m PS $ Im r1! fts. r -"a. 4 &EMqmmiMmM9mi.FFf!ivT&vw-m ' umrf n.ri ti ii Jt is.r u 'tef ' Y I ,Cit XK'iftlliLWnnVKIM r' l tv r:v . ' ? iV' rvKS!1! . l rA - rn Kr . ?f wmfst w - : s : .11 ' j 5 psuemng fJubltc fieeger X PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY 9- CTTtUB H. K. CURTIS. Pmudsst .'.0.O; Jhhn f!. Mnrtln. Vlia tic,. Man a.t Trftfliirrt m,PJF. A. Tyler, tlecret&ry; Charl's It. trndlns gjigj. Philip B. Cellltn. Jehn II. William. Jehn J. fww" - utuiiu vjumniuiim uavtu b dihucji SJgApAVtP W. UM1LET Editor I JL ' .'s KBIAJl4fch 'C - JOHN C. MAnTIN....Onernl Huslnp Manawr -. I Publlshrd JaU at Prnt.ie T.cnnra tlulMlns f. . Indtpendences Square. Philadelphia. . ATf.ANTIfl ClTT Pi-i-.r7nlml RcilMlnit f Nw Yerk 304 Mmltnen Art. It Ibtreit TOI Fent lIulMtng . ... T. Lem 013 atobr-Dtmeerxlt HtillJltm k&fc' CHIciee 1302 Tribune Ilulldlng snws nuncAUSi ,'f WcHHINOTON III REAL', J - N. 13. Cor. PcMinnvlYnntu Jkv. anil !lh St. ., IfKW Yenre nctiKM' .Thn Huh IluiMIn .. LONDON limrAI! Trnrnlrar llntMlnir i.'' Mitiixi'tiipTinN TF.inM The ninNINO Pcnt.le LisnnKB la served te auh auh crlbera In I'hllRdMphln, and turruumllnc town' II'. nt the rate of incite III!) once per neck, parable & te the carrjer. .D?, H11.1 ,0 pelnt" oulde of rhllndelphlft In the tinlted States, Canada, or Unlte.1 Htata pos session, peataie free, fifty (00) centa per month, l.(":! dellara per jear, payable in advance. Te all foreign countries en (1) dollar a month. Notion Subscribers wishing addreea changed Snmt tlv old aa well aa new addreia, BKLtaMO WALNUT KETSTOME. MAIN 1601 tTAidrtia nil comnm(c(if)en fe Kvmine Pvblla f Ltdgtr, Inrttyemtrne 8itart, PMIn-fc-fiiMii. c ' - - -m j. Member of the Associated Press 1,1 .Tlls ASSOCIATED rRHSS la rzttustetlv m T Wltd te th use far teiMiMlcaflmi e nil mc-hm t 52ee creddffl te (I e nel ethtrwlif crvdllnl I n Ma vavcr, and aUe the lacul eu' imbfljthrtl l fAerelH. All rteMi of rrruollefltlan of Hal dlra(ci jtreln or tle rtfrrvtd. )lf rhlltdelphli. gilunliy. Jnl; II, W3 WHY BLAME THE FAIR? NO OTIIKIt pnrpo.ve will Le wrved by the rcjierts mmlc te the City Counell en the MiinH needed for public Improvements In preparation for tlic fnir tlinn tlmt of ex hibiting the extent of the Improvements r which the heads of the various executive "" departments would llhe te have made, The total sum Involved Is $L' lil,!) 10,(115. 1S Ne one thinks for a moment that this will a be spent within the next four years. It ,.1 cannot he spent bemuse that amount li net available. Ne one experts that It will be spent in anticipation of the fair or that, If . there had been no fair plans, the Improve- ments would have been miiiie before 101M. , When we get down te preparation for me great cxmoitien it win de necessary te , tnke the matter up seriously and te decide what is Imperative, net in preparation for ' the fair, but te keep the city In proper con dition for its permanent Inhabitants. 1 The sums that mus-t be spent for the fair, J exclusive of thee appropriated for work en the grounds themselves, will be com- paratlvely (,raall. 1 Ne one will believe that the relaying of worn-out pavements, or the building of new eewcrs, or the extension of the water-supply j system, or the building of new police sta- tlens and flreheuses can be charged up j against the fair. All this sort of work will j have te be done anyway. I t FORGETTING TROUBLE t NE of the strangest of current phe- ," nemena is the apparent dispcltien of I tlt.ceuntry te forget the outrageous eenfu- aliVi of broken-down prohibition laws in j tht presence of ether troubles that have i crevded te the fnre In the last few weeks. i Destite all that Ccrumlssiener Ilaynes In J WashVngten and Director Davis in I'enn j sylvan'a are doing and saylnj, the tacit 1 agreei?nts of an unofficial and seml t official character under uhleh the liquor j hubiness 1 being revived have a leek of ; ptrmaitMce. I The D-ugg'.st-' AsO'-latlen met net long age and gravely talked of the new eon , plicatiens prented by the drug -store apeakeany. The reprentatives of the legltlma e dnig butin'-s talked and were done. Am' many -mall drug .-hops con tinue te earn their very bad repute. Raids re.-intly organized in Atlantic City i confirmed a pn-tty general suspicion and showed that certain political leader' in Atlantic County, though dry in theory, are . " wet in practice. Shere hetelkeepers who try te respect the dry laws are at a ter 1 rifle disadvantage. And it is beginning te be appartnt that eme of the police in Atlantic Clrr, like the police in ma,ny ether places, arc quietly doing their bit te keep Mr. Uarlcyceri alive, even when they aren't er.giged directly in the liquor busi ness. REASON WINS RAILWAY corporation. lieaied by the Pennsylvania, in their first atta'k en The Integrity of the Hnllrejd Laber Heard Sbtalned in Federal District Courts an in junction which actually prevented the beard from exercising the right te publish the sort of criticism upon which It must depend te make its power felt through the medium of public opinion. Had the ruling of Judge Landis and Judge Page been sustained, the beard would have been leH than useless. Hut the rule has i been reversed in the Circuit Court of Appeals after it short but strenuous anion instituted by the Government and dirtc'ed by Solicitor General James M. Heck. New the Railrend Laber Heard can "tell it te the ceuntrj." Much of its lest pres tige will be restored. And neither union nor corporations will have the aMhu n, keep the public in ignorance of aluss charged against them. IT PAYS TO BE DECENT , XirHERE is there a philosopher who will ' VV demonstrate te a doubting age the practical vnlue of Fimple decuicy? The task shouldn't be a difficult one Nowadays the , world is filled with writers who rover aerc, . of paper every week In the effort te imply i. or prove that lensjcsUblished heeial (en- ventlens are outworn, irksome and gen- erally a bore and that we should cast a great many of them overboard if we wi-h te be happy and secliill) progressive. In Southern California there has been in late years a sort of testing ground for such theories. The movies brought a great dial of money and no Inconsiderable number of social free-thinkers te Les Angeles County. Les Angeles Itself and the neighboring film colenics became a sort of metropolis for Bohemians. And In the courts of that county ten women have been arraigned for murder since the first of the war! BANNING THE CLASSICS JOHN SL'MNKK. of the New yr( Society for the Suppression of Vice, bus a stupendous task ahead of him if j,c K(1, en as he has begun. (j. The latest evidence of his activity is found in an action which he has started te suppress the sale of tl Satyrlcen" of Petrenlus en the ground that It is net lit te be read. m" Petrenlus was a satirist of the time of Nere with great literary gifts who de '" scribed the life of his times with the frank ncss of u Russian novelist. He has been described us one of the first realists nnd as the forerunner of long line of writers, in 9 eluding Lc Huge nnd Rabelais nnd Luurcnce Bterue. Jj If a student of literature Is net te be permitted te buy Petrenlus, we may find the ,,ban put en Hemer and Herace and Field. & Geerge Moere. -ft?. Attmpta recently have been made te V:ai "V s. suppress the sale of the "Decameren," and if the purists had their way no one would be allowed te read the "Arabian Nights." What is needed in the consideration of this matter Is Just n little common sense re enforced by n llttle faith In the essential decency of men and women. MR. HARDINQ HAS STARTED TOWARD THE RIGHT SOLUTION Hla Oeal Commission Would Prepare the Way for a' Permanent Indus trial Court pURBIDENT HARDING'S reply te the - urging of Governer Sprout for the np np peintment of n commission te Inquire Inte the situation lti the cenl Industry will hearten nil thoe who have been hoping for the setting up of some commission, tribunal or what net, which would have authority te lenrn nil the fncts nnd te point out ft wny for the peaceable settlement of Inber dis putes, , The President says that "the commission will come In due tlme." It will net he merely nil arbitration commission te effect a compromise, but a commission appointed In the Interest of the public nt large te de nil within Its power te Insure n continuous nnd udctpintc supply of cenl. The announcement In the President's reply thnt public authority is superior te the authority of either the miners or the opernters nnd that thf ense of the public must be submitted te the commission Indi cates that he has begun te think In the right direction. Hut why does he net appoint the com mission nt once? The mini for It Is Imperative. It cannot begin Its Investigations a moment tee seen. The sending of troops into the mining re gions is a temporary expedient. The soldiers cannot selve the problems in in velved. All they can de is te maintain order nnd protect the men who wish te work and prevent the operators from Inviting disorder by the employment of private armed guards who always irritate the strikers. All par ties arc expected te respect public authority represented in the armed soldiers. Hut the equities of the case cannot be ascertained in this way. They cannot be ascertained until the facts are known. The operators have persistently resisted every effort te get at the facts, acting as though they were of no concern te any one but themselves. This is net n tenable position. It hns led te most of the trouble in the coal regions. It hns aroused the Indignation of the con sumers of -enl when these consumers, de spairing et anything better, have net looked en it with cynical Indifference. The only way the facts and all the facts can be ascertained Is through a thorough and impartial investigation by a commission composed exclusively of representatives of the public with authority, legal or mernl, te compel the disclosure of the truth. Such a commission could carry en Its Inquiry while the country is waiting for the settlement of the wage dispute. Its findings would provide the datu en which the price of cenl could be computed. The wage question is the issue of least importance. The methods of marketing coal, the selling agency corporations, the privileged buyers, the priority orders, the royalties, the rela tions of the operators te the railroads and the relation of freight rates te prices are nil tegther of much greater moment than the wuses paid te the miners. Hut tl.e eperatnis have devoted them-sehe- fur wars te an effort te create the Impression that the question of wages was the vltul Issue. They have been saying that if they paid the miners an inert use of five cents un hour the price of coal would b" se high as te become a burden te the public. The time has come for destroying this fallacy and for getting nt all the facts. The President professes te desire te find a way te avoid disputes between the miners anil the operators in the future. He ci.n de It if he will nppeint the right kind of a commission composed of men in whom the public hns confidence, men who cannot be suspect! d of playing the same of either the operators or the miners, the groups whose joint Interests have always been antagonistic te these of the public. While such a commission will be able te find a waj out for the coal Industry, it cannot bring about peaie In ether Industries. That i an mme nnlj through the creation of nn industrial court. Such a court cannot be established in time te bundle the present emergency , but the framing of the nece.ss-.iry legislation can begin. Senater Rernh's decision as chairman te report from the Committee en Lducctlim and Laber the Ken.ieu Industrial Court Hill comes oppei timely. The publli Is ready for something of that kind, but It is doubtful whether the Keiijen bill gees far enough. It provides for a enrt without authority te enforce its decrees. This is the fatal defect in the law creuting the Railroad Laber Heard. Otherwise the bill Is meritorious. It does net Interfere In nn wnv whntever with the right of men te organize. It n-'sert.s their right te bargain cellccthelj through their representatives. It also asserts the right of n man te work, whether he belongs te n union or net. And it lays rlewn the rule that labor, whether skilled or unskilled is entitled te n living wnge. The bill will net be passid. If it is pnsed nt nil, without some Important amendments. Hut Its lonsideratlen at all will bring the day nearer when we shall haw an accepted Industrial cede framed for the purpose of the orderly settlement of disputes between omple.wrs nnd cinplews and an Industrial court with autheilly te compel obedience te Its decrees. Then the law of quit will prevull In the llltcre-t of the whole public'. Then no groups of werl.inginen or empliAjers will have it la their power te tie up anj essen tiiil industry, and the enormous sums wasted annually in strikes will be saved te the werkeis .uid peine and security will reign. PAX AMERICANA "XT') DIFFKRENCi: in Latin America Is IN incapable of solution." This is Sec rotary Hughes' expressed interpretation of the brilliant victory for arbitration signal ized by the ratification by the plenipo tentiaries of Chile and Peru of the Tncna Aricn agreement. The protocol, which Is the form this really memorable convention takes, names the President of the I'nlti-d States as arbi trator. Frem what has thus far been an nounced cciiKernlng the details of the arrangement, It is probable tbut the offices of the American Chief Kxecutlve will net be required unless the Chilean-Peruvian V"' x jmM pie "mmmmmmmtm apparatus for handling the controversy breaks down. The Government of the United States will thus presumably rerve as a safely valve In the event of threatened deadlocks In working out the plan. Mr. Hughes' optimistic summary of In ternational relations In Seuth and Central America Is net hyperbole! There has been no major war between hny of the various Latin-American States since the Treaty of Ancen ended the physical strife between Chile nnd Peru In 188.1. It is the variant readings of thnt pact which have generated war clouds for considerably mere than a generation. With their disappearance, new acclaimed by the Heerctnry of State, who has been se conspicuous In bringing about clear skies, there In net, indeed, n single critically se rious Ipstie menacing the Lntln-Amcrlcnn pence. The spirit et revolution In the tropical republics Is unmistakably subsiding. Inter national rivalries In the southern half of the continent arc healthily kecn, but In no sense ominously bellicose. The Peru -Chile conflict nnd that rcmnrk rcmnrk nble nnd devnstnltng war in which Paraguay virtually committed national suicide in n mad nttempt te overmaster Itrnall, Uruguay and Argentina nre tragic but happily fading memories in n portion of thn glebo, which, for all Its missteps en the rend te true democracy and orderly government under hnndlcnps often misconceived abroad, hflB been much less subject te worfnre en the se-called "grand" scale thnn cither the United States or the turbulent Continent of Europe. WILLIAM AND HENRY IT WAS Inevitable that when the mind of Kansas turned te the labor troubles of the moment the cold rigidity of technical dtscourse would be relieved by warmer and mero diverting argument inspired net by statistics but by uncommon sense. Doesn't William Allen White still bide in Emperia as the voice of the Stnte's own heart? And isn't Henry Allen, William's friend, the Governer? These who really knew their America waP-sJ. long te bear from William and Henry, knowing thnt when cither took his pen In hand we should hear, through the racket of standpatters nnd agitators, the authentic Middle Westerner who pre serves conceptions of Americanism that haven't been degraded by any of the intel lectual maladies new current In the East. William spoke out and Henry spoke out, and as n consequence Henry has authorized a warrant for Willinm's arrest 1 Were there ever stranger times than these? It was Governer Henry Allen who estab lished or caused te be established the In dustrial Court of Knnsus. William, editor of the Emperia Gazette, thought Henry's notion rather geed. Outside of Kansas, Henry has net ulwnys been able te make himself plain. His Industrial Court was Intended primarily te de Justice te workers. It is already advocating a minimum wage higher than is paid in most of the unorgan ized industries of the State. It is opposed te strikes. Wllllnra looked en admiringly until the Attorney General of Kansas, acting, as he believed, with the authority of the law upon which Henry established the Industrial Court, declared that any one who expressed sympathy for the railway shepmen during the present strike was violating a statute. It was then that William defied Henry nnd the Attorney General nnd the world, nnd put a sign in his window te declare his belief that the shepmen were nt least fiO per cent light in their contentions nnd thnt they were justified in fighting for a living wage. New, you would suppose that Kansas would thrill and jubilate. Here was n fight with right upon both sides. Hut Kansas didn't applaud. It was shocked. Henry and William fighting! Yet we, for ourselves, would like nothing better than te fen and hear William and Henry fight ever the Issues involved in the present eco nomic tumult. Fer, between them, they would shed mere real light en the moral factors of the case than n hundred lawyers talking in unison for a year. "This," said William of the order issued, by the Attorney General, "Is an infamous' lnlatien of the principle of free speech. I for one would be ashamed net te ignore it!" "If William wants te go feeling," said Governer Henry, "we shall have te de something about it. Arrest him!" Meanwhile, of course, both Henry nnd William are right in their essential claims. They are righter than nny ether two men who haw yet taken part in the general uproar of the strike debate. Henry is con vinced in his soul that strikes nre wasteful and harmful te everybody, and most in jurious in the final analysis te peeple who work for wages. He believes that, in the Interest of all America, the industrial war ought te end new and forever. He wants te seu living wages paid in Industry nnd he Is willing te compel employers te pay thorn If he cnn. "Se far." says William, "se geed. Hut free speech Is the one indispensable thing in the United Suites. I'll say and print what I believe though the heavens fall." Having said thnt, William closed with one of the wisest utterances ever heard, even in Kansas. "Free speech is most valuable and nin-t necessary," he concluded, "when It is the sort that Is in danger of suppression !'' William, we believe, is even n little wiser than Henry. Fer, while Henry has been lighting en the side of pure reason, Wil liam is conseeiuted passionately te a moral principle that Is at the very foundation of the American philosophy of government. Representatives of the Industrial Court sny that William and Henry nre both wieng and that there is nothing in the lnw te limit free Fpecch or te, authorize any one's nrrest for the free expression of any opin ion. Hut William nnd Henry ere net wrong. The wrong one proves te be the Attorney General of Kansas, who happens te be a politician about te run for another otfice and, therefore, In search of campaign stuff. EXIT AT THE HAGUE THL warning with which The Hague con ference finally and officially closed Its futile sessions constitutes in itself nn ex planation of the failure. The non-Russian Commission adopted a resolution pledging ewry participating Power te use Its In fluence in prevent Its nationals from accept ing Russian concessions involving property fermerlj owned by foreigners. This Injunction clearly rei'tignl.es the ap petite of foreign concession hunters for the employment of their capital in Russia. Wlille the conference produced nothing but deadlock, side eleals conducted by during ex ex ex plottatlenlsts covetous of oil or mining rights or manufacturing privileges were breezily numerous. Individuals nnd corporations with n tnste for gambling have accepted the risks ln ln elvi'il In n possible dash of their interests with the principles of communism cherished In Moscow; Ah the trading thrived, the necessity for the renunciation by the Soviets of the Marx ian repudlatlon-ef-prlvate-propcrty doc trine perceptibly diminished. Nationals, who in advance hnve dis countenanced the official warning of the conferees, are, of course, taking a long chance. Se are the Soviets. Honors, if the term be permissible in this connection, are about even. sfflBtH SHORT CVTS Senater Ledge Joins Republican revolt and helps defeat 119 per cent duty en cetten glevesi Dritcii Itf tht ttrift ifren Frem ih pathi a fentte, Leiae i th the neMtrnui, litre a houdv-det Justice, happily. Is net yet a snowbird, The Federal mailed fist still holds aa wire branch. Mella Is as geed a sport we eace thought Susanna, p)d Fesr-ef-Hepriials Is a great booster of high tariff schedules. . "Net the biggest, but the best," sheuhJ he the motto et the Fair; Lltvlneff, the Allies have discovered, Is a Maxim that needs teaching. Agreement in the rati strike may be In sight, but se is the North Star. Senater Ransdcll varied the procedure by twisting the Hrltlsh lien's sail. Cavalry and machine gun troops are new In a sense sappers and miners. We'll all be interested in the coal atrlke when we go te buy our winter's coal. What the Society for the Suppression of Vice appears te need is a geed dictionary. Old King Ceal may be shy hla pipe and glass, but there's n let of fiddling going en. . It is asserted that a re- Incidental cent ruling of the Cir cuit Court of Appeals has put teeth Inte future decisions of the Railroad Lnber Heard, but as rumor says It will be ignored by the parties concerned, it may be that a little gum-strcngthenlug is the net result. It wasn't a hand Sennte Republicans gave the Finance Committee glove tariff, but a fist. Seven golf 'balls were found in the stomach of n California ostrich.' The nine teenth hole. In the drama of "The Forty Bootleg gers" "Open Scsnmc" is equivalent te "Open Barley." Debs appears te be doing considerable te queer the chences of political prisoners seeking amnesty. Hopewell, N. J., has Btarted in te purify its bungalow colony. Putting the bung In bungalow as it were. There seems te be growing belief thnt one who suggests blanket amnesty nt this tlme Is three sheets in the wind. Is insistence that William R. Nichelson is the missing link In the dope Inquiry due te intention te make a monkey of him? Germnny hns accepted financial control by the Allies during the moratorium. It Is amazing what one can de wiicn one must. Senater Geeding, of Idaho, would like te see a tariff wall "clear around the country." Regular hermit crab, Isn't he? When Mrs. .Tulln Callahan, of Chicago, decided te be n French dressmaker and changed her nnme te Fill, her husband, a bricklayer, sued for divorce. t Oh, Miitreaa Julia Callahan, Yeu grieve ut. Yet you de, O, Jule, hew can a icerkingman Stand such a thing from jeuf He'd let you stitch, if you'd a mind, Ana never, never grumble. With gratitude he'd catch your mood. II a t Fifi.' Fir! Jlc'd fumble ! The killing of nn umpire in Missouri draws attention te the fact thnt what the baseball fan most needs is a little self-control. Though it hns Rent a consignment of troe-ripened apricots te the President, Cali fornia continues te keep its peaches en the beaches. If Southern farmers plant peanuts In stead of cotton we may leek for u delegation of 'bell weevils in Washington pleading for protection. ...- .vuiii.- i America are net in n mood te be driven or coerced, says Mr Gempcrs. The trouble Is he knows It with out realizing it. Correspondent Insists thnt Lenine haB fcecn poisoned. Hut one who se assiduously swallowed his own nostrums should have been poison-proof. It seems foolish te prolong n strike where eventual compromise Is Inevitable and where a semblance of victory may be mere costly than defeat. Blessed be the man, said hnnche Pnnza, who first invented sleep, nnd the Bern Night Watchmen i . n,l'"'s tllrns "C two in dersements. After the polle-e of Biddeford, Me., had searched feir hours for n young man whose clothes were found en the beach, word came that he had been found by a fisher man five miles out nt sea asleep in his canoe. When nn Atlantic City train, which had traveled through the darkness at seventy miles nn hour, urrlved nt Bread Street Sta tion n seventeen-yenr-eld boy was found fast asleep en the cow catcher. Fer be It from me te criticize our law makers, said Mrs. Arabella Mixing, but whatever the duty en cotton underwear, t Is bound te shrink. i. JI" ul;. N' ,TV Cbnn'bfr of Commerce tTihiJ ;T u " "'YK"n oeost the town, It will be the booster's task te nreve Pnnl'j te prove Paul's ourre is no donkey. i , ,Sunb"yi p-. wen nfter two or three drinks of home brew stirred the stuff nnel (brought up n dead cat. Mete kick there than In wblte mule. Chicago hns two secretary vultures who will eat nothing but snakes. Strange? con cen sl.lerlng that they could never have been brought up en the bottle. n The Brooklyn candidate for Congress who sued his liindlndy cbecnuse she removed his doorbell perhaps thought it would men extra work for the knocker. Cumberland, Mel., Is this year's first elnimnnt te the story of the soused rooster The; dear old yarn Is brought up te dute with the police hunting for stills. t At the Zoe A duck-billed platypus U leafing f the Drenx: Like a puns she p'ramulatcs and like a noose she honks; Dines en angle worms and shrimps; catchci 'cm tcith skill; Fere and after every meal presents her little bill; lays an cog and hatches it in line with (indent plans; Feeds the babe en vwthcr'i milk that never comes in cans; Cemes from far Australia te startle all our eyes. Who arc we that ice AemW o'er monopolize surpriset Ten te one the platypus with mien sedate serene, Thinks we are the queerest thingt that sht hoi ever seen. G. A. w itx n t '" '''": Wv ;; "' tx TJyr WctX fv .x NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Knew Best L. C. VANNAN t On the Government and the Disabled Veteran THE extent te which the Government of the United States is assisting the dis abled veterans of the late war is net gen erally known te the citizens of the country, says L. C. Vnnnnn, manager of the United States Veterans' Bureau of District Ne. .'I, which Includes Pennsylvania and Delaware. "The bureau in this district,"' said Mr. Vnnnnn, "is spending every month the sum of ?.'1,000,000, and we have new en the list about 77,000 cases which are active nnd many ethers have b;en closed; that is, nil the service which can be rendered has been given te the men, who have been rehabili tated either physically or economically and placed in positions where their especial tal ents or abilities will prove of the most value te themselves and te their employers. "The Third District (Pennsylvania nnel Delaware) Is carrying nbeut one-tenth of the entire governmental service te the dis abled soldiers, and It Is the third largest district In the country in point of expendi ture nnd in the number of ex-seldlcrs under care. The Government clenrly realizes its responsibilities toward these who suffcreel In any manner by reason of war service, and it Is e'lelng its utmost for them. The District Lecal Offices "Perhaps the most important of the ac tivities of the bureau are these of rehabili tation und the meillcul service which Is rendered te the former soldiers. Ihe first of these deals with the nctuel training of the men nnel the putting of them Inte per manent employment ufter the period of training bus been finished. Our office here is a district office, although the office of thu Philadelphia branch, which Includes Phila delphia, Chester, Delaware. Bucks and Montgomery Counties, is located in our building. . , ,. . . . "The ether lecnl offices in our district nre located' at Wilmington, which covers the State of Delaware, nnd nt Pittsburgh, Lrie, Johnstown. Wllllnmspert. Seranten, Allen town und Hnrrlsburg, In Pennsylvania. The actual work of treatment Is done ut these offices, ours, ns I hnve said, being the su pervising office for both States. "When this work was first thought of nnel in the early stages of its development, the men at Washington who had It In mind remembered the pension system which wns the outcome of the Civil War und the fail ures and disadvantages of that system. These men began te work out a plan by which these disadvantages might be avoided nnd by which the Government might make ns full and adequate return te the ex-sel-dlcrs ns possible for what they had done for their ceuptry In its hour of need. It was then decided that the best mnnner in which this ceuhl be done was te fit them for some congenial permanent employment in which their natural capacities and experiences might be taken advantage of te the fullest extent. The result was this plan of rehabili tation, both physical and economic. The Scheme of Compensation "This schemn of compensation, It wiir felt, hns net the evIIr of the old pension system. It prepnrcs a man thoroughly for the work which he is able te de nnd then finds thnt work for him. The former system gave him n sum of money ever se often and then paid no further attention te him, and it cnn scarcely be argued that the new plan hns net mnny advantages ever the old one. "The new scheme endenvers te compen sate it man for the degree of physical injury which he hns suffered, or nny disability which hns been aggravated by reason of his mllltnry service, nnd this compensation is bused en thu average num. This fcuture Is Important, for It explains why a mini may Imvn lest his earning capacity by reason of mllltnry service nnd yet net get as much money from the Government ns he might have been nble te earn were his earning capacity unimpaired. "With this In mind, the scheme of voca tional rehabilitation wns brought about. A commission went te Canada te study the English plan of rohnbllltntlen, nnd before long the Smith -Seurs act wns punned by Congress authorizing vocational rehabillta- Training the Fermer Soldier "By .vlrtue of this act we are enabled te give tne men vocntlenul training along wma line in which their physical disability will Interfere aa little as possible with their 1 )t .WHAT THE EYE SEES NOT enrning capacity. In most of the cases I might sny that it does net Interfere at nil, se carefully is thnt disability estimated and taken into consideration for the work for which they nre being fitted. "I might nlse say that the general public has n mistaken Idea ns te what rehabilita tion means. The general impression is that It is te raise the educational standard of the country. This is net the case. Rehabili tation simply menus thnt we nre trying te restore the earning capacity of the individ ual ex-soldier which he lest totally or In some degree through his military service. If we can improve the enrning capacity of the man nt the same tlme we de se und nre very glad that this is possible, but the end for which we strive is te return the mnn te his former stntus. As n mutter of fact, the cases of nn improved enrning capacity arc numerous. Disability Percentages "The physical disabilities of the men nre reckoned In percentages which are de termined by competent nnd conscientious physicians. Thus n mnn who hns suffered n 10 per cent disability or less will receive $8 n month, nnd a man who has u W) per cent disability will receive $r.0 n month. The tempernry disability that is. something which we nre ccrtitiu cnn be cured or re re eovedis based en payments of ?S0 a month, nnel permanent disability is based upon !100 n month. "The men are paid while thay arc taking the vocational training, nnd we new have about 11,000 of these In the training schools nnd henee en the payroll, The average amount which these men receive Is about $!-" u month. In the country sections of the district the compensation while In train ing is based upon $80 a month, und In the cities where the cost of living Is higher it .'.I,.,?.?0 n "th. There nre new about .'2,000 men in the district who nre receiving from $8 te $100 n month outside of the ve- TM'um1 t,r'li',lnf- .J" i-Hee f permanent disability it is possible for the man te re eclve as high us $lu7..ri0 n month if he has his Insurance. Insurance and Compensation "There is n difference Iwtween compensa tion nnd insurance. The Insurance has been bought and paid for by the man himself there. Is nothing giver, here and In this ense the holder of the policy does net get nnv thing unless he is totally disabled or until he dies, just aB in the case of any ether Insurnnce policy. "Hut the compensation is given by the Government. The man receiving it d,i et pay anything for it. nnd It Is Intendee simply te compensate ,m for injuries re ceiveei or aggravated while In the seni'ee of the Government. "If u man bus suffered n 20 per cent ells, ability, he Is compensated for that 20 ner cent less in his enrning cnpncltv On ti.l ether hand, if he hud n disability net suffl clent te bar him from the nr n wl,en ft entered the service, say 10 per cen , and thnt 10 per cent wns increased te ''6 ner cent through service, he is ceninensari.ri V, the 10 per cent increase. Thi h ffi !?1 Government Is doing the utmost for te men the Interests of the taxpayers are nlse nre ' tcctcd. In nil cases th, prontest pessP bfe euro is used in order thnt absolute fair, ess bhnll be shown. "iss "We- hnve Indlvlelunl contracts with the various hospitals and with the schools" he raining Is given. Our object Is thoroughly te prepnre every man for the job whIM. i, fBer)hltmn"Cl1 t0 n" '""' "',,n "Web HOPING TT SEEMS desire and wishes -Grew se fast There is no power Cnn grant them nil nt lust. Success but brings desire Fer mero success, Geed fortune culls for mere And happiness. ' Is ever juBt ahead Upen the way. Shrined ill the glory Of a coming day. This thought our shield Against rebuff and sorrow, Ne matter what today, We have tomorrow, -Abigail W. Cressen, In N. Y. Herald, frCtm jm - iHi'MkfV.!! "" V --t" " 'ffT "fl - lin i - - Wm m,.i.i Vif V- "' ..UflfT. ys.Mlrti.eL.: .? ' ..Jp& JLlm JEkjP&jek tlffle? W ti T-&"7 A'-.:"'?! v'. s i " - What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1. What tropic line is crossed In patting from Key West te Havana? 2. Name two long narrative poems by Shakespeare. , 3. What Is an endemic disease? ,' 4. Who waa Hyperion in classical mythel. , egy? 6. Hew Is the name Ceekburn pronounced In England? C. Hew old was Cleopatra at the time et her affair with Marc Antony? 7. Name three commanders en the British slde In the American Revolution? 8. when was ceffee Introduced Inte Europe? 8. Te whlcn American State Is allotted the greatest number of presidential elec toral votes? 10. What Is feldspar? Answers te Yesterday's Qulr 1. Halcyen days were the fourteen dsyi nbcut the winter solstice. The halcyon wns (i bird fabled by the ancients te breed in a floating nest en the sta and te charm winds and waves at thu winter solstice. In modern zoology, the Australasian kingfisher Is a hal cyon. 2. Hubert Werk is the present Postmaster General of the United States. 3. Mexico and Brazil nre two American countries which have been empires, th former under Iturblde and Maximilian and the latter under the Portuguese ''no e' Emperors which ended In Dera Pedre II. 4. A harbinger Is one who announces aa- ether s approach j a forerunner. 5. Ment Blanc Is between 16,000 and 16.00ft feet above sea level. 0. Brand Whitlock was United States Min ister te Belgium during the World nr. 7. An "ex llbris" is a book plate, se cal!4 rrem the custom of printing or en graving upon It the Iatln words, " Ibrls' (from the books) of , fol io well by the ewner's name. 8. Gresgraln Is a corded silk of light luster. 9. Impasto In painting Is the application of thick nnd opaque oil color te a canvss te give rollef, force and solidity te the ebjects represented and strength te ths luminous parts. 10. "The paths of glory lead but te ths Kraye" Is a line from Gray's "Elegy, written In a Country Churchyard." A Rondeau Romantic AT NOON beneath the greenwood tree . , p',n, PlnPl n wondrous melody, And I.che, lingering In the shade, Repeated it. Acress the glade lhcre came a golden-coated bee (A Prince he was, 'twixt you and me, In some old Persian dynasty) Enchanted by the tune Pan played At neon. He found a rose beneath the tree, where sun wove golden filigree, And ns In ages past a maid Had wen hlB heart, se new he stayed, hnchnlncd by love's sweet ecstasy. ' At neon. Whltelnw Saunders In the N. Y. TJinM. Today's Anniversaries 1?? Jehn Gibsen, secretary te Governer uillinm Henry Harrison, arrived at Vlo Vle cenncs nnd proceeded te set up a government for Indiana Territory. 1837The first vessel sailed from Detroit direct for Liverpool. . 1804 General .Tnmes B. McPhcrsen died from wounds received In the fighting netr Atlanta. Bern nt Sandusky, O., Nevinb I860 Albany, N. Y., celebrated the 200th anniversary of the granting of its charter. 100.'! General Cusslus M. Clay, famous feldier and diplomatist, died at Whitehall, Ky. Hern lit Madisen Ceuuty, Kentucky, October 10, 1810. t 1010 James Whltcemb Riley, the "Hoesler Peot," dled at Indianapolis. Hern at Greenfield, Ind In 1853. 1010 British .Heuso of Commens ratified the German Treaty and the Angle-French pact. Today's Birthdays Duke of Somerset, one of the wealthiest members of the British peerage, born seventy-six years age, Themas E. Wilsen, who rese from a clerkship te he one of the great leaders In the Chicago packing Industry, born ut Lon Len Lon eon, Out,, fifty-four yours age. Bishop Jehn C. Kllge, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Seuth, born nt Laurens, S. (' slxty-one yenrii age, j Jeseph L. Bristow, former United St-J fiennter from Kansns.bern In Wo'.fe County. Kentucky, sixty-one yeurs age. ' mM? f L i ?.. -rA f?ta l're '- . t.vjJ Iv J