Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, May 03, 1922, Night Extra, Image 8

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". Oterc I Goldsmith. David ri Bmlley.
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...Editor
aC MAnTlS.... central BunlnMa Manag-or
itd'dAllv at tKnlin T .. ...tl.t
XndenndncS Square. .'hllaOelpliln.
- rre-tiilett. rjulldln
.104 Madisen Ave.
.701 Ferd Building
... ...... 013 Qlobe-Vtmecrat nulldlns
',i'lf!&&S" I303 Tribune Building
"mssLL. ,swa bureaus:
'iV-mmmrmiFet'' pnni'vanl Ave. and 14lh St.
r? W"- BM"0 Trafalgar Building
(F. XrlNIKa Ptll.tfl Lnem la unri In ...h.
" - ... -. ....-... :- ........ ... ....-
m rnimetipna ana aurreuninr town
-. v fc.i-.ia w vama per iveeK. payaDia
SrJP.I1 J xlnt eutalda of Phlladerphta In
United Btatei, Canada, or United statu. no-
fl5!?f " n'tr se) centa W month.
Jellara per year, yayable In advance.
Z!L!1 "'' ceunirics ena ii) dollar a month.
Mvm euMcnmni wianinc aanrese chanted
aUTH old ma well as new addrc. .
JTALMIT
KEYSTONE. MAIN 1601
M4A-M oil commttttfcaffeit te rvrttfite publle
gagf. ndtpeiiitcnc tleuarr, PliilatrlpMa.
yfftitmbtt of the Associated Press
&it2. $OCtATED PnESS is exclusively
' h'SSSi ? tht republication et all n
en-
neui
srw"1
2ml aer an' 'J0 f,ie te:a, "eu ruellaheii
?i,Wyj.rtf,'' r",;i"",,,0' 0 -' "p.irtM
pBiUdtlphia, w.aufiJir. Mir s. 1?::
LIKE A WHIPPED DOG
fjLXER and his friends UlBcevcrcd jestcr-
'iln',rhnt T'rnetilnnt Tliirdlni !. Inn wNn
bf 'JrOlltlcIan te Ktnlt himself te bu iihcd for
SIS"" thtlt purposes.
J$ Mr Alfnx nnltn.l no lin Prr.l(Ipilt 111
I.,' mnninif ..I.U A.Ann n..nHnt T "4 1 1. .. liert V
TJj, ....j 14114 iAltUlH.. Him.lk A. iH Ml-
sj - ana nna a piea..ant liiterMew. n it unu
ifOr ended there'it- would linve bwn noMlble for
the Varc machine te whisper nbeut the State
that the Wnsiilnutiin AthnlnKtrutlen WHS
fe vkeplnf that Alter mlelit win.
0 - 'But the President blocked this little game.
i. I. ABLn. m whit ill. kn iiTTf.r Tnn uui'ri li'w :
...
l,?. want te settle thii question jer en
V' time. TAe Pi-esWcitf 1i net nartMeatlna
j;?' . In any primary Unfit in any State. He
docs net regard it as a teemly thing te
' ,Mlp and fierc toil! be none of it.
V..4 11.1 .1.. . ....,...-. 11...
, ut iuis wus net me eni.v ri'Dun mat .iicr
.. flHlwtl (In Un ..a I. A'.. at. I .. .... If It'nu
w .. ...; uu ..? in ...i-.iiiiii.buii. lb i.u
arfTen out thnf tnlppmnhln moMUjiffeH lind
if, ,xen sent te every member of the lVniisyi-
Tama ucicgauen in tne iieuse et ueprescn
tatlres sumnienlng them te Washington te
!'' .attend an Alter conference. There are
thirty-six Pennjlvanla Representatives. Lx
actly sixteen of them weie wllllnj; te meet
the Contractor-Combine candidate for the
governorship. The ether twenty stajed
aavay becuuse they did net want te endanger
their own chances for rcnomlmitlen in dis
tricts where the sentiment Is overwhelmingly
for Plnchet.
It is very clear that the Contraetor-Com-llne
must make its own fight without any
kelp from Washington. And it is clear nUe
thai the attempt te create the impression
$ i that the President is with the Combine has
:K) left" It werBO off than it wns before, because
'lia I'mttllAnf ctnfemAtir blinira flinf Im tnnu
BOt intend te be entangled with the 1'enn
llvanla machine in any way.
"8e Alter returns from the national capital
Vke a whipped deg.
.?K
'', MORE TREATIES WITH EX-FOES
lL'r?. . .....
NOT even the dwindling runks of treaty
antagonists in the Senate are likely te
raise much dust of pretest ever the extradi
tion and cemrirht nacts with f!irinnnv.
Austria and Hungary, new in preparation.
t The latter agreements are in reality a reti
nal of former arrangements which the Presi
dent is, te recall te life by a senatorial reiniti reiniti
ateon virtually assured of passage. The cs-
fraditlen covenant will restore the relations
aermany existing nmeng states et consequence
ud should put an end te a situation em
barrassing te the administration of justice in
jttues of peace.
Tt- n'lll ria IntflPADtintt i'e Tamem nl.lli. it..
Jl 4, ,,444 4.W 4...V. V.-h.l. 1 J 1' 11111 .lUCllU-i- Hif.
? German Treaty will result in the reee.ery of
&V Government is dc-ireus of regaining political
t 4itaVAMilAtii nirnlnct 1 1 ij nntlit-ii i-. ! 1.
l j vnniu'iJ Mi'""'! n ttuuiuiu.t u. til ill Jl IMC
K -V preceding regime, it is significantly posbJble
KL;tIiit tome such exchange may he bpeeifically
hffected.
' SAFEGUARD OF REPUBLIC
TT IS a popular impression that Irreverence
,i la written large in the catalogue of Amer
ican traits. This is confirmed by the in
twslty of adverse criticism te which every
'Chief Executive In the annals of the Republic
'-lias been subjected, as well as conventional
enunciations 01 congress, jii me puuuu
"W-, meu ernncne? et tin uevcrumeiu uru tun
ifi' adiered. indeed, fair came.
ffi I r,It.is net te these institutions alone, hew-
vW fer! that the destinies of the Natien are
J 'nfided. The third division of the tripartite
' j " 11-UlUL'lj UUD UrCH UUI.'U i-alC UlUfll UUKU3V
w , fmbunal In the world," and, with all thejr
vy ubHtihi fnT lpnnnflttni .mnr1niiis nr unnt-
' Mr KtariiM nre extremely disinclined te nucs-
tlitn thin iudement of an outside com-
.1 - The Supreme Court of the tinted States,
!Mf ain'basis upon the authentic majesty nml
J? talellectunl distinction of which was renewed
$' ' at the rcdedlcatien of Its e.irlj liemi- ut Fifth
Ki'if ,'aiid Chestnut streets jesterday, unquestlen-r-3i
' bly inspires n respect and cenhdence uninue
f'H"' 4b eh hlarnrv nf rptiuhlleiin Institutions.
... fnt.A I. 1.. ,ltlu .it.i.il., iillin Lntf-
'rn.j "O.UCIU n 111 inn .innuii'. ihmi.1 "ti-
ffi reception nor (iihingeuueuMies.s, iveguru
fttmt this tribunal, for the sobriety and dis dis
$$riminatlen of its judgiuents, for its cuu
ife tlaug yet vital reactions te the deelepinent
j5jWti society and lielith-al and legislate i
wlitlndihti is unallettedly hem-st and today
Wvwi.'r -TT. :. , 4i...i i-n ............ .i !...,..
iJ'K7iIBIOl inBlllidivi', r iiiiiiiii:f nun iii;ri-
Ei'iiU -1. VtrUIt. II- la nvl.n.'i.innl 1 1 tn ll 1 11 1 !1 1 ,1 t ll (1 f
f-iTil , . ' tllllll,l4IH, 1-4 ..." 4. ........ .....V
.wAiittita tnnWntr etUIimI f I fill! tile vpr fllUlltlu-
$f 'tlen of the tribunal, it is remarkable that
'R -I" 14.. t.. 4...t...n...taA An.lAII I..1 11 t.ll
iM ' mUVWkiy 111 juiinimuril.rl ..ituwinu I'll"
sri?i iinlque authority iinf. powers saerliig e.en
m&tajf autocracy, i-e rapidly acquired an aspect
irnJm Duality in tue popular esteem
"WyJ.Vrpi.lii Anna ttnf inprm fhilt r rltipiRin in thnt.fi
i3f.Vlv davs was stilled. .ntl-IYderallsts
at the steady drle of the Supreme
EWrWaSrAf) fundamental instrument te the need of
p--iWB times anu demonstrating its uuapuiDiiuy
Jlt the demands of pregrcs.
Mjptfjlt is no exaggeration te useerl that, while
' J''Hrt'ConHtltutlen sets forth the framework
tbe Republic, me huprcme court gave
and practical suDstance te tue wneic
ing structure.
w much et this monumental work was
wnlatcd by the fathers it Is nut casy
4etermine. The first 3 cur of the court In
Yerk was by 1111 imiuh tue least exacting
Rs'-carcer. Upen lis removal te Phila-
la In J.71U its period et inspiring ac
' may be said fairly te have begun.
Em
the Chief Justices, Jay and Ells-
' uhn ant- 111 (Ills rltv nrler in tin-
1" .. .. . . ... . .
of tee capital te tt asuingten,
mere than the preliminaries of
IrstMMrrira' eestributlen te the
ra& ai.!. . ,..
-7-ji-r.,v';T. .. . i -".
MW.
Mr; it
',
the implied powers of the Constitution, new
grown te rastj'propertlons, were first fortl fertl
lied by the weight of judicial utterance.
Rilling after ruling imparted elements of
cohesion te the Natien, effacing the nssumed
paradoxes existing in the scope et State and
national authority. Taney, his successor,
wns avowedly a "strict constructionist" of
(he Constitution, and yet, except for the
famous Drcd Scott decision, a new ndmittnd
blunder, the reasoned and closely consid
ered judgments of the court were often dis
tinctly in line with the Marshall tradition.
Since the Civil War, shortly after which
Chief .Tustire Chase made the memorable
declaration that this Natien was nn "hide
structlbK Union, composed of Indestructible
States," the basic nature of the Republic
has net been a subject for definition by the
Supreme Court. Its functions, hewever, as
a constitutional interpreter, as the ultimate
authority upon legislation, as the arbiter
in causes between States and as the final
veice in matters of national moment have
steadily broadened.
Through nil this process of adjustment
public respect has gene hand In hand. The
Supreme Court may be nugust, but it is net
old-fegey, nnd though it be in a sense- the
embodiment of restraint, it has continued te
dlsplny an elasticity and a sense of values
which is n salient cause of its vitality.
The average citizen, net Involved in some
cause befere its bar, is net accustomed te
dwelling deeply upon the province and per
formances of the highest Instrument of
appeal in the land. The position, integrity,
wisdom and authority of, this court nre au
tomatically accepted.
The formalities In the presence of Chief
Justice Taft in the charming old building
yesterday serve, among ether things, as a
tonic and wholesome reminder that there is
at least one institution which Americans are
both bound nnd voluntarily happy te re
THE BACK-ROOM CANDIDATE
INDORSED IN OPEN MEETING
Mr. Vare's Personally Conducted City
Committee Saya Mr. Vara Did Right
In Hand-Picking Alter
TV ANY ONE expected the Republican City
Committee te keep its hands off the con
test in the primaries he has discovered that
he did net knew of what sort of stuff the
committee is composed.
Plnchet nnd Alter are contending for the
Republican nomination for the governorship
nnd Pepper and Burke nre contending for
the senatorial nomination. Theoretically,
the function of the committee is te see that
the voters of the party hae aii opportunity
te express their preferences at the pri
maries nnd then le cxeit itself te bring
nbeut the election of the candidates nomi
nated. But this committee is net new nnd never
has beeu impartial in a contest for n nomi
nation. It has always bceji for or against
some one, nnd It has exercised all the power
it possesses te bring about the ends which
it sought.
It is net necessary te go any further back
than the mayoralty campaign of 15)10 te find
it committed te the candidacy of Judge Pat
terson. It fought Mr. Moere and came
within 1300 votes of defeating him. This
Is what Ed Vnre and Dave Lune think the
committee should de. It Is what Jim Mc Mc
Nichel and Is Durham and Dave Martin
nnd Bill Leeds and Jim McManes did before
them. Even If there were no formal Indorse Inderse
ment of candidates such ns was given en
Monday afternoon, the party workers were
quietly ordered by the committee te light for
the nomination of certnin candidates.
All this has been done en the theory that
it is the way te keep "The Organization"
Intact and te retain its held en the offices,
without which its power would decline. The
committee has responded te the Instinct of
self-preservation. It knows that it Is net
a representative body, no matter what It
pretends te be. When wnrds elert members
out of sympathy with the group In control,
seuts in the committee are often denied te
the opposition members and rump ward or
ganizations aie set up te elect men who will
te as they are told.
Therefore the indersement of Mr. Alter
Is net an indersement of his candidacy by
the Republicans of Philadelphia. It Is noth
ing bur a renewal of the Indersement of him
by Senater Vare, who waB one of the men
who selected htm In the first place. Vare
pulled the strings and the dummies danced.
The action of the committee has net made
Alter stronger by a single vote, while the
chances ure that it has added te the strength
of Plnchet. The independents will see in
It justification for their opposition te a can
didate selected In a prhatc room by a group
of contractors who happen te control the
party machinery in their cities and ere in
politics for their private profit.
When Councilman Wcglein asked nt the
committee meeting "Who In hell presented
Plnchet's nameV" he reliected the feeling of
the men In control. Whut right has any
body te presume te question tin- wisdom of
the oiguuizatleu leaders und run a candidate
In opposition te the one the leaders hae
picked V Because Mr. Plnchet was asked by
a large group of representative Republicans
te be'enip a candidate without first nsklng
the City Committee whether they might de
it, Mr. Plnchet Is an outlaw in the opinion
of these who train with Vare.
The situation of Senater Pepper is dif
ferent from that of Mr. Plnchet. Just what
inliueines brought about his appointment 10
the Semite by the Governer has net been
dlseleicd. He is new a tandldate for the
nomination by general consent of the or
ganization, while Representative Burke, of
Pittsburgh, is contesting It with him.
The committee has given its Indersement
te the Senater and he has au opted it with
gratitude and gracleusness. lie wants the,
nomination and he wants the support from
all sorts of Interests, and he U willing te
accept whatever support lie tan get. He
might hae told the committee that it was
going be nnd Its proper function in indorsing
him, but he is n practical man and he knows
that whatever ether vices the leaders of the
committee may have, they de net practice
the vice of hpecrlsy. If they ure Indi
vidually for Pepper, they are net going te
pretend te be Impartial In their official
capacity. Pepper knows they are for him
and he Is perfectly willing that they should
say se. In return for this declaration he
has told them that he is a strong "oiganiza "eiganiza "oiganiza
Hen man."
What effect this declaiutlen will have
upon the esteem In which he Is held In the
community does net et nppear. It Is te be
hoped that It may have no serious effect
upon his primary etc, for between Pepper
und Burke every geed cltlcn uwuic of the
record of the two men must cheese Pepper.
. Te return te Alter, it is worthy of note
'that 710 one mwtlened Governer Sproul at
EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 8.
was an apparently deliberate attempt te
ignore the part which he had in bringing
Alter te the attention of the contractor,
bosses who selected him. They were afraid
if they said anything about Sproul and Alter
that Plnchet would remind the voters that
he Is pledced "te clean up the mess" in
Harrisburg that lias become disgraceful dur
ing the Sproul Administration nnd that Alter
is saying Httle about it. Indeed, Alter Is
still drawing his salary as part of the Sproul
Administration, while Plnchet resigned as
Forestry Commissioner as seen as he defi
nitely entered the race, in order that he
might be free te tell what he believed te be
the truth about conditions in the State
capital.
PUT-AND-TAKE
IjlAR mere significant nnd enlightening
JD than a yard "long official cemmunique
from any diplomatist at Genea was the
sudden rumor of a British triumph in the
general scuffle for exclusive oil concessions in
Russia. All Russia's oil may have been
bartered away by the Soviets. The rumor
et a sweeping grant te British capitalists
may be without foundation in truth. But
the announcement of a British victory wns
needed te remlnd the world that a war Is
en and that It is net being fought without
intense energy merely becnuse it is being
directed in silence.
The conference at Genea is, In fact, an
economic conference directed only en fhe
surface by statesmen. European captains
of finance have had mere te de with it than
any Government, new or old. And it re
mains te be seen whether IJeyd Geerge nnd
his associates were unaware of the enormous
coup which the British and allied oil men
have been trying te consummate under their
eyes. It is seriously te be questioned, tee,
whether business men may safely assume
te be dominant factors ever the represent
atives of government in any great affair of
international diplomacy. Fer, even while
the leaders of the most pewe,rtul European
oil combine were congratulating themselves
upon what seemed like an unprecedented
achievement at Genea, Leen Tretzky was
making nn ominous speech at Moscow. He
was addressing a part of the Russian Army,
which Is at the present time the most power
ful and spirited army in the world.
"Soldiers," Tretzky said, "be ready t"
Tretzky is net like the amiable Chlchcrln,
who has been putting the natural resources
of Russia up for sale in Europe. He Is net
like Lcnine, who is a thinking machine,
with a habit of surrender and compromise,
Tretzky is the hardest-boiled radical alive.
And he is commander-in-chief of the Rus
sian Army and a man who can de with the
Russians nnd with the ether ruling Bol
shevists nbeut as he pleases. The signifi
cance of Tretzky would net have been lest en
any European diplomatist worthy of his
salt, though the foreign oil barons seem te
be unaware of it. There Is no treaty possi
ble of acceptance at Genea which, if It in
volved Russia, could net be nullified and
scrapped by Tretzky.
Suppose, then, that the Biitlsh oil men
have cornered Russian oil reserves j or
suppose that they may corner them or that
ethers may corner them. And suppose that,
after a great deal of real money had been
expeuded In the development of Russian oil
fields, Tretzky and his disciples were moved
nguln te feel that the only decent thing te de
In this world is te seize private property.
Would the British send an army and a navy
te protect "British interests"? Suppose
the perpetual quarrel between Tretzky and
I.enlne leads te a split and an internal war
in Russia. Te which side must the con
cession holders leek for protection?
The game at which the oil men arc play
ing is but one of hundreds of similar ones
new speeding up at Genea. Russia is be
coming te all of Europe what Mexico was te
the United States until the advent of Mr.
Wilsen nnd Mr. Harding put a check upon
the foreign Invester bred in the belief tiiat
he may take desperate chances with his
money and yell for the army or the navy te
get him out of his scrapes. A weak Gov
ernment with enormous undeveloped re
sources te barter about Is always danger
ous te its own people and te ethers.
Whatever is filched from Russia by head
long opportunists will cot far meie than it
is worth in the end. What Russians and
the outside world need is an open deer in
Russia. If the economic conference cannot
perceive and meet that need.it will be worse
than UReless.
The United States is in a difficult position
with relation te the conference. Secretary
of State Hughes is right in his present
course. Without a Btable and mere or less
representative Government in Russia the
Russians themselves and any one who deals
extensively with them will be in danger.
And Washington, refusing te be tempted
Inte an enormous game of put-and-take,
which jet may lead te gunplay and blood
shed, is doing the rational and decent thing.
A NEW USE FOR OLD CLOTHES
WHAT Belgium was in the war of Ger
many ngalnst the rest of Europe Ar
menia is in the terrific war of national reli
gious and racial Interests in the Near East.
It is the point at which Eastern and West
ern civilisatiens meet and conflict. It has
been trampled by Invasions, swept by famine
nml pestilence. Its people have been mas
sacred, scattered and starved. Its children
are orphaned nnd dependent for life en the
pity of strangers.
Fer the deselate millions of the popula
tion, who will be barefooted and half nuked
when winter conies, Near East Relief, which
Is incorporated by Congress and uctlng in
Armenia for the American Red Cress, wants
jour old clothes nnd shoes, and any ether
warm garments for which jeu have no use.
All the schools are bundle stations today.
Bundle your discarded things nnd take
them te the nearest "bundle stntlen." Yeu,
like the unfortunates for whom such gifts
are iutended, will be happier next winter.
ANOTHER INTERSTATE LINK
INTERSTATE communications evince a
notable development In the preparations,
new virtually completed, for establlshlpg a
frequent ferry service between Tacony and
Palmyra, N. J. Twe double-ended steam
ers have been acquired and will Inaugurate
the new cress-river run en Satutday.
It has been many years since any effective
effort has been made te supply feet passen
gers and drivers of vehicles with new routes
for passing the State line in tlilH region.
The Tacony ferry will obvlnte the necessity
for a detour as far north ns Bristel or ns
far south as the elder sections of Philadel
phia en the way te nearby New Jersey
communities above Camden.
The new service is net In the least a
makeshift pending the completion of the
bridge. The structure will necommednte
the municipal district nn both banks of the
Delaware, but Increased communications nt
ether points will continue te be deslrublc,
ns they are capable of useful expansion.
When the bridge Is built it probably will
be found that another span is needed, and
even additional ferry linen north and south
of the city.
The Dry Goods Economist sns the
summer girl nf 10113 will be modestly attired
in red, yellow and blue, with' secondary
JVAfAMi if ja-AAn Sift, tl STA fltlil eIaIi.. at.. .
VW KIVVH Vfflre ,NHU TIUITLa !.'
T
AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT
Bar Yerke Stevenson Made the Let of
Women In Journalism a Pleatanter
One by the Example of Discre
tion and Dignity She Gave
te Her Werk
Uyv8ARAH D. LOWRIE
SOMETIMES I wonder if among all the
activities In which Sara Yerke Steven
son was a moving force any has profited as
much by her connection with it as that of
journalism for women. '
Perhaps better than most of her acquaint
ances I am In a position te judge just what
Mrs. Stevenson has done in that regard, net
only for her day and generation, but for
the generation that will reap the benefit
Without very well sennlnc the source.
Journalism has long been an honorable
calling for women, thanks te these who have
shone In its ranks, but te ignorant and
therefore prejudiced onlookers it has net
always seemed a gracious or worth-while
position of power.
Many persons ielt that they were within
bounds if they thwarted the getting and
the giving of news. And many persons felt
that they were quite within bounds if in the
company of journalists they assumed that
nothing could be left te the discretion of the
journalist and almost nothing left te her
honor.
MRS. STEVENSON, who was Peggy
Shlppen of the Ptri.ue liKner.n, swept
nwny that Ignorance nnd therefore much of
that prejudlpe, and only the indiscretions of
the women who are her successors can undo
the work she se ably and quietly performed.
It never occurred te the many persons
who talked things ever with her, nnd most
persons who had news prlvnte or public that
nffect the welfare of this town were went te
talk things ever with her it never occurred
te them te say : "This must net be written
up!"
On the contrary, her word was waited for
whether a thing should be made public and
hew and when.
She wns inundated with Items that per
sons wished her te consider news; and that
she accepted se much speaks volumes for
her real kindness of heart, for she knew
without the lifting of her hand enough te
fill her space twenty times ever. And she
was given mere liberty than any Journalist
befere her day te write what she pleased.
Out of the long experience of her life anil
the varied personal experience of her davs
she had "copy" and te spare concerning
things that belonged te her life, but she
allowed ether Interests nnd ether persons
te use her ns a mouthpiece te a most gen
erous deeree.
I think this wns due te a perennial veuth
in her that would net permit her te stag
nate or lag en the forward march.
Her acceptance of se much news gave
muny really timid souls courage te ask her
te accept mere, and In the end she get her
whole great community of mere than a mll
1 en souls accustomed te the Idea of sending
their news little or big te the newspaper.
,.f erhnps the "space manager" sighs ever
'""sjdee fixe ns 1111 inheritance he would
gladly forge, but te the gatherers of news
it is really a godsend. Fer thev meet a
response te their peifectly reasonable in
terest which actually gees mere than half
wny. That is, If they are known te be ready
and able te publish news, the news is
vouchsafed with a very generous gesture of
trust nnd gratification. .
EVERY new nnd then one meets nn old
timer who has a lefrain of cautionary
expurgations; every new and then one is
bored by a sort of bantering taking for
granted that nothing is safe when a news
paper representative is within earshot, but
what used te be the rule among women is
new the exception where Mrs. Stevenson
wns known.
I. for one, nm immensely grateful te her,
and I wish with all my heart thut I could
tell her se face te face.
I suppose the secret of her discretion was
net only personal dignity and what is called
worldly wisdom, but an instinctive sense of
what would help and what would hinder a
geed cause or a geed person or a geed Idea.
Te make much of differences, te ncccnt
temporary maladjustments, and te tell tins
story in the exact words without the per
vadlng utmespherc te be, in fact, a mis
chief maker instead of a constructive oh eh
server In the end shuts the doers in the face
of that particular nevvsgetter. People may
Lei, , Vi1"' bu',Bl'e hns ' kucss her facts or
what she sends in as facts, and in the end
she loses her usefulness, no matter hew well
sne writes.
MRS. STEVENSON wns sometimes curl curl
eusly absent-minded about dates and
data concerning coming events, but she was
te be trusted up te the hilt in the matter
of atmosphere what lay back of an event
nnd constituted the reason for it. Her train
ing in society and life in general made her
wary of Interpretations offhand. She might
have been racy she and her set knew mere
racy thugs about the people that make up
the world than the professional gossip jour
nals; but she preferred discretion, chese te
thaS'a'musln'gSier.11 JUtUclUS rather
Se in a very reul sense she built up a
feeling of security, what one might ca I a
trust, which it will be an honor te her fel
low craftswemcn te carry en in this town.
T DO NOT knew what was her leading
X motive for taking up that career nt it
time when her life was nt the hevdav of its
multiplied activity: perhaps it was the need
of meuev In he first place; but her dis
criminating mind very seen made her nvvare
hew much journalism entries with it that is
net money nnd is meie than just power.
It Is a great fellowship, and once avvnre of
that side of it, Mrs. Stovemon accepted that
us Its chief asset for herself, perhaps the
greatest asset her varied and interesting lf0
had brought te her. Its democracy pnlpablv
broadened her and probably kept her spirit
the clear nnd bunvnnt force it was through
"snrievv. tell nnd pain." J
I think- she would be the fiist te testify
that she gt ns mud, from journalism as
she gave, which K only another way of
sa ing that she was happy in her choice of
a profess en nml 111 her best in her daily
work for her dally bread. '
. n'01.!1 'V'01" P""",'. "working for one's
dally bread or for line's daily luxury or te
pass one h time Isn't a drag. It jN work
done against the grain, or without an In
spiration, or under the discouragement of
failure or for no geed thing, or, worst of
all. te prolong an existence that is in itself
u living death thnt is u curse!
Whether we women nre fitted for our
dally work- by technical training or are
trained for it by the changes ami chances
of life, ns was Mrs. Stevenson, the Bi,.nt
point is te fit it with the grac and dignity
nnd real enjejment thet marki'd her career
us a business woman.
The New Yerk nellen
Policeman's Let force Is being ignored bv
Net a Happy One brokers who hnve lest
.r,00,00n in bends ant
a prlvnte investigation Is being made v'l.
hnpn the brokers think the cenH already
have their hands full with the bandits This
mny nlse explain the charge of the Pell,...
Commissioner that thev neither bhavu their
faces nor brush their clothes, ,
- . c. Misfortune comes te all
Tragic Story of us, hut only once in a
whlle does it fUt niore
polgnently than in the inse of the Ellenvllle
N. Y., printer who dropped and Nhntlercd
n clay pipe he had smoked for forty-two
enrs. What will he de new? Quit smoking
altogether'! 'Inke te smoking cigarettes?
There is room here for Interesting conjec
ture. Nevy Yerk flapper Is said
Entertaining te have se successfully
the Burglar vamped a burglar that
he left without the loot,
Ner was he arrested. On the ether hand,
Hazleton, Pa., has a flapper burglar, But
aba was pincnea, xnere seems 10 ee aiscrii
inatlOB nere, ur pwh wiritarp
s0k ' ft' MM
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MMI n2&'' ' v . , jib
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NOW MY IDEA IS THIS!
Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They
) Knetv Best
DR. WILLIAM C. BRAISTED
On Combined Curative Research Werk
RESEARCH work and the co-ordination
of all the healing ngencies will be one
of the greatest works of the present century;
according te .Dr. William C. Braisted, presi
dent of the Philadelphia College of Phar
macy and Science, and in this great work
for the benefit of humanity Philadelphia will
play a leading part.
"The work which we have In mind,"
said Dr. Braisted, "will begin at the very
beginning, that is, with the lalsing of our
own medicinal herbs und plants. In this
branch, ns well as in the later ones, the most
exhaustive research will be conducted. e
plan te experiment with all the new knevvn
medicinal plants nnd te experiment net only
with these and with combinations of them,
but also te raise many plants the medicinal
value of which is as yet net definitely known,
und. in short, te make a thoieugh and prac
tical survey of the entire botanical field.
The Physicians' Part
"When we have discovered drugs which
appear te bn of value in the science of heal
ing, the next step will be te have them
thoroughly tested. This we shall de our
selves in our own laboratories, up te a cer
tain point, and then we shall have them
thoroughly tested by the best physicians in
the country, many of whom have already
signified their willingness te co-operate with
us.
"When the time nrrives that these great
physicians nre convinced that ceitaln drugs
will always have certain effects, then we
shall give the formulae te the manufacturers.
We shall net de any of the manufacturing
ourselves, as it is essentinl for us te keep
ourselves entirely away from the commercial
slde; we are simply doing the work of dis
covery thieugh lesearch und experimenta
tion. "We ulrcadv have two ncrcs of ground
under cultivation, nnd there are 'J00 acres
at our disposal near Philadelphia upon which
w'e shall place our experimental botanical
gardens. Frem the work which is te be
denp en this land we have high hopes of
making soma important medical discoveries.
Combining the Factors
"Our plan contemplates the working to
gether in a closer manner than ever before,
since medicine nnd pharmacy separated
nbeut n century uge, en these two great
agencies, and te them will be added the
work of the chemists, bacteriologist,, and all
ether agencies which are new working mere
or less separately toward the samu end,
"A nrnetical demonstration of the value
of an institution of this kind was given in
11 notable way at the American University
Experiment Station In Washington during
the war. Amazing results followed the labor
of the experts In the various lines, nmeng
them being chemists, phslcists, biologists,
pharmacolegists and pathologists from many
sections of the country und all working
under 0110 reef in close co-operation und in
conference almost hourly.
"This ib wimt we hope te establish as a
permanent tiling, nnd if the work is carried
out along the lines new planned, as there
sceliis te be every likelihood tltat it will be,
It will constitute one of the great move
ments of the present century. Thousands
and hundreds of thousands of lives are new
being lest needlessly becatise of Insufficient
knowledge concerning chemical, physical und
biological changes.
Higher Standard of Drugs
"With all these agencies working to
gether, it will be quite possible, te obtain
new und higher standards of drugs. Re.
search and experimentation alone wUPde
much, but we plan also te have the co
operation of many of the largest nnd most
responsible chemical and drug houses and te
take full advantage of their practical knowl
edge, "Together we shall approach the prob preb prob
lems which constantly beset the plusiclan
nnd the pharmacist; problems rclntliis te
the Brlablllty of drugs, their pathological
action and the results of combining them
Perhaps the greatest deterrent facto? li" the
combating et disease in the past has been
that there was se lft! ro.emraii ...'."
the sciences of heullng, which nre all striving
for the same goal but by .highly different
wjBSpraassp
miSnwt'TSff-m' CM unm wed7 peiSS
BEWARE! TAkECARE!!
sW.tt..,..'atatH . r&T.r - - vr ' .
mwsasasssar- ui :l
sJU L.rwuu-ijl-uaaul'. Hi'W.f:"' 1 - . i.tj-lfls.-l Ja --
k l
ll4.T.a
iMitfc&t
W
"Spri
jiitC.
f-
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w
Philadelphia will play a lending jiart, and
the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and
Science will be the vehicle for the move
ment. We have thus fur received "the heart
iest co-operation which could be asked from
1 t ,,v, wl' ,,ave ljeCM "PPrenchcd, and all
the allied branches of medicine have ex
pressed hearty approval of the idea. This
has been the casu with the manufacturing
houses ns well as with the scientists. It is
no part of the program te interfere in any
"ay with private enterprise. Our work
will In u measure be te stand as a sort of
clearing house between the medical arts and
sciences and the manufacturers. The prob
lems of the former will come te us, we shall
solve them if possible, and turn ever the
results, after they have been thoroughly
tested and approved both by us and by the
physicluna te the manufacturers.
"As te our plans for the college, they are
?.,?n,,y J?ret,y, "eJl li,10Wn- We hnv5 nssur
mice of the sale of our present site, nnd will
take a new location which will permit the
expansion which is new essential te our col cel
,f.f?rktns n.c11 u,s ,t0 the "search work
1 nn, 'i8 '" ,mi,uI- Tllc new buildings
fnl ,!"" ,'mp,e n and ull modern
of us. The Philadelphia College of Phar-
ff!Wd-lvnce,ithe elllest institution of
its kind in the United States, nnd at its
tS!!S?wali.Bnni,Whi,ry- ,vI,icu was observed
I?i!y' the n,u,mn '! raise a sub
stantial sum te be devoted te the endowment
of the new college. ' u
Public Support Essential
"We have secured thus far the most cer-
dia co-operation of all the various elements
which we shall combine In our new plan of
e'lTn01!;-, "u.Uh., W f the public fa
: rii,r v .... "1 ' " u .movement such
Wf. ... V i """lllCllt SUCH
Q are irnlni nlmn.i ...i.t. . , .
believe te be one of ,1 "S. " lu,.w.Z"
movement-) of the present century u 11 ove eve
ment which when its permanent value is
demonstrated, will receive the unquesUening
support net only of the citizens of Philadel
phia, but of the .-iitlre world as well
"The alumni nie working hard for th
endowment und which we must have If we
are te de this work te the best advantage
and in u manner whrh will mnke if t?
Messing te mankind which we Imv" no doubt
t w 11 proye te be. The general pub 2. who
in the end. will be the chief lenet c ries'
can show that it Indorses our effort- by aiv.'
ing us practical as well UH moral sufmerV
The turn of 100.000 hits alSSd" R
wired, and pans te bring this tel,000 000
are new under way. v'iw,uuu
"Pharmaceutical experts estim..in ,,,.,
the people of the United state.- tha
the sun, of a-moeoooo1 .u,n ua ieT, K
used for medical purposes. A ,yc"" f.?
portion of this sum would enable f,!"11
duce. materially this enernfn TZ. " . ? .ru,-.
bv the use of fewer but l,e ieV .'"".. lu"
drug
igs, besides discovering e ,c mem, ' .
renting disease ,,, 1
nrr
suffering
from
The international con
W"" of the Eedera.
tlens nf 'IV...1... .,".ra
Excellent
Scheme, But
-. 4iiiUi;H cnien-
has declared it te be the task fc ,. 11 ,0""''
Iel workers te prevent J 0hfvu" ?
strike. It is an excelenl ,niv ,,r n,f.,0M
the cat. the ilme all he Lbe'"n
the world hnve'reached agreement fe of
ernmentH of the world will lmve ,!, ft" G,V
te quarrel about. But, of c0 rh- ' ?,""',"' lcft
nre the cat will catch a of mWVre"
the he 1 is mill!..!,..! '0l 0I ,mc'c before
Just
previsions of the Liberty Leun Veti If. ,i11'?
Instead of ret ling war benis thi,tnn?? ,,lut
be used for a soldiers' .U,?h?ZVK
an tiling te de with Secretary Mellen. Ct
ported intention te leslgn? 'Ull" " "-
If ber unions real!?!.
iJirVber' -.?
Restraint
Is Needed
union, n,jh
..u niir
Unternicr, limitation of
Samuel
will be equivalent te u restriction T " ' D
lives, liberties and Pursuit efhanK.S
the eemimr Mnrri; . ." i,nP.P'neas of
marked DtmeatbenM McQtaSa. "tow&hS:
nobody, ever tees Mtll TKaiLWJfil
fc-J)
"s-w "'
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v-jzzr3 -
jf Jr j
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r mf 'afaT aT JT"I
.4
1
-. I V"" -s ,,,
Cepyrliht, 1922, by Public Ledrer Compaer
SHORT CUTS
Indiana is new holding Ita head aftt
141D lll!H-iCii:nusO UUUl.
Most of the jazz at Genea is in the &Id-
siiuna ruiucr man iu inc Dig icui.
Japan may have, reason te view wits
aiarm recent Happenings in China. ij
Making a success of nn organ reclttl
durine Music Week nnvhf fn ha n nln. a
In the matter of an efficient army. psr
uaps i-eain gives point te Pershing's plea.
Russia has an idea she is showing bet
iricuuuuess uy expressing ner willingness te
eurrew money.
"If you want a better country, get out
ana vote xer it," said littdy Aster te wemea,
excellent uavice ler men te fellow.
The CUDture of Pekin'n narr h Can.
ten's air fleet is net without its application
iu mi iimitution-ei-armament plans.
Dr. Parkhurst blames the crime wti
en Tammany. This enubles Tammany te
euure uoners wun jazz anu tue Dapper.
The Cltv Cemmlttee'H nttnmnf tn rui
Pinchpt out of the party shows a lack of
acquaintance with its proper functions.
One's interest in the record -breaVim
trip 01 ene Aiauretania across tne Atitaue
is dimmed uy tbe possibilities of the air".:
piane.
The leader of the French CemmunliU
was Kicseu Aiay 1, iuai. On May 1, IDS,
he was slapped en the face. Next May 1 U
nm cacuni! wun a pat en tne wrist.
Irish Irregulars' raided Seuth Ireland
banks and cot n hnmlmrl tlinimnnl nmtnili.
As they gave receipts for the amount, then
is cvmence mat tuey did tiicir best te bum
it u regular raid.
Music Week, Clean-up Week, Petl
Improvement Week nnd Physical Culture
Week twentv-eleht ilava rnlfrwl Inte seven.
Just In a little while we'll have Bad Be
Week. Panhandler Week, Fireplug Week
nnd Rest Your Hat Awhile. Week; but we
cien r. expect te ue entirely happy until 1
have a Seven Weekly Fay Days Week.
What De Yeu Knew?
QUIZ
1. Where did the first Supreme Court of tlw
United States meet?
2. Who wns Andre Oretry?
3. Who wrete the parallel lives of famem
Greeks nnd Remans?
I. What Is a banderele?
5. Wlmt Is th meaning of the legal phrase
in banc"?
6. What nre the States of the Common
wealth of Australia? , ..
7. Mie were the two Secretaries of WarU'
- ...,tllu Wilsen administrations?
8. What Is n cryptogram?
9. W hat are the cress-trees of a ship? .
10. What kind of a weapon is a partisan?
Answers te Yesterday's Quiz
1. The trans-Atlantle liner Resolute and her
s'ster, the Rellnnce. of the sani '"Jl'
nagfi, ero the largest privately ewnea
passenger bteambhlps under the Am
lean flag.
2. Galilee Galilei, the famous Italian astray.
emer and mathematician, lived In U
latter part of the sixteenth and the nrej
part of the seventeenth centuries, alf
dates are 1C04-1613. . -.
3. Cobh is the Irish name for the pert.e
Queenstown. .. ,.
4. Table rerkB first came Inte use In IUi?
in the fifteenth century. The first rerjj
persenaae te use them In England w
Queen Elizabeth, although It Is doubt
ful whether she employed them en
ordinary occasions. ,.,
C. Oklahoma Includes much of the tern7
et the former Indian Territory.
6. William B. Gladstone died In !"'
7. Themns Jeffersen, for his first term, "
Jehn Qulncy Adams were elected W
the Heuse of Representatives. . ,
8. The Aral Sea Is a larite Inland salt-ww
lUliu UD VI lliu CUBl'ltul ncni i -Vll, 1
slaii Central Asia, Its greatest leifxil
Is 230 miles and lis greatest breaet" I
182 miles. . i
5. Rebellion la organized nnned resistance"!
erarantzed a-evt-nmn or any aUtllOtllli, 1
Revolution Ih a comnlete chanefu
a turning, upside down, a great,
versal of condition", fundamental
construction, especially rorcieio
HtltUttfili hv nltlmna nr auhMCU
newj ruler or pollty.fer Iha-eteVrti
' twrfiirt,d'i,.a
iv, avni a, irajtua ara). . lavair
eon
!?J