ffaPHnwmiV-ri 1 V '!. T -k'1 St3tTV i Mii;i ' ( EVENING PUBLlV: LEDGEn PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, DEOEMBEE 2$, 1921 i r i m f it w. ". X M i n is & & is I OT I i! I!. V IJ V mm I Bit R Queuing public HeDgcr PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY . CTIUIH If. K. CUtlTIS. I'n.iifttVT Jehn O.- Martin, Vice President and Treasurer; Charles A, Tjler, Secretary: Chr-M It. J.udltif J.udltif ten. Philip 8. Cellins, Jehn 11. Williams. Jelm J, flrurscen. aeerte l Qeldunlch, David K. Bmller. jrnrt-cters. akvtt k. pmii.ht Editor JOllN C. MAnTIN.... general lluelness Manager Publlahed dally at Pcblie Ledcr Bulldinc Imlependenca Nqimrc. Philadelphia. Athmtie Crri. , Tress-Union Bulldinc At it YeaK . 384 Madisen Ave. Drrterr.. T01 Ferd Bulldinc At. Leuis 013 alobc-Dnnecrat Bulldinc Cmoieo 1302 Trlbu-.tc Bulldinc , NKWB BURnAL'S TVisniNOTOM Dcituu, N. H. for. Penney vanla Am, aid U St .kit Tem: llteiuu Th bun Bulldinc I.ONCOM Bcruc Trafalgar Uulldlnc stnarT.ii'rie.N tuiuih The Kvs.Ntsa ITbme l.tnutn Is serccd te aub erlbera In rhlledelph'a end eorrec ldlnt tunas at tha ratr of twelve It".) cents ;er vrek, pnja&le te the carrier. By malt te relnta outside of "hllnd-lph'.a In tha United 13'uies. lanada or United tit.uex pos pes pos eaiilens, reues (tee. nft; ISO) cents per month. lx tJ8l dollars per ear, payable In advance. Te all ferHm countries one ($1) dollar a month, Notiei Subscribers wiehiny address chanced must cl old as we)l as new tddieu. DELL. 3M8 VALMJT KESTOVf. XU1.S l01 C7".liSdrr all conimi.n(caletu te Vvtntna Puttle litigtr, l:tlepenince Kqugrt. Phtlade!rl..a, Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED rr.CSS 1 exclusive . Utttit te the vac for rrpuetlcaHen of all i:eu. tfratchn credited te i or net otherwise crrJtlml this poser, and alie the heal n:u-s putltsl.rH therein. All right ef rrjitioHcaffeii of sprclel dlra'cfct nrrrtn ar' olio r'terved rblhdeljihU. HcJnrida), December C8, f"l MOTOR THIEVERY MOTOUCAU thieves hnve no reason for ceniplulnlns about peer busi;ics tills year. Thej hnvp mnnnsvil te get pos-eion of ttbeut len vnrs n ila. in tliiw cilr ever since Jnmiiirj 1. U.'tebcr wns their bet month, vi licit thev lelp UDt cat". There vmn a sliitiip in Xovfinliei' ami tlui far in Dcti'tubcr liie O'leber record lias net been wiiinled. The police, however, tl'ser .(,mmenila .(,mmenila tien for the buccces in recovering the btelcn cars. Of the total. O-.'S. they have hue ceeded In rettirning te the owners til but 473. What became of these is net known, but it Is suggested that many of them rvcre unk in the river or driven Inte ponds or into water holes in abandoned stone quarries with the knowledge and consent of the e tiers, Khe wished te collect the Insurance. But when one out of every seven Melcn cars is recovered, even if the thieve tire net all punished, the police are working te some purpes". Take the record for the tlrst twenty-two days of this month as an exam ple and it shows of the I'll! curs stolen 1217 had been found. Seme of the remaining twenty-six will probably be found before the mentli end. Se long an this condition prevails the motorcar owners will net have te organize Tlgilnnce committees, as the horse owners used te de, in order te protect their prop erty. COST OF EDUCATION DR. FINlHiAN", State Superintendent of Public Instruction, has taken advantage of the opportunity offered by the assembling of the Educational Association of the Com monwealth at Alteena te reply te some of the attacks of the Grange upon his methods. He has insisted that he has net consolidated the rural schools nor has he abolished the school with a single room. What has been done has been done by the Legislature. And he has defended the expenditure of money te improve the tehoel feysteni. It is generally understood that the griev ance of the Grange is that Dr. Finegdn has adtecated a longer school year for the rural ''districts. The farmers de net like te pay the extra money required for the extra weeks of schooling and they de net like te hare their children In school when there is work te de en the farm. This grievance cannot stand examination, although it is hacked by charges of extrava gance. The schools of this State have been starved for se many years that any approach te the expenditure of an adequate sum en them would seem like extravagance. If It an be shown that the money Is wasted the friends of the schools vill talc the opposition of the Grange worieusly. hut the salaries paid in 1'cnnsylvunlu arc lower than these paid in New Jersey and the rurnl school houses here are much poorer than these across the Delaware ltiver. Dr. Klncgan has star' ' the State in the right direction and he .ieuld be supported until he accomplishes what he has set out te de. BIRTH RECORDS A NECESSITY DIl. FUItUUSII'S appeal for the careful registration of nil births in Philadelphia might be called a restatement of the obvious lid net indifference te this necc.-sary obli gation persist. It is estimated that sumo 1000 births in this city were unrecorded thW J ear. When the newcomers thus unannounced reach maturity perhaps even before they are llkclj te be exceedingly handicapped by lack of efficlr.l records. Hlrth certificates lire required for pauMert-. Thej are some times needed in proof of legitimacy. Thej ntv often wanted for identification purpes"-. c--licclally by certain classes of employers of labor. Health records in the municipality i-annet be accurately kept without a complete return of births. Registration is net a mere rhmnnd of jfaddist statisticians, but n basic ncevsity in the present structure of civilization. I'hysi Wans and parents alike nre guilty of some thing mere than indifference in falling te record accessions te the citj's population. Their offense amounts te an inexcusable dereliction of their duty a- elt'cn". THE SOUTH AMERICAN BOGIE OF Till- Schlcswlg-HeMcin controversy it was unl by a certain Ilriiish states man that no one but him had ever under stood it, and he had forgotten what it 'ies all nbeut. Heppllj, that historic co'e no longer imperils reason upon Its throne. The menace has been shifted te the Tacna 'Arlca dNputc comprehensible In nil its ramifications te none save h chosen few. The fundt.inentnls ere simple enough. Hack in the late seventies and early eighties if the Inst century Chile and IVru fought H bleed and destructive war ever the pos session of the immensely valuable nitrate country ou the Pacific seaboard of Seuth .Vmcrlea. The region had been Peruvl.in. It be came, Chilean under the condition that at the expiration of ten jvara from the signing jf the Treaty of Ancen. which dosed the druggie, a plebiscite te determine the fjuestien of national status should be held. The voting of the Inhabitants has never taken place. Kacli republic has blunted the either for the Bittiatlen and moral principles JiUve become clouded in a mass of fchnl calltjes, disputed evidence ami uatleual sen sibilities. The problem was interjected Inte the Assembly of the League of Xatienii at its Inst meeting only te he bustily with drawn. Peruana the courage of the Washington P Conference in approaching points of ex slii'enn dellcncy has inspired two Latin ."'American nations, te which the restoration I? f umlcitulc relations wetiiti ec or tlie tit- jeit-t ipuiutij iiuvaninRC, wait new nopei. ' In nuy owns, the Chilean Uovcrnment lias fctaud4 l m l'wuvl4 (ieyenmiciit a proposal that the neighbor countries desig nate plenipotentiaries te mct in the Amer ican capital (e continue tentative negotia tions begun two weeks nge. The idea has already been expanded Inte the suggestion, popular, rather than efl'ultil, that I'.elivln. which Is Interested In securing an outlet te the sen, In or near the nltrnte country, be admitted te an International parley of Inter ested and friendly nations. The possibility of n clearing of the Latin American nlr is attractive. The Tacna Aricn dispute has proved n pest both te these who find It cryptic and te the selected few capable of analyzing Its details.. Tb.e reopening of the whole case in WnRhlngten would be directly in line with the spirit of the admirable precedent for facing interna- tlenal begles by looking them squarely in the eye. quacks the only people Who believe in panaceas This Is Why Sound-Thinking Men Have Ne Use for the Theories of Debs rnlil-: lnnbllity of the Socialists te think X straight was never better illustrated than in the opposition of ISugcnc V. Debs te the Draft Lnw. This law conformed te the Socialist theory mere nearly than any ether law ever passed in the I'nited States. There was an occa sion when It was thought necessary by a majority of the representatives of the people te draw into the service of the people n large number of fighting men. The law provided for drafting every able-bodied man between certain ages, without distinction of wealth or social position. Then It provided also for the exemption from milltnry service of men who could be mere usefully employed in the emergency. Thin exemption applied espe cially te working men, It these meti would devele then-Helve:, te viuning the war by wirl.ing in the rear te l'cen the army sup plied with what if needed. This is the c-cnrn of seii.ihsm : that rhe suite shall command the services of the peeple and shall assign thelu te the tasks that need te be done. But Debs opposed it because, forsooth, he Is opposed te war. And he sought te interfere with the opera tion of the law. this is wlint he was pun ished for; net for his opinions, but for his active efforts te nullify the expressed will of the majority in a great nntienal crisis. Ills conduct was the same in kind as that of the German spies who sought te sink transports cirrying troops te ICurepc. Ne one ought te permit himself te be fooled by the talk that Debs was a martyr te his opinions. He vas no mere n martyr te his opinions than were the German agents who were shot In the Tower of Louden. There is another phase of this socialistic business that deserves a little attention just new. when Debs is en the point of touring the country in opposition te war. We are hII opposed te war, and the men n-he dis covered hew socialistic principles work when applied en se large a scale as te compel them te tight arc certainly as bitterly opposed te war as any one. This ether pha-e is that socialism is net the panacea which its sup porters insist it is. There Is no panacea or cure-all in medicine and there certainly is none in government. The medical man who ndvertlse n cure-all is known as a quack. The Socialists arc political quacks. This does net mean that socialistic the ories arc net useful in an emergency nor that they have net been used successfully. They have been a titeful remedy ever since democracy began te supersede autocracy. We have get beyond the stage where n spe cific preposition is damned by calling it socialistic. We de net ask hew it Is de lined by the political economists, but whether it will apply te existing conditions and better them. Lighting the streets at public expense is socialistic. Sp is paving them. Se is a water supply for a city pro vided at public expense. .hist new there is talk about municipal i ownership of transit facilities in this city as a way out of the prc"cut tangle, and no one has denounced it as socialistic : but in the socialistic state all transportation sys tems would be owned by the people. len the presidents of the great railway systems arc saying that unless the Government steps interfering with thim it will be necessary for the Government te take ever the rail ways as It has done in some Lurepeiui coun tries. And there arc many leaders in the Democratic Party who have advocated it, just as they have advocated Government ownership of the coal mines. And the posteffice. as every one knows, is a socialistic affair, displacing the private system of dis tributing the mail, which broke down under the pressure of business when' business was net well erganised. The weakness) of the position of the So cialists who spell the word with a capital lettr is that they demand the wholesale abandonment of accustomed methods of government nud .buslucts and the applica tion of the principle of the Draft Law te all human activities. The plan would net work. It is waste of time and energy te advocate It. These who really have anything te de devote themselves te mere profitable tasks, knowing, whether they believe in feclnlism or net. that when a dose of so cialism is Indicated te u-e the medical phraseology it will be administered, and that when I' is net indicated I; will de mere harm than ftoed. WHITE LIGHTNING TIIL truth is often painful. 1'elk who have felt nsjrc(l that the prohibition laws were working out ai'u.Iublj became genuine hard liquor is dlflicult te buy will be shetked te r'ad of tI.- 12.500.000 gallons of alcohol that havn been permitted te flew frcel; in tills general regleu during the last few IilOllt'.ts, In tint! '.'ier of white lightning there were nieie potential headache, mere vio lence and mere cold gray dawns tunn ever could have come from the stuff which once was sold e-.er the bars in a period of hix months. It Is relatively easy te control the illicit sale of alcohol, and this ncwci-i sort of violation of the Velstead law cannot easily be (ontinued. The news from the head quarters of the prohibition enfenement ofli efli ccrs will scte one geed purpose. The "wise" chaps, the n;n who "knev whrre geed Scotch an be bought at reasonable prices" and these whose celiacs are replen ished regularl.i with prettily labeled bottles bearing em e famous names may knew nt last what they have been drinking. They have been drinking alcohol and "vntcr col ored with tea or burnt sugar and flavored with chemicals. And thei hire b'-en paying about twenty times the regular commercial worth of the mixture. REALIZING A CIVIC ASPIRATION IN A philosophic sense it may be, as Stevenson said, "betlcr te travel than te arrive." which Is another way of saying that there ure keener emotional values in aspirations than In attainment. Perhaps this Ib why the public becms net especially moved ever the certain destruction within the next Bix days of ene of the most vicious phases of contractor domination ever mani fested in this city . Had the goal been missed, it is unlikely thrt "Ucli Impcrtiirbnblllb w.,u!d lure pre' vailed. Hut the flslit for municipal control of the streets Inn been mi I he ut'ery I I1" Ks r ... -.. - - complete, nnd nt flrtt bliiBh most realltlcj Isxk tiuT asstel el dreuuu h signlfcaaca 1 of the event will sinkln as the merits of the T new order arc rercnlvil. Appreciation for the most important Vmstruclive achieve ment of Mayer JIoere'sAdiiilnlstratIou thus tar will Be cumulative Proof of the excellence t municipal street cleaning ban already becnyllsclescd in the tidiness of central Philadelphia throughout 11)121. With the new ycar-vte be explicit. en Jnuuarv 2 the nniemm illll be linnrcs- t-lvely expanded by the total yxtinetlen of tlie private-contractor regime. It is announced that the prlmaiv object of the Uty Administration is clean Vioretigh fares and prompt collection of aivics and garbage. If economies, naturally enr te the taxpayer s heart, can be effect vL h0 fmn'h rt,c bHicr- lie better. Hut all considerations arc subservient te efficiency, le the performance of a chic t.vty in the most expeditious, most thorough ulid most modern fashion. An expenditure' A' about :s..uln,000 n year will he Involved hi .i ,.....; ... ..- .. .... me unueruiMng. in uie "iieiu wer mono en army of some 0500 men will be employed. The opportunity is nt hand for Philadel phia te inscribe its name in the book of municipal progress. The chapter of dreams has been succeeded by one of negotiable realities. In principle the change is justi fied by conditions Hint had become Intoler able. It is new the obligation of the mu nicipality te realize in tlie fullness of its resources its vital new responsibilities. UNIONS AND THE STAGE NOW it is Mr. Zlcgfcld. the "Follies" man, who is in the midst of a little w'ar with the erganised labor of the stage and threatening, ns Geerge M. Cehan did, te say goetl-by forever te the American theatre because of an inability te get en with the At ter.' L'quity Association. The American stngc nnd the people who sing, dan-e. pose, lrc.p and sesturc thereon lm-e been very geed te Mr. Ziegi'eld nnd Mr. Cehan, ami the American people have been even better. Mr. Zicgfeld and Mr. Cehan are clever and amusing persons, and because they arc clever ene may venture te suppose that their wild farewells nnd their expressed determination te depart forever from this our laud mean little. ICnch wants te go where there will be no labor unions te trouble nnd hamper the artistic mind and the mind that rules the box office. Put where could they go? Actors are In the British Laber Party and se are authors and chorus girls and the musicians. The British unions de net bar even the folk who piny soles en the trom bone or the xylophone. A producer of Fol lies or Cel, an shows would surely have n hard time in Htissia. vUiere any one with any sort of talent is supposed te work fcr two meals a day and sleeping quarters in a Soviet barracks, nnd where the people are asked te find delight in the dank plays of Comrade Chckev. Could Mr. Cehan express his art in the Scandinavian? Would a Fol lies be a source of profit in CVecho-Slevakia? Hardly. Mr. Cehan and Mr. Zlcgfeld will stay In the L'nltcd States, where the slaying is geed. Doubtless the Actors' Equity Association knows hew te be high-handed new and then. Its leaders nnd officers have studied at the feet of the bricklayers, the carpenters and the plumbers. And all the knowledge they have gained is by no meuns evil. Thnt much Is apparent in the nature of the row which Mr. Zlcgfeld is having with the union. There was n premise te pay emc players for a special Thanksgiving performance net provided for In the contracts, nnd because the management sought te revive an old rule which made of the proceeds from spe.ltil performances n gift te the management, some 6f the members of the chorus struck, nud two were, ns the saying gees, fired. A gen eral walkout was then threatened nnd averted when the insurgents were reinstated in the cast. Such brushes of temperament arc hardly enough te justify a play producer in seeking a home In lands afar. The theatre managers continue te mourn about tlie killing effect of labor-union routine nnd restrictions en the stage. There arc logic and justice in much of what they say. In every play and every player there must be some llickcr of artistry, and aitlsts de net work well within any formula. When managers and actors begin te quarrel ever these subtler disadvantage-. f a unionized stngc it will be pe. sible te tukp sides and recognize ground for debate. But It is a fact that some old stage traditions permitted the consistent pinching of actors and netrcses through extra per formances and overtime work for which no pay was given. The Actors' Equity has been fighting that tradition tfnd It ought te win. ROYALTY AT ITS BEST THE limited radius of royal marriages of the present democratic day lends te be trothal announcements something of the interest attnehing te an ingenious puzzle. What with toppling thrones and prescribed titles, eligible noble suitors are scarce and brides-te-bo arc rctrl-tcd te a narrow c-iivl". It may be said, hewevtr. of the Heuse of Savey physically one of the sturdiest in Europe that its members, have displayed considerable invcntivencs in their quet of ncv.- bleed without infringing upon the externals of conventional aristocratic re quirements. Somewhat in a Pickwickian sense vas Nicholas of Montenegro a King. Hut the Almanach de Getha acknowledged his rank, and assumption of Its authenticity was made !ij Victer Emmanuel III in taking the Prin cess Elena, of the tiny Balkan state new extinct, te wife. The present Quern of Italy need entertain no fear of photographer. She is fair and strong. Her effsprins are vigorous and healthy . and quite as presiulalili In leeks as the average peasant children of a nation noted for its ienielir.es-, Humors are current of the approaching engagement of her fldcM daughter, Velnudn, te young Leepold, Duke of Brabant, son of these model niemircbs. the King nnd Queen of Bilgium. Savey cleverness is again dis cernible. Albert aid Elizabeth of Belgium beer regal titles. Biter than that, they are able secrclgus. patriotic- suardiuris of u valiant people, sound in character' and in bedv. The ruling Saveyards are te be congratu lated if this match is ensuinmnt"d. Kings nnd Queens are like the rest of tin in this: they annet effet processes of degeneracy with nretens", however pompous, nor inn they advance lem'uicing arguments en behalf of eicluMve inbreeding. The marriage of two such decent and nor ner ninl specimen-' of royalty as Yelandn and Leepold would he a public gulp. llcnts tire still high. Whose fix Building:, are net going JsGerwJ.' up with the speed and frequency desirable. I, imitation of available labor has seuiethimj le de with U. There in much virtue in labor unionism; but sui'ic has brought abuses. The Leck weed committee found In New Vnrk a labor union which had fewer members, than It hud ten years age and with i.H of its mcnibcis ivcr fifty yearn old. There ,ti hundreds til veung Anieihan ex-cricc i ui unemployed vhe ntlghl easily lie taught truth - nud put le mi, Itii'ilcnls 1117., iln cons'-leiiMii en 1 1'kliigmcn, I eh conscleii.-ips deprive willing men of . t.pt . i-enn-icni.-ips cicnnvc wining mc, we,, wherein Is the tyranny; of labor 1 Decles le that eL Jciuxt f r su- AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Architecture and Interior Deoora Deeora Deoera tlons no Aids te Character Fur niture Jar.z That Sets the Nerves Dancing Uy SAItAII I). I.OWK1E I DO net knew a mere severe test te an empleye thnn putting hlin te work in surroundings that arc down at the heel and out of repair, timl lneklinr te Uln. m keep up his end of neatness and regularity when all the things with which he bus le deal tire makeshifts. It Is difficult for a chauffeur te keep a gone-te-pleccs machine polished and oiled and filled, or his own clothes mended nud brushed. It is difficult for a superintendent or a head nurse in a dilapidated hospital le de even the things that can he done, even In the way ,of cleanliness timl discipline. Allll in II tllpfr n.1,1 r.f.ilnfwttl flflirn tltllldttl!' vi :. . - "" ..,..... .. -.-. - v tnese wne Have te de their worn under con dltlens eC disorder ncceninttsh their daily viiive with mere expenditure of nerve force Minn is fair te themselves. Te leek out of n window at ugliness nnd ti leek Inte n room nt narrow shnbblness, cv If one is net often conscious of the geuynl misfit of evcrylhlu; man-mndu about iiltiu .is an Irtitnnt that inn aec011.1l ler u geed Acnl of fatigue. It .V perfectly nvtenMihg that the scn-e of protxVtlen which t lie rally In'lldeis In (his country Vnd was se geed and that it yet was net v'lihcrited by tin- succeeding gen eration. "Vhey could build little houses and big houses, little looms and big rooms and every vnrle.'Jk of reef and deer and window nnd stalrvvn. nnd liri'iilacc. and somehow combine slmlclty with grace, and their ihlldren nnd fAindehildrcn tailed with every one of these lYktngs and with the relation that these parts' Viad te one another. EVEN new w'.n they copy an idea of an elder lmll.xl.ig they de net pet the spirit, even theug.X they may acquire the letter. 1 was tntcMVd te observe this in a great Coleui.il-lookli'g building en Blend street used as n clui'v Yeu would expect such a building te have x vide and dignified hull nnd n stnlrway thiM- completed the big nlr of welcoming hespltavYty. But the hull is a corridor and the stafx.way is just steps going up. In the committee room en the third fleer where the inretliTY? w-as held thnt I was attending the ether daV. folding doers divided It from a scries of nvvnis stretching along the front of the buihllnxV But these partitions portioned off the spnvV into rooms tee long for their width, and We scries of divisions when thrown together v.ndc just a great space with a low icillii',' tui.V a number of windows; there was nothing ntv'Viteclural te glvc.it the proportions of a hall i-r audi torium. Y'eu could net think of Wiy thing but classrooms, and poorly adjusted class class class toenm for hearing at that I arrived tee early for the meeting, which was depressing anyway In Christinas 'vek, iiml as I settled into u duilr ten narrow v'er most adults, I cave tongue te my illssnv4" faction te the only ether, occupant In tV' 100m, another curly comer In the row bchln me. "I think it is this awful paper that dc- ' presses one." 1 said. v "I like crav naner." said the ether se- vcrely. "But it Isn't gray, weman: it is brown !" I called back at her. She did net reply, and looking round at her, I saw she wnti dressed in brown from head te feet, se I felt it was best te held my ycace. TJEKIIAPS she was J- furnitutc. Braun photographs of old masters and rough plnstcicu vail, tinted light brown, with libi..ry table ornaments of tanned cowhide, were the last cry. Perhaps the man she did net uurry had nsked her llways te wear di esses the color of her eyes and hair, perhaps but what Is the use guessing? She faded eul of my skyline an t!-e room Idled up with I bey women in gayer (o'ers, and piecntl.v the lecturer came in and had te ask us te sit no front ns far aj ,e could lieeac.se It ".as dlllicult te be hcuid in se long n room. Liter en he complained of the ventilation, nnd still later en of the noise ftnin the streel. until I began te wonder if the room had get ou his nerves, loe. I have seen people tp.ind and grew icMid and leuiideutlal under the ciiaim of loe.us, and 1 have known memories of beautiful rooms outlast the memories of the men nnd women one met in them. Most children can remember rooms and their furnishing further back than they can lecellct the nppenranic of their parents and their brothers and sisters. All of which gees te show that surroundings have n very marked effect upon our minds. 1 Mil untel Piece" in which a mantel at the end of a sitting room was dismantled of Its erlglnul bric-a-brac by n visiting niece nnd, modernized was dcmetalized by a bewildered servant trying te remember where the new things went: was swept clean by n visiting burglar, nnd filially restored te nn even earlier fashion by a plaintive and attractive maiden aunt en the eve of the return of her ancient suitor te claim her hand. In each cat; the value of the arrangement was that it actually expressed a mind even the burglar's and nothing that really e presses "a mind can bore or depiess one, nt first sight, at all events. The trouble with most public rooms is that no one person Is responsible for their general effect. A com mittee probably decided by voting the color end c: rang' incut and shape of the room that the lecturer and I found se depressing. I WISH that I teuld ficd out who in vented and then made popular in this country the eater-cornered arrangement of furniture and rugs thai one "ic in hotels and in certain well-to-de houses. The rule seems te be that all bureaus should go across a corner, all nigs lie slant-wise te the walls, all sefns be arranged with one end further out in the room than the ether, rl! vases put any way but In pairs, nil pictures hunrf in tUghtcup or down a wall like flyln'; Kwaus In fuliy tales, nnd all books and pho tographs arranged tit the corners dunt-wlsc en tables. Seme persons go se far as te make their beds run out from a corner into tlie center of the tenin and I knew one house wheie the dtulng-rnem table is flung forth from a cerne- se that nothing runs parallel with rlnt nils of the room I nun n spoon te a gucsl. I de net get the itlra ' If It Is an at tempt at informality, the i-eal ideal would be te copy tlie helter-skelter appearance of sweeping, day. Almest ell the persons, thnt 1 knew who live thnt way, from sojourners In hotels te elderly spinster, are rc-lless and iinre.-tful companions, e perhaps then- j.i;-.. ring the furniture is a kind of outlet te t'l.'de inward uncertainties. And if u reallv Is the outward and visible expression of their irward cress purpe-cs It i inlet-citing ,, -i symptom, though no well pet&ou wants te sit long among bympteiu-. AHOl'SE decorator told me net long age that she was offered a very lucrutivp partnership ever in Ni erJ,. but net knowing the would-be purine she v ,i v,iry about mere things than i annul before she ii iis'ulerrd the (imposition (.erlenslv. She ipked him. for one thing, v, bat was Li.s Idea of furnishing n room th.it was alrc.idv fur it'ished and had been long lie( ip, lie said he took e-.er., thing eir and stripped the paper from I he walls yn, began v lib the paint nnd paper new uml then put in his own idea.-, of fin nislilngn gunlcij b' the tpes 'or which lie loom wns di .ign d lie left out the people as being negligible nnd their former be.englugs n bung fe,- tbu ,0,,t part sentimental survivals. She did nut go further .th him once bi got that point of view, her procedure being iust the opposite. The people who occupied tlie room being first in hep estimation and their original nrraligenieiil being ludienliw of the people was always iiupertnut. What linages Mie suggested were along ihe In,,-. of what was the bcH in the room. Hlr .1)( it was like .riling t biography Iimcm! ,,f novel. Yeu hud le keen n fimiaetcr In illltl lint te create one. Vhcil site bi.d fin- iMied It was llieli- room, net '",l' 1 ieiU instead, pi at tucir irerst. The success my in us uciiit uiun ai men- u-.'Ji il1", j..Sca.V:'!.' .LX".jfi:.k&a&ir!Cw J MP"LfVl'LjL liT A UM'r !! r tfiamiJislii.--.'rV.tt.E J9 11-J- f-'-iHrJ ir -fiSmi . . .888SB9iffiS!ffiffiE BaflBBBBBBBBBBBBsCBBBBBBBBkBr J TjBBHSBBBtaW V I T UBTBBLBJBBflBBiTSbMBBBBKJBlBflBBBflBBBBBBrLfT 1. eBfBV9HPvBIBBBBBBHBMLaRtflSA'!s SbIbBB -1 '- ZfJtmJnZ y . - - '... w, v?u . V - s s NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Rally Talks With Thinking Philadclphians en Subjects They Knew Best MrCxS CATHERINE E. RULAND On PiNysical Education for Women THAT physical training is net only a geed thing fv women te adept as a mnttcr of health, but t.'mt it offers considerable possi bilities ns a profession, is the opinion of Miss Catherine !'' Huliind, director of phys ical education ,at the Central Branch of the Yeung Wetvn's Christian Association. "Tlie adviintn vs of a sound nnd well trained body nt v se great." said Miss It'ihiiul. that it iV unnecessary te de mere than nicuileii iliii vlinse of a great nnd highly divei-sideii siyA,i''ct. And they are equally great whether considered from the standpoint of personal' .physical health, the mental strcnslh which almost invariably ac companies a sound phyWquc. provided, of course, that there is someSasis te start witli en the mental side, nnd as tx possible profes sional career. "We hear much of the bixxadening of the sphcie of women In many wnts, but in few matters has there been a grcnxVr change In the last two or three decades Chan In the relation of women and nthieties. The day of the 'clinging' girl who was af-.vx id of the sight of bleed and whom the tiwexpcctcd appearance of n mouse threw into something like hysterics has gene, never te rctir&u. Is Boen for Natien "Women are all the better for this clitxnge, and se is th" Natien as well. The develop ment of nthieties in women means a stronger race in the future stronger physically aiuL by reflex action, stronger nieiitnlly. lllstevv shows that these nations which had the met-y. useful national lives, net only in the work lequiring pnysteai strengin. nut in tnc arts v and ether cultn-al lines, were these who were athletic. I "The two thing.-, menial activity and I physical strength, seem inseparably bound together. Naturally, there haye been excep tions nnd persons of little physical strength. If net actual weakness, have often achieved great deeds in the arts and s.-iences. but they were persons who succeeded In pite of thc-lr handicap. They accempllshe what they did, dc-pite their physical drawback and net because it save them any advantage, I have little doubt that, were It possible te prove it, there would he many who had perhaps an almost If net entirely equal mental endowment, but who failed becaute of phi Meal weakness, As a Profession "Considered as a profession, physical training offers many pesilbllltlcs for women. It is especially attractive te graduates of the high hchoels, who piefer a profession akin te. but net of. (he- cultural am. and si ienccs, Pel them it Is nearly Ideal. "Like, every ether line of work, the mental abilities are employed te a great extent by thn girl who l a Lei up physical training pro pre pro fesslenally . A lellcge education is, there fore, a deeided advantage as a basis for learning the work, but It i net absolutely essential. "When four years of further education after the high school arc net pessUde, there is tlte school for physical education, v l,hh offers u course of tlnee years, thus peiinit llng the student te begin her teaching career a e.-ir earlier than the ch'I who bus gene te college. But while she is made thoroughly competent by h"r (mining, the h:ts mis,e'd four very valuable years net only of menial training, but of environment which proves of great us- In her later veik. Weill. Net All Pliys.it al 'However. I he pre.'peilhe student should lien be misled Inte the thought that all I be verl. of a phy.sicnl director is bodily. She will find that the mcii.ality plays an aliue.,t equally Impei lunt pait In the directing of the pliyshnl iipbuildln-,' of ethers. "Tp hludl'M which she must muster m-n scml-mcdiinl, '"! perhaps physiological would be the mere accunilc word, and iiiiiny nf these course.' me, In my opinion, inure dillleiilt le mnsler than the i.-gular academic course of the cellegi s. She must also pos sess a geed degree of judgment and coinuieii sense "I need scarcely spe.il: of the danger (u whose own preparatory traliilitg hn tliose uneer me can- or a puyiini dli -. ier Inadequate Sh i.m-i knew iaeil. Le v UIIICll 'M.-ll-C MIC ,11", illlll' c .,f , U1 ttnul wlnieitit ivrrdeiii' nnd Mil n'eni r - ' i litres Lieu pIim'ivdiieu ami ipipidct.iii ,. hygienic Lain ledge. lu addition ahu immt I have, suiliclcnl po-eeutillty te meet cllfilcult 1 situations xvhlch taatt ui, itatte in tuists4ii x SUFFERING FROM EXPOSURE, EH, WHAT? 'i every line of work, Mnnv n physique which might have developed into a well-balanecd. if net a particularly strong one, has been injured by overdoing in exercise, especially in these exercises or gnmes into which the competitive clement enters. Develops Character Alse "But in the work of a physical director there is also an opportunity for plnv In addition te tlie hard study and hard work necessary te mnsler the routine. Fer the girl who is fend of athletics there is much pleasure te he derived from the duy's sched ule. The period of training passes quicklv for such a one "I can hardly lay tee much stress upon physical training ns a developer of char acter. When n girl of thn education re quired has passed through the training necessary for becoming a first-class physical Instructor, she has nlse becoine n person of strong Christian character with high Ideals, untiring zeal and a personality which pos sesses the power of leadership toward the finer things of life "With the physical director, mere thnn with any ether teacher, lies the opportunity te meld, in part ut least, the character of every child whose life she touches. Thn children of both sexes admire physical prowess, and in this fact lies n great part of Hie inllucnce of the physlenl director, rhen. again, children are almost universally fend of athletics nnd will devote time anil enre te the cultivation of their physical well-being, which It is difficult te get them te give te many ether studies. A Great Obligation "This is n great privilege, but it nlse imposes an equally great obligation, nnd the inllucnce which the physical director wields nin.v he made an enormous power for geed in the institution with which she is connected. She must see te it above all things that this power Is used te the best advantage. "Fer the girl who hns n fondness for keclnl serncn, the calling of the physical ixircoter will be net only a wide but also a iwngenial field. There nre in it oppor tunities which nre almost uneqtialed clsc xvirc. If I may speak from personal e.x pcrx.iv nee. I would say that there is no jev like ae jev derived from this kind of work. I nnr. firmly convinced that the girl whose own wlticntienal opportunities hove been limited" jte the high schools, nnd who lias -the inclinntU'ii for this profession, enn niake her life ceuni for mere in it than In anv form of service open te her." IFTyit De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1. What is a x Ivarluin'.' Z. XVhe were ft9 four I'lcliwieUlans? ". XVhat I ' tlie xveanlns of the Lntln phrase "neil nm tVV'Rere"'.' 4 What Is tlie Aurtli city of the United States In rxX'ilatlen'. 5. What Wtate entexed tlie American Union with the prtv 'fit that It could, If opportunity aivac. he divided Inte lour separate Stites? 0. When, wbeie uml h tween whom was the battle of AsiiieiV'xrt fought" 7. XVbcrti Is tbt ninclc .Y-'erest'.' 5. Who v.is tbe uoieWU who eresa-0 Die Koruc of Nlnsara .Falls en ;i tight, rie sat down en (Vie lop? midway en his venturesome Jeaney and cookie and ate an omelet? 0. Who was Tcrcsn CarrcnvV 10. What Is a inessin'' Answers te YesterdayAi Quiz I lltiRh f'lipit was the fuit.v.vlcr or i, .iipeti.ui djimuy of l-nmtch Ic.ncV from which the liotirbetvu were il- rElfwiT t"0ne:,a K",s v'r K,'a,"i0 :. An eliliite In a per-nii ilcillcuteec le inen. ustlc or rellelc.ui lie or v.ei ; tiuyly I'iirtl- w.i-, u nt.tr IhiKlbV ihc.u- ncnl iniiii.iRrr piuduccr of lir Ainm erlei of Gin. -.t and sv nY'V' X operas Ht the Klivuy Thc-uti e, Lrxvilen t t.oiceln Ik the enpllnl of N'ebriHcu .-. Ahilii-llenci le Sage (IliUS-lTr) w-etl, ,1.., liiieuiis story of "tin .,BJ or K. ri"i 6. ;Im-.iIccI nieiins l)4reloelei op , h sandaled, used l-nitlculurlv of frWr or nuns. .uu.x; 7. I.atlfundiu are laiun csluie nu,,....i.. ... cha.. iclerUlns a country 's aeriuV' J S. Mytei 'I. lerrlclt N 11,0 present Auierl can Auil'USMider te I'l-aitc-c. w",ir' V. I-our i-ri-siei-ni- ei .-.lexice altei 1'er- iirn cm, "n iiiiuere, liiicj i, '.. ,' 'il ( tln't-jrtJii i t'n - 10 i. ' 1 ll'K . . IVcin i, v ill euipi; iventicl uU i i le. ' P'rttim i .' '" or i ' i Pin' e" si ' :l lu, Mi l of n linlvi.i-wlte i attcamtlim or cjoinpctciice from celT lesUW ei cxnmJnltifi beOfh g ( SHORT CUTS Christmas week going btreng. "Ketan Has New Aide." Headline. Yep. Cupid. The Moere unemployment plan should result in less unemployment. Director Furbush urges birth registra tion. Mr. Pullman could get a wheeze eat of that. The old woman began te pluck her geese just u couple of itay3 tee late for Christmas. We respectfully draw the attention of Jay h. Heuse te the allcgcel fact thnt lighted cigarette set fire te a sewing machine in a house en Chestnut Hill nnd arc pre pared te leek en with calm unconcern whin he throws a lit. Christmas fare at the Eastern Peniten tiary will bring tears of compassion te the eyes of the families of the unemployed, Prisoners didn't get a thing but roast beef and potatoes and turnips and lima bean nnd candy nnd cigars, Irish problems are new rewiring n much earnest discussion as ever thev wen in the Dnil Elrcann or the Londen Confer ence Dail Elrcann members are talking tilings ever with the home folk; and wltlt these home folk rests the fate of tbe Irish Free State flcorge Washington's little htUchet mace no greater historical stir than that in store for the silver-plated pickaxes te Tie used by thn Mayers of Philadelphia and Camden en January C. They will break rreund nC only for the Delaware bridge but for tin Scsqul-Ccntennlnl. Just in case the fnct is ebscirre d by jubi lation ever the release of Eugersn Debs: 111 was Incarcerated for opposition te the most socialistic ruling of modern times, the draft: n ruling, be It noted, which put labor in the preferred class nnd consigned the white cellar classes te the trenches. President Harding urges that tlm prch lems of the world he settled at. a. table rathe than en a battlefield; that they be clisrussct! in simple terms nnd settled in, a common (ense manner. There Is nnthlnR startling in the pronouncement any mere than there ' in the Sermon en the .Mount. The plea, in fnct, has something in it of the qualitv he advocates. We are tickled and tlellchtcd te 'ejm that the Ferclney Tariff Bill provide-, for a duty en boekB brought ever by an immi grant when Mich a materia! evidence of Intelligence has a pecuuinry -value of mere than .-."D because if there cre aii7 seii'i' In the prevision it might couplet us of In justice te the tariff gentleman in the inmie ilinte pnst. Humer Is often n liar, bub mere often thermometer which register the jiepuliu' wish and records it as a fact There is sig nificance, therefore, in Mkp report that Kamen de Valera. bowing te tthc overwhoha everwhoha overwheha nig weight of opinion In favor of the trout' will announce t Ijo withdrawal of his opposi tion. It would be nt once in welcome ml a sensible net. Next week we may begm te fcc hew clean a new municipal street-cleaning broom can sweep There will be ill evidence two inoter-svveeperH. a snow-lead r and two teu teu eon tractors. Much Hint is tjoeil Is expert"' of the new order of things. Who knows Clean streets may yet lend tes clean pellth" Why net? Cleaiilinesn beinKNicxt le genii! uesH, Philadelphia may he if near neighbor uf heuveii. Philadelphia Is altogether loe me'lce' She h, te ask Hie Slate for ij,'..'00.fj0t) M the Sesciui-Centeinilal. Thli' Is half a u" II, m dollars less limn Oregon is appi'Mir; tiling for the world fair in Portland ""'V.', Without doubt the Portland fair will In w uml niieiessful; bill it does lit.! begin ln,.,'!,lj Ihe Importance of the great icveiii In I hufV, dclplila a year biter. The Sf Miil-CentcnnWi i,n't u local affair It Is ijeslgtied t" ,"n.i Aim-ru u ns she is te Hie nations or m world. OptlmlHtlc i'reddy's ma is nptiiuilth'. 1 have seen tills wetUlil swcci SiiiIIc nr llilil'klugs cabi'M I"' (In the Heur I nm imidlty feet 4 . ,. i I I. tit.i., . II nil KH'ni iF4liai.it ? I" nttfi . . Sin would say, ' Wliy. si's, indeed. It Is lucky thnt our Braify Alu't h sloppy centW'oae! ,., -4- f vv '-N.