Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, April 12, 1922, Night Extra, Page 8, Image 8

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MU. PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY
BrlR CTnUS H. K.- CURTIS, PsamNT
Kehn C. Martin, Vlc rrcildint and Triurrs
I MCterlM A. Tjrler., secretary! Chant II. Luillni-
I '.-.'.' !. PhlllD H. Celllnl. Jehn H. William .Tnhti J.
t. fft Hwraaiin (Iab 1.- ifliililaiHllli h.utJ n ......
I 1. ; Plrwilera.
f, ffi'PAVlD BMU.ET ndlter
ijjy, iu Juan c. AiAitii.N..
..v a.AB .. mm. ...
O-n-ral Hilnm Manar
jj'.,V'".V- Pll1I.S,1 .I.IK. a Tntln T .Mn T....I !--
U '??!-. Independence Square, Philadelphia.
": ATtiHTIC ClTt lYa--Unien n.llUlna
'fv. Independence Square, lh
i "Imp. rAtiiwnc CiTt rrw
AiM Kaw Te .1
C&J Danetr 70
...e Maaien Ae,
701 Kuril TlnlMlnr
Ij'jtt. Lecii 013 Olobe-Dtmeerat ttulldlni-
j'CaiCAOO 1302 Trlbun0 UulMini
VM-tve tlt?tlf ifia.
B WilMiNOTOMailaiatT.
P3?V . N"' '' Cor. I'ennnjlvanla At. and 14th St,
if 2S,W y Bc-sic The, sun Pullctlne
j-onde.n jjcbiiu Traralgar Ilulldlnc
svn.soniPTiejj tcrms
, The Kr-MX.1 lrun I.ii-n U aervexl te sub
erlhera In Philadelphia and aurreunlnir tewm
at His rate of twelve (12) i-nta per week, payable.
te the carrier,
Br mall te point eutalde of Philadelphia In
The United SUtee, Canada, or United Smtm pe-.
aeuleni, pollute free, fifty (SO) centi per month.
It (10) dellaid per year, payable In advanra.
Te all foreign reuntrlen ere (11) dnllar a month.
Netici Sutiecrtbera wishing aditree- charted
tnuit cle old as -ll ae nen' addrets.
Etr. W WiLMT KEYSTONE. M UN 101
tTAddreaB all communications la Hitnlna I'ubUe
l.tdgtr, tntlcvtudtnce Square, 'MfuilrfpMe,
I Member or the Associated Press
TUB ASSOCIATED MESS ezctnilvttv
Wtfed te t)i wr for -ejiuM(catteii of all vrwi
iittatthft credltrd te it or net otdeneiar crtdlled
in thia taper, and also the local tines publitheil
Oiereln.
11 HM at rttuWcatlen of special dliratcht
aerrtn ere olio reeerved.
rhlliJflpl.li, Urdntidey, April U. 122
INSTRUCTIONS
CITIZENS of rhllndelphia who fntieil te
register lart autumn or who lime
chnngfd their residences since that time
mut be enrolled nt their division pullinE
places today in order t qualify for etinc
In the spring primary at which the Repub
lican nud Democratic nominees for (Sov (Sev (Sov
erner. Lieutenant (toverner, Secretary of
Internal Affairs and Senators and Itepr
entatives from Penusylvaniit are te be
chosen.
The hours of registration arc ftein 7 in
the' morning until 1 in the afternoon, :iml
from 4 in the afternoon until 10 in tin
eveniuff. The opportunity of Republicans te de
liver the State from cynical machine nil'1 is
approaching. The piimary election t
which the issue will be decided falls en
Slay It). I'eren who have net registered
will be denied th- right te vote.
The 'nomination of Uifferd Pinchot for
Govern.? would Iip vlrnially assured bj a
full registration. It is the se-called '-bet
elements" who are proverbially delinquent
when registration days roll around. Today
is an excellent oc:Heu for liting up te
principle.
J
THE BROOKS LAW VALID
'ACCORDING te the L'nited States Su
J. preme Court the IJroeks License Law of
this State is valid, as it "does net purport
te authorize or sanction an thing which the
Eighteenth Amendment or the Velsf-ad a. t
prohibits."
The act gives te the State supervision
ever all places iu which alcoholic beverages
are sold. Neither the Eighteenth Amend
ment nor the Velstead act deprived the
State of its right te superlse these plaee.
As the Wener net is an amendment of the
Brooks Law, reducing the license fees and
providing that no liquor" forbidden b Fed
eral law mliy be sold in the State, it may
be assumed that the Supreme Court deeisieu
by Implication validates this new law uKe.
The effect of the decision Is te put the en
forcement of the law up te the State au
thorities. If men holding a license sell
liquors containing mere than one-half of
1 per cent of alcohol they are liable te
punishment under the State law. and If
they are net punished then the State ,tu ,tu
theritIe" are neglecting their duty
MR. SUNDAY'S VISIT
IT WAS odd te hear the Rev. Billy Sunday
repeating in a voice of thunder te a
large audience at the Academy of Music
the crudest, silliest and most barbarous lie
Invented about the Russian people Mnce the
flrst revolution. But there the falsehood
stands In the text of the address which Mr
Sunday delivered en Monday evening under
the auspices of the new Law Enforcement
League. "The nationalization of women."
cried the noted evangelist, "Is u principle
accepted and encouraged by the Ilol Ilel
shevlsts!" The disturbing thing Is nut that u pro
fessional crusader of the light should repent
at this late date an assertion that even the
most malignant enemies of the Soviets never
took seriously and se breathe new life into
' a libel that died almost nt once of it own
essential meanness. It is thnt a spokesman
fr a considerable part of organized church
opinion should .seem se complete!) out of
touch with the truths of contemporary life
and se willing te repeat a lie that slandered
all the womanhood of one of the largest
countries en the fuce of the earth. It is net
necessary te agree with a man te feel com
pelled te play fair with him. And the
propagandists certainly haven't plajed fair
with the Russians.
Once, a few d:i)s after the Soviets hail
come Inte power at Moscow, a small group
of anarchists who are different enough
from the Bolshevists tu be their deadliest
enemies posted, in a small Russian village.
h notice recommending t lit- nationalization
of women nud forged sith tint names of
local Bolshevist Commissars solely in order
that the new regime should be annoyed and
discredited. This was perhaps the first bit
of anti-Soviet propaganda In Russia. It
was about the only lie en record that ever
5 as evertnken nt once bj the truth. The
mple fuct is that the present Russian view
of marriage Is very much like our own If
Mr. Sunduy was net uware of this he
should devote a little mere Intelligent lit lit
tentlen te the newspapets. If he I te pro
fess a guiding knowledge of the future world
he ought te have et least u superficial ac
quaintance with the facts of the world he
lives In. It is nut u completely hnppj
world, us things ate going, and it needs
nothing se much as n little feibearnnce and
charity between man and man. It needs
tnnrp nemile iltli mi lmn.ki.et.tu ....... .t s
ri the saving power of simnle truth imelli.
-'.' .-.tl7 f. .,.,! Tl. II, ,.... ..!.
a...., .mv,.. ..m.-iuji (u,mien, siicu
as It is, cannot be simplified or solved by
foolish scandalmongers or the pienchers of
hysteria and hate. These gentlemen have
had their day nnd the responsible officers of
government everywhere are having n hard
time cleaning up the mess they made.
It In possible better te understand the
Rev. Mr. Sunday when jeti remember that
in recent years he has become n sort of
bulwark of the most rigid conservatism.
Itacantlv ha war cnlleil in Went- Vri..ini
- - .- ......... , ..v..v , t.filUlU,
fiW where he was supposed te seethe and nnlet
iYt'1. wnrktnr men nnit women ii'd,, lalnm ...i.t
"'r fcy-wT Bt"i usiu in nun worm, were sup-
Yfrl. jr. A. 1 . .i..1 1.. .l.f ,.
HMV posed, it seems, te be content with premises
?-5PV ,.- -of peace in the uext. The sawdust trail
-i'iitW WM te he. In the scheme of the super-rich
triiliv nt West Virginia industrial fields, a sub-
POk'kitltute for labor arbitration. Se in his
iffiia Philadelphia address Mr. Sunday naturally
Ki.yoaeufh took a fling at labor leaders.
jLgtt,my haa come and gene. And, as a city,
;-iwe;sws) aosMeow no- upiitteu. no are no
ilMl,,i ei aoseiute velsteadlsm
W are no wiser.
witk. IMtlOU
Sl
wmm
T emphasis 'are net what we need te be dry.
we neea Honest men in office nnd less gen
eral hypocrisy, nnd a social equivalent for
the saloon. When Mr. Sunday can tell us
hew te obtain these things wc shall listen
and obey, nnd he will net have te shout.
A CANDID RUSSIAN REVIVES THE
ULTIMATE STANDARD OF PEACE
Mr. Chlcherln'a Disarmament Program
Is, However, Launched In a Situa
tion Bristling With the Most
Formidable Difficulties
TO THE uninitiated there Is something
rather trying In the -ery expression of
what is called Bolshevist doctrine. The
terminology is difficult and seems te lme
been emplejed with unnecessarily bad tem
per. Net every inhabitant of this troubled
planet is' precisely sure whether he is a
bourgeois or a proletarian. The pedantry
of sevletism has net been for Its geed.
Perhaps Mr. Chicherin, who struck lirst
fire at the (jenea conference, has realized
that the dreary jargon Is pln.ved out. In
any event, his renunciation of Its doubtful
services Is conspicuous In his exceedingly
straightforward disarmament' plea, which,
se far ns Its essential significance is con
cerned, might have sprung from the lips of
Woodrew Wilsen or Charles Evans Hughes
or Anatole France or Remnlue Helland or
Maximilian Harden or Lord Rebert Cecil
or . G. Wells or Bernard Shaw or Sidney
Webb or Nerman Angell or from the sim
plest peasant or laborer or the most revered
sages of antiquity. The meaning Is funda
mental and transparently nppealing.
Te the Intense disgust of Leuis Bnrtheu.
head of. the French delegation, the Russian
legate began te crumple up thftsc precious
agenda, rules te circumscribe the scope of
the conference, which, he apologetically ex
plained, he had net carefully perused. And
despite Mr. Lloyd Geerge's facile maneuver
ing, which temporarily averted what diplo
matists and correspondents professionally
call a "crisis," Mr. Chicherin iemaln un
repentant. A new statement Issued by him yesterday
stresses the acute need of disarmament In
any attempt te reconstruct Europe, and de
dares that amelioration of present condi
tions is Impossible while the "Imperialist
countries" continue vast expenditures for
the maintenance of large armies.
This is brave nnd candid speaking. One
docs net have te wade through "Das Kapl
tal" te grasp the Idea. The thought, how
ever. Is nor new. The ex-Kalser probably
will confess thnt he has entertained it. It
was clearly formulated in the I.cague-of-Natiens
Covenant. General Wiss eened
the Pace Conference Forum in this dt h
year and a half age with an even mere
sweeping statement of the principle. Mr.
Hughes forcibly dwelt upon its naval phases
at the Washington parley, and triumphantly
achieved an approximation of a limited Ideal
lu practical terms.
The general principles of accord had.
however, been reached before the American
Conference nsscmbled. At Genea the situa
tion Is reversed. The national sensibilities
of several et the most irapertnnt countries
involved are extremely delicate. The task
of segregating black nnd white sheep is net
easy.
It Is, for instance, permissible te wonder
whether Mr. Chicherin is com ealing any
ulterior purposes. On the surface, a suh
stanrinl gain has been made since the Red
army, strong in numbers and drilled te
Prussian precision, has supposedly been the
pride of Leen Trotsky. If Mr. Chicherin
is bargaining en the subject of its disrup
tion, what Is the price?
Is It a merely similar act of militarist le
retrenchment en the part of France or will
the question of Russian foreign Indebtedness
be Involved or a European concert of ap
proval of bolshevist ambitions in the equivo
cally "independent" border states of l.atvin,
Esthenla, Lithuania and the T kralneV Is
the oil in Georgia and Azerbaijan, upon
which British eves are lenglngl) cast, an
asset for barter?
If Mr. Chicheriu's altruism may be ques
tioned, it Is equally legitimate te examine
the alleged chauvinism of France. Evi
dence that a small but powerful group of
jingoes are exploiting the military "protec
tion" idea te their own advantage Is net
wanting, but the persistent opposition of
many classes In the republic te immediate
disarmament probably lies deeper than this.
It is no slight labor for Englishmen, freed
from the German fleer menace nnd inteusel.
eager for general trade revival te relieve
home unemployment, or for Americans, in
their security nnd wealth, te comprehend
all the shadings of the French view. Cou
pled with resentment ever the German
depredations and the anxiety for u piempt
payment of reparations te offset some of the
hideous ruin, there is. the keen historical
memory of four devastating foreign Inva
sions within a Hlngle century, und an equal
consciousness of the isolation of France
since the armistice.
The League of Nations, weakened by
blows unforeseen at the time of Its creation,
has failed te fulfill Its constructive and pro pre
tectlve purposes originally designed. Its
vital principle Is identical with that pro
posed te Mr. Chicherin. It Is practical ex ex
icutien that i dela)ed.
The three-power protective treaty be
tween France, Great Britain and the l'nited
States proved an Illusive drenm. The
French beheld a recalcitrant neighbor tee
close for comfort, u neighbor net averse te
employing any agency te make the Ver
sailles Treaty Impotent.
Add te these complexities the materialistic
interests of nil the great nations of the
earth In Russiun economic, agricultural and
industrial receveryan nllgnment Including
the L'nited States, which is "winching" at
(Jenea and the difficulty of proceeding with
Mr. Chicheriu's remedy the remedy, in
deed, of sensible persons Jhe world eier
may te some extent be appreciated.
Nevertheless, the .Russian delegate, in
reiterating an inextinguishable Idea, hits
done civilization a geed turn. He has re
vlved a standard of Idealism the struggle for
which mnst be sustained, despite rebuffs and
setbacks, if modern civilization Is net te
revert te the chaos of the Dark Ages.
DAUCHERTY IN INDIANAPOLIS
OVER-ZHALOUS nud Inexpert meddling
of Public Prosecutors inspired by n dis
like of organized labor and a will te disci
pline It in some of the Federal Courts of
Kansas and Indiana Is responsible for the
complication of affairs thnt took Attorney
General Daugherty te Indianapolis e set
tle the coal strike.
Mere than a year age some of the mine
operators of the Middle Western fields and
tlM Imikhjt the mlsoJ.Bles4.followiB
jpj;rs.vLvnaiiiP!r wn v w? -y.!'!; 'x
apww.afflrcsreys ? aj .smw
V,1ift"rTlr-.'-'-rJr " .TT-vrw
fff
LB
their usual practice,' met te ngree upon wage
scales nnd working conditions. Mere than
200 of these men were Indicted before Fed
eral Judge Andersen nt Indianapolis for
violating the Sherman law. They were
charged with conspiracy te restrain trade,
and maintain prices, of commodities moved
In interstate cemmeVce, Since nlmest nil
centrncts nnd agreements, whether they arc
entered into by business .men alone or by
union leaders and the employers, tend often
est te advance costs and wages alike, nnd
since even an ordinary contract between
two individuals lu business might be said
te restrain trade In the avenue directly af
fected, nil agreements of every sort might
become, under the theory sustained by
Judge Andersen, conspiracies in restraint
of commerce'.
When public criticism begnn te run
ngalust the smnll group of soft-coal opera
tors whose refusal te confer with the, miners'
unions brought en the general cent strike
these men begnn te leek for nn nllbl. They
said In Washington that they didn't enter
the coal conference because they feared Fed
eral indictments. This defense, belatedly
advanced, nmnzed the Attorney Oenernl and
the President. Mr. .Daugherty said publicly
that there was no thought in Washington
of asking for indictments aguinst anybody.
He went te Indianapolis only te find that
neither Judge Andersen nor the Federal
Prosecutor In that district is willing te see
the original coal indictments set aside.
The moral of all this is that wc In
America need te formulate n philosophy of
Industrial relationships that will be worthy
of the respect of ever) body nnd thnt will
make !t Impossible for the personal preju
dices of any small group te force the country
te a policy of action in which it doesn't
believe,
theTtaWfjill
THE Tariff Bill reported te the Semite
eterdny afternoon by Senater Mc
Cumber is mere nearly like the bill which
will ultimately be passed than the measure
which the Heuse passed and sent te the
Selinte.
The Heu-eblll provided that the duties
be levied upon the American valuation. The
Senate bill provides thnt the duties shall be
levied en the foreign valuation in accordance
with long-standing custom. Arrangement is
made, however, for collecting duties en the
American valuation of icrtnin articles by
proclamation of the President when It is
found en Investigation that the ;mpeit of
these articles is likely te injure the Imlus
trj of the l'nited States.
This is clearly n compromise prevision
intended te please these who have been in
sisting that Europe, with its depreciated
currency, can manufacture goods se cheaply
that it can expert them te the United States,
pa) the duty en them nnd then undersell the
domestic producer. If this contention Is
true, then, when it is established in any
particular vae. the President can go te the
relief of the domestic manufacturers.
The demands of the farmers' bloc lnie
been granted In the agricultural sfhedulc.
A duty of thirty-five cents a bushel Is levied
en wheat. A basic tax of thirtj-tive cents
a pound is levied en wool. A lax of two
tents a pound en green lildt s nnd four cents
en drj has been fixed, it being the first time
in cars thnt hides hae been taxed. Leng
staple cotton Is tnxed and short staple is
admitted free. And se en through the prod
ucts of the farms and plantations.
it is estimated thnt the bill will talse
S.1."i0, 000,00(1, a sum which used te be about
one-half the annual expenditures of the
Government, bur which is new only about
one-tenth of the siTm needed te pay the bills.
Debute en the bill will net begin until
Friday of next week, when the Senators
will hae had an opportunity te read Its
l.'l" pages nnd digest its various previsions.
When a final vote will be taken .no man
kneweth.
THE DEEPEST HOOCH MYSTERY
IF GOVERNMENT officials cannot regu
late the flew of hooch from the "seizure
room" In the Postoffice Building, where con
fiscated liquor is stored before it is pre
sented ns evidence agaiast uolnters of the
dry law, hew can they be expected te re
strict the Output of distilleries, fake drug
stores and private stills? Time and ngaln
newspaper lenders have learned thnt the
hooch room at the top of the building at
Ninth anil Chestnut streets has been
burgled. On Sunday, .according te the latest
advices, siv cabes of whisky disappeared
from i he Government's collection.
New, nil the floors of the Federal Build
ing are supposed te be carefully guarded
day and night. The stairways leading from
the ground fleer are dosed after nightfall
nnd the gates are locked. Whatever ijquer
is taken from the seizure room is brought
down in nn elevator If it isn't carried off in
an airplane. One of these days this deep
est of hooch mysteries will be solved. And
we shall nt least have the pleasure of an
other surprise,
The lady who smoked a
lag for That cigarette while ud-
Kagged Feeling dressing n local club
probably felt fagged.
This may have appeared te her uu excellent
way of communicating her weariness te
ethers. Why be Hellish? It may be that she
forget the childhood rhyme of "One thing
nt a time nnu tnut done well, etc. ' Net,
of course, that all the old snvings am true.
There is thai one, for instance, of "Where
there's smoke there must be lire." But,
take It as a geneial nile where there is
smoke in the mouth tlieie is little tire In the
speech. Like Ciinsidy in "Captains Collin Cellin Collin
geeus" one Is npt te suffer ftem net "Keep
lug things scparnte," there is ulways pos pes
slblllty that it will neither lie a geed smoke
nor a geed address, That smoking was for
bidden in the club maj have had something
te de with it. The gn "Ne whistling" in
a newspaper office w ill make a woman
whistle who never whistled before. But
isn't there a plac where she Is willing te
step? It is said some ladles left the club
te show their displeasure. If se, thev ncted
strict!) within their rights nor did they
show themselves strait-laced. One is tee
prone te consider things merely ns right or
wrong. But they really have another angle.
Net ene-nnlf of the things thut are objec
tionable in u tlieutti! are wrong. Thev are
simply in bad taste. The Western 'lady,
leccnrl) tigiiilng lii'the news, who kicked off
her shoes n company, declining that her feet
hurt, did net thereby de anything wreng:
but we d hate te see the piuctice become
general. It Isn't done, you knew; though,
heaven knows, we don't knew what we may
expect. De you suppose the ache for se'x
equality prompts women te de the un
conventional? If be, let mere men content
themselves with n smile and be tolerant.
And, eh, well, let the lady smoke if she
wants te. We begin te feel as though we
needed a puff or two eurself.
Ills voice shaking witli
Free Seeds emotion, Senater Cam-
wny protested thnt Vice
i-jeMuuui v-uunuK" iLium'ii te recognize aim
se long as a selltury Republican desired the
fleer. The Vlce President should nveld
causing the Curuway seed of discontent te
germinate nnd threw out sheets. Let him
rather allow Caraway te sprinkle, himself
abundantly en the Republican cakes of ora
tory. In the Congressional Recerd there is
room enough for all.
In Carmal-by-the-Sea.
Calif., the Arts nnd
Letters ticket carried
the election nnd the
It Should Be
Caramel -by -the-
Sea
village will remain as
it Is, artistic and "unprogressive." The
opposition wanted paved streets and ether
"improvements." "All te the candy," cried
the artists when the returns came in, "Oh.
!utel" !!4 the pimo-ltlea, ......
l iPi'-jyii.
THjffiADM
I MM?!
AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT
Sunnyalde, in Haatlngi, Nebraska,
Seemt te Prove That There la
Psychological Moment for the
Starting of a Neighbor
heed Heute
By SARAH D. I.OWRIE
LAST winter in New Yerk City v I was
a delegate from my State at a national
conference of women whose activities were
chiefly what might be called philanthropic.
The organization was net a new euc and W
often mentioned in the papers for its im
portance and for the weight of its opinions
mi things civic nnd sociological. The
women who were foremost In its councils
nre what might he called the "key women"
of their communities, even of their States.
Whatever Is found "te be practical nnd
well worthwhile In one State is reported r.t
this conference with n view te its being
tried out In ether Stntes, somewhat modi medi
tied perhaps, but tried out. And whatever
has been attempted and has failed is also
reported, se thnt the ether Slates can take
warning and avoid a like useless expendi
ture of time nnd of money.
The organization is supposed te work nleng
democratic lines; that is, it is supposed te
work with capital apd with labor for th
betterment of the community. But it struck
me, after hearing most of the reports from
the States, that it was working with capital
for labor, which is n very different proposi preposi
tion. One of the Stntes, a New England one.
reported for lnstnnce, that its State "key
women" had tried out an experiment in
running-n small town neighborhood house
for two years with the hope that its useful
ness in the life of the town would by that
time be se well proved thnt the town corpo
ration, or at nil events the general popula
tion would take it ever and support and
run it. But the experiment was reported
a failure, because, though the house was well
used, and the statistics of the head worker
were all te the geed, neither the town cor
poration nor the citizens in general felt any
enthusiasm about, supporting it. Se the
rencluslun for that State seemed te be that
n house that was everybody's house was no
body's house.
WITH that queer fate that makes one clue
fellow another, once the mind Is en the
alert with a question, en my return from
New Yerk next day the Yonkers local
newspaper fell into my hands and nn article
iu it by Ruth Agnes Abellng, with the head
ing: "Sunn) side Started by a Weman."
riveted my attention, for I hnppened te
knew the "woman" mentioned in it, Mrs,
Charles Dietrich, of Hastings, Neb., the
wife of the one-time Governer nnd United
States Senater of thnt State. And I had
lse heard of "Sunnyslde," which was its
theme.
This is what the Yonkers paper spe
cial, writer had found It worth while te
publish nbeut the Nebraska town experiment
or shall I say success for Sunnyslde as
a town neighborhood house has been n com
plete success from every one's point et view
for some ten years.
Sunnyslde?
It's the henit of Hastings, Neb. that's
the best wny te describe it, nnd it was
Mrs. Deitrich who vitalized the heart.
The Hastings Weman's Club bad, for
several years, wanted te open a home in
Hnstings, net especially a home for old
people but n refuge whteh would serve
both old nnd )eung In time of need.
Three hundred precious dollars weie
gathered toward the project, but It speraed
Impossible te git futther. Se the money
was put in thr bank and the plan tem
porarily tabled.
Right there, however, fate took a hand.
Grandma Bali, whom nil Hastings knew
nnd respected, fell nnd broke her hip. Fer
n little while Grandpa Ball served as a
breadwinner and nurse, but the -double
duty seen proved tee much and county of
ficials took charge.
The officials devised what seemed te
their masculine minds a senslble and
subtle scheme.
We're going te take you te the hospital
where you can have the proper care, they
told Mrs. Ball.
Who will leek after Ball then? she
asked suspiciously.
He can go down te the county farm
until you're well. They tried te be
cusuul.
But Grandma Ball understood and pro
tested fiercely.
There Sunnyside came into being. Mis.
Dietrich heard of the pretest, put the
matter before the club nnd the $800 wns
drawn from the bnnk for the establish
ment of Sunnyslde.
lu the heuse which was Immediate!)
rented nnd furnished through contribu
tion, the old couple were given a toein.
They took with thtm te their new home
only their most prized possessions five
life-sized crayon portraits of themselves
and their former spouses. All were done
by the same itinerant artist at the same
time.
They Indulged in no petty jealousies.
Indeed, If you hnppened te call en Grand
ma Bnll she'd Inform you, in a voice
grown thunderous from years with a deaf
husband: "That's Ball's first woman. I
never knew her. And that's bis second,
nnd that's my ether man."
, And se thnt is the story of the starting
of Sunnyslde. This year eight new bed
rooms are being udded te the building.
It Is a branch of the Red Cress nnd ob
serves every holiday in some special wu.v.
I MAY add te this delightful Utile account
that te my knowledge the additional
rooms are te be filled with quite as Inter
esting patrons ns were Grandma Bull and
her husband: some old, some young, some
paying boarders, some puid-fer beardeis,
some waifs And strays, some retired lead
ing citizens, some ill folk convalescing, .some
out-ef-buslness folk temporarily waiting;
some persons there, during nn emergency,
some for the remuinder of their days. The
point is, it is really Everybedy's' Heuse.
The town uses it for some of its special
cases, net of the pauper or derelict class;
and the hospitals and churches use R for
some of their round pegs that will net lit
into the square holes of their philanthropic
institutions; private citizens use it for their
friends and their relations us nil agreeable
and safe retreat where, becuuse of t)jfi BOed
nursing nnd geed cheer and geed cempanv,
worn-out persons nre less trouble te them
sees and te ethers than ut home. And vet
it Is net n general dumping ground for un
worthy persons. The town holds it In tee
much honor te belie its name. Sunnyslde!
It is an honor te live there und a pleasure
te go there, and being Everybody's Heuse,
there is no confession of failure implied by
finding it a home,
GRANDMA BALL could net have popu pepu
InrUed thut retreat ler her old age bv
herself, nor Could the wife of the ir.l!n.'.
erner have weu the community ever te the
Idea of Sunnyslde by herself, though she
certuinly is a "key woman" in her State
and outside of it. It was the combination
that made the dramatic and successful be
ginning which ha's played te n full house ever
since.
Everything depends en hew a thing begins
in n small community. And it is worth
waiting some time for the right moment,
holding the "three hundred dollars" in hand
till h Grandmn Ball case turns up.
The Commission en Reorganization of
the State Government has prepared a chart
demonstrating thnt the State Government is
oppressed with tee many commissions; and
nil the rest of them nre new convinced that
the ene tee many is the Commission en
Reorganization of the State Government,
Attorney General Daugherty says re
port of Increased revolutionary activities
ure exaggerated. William J. Burns says
underground propaganda is everywhere. The
two statements are net necessarily antago
nistic. A balance struck between them
should prompt, reasonable care wjtheut bys-
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NOW MY IDEA IS THIS!
Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They
Knew Best
NICOLA D-A8CENZO
On Practical Art va. Art for Art'e 8ake
DECORATIVE art is new practically at
the beginning of an important readjust
ment, according te Nicola D'Ascenze, one of
Philadelphia's leading exponents of the
artistic crafts.
, "Times have greatly changed," said Mr.
D'Ascenze, "and artists are no longer main
tained by the members of the nobility nor
under the patronage of the church. The
trend of modern life has thrown them en
their own resources te a great extent, and
while this change has been beneficial te the
artists whose emancipation came with it,
It has played havoc with art nnd some kind
of a partial readjustment is IneviCabie. Tee
sumptuous decorations of the palace have
beeu replaced by the portrait and the land
scape nnd the triptych and the predclla of the
church by illustration and the lunguzliu
cever:
Demand for Religious Art
"By this I mean that most of the self
supporting artists are new busy with the
latter kind of work nnd very few nre engaged
with ecclesiastical or decorative art. for the
adornment of the home of of public places.
However, I am safe in saying thnt religion is
new making renewed demands en nrt and I
am glad that this is the case, because, as a
partfnl result, cheapness, lawdrincss and
quantity nre being replaced by quality. And
the 'made-ln -Germany nrttcles such as
windows, statues and vestments, which
have flooded this country und demoralized
the taste of our people for n generation or
mere, are being gradually replaced by greatly
superior work done by American artists.
"It is very unfortunate thnt the urtlsts
who are apt te regard such work as 'mere
decoration' and who fail te appreciate its
true worth tee often shim it for the easel
picture. As one result of this unjustifiable
nttltude, few of our nrt schools tench Hi"
proper regard for the decorative arts nnd
allow the students te develop with a mistaken
Idea of its dignity and place.
"I realize that very many of the instruc instruc
ters have no sympathy with this kind of nrt,
an art just as real and much mere prac
ticable than pointing in oils, becuufe their
interest is in landscape and the portrait,
but the economic aspect is nevertheless
making an impression en our artists and
many are heglning te leek upon It with
favor. i
Industrial Art and Industry
"Industilnl art may have been se named
because it is, the art of the industrious. In
it there are no daily ten parties, no cozy
terneis, no incense and no pipe dreams. It
is all pure hard work industry. This may
be the reason why we are looked down upon
by the 'art for art's sake brotherhood. The
niotte of the industrial urtlst is 'art for
humanity's sake' and they prefer te beautify
anything needful, n chair, a table, a hinge,
n doorknob, in short, anything that needs it
and has a public appeal, The industrial
nrtlst steps at nothing ns long as it can be
redeemed from ugliness te beauty, from the
commonplace te the artistic,
"The industrial artists nre net possessed
with the Iden of raising the taste of th"
American public with a lundscnpe; they
knew that tee few nre as yet interested iu
that kind of artistic expression. The people
want the useful things, and it is our business
te improve these things by making them
beautiful nnd net te scoff nnd starve.
' nut i lie iaciv ei me critical iiicuity in
our public causes much of the 'Imported' te
be dumped en our country. If they could
mere readily discriminate, they would Fee
thut the charm, if it can be called that, of
most of the imported work lies in the name,
and that in .workmanship and beauty it is
fur inferior te that new produced here.
A Parallel In Architecture
"And why should it net be, when modern
American architecture is far superior te that
of Europe? I am amazed at the lack of
real taste displayed by most of the present
day architects abroad. The 'modern style
of the Viennese has ruined the taste of
Europe and everywhere one is shocked by
buildings, the design of which Is neither
structural nor dignified and which nre cev-
Aserl irttli mikatnlntrlAae -lAift-ntf . -i- i
'They nwia either te hare forgotten or te
uu' utru ui win iiue uih.chiuus OI 1 110 past,
"On the ether hand we are erecting build
low here which are inspired by the fine old
work and skillfully adapting them te our
.needs, uutll some day we shall develop
something mere indigenous te our civiliza
tion. This haB greatly helped the, develop develep
ment of the decorative arts, te which it
ewes ila present success. There is no need
therefere te import anything from Eurepe
unless we still takn nrld In tin. i,,,.. .'. .
UI.IW S-.TTr "-."." W wm mm
-w5HH ' eere Jsiu,m-H A Alt
I jL'll L-M-11
T -t -!.. 'JMalU .e-1-l-l-l-l-l-l-l-l-l-l-l-l-l-l-l-a .I -l-i-i-i-i-Ma, Mf tM- V
JFTTmztfF Vl i
viaTfjf JHKn - J"iiiiH"ckvif " - '."
Commission appointed te Inspect nit the im
ported acreage of statuary, vestments, orna
ments nnd stained glnss which are allowed
free entry ns works et nrt.
Much Trash Brought In
"It Is little short of criminal te permit the
tawdry trash which comes by the shipload te
enter at .nil, much less duty-free. Our
churches nre full of this dccalcemania pro
duction of windows nnd the only thing te be
t-aid In its favor is that it is cheap. I was
amazed last summer whlle in Chartres,
France, studying the fine old glass of the
thirteenth century in the cathedral there,
te find that the glass in St. Patrick's Ca
thedral, New Y'erk City, some of the were
glass in America today, wns made ther,
under the very shadow of this cathedral, the
greatest treasure house of ancient and me
dieval glass In the world.
"The same is true of England. Loek r.t
the bttiff which comes from there te 'adorn
our churches. Stupidly designed vestments,
anemically conceived windows, filled with
stained glass attitudes and stained glass
faces with nbeut nB much feeling and ex
pression as the average cigar-store Indian
of past days. On the whole, It is skillfullv
executed, hut there is nothing' vital. The
subject matter is usually interesting, but the
most Important thing of nil color is the
most lacking As a result, tbclr windows
nre celtl nnd thin transparencies, washed out
find sickly. We cannot hope for anything
better from them ns the Anglo-Snxen has
never been noted ns a colerlst. Appreciation
of color possibilities is a rucial character
istic and we must go te the Oriental or Latin
ter its fullest expression.
Forgetting the Past
'The European craftsmen, like their
architects, are apparently In search of the
new, but are going nbeut it in the doubtful
manner of first forgetting the glories of the
past. We, in the United States, en the
contrary, are attempting new expressions.
lift they arc based upon the old and proved
traditions; in ether words, we belleve iliat
art is a carrying-en process, an evolution,
net a revolution.
i. Ve n'tteh craftsmen are nlse of the be.
I ef that the best art is that which has be
hind it h definite purpose for Its existence.
J feel that u lundsenpe especially executed
for an evermantel is bound te be better tnati
the one painted for no one purpose or for no
ene person. An artist Is certain te de better
work when inspired by special surroundings,
the color scheme of a room, the lighting
scale and nttructlyeness of the subject, which
after all must nuike Us nppeal te the persons
who are te liv with it.
"We must-realize that aflenst 00 per cent
of the fine old work new In the hands of
collectors was made for n definite place,
purpose nnd person. The nverrige artist te.
ilny has gene mnd from the smell of oil paint
and nothing is worthy of attention elcent
semeth ng for the next show, although some-
lines he must of necessity use the same
frame nnd occasionally, for lack of funds the
tame canvas. "
"I hope that there will be a change of
heart and that we will use our talents for
he requirements of the common people. Tim
kitchen utensils of the nnclent Greeks and
Remans have deservedly found their wny te
our museums because, of their beauty ; ours
find their wn, nnd just as deserved y se,
e the dump. But ns nrt made permanent
hose of the ancient, se It can redeem "..is
But It must be made the servant of daily use'
m"r lifer"00""110"- C Im" ainWMtew
Today's Anniversaries
17.S0 The British opened fire en the,
American batteries defending Charleston!
1700 Samuel Mr-Roberts, the first nntir.
son te become United Stntes HenMer from
I Ineis, born in Menree County BllnnU
Died in Cincinnati March 82, Jffci '
1MJ2-Denuld G. .Mitchell, who attaint
fame as n author finder the name of "i
Marvel " beni nt Norwich. Conn. J)Iod t
New Haven December 15. 1008 '
lSOl Edmund Ruffin, n 'seven
year-old Virginian, fired the firs?" fiv"
agninst Fert Sumter. first g,,n
1021 President Harding deliver,.,! i
first message te Congress. (Wlvere(' his
Teday'e Blrthdaya
TheOlt. Rev. Arthur 0. A. Ilnll TnU
copal Bishop of Vermont born I ' "
shire. England, scventy-five years g
Luke Leu, former United States Senater
fro... Tennessee, born lu Nashville (e,."
William II, Bnnkhend. Represenlafic i,.
.Congress of the T euth' Al.tCu "p I ?,,
SIJw'me. T AIabam8' f- a
i.tif-,- t-iiie UKO,
t iawii a wi ' r '. fc'jP'.ffwjKA'ni
"AHA Dun ' - vv-"? A
SHORT CUTS
Boekbinder was by the law-book been.
The world new awaits the truth about
Russia via Genea.
Lloyd Geerge may be Hamlet at Genea,
but Russia is the Ghost.
Laddie Bey continues te be the en!
Washlngtenlan beyond criticism.
Yen can't vote if you're net rejlittrrd,
And you, can't kick if you don't vote.
The first thins Lloyd Geerge did it
Genea was te tie the Cannes te the Hestlia
delegates.
Billy Sunday audiences have eppuutly
net learned that the Chautauqua ulutt it
insanitary.
With se much en hit mind one couldn't
blame Andy Gump very much If he forfej
te register.
Any suggestion that Brumbaajlj It t
be given Finegan's Jeb would be sufficient te
defeat Alter.
In a three-cornered fight two ef tM
contestants are bound te get knocked lntl
that kind of a hat.
In the 'matter of naval balaneM, l
would he an casv matter tn renrlct (Va.
gress et giving snort weight.
There are marriag ea In the aprrit world
out no D.riiis, aays jenan ueyie. mve-i
dently allowed the Sangera te fain contre
there.
All ready for the first cleae-up la t4
great drama, "The Purification of a Statr.''
Put your best feet forward and regliOf
patriotism.
lickle 1 fame. The lone straw hit
that achieved notoriety In Atlantic City th
ether day will by end by lie en the duit
I1C(1I juiuuru.
But ran a performance of daints eptrl
iauni eleven neura really be called leni
winded when all the music la provided bj
drums and fiddles?
Jobs' for Brumbanch. RaMIeman ail
Mackey ; everybody happy If Alter is elected)
that is, of course, everybody but tM
iicupiB at large, anu tney don't count.
Chancellor Wlrth waa the only delteitC
who waa net applauded at Genea. Well, la
the rlrmtniit.tiMtB . ......I.) l..J1 ,.
that these present would want te fall en Wl
r anu kiss mm.
Russia gees te the Genea cenferenei il
rarily tied up. She geea there te face tradtrH
num. uer eusineis at tee least pe-w
risk. Her handicap Ilea In the personnel
her representativea.
What De Yeu Knew?
QUIZ
yn!. iB h origin of the expresileSi
n - . .. ia. im uuiiuucrm (
d. What are the three great divisions of tj
Slavle peoples who form the majority
, ,c' the. Inhabitants of Russia? . ...
. Distinguish between the League of M
r ,"3 ana uje Association or n""j
6. Who said, "Oh. may I Jein the choir
nvlslble of these immortal dead we"i
live again" 7
ft. Whlll lfln t an avilmal Im m AVftf
7. Distinguish between a tipster and aHH
1. What Is tisane?
'J. What ia the antlmr nt m. Itawtrf
10. What is the Immortal flower of Pr'
aise;
Answers te Yesterday's Qui
J, "The Artful Dedger" was the nlcknsJW
of Jehn Dawkina, a yeutnrui pi-
pocket employed by Hugin in Charmi
Dickens' novel, "Oil
1
jjicuens' novel, -uiiver xwisi. , . i
S. Wellington Is the capital of the Dominion i
ef Klaiif Vaa In A Wi
1st."
8. "Te go te Canessu." means te eat hureMJ
ple. Canessa la a town In Italy
Kaiser llelnrlch IV went te hujnMi
of New Zealand. owl?
uimseic oeroro l'epe uregery v '-
debrand) In 1070.
4. A merle la n blackbird.
C. Themas a'Kempla waa a German J
' cleslastle and the reputed author
the "Imitation of Christ," His dt
are 1380-1471. ,M
6. Kamehamehu the Great ruled ever wa.
Hawaiian Islands and was the nr
te unlte them In a single kingdom. .
7. The treaty of Guadalupe Hidalge eny
win .Mexican war in jsie. "",r ,,
takes Its name from a subiirs 'i
Mexico Clt". , ...
S, A secle la a low, rectangulur block "
lnr au aiinrt..- -w n nailuttl.
9, A (lulnauagenailan In a person flt -7$'
10.
S nrli, U II, nann aWlrlt ftf
T
'....S T-" r'f - ,
O'l
land.
Kiii V ' :
i.Ti' i.
fi
a-suj
v.
aiVV.I
A.
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., J,
Wr
iMAjh
J- lyy-.J!. ,. .$ ;,
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ll'V-Mi"!!. m',. .;,
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IV