C"fT r 8 EVENING TUBLIO LEDGERPHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1921 ' Jl i m III ; Izuemng public MzbQcx PUDLIC LEDGER COMPANY cvnra it. k. crn-ris, rnr.'itrsT Jehn C Martin, Vlr l'ri-ilrt nt nnd Trnurert Ctiarln A. Tlr, Secretary, Chare II. Linllng Linllng ten. Philip P. Celllna. Jehn II. Wtltlnma. Jehn J. flpurieen. Oiorije I'". Onlilitnlt'i, DaMJ i:. Smiley, Dlrttim. DAViiTn. sym.nr n.ni'.f .JOHN r. MAHTtN ..General IluilnMs Manaurr rubllahcd iIaIIv at I'rtMe I.toera DulMInc liulfenilmce Uiiuare. I'IiIIikK-'I'IiU Atlantic Cm rrtst-VMen nullJIn Ntff Yiiiik nill Mn-ll-. n Aip Dsnerr 701 Ferd nulMIn KT. I.erta 013 aieic-Drmncvnt IliilMinr CntcAoe 1302 Tribune Uulldlng . nm:h nriiBAi's- WiilllNnTON DCBlMC, N. II. Cor. riniiy'nK Ar nn.l HI 1 Si. Jvxw Tonic ntinnc Th Sun llulMIn- Londen uvnKiu Trafalgar ItulMlnr suiinchii'-hiin Ti'.it.M.s Th Hiinine Prnt.tc Llihiej la ntnM te ub ub crltera In riilltnlelphla mid lurreumtliic tnyvns t Iho ral( of tele (I'J) cent pr wttk, jmyabU te the carrier. u!. mn" ,0 r"!n' eats'dc of "lillat'-ltiMa In tn I nllfd 8 .it' ( 'lunula r t'ni'rl . tM ,n Ssisleni, peHtnk tie. Iltt. (5(1; cn( ir month, lx (10) dnllarn rer rni, i) utile lt nOMinie Te all fnreln rnintrli"i one (ID dollar ft month potier HuliBcrlhtrs nlshlnc adilresj chanced BlUft ul9 eiu is well its i.ev.- uddiira BELL. JCCO tru.MT Kl TOM MUN HOI trAAdreas oil ctiintnumctitlnns te Ei - seu; i'ublfc l,:'tluer, liitlrtrtulcnff Square, 'JiiIffir.-iiMe Member of the Associated Prcn Tit!! ASSdrtATRD rfESS i ttren.fi'li; n titled te the ne for .-riiuWirnlien of oil nftt- ditpatches credit, CI te (t e net vthetuue credited M iMt pnper, nnd a!e the local nru i piibliefcrd therein All righti e republication of special di-pnlchrn herein ere aim rriervetf l'hll.J-lplili. Mnn.li.. Detrmbrr 19, 1921 OVERDUE RECOGNITION TM Kill'; is seldom a year In which the records of the 1 i'm ttnetit of Public Safety or the Knlrinmiiit Perk Commission de net attest te numerous nets of heroism performed In emergencies br iollcemen, tire men nnd Fninneutit Turk guards. It the average citizen tnkes the protective serv ices for grunted. It Is the job of policemen, he will rolled, te ttiitnl out In the snow or the rnlu, te work loin; hours ami te get along en small pay ; of tlretnen, te risk their live pert of the dti's work. Tough, perhaps, but wlint are you going te de nbeiit ltV Imagination as well ns gencrexity wast re quired for the establishment of the fund lvhlch Edward link has provided for the ray ment nnmmlly of awards of $nmt) te six policemen, firemen and park guards In recognition of unusual acts of courage or dvotlen te dut. The pension funds are meager enough. The sums te be distributed under "The Citizens' Award" will be gen gen ereus. Hut the new fund will be of most Value as n general reminder of the excellent and admirable service rendered from da te day by the men appointed te guard life and property In the eltv nnd in the p.irks. THE FRENCH FLURRY THE extent of the disturbance caused by French naval demands In the disarma ment councils cannot be adequately deter mined until p.tbllc sessions are resumed. It is undeniable t lint the claims for dread noughts said te have been presented over ever over ceoud the reduction program us originally outlined. But worth noting also is the fact that the unsettled relations of Frnnce and (ireat Britain are just new being reflected In Washington. The situation Is net precisely Inspiring, but It Is perhaps unavoidable. The coming conference between Lloyd Gterge nnd Hrlnnd must Inevitably exert a powerful influence upon the process of ac ac ac comeodation1) In the capital. A game of bargaining Is under way. Disquieting as this mny seem. It should by no means be construed as forecasting disruption of the commendable program of bona -fide nnvnl limitations. It Is net by motives, of which there arc many nnd conflicting in the Washington sessions, that the convention will be judged se much as by results. French requests for navnl expansion nr- one thing. Surrender te tentative demands Is something else. The possibilities of adjustment hnve by no means been exhausted. As has been said before, an International conclave without crises is one which It would be needless te call. There remain substantial grounds for hope that France Is asking for mere thau she entertains any reasonable hope of obtaining, nnd that accord after the conventional over statement of national needs en mere sides than one will eventually be reached. CAMILLE SAINT-SAENS PULI.NKSS of jeurs Inevitably wen for Cnmille Satnt-Saens the title of "the grand old man of French music." Like most conventional phrases, the characteriza tion Is hardly exact. Ills death at the age of eighty -.si:: Is a reminder of his association with the most fruitful periods of musical pi egress of the nineteenth centurj I If was a warm friend of Liszt, and It was through the hitter's in fluence that "Samson et Djllln," the opera by which Salnt-Snens will prebabl) be best known te posterity, was produced in Weimar In 1877. The changes in music wrought in his life time were prodigious, and as a conscientious artist rather than a full-powered genius, these developments were reflected te a large extent in his writings. Lack of vital Inspiration was at times offset by his seasoned scholarship, by a sense of jsdse nnd by nn antipathy' te ex travagances which rendcied Ids work pol ished and graceful rather then strikingly Individual. He w-es a true eclectic, exploring witn un flagging Industry virtual!) all musical forms, cantatas, concertos, symphonies, operas, ballets, symphonic poems, and appearing also as a concert pianist. As an lnstru mtntnllst he was especially successful In the last-named field, with "l'haeteti." "The Spinning Wheel of Omphale" nnd the well known spinning "Danse Macabre" as his most pepulnr achievements As a rule, the emotional content of his works is net striking, ultheugh he hud a fertile gift of melody. When net betrayed by this talent Inte meretricltj, his writing had the stamp of authority and his orches tration was almost Invarlnblj rich, re re ueareeful and replete with color. fersennlly dignified, yet unpretending and unaffected, he was never a victim of the ephemeral false starts and sensational ab surdities committed In the- name of music during the last quarter of Ills long and un illpeachably honorable enreer AMERICANS FOR PROFIT THR cancellation of the natutaltzatieu papers of a (ieruinn by the Federal Dis Jrlct Court In Indianapolis, en the ground that the man never Intended te become an American, Is In line with the recent policy of the Government In such cases. The Htate Department was troubled for vears by naturalized foreigners who obtained American citizenship In order te secure ,hc MVtectlen of this (levernmeut in their en terprises nbrend. In order te escape this n rule was made that unless the nnturullzeil person lived In America he must forfeit lilb Citizenship after n certain period of years 'Jhl rule deprived many Smith nnd Centra! American revolutionists of .the protection Vwih they always sought when they get In 'trMlifc lujhelr native countries. ' 'ik Indiana dentist Is net a revolutionist, jV 'Via Mhit Mtl merlca in 1BSS and was natu- ''riinW In'VdO, and returned te Geymany In hMraftw be could .wake tuere mencj practicing dentistry there than here. He came back te defend his citizenship, but de stroyed Ids chances, by admitting that whcthci he should remain here would depend en his piespcct of doing better in America new than In Germany . The (Vim did net seem te think that citizenship for piellt should lie tolerated, and It very properly canceled the man's papers. .. TIME FOR REPUBLICANS TO THINK ABOUT GOVERNORSHIP It's Net Safe te Trust a Choice te the Little "Practical" Leaders New Scheming te Nominate a Figurehead WHAT Is the Republican 1'nrt.w in Penn syluinln gelic; te de about the selection of a Governer te sun eed Mr. SpreuP Is it going te let the Utile coterie of little leaders who have been conniving and schem ing for many months pus' walk ou with the nomination for some dummy who can be depended upon te di as they dictate-' Or Is it going te get awake 'e the situation before if is tee late mid se- that a man lit for the place In every sense of the word Is chosen '! These are the questions th.it must he faced, and faced without mere delay, by the men nnd women who believe that the Re publican Party Is the one bct equipped te govern the State. If does net require the peu'r of a clair voyant te discover that there i n widespread conspiracy afoot ame ig some of the practical county leaders te grab the powers of the Executive Department mid run it en the bttfls of personal profit. Practical! Well, that word will sere in place of a mere stinging adjective. There nre practical safe blowers, practical pickpockets, practical grafters, and they are net all out of politics. The signs are everywhere. The most dan gerous Indlcntieii Is the talk ei "harmony." Harmony among the "prnctlcal" leaders means a frnme-up against the voters, against the rank and file of the party. It means a mock primary with all the cards stacked in foer of n figurehead. The same sort of talk n heard before the primary at which the lien. Martin O, Brumbaugh was nominated, and leek at Um result '. But n mere distressing symptom is the failure of any of the important lenders the men of 'State-wide standing like Senater Penrose nnd Governer Sproul te say the word which would put a step te the machi nations of the little tricksters. Whatever the motive which keeps them silent, their very silence is new turned te advantage In fnver of men like Beldlemnn nnd Snyder, neither of whom Is the type of public man needed for the governorship. These men and their friends are hard nt work lining up little lenders with n block of controllable votes here and ,i block there. They arc boring from within In the "State Committee. They have adherents nt stra tegic points regulntlng the machinery of the party . They may even be found eventually te have the active assistance of our newest 1'nlted States Senater, who, while unable te occupy the sent In the Senate left pain fully vacant by the denth of Mr. Knox, Is still net tee 111 te be able te play nn Inside game of political seven -up in the matter of the governorship nomination. It is time for the real Republicans of Pennsylvania te leek Inte the situation nnd nit leave it wholly te the "prnctlcal" men. Great things have been started In the SUM Government, and blger things are abend. Thee nre days of reconstruction and prog ress nnd evolution, and no moral or mental pigmy con be trusted te direct the affairs of the State during the four years beginning In 1023. Where ere the "big men" of the party, the men of affairs who are trotted out ns delegates and alternates te the national con ventions; the men who furnish the backbone 'and sinews of Republicanism? What are they going te de about this nomination? Are they going te have any say In the selec tion of the right kind of mnn. or are they going te leave it wholly te the professionals ns they have te date? It Is net tee late te save the party from the pigmies. But it seen will be. The way te begin is te clear the field of all the bluffers and Imitation statesmen who are new pos turing in the limelight. A few forceful words unitedly spoken liv the leaders of business and Industry und public affairs who bcliee In the Republican Party would puncture these pretensions like toy balloons. Then the way would be clear for the nomination of the right kind of landidate Will these words he spoken? THE KING TRUST IF UK had lived sewnty-tive years age it Is net likely that Jereme Napeleon Bona parte, of the Baltimore Bennpartes, would have taken the preposition that he go into the king business se lightly. He admits that the possibility of Ins be coming King of Albania has been Informally discussed, hut says that lie neer seriously considered it. The throne Is vacant. Prince William of Wlpd occupied it for a minute or two. but abandoned it when the war broke out T!ils was after the suggestion hud been reiec ed that Geerge Fred Williams, of Bosten, known as an ardent Bn unite, be made King. Geerge Fred was net a member of the King Trust, and If he had been willing te exchange the delights of democracy for the troubles that go with a irewn it Is doubtful if In1 would have been acceptable te the Powers who were selecting .i titular head for the new Albanian state. Kinging In F.nrepe has. se far as p.isslble, been managed bv a close coiperatlon for the last century. When thy ;,intilnrds. wenrv of the Bourbons, were ready for another King, Amadee, of the house of Savey, was sent te them. But he could net pronounce Spanish and he had te tlee the emintr The Bourbons were then reinstated When Greece was set up as an independent kingdom Otte, a German Pilnce, wn - sent te Alliens te reign, but he did net like the job nnd went back home. Then a Danish Prince was selected, and the Greeks wire told te elect him King. They obeyed, ami ,i descendant of this Dane is new en the (ireel; throne. And when Norway wns separated from Sweden another Danish Prime was picked out by the members of his family who had married Inte the reigning families that con trolled I'urepe and was made King of the Independent Norway. A Hohenzellern was put uti the throne of Rumania when a King had te be found for that ceuntiy. And se It gees from decade te decode. Napeleon was the man who made kings in the early part of the last century, just as the King Trust lias been making them In mere recent years. lie put one of his brothers en the throne of Spnln. another en the throne of the Netherlands ind still another en the throne of Westphall., Bcrnadette, one of hit) marshals, wtsi-nade the heir te the tlirone or nwnienQnq ,-uurni, nueincr.nr els generals, became Kin; of Nnp es. Nene of these men from Napeleon down was of royal blend. Their pedigrees were net regis tered, nnd If thev knew who their grand fathers were (hey were fortunate. But the upstart Napeleon's experiment in king-making did net last long. The only King of the let who survived Waterloo was Hcrnndette, nnd his descendants still reign In Sweden. The old trust reasserted Its power and continued te exercise It. But In this third decade of the twentieth I'cntttry the business of kinging Is net what It used te be. A sort of dry ret seems te be affecting thrones, and they have toppled with surprising ease when the opposition has put Its shoulder te them. Alfonse of Spain has been quoted as saying that If the Spaniards wished te set up a republic lie Would be the lest te oppose them. And his fellow rulers are but the palest shadow of what the Kings used te be when strong men roe by their own mljlit te the head of a kingdom and commanded that they be crowned. A kingship is the last Jeb that would op peal te nn ambitious young man In these days that have followed the years when the nations were thrilled by the thought of a war te make the world safe for democracy. It is about as attractive as Hie presidency of a commercial trust for the dissolution of which the Supreme Court has just Issued an order. THE FAIR AND ITS MEANING EXPOSITIONS of the old conventional type have had their day. .Herbert Hoever, discussing the Philadelphia project at a luncheon here en Saturday, emphasized this point, and at the same time contributed te the undertaking the germ of nn Idea cal culated, If properly developed, te Infuse the enterprise with new life. Spiritual ns well as material backing Is essential te the success of International fairs. Grandeur of buildings, profusion of ex nlblts, mechanical, Industrial, artistic, ere net enough. According te Mr. Hoever. It Is Intangible factors, quickening the imagina tion and stirring the moral and historical consciousness of mankind, which count most. The significance of his observation ac quires a special force from the ripeness of his experience in lnrge-sciile organization nnd his profound practical knowledge of world-wide economic conditions. In ether words, te justify Itself a modern exposition must hnve a soul. It must embody an Ideal. The opportunity te vitalize the fair of lfli-'fl with a meaning grunder then mere physical manifestations Is very pressing. Men's hearts must he touched and their best Impulses stirred by the recognition of nn Illustrious anniversary. In addition, a reckoning must be made with permanent values. Mr. Hoever's sug gestion that the erection of a new Federal Building long sorely needed here within the exposition boundaries opens a vista of etlmr lasting public Improvements. The age of llimsy, speciously glittering expositions has passed, at least se far as their warranty Is concerned. The structures te adorn the projected fair should be mode te conform with Inspiring ppertunltlcs for progress of all kinds In this community. A new kind of civic or commercial center is one prospect, and there are ethers which should grew out of such a conception of the enterprise as Mr. Hoever has outlined. The Secretary of Commerce has laid his masterly hand upon precisely the sort of en couragement which the fair program re quires. He has also, as might have been expected, demonstrated his seasoned fitness for the pest of director general of the under taking. He Is unquestionably the man for this re sponsible pest, nnd Phllndelphians ewe te themselves and te the splendor of en Im mortal chapter In the city's history te bend every energy te win his acceptance of a part ideally suited te his clear-cut abilities. TUSTIN AND WELFARE WORK ERNEST L. TL'STIN, who died m Balti more yesterday, was for years Interested In u private way In the kind et verk which he undertook ufficially when Mayer Moere made him Director of Public Welfare. Mr. Tustln organized the new department nnd devoted himself euniestly and conscien tiously te Its development. Men qualified by temiM-rament and train ing for such work are net easily found. The Mnyer, however, is expetted te select a sue sue eesHer te Mr. Tustln who will devote him self te the welfare of the unfortunates under his care and te the development of the ac tivities maintained for the recreation of the people who live in the crowded districts. Men who would like te play politics with the job arc numerous, but the Mayer knows that such men are the last who ought te be considered when he is searching for a new Director of Public Welfare. THAT WALL STREET BOMB THK discreet will suspend judgment en that story of the confession of a mnn nrrested In Warsaw t lint the bomb exploded In Wall street In September of Inst year wns manufactured by agents In the pay of the Third International Conference of rndicals in Moscow. As It stnnds. the report of the confession would justify much thet was said about the Russian cunsplnie te startle the world by outrages. The bomb In Wall street was Intended te kill J. P. Morgan, according te the report, but It exploded fifteen minutes tee seen. The nrrist was made nt the request of American Secret Si i vice agents, who Jiad traced the man te F.urepe. This is (he reassuring feature In the case thus far. for It demonstrates that the effort te discover the criminals has net been relaxed and thnt some progress has been made. The men who ac'ually made the bomb and arranged for its transportation te the corner of Bread and Wall streets have net yet been nrrestfd. Thev are said te be in Kurope. Whether the Secret Service agents knew' where they ere lias preperlv net been dis closed. If they can be taken into custody and confronted with the man who has con fessed we shall be en the wey te nn unravel ing of the mysterv. Prof, Irving Fisher, of What the Vale Yale, bus been telling De We Cure? the Londen Scheel of Koenonilos be has beer, reliably Informed that a German chemist is making synthetic geld out of baser metals, and when the process is sufficiently cheap ened Germany mm Heed the world with geld and make It worthless, thus making a farce out of reparation pavments Huh-liu. Yes. Indeed. Quite se But hasn't she made a fane of it already? And after the farce Is ever and when the geld curtain's down, the presumption Is that the world will turn te Mr. Ferd for relief by means of his hug-cnorgy-unlt-ilellor nnd nil will be right as right can he once ngnln already yet. A New Orleans (,t Is Iisue Is .Joined mother of a Knet of fur with four lively heads and four kicking legs. "Meelem cleus "' she Is understood te haw remarked when interviewed. "And win can't hurt our felines by refeirlng te them as a Four Power Packed." In view of the fact that the Panama crashed Inte the starboard side of the de stroyer Grahiim off Sen Girt, the presump tion Is thet It fell a victim te the white lights. Or It may even be thnt the Panama thought it wiih making n Culebra cut out of (it'Miiaiu iirenii. The ungry emotion efJ Senater Beed, tcimlil be Inerc. significant lf it were net I Mir.inll'. . . . , vKv. ."... ,.,A..fl ; .n:wtSML M.-wftru AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Recant German Beeks Dealing With the War, Including Hlndenburg'a "Out of My Life," Indicate Leaders Were Fooled by Subordinates By SARAH I). LOWltIK A PUBLISHER told me Inst year thet he had refused te publish two German wnr generals' nutnblngrnphle accounts of the war because he realized en looking them ever that they were written for home con sumptien, net for the foreign render, nnd were, therefore, In the nature of German propaganda. He went en te soy that quite npnrt from the very biased explanations of questionable policies nnd the glossed -ever accounts of defeats nnd retreats, there was n great deal of misinformation that wns due te real misapprehension of the facts, nnd in some cases n total Ignorance of what hed occurred both within the German lines nnd within these of the Allies. I thought thnt he wns everstntlng that last cause for the defects because It Is difficult te rid oneself of the chlnnrn of German efficiency. If the Unison of the Allies wns geed, It is hard te believe that that of the Germans wns net better, and If the Information of the enemy's Plans reached the Trench nnd English headquarters In surprisingly short order. It is difficult net te take It for granted that with the German "superb spy system" the theme of n thousand pre-wnr novels the "All Highest" and his stafT could ever he taken by surprise But after rending Iliudenburg's apologia. Out of my Life." one realizes that net only was the German Armv frequently surprised by what lilt It, It was also ignorant of wbnt hit It, and Is te some extent te this day. I' or It would be verv peer pnllev and a short -sighted subterfuge te publish intcn- ,tt) falsehoods concerning the enemy falsehoods any student of the times can detect at n glance. Neither Is It wise 'te save one's face by belittling an enemy that hns routed one. T AM bound te realize, therefore, that the J- editor wns right when he snld that the German staff suffered from misinformation te n degree that throws a curious light en the subordinates whose business it was te gather Information, and en the type of mind that most evidently preferred te live en flntterlng rumors rather thnn fuce the very sinister truth. We were interested ns n nntlen looking en and listening In when Ifrland In his momentous speech nt the Dlsarmnment Con ference pointed u warning finger te two quotations from lllndciihurg's war book and stayed Ms eloquence long enough te rend them. I had never thought of reading the book before, but I picked up the Inst volume (he ether day and read it through. I first became aware with what curious sketchlness the account was being written nnd hew unscientific te sny the least was the jetting down of statements by the fol lowing paragraph, which wen a comment en the Italian prisoners after the betrayal ami the defeat of the Isonzo of the divisions of the Itnllen Army In October of 1017. TN THI campaign of the previous autumn." Hlndenburg writes, "mnny thousands of Itnllnn soldiers boil laid down their arms without any urgent military necessity, net from n lack of courage, hut from disgust of what seemed te them sense less! slaughter. They looked happy enough en their journey Inte our country and greeted the familiar workshops with Ger man songs." New this picture of wnr-disgusted Italians mnrchlng Info Germany singing German songs nnd greeting the workshops by the way Is such sentimental drivel that it Is almost funny If the realities of that dreadful march had net been se nwful. The men who had been betrnyed by their officers or some one officer higher up," taken by surprise, dumfounded by the unbelievable ness of the German and Austrian Armies in their midst, were herded In groups of thousands for nearly a week, during which time they were stripped of accouterments. clothes and. of course, feed; then they were driven in long files without rest, with out feed, barefoot and sick with fatigue and hunger Inte Germany, dragging by bare hands the artillery guns thnt had been enp tured from them pnst "the workshops of Germany." Did they sing German songs? Hardly! Many hundreds died by the way; many thou sands died In the camps where they ycre concentrated. They hed no rations nil along that journey except what the dead mules and horses and the wayside pickings in the fields supplied, and if they paused they were shot down. At night they were herded se close that only half could lie down nt u time, and ilways. nlwnys there were many dead ones by morning thnt could net get up nnd drag en even nt the point of n German pistol. These men felt bitter shame at their betrayal and implacable auger et their defeai. AniPthese that survived that march te this day cherish such dreadful memories of Germany nnd the Germans lhat the ex pcricnics of n future lifetime will scarcely turn that hate te indifference. NOW It is net te be supposed that Hlndenburg saw these men mi their march, but he must have get tliut senti mental and nhturdlv lying picture of them from some hcedqnnrteis report that fixed e vision in his memory. It gave him a very erroneous Idea of Italy's readiness te ou eu pitulate. an error upon which lie was later te base certain false hopes that come tum bling about his ears. I was generally amused at his dismissal' of Chateau Thierry his wile allusion and dismissal : "New another factor was at work the help of America. We- had mode the ae ae qunlntnnce of her first trained troops at Chateau Thierry. They had attacked us there and had pnncd themseUes clumsilv hut firmly ted. Thy had taken our weak units bv surprise, thanks te their numerical stipeiierlty ," TIII'.KK is something pathetic in his at titude toward the "Gentleman of the Dved Mustache." whom he speuks of nlwnys' ns "Ills Majesty, mv Fmperer, King' nnd Master." the caplt lis are his, or ns. "All Highest War I-enl." In his farewell he says "Like "siegfried stricken down by the treacherous spear of savage Hegen', our weary front collapsed. R nm, in vn emt it tried te drink In new vitality from the fen nt ii In In our homeland that had run dry. It is new our task te save what was left of our army for the subsequent revival of our fatherland. The present was lest. We had only hope in the future. "Se te work!" One gathers from sentences such as Ililand quoted, that "te weik" has another significance from that of mere labor. The book finishes Willi thoughts such as these: "The old German spirit will descend upon us again, though It may be we shall have le go through the purifying fires of passion and suffering Our enemies well knew whnt that spirit means. They admired and hated it in pence, they feared ami were amazed at it en the baltlellilds of the Great War, ' Well, it leeks fit in the "Immortal work" uf Gel ninny's greatest here as though he sceiihed the snake, net killed him. nnd If the world I- ( hnve peace something vital must be breathed ii.tn the souls of the chil dren of Germany te rid I hem of the poison of the "spirit of old Germany." It will take a miracle! Perhaps what men and women of the Society of Friends arc doing ever there for tin- love of Ged nnd their fel low men, in "feeding the children," Is the miracle or Its beginning. Hint for Gardeners Frem the Iliialnn Triiiprrlpt 4 iiiniLniiiiiHu ,,1-nr. un until. u uuuilt cutsvernis. Our method Is te carry them te lutuiu nn uiiu uirii i iii-in itruuim iiirre Jlmes,.' thus getting them ".e confused" that WtV'S'iVYrJ"'". '"" "" .u"c .. l., . --M0 - - Z?,r?r?8& "smWeWk S - I I Ml Mai 1 1 I I I llll Ill I I I I . USi'fr. 'fT Jf '&m&mmmmz fT' ,"-' rjBSMraW5ffi'BniSS8r-' s fjW'1 VXi-y',- s-jhTJ .;.' r .r - . it v ' - vj &r -it - ivj n .i - y At Ml -f i' T- .11 l I" - l .r FS -T M Jll. rS.-?. ,' tWt,' . i J iff y NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks IVitli Thinking I'hiladelphians en Subjects They Knew Best, WILLIAM H. ALLEN On the Making of a Bibliophile AT SOMK time or ether nearly every one getR the wisli te acquire n library. A few with well-developed literary Inteiest.s carry this wish throughout their lives and some of them fill It. A library, however, according te William II. Allen, a iost iest graduate student at the Cniverslty of Penn-, sylvnnln, who was chosen te make the se lection of Americana that Bryn Mawr College Is giving te the Sorhenne in Pnrls u library Is much mere than u mere col lection of books. It is n collection of particular books. "The first requisite of a successful bibliophile." says Mr. Allen, "Is. of cetiise, a bread education. Therefore It is almost Inevitable that he be a college man Heads But Doesn't Own Beeks "And yet the way of college students with books although many et them develop genuine literary tastes Is an unhappy one, from the viewpoint of the bibllephillst. He depends almost altogether upon the college librnrles, and net until after he Is gradu ated does the need of owning the books that uive 1.0 much te him impress itself very deeply en him. "In tht; years that he has been learning about literature he has been learning noth ing about book-collecting. Kven If he has the money te afford it. his library will net come te much If he sets out te collect It with no mere notion of what he Is about than nn understanding of what Is geed in literature nnd what is meretricious. "He needs the counsel of a bookseller. And why? Because only a bookseller or a man who has lived much with booksellers can knew what books add value te a llbrnry and what bonks encumber It. "But here Is another difficulty. Although booksellers knew a great deal about books, most of them have read but few. There nre I think I may say It few booksellers who have anything mere than a commercial Interest In the volumes that pass through their hands. Se that the young man who is starting his library needs net merely the counsel of a bookseller, but of nn educated bookseller. "Where te find one? Much Ignorance Shown "When 1 wns associated with one of the great l'nglish presses I ,traeled through out this country ylsltiug college and uni versity towns und doing business in them with booksellers. I was Impressed by their astonishing erudition ats-iut the title pages of certain books nnd by their complete Ignorance of what followed the title pages. "Most booksellers knew te exhaustion only two things Americana and fiist edi tions. Beth these subjects are highly de serving, but of the underlying associations thnt make them se highly deserving, book sellers knew little or nothing. The obscure fads about first editions and lecnl history are of no interest or Importance te tlii world, outside of u relatively limited field. "Yet the booksellers who have devoted most of their lles te the study of one or both of these subjects, ere likely te Im A Sailor's Lass N Hl'DDKN storms and sudden winds, 'mm,..,, liMitnliics shlter down the sky. I It's then mv heart Is like a gull That beats the wind nd cannot fly. It's then I wonder nre you safe, And will you come again te me? Fer there is none who knows se well I low cruel cold the sea can be. But when the wind Is still again. AVhen all the skies are blue and e'ear, 1 knew a feeling then, my Inyo A something that is worse than fear Fer any gill you chance te meet Who' w hnls a ribbon .In her hair Can give you one bold, slanting glance, And you will smile and think her fair. "A lass In ecry pert." they say Oil. trll me why I let you go! A sailor may be true te one, But fhere s no way for me te knew. Hilieck the calendar each day, , an ii-ii r nun ii'iiraii nnri iinTiiininna' 1M1 MlHi "llll M UMH tvf 1V WV t il leave the tea and buy in. .(arm lien once I get you safely imcJ OVER THE BRINK j&mmmmmmwM. " - .ri -- .rV. r ' ' "- ,, 'y T press young collectors with the notions that Americana and .first editions are the fundamentals of book-collecting mid de se honestly because they knew no better them selves Help for Yeung Collector "A seller of second-hand books Is npt te be of mere help te the young collector than the man who sells books as they come from the publisher nnd whose vriucipal business Is te purvey the Pellyanim school of literature te the Pellynnna school of readers. It is through the second-hand bookshop that most books of proved value pass. If by chance the owner of the second hand shop knows why these books are el value, beyond the price they fetch him, he is a geed man te cultivate, Indeed, "In short, it Is a man like this the young collector must find nnd depend upon until he hns learned nil the mysteries of the curious world of bibliophiles. At present there nre net enough te go around se few. In fnct, that the young man who has found one may count himself extraerdinarily: luckv. "But I hae n solution. Net long since the lMieksellers foisted en us the slogan, 'Read a book a week !' Let us turn it back en them. Let the booksellers themselves read a geed hook ench wyek. If every second-hand bookseller in the country weuli. fellow this plan we would have In the course of n few years a fairly sufficient group of erudite and competent advisers for the young bibliophile." HUMANISMS By WILLIAM ATI'KHTON III' Pl'Y pRRSIDF.NT HARDING recently wrote facetiously and prntestlngly te Darwin '' KIK''',,y" ,1"' '"'"''lent of the New Yerk Life Insurance Company, who had declined te Insure the life of the great turkev which graced the White Heuse table en Thanks giilng Day "This gobbler," he said, "mav be over ever weight, but he is nNe decldedlv ever-age u c rcuinstnnci. which according te the octn'n ectn'n rial data of this group indicates an impres sive tenacity of life. My advices nre thnt the gobbler that i-ets past one Thatiksglviii" ( hrlstmiis dead'lne thereby auteinutlcallv licquiies n new lease of life. 1. statistics indicating that he Is prettv certain te com plete a second cie'.e with w islihene and drum sticks intact and general health unimpaired bile mortality Is notoriously c, amM Immature turkeys, their record of longevity" once thev hae passed the critical peried's' Is calculated te make eyen us officeholders envious. "Fuither. I am unable te give official ap proval te your ruling thnt en overweight geb.lerls a dangerous risk. The aim of a gobbler s existence Is te attain overweight It should be the ambition of your company te encourage, net discourage, his efforts at corpulence. Whv de gobblers abstain from golf or fiem tnklng courses ,,t Muldoon's? Vyhy are they encouraged te lese their wnlst lines early and never recover them? Mani festly, the standardized relationship he'twee, height and weight which Is properly pre scribed for gobs, doesn't npply te gobblers " May nard Owe,, Williams, who travels oil about the world for the National Geographic Society, Is vcly much impressed yvlth the stolid common sense of the Russlnn peasant who he holds will some day blunder tlirmiL-fi and become a yery w.uth while Individual He tellk the story, for exrfinple. of an no. ciulen some three years age when he was in Moscow riding en a much -crowded and somewhat disorganized tram. An attractive but de'leate. looking young woman came in and swung onto a strap Piesently she gev" evidences of Illness and asked f some one would net give her e seat eh she feared that she yy-as going te faint. ,l New there was rnnifertnblv seated nn this street car In Moscow, (IN there is usually en any street car anywhere, a coarse anil thick-necked Individual with an eye out T nn opportunity te ogle any golid-loek n!r Bill. True te the methods of 1,1s el, ss Z patted Ids kll. e and suggested that the y(MI woman sit lice Immediately therc'orese from across the aisle a stocky peasant woman wlie must have weighed three hiindre pounds. She waved the dizzy Br , , ". 'J sent, admonishing her te Inke It, and said that she herself would sit. uperv ,e L. lit Hie egler, n thing which she Jifii ptly nre. ec.,1,.,! In', In ;leW l This sort l im&mmmmmmmi sssmsamBemmsm& rmwmmsmmm ltf&$sg& ttrV&a&S&SfSM My-!t?j('S ..teyWgnMg "X&MM , liWifJ, ttWAM' jtur jV .1 -:iM V 3S' M ! .' U ' SHORT CUTS Sadler boomers appear te be lu harncsi. The fact that bootleg hooch Is less than half of 1 per cent whisky doesn't save It. We assume that the clean sweep occa sionally referred te In nut n chimney sweep. Herbert Hoever reverses tht old jingle. It's yvhut he says thit counts, and net the blooming way he snys It. As n deserving Democrat, Postmaster Thornten Is convinced, apparently, that no Republican deserves the udjectivc. Orville Wright says the airplane Is still jn Its Infancy. He is probably right, theufh it get out of Its swaddling clothes eighteen years age. It Is en unusual day that does net pi vide a reason for the merging (or something) of the Railroad Laber Beard and the Inter state Commerce Commission. One thing that may be said in favor of ( arson for magistrate te succeed Kisen brown Is that there must be something geed in a man whom the gang se persistently opposes. The declaration of an eminent pro fessor Hint there is vegetation en the moon leiiyeS US Celd. Feci- 'mi mum- nf IIU llliva known for a long tlineithat it is made of C green cheese. i North Carolina Is said te be the norm of the biggest moonshine stills In the coun try. Somebody must have been icpeatlaz what the Governer of North Carolina snld '" the Governer of Seuth Carolina. M. Hanlhnra, of the Japanese delepi tinni te the Washington Cenfeicnce. snya the I our-Power Treaty has given Japan water for whisky. Frem which It may be argued Hint .In pun has no kick coming. Plans te sine the Angle-Irish Treaty may be linked with desire te save Be alera's face. Nowhere Is belief strong that Frln will make the biggest bull in Irish hit hit tery by rejecting yvhat Is new offered te her. Dreams A dream It Is gives perfume te the rose; Awakes tlie music of the birds and tree; Brings sweetest tidings en the geiitli breeze ; Turns levers' bleed te wine that swiftly flews : Makes baby smile while pleying with her tees : Distills the honey for the working bees; Incites the waves te sing of distant sens! And sends the patriot proud te nuet his fee. If life The 's the dream philosophers declare, y re lacking logic when tliey see itl ciie. ii-iini of life eternity may share - The A d ream within a ilrenin by magic penned. What Since ineiign a tiling Is ne.ver what It social' life Is sweet I'll thank the Lord for dreams! (J. A. "1 What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1 What In the (leedetlc Survey' 2. What Is the full name of the present Government of Russia." 3 When did the teirlble bomb explosion In Wall street, resulting In the death of thlrty-elght -persons, occur? , 4. AWie Is the present Lord Chancellor of Bnglnnd" r. Who yy-as the original rf D'Artagnnn' . Who was Camllle SalntHnens' 7. Name tyve of bis most celebrated werkl. 8. Wbnt Is thn ine-iulm; of the expression "tout ensemble" ' '.I. Hew should It In- proneunced'' , 10. Who were thn Kumcnldes In classic1 mythology? , Answers te Saturday's Quiz 1. Three kinds of- palm trees nre royal palms, datu palms and coconut palml. 2. Seoul Is capital of Korea 3. Ithelms was fermeily the coronation city of the French kings. , 1. Lord Mnrley Is n noted English Liberal statesman and author. During the Gladstone period he was nn nrqent i-h-unplen of Irish Heme Rule. Among his chief works are his lives of Crom well, Cobden nnd Gladstone, .".. Woodrew Wilsen was the enlv President of the United Stntea elected from Ne Jersey. . Mauve Is n bright but delicate purple. 7 The Corfletes live In the Island of Corfu, one, of the lenlnn Islands belonging t Greece, 8, Kai-n Ktnte Is represented In the I-lw ternl College by as many electors f the total number of Its Senatera an 0. The'tW?, J rTi of IW ' .Mehntrtmcdann. a -Jl 10. Thfc Bouthernmeat rallwav.-n lht frWiTlSV.: fi. ?.....". i'-...:i1" '"," ' - t,"m iMt.nv.uwwn VVUCm,,, .. f S