a- 0? n. "$ C" T ,yv i 'i'3 X' - t . rt 1 ,- it i jp 4.1 'EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEI-PHILADELPHIA MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1921 - ' ,?' C" & r-r. tffc W N :.,V iU ' & H pfenlng public flle&ger j Public ledger company ' CTTtUS II. K. CUIITIH, I'HUltHKT John C, Msrtln, Vice Preetdint and Treasurer; Chart's A. Trier, Becretaryi Char'ea II. Ludln. ton, Philip H. Collins. John 11 Wllllama. John J. epurieon, Oeorce V. Qoldmlti, David R. Smiley. plreetora. AVID V.. 8MILET Editor .JOHN C. MAHTlN....Oneral llulnej Mnnaaer Published dally at Pcblio LBtxjni Ilulldlns JniVwndmoo Square. Philadelphia. Artiitna Cm , Pre$fVnim Dultdln Kxw York 304 Madlrm Ate. Dktboit .T01 Ford nulldlne GT. Locls ....... 618 OIoke-Demoernf rtulMlnif CntCAOO 1302 Tribune rtulldlns NEWS BUREAUS TTiBnmoTON ricurac, N. E. Cor. Tennaylvanla Ave and Mth S Nxw Tons DcbCAO The C:m Dulldlng Vaioott Bostu Tr&IalAr Building SUDSCRH'TION TEHM8 The Evimmi Pcblio Loom la served to sub acrlhera In Philadelphia and surrounding towns at the rate of twelve (12) cents per week, payable to the carrier. By mrfll to points outside of Philadelphia In the United Plates, Canada or United States poa aestlnns, postage free fifty (SO) cents per month. lx (10) dollars per year, paable In advance. To all foreign countries one (tl) dollar a month. Notics Subscribers wishing address changed must ale old as well as new address. BELL. J0O0 WALJIUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 101 C7jlddr alt communications to Bvwnino Public Ijdiptr, Independence Square, Philadelphia Member of the Associate! Press TUB ASSOCIATED PRK8S H nctusivelv en titled to the for republication of all new tUpatchcs credited lo It or not otherwise ccdlfed in thlM paver, and aho the local news published Dierrtit. All rights of republication of special dLipatches herein are also reserved. Philtdrlphll, Mcnd.y, Auiuit .2. 1921 A PRECEDENT PRESERVED LEGISLATION to lit very special tnscs has long and rightly boon regarded as Inadvisable. In Stato and city politics tin term "ripper" Is sufficiently opprobrious to describe the practice of political ousting which such lawmaking sometimes involves. The usual objects of "ripper" tactics ob viously have nothing to do with tut- congres sional measure which would enable General Leonard Wood to retain his military status during tho period of hi" service n Governor of the I'!iilipplne!i. The bill, which applies only to General Wood and two other army men. In. however, a clear violation of a commendable principle, even though Its purpose is not to get rid of these individuals, but to honor them. The shelving, of the measure in the House de notes a conservative regard for good prece dent the effect of which upon the career of General Wood will not be harmful. The prospective Governor of the Philip pines will bo eligible for retirement, under the thirty-year service provision, on , Octo ber 0. There is. therefore, not the least compulsion upon him to resign from the army. A matters Mnnd, it is likely that he will simply assume his nosf in the archi pelago after ho has boon taken off the active army list. In that case the excellent rule forbidding army officers to fill civil Govern ment positions wi'l not be infringed upon. As the sentiment of the House is unques tionably sjmpathetic to General Wood, the tabling of the bill ennnot bo ascribed to ob structionism It 1' tho larger aspects of the situation nnd their effect on future legisla tion which has boon duly considered. MILLBOURNE'S FINE MILL WHEN motor drivers, venturing a parage through the borouch of Mlllbourne. neglect to observe the exact letter of the road law, the "Squire of tho place, one Yerkes, has them hustled before him, from a trap deftly arranged, and fined. Each catch means a little more than .?! for the "Squire and hi constable. When watchmen were posted hv one of the'motor clubs to caution drivers and to keep nutomobiles well within the speed limit thev were arrested at the 'Squire's nrdr and charged with dis orderly conduct ! It is prott clear, there fore, that tho astute Yerkes ih a 'Squire of hated legend, a justice of the sort that beset the roads of New Jersey In the old days before the State authorities harshly disciplined them. Too mnnv rond laws are made to be broken. When the authorities In n small borough put signs on their section of a great highway ordering nil motor drivers to Co no fn'ter than eight miles an hour they really mean that they do not want motor cars to go faster than fiftren miles an hour. But they leave it within the power of jus tices of the peace and fee -hunting constables to Impose unjustly upon drivers of automo biles. There ought to be standardized road laws applying in all boroughs, rationally drawn and rationally enforced. Then we should hear less of fine mills Automobllists mean while have it within their power to deal effectively with the fintng 'Squires. They can avoid tho tow-ns In which these 'Squires hold forth -Thii In 'lie course of time business meifwhn rule the borough and put 'Squires into office and kick them out will learn that the prospentv of a communltv depends invartnblv on tho n.iture and extent of the traffic that passes through it. AN ARCHITECTURAL GEM AS MIGHT have been exported, work upon the reconstruction of the old f'ltv Hall and Supreme Court Building at Fifth and Chestnut streets lias immediately empha sised the contrast between the original beauty of the structure ami the rookies and inartistic character of later additions Traces of charming old stairways hne been brought to light Subsequent "patchwork" improvements are responsible for the present unprepossessing appearance and arrange ment of the interior. The restoration, ns is entirely proper, will respect the original plnn. This is not e- clusivelv because of historic association". Appreciation of esthetic values will alo play its part Just whv so much of Colonial architecture was beautiful is ns difficult to explain as the hideousness of the Mid-Victorian or "Late General Grant" achievements. Each age is wont to nrnle it'elf upon Its inu of structural boautj. Historical perspective, however, invarlablv reveals marred oscilla tions of taste, anil it Is possible to appraise with some accuracy the course of architec tural stupidities nnd architectural Inspira tion. The grace that ahtdo in the Georgian style, Imitated in this country, is absolute and can be estimated apart from the soften ing Influenies of age. The American Insti tute of Architects, which Is supervising the reconstruction of the old City Hall, has an unviable onportunltv to recreate a structure of which Philadelphia may bo proud. The primary assflH for evolving a gem of tte genre are all present TOBACCO CONSUMPTION THERE Is a small group of persons in the I'tiltcd States who regret thut the bucket of water which the servant of Sir Walter Raleigh threw over his head when Jie found his master smoking did not ef fectually check the disposition of white men to experiment with the soothing e(Toets of tobacco. .There is n much larjer group who are ad that Sir Walter persisted in proving to bis satisfaction thnt the American Indians knew n good thing when they found it. How large that group Is no one knows. No census of the smokers ever has been taken. ill wo know Is the amount of tobacco that ' j mey consume. r,"S"' According to the statistics gathered by Stt-ff he census takers last year, -10,000.000.000 INT. ViinnMf V-ore manufactured for cousump- 'Jviwb' in me united Estates, xnir u aou -. ?ui..-i.. - .b ., r.1 . M.. .:. cigarettes apiece for every man, womnn nnd child. As no children nnd few women smoke tobacco In any form, the nvcrage consump tion of cigarettes by those who use them must be at least 1500 a yenr per capita. As 87.000,000 clgnrs were manufactured, the nvernge consumption of cigars per caplts must be about 2S0 on the same bnls. It would be easy for Mr. Cnttell. the city statistician, to figure out how many plrrtes of Ice cream could be bought for what is paid for cigarettes nnd tobacco every yenr, or how many pairs of baby shoes, or how many suits of clothes, or how many automobiles, or how many mlssiounrlcs could be main tained In China, or how ninny times the cigatcttes would reach around the world If placed end to end. or tho economic value of the nshes if the chemicals could be cxtrnetctf from them Rut tbese figures would hnk only a curious Interest. The fact that the Government receives revenues of nearly S300.000.000 a year from the taxes on to bacco is of more practical concern. In means thnt those who do not use tobacco are relieved from that much taxation lnl other forms. CAN U. S. MERCHANT SHIPS FIND NO ROOM ON THE SEA?' n h Erll,ii nt Ik. CUInnlnn rimrrtd VU ..,. ,..,,-.,.., v. .mv. uiir"! -w.. Indicate a Conspiracy or Shameful Ineptitude? OYMPTOMS of nn approaching emotional O upheaval in Congress arc apparent iu the House and In the Senate alike whenever the affairs of the Shipping Ronrd are brought up for discussion. There will be a probe. Thnt I' certain. And after the probe there I may be n sky-high scandal. It Is being whispered In Washington that some gentle men with white vests may even go to jull. The Shipping Board Is futile nnd unbellcvn bly costlv. It Is rapidly making us ridicu lous in the eyes of the world. In the old davs. when the Germnns wereit getting rich nnd powerful by making science ' and ingenuity nnd cunning serve Intteud of the natural resources which they lncked. every ship that carried goods of German manufacture to n foreign port was assured of a profit provided out of the national treas ury, when delays or market changes In creased the cost of the voynge. It was argued that a vessel which brought Iu foreign money to pay German labor or German dividends was an indispensable part of tho nation's Industrial system. Great Rritnln always has found ways by which to subsidize her Bliips nnd keep them profitably employed in the business of the empire. When the war put the l'nlted States Gov ernment in possession of vast new fleets and gave us besides tho finest of the great Ger man ships, the Shipping Hoard was estab lished to mukc these vessels serve the na tional interest. The ships wore to be scien tifically operated. They were to put the ting back upon the high sens. They would extend our markets to the four corners of the earth and create In American youth the iniorest in the sen which Is necessary to any .people who hope to carry on a great foreign trade. Rut the state of tho merchant mnrlne Is litt.c more promising than it was before the war The Shipping Hoard began by being a disappointment. Later it began to appear like a grim joke. Now it is some thing of a scandal. It i a drain on the national treasury. Innumerable Amorican-mvncd ships of tho first ( lais are lying Idle while ocean freight ami passenger rates are higher than they ever were before. No one seems to know what Is wrong. The affairs of the Shipping Hoard are shrouded in mystery. It is being said in Washington thnt an investigation of the circunistnnces which threaten to bring nbout a collapse of Gov ernment plnns for a nationally Inspired ocean transport service will reveal evidences of n vast conspiracy of foreign shipping Interest intended to continue and strengthen old established monopolies of trade routes and shipplns by making n wreck of the solieme which the American Government sought to carry through. There are hints of n night mare of giaft. There are hints of n sort of executive sabotage maintained consistently aboard Government -owned vessels in the interest of privately controlled steamship lines ut home nnd abroad, nnd directed with a view to forcing the Government to sell out to the monopolists. Fantastic ns some of the currtnt rumor sound. It mut be remembered that if the ShipMng Hoard ennnot operate the vosspi under Its control without enormous losses, the ships nnd much of the business which they arc intended to do will pus- sooner or later to private hand. There is n() (rubt that oxtenslvi propaganda has boon organ! ized to discredit Government ownership of ships, to disgust the American people with the Idea of nn elaborate merchant marine and to keep American vessels nt home. In normal tunes there is plenty of work for big and little ships of all sorts. Yet It is being seriously suggested thnt new wooden ships recently turned out of American ynrds be broken up for kindling! Apologists (or the Shipping Hoard nre forever ntlling the attention of thp critics to the depressed condition of international commerce. It is true that American export" have fallen off enormnu'lv beciiu. the in equalities of exchange rate- make it diffi cult for foreign purchnor to bin lieavilv in the l'nlted States. The fa t remains thnt the great privately controlled ocpnn trans port system find business plentiful enough to wnrrant the highest passpnger and freight rates in history Onlv thp American com panies operating Shipping Il'ard vess.-ls find It difficult or Impossible to get alonz Congressmen who have been-looking into the matter refuse to believe thai natural inusos nro behind the Shipping Hoard fail ure They believe, and sn. that n collnpi-e which appears to reveal o shocking lack of rapacity in the I'nited State Government and in American business men is due di rectly t.i plots deilsed to keep the American merchant marine In the sketrhv and ineffi cient forms thnt It assumed before the war The congressional investigation that is rer tain to be organized will be tho most in teresting Inquiry ordered in Washington since the war PASSING OF THE BIRD BATH THE delegates attending tin- international convention of lintel stewards in Pitts burgh report that the American plan hotel has disappeared from the larger cities There was a time when no hotels w-,.re run on tho European plan A man pnid .fli, SI or .." a day for a room and throe inals. The ?." a -day hotel was the best that the country offered For this sum a generous brenkfast was served, an adequate lunch and a dinner of as many courses as the guest chose to order. He might have anything on the bill of fare and ns much of It as he wished. The vegetables were served in china bird baths, which tho wnitpr arranged m a semicircle around the dinner plate , One has to go into the smaller towns to find the bird baths on a hole table And it Ih In those towns that the hotels still charge a lump sum for room nnd meals Now and then there is one which advertises the American nnd Europenn plan It is what the people of the town call the "swell" hotel of that part of the country. It nctunlly hus baths connected with Home of the rooms. In tho cities the bird baths have dlsap peared from the dining room and baths for human beings have appeared nn the upper floors. And In the dining room a guest orders what he wishes and pays for It sep- nrately from his rootm Or he takes his meals In outside restaurants wherever ho happens to be when he is hungry. Those who have nothing more important to do may try to deeldo which is tho better plan. The rest of us knpw that the plan now adopted iu the cities was not forced upon the public, but that the hotel managers have adopted it because they have dlseov ered that it serves the convenience of tho people. If some other plan shall be de vised that is more convenient it will be adopted ns soon ns It Justifies itself. RICHES AND DIPLOMACY THE report from Washington that Presi dent Harding Intends to keep in the Diplomatic Service those men who have en tered it with the expectation of making diplomacy n career Is very good so far as it goes. Most of these men occupy small and comparatively unimportant posts. The Im portant posts are filled In the old-fashioned way. Appointment is made to pay some sort of a political debt. General Dawes was brought face to face with the consequences of this practice when he was nt the head of tho purchasing de partment of the American forces in Franco. Ho sought to make arrangements for sup plies nnd labor from Spain and Italy nnd C.lf .ii.tn ...I I... I... fmin.l 1 1, a mnrlfnM '""-". "'" l""UU i" ""- rPprPjPntativps there Incapable of giving him any effective assistance. In his diary he says thnt so long ns we continue to Fend rich men abroad without nny -consideration of their other qualifications the Interests of the United States will suffer The only American diplomatic representative In Eu rope with whom he had any dealings who was equal to the emergency, he says, was Ambnssador Wallace, in France. He docs not mention the others by name, but when he speaks of them In his political diary io puts n dash where the name nppenred in his record. Some of the embarrassments suffered by a man who is not rich nre desorlbod in the 1 letters of Walter Hlnes Page, who repre sented us In London. The salary paid Is lnndequnte and no man can serve in Iondnn without drawing on his private resources. Whltelnw Reld's house rent amounted to more thnn twice his diplomatic salary. Am bassador Herrlck, now In Pnris, Is finding It difficult to obtain nny house suitable for his occupancy. Up Is a rich man and is not forced to restrict his expenditures lest he Impair his fortune beyond recovery. Rut for lack of nn cmbnssy building In Parts tho dignity of the United States is suffering. Mr. Herrlck is n capable diplomatist, as Mr. Wallace was. Dut the American Government ought not 'to be forced to seek among the very rich men of the country for Its Ambassadors. 5Ir. Page was not a poor man nnd he was an mdinlrnble representative of the United iStntes. Rut lie wrote the President that he would not hnve gone to London If he had .realized fully the humiliations to which he 'would be subjected because of the niggardli ness wilb whicli Congress treats the Diplo matic Service. It is all very w-ll to keep the trained men In the smaller posts and to promote them to 'higher positions as they prove their fitness. "Rut until Congress provides buildings In all the foreign capitals for the use of the American representatives and raises the pny tm a figure commensurnte with the demands for cxpendl'ure the most expert diplomatist in the service will find promotion blocked for .him unless he has a large private fortune. THE DISARMAMENT AXIOM T ORD RRYCE. in another address before ,li the Institute of Politics at Williams College, repeats the truisms concerning the mnilness of heavy competitive national armaments. The theme l one which, so far as the security of mankind is concerned, does not lend Itself to original treatment. It is not now ideas of neaco preservatives that arc ineoded. nor now reasons for advocating uni versal disarmament reduction" thnt ore re quired. The. old elemental arguments sol emnly hold good. What is dosirablo is continuous Insistence upon nn nxinmatlc proposition. Public iconsclousnoss of the peril nnd burden of (piling up war preparations is widespread. 'What lagged until civilization was all but rlestroyed was action unnn the common -tsenso convictions. Lord Rryce need not hcitnte to cover old ground iu his warnings. There ennnot be loo ninny authoritative voices calling for a practical and constructive recognition of the Ilaets. It was George Meredith who somewhat sjldl.v observed that there wore few great truths which were not trite Rut thnt c.rcumstnnce did not dim their grandeur, nor u1. the domlnnnt case for disarmament in the least weakened thereby. VHE MOTHER MOURNS FOR ALL fnHE bereaved English mother who is to ,JL come to the United States to lay a wreath Cm the gmve of the unknown soldier to be hurled in Arlington Cemetery on Armistice Huy is to represent nil the mothers of tho fejo nations whose sone wore killed iu the U'ar. Her identity i" to ho concealed, thnt there riiny he no personal element In the beautiful tlfmbnlism of the tribute She is to be just n mother mourning for her son. She will lie there vlcnrloush for evorv mother whose i-Jin lies in nn unmarked grave on the battle fields. Each such mother may find con sintlon In the thought that the soldier in tbei Arlington grave is her son nnd that the IJtigllsh mother is Inying tho wreath beside tltt monument for her. And each mother mny also console herself wiil.'Ji the belief thut the three veterans of tbes World War who won the Victoria Cross antf the three Crimen veterans who nre to I' enrrt the Hrltlsh mother across the ocean wtjum nnvo none ns mucn tor nor n sne nau 1 kern selected to represent bereaved mother -rimd nt the moving ceremony next No vrinhor. DARWIN DIDN'T KNOW THIS r' IS too bud thnt Ilenrv Adams did not live to rend the latest report of the FJeld Museum, of Chicago, containing the der.rtption, of n marsupial which has re-nrja-diu'od Itself for ,'l.onil.OOO years without I'jKjugo in its structure. If he were still nCveilie could find n more convincing argu ment against the early Darwinian theory of es.ilutlon thnn thnt of tho fossil which he dlt) use. His fossil 4 found In the rocks of nil ages, continuing without change for hundreds of thousands of years until the omitjirc became extinct T io Held .Museum report tens ol a small Snillii American marsupial about six Inchon long said to bo identical In structure with tho lossil skeletons found in rocks 3.000,000 yentri old The nnlmnl has survived and repri'dueed itself during all this period with out tmodifieations in Its structure such ns devtloped the present horse from tr mall fives toed animal of prehistoric times. It limy bo thnt the evolutionists can explain this ns an exception which proves their rule Rut however that may he. men of soirme will he deeplv Interested ill the sttntvof the nnlmnl known ns the enennlostcs, an'.f in compaiinc living specimens with fonij remains of his remote kinsmen. Canal barges are carrying grain In great quniltitles from the Middle Wert to New Ton nt one-fifth less thnn rail wntcs, ond are making better time. It is odd that nt a time, when airplanes are opening up possl bllitO'S of quick freight trips the oldest, anil nsutlly the slowest, means of transportation should be coming Into Its own again. -... .....m. .... i. AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT In Sheltered Vale Old Mill Creek Still Goes Its Busy Way and Local Photographer Serves jas Modern Guide Dy SARAH D. LOWRIE THERE is a man named Henry Troth who Is noted nil over the country for his beautiful photographs, especially his pictures of garden spares nnd of crock,. If he lived anywhere but in Philadelphia nnd was any thing but a Uuaker ho would have a con spicuous studio, expensive exhibitions anil would be, in fnct, one of the celebrities of the town. He is a celebrity elsewhere, but In this town he is Just a ensunl citizen who shifts his dark-room so often that even his clients; do not know where to find him. A studio he has nover had. so far ns I know. Now and then he reappears and lias n tempo rary little shop. I first began to realize tho beauty of the streams nbout Philadelphia from his lovelv pictures. His collection should be bought up before It is too late, for already those creeks are disappearing before the oncoming town. I learned nbout the Mill Creek first from him nnd, though since then I have lived on It, I have written this little account of his work out of gratitude for the introduction. THE way I first reached the Mill Creek was across country from Rryn Mnwr. It is as pretty a way ns any to reach It. One can go on foot, part of the way ncross farm lands or by rough Inncs or by mac adum roads. From the Rryn Mawr College cntrnuce drive one turns to the right be tween college buildings through n gateway facing n lane running beside n wood. The wood Is a wonderful piece of forest, and gives one an Idea of whnt the unbroken forest must have been In those parts 200 years ago. It belongs now to nn old Quaker ramlly Vnux. Mr. George Vnux has In his house there a very Interesting collection of minerals. Like most Friends, he is fond of scientific pursuits in his leisure hours. I sometimes think the stricter Friends, who do not yet allow themselves music or the piny, make up for the lack of that side of beauty by n keeu pursuit of nature. 1 do not know how mineralogy became Mr. Vaux's pastime. He was, I romembcr, onu of the pioneers In the Northwest mountain regions along the present route of the Canadian Pacific, near Lake Louise. GOING along the lane with the woods on tho right one comes to a very old grave yard and little church. At tho end of the lano there Is a road lending uphill and downhill. One turns to the right nnd down the hill. The wood is still on the right and a big dairy farm, with a tremendous nnd very typical Pennsylvania fnrm, is on the left. The road is very rough nnd gradually goes up a hill, always skirting the wood: In fuut, when one Is past thnt wood one has gone around three sides of it. Coming out at the top of the Inne and nt the end of the wood there is n road almost nt right angles. One wny goes back toward Rryn Mnwr or Haverford nnd the other, to the left, toward the Mill Creek. You tnke the left rond nnd go dowiihill. On the rlirht of this new rond are the old golf links of the Merlon Cricket Club, aban doned now some ten years for the ones some miles away ou the other side of the Penn sylvania Railroad west of Ardraore. One can cut ncross these upland meadows on foot and reach the Mill Creek by going In tho general direction of the Schtivlkill ; but In nny ense, by keeping to the road nnd going downhill one very soon 'reaches the creek at the bottom. There Is a lovely garden in nnd nbout a quarry on the left of this rond that bo longed to the Into Edward Sayre. It npd the old house It surrounds make one of the most delightful little country seats about Philadelphia, to my thinking. Once you hnve crossed the Mill Creek ut the foot of the hill, turn to the right along its banks nnd follow It by road or bv path until It readies the river. All along there nre remains of old mills, some of them pie revolutionary, nnd nbout each mill there are the vestiges of small villages, houses for the mill hands and the foreman and the miller nnd the gentleman owner. These houses were very good of their kind and sonic of them hnve always been lived in : others have been renovated nnd a few have gone to rulu. JUST where the Ardmore Stntlon rond cross the creek Is a very old workman's house with the date of 1000 nnd something I've been told thnt that Was the oldest house in Montgomery County, but I cannot vouch for tho truth of that. There are three very Interesting countrv places, from thut corner down for u milo or to. The first is nn old house to the right with big trees, nnd belongs to Mr. Chnrlrs Mcllvalne, the architect ; and the place right next to it with a driveway close to ith en trance is that of Mr Charles Ludlngtnn one of the heads of the Curtis Publishing Com puny. That place has nn Interesting garden nnd n swimming pool thnt hus been made a part of the garden architecture. Mr. Ludlngtnn has also made a verv unique and worth-while collection of Chinese paintings. Any one interested in the Itnllan primitives should study these much earlier and more finished pictures of the same type. THE third place can only he seen from one point on tho mud. though the entrance drive enters from it. It belongs to Mr Inmes Crosby Drown, the head of Rrowii Rrothcro. bankers. It has a beautiful music room and was the scene of the Greek phiv which wns given iu the early summer bv Miss Mattlilson and her compuny. Crossing the creek again ' nnd golnc steadily downhill nlong its very shady hanks you pass more nnd more mills, deserted and ruined or recently repnlrcd, the road always growing rougher, until without warning you come suddenly nut on a green meadow with pretty old houses and mills, nil rharmlnglv kept up nnd surrounded by vino and flower covered walls nnd terraces. It Is as tlioii"h one had come upon the Petit Trianon itself there on the banks of the stream, and as though the great trees were part of the park of Versailles. THE Inn of Mniie Antoinette, the mill tho dairy inttage, the miller's (ottnge are all there to the life. There are. I suppose some dozen vine-covered buildings In the little community, all built for some evident purpose of communal life. And, Indeed, the mill and the storehouse, the grnnnries and the laborers' cottages lind owner's house all formerlv belonged to n man by the nnme of i inniniiu, wim in mo enriy nays before steam hud a prosperous business in that quiet valley. Rut the place was, for perhaps half a century, a rum when It wns restored by Dr. Semour Do Witt Ludliini anil used for his patients It is known ns the GInd wyne Colony, the nearest PostofhYo heine Glndwyne, up near Morion Square. THE hills forming the cupllko valley are part forest, part orchard and garden slopes. Two smaller creeks enter the Mill Crook nt this point. Dr Ludlum's Inborn lory and X-rriv rooms are In tho bulldine that was formerly a great stone barn on the edge of the road ns one leaves the colour going down the crook The office for receiving strangers and the friends of the patients Is, however, in the long building with n bolconv. which in the old days was the combination roadside inn sUirc nnd Postoffiee. One may cross the creek here nnd go buck bv Merlon Square or keep along the creek lo the Schuylkill On the river bnnk. as in Revolutionarv'dnvs' the prdestrinii may hail a forrv, rowed hv on ancient boatman, nnd be taken across the river to Rhawmnnt. Onlv nowadays frequent trains stop nt Shawiiiont, which will tnke one hack to town In twenty minutes or so The river Is very beautiful at tills point. There is a great fall Just below, nnd above It Is serene and navigable, Cannes enter the ennui nt Shavvmont, going down the river, and keep to It to the Palls of Schuylkill below Mann yunk. A rough but very picturesque road on the west side of the river joins the Rcl mont rond some uillos down. Ry foot, canoe or motor the Mill Crock U werta seeking and finding. waces and Working, conditions AftC PERFECT" WHAitrjY iPftANUl ,) " THE TAES ARE REAS0KA6LE AMD PAIR TaS COUU'Dn'T ee . FAlRCR VKitmi x xtsmm "uvf " I M P0R- ReasonaQle " no Moee ANDLCT .PROPIT6. . Auto L0CS UVE" IVE OEFNTooaKOY WtcE&SARY'' NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians on Subjects They Know Best DR. FURMAN ANGEL On Post-War Psychology rpHKRB has been n considerable increase 1 In neurological cases since the wnr ended. This no one can doubt today, es pecially If he has come Into eontnet with lurge numbers of hosnitnl imtlcnts. ' sajs Of. Furnian Angel, chief resident physician on the medical side, Pennsylvania Hospital. "The question naturally arises. Why should this be? Many widely different fac tors are believed to be responsible. I'irst should bo mentioned the cessation of the so-called 'war psychology." During the war wc were led to believe by the press, the pulpit nnd public speakers that war. in it'clf. was right. Many, further, enter tained the belief that the wnr would never end. it seemed, nnd money was very easily made. It was us easily spent. Easy Jobs Were Lost "The post-vvnr period found a large num ber without employment as a result of changed conditions. This factor nlune has caused countless numbers to develop neuras thenia, hysterics nnd nllled conditions, and it has been the cause of not a few of our suicides. "In fnct, there has been nn alarming In crease In the number of neurological cases. Kvery hospital of any size should have n clinic for the examination nnd treatment of these cases. In this way the ordinary practitioner would he able to recognize the obscure phnses of mental derangement as well as the ordinary forms of insanity. "These clinics would safeguard the public by removing from the streets dangerous per sons or those llkelv lo become dangerous through tho development of their mental ills. In addition, adequate treatment could be given the mentally nlllng. innny of whom could be cured. Causes for Sulrlde "As for suicides, the majority of them are not to be attributed to Insanity. Tnke What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. Name three American generals promi nent In the War of 1812. 2. What Is meant by "postn regtanto"? 3. Distinguish between the Cnmorra and tho Mafia. 4. Whnt Is the fer-de-lance? II How are the Territories of the L'nlted States repiesenterl at Washington? fi What Is an epyornls: 7 Who was Cornelius Trump .' s. What Is the meaning of the term "dolce" In muulc? 0 What is a coronach'.' 10. Nnme a European country in which the cnpltal Is not the laigest city. Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. Queen Vlctorln n Grep.t Brltnln wns tho daughter of the DucheFs of Kent daughter of Francis, Duke of Saxo-Coburg-Sanlfelcl unci it sister of Princa Leopold, who became the first King of Belgium. 2. "The use of the globes," foimerlv re. garded as a regular hrnnch of the edu cational curriculum, huh the. teaching of astronomy nnd geography hv meana of globes. 3. A lory Is a kind of parrot-like, bilght- plumagcd bird fioni the Hast Indies. 1 Lenin should be pronounced "Len-yln ' j. "VrnlsembUnce." a Krcncli word Im ported Into English means nppenranco of truth, plauslblo restmblance 6. The Island of Formosa belongs to Japan. 7 A vendetta Is a blood-feud, In which tho family of tho Injured or muidered man seeks vengeance on the offender or his family Tho name vendetta Is taken from Corsica, notorious for the nrevn lenco of tho practice. ' revn 8. Truce of God was the name given to the suspension of private feuds In Fiance Italy and elsevvhero In Europe In the eleventh and twelfth centuries' The terms usually provided that the feuds should censo on all tho more Impor tant church festivals nnd fasts. Orlrl nally Introduced b tho Church to mill, gate the evils of private war. tho c is torn gradually fell into disuse n.s the rulers of the various rountiles became. liwro i'"iiii.i 9. Alessandro Volta wns a famous Itullan physicist, famous for his researches In electricity. His name Is preserved In the word volt. His dates aro 17 u,. 0. William R. Cllndstono Is credited with SF Ul Vhrase th L'npeakable THE MILLENNIUM THE 0T OF UtfNG ih vehy REMONAeie, f0 COMPLAINT " " TrlE fflAT0M& BETTwgfM CAPltAL AND LABOR ARE COMPkSTtLY HARMONI0U6 " When everybody is contented. ?L W'J v&i Pi'SSA 'CMMAHf n?iANt1 sffl fBtlCol nnyja Wrtcn all the world it at peace. Taxes ap EN7IRELY . SATISFACTORY I HAVE NO COMPLAINT ABOUT THE THE TAX ATES A JUST" TAKCV A v When everybody is satisfied with taxeii H0NE6TY IS THE SAFE4Y POLICY " "IM NEVER. GOING- 10 KILL ANYMORE (SENTLEMEN ON When everybody is honest. the case of a prominent business man who loses all. He might shoot himself, but not because he was insane. Merely because his outlook on life showed nothing ahead for him. "Coming hack directly to the wnr of the men who entered the service nnd participated in warfare, there were two different types of those who since the wnr have become psycho-mentnl Wrecks. One of these was the man who entered the service with nn originally diseased nervous system. An other type U exemplified by the man who from childhood possessed n functionally weak nervous system, n nervous system thnt wns adequate for his ordinary civilian re quirements, but rould never stnnd up under the trying clrcumstnnceN of mllltnry cam paigning. "From these types of Individuals came thnt vast maiorlty of cases of shell shock and war shock which form one of the most vexing problems that the hospitals of the country face todny. "That the war-shock patient is n sick man no one who is familiar with the facts doubts. His is a new type of illness, ono thnt will be with us for the next ten years. "I.astlj, but by no means least, might be mentioned the- type of neurological patient who has the condition which we call 'cora pensntionitls.' He believes that his present condition, regardless of whnt it Is, lias some relation to war service and that It consti tutes an adrquntc ground for compensation from the (lovernment. Close Study Is Required "To be fulr to the patient nnd nt the same time to be fair to the Government, these cava requlie the very closest study to determine their exact relation to previous mllltnr.v service. "While In the naval service I had great opportunity to observe thousnnds of these cases at the nnval post at Cape Mny and the general army hospital nt th same place. Today 150 per cent of the cases from tho Public Health Service hospitals ure ncuro loglcal ca'es." Sun of the West, Good Night SUN of the west, good night, good night; Orb of n splendid day ; Slowly von sink from my eager sight Into the far away : And night comes down nnd the shadows dnre To creep from the depths of their hidden lair; S'nfe till the dawn may they linger there Sun of the west good night. Sun of the west, good nlgftt, good night; Ages may come nnd go; And you swing on In celostlnl flight Nor reckon on things below; Rut I know nnught of my destiny Tomorrow my.frnglle bark may be Far adrift on a troubled iea Sun of the west good night. drift Crawford, In Knnsns City Star. Today's Anniversaries 1777 Americans under General Sullivan landed on Stnteu. Island, surprised two regl nients of Tories and captured many prison ers. lN40--(,eiiernl Kearney established n gov ernment for New Mexico with himself ns Provisional Governor. 1801 Yacht America wins cup race nt Cowes; trophy has remained in this countrv ever since, though frequently contested f,:. lRlii-Aliss Lucy Johnson, the inventor of seamless bags, died at F.lmvvood, R. I 188(1 -W .1 Kendall, in n cork vest swam through the Niagara rapids linn-Frlcdrich Kbert was sworn in as iiiiiMiiui i it-nuK-iu oi licrinnnj, 11120 Women of Costn Rica wi verc granted the rlglit of suffrage. Today's Birthdays . .'ViY.'.1 H,'.U' (;".",n' M"1 aml '""Ir if the late HMtv Green, bom in London fifty, three .venrs ago. ' William L. Douglas, former Governor of Massachusetts, born nt Plymouth. Mass sevrntv-six years ago. Ho, .nke. III., fiftv.clirlit vn.. ...... Daniel It. Anthony, rcpreseiitntlvn in Congress of the FirAansas District, bo ft at Leavenworth, Ka fifty-one years ago. Dr. Hei.rv- Suzznln, president of the ir,,. yerslty of Washington, born nt San Jo"e Calif., forty -six years ago. !,p' The Rt. Rev. Alexander J. Mcfinvh.u Catholic bishop of Chicago i ,.,-" -4av.Vkl 'it rut "OwR Pur.., 0ICIAL ARE EFFICIENT fcs! MONEVr VtM) S 6A ' , "The best TAH SY5TM in the world" I AM. ENTIRELY SAHSFiED WlTM MY TAyea Tut" TArj ie fair AND 30.VARE TVfl LAW MUST Be RCJPrcTED THE MC" SHORT CUTS How that man Hnmpy docs love a scrap 1 There ure no compensations in beln; bitten by n snnkc nowadays. Ry the time the Penrose statement ar rives the people will hnve lost inteicst in It. Perhaps Hudson Mnxim considers th relativity idea his because he never gave It nvvny. Whnt Is tho dlffercucc between an ash cart seat nnd nn anxious sent? None worth mentioning. Grover Rcrgdoll is sojourning at St. Gall. Sounds ns though it ought to be hi! patron saint. There is something distinctly bolshe vistic in Vnny's endeavor to inject class into tho campaign. The Wnr Hoard seems really peeved at the airplane for nddlng to the complexities of naval warfare. Literal-minded Congressmen hnve de cided thnt General Wood must go out before he enn come in. Tho hay -fevered paragrnphcr consoles himself now nnd then by sticking ono of his wheezes In print. After mature deliberation we arrive it the conclusion that Suzanne can stand the racquet but not the gaff. If Grover Bergdoll and Rill Haywood could got together whnt n beautiful little hammcrfest they could hnve. We take it from the report of the Joint Army and Navy Board that the battleship is neither absolute nor obsolete. Perhaps Lloyd George made a mistake In the Irish negotiations In not holding back something of what he hnd to offer. "What, shall there be no more cakes nnd alo?" asked Sir Toby Reich. Cakes, Toby, with a luxury tax on 'em, but no more alt. The ship of stato is still suffering from "j a shattered Doom ; nut repairs are oeiuj made ub It moves toward the port of Nor malcy. One Is justified in supposing that Oca oral Mitchell does not give wholo-hcnrted approval to the finding of tho Wnr Hoard that the battleship is btill the backbone of the navy. It is said th'at a substitute has been found for anthracite. If it could only be put on the market this winter the consumer might sny of the coal magnate, "Now watco me mnke this bird come off his perch. v Rcnr Station, Del., man says he killed eighty-five blackbirds with one shot. Co caine, pcrhnps. With three blnck ero and seven men in buckram the eighty-five ought to rnuko an army to delight the lather of Lies. Stephen Coundourlotts. of the Greek Con- sulate at Washington, says this jazz thai they call music is just' noise that makes jou wnnt to shake' your shoulders. We t.ike it thut this means thnt the gentleman docs not wnnt to want to shimmy. No growing nntlon like Japan can be a whole-hearted subscriber to the doctrine oi self-determlnntlon for small nations. H contention. Is thnt the doctrine was hr,uf" Into being after the other big nations of tm world had "got theirs." The fnct that George Bernard Sim sajs he won't coimi to America because vv have lynchers here nuil because Debs is w Jail will lead many to suppose Ihnt he planning u visit. There Is uothing common' place in his self -advertising- A Lewlstown. Pa . vet Anil (he lllsh Wns erlnarlaii tells of a deer an Also Ran thnt Jumped oyer nil automobile, a leap ot ihlrn .lu-n ffnl from truck to triiek. LfflP' frog he calls It. and no frog would nttemp to puss the buck. A pretty good jump. , admit, though, of course, it docs not cowt pare with the bovine stunt on n incmor" occasion when a little dog laughed to m " MY LANDLORD 16 M07 COtlSlOtPMC AND JUST ' r ;c: GOLDEN rule IUD OfUllL .V1' ! t I I $ I jf .1"'J 'nr' !-. ' . jMJ. s v- Twy.t.