Mi SE''sTw f& t laienmg public liedger PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY I? OmUS R. K. CURTIS, pKUlDBirr Jehn C. Martin, Vice President and Treaaureri Chart A. TylT, 8-cretaryt Churl' H. I.udlne ion, I'hlllp 3. Ceillnt. Jehn H, Williams. Jehn J. tours-eon, Geerge K. aeldtmlth, David E, Smller, directors. DAVID B. SMILEY Editor jTOHtt C. MAnTtN.... General lluslnesn Manairer Published dally at Pcnue Lnrata Building Independence Piuare. Philadelphia. Atlantic Citt rrM-Pnlen Bulldlnir JCw Yebk 3fl4 Madisen Ave. Detroit 701 Ferd Dulldlnic St. Lecia C13 Oteb'-Dnmerat InilMlr.B Cntcioe 1.102 Tribune Ilulldlns NKTVS UURISAUS: Wasiiinoten Brume, N. 7J Cor Pennsylvania Avt. and 14th St. Nrw Yerk Hfnrin The Hun HutMIng Londen Dvtitte Trafalgar Uultdtntr suusciiii'ne.N thumb: The Eir.M.se 1'muc Lbihieu Is serve! te aub crlbers In I'nilailr I'hi.i. .md nurrv-unding towns at the rale of iweHj HJ) cents per week, payable te the carrier By mall te point eutalde of rhlladMehla In the United Stnte c'i na.la. . r t'nltcii .xtatea poi pei poi letens, reituee free, nfty ("0) cents per month. Six till) diilrirj per vear. inah adanee Te all ferelcn countries nr ijl) d liar n month. N'OTicn Subscribers ulshlnc ad.lieaa changed must icte old as we I as neu addre. 1FLL. 3000 WALNUT KFYSTOVE. MAIN 1601 KTAtittreai all rommtjntcnflettji in Ktwitij rubHc Lederr. lnd(pendrnc Bqunrr. Philattrlvhui. I Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PliKSS it rseluHvelu en. fttlfil te the ur fur '-fpulncntlen of nil icu-i dtsvatchrs credited te (f or Net etirncl-S' credited n this vapcr, und alsu tl.e local ncus publishtd therein. All rlehts at rriinhUcntitm of aurctnl tlimntches ' herein are aha reinfect. rhlladrlplili, f.lunUv, September 30, 0Z2 I I 'JUDGE FINLETTER IN LINE J1 UDtiK nXl.irrmrs refusal te reduce the ball of the mui-i-d dope peddlers insures their nppeur'iii'V for trial. It also puts him m harmony with .Judge Menaghun, of the -nme court, who erigi nally fixed the bail high enough te force any J Deniisman who migui come m me rein-t ei the men te assume personal respeiiMbi.ity for their continued presence within reach when needed. Jtldje Fin'etter very properly said that he i would net review the commitment of a .ludge of even jurisdiction, for If he reviewed It ' "whnt is there te prevent another Quarter ' Sessions Judge reviewing uij decisions next month?" New that the Judges are in harmony, the 'work of clearing up the dope gang can go ahead without interruption. DR. PENNDIAN IS RIGHT ALTIIOlViII the TnivprMty (if IVnn-yl-vutiia hnt been fofipelli in refu-i' :ul :ul mlssien te Lt)00 :uplli imt- t hi- fall. Acrinii Provest Penniiniin'" dei I.trnrien 1" fstvnr ui an open deer for nil wli Mptre t n celli'S'' education tiinds ns the fnnnulnrlen of a found principle. He has looked beyond the immedl.tte pres ent into the future ami 1m fen-ldered the possible results of denial of i-ilueimenal op portunities te youth Making them. Sueh denial, unless baed en defctiMible tenens. Is likely te create the impre.--ien that the colleges are maintained for the privileged few and te arouse the hostility which privi lege always arouses in a democratic com munity. Higher education must be democratic if It is te continue. It i Imperative that the way should be kept open for the peer boy or the boy from the home of the uneducated te acquire nil the education for whi h he has the desire. Only in this way can the life of the Natien be kept s-weet. If the roots of the educated men se down through all the strata of society te the luwe-t, no winds of demagogic or anarchistic pas-Ien can upturn them. They will bind all -trat.t together, for the educnted in their own live? will prove that there is no barrier be yond which ability and desire are forbidden te pass. Fortunately, the college" and universi ties are ftill democratic. The peer boy of parts is en an equal footing with the rich boy. Snobbery is frowned upon and the boys are judged en their Individual merits and net en their wenlth or nme-tr.. Tlii must continue, net only for the benefit of the boys seeking aa education, but for the afety of us all. GOOD BUSINESS! THE announcement of the I'etin-) Ivania Itailread Cempanv that it- tint- are -e 'congested with freight that it will be com pelled te put an embargo next week en the handling of everything save feed and coal is merely new proof of the returning pros perity of which there have been numerous ln-tances during the last month. The Pennsylvania System is carrying a much freight as it carried in 10-0 when business was booming. It i- net the usual autumn rush of grain te market, though that Is en. The pressure of ordinary com mercial freight is se heavy that it has brought nbeut a shortage of ears for carry ing the crops. This is why there has te be an embargo en everything el-e for a week in order te enable the read te clear it line.- The conditions are rucli. us we have -aid before, as te justify buines men !n ma!: -lng commitments for the future with the confident certainty that thy will be able te fulfill them at a profit te themselves and te everybody else. CITY LAWYERS AND CROOKS rnlinitn should hnve been no occasion for J. City Solicitor Smyth te forbid his as sistants te appear in court as counsel for men or women whom another department of Government wis prosecuting. The young lawjers in his ellice ought te have had sufficient sen-e f their public re sponsibility te refrain from tnk.ng retain ers from persons urresud by the police in the course of their duty of cieunlnj; out the vicious gangs. These assistants nre part of the fle em inent. The appearance of the Mayer, if he were a lawjer. a the teim-el for n man chnrged by the police with conducting a vicious resort would net differ in kind from the appearance of As-ihtunt City Snlli Iw.rs In n similar m!e, although It would differ lightly In degree. If the law is te be enforced and if the vicious nre te be punished, there must le harmonious co-operation among till brunches of the local Government. And if a lawyer wishes te engage in the bu-lness of defend ing persons accused of crime, he should sepurale himself from whatever department of the devernment he may be connected with. He cannot serve two masters. GROSS BUNGLING r1 UKGINS te leek us if the authorities had been deliberately negligent in their Inquiry into the New UriniNwick double murder that happened two weeks age. Ne autopsy was held en the bodies of the victims. A superficial examination vvns made and It was reported that the woman had been killed by a bullet and that there were three bullet wounds In her head and cratches en her face that might hnve been made by the finger-nails of her assailant. The grave wm opened yesterday and the body was mere carefully examined. It is low reported that the wemnn's threat was cut from ear te ear the Jugular vein, the carotid artery and the windpipe were severed. The physician who examined the body In tk int place and made the original report Cya that he was tela net te make an astemit, but merely te report en the cause of death. lie did net eren seek te recover the bullets te ascertain their precise char acter be that the kind of weapon used might be known. This la the kind of examination that might have been made If it was the purpose te cover up the crime. New there will be curiosity te knew about the condition of the body of the man, which is te be examined. We have been told he was killed by a single bullet fired Inte the back of his hend. Hut we de net knew nny mere. Se much has been disclosed by the autopsy en the body of the woman thrtt the authori ties will find themselves compelled te see the thing through. If iuellleicncy Instead of deliberate pur pose is responsible for failure te discover vital , facts, it is time that some efficient agent's were set te work. NEW FRANKLIN FIELD AS AN ASSET TO PENN Opening of Splendid Stadium SugBests the Healthy Validity of Athletic Distinction tis a College Facter TN THK latest of his numerous nutebl--1- egrnphie.s, Anuteln France rejoices that he was bem before the era of "games," In particular athletic contests, highly organ ized and Imperious in their command of popular emotions. The iUn-trleus Frenchman Is an acknowl edged repository of wi-dnm, and yet it mny be questioned whether his acuity would ever teach him te comprehend these enthusiasms primarily responsible for the construction of se monumental n arena as that in which the football season at (lie University of I'eiin-vlvanln will be inaugurated this after noon. The bewilderment of M. France is net entire! exceptional and it is in theory highly respected In certain quarters. Savants and earnest educators are seldom denied hearings for their elegies upon the alleged demise of scholarship Ideals nnd the nscend nncy of athletic standards in modern uni versities. Distress signals are especially prevalent in autumn. There nre members of the public who strive sincerely te be alarmed. Much ink is spilled in an effort te analyze the harmful Agencies ( a 0OHege education. The youth of the country are pictured as light-minded, unbalanced, frivolous heirs of a race of sober students te whom a point -cored in a debate en Neo-l'latenlsm meant much and a touchdown was an object of utter unconcern. At about the time of year when such Illustrations nre most mournfully presented the problem of nrcommedntine vat crowds at football contests is considered anew. Ardent and impatient throngs clamor for entrance te the arenns. Harvard's stadium, huge n- it K has been found Inadequate te blg-gume demands. The cnpnclty of the Yale bowl is a dis appointment. Until this year, which brought the erection of the mnjetic new stands and colonnade-, Franklin Field was regarded as paltry in proportions. Fmphnsls upon what has been called the inconsequential a-pei t of college life is truly terrific. "Intellectuals." whee voices have perhaps but lately been raised in pretest, hnve been known te join the stampede, nnd se-cnlled "cloistered" professors have been caught grabbing their hut-, ru-l.lng from their desks and cheering wild y the liome lieme teum victory or descending te the depths of spiritual agony nt the sight of n fumble. Much melancholy nenscn-e. has been ut tered about the damaging effects f athletic "domination" in American universities. It has net been noted that the scholastic prestige of Harvard, an Institution of some standing, has ben lowered since the annual gridiron defeat by Yale ceased te be a mournful tradition. Ner has the University of Pennsylvania a higher status nor a mere distinguished faculty than In the Ui'ty days when It was the monarch of the football field. The Implications hem should net, of course, he strained. Nevertheless It is a fact, whether te be deplored or 'auded, that athlettc dlt!nrtien is an asset for any university In this country. It Is en agency of considerable power in the enlistment of public geed will. Without buch favor the possibilities of degeneration even In the academic field nre net te he discounted. After all, Is It reprehensible te admit ex isting conditions, and are they actually ns humiliating as alarmists have proclaimed them? Successful teams and sufficient ac commodations for their admirers hnve net, se far as Is known, wrecked any American college. Appreciation of th splendid re-equipment of Franklin Field need net' be rn'f-hcnrted. An irrri -lng work, n credit te the Ur Iver sity nid a benefaction te Its r anv thou sands of loyal friends In this city, has been iw'.ftly nnd brilliantly HCcetnp'.!'ed. Of ceurse, Philadelphia ardently hope for a winning team this year amid the new and impressive surroundings. NO "SOLDIER VOTE" THOSrc little mn who were afraid te vote for the pr I'ect'en of the interests of the country at large en the Ix.nus question must be hat ng themselves as they study the verdict of t'.e people en the Senators nnd Henreseiitutives who voted against the bonus. Net a man who took the large view has thus far suffered at the polls. In New Jer-ey this week Senater Frelinghuysen, who voted against the bonus nnd supported the President'- veto, has been reneminnteil b an overwhelming majority. There wan no "soldier vote." se f.ir as a cnieful nn iilysls of the returns indbntes. The voters were apparently satisfied with what the Senater has done in Washington and ro re ro nerninnted him en his record. The explanation is simple. Soldiers nre no different from ether citizens, except per haps they are better than the average. Men who are unselfish enough te risk their lives for their country can be trusted te vote wisely for the future of their country. WHAT HALTS THE TURK IT HAS been noted in Constantinople that never perhaps In history have friend and fee touched elbows se closely without the firing of a single shot as have the Hrltlsh nnd Turks In the violated neutral zone. It mnv he added, seldom In history hns tha threat of a war of unpredictable possibili ties followed se closely upon the heels of a devastating major conflict of nations. Uritaln is exceedingly loath te provoke hostilities, nnd of this pregnant fact the ICeinnliHts are acutely aware. All their actions thus far have capitnll.ed the existing critical conditions te the utmost advantage. There are, however, significant sugges sugges tienH of a temporary abandonment of this policy in the rCPOft of conciliatory note from Kemal ttr General lTarlngten, accem EVENING PUBLIC panied with n premise te halt the Otteman advance. If this is actually stepped new, it Is in response te the kind of argument te which the Turk has always been prompt te react superior ferce. Itnpld increases are being made te the British fleet In the Straits and the Sea of Marmora. Guns en the great armada as sembled there are reported te have a firing reach of twenty miles. There can be llttle question that discharges from these power ful weapons of war would exert an em barrassing influence upon the Turkish land contingents en the Asiatic slde of the in vaded territory. Fortunately, the Hrltlsh Admiralty hns had time te collect some of Its important naval units from Malta and ether Mntiens. Knowledge of this may account for the rumored dlspntch of an ultimatum per emptorily demanding the withdrawal of Kenml's troops from the Chnnak zene. It is evident, also, thnt France is think ing soberly of her rash sponsorship of Otto Otte man ambitions In the Near East. General Pelle, high commissioner f the republic, has notified the Nationalist leader thnt his Gov ernment will net be able te restrain the English if they nre attacked. This Is n plain indication of newly aroused rre-llrltlsh sympathies and of the begin nings of n program of unity. It Is the only policy which the Turk will respect or which can temeve the explosive elements from a potentially intliitmnnble situation. THE RICHES OF THE STATE Willi. V. these who hnve followed the mat ter are avvaie that tin value of the real and personal prepertj owned by the Commenwenlth has increased In recent years, few wcte prepared for the revelation con tained in the report of the recent Inventory made by the Secretary of the Interior. When the State property was inventoried under Governer Tcner in 1011 It amounted te .4." 1.000,000. The new Inventory shows that it is worth $100,000,000 at the present time, or nearly twice the value eight years age. Ne account has been taken of the value of the new Stnte highways, en which nearly $."0,000,0(10 hns been spent. The total is made up of the value of the State forests and of the land and buildings of public institutions nnd the equipment of them. The Library nnd Museum In nnrrisburg, for example, are appraised at $521S,000. The Capitel nnd Capitel Park nre worth SIH, ."110.000. The new Seuth Office Building 1- wet th Sl.s-OO.000. And se It gees with ether values in llarrlsburg which have been 1m reused by the Investment of money since HIM. ' The value of the forests, which la new Jl'J.i'.OO.OOO, nlse Is greater than it was eight vears age, for the reason thnt the forest area has been enlarged and the old area has been made worth mere by Intelli gent forestry service. The tangible assets of the Commenwenlth hnve necn lncn used by an average of nearly 50. 000, 000 a year, a fnct worth the serious consideration of the men who hnve paid the taxe". If the nsets of nny private enter prise had increned te n similar extent during the same period the owners would be justified In feeling pretty well satisfied with the showing. SHORT CUTS "Off ngen, en ngen" At Bryrt Mawr was probably written at u horse hev. Itryn MnvvT hns demen-trated hew youth may take n tumble te itself. If it isn't always done gracefully, it is. at lenst. Invariably accompanied by a plucky comeback. Wnrtifrrr Jilt nrhitvei a tpill fir surf thnt .'(; int chuffed her; Se chcn .in A- i IN iletcn hr dart net frercn Hut join in hearty laughter. "Let Geerge de it" Is temporarily the motto of Grecian monarchists. After a showdown many a pekr fnce becomes suffused with n four flush. It begins te appear as though the Depe Ring Is te be provided with a keeper. Halsuli the bandit, hns surrendered. Anether book of the past bound in Morocco. The same Wllhelm who ousted Bis marck did most te put the mark out of biz. Even his enemies begin te ndmlt that President Harding is measuring up te his Jeb. Idn Rubinstein, dancer, says artists should net be judged like ether people. Alibi Ike said it foist. Vcnizeles might feel honored by the call of his countrymen If he felt dead sure that they knew whnt they want Nowadays Jehn Barleycorn never feels safe "in Tera'T-d '.lr's territory unless he is en one of Mr. lai-licr'si"- It has at least been conclusively demon strated bv the New Brun-virk. N. J., au thorities that -omebedy bungled. With fourteen thousand matriculants at Penn there ought te be lets of vocal power at games In the new -taiHurn. It in becoming the experience of the Vice Secletv in New Yeik police courts that if Sumner comes a fall'M net ftrbehlnd. The time has come, Mnstapha said, te boil some ether things, sicl. as treaties senlcd with eenling wax nnd cnbhnges and kings. Th world gasps srlth horror at the blnt at Hpezla, and vt the event would have been tame nnd r Tti.enplace during the big war. An nluminus el Ilirvard, returning te college nt sevent)-" snys he means te -tudv as long us h" - That explains his return without pre . k- us necesalty. Parcel pest ra' ii going up. It will mean te the nvet . man from five te twentv-tive cents i i nth, nnd te the Gov ernment a matter . I -wt.OOfUWOji year. New Yerk dispatch says a genernl 5)uMn'es revival Is rellected by Increasing nctivit In ttie paper ministry, inn. isn i the way it works In the Berlin and Moscow mints. The bombing planes which theoretically sank the battleship Arkansas also blew up the contentions of these who held the navy invincible against nlr attack. Atlnntn (Ga 1 rann elopes en his seventy-seventh birthday with sixty-four-year-old 'widow, lie wuys he'll live another twenty enrs and wnnu a home of hH own. Why net? Optimism lives forever. Tinden meter driver has broken a rec ord by covering fis."i miles in twenty-four hours. We tii. 1 eurself somehow mere In trigued tif ye i will permit the use of an entirely new 'ocutien) by the thought of a snail or n tortoise traveling twenty-four miles In 20S4 heunt. The American Society Weird for the Control of Can cer seeks te glve a solar plexus te a "solar essence" by ismiing a wurnlng e the public. The promoters of this "cure-nil." made in Germany, tell the credulous that it will "revive dead trees, destroy submarines, care cancer, preserve melons and extract geld from clay." There Is one little bit of truth In the premise. There was never a fake( however erode, that couldn't extract geld Vem human clay. LEkGER-PHIEADELPHIAV SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER SPEECH. SAFETY VALVE Orators In Hyd Park, Londen, Prove That England Knew Ita Value All Kinds and Conditions of Cranks Br GEORGE NOX McOAIN Londen, England, ENGLAND, unquestionably, Is the land of the free. Pre-eminently is it the land of free speech. I never fully appreciated it until after many yenrB I revisited the oratorical exer cise in Ilyde Park. Parliament isn't the national forum of the British nation. Net for a moment. It's at the marble-arch entrance te Hyde Park. Nothing Hke It exists anywhere else In the world. Politics, religion, finances, sex questions and prohibition and antl-prohlbltien are always en tap. This fact alone doesn't count In the free speech category, however. It's what Is said and by whom. I INTRODUCE a man with a square of red tied te an old umbrella with numerous Strings. He had nnethcr square of red for a hand kerchief. At his feet was n bundle of Communists' literature for distribution. The subject of lila address was the l.GOO, 000 unemployed of England. He spoke nt them as well as for them. It was In n way that would net have been tolerated in Philadelphia possibly In Chicago. Net if the police authorities knew of It. His rostrum was a soap box actually, net metaphorically. He was typically communistic or Bolshevistic. ON HIS head wag a battered Panama. A used omnibus ticket was stuck In the band. About sixty years of ape, he had a patriarchal beard and long disheveled hair. He was cellnrless, with a dirty muffler wrapped cester fashion around his neck. His shoes were heavy nnd unpolished. Baggy breeches, well worn, and a woolen Jersey tern in several places made up hli attire. He spoke in n mere or less Bing-song voice. Every once in n while he would empha size a word by yelling It with startling suddenness. TTmEQUENTLY witty, he was also often -T profane. Here nre samples of his oratorical out eut bursts: "If you people (the unemployed) at tended te your business you wouldn't be living with the wife, three kids nnd a metlier-in-lnw In one room. "Ne! You'd be residing in a mansion nenr Hyde Park. "Yeu wouldn't be starving; you'd be having a geed time drinking champagne, while the teffs would be running te Par liament te find out whnt te de nbeut it. "The teffs nre nfrald of you, but you haven't the brains te knew It. "Whnt kind of n Government hnve we? "Rather, whnt kind would we have If It wnsn't for Lloyd Geerge, that geed Samari tan from Wales like hell ! "Anil Lloyd Geerge running the Govern ment for you nnd King Geerge; a King that hnsn't n drop of British bleed In his veins." "Yeu can have till the things I've told you nbeut If you only knew hew te go nbeut It." There was a let mere along the same line. NO LESS than seven ether orators were nt work In the semi -circular space. Nearest the iron gates was n well-dressed man en a small platform. In geld letters en a little sign hung from the tailing were the words "Christian Science." Next, seventy-five feet distant, two scholarly looking Hindus, with cafc-au-lalt complexions and snowy turbans, were preparing te speak. Their gilt sign bore the title "Islam in England." Continuing nreund the semicircle the next candidate of appeal was n geed-looking young American. He was n clever talker and very persua sive. Behind him were three ether young men, evidently his moral supporters. "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints," rend hl,s designntlve placard. It was the Mermen propaganda. A BIG, bleed-colored banner, supported en n cress bnr between two poles, hung beside the next prencher. Net mere than fifty yards separated each spenker in the somi-clrcle. Yet they did net seem te pny any atten tion te each ether. Each had his own circle of listeners. These crowds were well dressed, respect ful, eager, as a rule, nnd interested. The man with the red banner was a very dark Brahmin. ''Humanitarian Atheism" was his sub ject, and he discoursed of the "Great Con troller of Nature" and the law of kindness unil self-respect. Anether llrah'vin, whose clothes bore the evidence of genteel poverty, came next. He spoke in excellent English. Neither platform, sign nor banner was nt his command. Right in the center of his circle he Btned en the ground nnd talked in a loud tone. lie seemed te hnve n grouch against the Christian religion, from all I gathered. mllE last but one of this convocation of orators nnd nciir-oraters and cranks was a Scotchman. He was the best dressed of the let. A brnld-trlmmed morning coat and n rather gaudy necktie, together with a rough Scotch b-r-r-r te his speech, made him a marked mun. It took a few minutes, because of his vague wanderings, nnd rolling "r's," te get his t-rift. I lis crowd was respectful but cold. Ne wonder; he wan talking prohibition. There were a number of women among his auditors. They were net sympathetic strange te say. One of them nt my elbow spotted me na a Yankee. "Of course, you knew he gets paid for this," she snld rather disdainfully, "Indeed?" I replied noncemlttally. "Yes. He's like that 'Pussyfoot' John John Jehn eon veu peeple sent ever te us. He's In It for what there's In It for him." Then she concluded : 'Hut I need net be wasting my breath en jeu, sir, I fancy you've seen enough of this prohibition business where you come frem.1' I TURNED te the right, where the Inst of the Demesthenic rivals steed. ..ret.,. T t ... riimH,1nn" lilltuf t,fefA ,!,. rostrum of a rather nlco-lneklng, middle aged, grnv-hnlrcd nnd bewhlskered mnn. He spoke slowly, emphatically nnd nrgu inentHtfvely against prohibition and Mrs. Aster's Lecal Option Bill. I didn't knew thnt there was se much "hooch," dope, insanity. Inw-brcaklng and general' cusstdness in the whele world as there l In the United States till I heard this ""'as for figures in the way of statlsticsT no had them te give away as well as te I? 'all he said about the evils of prohibition Is half true, there'll be a pre-rum rebellion nt home before I can get back. Before he finished I was mere than ever convinced of what I said several weeks uge, tint prohibition in the United Stntes has the liquor Interests of Greut Britain scared WlAlwi I am confirmed In the belief that England Is the lund of the unafraid when It comes te letting a manor woman have his say unmolested out In the open. It's the safety valve of the Empire, J ' xae"" Vfj II AAV 1 LV vll'lKl v TBlrr fw f 3fcAW,& Z,.MW.iri$4$Gi& -" -T 0S 'I J. k I II I 111 II MM V ' " ".-- M-JeVU Vt&Mlklii KuAXnMmMtaMtzvWm .. r"lZcr"l' ru.rj i1 -L.r i ,twv inBKMnMtAviH,"v"lir''r' -. jhhtit wsa? . .r . s. -a i m- jrjjrr jr- ,jt .iji miw StttKwpTb u:J?&i W- :. y ;jjt?- .r rr NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians en Subjects They Kneiv Best CLAUDE L. ROTH On the State Election Laws ONE of the chief causes of the indifference of the average citizen te participation in polities Is the complexity of the election laws, according te Claude L. Reth, solicitor te the Sheriff, who hns mndc n special study of these laws. "It cannot be denied." said Mr. Reth, "that these laws nre difficult for the ordi nary citizen te understand. At every bes bes slen of the Legislature vnrieus bills te amend these laws arc Introduced, and these proposed measures mny generally be divided into two classes: first, these intended te simplify the procedure for prnctlcnl pur poses, nnd, second, these te prevent or furnish new varieties of fraud or irregulari ties. "As a rule, the political leaders are op posed te additional regulations; first, because we new hnve mere than can be btrictly en forced, and, second, because the existing regulations tend te lncrenbe the expenses of the organization. On the ether hand, the advocates of reform oppose any repeal of existing afeguurds because they feel that the evils they are Intended te prevent would become greater. ... "Between the two sides very few radical chnnges have been niade In the election laws Blnce the Uniform Primaries and the Per sonal Registration Acta of 1000 were uassed, except that essential details were changed in succeeding Legislatures until they were re-enacted in revised form in 191J and again in 1010 te conform te changed con ditions. . Beth Sides Oppose Change "Perhaps the greatest single cause of dis satisfaction Is the requirement that every voter shall be re-reglstered annunlly. and that in cities of the first, second and third clnsses registration can only be made en the personal application of the voter, except in a few special cases. "Numerous plans hnve been suggested te riiake registration automatically renewable se long as there Is no chnnge of residence, but till such plans have been objected te en the ground thnt the Stnte Constitution re quires thnt If twenty-two years of age or t pwnrd, the voter must hnve paid within two years n Stnte or county tax which shall have been assessed nt least two months nnd paid nt least one month before the election and that there Is no Practical way in the cities te ascertain this without compelling the voter te exbiblt n proper tax receipt te some official authorized te register the voters annually, because such tnx mny be upon real estate, occupation, n poll tnx or en mortgages, and there Is no uniformity with regard te the collection of these throughout the State. Removing the Tax Qualification "It seems Itnpossible te obtain relief from (be Imrdens imposed upon citizenship until tie constitutional requirement of tax payment as n qualification for voting Is removed. This can only be done by a cons Itutlennl amendment, which must be passed by two successTve sessions of the Legislature nnd nnpreveu at the polls, thus taking about five years te consummate. "Mtheugh such n plan has been advocated i,v many prominent persons nnd bills have been Introduced for that purpose, It has never met with general approval, probably because the elimination of the nbsessers' list nf tiixnbles would necessitate drastic chnnges ?n ether laws having no direct connection ivttt, elections, such ns thnse regulating the jury system niid In Philadelphia the appor apper t eminent of Ceundlmcn, both of which are based upon the assessors list of taxable,. 'The worst feature of the law requiring tax pavment is that the tax must have been nssessed at least two months before the elec Hen This period usually expires before any of tiie personal registration days in any of the cities occurs, and then If a citizen who considered himself n qualified elector, but who docs net have real estate or mortgages In his own name upon which tnxes have been nssessed egnlnst him, finds thnt his name bus been emitted from the assessors' lists of tnxnblcs In the district In which he lives, he has no way of qualifying himself te register unless he hns n poll tax receipt from the nrevleus year or can persuade some court te r,., vi. r,nma tn thn flsaessera' lists at least one month before the election. "The low grunting this was passed te old him in such a situation, but the act has been bold te be unconstitutional except In cases where an assessor, upon personal ap plication of the citizen, hnd willfully refused te place his name upon the assessors' lists mere thnn two months before the election. "The Constitution of 1700 required pay ment of a Htate or county tax assessed at least six months before the election as a condition precedent te the right te vote, and the Supreme Court, in 1816, decided 30, 1922 lJMMGIII r.2S r murm. .hhh v-;- . OWWJHK Vffar1l uAti - -jur that the tax prevision was mandatory, and that until such assessment was made no citizen could acquire the right te vete. "The authority of this decision has never been changed except te the extent that the adoption of the present Constitution in 1874 reduced the period of such assessment te two months. "Ne chnnge in our fundamental law can be proposed which should meet with mere popular support than the abolition of the tax requirement for voting. When this step Is taken it will be easy te simplify the elec tion Inws generally se thnt every person with common intelligence can understand and perform hl.s duties ns n citizen without absolute dependence upon the few men trained nnd active in politics who make it their business te be informed of the numer ous chnnges in the election lnws. Women Becoming Interested "Since peliticnl leaden nnturnlly desire te keep voters dependent upon ward and division lenders for guidance in election matters, it is net likely that any organiza tion in power will initiate nny movement te abolish the tax requirement. "Women residing outside of Philadelphia are becoming very much interested in this matter, however, since the tax qualification has worked a peculiar "hardship upon female voters in consequence of the fnct that In ether counties of the Stnte thnn Philadel phia occupation taxes nre new nssessed against women who nre enrolled ns electors, nnd these tnxes greatly exceed the amount of the poll tax payable by a woman In Phil adelphia County. "The result of this hns been that mnny peer women residing elsewhere In the Stnte are encouraged te abstain from voting in order te avoid the payment of such taxes. Therefore the women's organizations will prebnbly find It necessary te inaugurate n State-wide enmpnign te secure the abolition of the tnx qualification if they desire te hnve ns much influence in political affairs as the men. The Registration Figures "The most important part of political campaigning is in getting the voters regis tered se that they can vote. According te the last annual report of the Registration ( ommlssien for Philadelphia, the total num ber of persons registered In tlje fall of 11)21 for the municipal elections was only 43L', 100, although the total number of persons assessed as voters in the city was "flS.OSM "That this apathy was net due te the fact that only county officials were te be elected Is shown by the figures of 1020, when there was a presidential election. In the fall of 10110 only -150.017 voters registered out of Monir "Rrh,s'""t ,e ""8.0S1, entl only 418,017 voted for the presidential candi dates. I his prcsents n problem In Amerl ennism in addition te any arising from the foreign birth of naturalized citizens or the effects en nny radical propaganda." Coeling Their Ambition from th Tolrde nirnle. Fer the next forty-two yenrs Germany will he paying her Indemnity. In the years te come, as each annual payment fall's due, t will recall te each German citizen's mind the fact that lis country lest the last wnt and will Interfere with his natural Incllna Incllna tlen te start another. Teday'H Anniversaries inn Martin Luther maintained his ninety-five prepositions nt Wittenberg, 1770 Geerge Whltelield, the founder of the Cnlvinistle Methodists, died at Nevvburv Nevvburv liert. Mass. Hum in Pnitlnn,! rw. i... ,,- 1714. "' B"-,uuer -' Trm'u'1 1AfInrs,1''l l'ri Roberts, fn fn rneus British soldier, born at Cawnpere, In. dla. Died in France November 11, 1014. 181)1 General Boulanger, former War Minister of France, and subsequent leader of a party Unit threatened te overthrew th . Government, committed suicide at Brussels 181)7 The railway from Moscow te Arch." nngel was completed. 1011 By the breaking nf n pulp mill iin. at Austin, Pa., the town was virtual y v i n J out and mere than ene hundred lives were Teday'H Birthdays t Pr' M,,",,.nn"ry Vn('C'rncl!t'. "resident of Lafayette College, horn at Rochester Vt forty-seven years age. ' ' l, The Rt. Rev. Jeseph G. Andersen, Cath olio Bishop of Bosten, born in Bosten llftv seven yeurs age. "' Wilten Lackaye, long n prominent actor of the American stngu, born in i.mi,nV, County. Virginia, llfty-elght years ugn. David Irlilay, president of Michigan Agrl culura College, born at Celemn, Mich., forty-six years age, iu"-u, vv r- . BSJSSssS cjJt msmm iWL''. r a IMP . HOPE DEFERRED ""j y" .efifttfr-1- v" &S ... vvWi.flSF- sJ4J kiu k- x r i si i a iia rWV- .iMA-S If lAfi - ft- What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1. What are the colors and design of I flag of Cxccho-Slevakl.T 2. What kind of a musical lnatremiat I the guzlee or ruzla? I. Who la the here of the Odvuavf 1 4. What Is the origin of the term, "A I ei Bureau ana paicnes r B. In what way docs a crocodile differ I an alllKater? 6. Hew many spectators did the Fltvi Coliseum at Reme accommodate 7. Whnt States border en the flmut Lak 8. Which Is the elder language, Frenckl ingnan 9. Among what class of persons did word hokum originate 7 ID. what la a garnishee? Answers te Yesterday's Qu! 1. A quetzal Is an American tropical ' noted for Its brilliant nlumare found especially In Quatemalt, which country it is me national I DO I. 2. Mohammed VI Is the present .Sultan In ConstantlneDls. 3. Popes who rclfrned In the nineteenth! tury were Plus VII, Lee XII, I VIII. Gregery XVI, Plus IX ana 1 XIII. 4. Tret In weighing- goods Is an allewus rermeriy made te purcnassrs in cm fensatlen for waste due te transport ion. 5. Trcpang is nn East Indian sea slur, I esteemed table delicacy In China. 8. Michael Faraday was a noted Enili chemist nnd physicist, the dliceviMl or muRnete-ciectricity. ills aaiee ani IIIU-ISUY. 7. Francis II was the last Emperor of j IIelv ltemnn Kmrjlre. Twe yean I fnrn the extinction nf the shlde Helv Reman EmDlre bv NaBtflU" Francis assumed the title of Erapetw of Austria, evor which country M ruled until his death In 183S. Ha Wl born In 170S. . I. Edinburgh, both because of Its " lien, vvitti nn ncropeus en wnien w caBtle Is situated, and became Of RJ reputation for learning ana cuawi cnllcd "The Athens of tlia .Nerm." O Thft Ta.irlfl nr I.Tiapnrlfll lu ft nflllM I mnimnletirrt nf thn Knanlsh Klnffl. tel by Philip II in the sixteenth MntmTj twenty-seven mueB nerinwen Madrid It Is one of the largert ba lngs In the world. ' 10. The Territory of Hawaii has a VW tlen, nccerdlng te the 1320 canal 255. OIL'. The population et uw u or rsevada was 77,407. 1 Noblesse Oblige 50 LOKQ at Hener held U$ endmt MH letcfil nlnea, utU Be long we tiand e deoier, Eurof, place The stricken fields of France still blieafr1 open wounds, . ,j The livid scars In Flanders have net wm In Ne Man's Land the pines still W". the sounds .... Of crashing waves 'gainst walli tint nw yield. The smoldering ruins of humble bem The graves of heroes still unknown, The skeleton cathedral domes, The drooping weed en sculptured iteMj. Still testify of priceless sacrifice teTJBW Still signalize the meanness of unriH" might. A hundred thousand sturdy eons of & land's best, lM With backs against a spattered wall " Hcl1 1 , x m tliea An many thousand cresses plead rw W'hereV'Nterday they proudly font And thousands mere, yes, mUlleni J Frem school and shop, from hut ana Frem factories' xerge, im" - Fest followed en, in turn v "Y'" Till every blade of grass seems dreaci And every placid stream a crimson floeo. Along thn Semme, at Ypres, Ami On AlpinThelghts, in submerged wintry W Fair youth kept tryst with death, Bl UOU KIlOWB Hli IUU evv- - M, That justice might be sure, democrat They counted net their lives ns fjJJ'aJ They scorned te benst of wbattMy -m They never doubted triumph nr, a They knew that right could no w -m Fer lieigium, ltniy, mir "- France, , . rtrij I Men leuped te die as maidens """ tinned I ' And yet-grent Ged, forgive !-m tt f what the); ' ""....n. even neW-1 ur nillieus tiiie inim """;Vilu.rinl"l,i Ah If deep lines of cure and w lie"D!w all llud net been stumped for ou m T; Great Ged forgive, great Ged riw , If ever unce we think of geld m If in our selfishness we let y JM oemo tuie ei puny Bu, ".i," v.rfi" Francis Bourne Uphara, in the A i Times. r - . ,- a . .JVV