tetf i.it. i r ( t ? in & u f. im mi Hit r 1 1 ?t;thMmMmmn l VJ$r W&,n , , . , ' CTiU :.' " - nTJHTTie TW -'V'JfcK EVENING PUBLIC "'LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, MOtffrAY, JITLY tt, 1922 HMG HUGHES RAPPED IN MIRRORS Anonymous Washington Auther Again Hits Alleged Weaknesses of Capital Leaders T. R.'S REGIME CRITICIZED Waahlnjrten, July 10 A wrcrely critical arraignment of the conduct of the Government at Washington anil the men who utand out as the foremost political characters t contained In "He hind the Mirrors." Iiy the nnnnjmeiiH author of "The Mirrors of Washing ton," from the pros of O. P. Putnam's Sens, released hem ycterday in ad vance of It a circulation In book form. Few arc spared. The tone of the work is decidedly tics'imlstlr. both with regard te the Government and buelncs and these who have prominence In finance, industry and politics. The re cent past Is reviewed te contrast it with today. Roosevelt and the men of his time are net spared. The Colonel lhed by pic turesque. exoRRerntlen, It li told, with the additional remark:- "Actually his rule was one Ions compromise with Aid rich and Cannen." Only these whom Sir., Itnei-evclt called malefactors of great wealth nre held up nx great men, of whom the author ap pears te find no counterpart today, ex cept in Henry Ferd. Harding Feebler Than Tnft Unlike "The .Mirrors of Washing ten." which was n collection of sketches of political personalities, "llcliind the Mirrors" Is n discursive narrntlvc In a philosophical vein concerning American tendencies. President Harding Is made out te be a weak chnracter, but favor ably contrasted with Secretary Hughes, of whom the author's dislike as mani fested in "The Mirrors of Washington" has net abated. If Mr. Harding lias mere common sense than Mr. Hughes he "is feebler than Mr. Taft," It Is held, and the present Chief Justice is net painted in complimentary terms. In the author's apparent opinion the Cabinet seems te be a collection of weaklings. The Senate new rules the Executive, according te the author, but senators arc iicltl Ins the proposal, with details of the tonnage te be scrapped, was net Mr. Hughes' Idea," says the Avriter. "Let us de the man In the White Heuse jus tice. He conceived It en the Slay flower, read It te Senater James Wat Wat eon, who was with him, and wirelessed It te the State Department." Comparing Mr. Hal ding and his Sec retary of State, the author of "Behind the .Mirrors " sa.s: "Where our actual Secretary's mind falls short of our suppositious Secre tary's i-ilnd Is in the valunblc quality of common sense. 1 nin even prepared te maintain that ns a measure of icnllty Mr. Hughes' mind Is distinctly Inferior te Mr. Harding's, which is ene reason why he never became Prcsldcat and Mr. Herding did." Of Mr. Hughes It is said that "he tins only one criterion of reality, his mind, which has been developed at the expen.-c of all his ether mentis te ap proach te the truth." It is added: "He lives In a region of facts, prin ciples ami logical deductions. He does net senKe anything. And only men who senlsc reality have common sense. An extraordinary but limited mind, Mr. Hughes impresses us as tne boy light itut Unitn t ntu nA liilil nn trt tuMn The Washington Conference en Llmltn- h'nR calculator does, and leaves us uu- tlm it Armnmntif tu mrwlfi ir nnnnnx nti ! MltiHIlOll. abortive affair. The bloc system In Cen- I Weed row Wilsen comes In for sharp gress Is net new: "It conforms te eur.nl'iss ll,1(1 tllls curious story is told of best traditions." i him Mr. Hughes Is denied credit for his starting warship-scrapping proposal at the opening session of the Washington Conference. "Kvcn the drnmatlc method of mak- "Mr. Wilsen was by temperament nn autocrat. An Illustration of hew per per enal was his government wus his treat ment of his enemies. Ills bitterness against Huntington Wilsen, the He- publican, Ambassador te 'Mexico, is well known, A year or two after the dis pute was ever, Huntington AVllsen's son came up for examination te enter the consular service. He passed at the top of the list. President Wilsen heard of Ills success and directed that he should receive no appointment." Huntington Wilsen never was Am bassador te Mexico. He was Assistant Secretary of State. The author may have had Henry Lane Wilsen, former Ambassador te Mexico, In mind. The Cabinet la net spared. A rather general view that Mr. Mellen lias made an excellent Secretary of the Treasury Is net allowed. "Mr. Mellen is the ehyest and most awkwhrd man who ever rose te power," says the writer. He la pictured, ns getting credit that belongs te subordinates, among whom H. l. Gilbert, the Under Secretary of the Treasury, Is mentioned most prom inently. "The voice Is the voice of Mellen, but the hand Is the hand of Gilbert," It Is told of Treasury accom plishments. Mr. Mellen s rffeMl te dismiss Democrats from the Treasury service la attributed te 'merely tbe In stinct of self-protection." Get after that rheumatism Drink a plnjj of Mountain Valley Water fieri hour en the hour. ,.'. Drinking erdlnsrjr .pure feed. water. I n van llut drinking Mountain Va the radle-actUe wnter. , nnickljr nim. ha, hvpmrixa nciniiy I causing your achfs and palm. ey. re- that la Try It today. Offlf nnd SatfKroems, 71 thrMnul St., Phlln. Call and sample Water free. Ph. Walnut 3it7 R.d!e.ctive Mountain Valley Water " WaWvYvWrAv Osa V'Vv fl H akv -CELEBRATED . Ginger Ale I HI mj "NT MEASURE l5'a FLUID OUNCtS I 111 rlJMCl,c,UOTSWVVATIR.SU(WR.JWICA I HI WNi'ft.CAPjlCUM,CARAMtLAMrnUITrUVeM R lllCligguetClub Ce.Millis Masjjl llL '' i," aJaPaTEyMw It wouldn't be the same "If every woman en the street Should make a leaf of bread, They wouldn't be the same at all," The Master Baker said. (i"Seme leaves would burn, and some would fall, And some would net be geed ; Though each one used the self-same flour And did the best she could." AND there's no secret about X. making Clicquot Club Ginger Ale. We tell what we put in it Other manufacturers knew all the ingredients we use. They can buy most of them. But they don't make Clicquot Club any mere than a woman with geed flour and a recipe can make bread which tastes like her neighbor's bread made with the same flour and recipe. We have one decided advantage ever ether ginger-ale makers. All the water we use is pure, cold spring water, drawn from the bed-rock. Nature has filtered and re-filtered it. The carbonation of this water and the flavoring with Jamaica ginger, fruit juices, and sugar make the happy blend that is never duplicated except by us. It is almost a universal taste. Why, then, should you drink ether ginger ales if you can get Clicquot Club? Ask your grocer te send you a case. Keep a few bottles en ice or in a cold place. Serve it any time te anyone. They all like it THE CLICQUOT CLUB CO., Millis, Mass., U. S. A. Ginger Ale Sarsaparilla Birch Beer Reet Beer 4 . i ft MAI G. T 3 ER ALE CAR SMASHHALTS WORKERS Aceldent it 25th and Ridge Ave. Detaya Many en Way te BUelneu Business men and women were de layed forty minutes en their way te business thla morning when a south' bound Hldge avenue trolley car hit u Wllls-Jones-Supploo milk wagon nt Twenty-fifth street. The wagon wan smashed and wedged In sucji a way that the trolley emergency repair crew had te be culjcd te get It moved aside. Ne ene was hurt. The accident ec curred nt 7:20 o'clock, nnd n long line of cars wna held up until the line was cleared. ' Shave. Bathe Shampoo with rii Seap.1 Cuticui catleara Bipliawfcw-HifMiitrn Any Hat in Stock $4.50 were up te $17.50 J2r THINGS WORTH WHILE 1618-26, Chestnut St. Fer That Vacation Trip! SOO New DRESSES Were $16.50, $18.50, $22; tfiV J f geme te $35. Voiles, PBBCJ Ginghams, Linens, Dimities, Swiss, Ratine I About' one hundred Tub Silk Dresses were up te $27.50 All colored stripes; white background. $15.50 100 Dark Silk Dresses Were up te $85 Cantens, Crepe de Chine, Remain, Reshanara. . . Wasl Skirts were up te $15 $8.00 Pique, Gabardine, Linen. $24.50 Knit Crepe Capes Were $39.50; very effect- fc99 CA ive; all new colors W&&.W $4.75 Sweaters, all colors fflm w 111 )ev. I WM .BBk ILr' "sJsBaBaBaBaaVi Put if up te your meter Yeu want gasoline that is efficient under all of the varying conditions of speed, lead and temperature under which it must operate. Put it up te your meter ! Compare Atlantic with any ether gasoline you can buy. There's no mistaking its all-'round superiority! Ne repeated churnings of the starter te get going! Ne continued pepping and sputtering when warming up ! Ne misses at high speeds (Atlantic burns withhair-trigger swiftness)! Ne weak or uneven explosions en slew, hard pulls! Put it up te your meter and get the positive proof of the high, uniform quality of Atlantic. Gasoline the one gasoline you can be sure is always right and always obtainable. "There's an Atlantic Pump en the read you are traveling Such a gasoline must have a low "initial boiling point" for easy vaporizing and sure fire ignition; and also a uniform chain of higher "boiling points" te give it stamina high expansive force and te insure complete combustion. That's the kind of gasoline you get in ATLANTIC I . ... ATL ANTI C GASOLINE PutsPep in Your Moter I m f V i j. Buswegji-.TTM ,l Vf, l .uv