ssssssssMBJ5SKPSSqe jg-ts iHLij-ii. lj , ... . , ...... i ...'.'. i , . ...... ; rn kiitiimkn v m I f r m W y ii BWW KT iiV m lil ;, ,.W V I I' I' f. rrl I? v1: r fV: KT lb. t U,' i ' vM ' IA P'A i1 I. W !- w F, M. m .. & ii. mt iw i a. I VViWU. V."" iL.'- . - 1"' W1 N. m- Mi" ' 113. W J f ( ;, Bft.v, 9W ' t w. s M H. m vwm B' ,' t.W.&tV it .sivr s.fj, fcubltC IftiWr vt w;vM; j-t: r " . . . Lt.fr-ir2'Lry" vv"" rt itruiu.ii i.vnnvB rnunivv &..." '. CURTIS, PlMtDRNT ?) j! 'SX,,ln y,c Vrmltitnt and Treasurer; HID ft. CMUrim. .lnlir. T1 Willi.... .-v.. kKRwl; ae0I, " sleldnmllh, David E, amtlu.' frjHVTD W. RMII.HT Kdlter 'yt1 c- '"?.... general liudnn Manatfr ubl Hy at rctie Ltnnra Ilultdln . 'H"!??s Citt rrMft'tiini nut!.tl lrRyE.i0,,c M Martlfen Ave. i!? OBI 013 GrVt.Drmn-it IliilMln. - j ' rL - ,. - r fc r , - m - m m. -m-mr w m r m m m m t mr iw m a i imi .- i tBOTWj lit . . . RW? w Kiln's D, ITAHttSOTOM BVOCAl', SV ! fii ? "..Cor. l'enn wlM', lONDON Bl-MEIB VBI0400 , 1302 Tribune VlutMIn UUllCAUSi tnniylvanln Avt. and 14th Kt. ...'life. Sun niHKIIni .Trafalgar Uulldlns Ri'rsmirTtfW tfium .2tJ.KT.IS,X0.,PW?.L,tMlt ' "rvt l erlbera In lalliiJlphla and aurreunlns town t ttie raM of twolve (12) cents per week, pajabla te tha carrier. kPfT.?t!'i u,r..pelnt,'' eul'l of Philadelphia In 2J.l,iSi,!L''."ll,,- Canndji. or United Mtnl-n ros res 8!?JiM,Jt?f u '" flr,y r,0) cn' month. Xv..U-fere 't" r?,'lnfl ."" tl) dollar a month. J.OWOB Suhcrlber within ad tri chanted mat give old aa well i new addres. ELt 8(N)0 VALMT KKYSTONT. MAIN 161 tAddreaa all rommunteatlenti te rvning Publle l.tleer, InitcytnJrnce Square. riillattlpMa. Member of the 'Associated Press ;J,ZB. ASSOCIATED rREBB rxelittivrtv -f Vra. V "" ".ni rejiMbllciitlei, of oil tteua tfitpaleriea credltVJ e t r net ehru-te crrdded Afrr'n'0'""'' " "ll' loc"1 ",u' 'ul,"''l'1 ai' ""''' e refuMlonle? e sjecfal ddpa(eM yrein are ae reserved, rMI..WIphl, Mend. April 3, 1922 SIGNS OF THE TIMES IT WAS remarked en this paice the ether (lav thnr It inu nWn-nlviililn tlmt the CttV !". Ceniipll tnk'hf lnuUr tlmt Vie 1nlr Cem- tatttet! abandon its purpose te Rft nleiii "IUieut n director general or executive heuU. Indications of thu attitude of the Council kave already hemun te nppear. Scnate:' Vare. from whom many of the Oeuncllmcn gladly take orders, say tliat "the biggest man that can be found" should be quickly atlected ns director gcuernl, en the ground that such an enterprlw cannot succucd Without n single responsible directing head. Ceuncllnian llnll, who says that he fUf geated Mr. Hoever for the plaen. Is still of the opinion thnt a man of national reputa tion should be chosen. Ills second choice U Colonel Gecthnls. who built thu Panama Canal, and he believes that the best avail able man should bn secured no matter where ke lived. Councilman WcRleln'e candidate Is W. Frceland Kendrlck, but, candidates nIde, lie is convinced that there should be a single directing head te the enterprise who can pcruade nil lntereti te work harmoniously toward a common end. It Is net necessary te et the cur te the ground te discover the direction lu which public sentiment Is mevlnj;. The .Ur 1 filled with expressions of dissatisfaction with the Way the preliminary arrangements am being ado. Vnlcss heed Is given tn this theri- Is - e telling what seit of a blew-up there WiU be. BOULEVARD MOTOR RULES TWO outstanding meter traffic rules are enforced by the I'nrk Commission en the Falrmeunt drive-.. One Is drawn te pro hibit the use of smoking mo'ercars In the Park. The ether puts n strict limitation en "parking." especially after nightfall. With he extension of the Park Commission" au thority te the new boulevards these rules fcve been applied automatically en thee pen thoroughfares. Se objections have 'turally risen which will be aired tomorrow it n 'hearing arranged by the I'nrk Commis sioners at the request of residents of the Roosevelt Boulevard region. It is unfair, of course, for the commls cemmls commls aleners or any one lse te deny tin right of resident en a large and roomy thorough fare te park his machine nt his own cuib. There is no need for nny ironclad parking restriction en the Iloescvelt lleiilevsini. IJut there is full justification for the (itnnilslun rule against smoking automobiles, The meke from a badly adjusted gasoline 'iigine is ruinous te shrubbery :ind bad for the jen ral health. Moreover, it is a sign of negli gence In the owner or driver of the faulty machine. In enforcing this rule en the new boulevards the l'arl; Coinmlienera present a poed example te the police, who make no serious effort te prevent meter drivers from tilling the air with poisonous gas and smoke even though an ordinance te restrict that general nuisance U en the city's tatute books. THE VANITY OF MAN EFFOItTS of the sophomore class in the "University of Pennsylvania te bring about the ndoptlen of kniekerbeckcrs are temporarily blocked by the objeetien of the bow-legged students. They are loath te banden the full-length trousers which con ceal their curves. This manifestation of vanity would net have been possible a century or two age, when knee -breeches were worn universally. Franklin were them, se did Washington, and se did all their contemporaries. And for formal occasions the breeches were made f silk or velvet and no one complained or ridiculed, as Colonel Harvey has been ridi culed for wearing knee-breeches at the wed ding of Princess Mnry In Londen. Before the knee-breeches cnine into fash ion long hose were worn covering the whole leg and revealing all its irregularities. The hese of the rich went silk and thoe of the peer were woolen. If it were proposed te go far enough baek for the precedent, it could be understood why the University stu dent might ebjeet te the adoption of the costume of the fifteenth or the sixteenth century: but why there should be objection te the costume of Franklin it is difficult te Understand en any ether theory than that the students with peer legs are tee vain te wish te exhibit them. New the flappers with their short skirts but that Is something else again. MRS. VAN WINKLE THERE are two cities of Washington the visible and the invisible. One is the brightly lit stnge upon which the great figures of politics and diplomacy move mera or Icsh impressively and speak their IIiiph and recite ancient platitudes and occasion ally de noble things. The ether Is a com cem com unltyef fertunntc adventurers, of moneyed, well-dressed, well-fed, mysterious men, who appear as the Informal ambassadera of such groups as desire from the Government privi leges or opportunities of the sort denied tn tie average man In the ordinary routine- of gaisteuce. . Thee groups are various and Innumerable, and their representatives, tipsters, spies, advisers, wire-pullers, lobbyists, creeks, blackmailers and Informers arc n veritable horde. A great deal of money passes through their hands. They live high. And they are the peeple who seem te have been hocked by the discovery that Mrs. Minn C. VaB Winkle, who Is, officially, n lieutenant of tha District police assigned te the duty ' at guarding the welfare of young Women in f!ta National Cnpltnl, does nnt'wnste her tlma s) number. iiecently mere iiave been Wrests from tun police in Washington of "jMktsidaleus exposures n fleet hi g Mine of the j&WfU'SBewa mm t-eu-iiiipuiincii assistant dtjf.im -tha Federal Government." These threats VMVfrbMn followed by a, well -organized it te rerce Mrs. en Winkle out of ut. Aadairs. Vau Wla . .W -m.JTg.iri.-!' T te try te force her out of office. "I knew sciences of tales management and cemraer T i . . ........ -.-. .. I AtVj vrlVUi A JJ M. ,x. jxn.r f tee much for them," says she. probably does. Washington, ilndej" the surface. i, of ceurite, no belter than any ether large and busy city with n mixed population. When some of our ether troubles are ever it may bn worth while te agitate for n clean-up of Washington. There nre tee many peeple about the sent of government who have no visible means of support. The sort of ex posure which Mrs. Van Winkle might be able te start might cause some of them te seek ether places of residence. It Isn't re assuring te hear of high jinks erganised in lobbyists' palaces for some of the miner politicians. Ner Is It nice te hear from Mrs. Van Winkle that Washington's high rolling lobbyists seem tti be regarded even by some of the police officials ns u specially privileged class. NO PORTENTS ATTEND THE PASSING OF A MOCK CAESAR The Death of Charles Hapsburg In Smit ing Madeira Adds the Crowning Irony te the Tale of a Hapless and Out Out Meded Dynast firnlW heavens themselves blaze forth the death of princes." Caesar's wife, and i-ensequently nbeve suspicion, was net nlene in this belief, of which there was te her swift continuation In the most famous assassina tion of all history. The celestial obbligato was impressive. Thunder- shook the cupltel. The earth trembled. With appropriate ges tures great Julius fell. In the absence of detailed reports from Madeira, it may be nssumed that the Usiinl delightful weather prevailed in thnt Insular paradise which was the pleasant place of exile of the dying Hapsburg. Perhaps the modern heavens "are democratized ; perhaps merely Indifferent. Whatever the cause, It Is certain that little relationship can be traced between their moods and the wreck of thrones or the fate of obsolete monarchies. Something mere than the passing of a King in needed te ruffle modern skies, even though he be a Caesar. Fer such, according te :i strained but onee potent theory, Charles Hapsburg was. If his death Is of comparatively blight prac tical importance historically, it Is fraught with solemn significance. "That race," declared a recent commen cemmen commen t.iter In appraising the Hapsburg line, "is a mad and sanguinary anachronism.'' Yet it nun thnt race which four centuries nge dominated both the old eastern and the new-found western worlds. Charles the Fifth has been called eery inch an emperor. According te sixteenth century standards, the nscrlptlen is justified. That singular hypothesis, the Hely Reman Kmpire, designed te irnltat" the mastery of the Caesars, was quickened Inte new reality tinder Charles Hapsburg, virtual lord of Kurepc. King of Spain, through his father's marriage with the weak-minded heiress of Ferdinand and Isabella; ruler of Germany, dictator of the destinies of Italy, conqueror of Tunis, Inheritor of the Netherlands and claimant of all the vast Americas save lirazll. However perverted and untimely, senie of the invulnerable pride ami aristocracy of the Hapsburg is understandable, lle-idc this line the HolifniselleriH arc eliinbers, pcivenus. up-tnrts. Hut the new world, whiih in the deepest sense is without seegraphlial division, is Impatient with mere -oueleusnc$ of the accident of birth. King--, unless shrewd enough te sae their faces by voluntary cf fac"mcnt or by the exhibition of forthright qualities of uitlrenhlp, lire profoundly dis credited. Geerge of Great IJrltniii is an amiable symbol ; Victer Emmanuel of Italy a con stitutional leader of some ability, and Al Al foneo of Spain an Indirect descendant of the Ilnpsburgs, by the wa retains his throne largely through personal charm. It Is as men, net iih ineunrclis, that these three surviving royal rulers of major Euro pean nations are tolerated. The ScandW navinn Kings are citizens in fine robes, suit able for pageantry or dedication ceremonies. Tt was the misfortune of the Hapsburgs, undistinguished In the main for notable gifts either of the mind or heart, te remain per sistently unresponsive) te the march of civ ilization. Fer nt least a century and a half the chronicle of the HnpsburgH is dark nnd terrible. Uneulightenment rnthur than de liberate tyranny was their bane. The fates have been remorseless. The record Is ensanguined with murders, sui cides, nssas'-lnatlens, slilpw recked dynasties and acute persennl griefs and miseries. Marie Antoinette, slain en the altar of impulsive and irresistible democracy ; the Empress Elizabeth, perhaps the least cul pable of the deemed heuxi, assassinated ; Maximilian, executed for a mad attempt te implant medievalism in the Western Hem isphere; Crown Prince Rudelph, suicide in a sensual orgy; Archduke Jehn Nepomuck, of destiny unknown; Archduke Ferdinand, whose death provoked a world cataclysm; Charles, bungling aspirant for a vanished threne ever an evaporated empire these are a few of the many tragic figures which crowd the poignant romnnce of the hapless Hapsburgs. The last adult of the line was in certain respects a pitiable figure. Apparently in capable of accommodating himself te nctunl conditions, his end amid the sunlight and Bewers of Madeira Is exquisitely ironical. Philosophers mny discern an application of tlw doctrine of nteucmnnt in the descent and prolonged degeneration of the Haps burgs. It is net easy te conceive that, lave, for a handful of Infatuated reactionaries, the chil dren of Charles ever will provide inspiration for royalist activities of any consequence. After 700 years the curtnin falls en the Hapsburg. The death of Charles, although it provokes no stir, Is in a sense a relief. The heavens under the new dispensation are smiling, implacable. MAKE WAY FOR ART AN INCENTIVE te artistic consciousness is tn the elaborate and attractive pro gram for Art Week which will be celebrated in this city from April L'2 te April ). The spur te self-rcullzatlen along esthetic lines is thoroughly justified and the stigma some times attached te the term exploitation need net be feared. Athens and Florence, foremast urban names lu art. were uimMinmed te exalt themselves nnd the achievements of their citizens in painting, sculpture nnd archi tecture. The resplendent gilded hey of Florence, who died of over-drceratlon, rep resents perhaps an excess of csthctiu zeal, but the bpirit of the great carnival through which, he gleamed la worth emulating. There is little danger thnt sincers art will ever suffer from undue advertisement or I th U wtt aa a UtU And she clal efficiency. A UNfc WUMAn OtCO mm. clal efficiency. The promoters of Philadelphia Art Week nre net seeking te glorify the nttlstlc fiber of this community beyond Its deserts. Their object is recognition of actual accomplish ment and nn awakening of popular interest in the expression of taste nnd beauty. Art works of high distinction are te be exhibited in shop windows throughout cen tral Philadelphia, local art clubs will held special displays:, the school authorities will co-operate, painters and sculptors of nn nn tlennl reputation and of Philadelphia origin wilt spend n stimulating week here, the quaint charm of Seuth Camnc street nnd Its little- clubs will be emphnslzcd nnd the unique season will close with a picturesque and colorful public fete In RlUcnheusc Squnre. Such is the interesting program In prepa ration. Reth In Its objects nnd Its character It differs markedly from the sort of cam paigning prevalent In American cities with a bent toward what is called material progress. ' Everything In its place. Philadelphia has been long and rightfully aware of Its In dustrial eminence. Trim art is seldom clamnretiB nnd Is Inclined te be disdainful of the assertive spirit. Hut it will lese nothing by a 'straightforward and vivid nppeal for public consideration. The laurels of Philadelphia In the art field arc honorable and authentic. Civic nc knewledgment of this fact will he refresh ing and entirely in order. LODGE AND LONDON COLONEL HARVEY will hnve te make a wero break than nny of which he has been guilty before President Harding will recall him from Londen. Mr. Harding appointed Ihe colonel against the advice of his friends because the colonel wanted the efiice and because he had been useful in the campaign. It wan the kind of an appointment which every President tins mnde. Mr. Harding is a friendly man, tol erant of the peculiarities of ethers. It was his human side which dictated the Harcy appointment. This docs net justify It, however. The colonel was net n worthy successor of the distinguished men who have filled the pest, and since ha tins been in Louden he has net exhibited nny remarkable diplomatic apti tude. Men lu touch with the British capital are saying that the early recall of Harvey Is expected there, and reasons for it nre given which will net 8UTprla these acquainted with him here. Hut It is likely that he will be ullewcd te held en until he gets rendy te come home unless he makes he serious a break that he will have te be removed. The suggestion of Senater Ledge as a possible successor te Harvey Is doubtless mnde In order te see hew the country will take it. Considerable opposition te the re election of the Scnnter bus developed in Massachusetts. He will he seventy-two yenr.s old in Mny, nnd would be seventy eight when Ills term expired if he were re elected. It is conceivable that he would like te letlre from the Senate and spend the ne.t few jenri lu the Ameilcan Embassy In Londen. He has been a member of the Committee en Foreign Affairs for a long time and its chairman since the Republicans came Inte control of the Senate. If ap pointed he would enter the diplomatic ?erv ?erv ice with a better equipment than l.s common. But Ledge in Londen would cause the cynical te smile. There hns been no mere persistent twister of the lien's tail in American public llfe.fer the last generation than lie. These, familiar with the ancestry of a large group of Bosten and Massachu setts voters liuve assumed that the Senater's official attitude toward Great Britain was dictated by considerations of political ex pediency, and that the-e same considerations were lu part responsible for his attitude toward the Versailles Treaty. New, te Send nn Anglophobe te Louden te strengthen the ties of friendship between England and America might be successful. It certainly would lie audacious, and it might also be the most tubile kind of domestic politics. ANTI-HATE HA'l E, deliberately organized, has become thu newest of political und economic weapons. Hut hate is a destructive force. It begets hatred. That is why the lirsti statement of ptincipled of Alansen R. Houghten, the new American Ambassador te Germany, has a most refreshing sound. Mr. Houghten isn't going te take any manu factured hate with him te Berlin. He has no faith in it. He Is convinced that it can de no geed. And of course he is right. Much of the hate prevalent In Europe has been mail's te order by politicians. The, masses of the plain people, the driven mul titudes in nil the affected countries, nre help less victims of this meutal poison. They inny yet have te bleed for it ngiiln. It Is possible te held the Germans te their obli gations without perpetuating hatred against nil of them. And It is true, as Mr. Hough Hough eon observes, that the hater will inevitably suffer mere from his hatred than the hntee. It Is about time that, the world cleared Its mind of the remnants of some of the mere reckless war propaganda and remembered that there are women nnd children In Ger many nnd a new generation, and that some thing must be left of that Mist liberal and democratic element that would imve bet up a real democratic government In Germany within a very few jears If it hudn't been deliberately overwhelmed nnd mnrtyred Jn the wHr. A FEATURE OF THE FAIR THE enterprise of the Pullman Company In premising an extensive exhibit at the fair of 10-0 is replete with interest. In all great international expositions displays of agencies of transportation hnve bicn con spicuous fentures. Visitors te the Centen nial of 1870 were fascinated by the locomo tive section typifying the marvels of railway pregreu. It we'uld be amusing te study ene of thew mennrchs of the stiel read today watch-chain te.s compared with their huge Impressive descendants. An Instructive ex hibit of passenger-conch development also could be mndp. Vestibules were virtually unknown in the Centennial age. All-steel conches were decades from existence. Anether chapter in the history of railway rolling stock wan emphasized at the Colum bian Fair In Chicago, where the gayly painted English compartment carriage were found surprisingly comfortable and net with out n certain quaint charm. It Is presumed that the leading foreign railways will be represented nt the Sesqul Centennial, and interesting comparisons will naturally be made with the thoroughly standardized, large and solidly built Ameri can "corridor" coaches. The progress of sleeping cars nnd such changes as liuve been effected In night travel will, of course, be accentuated. Everybody can remember the barbarous pigeon-holing of passengers in constricted upper and lower berths, the In convenience of lavatory "facilities," the difficulties of' undressing and dressing in crnmped quarters, the meager ventilation, the waiting In line in the aisles. The public will unquestionably be eager te note basle Improvements In the system. By the way, what nre some? An it was the National Onus en Operators Ceal Association that halted the Federal Trnde Commission investigation of the coal indus try, H Is up te the coal operators them selves te prove their allegation that they can't reduciHlie nrlce of coal without reduc ing wages. And, Incidentally, it has never been proved that tbey want te reduce the jrtatacaesu 1 I ' i The Making of a Qardan Furnlshst Anether Illustration of the Fact That What Yeu Qlve Yeu Get Bjr SARAH D. LOWRIE I SAW n most Ingenious toy the ether day that n woman hnd made te Illustrate the vnrleus stages her garden hnd gene through before It became the charming nnd complete thing that it Is. It was ft small model made out of painted cardboard thnt would fit en an ordinary sized kitchen table. She poured sand ever the tnble nnd patted out the ter races and vnrleus slopes of the surface, nnd this was covered with a green felt cloth. Upen the green ground the vnrleus parts of the garden were placed, from the uummer house nt ene end te the wall and tree vista nt the ether end, with the flowered terrace, the peel, the parterre and shrubs and trees nnd paths nil dena in miniature nnd rendy In be put down or lifted up and. put down some ether place as the fancy might suggest. Te her nil these separate parts were sepa rate chapters in the history of hrr garden. Fer the tiling had grown little by little and had needed much adjusting before it settled into Its final shape. It would have been difficult for any ene who had net known it in its various stages te be sure what came first, or what had been the finishing touch te that garden ; but one thing wna very ap parentit had the same characteristics which marked its owner. It wan a comfertnblo garden, and she was n most comfertnblo per son. It had certain exaggerations, certain unfulfilled aspects, as though It had been sketched in places and never filled out, but mnde the best of with a kind of amused geed temper, as though its owner said of it nnd of herself: "Oh. give us time te im prove and meantime let's enjoy the view." THE plants had nn nir of having grown where they pleased and when they pleased and being cheerful, but rather so-se of their kind; nnd the owner said they were exactly like her bcrvants, self-indulgent nnd very obliging, most agreeable nnd rather untidy. She was showing us the little model, net with n view te illustrating -her own idiosyn crasies, but te prove that no two persons will urrnnge n plot of ground alike, for as she held piece after piece of the garden make-up in her hand walls, rocks, terraces, peels, scats, trees, flowers, shrubs, bteps, eta she bade us onlookers guess where they went, or, if some of us knew, oho bade ns say where 'we would prefer them. And It was qulte true we seldom agreed about any thing. She snld that that had been true of her own family, se much se thut from the first, even though the garden was hers, she had had te muke each change against opposition rather than with co-epcrntlon. Seme ene asked her hew she had had the perscverance te go ahead. And she replied quite gravely that the garden had been a llfe-navcr te her in mere tlinn eue respect. She was just ene of n large family, and her mother was a notable manager and her father a master of his property by convic tion rather than accident ; thnt is, he called everything "my." even the dining-room tabic. She snld that as a girl she did net hnve a bureau nor n chair of her own, much less u room, but this garden that had been n waste and rough slope en the back let was given Inte her keeping and acknowledged te be hers. She said it was the only thing except her bits of jewelry and n few books and her clothes that she owned until she was ever thirty, and thnt it meant every thing te her both as n possession and as a thing te plun for nnd work with. She in sisted that it had eaed her from being nn old maid. She hnd worked out se many repressions and worked in se many big. com fertable realizations ns she dug und delved there. She affirmed that If she had made the garden, the garden had returned the compliment by making her. SOMETIMES I wonder if gaidening would net be the best cure that the world pro vides for impatient and even sick nnd sad feiiN. I knew by cvpericnen thnt it is a perfect cure for a jaded, impatient mind and for a nervous, fagged body. The mere jerking out of the things thnt have arrogated te themselves a place un asked In the garden is an exercise thnt gain rid of many a grudge that has fettered one'a spirit. "Out you go, you great sucker! What business have you te cat the chil dren's bread? Ah, liul Yeu InsidieiiB, creep ing, choking runner, come out of this! T knew you for what you are. though you try te leek like one of my seedlings. Yeu have crept in here under cover of the dark ! New see here, grass! Nene of this! Your place is en thujawn. You've mistaken your va cation. Yeu could net grew a flower If you lived here all summer, nnd you knew it.'"' It Is a great relief te speak te the in truders in your garden thut are called weeds ns you would like te but mey net speak te the intruders In your life thnt nre culled enemies. Then, as little by little the ground Is cleared of Its living obstructions and n breathing space is made for the seedlings nnd the sprouting perennials, the ether side of you, the protecting, grateful, hopeful side. gets a chance. Even tjie little seedlings thnt you hnve te thin out te give room for the ones that are te grew lustily in the enlarged space have little entitles in your mind nnd you feel sorry for them that thev are se arbitrarily chosen net te live, nnd you scratch about lu some less crowded pnrt of the garden te give them a chance nt the sun and niln, te Mower if they ran. And the perennials that have been winter hurt or that have ceme en tee fnst for the reluctant spring te warm them, you coax along as you would u sick animal that hu.s grown old in your company. I AM never se much interested In my plants when they are in flower ns Teiien they nre little and frail. When the garden Is Ip full tide of bloom it is the people thnt ceme te enjoy it that I enjoy most. I very early get thu habit of liking te have mv flowers picked by ether people. Before I hnd a garden I noticed thnt the owners of gardens or their gardeners always picked the flowers te be given away. They obvi ously wished te preserve the symmetry of the garden and yet nppear generous. They always left the (lowers en the stems that I particularly admired, and they never picked the bouquet in the proportions that seemed te me desirable. Se when I came te have n garden I took for my share the fun of grow ing the flowers, and gave away the eholce of picking them te the garden's visitors, from the littlest baby te my mother. The littlest baby nnd my mother picked their bemftiets just alike very large flowers with very short steins. .Sometimes it would mean n Illy or a rose that was exceedingly effectUe glowing just where it was, but though I held my breath ut the choice I never Interfered once I had offered the hoa hea pitnllty of the place. I thought, "If the baby grows up she will think of tills garden aa a royal giver of itself!" Curiously enough, the time my garden la most generous te me is net In summer, when it Is all premise or nil bloom, hut In tb winter and very early spring before a tengue of green shows above the ground; about this time of the year, when the seed catalogues are things i te ponder ever and you wonder If the bulbs hnve steed the zero weather in February. Fer what the garden stands for te me is hope. And hope is a better youth preserver than any beauty lotion can recom mend, and I am triumphant te find tbnt It comes dancing through my winter-worn garden before there Is the least touch of spring in the air and rejoices my heart with wliat may be, if the spring nnd I only have luck and the seed catalogues only tell a third of the truth. Newark, N. .T which has been paying $3U,000 BrealifBst Feed and Economy u year or gnruage (lis- DOSal. has decide,! (. huv $25,000 worth of pigs. The pigs will ea't the garbage; the garbagu will fatten the pigs; ami (tin nnle of the pigs will fatten the city trensury te the tune, it is expected, ef (I per cent en the Investment. Ni'w Yerk contractors are nreiuUInz te make ssi-hnir'n loderless. It Is jiet alleged .that this is a u te dtafci r ' f ' 1 jssssBULXjirTKfaUsvKasCais .' " - , - i s . S r sla9sBlssssssssHh5gi3 f. NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! fiaily Talks With Thinking Philadelphiuns en Subjects They Knetv Best DR. MARTHA TRACY On a Balanced Diet A DIET made up of the proper feed de ments is just as cssentlnl te geed health as feed in sufficient quantities, according te lr. Martha I). Tracy, dean of the Weman's Medical College aud an acknowl edged authority en dietetics. "A great many children are undernour ished," said Dr. Tracy, "and tills condition results as frequently, if net mere se, from Jgimruiieu en the part of the parents as te what the child should cat as it does from poverty. Children, especially, should have much fruit and milk ns an csscntinl part of their diet. Beth the parents and the children themselves should.be given the phys ical reason for the diet recommended te them.-nnd we have found thnt they fellow the Instructions much" mere willingly and effectively when they knew why they nre. doing It. They should knew what feed is for and what certain feeds accomplish in the body. "A child which is undernourished cannot by nny possibility be be efficient as would be the case if it were properly fed. Me:t adolescent girls de net cat sufficient feed, and often whnt they de eat is net of the right kind : the result is that most of them are only from 50 per cent te 70 per cent efficient in their studies or work. Definite Purposes of Feed "One of the great points which should be impressed upon peeple is that feed serves definite purposes In the body. There nre sevcrnl of these uiceifie kinds of feed. Tim first is that which Is transformed into tis sue, bone, etc., nnd In tills clabs ceme the meals and certain of the heavier feeds. The second class is that which produces energy. These feeds ure net transformed into tis sue, but nre used up In very much the sumo maimer ns an engine burns its fuel; they are translated into heat and used up. The bodily tissues cannot be properly built up nnd the energy necessary te de work be created without the right kind of feed, "The chief tlssue-bulldlng feeds nre meat, eggs and milk, together with certain vege tables. The vegetable proteins nre physi ologically incomplete nnd net equivalent te the. proteins of animal meats. Te give the body a sufficient amount of proteins from vegetables alone an enormous quantity must be eaten, nnd the persen who fellows n strict vegetarian diet thus has his eholce between net getting nn adequate amount of proteins or of getting indigestion through over eating. A strict vegetable diet, te be effec tive, must be rc-enferced by milk and eggs. "The chief energy-producing feeds are the starches, sugar and fats. This matter of the relative feed values is net guesswork; it has been scientifically demonstrated. The eung. vigorous udult person uses up nbeiit 1000 heat units n day doing absolutely nothing. If he works or moves about much there must be a proportionate increase in these units, .Matt' Youths Undernourished "But in spite of this obvious fnct there are many young persons who ncqulre through their feed only from l.lOO te 1800 cnlerles a day. They cannot expect te de vigorous work en this amount, nnd it cannot be ex pected of them. Seventy per cent of this group are peer In their work. "Nature's pretest against such conditions takes the form' of it less of weight. The body, deprived of the right amount of feed, drnws upon its own tissues te supply energy. The humnn body is different therein from n locomotive. The latter steps when Its fuel is exhausted, but the body burns up Itself until the point Is reached where the heart and respiratory organs step from Innnltlen. "One of the main troubles In this arti ficial civilization of ours Is that we have developed false appetites. We eat at all hours of the day, nibbling between meals, nnd when the time comes when real feed Is set befere us there Is no appetite, and little of the needed feed Is eaten. "Anether very important factor In the matter of feed 1; that of the vltamines. Thcbe consist of feed which does net seem te be used, lu the building of tissues ,! similarly uu net mwiii ie mippiy energy Ve thorn will ll lllrft reEllllU tn lll.ll If h If . ..ta i ss x -rf pguspan i i.5" system witli regularly . Just what effects they produce we de net yet definitely knew, but health and strength suffer severely if they nre lacking in thu general feed scheme. "There nre three sets of these vltamines nnd three sits of conditions arise when they are emitted from the feed. The first of these vltamines is known as fat soluble A, and it is found in butter fats, leafy vegetables Mich ns spinach, lettuce, etc., and in egg egg jelk. A very little of It is also found in tin- root vegetables with yellow pigment, such as carrots nnd sweet potatoes. It is also found in milk. A young animal will remain stunted In growth without this fat soluble A. no mutter hew much of the ether hiJl,8...00'1 ,if 't'lves. It will net grew without It. and there will also be a tendency Sdui f '.h ilecs net remove this fat rfnl ,r A fren U' u,llch 1h '" important depends largely upon this feed element. . Vulue of Unlnuhrd Grains ..7J" h,c.T',,.f tlie, vltamines is known as water soluble B and it Is found in most h'2',u5fc"" l'0tlctilarly in the husks nnd f , 'fi "', - l""n persons insist upon polished rice or milled flour nnd meal, they nre .rating feed which luis had one of iu most valuable elements taken away from it. Ihe absence of water soluble B will eventually result such diseases as berl- ..,rt2rinicu?1.1" n'.,d mu'Ulde paralysis. n,M YllPri '. of course, a rare divine in Occidental countries where them nr len y of vegetables, but it is very cnime, the Orient, and virtually all ef'i, my be r,,c , te the use of the white polished rlc . f which the., people cat very 'large qui title" Ve tar a M.minr ease In our mv n " "tr; in the use f ,wy wMll , , "try of who le-grain bread here and of t , !,,. polished rice In the East we 171 me,,, he wiping out of diseases of this kind! "" J-he third is named water soluble ( I is found n most f.csh fowls, .J,,,!,; nVh ""," nml vegetables. B 1, must be fresh; when cnumd or dr e.l ' Miluitble element disappears. One t'ause of Scurvy "The continued nbuuice of water soluble p will eventually result in scurv w eh In the days of balling vessels, who, ,, I went without fresh feeds for periods f months nt a time, was von common v,. soluble C Is found in oreinTe ami l!'" and nlse In the juice of m,ee"d s " Mm. i parents feel that they canie give the' childicn oranges durlnc il.e i,,;i, ,"V." iffnr, 'El!!. 'i'f"""f 'nnet h he flif ttiirnm.n ,ftii-i.i.. "".ij nut b purpose admirably. The extreme luck of vita iere ducc stunted ee, Hn " ?',M,.?.W"1 Pre- it is n mutter of .IWI...1...I '. " Villi two .,.! just Hew many t are caused by It Is last m in...i ',' . ""i...a' utter lack of the iiiuiuuici Will no, mete n ).!il. ...J. '.i. ." .?MarJ te pre- an, equally necessary 0 mil, 1,fl5'"'",s "'" insure long Uf0 In ,e adult. t,ln V'ROr nn'1 Ibero is also the element nt ni i without which the hones Z ? fca,n'1""' be built and uialntnTned. Th3 ' ' T''".! largely in milk, leafy vegetable. Te, '""V"1 with the husks left en. All of ihef,J, Rr"'"s must haiea place 1 the feed if hnfi01"?1.'" dren and adults are te enjoy "ifc1' cL- K rai, je tw faft u mill) uneer ine tiiiniiim... .. ... . ir . Ice rniiiil.lU... . ".."' Ol UK Ice regulations. v,,- .i,; " "": ' "" .erv . ..I..!i . . te nn executive. Which ,1,,.. ". .i.",.."'?' "ln n nam can asisisa damn them necessarily mcil;:'-!n:se man times n 1,r.M7.'"1 ' ,KH". "" "in some. mill; MUCH I iiti., I.. as? of m en was & - at nxecutve; for they t .,,..,. " '"" i nc insuiien inn e, When n, i' . """ reaclirH that point l j 1 ".. , "'"'"nte perfection whjrc.lt rlecu 0 iv1', W" SHORT CUTS April came in en a watering cart. Mendell en Harmony suggests Spoeflj en I'urpese. The gang is preparing te give Pinckj .some net punches. The coal strike proves that the expect occasionally Happens. Lives of politicians during camps.! remind us that the .State never is, but alwsl ie ue, eicst. Charles Hapsburg nnd Nnpoleen Beal pane uicii in cuc, but there the leu blance ends. The meteorological Browning, la edltien--"Oh te he lu August, new td .priru ncrer Kings of old were said te die In odor of sanctltj. Mndclru was the cbttl nt late ler Charles. Savages in the Ulterior of Africa tJ taken up the modern forms of jnzi:. W they deserve nothing better. They start. it. I lie Mnyer has had n radiophone rj celver instnllcd in ills office in the City Hu Te mnke it easier te get his car te 3 greuuu : the Soviet stenographers hnve cUril for the Cienen conference in chnrgc oil chaperenc. Anil yet they say the Belsheti no; riiuicai. The dismissed executive staff of Buieau et Engruvinz nnd Pi-imln.- im, eeicred thnr. when president Harding M in- into mini. I'llfeclinzlv reirnrrilptu nt it.,. ..,,!h. i the controversies, there' nre eme eleranl of the public who are inclined te call ere riijnt- ix nun. Te consider that the Iden of n l .mini I s.emn Mist wilderness would be pleasing I home memberc of the Senate is te ronslel tee i-iirieusiv. I iibllc interest in the Ceal strike A probably grew acute when public utllltU are affected. ,hm ,lt present the presH ... ..i.iiii lu-imicf iiuay.s tears. What De Yeu Kneiv? QUIZ 1. What niiV,c,ilw'",1.,,',l,1',nt was known i " .i i ,h ill wftlent active volcano tiie weru . M..i i ",.'"v. '."'tvuuiiiiiY : "' im wtr Atropes. rllhe and Lacked hi classle mythology? J 4. Unlet- the Jteiiinn Empire, whnt did til r i,.,""' .,lu' "iRnlfyV ... bii lb the origin of the word httchiul 6. In what century did Sir William Ulacfl i-'i ," lameus conimenlntor Lngllsh law. live? , imv Kl I!)8K0U 7 Un!?r, wh't President wan a sirJ .!? i fccci-etnry of State'.' A- at lM.a Ribbon '. 10. Whnt color lu ecru? James Answers te Saturday's Quiz 1. A Jno table, wh'eii H round and of mi ornte p.r.e, derlvea Its name from iramii of loe, a Kronen card gH Ihe word loe la uu abbreviation lantorleo," which in u corruption the branch "lanturclii," tlie rcftsl a reng, equivalent, perhaps, te "W roe-loo-re-Iay." 2. The Canary Islands, In the Atltft -, r.ic,ean.' Meiur. te Spain. . 3. Jlenld Amundsen discovered tha Sew Pole. 4. Croesus, the richest person of the snej; world wait king of Lydla, Asia Ml and lived In itn capital city. Sardl . 5. blcrta melius a long, lagged mount chain. The wcrrd 7h from the Hp und or Glnully from tlm Latin W seirn, ' meanlnir a saw. ii. Louisiana was named aflir Leuis XI1 i t Km nce 7 ('iiiiiiihur n led uieicurie niltilildcl v nil lull. i.. J he chill nctv of lJucilitriv. the t' turntable, r 'U-h In Khalicspf ,. . senicm. -.iniili Ade About Ne""' j, .n iH'Jtiitrni la u Hue .onnectlng ;' a ,et. '"i eme mean annua) lempii v. i no e yen ueaaiy, sins are jprjiw.'' uYy,,ufc mutteny, ! 1 i t y.i. 1 . ai.s ,-w . ..(hiii-h . &A !Ji
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers