Sr5 . ii-U" ' -i ""in s ifi anil i i ii I -" ! liiFWWIIWnHBVnnHIHBH 1W" z2 IWtmm'-'-'? y '-w iw-v 1U EVENING PUBLIC LEDaER-PHILADEJDPHIA, MONDAY, MARCH 28, 1921 tf i, nfevj ;-d .ito-fi, . i f&'pf Sfc I ! ';! Kill MS tl! w. Pf: 5' 'I'M ! 5i ill ';.f ,- ?. I'? ifs, '. . . ',, lit 4 ii - I if- p. It'ji , ' i I . M' r, v tf M i ' i , f i hU r !l .; - 4 w ;? , .; r . H, fei ;: . mk'i ' lih , , W.I fill WiVi. W ' li M Jibs !?. llh ' '! ilk i if. IK I' J ! 1 W I 4J - 1. I:: ::' bb Via llllllllllllllam 1 Evening IJubUc-IGc&aei: " PUBHC LEDGER COMPANY CTHUB U. K. CUIlTia. PsBMDiKfr Cbarl-1( I.tidluaton, Vice Preild.nti John C. Martin. Treasurers Charles A. Tyler. Herratarrl Philip . 'Collin. John 11. Williams. John J. iuriooTi, Dcor( P. Doldsmlth, David K. Smiley, Ptrectnrs EDITORIAL nOARD rtsr If K C'fHTi, chairman PAYltl B SMIIKT Kdltot JOHN C. fAITlN. gntmlHulnmMniirf rubllshtd dnlly at rvouu I.reora Bulidlnr IndeinUmco fiui-f I'hllndflphla AtmntI' Cltr Presi'lnKm Ilulldlng Nw Vobk 3tM Miullnon Ase, UKmoiT 7(11 Korrt llulUlne Br. lyOtld 013 Qlob'-Drrnocral Uulldln CJIIOno IS02 MtuiM ll'ii,i.-. news nirncAua H'isniNnroN Hmrac, N 11 l'i.'nnylin!a As-. ur.d Mth PI. ' i'osii IHtiiic Tho Kutt Uuildtnr ItoHPO Uriir.Ai London Timro RfDSi'ltirTIO.S' TKllMS The I'lINIvo 1'rtLic l.nii,.n li non'ol to u criers In Philadelphia and aurroiindlnc town" it t.ie raio of tsrclso (13) cents per vrrek, payable 10 1119 inrriT. Dy null to rolnte outtd of Philadelphia, In the Lni' "i riai-. (.an.ina. or unitea Kiatei pra- til(in. poat.icp free, fifty (BO) cents wr month, till (1(1) dullard pr y-r, pajaMo In advance To all fuflirn count-len on 1) dollur a month. Notice Subscribers nlshlnK address chanted Must flvo old as well as new nddresr. BELL, JI1M PALMT KEYSTONE. MAIN J000 XT X&irtts oil ccmmun(aioiis fo Kt'cnlnj TublVo ljeitgrr Intrymdrnct Sqvar', DU.'iufflpMo. Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED rRESS It cxcUtivelv etv tttlrrf to the ue for rrpuMlntlon of oil ntwi ditfalcSti crrdllrd fo it or net ofnenolse crertlleit n (Me ropr, and also the local tmips vvbtlaheA therein.. All rights of r'pvbhcatio of jpiwlol ltipaXch;j erein are aUn r'nerved. rhllidtlphlt. Monde,. Mirrh It. 1031 PAVING FASHIONS TIIEItE is apparently no limit to eirri ments in iktreet paving. When absolute novelties are larking, a return can be made to former methods Rtibjeet to modern Im provements. This procedure has been applied by the Highway Itumui in its award of n contract to lay asphalt blocks on Chestnut trcet between Twenty-second and Fifteenth treets. For more than a generation pave ment of this kind hah not been favored by the municipality. The record, however, docs not necessarily Imply that such a roadbed will not be serv iceable. The worth of wood blocks svas cer tainly exaggerated, as has been discovered after a liberal trial of them. The paving experts, however, generally Bgrre that tho most practical street surface Is the one which, in addition to other vir tues, can be the most easily repaired. Blocks of some sort are therefore to bo desired. The carefully cut stone cubes laid in cement have proved sntisfactor in tills city wherever tried. Asphalt blocks will be a trifle smoother and should present a neat nppearance. If properly set in place they may be found suitable to the traffic demands on one of the city's main nrterics. LIFE PASSPORTS DK, FrilHl'SirS plea for greater care in the registration of births is something more than a narrowly personal desire to keep his statistical In lse in order. Physicians or parents who arc carelesa about filing birth records increase the com plexity of an age which has decided, whether wisely or not, to place much de pendence on cataloguing, cross. indexing mid official documentary evidence." The State Department refuses passports to perons un able to produce copies of their birth certifi cates in communities possessing the regis tration sjstera during the years in question. The director of public health describes the municipal record as a legal passport through life. It is needed In numerous other situ ations besides that of u contemplated jour ney abroad. Attention to the registration regulations Is furthermore, not grievously onerous. The health director quite conectls insists on ac curate birth reporting. There is little doubt that the subjects of the entry will appreciate its worth at some subsequent date SOCIAL SERVICE IN STRAITS THI" Society for Organizing Charity needs no apologist. Its ndmlrable aims and their practical execution have lonj been recognized This valued social agency Is, however, seriously In need of funds where with to carry on its work in these times Trhen the reactions of the wnr anil peculiar economic conditions have enormously In creased the unemployment problem nnd hence the claims upon the society. An appeal sshich the society has issued set ting forth its embarrassments, necessitating a reduced budget, and the pm-pert of lack of funds for its projects ufter .May 1 of this year is emincntls worth heeding. The situ ation is complicated by the .tatc of the ex cellent plan of combining the various chari ties and social welfare organizations of Fhlladelphlu, which is not set actually in operation The federation idea has been eepted. but it will not begin to function u-thoritatl-ely until 1H2L' It is the intervening period which presents difficulties The "o.nts, shich has rthnys been conducted on unsensntionnl and i.inse quenth tj3 -ii-nt lines. i assuredly a (rilV servant of a type wMh the enminunit.s L.is a duty to preserve nnd uss SILESIAN COUNTER-CLAIMS WHll.K it is nf 5' proud timt the Herman triumpn in the I'pper Snesiuu plebiscite is (,t a kind lomparabli ssith the "victorv" .,f the imperial fleet ut Jutland, the last rt porta eiist considerable ,. jbt upon the nutiieurli it of the first ntinounce ments. n..ijorit of ."'J per . 1. 1 i . .mined by the I'oles m tin important mil istnnl d tricta of Koenigsht i tie nni .r , n aid in mining ngion- -i lil-ti v re the .'hi-f j.rues Of the contest. Propaganda nnd enth isinMen!! j. resented misinformation lis Imt.i sides inwtnhl.s loud a problem wllui is mn of tie most ,mri. ate arising from the pence treatv That the as eoeinted powers were 'imler no illusions re garding the Is .io'eer. e'enr's down by the test of the V r..i..s pact which pr' vides that n ' fin', - port" must be made ..f the balloting prior lo action tiweriung the new frontiers It will l..ubtle-s be some time before nny thing like t!i 'ruth im be sifted from t'ie mass of lngel.ousl sorted fig ires. It is worth noting moreover tl.n' 'he powers will mnke the final decision on the hoiindnr.ci "with regnnl to 'be wishes ,.f tl,e inhabi tants," but bj no means wltl.oi.t respei to the desl-es of s'lb-tai.'in! niiimritl' - nnd go graphical distnbui.oi.'j Til" plebiscite was eninl ict.-d ). a guide. It Is not the 'Inn' 'wrl m "-. mutir THE FIRST STRAW HAT A MAN from I'a-adena i.,re the first str.iw lint of the eas,,n ,, t),s rjtj on Saturday and attracted conslib rain.- at tention. llul whs should this be' Have we not tern basing straw-hat weather tins month? The mercury litis been up to TO, and Satur day nftcnonn it was 75. There are many Jays in tu summer when it is no warmer than this Indeid. 7 Is suinmir heat. They wear strasv ham at I'alm teach in the win ter when it Is no warmer, and whnr is c,ooj enough for Palm Heneh is certainly none too good for Philadelphia. AVe are altogether too prone to adapt our costume to fixed dates regardless of the temperature There Is a custom of donning atraw huts on Maj 1." In this city and of calllug them in on September lf ami the trnw hnt.s i'l appear on thnt date even if fl.ero is a Hurry of snow They are accepted as afliftter of course, while a strasv hat on a much warmer dy in March excites com ment. W'c cat hot cross buns on Good Friday and never think of them on nny other day of the year, but they are Just ns, good on the Fourth of July. A Thankoglvlng dinner without n turkey lacks something, and thou sands of families eat turkey on no other day of the year. It Is true that some of them have cold turkey for two or three days nfterwnrd, but that is merely bwnuso they could not eat It all on Thunkglvinic Day. The l'nsndenn man who dressed according to the weather deserves the commendation due to h mini svho has the courage of hia desire for comfort MR. LENINE GOES SHOPPING FOR AID AND RECOGNITION The Hughei Note Shows That There Are Still a Few Things That Cannot He Purchased for Money STEADYiro minds were needed In the crisis no lesser word will do created by the Moscow Itolshevists In a final des perate effort to Implant In the outside world, under the mask of trade agreements, the seeds of an idea that has devastated Kussla. It Is cheering to knosv that such minds were in Washington. The weird structure of Russian bol shevlsm is wavering. Its supports arc fall ing nway. It has to have nesv braces, ncsv props. The appeals to the United States, to Prltain, to Italy nnd the rest of the world were throsvn out like anchor lines. I.cnlne struck for svhat he believed to be the weak place in the scheme of svestcru civilization. He appealed directly, in a mood of frank cynicism, tn the cupidity of mankind, to the acquisitive instinct svhich he believes to be dominant over nil philosophy in every democratic government. Ilolshevlsts have been taught to believe that other people ssill do anything for money and thnt for a price they svill ignore any obligation. So the spokesmen for Mos cow advanced into the open to wave strings of jewels, to jingle gold that doesn't belong to them, to dazzle business men In Kurope and America with promises of loot. From Washington they received an answer that must have amazed them. Isn't this the land of the almighty dollar, where all men think only of money? The price of Itu'sian trade which in itself Is still an unknown quantity has yet to be fully reckoned by the governments which in this crucial Instance decided to pay it. All people who arc able to discern the Inner truth of foreign nesss knosv that the whole scheme of HoKhcvist government Is disintegrating in Uussln. Yet the ex periment directed from Moscow certainly ssas thorough. No one svas spared. None of the restraints common alik to Individuals and governments elsewhere in the world was permitted to temper the enthusiasm of men who sought to reform an empire and mnke It good by the simple expedient of enslaving it and den.sing the right of any individual to think, net or hope without the prior consent of a council of fanatics. The cost to the Itusslnn people of this experiment has been stupendous. Their sources of production have been dried up. Individual initiative has been paralyzed. The life; of a whole empire is stagnant nnd there is serious douht of the ubility of the population to provide for Itself even the bare necessities of life. ' To bring such n blight upon great and nctivc minded peoples elsewhere accustomed to live anil find safety and happiness by means of the delicately co-ordinated mechan isms of commerce and Industry would, of course, be to commit an unforgivable crime and Invite a svhole series of unprecedented disasters. Yet the effect of the decision of the Ilrltish minlstr.s virtually to recognize the Soviets svill be to establish in F.ngland and elsewhere something like n nesv belief in bolsiievism and to cause millions of people to feel that sovletlsm has proved its utility. No matter what Lloyd (Jeorge mas say, no mntter 'what the Ilrltish Hoard of Trade may say. the masses in Kngland will feel that boHievism has scored a triumph that would not have been possible if it were really unworkable us u theory of life and government. Similar reaction;' of mass psycholoz will be nppnrent wherever the representatives of going governments appear readv to deal with the Moscow regime on anything like equal terms or to appear to condone the outrages of Soviet practice b.s temporarily ignoring them. It ought alsvnys to b" remembered that I.cnlne set out to dictate to the world. It isn't like him to appeal for anything that lie could get by force Without the aid that lie has been seeking and the shade .,-,s recog nition implied in agreements such as have just been negotiated in Kngland and Italy, he couldn't have ln-nd another six months, and no one knows tins better than he. To say that a trade agreement with ltussia is not governmental recognition Is to say what is not in any practical sense true. Trade In n.usjn now is not like trade in any part of the world. It is nothing more or less than a monopoly of the Moscow (iov ernment, or, rather, a monopolv of the energetic fiOO.OoO active Reds who hnve im posed th'-ir will and their theories on the lhO.OOO.OoO people of Russia, It svill be argued, of course, thnt the rc establishment of international trade and the opening up of the channels of commerce in Hurope are neces-ary preliminaries to any thing like settled pence and a renewed equilibrium on the Corn merit and elsewhere. That Is true. Hut Itus-ln cannot trade In ans normal sva.s svhile the land is under Its present dictators. The world that could benefit b.s trade with Russia needs things which Russia hns not got. It needs food supplies, the raw materials for clothing, ores and the like. What I.enine offers it is gold and jewels lib hed from the palaces of 'he aristocracy Rus-iu is not prodintlve. It is not productise because the initiative of the Individual was destroyed under a rule of government svhich made It a crime for any one to benefit or profit directly by the results of his labor The note sent b Secretary Hughes was not unfriendly. If tne masses In Russia couhl read they probably would he the first to applaud It. The tone of the communiiu tion r veals an intention precisely similar to that which inspired Mr. Wilson's notes to the beleaguered liermans. Mr Hughes talks of the d liberalization of trade, and advises that it be accomplished In Itu-sin ns a preliminary to uny acceptable order of industrial relations between th Russians and the Tinted States. I)o they know- in the foreign chancelleries thnt this is pre . isely what ninety-nine out of every hundred Russians openly or sefretly delr ? What the State Departinu.t means is the democrntinition of governrm nt. There U nothing in the note to encourage the rcae nonaries svho are poised for a leap into power over the wreck of bolsiievism. Tin; course of action which it suggests is one thnt the Russian libern.s now alliul for de feuslve purposes with the KuNLevists might easily force the evicting goserriiucnt to adopt If tlie events in Rusta wer" permitted to follow a natural course without interferon t from the outside in the interest of one group or unother. Such an analysis as this is prompted by a regard for the interests of the Russians themselves. Auy one who hopes to profit by the present fluid condition of Russia or to find extraordinary prizes in the svpskage which I.enine has made will probably be disappointed. 'oneesslons granted from Moscow will Bst certainly prove to be liabilities rather than assets to those who achieve them. They will surely havo to be fought for" before very long. So It is en couraging nnd reassuring to find that tho attitude of the United States Government is to remain consistent. We hnve' expressed eagerness to deal with a really freo Russia and n really representative Russian govern ment. Until it is possible to do this we shall remain aloof. Gold mines nnd oil and the loot of churches cannot bribe Washington. Lcnine has probably learned this with com plete nmnzeinent. Ho nnd his associates nlsvnjs hnve said that "gold can do any thing In the United States." Well, it can't. And thnt is fortunate. It is not too much to say thnt the Hughes note, finally denying anything resembling recognition to bolshcvlsm, will be remem bered as one of the most Important state papers ever issued from Washington. It will stand as un almost Insurmountable bar rier in the svay of demagogues who are seek ing .to win abroad victories which they were unable to win In' years of ruthless nnd ruinous experimentation nt home. HOW BACON SAVED HIS SKIN THI2 announcement by Professor Voynlch, of New York, thnt Professor William Romalnc New-bold, of the University of Penn sylvania, has discovered the key to the Roger llncon volume In cipher In svhich there is a record of the use of both the telescope and the microscope in the thirteenth cen tury, is likely to pros'okc the Inquiry why llncon concealed the results of some of his scientific Itiv-1 ligations from the people of his generation. The answer is simple. Bacon lived in the thirteenth century. All scientific dis cussion of his time was based on custom nnd authority. There was virtually no experi ment science. When an alert and curious minded man studied nature itscif in order to find out its secrets he was suspected, especially if his conclusions differed from those bnsed on nuthorlty uiul custom. As It was, llaron, who was one of tho greatest scholars of his time, spent many years In prison becnuse of the views which he ex pressed. They differed from those of his contemporaries. There is in existence a cipher manu script, however, which is generally credited to Hacon. It has passed from hand to hand for centuries without ever being translated. Dr. Nesvbold has been at ssork on it for n long time, nnd he will tell the College of Physicians next month some of the things sshlch he has found. Among them, as al ready indicated by Professor Voynich, is thnt Itacon had both a telescope and a microscope nnd that lie used them. The date of the invention of the telescope' is usually put about three centuries ln'c.- thun Rncon, or in the early part of the seven teenth century. Hut the interesting nnd significant feature of the Hacon cipher mnnuscript lies in its relation to the iutellectunl temper of the thirteenth century. A man svho set forth views on science or religion which differed from those of his time did so nt the peril of his life. This condition continued for centuries. Galileo suffered because he said that the earth revolved around the sun. His contemporaries insisted that he was wrong. They could sec the sun revolving around the earth, and the Hible told about the sun standing still in the heavens. What better authority was needed to prove Galileo wrong than holy svrit nnd the evidence of the senses? If Hacon hnd announced that Sat urn had rings and thut Jupiter hnd moons imprisonment would hnve been regarded as too mild a punishment for his heresy Whether he knew this much about the heavenly bodies we shall not knosv until Dr. Nesvbold tells svhat he has found in the cipher manuscript. We arc svont to congratulate ourselves on our more liberal point of view. Hut it is not so much more liberal us we think it Is. Two or three generations ago all the ortho dox were denouncing Darwin as a heretic because his announced theories ubout the creation of man differed from the account In Genesis. In an earlier nge he would have been burned at the smke. The nine teenth century Kngland of Darwin was a little more humane in its punishments than the thirteenth century Kngland of Roger Hacon. Otherwise they svere very much the same. Views which differed from thoe based on custom and authority were denounced in both periods. A little progress has been made, however, for the number of men who, with William James, are willing to admit the chance that those svho disagree with them may he right is much larger than it used to be. Hut it is not so large as it ought to be. Take for purposes of illustration an extreme and controversial case at the present mo ment. The Holshevists of Russia are try ing to set up a communist system In place of what they call the capitalist system of economic organization of society. There is a disposition in the rest of the world to regard Its own system as perfect because it is the .system to which the people are accumstoiiied. Virtually all of the arguments used against communism are based on custom. The relative merits of individualism and communism arc rarely discussed. They are not even considered by persons In places of authority. If these persons could get hold of I.enine and Trotzky they would be disposed to treat them as the authorities treated Roger Hacon because his views on religion and i.'i( nee dlllercd from the views of his gen eration We are not arguing that communism is ruht. We do not think it is workable or will evir be workable on any lurge scale so long us human natuie remains sehnt it is. Hut we ure willing to ndmlt that our siesvs on svhat is economical) possible in the organisation of society mny be us mis taken as were the views of the contem poraries of Roger Hacon on the organiza tion of the solar system. Yet we and ull who believe in the present system, with all Its defects, will continue to oppose lommunlsrn nnd the Holshevists und will insist that it is our duty to do so. THE FRIENDLESS WHEN all else fails, when no other victim is in sight and 10 otlnr alibi is possi ble, blame it on the automobile driver. If other people refuse to accept ne.essary tax burdens without shrill outcries anil lamenta tions and calls for the police, take a little more mono) from the owners of motorcars. They are used to being manhandled und they do not seem to have any friends The pioposnl to put a state tax on gaso line was to have been expected. The tax of a cent u gallon on retail sales could be paid, of course, without any great hardship, The price of gasoline has dropped It may again tnl.e unto itself wings. Hut a cent a gallon is not much. It is the theory, not the condition, so generally apparent thut must irritnte those who own motorcars. A man who buys a new automobile pays a Hat tax of per cent to the government. Then he must pay any where from S10 to $20 a )ear for the privi lege of driving on public roads. Often enough lie has to puy license fees in more than one stute. For doing all this he is denounced by the upllfters, bawled out by traffic' policemin and blamed fo,- uccidents ihut are the fault of other people. Still, a great many motorcars continuo t0 trundle around It seems almost Impossible to get them ofi the roads. Count Greppl, IC.'I years old, of Rome, sass the wuy to live long Is never to be in a liuriv. to walk a lot and to live a life of single blessedness On the other hand, John Austin Kit! yinrs old, of Rutland. Vt , blacksmith and fanner, was married and had a family So vou may puy your money and take your choice. . . AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Change for the Better Has Taken Place In the Relationship Be tween Scholar and Teacher Uy SARAH D. I,0VUIE I WAS going out to St. Davids the other day on the 12 :ir from town, nnd nt Overbrook, and a few minutes later nt llryn Mnsvr, the car was invaded by little groups of children homesvnrd bound from school. Teachers saw them on the train and in some cases saw them off the train into the keeping of a variety of caretakers cabmen, parents, governesses, maids, neigh bors. Their parting from their teachers svas v.cry affectionate nnd happy. If it lacked ceremony, so also did It lack uny buggestion of escape. Remembering my own childish reaction to my teachers and that of my generation, I nm continually amazed by the Immense change for the better in the relationship. Of course it comes entirely from the changed viewpoint of the teachers the children are no better and no worse thnn in my day, except that being in a better utmosphero they net more normally. THK change in teachers is not eo much In what thev teach as In how they teach. A generation ago good manners were insisted upon from tho pupil to the teacher, but many very clever teachers had distinctly bnd manners toward their pupils. Ono heard very often of a "cross teacher" In my school days; there are such abnormal ities nowadays, but they nre generally eliminated by the head mistress or head master, notsvithstnndlng other vnluablo as sets. One came in contact with teachers ssho wept from anger, or were sullen from fatigue, or were stony from sheer dislike of their job. Fortunately teaching is no longer the only way a person without a vocation can earn a living the weeny kind enn become private secretaries, the sullen ones can sell sweets nt a confectioner's or preside at a dyeing and denning counter, while the stony ones can sell rnllroad tickets or repel questions at an information desk. Kven the good-natured foolish virgins that never matured and whom their pupils used to alternately "rag" or cajole arc no longer found among the ranks of teachers. There is many a good, lucrative uiehc, from the shoe department to a point a little lower than the angels, for an immature, kindly soul who can be imposed upon to the verge 'of mental collapse. With colleges and high schools turning out hundreds of women mentally equipped for teaching who have chosen teaching as a career, even the kindergarten and primary children have less to fear from their pre ceptresses than the children of my day, who generally were handed over to the keeping of some one's poor relation. Hut all the colleges in the country would not make good teachers whom the children enjoyed as u matter of course If the whole point of view of teaching and, indeed, of training children for life-had not under gone a revolutionary change in the last gen eration. CHILD psychology is a term as familiar In this day as "nntiglity children" seemed to be in my childhood. You were either a good child or a naughty child in those days, never just a child. Y'our faults were treated like enemies' forts to be stormed, bombarded, called to surrender with no mercy, the flag hauled down, the stronghold evacuated and the walls demolished and left starkly, unpleas antly remindful while the conquering army marched on to the next obstacle to raze it likewise to the ground. You were never allowed to outgrow any imperfect trait, or grow into uny maturity through awkward phases without being distinctly reprimanded for being In the grub stage. The punishments dealt out to you had no relation to the crimes you committed. If you scratched the eight -day clock with a hnirpln that you found on the floor you svere whipped; if you glued the family album with some mucilage left nearby on the table, you were whipped ; if you were Impudent to au ageo relative, you were stood in a cor ner; if you broke your sister's toy wash stand, you were placed on a chair much too high for your legs to touch the floor and compelled to remain still sshile your heavy little feet dangled without support; if you dropped the cat out of the window, back you went to sit n half hour on the chair. Tennyson's "Charge of the Light Bri gade" was in great vogue with the teachers of those days. They neser paid any atten tion to the "Some one had blundered" in it. but they would have liked to have every blackboard in the land embellished with; "Theirs not to reason why, Theirs not to mnke reply!" They explained a problem In arithmetic, but not n problem in conduct. "It Is enough thnt I tell you not to!" The thing thnt develops first in children along the line of ethics Is of course a sense of justice. If you offend that you are a "goner" with n child. He will forgive you, he will love you, but he will not ac cept your verdictK unquestionably after such n stepping down from the pedestal. ALONG with child psychology has come the study of child physiology of late years. I was Interested to sec liosv many private school as well ns public school teachers had gone to the lectures on the combined physical nnd mental stages ot child development thnt were given here at the Friends' Select School under the nus plcts of the Society of Mental Hygiene. The particular one I went to dealt wjth reme dial physical defects which produced men tal retardation in children I doubt If two teachers out of tin, thirty years ago, could havo picked out a first-clnss moron from any other mental defectives or would huve known what was the essential difference between idiocy nnd retardation. I linve been reading a book this evening which I picked up the other day ut the Philadelphia Library bv Wilfred Lay. called "The Child's Unconscious Mind." It deals with the relations of psychoanalysis to edu cation. It is very illuminating to, I was going to say. the "lay" mind without any desire for u pun. He hns a chapter entitled "Sublimation" in which he analyzes those traits of child hood svhich nre marked ut certain periods and svhich cither become vastly less con spicuous In succeeding stages or are sub limated, changed, so ns to become displaced from their former trend and used to lit another purpose. He cites svhat Is called technically "exhi bitionism," the "come see mo jump" of most cihldren, ns r trait thnt is normally outgrosv-n, or svhich, when It K not out grown in certain peculiarly gifted indi viduals, can become sublimated and made socially available in the actor or the artist bv society itelf, which encourages the iihibitionlst traits for its pleasure nnd profit. All this Is dealt svlth in a most Judicial and scientific manner. Whereas, in my youth what might be called the exhibitionist instinct In my ynuns breast was dealt with by iny early preceptress in the following lines which I was set to learn by heart : "What, looking in tho glass again! Why's my silly child so vain? Does she think herself ns fulr As the gentle Illy there? Does she think her eye us blue As the violet wet with dew?" etc., etc. Well, most healthy little children are uh pretty us (lowers, and why, after ull, should adults huve all the looking in the glass? Resides, when I looked In the glnss It was generally to make funny faces. Hut it had been n long, long while since that teacher hud been u child, n child .ssychologj was not then In vo-tue, so I remember the inej. dent without runcor. The curious fact has been discovered by government investigators that the automobile business is the one that is suffering least from unemployment. Perhaps families ure living in their machines because they can't gel houses, A Pittsburgh huckster has acquired n job In Italian opern. He will never, how evr, have a more filling role than the one 1m has discarded: Parsnupp-a. turnup-o, rhubarb u, potat', The flnc-a bunaua, meoeeg-a toinut , - - " ac'! i i ., j . ' VL. Try rV.' .,' rV'W'WvV'i' mm 'Rw.WIrtSRyv- s 'Si'l-'ti'N, :- "' ' Matfe .REFORM r"S2S3rJ,. aefiks-;bSS5Ss! VssssssssssHPMflHsMSaaBtelS s- '-" -Z "SiSr-'S-''"3 's'Jj.vi7,,-s'M!',--"-rw &&mmsBB&FTsr. i J j. - "" . r lvshxih : NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia on Subjects They Knoiv Best C. C. A. BALDI t On Americanization AS A blind man needs light, just so do sve need Americanization, in the opinion of C. C. A. Bnldl, banker uud prominent Itnllau of this city. Peace, which right now Is n vital requl sito of this nation, ns well ns of every other nation, can be best gained, according to Mr. Baldi. by inculcating that peace into minds which ore restless nnd Irritated and rei.dy. nt a moment's notice, to flame up In opposition to law and order. "Amerlcnnlzation," says Mr. Baldi, I regard as the best method of attaining that general happiness which means success to this great country. No mun can do proper justice to himself and to the public in gen eral who Is not In accord with the spirit ot Americanization. . "Ry interesting ourselves in this tiling thnt we call Americanization, and which in cludes many and varied phases, we make our own lives hnppy, we benefit our homes, we absorb obedience to lnw, sve aid and en courage others In the search for happiness. Hv practicing the spirit of Americanization the foreign -born resident secures the con fidence and good will of Americans, and he soon becomes nn American himself in fact as well as in theory, thereby obtaining all the privileges nnd advantages which cuch individual state, and the nation as a unit, offer him. , , , ... "What Is wealth to n resident of this republic if he has not the privileges of the free-born nnd the approving consideration of his fellow men? Whnt Is a profession worth if he hns not the same rights that other men possess? A crlmlnnl may make SIO.OOO or even 1 ,000.000 by a single nefarious operation, but is continually haunted and oppressed by the shadow- of the law, whereas the honest man who has earned his right to svhat he possesses hns the respect und love of his friends and asso ciates, and can hold up his head confidently nnd proudly without a fear. True American Win Respect "Just so the true American, who is faith ..! nil lovnl In word and deed to the conn- trv of his adoption, possesses peucc of mind arid the respect of other people, while the man who tries to serve two masters, or lives onlv for his own selfish Interests, is continually distraught and unhappy and discontented. "Becnuse nn Italian or n Frenchman or n visitor here from some other land Is loyal to the United Stntes does not mean, as some oennle have claimed, thnt he Is disloyal to his native country. On the eontrnry, he is a credit both to us nnd to his own native land. If he commits a crime, people say, 'Oh yes, he's an Italian,' or, 'He's 'a Ger man. '" and It is equally true that if he Is honest and successful those same people mnke the same remarks. Thus the man's native country gets tho credit or discredit, ns the ense may be. "If the immigrant coming here hns no intention of ndnpting himself to the cus toms nnd spirit of our country, we do not want him: he might better stay on the other side of the Atlnntlc. It Is just ns If u guest in a home Insulted and disregarded the wishes or arrangements of his host, only in this case the host Is not nn individual, but nn entire people. "Anierlen has everything that any other nation in the world has and more, and yet .1 great many foreigners are forever com paring thts countrv unfavorably with their own birthplaces. It Is perfectly right for them to love the Intter nnd to svlsh to re. turn to visit them, but they should learn to revere nnd love their nesv home nnd give It implicit and unquestioning loyalty. And so, after all, he can serve two masters, but in such n way as to make his loyalty to his adopted country stand as a credit to his nutlv-e land. Prvir Needed Most of All "Right at this particular time, what we need most of nil is peace. We have shown in the recent svur what sve might have, hut now we must base peace and u contentment of mind. It is nn unfortunate fact that certain forms of industrial unrest and trouble we must always have. What wn do want to do is t prevent more of those who might foster such unrest from ever leasing their own countries to bring trouble to nur land. "Amerlcanlzntmn Is the best thing that this country has undertaken to remedy whatever faults there are In our nran I relationships. The American who does m.t fl FOOLING HIMSELF ONLY jw k. 1 MrnVKlm W . fj '. L;,iirJKlv!(V fl im '1' w,,TOfi& ssti,.. " v -!ii?i!!11Jnif ftskA. Jtmsmmmmb ' .sm of simt'Li ' avtmAt mmmhm. SSttVSHiK vlArtVO (f tfif.r it ,VK V.f.4V ' JWWmsmMlfr&X'.J'x.- r- , , '... 's- " ,v?w ka-'-s. 1 :"-. V'-v 'C.l .t . " -is.-. :. -""vS - .,'V. - C.',-. 's'sVw's-T v. - v;. N. , -'- ';...'7 - V.X tuke part In this campaign or is not inter ested in it Is doing as much hnrm nnd is often just us dangerous ns the man who needs to have Inculcated in him this Ameri can spirit. i "The whole plan cannot be accomplished by one or a few people ; by one political party ; by one religious sect ; by any one portion of the people. It Is something that must be united in by every one. regardlcsH of whether he is Socialist. Republican, Democrat, Catholic, Jew or Protestant. "It Is the root of progress In the nation, and probably the only thing that svill bring us up to that standard sve are entitled to r.nYpi Jt miIst De shared by all, from the t liief Executive of our government to the humblest man in the country. The common good of all will be served bv si general devo tion to the practices and principles of Americanization." ( PLAIN TALE THE simple truth we tell to you, And tell it without trvlng, Of companies that lie In view And others underlying. Said T. H. Mitten svith a frown, Though finances muv nhm sick, e vc really got to buckle down And find n fare that's basic. " 'TIs easy, as it well can be. To solve the pretty pickle; nil- fare should naturally be A jitney that's ii nickel. "Or (since one does ns one is told As faithful servants ought terl, The basic fare I now unfold Is six cents ami a qunrter. ' Assuming that that price perhaps (tlves no one tnste of heaven, Since life s a gamble let's have crap ho come my little seven !" Here Fnncy cried, the merrv jade ...im . n'lllI ''n,),t ro'ic her! I hats not finance. I'm much afraid, Hut just progressive euchre." G. A. What Do You Know? QUIZ " WHttttcni1"e" dld C1,rlst0P"?r Columbuo 'i u'h2 i'!1;' H? "'os'le of tho Indies"? 3. ho holds the world's parachut record' 4. How many years lntervr,a '...." Vit er more"? In what ntnte is the city of Spokane' From what Is chocolate derived? .. ,.ui . ,, . ui ancient urene., ehiee .;..,";':' "r" w. me training? s-,pU,ory military ' W,'melN13 U'e "m nai" of "cau nrum 10. When did ho live? Answers to Saturday's Quli 1. Anatole France in n celebrated French novelist and philosopher, noted for his clear style und delicate Irony. Hla real mme Is Anatole Thtbault 2 HeonP;gC;ic'u.',lulreC' " ,he " 4. The Fraiieo-I'rufslan War ueicnn In i70 B. The Aleutian Islands, or Catharine Archl pelago la extended In the Pnc IfiV S beyond the southwest peninsula of i .: im: vr, ;'vvf,"'u"' .no'" pr his Impositions In Rils.-ilu,' Paris, ho Last and elsewhere. He died In nrlsoi. In Urblno, Italy, In 1795. p lB0" ,. iiie ni st mtmo or Marnhul Koch Is Fanll. nand. "' 8. Thomas Nast was a celebrated American cartoonist, especially famed for In r,t" torlal attack on the old Turn ma i y r g He uivs born In Landau, (lerinunv in mo. and w-Hfl brought to Aim" lea ut the K of six. President Roosevelt nn pointed him consul geneuil lo Oiiriva. quli, Lcuador, wher he died In lao" 0. Shakespeare vvrotu tho play "Tlmon of 10. Tho word, liibdomudal means weekly. ''i. T5 " .V 'Ti "- .. T'-tv "''' w-'' '.'' I ...,nrst "I'd second bnttles of the Marri"? Who said "As it .was the beSmi, ng la everm'o"?1 ""'nlnK' ""'' """ be tor' - ,11 "'.-, -:.,.. V,. .. s.,.s i, 'y, - ". . -I. ".v ,,., .. ' - .;..;:1. SHORT CVTS Perhaps a visit to Mr. Daugherty m; uv urrnngcu lor Jir. iterguou. A Blloxl, Mo,, mnu has captured I forty seven pound driimfish. Can yon beat it? The finger of unworthy suspicion ma; now he pointed at the physician who owo brewery block. If n tax were placed on sprin; poiirj there nre those who wouldn't care If It were so high as to be prohibitive. Government by conference being oa trial in Washington, It would be unkiuil i! unwise to anticipate a verdict. "He's forever blowing biibblu," hummed Major Sprague when he heard of the. suit entered by Colonel Procter. Keeping a basic five-cent fare, re marked Pericarp, is like trying to button your overcoat with )our mittens on, To give tang to frivolous comment, !e: the fact be noted that 1.100 persons die of starvation in Honnn, China, every day. The genial philosopher says he is ex tremely glad there are so many good beokl he hasn't yet read. There are good timet still ahead. That the Boston Health Department should prepare to give free medical atten tion to nil citizens is calculated to mile practicing physicians sick. The size of the Faster egg presented J io me resident suggests the fact that three feet don't make a barnyard, though the product be all to the candy. Bubbling enthuslni'm end welllnir kdmb 'I ration force us to admit that if Mr. Mitten ll were not a competent traction manager hi would make u dandy horse-trader. All thieves nre mean, but some irt meaner thnn others, us witness local Instances-: One thief robbed it baby's bank and unother stole a girl's Faster outfit. The 'motto of the P. R. T. an""1 to be: Punch, brother, punch with cap-; Punch in the midriff of the pnsseugare A Boston florist lias named n striped red carnation after the Vice President True fame svill not have come for Calvin, how ever, until his name is on a pair of rw suspenders. Foster hats and frocks for American women thla venr hnve I'nst In the neiltllbof hood of $'.!00,000,OiMi. Perhaps the monej Jl nugnt nave been upent more wisely, w You tell 'em! A Susquehanna woman trimmed (",'; Faster hat with the 'skin of n blocka' There muy be here nn earnest attempt w dlscouruge the manufacture of bome'waai hooch, Pennsylvania is in the position of til housewife who has a limited purse and rail" to buy. And she hesitates about approM"" Ing Friend Husband Taxpayer to mnKC touch, us he possesses u most unholy groucn. When u condemned slayer entered tij death house nt Sing Slug recently his ' question svns, "When do we eat' " fact, however, ceases to he startling u" one realizes thnt his conscience It proM&V nothing more than nn appetite. a T. K. Mitten nt his pro? cm Mumbles over basic fares; "One, two, three, four, live, U. S'ven, Street-var fares are bound'for lieaveq. Patrons, quaff your bitter cup, (( Watch 'em, watch 'em going up. Penn scientists have discovered ')'), I Roger Hacon had knowledge of the '"" "fj. 'i 1 .1.- ...l...n..An... !.... e.inee.tlfMl WlUlV ' UI1I1 HIP IIIIL-Itiai 0ir, link . :- , t. knew because he feared persecution pj ' J fellows. Kvldently then as now there wri those who stressed the evil of a gin" w much. The West Philadelphia mar. who j lh5,e fifteen eggs la the gnrnagc emi !"""',MUf ,1 lillil neen in an inciinuioi m g unil lefused to ha tell proven ""&,! ,! benefactor to the guibnuo man NV" ,0,Jj,Uj the fenlhered Tonsys 1,;'nP &,l,ft wagon. "Barter, fOes' fulls PP" '.1 '1 surprise, says tup garvnso " r , if , , ' ?Ve T I Jfi 'j