$1 m Wk IjWaWHHV WtJXrh vjfvf'.rriia.t'L. r.iu'r"vriA- v-- -itjji.j . a- u v" si jam. ."rati : b . ? . ... ;.; -f sKSfj1 .; .' liPr ' - r&3? . .'.-. & &;..:... yi,.m.v ir.... W! .PUIUMM fVlH M i? , i PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ii8 I ' I. Cmt'B n. K. CUltTIfl. PUHIDBNT '' ' 'T. .Trtlm I', Atm-llll. Vlrt f1r1i1til nn.1 T...i.aiir,.r! Cj)rM A. Tylar. Hwrataryi ClrntWn Hi I.tullii t am nhllin n r...Hi, intm 11 ivniimH t..i,. f lhvJ . blraeters. Mnnrirann. flftiipvtf V. flniaatntltt tVavl.l 11? M.iil1ai. Ft . Jav.d n. AMtr.RT iMiter t? j, JOHN C. MAnTIK....qnierM lIusttiMa Mnnaittr l?i. rubllalitsl daily at I'cnite Licoea UulMlnt- .4. ' Inclfpcmlcnce Hqimre. 1'hllmlelt'liln. -IS iMlimfl rlV llMU.IflllAU 11...I.1I... Nivy 1'ehk !114 Madlann Ave DicraeiT Till Kenl llulMlnK l I.OCIS 01.1 ()n-Z)rmeerul lIulMltig Cmoieo 1.102 Tribune NulMltir NEWS limnAUH: Wllltl.'tlTON II untie, , N, n. Cor. Pann'jivanla A. ivr.J Htli St Navy YeK Dcbiav The .Sim llulMlnv Londen Hcar.e Trafalgar llulldltuf Ht'tiNCltllTlON TKKMfl! Tha fttMKO I'l'BMC l.HMKR la servM te aub- atrltiera In l'nllnilf lnhU iin.l lurruuiiillnr tuwna ", at the mte of tnelva (12) canta far vvel:. payabla ;I te tha carrier. t By mall te relnta eutalda of l'hllailalphla In the Unlled .stataa, I'Ana.la. or tnltisl Hintes ees- Stations, peatara free, fifty (80) cents per month. Ir (8(1) dollars per year, pa) able In mtvinee Te all furelan reuntrle one ill) ilellnr a month Notieb SubHctltsTa wlahlna- aJJrven chancal nuat lva old aa well aa new address, BFl.t,. 380(1 WU.MT KEYSTONE. )UH 1601 CT Address ill co, m mi (cat Ien t fe Kvrnlna PubUe litAatr, 7mffpenicice piiare. rMhidfliiMd. Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED MESS i excUtsivtI-j en titled ff the line for rfimMicafleti of nil ihmi.'. ialoe cfdllcrt fe If vr net otherwise credttnl 4i thla paper, and alie th local nmi pub.'tsftrii tterr(n. Alt rights of republication of tpevtal dlipatchts herein are ele reen'J. - Phllidtlphii, Menar. Ocleber It, Is:: WATER PROBLEMS CAKLCTOX i:. DAVIS, chief of the Watt'r liiirpnu, in net in t he lenJt a prey te lU'liisi'jn in liis conception of enn uf thi reit cerieus of nil our iminli'ipul preMi'iui. If Is net te li (liputPil that tin- pollution of both (he Deluvtarn nd Schuylkill Ulvcrt Is preccedlns nt an alnrmlii); rnte; I hat the city rapidly 1 ouiKrewiiiR lt.x snun-ea of water supplj and already is fur In-hind In Its equipment for valor distribution. Addressing tlie City Club en Saturday Mr. Pat H speke with commendablo frank ness upon the extraordinary situation in the forty-fhe miles of city territory north of I-'rankferd. without feeder or surf nee mains and with no puinplin; station or ni tration plant. This region la capable of uppertiiiR an urban population of half .1 million. The filtration plant for Wear I'lulndelphia la. se far as eupaeil i eiiierned, ob ieiiily out of date. The northern section between Wyoming .street and Tiega street and from Frent west te Fifth "virtuall) is without a rater pipe." Chief Dais is net exaggerating when h tresses the imperntie need for a laige aeale consideration of the water problem tn relation te the inevitable gmwih of the city within the nct I'fteen or iweuij years. Plans for utilizing the waters of the Xeshamlny. Tohieken and Upper lelai;.re have from time te lime been breached, but no action has been taken upon these im portant proposals. There can be no iiietien that the appro priation of outside wnles, costly though the erk mljlit be. would be a magnilh i-nt step forward in the right kind of municipal de velopment. The increase of Industrial e. tablishments en the Schujll.ill and Lewer Delaware renders it extremely unlike!) that tl eap sources will ever become cleaner with the passing years. THE GLORY DEPARTED THE demise of the Dauntless, firc-uept in her home slip, may net have been untouched by cinj. Ships are n.iisiue creations, and who knows but that the Teleran ferryboat may haw resented the nation-wide dramatization of the Inst mo ments of the City of Honolulu, an upstart craft, anyway, of alien origin and unripe In .1 cars' The Dauntless never tarried a witeless, nor, In fait, cargo excepted, anything new fangled. Seme say she had attained the go of fifty years. In any cent she wac nature, net callow, a nnt't te be reieiencetl. Classic leisureliness was hers, with a pace e.' dignity and, of late yearn, sobriety. Te Gloucester in Its heyday she traveled with the came impassivity as in the sue reeding and present period of respectability and repose. "Once she did held the gor' ger' gor' geeus East in fee" that is, if Jersey be correctly "Spain" and Gloucester was ever gorgeous. She will he mlsed en a river en which antietilties are treasured and remarkably ell preserved. I'essibly the IVitIp anil Fearless, heroic In nomenclature at least, already ha pledged themsehes te sustain the traditions te long upheld by their ,.i. rable sister. HIGH COST OF FUN THE Federal Government i rh her by JOO.olT.eO because of the World Si rn's of baseball grimes played in .Vu Yerk. This sum is the 10 per rent tut paid en the receipts from the sale of tickets. Nearly one-half of ihes(. who snw the Raines paid $." each lime ihey entered the gate. It would be easy te indulge in moral reflections about the e.uiiuaganee of H is. Hut nowadays there is no amuseinint of fered In any of the large cities (lt ,,.;, smaller price. It I, much less tui, hns te pay for a geed seat ut the np-rn, even in Philadelphia. There i, a vaudnille ahew In New Yerk the tickets te whMi ust fi. and it is playing te crowded houses. The old days of mederale-priced iuiu-i. incuts lias passed. The disposition et the amusement managers is te charge all tl.e traffic will hear. Seme day a manager will reverse the process and offer amusement for as low n larlie as the expense of provid ing it will permit. As there are mere ; e..p!e who can pay ;?1 for a ticket than are "ill iri, or able te pay S,", he will have ,, w.rJ la-go ptibln from winch iu iiravv his audi ences and i an till a big loom everv day if his show Is, worth seeing. That is, he r-ill become the Henry I'erd anion,; managers Henry has a bank halanre of .s.1.'0,000,ijOQ. HOW TO GET ACQUAINTED IT IS explained that the rough-and tur.ble light between the members of the fresh man and sopheiuoie ihisnes at the I'ti,vi slty was arranged for the purpose mnjdr,;. the freshmen attpiainted with one unu'her! It wan the college way of liitreiJuMii trnngers. The best that can be said of it , ti,et jt deeH Introduce the frechmeii te one another, quite informally It is tine, hut none the )-ni effectively. The same results might l, sought tbreugli a tea party, but it is doubt fill if they would he attained. Tea partim de net appeal vry Btiengly te boys. The system tlees result in changing the freshman class fiem n company of boys with no interests in common Inte a nellijiiler Croup deteriuliied te resist the aggressienn of thu sophomores. The wonder is that It has net been ap plied elfccwhcie. Take Congress, for ex ample. Every two years let of new men are elected. They go te Washington with an cxaggerat-vl Idea of their own Impor tance. Hut they de net engage in team tiny. Kew if1 it should come te pass that st aneuiu de a rougn-anti-iumnie light in 'mac Park between the new Congress- itjixfl e ou' merp would he accomplished jj 'iwpwni hi inv "iij m Kciiiug tue new men te appreciate the fact that tbey must work together If they nie te get nny eptwrtunity te mnke themselves felt In legislation tlinii can he nceempllslied In a month by the erdlnnry methods. Then, tee, the sale of the niovle rights of the scrimmage would yield a considerable aum of money that might he used in paying future campaign expenses. There are se many possibilities In the plan that Us re jection will be tlue only te the ungrounded assumption of the Congressmen that since they have become men tbey have put away childish things. OVER THE RIVER "jlrrCII may be said In honest praise of n world (hat still can provide a spec tacle us bright and diverting as that of the present political campaign in New .lei soy. The temperature Is rising and the rhetoric Is becoming mere and mere vivid ever the whole length of the Slate from the Oranges nnd Hoboken te Cape May. It is written iu Hepublican pronounce ments that Governer Edwards has no mere elinuee of beating Mr. Fre'lughtiyspn for the I'tilted States Senate sCat that the two men are warring ever than Mohammed VI. present Sultan of Turkey, hns of being King of Great ltrltalu nnd Ireland. It Is Interesting te observe, however, that Mr. I'rellnglniy sun's party managers are labor ing as they have seldom labored before In any cause. They display signs ut tremulous anxletv almost as conspicuous as these dis cernible In the ranks of the opposition. Yeu feel, after n survey of the State, that If the strain becomes even a little greater it wilt be intolerable. Mr. Edwards, who Is In Ner .Jersey about what Lloyd Geeige Is iu England, a deft player upon the heart -strings of the eiewd. has made a slogan at whiih his an tagonist laughs with a very geed imitation of derision. Vet it is a slogan that may cause Mr. rrelinshuyscn n geed many anxious hours. The Democratic candidate knows what Is the matter with the world and with .lersey. It I- high prices. "Give us," t'es Mr. Edwards, "a geed tlve-cent glass of beer, a geed nickel i Igar and live-cent trolley fares!" Less picturesque and less incisure is Mr. rrellng'.itiysen, who has bten paying the voters the compliment of erdeied and logical speech. He would have them think of the deep am! complicated affairs of s'ate. of the high purposes of YeNte.idi-n. "f I lie dangers inherent In the ptescnt muddle i.f our for eign affairs, of difficulties whbh bect the Public Servile Corporation. U' appeal, briefly, i te the- reasoning powers et voters. Mr. Edwards, en the ether hand, drives straight tn the s(.;t of the emotional con sciousness In the average iitiin And theie you are. Elections have been wen by both method". At this wilting it is net iasy te say who will win in New .Icisii. runner Judge SiUer (is tie lienmeratlc aspirant for the governorship is going along like a child in a ciewd with a firm and trusting grip mi Mr. Edwin iN' teatsleeve. Senater IJunyen, who aKe wants te be Gov Gov ereor, is similarly trusting te link and the pushing power of Senater rrelinghuysen. Te understand the spiritual stresses in herent in the situation It is only necessary te serutlliui' some of the recent details of the lampaign. See rotary Weeks, of the War Department, volunteered te make a speech or two ter I'relinghuy cn. but was frantlially waved away by the liepubllcan managers when they remembered that he is quite as "wet" ns Mr. Edwards, while rre linghuysen is running as an Inflexible Vol Vel steader. Vice President Calvin Coelldge. who Is "dry" in mere wnys than one, will play Secretary Weeks' dates. The Democrats are equally fearful of any exterior Influence which might upset what (bey consider a delicate and treacherous balance of sentiment. Mr. Edwards is aid te feel that bis slogan mid such discourse c: may radiate outward from It should be adequate te carry the State. Se Jersey Is saying te the outside politi cal world, and especially te Washington : "J uat let us alone, in heaven's name! Wt haven't time te talk te you new. Yeu don't knew hew terribly we have te work te keep one party from spilling ever Inte another, te keep Kepublleam from going Democratic and Democrats from being IJ--publlean !" Governer Edwards says little about the qtestiens that should naturally engage the attention of a Senater of the I'n.ted States. He doesn't explain why, if live-, em fares are possible, some of tic s-ib-idlary car lines of the Public Service C.n oration are in actual danger of Kelng hepebssly broke. Sin h 1 life in election time-. The Demo crats are "wet." The Republicans are (jrj"in theory, at lea-t. That is what the tight really 1 about. Jersey v. ill be worth close 'wntchlnB in November. It will show whether emotional raciiem rather than reason actually dtrmine all Important elec tions in this country. D v-!ll show, tee, hew a State with a representative popula tion and few fixed pe!itnal prejudices actually feels about the dr; la-, in Its pres ent form. CHEFS DISCOVER AMERICA THIS is an ag" of i..iracles that A'ii'-r.i M'" may ye Se the rumor be made te feel at heir.e ' tb'lr own restaurants neeil net lie regard-l 'vi:a lie red.ility or ills-iri-si.i s the rillnt. n i a dream as wild a" or.- of ti-e" 'i.et Mi. Liln-en used te have In h.s ve:'!.. IU-sta ;ram owners have n2r.p,i se.,. ,i !v in their national conven tion tl.v n.' 'arJs e ight te be printed In a lursiiis" f'i!. -liar te thd- patrons and that folk ma , .u!ntel with the Trench inn "unge ''-it ' '" b relieved from the handl 'ap that ulw .; bus stlll'ted thtm when they in ferti fer: .n.!y te dir..j in the shade of U. urt.n .si paia.s. Who id ,!'i,r " I.' ague of Nations Is Im-pes..ib.e-' A:.y'..irig i- pessib'e In this period of progress ar.d revolutionary change. Peo ple new alive i, aj yet -ip ihe day when taey may a"r a lirit tlas ie-taur:int and or er a c.r.iii-r that will net astound them wan it .a served by the waitir. Tl.i KreM h language bei'iiiiiii the language of m' ii'. 'ar-i- wj. n Pnr.s cooking Ilrst ii.ad .' 'J vent in the I ii.ted Slates. It was ei.e of tir few fashions that became piTiiii'iei.' AmI It has always tended te keep tLf t' it-h of natlvi American cookery 1j x..p U. if or e-.s i eln)dete. A f i viiil- e ure still unconsciously t-x-ttw ! ii." ptenenie of foreign things. 'JV!I - 'ii". t pbiiire or a musical compo ,:of, .ii.jsu'eii nnd we will believe nt oil. e that .t mu-t he In seiiii! subtle way Ml ptr.'ir te the native product. He ft has uluujh Ix-tri with the arts of cookery. There Is no teuntry en eaith that does mere mug tiifieent things with the devices of the kitchen than we de. And there Is none hoi se rich and various a Held of resources. Chicken In the inenner of the Maryland ers, Virginia spoon bread, corn in all in rleus and magnlUcciit forms from the cd enr te thu pone or the muffin, ter- I $fr'v 'l,'V')3vAif E VEXING PUBLIC LEDGEKHILADEti'rilA. MONDAY. OCTOBER' 16) rnpln, turkey with chestnuts, the sntisniea of Lancaster Count), testers ami clams nre virtually exclusive te the I'liltcd States. Thu Freiichinnu liitreduced for the Hist time te biickwhent cakes nnd maple plrtip probably would go mad with ecstasy. Yet jeu never hear American cookery extolled abroad. Yeu seldom hear it extolled nt home. The art of the French chef consists In his remarkable ability te dlsgulse deficiencies of raw materials with bewildering sauce. Thus In the kitchens, of Frniice the sublle wcrk of the continental diplomatist are often btllllaiitly Imitated, If the restaurant men of the United States carry out their newest plnn and call fried fish fried llsli and beef stew beef stew they may yet profit by the example of Columbus nnd discover America. They tuny stumble en the wonders of American rookery nnd give It tlie place If deserves among the great things of lln earth. We iu the rutted Stntcs drink the lies! coffee in the world. Yet the American nbrnad feels that he isn't truly cultured unless he can consume large quantities of cafe an lait-tiie mixture of Inferior coffee and warm milk which, accepted as the uni versal breakfast beverage of ihe Continent, is such as te make the stranger with a pnlnte net sophisticated te the point of ruin choke and shudder and mourn for the clear, -i-iilk. wine-like brew that is te be hud only en this si,),. f the world. RULE BY FASCINATION LLOYD GEORGE'S address nt Mnnches ter possessed in high degree the char acteristic glitter, the characteristic bril liantly coated inaccuracy of statement and the crisp fellntv of phrase with which the llrltlsh Premier has defended himself In a long series of crises. t Is Impossible te withheld admiration for opportunism of this dazzling type illumined by the personal magnetism of a consummately adroit poli tician. .Air. Lloyd Geerge has "explained" the much-criticized part played by Britain in the Near Eastern imbroglio by implying that the historic drama between persecuted Christianity and brutal Islamisin lias been re-enacted and that the old Liberal policy of protecting, even te the brink of war, the oppressed minorities In the Near East has been revived. In his fluent discourse no reference can he found in the snubbing in Londen last spring of Kemalist envoys, eager te establish peace upon nlinest the identical basis new reached after a war scare of very formidable pro portions. Ne referenie can be found te the game of cemmerci.il umtiel In the Near Eusl whli h bears the scantiest relationship te ei'lier Christianity or Meslemism as con ventional nb-trni tieus The fact is that link has once mere played into the Premier s hands nnd that after an exceedingly risky i nurse of bun gling and mismanagement in ihe Eastern pelii ) the peak of the iiisis has, fur the moment ut least, bun passu. Mr. Lloyd Gemge would net be himself did be net make ihe most effective and spei tin tiliir use of this geed fortune. No Ne f'Oily iu public In., in England can misstate a iiise se ably or ' i harininglv as be. As a political vliiuesn he is quite tin rivaled in the vast empire ever whlih he he'ds such vivid sway, and despite (he rumblings of opposition it appears likely that be will continue te perferin -his astounding feats te the delight of the ma jority of his country men for some time te come. Fer the consummation of bis downfall the emergence of another political genius is necessary, and that event docs net yet seem te have taken place m England. A NEW CRIME WHAT is the speed limit for moterenrs in Philadelphia V A driver brought before Magistrate Rebert' it day or two age was solemnly charged with driving se slowly that he obstructed ti attic lie was duly fined. Unfortunately, the finer details of the case wen- net reflected In print. Hut It would be inteiesting te knew when a meter driver eager te be en the safe side of the laws may expect te slip into a new and unexpected morass fJf tieuble. It may lie assumed, for th" sake of discussion, that the unfortunate man In question was cnuglit s mew here en I'reatl street between Aieh street and Columbia avenue, for uny one who proceeds at less than twenty-live miles an hour between the new automatic signal stations Is pretty sure te be in everybody's way. Doubtless fast driving en a rigidly policed thoroughfare intended for high-speed traffic Is safe enough. Put the significant thing te ebstrvc is that If the traffic policemen en P.rend street de what is epci tid of them and ktep traffic moving they must actually encourage meter drivers te violate existing speed eidiuniKi's. That means that the present ordinances rather than the peller or the new signal and truth' theeiles lire faulty. One of the first muses of meter accidents is In laws n.ade si, indexible that they are obviously intended te be broken. It is the moral effei i of this implication tint is disastrous What Is needed is n traffic tede bread enough in be strictly en forceable under all i iicuinstances. If you cause people te beluve that they are ex pected te break one law, they seen will develop a habit of breaking ethers. The rule applies all along Hie Inn., irem prohi bition te meter regulations' RIGHT WAY TO TALK GENERAL DAWES, no longer in office, expressed bis hein st opinion of Con gress te the New Yorkers who gave a dinner te congratulate him en his work as Director of the IUidgit In Washington. He remarked that Congress- s "n nest of cowards" and that Cabinet officers are Cemnnches in fighting budget control. Few persons nwnre et what gees en In Washington will disagree with him. The head of every department is a glutton for money. lie manes extruagant demands and takes no account of the meds of ether departments. And Congress has net the courage te cut down expi ndltures when it thinks that the money will make votes for the Congressmen. In short, there Is an almost complete lnk of a sense of finnnelal responsibility. This is why ii costs se much te urn the Gevt inment and why the opposition te an extension of Government control of business aitivitlcM is se general. Hut the situation iu Washington Is no different from the situation in every large city. 'i'l( puh'i1' money is spent with i: recklessness that would ruin any pilvate business. If xve had mere men like General Dawes xvhe would icluse te minre weids in talking about the subject there would be better prospects of improvement than there new are. Stiiten Island woman, Dry Mil years old, grieves bei aus.. the Velstead law bus tukcu n way fiem her the wine te which she littH been accustomed. She perhaps fears Uk lack will bring her te an early grave. There Is geed citizenship, however, in her cemphiii'l . Were she ether than law-abiding H),e would net lack her wine. She'd knew a bootlegger. CIiiiib A. Spreckels has t lnsed one of his factories because the price of sugar is tee lilfih. We don't profess te understand that item ; we simply pass it en as we get it. Senater .Tim ltee-1 refuses te declare himself en the liquor question. Willing te t'eiiipimnlse, peiinii s, en dry iliuinpnsiie. X-'. AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Welfare Federation Achieved Succeis Dcopite the Teries, Who In tha Course of n Couple of Genera tions Will He Its Best Friends Ity SAHAII I). LOWRIE THH Welfare Federation weathered Its first strenuous year. After what looked like a near failure in reaching even en ap proximate goal, and u very exasperating fnilurii le cetnplste its 'ists for n practical campaign last autumn, nnd nftcr n smoth ered cry for help te rally the workers for n sort of lltilsli-up campaign Inter in the winter, it suddenly ceased from troubling, righted Itself by some Internal bnlnncing of rearrangement, kept Its pledges te the or ganizations and te the public, nnd, In fact, "scrambled ever the top" after ill and avoided mi nnticliniax I Hew it Fiiatched victory from defeat one does net knew, hut I suspect that the men who were responsible for I he victory are net the ones whose Impractical complacency during the prelliiiinar.v prepniutlniis nearly diMied it. These who succeeded will never tell who were the jnuecesful ones; that is certain. He the ciieral public and even these of ps who worked indcr such hniidl enps of mismanagement last year neeil net probe. We can only be grateful te Judge Martin and Mr. Scwall nnd Mi. Klklns and Mr. Effingham Merris and .Mr. Wurden nnd the ethers as well as te our friend Ludlow of the persuasive smile, who would net step working for success in the face of nppaient failure. IT IS a mystery yet why the lists were se bad. nnd why nnv one could think that n plan that sent the solicitors cnreciiingi from one end of the town le another during day's working up of subscriptions vvns n feasible one; or why hundreds of aildres i of persons living m Reading and Pottstown and Lebanon and llelhlehein and Qunker Qunker tevvn were given out te be treated as "tie would treat these of persons living nt the Falls of the Schuylkill; or why first, middle and last, the addiesscs had net been verified six cases out of ten. But I de net henestlv think that even If all the lists had been correct and the time of the solicitors had been carefully saved and the notices sent nut te the possible sub scribers had given them the ilntn that would best move them 1 honestly de net believe the first drive would have gene ever thu top with any headlong velocity. WE ARE up against city, for the first tin st something in this me of nny enterprise that is as baffling n it is inevitable in its power te halt ami nearlv cterniinnte nil onward movement. And that things tle suc ceed is due le mi even stronger, dogged resistance of resistance which does mil I eh victory iu the end. although it pretty nearly extinguishes the victors. Such n victory In the face of Mich discouragement robs the work of most e( its elation. It is "a sob bing process te give a new geed te this town." some one remarked te me lately. 1 de net knew what spit it of contention is at the bottom et it. or what curious lack of co-epcralion. or what grudging dog-In-tlie-inangei' surliness that makes II natural for us te i ese m (hauge and suspect innova tions and balk nt improve!' cuts ami carp ut inspiration. Their is, of course, our geed side of which these qualities are the exag geration. We like te plav lone hands In our philanthropy, and se we have any number el group charities supported by one or two families or. coteries et social or religious sets. We nre faithful te past obligations and almost leave our seats en charitable beards in our wills. Wr n very prudent about scrapping anything that 'ins ilice served lis purpose te our satisfaction, and we are very ailniuing of what has hem and like te patriuii.e what is. Se that if the Federation has outlived the first year it will find us putting it en our visiting lists for Mil- year, and In another year it will be one of the family. Ten years from new te work for it will be as geed ns being en the Assembly lists, nnd twenty years from new if State socialism wants te wrest it from us. we will call cut the City Troop te bleed and die for it. TN SHORT, the Welfare Federation, which was the best idea for tackling our nresent philanthropic pieiiiem, lias get the usual grudging reception we give our best sue. cesses, and it will new go en its way upheld by us as one of our best traditions. Hut the stupid thing about us Is that we worried and hit it se before we swallowed it down thnt te these who had te administer It te us it had the aspect of a terrible medicine in stead of n geed desrrt. And by these who ndmlnlstered it I de net mean simply the men who acted as Its trustee. I menu all of us who went nnd a iked Philadelphia te give in bulk what It had been accustomed te give in pieces. Or, rather, we asked many Philadelphians le give whnf they had been accustomed te see it few Philadelphians give. It wns a per fectly simple and reasonable idea; "Let r,(),t)t)0 give what fienn gave!" This year It is simpler still: "Let ".'0,000 give what .1(1,000 were asked te give!" THERE is no doubt about it: the relief of net neing dunned in every mail by some philanthropy or ether te tide it ever was a joy te tlie givers, once the drive was ever. Hut that relief was nothing te the relief felt by the philanthiepirs, who knew for the first lime what their incomes for the year were te be. Tills year there will be mere philan thropies included in the Federation, which will mean n snving of vveik for all con corned and no grenter expenditure of money In the end, This yenr we have the word for it fiem the sadder but wiser committee that the lists arc corrected and the plan of distributing the turds improved and the campaign drive arrangements simplified by better preliminary wcuk. These of us who thought we ought te help last year have no less reason for helping this. unlesH Wl. ftre down nnd nut physically. These who gave last year have every reason te be glad, and therr who refused every reisen te lie serrv. It is a hurt piece et vveik and it will take very systematic giving, but It Is difficult le see hew most of us can get out of it with any honor. If we can call tome, enthusiasm te our aid such as some cheerful souls manage te put Inte their business and pleasures we may even get a cert of tri umph in doing n new thing well. If we could only add te our sense of dutv a Hash of Imagination we might almost get !t glimpse of the future, when the men who have been responsible for tlie Federation and these of us who have backed them will be cited as wise and generous and far-seeing citizens of a then beautiful and benevolent city, well named "llretheily Leve." B'; L'T imagination for sun ess ;s net a vir ile common among us or gieatlv bnnld We tirefrr te deem our great entemrlsi.u m failure in imagination befme we have even begun te build them Inte successes, Fortunately for ns, the Teries of the town who deemed the Declaration of Inde pendence when it was read In Ihe square new most of them occupy patriots' graves in the imagination at least of the "Dames and the Daughters," who forget, If hiderd thev ever realized, that most of their fore fathers were inin te their type and liked that Declaration and all it Implied better tlie third nnd fourth time it was read than the first. Our tendency te "Tery Ism"--j, P., stamj. ing pat is u inherited trait that is ns much n part of us as our Liberty Ikdl or the Signers' Tub e or ( arpenters' Hall. Teries nlwnya get licked in the end, nnd Liberty IlcllH, however cracked, tome out ahead. Pcrhnpa if we cold-shouldered our Tery tendency te "knock" and called our caution by the right name selfishness we would rhtl by recognizing a geed thine tha first tme we caw It. "-stu" j iii pi mwhrwmmmmmmmmiWiwwjFmm!.i8m&m&SA t-.mT ' i i i mil "i'ryxtK) '""-' - "". l2c5raT!SiCTiV . ;:r;- &fei KrS iVTP4 WaJlJ. !ftif,:,!"r.. !C'a .!:""' fSi!s'!is;e:sts'"--' NOW MY IDEA If THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians en Subjects They Knew Best J. A. McCU'XOTjr.H On Need of a Clnssic Revival A ItEVlVAL of interest in the classics nnd especially of a study of Shakespeare nnd his works, would de much In counter net the influence of the present-day ' era of Jazz." according le J. A. McCullough. pres ident of the Philadelphia Shakespearean Guild and vice president of the National Guild . , ., "It Is mninlv through nn Inspection of the literary works of today that future gener ations will be able te xisualize what our 'era of jazz" means." said Dr. McCullough. "And just as this K true, se is it true that the rising generation is being melded mere or less bv modem literature. Fer some time the thinking world has been proclaiming the need of calling a halt, and while the warn ing seems te have been heeded in some de gree. It is going te be hard for the pesttwnr neurotics te get back te pre-war sanity. Tills 'era of jazz' that we speak of has been explained se often and m convincingly tbut it needs but little explanation. World Hud te "Wew Off Steam" "It was absolutely necessary that there be a reaction after the long, trying days of the war. The United Stales did net feel the strain as did .these i euntries mere deeply Involved. Hut' the reaction was bound te come here as elsewhere. The emancipation of woman was one great result. And just ns nny person or class, suddenly thrown into n new environment, will go beyond expected or rational lines, se there came the period of 'ever-emancipation. ' "Hut all this Is passing gradually. Slowly but surely the entire world is coming te leek upon things sanely. And where can a better aid be found in reaching a rational viewpoint than by contemplation of the classicsV I refer particularly te a levival of interest in Shakespeare, because the works of the bnrd are of interest te all and he is net beyond the contemplation of the laborer as well us the cloistered student. "The burden of reviving interest In the usual run of classics rests with our large schools and universities. Toe u any of them, in my opinion, have been lentent te puss by the fundamental worth of Greek and Latin in favor of n Heed of isms and new olegies. All these have a place in a never-eliding progress, nnd I um far from one who would send back or even hamper tine progress. Hut there is something in spending tee much time In running up and down cross-reads and forgetting thnt the trip forward must be accomplished en the main read. What Shakespeare Has Dene "But it is diftercnt with Shakespeare. He meets nil classes en their own gieuud, and humanly, tee. The greatest thing te be accomplished Is making the middle classes, se called, .realize that Shakespeare is net necessarily for the 'highbrow.' Where in the world of letters can there be found a man who understood human nature as he did'.' He saw into the foibles of kings just as clearly as he saw the grotesqueries of the buffoens: And the fact that he tran scribed tills insight into deathless words makes him still mere human. "One does net have te be a savant tn ap preciate the beauties of Shakespeare. Even the mechanic who spends a portion of his evening going ever tome piny of the bard will find himself bettered ut his bench by the time spent. Ne tine who reads hi Shakespeare and attempts te de se under standingly run help but be Improved. His command of English will improve gradually by contact with that great master of the language. Even the use of archaic expres sions will net come In amiss. The man only moderately educated who becomes interested iu Shakespeare will Unci himself adding te his store of meager knowledge until the sum total of the result will surprise him as It slowly but surely becomes evident In hjs speech and In his thinking. Provided Entertainment, Toe "Unlike many advocates of Shakespeare, 1 nm net in favor of tee many attempts te popularize him upon the stage. I feel It Is much better that there be one or two real dramatic exponents of Shakespeare, men who knew hhn and ure sincere Interpreters. These men nnd women usunlly hnve made Shakespeare their life study, nnd their inter pretation cun be looked upon with confl cenfl dcnci . Shakespeare should net be treated 1922 , . "LET IT BLOW!'' lf 1 i II; K '. t i ! Mill tfra4fer. '-js l- ..rfPnr ' v - 'cr: &BFZ&SZ0&& - - ' .,. .t r jr ,' jjse ns n fad nnd thnt Is iust vvh I would hn pen were every little theatrical nc r genius te take ii into ' i' head te 'piny Shake speare. "There would have been no better war of ending the wave of salacious farces that marked the end of the win tlii.n by having every .nanager n the country produce ere or mere. Then the public would hnve sick ened rapidly. t cilut we have neon particularly fortunate in this respect. The real masterful Inter preters of the master drnmallst hnve been few and far between. Edwin Beeth had his day. and his memory lives mainly in his Shiikesiiearean roles. Then we have had Mantell. Sothern and Hampden. It seems I hat fate guards the future of Shakespeare, that when Mantell and Sothern are end ing their days of useful virility some one like young Hampden appears. I de net doubt thnt years hence some one will nppeur te take his pbue and carry en the message that the sweet singer of Aven penned years URO. Can Help Kvcn Boilermaker "I would like te see our schools give mere impeitanee le Latin and Greek, as I have saitl. Itut linking these things as iu fuce of Ihe argument f ia. wn;i fellw who will go into trade. 'Hew will Greek help me build boilers.' I wmihl my 'Shakespeare will heln """'' )"nim say -MiiiKpspciiru will help b"tt 'K'',t; '"" h""lli"e 1m'"'-'m t0 something .lni'i'm,'!, Ti !,n" .J"".'"! x''nkespe.ire without definite and he.ichej.,1 results. He does net have te be lead academically at all. There is morn geed meat in any one of his plavs hail in a dozen desPr, .p.,!,,,, ,mvu.s, 'Am, a ted te Ihe printed page j hotter form than in 'Remee an, Juliet". Where is there a better farce wit, mere real humor In th" situations than in -A Cmedy of Errors"' And se one could go down the entire list n'thVeeL l !."! "W" ,,r,snB" !"ld Ch 111 tll( KCIlfTllI f-fllClllf of I M ii it v "in,,, i i. . .i . ."" m- i; sent film with the hum , m , " " !'.''" Beeth, and then we ",, ""? '('"'"'K at BUlf of misunderstn, lli L hlhiml " I iri'1 Ihn .... . erstnndliig.' I'ic.iRe, noxious te de honor te the Meuntbat-''-. arranged a ,. Hipping Old Companion stockyards; and Ladv M ,,,,). I',',0 , ""I in order te go shopping. 'jUst ' ncyT l-referilng a store le a slaughter muse A was enough te peeve nnv lecen mn " ,U milter.. Meuntbatte.i, ,e ve ver h r"" honor by calling Jdge j, e' ular sniifler after (he crowd hail given i.i," .i r bin --seethed iheni by a ,1 , , '' ; well-known Londen vernacular tlmf i, . Jibloedy mess. Ull tIh..anin",PlB a d-v "! the doctor Wny t,', may be a lm.,i '......" One Cannet Blame Eve xvi .. f,ur l'ljlelans in Vew I.Ut l.s teserbeil ., .. ...vcw Jersey. npple crop , blessing tl,,, leg' Dees the nilleciivi. imn ,. summon. of cider? A Mtierestnw , ' ? ,""' Jersey this fall, he bays. deep In Dcmehlhcncs MeGlmils lead of ue,. happened te the freshmen at Pen,, ... if1 ruce hasn't changed much," said he r ' i "' lege Is attended by tl.e same b,nd of Mm, cring idiots ns when we weie boys," '"'", Mrs. Hall has asked Governer Ethvnr.Ia for "n comprehensive, tntc Ilgent i nd R ent investigation." Wants In fact ier. New Brunswick has had evVrytMug'VlX .nf;,rat;mue;:,;n1;'iii;att:ttrl;r0? What served mere , stir'il e ',!' InlrR during the war than the cei.u ,,,i . ' hien of parades thai n't t' eve1' W" !!!" i ."'!!'. . """Mine .X, dl t place. " lmve tl,elr Important "Above nil, the thing 0f ,....,, T . , disabuse the public inlm V Th,1 f . 0? Shakespeare be ng treated ns ,i JV . Let the teacher in the sc en Tsh. w m" tl.e pupil as the real , s -Jli,n t0 Let the casual reader ", ' same lichl. let tl, .. ' V''a. "'" '" the .' - 'l"r' 7.l'l r,f M' U's.t -tj 'J tC-'f. JtrmMtaSaSaTaWl JT -r 1 pit a C " -.-v y .. .y SHOK'I CVTb inrace, me eye et urecce, new wein a pntcti. HellldnyshurR. Pn., cat uses th tlt pnene. leline Is busy. .Tnck Frest has his eye en the pumpila. He'll put his lingei en it 'nter. J New thnt his enemies knew where LleTd ! Geerge stnnds, -tbey are net one whit happier. New Yerk man fined $50 for fllrMni' wun n policewoman. Homenevv we can t M- lleve It wns worth thb iiiene). Wonder hew thnt whale that appwed nr noutnnmpten, ii. l., expected nny pti llclty new that the season is ever. As Greece sees It. Italv will claim tha Dedecanesus Islands for no ether reason till that she sees a chance of getting them. Turkish Nationalists have declined t let Nansen visit Kemnl nt Anatolia. Chilli us some ettier expeditions he has featured. Lecnl cheesemnker has Invented an odorless llmburger. It will, of course, be served with seedless pretzels nnd klcltleM ucer. Queen Murie of Rumania's crown of solid geld weighs four pounds. Heavy cneujh iu itself te make uneasy the head that wears it. There's ene less "less" en (lie Gleucei- ter line, new that the Dauntless has tone, but happily the Peerless and the Fearlew btlll plow the mighty deeps. It will net give brilliance te FecYl ramc nor weight te his criticism of Clemen' ccnu te Knew that Peiucnre s policy as re gards Kcraal wns dictated by the marshal. .T. Odgcn Armour Is nt least willing tej namit tnut whatever the nature et nm speculations In wheat and corn, cresa-ef aminatlen by the Federal Trade CemuiIislM gees against the grain. The Government is said te he plannlni te modify the dry ship ruling. If this should chance te split the Eighteenth Amendme Attorney General Daugherty will he force te admit that he did It with his little hatchet. What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1. What pretender te the -English throne ended his days as n cook in the reyw pal.tce'.' ,., 2. What is the largest library In the werldl '!. Who was the "Qrent Electer"? ' 1. What Is meant by tlie Succession Statu et i'jurope; .. . C. Who was Fielssntt and when did he livn f. wiint is a inachlcelateu tower.' 7. Who Invented the renplng machine: b. What Ih n lich-gate? !'. Where decn llcorlce grew? 10. Who was -Mauu? Annwcrn in Sntnrduv's Oulz 1. Mount Legan, in the beuthwest corner J Yuken Territory. Canada, close te Alaskan boundary. Is the BecfM highest mountain In Nertli ,A"ie"c,, IU summit Is 19,500 feet above :. Thu Congressional Library In Wafhlnf; ten Is tlie largest llbrury In the Vl .'ill ill-lllineil'Jl v. , l)lll,.aj 3. Catherine, the Great. EmpreBS of "!"! was by birth n. pet man, n nair Stettin. She was tlie daughter or Prince of Anlinlt-Ze.bst and ' originally named Sephia. Augusta. . i. The Manchester Scl.uel cl M1" Economy was n name miiillecl e Bieup of English economic writer under the leadership of Richard Cc .1.... nrwl Tnhn HHllllt. W 10 ndVpCW the. principled of free trade, the mn'" tlen of Kovcrnnient functions .ina Jfl. development of unrestricted ccmP'" tlen and what Is called tha Mais'" fahe" policy. . , rll r. A pamulnade la an nbiis ve or cer . . i eisenal satire, n tvu c eus , aqulU (, ii. MgniuerBu iiurij wer, in.. "- "waL a celebrated American cayuhi M'.'sjg Henry Lee. un nctc.iiut 01 lib. WW" and dashing operntlena Iu the licve'" 7. A 7S r'i hind of Seuth AfrlC 8. Ilouget' X'Llsle wrote the words of "Marseillaise." wlin 9. The Ullcad of tlie Bible wus n jw , III, 1110 llivt.ll III iiiini"" V '. i .,..... .11 .... ,.,... en e laillbe ' ll'IIIIMI VwlH".f. - t. . J"; uy