!&&& i.-a 'if ?'-s"rTj( 07 I Eueninjcj "public HeDgcc PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY crnxs h. k. cuims, raisinEST John 0. .Xfartce Vic President and Treureri Chsrl's J T er SrcrrAT, rnnMei 11 i.uillnK ton, Philip 8. olllns John II. Wllltsms. John .1. Ppurireoii Oenrre I' OoMsmlih. Dvvld K, Smiley, rlreete.r KMTOIUAt, H0A11D Ctai's H. K i'inTi. Chairman 3PAV1D B BMILBT .Kdltor JOHN C, XfAUTlX. . Cleneral Bulnte'Miinivs-er Published dally at Putio Laxim Building Independence Sriusre, phllmHphla Atlantic Cut .. ., r're-('nkm Building Nlw Yonic. . . . 3rt4 MAdlann Ave DBTSOir 701 Kord nu!' l nit 1ST. Loci 013 O fo be-D.-tn octal Bi' ing CntCAOO . 1302 rrinu'ic Bui .l.ng NEWS Bl'RRAl'8 WAIHIKOTON Ut'BEir, N K. Cor Pennsylvania Ave. and Uth St pair VonK 11 In eat. .The Sun Building LOXDON Oocac .... . TMfilgsr UullJmg SVDSCPJIPTION TERM? The Dvsm.vi I'l'suc Lsisier ii Kcned to UD crlhera In Philadelphia and surrounding towns at the rate of twelve (12) cents t'tr oh, paahle to the carrier. By malt to point outside of Philadelphia In the United Stai s L'anadi or United States ros sessions, postage free, fifty (SO) cents per month. BIT (fl) dollars rer year, pssabl In advance. To all foreign countries one 111; dollar a month. NOTtcr Subscribers wishing address changed must siv old ns well ns new address. BELL. JOOO VTALMT KF.iTOs.E. MAIN JtMO jy Addrtu all communications to Evening Tublio htdger. Independence Stuart. 7Villiilplnn Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCfATED MESS la exclusively eit Utled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not o'henclse credited in this paper, and also fn locnl neicv punfKhed therein. All rights of rcpuoNraMon of special rfXpofcAieA herein are aim rerted. rhiUJflphU. Silurdi', April 16, 1921 TEAR OFF THE MASK CONTROVERSY mil persists over the identity of the Mnn iu the Iron Mnk. Thorp wns n delibcrnto eonsplrncv to con cent him. When the Minor spoke of Certain Men who nre blocking him nt every point be cause he "ill not consent to n partnership of the city got eminent with the men who profit by the protection of vice he put a mask over their identity. The city hns a right to know who these Certain Men arc The men themselves are, the only perrons Interested In hiding behind the screen of feeee words. The city is expecting the Mayor to tear Wf the mask. THE FRANKLIN FESTIVITIES ITxHE exercises in connection with the J. transportation of a new Franklin statue through this city today arc both appropriate ami unnecessary From this latter fact Philadelphia's may like to deme pride, even though the preser vation of the memory of a great American In this community is almost an involuntary performance. For it i simply impossible to forget Franklin in a place the fundamental Activities of which are so grounded in his achievements. For this reason no tributes to the simula tion of the man in bronze can ever in the least acquire the character of absurd image worship. Indeed, it is somewhat difficult to appraise the artistry of Franklin statues, for the vigor of n unique personality nbldes and the mind reverts to what Franklin did and thought rcther than to what the sculptor accomplished. Memorials to this illustrious Philadelphian by adoption take on the na ture of honorH to the lit ins. It is the spirit of such tributes that is Inseparable from the festal ceremonies of today. It is an untrngic, cheery life that will be celebrated, n life the continuity of which does n"t seem to be severed, although history maintains that Franklin's eyes were closed 131 years ago tomorrow THE HOUSE RECANTS AFTKR a sensible start In its treatment of the reapportionment problem. Con gress i exhibiting characteristic igns of repentance. , There was manifest wisdom in the decision f the House of Representative!, as ex pressed In a bill passed by that body lust session to adhere to n membership total of 43.". Rut the measure died in the Senate, and the best that is promised in the House now i a compromise between the extremists who seek to increase the seats t INI unci those who would be content with liiu Approval of this figure would mean that no state would suffer a decreased repre lontatlon due to enlargement of the con gressional districts On the other hand, the day is ceitainly coining when the accommo dations of the House can be no further tretc hed Such concessions to the expansionists ns are now in prospect can only be temporarv, for by the time another icnsus yenr rolls around the quandary will be more embar rassing than ever The proper course s to begin the Inevitable self-restraint methods at once. The House is nlreadv overcrowded and ns a legislative bodv unwieldy . A constitutional amendment ietricting the size of the Houe to a total of ."fin con gressmen is now suggested Such proi eilure Would be whollv unne.essarv were the e. eellent original progtnm carried cut TOWN VERSUS COUNTRY' THE death of the mother of Judge Uormati at the age of 102 tear siijjims that life in the i it j is not so uiiw ho'esome as tne advocates of n leturn to the land would have us beliete Mis (Jorman had '.wi in Philadelphia ever since she was i icntepn yonro old She retained her fncultir. to the last and those who did not know her nge were astonished when told There are many men and women hue who have hc(l more than four-seore ears. and thin are still mtnelx pursuing their usual occupation- The p.o;iortloti of hale and hmrn oitogenarlans ati.l nonagenarian in oeri i in is larger than in the .ountr The reason for tins i not f.ir to seek .j the comrnii nces whicn make life en- are piovided in the cm- Tnere is wantith in the houses The wnter is mre. good food is plentiful and offered in nn nlluting tariety. and theie are uiiuiriiicnts mil, mailable which distrn-t the muni nnd keep nlive the interest The iminirt. ultn all it attractions of sccnor, lis grein grass, n lowing herds and its glowing ci op. is nlso the ,aee where the water i frequintlv r iitHin innir-il with tlisense g'lins wliep' K is not .,s to git medical attiMidam e (inckl. win re ihr Moors of the lions!, are i'o!i lie. niise ihev are hen ted with stoics, white ilrafts blow nhojf the looms ami where nwin fannln s ,, e on the farm products wh,ih the,, cnnic- si' Salt meats in the winter and nnnM g'eis In the suiniuer nre c oinnion And tn mi. trjman who survms does it i,i,,.. u ,w blessed with a ciistiron onstiii.i.oi, HOW COMPROMISE STARTS JAPANESE pii-s comiinut reguimrg ''ie Stale Ileparimcnt's iriticiMn of the Vnp mandate dwells upon the possibilities for hitrgaln wlih h the situation still I, old,, ,,,,(. line ilillin ulilil Join ii, il proposes that if lite I'nitvil State- should refrain from fnitifiuig Guam llie -Iilt'is of n;i might be icvi-eil This Is u fantastic idea, since the cases arc in no wny nuulogous 'I here is not the slightest i Iniiil upon the Anicricnii title to the laigest island of the l.adrones, unre stricted possession of which wns seciiricj by formal trmtv Hut lh extravagance of the Mlggcsliou Is iln upie of iiliirming The fii-l tluit it was made is nu iinle mJnn not only llmt Japan is hard prested fur au nrgiimcut, but that she Is groping for the path of compromise. Mr. lliiuhes' sound tntccraft is revealed in the nine lintor mood in which his pialn spoken nolo to Toklo has been received. Just ns most Americans liclleted, there re mains a batch of salient questions of foreign policj capable of being straightened out. Self determined isolation will accomplish nnthingf Thero nre few international prob lems so constituted that neglect will not mnke .hem more formidable. Our approach to the Yap Issue seems to hae been firm enough to hnvo meaning and good-tempered enough t promise oventun! adjustment.. HOOVER WOULD MAKE US FREE FOREVER FROM HARD TIMES The Secretary Has a Scientific Remedy for Ills That Politicians Can Only Mourn Over "X'RV shouted the politicians in tint- VV son. "is Hoover?" Even the cynics did not realize until then how little a politician sometime knows about real life. Hoover, who lall.s in this cltj todn nbout one nf the greatest, plans eer formulated for the improvement of life in the United Stntes, a plnn thnt he himself devised, Is one of the few grent geniuses of his generation. Politicians generally believe that civilized order and prosress nml collective thinking in a country like ours depend on the repeti tion of political truisms inherited from earlier and simpler times, nn speeches In Congress, nn allegiance to pnrty doctrine. Hoover believes that life has become n matter of labor anil that economic practice, rather than political theory exclusively, gov erns existence and controls feeling and In the end makes for the success or failure of grent industrial nations. Statesmen hope for n world without wnrs. Homer Is laboring for n country without h.nd lime., without privations, without the friction that lends to strikes, or the selfish opportunism thnt so often is n preliminary to war. What is more, lie is able to show you bow his aim may be nchloved with means and methods already available. His view of the business nnd industrial life of this coun try, of railroads nnd highways, itrcat plants and mines nnd the multitudes that operate them has the sweep of poetic vision. Give a mnn scientific training nnd he will accomplish marvels. Givo him, in addition, the quality of Imagination and he will as tonish his times. It is because he is imnginntivc, because he is sensitive to every manifestation nf human needs nnd at bottom generous, that Hoover news industr in America ns a series of dissociated and conflicting forces rather than as n unified scheme of effort likely In bring the mot benefit, the most hnppiness to all people concerned. He insists that the country nt large gets only sixty or seventy cents for the effort thnt ought to bring it a full dollar for dis tribution nmong the men who own indus tries nnd the people who lnbor in tbem. Faulty organization, friction between op posing groups in Industry, the use of coal where water power now undeveloped might be used, duplication of effort, unscientific operation of basic industries bring nbout this general waste. And so Hooter is responsi ble for the new Federation of Engineer Societies, which, endeavoring now to make science more general in industrial organiza tion nnd management. Is In reality making for the solution of the mint trying social problems of the times. To a man of Hoover's temperament the industrial mechanism of the United States. lewed as a whole, seem out of adjustment It has many clashing units nnd other units thnt do not function nnd still others thnt are worn out nnd ready to be discarded. It ruttles nnd bangs. It wastes Immeasurable power and burns out bearings. Mines and rnllwats and rivers and high ways are not so organized or utilized us to work toward any common end. to help each other and In thnt way to help the country and its people. Most of them have been permitted to glow out nf the accidents of chance and opportunity . Public utilities are not alway public They are too often organized nnd admin istered for the ei luive benefit of a few. Stnl;e5 and lockouts, seen in the light of such beliefs n this, appear as the most lamentable of all conml' waste. Tli ideal condition of which engineers hne begun to think is one m which no one would bine to be idle or underpaid. The Ureal Lakes would be open to ocean going -hips ami thus the interior of the country would be brought cloer to Euro pean market-. The water power of the East would be de i eloped and so coal could be saved by all the eastern railroads through the simple process of general electrification. Tnere would be federal agencies to aid in the scientific distribution of labor to the places whoie it would be most profitable and must producthe Everything possible would tie done hj en gineering scienie to icgulate better the dis tribution and pioduction of inal in order tout miners would not hate to face seasons of ciunpulsnry idleness. Homer dnes not belioto thnt there enn proper. . be uu such thing ns overproduc tion It is liis conviction thnt better gen eral prosperity made possible b better gen eral industrial oigntuzation would make the luxuries of todav the necessities of tomorrow for all sorts and conditions of people. Ami he does not ask governments to force nny one to do anything He depends on the good sense unci instinctive decency nf the average mnn to do the right and progiessjve thing once he is permitted to know how it can be done In it word, he vv isheu actually to put the country on u liuinis.s basts, to provide con stant work nt good wages for everybody mid to make nil business men sen that they ihemselve, would profit thereby, N'n man living has struck clin-cr th.in Homer to the roof and origin of the unrest mid unliiippiness thut are prevalent in the world todny. Every foolish and dangerous political theory of these tlmeR originates as an i xpresslon of dissatisfaction with some set of economic conditions Other people hope and talk nnd quote from the political formulae of other times. llonwr sek. to bring about social justice, prosperity and pence bv a method that never fah- lie relieH on science And be has convinced about l!O(i,0t)0 industrial engi nei i-s and enlisted them in spread his gospel wherever it is needed GRAY KINGS AND BLACK ffrpIH.Y were both very unplensnnt char- J. Hcters," decided little Alice when aked 'o discriminate between the Walrus ai.'i the Ciirprnlir Sin h would lie the opinion of niaiiv prr-ons regarding the present dethroned heirs nf the Hnpshurg and Hob' nzollern houses In A Wria howevir, some distinction Is significantly made bill just introduced in the National Assembly renders the pres ent e of n former king in Vienna n felony putii-hiib'c bv five years' Imprisonment. Charles' c han"'- "f n come-bnek would be enoiilv compromised In such ii law The I'hii fieimans who nre eager for tho absorption of Austria by llerlin, enthusi astically npproved the bill, which originnted with the Socialists. Their support U said to lmve markedly increased the clumces of its passage The political combination is extraordinary but bv no means inexplicable Wlllllllli Hohennllern was nut II former ruler of ustrn The I'hd licmniis have no liking wdiatever to come under Hnpsbtirg EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, SATUBDAY, APRIL 16, swny nnd they hnvc not the lenst reluctance In furthering n program which would pre vent such domination. If the new bill hml licen directed ngnlnst n inonnrclilcnl restora tion of nny sort the Socinllsts would hnvc probably lacked an ally. It seems that in central Europe degrees of obliquity concerning ex-royal houses are sensed with n fineness difficult for the out sider to grnsp. SIXTEEN PEACE POINTS rpHH order of the national Railroad Labor -- Hoard abrogating on July 1 the national agreements entered Into during the period of government control wns issued in nnswer to the petition of the railroad managers. That petition was presented at it meeting of the board in Chicago on January 31 Gen eral W W. Atterbury, ns the spokesman for the roads, said that unless there wns n reduction in operating expenses many of the line would be forced Into bankruptcy. "The I.nlior Ronrd can nvcrt this rntns trophe." snld Mr. Atterbury. "by declaring thnt the national ngreements, rules and working conditions are terminated nt once: thnt the question of reasonable nnd economl ml rules nnd working conditions shall be remanded to negotiation between each carrier nnd its employes; nnd thnt ns the basis for such negotiations, the agreements, rules nnd working conditions on encb railroad as of December 31, 1017, shall bo re-established." The board has not acted precipitately. It has taken ten weeks to consider the matter. Instead of ordering thp nbrngatlon of the national agreements "at once." ns Mr. At terburv requested, It has given ten weeks' notice mi ihnt there tuny be time for nn adjustment of the minds of the men to the new conditions nnd In order to give time to negotiate new agreements. The board has reserved to Itself perfect liberty of action in order to nbrognte nt nn enrlier date the agreements nffectlng any class of employes "unduly delaying the progress nf the negotiations." There is now to begin u series nf eonfesj ences between the men nutl the managers of the different railroad systems so that they may come to nn ngrccmont on wages nnd conditions of work. This Is what the mana gers asked for Inst Jnnuary. It is whnt the Esch -Cummins lnw contemplates. If it Is impossible for the two partios to come to an agreement in any glren case, the Lnbor Roard can interfere In tho interest of har mony. The conditions thnt must be recognized in the negotiations ore laid down by the bonrd in a statement of sixteen points, likely to become ns fnmous in labor controversies ns President Wilson's fourteen points were In the pence negotlntlops. The right of the men to orgnnize without interference or obstruction is asserted, and their right to act toward lawful nhicets through the representatives of their or ganization, whether those representatives nre employes of u particular railroad or not, must be agreed to by tlJ managers. No discrimination inus( be made by the malin gers between members nnd nonmembers of different organizations or between members of different organizations, nnd members of organizations must not discriminate ngalnst nonmembers or use other than lawful per suasion to secure members. This is substantially n declnrntion in fnvor of a rcnl open shop on the railroads, for it is an attempt to guarantee to the rnilrond mnn n right to work whether he belongs to a union or not. The employers must agree that the work ers have a right to be consulted prior to nny decision reducing their wages np i hanging their working conditions, and they must ngree not to discipline nny worker without giving him nn opportunity to be heard. The eight-hour day is recognized in principle, nnd the right of men to pay when tliev nre ordered to report for work is Insisted on. Many other points nre touched on, but they deal with detail. The outstanding features of the ruling nre n recognition of n real open shop, nn admission nf the right of the employes to organize and to be rep resented by the nfiicinls nf their organiza tion, nnd a declnrntion in fnvor of the eight hour day. The program will lend to a settlement of nil disputes if the malingers unci the men nic disposed to mnke pence. CHIVALRY IS NOT DEAD WHEN knighthood wits in (lower disputes were settled in niconlnnce with n set of rules framed in n spirit of fairness which ha lost some nf Its sheen with the passage of the years. Rut that spirit still survives. It has manifested itself nmong the girls attending the University of Pennsylvania. n wns proved when the' members of the girls' fencing team tried to elect a captain. The vote resulted in a tic. They said it was useless to vote ngnin. for the risult would be the same, Thereupon one of the candidates said : "Let us decide it with the foils." It was ngreed to. nnd the two girls fenced a they hml never fenced before nnd the vanquished congrntulnted the victor. This is how they used to do In dnys nf old when knights were bold and barons held their swny. Now when girls have the vote and (ch-o to dote we return to the gnod old way. BRITAIN'S ASSORTED TROUBLES THE miners in the Ilritish Isles m.iv have moved in the course of their strike ne gotiations to force the government to make pence through n policy of seizure nnd nn tionnlizntlon in the conl fields. Hut tin decision of the railway workers' leaders to ancol orders recently Issued for n sympn thetic walkout shows clearly that the mind of Ilritish lnbor doesn't run freely nlong with the mind of the more rndlcnl leaders Some of the demands made by the coal workers seemed at this distance to be mst. Hut the miners' grievances were not so serious ns to warrnnt nny thing like a tie. up in the industrinl life of nn empire. A conl strike in English and Welsh mines might still have serious consequences Hut the outlook becomes far brighter with the refusal of the labor group ns a whole to sup. port unions which nlm to use their power for purely political purposes. THE ROOT OF THE EVIL IN CALLING the attention of the country to the fact thnt unfit men have been nu merous nmong prohibition enforcement olfi cers the National Civil Service Reform League merely stresses u truth with which most people alieady were familiar. Rut it is to be doubted whether blame can be put flatly on either political party or on any of the ie. partment officials wholfuiietioned in Wuh Ington before or nfter Mnrch 4. The appropriations for enforcement made icy Congres were nnd still are whollv m adequate tn permit salaries of a sort likely to attract the better classes) of men intn tin- special service. Moreover, a man who lias no criminal tendencies may very quickly develop them when, working for n pittance, he i confronted every tiny of bis life u(, opportunities to make a vast lot of easv money by temporarily forgetting hw oath and merely looking another way. There are times when one certain man inn be of decidcdlv morn value to the com. muuitv than four certain men The reud:-iie-s is all. ' It is the conventional tribute to Japa nese Imitative powers thnt n Vivianl from Tokio Is expected here. Steauirhip oil upon the waters appears in neV" life anything but smooth for the offended snad in the Delaware. THE COMING COMET It May Approach Within 750,000 Miles, Dr. Barton Says Ancient Superstitions About These Ce lestial Visitors, the Tramps of the Sky Ry GEORGE NOX McCAIN DR. SAMUEL GOODWIN RARTON. of the University of Pennsylvania. Informs me thnt Wlnnecke's comet, which is due In June nnd which hns been sighted by Prof. E. E. Rarnnrd. of the Yerkes Observatory, has not bi'en seen yet by the University observers. The prediction (hat the comet will ap proach "very near" the earth Is more or less of n moot question. It may come ns nenr ns "fiO.OOO miles, Dr. Hnrton says, or it may sweep through Interstellar space nt n much greater distance. Dr. Hnrton does not look for any remnrk able developments In connection with this celestial visitor. V The fact thnt Dr. Rarnnrd has picked up the comet is due. the doctor thinks, to pho togrnphy . ns the comet Is not yet visible to the naked eve. "Wlnnecke's compt is n periodic nnd we have been expecting it to nppenr for some time," snld the University astronomer. "We hnvc been looking for It, but, ns I sny, hnvc, not jet located it." REMARKA71LE views nnd superstitions concerning comets hnvc been held by men throughout the ages In every lnnd. They were held nnd nre still held by countless millions todny ns omens of dis nster or portents of war, pestilence or fnmlne. Particularly were they supposed to be the heralds of denth to those in high places. Every generntion or so witnesses n resur rection of thp nnclent belief thnt this planet will come into contact with one nf these fiery visitors some dny and be nnnihllnted. A dor.eit yenrs ago. when otto of these periodic comets which appear nt regulnr intervnN wns due, thousands of Negroes in Philadelphia were thrown into great fenr lest the earth would be destroyed by colli sion with it. THE Into S. P. Lnngley, the eminent scientist, once writing about comets, said that In their spectroscopic analysts the most prominent clement was carbon, ' It wor suggested fifty years ago that comets kept up our atmospheric supply of carbonic acid gas thnt even tho carbon found in our own bodies was supplied by comets. Langley snld with fine scorn con cerning this: "That we may be partly ninde of old nnd used -up comets? Surely It might seem thnt n mndder fnncy never enme from the brnln of n lunatic at the full nf the moon." In 1MVT Prof, Fnlb. of Vienna, announced that on November 13. 1SI)D. n comet would strike the earth and the end of the world would be the result. Rut the professor was fooled. The old planet still swings on in space. There .Is little doubt, though, that the globe has several times passed through the tnll nf n comet. Spine comets hnvc ap proached very close to the earth, too. SEPTE.MRER. Catnllle Flan ISO.", wns. according to driest September known In Europe in U00 years From this -It wns inferred thnt Fnye's comet of thnt year had passed very close to the earth nnd wns responsible for the drought and beat nnd n yellowish hnzc that pervaded the atmosphere nn the continent. Fortunately. It is only the comets that are visible to the naked eve that count with th nlnrmlst denizens of earth. What they can't see dnes not bother them very much. In November. 1SH2, the Holmes comet was flitting through space. The word was passed around that there was to be n collision be tween the earth and the comet nnd thnt the end of nil things wns nt hand. The announcement sent n shiver of ap prehension down the spine of millions. On the Sunday before the comet wns sup posed to strike us, the Inrgest congregntlnns thnt the hurchrs in wirlnus sections of the country had ever known assembled. It wns tinnlly ngreed by the vvngs that the comet vvls the prophetic portent thnt W. .1. Rryan was to be walloped by McKlnley for the, piesidency in the election t lint followed a few 'days later. There nre good reasons for believing thnt the eaith passed through the tall of this comet, though no one seemed to suspect it nt the time. Dr. Henry Drnper exnmined it speetro scoplcnlly and it was also photographed, the first time that any comet Imel been subjected to such tenestrlnl indignities. The hoodoo end of comet lore, if there hnd ever been unythlng to It, ertnlnly should hnve developed in ISO-. In the fall of that year there were no fewer than seven comets In the field of astronomical vision. The following celestial tramps were cut ting capers over the highways of the night: Swift's comet. Wlnnecke's (the one now duel. Demnlng's. Hrook's, Rnrnnrd's, Holmes' nnd Freemnn's. The curse failed to work nnd the joke wns on the frightened Mnr-gnzors. IN lSl J.Tcbbutt. an nmnteur astrono mer of New South Wales, discovered n comet which ultimately became one of the most splendid nppnritinns of the sky in the last century. The superstitious afterward declared that it had foreshndowed the assassination of President Garfield, which it preceded by n few- months. It would be n verv remarkable thing if n comet did not appear in the sky n few months or n yenr or so before every great event such as wnr. fnmlne or pestilence, seeing that during the century just pnst 348 comets were observed bv astronomers. Till number included eighty-four re appearances of periodic comets, though only twenty -six were visible to the naked eye. LET us go buck n few years. A comet which appeared in the year 371 H. f. was thought nt the time not 'only to have been the visible prediction of but nciunlly produced the enrthqiinke that caused the Greek cities of Ilellce nnd Hum to be ruined nnd submerged Josephus vouches for the story that the fall of Jerusalem was presaged by "a comet in the form of a sword thnt hung over Jerusalem u whole yenr together." In the Middle Ages when n comet blazed In the heavens it was looked on as nn omen of death to some king or prince. Shnkes pcore couldn't escape the superstition. He declares that "When beggars die there are no comets seen. The heavens themselves blaze forth the denth of princes." The Emperor Vcspasinn crncked n joke nbout n comet and the augurs or soothsayers or some similar cull vowed that he suffered for it. A comet in A. D. 70 was said to be the forerunner of his death. "Thut hairy star doesn't mean evil to me," he said with a laugh, "It points to the king of the Parthian. He In hairy, but I nm bnld.y Vesnnslnn's light went out within the year just the snnie. COMETS as death warnings, according to the credulous, were : That of -145 A. D., which preceded the denth of the Emperor Valciitlnlnn; of (S.TJ, the denth of Mahomet, and X)', the demise of Louis II. When the year 1000 A. I), dawned every body ill Europe looked for some awful cntns trophe or the end of the earth. They hud their fears foi their pain. In lHlii n petition was sent tu the French Academy nsking thnt It umiuuuce thnt the earth would not be destroyed by the comet of that year. The renson assigned for this unusual np peal wns thut in 1773 ho grent vvns the fear in France that the eaitli's end wns approach -lug thnt speculators took advantage1 of tho panic tn sell seats in Pnradise ut exorbitant prices to the gullible ones, Tim Academy remained silent. "SIC NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia on Subjects They Know Best WALTER P. MILLER On Americanization "rpHE light of Amerlcnnlsm cannot be X hidden under a bushel ; it must be set up high, so that its rays can penetrate nnd dispel the dnrkness of ignornnce." This is the stntcment of Walter P. Miller, chairninn of the Americanization committee of the Chamber of Commerce, who in dis cussing this city's obscrvunce of All-Ameri-cau Dny said: "The citizens of Philadelphia, through the medium of n great mass-meeting April 7, expressed their loyalty to their country and their government. . "It wns a fitting nnswer to the element of radicalism that dares to flaunt itself In the public eve throughout the country. Such ineetings'ns the Atnerlrnn Legion hns under tnken, supported by the ninny other organi zations Of the city, nre bound to rout rndi cnllsm. to strengthen those who mny be wnvering in their attitude toward the gov ernment nnd bring to the front the lnynl nnd true Ainerlciins. whether native or foreign bom. Wants Efforts Kept Up "This effort en masse could be continued for permanent good if each individual would mnke it a point to carry his Americanism Into his dally life. Too often the American spirit of patriotism is something to be brought out nnd held up to view on holidays only. "We have ninny people living nmong us not knowing our Inngunge mid customs, our history or our Invvs, and because of this lack of knowledge they nre susceptible to influ ences which nre hurtful to them nnd which, if allowed to persist, might hnrm theVnuntry of their adoption. Counteracting Influences, continuously and consistently applied, should be brought to bear upon them. "Not one of these people would be con vened to n fnlse doctrine if every American did his full duty by his foreign-born neigh bor nnd would give him that consideration which would make him realize thnt be hnd it friend. "Friendship nnd a common purpose, with n knowledge of the English Inngunge, is the first step in Americanization. We cannot be a nation ninde up of vurious foreign coun tries on Anicrlmn soil. We must have n common Inngunge, a coinmoinpurposc. Schools' Aid Aliens "A common language is easy of attain ment Our public schools nre well equipped to leach the foreign born, from the little child to the ndult ; not only to tench the language, but to bring home in tho teaching the ideals of our country Those who arc looking for ward, to becoming United States citizens should use these facilities of their own voli tion The desire to conform to the laws of our country, which require n knowledge of English before citizenship Is granted, ought to be sufficient urge to nny ono desiring to become a member of our great democratic family. "To hnve n common puipnse there must he a common meeting ground, nnd with a unl versnl knowledge of English it is nu ensy matter for the foreign born to come into contact with his American neighbor, and ensier for his American neighbor to bo friendly with Mm. If there is n grent work to be done, something which will benefit tho country nt Inrge, to which all people must lend their efforts for successful accomplish ment, it tends to form a bond which unifies ns nothing else can. "During the war the foreign groups of this dty were brought together In the work nf gathering subscriptions for the Liberty Lonns. They gave their support to (ho government loyally, they gave their sons bravely and their money willingly. The re port of the foreign language division for the Third Federal Reserve district shows how faithfully they performed their duty tn America. Nineteen different nationalities were represented in this report: Albanian, Armenian. Chinese, Czecho-Slovnk, French, Gerinnii-Anierlcim, Greek, Hungarian, Itnl Inn, Japanese. Lettish. Lithuanian, Polish, Rumanian, Russian, Scandinavian, Serbian, Syrian nnd I krninlnn with a total sub.srrlp. tlnn to the fourth Liberty Ioan of S33, OW.IIOO. Showed linlty to Untied Stule "This work not only showed the lovnlty nf these people to (he government, hiit it created friendships with the native born 1921 'EM, BOY, I'M WITH YOU!" Wt tzrpsr' s$$f. mi' .''' which hud never been realized or thought possible before. "With the stnrt nnd impetus that has been given for icnl Americanism, a wonder ful opportunity to join forces onco more in, a common purpose is presented In the coming celebrntion of the scsqulcentcnnial, to be held in Philadelphia in HUifi. "At thnt time wc will eelebrnte the 150th anniversary of the signing of the Declara tion of Independence, tho beginning of a new era not only for this country, to which it brought freedom of speech nnd liberty of action and the right to worship God in man's own way. but for the whole world. "The new citizens of today will npprn cinte whnt this event moans us much ns the native born, and they will gladly give their best efforts to mnke it a success. "Let us supplement our patriotic meetings with our dally efforts to become better nc quninted with sour foreign neighbors the employer with bis foreign -born employe, the teacher with the families of tho children who attend their classes, and wherever It is pos sible to let the light of our Individual Ameri canism shine." DAFFODIL TALK UNDERNEATH the emerald hill Shone the golden daffodil ; "Am I," softly whispered she, "More than banquet for the bee?" "Tes," I answered, "you nro mirth From the bidden benrt of earth ; After winter's silence long, Comes with you the breath of song; You nro on en, you nre sign, Of nn ecstasy divine Thnt shnll like n flood immerse All the wnkened universe!" So the daffodilly smiled Radiant and reconciled. Clinton Scollurd, in St. Nicholas. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1 Who was Sadl Carncrt? 3. Whnt Is the orlglnnl mcnnlng of cabaret? .1 Where did the Druids live? . Whnt Is the correct pronunciation of Anne Boleyn, ono of the wives of Henry VIII and mother of Queen Kllzabevh? r Who created the fictional character of Colonel Mulberry Sellers? 6. Who wrote tho score of the "Norma"? opera 7 Whnt people nre sometimes called Cam- brlnns? S What Is n cache? 9 What Is the keelson of a ship? 10 What Is n palinode? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. The first grent International exposition or worlds fair In the modern sense wns held In London In 1851 under the presi dency of iho prlncn cojmort. 2 Woodrovv Wilson was born In .Staunton, Va. 3 Modem scliolaishlp Inclines to tho view thnt the name Julius Caesar was pro nounced "Voo-le-oo&o Kl-snr." 4 Charlemagne. Ulng of the Franks and emperor of tho west, was born In 712 nnd died in 8U. 5. The "Canterbury Tales" Is tho most famous poetical work of OcofTroy Chaucer G. Australia holds the niandnto for eastern New (iulnc.i anil for New Britain New Irelund nnd HoiiKalnvlIle Inlands' New Zealand holds the innndnto for pa it of the Samoa n group in tho Pacific Ocean. 7. Two popular mnstlcatorleH lira betel nut in the Oiltnt, and chewing gum v masticatory Is something Hint may ba chftwed 8 It to du Janeiro in tho second largest cltv In South America ' 0 Frank H KVllogg Is. senator fiom Minna- bOtll. 10. Matinay is the nntnr for the ceremony of washing the feel or tliu poor on Maundy Thursday .he TIiuimUv. iu. fore Ivjster The word lsn iti-nns Urn Rims distributed In connection v,ttn Ibis ceremony In KngUnd tho t washing Is uliuokt ,ui -ov, i i"1.,ii'f1y' '." '""'rthutwl annually "on behalf of the sovereign, Humanisms Dy WILLIAM ATHERTON DU PUY SIR AUCKLAND GEDDES, the Rritlsh ambassador, recently told an amusing story of a hunt in the Canadian wilds, nf the wolf packs thnt howled around the cabin nt night, of going forth, n torch in one haml and n revolver in the other, of seeing two bright eyes in the darkness nnd firing. The next iTiorninc it was discovered that he had killed n rabbit, Mr. Jussernnd. the French ombnaclnr and dean of the corps, later spoofed the Britisher a bit on his story. "It was nn excellent story." snld tho Frenchmnn. "Quite remnrknblr in some re spects. It was particularly remarkable, it seems, to me, because it was n shooting story told by an Englishman nud there was no tiger in it." Mr. Herbert Hoover, secretary of com merce, is particularly interested In the prob lems of reorganizing tin; government depart ments. Some weird situations have developed in tho Topsy growth of government agencies, he says. Tnkc the matter of bears, for in stnncc. The United Stntes is the ownff of mnny hears. The pnlnr bears of Alaska are administered by the Department ol Commerce through the Hurcnii of Fisheries. The grizzly bears are administered by the Department of Interior through the national park service., Tho brown bears, however, nm ndminlstored by the Department of Agri culture through the forest service. It must all be very confusing to bruin. Senator Pat Harrison, of Mississippi, who is today probnbly the most active youthful member of southern Democ racy, has gained much prestige iu Celtic circles because of a belief, growing out of his name, that he Is Irish. As n matter of fart, the senator's given nnme is Pntton nnd ho Is the scion nf ens of those southern families in whose veins to day Hows purer English' blood than is possessed by nine out of ten of the residents of the tight little island Itself. April fool I In thnt prime requisite of the politician, n memory for nnincs. Postmaster Gen cral Will n. Hays is the most gifted man in public life. A name and face, once given him, becomes catalogued in his mind like a card into nn index lite nnd Is there for good. One nfternoon, when he had been In charge of his new cabinet post about two weeks, he sent word nround thnt he vvouM meet everybody In the building from scrub1 women to bureau chiefs. They nil enrae, 2000 of them. They shook linnds and gave their names. Mr. Hnys was careful to get each cognomen correctly in mind. If knrn clerk sought to hurry past the chief would stop hhn and insist on the name. Next day he began meeting these proplt In the halls nnd in their offices, cnllinic them by name, nil of which helped mate rially in establishing human relations. Twenty-five years ago the Democratic governor of New Mexico appointed n dash ing Kentucky gentleman attorney general of tho state and Instructed him to clean up the outlawry thou prevalent. The appointee was a Democrat nnd jiad served in tho Legislature ns such lie ho'l been born during tho Civil Wnr. tiiv father hnving gone nwny nnd fousht four .cni without so much ns a visit to his wife ana baby. Down in Texas (lie son married tlie daughter of a Confederate soldier. The son's nome was Albert II Fall aiid today lie is the secretary of Interior In (he Harding cabinet, avowedly partisan Hipi'b" llcan as it Is Mr. Fnll is a Republican -has bcon for tweuty years. , . . All of which goes to show that political faith is not like tho leopard's spots. Much Labor for a Little Radium I'lod W. Psrsons, In the Worlds, Woik Practice has shown that It is nccessar hnudlo nnd treat something like l,(0.iw pounds of nro In order to recover n irlim.'" milium. One ton of ore will selduiu u liver more thnn lx or Bcven nilllif roi "j tho radium element, or an amount of radium no lnrger than the size of n plnhead. "JB authority figures that, including conl, water nnd chemicals, the producers must nii" nioro than 00,000 tons of raw material i" produce nn ounce of the precious radium liietnl. No such effort hns ever before n required to produce a spoouful of 'W ,in j element. " -..JlisW ay v.l ,f, -rfv,( t. Y.BfeA' CyS. .j'Aai,.