sen m 7mi. 1 fjM&tW, , t enlttQ "public ffieftger &' PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY Hji ....,.... .. ........... - E' ."p, tinua u. is. jc.i E' yV'Jann C, Slrtrtln, Vice l'reslthnt n.l Treasurer; "-..p.. Liiiun ii. iv. ui.iLim. I'nrniT it .JTidMirlffA, Tyler, Secretary, Char" tl. I.udlng. ;,! m, rniiip a. ceiuna. Jnlwi II. XVIIllnms. .lehn J. Smiley, raeen, Geerge F. Qeldamli'i, David K. ners. LVtD K. BMtf.r.T. .E.lltnr UK C. MARTIN.. . general Iluslness Manager ubllshetl dully at TcbUC Lkdeei Tlulldlng Tnitru.nitnnfi. Untina t"Mil1t ilut tilil n R'v Atmntie Citi 'rrttn-Unien Uulldlni w iuuk ..iliil .Mlilil"in .VP. Urtierr... 701 Ferd llulMIn Or. Leria 013 OIefcc-Drmwrnl Jlullillns; CHICIOO 1.102 Tribune Building NT.WS UL'HEAl'S; TViiniNnTON Bciiuti, N. n. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave nnd 11th St. New Yerk eciiac Thu .sun liulldlng XONreN Bcarac Trafalgar HullJlng sunacnii'TieN tkkmh " The EviMvei Pcbme Liws.ii Is served te siib- acrlbera In Philadelphia nnd eurrenndlrg towns t the rate of twelve (12) cent par week, payable t the carrier. .iir mw man ve FQims euisiae or I'miaueipnii in T te United States. Canada, or I'nlteil Mtutes ue. ' "liens, postage frea, fifty (SO) cents per month. via vtie iiunnin tct jiar, I'djutur in Hiittinvp, Te all foreign rnuntrics one (ID dollar n month. Neticb Subscribers wishing address changed teuat (He old as well as new addiess. ttll, J000 WALNUT KrAMONE. MAIN 1601 C7.4dtlt.9s oil rommteiU-atioiw te i.'tnilMj Public Ledger, lndrt'ndence ftiuarr, Vhllatlrlvhln Member of the Associated Press s TIM ASSOCIATED rRrSS is exclusivity " t(tlif fe the use ter republication e oil newt tiltatches credited te It or net vthtritut credited f)ilj vaptr, and also the local news published therein. All riphf cf rcimMfcotlen e special dlwntchct herein are also reserved riilbJdpliU, S'alur.Uy, February 23 1922 GOING AT IT IN THE RIGHT WAY THE pliius made for organizing the Pert of Philadelphia (bean Traine Kuirau will commend themselves te every etn vvhe lias been hoping for come ( enccrlt il effert1) , te develop the bn-lne-x of this pert l It is proposed t lint the bureau be under the direction of n salaried malinger with a tnft of assistants, and tint il devote It-df te KDtlirrliiK Intet'iiiatimi alieut tlie iiKiveinenl of freight from the tnliiler te tin- a a beard, anil the n-ions ter it- liipiuriii from one pert intlier 1 1. ,n .metlicr nnd that it (li.--('iiiiiiatc infel iiiutien about the tldvnntage nffeicd by thK peit in the .i of faellitlcs for le.ulitu ami uiileadin.' . nd Jiert charge's, and thai it Nvie .1 memhly schedule of .-aillncs for the liifeim.itbm of uhlppers, and that it al'e Kit in lemh with individual hlpperi and bring about, mi far lis possible, a spirit of co-epcr.itioii between the shippers and the ngent of iv.iuililp lines. In brief, the pl.m li te after IlMMlie'.-, Just a a private buMm1- lie wanted te iihtciim hi in. in wenlil d i if :ile. I here ha" hcte in the just. been uetlung of t hi- lum Ve have tru-t('il te link "e have let Bteninship line" go eNe.vhere when they inlght jii-t as well have been brought lure, and we have made no effort te attract eee.iti freight. The plan v. bleli ha been made by a com cem com "inittee repreM'iitlng Mirimis reimncn lul bodies and the Director of Vhatve-. DneUs end Ferric-, will have te be formally ap proved by the diffi rent organiratiens before it is put Inte effett. Iiut there eeni te be a disposition at the prcent time te get buv. It is the most encouraging thing that h.i happened in connection with pert develop ment for many years. BOULEVARDS TO JOYLAND WIIUN the plans jus-t approved by the Camden City Council are carried out two great boulevards will run fanii from the Delaware Urldge terminal te the sen. The approaches designed under the. super vision of the Camden City Plan Coimullen re wholly admirable. Already n smooth way is open from the point at wnicli the bridge win drop in Camden te the magnificent White Norse pike. The newer boulevard, proposed b the Plan Commission, will run from the bridge end te connect with rhe main Stare reads te Nevv Yerk and the Asbur.v Park areas. Thus the whole .ler-'.. Coast Pun, from the Atlantic Highlands te Cape Ma. will become a sort of Mientiun suburb for Phlladelphlans nnd the whole eastern section of Pennsylvania. New Jersey itself will be bencficd im mensely through the work of the I'amden City Plan Commission A wide and orna mental nppreuch te the hrldae will have a Keed effect en the whole neitheni p.irt of Camden City. And suburban development will certaiuly.be quickened alen the rout of a new main highway which will be of unique service net only te tetiiist- but te farmers as well. DEMOCRATS OF TWO KINDS TJAKMONY," Said A. .Mitchell Palmer XI en the eve of the Deinecrntlc confer dice in lliirrl-lmrg. --is the cheerful acipnes. cence of the intneilt.v in the will of the ma jority." The purpose of the renfeieuie was te Klve the minority un'nppnrtiiniiv cheerfully le acquiesce. The assumption as that these who were conferring represented the majority. It Is tin open quest ion whether thev de fpeak for the majeiitv, JiiiIup Miiriinu..il tti was net nresetit. lmr wen. .mi- ( k. i. ...i ' .... -... ,..a. ,-i ,,,- ti,i ji'n there save as spectators. Mr. Palmer and Vance .MeCenuiek are real Democrats. They lul a mevi.uent te break up the bi-partisan censpin,,n nu,,,r Mhicli the iJeinecrats plnjeil the game of the Jtcpublican maih'.ne. Iiut there ,Ue nianv influential Democrats who de net want that M-partisan censpir-u-v broken up. TheV am in politics for what tiny can make out of it If they can make nunc bv dcils with the Itepubllenn machine tli in b.v putting up ..,,, honest light in the elcMiens they pn fi r making the deals. Ihe situation is one whhh d s''lsts both Demei rats The St ite lack of a iiencst uepueiienns and lium t Iiut what can they de about h lins suffeied for years for tin , genuine opposition party. 'I if re is no or- Sanizeti iiemecriuy strong t neugli te put the fear of (!ed and I'efcit into the In-irts ,,f the dishonest prefesM,mi politicians who trade under the mnne of tin- iCcpublic.iii 1 Party. And there d e net mi -ecu te be nny prospect et a united Dinteuatii nitien. oppe Conditions tire such, however, as te gne te the Deinefitits a bettei lighting chance for victory tills yuir than they have hml f, r a Jeng time. i lie itepuhll ails who vmmi ti Bee a ticket of hlgh-mlmled and able m, u 8 nominated at the pitmanes ate hoping that the Dcmeciats will get together und'ngice en fce strong a ticket tliat the Kepublicnti machine will be forced for its own protection. te turn down the pel.tical hacks who aie Eceking the nomination te the govemeisiup ' i If Democrats like Ileiand .MenK 'nnce ' SlcCermlck and A. -Mltiheil 1'alnnr muld have their wa theie would be a n.il iigbi. But these men leek out of place in 7tnv" gathering of Pennsylvania Demeirats. They de net speak the language of many of i the county leudeis. They have ideals, but mme of the. county leaders would net knew m ideal if the) should mctt one en the Mreet in tlie full light of the uoen-day sun. The llarrisburg conference will ). f. .' lowed by 11 confidence of the Itennlwell wing of the party, it may be a consultation ,,( ' v lenders wlie visit one another and come te Bn agreement, or it niaj be n meeting (l J. JUrrlsburg or elsewhere. Hut the men who Vl ilsfMk the lunguiigc of Itennlwell will get 'jfc toether in sonic way and reach a common v?,U:.j'......ii.. I ...ill I.. ii. i.. -,tpjtyicaifiiuiuiiiti iiini iwii niiiv u 1-iiuiiiii.ii.e iei v'?f,W"fOTeriierhhli who will be n very iliffer- i,1y5'',Wt"t vt wen fruui the cunuiuutu vvmj wm ' " EVENING PUBLIC LDOEK - nmmentl himself te the men who have jusl been meeting in Hnrrlsburir. Whnt liiny hnppen In the primaries can be Inferred v'hen It Is recalled that In 11118 Ilennlwell polled 78,000 votes :u.il wen the tioinlnntlen, while .leseph F. (luffey. n Democrat of n very different kind, jmllctl tuilv Oe.OOO votes and was detailed. AMERICANS CONTINUE TO BE THE WORLD'S LUCKIEST FOLK One Leng Glance at Any Other Country Will Make Our Hard Times Seem Almest Seft "TjAIin times:" The dishcartenim; XI phrase Is still lieavd pretty generally In the 1'nited States, Listen long enough te tin pessimists nnd j en will come te believe that we plumbed In recent months the ulti mate deeps of national adversity, Were corporation taxes heavy and sales short? Were dividends cut? Were bunk b tlalices shrunken? Were jobs haul te get? Did wuges smj;? Well men nnd peer alike con soled themselves with two mournful words, "Hard times:" The times have been bald, certainly harder than they ought te have been in a country se rich In icseuices and se versatile In Its talents lis ours, Mere people than it Is pleasant te think of have felt, through no fault of their own, the pinch of w 1 til that followed upon temporary dislocations In the mechanism that operates liermallv te keep times L'oed. And jet, net te justlfv bv nnv sort of tolerance the follies ami the abuses and the genuine sufferlns involved with a slackening of Industrial activity, but for the geed of our own souls, we ought still te lemcinber that ours continues te be the luckiest country under the sun. In comparison with many millions of ether people as deserving, as earnest nnd is industrious ns ourselves, we cannot be 'iliil te knew what times are like when they arc ually hard. The Irlh people weie nevi r linking In habits of indiistrv ami hard wet I, l in n recent emergi nej they had te ask for help from the outside world. The Knslish people aie harder up than vve are. (ircut multi tudes of them have bad te accept small deles from their hard-pressed (ievetninent In Itussin there has been u devastating famine net because of belshevis'm, but be cause the clouds withheld their rain In the growing season. In China, where Industry is viewed and practiced ns nn essential virtue, crops failed ami multitudes died of slew stiu vatien. Kven devastating famine doesn't represent the limit of national mis mis fertune, a some people have had te endure it because of the war. It Is Armenia, tin eldest Christian nation in the world, that alone can claim the uis uis tinctlen of Iiiivlnj; plumbed the last imagi nable deeps of human hardship. In an area of Armenia and neighboring territory that is about half as large as Texas JOO.OOn children wander like small gray ghosts ever land us barren of feed or shelter, comfort ur consolation as the face of n dead planet. They ate the bail; of the ttees. They ate the grass until the snow fell and ce'vered It. New the surgeons are amputating their ttwen feet when anesthetics and instru ments arc available, which 1 net always, Armenia happens te be the unadvcrtKcil llelgltim of the silent but lelentlcss war of pence that tages thiouglieut the Continent of Hurepe. It is n baltlcgieund in which the opposed political ami economic Intetests of Kast anil West me hugelv deadlocked. And se It is n place in which all the miseries of the world seem somehow ceiicenttated. It K as if fire had passed ever it. Worse things limn war have pasrd ever Armenia as a matter of fact the cavalry of fanatical raiders, utter famine, tvpbus. UefugeeN dee In small armies and Hec lU'tiln. Hut they have no place Te go but the open deserts and the naked hills, and se il,,.y die like dtlven animals, Americans who' aie Mghtltig te keen Armenia n'lvi and losing their own lives freqiientlv in the struggle have .ictu.illv founded en the outskirts of AliT.andr.ipel the strange st ,.t ,.w., ilM,,Un It Is a city of IVIOti children, n claimed half-wlbl fieni the deserts, who de net knew their own names and are net se broken with hunger and disease that their lives lnay net be saved. Other childien have been les, fortunate. Many thousand- of them have bccM maiclnd or carried te the hil's te die of .slew hungi r and disf.'ise under the eye, of w.itcbii. who could . de nothing but ptetict them fteui liunger-madih tied ihcs Hut for the ihuici.es of America ihe Ar menian iiatbn vviiulil hive be ibllti raicd. About ...OOlUMHi eif the mit-lnul p M!:itn.ii tiinain. They arc peipetU'illy I'lhin, perpetually- hungry, forever vvitln. i' ' rest Theirs is a land that turns upon tin- wetlil a face tr.insfeinud bv miserv and gi n pain. mat inn no itermng imt iiepe for i ',, of inanklnd while the powers u lit bicker and talk of spheres of political economic elemiuani i', llarel times j t i t - und atvl A GREAT CONSERVATIVE T HAS been sugistid te us that I thi- weather genl'eiii.in is the i.eise,, bet qiiniit-iMi te 'f-ni ti, leiintrv out of gloom and confusion tint fellow, the. the end et the wnr. ler ti),. wi'iitlur gi nt', m-m i conservative and 'insistent, ns Mm natute of Ibis wlntir moves, Ujs ;,,, v ;iI1, siimineis tu-i vaibnis and divettiug. but thev are new only en tin- suif;l, c TI ( ;ne gieuiideil en olI-fashiened pnnciiilis and 1'iev are mil 'e dllig te fericulis tc-tcd ami fetiml s ,'isfaci. rv bv bmg i , ,., ..0 New and tlift. ; en mav ! le ., suppose that the Wenth'i Hun uti s Hying out new tbin.'s. that it bus biieme indleil ,u ;,, or i veil ri'volurieimiy. At such tine s it is said that olel-fiishieiiiii winters were il,t. only genuine ami -tii" j:j ones or that the mmleiii stiiniii r is if an nifnier -ort and tl at the I'liiuate is 1 1 .i li-yiT g, for the worse, of cnuise. Ami tin rt Dime yeie weathir aiel -uv. and b!l7:irds te sli,,v that thu weitheriuan is content te In veil metigh alone. Seme eld-f.ishinnul ilungs - ieli'ien, Tei ex.mip'e, iilnl iiuisli ami vv riling--aie best O'd -fashioned matin r Is geed for the coun try plan's. In tin- Miles lt j .something of u tiial. An id' nl vvi utheimau weu d hive eil'' suit nf w atl'i r for the open times am another fir enit'iuiiit.i s le vvlibh people have te cetitenel Willi the did ultles of tl'.illic en feel evi r inn li ..ii'"l piiveim ut-. There Is sin b a thing as tee much con cen con servtitisin. CONGRESS AND THE BONUS C NAICLKS A. KMiiNT, Jicpi -e ntntive in ((ingles fun,, t)ie, w ti j mldiised Hie 0!lb Seiietv el this (y en the bonus qiiistiin, and indue ed it te admit ,i revju- ti'iu protesting against in jiassagc bonus leglslallen, destrves jespm "f for any his courage. 1,. is a candidate for the Hi publi.fin nomination for the wgovi'ineiship of his State, and, although h'' said that nnv Con Cen giessman who votes against the Heuus Jim will I'einmlt pelltliiil suicide, he ijinnet re iiitnn silent when it Is proposed te tax the country heavily te give ndiliiienal iumpcn satlem te the men who were the uniform during the wnr. He i eppcis(l le the bonus because of the taxation Involved, ami he i, also opposed te It bcinuse be docs net want te cemmenlalUe patiletl.m Th" men di I net wear the uniform In I he hope of gain They were biuiiuiuneil u ihizcjii- te set ve their country. Thej rebpended, and thej should net be deprived of the feeling" nf re spect for themselves that giew out of their servlte b.v defiling it with "any sense of sordid gain." We have said Hint Mr. Knight displayed great courage In thus speaking. Hut per haps it was the kind of coinage which the cett nl i, v admires. And it may lie that he s-altl what thu majority of the people fue thinking. Dr. lllbben, president of Princeton 1'nl verslt.v, who bus lccently been (raveling in the Seuth, has lepnrted le Senators lMge and Frclltishuysen the stale of sentiment which he found there, lie leek pains te In quire of nil sorts of people. Including men who had serveil In the at my titiil navy, what they tlymght of the bonus, and be lepnits that he did net find ti single man vvhe favored lt. The men who were most stoutly opposed te it were ev-service men. Dr. lllbben, therefore, assumes that he Is speak ing for .",0(10 Ptliiceten nliiinitl who were In the set vice when be says that they enlisted with uoevpeetntlen of icwiird. and that their services can never be adequately coinpen ceinpen sated for in money, lie cencludes: "At this critical period financially in the his tory of our country nnd of the world, it seems te me a crime further te remove the leull.itlen of tiniiiiii.il stability and te to te move it indefinitely b.v the lneicne of our obligations te the amount of several billions of dellais." Sue li letters as that of Dr. lllbben will encourage Congressmen who arc oppose I te the bonus, but ate afraid "t the political effect of opposing it te cNprcs their opin ions openly as Mr. Knight has dine, te vote- fei the pioteetlen et the taxpayers when the bill comes up for passage. EDUCATION AND DECENCY? S AY that a man is illiterate that is, that he i unnet lead or write or make speeches and, in the eyes of n crv large class nf people, be will be condemned as tin undesirable. Yet. if thorough training In schools ti ikI colic .cs is Intruded te make' for th" higher clllwiisliip. hew Is it that se much wrong Is done every eluy by clever and p"l Islied folk in the' 1'nited States'.' "laltt cali'd" people enn he found at the head of every doubtful political enterprise. Thev aie involved in almost every conspicuous social and linancial scnntl.il. Let the or ganizations formed te make literacy the chief lequiii mciit of eitlciiship continue te lleiirish nnd gtevv. It is geed te hear one authoritative voice raised for the enlMiteiimeiit f such as thee. Dr. A. i:. Winshlp, of Husten, who is himself an cpeit of long el erience In educational prm esses, has just been telling a leiifeience of literacy adveintes in Chl Chl eage that its members aie en the wrong trail. "Among illneiate people In Ten ucssie and the Care'lnns and elsevvlu re," saiil Dr. Winshlp. "there an- as geed na tive brain- as you could find in Wall street, Yale or Pilnieten. These lueuntlllliei c.mlil tenth Trnilliat students much that it would tin t hem geed te lent u. '' What Dr. Winhii menus, of course. I- thru von cannot loam honor, diligence ni- iliistr'v. coinage, dignity of soul. eharity or rrnncrnsity out of books. On if thc-e days we shall learn that I be lilt late Is net te prove that ou have all tin siiry te geed citlcnsblp or i virtues neces i ii-eful life. SHORT CUTS We just knew spftng was feeling. It knows must be bow ami III for Ma' lieu te ke 1 1 (iser that slb'tlt. Xct winter emed. Chill It' we may Chaplin pvpect a sneeze has mlluen.i. Probably the one newspaper reader pio pie pio feundly unii'iti ti -led in the tlapper cotitte-ver-.v is the llappcr. Soniiheu we'll feel serrv te see (iifterd Pluchet quit his job as State Commissioned of l'eifsti. Hi knows tieei. 'Ibc'W'nr De,iaitment may place a ban en the ilingih'e. Clrcuuistaiiiis have nl leatly pievidei it with a jin. Atlvicis from Itiuiic state Deputy Fucta has been invited te feim a Cabinet. This I- going te be a been te the p.uagiaphir. lt would be e.'istei for the Democrats te oriiiele tin Piisldent for aj peiniing none but llcpuli icau- "il th'' War Debt Heaid if tin men tli"-' 'i t'ii' net all epeils. ( me of Sliakepenre that "i 'a. sii '" could be any ami all pe-sibli- qm i leuns ,'ivcrn tl I'l.tde te an-vvei liens. Mitlh.lile McCerinlck al-e In the malt bonus, tar h" it cot sidei- hlm-elf Is a medi -t guv . tintls ()ser n'l sulhe.cni. r of taking ad ion mi tin. from any I "it.i fin.iii te a I' lltlcr of the people. He si lie Is waiting te be led. Tilnlty Celli ge, going le tr te cat. alienist- conduct a p .illation of our old gree. Hart foul li a tinbu .vchlatiic Conn., i- bv having amlmitleu. friend, the Thinl D There is matt rlnl for vvi'tir in the t a-e of the uiariue juevldid by surgery nd check, making him unit f rn nils. the short P H-Vi le, witli a new ter Pa.. nose egniabie in hi lt miiv In that If th" I'liginiei- who lepeited oil the vniiell- slUg'-ti'l .se-qul-(' ut 'iinial site- bad been paid - ilnrie- com M i n -unit" with their ubll'lv and -lauding their opinion would have t c wtigbt. Sisie r-ln-biw e.f .liiiiu W. (liiaid. fount r Anil is-rid"r te (leim.inv, savs tin model n girl i- aM light tle-pite ler ilgiiiette sine' iug In r sloppy galoshes uuil bei ioll iell ioll devvn hose. It is, then, us we suspected. Pari- miinli ipal authorities have change tl the niinie of the Hue de I lainbetirg te the Hue de Huctiest. The change wasn't thought of until It'll, but the mci-ure was deiiblle-s spietlul up b.v t llicieiiuy cxpcils It. I i'i seiitiillve Ciiihn, of New Yerk, -in- tint what Cengtc net ds is u publlcit.v ngint. That wtie te nnd what it lias uivi'i !:u kul. Approaching fictions invniinbly -ei in te preive that what lt ically needs is coinage. Men stuibnls at Sviacme Cnlveisity have eiganit'd the Antl-Htli'mlnacv Club, and, as a piete-l auaiu-t inu-ciillne giiis, h,ie hvvern oft powder alter s iing, -( cntetl ti I'et water and bnb -ilbben tit-. Oil, the big, biave things: The fact that bevs are admitted free te the bleu I i'.n mi ceiliiln d. s by the St I.euis ba-eball club is ('..dime net only of kindness, hut also of sound lenuaeiclal si tse en fhe puit of the luamigt hit nt, it is build U;g up future business. Ceiigii'ssluiial elt bate e-eiict ruing tic liiithplaie et Aiiiliew .lacksen ha- at it a-t seivnl ihe pm pose of putting lulu the luerd that what ilic (Joveiner of Xmth ('.liellua aid te lb" C.ovciner of Sniiih Ciuuliua an ticipated the Vulste id act. Pettsvllle, Pa., Scheel ISeanl has de elded uiien legal action te tolled LM (MMI 0 r-taie nppieii i.uniii- ioem 'niitiue. I, veil if till serve a fat lleal'ei Uiii'Sii t gee il coin Ille sun mav a Useful pill pose. Somibetly may get check for lighting the ease. Twelve-year-old New Yolk ceufc-sttl te having stuitnl eight two weeks "I cannot (ell (l e," iiefted in have said; "I did it beiy has bus in he Is ri'- wil'i nn tile matches." Frem which we gather that pn haps the shade of Parson H'ectns Is still lictletilislue, 1) PHtLADJHtly - EDITOR AND AUTHOR E. J. Stackpole .Writes Charmingly In "Tales of My Boyhood" The Story of a Famous Treasury Nete The Revenge of an Engraver My fltiOUOK XOX McCAlX MY PHin.VD D. J. Stackpole has tinned aiillier. After having achieved success ns the editor nnd publisher of the llarrisburg leve lling Telegraph, he has turned temporarily te nutliMi'shlp. A beautiful llltle leather-bound volume, as admirable in letter-press and half-tone as Tt Is chai inlng ill its literary style, has reached me. "Tales of My ltoyheod" is the title; the Juniata Valley Is the scene. It seems but a few scant .vears when the old Capitel grated "the Mill" in llarris burg nnd the author f "Tales of My Hey heed" was a stalwart, liidd -faced young newspaper eoriespeiiilcnt. A suggestion of hew swiftly the jenrs have sped Is contained In the Introduction le this geld -embossed little wetk. which comes like a brealh fieiu the daisy fields of Penns Iviinln valley s : "Dedicated te my children nnd grand chllilicii, with whom 1 have se often lived ever again in fragrant memory the happy .vears in the Jutilafa Vallcv se dear te my childhood." E.' .1. STACKPOI.i: and myself tuc the sole suivivers eif the small group, as computed with the iiggicgntlen of present In cerrcsi ntlents, that reported the legis lative sessions of ISssl-s.-i, I'litonvenllenalit and freerKiwef expres sion, legether with the exuberance of jetitli, were the chief charms of these long-geno da.vs. It is this 1 Tin t Mr. Stackpole has Imparted te his Tales of Mv Hoy-hoed." Thev aie delightful teMiie for this reason, aspic fr in the Intel est that comes flout long iiciiiaiiitanceship. "Hi'l'l .1. tell lis 'bout when you were a Utile bv," wis a grandchild's appeal that wen the ictltal of tlii-e memories, of da.vs in the .liiniata Valley. There aie no iliaplcr headings. The stories i uii with black -sitlcheads, uml the "Halkv Neise." "Obi Swimming Mele." "Ciicus and Mcnageile," "Hiinglug Heme the Calf." "Pepper en the Steve,." "The Heme-Town Hand," "Old Canal Days" and "Cra.y .lake" convey suggestions that aie fully borne out In the text by an author who frankly cimfes-is that he "has. nut betheicil about literal- style." Hut he has a style unconsciously, nnd it is till the mure charming for that ica-en. DID you ever hear Treasury eliicials hew the Untied Slates weie umile the victims of a puuticiil joker, ami the joke net ills. ills. eeveietl for veais aftci waul? All the time, hewevtr, that prarllc.il joke was pa'-tug under the eyc.s and through the hands of millions of persons. It was eleveji J cars before It was dis covered. In the Interval the staid, seiieus money of the cntintiy had become the vehicle of a pietinc pu..lc that was intended as a sneer sit the Cevciiimeiit. Had any shut p-ey ctl Ttensiirv official, banker, bank clei k or ordinary ritiren han dled the me ley in tip-ide-ilevvn fashion lie might have di-cevcred the fie.ik. When It was feuml out it was suupnsed,, at hi'st. te be ceuiitcifelt. Cleser inspection levealed that it uis the genuine goods, and for the sake of the lep lep utatleti of the ilepartmeiit It was decided te let the cotubinatlen stand. In tinaucl.il idii'lcs whetc It Is known it Is called the "Hagle anil .lacka's Treasury Neli ." TJl' iruiurrr 3: KHIIHW has tempertirily Hi lull listed iciiev freak-, te 111' cue one of these cur some of whith still tire in ciit illation. lt is it Tiea-ury note of S10 ilenomltia ilenemltia timi. of the scries of lss'l. On the f-ice of the bill Is nn American eagle in a liU'e ciigiaving te the left of the scul iiutl b tvveen thi'-ii'iines f W. S. Hose Hese Hose eralis. Uegi-li r of tli Tiea-ut. and .1. X. Husten. 'I n'ti-iiier of Ihe I nitetl Sliitcs. Te all .ippeiiiaui cs the ci'jle is of the ngiilatieu sert: the bald or whlle-hculed, ili-i'nttiil :i- ll.iliiicli- l.euceceph.ilits, Theie is nothing peciiiar In it until the lull is turned up-lile down, ami the eagle bei'eiiii s u jacka-s head, perfect in outline. rjllli: -cues was issued, according te facts L fuini-htd b Mr. Kihcvv, in the call cigln I'-. 'Ihe , f el 111 till until Ihe ui'lii who bill wtl- li"t dlsi evcretl pcipcti.iiril tile outrage hinisi If in a I.-td r te a or Jeke n veiled It Tini-uiv ethcial. In the nn aiitlme the lull h 'd gene all ever tbeceiintiv. It VMls tl ten id v stihji t, and iu-ti ad of telling in Ibi bin and icl'tlug it fmiil i in ullll'etl il Wtl- il'Vi'led In let the i in .'iiii.it imi sliiud, in Hit hope that the publi wiuild nevr di-i ivei it 'I le -ten is thai an l.nijli-bnnn wmking in tin Depiuimi nt of Piini.iig and Dngruv mg w.i- ili-ihtiigitl for i .pressing opinions I luil wire distasteful le r-enie id ibe then ellii ml- et the bureau. Having In en given Ihe u-ual month's neti't'. he decided upe'i a iiie.iu but lasting icvelige. rpHH eugiaver n winking at the time JL ii the new plat's tei a SI0 Tica-ut Hele. 1! a tit ft handling of the lights and shadows of the eagle he liieduced, when the ligine was lcvei-sttl, the head of a iinka-s. rnuii nn aitl-tic p lnt of view bis weik i. cM't'llnit, even when seen under a mag- tilt v lug glllis. It Is the (icrfei tiell t f IU.le cicalien. The bead and neck t ibe i igh furnished the lead of the niiiiii.il. 'Ihe light shading lit the lias,, of the win'' le i tunes n pcifcit eve f i imi the oilier vf'vvpdiit, while the thighs and tall el the bud lerni the cars of t! e bnist. Seme of tln-e in I' - -till alexia ciicula ciicula lien, the -etie's bavins in en iued terly .veins age. TvU. w. i:. HI (IIH.S. like ether le'iillng u nlivsiclails of Pliilaileltihln. holds the conviclien that n prnfi iemil man tun give the host siivlie te Irs clbiits bv kteping iiiuiself mi le par pbvsirallv at all times. I 'or this ica-en the tint ler has made It n rub for vears tin imal! te make a pilgiimigc te some out-ef-tlic-v i' corner of the earth. Smith Amend. (' Oiienr. odd coiners of Kill epe. simph i e "ti ti bv temneiary ramli 'iff in the West, have hi eti visited by him tluiinc tl e last tt nt yeats. He i tetlav siuiiev litie en the Xmth At I.uiiic bmiud for " iii.m. It is his pulp' se l" Vi 't the lulti'd eilles of 1' e lava-ami A.Id - 'it I m ll, Clilcheu Itn nnd Pa'i mine. After , in nt nu In' vvlll in Moh-ii pieper, "nd ii th it h'- m iv inn t'e v II In spend some time I" II it II l'lrebahje I lUMica I" the li- inaikabl" mills "t .Mi'la ' Me tells me thai the mvsleiv if the-e lest cities of the Seuth ha- held bun en- thral'cd ter veais. New he Is geiii'r l Il ' in 'I In lti ' in I'b lit of Xoilh Xeilh I ulvi i-dtv sug. i iiil"iitien of li'illuiss le-ts Aiiieil 'in imi- Will lenc.v Pills Hilllll i e it'll u bv for iiie-pectlve lre-1 i m r-ltles, We ventui Imac New Ien baf'tl l In Ui - iitnli'i an thit when liiile tree ttfc&f SAttOTBA M. . eiildn I have i a-si i m , ,, test, be was tee busilv engaged in thinking out 'eiui'tbing weith while; ami il mav be that he was" cm n while lolling and dunning, -bade mine usi'lul te the wii'bl iban the "con "cen sirviltlve. t'Vpeiitmt'l i-vil,oe';sts" with their little inte'lii Iniil v, nd-lli ks, i Tv i ntv -live Hahvlen, Wabble l''riiin N , Miuiig men hnvi Hab.vlen s , , i,iv ii'ctlgcil ihf?m- -I 's nevt r. eh, never e be seen In pn' I nh itlrls who weai si ippv galoshes. Hv which it would appear that Ihe gills, iih I'vci, aie ublu te intikcj the boys bit up and tku nulicc. v isr: VI if i, "'wwi V-, skua: WK A mjf a2' r-JK . ittrtnmr!FilZf- AV'iA i .1."" .j-iWit'-'V-.-ftirii t AT-jt rr ve.A ai..ur .-j . A70I4 MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily -Tallin Willi Thinking Knew MME. OLGA SAMAROFF On the Artist and the Public Tlinm: is little doubt that some of Un musical Interpretative nrtisls have some what of u tendency le linilcirate ihe taste of the American public, says Mine. Olga SamarelT (Mrs. I.eope'd Slnkeu-hii, one of tin- foremost liliniisls of the world. "P.eth fi i inv own evpcilcncc and fieiu what 1 liuve seen." said Mine. Siniai-fT. "I mil piinvlnccil that tin- AmMlc.iii public will 't imil niiirccl:ite the best Ilia' the llleiatiile of music nllertls. if it Is given te tin m. Hut il I- itni irtiinnlel line lint some uitl-ts, in u mm iiutlcr te cehihicrciul- slsm. untleirale the public la-te nnd plate en their luegrums works which nie weilliy neither of the nbilit of the peileimer imr et i lie -eiieiis coii'ldei.ltieii et the auill ences. 'The iriiivvtli if the interest in and the appieciiitlen of music in the I'lilt'tl States h.i ecu tieniendeils dining the la-t ! "I twelve year-. It 'il-u ha- been ceustnnt, lut spasmodic, and tin changes vvhlih have eccin leil in tlie piihlic i.iste aie always fm the better chl of 1.111-0' I'm- Ki'iiellt of All "I (iitinet sav -treiiglv i Heugh thai in-ti-ts, nuimigtr- and dub- vvhbh itri'diiici ested in the giving of lein'trls can, with ile e te tbeiuscivcs but i ilher with siibsiaii lial gain, go th finitely In I hi- dliecllen of giving the public the ciy best thai theie i- in music and net 'play down' te the s,(. called popular tiMe. This insle Is in many iustiim cs i mislderabl Inghi r than ii ap peals te be. "In in own (peiicnie I have upon sev -eial in eiisiens sent lecllul liiiigr.ims te nnn agtii or dubs In smaller cities and hud iheni P tinned te me Willi l!ic leqilesl le miIi i t'lli ill lillice of -nine of Ihe lighter si a e-tieii- c'tis-lcal iitiuibers which ! had thought ceitiil be suici-sfiilly plavetl enlv betere the niidlfiu cs whicli me te be found in lie' hiigc-t cjtlc-. 'J bus 1 h uracil that iiijimimI cultlvatbi has In nunc mine widely spn ail than lias gruerallv been iniagrtied. "One li'iisen why It Is possible te de mere in music than in litcraliiie or the draiiui is III I. It, se music tines lleL have te be Ulllli'i- steed in a scleiiiilic or techn'cal -en-e in enbr te b'' inje.' nl. It Is self i vhli ill hat a pet son cannot get anything fieiu u pine of lili'ialuic wiillcii iu a language vv.i'eh he cannot tinili'i'-Uintl, uml in the i t .una nime tichuic.il knowledge ih icipilietl for the mesi thoreiigb apiitcclatieii el the wmk. Hill music is the common language, net only et till nations, but of the nits. An Art l.'ntlrcl.v Developed ''Tlieicfeie, Il is itupeitunt for music te be popularly develepnl I illlsc it s the one an which can be eleveleped in Its entliil. It Is iiianlfestlv lmpess(, in bring nil ihe great weiks of painting and sculpture te this ceuntiv, no matter hew man million nil cm vvi' mil have, ami Iiencn the iiiov iiiev inent v.liiih t In -t- gieat weiks of ait e in give Is neci'ssai iiy llmlinl te the few who. by ltiisen of geegiuphlcu lecatinli or by tiuve, aie abb' I" see them, "Hut if is diflcieiit with music. 'e matter wbeie it is composed, no matter what the nationality or language of the (onipestr, tiic weik inn he brought te us and plu.vnl or sung hi'iu just us will ns iu the mm. poser's heine city, bnuilse lie is speaking In tlii" one universal language of tones. "When ihe cycle of ihe lleeiheviu piano sonata- wlmh I pluvial in Pliiliit'clp1,! i and New Yolk lll-l si iseii was lilst piejeited, I wis tebl by nianv peisen. t lint they would imt 'go'; that I1'" g in nil public did net waul tlicui. Hut tic gciieial public did want Hum, ami lite mein iiii-iium' et t'.e eiiatiis ami the ineie iiiiiicuit 'mi's te ild'staii'l wi'i-e i In outs v.lilcli ntliacti'i closest iitli'iitieui from the audience. mi - I the Faith In Public .Instilled "It 1 a gieat satlsfai tlmi te (be aill-t te have that belief III the de-lie of !, Ameilcan imlille for the best In iiiiislc M jusllfied. This taste for the best bus j,. I roved Immensely in the last ten ycnis. Pint of it lias been due te Ihe gloat in - Illblis of the imilltiy iu the sllllpe of our hue s,viiiihtiiiy eiche-tias ami epcinP" or er or 'anliil'ens, uml peihaps Mill nn re el 't te fie fact that an intnlf ul , cuplc will i.ucly i. main satisfied for a long tluiu with uny thmg but the beet. "Uur country ewes an enormous; debt te iSF?" vi'J Ww-i,f ' - a- ssHVr f nw 'f "YE MIGHT TURN VICIOUS!" W&j SL. N . ' ;',rv X lEmFWR! V-f -A K ---Si.v.iT a' XT tTJ,tLtitjPZ !?!'??' -" - ' T .tsn--.. m f , BBBsyTisTiMifj' -y"' -rf , i :j&""' I'liiludvlplijans en Subjects They p liesl Theotleio Themas, Dr. Leepold Damrescli, 1'ian. Kni'lsel, the Husten Symphony Or cheslr.i ami ether men and organisatiens who in the days when the public taste was formulating stoeil,.liiinly for the best that music offers and gave, nothing else. This they often did at cost te themselves, but these plot rs piefctred te cultivate the lasie of the general public nt a less intlier than le saciihce their high artistic principles and give tilings which they knew were net wen by of them or of their ait. Their work must have sicmcil te them thankless at the lime, but II is new bearing fruit uml will continue le de se us, long ns music lasts. unit n 1 taiiig (irent Werk "We have al-e much for which le thank the women in this ilevchipmeiiL of a ills i rimliiaiing public taste iu iiiiislc. The women's dubs all ever the ceunli.v are doing a glial -trvlie le iiiiislc by the manlier in which p'cy nie giving conceits, hiinglug out the I" -i Winks, cngiging Ihe best or the nitlsts and thus, hmh bv audition and ey -tn.lv. hulhlliig up sphmlid and crltbul iniilii iecs bifeie which evirv arlisl will feel lllsiuieil te give the bcs that he ie I'-ses. "I hit the Anient. in men al-e have some thing te de lii ibi- ic-pect, and the first Ihitig that -heuhl be done Is let the male An i t.iiin le ev ei come Ills hestllitv te the kind et in i-.ii- which lie terms 'lilghbievv .' I. os ,,f .., thing- are net 'liighbiew,' but if tin- ti'iui must be used, why, then, per-han- 'highbrow' luusic isn't such it bad Ihing aflei all, "If tbi feeling is overcome the I tilled Si'iie- will slam! quite as high ns any Hu Hu lepcaii ceuiiti.v In the mallei of the appro appre i union of geed music. We have' developed iii'iidl in the malt rial nit-, and sciences in lids' i mini r.v, us is neic-saiy and expected In a nation which lias net jet attained any thing like its plnsical giewlh, but (he line ails aie new coming into their own and as suming their proper position nationally. Hut '"fun. ihl- can be act eiiipllshc'il tiioieughly Hie men iiiu-1 ri'vi-e .some of their ptecon ptecen ceivnl ideas ns , the relation of these arts le their ceuiiti.v nnd te themselves. America and Hurepc "Tliis fi cling of hostility exists te n greater exlml In this count rj than in Ibiiepe, bin n must net be uudctsloed that e vt iv man in lauepe Other loves music or utientl- D.i'ieiis. Hut even admltlliig the cisc et H persons, is true thai the iil'llude of the .minge Uuicipenii business man tewnid Ihe line arts i, diiTeient friuii Ihut of inn n Amirlcaii men. anil Ihe singu lai' pan of II nil i- that thousands of the-e Aii.cil-nn men who li'ivc oveiceme this lie'ing h.i'e bnmne ciitluisis,. deelecs of h" best In music and verv illscriiuliiatlng beaiei - of II. "The last step iu the appreciation of music In our cmintiv. ami one whlili I am nire will seen le taken. Is fe get the men the Miun.'er men I'speelallv avvnv fieiu that hest'lltv te what thev ftrni "iluhbievv' iu music If thev wciii'd enlv allow lliein-ehes ' eiiiev it thev would aetiinllv etilnv it Here iiimIii the vveiiicn have d fln,, wn. Mid in us ineii hlive been 'ceuvel led' te (lie ilei nine of g 1 music b tkeir wives svviitbenil- or dune-liters. ., wlM t) I ..,, ..,,. . onnei in nii'v never uiitiiiden It ir eui'i-s me miicii vvnieli tliev etiieiv." thin etigbly ll'isslatii ute crewing '" HI"' A riciii enrn s.ivs .liilm :,., ,,r Ciimpeiisallen Signcvv Iiei , , , . . ,, ,. ""' AmcMMin He'lcf Atlinlni-tliillen. l.vcn v 1M i-e ge,- itj ,,lju imt "ilnd, It- .mil. The fun mav vet icvo icve liitlmie ciii'.piii: en Hu Pm fai ins H Ihe I'm.' Ibe v-u Id In-awakened le He, fed v 'bn of m.ile. Hus-iu nnv . the imir I.ei wlih a stip-dy. Hut mi matter Cast veiic nun iiciiii en me waieis, nnd coin- m"ii e mav mint miii up later for of iiielasscs. a supply . The l.eml nilen llspnli'h thai Sir bus f,,.. fr 'hi the 1 Ibe fact ' ui't de I'll imi. n ler i lie limin" M'diii flit' si illug Mulbei'i') Hush I'i le i fm Ih lid's UIIIIIV Cg .. Hen e of Commens In lugs p. urn H t that Is sunn II nil n in, i,,t , r Pn "iiu i i f the i ( -t li nt I, imi I inb i i nd i w h sin - ii, I, Hi, , ,ij 'i vv.'i.i il i the I'hi'ii . n i . ' '' ' Mf I'I i, ti II lleis u in 'u IIIKlll liv.-uj MUIIIIIS I 1111111111 I, UUKUIIUII Miiv cemesje he n member f f,e Uwt tui(l rerJgiiH from his new job, VWirtSN ' flnwU'if3''' What De Yeu Knew? QUZ Who xvns Ithadamanthus? Whnt Is alliteration? Who Is the present chief of staff of th United States Army' Who is the conductor of the San Fran Fran ciseo Symphony Orchestra? State the authorship of "Soldiers of Fer. tune" and "Soldiers Three." What is meant by "Peblacht na h Klreann ? 7. What Is a, Brown Bettv? 8. What Is a connoisseur? 9. Who l.s the Secretary of the Interior In the Hardin? Cabinet? 10. Distinguish between u trapezium and a trapeze. Answers te Yesterday's Quiz 1. Dr. Walter Dnmresch Is the conductor of the N'evv Yerk Symphony Orchestra, or, ns It Is officially styled, the Sym phony Society of New verk. 2. Sir Walter Scott wrote-. "The Lay of th J.nst Mlnsttel," a heroic narrative poem find one of his early successel. before he xvrote the "Wavcrlcjr Nevels." 3. The branches of the reltl.'- language are Clacllc, or Old lrlbh. htlll pneken or lead by ahetit a million people; Erse, or Ohl Scotch, still ppelien In parts of the Highlands; Cymric, btlll a llvltif languuKt! in Wiiliss ; Manx, the dying lamrungp of the' Isle of Man, nnd Hieteu, the langunge of Brittany In l'Vance, I. A nonagon Is a plane figure having nine widen, or, mero strictly Hpeaklng, nine angle's 5, J'.illnelreinc: A word, phrase or sentence which leads the saine both wa8. Kf aniples me: "Mndani, I'm Aduin' ; "Able vvns f etc l saw Clba." C. Jehn .1. PcrshlnK bus the rank and style f lleneral of the Armies." 7. Lord Birkenhead (Frederick 11. Smith, nicknamed "Oullener" Smith) is me Lord Hiuh Chancellor of Knirland. . 8. Baltimore Is called the Oriele City, the colors of the bird being the earne a' these et the Calvert fiimlly, vvhe set tled Maryland. It is also called the Monumental City. , A "non sequltur" iu logic Is an argument which does net fellow en the premise. The words are Latin, meaning, '" docs net fellow." "The Little Corporal" wa3 a nlcknanw applied te Nupoleeti Bonaparte. 10. Today's Anniversaries lbe Jehn Adams, of Massachusetts, wat appointed first Piiltcil States Minister te Dngland. ' 1M)1 Samuel Mcdury, who served M t'overner of Kansas Hnd Minnesota Terri tories, horn at Montgomery Square, Pa Died nt Columbus, O., November 7, 1864. l.seh Hail of Derby becamu Hrltish Pre mier for the beeenil time. 1SU4 Hrltish Cevernment declined te as sist the Danes against the Prussians ana Aust Huns'. D1)L'- Klntnus .deinonstratleu before tni l.'mperer's palace iu Herlin. I.Mi7--I.aily Wallace bequeathed her hus band's famous art collection te the Brltlin nation. li0: German Hmpcrer's yacht Meteer launched at New Yeik and christened W Miss Alice Roosevelt. , llilitl President Wilsen chobe Balabrldft Celbj as Secretary of State. Today's Birthdays Majer Grticr.il Harry F. Hedges, who commanded the Seventy-sixth American IH vision in Prance, born In llosten sixty-two jeurs age. . Duchess of Atlilene. sister-in-law ei (,iieui Mary, born at Windser Castle thirty nine years age. , Jehn Huike, Inte Treasurer of the Unite0 States and former Governer of North 1J 1J keta, bem in Keokuk County, Iowa, sixty tin ee years age. Carl W. Hlddick, Representative In Con Cen yress of the Second Mentana District, born ai Wells, Minn., fifty years age. ., ,. Hisliep (Jeerge II. Hlckley, of the Metli' mllst Kplseepnl Church, born In Phllnoei Phllneei phlu fifty-four ycarti age. Lac Eche After Sunset CALM, Seiei plncid I.ae Eche, Lighted by uinnnllgbt beams 1? And glimmerings of day, Silent and beautiful, Like il.uK eve Iu woman. Ne sound !- Yit It seems A iinl-clcss teund is beard Save giasiepper't chirp, ''e v bell's link lugs, 4... I .....1 ,1,1 .- 1 l..1il .van vv nippoervv ill b geuti-iiib"; .1, Arch. H. Nevvmun, in the Montreal UwJ Star. M i r ' 'vXftw ' t t'll-j&it'SAel lii31wVTJ' ,., t. .. r - " vr j r i fit KkiU'jUS uttSftiit. ii i 'Oi