIEND of mine wns asked te talk te some children net long age about cur rent events. She was n very ardent member of the League of Weman Voters nnd she urged the children te send one of their num ber te represent them nt a nearby con cen feience, en the public schools of the State, nt which several notable speakers were te be present. The one she chiefly emphasized as worth while was Mrs. Carrie Chapman Cait. who ns the organizer of the League of Wemnn Voters and great in suffrage affairs, bad loomed large en her horizon nnd te her thinking should also be a great person In the eyes of present-day boys nnd girls. Hr suggestion thnt each child donate a pennv te pay the fare of one child who should go te the convention wns enthusinstlciilly acqul escrd in. And she made it a point te he present next clay when the pennies were brought In. Net only thnt. she asked the first boy who came forward with his penny (.queezed tight In a grimy hand te explnlii te the vest of the children what his pennv wns given for. His answer was very prompt nnd ardent: "Te help pay for the monument for ChacJie Chaplin's cat!" said he. Perhaps the country has reason for ilatlnii that Congress is tee busv te Sr with the bonus. FBID AV JULYj 21, 1922 ' fridaV julyj 21, i9& jbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbsbbsIbbbbV" J crs- .stsBBlt I iflt llfccP3l ll2JttisBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB9EBBBBBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB l SBMBSUBBBT Jm SBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBrBBBBBBBBBBBWsP LjSSaSBBBBBB'lBlT jVf Tasfl. SI jBSSBBBBFsM 9 f fTScSBBBBB rAl "cjP V 1 j" L V SB''iSs'SinU0H'lVilSISIBBrSBSBBBBQ fr 'BaPsslW,TB&g fc iJwHFLmKtji (Xt '' ' tF W , L NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Knew Best MEREDITH HANNA On Increased Divorce Costs , THE cost of divorce action, which has steadily increased for the last twenty years, took nnntber jump recently when the Judges fixed the compensation of the niBstcr in such cases nt 100 nnd the Legis lature Increased slightly the fee for tiling divorce suits, although this action has net materially affected the number of divorce notions brought in the courts, nccerding te Meredith Hannn, Dcputv Prntbonetnry. "The original master's lee." said Mr. Hanna. "when I was admitted tethc bnr, nbeut twenty jears nge, wns $-". Since that lime it hns been increased three time, etch time in the sum of 525. First, it wns mode SriO, then $73 and new SIOO. Ihe last session of the State Legislature also ir.crcnscd the cost of filing the libel, which Is the tcchnlchnl name for beginning a suit, fiem SI. 7.". te $2.".-. Has Net Decreased Stilts "I de net think that the main reason for the action of the Judges in increasing the compensation of the master In divorce suits wns te make divorces mere expensive in order te discourage the bringing of such "The princlpnl reason. I think, was te make the cnnipcn-ntien of the master suf ficient te insure the greatest amount of care in the hearing of such suits nnd te get ntternevs of expcileucc and ability te act as masters. In a divorce case the position of mnster is one of great importance and responsibility, even though whatever action he recommends nnd nil the testimony in the case is reviewed by the Court before the decision is given. But much remains in the bands of the master, nnd for this reason It was evidently deemed important te make his compensation worthy of his giving the most serious attention te the case which he heard, . 'The action of the Legislature In incrcas Ing the fee for beginning suit was evidently for the same reason. The cost of everything has gene up materially and some Increase here wns deemed necessary. But the ad vance which the Legislature nutherlzed was tee smull te have any deterrent effect In the tiling of such suits, "Th" number of suits filed In Philadel phia County annually shows n steady In crease from year te year. There has been no nlarmliig. increase in the number of actions, nor has there, en the ether hind, hi en any tendency in the opposite direction. "New" conditions of v life beget new condi tions with regard te marriage and divorce, nnd while the number relatively has ccr tnlnlv net decreased, still, 1 should say that the divorce evil is tedny no mere of a menace than It was sny. ten jears nge. It Is true thnt mere notions have been begun, but then the population of the country has very largely increased also. "But the costs which I hnve enumerated aie bv no means the only ones in such a lawsuit; in fact, they often represent only n relatively small part of the total cost, Tiere are often charges for advertising the notices te the respondent, where personal service of the papers cannot be obtained, nnd there Is a ilnal charge for thu Pro Pre Pro thnnetary's office when the decree is filed. "All of these, of course, arc outside of the attorney's fee and the ether costs of ;t trial or bearing. The attorney's feu Is usually regulated by what the client is able te pev. and, ns in the case of many ether legal HUlts, it often does net begin te repay the lawyer for his time nnd work, "I should say from my experience In thu office of the Prothenotary that the new scale of fees does very little if anything te prevent nny one from obtaining a divorce if he or she has a geed cese and really wnnts te take such action. The only effect thut It could hnve, as I sec It, is thnt it would take a Utile longer te get the money together. Ne New Causes Given "The Legislature in Its action gave no new causes for beginning suits, nor did it reduce the present number in any manner; that portion of the law remains just as it was previously. Pennsylvania has a great many mere legal causes for divorce action than .wine of thetether States, and for this reason many persons from States where the causes are fewer in number come here THE HATCHERY te establish n lcsidence for the purpose of beginning suit. "But while such residents arc waiting for the legal period they have nmple time te think the matter ever, because tbe Stute law requires un nctual citizenship nnd resi dence within the holders of the State for one full inr. "Personally, I also have some doubt n te whether the ndded restrictions te getting married have had any effect upon the num ber of divorce suits brought in tbe county. These lcstrlctlens aie the long and very intimate questions which perc-uns desiring te marry are new eb'Iged te answer before the license Js Issued. Beth parties te the Impending marriage must new nlse appear before the marriage license clerk personally, whereas formerly the man alone .could secure the license. "It wns hoped thnt this procedure would discourage divorce by pieventing nt least n number of hasty or, rather, impieper mar riages, but this result does net appear te have been achieved, for there, has been no nnpii.-ci-.t decrease in the number of suits tiled since It lias been In effect. "It seems te me that education of the people is the only feasible solution of this great problem, nnd 1 think that the secret of preventing a large number of divorces each year is mere fully te Instruct enng persons contemplating miiiriage in the duties and the responsibilities of married life and also te educate people te icgard the marriage tic as a far mere sacred obligation than a mere business contract, as se nianv persons ure apt te icgatd It newadavs. These, it appears te me, nre the real fundamentals of many divorces, nnd until they are changed the number will net be materially decreased, no matter what the costs mav be. What De Yeu Kneiv? QUIZ 1. At what time of year were the halcyon .days supposed te occur? "con .. Who Is the present Postmaster Oeneml of the United States? --enernl i,",,tw" Amer'cil countries which . ,..,'''ue heen empires "lul I What is a harbinger? 5- JJ"W high Is Ment nianc? 0. Who was United States Minister te Bel- Blum (juring the World War? ' 7 What Is nn "eje llbrls" nnd what Is the e mcanl,,K of ,he term? Is l"e S, What Is gresgraln? 9. What Is "Impasto" In palntlnc' 10" W1S ?RiUlT-i-)Mt,,S "f '"leau but Answers te Yesterday's Quiz 1. Tensile strength, used often of metals s.?eTchhVhlr PtWr f '"nceaie' J. The presem Government of llung.rv Is a liberal monarchy, ruled bv a J tecum aa chief executive. - "egent 3 Tlv Island of Haiti, discovered l,v v. umbus en his first voyage "Vis Vfi by him Espanola. or Llttle Spain '"t nnnie was Lat ulzed Inte Hlstv.'.,,!10 4. The word sterling, ns app e?l tn ti? n ' Ish pound, is teiu te lih"0 bcei ?S.rlt; from starling, little star. In niinlTen te the star or bird den ete.i ?n coin. According te aneZVfwt'SS name refers te the i:aMerii,,R0s'1f,t'le man traders In England in'VhFmlrtSle' 5. Secrates, the famous fjrCek ehii. , wns born In the fifth cenurvHPl,rr' in 409, and died in the feuVt'Pce'ity 0. Tent native te China, is n,.niin., i Meffel, a Portuguese, vrlh T , ?,' hy, of the sixteenth century. In U m (l lery of the Indies." i, ,01r m8' Wlckham wrpte the first! uLu,ff , erd of tea In a letter, which wis IVl' served among the documents of L'ast India Company, in ieb? a uie consignment of tea was reed ,. i . Themas anrravvny, a LmSa,, . ly chant, who established a 2u'Mm?nr: selling thu prepared beernKe for 7 SWSverlgei. knWn bV "S ,,,lw'itanis as 8. The expression "sub resa." iiin,..ci "under the rose," and menu I m.al y strict confidence, 'hu8 bee. VniS " ancient Egypt, whoie the rose was ,h" emblem e( Herus, the i?ed or n?.tne 9 Taxylng In aviation ..uh,"ef " ! ' bUlmmlns along the water i ,, iVy. " piano or seaplane. uvciie. 10. Tapioca Is dprlvcd fipni the cms ,. . tre-plcal plant, the atttrch of wiiic ,' i'i )ji dried. "icu u 1 t - - .j SHORT CUTS Gray days are becoming everyday days, Oencrnl Humidity has perhaps forgettes hew te retreat. The Hague conference demonstrates that money sometimes talks in strange tongues. There is nt least originality in Gins berg s idea that the way te avoid trouble ii te go te jail. The Italian Chamber of Deputies in effect decided that Premier Facta was a stubborn thing. ,., Weman candidate for Congress in the Ilfth Marjland District wants Mr. Mude te liyc up te his name. Washington investigation seems te prove that tree grafting sometimes persists after tne weed hns become- lumber. Evciy time the ultimate consumer thinks of a n'ce little railroad trip, soraebedv hits him in the eye with a hunk of coal. ,.. .nr of tllc Nubian Soviet Government' difficulties Is its inability te differentiate be. iwcen negotiating ii lean and panhandling. , News from Nebraska convinces censerv- !'.t.l'('s ln,,le !jn,,l'tl St,,tes Senate that the Ittle prairie (lower is growing wilder every hour. Advices from Honolulu convey the In teresting Information thnt Kilauca has re sumed her job us press agent for the teuriM trade, Demosthenes McfJinnls snvg the fat man knows in his heart It is his geed nature nnd net the feed he eats that keeps biro plump. If they but knew it, Buffalo strikers are making enemies for the labor union at a time when the labor union most needs friends. The man who stele 200 hets from an automobile at Thirteenth and Locust streets perhaps wns still in arrears with his elec tion bets. Navv xerk admiralty lawyer has shipped ns a seaman te get fncts en sailors' lives litst hand. With the iidveitislng he has been given he is going te find it bard te glimpse the naked truth. , -N'ew Yerk wemnn shot by her husband while walking with another man declared she get what she deserved. Beth fuct aud acknowledgment an uuusuul enough te de serve recognition. I we avlntets have been fined for tree passing en n Punxsutnwney, Pa., farm. They llcvv ever it but didn't touch it. Punxsu tnwney, ii vvlll be remembered, Is tne official home of the groundhog. The slayers of German Foreign MIni-tcr Uutheiiau killed themselves when they fuuuci capture was inevitable. Germany's parlous political condition is shown by the efforts made te help them escape. The trouble with the Railroad Laber Beard lh that It can tell 'em, but can't make em. hen Laber Boarders go te swim as Laber Boarders eughtcr, they hang their clothes en u hickory limb, but don't go near the w utcr. Momentous dispatch from Hackensack, N. J., says the rallreud strike lias increased tllvver traffic, and motorcycle cops nre reap tig n j lch harvest of fepeedcrs. Thus the histerj of an Industrial upheaval is being written en police blotters. Because blacksnake.s are the natuial enemies of ground moles the Centcsville, Vn., Country Club wants u bunch of them iu lh neighborhood of their golf club. Later en, nttiichcd te light-running vehicles, they limy be trained te act as caddies. Gills with bobbed hair attacked and nibbed a man at Pensuuken, N. ,L W gather from the news reports that the bobbed hair was undoubtedly the cause l " violence . Which gives rle te reflection. Just think what would have happened Ufi bamseu cut Delilah', huift- ' "V - I V k. .SSBBBl m:i j I v,m 5 tftiii'.V c &, fts- ' . ., fC.e.j2&