t vTflft -f'f i " i . fv r i , ! i ' : o . - O W 1 1 1 1 i i t i fTueninn Uubltc W&azt ' rUBLiti LEDGER COMPANY CVnt'S H K. CI'HTIS, l'HESIOINX John C. Martin, Vice Prldn and Treasursn iCharlff A Tjler, Secretary! Char'ea H. Ludlnc. .ton, rnlllp H. Colling. John 11. Williams. John J. B(iutfon Oora r OoldnmltVi, David E, Smllay, Plffemrt. . juvin t: PMILET Editor OHN C. MAnTtS... Cl-imal llmlntM Manager rubllthfd dally at I'cMto I.trarn Bullillnr Independence Square. Philadelphia Atumtio CUT rrm-Unlon Building fc'W Yons! 301 Madltun Ave DrrxoiT 701 ford Building BT. I.oris ..013 Qtobt -Democrat Itultdlnc Cmciao 1302 Tribune Building NEWS BUREAUS! WkantNiTov Buatir, . N. E. 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MAIN 1M1 " ' CTAidrtst all communications to Ein(no Publto Titdotr, tnd'tend'nrt goiinre, rMlnitrlrhla Member of the Associated Press TITE ASSOCIATED TltESS is rtrlusWi-lu eit tltleJ to the use for rejuMrofton of nil tieu'S dlsitatches credited to tt o rot oti-riru, crtdttei 4n thts paver, and also th local nems published therein All riphts of repukHentton of np'ctal ilnpatohe herein are also rtttrvtd. Phllidrlplils, Siturdir. Aoamt 27, 1921 THE ATTACK ON PHILADELPHIA IX STATE, before their applauding friends, Coroner Knight nml Magistrate Campbell, rival Hlndonburgs until now In the northern section of the city, burled the hatchet with an accompaniment of hand shakes, oratory and pledges of friendship. Notwithstanding the sonorous pronounce ment from Mr. Penrose, his leaders united formally with the Vnrcs. A juncture was effected, as the war correspondents used to say, between tho two factions which are moving to attack the city. A fatted calf was duly murdered The beast would have died anyway of laughter at the bpeeches. "I am hie enough," declaimed Campbell, "to forget that I fought Kcndrtck at the lust election'" Did he mean little enough? It Is to be hoped that Mr. Penrose rend the news of the meeting. It means either thai his leaders do not take him seriously or that they understand him better than the voters do. Senator Penrose, after all, Is the only Sinn qualified to discuss the uptown merger if we except the independent voter, who lias it in his power to express himself In the only way that really matters to gang leaders hungry for loot. GREEDY JIMMY IT SEEMS to bo admitted by the politi cians with whom James B. Sheehan trains that he has a right to a job with little work and generous pay. He insisted on being renominated to his present office. As Register of Wills he has collected fees approximating $350,000 during the two terms he has served. When some one else was selected by his bosses be an nounced that he would run anyway. He might pull votes enough to throw the nomi nation to the opposition candidate. Now it is Informally announced that he is to be made a Mercantile Appraiser and that he has withdrawn from the race for the nomination to the registershlp. But why should it be necessary to pay him a price for taking himself out of the vny? Is the threat of a mere ward leader, such as he, sufficient to bTlng the Contractor Combine to its knees? Is the Contractor Combine so fearful of losing what power it has that it is willing to go any lengths n order to preserve it? Whatever may be the answer to these questions, Jimmy seems to have succeeded in putting It over on the Vare machine. In which there are many men who would like to have received a tenth of what has pnssed through his hands since he has been sitting nt the receipt of fees in the Register's office. DUBLIN'S OPEN DOOR rIS fair to assuino that Mr. tW Valcrn nnd his associates in the Irish Repub lican Parliament may depart somewhat In future negotiations from the rigid line of fiction' defined In the formal answer to the British Prime Minister's peace proposal. A demand for full independence is there reiterated. But Ireland hns been through a war of blood and pnssion. Every diplo matist knows that nationn, like men. re quire time to recover from oncer nnd bit terness, and Dublin and London seem to he playing for time. Mr. de Valern's note 1s an extremely able presentation of the moral side of the case. But the practical difficul ties which mnke it hard to settle any Inter ' national question on purely moral and philosophical grounds are none the less ap parent and pressing It is not easy for Americans to Issue judgments againt the British or against the Irifeh, especially at this moment, when something very like a parallel to the Irish question has suddenly developed within the circle of our own affairs "Put all thoughts of Independence out of your heads," said the new Oorcrnor of l'orto Rico to Uic people of that island in the course of n recent nddte". "Old G'ntv shall nnti always, over vou And nothing but English must be taught from now on in the prlmaiy schools " The people of Porto Rico talk Spanish ami thev are Spanish by blood, tradition and temtiei anient. ERZBERCER'S DESTINY TAJTATHIAS ERZBERGER. threatened bv 1VJL his foes during n stormy and vivid political career and nt last a victim of assassination, was a violent moderate The uncompromising intensity with winch he voiced his conviction contrasted piqunntlv with the balance and sobriety of Ins judg ments. It was Erzberger. the Reichstag memb'r, who urged pence without annexations in 1017: Erzberger who accented the iinciivl- ,x able post of armistice commissioner for his naiiun in i ui"; i-rznrrger wno ncivociitccl the imposition of sufficient taxes to enable tv&' Germany to pay her indemnities ns the uyest means of eventual financial rehabili tation. A spokesman for unpopular realities, his personality, If perspicacious, was belligerent. Enberger suffered from the misfortune of beholding things as thev are and proclaim ing: them with the lire which more commonly infuses fiction Such men are not infrequently ndjudged dangerous and destined fnr trngic cikIn. A MONARCHICAL FIASCO THERE was cold comfort for the militar ists and monarchists In the Merlin jnrau of soldiers who fought in the World War. They were rorlewed hi (Jencial Ludendorff. Prince Eltel Krlcdrich, son of the former Kaiser; fount von Wnldcrsep and 7yicra! von der Golf None of these one distinguished memwus chceicd sine ticurnil J.VJeidorff, but the applause for him wn.s eoble. ot "lily was there a loci,- of en r)Ulastic approval at this uiouaichut lonstratlon, but there was positive evl- we. of disapproval In the shape of '"boos" am' some of the spectators '""In the light of this coolness it is possible (,' W'Juus uia riieccn mane uy uouni von Wjjjferjrtwe. He said that the time would V, .rtM wWthey would nil Etand together "foe the Kaiser and the Fatherland." "Hatred," ho exclaimed, "will stand guard la (icriiiniiy," and "so long as Hermans suffer under a foreign yoke nnd the French stand guard on the Rhino we must pre pare for revenge." if there had been n demonstration of approval at the expression of such senti ments the review of the old soldiers might have taken on nn ominous significance. But Germany hns- got olong for three years without the Kaiser. Before the war, the most powerful single party In the empire was democratic. The mass of the German population hns been anti-monarchical for yeors, In the sense that it has been oppose! to the restrictions on the right of franchise which Insured the dominance in political power 'of the repre sentatives of the monarchical and aristo cratic minority. The Germans have had a taste of democracy and they seem to like It. Such acquiescing response as there will be to the Count's speech will find expression In the palaces of the deposed petty prince lings, in the hearts of the old Prussian guard and In the melancholy retreat at Doom. The experiment of exhibiting a son of the former Kaiser to the Berlin populace docs not appear to have been brilliantly successful, GERMAN TREATY JUSTIFIES HUGHES' FOREIGN POLICY American Rights Are Safeguarded and Harmonious Relations With the Al lies Preserved by the Consist ent Methods Pursued Since March 4 NOT the least infirmity of purpose on the part of the directors of the foreign policy of the United States Is visible in the brief and. in several ways, extraordi nary treaty negotiated in Berlin with the German Government. The document is illuminating not only as a definite expression of the official Ameri can viewpoint, but also as evidence of the consistency which has characterized the successive moves of the State Department since the advent of the Harding Adminis tration. It is now possible to discern Inflexible logic in such acts of Secretary Hughes as his Tefusal to commit the United States to an intercessory role regnrding German reparations and his restoration of America to certain commissions of the Allied Powers. Proof that the outlines of a constructive program have been established for several months Is now unmistakable. The rejection by the Senate of the Treaty of Versailles has been accepted as Incontro vrtihlo history. This acknowledgment of realities Is not necessarily an Indictment of that pact nor of the League of Xations, which has found numerous ardent support ers In both political camps. But practical circumstances, which ore In no wise chnnged by regrets, have made impossible a formal revision of the treaty of 1019 to suit lAmerican interests. Mr. Hughes was therefore confronted with the necessity of negotiating a separate agree ment with Germany if the hypothetical war status was to be altered. To be more than on unmeaning diplo matic gesture It was obvious that any con tract must contain those features of the Versailles Treaty which in all probability would have been left in the document had the United States been enabled to amend and edltjt. In this respect the new pact goes far. In a sense its brevity 1b specious. Fruits of the war to which Germany and the United States have agreed that the latter shall be entitled nre described nt length in the text of the Versailles Treaty. Tho separate pact simply enumerates them by part and sec tion. Of the fifteen parts of the Versailles contrnot, ten are retained. The clauses demanding the trial of the Kaiser are ignored. It is specified that the United Stntes shall not be bound by any thing relating to the League of Nations, the laying down of the new boundaries or Germany, the geographical nnd political readjustments of Belgium, the left bank of the Rhine, Czocho-Slovakia, Aubtrln, East Prussia, Mcmcl, the free City of Danzig, Schleswlg-Holstein, Heligoland. China, Siam, Liberia. Morocco, Egypt, Turkey, Bulgaria and Shantung. In other words, our foreign policy Is kept distinct for all settlements abroad and our direct concern In the consequences of the World War Is reduced to matters of direct Interest to ourselven as formerly one of the Allied ond Associated Powers. These sub jects include nil benefits In which we were originally involved, subject to the excep tions noted ; the retention until further adjustment of seized German property ; the right, although we refuse to be bound by it. of participation In reparation pro ceedings; joint title with the other Powers to the former German overseas possessions; German disarmament under international commissions ; war prisoners and graves ; certain financial details, Including payment for occupying troops; economic ariunge incntR ; aerial navigation for Germnny; reg ulations concerning German ports, water wnis and rnllwojs, a number of minor mis cellaneous details, and, what Is most im portant, guarantees of pence. Bv thlh Inst icscrv.itlon the United States nsserts Its right, with the other victorious Power", to occupy Rhine bridgeheads for a period tif fifteen years. In a general sense nil these stipulations were embodied in the long 'cntence of the KnoT-Porter pnce resolution which forms n kind of preamble to the new treaty. That this pni t is sufiicientlj explicit to estab lish, when It is constitutionally ratified, formal iclntions of pence between the late belligerents is incontestnh'e Enough con fiscated (lermnn propertj now Is held in this countty to moke the adjustment of dnmage claims largely n technical business. So fur as Germnny is concerned, sho will gle us what we exact. In unexampled fashion the majority of the rights which we assert i nn onlj be tucorctli-nlly indorsed bv the defeated nation. It Is from our former paitners, Mctors In the conflict, that we must t in n fur practii ill acknowledgment of the bulk of our demnnds It is, consequently, plain that execution is largely dependent upon the compliance of a third party composed of our former associates Nertheless, the difficulties of the case are probably superficial. It Is understood that the Allied Powers, accepting the situa tion, nre favorably disposed toward our sep arate negotiations. Mr Iliiglies has been loreful to preset o haiiimnloiis re'ntlons with these Governments, which haw been ohnwii b the line of poln i adopted since March -I. 10-1, t lint the I'mtul States has imt the slightest intention of plnilng the uiniplot In the peine nor of permitting itself to be outnittlieinercd by Gcminiix. The Washington Conference is approach ing. It Is rmdilv cone cjwible Unit nu merous mutters, the so-called riii.il adjudi cation of which we formally dispute, will bn reopened for discussion. Something ery like another peace pat ley is in prospect. Its reiill.atloii would justify the whole 'ngenlous pence poller of Sei re tniv Hughes as It hns been delibeinteh nnd nuthoiitntiieli unfolded The method are (.Imping up The Senate should expedite them by tatlfvlng a treaty, which furnishes the sole avenue of escape from a mnddenlng elluntinn. Partisans of whatever stripe cannot logically oppose the new pact. While the so-called "Irrocoft cilables" may rejoice that the League of Nations Is not accepted, their opponents need ,nqt be uttcrjy ulsmnyed. The cov- EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER cnant Is not repudlnted. The United States has simply refused to be bound by ;a docu ment which it did not sign. The position Is honestly and manfully taken. As It stands, tho German treaty Is n definite step toward International recon struction. It Is admirable in Its limita tions, framed for the specific needs of the ease nnd big with promise of further re assuring developments. MINGO TODAY the situation In the West Virginia soft-coal fields, snd nnd fantastic nnd bewildering as it appears In various lights, Is highly charged with the possibilities of trouble nnd even disaster. It Is doubtful whether tho Inevitable consequence of slack and Inefficient political administration ever was made moro vividly apparent than It Is In the Mingo field nt this hour. If the troop commanders nre tactful nnd cool-headed, If the strike police do not lose their heads. If there is some one with au thority In the State able to appreciate the force that patience and a sense of humoT and charity can be mado to exert in nny crisis, tho long months of folly and mal administration of affairs In the soft-coal country will not end In an orgy of machine gunning nnd bloodshed. Otherwise the outcome of lawlessness on the part of the miners' unions, the operators and even the civil authorities in the Mingo region may shock the country. The -1000 miners who were marching to the mine regions to "protest" ngainrt the con tinuance of martial law proclaimed by the Governor nre not all union men. They are miners who have been enduring the hard ships of a combined strike and lockout for more than a year. The unions precipitated the strike The operators called In strike breakers. Gunplay and murder followed. The Sheriffs of West Virginia and, Indeed, tho State authorities ndded to the confu sion by giving unlimited police authority to a small army of men summoned from outside nnd paid by the coal operators. These men exercised the authority of the State. But they were responsible only to their private employers. Experience hns shown that trouble of the sort which the people of West Virginin dreaded can be easily avoided If men who or ganize for n demonstration arc permitted to demonstrate peacefully nnd hlnw off their steam without hindrance. If the miners had been permitted to go to Mingo they prob ably would have walked around and snt down and the thing would have been done. If a Sheriff or n captain of troops had lost his head and attempted to stop them with gun fire or threats, a good many people would b" killed nnd the Mingo trouble be no nearer settlement. The confusion at the soft-coal mines is a disgrace to the State authorities, who permitted both unions and operators to play fast and loose with the laws, with tho Interests of the State and the Interests of tho Nation. SMUGGLING IS NOT EASY THE bootleggers who nre smuggling liquor into the United Stntes are coming In contact with a lot of officors intrusted with the enforcement of the law long before the prohibitory amendment was adopted or the Volstead law was passed. They are experienced in detecting viola tors of the customs law. They nre not par ticularly Interested In the character of the goods brought into the country in disregard of the statutes. They have detected smug glers of diamonds nnd smugglers of silks and laces and smugglers of cigars and fine brnndy nnd smugglers of nrticles of every Kind on which the importers, piofcsslonal or ama teur, have been reluctant to pay the duty. Their machinery Is highly organized and efficient. The Volstead act has not changed their duties In nny rodlcal way. It was contrary to the law to bring liquor into the country without the pnymrnt of duty before the constitutional nmendment was adopted. That amendment prohibits ItH Importation for beverage purposes. It may be brought in for medicinal uses ns hereto fore, nnd when so Imported it must pay the usual duty. The revenue officers are not Interested in preventing the consumption of liquor They nre Interested merely In the collection of the duty on all that Ib brought Into the country. If the duty Is not pall they nre authorized to seize it as they have for cars seized articles of other kinds on which the importers sought to evade the payment of the legal tax The customs department Is not In the hnblt of winking at the violntlon of the revenue laws. It Is equipped with fast cut ters which patrol the coast on the lookout for smugglers. If this cutter service Is not adequate to the demands on It now that organized efforts nre In operation to bring liquor into the country by forbidden was, it Is likely to be en'arged. While smug gling cannot be wholly prevented, It can be reduced to such nn extent ns to discourage adventurous nnd nvaricious men from per sisting in It. BEER BEER, like those who advocate Its re turn, is still' in the air. In Washington, where Its fate has been trembling in the balance for more than a month, it appears to be viewed as political dynamite. A few weeks ago Trensury officials, harassed alike by the wets and the drys, demanded that Congress go to their rescue with n law to clear up the beer question by i losing lenks In the Volstead act. They threatened to make rulings virtually legal izing "medicinal beer" if the House nnd Senate fulled them. The House nnd Senate failed them by ndionrnlng nffer a deadlock. But the Treas on has changed its mind. Sctretiuy Mellon hns nnnounted that he will mnke no new rulings. He will wait until September, when Congress will resume Its work nnd take up aguln the Anti-Beer Bill, which was drawn to meet the Issue raised by the Treasury and the prohibition enforcement officials. For a dizzv moment after the congres sional recess wns nnnnuncrd it seemed that beer wns about to return, nnd it is rumored that the brewers were ready to release enor mous shipments of the so-called genuine stuff. What Congress will do when It returns to work it Is hard to say. The Senate Is sticking by an Intention to make the search of houses, motorcars, satchels and the like illegal in cases where the searchers are not piovlded with specific warrants. It will vote for the House Anti-Beer Bill only If its no-search amendment Is accepted bv the House. Agiecnient nilsht be easier we venture to believe that It would be ensierIf Wnjne B. Wheeler, head of the A nti-. Saloon League, would take n short vacation from Washing ton Mr. Wheeler Is obviously n cause of growing Irritation to many SenatoiH. He hns a bad habit of talking for Congress ah if he owned it. Wo hnve from time A Masterpiece to time derided (lis efforts of genial stor.v - tellers who strive to give tung to the news, but In Westchester Countv, N. Y., there's u Unr we love. He says bees have parked in the gcirbox of his flivver and travel over the country wltli'hlnf When he stops they gather honey, Imt nlwajs come home when be honks his horn To try to improvn that storv would bo to gild the lllv As though Russia's The Grasshopper weight of woe were not Becomes a Ilunlrn sufficiently heavy, nn army of grasshoppers has Invaded Its train belt. One may Im agine the deyll quoting Scripture with a vile grin. - PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, AtrfiUST y, A WONDERFUL CAMP Delmont, Once an Indian Hunting Ground, Now a Boy 8cout Ren dezvous Historic Unaml Valley Forty Miles From City Hall Tl. fiirnirit x?nv tfATXJ , uuu..i.u iW. ...v.u. v THE Boy Scouts of America is the great est juvenile organization In the world. Fortunate Is the boy who is a member. Fnrseeine is tho father who encourages hl son to join Its ranks. It has effective and enthusiastic organi zations In every civilized country on the globe. Objectively, It alms to keen boys In the path of rectitude; teaches them the beauty of courtesy, kindness, honor and helpfulness. In great cities, whenever juvenile altjes or auxiliaries arc needed for public func tions, Boy Scouts nre selected. -It Is a recognition of their manliness, personal re sponsibility nnd duty. Grent are the Boy Scouts! CAMP DELMONT, the remarkable Scout camp In upper Montgomery County, closes Its ninth annual encampment today. Director Ernest Schultz will superintend the departure of about seventy Boy Scouta, the remnant of the summer jrogiment. The camp will bo left in a condition as snick and span, as fresh and attractive as though It had never known the presence of a boy. Yet more thnn COO red-blooded, athletic, clean-minded Scouts lived there the last two months. More than 2000 persons, home folks nnd friends of the boys, visited tbem during that period. It cost $0000 to feed nnd care for them. This sum did not include permanent im provements nnd certain incidentals of camp life. In July and August the boys came In troops from all parts of Delaware and Montgomery Counties. Every two weeks the personnel of the place changed. A fortnight is the recog nized camping perldd of each troop. D ELMONT is one of the largest Boy Scout camps In the United States. It Is the most romantic nnd beautiful of all. There are 100 acres of woodland, creek, meadow, rock nnd tangled hillside. The Federated Boy Scout Council of Montgomery nnd Delaware Counties owns the property. Ideals of outdoor life for boys from twelve to seventeen years here attain their highest realization. Tho valley was once the hunting ground of the Unnrai Indians. They were a sub division of tho great Delaware tribe or nation. In the museum are foxes, weasels, birds and butterflies trapped or token by the boys. Indian relics, rare mineral specimens nnd polished samples of all the native woods are there preserved. Ten college men, specialists, comprise the general staff of Instructors nnd attendants every year. There are no martinets. The Scouts are Instructed how to do things. They nre not ordeicd. Self-control, courtesy and per sonal pride prevail. DURING the season just closed there was no sickness at Delmont, though a camp doctor and n well-equipped hospital are always at hand. There is n naturalist versed in wood craft, a director and two assistants of Scout activities, a scout master nt large, swimming masters and lifeguards on the staff. The Scouts live like pioneers of the early West. Every house Is a log cabin. Eighteen of them, set around the campus, are open on nil four -sides. They are the bunk cabins, wljh eight bunks to each. The great council house, 33 by CO feet, is constructed of huge logs. Within arc two council fires. They are squnres of stone set In the floor. When the council fires are lighted the bmoke passe out through holes in the roof. The chapel is the most remarkable, ap propriate nnd picturesque spot In the Tcgion. It is a natural amphitheatre. A semicircle of rocks, some as big as a two-story house, others the size of a wheelbarrow. The pulpit is n curiosity. It is a boulder shaped like a pulpit desk, with nntural sloping top. During services on Sunday the Scouts and their visitors perch on the rocks or sent themselves on the ground. Clergjmen of nntionnl fame, Bishops of great dioceses, hove been proud to preach in this amphitheatre with its odd pulpit and rustic wooden pulpit chair. THE Scouts at Delmont nre Instructed in the mysteries of woodcraft and the lore of the great outdoors. American history Is taught nt its source. From the trails and fishing grounds of the I'natni Indians it is but a step to tho fulling mills of Colonial days; to the pre Rcvolutionary powder mills of the Unaml Valley. On the camp ground still stnnds a mill that made gunpowder for Washington's muzzle-loaders. There ore the ruins of a dozen others within a few miles. The Scouts swim In the vvnters above a dam tbnt was built before the Declaration of Independence was proclaimed. It fed mill-races that ground the grist, made the ammunition and fulled the cloth for the armies of the colonies. The lad in khaki not only hears the story of those wonderful pioneer days, but is con fccinu of tho visible presence of scenes linked with liis country's history. "The Daddy Shack" Is a unique feature. It Is what Its name Implies: a log cabin equipped with cots and other comforts for fathers who come out to spend the week end w-ith their bovb. The log bonthouse where the boats are stored dining tho winter is the only one of its kind in this country. Tho Scouts built most of these structures. There Is a ttading post. Scout necessities nre for sale. Candy can be purchased, but in qunntlt.v no lnrger than permitted by the doi lor. llinlth. robust and vibrant. Is the sine qua non of Camp Delmont. All other things follow. THE record of the kitchen, where two cooks nie cmplojed, is nn interesting presentation. The lommissary, with a competent stew ard in charge. Is ample, varied and satis fving. It requites 3000 pounds of Ice per week to supply the place. A barrel of potatoes and seventy-five pounds of meat nre consumed at a meal. A crate of eggs for each meal and 120 qunit.s of milk per das arc other requisites. Then there are ICO big loaves of bread a dny, a 100-pound tub of butter n wcok, bushels and bushels of tomatoes, benns, uibb.ige and other vegetables, with jams iixid preserves, watermelon, ice cream and other wholesome desserts In proportion. The charge for nil this is .$7 per week per bo j Of i nurse, thut sum cIocb not pay for much inoie than the mess nnd attendance. The uniiuul deficit Is made tin by contribu tions from blg-bcarled men and women who icnlle the vnluc of the Boy Scout move ment to the future of our country. Dlieclor Schull. laushed outright when asked about his discipline In case"of trouble with the bovs, "We never have any trouble," he said. "We never have had any trouble since Camp Delmont wns founded six yrnr ngn. The bovs are not bossed. They have the honor of" the camp und their troop ut hciiit, be sides a keen personal pride. Even if thcro vveic n bit of trouble In any individual caso the boys themselves would settle it." "How?" "Boy fashion by ostracism of the of fender. It's the Indian way," ho said. Delmont Is one of the few Pennsylvania Boy Scout camps that showed an Increased attendance this jcar over that of 1020. Great nre the. Boy Scouts 1 ? NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia on Subjects They Know Best JOSEPH P. CARROLL On the Athletic Pot of Gold COMMERCIALISM, personal vninglorl- . ousness and specializing in athletics arc denounced as detriments to the public bene fit, according to Joseph P. Carroll, athletic director of the Athletic Recreation Center, Twenty-sixth nnd Mnster streets. The cause of athletic benefits for the community generally is suffering, says Mr. Carroll, ns a result of the ascendancy of these factors in athletic life. "One can understand thnt in past times, when human life was more constant, a fairly leisurely preparation for competitive sport was, for those who could afford it, n natural provision," says Mr. Carroll. "The average boy (but seldom the girl) went Into ath letics in n tranquil spirit of adventure, to get what physical good there was or as much of it ns lie could and to enjoy the getting of it. He accepted what was put on liis plnte, took It for granted thnt it was wholesome becnusc thoso who had the knowledge offered it. consumed it nccording to his ability and in duo time departed more or less cheerfully. "It was assumed in those days that teach ers and purveyors of physical educatiou knew more about the broader nngles of ath letic competition than the novitintcs hi sport. It was nssumed that nthletica were a good thing in which to participate nnd on the terms or rules offered. Question of Real "Food" "But now ! Who enn say that life is con stant in these days when one lives for to day onlv nnd wonders what he and the rest of the world will meet tomorrow' When every other authority on athletics tells tho competitor that the world of sport is not jet rearranged, thnt it is n new era, and no one knows what the conditions of competition are going to be, is It surprising that he should nsk himself whether the purveyor of athletics ore giving him real food that will help him to live or arts merely keeping him amused and employed by things thnt are out of dote and no longer important? "Educating n boy or girl In othletlcs now ada.s is like buttlcsbip building. In both cases the question nrisos, 'Is it worth while wasting time on numbers when the supcr tvpc will sink the smaller craft?' It has been bad enough for the last twenty-five j curs, since directors began to deviate from the old classical inspiration in nthlctics and substitute for it something that teemed likely to bo more useful for financial return nnd material gain to both themselves ond the nnrtlclnnnt. "The creation of the star performer, specialist or super-man and Indifference to the person of mediocre ability; the strenuous race to win nt all hazards by menns not al wavs legitimate; the offoring of awards out of 'nil proportion to the energy or ability displaced nnd tbnt arc extravagant to the disgusting point; the strategy, wot thy of a better cause, whereby rules are emasculated to suit conniving officials or their pampered proteges; the crimes committed on the ath letic calcndnr under the caption 'expenses'--these nre the deteriorating influences that ore gnawing at tho ery .vitals of honest competition In sport. "The boy and girl become specialists, if they are physically able, or promoters if they aro not; and the physical value attend ant on athletic competition (mens sann in corpore sano) is lost sight of entirely. Aside from the physical damage often ilntio the Individual by over-indulgence to gain hu premacy nnd under the direction nnd en couragement of those who nre often, employed to safeguard thafrvory thing, the Individual becomes a veritable 'pot-hunter' nnd wi'l not compete or 'perform' unless reimbursed with the requisite publicity, sufficient ex penses or costly awards. The exodus to Klondike n few ears since and n moro recrnt quest for gold in tho hills of Mnrylnnd in, parallel lnstnnces to tho athlete one finds to day In Increasing numbers, Parasitic Lesion of Sport "Tho chameleon athlete whose principles nre gauged by tho 'pot-of-gold' btondnrd and whose allegiance and lojalty to his school, club or team vncilloto with highest bid is the parasitic lesion of sport. If competitive nthlctics are to attain desirable results nnd to erect, In the persons of honorable par ticipants, fitting testimonials to consistency of purpose, then tho dlrrctors of spent must needs bo nbovo tho encouragement of theso debasing tactics in those over whom thev exeit influence. "The policy of n group or organization should reflect, ns accurately as possible, tho attitude of its mentors. Directors of sport should be in n position to spenk frankly and fearlessly upon any mntter connected with their activity. Thoy should furnish nn ab solutely Independent and unbiased expression of opinion on all live matters affecting ath. letlcs. They should, of course, be fair, but abould uut hesitate to champion the un v 19& - WHERE THE HOPES OF EVERY NORTH SIDE TAXPAYER ARE CENTERED popular side of a question. There should be no private Interests to be served nor should their expressions be subject to the control of monctnry considerations or other emolu ments. "The director need not always reflect what he thinks to be public sentiment, but whnt he believes public sentiment would be If the public generally were as fully informed ns he Is. He should not be content to merely voice public sentiment, but should, with large wisdom ond discretion, create and direct public sentiment in accordance with tho highest ideals of sport. Having done this he can say with Horace, 'Lxcgl monumentum ncrc- perennius' a monument to thnt pre-eminent American institution competitive athletics." HUMANISMS By WILLIAM ATHERTON DU PUY IT WAS, ns a matter of fact, very dis concerting to the navy when, n few weeks ngo. It converted two captive German destroyers Into targets that were to be sink in practico for experimental purposes and the clam things refused to go down. First nt 0 o'clock in the morning the de btroycrs went out in a line, steamed back nnd forth nnd cracked nwny at iiflOO yards, which is a rather short range. They did it for hnlf n day. Then a group of great big battleships went out to shoot. For them 10,000 yards was close up, although they got closer later on. They unleashed mnln turret guns, broadsides 'n' everything and the sun traveled avvny over toward the western horizon nnd one of those de stroyers still bobbed contentedly out there In tho ocean. Finally all guns were concentrated on this hopeless, firmly nnchored little bont. It stayed ntloat until 7 o'clock in the eve ning, having endured ten hours of unvy firo. then turned quietly over on its side nnd. as if disgusted, sank without so much as kicking up its heels. It would not hnve been so bad if the performance had not been viewed by some army officers who hold that the way to sink ships I" to let them drop bombs on them. Major H. M. Hickham was one of these an inconsiderate sort of fellow. Do vou know what he said? Well, he kinda drawled and. says he: "If you give a woman n lead pencil k ndn long, with plenty of lend lu it and a nice shnrp pocketknifc. nnd If every" hnc !,,r0,te0;:tb?I,e.,..I'"t " ",t " " -" I cwTs7seoi'1?.n)meAt'C Co,n"ncr Ernest I. I.i wis I mi, of the most traveled men in the United States. He used to be n writing thing nnd thus make a living as he "vent" I What Do You Know? QUIZ i. 2 . 3 4. 5. r, 7. S. 9. 10 Howt many m,(,B th, nun frQm WfoM"' U, batl, f atty.burB Who was the classical codrtess of mirth Tau'sVr ,h9 " "' "hlch Urates Who was Napoleon's chief of nnli,.o Wrnln'13 'h8 mean"5 of one Inch of "rdayervT th' flm En"h comcJy Wbnt la the literal rense of tlrndo? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz regaaus In classical mvthnin,.,. ....... .i. winged borso of h0 v ic,sy,S" ,h. was the lean a. d hnlf "tarve.l i?na,U? Mnnchurla les north of rhfnn ... nn,leborder on Siberia', SfefelfiTS TnSVefiUirr1' r 0t"e' ve-" A ' p'nlnVr'" ,f WjSrS' swltifrlnsr cloth fan on newo?!?, Vnre8a'nuV" nOI," fr ,,s Pucllnn of Thtee Presidents of Mexico sine. n, nnnl? !r " "-!SSr.I,E- ''"preside" f& Vt$r means to b master. This form of mS'2,,,,r,Talls !n England In rWR rtSo"stra,e mor "'2 The battle of Fredaricksburic In the Civil .War w, fought In December. W2. 10. SHORT CUTS The Register of Wills registered t , won't. The trees will soon prepare for wmfrt by taking off their clothes. A technicality can hold up a peet treaty, but to uphold it a good constitution la needed. Apropos of some of the stories coming out of Russia, none but a. goose Is fooled by propaganda. Congress has Joined the army of tsi unemployed, but its pay envelope still goei marching on. When it Is suggested that the farm laborer should sing ns he works he probtbly says "Hoe, hum!" Armed deputies and miners battling hi Logan County, W. Va., are still far enoufh away from n peace treaty.- Those who still believe that communtan In Russia is a success might hold a conven tion in Lcipervillc Town Hall. It may be that Germany was so anxious for a separate peace that she didn't cart particularly how it was framed. Now that the United Stntes and Ger- v many hnve signed tho peace treaty th Hamburg steak may drop its nllas. "Let the blur writers rave." cries Con gressman Manuel Herrick. The gentleman evidently doesn't wish to go It alone. Dlckcry. dickcry. dock. Harmony il ways in hock. The Vares struck one, down Sheehan ran to wntch the political clock. "It's fathers not mothers that spoil bnbles," niijb the mother of n local pnM Infant. Well, isn't that what babies art for? What the Disarmament Conference vHH do depends solely on the qunllty and fore of the sentiment the outside public brlngl to bear on the conferees. The Mount Everest expedition does not believe in too much expedition. The actusl attempt to climb the eminence will not b undertaken until next jeat A Minnesota man Is tr.vlng to force his wife to pay him alimony. Sensing the nppronrh of feminism, lie says, in effect, "Eventually, why not now?" A recent Federal court decision is taken in some quarters to mean n revision o( tne phrase beginning "Suffer little children to "Let little children buffer." There is appreciation of human en deavor mid no frlvolousncss in the assertion that the ZR-2 disaster was n siiciince nil to give the ZR-1 a home run. From Ln Plntn, Argentina, romes the news that debate In the Provincial Les"1 ture was punctuntcd with bullets inw seems to bo a line field for Ben Johnson. Coroner's Jury of six women In At lantic City wrangled for nn hour and half and then icported that they couldnt ngrre. Wonmnly intuition mubt have been taking a day off Alma Gluck, opera star, Fays she i going to spend tho greater part of her ub abroad In 'sleeping. The least we can hop is that the concert of Europe, with its many blue notes, won't keep her awake. Tho wise and necessary rule that one should love his neighbor is oft Ignored in fashion cool by Capital and Ln bor. M" makes the proposition nt R while W from scabbard free: "Old Top. I II purely love jou if .vou pi uve that jemjve mc- Switzerland aft" . Full of Holes drought that mob unending Is now s it fering from too much water rivers thwi and rain still falling. Wo hnve it on nr serv authority that Jupiter . PI''"8. 'n. Switzerland uses a local cheese Instead l ii watering pot. In dismissing th Something Ridiculous suit of a "!''' 2LBr Somewhere claimed cpmpw ion for injuries recelr" while nttendlng n rase, the refeiee of State Workmen's Compensation Bureau "'a It wns ridiculous to speak of the benrin" children as n business. Without MP"lB1 an opinion as to the wisdom o, ; unwisdom d 1 1 In h.av. binding f orcc Tlf th. ;; ll nlalnW had been the mother, but tbnt J M "?s.,,i"vr::',"f'."i..i..;: DUSIUCSS IS 10 ULtCllu u.w... . --, v M I ''Wji- -M , . cij