Sr.yt nirv rs - v r i-:v . ji .. t;' !, . SET ? r'S" 'HWV1 r' ''. 4. I M V. "r o 10 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEIPHILAJDELPHIA, MONDAY, MAKOH 2i, 1921 wfrv&yfXtp,"V -.'-"""v- y;.v,'BvvA" 1 I Ij'-BZt lf JL s.? V -F 'rsmm jn ?& ' . 'LW '..'J ' W ?!!! ftJS . .PB'ras & r' r , .4. i J r' 'i i V X . ' ., I .. 'J ia . ' (; ..'; .'. 'ii M it V ;.. r- -nr W" 1 M.1 mwMfa ril J -.Hfii I'.lllH .i M-l W ililcST-1 , wMBRkT i K" Ft1"! - W .1 aVi S I fi " I , " ' f W j kl'fil.l .;.- ' I 1 M 'ttS'Jtt.ft rill IP f ' '" l liv hi' X f?UBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ernes 11. k. cuims, pximidbnt . Chnrlen H. l.urtliwton. Vice Preald-nt. John C. Itartln, Trea-tirr: Charln A. Tyler. Secretary, rhllip H. Collltii, John U. Williams. John J. Wmirit.iin. Cloumi) I". tlolilnmkflt, Luvld U. smite) . Directors KDITOni.VI, IToAIU) ('tit a II. K Crane, Chairman TUnn K. g.MH.BT. .. TMItot JCHINC. MAKTIN'. UnenilMlu-l'e?M'Manate- Iljbtleh.d dally l 1'cdi.ic t.mu nutldlng Independence Square, Philadelphia. AtLIMTIC ClTt IVcM-OkM Hulkllng Kw Toic S04 MMImn Ar DrmotT ;n rorrt null.llpg I-otH 013 Clobr-Ormocrnt ItulHlne Cniooo J802 Trilntn Hullillr sews m-nnAVs. Vloo Ucxtuv, S n. lr. 1'rnnavtnla A. nt Jt!i .'t K 1ok llitc The Sui liulMlnif lo.sroN litKur Ijndon nin SfnsC'KIPTION TEHSIS rh Uvr.MMi rcuLlc l.DKim Is ftnnl to nub crlbern In I'hlla4lt'hla nntl nurroundlnx town at tno mij of twelve V1 cnti Mr wtek. taybl to ths crrlfr. Dy nvall to vlntn outjlda of rhilidflphl. In tno United Stm-n Candn. or L'nlted tAt poi ilons, potae frf. rttty (50) cent? pr month. 8lx (Id) dollar pr vvar. iybl In advanc To all for. Ikii countries one III) dollar a month, OTIC! Subicriber nlahlnf addreca ehanred mut lv old as well o new addreo, max. 10W WALMT KEYSTONE. M.UN 3000 TT Address nil cwnmaiitccMoiis lo Kvtnlno Publle lrtdgtr, lidtmdrnc gouai-e, I'hitattrltla Member of the Associated Press 1HU ABSOCIATF.D PRESS exeluJii-eiV Hll'a to the vc 'or republU-aUm or all n dispatches credited lo it or not ofJimrijr credited n this fiatir and also tlie local iiiim published thtrrlw. AH rights nt republication of special ditratehts 'rctn nre alto reserved. rbilxMphU, Mondir, Mirth 21, P2i WORK AHEAD IN HARRISBURC SOMK (Towdod hours of glorious or in Klnriniis llfn nro m stdro (or 1 ln lVnn KTlvnuin Legislature. Ailjourninvnt planned for the end of Anril and April 7 has hren fixed us thi- Inn day for siibniittiiit: bills. Thus devised, the ro.tor preanges tlio usunl rush poriod, for o far only ricliteen mens tiros have lieeomc laws by tlio uiprovnl of tlio Gorerniir, und few of three are of major Importanrc. The school appropriation meas ures arc nupassed. The Sterllne bill. ehanR irjR the method of choosing the Hoard of Education of Philadelphia, now apparently stands but u slim ehoncc of paMaje. The reapportionment bills, so productive of po litical heartburnings, have not yet been pro entotl. Jberc ore before the Senate 1082 measures pc&a the House hat liuO in hand. More than half thi- time allotted to the kevsdon has clipped by. Kucrer nntl the ability and n-illinRnovs to distinguish vitn.1 from foolish und extravagant programs aix obviously needed to vernier the coming six week n creditable period in llarrisburj. fp to elate thf ljejjtlntnre's actual performan'o has been tiiunspiringly negative. DEBS: BOAT-ROCKER DnilS. prophet-in-ehief of undilufd ."-o-eialir-m in the I'nited States, rocked the boat uith enercj . enthusiasm and fonati'1 leal at it tiini- when no landing was in s-ight : when on every side people, government", the institutions of civilization and even the lights by vvhi'ii nge hnvu teercd were beiug en gulfed in troubled waters Once it was supposed that Dcb. despite all his ways of thinking, was humane and of generous disposition. During his term in jail he has done his utmost to banish thut impression. He hns been n noisy prisoner. He made his cell a sort of pulpit from which to preach to his clans. And what he has tried to tench them is that bouts should be rocked in storms. He was supposed to be in some vvnvn wise. Hut he is still tin nbl' to understand that the President of the Vnitcd States and those associated with him do not make the storms or create the tumult of heavy water' and that their sole duty to themselves and to humanity was to keep their vessel afloat anil bring it snfe to a harbor. Hornuse they did that Debs antag onized, insulted and misrepresented them with all the power of his lungs. Debs may be said to have done more than any other man now alive to discourage those who sincerely believe in political liberalism and its accepted prophets und to give im petus to the wave of reactionary opinion that threatened to sweep the country after the war ended. Whether he is kept in jail or liberated does not greatly matter. Even as o voire )eh has censed to he of any im portnrce to his friends or his opponents. He didn't know truth in n crisis. Aud when it was presented to him he turnd his back upon it. SWORD-RATTLING AGAIN MYSTKItHJl'Sl.Y. suddenly nml without wnrning or am visible incentive, toll; of intervention in Mexico has been renewed in Washington. Newspapers known to be "close to" the people who always have ached to see Mexico disciplined by an Amer ican army are finding great fault with Pros idem Oliregon nnil his methods. They find that he hns not carried nut his promises, that he has not set up an ideal government or brought about an eia of sweetness and light, though he has had nlinnt six months in which to miik" his country over, pacify it. reorganize it und give it a new point of view. To Obregon and ht- colleagues this sudden clatter in the 1 nited States will sound as strange and as mystifying as the astonish ing uproar whi-h turned the getie-.i! ntten tion of the I'nited States uti Panama and Costa Illcu The Mexican president will do what the, average American did He will merely pause und wonder. Me will he curi ous to know who is turning the .rank Obregon is merelj trving, against iniher heavy odds to bring something like order out of the tangle in v Inch Mexican affairs were left by a long line of vicious or mipo tent predecessors. Kisi -shaking and stvord-' rattling on the border certainly will not help him. And the people who like to sneer nt Mexienn officials are in this instance any thing but consistent. They are issuing warnings to the new president of Mexico because he has not linished In n fw mouths a Job that no living man could hope fully to accomplish within a generation PRICES VS. WAGES IjXIOD prices in this country dropped ap , proximately 1!1 per ci m situ c January 1. Til" statistics upon nhuh this isijmate rests were gathered and n ported bj the Federal Bttreu'i of Labor Statistn sV The cost of essential food khH shows downward trend In l-'chruan there was a 1 per cent decline from th nveruge level,., of January Shoes and lothing have been returuiux even more .wiftly than food to what the country rcgiinh as normal pines Rents, remain liigh as high, in must in stances IIS tllej were w in I c cost of living reached the topmost peak in t'o- spring of ll)2t. War prices centinue in the coal markets, and passenger and freight rates on the ini'wnys are higher than they were in the vears of the wai. So are trolley ares, which must he listed among essential items in a family budget. There has been a mniiicd dee'ine in the cost of building materials, but brick, lum ber, uullwork, cement, steel, stone, synd and the like are still held at rates fur in zeess of those of pre -war .'ears. It is estimated that a drop of 70 per cent all along the line would be necessar.v to bring llie living oMs of an average fnuiilj down to tho levels established generalh in the I'nited States before the outbreak of th war- Labor blames the employing orgauizatlonu and the employing organizations blame labor for apparent inequalities of proposed new wage schedules and current living costs, lint it Is hard to put the blame on any otic group and unfair to suggest that any one is wholly. Innocent. It Is true that wages are dropping faster than living costs In many instances, nnil that tho cuts suggested by the railway companies arc greater than any thus far made in the prices of the essentials of life. The country is feeling its way ns best It can through the fogs and confusion created by war. It would be fairer, perhnps. if such wage readjustments as nre really necessary could lie made slowly and gradtinlly. That docs not seem to be possible. It is likely that the present downward drift of prices will con tinue. Wage schedules now being promul gated will remain stationary. What Is re quired l patience: but Jt is necessary to ndnilt that wage earners, whose earnings cannot bo stretched even to meet declining eots of the necessities of life need, and often exhibit, most of It. Average wage reductions announced since Inst autumn represent approximately "2,'X per cent in most industries. The cost of living, of food, shelter, coal nnd wearing apparel, medicines, carfare and the like has fallen, on the whole, not more than 1." per cent. A TAX THAT EVERY ONE WOULD HAVE TO PAY The Proposed Levy on Sales, Either Retail or Wholesale, Would Distribute the Burden on All Consumers IN SPITE of the difficulties in the way of its application, sentiment among lend ers In Congress is turning toward the im position of some kind of a sales tax. They have become convinced that the excess-profits tox and some of the higher surtaxes on incomes are so burdensome Rnd destructive that revenue must be raised in n different way. The extremely high taxes on large profits and big incomes were levied on the theory that the rich could be made to pay. Hut these taxes have brought hardship to the very groups of society which they were in tended to protect. They have diverted from the expansion of business into the public treasury large sums which ordinarily would have been used to supply new capital for industry. And in many instances the money has come, not from the men wbo pay it in the first place, but from the ultimate con sumers. These taxes have been responsible in a large measure for the prcvnillng high prices of recent years. Other causes hove affected prices, it Is true, but the money taken by the government in an unwise and unscientific plan of taxation has been strangling business and destroying the very vourees from which future taxes can be collected. Two kinds of a sales tax are proposed. One is known ns a turnover tax ; that is. n tax on the gross sale of every business in the country, wholesale or retail. It is esti mated that such u tax would yield .5.000. 0(10.000 a year if it were levied at the rate of 1 per cent. Those who object to the turnover tax saT. and with some degree of truth, that as it would he cumulative, being added to the price of nn nrticle every time it changed hands between the time it left the manufac turer till it reached the ultimate consumer, it would become burdensome. For example, it is said that n turnover tax of 1 per cent on a pair of shoes selling for ..") would add fifteen cents to the cost of th" shoes, ns a tax would be paid first by the manufac turer, second by the jobber and third by the final purchaser. Hut this leaves out of account the business custom of adding n certain per cent for profit to every item that enters into the cost of a commodity. The manufacturer who had to pay five cents tax on a pair of shoes would probably add teveti cents to the price, the jobber would make that seven cents still more. ay ten cents nt n minimum, nnd the retailer would add twenty or twenty-five cents to his price. The government would get its fifteen cents, but the ultimate consumer would have to pay twenty or twenty-five cents. The ndvoeates of the second kind of a tales tax insist that it would he free from Ihcsc objections. They would have the tai levied only on the final sale. Thus, the I per cent tax on a pair of shoes worth ?." would be only five cents and only ten n-nts on a S10 pair of shoes. They argue that it could he levied and collected just us easily as the tax on medicines and certain toilet nrtiiles is now levied and collected b the drug stores. The merchant buvs a supply of revenue stamps and attaches them to the article when sold and collects the money from the purchaser. It has been estimated that, such a tnx would produce an annual revenue of $2.00(1.000.000. or about one half the amount needed by the government. A moment's consideration will show to any one fninilinr with business methods that there would be many difficulties: in the waj of working out nn equitable application of such a tnx. Whether they are regarded in insurmountable will depend in large measure on whether the person raising the obje, tions wishes to find a way out or is unalterably opposed to any kind of it sales tnx What, for example should be the tn. on ii package of biscuits now sellinc m the grocery stores for eight cents? How is the sale of newspapers and magazines to he taxed? Ik it expedient to exempt from the un the sale of all nrtiiles the retail price of which is less than .$1 or is tne tax to be levied on the total amount of the pun bases made at one time regardless of ihe price of ea'h nrticle? Are total sales of les- than 1 to be exempted? Ami if so, what is to be done to prevent the thrifty from going into ,i store and buying ninety -live cents worth of goods, paying for them, nnd going mil nt the door and coining right back again and buying ninety-five cents worth more, and repenting the operation ns long n lie pleases'? This way of beating the 'n was resorted ' by men who wanted to get two quarts of borr in a saloon when the saloon keeper was allowed to sell only one quart to a i usMinor. Two men would go m wiih a pitcher nntl each would buy n qi.nrt or the same man would go in and buv a quart Then ho would go outside of the door ami i omc right back again and buy his second quart, und repeut the process fill he ot all he wanted Hut no one thinks that n sales-tux law ',m be frnined which annul he evaded in some way Ways have been found to evade the income-lux law and lh" l.iw tuxtug excess profits Hut considerable revenue has been raised by these taxes The ules nn w nduiittediv exper.menta. in the I'niled States Itcaiise of this Otto II. Knhn. one of the soundest icnnoimc thinkers in the oiintrv. lias suggested that it he listed before being adopted ns one of tip' primary munes of revenui Hi, propo sition is that a gross -ales or turnover tax. confined to oniiuoditics exempting tin products of the fnrins--bc levied at tin. rate of one-third of 1 per not. This, ,i thinks, is so siniill that n wnj, ,,nt Ne burdensome on am one. vet In estimates that it would rain- at least !,",o.noii,(ioo a yenr. or about the amount produced by the pnsint excess -profits tux. If it wire found io wort, satisfactorih , then the rat ild lie increased; and it' it did not work out well the experiment could be continued in a different way until plan was found ilmt would both produce revenue and encourage business. Mr Kulm i not dogmatic nienn it 1 1, udniits that he lilts eome doiilits hut when the nuti"n Is confronted with tin neces-ity of raining permanent revenys of vaster amount than ever before, it Is necessary to I! find some way to do it which is free from the objections, thot lie ngalnst the hastily devised war taxes, As the members of Congress approach tho task before them they nre coming to agree with Mr. Knhn, not because lie lias set forth his views, but because when confronted by the facts they are forced to come to the same conclusions which this distinguished New York banker has reached. It may be too much to hope tbat Congress will approach the whole question in a Judi cial temper. The members ore politicians. They hold office because they have been able to convince their constituents that tlicy nre "friends of the pecpul." Their determina tion to moke the rich pay tho cost of the war through the surtaxes on incomes and through tlio excess -profits tax was dema gogic. They will find it difficult to rcfrnln froth the same kind of demagogy In framing new tax laws. Hut they ought to exercise all their self-control nnd fnee the situation in the temper of meu who wish to solve the problem rnther than in that of men who arc merely seeking to pandrr to the prejudices of the uninformed in the hope of winning votes. OUR GREAT BEER MYSTERY THE tone ns well as the text of Attorney General Dougherty's final comment on the now famous beer ruling of Mr. Pnlmer was such as to make the country pause and iwnder. The dry forces were rallied not only In Washington but throughout the country to force n, revision of the decision under which n doctor may prescribe n keg of beer for a patient or even n vnnlond of nle. It wns freely prophesied tlint Mr. Dougherty would moke wreckage of the ruling Issued by his Democratic predecessor. He has done no such thing. "A case of this kind," said the attorney geuernl. "will not be reviewed at the re quest of any organization like the Anti Saloon League." Self-determination for the representatives of government seems to be pretty firmly, established for the time at least in Washington. The breweries, according to nil reports, nro firing up in nn atmosphere of jubilation. It was 5Ir, Palmer himself who suggested that before long beer might be bought nt sodn fountnins. A country trying to adjust itself decently to n law which nobody seems able to understand or clearly define is drift ing further into bewilderment. And it is altogether probable that a poll of the population would show nine out of ten persons to be pretty thoroughly disgusted with tho work of the extremists on both sides of the prohibition question, who ore responsible for the present disgraceful con fusion and tho debasement of n federal law. A NEW STATE FANTASY DISSATISFACTION with Mate frontiers Is n spirit which has. fortunately, been but little manifested in the tide of American federal history. The fostering of such a sentiment would naturally lead to almost interminable complication, and it is hence unlikely that the singular movement origi nating In northern Idaho will pass beyond tiie stage of harmless discussion. The scheme, for which a propaganda fund in the modern style is sought, involves the formation of the new state of Lincoln out of the Idaho panhandle and adjoining parts of Montana and Washington. The acquisi tion from the latter state would include the important city of Spokane, alrendy picked by the propagandists as the capital. The opinions of Washington nnd Montnnn folk on this project have not yet come East, but it is not extravagant to forecast an un favorable verdict. There is. indeed, but a single instance that of West Virginia in an exceptional crisis of radical alteration in interstate boundaries aftr admission of nnv common wealth to the American federation. In Texas, it is true, changes nre still within the renlm of possibility, since the net ad mitting that state to tho I'nlon in 1S45 im posed the condition thnt nt nny future date the largest of our sovereign commonwealths might be enrved into four quarters privi leged to solicit congressional approval. The time is perhaps coming when n state approximately as large us continental Franco will be divided. There Would be nothing fantastic in Midi a process. Hut the Idaho idea appears distinctly impractical and is interesting chiefly for its rather nnive oddity. RUSSO-POLISH PEACE AI.AH.MISTS who prophesied a reopening of Kusso-Polish strife with the advent of spring will experience some difficulty in reconciling, this forecast with the news t hut a definite peace lias been sinned at Minsk. Thirty days are given for ratification by the Warsaw and Moscow governments. Poland is to receive an indemnity of .'10.000,000 gold rubles. The frontiers are in the main those agreed upon between the former belligerents in the preliminary peace drafts outlined some mouths ngo. M. Durtiski. the chief Polish representative, in reviewing the events lending to the consum mation of the pact, particularly emphasized the good feeling in which the negotiations were carried out. The fact i.s thai Itoth Soviet Htissia and Poland embarked upon perilous and costly military adventuns last summer. The pen alty for Polish aggression was a severe scare whiih reacted throughout all western Eu rope. Soviet Hussia also presumably ui quired a sense of realities when the difficul ties and burdens of world-conquest ambitions were demonstrated by the Polih counter attacks. All in ull. it was a miserable business, in which neither side was guiltless. The pros pect thnt n repetition of it is exceedingly small is one of the most t htering pieces of information that has come out of a war weary continent for some time HEX CI ItUENT revelations of the extent to which hocus-pocus, vnodnoism. hex doc tormg and the arts of witchcraft thrive and prosper in Herks nnd adjoining counties have astonished newspaper rentiers. The dnv was supposed to have pas-cd when in this part of the world any one would seek to find relief from suffering or confusion by charms and incantations. And yet one might stop to determine how much of modern polities is made up exclu sively of incantation and chant, 'llie query will rise naturally in a curiou- mind when it is observed that the usual reaction has followed in Harrisburg upon disclosures of rampant voodoolsm in many of the agricul tural counties. There nre to he "tighter laws" and ttututc. directed against witch doetius Everybody ought to know that muttering und mumblings ami speeches and a waving of hands cannot cure disease Everybody ought to know, too, that mutterings and mumblings and incantations and chntitings and wavings of hands cannot cure ill, due to political, social or economic causes. There ought to he an end of voodoolsm ill the Peiinsvlvifnin hinterland nd there ought to he nn end in political witih doctor ing in the State Legislature The expressed opinion of n Vew York jinige ihat blondes are fickle has ,cen nmdi fieil by the opinions generally expressed that this is ouh true of chemical blondes. The general opinion may be founded on fact, and the fact iiiiiv have solid foundation and he readily explainable There is something noiablv unstable in blenched hair Even if ii does not change color altogether, it will :i-suieiliy take on natural tints as it grows How en ii n girl he expected to be settled In hir mind when the temple of what she calls Iter brain Is bedecked with corn-colored hair that vvuiils to be brown and may turn green? 4 AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT The Meek Who Inherit th6 Earth Are Probably Gardeners There Is Rest for the Weary In the Han dling of a Hoe- Hy HAKAH D. LOYVHIH XJOT long ngo a woman was explaining AN to nic the work of nn organization in which she was deeply Interested. As she talked her face grew pale nnd drawn nnd little blotches of red came out on htfr arms and wrists nnd on her neck, while the pupils of her eyes contracted to mere pin points. Her voice, which had beVn ordinarily mellow to start with, got tense with the rest of her, so that her tones were shrill nnd overempha sized. It was very difficult to listen to her storv of (he wrongs she wns attempting to combat without becoming Infected oneself hy her nervousness, only with nic it took the form of pin pricks all over mo, nnd I had to exercise positive self-control to sit quiet and allow her to complete her report. Tho minute she departed und I could turn to some one else nil restlvcness left me nnd a mill pond could not hnvc been calmer. Two nights Inter her name enmo up in, the course of conversation nt dinner nnd sdme one present casually put her down ns a subject for psychopathic trentment, while nnothcr person opined thut she was just n crnnk. I doubt If she is either to nny dan gerous degree, but I think she is n very tired and not a very happy woman wbo has" let herself loose on the public, with a Cause. She hurts her cause by her uiihapplness and by her fatigue nnd by her letting herself loo3C quite ns much, if not more, thnn she heltis it, because the imrrcsslon that she strives to give is blurred by tho impression of herself. I suppose she thinks of herself ns willing to bo persecuted or even to die in harness for her cause; but the truth of the matter is she would get it over far better If she could get herself thoroughly liked and ad mired for It if slio did not nppenr to be dying from strnin under it instcud of living with great und encouraged hope for it. INTENSE souls con always get n hearing, but generally it is little more than n hearing of wonder and curiosity, with a kind of aftermath of pessimism. It is the buoyant, serene souls that get a following. A man said to me of a certain enthusiast, in this town: "Why, gracious, it is not thnt she tries to hustle you and me ! She would hustle the Creator if she could!" I do not know nny better cure for that particular form of irreverence than gnrden ing. And ns these spring nays mnko us town folk n little languid about our board meetings and n little wistful for certain countrysides whoso contours nre as familiar and ns dear as the faces of our friends, per haps it would be as well to take the hint some day soon and go off and find our level among the things of nature that by long habit have acquired the great virtue of never arriving too soon nor yet too late, but al ways just on time. Nnttire is n great mistress. You cannot deceive her by cunning or capture her by the blowing of trumpets; you cannot cajole her by promises or frighten her by violence. You cannot dictate to her n new law or worry her into abrogating nn old one. Hurrying her will not force her secret ; bullying her will not wrest from her n single clue. No flat tery will make a flower grow. Y'ou may be clever at a bargain, but you cannot bargain with nature. She fixes the price and the time and the process. Nor docs she ever wholly part with her possessions. She has a long memory for places. . Time is her con federate and lets her back into her old prem ises, over a ruined wall, through a broken hedge, to work her will; the beasts and the winds nnd the birds arc her allies, her children. THERE is a dictum in the Hentitudcs that used to puzzle me : "Hlessed nre the meek: for they shall in herit the earth." It is the last thing thnt one would think they would get "the earth '." 1 went to the dictionary, thinking that the vision which "meek" evoked must be a caricature. Rut no; the meek nre even more so than I dreamed I To he meek is to he "gentle." submissive, yielding, mild of temper, un assuming, patient '. All these pneked to gether make n mnu fit to inherit the earth. He does not hove to push and strive after it ; it is his naturally: he is born to it. If the gardener s earth, not the capital ist's, is meant, then surely it is pluin enough. All simple folk, from St. Francis to David (irnyson. nil gnrdeneis, fanners, naturalists, artists, the poets and philosophers of nature, all to whom the earth has yielded her se crets, have been the iever.se of proud men, arrogant, impatient men. From CincinnnttiK to Hurbnnk thev have Biihmilteil themselves to Nature's laws and yielded to her dictates with a reverence that was patent to nil men. (ientle they must be who deal with animals or plonts, mild of temper and patient, or they court catas trophe as they grow in wisdom they must perforce grow in wonder and in admiration and in humility. Put your naturalist, your farmer, your nntural philosopher, omong n crowd of world hustlers; gentleness, submissive yield ing to the world's laws, mildness nnd pa tience will not get thnt world ; he will be lucky if he docs not get the poorhouse. Put him in n garden nnd his gentleness is a money-maker, his patience n master touch, his humility in the presence of great facts of nature and his submission to law give him the essential quality for success. I WAS talking ibis evening to n grent healer of mental ills, Dr. Charles K. Mills, nnd he said his recipe for keeping one's brain tit good order was to use it ! He was discussing with a few of us a very modern book by a mnn named Kempt on psycho-analysis, and lightly as one would run one's lingers over a scale he compared it to kindred hooks on the same subject from Freud to Suetonius, thereby proving casually thnt he practiced what he preached. There are. I should think, some few men and women who, like him, find their relaxation from active work in n mellow, leisurely ex amination of other mens theories; but'inost of us lire too tired to read when we arc tired without dropping off to sleep. That is where gardening comes in '. The physical port of it keeps our liodles alert without nervous fatigue, ond all the happy growing sights and sounds about us. the pleasant smells, the comfortable natural things to touch nnd handle, give us n sense of being part of n great whole. We niergo into somctlimg greater than ourselves, greater thnn our span of days. We feel humility without humiliation. Our hurry slips from us like a garment, and serenitv, that difficult height to ottaln, that strong hold once possessed, seems of a midden ours brjftud man's power to give or to tukc away. A good nnd nblc executive to gel ie suits should be allowed to choose his own working force. Not nU executive,, are able. Not nil the utile ones nre good. An execu tive who puts political power above the public weul will prefer faithfulness in his henchmen to efficiency In his subordinate,,. So in public life n check is wisely put upon the executive by the civil service regulations. Public employes must first he competent and then they must be protected in their jobs; a desirable coudit.nn that puts the kibosh on that other desirable condition where the good nnd able executive is permitted to choose his fellow workers. Here there is a task for John Q. Compromise. There is no valid reason why nn executive should not be allowed to build up n "machine" so long as it is a competent and on honest one. So John I. Compromise would suggest that prospective i.fIiceiol(er.s continue to be ex iimlnrd for fitness nnd that the executive be allowed to choose from the eligible not from the first two, ns the law now stands; nor from the first four, for which Mayor Moore now pleads; hut from the first dozen if needs be. One of the first needs in any business, public or private, is smooth run ning efficiency with the emphasis on the compound adjective. If wages drop 10 per cent and living cost drops 1 per cent the grude of living drops 1 per cent. We just love arithmetic, don't you? Hut we would prefer rosier ex amples. tiWifuv-. .. Vi '' uV" vr j - ..... ' ..tos-- v'.-.ryj:; -- j e w a". ,...- ." -r-w,f .r," vhg-iTTT naraM na id irrvaTinsr -rtrrff'TflT.-e ffev v ii fMT'Jjj jijUrJIW'ljjaj JjLmw V- r- s. rft X :LrMdmPl -..-- .aelS-';!? M T " - ljv -stjrS'"'JW?aCLajtrf " 't 3l i if31 VTi cefc-l"4 sr- rttcsV' -,!-'" Jr'i n nHSUwii'i'lli " .-" .oii"" I-iini? .."-.7-,..-" ,jfe ..-cMB"! . l-jfte---'--sotrrw - - . NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians on Subjects .They Know Best MISS CORA ELSIE KINZIE On Teaching the. Deaf to "Hear" AFKW years ago the man who found himself being overtaken by deafness gave, up, by n supremo and grim resolution, nil cherished bones nnd accopted isolation us inevitable. In the business world it was n. matter of course that the deaf mnn should be subordinated or dischnrged. In the socinl world the joys of humnn comradeship were for hmring persons and no longer for the hnrd-of-henring ones. Miss Cora Klsle Kinzie, in her own per sonal life as well ns In the lives of hundreds of other hnrd-of-henring persons from all parts of the country, has proved that toda(v the deaf do not need to "take u back seat. Thev can make their eyes substitute largely for 'their enrs. Through lip-rending they may lenrn to take their place among henr ing persons in normal work und pleasures. As director of the Speech-Reading Club of Philadelphia, 1000 Locust street, Miss Kin zie has seen what lip-reading can do to bring happiness und usefulness back to men and women who had lost interest in life. Much Deafness In Philadelphia "It is surprising," said Miss Kinzie, "how much deafness there is in our community. It may be Philadelphia's moist climate that is responsible, or it muy be that we are just finding out what a large percentage of the population hns defective hearing. Formerly when a man or woman became deaf, family and friends sympathetically accepted it as an insurmountable obstacle nnd the deafened person bernmo n 'back number.' It is pa thetic In many cases to see the rejuvenation brought about today by lip-reading. No matter how deaf a person muy be, if he can read lips cusily he will be able to hold his place among normal persons, and often the public cannot believe he is deaf. "As for the joy it brings. 1 have seen manv examples. Since the wur I have come in contact with many soldiers who were made hard of hearing during the war. One bov I know wns ready to commit suicide. Despondent nnd hopeless, he saw nothing in his future except dependency and menial grind. Then he learned lip-rending. Drought in contact with many other deafened persons who were happy, and given a chance to mingle with henring persons in u normal way, ho regained courage and cheer. Now What Do You Know? QUIZ t Name the author of "Jane Eyre." Who Is Knut Hamsun? .1 What Is epigraphy? I. Who wns the composer of the "Unfinished Symphony"? 5. What Is the difference between an "epic of Krowth" and nn "epic of urt"? . Name the capital of Serbia. 7. Wbo Is Urltlsh secretary of suite for war? 8 Of what country Is the thistle the na tional flower? 9. What Is the family name of the- Hritlsh reigning houso? 10. What Is u palindrome? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. 'A cupplla" Is n term applied to choml slinjlng without Instrumental accom paniment. It Is n font, of muslo chiefly found In tho older schools of eccleslas tlc.il music. 2. Virginia Is known ns "tho mother of Presidents.' Amonff tho chief inairls trates b"rn there were Washington, Jefferson, .Mudlbon, Monroe and Wil son. 3 lenotnph- sepulcliml monument to one whose body lies elsewhere. 4 The abbreviation "I.ltt. 1." nfter a name stands for the academic degree of doctor of letters fljitln. lltternrum doc tor), borne by tho person concerned. It Is n distinction conferred for 'noln hle achievement in belles-lettres or literature as a fine art. In the I'nited Suites it is conferred by colleges lis no honorary degree. I "I.ovo In the Valley" Is u tlno and Innjr lyrlco-nurr.itlvc. poem by (ieorgo Meredith, the great English novelist. 6 A colophon: A tailpiece In old tinoks. often ornamental, kIvIiik Information new usuully placed on the title pane. ;. I'etci llytch Tauhnlliowsky, Russian com poser, wrote the "I'athetlquo .Sym phony." 5 Home prominent defeated candidates for the presidency who are still living nre: Democrat!!- William Jennings Hryan. Alton 1). Parker. James M. Cox . I5e publlcaus -Wllllnin Howard Tnfi Chiirlis K. Ilufihes; Socialists -Kufceno Victor Debs, Allan Benson, '.i, HnrrlshurK Is the capital of Pennsylvania 10. Rlcochutf Tho skipping on water or giuuud of a. cannon ball or bullot. AN AWFUL WALLOP J-r. sf ' ! rji erv7a its.j-s". . .jESt"- li v I -. mdL , J BTBP gsSlSg jfTrmTMMBBKM Is? vSb av amV X N as. ''TIJM, f--a" . 'VS.S',M-'. aurji'wsrtisy, he expects to resume his education und prob ably will study law. Industrial Leaders Should Help "The most vital problem facing the deaf i.s recognition nnd co-operation from indus trial leaders. It hns been proved thnt deaf people arc more efficient thnn hearing per sons In some types of work, nnd that along many other lines they can work equally well ns nnrmnl men nnd women. Some firms and Inrge Employers know this nnd are placing deaf persons in their plants ns much ns possible. Hut tho nirijority of industrial lenders have not as yet accepted this fact. "There must be n greater willingness on the purt of employers to give deafened men and women a chance to show what they can do. Those firms who have been willing to test them out have been more than satisfied, Mid employers hove reported that the nppli cants have made good ond they woultl not want to lose them. The highly developed powers of concentration which many deaf persons possess, coupled with close applica tion to work resulting from the keen desire to make good, give the deafened worker an nil vontogu over the hearing one in muny posi tions, nnd ho is frequently of more value. "The deaf do not usk for nny concessions or sacrifices on the part of business men in their efforts to interest them nnd secure their willingness to give the deafened applicant a chance. They oniy nsk for nn opportunity to prove the efficiency of the deafened person. "Rccaiise of the old idea that the deaf person could no longer hold his place In society, harU-of-hearing persons nre not leaders. They have allowed the reins to fall to others, nnd most of them need to bu directed. Hut they nre being tnught to go ahead on their own responsibility, learn ugaln to he leaders, to substitute eyes for cars as far ns possible, "There is no question that lip-reading is going to bring nbout even greater better ment for, the hard of hearing." HUMANISMS I P.y WILLIAM ATIIKKTOX DU PUY POST WHEELER, diplomat, and HalHo Krmlnie Hives, author, his wife, vvero being entertnined in Washington ond Mrs. Frnnces Herger Mnran. grand dnmc and de scendant of the Wnshingtons. of Charles ton, W. Va., where every other man you meet is of that chin, was telling of having witnessed John Hrown's execution. Mrs. Monin hesltnted over the story be cause the date of the tragedy of John lirown convicted her of having accumulated uuni erous years. "The only age," interjected Mrs. Wheeler, "is the lack of enthusiasm." Colonel George Washington Stewart, of the unity, is now stutloned in Italtlmnre, nnd goes nbout in the urtistie und literury set of that city. His wife Is Florence Pntullo Stewart, who writes books, who bonsts n studio with oriental draperies anil who refuses to be spoken to before 10 o'clock in tho morning. They have u friend, Mrs. Hnrrlctte flunn Rohcrson. of Washington, who conducts a school of personality, nnd who savs that the color which represents her individu ality is pink. Mrs. Ida Clyde Clark, magozlue writer, who contributed only wln-the-wur stuff while the contest was on, stayed up all night papering her room in Washington red before she could comninud the muse. And Colonel Stewart, after listening to all these eccentricities of genius, Hold thot they were undoubtedly evidences of "esthetic temperaments." Herbert Drone, a boy of twenty, with a weak lung, in 1SM.'I went from Kentucky down into Florida as far its there was a railroad to curry him. There he entered mi office and asked for work. It turned out thnt the name of the mnn to whom he applied was likewise named Drnne and thnt the two were related, "I will give you a contruct building a piece of railroad." said the elder Drum "If you will walk to -It." ' "Let's go," said the younger man. So he walked forty miles south to u cer tain landmark ami begun building. He put himself up a shuck anil bus lived right there ever since. His shack wus the first house In what is now Lakeland, Fla., and he hns watched the wilderness transform Itself Into a bower of orange blossoms, for this county produces more oranges than any region of like urea in nil the world, Now h is n member of Congress fr4ui the land of oranges, 1 ( i iV SHORT CUTS Kvcr aud anon it is cold Iamb March resembles. He is a lucky guy, no end, who haa a doctor for his friend. Of course, Lenine can't help his face but why should he want to save it? It will takcmoro than A Line O' Typj or Two to tell of. the affection II. L. T. In spired, The Soviet treaty seems to prove thit Lloyd George doesn't care what company he keeps. It will bo following precedent if Lenin and Trotzky grow conservative ns they grow prosperous. The P. R. T. of the first part appear to be preparing the sourest kind of kraut for the Krankforders. Nowadays when people discuss illumi nation one has to guess whether they refer to gas, electricity or hooch. From the U. O. I. hearing we gather that I'niler Grade Illumination still mani fests its Unspeakably Gloomy Idiosyncrasies. The Allies may yet reach Berlin, Why doesn't Joscphus Daniels get a Job as cor respondent and make good bis proud boast? The coroner is investigating I'olU vllle's haunted house. What's the matter with the prohibition enforcement ajent? This efficiency, business is being ran into the ground. New Jersey chicken tnievM nre now making tbeir collections in an auto truck. If there is the least suspicion that the spirits that hnunt that Pottsville house are distilled there will be no lack of willing io vcstlgators. rPho Helton nf n elmrch in Allegheny county was found drawing several gallon' I o liquor from n still Dehlntl tne cnuruj organ. Pipe organ, of course. Full of jll notes till the cops struck a blue one. Washington newspapermen are havinf i some fun with a cub reporter, one JoPJu! . I v 1 i - . 1 . a. i - . nlil In fit I wamcis ; out ni least u may ue uiu when Reporter Daniels interviews Secre tary Denby he will have some familiarity with his subject. In a liquor seizure cusc in Tampa. Fl'-i the members of the jury were invited to .iimnn 1i Aililnnn HlVn ttrOnK. 01 sniffed, ami the verdict was guilty. J' ?" intent nerc to mane jury uuiy popuii - men and to frighten off the women? A Mlddlctown, N. Y., man, 101 yr old. has just had a tooth pulled. It ''' last. We Ket his point of view Unless n tooth can meet one of Its "' lows once In a while it is worse than lone some; it is plum good for nothing. The Soviet Government has refused W admit Into Russia six men deported from "' United States, nnd they nre "now; nt i; bound for nowhere." Russia won t accfPf them; Uncle Horn nioy refuse to reajm" them; nobody else wonts them. ln i hard lines on the steamship company. When a victim of bootleg w,(",1,'fc,j arrested in McKces Rocks, Pa., tl''1?1 of police puts him In a cell with six W "" harmless Mexican snakes, whirl; K' persunde him to sign the pledge. .h rd a story from Pittsburgh. Hut not a is sold of the jng thnt follows when the k tlm learns how he has been lioodwlnlfi. Say, girls, you can't use the JJ walk on the straight nnd narrow notn ' health. We have always h15ht ":,.Jtic are emboldened to say so by the n,,a$ declaration of Vera Roehm. an ""-V"0., In this city. And listen, girls. ' J1' JS wnlk is worse than iintie-iUhy i it is """' unbecoming. a thing about tj We don't know slxtyseven-year-ohl New n ...nr.olJ ... Vnflier wii wished to adopt a tweniy-iin" . -woman, described ns a profess loiia MnfirJ singer nnd entertainer, ns his dough ler, d cept that he is suld to be vigorous stately. And we don't know n thlnfnfl,.. the lady. Hut we seem to ge a mcnljl l,h0 Hire olr the Surrogate who in di ) in' motion tnoK occasion io in-ui. ',,', la u , to it. It bears n striking rcsenibln net t well-known character In "M,'""1' A"n ' (u, I K-...i.t..i .i ,.,. in be making u" AWllllll MUX Ml'J'Vint. same p)ca. ,' r- t - .- . oflrt ----., I 1 vv.V,kl , .'miflt. isM- '-.