EZtm '""S.'T5 lI V VT' .. eB W "' " ' "' r..W H'M' IT Li '.' A H "" V F' K tfvB'. ". b w-m w- W N i,Y 1 ' :: .. r $ F- I i St EucnmgllubKc Ue&att JPUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY y crnua n. ic. cinvna,! rimtersT Charini II. Ludlnaien, Vlca President: Jehn O. Martin. 8ecretarr and Treaaurert Pnlllp 6. Cellins, ..Jehn II. nilllm. Jnhn J. Bpurieen. Directors. iVi" EDiTeniAt, noAnet '!' Craea IL K. Ccma, chairman '-.DAVID B. SMILEY Editor "iiOHU C. MAnTItt.... General Bualne Manager V!' JPubllehed. dally at PcaXia Letxjam Dultdlnc , . Independence. Squar. Philadelphia. ATUime Cm .Preee-Unien IlulMlna- , Nlif TeiK 804 Madleen Ave, prraeiT 701 Ferd Ilulldlni T. Lein 013 aiabr-Drmecrat lullillm i -.Cnioieo 1302 Tribune uulldlnt r NEWS DUnSAUOt ' "WlijnsaTnn ncaaitr ii. ? " S"T' I'enntylvanta Ave. and Hth Rt. ' f iw Toik IIciiud The Bun Building Lembek Bntie Londen Timet . HunscniroeN thumb The Brxxise Pcilie Lrnem ! icmd te sub crlbere In Philadelphia and surrounding towns at tha rate of twelve (12) cent per week, parable .te the rrrlr. ' Dr mall te points eutalds of Philadelphia. In tha United Statu. Canada, or United Htatea pea. aeeelene. peetea-e fre. ftftr (SO) centa per month. Six (10) dellara ier year, pisrabl In advanc. Te all fertm countries ene (Jl) dollar a month. Netic Suhacrttra wlahlnr addrees chanced tnvat lv old a well a new addreae. MU, 1000 WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 1000 V Addrt it oil comtnimlcellont te Evening Pullle Ledoer, Independence Bauare, Philadelphia. Member of the Associated Press r TltB AMIOCIATRD Mr SB (e rxeluttvelu en titled te the for republication e all nitc dltpatchee credited te It or net otherwise credited in tnlt pace-; and alto the local newt publithed therein. All rightii of republication ef special dlspatchet Herein are alee reerrvrd. V, FMIillphii, ?lurij, N..,nih.r 27, 1)20 A FOUn.1T.AR PROGRAM FOB. PHILADELPHIA Thlnre en which the people expect the new adralnletreUen te cencrntrate I la aitentteni The Iteiaaare river bridge. A drudeck big enevgh te aerommedate the largest ehlpt. iJevelepmrnt of the rapid franjlt trm. A. convention hall. A svihflna for the free Library An Art tlueevm. Enlargement el the voter tupplu Hernet te accommodate the population BE WISE IN TIME JrvK. PUKUUSirs appeal te parents te -' give immediate attention te their chil dren suffering from sere threat or croupy coughs must be heeded if there is net te be n alarming increase in the number of cases t scarlet fever and diphtheria. These dis eases ere new prevalent among children. Their preliminary symptoms resemble the ymptems of a cold se closely that children in the early contagious stages of the diseases ;re allowed te go te Bchoel and te the inevics and se communicate the ailments te ethers. Cleee co-operation between the parents and the school teachers ought te check the spread of the diseases before they become epidemic. The safe course Is for the parents te consult -n physician en the first sign of sere threat and fellow his advice. A little precaution In time will save the lives of hundreds of children. JERSEY FIGHTS rpHE trolley companies of New Jersey are TfJ- net te get a ten-cent fare without a I rigorous pretest from the car riders. Fol lowing the application of the Trenten and IMcrcer County Traction Company for per mission te increase the fare from seven te (ten cents, arrangements have been made by the opponents of the increase te hire the Sbest lawyers they can get te fight the change. ? The Public Service Company has net yet filled Its application for a ten -cent fare, but if It does It is likely te be confronted by itthlMMnn flQ vfcvntfaliti nai fhnr ti-tStrtfi ,. 1 t te abandon Its Bystpm of zone fares In tfa mf1fn it fnrtr mmttlia tien !...,... , ,. iwiitiin "ft" RELOCATING AN MASTERPIECE TIHE preprietiesare tastefully recognized in the transfer of the statue of the "I'll fkrlra Father" from the City Hall plaza te an effective location in Ftiirmeunt Park. 5 The formal acceptance of the virile Saint lOaudens work by the Park commissioner! (yesterday was gracefully in accord with the wveck of celebration signalizing the tercen tenary of the landing of the Mayflower colo celo cole Inlsts at Provincetown en route te Plymouth. SOne of the finest specimens of sculptural art Jn Philadelphia is nt last fittingly placed en tthe East river drive near Sedgley Polut. 1 The Park is the proper environment for jiuch a commemorative work. Net only was jit disadvantageous situated against the background of the City Hnll, but Its rignlfi jrance was apart from the historic atmosphere Jwlth which the municipal center Is Investrd. ; The plaza, te be ideally adorned If ndorn ndern jnent be necessary should im-mnriallze local "or state history. Bostetilnns presumably ad xnlre Wlllinin Penn, but they are unlikely te register their feelings en this subject by '.tributes in stone or bronze in the vicinity of the historic Common. The sculpture in Fairmount Park is of Ecncral and varied appeal. The sturdy . Pilgrim Father graces nn attractive scene LBnd without offense te consistency. , AS WOMAN TO WOMAN THE appointment of Mrs. Anna D. Bates ns one of the voting ns.sessers in the 'Twenty-sixth ward sugge-ts a policy well worthy of judicious expansion. If the work of listing the electors demands no highly ripeciallzed abilities, It does undoubtedly call for tact, diligence and sympathetic under litandlng. . Somewhat flustered by the novel responsi bilities of the franchise, numbers of I'hila "ilelphln women refused te give their names jre male a'iesMrs engaged in'cempiling their Jlst Immediately prier te the first registration day a few months age. In ninny Instances he assessors Impassively accepted the situa tion and departed. Women canvashers dealing with their own ,iex are unlikely te retire without ut lra-.t Heme pertinent discussion and perhaps illu mination of the subject. "It will take." llcclares Mrs. Bates, "women assessors te Bet out the women's vote en election days." Her observation Is worth heeding by the ,county commissioners, who are authorized ,te appoint the Toting assessors without dis tinction of sex. f "THE MYSTERIES OF PARIS" fpHEUE Is scant evidence te prove that the iuterest of the American people In the fictual text of the pence treaty has been in rnse. Champions of the pact of Versailles Jiave felt eggrleved because careful readers if a momentous document have been com paratively few, while the nlleged treaty Vreckers have gleefully advertised such In- illfference. Beth parties te n prolonged debate seem f " i.V kaT0 m'N'";(, n l,0'nt bearing almost as V 1 i "ierueh upon the highly respected constitution ,f the United States as en the Instrument $rnmed at Paris te reconstruct the world. ' rt.. ..Ural rnnntltiilien. be it said In all reverence, is heavy reading. Ah Illumined rtty such experts as Jay, Madisen and Ham Ham lilten In the Federalist papers, the funda iinental charter of the republic exercisea a i idlfferenf appeal. ' si' HV7 potent this may be was demonstrated k - ;J'iiirn; the constitutional ratification enm Ot.n, when the three most brilliant and fSj ' V Nfkful propagandists In our history com- 1.1 iV ''TSrV.-nf(illlli.a In a masterly Achieve 1 mtnt. The Inside workings of the censtltu-iai-fct . . . nuuui conTeniiens were, newevcr, net Known for ninny years. The sessions were secret. LenR after the event the diary of one of the New Yerk delegates revealed a portion of the intimate truth, but even today the story Is -incomplete. If nothing quite resembling the Federalist has grown out of the peace-treaty situation, the mystcTy of Paris is nt least far mere penetrable than the mystery of Philadelphia. The series of fifteen talks, te be riven under the auspices of the Ptinue Lr.neF.n In the "restored foyer of the Academy of Music, will bring forward some of the chief American participants in the deliberations at the Qtiat d'Orsny. The list includes Colonel K. M. Heuse, General Tesker II. Miss, Douglas Jehnsen, chief of the division en boundaries; Isaiah llowmen, chief territorial adviser; David Hunter Miller, legal adviser, and ether spc clatlsts, Herbert Hoever, whose knowledge of the European situation is accepted re whole-heartedly by the public, is also te speak. "What Iteally Happened ut Paris" is the nlluring general title of these confessions. There Is a chance that these revelations may start a new interest in the conclusions weightily formulated in the peace treaty and league covenant. ANOTHER AMBASSADOR OFF FOR THE LATIN AMERICAS Why Secretary Celby Will Start Tomor row Over Ways Traveled In the Past by Mr. Reet and Mr. Knox TT IS as nn antidote te Senater Fall and - his friends and Mr. Hearst and ethers who ardently believe that Mexico ought te be cleansed by fire; as a bearer of verbal unguents for the feelings of Iatln Americans who have been irritated or made distrustful by our occasional errors of word or act in Mexico, In San Dominge, in Haiti and else where, thnt Secretary Celby will leave Hampton Bends in a battleship next week for a tour in Seuth America. Mr. Celby has no easy Jeb ahead of him. On both sides of the line that splits the American continent there are innumerable people who, for various reasons, will de their utmost te make it difficult or even hopeless. Mr. Knox and Mr. Beet were secretaries of state who visited the southern republics en missions precisely similar te Mr. Celby's. They, tee, were emissaries of geed will and, speaking for the people of the United States, they sought te establish a new solidarity of understanding and sympathy among the democratic peoples en this side of the earth. But the currents of unfriendly sentiment, generated by accidental frictions and from inherited suspicions that are almost as per sistent in some Seuth American areas ns climate and language, flowed steadily against the United States despite nil that Mr. Knox and Mr. Beet could de or say. Better results could hardly have been ex pected. Fer one traveling secretary of state there were thousands of hidden propagan dists, thousands of voices raised te keep old hatreds alive, thousands of men engaged in the intrigue by which various European In terests sought te complicate governmental and trade relations between the United States and Its neighbors. There are groups In this country which dedicate themselves te the perpetuation of enmities among the various American re publics. But their work Isn't se easy ns it used te be. The spectacle of a President-elect nnd a secretary of state hobnobbing simultaneously with the Latin Americans ought te be re assuring. But the, difficulties of Mr. Celby's errand can be best appreciated by n study of some of the incidents of Mr. Harding's trip. The President-elect started south for a rest. He wished above nil else te go quietly nnd te avoid anything that might be viewed as 'a significant Incident." The Mexican border Is alive with un official diplomatists and forever unquiet be cause of unofficial diplomacy. Senater Fall, of New Mexico, was responsible for what seemed like an Invitation extended by the president-elect of Mexico te the President elect of the United States, who was asked te uttend the Inaugural at Mexico City In December. There were various and clearly obvious rensens why such an Invitation could net be accepted. Se Sir. Fall must be blamed for n situation that first compelled the decline of what appeared te be a gra cious invitation Issued In the name of the Mexican people and then brought from Obregon himself n somewhat testy assertion thnt no formal Invitation was issued. Even se tactful a man as Mr. Harding found the way crowded with unexpected difficulties ns he approached the border. Let us be fair te Mr. Fall and men who reason as he does. Immediately ever the Mexican border they sec a smiling, Indolent and Improvident pee pic in possession of a wilderness that con ceals unimaginable riches below an almost untouched surface. They sec a nation in poverty because it Is seemingly without the energy te achieve prosperity by a little tell, and they knew a great many ambitious Mexi cans who believe with them that ttfe strong hand nnd the practical disposition of the northern organizer are necessary te put Mexico en Its feet and give it a real start in life. But there is u simple rule, new almost universally recognized among nations, which grants te all people a right te de as they please with their own. Inte the question of our relations with Mexico there must always enter the question of one nation's right te direct the internal affairs of another na tion. Thnt question is recognized broadly by the American people as something mere or less abstract, But it happens te be the root of all Latin -American thinking when the United States and its policies ,are under consideration. Te the people of many of the southern re publics, who have been for generations under the tutelage of adroit Europeans hungry for trade nnd ether advantages, we continue te be The (Ireat Power te the North n mys terious power with a .mood for expansion of the sort under which small governments arc trampled down. Brazil and the Argentine de net nisess our motives In nrcerduuee with our nttltudc or behavior toward them When they are in doubt about our metUes they listen te what we say nnd observe what we de in Mexico. What enlightened Mexicens themselves think nnd what they say te the peoples further south wus clearly apparent nt the greut conference called in Mr. Wilsen's first administration te bring a peace of under standing between the people of Mexico nnd ourselves. Mexico was represented nt that conference by men of culture and long ex perience In the affairs of orderly govern ment. They were devoted, Intelligent men who had pnssed through the best universi ties nnd technical schools In this country nnd Europe. They were men of The world. Franklin K. Lane, the chief representative of the government of the United States, found that no argument, no proof, no pro testations of friendship could convince these otherwise reasonable and friendly men that there was net in the mind of the people and the leaders of this country n fixed resolution te Invade Mexico oenor or later and iakti 4 e invai A 'EVENING- PUBLIC LEDGER - away its richest areas for the sake of geld, silver and oil. That is an inherited belief among many Mexicans, It Is an obsession that rises and spreads like a barrier between the two halves of the American continent and does most te turn Lntln-Amcrtcan sympathy and Latin-American trade away from the United States. New, Latin America as a whole represents a tremendously potent moral and material force in the reordered world. It is mode up for the most part of virile nnd aspiring re publics thnt can beast limitless culture, limitless, ability, limitless natural resources and a devotion te democratic ideals quite an conspicuous as our own. If halt of the American continent has turned te Europe for its culture, Its educational forms and finan cial and commercial guidance ; if in the tc ccnt war wc were in danger of having active enemies en this side of the world before the stupid nnd brutal policy of Germany wns developed te a degree that caused a rcvul rcvul tden of civilized opinion everywherc, It Is because tjic people in the United States have been content te view the people of Seuth America as strangers even while they went te infinite trouble te understand ether pee ples a world away. Every small disturbance in a Latin American republic, every Fertle of every small bandit has been made te appear in the United States like a true revelation of Seuth American life. Of the real power of these southern republics, of their nrj and their riches and their fine civilization the average man in the streets of the United States knows nnd cares little or nothing Te Seuth America wc had been sending, the rawest amateurs in diplomacy, the sharpest traders, the most cynical exploiters. Lately there has been a change for the better in our business and governmental policies. But Germany and Britain, France and Spain have bad a long start en us. Men who represent European commercial interests in Latin America arc trained and flexible minded experts. The shrewdest emissaries of kalserism worked their will for a genera tion in the southern republics. German bankers, who were te be found everywhere, were only n shade less clever and quite as devoted te the expanding fatherland as the accredited ministers of Wilheltn's govern ment. Seuth America was and still is filled with German pianos, German automobiles, Euro pean machinery, European locomotives, elec tric light plants and the like. That Is net by any means the worst of It. Seuth Amer ica was tilled with sympathy for the Euro pean countries, which it regarded as its friends. The United States was the Great Alien Power. The hope of an integrated America, of American peoples nnd governments animated by common aims and aspirations, of a whole continent justifying nnd upholding the prin ciples of democracy, has stirred successive Presidents of the United States te great efforts. That is why secretaries of state travel south. THE FIGHT FOR OIL WHETHER he knows It or net, every motorcar owner Is vitally interested in the fight of Secretory Celby te prevent mo nopolistic exploitation of the oil fields in Mexico and SIcsopetamia. In Mexico he Is Insisting en the rescinding of the confiscatery decrees made under au thority of Article XXVII of the revised Mexican constitution, and in Mesopotamia he is demanding thnt the conditions under which the United States representatives ngTecd te the mandate previsions in the peace treaty be fulfilled. Agreement was reached en the mandate plan after a long discussion, in which the Importance of preventing any nation from getting exclusive control ever the economic resources of the territory had been stressed. There was te be an open deer nnd freedom of opportunity te all the nations participating in the victory, if net te all the nations of the world. As te Mesopotamia, Secretary Celby has asked that the terms of the Mesopetnmlnn mandate be submitted te the United States before its final form Is definitely fixed. He asserts the right of the United States te be consulted, net ns a party te the treaty, but as a party te the war out of which the man date system has sprung. His pretest Is made because of the report that plans were under way te ratify the Mesopetamlan oil conces sions made by Turkey without inquiry Inte the validity of these concessions. He de mands in the interest of American oil con sumers, which include the American navy as well as American industries nnd motorcar owners, that the opportunity te explore and develop the petroleum resources of the world, wherever found, should be freely extended without discrimination. If wc, had ratified the peace treaty, Mr. Celby would occupy a stronger strategic po sition from which te carry en his fight; but It is fortunate for American interests that he can back his pretests by the assertion of the right of this country ns one of these which contributed te the victory te be con sulted in the settlement of the economic ques tions arising out of it. In Mexico he is very properly using the desire of the Obregon government for recog nition ns the lever with which te force the Mexicans into the position he wishes them te occupy. The Carranzlsta revlsleu of the constitution permitted the seizure of oil lands which had been granted te concession aires. This change in the fundamental law wns defended during the debates in the con stitutional convention nn the ground that it would make It possible te force the foreigners who had obtained oil land for a small price te disgorge what were described as their Ill gotten gains. Pretest against the iniquity of Article XXVII has been made by England and France ns well as by the United States. It is net likely that any of these powers will recognize the Mexican Government se long ns this article remains in the constitution. Its iniquity Is admitted by a large party of enlightened men in Mexico itself. When it Is repealed the development of the oil fields can be continued, te the relief of every con sumer of petroleum and its by-products. WOOD ALCOHOL THE Brooklyn uadertakcr from whom the weed alcohol was obtained which caused the death of 100 persons In Connecticut and Massachusetts lest Christmas has been con victed of stealing the stuff nnd sentenced te from three nnd a half te beven years' im prisonment. The sentence is inadequate, but it may be thnt it was impossible) te connect him di rectly with the deaths. A man who sells weed alcohol te be drunk Is ns guilty of manslaughter as though he poured any ether poison down the threat of a human being. Weed alcohol is eh deadly as strychnine or urussic acid. There are persons who go se far aB te insist that its use In the arts should be forbidden. Its fumes cause blind ness if the eyes ere long exposed te them. Painters using, it te cut shellac have lest their sight. If it is te be used at all, such safeguards should be placed about its sale that no one may get it without full knewl- l.c3e of Its poisonous nature. k r PHL'AI)El,PHi:A SA.TU&B&Y, .NOYEMBER-27, RACING AND RELIGION A Suggestion for the Sesqulcenten nlat fireat Religious Werk of University students Seme Characteristics of Rob Reb ert McAfee By GEOUGK NOX McCAIN HC. HARBACH, of Gcrmontewn, hnR e the red bleed of the true sportsman running full in his veins. He is an expert of- the track. Net the track followed by Man O' Wnr and the long line of his predecessors the racing stable In harness and out, but the track that would make Mr. Riddle's splendid speedster leek like a plodder. I mean the wide but sinuous read of the auto racers; the breed that shares with air men the pride of being the swiftest Tsc'crs en earth. Nobody who witnessed the Fnlrmeunt Ferk automobile races of 1008-00-10 can ever forget them. I wns one of the thrilled tens of thousands that bordered the gray roadside and watched the mcteor-llke ma chines flash by, turn and disappear in en veloping clouds of dust. There was excitement, fear nnd inspiration in every recurring moment. - Mr. Harbach was in a large way the directing genius of these events. He was secretary of the Fairmount Park races. The secretary Is always the official who shoulders the burden of work and worry. And Mr. Harbach had his share. HE IS new right up in the front with n suggestion of "Initial velocity" for the sesquicentennlnl automobile races that will challenge the world; contests in Fairmount Park in that yenr of our Lord 1020 that will attract international racemen nnd even pale the memories of the former decade. Mr. Harbach suggests that these auto races or contests be given under the auspices of the city of Philadelphia through Uic De partment of Public Safety. They would, of course, be given with the permission of the lalrmeunt Park Commission In co-operation with the Automobile Trade Association and all the local meter clubs. The sanction of the American automobile associations nnd the Automobile Club of America would be ebtnlned. An for the proceeds, they could go for the benefit of the police, firemen and Fairmount Park guard pension funds. A wise and beneficent suggestion. The great scoreboard of the Quaker City Moter Club's third 200-mile race in October, 1010, in phptegraphlc reproduction, is ene of Secretary Harbach'u cherished memen toes of that event. The idea is big with interesting possi bilities. AFTER n while these citizens who have been Indifferent te or Ignorant of the fnct thnt Philadelphia Is biggest in some of the grcnt things of our times will nwaken with a Jelt te a realization of the fact. Here s a new nddltlen te the long list thnt the Evkninh Puiilie Ledeeh has been pub lishing In the last nine months. Philadelphia has the most comprehensive Christian student organization in the world. Its official title Is "The Christian Asso ciation in the University of Pennsylvania." It is a great, big, earnest, helpful, Inspira tion organization that Is doing a work whose results cannot be estimated in geld and whose influence actually reaches te the uttermost ends of the rnrth. It Is officered and operated by students. There arc ndvlsery beards, te be sure, with secretaries nnd church representatives ; but the actual organization is run by under graduates. It represents officially, by ordained minis ters employed en Its staff, by representatives en Its beard of directors and by student offi effi cers. the five great evangelical denominations of the world, viz; The Northern Baptist Convention, the United Lutheran Church In America, the Methodist Episcopal Church North, the Presbyterian Church In the United States of America aud the Pretestan. Episcopal Church. HERE are some of the things it decs: It brings te the University the best si-curable speakers en social and religious themes, the best vocntlenal experts nnd the most experienced guides In personal prob lems; Works constantly In conjunction with local churches in the Interest of the students; Trains nnd sends out students In. religious groups te nearby communities; Secures remunerative employment without charge te hundreds of undergraduates each year ; Leans text-books te them at nominal cest: Provides entertainments In homes nnd re ceptions ; Conducts a University Heuse in a con gested Seuth Philadelphia district; Maintains a University camp nt Green I. a ne ; ' .lc.2te?. an international students' house at .UM. Spruce street, where young men from every foreign land are entertained- It supports three missionaries in China aud India. And It does nil this without any rnttlc of drums or spread-eagle campaigns, In the most quiet nnd unostentatious wuy imag inable. h THE religious preferences of the student body show that there are In attendance nt the University 884 Presbyterians fi'iJt Episcopalians. 620 Methodists? 343 Luther ansj -In! Baptists. 'Ihe number of Reman Catholics is 802 nnd of Jews 740. There arc also seven Mormons, two Bud dhists two Greek Catholics, ene Armeninn, one Hindu nnd one Mohammedan. Tweuty-five of the largest industrial nnd commercial corporations nnd firms in this city lend their co-operation te the work. They leek upon it us u geed investment. 1 hey regard it ns n means net only of Bpreading the gospel of Christianity, but the gospcKef high American Ideals. It's a wonderful work. ROBERT McAFEFs name has figured conspicuously during the last few weeks in the various conferences of state leaders held In this city and In Harrlsburg. lie is known as the governor-maker. He gained the title because te him mere than any one else Jehn K. Tcner owed his elec tion as Governer. Before that time, however. In 1010 Mr McAfee had served as commissioner of bank ing under appointment by Governer Penny pucker. Subsequently he was made secretary of the commonwealth, and reappointed under Governors hdwin S. Stuart and Jehn K Tener. In many respects Mr. McAfee is n re murkablc man. He Is nn Irishman of County Antrim. He came te this country a peer boy fifty-one years age. and went te work in the steel mills of Oliver Bres. & Phillips. He married the sister of United States Senater Geerge L. Shoup, of Idaho who died some years age. She was a bril liant and cultured woman. Through all the vicissitudes of hlR political life Rebert McAfee has been a stanch and loyal adherent of the Olivers of Pittsburgh He helped te make Geerge T. Oliver United States senator. New he is helping te fight the battles of the third generation of the family. His faithfulness is akin te the Old World feudal loyalty that knew no weakening in success or adversity. Easy Come, Easy Ge Frem the Concordia (Kan.) Ulade-Ernplre. The hardest job in the wheat belt this sea sea seu was te keep the harvest participants from running off and Jeiulng one of these widely advertised tours te Europe. Restraint rrem tha New Yerk Herald. The shipping beard paid $101 te put an eighty-three-cent hlngein a galley deer. It is only fair te Bay, however, thut net mere than two men were detailed te keeping the binge eilpd. Ne Relief Left Frem the Portland Praia. Four years nge the defeated candidates could drewu their sorrows, "but they can't tyea aq.fjiui. tvuaja. i NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Knew Best DR. LEON LEGRAIN On Ancient Babylonian Civilizations ABETTER understanding by the general public of the undent Babylonian civili zations, net as nrcheoleglcal mysteries but as civilizations pretty much like ours of today, is urged by Dr. Leen I.egraln. rurater of the Babylonian section of the University Mu seum. Dr. I.egrnin recently gave up his profes sorship In the University of Paris te take up his duties here. a If any one has the idea that these duties are light he hns only te visit Dr. Lcgrnln's eflice te reallre his mistake. The University Museum possesses the famous collection of tablets unenrthed from the ruins of Nippur. There nre l.l.OOO tablets nnd It is Dr. Ln graln's task te translate, nrrangc nnd record these tablets in their proper sequence, a work which is probably new no mere than half completed. "Philadelphia, probably mere than any ether city In the United Stntes. should he in terested in the discoveries in this grent lanel of ancient civilizations," dcclnred Dr. Le grain, "since it was tin expedition sent out hy the University of Pennsylvania nnd this Museum that made what are probably the most Important of all archeological discov eries, that of the Nippur tablets. Alse the collection right here in the Museum easily runks with, if net above, these great collec tions in the Leuvre nnd the British Museum. First Excavations by French "The first great exenvntiens were made by the French, principally under the direction of 51. de Snrze, between 1S77 nnd 18S1 In nnd around the ruins of Lngas, nlse cnlled Tclle, which Is about 1.10 miles southwest of Ba'g dad. The French also, at a later prried, made important discoveries In the mountains te the cast of the city of Susa. "The Germans made explorations in the lands further north and also in the city of Babylon, which is nlinest In the center of this grcnt plain between the rivers Euphrates and Tigris. The land, generally known ns Babylonia, should mere properly be termed, in its archeological phase, Sumcrin, or the land of the Sumt'i'lans, as differentiated from the Akkadians, te the north. "One of the grent features of the excava tions In this land has been the almost ceitnln proof that these two peoples were of differ ent races, the Akkadians being Semitic, direct ancestors of the Jews, and the Sume rlans of some ether race net finally deter mined. Babylon does net nppear In the records until the year 2000 B. C. hut the tablets here, dealing with various groups of the Rumerlnns, carry us uninterruptedly back te nearly 4000 B. C. Dynasties Net Enduring "In these very ancient days there were no long enduring dynasties like these of Babylon or Assyria or Persia. One city or one group of people would held dominance for n short period, perhaps only a hundred years, and would then be conquered nnd overcome. Among these brief-lived centers were Lagas, Ur, Urak and perhaps a score of ethers. "Nippur was net n political entity but a religious city something like Mecca, holy city of the Mehammedans, It endured ns the various city powers rose and fell. The shrines and temples of the ancient gods were there, and the various rulers of the conquer ing cities took geed care te protect Nippur from nil harm. This is the reason that the tablets unenrthed by the Pennsylvania ex pedition In Nippur are se very important. They give us the records of nil the cities, end carry us further back than nny ether known records. "There seems te be some doubt as te just what these tablets contain which makes them se Important te nrcheoleglsts. On them nre found mere than a mere listing of the kings, although such data are found in complete form. We have the vnrleus subjects treated en the tablets listed and they include pol itics, business, religion, education, arts, astrology nnd many ethers. Treaties Like Modern Ones "Treaties just ns complete and as com plex as that of Versailles are found detailed en thu tablets; psalms, hymns and prayers, forming a complete and elaborate form of worship, arc included ; an outlined system of education that might contain suggestions net amiss for the Beard of Education here is described. "These peoples knew the arts, tee. Their lltcrature contains epic poems detailing the adventures of great heroes and praising the gods. They had statues, tee. which, whlle stiff and wooden like all art of the old days, are remarkable considering the circum stances. "Their methods of banking nnd gencrnl business details are explained te us fully bv the tablets. We knew that geld, silver anil corn were three forms of currency and that ir banks .accepted ucppsittt pi corn, ,-and 1920 . THE 'CAPTAIN AND THE MUTINEERS . jlenlj: In corn ns readily ns in metals. The latter were vnltied en their weight and were merely masses of geld or silver, as the case might be. The ratio of their values was about one te six, which shows n much smaller value for geld In relntlen te silver than new exists. The coins of the day, or rnther the names given te the masses of metal, were the pound, the shekel and the talent, familiar te us in biblicnl study. Ne Prohibition Then "There was no prohibition in these years around 2000 B. C. Wine was a common beverage and the people even made a sort of beer. The wine, besides being made from the mere usual fruits, wns sometimes con cocted from dates. Wc find en one tablet the interesting item that the women who kept public houses in these days and this seemed te be a woman's work were watched very closely by the police. "The uomen were held strictly respon sible for any rioting or disorder in their houses and if convicted were thrown in the nearest river with a stone tied around their neck. It is evident that although the Sumerlans did net oppose drinking they would net tolerate what is generally known in our courts ns 'disorderly conduct. " '.Tnz.' may have been known te these nncients : nt nny rate iuubIc was favored by them and formed n part of their everyday life. They had the bagpipe and the harp, as well ns some ether instruments net clearly Identified. The records nlse state that they made music by clapping their hands. "One feature of our modern civilization wns, however, practically unknown te the Sumerlans nnd Akkadlnns. That was 'bol 'bel shcvlsm' or 'radical' tendencies. Their kings. In nddltlen te having jmlltical power and distinction, had n sort of religious aspect as direct ngents of the gods. They ruled by the well-known 'divine right' and their weid wns law. "Taken as a whole, In that they tell us se many, many things, open up new fields and shed new lights en such great, mysterious fundamentals as thp creation and the flood, these records and tablets are, in a scientific or nrcheoleglcal sense, of the highest im portance. We must nlse come te realize that they arc equally important in displaying t us a wonderful civilization, whose men nnd women lived nnd acted much as we de, from whom wc have obtained many of our every day customs of life, and te whom wc are. therefore, closely linked. The great mass of the public should catch this human, per sonal note." What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1. What Is the origin of the phrase, "CJed tempers the wind te the Bhern lamb"? 2. What Is n medicaster? , 3. Hew far away from the earth Is the sun? 4. What was the middle name of President Garfield? 5. What nre the names of the four chief wars fought between the French and the English for the control of North America? C. When did Daniel Defee live? 7 WJmt.u'lr.0 "I0 Principal languages of Seuth America? 8. Who was Epicurus and of what phllose- phy was he the exponent? . Frem whnt Is rattan obtained? 10. What Is the literal meaning of "e.ing- Answers te Yesterday's Quiz 1. Tha first Chinese exclusion nw was passed by Congress thlrty-twe years age. It wns superseded In 1893 bv n morn drastic act known as the Gear? Force"0 'xt'lusUm lttw- wh'ch I. atiffln S. A rsalapreplsm Is n ludicrous mlsun nf rbiinrTaw i' Mrs. Malaprep, the queen of mill'0 Rivals."" SherWan8 "tt'K 3. Lord Chesterfield, the famous author of S.Vmln"!1'8, ,en ma"rH and conduct StanheU0 hlS 80"' Waa I,hl"l1 "w 4. He was born In the latter part of th seventeenth century nnd lived it ?,.! . nearly ihre. quartern of t ' U Sh century. His dates nre 11591. S"1"1 5. The Pilgrims nt Plymouth made nn ,.n successful experiment In cem,i,?jn" from 1620 te about 10"? c"m'n"nlsin ' gauntlet." SCU Wr,e the 8""y "d- 7. A de Jure government Is one that exists rightfully, by right cf law. ' ,s 8, In the battle of Iluena viam . i- i cans under Qenernl Santa Ana 10. Brazil was discovered In 1499 bv Vleenta Yunez Pinzen. a companion Celum- bus. ru SHORT EUTS Begin your Christmas shopping by out. ing Red Cress stamps. Toe many reform movements end witi the hiring of a press agent. A big salt field has been found in Al berta. Wonder if that is where Bryan burled his heart? It may be that the Russian soviet hu abolished money en account of the paper shortage. 1 Diplomatists nre undecided whether te stress the first or the third syllable of Meso potamia. Thanksgiving races seemed te prove that there is less danger lu flying than in auto mobile racing. ... . Pcrhnps it was the desire of Magistrate Vt rigley te draw attention te the uselcssnws of a coroner's office. Banditry has brought home the fact that the engine of the law must nlse be installed in the motorcycle. International events seem bent en prov ing the falsity of the proverb concerning oil en troubled waters. Mr. Gilbert knew what he was Ullini about when he said that a policeman's let was net a happy one. Mississippi comes te the front te prera that what actuates n mob is net dcslre for justice, but lust for bleed. It begins te appear that Lcnine bn spent se much geld en propaganda that he hasn't any left for trade. If babies could read the papers they would doubtless consider the fact that milk is coming down as the cream of the news. Mayer Moere has nn illustration of he extremes meet when the forces of evil and the unce' guld Jein te hamper his adtnlnli tratien. "The best it part of a holiday is the da; It"' Headline. "Darn these that fellows health v optimists!" Grouch. cried the Dyspeptic And it may be thnt the big-brotherly attitude of philanthropic bitter-enders will be found by Europe tee darned patrenlzini te be palatable. The fact that rises te puzzle the amateur criminologist (and the professional for that matter) Is that se many alleged thieves and murderers don't leek the part. Constantine's pledge te the Allies that he will net change the foreign policy of Greece is doubtless based en the conviction that a change would net be geed for his health. We are already vitally Interested in the business affairs of Europe. The matter at issue, in the case of the League of Nations, is whether or net we shall accept a position en the beard of directors. The fnentnl attitude of Knox and ethers that we shall always be free te enter Inte European affairs when our friends need help takes no cngnizance of the fact that we can not "cuter" when we nre already "In. The first page pf any newspaper new edays proves that en the world's stage tragedy has been followed by the cheap melodrama of banditry and crimes of vio lence. Seme day we'll get back te hlgn comedy such as Revising the Tariff of Menkeying with an Ad Valerem. Right new we are going te quit worry ing about the young Bosteu man who bai refused nn inheritance of 81,000,000. Per haps he knows he will make mere of a suc cess as an automobile mechanic than millionaire. But what a grouch he'll b" If he ever changes his mind! Net the least of the lust complaints that tan be levied against the members of tot Wilsen cabinet Is that there Is net a grett scoundrel among them. What Jey there would be in trouncing an adult-sized knare. What pleasure in whipping u miscreant w at least knew hew te scrap! But that ihfactien has been denied a patient nn(V0D,fj! suffering people. Incompetence coupled win conscious rectitude and buttressed by con celt Is deaf te censure, blind te criticism n proof against all attuck. And Mr. IlJf'J typifies the bunch. Net a darned ttunf wrong with the dear little man except th" he Is n dear little n.an. Stories from MB' den aud Paris of honors te the iiiikiied dead may stir the hearts of his ceiintrjmWj but net the heart of Mr. Baker. Nay, nayi Locking both vision and Imagination. , walks the path of duty with prim preeW ; and aevcr drops a stitch 1 ( "fr I c. tfnfl rrrWsmmn -r, ..-tit... I -j aJir' ,,