I?'' " A "V f ' -" !! ' '6;'v-.v"' ",5vfyu ?'J Wt A" " WfESW?Tfr 'ie.-?-,w-v ,--!--w-v-- v'Y"! 'vsm?utym . ,Wft fnjB 5n?w ' it ' '':aaaaaal ' A ri fift ? j , 4 Ar; .y.misnik !?' s, ,r 'v.v ICuening public Heftger I PUVJC LEDGER COMPANY emus it. k. ctmTis, rawiDsst venn c, Martin, vice President and Treaaureri Charl? A, Tyler, Secretary; Charles H. l.udln Bui FhlllD B, Cel Ina. Jehn II. VVIIlliu.n .inhn J. UTreOn. Genre P. rleM.mlth. nivM R RmlUv. ireejara. PAVID B. BMtkKT Kdlter JmtH C. MAnTIN....(Yneral Bualneta Manager i Published dally at TcbUO Lepees BuUdlna ' Independence, Square, Philadelphia. AIT A NTT e Ciit Prtai-l'nten nulldlns Kiw Te 304 Mudlren Ave. P"0IT 701 Fent HulldlnK f. LOOIS 613 Olab'-Dfmetmt nulldlrjr CBlCiOO 1302 Tribune Building NCWS IJL'nEAUS: WalMireTON Dt'ntiu, X. E. Cnr, Pennsylvania Ave and 14th Pt InwleuBcmt! rhe, Sun PuiMIng leDNDON Deiciu Trafalgar UtiiMIn SL'npCRtl'lION TKIUr Te EtiNtNe rnr.ne Lipeib la nerved la aub erlberi In Philadelphia, and nurreundlna- tawna t the rata nf twelve (12) cenla per week, payable te h,e rarrjer. B?. IF.'.1 ,0 Pln outside of Philadelphia In pa United State, Canada, or United Ptatea r- S?,,!?K,Jp9!.u,e fr'e' ""y (S0) cnt'' T month. '5.".! delrars rer eir, payahl m advance Te all feren countries no (ID dollar a month r.orie Subecrlbers wishing address changed lust lve old as well as new address BEtt. 3080 WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 1691 t-r Addrtat all rommiinlcnf'enii te Tve-tltip- PubHe Ltdeer, ndrpirtnce Sgwirt. rhtla dr Irhla. Member of the Associated Pres3 STRE ASSOCIATED MESS s exclujlffty -i. Med fe the use or tcpublicntlen of nit item Itpatches credited ta tt or net ethrru-lie credited IM paper, and also the local tieut published tnkrttn. AH riehta of republication of special dtspafc'iea Herein art alto reserved. Fhiltdelpbls, Mendir, uul It. !:: A FLEXIBLE TARIFF IT IS apparent from the size of the ma jority by which th Senate ha adopted the plan for nn clastic tariff that 'sentiment has advanced a considerable distance in the direction of n mere scientific adjustment of tariff rotes than that te which we have been accustomed. The plan. In brief. provides that the President, after Investigation, in.iv increase or decrease the rates fixed In the bill In net mere than ,"0 per cent If the facts justify It. Mr, Harding lias asked that Congress provide by law that the Tariff Commission be the body te make the investigation, but lie has announced that If this Is net done he will by proclamation designate the commis sion as the fact-finding body. Twe objections have been raised te this plan for an clastic tariff. The tirt is that It Is proposed at this time ns a mere elec tioneering trick. Congressmen seeking re election can tell their constituents that the duties fixed in th bill aie net final. They are merely the basis fr,em which the Presi dent will work In arriving at an equitable rate. If the farmers a,v the rates nr tee high, they can be told that the President will lower them; and if the manufacturers ay the rates are tee low, why, the Presi dent can raise them. This objection comes from opposition Beurces. The Democrat have been planning te attack the Tariff Iilll. It was te he their chief source of ammunition against thr Ite publlcans. Hut ihe flexible tariff plan pours water en all their gunpowder. They are naturally indignant and they are charging that Its sole purpose is te feel the voters. It might ! i ossihle te treat tl'.K s-ort of talk seriously if it were net for the fact that students of tariff legislation In and out of Congress have been urging the plan for several jeat-s. It is net something cooked up for a pe'itical emergency. The second ebjei mni i-. that the plan de stroys all stability in tariff rates. It lias frequently been said that business can ad just Itself te any tariff provided it is assured that the rates will be permanent some of the saints, according te tradition, ncciis. temed themselves te sleeping n a bed of aptkes. Every time Congress begins te con sider a new Tariff Hill business is checked and no commitments are made until it Is known T hat the new law is te he. If we are te assutiy t li:i t the President nd the Tariff Commission will art in geed faith this objection loses much of its feri e. There will be no changes in rates which the facts admitted by the interested parties de net justify. There will ! no long peiind of -uncertainty pending the pre. lamatien of a new rate; and a rate arrived at after careful investigation will be nere likely te be equitable than a rate agreed upon by the vote of Congressmen actuated by purely po litical motives. A further objection Las been raised, namely, that the plan i un oiistitutien.il, as It Involves the surrender by Congress te the President of its taing power A the Str'iuat' Court has net passed en this ques tion IT would he presumptuous f r any lesser authority te attempt te decide It. IS'it it is worth while retailing that we have had tariff laws which provided for lowing maxi mum and minimum rates and authorized t lie President te dei ide which rate should pre vail. The present plan in us essence is a plan for a maximum tariff ."ill per (cut Uglier than the rate fixed in the lull and a mini mum 50 per cent lower. And Congress em powers the President te liv. the rates be tween these limits in ii'-i erd-iiv with what ever may be the state of fai ts at any time. This hnrdl.v seems te be a surrender of the 'taxing power of Congress. t is rather an Intelligent exenlse of It. It miild he argued that Congress bv delegating the railroad rate making power te the Inter-t.i'" Commerce Commission has surrendered us powers under the Interstate mnmiei.e i la ,e of the Constitution, but it has ii"t been se held by the courts and the railroads nicept the rulings of the iotniii!ss:en. JOKES THAT WEAR OUT IT MAY surprise thatnge rs te be told that any j"le is never tee old te be used by a vaudeville actor. ' i is true. The order just i-surd b.v the manager of the Keith urcult of vaudeville theaties that there muBt be no mete jokes about prohibi tion has no relation te Lis belief in the Velstead law. The prohibition joke has be come stale and has lest Its point It Is like the methtr-in-l.ivv joke, which no longer appears in the i emie papers and probably has disappeared fieni the patent medicine almanacs. The vaudeville n ter has had te cut It out from Ins patter and find epmctllltlg te take its place. In like manner, the mortgage foreclosure in fiction Is banned. Thete wa,s a time when the line of the story arrived home just In time te prevent a grasping u eney lender from foreclosing the mortgage en the old homestead and turning the old folks out in the cold. It would take Mr Cat tell te iom iem pute the iineunt of ink used m writing such stories during the last lift v jciirs, nnd the vast sums involved in the financial trans actions which saved the farm, Hums piebahly big, enough te wipe out the war debts of the whole Terltl. Hut the uieitgage no longer nnenVa In fiction. It nnn ionic back acaln In another fifty years, for fashions alwajs "mevei in cvcles. New Unit the tiveidene jokes about pro hibition are te be banned from the stage the tiwliences who have grown se hardened te It that they no longer see any humor In It may 'te pardoned If they are a little curious about wnat will take Its place. . Si ST. JOSEPH'S COLLFfiF r-vJ . . ... SflHIB expansion et ht. Jesepirs College, i,,whlch justifies the purchase of n tract t ..'! ''Imrteen ex-res at the corner of Fifty- LfMktl. tt ami the City Line will be grati- fying te every one interested in the educa tional institutions of the Reman Catholic Church. The college, which was founded In 1852 and conducted In the neighborhood of St. Jeseph's Church in Willing alley for n few years, new occupies a building at Seven teenth and Stiles streets which It has out grown. New buildings te cost $1,000,000 will be erected en the Ovcrbroek site In the near future. There is room enough there for all the buildings the college will need for a number of yenrs as well as for all the out door activities of an up-te-date college. When the new buildings are completed the college will probably attract a much larger number of students than the 500 who new attend It. It will then receive wider often eften often tlen outside of the constituency te which It particularly appeals and will add still mere te the fame of this city as an educational center. REBORN IRELAND LOSES ONE OF HER TRUEST PATRIOTS Frse State Is Arthur Griffith's Menu- ment, Emblematic of the Enduring Werth of His Clear-sighted Statesmanship rnilE work of Arthur Griffith will go en. J- The premise of this progress is In itself the measure of a man te whose lndomlteblc end unselfish leadership the dawn of a new Ireland Is largely due. If there is a kind of consolation for the Irish people in this prospect, that senti ment does net lessen Indeed it deepens the sorrow for the premature passing of an In spiring and exceptional type of patriot. Irish history Is replete with the romances of Impassioned spirits contemptuous of realities, tragic dreamers, of the stuff of which perhaps poetry rather than nations are made. Cathleen-ni-Hoellhan, new bowed with the weight of bitter years, new bright-eyed and ecstatic, "with the step" as Yeats puts it, "of a girl" has been an Imperious mis tress. She has made martyrs, whose death in a sense, marked a release from a vain contest with phantoms and chimeras. Griffith adored her with n devotion quite equal te that of Emmet, O'Cenncll, Parncll, Wolfe Tene. It Is in bis expression of this loyalty that a marked departure from trist ful tradition may be traced. Of the program of the creation of the Irish Kree State, Arthur Griffith once declared: "It doesn't strike me as being anything mere than plain expediency,'"'" There was courage in th'j'- u'.ternnce. for the word with which the speaker defended his espeual of the cause of en nutonemous Ireland has long beer, shadowed by unfavorable con struction. "Expediency." maintained Geerge Mere dith, "is a man's wisdom; doing right Is Ged's." The epigram Is attractive, but many of these who have Interpreted it tee literally have fallen en the tlark field of de de lulen. In ;i considerable number of mundane af fairs "man's wisdom" Is about nil one has for guidance. Man's wisdom, bulwarked by impregnable honesty, was a fundamental fea ture of the character equipment of Arthur Griffith. . It was net, moreover, unaffected by a strain of linens" Idealism whli h supported Griffith in the grim days when misconcep tion of his purposes led te imprisonment and te sufferings which might have daunted a less ardent spirit. Hut it was, after all, "man's wisdom" in brilliant flower which Inspired the hard hitting determined Griffith and the magnetic and eloquent Cellins te save the day for Ireland In that critical hour in Londen when the Free State arose te confute t-keptles and repair the wreckage of a thousand tragic years. As fervently as ever he helped te launch the Sinn Kein movement, as vigorously ns he pamphleteered en Its behalf, edited mili tant journals and plunged into the vertex of nationalistic politics, Griffith championed the new order of dominion government and the prospect of the reawakening of Irelend te noble responsibilities worthy of Its place In civilization. The sincerity of his Intentions mid his unyielding grasp of realities burgeoned in the generous support of his constituters. His accession te the presidency of the Dall was a richly deserved honor which Griffith, with the aid of his faithful partner Cellins, head of the previsional government and cemmnnder-ln-chlef of the Tree State forces, repaid te his nation by an unflagging exhibition of practical statesmanship. If the ascendancy of the Free State Idea in the minds of the vast majority of Irish men at home and abroad Is an illustration of "expediency," It Is clear that that com modity, given certain conditions, has been undervalued and misprized. The best advices are in accord In fore casting the early and decisive defeat of these fortes either of sheer obstructionism or of inetuphj steal fervor, with which Griffith had little patience. The president of the Datl was a t lese student of history, net only of his own but of ether peoples, nnd he con sistently noted upon the conviction that na tional entity, distinction ami prestige were unattainable unless founded upon a struc ture of fuct. As a consequence, Griffith refused te ex ex tell the impalpable and the hypothetical. He beheld an honorable nnd glorious national life for Ireland under the operation of the treaty establishing the Free State. Whatever the aspirations of the Inmost recedes of Lis heart, whatever his poetical conception of Ireland a vision doubtless in tensified by bis Intimate association with .Jehn F.gllnten, Geerge W, Russell and W. H, Yeats may have been, Griffith turned from the separatist fancy because at this time it was manifestly Impossible te give it reality. He perceived In the partnership of nations of which the Hritish Empire is in fact com posed an honorable association in the inter est of valid progress. The opportunity for Irish emancipation of n very genuine kind was tee conspicuous and ten pressing te be sruriied. Griffith adhered te the facts. It is a brave, skillful man who makes of circumstances, apparently adverse, bis allies In project dear te his heart. Without the sacrifice of inherent principles, Griffith In terpreted dcstlny'as n friend, net n fee. The unpredictable caprice of fate is ex emplified In his death just en the eve of the fruition of his cherished purposes. Ireland with all her roll of heroes has seldcfUest one of finer moral caliber or one EVENING PUBLIC 'LEDGER mere earnestly devoted te her true well being than Griffith of the Free State. He will net be forgotten. A reborn na tion will be his enduring monument, PATIENCE REWARDED rriHE patience of the residents In the neighborhood about Old Yerk reed from Hread street te the city line Is at last being rewarded. This street has been dangerous te pedes trians for many years. There has been rib continuous sidewalk. The street-car tracks were en the side of the roadway se that pedestrians had te walk In the center. Ac cidents were frequent, and inconvenience was continuous. New it is announced that the work of Improving the street will be completed en October 1. The car tracks have been moved te the center of the roadway and walks are being laid en both sides of the street, thus making it as safe ns any ether street in the city. The motorists who used the read will be as grateful as the people In the neighbor hood for the Improvement, for they will no longer have te be en the alert lest they run down n pedestrian. The highway will be used only by wheeled vehicles. PARK CONCERTS RESUMED HEXKY I1ADLBY, who will take up the baton nt the Lemen Hill concerts en the resumption tonight, will be enlisted in nn undertaking te which the epithet experi mental can no longer be applied. The symphony orchestra season In Fair mount Park has far surpassed in popular appeal and even In artistic work the rosiest dreams of its promoters. In three weeks', time Victer Kelar, the first leader in the" cycle, demonstrated the keen and. sincere appetite of the Philadelphia public for geed music ns a diversion and a stimulus in summer. His successor, who will direct the con certs for n fortnight, is nn experienced hand at dispensing aesthetic entertainment, adapted te n wide diversity of popular tastes. Mr. Hndley's direction of the stadium concerts in New Yerk this season has brought new success te that enterprise which Is, in n sense, the inspirational father of the concerts here at home. He will be favored with a public eager for the best nnd sincerely appreciative of high class, rather than austerely "high-brew" composition well played. It Is te be hoped that modesty will net deter him from occasionally submitting some of his own admirable works. Mr. Hadley unquestionably ranks among the most tal ented of American composers nnd Lemen Hill habitues, new constituting nn Immense clientele, will be happy te pay their respects te his Individual inspiration. I SHORTCUTS I Lloyd Geerge remains the world's great est little compromiser. The oil waster doesn't care bow near the shore he makes his pitch. Darius Green would enjoy himself In Clerment-Ferrand these days. Wonder jf Senater Hellin couldn't be induced te use n little Federal reserve? It is the coal bin that will presentlv consider the saddest words of tongue and pen. The trouble with the Irregulars In Dub lin was that they didn't knew thev were licked. The Chestnut Street Association would like te make It "can't-de-it" Instead of conduit. We gather from the record that Secre tary Hughes does net approve of the Mexi can Constitution. I suppose the money that makes the mare go. ventures Mrs. Arabella Mixing, Is stabilized currencv. W hnt the railroads are willing te accept of the Harding plan continues te be but tressed with an "if." Necessity for public heerings preceding change will take much of the flexibility out of the "flexible turiff." Colonel D'Olier will seen be In a posi tion te continue the Hubbard series of "Little Jeurne.vH te Eminent Americans." One fact that will never get Inte the school books is that Themas A. Edisen is chewing a plug of tobacco presented te him by President Harding. Circumstances have brought matters te such a pass that It seems te have narrowed down te a question of Harding or politics en the Federal Iteserve Heard. Attempts being made te prove that Roosevelt never swore, says Demosthenes McGinnls, leek very much like a mean attack en a man who is net here te defend himself. He could swear by just snupping his teeth. The dampness of Senater Frcling huv sen's cellar has become a political issue and mny rest him his job; but his home Suite is full of earnest citizens who are willing te help him remove the cause of offense. Great Hrltaln, in showing her unwill ingness te concede the twelve-mile terri torial limit claimed by the I'nitcd States for prohibition-enforcement purposes, has no difficulty In finding a precedent for her ac tion in our own history. In Plqua, O., en Sunday one may go te church or stay nt home. Nothing can be bought or sold but milk and meals at meal times. Gasoline and newspapers are banned. Plqua should be Invested with two extra letters. "Piquant" seems mere descriptive. Whether the rate-meking power con ferred en the President b.v the "flexlble tat ill" amendment has the effect of the ap pointment of n scientific tariff commission, or merely the establishment of a political thermostat depends entirely en the Presi dent. In the glider flight trials In Paris nn American succeeded in staying in the air in n moterless airplane for forty-eight seconds. If the glider seems little better than a toy let it be remembered that the some has been true in the beginning with many useful in ventions. Nebraska's Lieutenant Governer Is working us n strike guard for $5 a day because lie needs the money. He draws no salary for bis official position, and be and his wife were broke when lie took the rail road job. Here we have a condition nf things actually freakish enough te baffle comment. New Yerk's Chinatown tragedy arouses interested conjecture us te the true Inward ness of the Hip Sing Tongs. Hip suggests hoech: Sing suggests song; and Tongs sug gests bummer: from which we may conclude that when the hooch breaks into songs we Uiey expect the teters will seen be at it ham incr and tongs. Scrnnten man hes obtained an injunc tion restraining factory girls from throwing "abandoned powder puffs ami cigarette butts" en his lawn. The wicked clgarctte and the abandoned pewjer puff must new accordingly pursue their wanton and unrc unrc generate careers In ether fields. Rut iiln't nil tills rather tough en un honest welkin' 1 e4ij - PHILADELPHU, MONDAY, "ATJGUSl1 14, AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT The Fact That Methuselah Ate What He Found en His Plate May, Dietitians Concede, Have Had Something te De With His Leng Life Dy SARAH D. LOW RLE WHEN I was a child lets of eldish per per eons who came te the house used a word that I grew te bate, because they al ways threatened me with It. The word was dyspepsia ! They claimed te be great sufferers from It themselves and refused te cat this or that en the score of it. And it nlwuys seemed te me that they gazed en what we children nte with envious nnd at the same time dis approving cjes, shuking their heads nnd ejaculating: "You'd better net!" or, "Yeu will lie nwake tonight, if you de net have bad dreams!" As a matter of fact we were given very simple feed as children, nnd nt such hours as would insure easy digestion before our bedtime, but apparently these sufferers from dyspepsia found even simple feed nt early hours ns tr.vlng ns tasty dishes of odd fla vors at odd times. Nothing agreed' with them. The truth of the matter .was they had ruined net very strong digestions, probably, by carelcs or haphazard or tee hearty eat ing in their early years, and ns no one much understood diet nnd few doctors made any but the sketchiest feed lists out for their patients, the wrong once accomplished was difficult te right. BABIES of well-nourished, well-to-de fnmilles would go te death's deer and sometimes out of It because of this very lax treatment of the feed subject. And babies cried a great deal mere then they de new, because folic was n very common trouble with even the ones that were supposed te be healthy. It was taken for granted. Then suddenly (nt least it seemed sudden) there came n change! The whole matter of feed for infants: the variety, the healing ns well ns nourishing qualities, the accent en this or that Ingredient te make up for some lack, the regularity and the quantity, the weighing nftcrward, the way the feed was administered, all these factors that were never considerations before were part of the regime net only of n well-to-de, much much berved household, but, thanks te clinics, pessible even te the baby of an Ignorant immigrant. As for the regime of adults in regard te diet, whole libraries have been written about feed, and been read, tee. When it came te the home hvgicne classes of the war the whole subject of diet, vwlth a knowledge of balanced meals, wns part of being patriotic for the housekeepers of the country. In fact, the feed shortage drove that lessen home in many n household te a very salutary de gree. The right feed, rightly cooked and conscientiously eaten, became part of win ning the war. Until then each locality hed Its fetish the feed it would have whatever else it went without. The cake in the country sections, the het brends nnd griddle cakes of the Seuth, the perk and potatoes of the Irish families, cernmenl mush nnd scrapple and sausage of the Pennsylvania Dutch, the beans and codfish balls of New England, the strong brew of tea for the settlers from Great Hrltnin, and the strong brew of coffee for the settlers from Scandinavia, the cab bage and soaked meat of the Slavs nnd Germans nnd the raw fruits and greens and spaghetti of the southern Europeans. The universal desire of the young person for sweet tilings and cold things might be said te have constituted the only general feed taste in tlie country until the war. During the war. and since the feed em bargo has been lifted, there is n growing tendency te be less, sectional, less racial in diet among Americans, and tee, at all events, give our bodies the benefit of a varied and at the same time a balanced diet. TT 1 in IS hard te realize that this growing telligence about feed and this real desire en the part of American mothers te provide well-balanced meals for their children has scarcely found nn nnswering echo In Europe, ccept where the Red Cress and the Ameri can feed relief feices have influenced indi viduals here and there. I spent part of this morning with n woman who has just icturned from visiting her daughter, who is living in England and who has lately had a baby. Fortunately, it was net her first child, or the end of the story would have been different and sadder. The parents saw te it that the best nurse procurable and the best-known English doc tor were en hand for the occasion. The baby came into the world fat and healthy and began life well, for its mother was also healthy nnd with plenty feed for it. Hut te the hitter's astonishment no embargo was put upon bow much or hew often the child was fed. Her first baby, born in America, had been very much mere carefully treated. However, both doctor nnd nurse seemed se authoritative and sure, she let the doubt in her mind rest. Rut when the child fell ill she sent for n chllil specialist, who immediately took it off Its mother's milk nnd put it en an Infant's feed, giving it merphia at intervals in order te quiet it. The baby grew rapidly worse, and ns seen as the mother could get her strength she set herself te the task of finding some one who really knew or cared about diet in the American way. She discovered a baby's hospital with n doctor who was se progressive as te be almost without public support, but in whom she found a kindred soul, for he could speak her language about diet and sounded like Helt or Starr in his ideas coin erniug babies. She get him te her liabv In time just In time- and they pulled the child back te normal bahvhoed, BL'T her experience had been se tenifying nnd her search had been se drastic that she was tilled with distress at the benighted state most of the practitioners of England were apparently in with regard te the whole matter of diet. She brought about a meet ing bet w fen Dr. l'lexner, of the Rockefeller Institute, and the progressive doctor of the lieby Hospital, with the franLlv evpiesjed hope that this e,ne progressive's hands might be upheld from the great fund that is de signed for the purpese of making the knowl edge of the few the wisdom of the many. 1 De Wall, of the College of Pharmacy, n very amusing and, I should think, immensely able paper lie rend last winter. He rather decries, I notice, tee much notice indulged in bv 'he generality of us upon the .exnet fend 'values of what is put before us. The vitnmine vigllants nnd the calorie weighers come in for some passing fun in the follow ing verse that he quetes: "Methuselah ate what he found en his plate And never, ns people de new. Did he note the amount of the calorie count lie nte It because It was chew. He wasn't disturbed, ns nt dinner he sat Del roving a roast or a pie, Te think it was lncking In granular fat Or a couple of vitamines shy. He cheerfully chewed every species of feed, Untroubled by worries or fears Lest his health might be hurt by borne fancy dessert, And he lived ever nine hundred years!" Dr He Wall's plea joking npart wns for plenty of fend of a wide variety. Te his thinking this catholicity of taste would de away with malnutrition and with deficiency diseases. He remarked; "My creed Is thnt he who enn eat In nil languages has found nutrltiennl salvation. The Individual vviie can cat and enjoy schnltz und knecpf, pate de fele grns, spaghetti, scrnpple, keumvss, curry, rnw shellfish, roast beef, twe-bnnded cheese, (the kind you eat with one bund and held your nose with the ether), chile con enrne, tortillas, caviar, chop Miey, schvvarzbred, oatmeal, hnssen .ifrffer. ceulash. gefullle fish, rice, tcrrnnln and pel will never ie hungry no matter whwt he may .ctts.' r - NOW MY IDEA IS THIS ! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Knew Best DR. JOSEPH B. WOLFFE On Campaign Against Heart Disease RESEARCH en a large scale supported by public moneys nnd n presentation of facts te the people by the medical profes sion through the press eventually will be the chief campaign methods in the etTert te stamp out heart disease from specded-up modern life, according te Dr. Jeseph H. Wolffe. of the staff of the Mount Sinai Hos pital nnd n director of the newly organized Philadelphia Association for the Prevention and Relief of Heart Disease. "The battle has just begun," snid Dr. Wolffe. "Doctors have known for n long time of the prevalence of heart disease, nnd have hud accurate statistics of its alarming increase. Hut such discussions as have taken place have always been nmeng medical men, and hence, when facts are mnde public, they tire perhaps mere startling than nctual con ditions would lndicntc, "Adult cases of heart disease, it Is known, stnrt new far earlier in life than wns usual before people begun hurrying ubeut as they have done for the Inst few jenrs. Symptoms of nrterio-sclcresls, or hardening of thq nrteries, are new appearing frequently in a scale of ages ranging from thirty-five te forty -five. "We work nervously nnd hurriedly, and we de net knew hew te relax, te have real recreation, for that same hurry and scram ble continue in whatever We de. If a men gees off for even a week-end vacation, he conies back te his work mere run down nnd tired than when he left, for he lias probably been en the go from the time he started, snatching feed when and where he could and never stepping. Always In a Hurry "In the city the pace continues; hurried meals, running for trolleys nnd trains, in crensed burdens of mental nnd physical work all add te the tension under which people live, without stepping te consider whether or net ihey are constitutionally fitted for a continuous round of activity. "Then, If they find thut the heart is In had condition the shock brenks the spirit nud they feel that they ere done for. This Is net se. Unllke ndvanccd cases of tubercu losis, heart troubles can be remedied by an altered method of living and a slewing down of all activities, with rigid adherence te rules laid down b.v u phvsician. There is no leasen te give up. "There has probably been no Increase In the number of cases of heart disease among children In the last few jeers, but never until the last year has any attention been paid te collecting information en children alone. New that it bns been found that children, unknown te themselves or te their families, huve often some form of heart trouble. It remains only te seek mere spare for treatment and te determine mere fully the causes. Few Deds for Heart Cases "In the whole city we have only sixteen beds for children afflicted with heart lesions nnd ether troubles that require a place of rest, where competent care can he given and frequent ' observations of the case made. These beds are in the little cottage In Deven. We could use 500 beds new in this cause alone. "It Is net a problem te be financed by private money or te be dealt with entirely in private Institutions, ns at present. It Is a municipal problem of the greatest im portance, and tee much cannot be said for men like Dr. Furbush and Dr. Cernell, who nre doing their best te provide for the ex amination of every child when It comes Inte the schools of the city nnd, further, te nr range courses nnd activities that will eradi cate heart weaknesses as the child grows elder. We need mere men with that high sense of civic duty. "Seme of the causes of heart disease in chlldicn are already known, such as bad teeth and infected tonsils Acute rheumatism also is invariably productive of bnd effects en the heart. We need a greatly extended system of research, made pessible by the city Itself, for private means nre Insufficient and there is much te be learned yet In clinic and laboratory. Heart Trouble and Indigence "When you think that the cause of n great deal of civic dependence Is heart trouble (hat might have been stepped many years 1922 NO THOROUGHFARE earlier had the enses been reported and dealt with by the city, it appears all the mere logical that the problem is n pub'.lc one nnd is important te mere persons than the one immediately concerned. "People have been largely ignorant of heart disease and the steps necessary te combat it. I believe thnt from new eii the newspapers should be closely in touch with committees of the medical profession in order that information that is proper mny be tlis seminnted among the public. It Is the only wny they can get it. "Among the aliens I notice particularly the ignorance of people about their own condition and these In their fnmllies. Thev de net understand the instructions of doc tors well enough te carry ihem out. Here at Mount Sinai Hospital the percentage of nliens is very large, and whenever I wish te show te nny nf my classes nn especially bad case, I have only te bring them here t'e n clinic. "Children suffering from heart disease should be located when they first come te school, nnd then It becomes possible te watch them throughout their lives, mere or less. They can be regulated in their activities while in school, and Inter thev can enter one of the many trades or businesses which are net tee arduous for their health. "They will be worth mere te themselves nml ,u?,.,sec"'ty, nH " ""fifing unit, and the possibility of their becoming n public charge enn be practically eliminated." Paris Sees an Ancient Motorcar Frem the Sclentir.e American. Paris is used te unusual bights, nnd a few days age the populace was treated te the sight of the venerable great-grandfather of the automobile. The owner, the Abbe Gave s. who wns perhaps the first profes prefes profes tlennl mun te recognlze the value of the automobile for getting around the country for pastoral or ether duties, managed ih'e creaking old contraption. He was greeted with salutes of horns throughout his nroe nree ress through the city The lons-vl-lened Abbe is looking te sell the historical ma chine und the proceeds will help the poorer clergy of his district. The car has net been overhauled In thirty vcars and barrlnc n touch efjisthmn Is still runable. The Woodshed Obsolete Trem the Kansas city Star, "Father, take that boy out te the fhernet7,era(lav:"Crn Jewrtl CU' Te Be Replaced by the Dry Smlle Frem the Mexico Ivcdeer. ' We presume that the liquid voice will "",.d,MPPeep n,lrcly em the peu J, novels. Shady Greve In the White Lights Correspondence Montlcelle (Ark ) Advance Talk about a community coming te the from but old Shady Greve has 1, ? t,ve big dances this week, one nt Vie Pace's and the ether et Jess Harnett's. Had geed music and plenty of girls. s YOUTH AlD I YOU have the right te sing, you who are jeung, Hut no such right os I who bed net sung In any sort for long, Hut new can bring te evensong A. voice thnt, as It finds once mere the will. Finds the forgotten strength and skill ' Yeu have the right te laugh, ns thus far free trem tears, but no such right ns tests with Who knew and banished them, Who grafted en life's bitter stem Buds that dicw sweetness from the rap of And, when they blossomed, laughed again. Yeu have the right te crave peace and con- lent" Rut no Mich power ns I te circumvent Unrest and vain desires, Fer ere the floods rose and the fires, I owned a loud where nil I wished came true And se need wish no w1k, nnew. ' ': acuu,w vun Ueneluer In Scrlb. i 1 441 PJMrVWaWaaJarJaaaaaaaaMaaiaaaaBaaWJ ss. ; aaw ...Lai ,,i What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1. What famcus tempest was specifically known as "The Great Storm"? 2. Hew ninny times has the present Prince et Wales visited the t'nlted States? 3. Which State of the Union produces the most tin 4. Who said "When In doubt, win the trlclc"? 6. What Is the most valuable precious stone? 5. Which is the largest lake in Europe? T. What Is the lightest known metal? 8. What Is the crlRin of the exprers'ea "The thlr. red line"? 0. Hew long Is the Suez Canal? 10. What Hiiilsh colony is named after bearded fig trees? Answers te Saturday's Quiz " 1. The. War of Jenkins' Ear was the name pepularlv given te the cenitlct between Great Hrltaln nnd Spain, which broke " out In 1":!9 and became mcrfced .in the War of the Austrian Succession. The Immedlate cause of the war was com plaint of Rebert Jenkins, nn English mariner, that he had lest nn ear ami undergene ether tortures nt the hand of the Spanlaids In the West Indies 2. L'r.vellte. is an important ere of aluminum found chlelly in West Greenlnnd, It Is used in the manufacture of alum, FOritum hvdrat" tler making soap) and an opaque glass called het-Last por celain. 3. Executrix Is the feminine of the word executer. 4. Edward D. White was William H. Taft'i immediate predecessor as Chief Jus tice cf th united States. 5. William It Day, of the Supreme Court of the United States, has been selected as umpire of the Anicrlcen-Ocrman commission te adjudicate American claims against Germany arising out of the World War 0. A ildus achates is a devoted follower, a hmchman "Fldus," or "Faithful,'' Achates was the loyal follower et Aeneas In Virgil's eple poem, "The Aeneld." 7. Anatele France, wrote the Feclal satire "Penguin Island" Usle des Ten Ten genitis). S. The Mle Is formed by the Junction of the Blue Mle and the Whlte Nile. 9. The International was n society formed, In Londen In 1SG4 for the interna tional political organization of work werk lngmen In the Socialist conflict with, capital, of which Karl Marx was the dominant spirit Its full title was the International Workingmen's Associa tion, and It was also known as the Red Intel national. It disintegrated In Philadelphia In 1S70. A revival of this organization, proclaimed In Rus sia en November 10, 1917. has been mllitl the Third Internatienale. 10. "The Intel natlenale" is the name of French song written by Eugene Pet tier In 1S71 nnd adopted ns u revolu tionary hymn by French Socialists and these of oilier European countries. Today's Anniversaries ISIS Prince dc .letnvillc, the son of Leuis Philippe who fought In the American Civil War, born in France, Died there in 1000. 1870 Admiral David G. Farregut, the famous Union naval commander, died at Portsmouth, N. H. Rem near Knoxville, Tenn.. Julv .-. 1S01. 1S70 The first wire of the Brooklyn sus pension bridge was drawn ever the East River. ISM First through train run between Detroit and St. Leuis. 1010 Prohibition and woman suffraje wen in the Hritish Columbia elections. I01R Feed ile:s were reported In Tokie nnd ether Japanese cities. 11)1(1 The Prince of Wales was welcomed in St. Jehn, N. H. . . HC1 Four lives lest nnd $1,000,000 In property destroyed in oil fire in Philadelphia. Today's Birthdays Fermer Prince Henry of Prussia, only brother of the ex-Emperor William Hi born at Potsdam, sixty years age. Henry Clews, famous New Yerk banker nnd financier, born in Englund, eighty-two jcars age, Wen J. Arneld, one of the foremost con sulting engineers in America, born near Grand Rnptds, Mich., sixty-one yenrs age. lit. Rev. Geerge W. Davenport, Epis copal Hlshnp of Easten, born at Branden, Vt., fifty-two years age. Jehn Galsworthy, celebrated English nov elist and playwright, born fifiy-five J'arJ age. An Evident Truth Frem the Chlcajn S'ewa, . . , Machine government Is evidently a gr0 ' deal mero expensive than the old fashion' J f Kuvcreuieui uy nana, y , Ws M ,. i :,. M . r -.i i .