Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, May 13, 1921, Night Extra, Page 10, Image 10

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EVENING PUBLIC LEDGERr-PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, MAY 13,' 1921
H J -ft r j('
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PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY
CVIll 3 11 K Ct'uTIS, PnBdiDrvT
John i" Miirlm, V, Ice President nnd Trnnrr
CnArtea A fl' Secretary, riinrlri II I.uillnB
tun I'hllip H Coillna John V Williams .torn. J
Hpurironn UenrEe V QoiilMnlih. David P. Simlav
IMr'ctors
rAvm b PMii.nr.
Ldltot
s, JOHN C UfAHTIN' General llimlnra 'tanns-ft
rublljlinl Onily nt l'iniic I.niiUH Huudlnr
, Injepcndi nco Sriuait, Philadelphia
.' Atlantic Cm I'mv.l mon IlulldlllR
' Nk'n oiik . .. ,:i,i Mi lliuii Aif
DETROIT Till IVnl lt.illrllnt-
BT. I,ori . . . . 013 Gtobr-Den ocrat Dull llns
CIICAOO . 1302 refluent Dull Unit
ng9 iirni'-u's-Wjmit.soio.s
im.tjii.
N r. i' r lVtinsilinnl Ai on.i Hth SI
iiw Voiik lit npt- ..'I he Sw Hull Mur
Lonikis Uracil- T-vralicar IlnlMm
arnsiTUPTioN Tr.iois
Th rjrEMS'ii I'liiii LcnnEu n nervwl to jh
erlhera m Thllad-lp 'j anil MitU'tind fii. win
at the rate of twelve 'l-i onts pi w rU pj i! a
to the i.irrl!
U mull In points ninth.' of I'lilladrlr-h a In
the lnitid Sinun icinirti or I'ni-ed s-t.a t '
asinn potnse f' tlfn i.-.tn ii-niH per mjn'li.
6lx ilili dutlArt itr u.u pa itue in adianrc
To all fur Iko mil: 'Uos one (SI) il..lur m, nth
NOTIi l! Hubcnbri unhinr, ad.lresi ihing'J
Jnual cue old ftfl well a in w adureti.
PEI.I., 3000 V1I
KKlTOM' MAIN 1000
Ty AMrcis all can.mun.ca torn It) riei'dtp I'ubllc
1'din hidcpctutrtlfii- jtyiiarc I'hilndrti'hui
Member of the Associated Press
THE ASSOCIATED MLS l crclu.i.l e'y en
titled fo fir 'lie for ? iMih iCil'Inu if ,i , iipu I
dijpilfrlf.t crerf.f.il o if i no' otllrr' tf ei-crf fr,
In tlm finper. mic ai.10 fte locnl 'n-ici inibhalirn'
therein.
ill rtpJ'tt o repubffmfuj'i o pecil rfMpafrJica
nerfH or iilfo vren ril
rhiljdrlphla, I nd. M II. Hil
FINDING A WAY TO DO IT
THK City ('niii.i-il. nh ilio n-itruic "f
tin Citv Siiliritni'o ntfiiT. Iiiih npp.in'ntl.v
foutiil a aj tn voiirn tin liulii niii for
thin Clt.T.
"I'lic l.uw I '.imirutfeo das 1 1 i 1 1 a tiH-iriMi-report
mi an -li mi ti pi 'iiiis tu.it t.i
v ilmL. ,,1 ,. ptit ;i ,. ,. an I .. i n
the lat SunJiu iii Mm ami li.nl. ai
on the lust Sut.dti v in .sept' UiIhm. and
"(IcHiRuai iuji"' mii-Ii tune a tin- tnno tn bo
coufornml to by t ho rtti.eu
The lAwjirs ..iy thnt viirli nu nrtlinnni'
wnulil bo xaliil in epito of tin- Stuto law
mnkin; I'ii-ton stnmlnrd tune the t:itnlni d
for Uie State If thov Uac foiiiul a wav
to ptvo to tbo people of tin-, citj nn ctr.i
hour of tlaj light fur rerroation every iluy
this "aimini r rtr one ilmuM be lielisbted.
DR. BROOME. DIPLOMATIST
DH. ItUtiu.MK i pu-.iiiiiL lii i1.. tun aj
an.ons the jilt f.i ili of tun lout uln'll
tional situation in a tr.anner to iniii.iinj the
admiration of the iW. i ramn
His plait tor u i mini il of terp l. r wiitih
has rpeeiMil the mammon- inilnr'iiiout of
tho loiii-bor in tin iii't-ihiiw e. Hon ot the
rity and is in a fair win to be iiulor-ed liv
all the reht. is intemled t open the way
for tin views of the whole tenehitu forre to
find rprevsii,n thronuli atithoritatno spoKes
tuen or wmi'i u.
It is not t e.nrv t d"il on the evils
ihMi It is intemliil to rem. ie 'I'lie tenih
rr.s know- what tbe art' lint Ir I'moine
is not sjiMiig iiiijth'tic about f.iem lie ts
merelv Koine ahead with a p'.iri to wtueli no
one ran r'.isonalih nine. I. 1m' w Iip h when
ndopted will in.iU" .nnn nf tin diseordant
rlrnien's u under ut the ease with which he
ha dulled their weapons.
MOTOR LIGHTS
Till' proisiiin in the pad laws under
I i-li nioti.r owners won nipt i!'-d lo
keep ilieir tl.no lights l.nnitr.r i'ii when
their iii.n liti.i s k.re ' parked ' in lnl rnws
in biiKh'n liahi.il stieeis was i.nfair and
VIIti ful It ll-e,l n he Hritdnl that ..in
witlmiit li;ht- f "lit ii'id ba-k nnsbt pi '
tn be duimer.ii s ..bsta. Us m a st.-.M left
Middonl. dark In sntne unforeseen tie. idem
to the elei-trn' 1 1 trh r stel lint no mil.
i vi r seemed to realize tha' under tieh mi
ditmns other ears would S' earefullj with
their own lichis in euule them
The in hi i pri.Mn ti. !il' n ni.tl
use nf on. 'ina'l p-irkins '.sht
pffntne -'stiirm with i.oeriiin
Mi:ti.".ii ' the n Mnti-r i'
I. . fhe
hoe, i mo
S'lrn .1 s
It will
relieo in. it. ir nwnerx n' .innoMime and
uiiii"! ' nr pi ns. and t.-nilile
In a c tier.i a. th" new r'..e i itner
rv; ns .1 1 ill s gtiitli'NII re-lind l.tll'W
that the .,,d ii i. a rmi-.tm ' l'.very
on. in the l..-i;!sla' .r- knew tl ,. I! .t no
fff.irt tn ni. it was made until the
niiiinr i lubs l.nat'ie n.'ni and .ii'irnl np
pei.. after a; r. a "i tl.e I s'l-Iai'.n- Such
is 1 ' at Huh si r;
JUDGE LINDSEY WINS
A i. mm i.u t ii t .i .ii,- r.en
l.iuNi.' ' !' r .Ii.n nile t 'our.
has l i ii su-t.i n . nt ! t I ids" ha- p.ii'i
the tine f, s.'iiui , ! . -i, n . d mi him fm
conit.nl .til '. ..i- -a i w .ti a i ie'nri
1 1" w ii. . i i ii i i v it i . c in in n d. r
trial iii th- ' i '..d be fof ' d tn
reveal in ,i -in ' 'i 'ii .nl'fd man had
told him in n".' ic Th" .1 idee refused
tn ise'. so 'l ,' tit l.t. r tn.il I, m II" in
Mti d "nt . , a: g ...d ne imd hi en nil" to
do 'ti tie I .'' I .' i""iirt nad lief n ie
pelider' it 'lt; ii'.e.i. : e i.n Lie fui t tlm- he
always k. , " wth the l...is ami sir.,
vlin (t.nfn. .1 t h"i
The .Im'U' j.n -pc n t mutder iria.
Itlslll-d -I' .1 .ilS" loll ,iiswt lie i .i .
til ill. p I' ' ' I '! t r ' - I'l'll-'K I . f l.t'li,
uii'l I- in- i J ml . id. i inlii.iluuii; Inm
hi i . i , ' I .' - ' "ts inm .in
til li i I i ti I I ,.',." '' t.' II nil' '"Ml In
tie tit I II . II ' - t ll tn I.' '-sl'tltl.ll "...
tl f tl. 1 1"
Aim 1 1 due I ndsi i s no i '" 'ii. i is
piinnlmn n ' "id'! tmi' !m Ht'.' ' i''..i
tiinit f'i sine ' . i. ii nurd I. i - a .1 irir
flf III III' II.. I Ii"' ne i -It "I
"CRIME" THAT MEN WINK AT
0 l in" ii t li ir - M I' - t '-' ii r
the ati" nn 'ii i' i r i i.nr . It
Kurt, S'.fiei "t" nf ' -I Mis f.ii tins d .
trier, tin- ill-.' mi ". d 1 1 b in . it. at i "i 'i 'i
are MtnuKlsliiii: '"' ' I !' m. s f ii i mr mm
thin on intri I min I", ir.
It wu- tnei'l a ii.altoi -f tin " ' t . n
this sni t f.f thins ' Id In cm '' .I'f.n'
public attiniimi Ihen has inv.r lit p a
fjnvi rt'tn-nt ieffunti"n nf the Inpi r tr.itTe
llhlih III- tint belli i"'Rei S'n'lJll.i
Honors inm I'nulaiiil and 'nt'ind fi un t .
rollllll. tit tl.nil llll li 'tl I' ".ll ll'll. Wl-ll
duties W.r.' hllili 1 .11 i-ll slilljsjll'l. (inn
rich out i.f 'in hi." I.uid ' ir.nl' m t'
jiast. And tic 'I.' 11 who hi.i. b. Hunt tie
tUIIIlltirleil S I- h-n' ""t fill tin 111-1 ll. s
jmilt.V ot 11 heilmils "ftelise A. I it-v hiii'
drunk tbe witii and li'iuois ihei Imie
milled kimw iimli "-hi 11 tin r Irn'tid- a-vd
vhere iln stuff 1 nine fmin and imiie but u,e
ricul 111..111I1-1 bus tiuiught the iinr f
them I nr it
If lb II. .11 ptltill of an "Nil1! hen logos
was lepinl'd cs 11 crime lepa.ibf men
Mould nut winl at thai ii.'la'i. n "f tin law
w'tlmiil iilinii ihei cannot u'''l what tlicy
wish I'u' tin VnWtouil Act is 11 suuitituan
mcnsiire inteifi rniK with tin- cratilicatioii of
n human itpppiiK n pinerM' apprtite. if
you will but 1 . 1 1 1 tin lens a Minimi np
prtjto Jti no -t '" li "f '"' miiiulniition
run it In pin nn thi -.line plane with nrsmi
or liiuidor 01 buii'urx m lni'lniai mbbeiv
Or flllUf'lv Tliel.foli we imulit in well
ndiuit tlrni the nun who u ant luimr will
set it In wlialeier win 1" poitubli. so buiir
an it Is gettable. and that lhfi will not
think tho wot he of themselves because of it.
evr-rtliflpvi It n the duty of (he eus.
toms ofuccrt nml of tho Internal revenue
ofliccrM to exort tlienuolvrs to the utmost to
enforce the law againM tin? manufacturi
and Importation of alcoholic drinks nml to
resist tlie temptation to wink at violations,
temptations the for 'f which only those
subjicted to them fully iindi rstntul.
LIKE PEOPLE AND POLITICS
THE P. R. T. LEASE IS FAULTY
But Incessant Quibbling Over the Pact
That Gives Life to the Frankford
Elevated Is Not the Way to
Make Progress
M
AN' 11 man m unman encased in the
purchase of neiossines is dissatisfied
with the terms of the barsain The seller
is nfieii incmisiiieiate of any interests but
his mi n If the pun has. 1 s demre for the
riiiiiN is strmici r than his i.ation about
tin pi ice. llsieeliietlt is leached. This is
the win Hade admitted as' it- of piosress,
1 xi. ts ami has always existnl
That is the wai, moiioier, in wnnh im
pruMil ttansii. cmisidoieil as a conunoility ,
can he bought by the uti of Philadelphia
The ueetl is due. The whiphatid of the
P It T. is admitted. Ancient wrongs, the
ofU'tises of traction tnasnntt's and iitiscrupii
Imis politii uitis. matiy of them dead, bine 11
smut dm! to do with the deplorable con
ditions P.ut wiiii;ins of hands and cries of "ei
torUmi." however indisnatit. will not set
back the i lock nor operate the 1'iankford
elevated
'llie bne draft whnh is now before
Coiiueil prtnidc specifically for the estab
lishment nf rapid transit service to North
east Philadelphia and for physical connec
tion of the line built by the city with the
py-tem of the P U T
Exports wlm halo delied into the trnction
muddle until their minds are ponderous
1111is.es .if grap.is. iiiiiot'tiation 1 harts, 111
teles- 1 11 1'l . ami labia'i'iu statistics .an
tetal.at. t .at tin pi,.pn. . ba'ciuu liii"iii
the uiiiiiicipaliti and tin P I! 1' i ih fic
tile lint this criticism, lioweier Mrliinii.
leads only to stagnation
It will not time the last spike nettled to
Join the Market stioei and Frankford high
speed lines.
To lecture the public upon its indifference
to the ethics or eien the finances of the sit
uation is futile. Nor i the average oitm-n
to be blamed for his attitude He is nau
seated with the wrangling and squabble,
the false starts and retrogressions that
would stagger nn Einstein to analyze
The wishes of Philaib Ipln in m this mat
tor ate direct and impli Want is wanted
intensely and sum-orely i letter and speedier
frnnsit and a truce to ub.tr. n Monism
At the thoroughly depi'.s.ng hearing be
fore Council's Transportation Committee,
I Proctor Twining sadlx imifessed that the
city was under the thumb nf the Uapid
Transit Compani. He admitted that this
was tint his fault, and Mint though the
lease was Miluernlile. he had been a party
to drawing up the pm t he cause it was a
compromise which seemed tn get somewhere.
(Vmparod to the sort of iiiiitmtis that
were lired at the Transit Inr or. tho lease
iloes ceitainli etnbodv piogre.. and is In
deed a miracle of clarity
Furthermore, it cannot be .aid that the
least mystery has been maintained rtgard
ing the unfortunate position of the city
and the advantageous one of th" P It T.
When the munn itiality embark' d in the
transportation liihltn it tiumed a role
hedged with doubts and difficult!'. It has
onnstrtif ti d the elevated rail win to Frank -ford,
but that ns.et will bo iriuullx u.eb .s
1 nless this line is mnde an integral part of
the transput 'atmn system nf Philadelphia.
It ousts the city ST.'n.iiiMi a yeai in
tl."d il.argts ,.n tin bonds tln.ited t" liniin- e
the wnrk .1 ib ml loss while tin mad re
mains itiopratiie The whole 1 laborato
fipiipinent .iru. no purpose whatever at
the present time.
Cull" in t'i' 1 onstrui tuui of the Delaware
Itiver brnlg'' until it i"aclie within a few
vnrds t.f the Jersey sire 'I lien imagine
eight or t "ii v .us nf bn kenng about linish
ing the prni. '
The IIMl'l.tV of Alliernun 1 mis have
transit tmibbs of their own ninl .ok'-i upon
the subject lack appeal yet if the Philadel
phia tang1' were gem rally rtalizid without
our frontiers th" probable verdict would b'
laughter
Fi.r -ir.'e tin Hlarikt nburg Adnniii-tra-timi
the Transit Company has sin at to
torce "10 town in!" the making "t a torn
pa. f a. advantageous as pnsiible t.. the
priva'c 1 nterprise Th" city l.a. stunk
bn. .1 e lien it could and has cndfnvoml m
olT-e' tin. kind of pn .sure
Tit..- . no set ret abmit tlnse n tie.,
i,eit ire tl.t v ti'tvel. nor nr" t'n fmei
1 11 p' ut.' 1I.1 in aught than uutnora . 'I In re
tir.- i. 1 I . roes in the i use. No! inn ll."
P ,1. . .a In s.i 1 lassitied
'i ' j 11 1 1 'ii lh" affair -" is n- ,n o h
11- 'ii'i i.li'n.u with a niiniinuin ot -n rih. e
'1 I . ti..l"i tider. the patron of I'.iatnl
In, - - until bis times are rnis. d, but
.iignt fticerned nlnuit the tinaie ml 'in
I n-ri.-r 1 ms of the City linvernnv n' I!"
spe. '.ng t.i" trials of the 'I ran t C.'inpnnv
I,. a'! - not .' all.
il - p'ngram is cars in iihundnin . sints
a- i litres and qui' k journevs
Tie whole issue is materialist. and 11--..,
I, n .In. lbl in- viewed from the bo-is nf
" gielltest plll'tn'nl good tn the gnu''-'
t 1,! r C i.nrmniso 1- tin p f..n ti.e
' 1 lll.'l tliere Is nn nil, el iniir-' 111
C'.e ..-i.e. Whilll I dl-t irllll gll ''ll.pn
in 111 'hii'ii'ter and n distigu-iil b tl.nvs
1- imie tin loss a rial'-tn in-'t ,iu"iit of
;i"Bi'-- Its adoption vvi'l iriai mat the
1 '! , Will It 1 ejVe ll o " T . ' II' . ll'll I ret til 11
..I be lo'al iiipital iiii'-'ii'ti m it- own
,.- l,l ll Will 'olllltt t.'l. ' Me pies, lit
Tun, upon the tl'easiiri in.- .1 in th Imi.il
.si. . tii.it ih" I'raiikf"! I r I Itusitetnn
in - will lie op1 in d and t . ir .: n nic truti-it
!' t.ii-ni 111 I'liiliid'-lpt in wi 1 b" iisib 1 ,
Tic iihsiirdir "'' -ti-UIIBIIig tn iut
tiimugh an ab-ni'it'lv ideal ba-e is ruaui
!..t I. if" pro' "''Is thl . Igh Ml" in ' eptain e
..f fact- Tin 1 miliary course pmduoes the
.nanitimi with win'li th" transit 1 ase has
.11 long be. U stl icken
Abject Huini.'lor to the Tra tmn Cntiipaiiv
iieid not I." 'I,, penalti of irogi".- It"
iimons "f il ' b us" ai" -till pnssibb The
Iaynr is 111 a '..-itioii to bung a,l tin' 111
terested parties nit 1 frank onsultHlnn end
to arinnge and 1.1 -if v un m ifllir detail.
I he ' i-tifg di.ift ' f I'.t I. i-e is a h-is.s for
ii.iiiirui'm w . . I' -lii.u'd I". I .tf to g"t
me toad i-tH'ti d. wlin li ni 1 'in. In . long
n. .,r 1. a I.n k ot i. 'i,'. t.i i ,iim th"
tit.-t ..f :i Imd bargain nnd g" alnad
A POOR SMELLER
DK Ml 1KH.AS Ml Itim P.I I I. Fit of
I 'oluii. bin I ini'-r.iti, was nun. where
mai 'ight when after failing to nleritifv
nun .en nf tin udms subiiutt.d 10 him, be
rmiftrknl that "til" sen.e of -li.ell Is the
least ihti llf-i tunl of the sen-" -
Whet Inr h" was right, nf "mrse depends
upon what is meant by int. II. final iiuali
Mi s Fverv 0110 knows that a dog has a
more neute sense of smell than a inau. lie
can trni k his master win re a men man
would lie helpless He inn pui-ue game In
the forest where no tra. a - of a footptlnt
are visible t" the utest human eye nnd
no scent is detectable bv the most sensitive
human noe If this qunlitv in tin dog is
lint so inti lleottinl as th" qualitv of tasle or
tuin h r sight or hearing in the human
being then th" dog belongs on a lower plane
than man
Itut how are wn to neeine the relative
intellectual quality of the senses? Human
iieings have been known (o detect thlngi
by their sense of ntnell which the animals
cannot detect. Helen Keller, for example,
who Is blind and deaf, used to be nble to
sort the washing of the family with which
she vvus living and arrange, it In piles be
longing to the different persons. She did
it by Jirst lifting the folded garments to her
face and near to her nostrils. She insisted
that she did not smell (hem, but there is
no other known way by which sho could
have distinguished among them.
Ilio sense of smell in the ordinary civilized
man, however, is not so acute ns In the
luivagp. It has become atrophied through
lack of exercise Dr. Ilutler might have
defended himself for his inability to dis
tinguish odors by Insisting that he wn.s n
highly civilized human being or that his
olfactory nerves had been paralyzed by tho
odors of New ork Or be might have mild
that the odor of bav rum. which be did
identify, was s., pungent that it left him
unable to distinguish the odor of alcohol or
of citronellu or of wintei green or of catholic
acid or of anv of the other substances sub
mitted to him at the dinner of the Engineer
ing Society of the utnversitv
"MANY INVENTIONS"
F0U the good of their narrow -visloned
nnd irreconcilable souls, all the leading
jingoes, nil the hard -shelled old codgers who
view plans for world pence n the work of
dangerous idealists, and nil the folk who
saw in American effotts townul new Inter
national understandings only the work of
light -bended visionaries, ought now to be
loaded on a barge. The barge should be
towed to the open sen off the Delaware
Capes in order that its passengers might
view experiments with the newer methods
of wnrfnre which will be "inducted enrly in
.In tie by combined militnrv 11 ml naval forces.
The War and Nnvy Departments nro not
going to have a show The business they
have in baud is no nn re practice maneuver.
They areti t going to tove.il half that they
know, even to nlhcinllv designated observers.
Vet what they have made public is enough
to stagger any ordinary imagination.
The most important trials will bo made
in this itistance with asphyxiation gas shells
of a sort thnt. according to experts, will in
the future kill instantly every one aboard 11
ship on which they fall.
Tho niind of mnn hn created many in
ventions, but nothing so fnr achieved equals
in awful significance the work done in recent
vcars in the name of mill'" y preparedness.
'Ine 1'nited States Army 1ms a gas which,
it insists, will kill any living thing it
tom lies. With thnt gas the army fliers feel
able to make themselves actual masters of
the sea. "We'll stop anv ship you send."
say the landsmen to the Navv Department.
An airplane cannot he gnssed. It is too
tumble on its wiugs. IJut it can drop a
shill that will charge, the air for miles
around with deadly gin Warships are
fitted with ventilating turn hinery that draws
nir to all their interior reces.es Without
air the crews would perish. "If you don't
want to send your ships to a certain finish."
say the 1 hemienl warfare men to all the
nnvy departments of the inuld. "vou will
have to mnke them airtight in th" near
future. One of our shell, will io for a
ship if the gas-bomber's aim is half good.
We'll simply create uti island of gas around
eirry vessel nnd ail the men on that vessel
will lie dead before the ship can tind n way
nut. and if it lituis a way- out we'll try
again You've got anti-aircraft guns, but
we'll ride out of range."
The trials on the Atlantic waters in June
will b" in the nature of duels between war
ship, and nirplams, between artillery and
poi-oti The army, which n tn do its fight
ing trom the nir. is insisting that it ivill
have the nnvv in the hollow of its hand. Yet
11 lobes on relativi ly simple equipment.
Fiery great Power now lias in its pos
si s.ion peifccted plans for airplanes which,
loaded with gas. can be projected over long
distances to a given targit and guided over
ei ei 1 foot of the way by wireless. Stub a
machine would be nothing more or less than
a tiding bomb of enormous dimensions.
I undid witii the newer gas. such a machine
. .1 .hi li-stmi ri city.
c 1 1 iat.it urn will have to accept diarma
nn nf or annihilation !
T.i" nations cannot disarm until their
fiiiverntni tits tind 11 wav to meet in concert
and arrange their affairs upon a basis gen
erallv satisfactory to every mi" concerned.
Those who in this country labored hardest
to make such a concert of nations perma
nent wire ncciisfd of hems false to Ameri
can id' ill..
QUESTIONS FOR MR. EDISON
IS 'I IIH State of New .lirsev diy or wet?
linn many years would be n quired for
a pt nit ft il fired upward in a straight line,
and moling at a rate nt h'le'i miles a
-ei nnd, tn teach a height app "xiiimtiiig that
of stiiator I.a Fnllotte'-, opinion of himself?
Wlm discnvpted nutmeg, and why?
Ii. tine the foreign policy of the I'nitfd
States I'overnmont in relation to llmnkljn.
Explain the genesis of the Nm Hnslnnd
ontisoion".
If nil tho bootleg whisky lonsuinod daily
.ti Pennsylvania were pertnitud to How over
a ten foot dam through a shin on, n twenty
foot wide, and applied to the rotation of
turbines, what would bn th" resulting d"
gre" of hourly energy measurrib'e m watt.''
In candle-power? In horse-pnwi '
How many mothers in-law has the Shah
of I'er.ia?
Win re is the largest niuicen e.ii mm"?
How many tinnis does I.lnvd (Jenrgc
change his mind between liliiii and dinm r nn
Saturdays?
Wlint is a Korah for''
PANAMA TOLLS
THK repeal of thnt part nf tin Panama
Canal law whnh eximptoii Amf-m .111
inastivise shipping from the paunent of mil i
wns brought about under pn-sure from
President Wilson.
In n special missage to Congress on
March ". 10H. he asked tor repeal "in sup
port of the foreign polo v ot tne administra
tion." and said "I shall not know hovv to
deal with other matters of ivmi greater
deluacv and nearer 1 finswpieiiee if you di
not grant it to me 111 ungrudging measuie "
Hut 1 he country has hi en kept in ignorance
tn this day of what ib-lnuie matiirs were
dependent on tin repeal of the toll.ecmp
Hull privileges
Opinion on the merits of n, (pif..i,,n ,l,f.
fers widely It hm bren ti.ii.nlaiiiod tna'
the o-lgina1 exemption nf 'oastwise .tups
from tb" payment of to'.is was a briaeh of
faith vvith Client P.ntain And the ein. 1
nppnsite has been maintained with equal
emphasis.
The treniv prni ides that the canal -hall
lie open to the shipping of tin' world on equal
terms. What this mums depends on what
the term ' shipping of the world" means
Now, it has been insisted that vessels en
gaged in 'be coastwise trade haie never been
included as shipping in any international
treaty on rights of ve,els of tho treaty
i nun tried The coastwise ships of every
loiintry rnjov privileges in the home ports
which are not nerorded to foreign hhips,
evin when treaties provide that foreign ships
shall enjoy all the privileges uceorded to do
nn stl" hhips.
When t nngi'fss gets through tilth tho dn
cussion of the subject the country will know
more ubout It, and it la hoped that it may
know what was in Mr. Wilton's mind when
ho asked for the repeal of the toll exemp
tion provision in the law
AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT
Following a City Trail May Bring tho
Lucky One to a Museum That
Has Given New York Some
New Ideas
SAKA1I I). I.OWItlK
SOME years ago we brought down from
tho Adlromlarks one of tho guide's sous
who was himself a lumberman in winter
ami our chore boy in summer. He had
never been on n railroad train, never seen
a city nnd never been In a house built of
any tnnterlal except wood or of more thnn
throe stories high, never worked in n shop
larger than 11 blacksmith's or made a pur
ihoe in a store more pretentious than the
village store of his own little postoflice cen
ter of '.'(M) or so Inhabitants. If he was
Interested to see the city wo were 100 per
cent more Interested to see him wlillo he
saw It. He enjoyed himself thoroughly both
on the journey down by train and Hudson
ltlver boat, and during his week here, where
he visited everything from the Zoo to the
Navy Yard. The surprising thing was that
he found his way after the first day nr two
without anv trouble. He had his own
theory about, that which he propounded to
me in his slow way ami In his north woods
vernacular.
"It ain't so surprising, come to think
n it, that I have n pretty good Ideo of how
to get round without losing myself. It's like
tins: I'm used to following u trail. Well,
may be to some folks thnt ain't used to
noticing things the woods look kind a the
same one place and miother. IJut if jott
get used to looking out for things and kcop
ing your direction, north or south, and cal
culating when you get to a stream whether
It goes up and down your trail or crosses
lt.iuul whither u mountln Is to one side of
a clearing, and what tho trees are near
where the trail forks, nnd if them's been n
lumber job that's slushed the trail for 11
quarter of a tulle, or if there's been a clear
ing that's git grovved up in popples so vou
have to keep vour eves on the ground." or
111111 be a deer-run Icis crossed and sort of
bogged up the ground, or 11 windfall that
makes you go loutid or tinder well, follow
lug 11 trail in a city ain't a grent deal harder
than following one in the woods. I went
up to the ltalilwln Locomotive, Works dfter
I seen where it was on the map and I como
back acrost without bothering to look at
the names of tho streets. I seen the Bamo
things coming back home that I'd seen
going, so I knew I'd struck tho right trail!
( ompared to a timber slash tills city la
easy to inc."
SINCE then I have often beguiled the
sameness of my way downtown bv pre
tending it was trail and, taking "n leaf
out ot the Adirondack woodman's experi
ence, noticed things! Tliere is the Trail of
Little Jstr.ets. the Trail of Stable Mews,
the Itig 1 rail, the Cross-Cut Trail, all wav,
ot gating to IJrond and Chestnut streets ; or
there nie longer trails reaching distant
places, points where down u vista one can
see Italy China, the Ohctto, Gcrmnuv.
Atiiin, Ktiiuania. Hussia ! In New York
they show you bits f things thnt are quaint
ni- reminding of M civilization unlike that
of the avi nues. They call something a vil
lage that is nothing but n piece of a eitv
with onlv lure and there a scrap of a street
that might have belonged to 11 small toivn
of 11 lenturv ago. They herald their Me
Dougal alley as though it was u unique
survival vuuth perpetuating by blue and
green doors and tlniver pots. What would
they do if they had our Cafnao street! Or
would fin 1 over cense from boasting if thov
could plant their village 111 lower Pine meet
nnd mill;" their Latin Quarter in those little
stieets with old doorwavs from Ninth street
to the river, or going smith from Pino, it
never oci urs t u when vie are derided for
our shabbiiie.s. ,, corrupt polities, l)Ur Uti
irogre.s,ieiu,s or our In. k of style bv those
millions of uniiatlie New Yorkers who buv
and sell ami perch for pnit of a lifetime
mining .New dirk's skyscrapers, that we
haie aiivthing except the l.lhertv Hell over
here that would be worth New York's while
to possess or pause for u moment lo con
template. AND yet. though It is n fact that most of
the plavs that have run a year in New
oik are our new plays the following
winter, it is more often than not that Phila
delphia creates an Idea that not only New
ork, but the whole countrv aciepts as a
stroke of genius. I .an think of countless
instnnces of this creative origlnalitv in pro
fessions and businesses Hs widely different as
medicine and the department store, but the
siroko ,,f genius thnt I have in mind nist
now Ih that which created the most original
school in ibis city and combined it with a
museum nf beautiful works of jut thai is
second to none in the country.
Ml SEFMS can bo v.-iv dead places,
mausoleums of objects that were made
tn lie inioyed by daily use, into whnl, one
stiays with the pious desire to add to one's
culture and escapes with u sens,, ot in.ide
qualcnes.s and relief.
Hut this museum Is full nf beautiful
things that are used continuoiislv , nnd by
the persons to whom they inn cue tin- mu
cin st pleasure and who will translate ihe
esseme of their beauty Into everyday life.
Most museums inn only be enjoied. except
011 holidays, by the comparatively idle and
the "unfortabh well-to-do; but this col
lection fif works of art is the lial'.v nnsses.
sion of the wurkers of the city, ami though
free to tho well-to-do is actually mu.i used
by the comparatively poor.
IM
OST schools,
evi 11 must art s( hools,
have to rely
on photographs of the
treasures of th" past arts or
nil 1 Olili's or
011 histories, but this school, devoted to the
study ut the beautiful, has a.- its inspira
tion and inientive u priceless ( t inn of
works of nil In .1 hundred in. ilium-, from
jeweled fans to brones. Moat si bonis turn
mil work that has at bet a promise, but no
fulfillment. This school ban in its nnnuul
exhibition the finished woik of its greut
pupils, who ate nuisteis out in the great
world, from which thov couu back once and
so often to rinew their youth and their first
Inspiration.
THE trail tliey follow is a illicit enough
one. though it is eros-rd bv what an
Adirondack boy would tall "riiimais" and
is half obliterated her" and there by
"slashes." That ts if one goes south uti
Eighth stieet to Chiistian himI tuins toivaiil
the river there, on n quiet block that was
inn e more than respectable nearly aristo
cratic, is Ihe (Jraphio Arts C'ub a'liiiiscum,
u school nnd an alumni house in one
When one considers the sickening pitfalls
into which the adolescent nr the frustrated
artist may fall in these dam of broken
values, and witii the verv grave implica
tions that a recent exhibition of modern
painting lias cast upon the nnntal and
moral staminn nf both masters and pupils
of a far different trend of Ideals, one bus
a dutv as well as a pleasure in stcue fmiu
May lo for the next two weeks, when the
annual exhibition of the (iraphtc Arts Club
will be open to the public.
Politick. Itaditz. it Susan. I'lnkelgreeu,
Criss, (Jrossinan, Solowev, Collurmsl, pa(,.'
lettl, Van Itockoii, Koriihnuse and Itlumeii
thnl are some nf the artists of the thlrtv
fivii who will exhibit among the master
artists; and ut tbe 'same lime in the life
i lass rooms thirty of the ,'tOO pupils will
have the honor of having their plctiues
hung.
"or ninny reasons there has hem a eon
splrncy of slletne cnni ernlng the dangers
elsewhere of the morbid or psv idiopathic
tendency of a whole group of painters and
..cillploi's As one man expiessed it: "If
what I think of them is true, it would ruin
tlioin nnd nie to sny it publicly "
IJut in the work of this school of tho
('itiphlc Arts Club thn eitv ha. an antldoto
for the poison that is threatening the sanity
of art, nnd in It6 coming exhibition tho
mnrlis or sincerity win nuiKe an nppial of
lu.pe to us all
Peace, Please Be Still!
From tl I'drtn.'iiH MuimzIii.
We feel reassuied, now that a London
Journalist informs us thnt the Great Peace
runs on ball-bearings. Wo feared It was
I going to be run on brawl -bearings I
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NOW MY IDEA IS THIS
Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia on Subjects They
Know Best
MRS. E. M. CRITTENDEN
On Protection of Children
WOKKEKS of the Pennsylvania Societv
to Protect Children from Cruelty in
investigating "cases" tind that many more
nro those of neglect or unfoi Innate circum
stances than cruelty.
This is the statement of Mrs. E M. Crit
tenden, superintendent of the temporaiy
home fif tin- society ut -Ull South Fifteenth
sheet.
"Only yesterday we had a ease of five
(hiblteti. ages four to thirteen, who were
running up and down the street, their mother
having just been taken tn n hospital with an
Incurable i nse of tuberculosis nnd the father
out of work," Mrs. Crittenden said.
"The children were brought here. Wo
had another case, also by loincidenee of
five children, nges two to twelve, vvliete the
mother is awny and the father intoxicated.
Thev also were brought lieie. These nie
only a few of many instances.
"We accept ihildren here from two yenrs
up. The oldest boys we arcepr nie twelve
years old, the girls nie any age. Hefoie
coining Into the home proper they go tn the
medical clinic, are taken before tho sur
geons and carefully examined.
Sent to Isolation Ward
"If they are all right thev aic sent to the
temporary home In the isolation ward, and
cilltuies are taken and sent to the city
laboratories. If the tcport from the cultures
is negative, the children nie taken Into the
home. If there is a disease present the
children are taken to the Philadelphia Hos
pital for Contagious DJsiases
"We have in our homo a loom for bins,
one for girls, with separate bathrooms. The
cliihiicti take their meals line also. They
have ii blc playroom with an outsit!" porch,
and plenty of toys and books and games with
which they amuse themselves. They arc
under constant supervision at all times.
"Concerning tho physical' condition of the
children, hospitals refuse to take cases of
scabies if tho children are running around.
So wc linvc what wc call 'scabies' homeB,'
where we board the ihildren In private homes
iiuilcr whnt we call 'home mothers' until
they are cured and come to the home here.
Vorll for Hoard
"We liave thirteen children hern now in
nnr homo. My business, besides overseeing
tilings here. Is to get the children out. Wu
send them to various agencies which mnke a
business of placing childien in proper homes
or we place them ourselves. vVe are most
careful to Investigate the ohnrnrter of the
men nnd women at the head of tbe private
families where we send uur children, and
keep tliem under supervision at all times.
"In lie case of a young girl, for Instance,
What Do You Know?
QUIZ
1 Why Is n kitten lalled n puss or pussy-'
'. Where Is Manchuria"
3. What Is the difference between n monsoon
nnd n typhoon?
1. What Is nn antelope nnd where did it (ret
its nami.'
C Nnmo two works bv Voltaire
ft Who is the leader of tho Polish uprising
In Hile-idn,?
7. What Is the largest eitv nf Haiti'.'
8 What wns tbu (iolclen Fleece "
'J. What Kouth American country Is noted
for Its production of nitrates.'
10. When did the Ilepubllcati party nonilnnto
Its (list candldato for President?
Answers to Yesterday's Quiz
1 Christopher Columbus worn the titles the
Admiral and the Duke of Voi.ikuu for
bis discoveries In fho New World.
2. A lilPPOurlfT is n fabulous grlffin-liko
creature with the body nf a lioise, A
Krlffln Is n fabulous creature with nn
i aln's head and wings and n llon'a
liodv
3. Tin first political office held by Abraham
Lincoln wiui that of member of the
Illinois Legislature
1. Joslah Wedgwood vvn.s a eclehrntert Lng
IMi potter, especially noteu for hla
tuples of classical vnses and other an
tlquitiea Ills dates nro 1 730-1TH3.
5 A philippic is a bitter invective The
mime, via- originally given to the lm
jmssloncsl orations of iJemosthnnes this
Oreek. against Philip of Macedon
C. Tho htralt of Han Juan do l-'ucn js tha
entrance to Pugot Sound
i. Albert Francis Augustus Charles Kmm,.n
iiel, of Haxe-flotba, husband of Queen
Victoria, was a native of Uennany
He was born in ("oburg In 1819
8, Leghorn Is the English form of Lfvorno
an Italian cltv, ftoni which Leghorn
straw bats ilcrlvn their name
9. Torqu.itn Tasso a sixteentb-ivniurv It.it.
Ian poet, wrote tho epic "Jerusalem Ho
llvered "
10. Tbe HlekHite. Quakers nro so called In
rAferenct) to Kllas Hicks, tho founder
of the beet.
LOW TIDE
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IT-"--"
if n family wants to take her into their
home to llvo with them and assist with the
work, we send the girl nnd she works for her
hoard. Wc supply her with clothing. This
enables families which need such a glri
but lannot afford tho fiunncial outlay to
adopt her.
"We require a large nnd constant supply
of 'lothlng hoie, for when the children come
in their clothing is usually burned nt once.
They are then outfitted by us, and then
when they leave here they take the clothes
we have given them along. Of course, we
do not object to families with which our girls
work giving them clothes, understand, hut
we assume the responsibility of clothing
them ourselves except in exceptional cases.
"We arc verv careful, also, not to send
a girl that we know is not good to children
to a family having 'liildren.
"We allow parents of children sent hero
to pay a little for them if they cnn. This
is for two leasons: to aid in the suppoit
of the child and to keep up the Interest of
tin- children. The parents also may, if they
wish to, visit their children here."
Literary Caution on the Banks of the Kaw
I'toni the Kansas Citi star
Wc have n communication pointing nut
that while Mary .1. Holmes did not write the
"Autocrat of the Hieakfast Talilo," Sher
lock Holmes didn't, either. Wc told our
editorial colleague he'd better look il up
before press time.
Humanisms
Uy WILLIAM ATIIEKTON IHJ PUS
mllE aquarium in Itattery Parity New
X York, is a sort of u shrine to William
Sprv, commissioner of the (leneral Land
niTie... It maiks the snot where the happi
est twelve hours of ills life were spent.
Forty years ago this was Castle dnnlen,
where tho immigrants were received. Here
came William (spry as tne sou m nu umm
grant English tailor.
The tailor was u very religious man and
when, thiough nil the years of the boy's
life, he said family prayers, thrie. had been
a request that a way bhouhl be opened mi
Hint would make It possible for his family
to get to tbe land ot tne iree.
Tills prayerful suggestion bad glorified the
iio.l SJ....PJ ... ii,,. mind of the boy. So
that night uftcr they had landed they slept
cm the floor of the immigration station at
Castle Garden. Tliere was not even a quilt
beneath the boy nnd his arms made his pil
low. Hut the rapture of it was so gieal
that, nfter fifty years, this Federal official,
who'has also been Governor of a State, goes
buck to the spot, takes his grandchildren
vvith him, und tells the story of the great
migration. ( t
Former Kcpiesentative ,1. A. M Adntr, of
Indiana. sa)'M th" '"' '"'" hP,'n t'10 possi
bility of being written donn in history us
n gtent man lost through the demonstration
of one small mental bad habit which in itself
was not paiticulnrlv impoitant.
Thcro was a certain chairman of n com
mittee of the Hoiim' who habitually dragged
statistics into his speei lies and arguments
but who nlvvnys got them wrong, no didn't
seem to have figure instinct lie could not
lie accurate in their use He always made
mistakes in quoting thorn
Ills opponents found this out Whenever
ho used figures thev would look them up,
would probably find them wrong, would
cross-examine lilin. expose him. It might
lie that everything in ids argument but his
figures was tight. Hut by showing the
figures wrong the whole wus given the ap
pearance of being wrong All the work of
tho mnn was discredited Finally he re
signed from Congress of his own volition,
When Mr. Harding made his inaugural
speech In front of the Capitol people stood
on thn steps of tho fVmgressionnl Library,
'.'()() vsirds nway, nnd heard every word of it,
thanks to thnt marvelous device known as
the amplifier
Two or three days Inter, th" new Cabinet
members having settled into their niches, it
came to pass that thev went about and made
speeches to various gatherings. Ono or the
first to so nppear wns F.dwln Denhy, Score
tary of the Now, who is six feet two and
carries "ri0 pounds of muscle nround with
Mm.
His framework is surmounted bv n
polished dome Ivpieal of Itoman architecture.
Ills cliest is like a huge water barrel. He
began to spool, in tones that for Mm were
ohviouslv modulated, nippressed Hut deaf
pennle in the back of the hall heard every
word The window panes rattled in their
frnnictf Some one near me said
"Hnrdlne won't need nn amplifier any
more now that he has iJcnby."
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SHORT CUTS
Why not turn Director Twining loose on
Edison's questions?
IJergdoll Is n mosquito that I'nclc Sam
will eventually swat.
"Yellow perlllsts" nevar let common
sense interfeie with their hates.
Now cold as ice; now hot as blaze;
May doesn't Mny; she just 11111117.0.-1.
When Germany "accepts without re
serve exception Is made to mental reserva
tions. The new emergency tariff puts a tax on
peanuts, but the politician is of court
exempt.
Old King Coal continues to be a rati'
tnnkerous, bclligcrcut und coiisciencelcn
old soul.
Korfanty's idea is that his soldieri
might Just as well do a little fighting while
iney wait.
Defeated in Paris and London, the (itr.
mans turn hopefully to Hoscnburg, loscl
anil uatluor.'
Tho Young Lady Next Door llu One
opines Hint navy gas tests nre mailo with
guinea- pig- iron -chid.
Ve can get a perfect transit lcn-e all
right if we wait long enough- s.iy, lound
nbout the millennium.
The law is a mighty engine, but viola
tors continue to demonstrate that there !i
souieMiiiig thn matter with its cl uch
Whether the downward men h of pried
is a funeral inarch nr 11 quickstep deprnili
hugely 011 the location of your reiimmj
btnud.
There is still n lot of optimism 11 the
world. A prohibition enforcement coiuniH'
sinner says New York will soon be cits 01
the Sahara.
The Lockvvood Committee npi en to
have developed thn fact thut Cost - Plus vv.ii
a piker compared to the New York mo'
tractor system.
And every hern wrongfully nccusnl In
the slackers' list will serve as an uiiuittini
shield for the man who cared nothing for nil
country s need.
You can't tell a tiling uhou' 'b'J
weather; which is why m many careful
custodians of public, buildings have not '
done away with stoini doois.
France will judge the value of the terms
to which Germany has agreed by the fa .ilitJ
with which she is able to use the dermal
bonds as international currency
Has it ever occurred to jou thnt I'hiliJ
H. Johnson might be enough of an a truw
to abrogato that perpetual contra, t a 1 M
his littlo lonesome? Nor to us, eitln't
Louis Agassi Shnw. Instructor in Fr'
v'ard, dravvfl nttcntiou of the world t" '"'
distinction between the man who siill
fends his home and one who defi'inl
homo still.
When a man onco realizes thn' there
is no tax possible thnt tho ultimnte
burner does not pay, understanding ' 'J'
snles tnx ennuot be other than u pre'ui.e '
indorsement of that measure.
The difference between performance
nt Flume ntirt Upper Sllesin Is that the fin
was romantic drama that came dangerou"'
near degenerating Into fnrco and the wwm
is melodrama that is Unhid to rmc nt w
moment into pure tragedy.
A Montreal physician says lie lm ."'
covered 1111 iinestluitle thnt makes n prrwj
tell the truth, not because lie wants to. ""
becnu'o lie no longer hns intelligence enow
to lie. Witii truth so simple n thing, I1"
it a wonder there Isn't more of It.'
t . ..-11 1 il.n the ontl
ll is wen in iviui-iiiuiT nml- "- -;.,.
mism that lends Mme. Curio to believe tSJ
radium will eventually cure cancer ( )"
it assuredly now alleviates tho suffering
cancer victims) in the same optimism '
led her to success In isolating the niulc
mineral.
Sny' It's knowing life is dear
Thnt prevents Ion much complaltunij
Whin thoiiTli .Mnv is chill ami nn-m .,,11
'llilnLii she 1.111011 liul when she S ralnlW' I
It need eauso us nn t.urprise
While the wintry winds nro blowing
To hear somo Mny of starry eyes
Say, "It'a snowing t"
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