ru ;j , h ;. LV L-4 r- K s?j. I V FWt 'a i i?.ns 10 ?' Jtenf 1.9 public ?IcdaeK . tnJBLtC LEDGER COMPANY r i.oinua ii. n. tiiiuio, ruMioncr O. Martin, Vic Pri-aldont and Trcaaurart T7l-r.Bcrtarri Charles ii, udlna lar. fl.eretarr: In fl. Coillna. John vjoiiina, jonn u. vviinams. jonn j. I utorra . uoiaamun, uavia k, umiiiT, t. B. UMILF.T.... .Kdltor C. MARTIN. . .Oenral Pu.lnm Mnr - JPdbllthed dally at Cuomo Unpora Uulldlnr 1 Independence Square, Philadelphia. . .AltKTIo CITT Prett-Untoi Jlundlng Haw TOBK ,164 Madison Ate. PT0!T ... 701 Ford nullcllng r. Loot 013 atobe-Democrat Bulltllnc i-klWiM 1302 lY-ibuM Butldlnc - riBwn DUnnAUS. WiiBIHOTON TH-M.IC, N. , Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. and 14th St. Kaw Tobk tltniAU . The Sun nulldlni LMBON ODituu .. Trafalgar ilulldlnc 8t Ubl'lUCTlON TEHMH Til BvsKlMl I'i'BMC LVKOtn la cervrd to aub aeiWert In Philadelphia and siirroundlna towna at to rate of twelve (IS) ctnta per week, payable to taa carrier. " By mall to points outalds of Philadelphia, In the United Otatfi, Canada, or United Htataa po reatan, poatace free, fifty (00) cute per month, Ms (18) dollara per year paynble In advance To all foreign countries one ($1) dollar a month Notice Subscriber wlahlnpr addreea changed must lv old na well as new addreaa. WtL. 1000 WALNUT KEYSTONE, KAIN 1101 K" Ad&nia ett ccfnmun(crfons (o rtcnlno I'ubllc . iMfdgor, Independence flouarr, 1'hitadclylna t Member of the As-Boclntcd Press TUB ASSOCIATED MVSB Is MClujiufl fit titled to fhe uje or rrimblcaflon uf all iirne flpa(chej credited fo (( or net nthcrv ( credited to ttf paper, and olio fwt local toi miDllinrii tStrttn. All rtoMs of t-rpuoKcaHo- of srortal iflipalcnej erln ore. also reserved. Fhlledelphla. Tufla. Jnn. It, 01 MORE PULLBACKISM! IT'S just what might have been eMircf-d The kickers have begun to kick; the .pullbacks arc growing vocal If somebody from the Middle West or Pacific Coast, where they tlo things differ ently, had chanced to bo present nt the first public hearing on the proposed Delaware Silver bridge (die nt Franklin Square yes terday afternoon, that person surely would have felt that the board of engineers who sub mitted the plans bad born gulltj of some crafty scheme to outrage tli citizens of Philadelphia and Camden instead of out lining the finest piece of progressive eon rrructlon over oiTercd. in th" hfstorv of tho two cities The arguments advanced nn tnt the plans war primarily individual and moM of tlietn had been fully anticipated and disposed of In the report of the enginoi rt. So there Is no serious likelihood that any nur of these abjections will block the fulfillment of an Improvement that will work Inestimable benefit to the ii.OOO.Onf) persona ulio rrilde In this metropolitan center. Hut the Incident Is interetinr chief!? as Another exhibit of the pettv nnd cssrntlnlly Mlftah spirit which has held back prosress In this community throughout its liMory. There nex-cr was a large public improve ment of the character of the bridge which did not adversely affect tome few Individual Interests. Hut proper administration usunll? can remove or relievo an? real luinMilp Involved and still sero the only rule that ought to count, and that Is the greatest good of the greatest number. A CHANCE FOR REFORM MEMOIUES of how not -to-do-it ma? b profitably summoned lij the Ronrd of Education in Its financial efforts to advance the school-building program. The nehonl bond flotation of la-t fall was miserably botched at the outset and only nu eleventh hour awakening of public spirit crowned the campaign with eventual success. The leason of the paM is well worth re tailing nt this time, when the Finnnro Com xnlttee of the board is authorizing the placing on sale of S2.000.000 of the $5,000. 000 bond issue for the erection of now truc- tures and the repair of the existing physical equipment. The bonds will be introduced into the market ou August 1. Ther' Is ample time in which to accord the undertaking it due measure of publicity. An? thing like n repe tition of the old soporific methods which enme fo close to obstructing the nlnry-increase program would suggest that the board has been Bourbonized An excellent chance is at hand to prore that such an intimation is unfounded. There Is no real reason wh? this loan for a vitally important public purpose should not be a success If the responsibilities of the situation arc energetically grasped. A FAMOUS COLLEGE rjXHE Pennsylvania .Military College nt - Chester, which Is celchrntlng Its cen tennial this week, was founded nnd con ducted as a Friends' jsHiool for thirty years. Jt was changed into a military school' nfter it came Into the control of the lute Uoloncl Theodore Hyatt, a Presbyterian, wo In troduced military drill becane of its disci plinary value. All this happened In Wilmington, Del It was not until 1S62 that the school was moved to this State, first to West Chester and later to Chester. It originally occu pied the buildings now the home of the Crorer Theological Seminary, but soon after new buildiugH were erected fur it, use. alt, has expanded since its origin in Wil mington until it has become one of the best Institutions, of its kind In the country. Many distinguished men are oti Uh list of graduates. Mr. Harding, who received the degree of doctor of lnws from it white he was In the Sennte, w-as so impressed with the character of the work done that lie said if he had several sons he would --end them nil there. General Pershing will receive the degree of doctor of milltnry science this week, and he is probnbl? the most distin flulshed professional soldier to be honored by the college. Ceneral Pershing will con fcfder that he is receiving more honor than he io conferring when he accepts the degree. -uovernor nprotil verj appropriate! will e present nt the centennial oxcrdsei, Und 'rf he does not snenk f th ir-nnt ,...i. i.... EMAr 'IBS As been done by this nnd the other col leges and universities of the State It will j" not be for lack of abundant material from ' Which to draw. ' BLESSED BE THE FAT MAN TT; IS a mistake to say that imbud? loves u, fn' ,""' o i beloved by all who like to take their ease. Because he. Is fat he does not care to move around too much and he thinks up schemes to conserve his energies. Thus, automat ically, he becomes the Inventor of Inbor tavlng devices and a friend of humanity. t Bob Lee, of Darby, a fnt man and urn latcur farmer, Is n case in point. Because lie objected to squatting down to plant peas lie Invented the fnt man's pen plunter. a four-foot section of gas pipe with a funnel top. He has now Invented a weetler which ttrlpa the garden of hurtful encumbrances without necessitating the bending of the back. more power to him. .May his good work contlpue. He may jet Invent a whistle (or something) that will drive potato bugs to t eulqlde. INVULNERABLE VANDERLIP WITl a gorgrousiiens of Inuguiigc hereto fore only considered nppllcahlc to sun- Hi . Kiseea wnmoriuu, n hmiim.iuii u, lunncrup, U.j 5 pf Los Angeles, litis vnunted the luxuriance, KfTik moral, political, llittindul, Industrial and ?i't ! nffrlrtilfiiral. of Korlet Itussla. rt'.. t -'- t ; " . i-. i... . i ... . . t f 5;Ui JM yvuevauvu uua uv.ui iuu (urge iiir ! L his lusty appetite, Just so no reflections on the working out of communism have been sufficiently dismal to check his hearty opti mism. Mulberry Sellers himself was obviously no cheerier than Mr. Vanderllp, no more in vulnerable to the blight of hard realities. It is ensy to sneer at this poise of spirit, and yet no one can deny Its worth in mnny a tight place. A particular test of its inspiration fit this moment has been provided by Comrade Krnsain, the somewhat canny trade agent In England for tho Bolshevist Government. Tucked nwny In nn interview secured from this legate by the Petit Pnrlslen is the parenthetical observation that the Immense concessions secured from Ilussln by Mr. Vanderllp arc not "operative, he not having deposited the forfeit money." Apropos of this ruling It would bo patron izing to extend sympathy toward Mr. Vnn dcrllp. His portfolio of contracts may be worthless, hut the simon-pure ardor of ex ploitation Is difficult to suppress. Mr. Vanderllp need never he really stranded. H has already demonstrated his worth as n rlrst-rntc publicity man. Some thing like true nrt Is required to advertise with even u tithe of his brilliancy. A PIECE OF BUNTING THAT CAUSES A THRILL Loyalty to the Flag Is Loyalty to Symbol That Stands for the Forces That Have Made Ua What We Are r. Till: extreme internationalists could have their way such things ns the FIhi and Flng Dnj would cease to bo significant of an? thing. They would have ub believe that national ism has been outgrown nnd that It wns never anything but parochialism on a large scale. Thej arc only superficially right; therefore they arc fundamentally wrong. Internationalism is a reaction against ChntMltilsm. that narrow, bigoted I mired of ever? thing foreign which has been fostered b drmugogues seeking votes and bus made It difficult for broader-minded meu to deal fustli with other nntiens. This feeling, long before the name for It was invented, was responsible for much of the misunderstanding among iintion. The languages of th world nre full of teruiB descriptive of foreigners Hint are based on the assumption that a man of a differ ent race nnd different nation is something less than human, a sort of a monstrosity. Ills speech is regarded as a meaningless Jabber, cveu though It has been used to express some of the suhllmcst thoughts with which the human race has been Inspired. Of course, intelligent men revolted against such nariow-mlndedness. Mut with that curious and fatal inability to see the whole of n question, what Is merclj a product of Ignorance has been assumed to be the prod uct of uationnllsm t hut is, u product of the love of people for the countrj In which they have been born and reared. This love nnd loyalty Is one of tho finest manifestations of the human spirit. It has its foundations In those qualities which make nn orderly society possible and enable men to work together in masses for n com mon cause. There nre bill) tic ties among men who hnve had u common experience The graduates of every high school know this because they have n different feeling for their classmates from that which the? experience when they meet a man who wns not In the same school. This feeling binds Baptists to Baptists and Catholics to Catholics nnd Methodists to Methodists nnd Pre.bvtevlnns to Presby terians and Hepublicanb to Republicans and Democrats to Democrnts and Americans to Arnerirnns nnd Englishmen to Englishmen nnd Frenchmen to Frenchmen and (icrmnns to Hermans nnd Chinese to Chinese. And Americans of British. Gernvin, Italian or Scandinavian descent feel toward tho coun trj of their ancestors a tenderness which they do not feel toward nny other foreign country They nre good Americans, but they are human beings first, possessed of the fine humnti loyalties which make it Impossi ble for them to forget the sources from which they sprang. How deep this feeling lies in him has been discovered to his surprise by man an American in n foreign land. lie has taken bis love for America as a matter of course and has given Uttle thought to it. But when he sees the Stars nnd Stripes in Mon treal or London or Pnrls or Homo or Vienna or Berlin or on a ship nt sea he is thrilled nnd the tears come unbidden to his eyes, and he begins to wonder whnt it nil means. The internationalists would tell him thnt It means nothing except thnt he is a stupid fool, with no more intelligence than the beasts thnt perish. But there Is something more to it than hase entered the comprehension of tho men who would abolish nil nations. It is family loyalty on n larger scale. Patriotism Is to a nation what the mother intlnct Is to a family. It keeps the or ganization together. Nations have developed out of disorgan ized masses of men because thero was h need for them just as the family developed In prehistoric times, because of the self protectivo instinct of the group. It sounds fine when a man tnjs that his Interests nre not confined by any national boundaries, hut thnt he is n citizen of the w-orld. The (Jermun Socialists were in the habit of talking In this wa? before the war began, hut when the were called upon to decide whether they would be citizens of the world or citizens of Germnny, the old basic instincts assorted themselves and they cast in their lot with tho couutry in which they hnd bee.n born. Their theories broke down when brought into contact with hard facts. So when we show our respect for the Flng today on the anniversary of Its ndoption we are paying a tribute to a symbol that stands for the finest qunlltles In human nature, the qualities that grow out of loyalty to the forces that have made us what we are We must alwnyH hold tho Stars and Stripes In higher esteem than any other nntionnl banner, but that need not blind us to the fact that the flags of the other na tious nre also symbols of splendid Ideas. It is out of this respect for the qualities of other nations thnt n better international understanding will come. Tiien patriotism will not be condemned by impractlcnl nnd superficial theorists as the emotion of ignoble minds nnd life on this old planet will be relieved of some of its distressing complications. THAT NEW PARTY PULLICK information about the new po litical party which has been indorsed by the Central Labor 1'nion must be given out by its promoters before it can he Intelli gentl? considered. All we know is that the part? is to have "fairness to all" as its underlying principle. A more detailed program than this is needed to attract voters. There never was a political part) devoted to unfairness to nnybody. They all profess to seek to es tablish justice. Difference of opinion about the way to bring about its establishment is whnt mukes parties. The Republicans and the Democrats, the Socialists and the Communists alike seek ice. T lie Republicans Democrats, however, do not agree fiiiiiists and the Social - fustlec. Tbelr own dlf- best way Jo reach W I EASING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADEUJJbLlA, the same goal on which they agree, namely, tho greatest good for the greatest number. It may be said of the new party that great political parties usually form them selves about ideas on which men agree and arc not organized out of hnnd at a meeting of enthusiasts. PEACE BY WORDS CHARACTERISTIC of the embarrass ments which have pursued the IJuitetL, Slates In all of its efforts to conclude Its share of the World War Is the existence of two separate peace resolutions sufficiently dissimilar to provoke debnto nnd delny the processes of settlement. And yet in fundamentals these differences nre not mnrked. Apart from political con siderations, both the House and the Senate resolutions express to a certain extent weari ness of the wrangling over treaty-making which is so familiar an accompaniment to the balancing of safeguards provided by the Federal Constitution. Senator Knox, whatever may be said of his basic motives, wns unquestionably pleased to imagine thnt a heartening stnrt toward peace could be mado if Congress should formally pronounce that there wns no wnr. Representative Porter was doubt less inspired by kiudrcd fnnclcs. Regarded abstractly these conceptions arc alluring. There are stanch League of Na tions partisans who cannot consistently abuse the philosophical idea of peace. The so-called Irreconcllables, whatever their opinions of the covenant nnd the Versailles pact, have not posed ns champions of wnr. Theoretically, the enunclntlon of pence, without further Instructions on procedure, should delight everybody save Inconsolable militarists. But once the descent to realities Is made the simplicity of the situntiou Is seen to be delusory. The Administration, while kindly to the general principle of a declared peace, hns refrained from issuing anything like mandatorv directions to Congress. This absence of dictation hns enabled each House to proceed in the matter as it has seep fit. The Knov resolution, nn Inheritance from the dnys of contest with n Democratic Execu tive, reveals evidence of hnrd wear. In structions to the President to conclude n separate trenty with Germnny have been deleted and all that remnins of that program is the provision thnt the American claims outlined in the text shall bo considered duly protected thereby until a treaty brand not specified shall establish a new order. The preamble reaches the pronunciation of pence by tho expressed repeal of the declaration of wnr of April 0. 1017. Representative Porter, less hampered by traditions, preconceived policies nnd prec edents than his competitor, hns frankly condemned the repeal method ns a reflection upon the morality of our entrance Into tlie war. It is upon this point that the joint conference which Is to consider both reso lutions with n view to harmonizing them Is likely to be divided. The House of Representatives Is awnrc, nnd Bourke Coekran has lately stressed the fact, that Its prestige has perceptibly dimmed of late. The Senate, us is well known, plumes itself upon Its influence upon foreign nffatrs. Surrender will need to be registered in some quarters If Congress with one toIcc Is to proclaim the cessation of btrifc with Germany. Assuming, however, thnt differences are eventually adjusted, it is permissible to speculate upon the effect of the congressional pronouncement. Peace will hnve arrived because the national legislature will have affirmed Its presence. But the national po sition will remain anomnlous nnd undeter mined until our relations with the late foe have been formally adjusted by treaty. Unles3 we are content with "rights" which the resolutions insist are ours under the Treaty of Versailles, which we have not signed. It Is not easy to see how we can avoid entrance Into the general pact or the negotiation of an independent trenty with Germnny and the fragments of tho former Austro-IIungarian Empire. The alternatives of procedure nre pre cisely whnt they were two years ago. Reso lution by Congress cannot alter or modify them. It i" aFFerted by friends of the con gresinnnl policy that the kind of pence foreshadowed will be psychologically healthy. Mental refreshment Is, of course, always in order. Considered from that viewpoint the, resolution program may be beneficial. But Its effect on world reconstruction can onlj be salutnry If the public Is content to accept the rarefied philosophy of Hamlet, which In forms us that "there Is nothing either good or bad hut thinking makes it so." Individuals capable of subscribing to that doctrine cau have naught but commendation for peace by resolution. Experts in Paris, Ber- To Settle Hn nnd Budnpest arc the Argument now quarreling over which citv boasts the most hcautlfal feminine legs, jf they'll be good children and quit their quarreling we'll take them for n walk on Chestnut street. Coney Inland hns nviatlnn traffic police men. Fly cops, ns It were. Admiral Sims may later realire thnt the reticent man is seldom misquoted. Perhnps Congress wishes to snve tho peace resolution for New V ar's Day. We love Oregon, but she just simply naturally has to go nwny linck and sit down. The hnlls of Congress, reinurked the pessimistic guv. appear to he principally lobbies. Mother Earth to the Pons-Wlnnecko comet: I nm content thnt wo be better strangers. The prohibition powers that be probably decided thnt Pueblo hnd to be wet within ns well ns without. Hats off to .Tinimj Murphy, pugilist. He is a brave man Ho killed a mad dog witli his hnre hands, choking it to death. With Franco and Ilelgiuin nt odds over the use of German 'h first reparation paj -ment and French nnd llritish in dangerous opposition in Sllcsin, the dove of peace is hnving little lime to preen her feathers. Senator France has heen denied adniis. slun Into Russia. Cac of rank ingratitude on the port of Ioiine and Trotsky : and sonio cause of amusement to n numerous ,odj at home inclined to believe that the Senator talks too inuchj From Paris there comes the storj of a man who can stay four minutes under water anil eat cherries while submerged. This ap pears to be a variation of the story of flip miin who could stay for hours in liquor and cat the ihcnleo there mibinvrgcd. --r - ROYALTY COMING Boris of Bulgaria, Son of Ferdinand nnd a Cxar of the Balkans, to Visit Us His Family and His People By OEOROII NOX McCAIN PHILADELPHIA will very likely hnve the opportunity of entertaining royalty before the snow flies. . , , Czar Boris of Bulgaria has announced his intention of visiting the United Slates. Boris Is Bulgarian by nativity but not by blood. He Id German. His father was Fer dinand, Prince, and later' self -styled Czar, of- the Bulgarians. , , . , He was also known until the day of his forced retirement as "The Fox of the Balkans." . . , Ho deserved the title. He had the beak of n vulture and the craftiness of a weasel. He was a penniless princeling ot",,e nousc of Snxc-Coburg-Gotha when Bul garia took him up. .. ., , Tho story of Bulgaria, and of Ferdinand, is one of the most romantic tales ever told In the history of the Balkan Peninsula. J A. McGAHAN". of Ohio, a newspaper correspondent, is the man to whom pri marily Bulgaria owes her freedom from the oppression, cruelty nnd flnming fanaticism of 300 years of Turkish rule. . It was bnck In IR77. ' McGnhan hnd gone to the Balkans ns the correspondent for one of the London news pnpers. Ho hnd traveled down into Bul garia, which was then feeling the heel of Turkey upon her neck more heavily than ever. In May of thnt yenr the Turks invaded the Bulgarian town of Bntnk. They slaugh tered C000 out of the 7000 Inhabitants of the place without regard to ago or sex. It was one of the most terrible crimes that had ever been perpetrated in a land notorious" for Its disregard of humnn life. McGnhan's Investigations disclosed tho further fact thnt not less than 12.000 Bul garian Christians hnd been murdered by the Turks in that month alone. Achmet Agn. the Turkish commander in charge of thnt district, was decorated by the Stilfan Abdul ITnmid II for hlo share In the butchery. It was this same Abdul. "The Butcher of Europe," who was dethroned and impris oned nnd who died not long since In exile. McGAHAX'S letters describing the Bul garian massacres were smuggled out of the country. Their nubllcatlon shook Eu rope like nn earthquake. It was the first authentic information tho world had of tho nwful conditions existing in the heart of that peninsula. Gladstone thundered against the Turk In Parliament. Russia declared war on behalf of her co religionists, nnd the Russo-Turklsh con flict of 1877 wns on. AS A result of her victories. Russia not only liberated Bulgaria from Moslem oppression, but give her a niche In the Au dience Hall of Nntions. As the Vilnyct Tunn. otherwise known ns the Province of the Danube, under the Turk, Bulgaria had becu administered by Turkish Governors. With her emancipation there was none of her old royal line In existence. She there fore east nbout for a scion of one of the ruling houses of Europe to whom hhe could ofTer her vacant throne. Prince Alexander of Battenberg became Prince by selection, but resigned in 1880. He feared assassination. Tho intrigues of the court, the bitter political animosities of the various cliques, put him In fear of his life. I Is 1887 three delegates were chosen to visit Western Europe nnd select a new ruler. They had proceeded ns far as Vienna in their quest when one of tho delegates dropped into Ronnerker's cafe for a glass of wine Thnt glass of wine altered the history of the Balkan peoples. In tho cafe the delegate met an old friend who, when acquainted with the Bulgarians' mission, declared he knew Just the man for the vacnnt throne. The name proposed was that of Prince Ferdinand of Snxe-Coburg-Gotha. His fortune wus In nn impoverished cnnditioti. He was practically "on his uppers." He was tall, thin, angular, with n huge hooked nose nnd eyes set close together. The offer was n god.seud. He jumped at the proposal. Ho was twenty-six years of age when he nscended the throne us Prince of Bulgaria. Ho had reigned more than thirty jears when the results of tho World War hurled him from his throne. His entire career front start to finish wns one of Intrigue, remorseless nmbltion and ingratitude. The assassination of hib once friend nnd ndvlser, Stnmhouloff, known In the courts of Europe ns "Tho Bismarck of the Bal kans," has been directly charged to Ferdi nand. It is said that he was jealous of Statu -bouloff's power. CZAR BORIS was hut a boy when I saw him in Sofia a dozen jcars ago. His father was then n huge hulk of a mon, hnlr heavily strenked with gray, struggling whiskers and n habit of gazing straight ahead in a dull, lethargic way. It was this mnn who ruled Bulgaria with an Iron hnnd. It was he who forced the nation to nn act thnt Is one of the blackest in Balkan history. The bulk of the Ilnlgarian people were pro-Ally. Their hereditary hatred of tho Turk, the memory of centuries of oppres sion, compelled them to this position. Czar Ferdinand was n German. Ho was an Imported ruler, n roynl carpetbagger. He ran true to race and type. When the crisis came and Europe was plunged into the vortex of the World "Wnr Ferdinand milled his armies to the aid of the Turk. His right hnnd grasped the right hnnd of n people that hnd been slnineu with the blood of Bulgaria. CZAR BORIS Is the son of Ferdinand. He comes to the I'tilted States. It Is said, on a visit of congratulations and thnnks. Congratulations, prosuinnblj, for the fail ure of the 1'nited States to declare war ngnlnst Bulgaria, as It should have done while It was in the business. Thnnks for the hundreds of thousands of dollars of American nmnev thnt have been spent in relieving the suffering nnd hunger in his domain? T am not so sure thnt this country enres a hnnc nbout the thnnks or coiurmtiilutinni. of the royal family of Bulgnrln, or thnt por tion of their subjects who turned their backs upon Russia that hnd saved them nnd made them whnt thev were. Tt is with the Bulgnrlans who saw the light ; who would have rushed to the nld of the Allies had not the "Fox of the Balkans" hindered them. Cznr Boris unquestionably has nerve. If nothing else. In proposing to visit the TTnlted Stntes so soon nffer the close of that great nnd terrible event. The thousands spent by him and his servitors on this Junketing trip might well he used In relieving distress in his do minions. r THE FLAG COMPOUND of principles and laws, Brnve deeds nnd sacrifices, A flag Is only great because Of whnt It syudiolir.cs. No silk or bunting stirs the blood. Ts'o oj p-intriguing color, Save when the symbol's understood ; Then life grows richer, fuller. Old (Slur in her waves and fol(,s Seems all that's brave nnd right, for The patriot In her beholds The virtues he would fight for. G. A. , . i a?teEgJDAY, JVXE .-H FLAG DAY-A NATION'S SALUTE TO THE vj 'Ervi;' 'Cpir!' ' El' Prwvrfm ir aUiE . : , .'. NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians on Subjects They Know Best RALPH CHESBROUGH On Trade In the Near East THE establishment of agents in tfic Near East who can correctly Inform this country ns to the people, condition nnd needs of thnt pnrt of the world is n neces sity, if this country Is to secure und hold Its share of the world trade in that section, nccording to Ilnlph Chesbrough. foreign trade expert, who has just returned from the Near East. "There is a large business to be done with the Ncnr East," said Mr. Chesbrough. "but the business men of this country, as well as the Government Itself, must act prompt ly if it Is not to see Itself outstripped by foreign competitors. ".lust now political conditions in Asia Slinor nnd other pnrts of the Near Enst are fur from settled. The Bolshevists have allied themselves with the Turkish Nation alists, nnd although uttacked by the Greeks, as well as other troops of the allied coun tries, they nre fighting n defensive battlo on their own ground. The region which they hold Is one full of the richest natural re sources. Products Ready to Ship "Large quantities of new products arc being held within the boundaries of the Nationalists waiting to get to the sea to be exchanged for foreign manufactured products necessnry to build up the country. "Despite the present situation, it Is hoped that the problems in this section will be settled soon nnd the world will theu rush In lo shnre in the trade of this section. The time to act is now. Great Britain, France, lapnn and other countries nre on tlte ground now, und when thnt time shall have como the? will have secured all the concessions worth hnving if we do not get busy in the meantime. "Thp Near East, comprising Greece, the Balknns, the Bind; Sea region. Asia Minor, Syrin, Palestine. Egypt, Persia. Arabia. Mesopotamia and the entire Mcdlterrnnlan region cast of Italy, comprises n magnifi cent field for future trade relations. "To do business with the people of that section effectively means n thorough under standing of the psychology of the people, their needs nnd their methods of doing business. "They are. tin the whole, n very conserva tive set and not readily susceptible to modern methods of doing business. They go n great deal on the principle that seeing is believing, and therefore the business man who can please them on that principle Is most likely to be successful with them, American Banks Needed "What is needed over there are American Agencies, banks, chambers of commerce, or gnnintinnH or Individuals who know die language, the customs and the desires of the people and who can translate these things to ii. There nre a grent many mushroom firms over there, nnd thcrcTorn it Is im portant thnt n business man in this coun trj should know just whom he is doing busi ness with. Similarly sharp practice has not been an unknown thing on this side, nnd It is therefore necessnry thnt some one repre sent linns hero who has the confidence of tlie iiinccrns on the other side. "One of the most linportnnt things to consider, outside of the fact Hint wo miiNt meet the prices, credit terms and the quality and stjles of packing of goods of our for eign competitors, is to give our prospective customers over there what they want, when they want it nnd prepared and presented in the way that they want It. Much trade has been lost to foreign competitors because American business men have chosen to dis regard this Important consideration. "At the pre-ent time wc have Great Urlt aiu as probubl? our strongest competitor. Germany Is coming bnck fast. France am) .Inpan, as well ns Italy and Greece, are all well intrenched in this part of the world. Have Own Business Methods "Business among the Orientals is ,.nn ducted in such n way that Hie big business men arc not always apparent to the casual observer. Thus one might go into the ba zaars of Beirut and Aleppo nnd find n couple of men sitting cross-legged in n small shop, without t.vpewritprs, phones or other signs of modem progress and conclude that thev were not worth doing business with s a matter of fact men of this type arc often the biggest business men of the cominiinitv "Soon these countries are going In open to foreign capital The former Turkish governmental prrludlce against foreign In Hiii lice Iiiih hccii r moved Railroads and other convenience wl ho hitUt With not" tlcal and Imtindiu-j qucsimis tctth-0 the 1921 ' STANDARD BEARER enormous natural facilities and resources of these countries will be developed, "First-class men to act as agents will be the most effective means thnt business men here cau adopt to secure business In these countries. They must know the customs, the lunguago and the requirements of the people They must know the seasons for things. The nlso must mnkc up their minds that thev caunot make enormous profits to begin with, but must he satisfied with com missions if they are to meet the prices of their competitors and eventually work up a steady, satisfactory and constantly increas ing business. "The people of these countries are, how ever, susceptible to new things if they are shown lo them. Thc.v are often quite sus picious and always buy from samples. Progressive Methods Will "Progressive men huve succeeded in in troducing modern agricultural machinery, the movies, electric fans, talking machines with recoids in their own language, playcr pinnos and. until prohibition, American beer. All these things proved Immensely popular with our foreign neighbors. "There are man things that they should have. Many of the big cities' do not have telephone systems, electric lights, tram cars or modem sewage systems. There is con siderable room for the development of mo tortruck transportation despite the fact that they arc not unknown over there. Level headed, progressive emissaries, however, are the hope 0f tho business man If he is to make his trade with these countries the big thing that it ought to be." HUMANISMS By WILLIAM ATIIEHTON DU PUT PUGENE MEYER, head of the War A-i Finnnce Corporation, used to worry a good deal because lip could not make a speech, .lohn Eversman, who used to be secretnry of the Republican Congressional Committee and before that was secretary lo Representative McKlnley, of Illinois, re assured him by telling how Mr. McKlnley met the same sort of situation. The : congressman appeared before the stu dent body of the University of Illinois to mnke a speech ou "Modern Business." He begun in thin way: "This is a good speech. The figures In it nre mine hut the oratory Is that of my secretary, Mr. Eversman. T will read It." As he progressed he put a grent deal of enthusiasm into delivering the mounting periods. Whenever one of these soared gracefully to the heights and pnlnted u sun set glow, or fingered the heartstrings that nre uttune.l to country love, Mr. MeKlnloy vvould Pause and interject an nside to the effect that : "John did pretty well on that, didn t he," This unique treatment of tho subject made a very favorable impression on the audience. It was honest. There were a round hundred men who wanted to become First Assistant Secretary of ar and help John W. Weeks run tho business end of that lighting department, procurement being the big tnsk. Finally tho V." , "n? ,Blu'n ,,n -''loncI Jonathan Mnhew Walnwnght, of New York Cit . a lawjer w ith a good military record, v It will never be known on the outside who was the second most likel? candidate, fur the post hung In the balance between two men for weeks. This second man was head of n bg business organization. He lost, not rough any fault of his own, but because he Secretary wns himself not a lawyer and, therefore, felt thnt It vvould u. wise t,, have a mnn who was as his first assistant. Charles Evans Hughes, it it, remarked over at the State Department, is e flirt secretarj since John Hay to w'ear a ben" It is also remarked that there is a some what striking facial resemblanee between these two men who have come to preside over the Government's, premier dennrtmo ,i liny, undoubtedly. BL,1 L. T h ': fl,-.. .1 ."MMI, ship than iinj other mnn In the world tela He is taking Hie situation vcrv serio uslv t giving ever ounce of encrg) he has to t" Is vv ,.., r, II....I.... i"-'" """ion. ' ', "' ""' is IISKCll (, i,, speeches on public oc,,..i.k . lecni.s noslt ve v He hasn't time for it. When he Is asked to grant Interviews, to appear so cially, his re.pniisos ro Just ns positively the negative He is busy getting on ton of this Job and will iiof he diver led? ' Qf Ilk. II Ktiittt.mnn Mm ii ""' .! iiiiv til IMT In III. Of till u generation to hold the' post. Tel I K , ! " piohah I), has come the greatest opportunity ' Hughe-, it In hhIiI. has a better rhanc", of writing his name hhrn in ,- ,i . .. ."."''. "f ' COLORS AND THE Wliat Do You Know? QUIZ 1. Of what State was President Arthur a native 7 Z. What is a helicopter? 3. "Who is the author of tho Peace Resolu tion that has boon passed by the UnltM States Senate? 4. Where is Assam and for what product If it noted. 5 Who wroto the play, "Cyrano de Ber- gerac"? C. How many geographical miles make degree of latitude? 7. Who was Junius Brutus Booth? 5. Whnt Is stippling In art? 9. Who waa "The Wasp of Twickenham" 10. What Is iago and from what Is it de rived? Answer to Yesterday's Quiz I The Green Mountain Boys were soldier! from Vermont In tho American Revolu tion, first organized under this name under Ethan Allen In 1775. 2. To Bishop Warburton, of England, is at tributed tho remark, "Orthodoxy Is tar doxy: holerodcuy Is another mana doxy.1' 8, Nariklno Is the name given to the war profiteers of Japan. i. Lucrezla Borgia lived in parts of the fif teenth and sixteenth centuries. Her dates aro 1480-1519. G. Troy is called "the Qollar City" on ac count -tt Its great collar manufacto ries. 6. The first name of Major Andre was John. 7. The length of tho main line of the Gov ernment railway In Alasha Is to be 471 miles. 3. Hera In Greek mythology was the great est femlnlno divinity of Olympus, Queen of Heaven, wife and sister of Zeus, and Inferior In power to him alone. Her equivalent in Roman mythology Ii Juno, l. Obit la from the Latin verb "oblre." t go to meet, and hoa come to signify person's death, a notice of th death or funeral obsequies. 10. A lapwing In a bird of tha plover family a peewit Today's Anniversaries 1772 Duncan MeArthur, noted soldier and Governor of Ohio, born in Dutches County, New York. Died near Chillicothe, O., April 23, 1830. 1777 Resolution of Congress providing for the adoption of the Stars and Stripe an the national flag, 1801 Benedict Arnold, the traitor, died In London. Born nt Norwich, Conn., Jan uary It, 1740. 1807 The French under Napoleon de feated the allied Russians and Prussians t the battle of Fricdland. 1821 Andrew Campbell, whoso inven tions did much to perfect the modern print ing press, born near Trenton, N. J. Dim In New York City, April 13, 18P0. 1830 A volunteer company left Cincin nati to nid In tho fight for Texan inde pendence. , 1840 Henry MIddlcton, Oovernor of South Carolina and United States Minieter to Russia, died at Charleston, 8. C. Bora In London. September 28, 1770. 1887 First steamship of tho CnnadieB Pacific Line from Yokohama arrived at Van couver. , , . 1020 The Poles evacuated Kiev before the Bolshevist offensive. Today's Birthdays Queen Sophia of Crcece, u sister of the former German Emperor, bom In H""1 fifty-one years ugo. ... Rt. Hon. Frederick Guest, who holds tw post of Air Secretary In the British Got ernment, born fifty-six years ago. , Captain Sumner E. "vY. Kittelle, Uul W States Navy, the now Governor of the vjr gin Islands, born at Pccksklll, N. Y nW four years ago. , . , Robert M. La Follctte, United Statef Senator from Wisconsin, born at Primrose, Wis., sixty-six years ago. . John McCormack, the famous tenor sIiUJ"; born nt Athlone, Ireland, thirty-seven JM ago. . .l, Roger P. Bresnahan, president of W Toledo American Association Baseball Cmi horn In Tralce, Ireland, forty-one J"" ago. Why Not? From tlie hprlnufloM Republican . , Bates College debaters have ed ' England to argue with representatives n Oxford on the nffirmatlve of the Oil"110?: "Resolved. That this house approves ' American policy of non-intervention in ropenn nffiilrs." If they know just woj this policy is. why not tell the homo row Is This True? From th London Hnlurilu) flev.ew . -aT J Unit r,il nri, Hlalinnesl W llPO Wl ", an oppoiltinity of being so legally. ra tVi. r- - Ml aft-- r.-f --V 1 IJ1. -v -t-:iv,tftifaasa SJWMfc