m m 1 n m m 1 l .: m :B vl r : fSW t un urt nJ,i? Lu 1 r m 3! Dr. 'k.wwtht1 , .VOltfTfTJj- ' V k7, i )"ij V-J '"'F i ' IMJentnB fuMtc Wtbytz k4lfc PHLIC LEDGER COMPANY , -V J ' JW C, Martin. Vic Pruldtnt iftd Tmaanrar! ' rr J' HrgS11A' Tjrlr. BcrtryiCririef II. Ludlrw- Recter"' """ F Qeldralti. Dvld if. Smiley.' JfrAVIP B. BMILBY Editor ? JOHN C. MAirriN. . . .Qntral Dmlnm. aunwr , Published dally at TcbMe Lmm Bulldln '-. independence" Square, l'hlladtlrhla. t S"J? Cirt rrtai'UiHen Bulldlr.- JSw YesK .104 Madisen Ave. Sarterr 70t Kerd Jhilldln t EL' t,00l 013 Ohbr-Demecrat nutldlnc ' Cmioieo 1302 Tribune Bulldlnt NCWS IlUnEAUSl WiSHIKOTO.I DlBCAV, $? K. Cor. Pennsylvania Ae. and 14th St. IW Yemc HrnSiV Thu Bun Bull.llnf mden Doitie Trafalgar Uulldlns . SOUSCniPT'ON TERMS: The Ktkmine Pcblie Leixibb Is sened te sub scriber In l'nlladelpnla and aurreundlnR towns i at the rate of tueUe (12) cents per week, payable 1 te the carrier. a.8?. IP.,,J ,0 POM" eutilda of Philadelphia fa 55? United mat. Canada, or Unlted'Stntrs r ?,!?!l!,J,p?iu,r frce. Mtr 30 cen nr month. J "'J.".! ""'hira pr jear. payable In advance. Te all foreign rnuntrlrs nn (11) dollar a month. JveTirB Subscribers wishing address chanced rust give old as well as new address. B.t. iOOO WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 1801 r Address all communication! te Kvenlntf PtibHe Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia. i Member of the Associated Press i.T1E. ASSOCIATED PRKS3 U exclusively en titled te the use for republication of all news fUpatches credited te It or net otherwise credited Hils paver, and also the local news published fJlerefn. .Alt rlehfs e republication e special dispatches Jeretn are also reserved. rhllsdtlphla, Friday, September . 1923 PINCHOT'S PROGRESS AGAINST Mr. Pinchot the mnchlne politicians of the Stnte arc raising a typical cry. "He Is helping the Demo crats," they wy. "This is net n prlmnry contest. It is a contest e Republicans for an election and a campaign ngalnst the Democratic candidates. Pinchot is talking as if it were a campaign of Republicans against Republicans. He Is saying tee many ugly things against members of his party and against the organizations which must help him te get elected!" Oddly enough, Democratic leaders, includ ing Mr. McSparran, take a similar view of the matter. They gloat openly when the truth, as Pinchot continues te tell It, seems unfavorable te the Republicanism of the State. The fact of the matter is. of course, that there Is a conflict within the Repub lican Party and It is a conflict between the decent element In the party and these who want te render Pinchot helpless after hi lectien, and perpetuate vice and graft and general political devilment through corrupt control of the Legislature. Pinchot Is net only carrying en a cam paign for votes; he Is directing n cam paign of education. His appeal Is frankly Intended te stimulate the better element in his party te action and te obtain the co operation of the Inactive voters, who, if they were te turn out te the polls, could clean up the Republican organization and lengthen it life in Pennsylvania. This was apparent again yesterday in Mr. Pinrhet's speech te farmers at Center Hall, which may be sald te have formally opened his campaign for election. He knows that if the unorganized voter will think and vote the organizations which abuse power will hate te behave or go out of business. WHERE SHALL CHILDREN CO? KEEP your children off the streets! This, briefly, Is the recommendation for parents embodied in a report relative te street accidents written for Superintendent Mills by Captain Hearn, head of the accident-prevention division of the Police Bureau. Little boys and girls haven't wings. They cannot get even te a playground, if a play ground happens te be anywhere near, with out using the streets. Xer can they go te school or the grocery or the movies unless they use the common highway. If all chil dren were locked safely Indoors none would be hurt by meters. That is certain. But se long as cities are organized in their present forms it would be better and wispr te make the streets Mifc than te deny chil dren fresh air and exercise. There are streets and streets. Seme of them are se heavily traveled that they are unsafe for children. But most residential streets might be made safe for children te play In were It net for the occasional auto mobile speed fiend. A larger force of traffic policemen would make It unnecessary for the police te suggest something like life Imprisonment for children. But Captain Hearn doubtless felt thet it would be use leu te make se sensible u suggestion te thr City Council. STREET TUNNELS WHILE the Council Is considering tjie regulation of permits for private tunnels under streets connecting buildings of busi ness houses en two sides of the Bame street and private bridges built for the same pur pose it ought te lay down general rules. The ideal plan would be the passage of a general ordinance empowering the Director of Public 'Works te issue permits and te assess such charges as might be provided in the ordinance. Then anv hubincss man who wished te make n physical connection ever or under the street between two of his buildings would huve only te present his case te an executive officer. That officer would make an examination of the property and if there were no valid public reason for denying the permit would issue it. This would simplify matters both for the City Council and for the business men, and It would safeguard all public Interests. THE SOURCE OF NARCOTICS "TVR. CHARLES E. BRICKER, the pollce ' surgeon w-iie lias been observing all drug victims taken In recent raids, ges courageously and intelligently te the heart rt me question presented by these nrresta 'In reminding the Courts and the officials of the Police Bureau that the scourge of nar cotics cannot be dealt with properly unless . way is 'found te restrict or regulate the manufacture and sale of the various chem icals broadly classified as "dope." If there were nothing in the prohibition laws te precnt the distilleries from turn ing out whisky in unlimited quantities the Velstead net would seem even mere fnrclcal than it is in operation. Yet the agencies of law which arc moving te limit the .Improper use of drugs nre confronted wita system of unregulated production which always will make their work mere or les-i futile. What the Harrison Drug Act was Intended te de for the country, State laws will have te de in regions wbere the nar cotic evil has taken the form of a grewtnj menace tepubllc health and morals. i Manufacturers of drugs hitherto charged d.v Implication with the reckless distribu tion of narcotics unswer that containers bearing their trade-marks and found in the possession of drug addicts have been Imported into the United States from for eign markets te which they were shipped. Tilt fact remains that the American, tier MO, Japanese, British and French manu facturers turn out mere narcotic drugs In C-nt day ttan could be used legitimately In year by the world's physician. It la of M,- 4 ,- little use te regulate one group of manu facturers if all the ethers are permitted te operate unhindered, ' There was in the plan of the League of Nations rt clause for an International ss tern efchecks te restrict 'the manufacture and sale of habit-forming drugs. But it was called another of Mr. Wilsen's dan gerous schemes and it vanished with the wreck of the Covenant. COAL PROFITEERING MUST BE CHECKED BY OFFICIAL ACTION And This, Toe, In Spite of Senater Reed's Astounding Pretest Against Government Regulation A N INCREASE in the price of coal above that of the current year would provoke such n pretest that the Government would hare te find some way te interfere and check the profiteers. There is no moral Justification for nn increase in price. It will cost no mere te produce coal than it cost before the 6trike was settled. The men nre te receive the old wages and the cost of supplies has net been increased. Yet, if there were net some regulatory action by the Government, greedy operators and dealers would take advantage of the panicky feeling of the people and charge whatever they could get. Ceal might go te $20 or $30 a ten. Under the operation of the unmoral law of supply and demand this is exactly what would happen. But the country Is confronted by an emer gency se grave that It Is imperative that agreement be made te suspend the opera tion of this law for the time being. Its operation cannot be permanently checked, but it can be held up for a few months through some sort of compulsion en the men who control the distribution of coal, a com cem com pulsien which will force them te respect their obligations te the community nt large. The operators who met with Secretary Hoever, of the Department of the Interior, and 'William D. B. Ainey, chairman of the Pennsylvania Fuel Beard, and ethers yes terday afternoon, were inclined te agree te keep the current price of anthracite un changed. If the truth were known It would probably appear that they arc afraid te demand n higher price. They knew thet the public holds them jointly responsible with the miners for the shutdown in the mines and the shortage of coal. And thjy knew that any course entered upon by them which would give any one an opportunity te charge them with taking advantage of the necessities of the people necessities which they have created would lay them open te reprisals of a kind which they hesitate te face. If the operators in the anthracite regions are te retain control of their property they must exert themselves te the utmost te make profiteering In anthracite Impossible. And what is true in the anthracite field is equally true in the bituminous field. The price must be kept as low as it was last year and adequate means for distrib uting, possibly for rationing, coal must be found. The bill before the Senate te prevent the exaction of unreasonable prices may net be the best that can be drnftcd, but its pur pose is right. The coal consumers of Penn sylvania, however, will regret that Senater Dnld A. Reed has seen fit te oppose it without suggesting something better. Senater Reed's home is in Pittsburgh, the city of the men who control the soft-coal industry. His professional affiliations are with the corporations with which these men are connected. In spite of his dis claimers, he will be suspected of speaking In defense of the coal barons. He speaks In deprecation of the evils that can arise "because of a momentary stringency In coal," and insists thnt they nre less than the evils that would fellow the attempt of the Government te fix prices. And he declares that the Government has no mere power te regulate the distribution of coal than te deprive the coal opernters of "a part of the market value of their property without making the shadow of compensation for it." This is by Implication a defense of the right of the operators te charge for their cool whatever they can get for It, a right which under ordinary conditions no one will deny. It is likewise nn assertion that the Government is without power in a grave emergency te protect the public in ncccss te one of the necessities of life. Academically Senater Reed may be rlgTit, but practically he is se wrong that only his lack of experience In the consideration of the responsibilities of government can explain his attitude. Unless government has broken down in "Washington a way will be found te check the greed of operators and dealers. The Interstate Commerce Commission has power te give priority te coal shipments en the railroads and it can give priority te the coal from one mine ever the coal from another. It can shut the profiteering mines out of the market and compel them te go te court te seek relief. It may appear that this power of the commission will be sufficient te prevent profiteering. But if it is net sufficient there certainly 13 wisdom enough in either the executive or the legislative branch of the Federal Government te find another and mere effective way. A RIOT OF BAD MANNERS THE State of Minnesota and Its people, und net Vice President Coelldge, worn permanently humiliated yesterday by the almost Incredibly bad manners of a multi tude that hooted and booed when Mr. Cool Ceol Coel ldge begnn te deliver an address at a fair in Minneapolis and became se disorderly that the address was left unfinished. There is no precedent that we can call te mind of similar discourtesy te an important representative of the Government. If Mr. Coelldge had been flippant, had he been dis posed te flatter and amuse the crowd at the fair or te Indulge in the light-headed jazz with which stump orators fascinate the average crowd of qualified electors in the United States, he would doubtless have been applauded and asked te go en. It was the Vlce President's misfortune te feel and talk seriously about serious issues. Se folk who were fairly representative of the larger class that holds the destiny of the Notion in Its keeping appears te have been bored. Te the Governer of the State and the newspapers falls the difficult Jeb of apolo gizing for the insult offered wantonly te the vlce presidential office. It is a Jeb that n let of people will have te sweat ever for a long time te come. And it may be eren a inneer time uetore a jrireucm or vice rrea. ident of the United States consents te b -v. evening Public ledger received in it community (hat seems te hav forgotten net only the rules of reason, but the rules of common courtesy te strangers within its-fates. Mr. Coelldge Is net n spellbinder, and een as an after-dinner speaker he doesn't shine. But lie was the guest of the State and the representative of the President of the United States. It was no crowd of radicals thet interrupted him and bawled for the horse races instead. It was a gath ering of average voters, who In such seri ous moments as they have, wonder why the bosses and lenders of pe'ltleal partleH de net take them seriously or wish te be guldsd by their opinions nnd desires. NEARING THE GOAL ANNOUNCEMENT by Majer Moere te a delegation of Frankfenl business men that the new elevated line would be turned ever te the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company for operation en Saturday, November 4, and that arrangements can be made for n celebration of the event, calls attention te the nppreachlng completion and equipment of the first of the new high-speed l'nes planned years age. The regular operation of trains from Sixty-ninth strict te Frankford Is new lcs than two months away. The long Impa tience of the Frankford peple is at last te be relieved. We shall knew befere the middle of the winter whether the preliminary estimates of the amount of business te be done en the new line hnvc been correct. Ne one need he surprifed If the business exceeds the esti mates. The line will be opened at the season when everybody Is in town nnd when travel from the out! Ing districts te the center of tlu city is most active. It will make It easier for people in the northeastern rnrt of the city te de their Christmas shop ping and te get te the theatres in tliy evening. As seen ns it is posslble te use the actual business of this new line ns a basis for an estimate of the amount of business that ether new lines can be expected te de. the city will be in a position te make deflnite proposals te the P. R. T. for the construc tion nnd operation of ether units in the pro pre posed series of high-speed lines. If these new lines nre rushed they can be completed In time te accommodate the travel of the Sesqtil-Centcnnlal summer. POLITICAL MAY-BUGS TITAY-BUGS belong te the ephemera, J-'Awlth life for a day. Quite as transi tory in nature seem te have been the interests of what are called "ordinary citi zens." ns distinguished from professional politicians, In the primary contest last spring. By September wings of the May bugs have long since ceabed te whirr. Registration places in many of the divi sions throughout Philadelphia presented yesterday scenes of the most uninspiring nputhy. Political enthusiasm, zealous con cern for the right of franchise, has net lasted ever summer. It Is virtually a foregone conclusion that Gilferd Pinchot will be elected Governer of Pennsylvania. Acceptance of this assump tion is without doubt largely responsible for the slim-registration en the first of three days set aside for the work. As an excuse for shirking the responsi bilities of citizenship the contention is cbar acteristlc. Politically speaking, it Is Immoral and indefensible, implying, as it does, regard for the privilege of franchise only when a fight Is in progress. Registration slackers this year seem te have ignored the fact that State Senators and Representatives will be elected this autumn. It Is typical of the delinquents te neglect the obligations of franchise nnd Inter te complain bitterly ever the composi tion of Congress. There is no kicker like the man or woman who has done nothing te prevent the situation, which, when irremediable, is viewed with nlnrm. Twe mere registration days are in pros pect. September 10 nnd October 7. This Is n patient system of government, and what ever Its defects, it cannot be said te treat the indifferent elector with anything but the men generous consideration. It may be wondered bemctimes whether such a citizen is really worth all the attention received. AN INTERCHANGE OF COURTESY AN INSTINCTIVE sense of courtesy Inherited perhaps from ene of the courtliest of nations the mother country of Spain seems te have been Irresistibly operative nbeard a little Mexican gunboat when the great battleship Maryland carry ing Secretary Hughes and the American commission te the Brazilian Centennial steamed into the majestic hnrber of Rie de Janeiro eh Tuesday morning. t In nn Instant geed manners took refresh ing precedence ever Mexican-American con troversies nnd reduced at least te temporary Insignificance the fact thnt the United States has net yet formally recognized the Government of its Southern neighbor. The diminutive unit of the Mexican Navy saluted lustily. The Maryland boomed nn answering compliment. Mr. Hughes, It Is said, urged Admiral .Tenes te walve tech nical considerations of diplomacy. Beth vessels, explained the Secretary of State, were in a friendly harbor. It was clear that the Mexican commander hnd acted upon en Impulse of unaffected geed will. It Is clear nlse that Mexican-American relations are net going te suffer by reason of reciprocal civilities. Mexico and, indeed, ether Lntin -American nations have often been Inmentnbly misunderstood In northern latitudes. Mr. Hughes supplied a needed change. His sympathy with and under standing of nn ingenuous act is precisely the sort of thing te expedite and establish the long-delayed accord. It was the kind of tiifle which counts for much in Lntin America, where sensibilities are keen nnd pride is intense, The occasion was particularly happy as an untldete for some recent extravagantly absurd misrepresentations of Mexico, nota bly by Bruce Blelaskl, who reported the capital of that republic as a hotbed of bol bel bhevlMn. On investigation it hns been shown that it in the cubtem of meat-shop and pulque saloon proprietors In Mexico City te ndver ndver tlse their wares by red lings. Seme Amer icans who have beheld the display have been startled quite ns much ns are perhaps nema lereigners passing ey mictien salesrooms in our own country. Better than most of his countrymen, Mr. Hughes renllzes the nnture of the Mexican problem. It is therefore net surprising te note thnt he returns amenity for amenity. It is at least worthy of note that when the mate of a schooner wrecked in the Seuth . .4. m - n Sca Islands- where the And It May Be women are geed te leek True at That upon und outnumber the men fourteen te one, told the San Francisce ship reporters that he preferred his own wlfe te any fourteen grass-skirted maidens en the coral strands the wlfe of his besom steed by his side and smiled approval. .... t Iu"'n pert author! Battle Line -Up ties at Batum have seized British ships. It Is understood that if they are net immedi ately released a British fleet of destroyers will arrive te take them forcibly. Jehn Bull, it would annear. is due either tn knnMr 'm - l for a goal or bat 'em for a home run. v PHILADEIiPHA. FRIDAY; i ' - i 7 " "" ' ' AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT ' Net Only Are Ceal Mines Dangerous, but They Are Dirty, Damp and Dark Assuredly Enough D's te Damn Them By SARAH D. LOWRIE Jf T SAW ome photographs yesterday of co mines. Inside and out. in n magazine. There was also the statistical account wlth them, output, wages, etc., etc. But te any one who Is unfamiliar with the leek of the real thing, the pictures de net convey much. I de net knew one thing about the leek of a mine inside, becnuse I have never been allowed by my relatives nnd friends and nc qunlntnnccs the mine Owners te go in side. It Is tee dangerous, they sny for visi tors. Se that though I have spent n great deal of my life en top of anthracite mines, I ve never gene down into the pit. But you can get a geed deal of the atmosphere and feel the conditions from the outside, even If you de net knew nny miners personally and have never seen them nt work, and even If .veu have te hear everything from the em ployer side, nnd, in n sense, have always profited by the employers' dividends. Common sense and your cyeB will tell jett three things besides the fact thnt mines are dangerous. They nre dirty, they are damp nnd they arc dark. In spite of machinery that can cut in n day what it used te take twenty-fife men te cut, much of the cutting still has te be done by men in cramped positions nnd dnmp conditions, nnd all of It has te be done under dirty conditions nnd cempnrcd te most ether occupations, outside powder nnd chemical factories dangerous conditions. Once down the shaft, you work In a place where no sun can penetrate, no light ether than artificial, and you work with u sub stance that turns your body nnd clothes Inte sooty, grimy blnck in a few minutes. Yeu remain thnt way nnd you breathe thnt air until you get back home at dusk. ' Whether you mine the coal, or pick ever the cenl te extract the slate, or run the mine cars, or are employed In the tipple, you nre working with blackness in blackness and turn black yourself. UP ON the spurs of mountainsides, where most of the mines begin, the mining is comparatively near the surface, but as the vein runs deeper the galleries go down, down, until they nre far below the surface. Fer convenience seke, the homes of the min ers nre most of them near the mouth of the mine, in some cases the mlnp cempnny owns the surface immediately round the shaft for n great many acres, and has built the houses for its empleyes within easy walking dis tance of the works. The dust of the mines, end of the great refuse heaps, that rise like mountains, of cenl nnd sing and slate, sifts ever these houses se that they tee nre black, and ever the ground se thnt It is unfertile, nnd into the streams se that they are polluted. A geed deal of the refuse that is discarded when the coal is picked out is inflammable and it often happens thnt the great moun tains of waste about the mine villages ere en fire, n dull gaseous heap of smoldering curth, which burns for weeks nnd months, potbeninc; the air of the houses clustered about its edges. Sometimes an abandoned mine catches fire inside. The wooden preps nnd what is left of coal dust and the cenl here and there In the veins burn for months. This hns hap pened lately te a mine nt the feet of Wilkes Barrc Mountain, nnd the gases from this pent-in fire have mode the houses en the top of the mountain uninhabitable for the early part of the summer. BUT a miner nowadays does net hnve te live in the company houses or buy In stores cither owned or regulated by the com pany. He hns stores and hanks nnd schools nnd rcntnblc or buynblc houses te cheese from under perfectly geed trade conditions. The reason that he has tliit, freedom is that his predecessors struck and refused te work hampered by employer-owned heuse nnd store, becnuse he never had savings under the old conditions, where from the liquor that he get drunk en te the shoes his chil dren were his employer reaped the profits. The mines nre safe new, compared te the old days, because the employers' liability insurnncc has made safeguards n paying preposition te the employers, nnd because the unions struck for mere machinery safe guards te take the place of the old system of espionage of the empleyes by watchmen, whose duty It wns te Fee that carelessness about uncovered lnmps und pipes nnd matches should be reported and punished with dismissal. The power of n watchman with n grudge, und the danger of n watchman with n mind te shirk, were two very ugly facts under the old system new wrapped. The lighting nnd the ventilation and the shelters and the machinery and the regime of even the least progressively run mine nre far in advance of the most paternally run mine of twenty five yenrs age, owing te the pressure of pub lic opinion and Legislature and competition. INDEED, their Blewness te tnkc away the unnecessary hardships of coal mining lest them first the native-born American miners, who began when the mines began sixty or seventy yenrs age. Until then, that region nbeut Wilkes-Bnrre was n summer resort, noted for its geed nir and lovely forest and farming scenery. Wilkes-Bnrre itFelf was a county sent nnd noted for its fine old hotel en the rlverbnnk, where it wns cus tomary for the wives of the Judges during the yenrly sessions of court te enjev their summer holiday as much ns though It were Bedford Springs or Saratoga itself. The forests are gene, and the country side is scarred with coal brakes and slag heaps. The city is a beautiful ene for sit uation and for Its hnlf-dezen principal streets, but it is net n summer resort, nor arc the towns that make up Its environs for the most part cheerful places te drive through. The present populations of these mining towns may be prosperous compared te their status In Central European coun tries, from which they were imported, but they are cither content or possive under very sordid surroundings. FDR when the native American miners bow wlint minlnc was. thev censed te be miners. And when the Welsh miners that came ever te take their plnces snw what opportunities the country had for ether work. they. tee. dropped out of the ranks. It wns n strike just as plainly ngninst con ditions as any organized one, but it wns ac complished by desertions of n family nt n time. It became necessary te import lober that would net desert for a better job, and the most Jgnerant populntlens of Europe were drafted for the purpose. In many cases the new let spoke dlnlects thnt even the local priests could net understand, nnd, for n time, they could net be organized into any concerted nctlen for better conditions, even in the mines where conditions were netnblv bad, because they could net be told their rights or thus come .te comprehend their wrongs. When they were finally reached, through the younger generation mostly, who learned English In the schools, they were reached by agitators rnther than by mere stable forces for Americanization. Meanwhile, the cenl mines had passed out of the hands of individuals nnd families into the hands of corporations, nnd the corpora tions were further organized Inte great in-tcr-allled directorates. If changes for the better were te be brought about, they hed te be with the consent of many nnd at the demand of many. Concessions of nn individual te an individual were no longer possible. Whether it pnys. te own and te work n mine under existing conditions is for the owners te decide. Whether It pays under uny but the best conditions and highest wages te work in a mine Is for the workers te decide. They hnve apparently come te a temporary decision nbeut it, workers and owners. But the rent point nt issue Is, Will men who have te mine ever be satisfied with wages or with conditions? Isn't it work contrary te human nature work, dangerous, dirty, damp-and darkV nXTv"fyffl..iiPX SEPTEMBER,, 8, THE Jwt V yim "WHAT feri le? Along v hooray' -T " HOORAY r 'WkJ TKZ aiaiaiiB i ar.wr ir ixrtia i .i .Vi J- NOW W IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia eji Subjects They Knew Best , ROBERT J. FULLER On the Economic Value of Veteran Rehabilitation LEAVING aside entirely the humanitarian side of the question, the economic value of the rehabilitation of the veterans of the late war will ndd te the lndustrinl nnd eco nomic resources of the United States a sum vastly in excess of what this rehabilitation has cost, according te Rebert J. Fuller, chief of the rehabilitation division of the Veterans' Bureau of the Third District, comprising Pennsylvania and Delaware. "In Pennslvnnia alone." sold Mr. Fuller, "we have put into training mere thnn lfi.000 men. nnd there nre en the training rolls nt the present time ubeut 11.500. There is practically no limit te the kinds of train ing which they receive, and probably in round figures the men are new learning 2-.j different trades and occupations. Thousands of them have been rehabilitated net only economically, but nlse socially. "As may be guessed from the number of various occupations which the men have se lected In which they prefer training, the occupations run all the way from an acety lene welder te a pest-graduate medical stu dent. What Rehabilitation Means "The fundamental idea of rehabilitation is te return the disabled veteran te civil life with an occupaten wheh he may pursue gnlnfully nnd without any economic less in spite of his vocational handicap. In ether words, it enables the rehabilitated man te compete successfully with the normal man In thnt field of work in which the former hns been trained. "The economic gain te the industrial and productive resources of the United States from plnclng these veterans in n position where they arc producers in n great many ii.. ...ill I,, e vnfv ulinrt ennrn of time. fur outbalance the cost of se fitting them. One of the chief aims of the Government iu doing this work is te avoid some of the evils which followed the Civil War. An important lessen from this experience has been learned hnd a bad economic feature has been elimi nated. ., Cheesing the Occupations "Through this work there has come nbeut the most serious consideration of vocational guidance and direction, or the cheesing of the occupation for which the men are best adapted. .This selection Is based upon the previous educational background of the man In question, his previous occupational ex periences, his nge, his personal history and the extent nnd character of his disability, coupled with his desire end his personal preferences. "It would naturally be unwise from every standpoint te try te make n physician of n mnn who had net the previous educational background for such a profession, when there might be nnd usually is one of the mechanical arts In which he would be suc cessful. All these things have te be care full v considered In the cheesing of an occu pation for the men, but they nre generally amenable te reason in this matter, which is of the first Impertance both te them and te the Government which is supplying the edu edu cntlenal facilities. "The counsel given te the men is naturally mere in the nature of advisement. We point out te the man himself the spheres in which he is most likely te be nuecessful and in which he can make n choice, having in mind the above considerations. Choice Net Compulsory "Frem our experiences In this line It Is believed that in the question of vocational guidance the adult Indlvldunl should net be directed peremptorily or told that he must de this or that, but thnt he should be led te make the proper choice 6t vocation him self. This 1b, we think, n contribution which rehabilitation can make and is making te the educatlenul world In quest of mere ma terial te guide young men n the correct selection of their life occupations. "When the hclcctlen or occupation has been finally made a definite effort Is then made toward the setting up of the training program, with rather different bteps nnd cer tain tlme limitations. The training itself has been carried en both In institutions and in Industrial establishments, with approxi mately 25 per cent of the men training lu the latter. "The training program then may be either intensified courses of study prearranged bo be twecn the Veterans' Burenu and the insti tution giving the training, or it may be a series of steps carried en in industrial es tablishments under competent counselors, which will cnuble the men receiving the ceurse te pursue successfully the given trnde or occupation, 'In both cabes our experiences have shown that there is much subject matter commonly thought te be necessary In the educutlennl niiuviu ,.' v . , coeu.muij i-uininateu from the training program and thus save f Inch time ler te man receiving 'the train- !Wm.,.U'kAHWAlWll -' ' - v -,"" vie'w1 1922 . ' . . . FARMER AND THE STRIKE '. " as the farmer is rejoicing in a bumper crop I 4luM a "SCAB. Mr?'. " A sMll Tmmdm GOOD i& l- f flMnD' tnrfSNTefc m.tam uiau. - X0UR BUMPER. V THiNff! . , THW?, T , 6 . Dai i jfrflS. AKefHCK' comes the gloomy possibility that he cdnnet market it ing nnd expense te the Government which supplies It In the carrying en of the train ing program. Something Entirely New "Rehabilitation work is something en tirely new nnd is the direct result of recent wars, especially the one through which we, together with most of the rest of the civi lized nations, have just passed. It was seen early in the war that the less in personnel wns going te be n very important factor eco ece eco nemlcally net only te this Government, but te that of every country involved In the conflict, nnd that there would be need te capltnlize nil the functions remaining te the disabled men. "It wns. In ether words, nn effort te avoid the se-called 'scrap heap' which had been the result of most previous wars. It is n well-known fact that, following the Civil ar, thousands of men who had taken part In thnt great conflict traveled the country ns tramps, with no goal and with no ambi tion except te becure n living in the easiest way. As has often been said, and with some degree of truth, the American tramp was a product of the Civil War, and once firmly grounded, his Indolent, roving ways have had many imitators, until today he may be said te have become te borne extent a fixture in our civilization. "Many of these men become mendicants ami a burden upon society. It was te avoid these consequences and te eliminate these conditions ns well as te assist the men In gaming economic independence, bccatibe we ourselves were ready and willing te,nssume our welfare responsibilities, that Congress passed the act which made possible the work of rehabilitation. These Who Are Trained "Only these veterans nre given the train ing who hnve been injured te such an extent tiiat it amounts te a vocational handienp. Jt he cannot compete with the normal worker in his particular line by reason of what he has buffered during or ns n result of the war, he can secure training. Ji'.T.!!.P ?vcrn8 length of the vocational training is about two years. The courses ?n.rinJ .' .ry '? lensth- nn,nK from six months in the shortest ones te four years in the longest, nltheugh, as I said, the aver aver age is about two years. .'Zrse m1n ?.re ln '"'"InR in about 230 the i n-SYt1! ln!Ltltutin In the State, and the Institutions nre chosen with the sole K!.nPn8 i0 fcc.t;urlJJK tLe best results for the E2Linnd r. tl.le 90V,crnmcnt In the shortest possible period of time. We hnve, utilized wherever possible these organized ' Instltu- I "n S,,l,c". ."re wiIIInff nml caPab'e of ns smilntlng the men receiving training into the regular courses or which are willing e modify the entrance requirements und the courts te meet the needs of the men. ft, ,ie" T fill' ,that ,he training will mere than repay the Government economically I 'ZarT''f ,from f,KUrC3 et from theory. It is based en the enrning capacity of these men who hnve received tralXg :m ngalnst these who hne net. Three fun! dred cases which we have investigated show that the Increased earning capacity of the rvenVVrJr" trail runsfem $100 we'll werthS;- yCflr' Qnd BUre th'8 ls What De Yeu Knew? Quiz 1. By whom Is the President of th TTnif- 4. Wlint Is the significance of the exnres. 'n. "Barnum wm right"? MMM 6. Who was the last Secretary nf r . Whth? ,W1Iaen, Aam,n,'l? Stat of 0. What Is conchelogy? 7 WtatpeVuPc'nMnn,nE f th0 word 1"1 8" WCubanfln C'rS and JesE" of the . ViVi : " " ""' e in macninery? y 10' WeaftEucrnVh0 fUr rlvcrs of 'c Garden What Is a sheae In machinery? What U'rirn tln f.. i..."'"ri..' Answers te Yesterday's Quiz 1 Th!!t?Jt ai!lve vlcane of the United htatcs or Its neskfHBinn. i. ;..'. yniica , n the Island of llawail. "'""". in 2. Pajamas originated In Inuia. 3. An cyna is rt yeuiu; hawk taken from h nest for training in falconry b?m ? J vet completely trained ut net Thfi chief colonial posHesslens of Pem. ysxxr, iMf nn' 6. Andrew D. Mellen B the nresent . taryesOf the Treasury0 JW &5 death, ana Lcthe In classlrni !ifnir nr nrnr...in -.!v.H. or her trade 10. The Jury-mast of Jhi'T.."VE. ?. Thajury-ma of a .'hin"S,,Ar. !!! mast ?Mmtm .Tl 41 vi 'MS Mi' M . SHORT GUTS V: H The Weather Man at last tried te prenl- ue ubu u ncari. v i It is hard te cure an addict. Wlsces sin has the La Follette habit. Doubtless the Sesqul Finance Commit 1 ice iuunu comierr, in me nna JjyDerry. , Rumania new proceeds te demonstrates innr iinnnnv linn rna nentt , tn, n.. crown. - A man wen the fancy-work prize at uV jyDerry iair. j use rancy, Bald tne fur ones. " , Greece is the latest te realize that tiis fortunes of war are tee frenuentlv mifnr.f- tunes. ,, 'I Neptune Maxim never would dare tefj ...-ifcui. me wuiiiu iruc mac ecauty is oil) cam uuci'. t Judged by his delight in getting whteMif off his chest, nn asthmatic ought te be a d parngrapher. ,' J( . It Is a safe bet that the Greeks Jut) new would be willing te swap CenstantiM, for Vcnlzeles. Atlfintlf Pftv tinni.tln. M....4- L ltJ '-i : changing clothes. Just hew tired tomorrow, wuj UCUiUIiaiXUlU VtfWA DMntJ.Hi D.JIlJ J A 11.1. a ??n I2,wrry unduly ever the reception be ' A man may have a fairly high percent- j age, but he can't be 100 per cent Amerlcut1 unless he registers and votes. ' - ' i The Curtles glider is having no men! success than the Lnngley plane, but it, b ' uc,u5 ncwcu wun mere cnarity. We begin te foresee the possibility thtt.i ------ .... -.. Bu, t uni ui cuui he wa- answer a questionnaire and get a prwcrlf tien. The average cost of a meal ln Sing is six cents. But we'netiee that it U the warden nnd net a prisoner that is brai ; cine about it. - . 1 1 Dayton min has discovered means of taking the knock out of an automobile meter. New device should be affixed nt once te tht car of progress. Government experts In planes flytef leir are gassing bell weevils ln Mississippi cot ton fields. This may work till the putt things get gas masks. i ... r . 11 ..i .ery lrem Stroudsburg, Pa., telli et "suunng wealing several links of a cnais i nt a boatheusc. Vulcan new busy wl ; ...i uiui-aauutning JODS. Small boys getting ready for school mi advantageously take note of the fact that , oysters are new being taken from their beds imnu u wera et complaint. A beaten pugilist, ventured the Cost scleneelcss One, ought net te have aai trouble about transportation. He should bH able te travel en his surface scars. following an engagement in Ce Nationals nre said te be "scouring tM ; neighborhood." With se much het wa'er they ought te be able te meke e geed je , of It, Easlen man (according te a dispatcl) fell sixty feet from a smokestack and w unhurt, l'crhaps he fell en soft coal (Shucks! We don't care. We baveu't a conscience.) ... I'rlvnte secretary of the Secretary J ,j " i in wearing a Jl suit Ol awr . made In Panama out of four flour rti. ""!- "u ii mat ne utuuieu me i,"-' , ail fculd, "Eventually. Why net new? ', Though hardly a day piibses ,w,"B0"j ' some Incident exposing the absurdities, w , the existing Immigration law. the f should net be ullewcd te obscure its virtue. All it appears te need Is n little ceww senbe. , Clergyman of Norwich, England, dj tllnrnu Ida f,mt !...- nl.lK .nlnn 111 1HSHJ .w.vu v..u .1,11, mat vmm ipimi...-v --, b cabes is held in bnr parlors of public neuwji (back rooms of saloons) and that refrew. . incuts nre served from the bar, I',(luw i notes, as it were. i i r - - - The stnrtllng news is flashed, frog i ii, i.. .i.. .i. " i. .. i., i, irk. aniii ..iminhu mut uiu ui( in l-uilllllh " ' 'iy' "Coming Through the Hye," with vria tlens, is te be the season's favorite ,u5 The principal vurlutlen, we burmlse. TO lm n limine .!..... ,1,.. MM.- til halt " 'ii t in Place of a broken or lest one. per cent, iAt fV' yff., &tfx &!?! '