Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 05, 1922, Night Extra, Page 10, Image 10

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EVENING PUBLIC LEDGE& PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 5. 1922
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fayiE?lt;.. Tylr.. JUcretury: Charlr H. L,udlm
iiZtvmS: lllp B- Celllni. Jnhn II. William Jehn J.
9T tn' are " 0Unilth. DkvM E. Smiley.
t t)AVn B. SMILEY Editor
' 3(nnt.C. MAimS'... Ctneiral Buln(i Stammer
) Published dally at Fcsttc LrwjM DulMInc
, Independence Square Phlladelrhla.
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NEWS UUHEAfS-
wiiiithoTe.v nmtut,
N. n Cor rennayhtinla Axe and Hth t
New Yerk llcittir Ttie Sun rtutt tin
Londen UcuiiC TrafIfir Bulldlnjj
Sllis'CltltTION TKU.M-TJ-.
ErnNlsn i'idlic Leiiii Is mis, te uo ue
Bribers In I'hllitieluhia. and rfurreundlnc tewim
St the rnte nf tueive (1.) icnti tr k, paatle
the carrier. v
Br mall te point eutld of Thllidelphla In
tan United .state f ana la nr rmtl Mat po pe
"'' Peta-e frse fllty (50) cent rr month.
J'", rteiura per lenr raM- i-i .vivsrc
Tn all rerelcn muntrlee nr cI i liar a month
reric Subscribers wishing aldrej charted
MUat clve old av well a nfiv address
'WIX. 3000 tTALMT KrYTONE.' M 11V 1MI
VTAitTtii nil eemnnnlcnfinni te riiiu PuiHc
Ledger, Initcprnrf-ner Squirt py, ad--'pia
Member of the Associated Press
TK ASSOCrATVD PRESS is rjclMSii-rjy fi.
fUlrd te th in for icvubneau n e' all qrui
MUpntchrs emitted te it cr net cHr-uuf -"difJ
lits pemer. und also the local ncui ru!.iifd
therein.
All rtehts of rrruMlfotien 0 Jjcrciel iiip(itc
Werein em nlie resfrted.
rhllidflphli. Tuediy, -fpurabtr S. 14::
RUS IN URBE
Tnn I'.vbrrn filr ! a-" g-w ! an example
of rns .n i rli' :i - -iu l li't.ni .in
vberu in tic 1 nitul St 'tt It l- iii a:ii
cultural f.iir li l witJ.ln tin- limit of .1
city of lir ir' !" in tlliii etnilatlnii
l'utupl'in) ami plc are tuiliite'l alen;
xvltli rare licirM'-s and v.nulcWlle iierfermer".
Real fariiui:-, and there are man within
the city limit, compete for prize with men
uhe farm for plei&iire. The prizes mean
temethlni; te the man who makes hi luiiu luiiu
frem the land, but te the ethets they ai'
merely a reencnltlen of their vkill in a -ort
of expcnle Epert, t-uch as golf or
yachtlti','.
The .'isrlrultural ptatlstlc of Philadel
phia Count would diiubth s .urprl-e thee
unaware of the number of aires et rultl
Tated hind vllhin it1- benmlarli . We ral-e
bay nnd potatee and untie and ebiiKens
and applet and piniliue, milk and butter.
The total value nf the farm predm ts i
probably mm h greater than that of Tike
County, fur example, or than eme ether
of the absolutely rural teuntl's of the
State.
A MAGNIFICENT SAFETY RECORD
THIS l net the hrt tlnip that the l'enn
sjhatiia Kallread has bren enabled te
point with junihable pride te .i banner
year of serurit in the operation of it line
Hut the twehe months ending Ma IU.
102-V during which period l.V.'.onfl.eon pis
eengeru were rairled without the le--s et a
ttlnglc life, was net marked by ie'np!tc
recovery of Ameiiein railway from the
vrar nherl; Conditions hae been trting.
even for the best managed reads, anil be
cause of tin alone the nciemplNbment of
the I'eniiiihania eam3 a tpcelal si,;nin
cance. Figures are frequently quoted eoneern eeneern
lng the safety accomplishments (,f liritish
rallwas. Lines tin h as the Londen and
Northwestern and the (iieat Western lue
cxperlentcd ears without a death 1411 nf
paengers. Hut nltbmigli their traffie i.
heavy, it imi'i be remember) d that the mi'e
age of een the major I'nglish railwins Is
Ir.slgniiirant lempared wltli total for iu
eral of the great Amerlean siipiiis
The I'eniiMh.inia S"-tem embrai e mere
than 27,000 mile of tiaek. This is riter
than the entire total uiileagp, net leuntiiu
double, triple or ipindruple tratkagi. ut
the cntlie I'nltid Kingdom. It exceeds uNe
the total lengths of line In. respei tneh.
Italy, Argentina, Austnilia, Itrail, .I.ip.m
ar(d several ether fni-t-rnnk ceunt.'ies
In Its legard for buniin life nnd prmtlial
Interpretation of the familiar admonition of
safety fnt, the leniihanU has s, t a
notable example in raihe.uling, be-pe iking
a sincere romiptien et its responsibilities
a a public servant.
GOLF, IRREPRESSIBLE,
ffTT'S a great game If jeu timl the hall
X before the end of the da jnu v in "
Dan Dah . with his dn. inimitable
drawl, und te knock 'em out of their seats
with this description of the game nf golf
That was In the dim das when I'dm
May was eung, when -hert shirts, evnn in
mtisical cemedv, induced ee-strain, when
eelf was a ridiculous e.etle. (emprehem-ible
only te a few fantastic with fat purses and
se fciikc of humor.
Back at the beginning of th! century
golf was e.teliisne enough te be funin . Its
development into a popular pastime drafting
Its deetees from eer class in t-euet was
altogether unimaginable.
Records of the public link at CehbH
Creek l'nrk tell the tale of a tremendous
transition in the laid of (.pert and amuse
ment. Frem Jnmiarv I te .Sepnmber 1 of
this year "2..177 phi era shared in the
ecstasies and ugeults of golf en the admi
rably kept urta maintained b the munici
pality. H. C Hunter, the mpcrintendent at
Cobbs Creek, dei lares that no wmthir is
tee bad for mme enthusiasts liajcball suc
cumbs te "wet grounds" and tempests, but
tht jelfiHt In us buhl as Ajax
Dan Dah, were he uliw- tedav, would be
compelled te cheese a duTerent subject for
his satire. (,Vf ha aiculiel unlversalit,
and the popular ardor which it inspires is
no ecciuly butt fei irrexcrcnt mirth.
LITTLE NATIONS AND SURVIVAL
'TpHE little republic of Austiia, bankrupt
nnd prostrate, is familiarly cited as an
instance of the unintelligent ruthlessness of
the Trea'y of St. Uermain. The inland re
gion wlilv.li was eme the heart of the great
'AuHtre-IIiingariiiu Ianpire has been de
scribed as an economic impossibility for
which no fut 111 save that of perpetual
national banl.iuptc could be imagined
1 Much him been heard of the se-called
, "Balkanization of Kurepe" and of the trials
of email countries without diversity of
natural or industrial icseuices. Austria
Laa been called hopelessly tepheavy, with
its swollen capital, Vienna, a deadweight
upon a hapless p"op!e with nieugcr oppertu
Bute's for nclf be.tcrmcnt.
f, Czeclio-SlevnMiin opinion may net be
Seemed entirely truMwerth, since the Heur-
ishlng nuw nation, wltli I'rague as its capl-
llti, is liiiiuraiiy uiiNmpatuetic tewaui its
, lemicr ejijiri.sscir. 11 i nurirnuiig, never
ith'tless, t note tin- verdict of Dr. A. It.
tBasIn, rvllnf Ht-i- of Finance et Cecho-Sle-
iivakla, upon Austrian public policies. This
-critic points jiut that "AiiHtriit hu.s ."0 per
(Cent mere cuilivuicci run iii.cn uniuvri.iiiii,
'mere feicbt wealth than Itehemiu and 11
& .wanufacturlng indiiste cciual te that of un
of the auecesHien states."
Wt' i"IIir experts of limber nnd iiiiueials,"
k. tie adds, "and her pielits as an eMnblicJicij
S1!jWnKlilK ""'I tuilliliciriiu cciiirr miiiiihi vii-
KhW8 her te pay for the imports hc
ifMulrcs.
'uS&y'
that a friuaii uatieu is uecus-
wrily a wrecked nation has been vldcly
circulated since the war. It Is, of course,
worth consideration, but net h a historical
axiom. Dr. Ilaln may be prejudiced, but
he had adduced facts te show that Austria
Is net utterly bereft of resources.
It Is worth remembering, moreover, that
even though surrounded by great and power
ful neighbor the Swls have succeeded In
surviving without a seaboard and without
coal deposits.
The latest plan for the recovery of Aus
tria I economic union with Italy. The
possibility exits ale of a Danube con
federation, of which the new republic would
be an Important member.
The rout te rehabilitation Is thorny.
Trade agriement, lean and an accommo
dation nf tariffs are necessities for AuMria.
The little country, heweier, is net a desert,
nnd its reconstruction i dependent, at Ient
te some extent, upon the proper development
of considerable resource which the oppon
ents of "Ilalkanizatleir have conveniently
been Inclined te overlook.
PEPPER AND THE COAL MEN:
SOMETHING NEW IN POLITICS
Forbearance, a Sense of Impartial Jus
tice ahd a Will te Understand as
Substitutes for the Big Stick
rPIII!HK N in some men a quality which,
- for tlie want of a mere definite term,
might he tailed ceurte of mind. It reflects
itself in piticme and teleiunce, In an
Illuminating sense of humor. In a fixed
regard for all just principle nnd In n kind
of in'el e.-mal a..irarcc which, re-enforced
b !car perception of changing rights and
vi-n-igs, ni'i and line afil give all sort
et gi 'itxu ..dv.iii'age te an adversity less
fei tunat-'.v 0 1 till i'd.
Yeu hive thai gift or jeu haven't. It
i net a characteristic- of anv particular
hind or cla of people. It doesn't come
from an.v particular sort of education ether
than the edui itien of experience applied te
a sensitive mind. Becaue tolerance nnd
the wisdom of humor and patience arc
seldom encountered in the battlefield of
1 ontemperar.v politic, it i worth observing
that it wa courtesy of mind, rather than
an of the mere theatrical device of current
economic philosophy, that enabled Senater
I'epper te bring tempeinr order out of the
toiifusleu in the anthracite held.
Already It Is being said that "I'epper'
victory" i remlniient of Icensevclt and
bis achievements In a emevvhtt .-Imiiar
emergency. It Is, In fact, tee earl te a,v
whether the adjustment effected at the ieal
lenferenecs here nia.v be called a victory
for mi both. Certainly a public eonfiented
with 1 limbing coal prices and the threat of
a winter short ige due te diminished sup
plies and nippled j steins of transport
cannot feel that it is victorious.
One thing, however. .Mr I'epper did by
methods whnll unlike the method of Roose
velt. He epene I the via te an iniuudlate
resumption of anthracite mining. He bad
no big stick and none of the power or the
fae illties of the Federal Government te
help him I'n'lke Senater Herd, Sinaler
I'epper does net appear 10 have hi en even
s'lghtly biased lu favor of the corpeiation.
He was net se foolish or se uncharitable as
te suppose tint workmen in th,e coal Held
wnald bung the miseries of eviction and
hunger nnd general drstitutiea upon them
selves mid thcti families without what the
believed te be erv geed reason. And.
utilise snine rjf these avowed friend of
labor who are in reality labor's in mic. lie
didn't believe that a majority of the men
who have Invested their money and their
working .vears in the mining industry are
incurably selfish and inhumanely cruel.
When Mr I'epper begin with the simple
assumption tint the miner and his em em
ple.ver h ive at bottom the same sort of con
st tence and the s.mie tapaeity for feeling
anil the tame ba-n concerns he could net
fail.
The time came when Warriner and Lewi
alike wen te him with their trouble, net
beeau'e one 1'nited States Senater could
show them 11 way of escape from a wilder
niss eif Industrial 1 oiifuslen never yet
charted or explored, but because at heart
all the opposing leaders of the employing
and union gieup are si, k of the passion and
unreason and . ielc in e and futility of these
half-taught and dangerous amateurs who
still believe that ou can really subdue the
minds of men b the use of clubs and In
junctions and threats of jail.
It may be that politics In "Washington
nnd, Indeed, all political thinking as it is
done by the few who engage In that least
fashlennb'e of pastime are ke.vcd tee high.
The Senate has a way of seeming te shriek
when it has an thing Important te de or
sav Washington Is new In a fever. It la
obviously und shamelessly excited.
Vet people who are sure of themselves
necer get e.xt ited. The knew that truth 1
quite as mighty as the legend -nvs it U and
that it will prevail whether statesmen want
it te or net, ami that right docs Invariably
assert Itself without asking for the aid or
consent of parliaments. And they knew
that there aie some great issues which can
be better disposed of through un appeal te
the natural human sense of decency than
by appeals te law, and that the rule of
common cemtey, as It is established be
tween men, If ou have the sense anil
gi ace te epply it i will often be mere swift
and effee tual a remedy for economic and
social ills than n rule from u bench. There
is tee little humor In Washington, or,
rather, tee little of the instinctive wisdom
of which generous humor is the outward
sign
Ceurtesv of mind was wholly absent from
Congress during the years of the debate en
the League of Nations. It is absent new.
Mr. t'empers is without It. Se Is Attorney
General Daugherty.
Yeu might suppose, listening te the shouts
and the threats of these hours, that the Fed Fed
eiatlen of Laber could disrupt the country
if It wished and that Mr. Daugherty is
neeiled te save us from worse than death
Yet we have been meie than once tliruilgh
troubles , incomparably guater than the
tieuble of even 11 genernl stiike would lie
and we survived and carried no marks. We
are net se enervate el jjs, 11 people that a
little hardship eeuld seriously hint us. It
mu he what we need as an antidote for
jazz.
That, however, Is aside. What we
starteel out te say ts that the significance
of Mrj I'eppi'r's weik In thn coal eon een
ferencew Is linger by far than Its immediate
result, The ijuallty of the thought and
,l.t I.a tiMimlil trt til .., I! .. .11..
leCllllg lllllt nc KwuB..v .w ... piiinn inn-
ciibfeleiia is net tbeatrkal. It Is a fresh
i
f
sign In American politics. It will net
always nnd immediately thrill the gallery.
Hut It has been before and will be again
the ivtuff out of which great statesmanship
is maile. These who serve America In the
prcent, like thee who served it most nobly
In the past, mut feel with all the people
rather than think for the few.
CLARKE AND SUTHERLAND
GHATIFICATION will be generel ever
the President's announcement that se
able mid juillelally minded n Inwver as
Geerge Sitthctbind Is te be appointed te
suieecd Associate Justice Jehn II. Clarke
en the Supteluc Court bench.
Mr. Sutherland, who served two terms
In the Senate fiem I'tah and declined re
nomination, has a high standing nt the bar.
He ha been president of the Ameilc.in Hnr
Association, nn office te which he would
net have been elected If he had net had the
respect and confidence of 111 fellow
lawyers. He wns one of the technical ad
viser of the United Slate during the Dis
armament Conference In Washington, and
lie ha in teteiit cnr been Interested In
the grevit movements looking tow aid the
application of sound and reasonable prin
ciple te the solution of world problem.
He will lake with him te the Supreme
Ceuit bench a high sene of public re
sponsibility a well ns n finely tr-tlned legal
mind. HI nppelntment, following upon
that of William II. Taft te the chief
jutlcehip. give ground for the belief that
I'resldent Harding can he trusted te (ill
with able men whatever ether judicial va
cancies may occur during hi term.
The case of Aketlate ,lutlce Clarke I
Inti resting He has been en the Supreme
t'ei it bench enh IX vc.ii. having been up
point))! te iill the vatiinr t l'i'cd b the
t'-lgiritien of Mr. Hughe In 1!1(. He
will net be sixtv-live .venrs elei until Sip
(ember is, the date en which hi resignation
bet eme effective.
It ha raiely happened that a man re
sign from the Supreme Ceuit. save for
phlcal disabilities The Justice usually
serve as long ns they are able te perform
their duties and they die In the harnes.
The resignation of Mr. Hughe was excep
tional, for he retired from the bench te
become a candidate for the presidency.
Justice Clarke resigns in order te devote
the rest of hi life te 11 wider form of
public service than I possible te him when
ccmhncd b elliiiul duties He 1 said te
be pin Menial! Interested tn the success of
the League of Nations and lie holies te
de something tewaui strengthenl'ig the
demand in the United States that til
eetin'iy become a member of the I eigne
or of some ether international assoc 1 itien
lermed te improve the relations nneng the
nations and te discourage the settlement of
disputes by feice. His active assistance
will be welcomed by nil these vhe think
that u grievous error wa made when the
Senate rejected the Versailles Treaty.
TOWN AND COUNTRY
DH. FUIIHUSII may be trusted te round
off both ends of the supposedly stimu
lating vnentien season with warning.
The Diiccter of 1'ubllc Health 1 net In
the least deluded by the spuleu charms of
green held nnd running brooks. In his
opinion, which Is well fortified by authori
tative stntistli . the menace of t.vpheld
lurk in the bucolic lite, while the great
cities), which pei'ts have se frequently pic
tured as dangerous urtlfitlal. are lauded
for sanitary equipment and administration
unknown in the wide, open sraccs and the
greit out-of-doers.
Dr. I'urbush, In effect, admonishes re
turning I'lillatlelphians te refrain from over
estimating the delights of summer sojourns
in plate vhere the water supply Is lesb
pure than the ,k.
It is .111 established fact, although omc emc
tlraes unret egnlzcd. that the clu Is the
eventual home of fresh vegetable, ripe
truits, sweet milk and new -laid egg Trust
the movie and the melodrama,1 nnd a
lnetrope I i a rapatleu monster In wait
for iiiral Innocence of soul und splendor of
health.
Tiust nnsentlmentalized actualities, and
"oveigrewn" mbnn communities are "re "re "re
positeiies of the best, most vailed and most
nutiitieus feed, exced in the administration
of modern h.vgiene and eTer the securities
of prose as against the pel lis of peetr.
The air ma be thick, the streets noisy,
but the plumbing is geed and the di Inking
venter steiillzed. I it te he wendeied that
Dr. I'urbush fears the autumn Invasion of
recent duc-lleis in a texii eeuntijslde?
DON'T LET 'EM FOOL YOU
Till' suggestion by the teal operator
that the agreement ie pn.v the miners
the same wages they have been rceeiviii,'
for the last two cnrs will neeessarll 1c
fellow cd b an lnciense in the price of an
thratlte te the consumer needs a dlagrim
te make It undeistnndnble
'1 he enlv thier.v en which It become nt
nil plausible is that the opeiater intend
te take fiem the public the lesse the
have sustained elurlng the five months of
Idleness In the mine Hut the jIHc is
net responsible for the losses, and It should
lint be compelled te pax them
The cost of tlie supplle used In mining
Is lower than It was two .veai and a half
age, when the wage s,ae eas negotiated
Freight rates uie also lower and mom j j
cheaper. A icsumplleii of v.erk at the old
stale of wages ought In leusnn te Iip foi fei foi
lewed bj a leduttleu rather than an in
crease in tlie prlte of coal
The opeinters themselves hnev this Thev
can't put eivcr anv bunk about the necessity
e,f charging meie unless the public is
willing te he fooled.
THE LINGERING LEAGUE
FOlt an organization v lite h has bon de
clared moribund, the League of Nations
seems tn be pla.vlng n game involving scout
respect for its fee.
The (lags of tiftv-ene member nations
were, H.vlng by the shores of Lake Geneva
xvhen the thlid nssemblv nf the League
convened .vesteidnv. Subjects te be consid
ered at this sCssien aie a revision of the
treuble-iuiiliing Aitule X, the extension of
the Waihlngten naval leductien piegiam te
nations net represented nt the national capi
tal last winter, and elKirniaincnt and the
contiel et the arm traffic.
This last .subject will be discussed In n
speclnl conference, which the League as
sembly is expected te authorize. Te this
meeting, which, although originating In the
League, will be administratively apart from
that bedv. the United States will be Invited
te send elelcgate.
I'esslbly Americans nre net deeply Inter
ested in the aspirations of tin Leigue, If
that Is true, It is incumbent upon somebody
te explain why sevent -eight vlsim,, sent,
mere than these icserved for the citizens
of 1111 ether nation, vvcie rescued for our
eeunti.vmen nt Geiirva
The limitation is one of space, since It
has been reported that thcie wic mere ap
plications for observers' tliaiis than could
be accommodated in the gieat Sallu de la
Itefei matien.
f tlie League Is dtad, it must nt least be
admitted that its obsequies nic attiacting
censldciable attention.
Oh, well! Neither Abyssinia nor
Afghanistan is a member of the League of
Nations, cither.
WHO INVENTED SUBMARINE?
Rebert Fulton, a Hundred Years Age,
According te Information Gath
ered In England Se Pennsyl
vania Gets the Herfer
By GKOKGE NOX McCAIN
Devenport, Devenshire, Knxland.
WHO invented the tirst successful sub
marine? I frankly ncknowledge Hint I had te come
te l'nglaml te make the discovery.
In an Indefinite way 1 had in my mind
accorded tl c honor te Captain Luke, of New
Jcisey,
Instead It was Itebert Fulton, et I'cnnsjl
Miiffu, meie than HMI jenrs age.
Fulton of steamboat fame, who started
out ns 1111 aitlst, landscape und portrait.
He was bem in Lancaster County.
He wound up as nn Inventor nnd u world
famous man. ,
Fulton lived here in Devenshire for a
short time.
He met Watts, of locomotive fame, and
told him of his plans.
WATTS encouraged the young nrtlst, and
later en he constructed n submarine.
He wiis full of tlie scheme when' he came
te Devniishlte te paint the peitrnit of the
Kail of Deven about nil'!
Afterward he cieed ever te Fails full
of his plans.
He had the usual Ill-luck of an Inventor.
The pevvcis that be gave hlui the stony
eye and frigid hand.
Finally he get Nupoelen Interested.
He blew un. with his submarine and a
toipede, a small beat In the harbor of Brest.
Anether I'enns.vlvnnla triumph.
But Napeleon was n land tighter net a
sea wan ler.
The stibttiuilnc dropped out of sight met met
npheiically. Ai'terwatd Fulton went back home te the
U S A.
Then he invented tlie steamboat.
livery schoelbo.c knew the iet.
An.v hew. Hnglanu has toiinelalin te hav
ing helped Fulton.
TIIF.nrf is n tiite saying that politics
mnkes stlangi' bed-feljew.
It' true, but net nearlv s.e true ns the
fact that eliiatle changes in Europe ninke
stranger bed -fellows.
A eultuicd and courteous Bng1Ihman
brought the fact te mv nttentlen through a
brief talk en local bleed.
It wns en the ride from Plymouth te
Trui e.
"We were fellow eccupnnts for nn hour or
se of tlie same compartment In the train.
While the d.vnastlc name of the Hiltth
rc.val famll i new tlie Heuse of Windser.
11 lesult ef'the gient war. the bleed of the
Wittlns will net become thinned out for a
generation or se.
One of the most popular effects of the
World War en Gnat Britain wna the
change in the levnl name'.
The Wet tins of Germany, of whom the
l'rlnce Consert, husband of IJueen Victeuti.
was one, weie as re.val peisenages. tee
widel) lepresentid ever Utuupe nmeng Ger
man and her allies te be popular ju the
Biitlsli Umpire from Bill en.
Only the deserved popularity of King
Geeigi? and his i.unlly guve it toleration.
Then came the change te the name of
Windser.
TALK about strange bed-fellows!
The notorious Czar Ferdinand, of Bul
gaiia, who bold out te Germany when his
very honor belonged te Hussin, wa", like
Victeria's consort, a Prince of Saxe-Cebuig
and Getha.
Fcullnand. n long-legged, hook-nosed,
penniless pilncclet. was picked up In a
Vienna cufe unci made Pi nice of Bulgaria
ever night.
It's a matter of European history of the
last thirty c.us,
A Bulgaiiiin committee sent out te find
a inler of leval bleed for that country bit
en Ferdinand of Saxe-Cobutg-Getha.
He wit of the Wetlln bleed.
The re.val house of Suxenv and of Saxe
Welmai. of h.ixe-.Meinlngi 11 anil Saxe
Alienliurg. aie nf tlie Wettin strain.
All fees of I'uglunil in the great war.
J 11 fact, thieugh the course of eais and
of internum iage. the Wettin bleed was in
filtrated thieugh nearly everj rnjal family
et Kut epe.
It showed out In Den Carles and the
graceless Manuel of Portugal, whom Gaby
ami her peail nuklace mined.
Belgium, in )dil King Leepold, had its
repicientathe. ami 11 peer one he was at
that.
Twe thousand .vears age had the same
dvniistic conditions prevail) d as the did a
tpiartt r of n ccntmv age, the Wettlns would
have iilled the wullil.
KING GKOBGK V, according te geneolo geneelo geneole
gists, I a elliect descendant of King
David the psalmist.
(if 1 nurse, flint going back quite a dis
tance for a pedigree.
Certainlv he is of the bleed of William
the Conqueror.
He can claim relationship te sixteen of
the tlilrt.v-slx niiinarehs who have sat en the
tin nnc befeie him
Through 1 he Geerges, Jnincs I. Henry
VII, the first teen Kdwnrds, Jehn, Henr II
ami lleniv I, his line of descent te the con
quest i 1 le.ir
Then he has a line back te the Saxen
king.
It's tee Inn? and tee uniutxrestlng te re
cite hi gnu ileg through a line of for
gotten 111011. ire lis
The heraldic nnd genealogical sharps have
it all figured out though.
The line ;' pritty faint, and fine, and
fegg , new nnd tneii in spot.
l'aitlc ul uh the one that stretches from
Buckingham l'nlice of today back te the
palate' In Jerualeiii hundreds of .vears before
Bethlehem
Don't forget that when the clownish and
spectacular Wllhtlm of Germnnv had a
special opening made In the wall of Jeru
salem some tnr ngn se tliat he might ride
into tlie eltv In tilumpli, he went in as u
elesi endant of David!
At least, se they bay who pretend te
knew.
QUEEN VICTORIA slxty-ene years age
xe rifled the fart of her descent from the
gieat I tug of the Jews.
The Kev F It. A. Glever, British chap
lain at Cologne, in 1MJ1 wrote u book en
the subiict.
It was ,1 revival of what Is known
ns the picscut Angle-Israel theory of the
English people.
Glever's book tickled the Queen Im
mense! v.
She sent for tue pntseii te come te Wind Wind
eor. He was re.vallv entertained.
During in visit the tauten told Mr. Glever
that both she and l'rlnce Albert had long
hehl the views set forth In his hook.
Thin bet Mujtst erdnccl tlie tevnl fain
ilv tin' te be pieduii'il for hi inspection
'Then at the loot et the tree, was the
name nf David, with Vleteiiu lu tlie topmost
tlirect brunt u.
HEItE S the way the story of King Gee.g,.
V's 1I1 sei nt through his grandmother
Vlctni l.i inn.
A a Guelph of the Weed, the King traces
his pedUree tiem Beger el'Kste. the Saracen
lie rn
lie. In turn, descended from Snladln the
Nazaitue. and he wns of the Hebrew ienl
heil- ,
linger il'EMe was a Mussulman. But
nevcithekss wa.s a descendant of King
Din Id.
At 1 ni ding te M. Oppert, an authority en
the siibjut, 1 est ait h bents this nut
Thus It tomes about that David nnd
Geerge are linked by bleed iuii thieugh the
centiirle.
It nirpihes us te lead of n voting
woman dislocating her shoulder while play
ing with 11 kitten, though 111:111 n pntketbenk
lias bein dislocated lu a game with kitty.
Ferger has lest hi pen hand In Sing
Sing mile bine shop. If workmen's compen
sation weiei operative theie this might pieve
1111 Interi'stlng case.
A I.ntlnlst might ray that n Sultan
with fifty wives baa a 1-uxorious l'Xe.
AS WE MUST SEEM TO OUR LESS FORTUNATE NEIGHBORS
NOWMYIDEAIS THIS!
Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They
Knew Best
DR. C. P. FRANKLIN
On Effects of War en the Eyes
ONE of i
far as
the chief effects of the war. In se
s tlie ejesignr 01 cue seituer i
concerned, was te call the attention of the
men te the fart that their sight was one of
tlie most impeitant functions of the human
body and needs attention, snxs Dr. C. P.
Franklin, who lias cb.uge of the division
of optometry of tlie Veterans' Bureau of
this district, nnd who was n lieutenant
colonel In the Medical Cerps In the war.
"In most wn.vs," said Dr. Franklin, "the
problem eif the eyes of the veterans does
net differ materially fiem that of the gen
eral public, .except in a few particulars. A
Iaige proportion of them have the usual
lefraetive crreis which were net noticed
until they Svere collected b the Govern
ment, as is done for any one by private
practitioners.
"The Government docs net supply 'glasses
at Government expense exiept for certain
classes of men. These who nre gianted
vocational training me supplied with glasses
where they tuc needed ns pint of the neces
sarv equipment for training. The Govern
ment also HtippMcs glasses te men under
tieutnient in euses wheie the will be of
benefit in correcting certain conditions. Tlijs
applies partlcul.nlv te nervous diseases,
from which a suiprhlngly laige peicentage
of the men Mifler as u result of the shock
and stiain of war.
Poison Gas and Optic Nerve
"The Government will have the eyes of
anv vtteran who applies for it examined,
this seivlce being free, but unless the con cen
eliilcuis xx 1 ich 1 have mentioned exist, the
soldier must supply his own glasses.
"One of the most interesting things which
I beginning te appear in the medical and
genei.il welf.ue weik anions the veteians is
111" pes-lbilltv of the effect of the xaileus
pol'en gases 'used dining the war upon the
optic ncive of the gassed men.
"This is only n theory ns et. because the
use of gas In win fare is se new that it may
lake Unie, perhaps jenrs, beftire the degen
erative iffeit of the gas en the optic nerve
vv'll appear. Fer that matter, it mil never
appear, but we arc beginning te suspect that
the gassttl man may pesblv. even venrs
after the Government has rehabilitated lilm
in etbei wn.vs. show' defects of vision
thrnugli the Influence of the poison gases en
the optic nerve. '
"The matter of the optical condition of
the veterans is Impeitant psveholeglcallv.
Most nf them before the war felt that they
were normal and sound, because nothing in
their peaee-tline lives had ci'ilteied nttentlen
en their plivslenl condition, and this was
fiequentl the case with their sight. The
could see, and that was all they thought
iiitessar.v.
"But wltli the war came the necessity for
detailed phv sit nl examination, both for enlist
ment and for discharge, anil this, tegetlur
with the fact that elurlng servlie the weie
in ficqucut contact with elamaged men, both
mentalh nnd pli.vslcall , they became con
scious of their tie feet. With the natuial
human tenth nc.v te exaggerate these things
thev found themselves handicapped hv ee
stinin, which, befeie the war, tlie had tin tin
iiinscleusl oveieeme. But with the cnu
scimisncss of deft ets came also the desire te
have them collected.
here 'I here Was Itcal Damage
"Tin se eases were, of course, considered
i. as one. Tliey were taken e.tru of by pin
vldlng, after examination, the pieper glasses
suitable for relieving eve si rain where tills
was net ilue te llie war, but had been ex
aggt lated by the war conditions. Tlie
excellent ps.vcholeglcal effect of this collec
tion was often apparent lu the results ob
tained by Heating ether conditions,
"Mut the most inteiestlng cases te the
specialist aie these in whleh mtun! damage
had been done te the titular appaiatus hv
gunshot wound. These, in e ciiupinlstiii with
the ether ease's, are. happilj, few and far
bit ween. Mat. If the war hail continued
even n shiut time longer theie ueuild have
been u far larger peicentage nt cc eluinagu
done than actuull) eccuiicil.
"On the ether side, at the fient, I had
aliiad outlined a plan fei tin better pro pre
lit Hen of the ces of the soldiers in thn
finiit lines. One fsatuie of this protection
was goggles of uiiliD akahle glass, nr lather
glass which, nit I it m, h ciatked b.v elu t-sphish
(soil thiewn ui b; t xpleding shells), would
net splint) r.
"Tlie danger te the e.ves of this dirt
splash was censldeiable. With tlie goggles
there was little clanger te the ejes them
selves, but the danger from possible Infection
vtes always prcbeut, The seiMiud been se
ft8
zzStZSsI U'S- W,TH M05r 0F 7HE 5s
'Z.OFSM .DISSATISFIED EYjvS:
QUARREL- AMCGJV--r
long cultivated and se frequently manured
that it was highly infective, nnd when this
Infection took held In the eve there wa
pietty certain te he trouble. But I am glad
te say that the total of e.ve injuries lu the
war was, comparatively speaking, .small.
Psychology of the Veteran
"These of us who commanded men In the
late war have pel force learned his psvchol psvchel psvchol
egy. which is quite dlffeieiit In many vv.i.vr
from that of tlie nvtiage .veung man of hi
gcneinl age In this ceuntr.v I mean the one
who has net had the strain and stress of
a great war among his experiences.
'The war in many wu.vs ha Ineiadicablv
nlteieel the clmaeter of the veung enlisted
man. In some wn.vs It had made abettei man
and a better citlen of him. und one better
able te stand en his own feet and take care
of himself.
"And .vet, with nil thl. he retain. In
mnnv tas,. te a marked degiee. the mental
attitude of the enlisted man Mint of laving
a laige piopeitlon of lespensibllity upon' the
'Moulder.', of the man in command of him.
. . . ' efV"llrsc' necessary Ie u great ex
tent In militaij life, ns it is ,1,,. llsM.nL.c
et discipline; but. ciiiieusl enough, in tlie
se-called let-down of p. .tie which suet ceded
he stnit, 0f nr ths 11(,rll,ap ,,! ,.
tude of the enlisted men continues for vitrv
nig lengths of time. It must be icckeiied
"Uh in all cases, but especially in these 0t
the defective men.
MT!,isil,,',i1! "f. '',"v'";t'',nding nnd bhg
nble te handle the enlisted men is a veiv
mpn.ta.it factor in the,,- cine and In ail
he welf.ne we.k which Is being ,1,,,,,, fn,
them au.l unless u ls ,K,.U (.,mK,,,01il.
ten bv ih,,s uj10 ,m(l ,() (,ea, ui(j i(m
lit le cnu be accomplished with the disabled
Much Still te Be Dene
'We
seier.il
thnusntnl rn,A n ....
ninnt I nf )l. v... ' 'v....' "'"
"....oil ir ''calls isuieaii. nit per
hni i ,feU,,1"'t Miifnc of this work
has as et enh- been scratched, as the vet
eians are learning mere and mere, thiuugl,
he manner in .,, tllpir cemrml(,s
iei CI, that the Government s e,,K ,
s ,nK. -?!"1 ni,V,,V,fc ,lul "rvthlng ,.
slble both medical ami surgical, shcnhl l,e
done or the,,, , ,,,. ,), ,, ,s, ;
Ists that can he obtained In every line of
medical and singled weik.
,'"1il" H'l'taii of the 'Third District
fPenVsjlvania and Delnwaje) takes i,.le
in .isseeuitliis with Its nedicn staff s
"lembc.s leaders ,,, best i.tedl, a! ,,,,!
su.gh ,1 li.a.s, ,,,, is ,nst dail ,,,. e
J m 1st the names of llstiPis,c,l ine n. wh e
without exception. .e wnK , ,i ' ,,"
Ie ever thing wltr.in thel. ,,' f, .
welfaie and the ,disic.. co mill leu of he
men who pulled us out of a hole"
What De Yeu Knew?
QUIZ
' Wk,v ,tl,atw'al(?0-frtl"5 eln "the
, 8euV .,.!,aattv,'tVrmer''.a"a l" J"-W'V,tl(Cl!,.;"!laSb,:'-"c"""1
"Antlpo "Antlpe
3. What Government nre net members of
lb.. League of Nations' '"c'nDer8 or
HOnil.e"n ft0t "re "' et or nautical
5: w,aVu.l apor,.,ture wm lre" """
10.
What is an integer? ,
Answers te Yesterday's Quiz
1. Th
i.- dneivui incas et rem i,li
of tliengs or te,Us JwiiSluK t eV?r"m
tins as writing " "'biiu, uein cress-
WISCOIHllI
ce;tnln thu L'aflger State
liolegiapl, will Is one xv.i e ,.,, v
y he peso,, I,, e,:'!HZ nK
A llOltlg
I
1
:ssiKw
D' iW,,i,i,JrtVl.7r,vx,V?.f?''i?.nen.n com-
Ki-hIhi lntt ' ... T .; "ur
are ' Dar
- . -.s,,.., Kl4 i llll
Obi ren
enuii Is ant tin i
me tails or i te '.i,.,im.i
lieth viltime of wat V- , ;,,i V'0I',B
leg.,,,,,,, ,. .U-'B'i in
10 A weiuLui is an Aesti .u,, ,, , , .
Ptiunp. with i tlk" ..'ei '".'.
Erav Ifli-b'ew n. iejih, ..;,.,i... ,"r. '"''i
lrt-b'ew n. cea I,, w , , i' , .. '"'! 1
liead,
ami
. arge i at limnn ..,1.1; ' ""i1 i cnu
ears"0 It VneVtwn'ai 'SMi.1V'
and easily demutlcatesriT
.... sh. ,i in nnnritp..
cuBuy aemtstleatcctf
liingUuLe siieken h. vc-..i '.'".'J eisli
II. Illtli fr... !.- .. . .
7. Ca mill. Ucsmeulin,," , ' "lu'( '' Uil.i
1 reneh Itevolutlenist , K', K , ''"'i'1
mnt as a pimiilihteep Vnid .'.' V,"1''
Hi. was guilleii.,,,.,1 In l"" Jeur,",H.
R A volcano u m . ,n .. ' .' ..
Vulean the itei ,., U , f ,'h"" "?
mctiil-wnrlcltii; b ' r Ulei and
'M
SVcbTfrW-
SHORT CUTS
Don't you wish Ceramandcr-in-Chlrf
Sel would lire General Humidity?
New is the time te begin te remember
net te forget te register the day aftM
tomorrow .
The fair being a knockout, we are In
formed, one can't afford te give the by-br
te Bjberiy.
Ter newspaper weikcrs, street railroad
men and some few ethers it wus really and
truly Laber Day.
Scanners of newspaper pictures wonder
what Carpenticr leeks like when he isa't
wearing u smile.
It is net a particularly editing picture
te see .Mr. Daugherty nnd Mr. Gemperi
grew historical together.
reurteen cobras have nrilved at thl
local oe. Gieat snake! What's the bl
idea, new that piohlbltien is here?
It's tough, te hear Dr. Furbush tell it,
for a man te go away for his health and
bring back a case of tvplield for us ne.,.
ber.
Self-respecting union labor eamestl;
desljcs te see the miscreants icspenlb!e for
the Pittsburgh horror captured and
punished.
,
Js.mav at least be conceded that there
are political prisoners who have been lenf
enough In Leavenworth te be an embar
lassiucnt. "Just heard of a sad cae. Teer
woman unable te bur.v her husband."
Toe bad.
"He Isn't dead.'
iievv enu u uuppen;
Mevie man of Dever. N. J., pays $22
for a ten of pea coal with an additional $3
te have It put into his cellar. This nievlni
pie tin p. dear children, illustrates the strain
of Dever.
"The bell weevil," we learn from the
headlines, "costs the Seuth 010,000,000."
We tiust we nic net hurting aii.vbeilj's
eeiings when we earnestly avow thut It
Isu t weitli it.
Sixty - ene-.vrnr old Milwaukee roan
premised his forty-iiliie-.ve.ar-eld bride ?.00
for every .vear of happiness she gave him
and new after one .vear she bues for divorce.
Anether bonus fizzle.
Trenten woman arrested en complaint
of her hiisbnnd for eliserdeilv conduct
a lege',1 the double NS dim te her drlnklal
his home brew. Well, he knows new, (t
least, that it has plenty of kick.
Device hns been invented which photo-
graphs, the voice. It .s known as the
phonefilm" ,i s ,,nt te be confounded
with the "phony film" which from time lm
memeiJn! has materialized the "touch."
. ,'."r'1,lls u roll,(V says the colonel let
nelshbeirlng column, "that David and Geeri
aie linked b.v bleed through the centuries."
But it Is when they are linked b) Lloyd
that the really cut some figure.
One can't expect the family of Bernard
Goldstein, of Kensington nveniie, te svmp
tlibe with the city eidlnnnce ferliiildlng
awnings. An iiwnlng served ns a lire csCJI")
and baud their lives when their home caught
Inc.
Prohibition agents, tipped off that A
t.ink eiiteiing At'initlc Citv was laden
with hooch, held it up and found It con
tained nothing but booklets of the bcniUJ
pageant. Which may prove slmplv that tot
pic.vs agent has a sardonic sense of humerj
Hawaii savant recently announced that
the bite of the ccutipede is no morn scrieui
than the sting of a bee or wasp. Ne
cenns the Journal of the American Mecltcal
Association wltli the assertion that the WW
of the tarantula is reiely serious. "
await apologists for the lattlesnake anl
cobra.
The Ceriinn rhn
Klgnlllcant d'Affaireh ?t Moscow
Gestures e'.illrd en tlie 1'nrelJ"! t
, Minister there te .
Plain te tlie Hussiaii people German 's very
ellflieiilt position. , Moscow iicxxFpaPJ
C'iVI'S llle nihil.,.- "Tl, ....... ,,! nnr SOe'lSI
tl.lltOIS. All t'lw, lli.ssle,, ..nr" Til's
Itiissliin win. liicldentiill, Is Indlcnteil Wi
IHIISIIIVlSl O C' till Elll'CK. llll'OIC iig "
Itign ellspatch te the Leiulnn Tline-i. uliicll.
set fm Mi that 1,71111.1 IS persons hive Ik'H
eMi'iili'd hv the Chek.i. the Bnlshev 1st t;'r;
Hulst tilbiinal. Thai, of course, is the k n.
"i""..:" ."r' . .
ii mi) ii i- iiciiii.iu.v n.es ie cci : n' ":. i
-.. hu hhj mvu vi iuuiux i' ' . ii-iJl
?5 ,he fnllJ, "nW lydioIelcl 2A
aLliHf It. but I? t
iiitij iiejviiwi")"' .1 a
Alllci when they dlJ
" ",,,J "aJ9 ea l,, aji
i
m
$i
i!h' i V(-v4is
r-ifAfX-yf-'&M
'H-y-:.
.M-
SSrft
,3trf;
reparatlgna.
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