T. . r$w&rT fW jtt1Vi3w.iri, virsiiiiirAiSc&t -L J'jF Iwjrftl'TTr.1.1 V. .-ji'SftirKB mwmssmmmmssmsmmmmmmmmmmmrnKm Rife rLWV " "' 3rt,M',r.U ijiaJe 4. . 4 f TrtT ,r s I : Jh - "i 1 A &? '""--' tf)Fv3 K imh nut I :: mat ra :izt m fft "':. $'4.u ninalJubltelle&Qer JWULIC LEDGER COMPANY 'CTOUS IT. K. CtTRTtR. tnn.lnvT fob C. Martin, Vic PreMilent and Tiesisurcri V&.JP' .i!ri . necreiaryi tnanes Ji. i.utunir- -nuip . unions, jenn n, wiuinm. Jnhn .1. ran, aeerss K. Oeldemlth, David E. Smiley. tern. . AVtP W. BM1LKT Ittlter SMIN P. MAIlTtN (li-n.r-nl tlilln-. Minarrr s - "r ? Jg &F..,it3ubltahd daUy at Pcsrte t.eoera Building fL-ti' Independence Square, Philadelphia. ' . TZ . . I'mvunNm Huiiaing :14 Madleen Ave. KrtWlPMIt TOt Fert tl'Jlldlntf bi('t Lt;ia 013 alcht-Dnnecrat rtulldlng Pi.)fMCoe , 1302 Trillin Building mJ.t vrcws ntmrrlt'B! ,wnmi,gnx ll . n. JHw Tene I fcSMOOM JBCI ritmr.eTOK Bciaiu, . Cor. Pennsylvania Av. and 14th St. Drene. Tna Sun tlulMtr Ocauc Trafalgar Building STB EftMPO l'KLIO i-siuta It aervetl te ub 'lIMn In fuilatieumla Mid turreunillng town tna rat or twtlv (in) centa per week. payaW ,10 'Me carrier. '..B m" ,0 Points eutalda of Philadelphia In IB united state. Canaitn, nr United statre pn anions, peetaee free, fifty (RO) cents per month. Is (In) dellnre. per xear, payable In advanc. , Te all ferelirn countries en 1) dollar a month. I Netice Subscriber wishing addreia changed , Snuat Blve old aa well aa new addreae. BELL. 3009 WALNtT KEYSTONE, MAIN 160! KTA&Artts nil communication te Evrnine Putlle I.t>r, Injrpenttrnct Kqunre. PMlaittlvhia. Member of the Associated Press JK THE A8.10CIATKU I'll KIM i txeluilvtlj Cf Sled te thf lite far i (publication nf nil n-iits HNtafrirf crtdttrd te It or net ethencitc ctdtttd this paper, unii alie thr local ncwe pub'.ishtj thtrtln, All rieht ef rfpiiMlcnflen of tttclal dispatchti JeTein art oIte rtsrrvti. Pfallailrlphli. Thurtdir, NuTtmher ". W2 OUR NEW ASSEMBLYWOMEN POLITICS m it Is tilnyert at HiirrNburg is erJlnnrily u reiigh-atid-tumbk' gnme. It Is net usually notable for retinvment of methods or manners. What chuukcm In the tone nnd complexion of tlie Heuse will fol fel low upon the entry of the live women just elected te Its membership remains te be Men. Women nlways have had a civilizlnc Influence, even In the wllderm-w, and there U no reason why Herrisburi' should be an exception te this rule. Three of the new Assemblywomen, Mrs. Speiser, Mrs. de Yeung and Mrs. l'ltts. Will represent Philadelphia dlbtrief. They are extremely modest in telling of their plans. Naturally, they have few plans nt present. Women in politic and in public offices etifht te be gien plenty of time in Tyhich te leek about and get their henritiKs ahd n maery of the technique of party affairs nnd udminitratlve service. At llnrrUburs the maehine will operate ' tn spite of them if they are net willing te go nleng. Hut the five women in the As sembly can nflerd te be patient. They can be the eyes nnd ears nnd voices of half the electors of the State if they cheese te be. Whether they nfcnmnlltdi mueh or little will depend finally upon the degree of their courage ami the extent te which they are able te apply the great power and influence of the woman vote In Pennsylvania in the interest of better polities and better gov ernment. THE MIRACLE COLLEGE UNLIKK romance as it 1 often popu larly conceived. Temple I'rlversity be longs te the domain of fact. But the ncenl of its inception nnd development is no' the leas romantic for this contact with reality. The necromancy in this instance another word for the untiring energy and unselfish devotion of Dr. Russell II. Conwell be stowed upon the magnificent popular educa tional institution of his own malting has for tome j ears been accepted in this cemn.unity without especial wonder. The founder of Temple T'niversity bus accustomed us te miracle work. In a tene, thin constitutes n tribute te his remarUable pewers: but the assumption n( this attitude only accentuates the debt of I'hiladclphians. " Tangible eddenec of condign i;ratit..i!c i new proposed in the movement te erect by popular subscription a splendid new college building for Temple in eipeciai appreciation of Its geed genius. The pregiim warrants the heartiest und most substantial public support. Conwell Hall, as the structure te be rniFed at Bread street and Montgomery avenue will be called, will serve, in addition te its practical uses hs the n.wnbel of a virtually r.nparnllcled achievement, n popular unier ity endowed at the euW't with nothing but the inspiration of u noble ideal. As it exists today. Temple is a supirb monument te its feundtr nnd a brilliant feature of the educational ic-eurees of the community. Notably within the past decade, Its standards und equipment hae been car ried te nn authoritative point of efficiency. It is solidly shaping up into Mich an institu tion of higher learning as I)r Conwell orig inally planned with but the meagercst initiul assets, Conwell Iln'l is n prejeit which citiens with any respect for the geed name of the city should be proud te indorse and e::"cuie. THE RECLAMATION IDEA IT WAS te bme been expected that the proposed plan of the Sesqui-C-ntcnnlul would appeal te an orginlzatien of the char acter of the American Institute of Archi tects. Indersement of the program by the Philadelphia Chnitr of tins eminent insti tution implies n perspicacious regard for the future development if Philadelphia en lines net merely respectful of beauty, but also of practical municipal responsibilities. At its meeting tills wek the chapter laid jarlieular stress upon the reclamation op portunities in connection with the fair. Although the Ci rt Temple plan avoids con sideration of the mooted question of redeem ing the banks of the Schuylkill between the dam and Market street, there mn be littitf doubt that if the exposition is once uutlierl- ' tatively launched this Improvement idea will again merge. The fair project in its pre-ent feim in- eludes some acies of reclamation. 1'ven a ginning would nlmest Inevitably serve te strengthen support of a redemption enter prise en n larger scute. That the city, in spite of the expense li Involved, would eventuully profit by the establishment of modem conditions in its central area is entire!) probable. The time will come when the stockyards must be removed and drastic measures be taken te efface the junk plies and ethu- evidences et eitie degeneracy in the region whete the Schuylkill cuts the city in two. ,j It is quite conceivable that such a refei tu " nay be mere difficult and meie etly te (', effect u decade hence than during the ex- 'petition building yean. .', erlit ciif?fft.Hrm nf thp nrphllmtlu nt llm Vrhi isstrl""" Institute is. of course, made upon Btsuu.ptlen thnt the fair will take place. Experts have alwnys had a way of ellml- Ming "town pumper)" trem tiieir keen ea f nrehletiiH of the future. fl VST ' J.'u i.. ' .- R A NEW PENITENTIARY a number of years plans for the re- ;tsnevnl of the Kastern Peiiitenllnry luive ;i intermittently proposed only te be In favor of ether public improve- deemed et mere pressing Importance. the subject is bound te ricur untij Its steps are taken te secure tin out- I, site for thin institution. aiciveniy, wnesa Knowledge ei blem, (s as mitherltMTe as his it is Drofeuad. Is fraakly ttsfft " Wt if .,. - of the opinien1 that mere modern facilities nnd n suburban loco t Ien have become ncccs sltles. His point of view Is distinctly worth heeding en several counts. In its nresent situation "Cherry Hill" is nn anachronism nnd a serious drawback te the development nf n section of the city suitable for residence purposes, a region which logically should profit by the Parkway improvement and the changes in progress in the Palrmeunt area. When the cornerstone of what was pro jected ns a model penal institution was laid nearly a century age, in May, 1823, Cherry Hill wns surrounded by fields some distance from the thickly settled parts of the town. With the lapse of time the site has become wholly urban. Mr. McKcuty's program includes the care ful selection of n location "fifteen or eight een miles from Philadelphia" and the use of about 2e0 acres, preferably of land with n rocky base suitable for quarrying by the prisoners. Mho could be employed in the production of geed rend-building material. His conception is reasonable, in line with modern prison reform Ideas nnd deserves the specific nttcntien of the Commonwealth. CONGRESS GOT THE REBUKE THAT WAS COMING TO IT Eishtccn Months of Floundering Could Net Possibly Satisfy an Intelli gent Electorate fTUIE one irresistible conclusion that can be drawn from the result of the voting en Tuesday U that Congress has been re bulled. Soen after it assembled it was apparent that it was lacking in leadership. Although a let of new members entered as n result of the unprcccdcntcdly large Republican vote cast in IDL'O, the old Congressmen who had managed te survive defeat for several years were automatically placed in 'emmund of the Important committees regardless of their tit lies j-. They fell down en their jobs, and it was Inevitable that they should fall down. The seniority rule, which results in the promotion of men in regular succession according te their length of service in Congress or en a committee, periodically brings nonentities te the front. The able men wbe have been in Congress only one or two terms have te amuse themselves ns best they may while their inferiors dictate policies and shape legislation. In spite of the fact that age cannot wither nor custom stale the infinite in capacity of a certain proportion of the luembets of the National Legislature, age and custom de conspire te perpetuate a system that legicall? leads te such a rebuke as was administered en Tuesday. Repeatedly during the last eighteen months this newspaper has called attention te the fate that was in store for Congress if it did net rise te Its opportunities. The Notion has been passing through a crisis te meet which constructive statesmanship of the highest character wc required. That Ftatesmanshie was bevend tlte capacities of the men in control. Whether It was present among the men in the ranks kept down by the tustems of Congress does net appear It is known, however, that an overwhelm ing majority of the memliers of the party in control were devoting mere time te thought nf hew te sac their eiltical skins than te hew te serve ihe Natien. Tin- eternal truth of the saying that he who would av his life will lese it is i nee mere proved before our eyes. If is nor ftident that the result of the election means anything mere than p. re buke te Cengres. It is net a triumph for radicalism or for conservatism ; neither is it a victory for the "wets" or the "drys." The situation recallB the joke of the hu morist who hud a man remark te an Imagi nary Senater that his country was culling him. "I knew that," replied Senater Setghum. "but dllTerent parts of the country are call ing me different things " Governer Edwards, of New Jersey, was elected fe the United States Senate because lie is an nvewed opponent te the Velstead law. New Jersey is unmistakably "wet." The law has beense loosely enforced that the sale of liquor in ninny cities ha been almost as free as It used te be in the old days, Ohie, en the ether hand, has elected Rep resentative Fess te the Senate. Fess voted for the prohibitory amendment when it was submitted te the Heuse of Representatives and he is nn avowed "dry " l'et sentiment Is se nearly balanced en the subject in the State that the vote en a "wet" amendment te the State Constitution is about evenly divided. And the avowed "dry" sentiment of Glf Glf ferd Pinehet did net prevent his election te the governorship of Pennsylvania by an overwhelming majority. Maryland has defeated its radical Sena Sena eor, Dr. France, and has elected William C. Bruce, n conservative, In his place; and In North Dakota former Governer Frasier, a redkal et the radicals, has lest the elec tion. But La Follette in Wisconsin and Jnhn'en in California have wen. And Victer Rerger, the Socialist, whom Congress refused te admit a few years nge, has been elected te the Heuse of Representatives by a Wisconsin distritt. Ledge, who .stands at the opposite extreme of political thought, has been returned te the Senate by Massa chusetts. The Republican majority in the Heuse will be se small after next March that if the party is te de anything te justify the leuHdenre of the people It Will have te be done within the next four months. But it will net be done unless some one assumt.s the leudernhip. OVERTURN IN NEW YORK THE Republlcun overturn la New Yerk is net re surprising as it would seem at first glance, The Itnpu'slen has prevailed that Gov Gev Gov erner Miller was elected two years age mer Governer Smith because of his own strength. An examination of the election returns in that car will show that Mr. Miller was carried Inte office en the wove of hostility te Woodrew Wilsen which gave the State te Mr. Harding by a plurality of 1,100,000 tuer Cox. Mr. Harding i oiled 1.&71.000 votes; Mr. Cox received -Rt.OflO. The vole for. Miller was l.an.'.liOO nnd for Smith if we 1.12(11. -1100. The Cox vote fell 480,000 short of the Hinlth lote. This. was the vote of Demo crats who wanted U rebuke Wilsen nnd they , were east for Mr.Jf ardlng. Eaeugli of 'then EVENING' PUBLIC LEDGER - were cast for Miller, who also was running en the Republican ticket, te give him u plurality ever Smith. This year Miller was running en his own merits. He has been one of the best Gov ernors in the history of the State. But he alienated some of the Republican Party bosses because he has been mere interested in geed government than In rewarding the men who cerry the election divisions. This year he insisted en naming the men who should be associated with him en the ticket nnd trampled en the feelings of n let et county leaders. Smith is one of the most popular men that ever filled the office of Governer. Ac cording te all accounts he personally made a geed record in office. And he 1ms been con sistently opposed te the influence of Hcnrst in the politics of the State. Dr. Copeland, the Democratic candidate for the Senate, undoubtedly lias been cart led into office en the tide thnt swept Miller te defeat. He will net be any better repre sentative of New Yerk in the Senate than Calder has been. The chances are that he will net be se geed a representative for lie has had no legislative experience, nnd se far ns the record shows he has been nothing mere than n physician with n liking for office and n fondness for publicity. THE REVOLT IN CAMDEN AMONG the thrones that rocked nnd fell en Tuesday, that from which Davy Balrd ruled in Camden for lel these many years is peculiaily conspicuous. Senater Frcllnghuyscn, righting desperately for Ids political life, made no secret of the tittst which he put in Camden and Mr. Baird. Other regions of the State might seem dubious nnd disposed te go unwisely from the fold. Northern regions like Jersey City nnd Hobekcn und Newark, never quite de pendable in n political emergency, might go impiously nnd fn cempnsy with the uncon verted rich of the Oranges te light wine nnd beer and Mr. Edwards. They were uncertain, said the prophets, like ethe.- sec tions of the interior where there was ob vious dissatisfaction with the record of Re publican lenders in matters affecting street railways and the Public Service Corporation generally. But Camden was net uncertain 1 It was in the plans of the campaign man agers what Seuth Philadelphia usually is in the calculations of the State Committee of Pennsylvania. It was impregnable! When late en Tuesday evening the winds began te blew cold, the watchcru i.t Repub lican tickers thought of Mr. Baird and his organization and were comforted. Davy, geed old war horse, captain of captains, friend of the politically afflicted, was out there in the storm holding his stronghold against the heathen ! They knew Davy. He had never failed them. Aud he would net fail them new! Had Camden nnd Atlantic Ce.mties nnd the adjacent regions run anywhere near te form, had they been kept in the ranks, Edwards nnd Silzer would have been de feated. Mr. Balrd's organization may have revolted. It may have been permitted te wander. The apathy of which we had heard se much may hnve been merely in the besoms of Republican leaders In the south counties. The grisly fact is thnt the Camden landslide which was te hnve saved the occasion didn't develop. Camden came perilously near te giving the Democrats a majority of Its vote. Jersey politics, as wt. have said before, is n deep game. It has been clear for a Ien,; time that innumerable small lenders of the Republican organizations were mere "wet" than Republican. What reully happened below the surface in Camden and nt points south we shall never knew until somebody en the inside writes The Mirrors of Jersey. One fact looms darkly out of the gen eral confusion te attract the awed attention of party men. Mr. Baird couldn't elect Frelinghujhen or he wouldn't. The conse quences in either case should be the same. The time becms te hae come for Mr. Baird te retire te the political equivalent of Deem. There can be no consolation for Mr. Pre Jinghuysen aud Mr. Runyon nnd the ether casualties of the Republican ticket In the thought that the people of Camden, like the people elsewhere In th State, displayed an independence of thought and uctlen which, aside from its Immediate tendencies and re sults, is reassuring as a political sjmptem. Mr. Edwards was net nn ideal candi date. He didn't pretend te be one, He presented himself en the stump as a rough customer, determined te de all tlinr uy in his power te bring suffering te the com placent Republican majority In the Senate of the I'nlted States. He is net constructive by instinct, 'but he knows crowds und the needs and prejudices of cre.vds. Fer n time It nppeared that the friends of Frellnghuysen had found n way te defeat him. They began a powerful caiipaign of newspaper propaganda te disclose svhemes of read graft which, they alleged, had flourished under Mr. Edwards' AdminUtrn AdminUtrn tien. About this question all farmers ere almost ubnermally scnslthe. Their read taxes nre high. They hate the thought of spending large quantities of hard-earned money for highways that may crumble in h few years. Mr. Edwards went en unmindful, talk ing te the crowds about tl.elr personal rights, about dictators who wanted te man age their souls for them, obeut rhi. rubstl rubstl tutien of governmental might for the divine right of personal freedom and all that sort et thing. He was seldom technical. Ills chief nt gument against Mr. Frelinghuyset, v.as that Frellnghuysen was one of the "mbal of freodein-stealers" In Washington, The crowds were touched, Tl.ey seem te have been convinced. If the fanners were sensitive about read expenditures, they were still mere sensitive about ether things. .Se were the people in cities like Camden and Atlantic City. Camden took Mr. Ed wards warmly te its heart. And the effect is as senmtlonel, in the view of anv ,lerev politician, ns if the Vnre miehlue hail belted overnight and voted for n Democratic candidate for the governorship. Mr. Baird will have te shoulder most of the blame for this, whether he derive it or net. He may re-establish himself im the acknowledged caliph of Camden County. But if l.e does he may be credited will! having performed a political mira -le. WHERE THE SENATE LOSES OSCAR W. CNDKRWOOD's anneun.e. ment that ill health will romp his relinquishment of leadership of the Demo Deme cratle minority In the Senate after March 1, lOiW, means n less net only te his pmtv but te the best Interests of Hie Natien, Mr. Cndcrwend's partisanship h(lH never been of a type te eIjm'ui,. 1.1m vUIen in issues of paramount important p. His somewhat ileliente put in tlie Amenten delegation te the Washington Anns Ceiifereme was ml- mireiiiy una patrietitaiiy plajed. At n chinery for pieservlng the equilibrium of the I'aclllc. Senater rmrerw nod's leilremeiit from an executive lele In his party will coincide next spring with the eluntary withdrawal of Jehn Sharp Williams from political life. The senior Senater from Mississippi N nil ilher Southern Democrat whose leurse in 'the upper house has been innrked by faulty, sincerity, ripened judiapnt and Sound .htiur.u - r t me id the Senater from Alabama permit mw wu,' '." ' i ' ' l"" h'r.v :;''i5rirr' s" as tt ;.'"; -e5S. . x. ,, .iii I, -'" t irenx ieui in" i"". iin liner ii, H in of NnfienK, le bederd his appreciation of ' !pr f ",, ,e n matter for the piohll.lllen the mere circumscribed but estimable mn. ;... ,,,... iK. officer mther than f,,e tc; AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Emotional Insanity la Something Ap7- parently That Affects Others Than the Principals in Murder Cases. Auditors Are Net Immune By SARAH D. LOWRIE DURING the latest of the murder trials that a part of the general public of this town line "enjoyed" te the full, I re ceived the following letter: Dear Miss Lewrle: . Will net you write In defense of the stenographers? If "emotional Insanity" is sufficient excuse farr Catherine ncxler's crime, what safety is there for any woman employed tn an office? Mildred Reckltt's friends will never be lieve there was any foundation for Jealousy. The rest of tis would better be Retting a life Insurance for th.i benefit of tlfese we must help te support enl prepare for the worst If a jury acquits nor. De coma te our support. A girl who needs work cannot pick her employer. She has te take what she can get. I HANDED it te n very well-known nllenlst te rend, who had seen the'persen in question both In court ami In jail, nnd I asked him what wns "emotional Insanity" that it should lend a person te commit mur der nnd yet be of se temporary u nature ns te make her safe te be nt large. He said there was no such disease as "emotional In sanity of n temporary nature." If you nre insane enough te be irrespon sible, you nre tee ill te be safely nt large. Your recovery may be n matter of time, or your illness may be n chronic condition. But In either case treatment under strict surveillance for a period te be determined by physicians qualified te treat such n case should safeguard the public as well as the patient. Our law l evidently defective. In that it frees n person en the ground of insanity without specifying nny curtailment of lib erty en the ground of thnt insanity. LATER I was interested te listen te the verdict of mere than one of the noted physiclni.H who specialize en mental diseases who had followed this particular case. Since they did net make thnt verdict n matter for public discussion, neither shall I, but It was their very emphatic opinion thnt the manner nnd the matter used te exculpate the pris oner and arouse public feeling were likely te unbalance unstable minds nnd give an impulse toward distraught violence in men nnd women who had imaginary or real griev ances and waited for but this show of hands in their fuver te break through the barrier of self-control and play the part of wronged heroes nnd lrerelnes before an applauding and sympathetic nubile. Bad as the double hilling was, whether It wan done by an insane person or an in toxicated person or a revengeful person, the manner of placing the facts before the jury and the public te affect the jury was an added menace te nil society. AS FOR the public, who for the sensation it get by feasting its eyes and ears at that trlul immensely helped in the deBlred effec,t en the jury one wonders what the aftermath of licensed brainstorms will be as a result of the gorge ! Fer if these doctors knew their business, that is just the sort of feasting that under mines the wlll'nrtd disintegrates the control ling mind. It is n debauch of the feclinge. A -jrent many persons said te me: "If it had only been kept out of the papers no one would have gene or listened 1" That is net true, because the public that wan brought te thnt trial was wanted there ns part of the' defense, and the advertise t"!if of the trial wns necessary for the de fense. The newspapers did, en the whole, the enlv thing possible. They gave the pub lic both sides, since it was plain that one side ct least wns te have all the publicity that could be utilized. ! THE letter which I quoted above from the stenographer hns a very genuine ring nl-eut it. net of feur. but of common eense. However, ethers besides the jury were mere sentimental thun just nt that trial, for most of us ere sentimental nnd few of us are just, te that is where n lawyer for defense can get in his surest effects, H avoids the conscience and works en feelings, and, if his audience weeps, he' feels sure that his jury does net listen unmoved. It is die sltlU of nn ncterMhat he needs, net the plain statements of a historian. He knows his public, and cynically arranges his plea te sentimentality en the pretense that It is n plea for justice. As a remilt of the verdict, however, 1 doubt if the danger te stenographers is any greater than te ether men or women who, in the punult of duty, hnvu te cres the peths of jealous persons, sane or insane. This particular trial is only n Fymptera in the widespread disease of sentimentality false sentiment, which is undermining justice everywhere. The real menaces te society are the things that fan thnt folse sentiment. Last sum mer two novels were sent te me for my opin ion. I thought, as I read them, thnt they would be inflammable stuff for minds al ready diseased, and net pertinent stuff for wholesome mindc I was interested te see that they were quoted lately ns evidence in another recent murder ease of the moral dewnfnll of one or both of the victims. THE truth of the matter 1 we de net need books or plays or the testimony of c eirts te Inform us about the wrung way of doing n thing ; we need nil the incentive and example nnd comfort we can get about the rteht way of meeting our difficulties. We de net "ee.l te cultivate our sentimentality, but we de need te exercise our self-control until it can be depended en te work when we put it te steering our emotions. As for the stenographers, let me s.iy thla one thing te them, since they hnve asked me te speak for them. Yeu women have a great trust ! Yeu ure doing n big piece of work in tlie world. Next te mothers and wives you have the most confidential nnd delicate position in the licn of men. The fuilure of nny one et you te live up te thnt trust hurtH the whole re lationship and undermines the security of so ciety. Ne one of you can live just te her belt', or .fall just te herself. Yeu cannot always cheese the right employer, but you can ileal rightly by that employer CVen against IiIb will. It is because the majority of jmi are re I'lear-headrd nnd geed-hearted in tlie best seise that our profession is honored In- men end trusted by your fellow women. These who dishonor it tle.il a foul blew at their fellow workers. The world's thirtv-twe Caught en inest beautiful women the Heppe hlTVe Im en plelted hv a liehl British photog rapher named Ileppe. Heppe. British, would have been mere emit ions if he had been Ileppe, Scotch. By pleasing thirty two women he has effendttl all the rtwt. Robbed of his peace of mind hevlll have a hard row te hoe. Lecal weather forecaster Great SnaUes of Warsaw, Ind,, snx -tins is going te lie a mild weather sharp. West Virginia prehl- Coinpnilsens bltlen enforcement elll- Are Odorous ters (emplain that their ability te smell stills, has beeu thwarted ' M' ,'r,"'l "hiewdncHs of moenshiners, who have taken te raising of iielecats. A peer urguiiieiii en us men, A skunk should Indicate a still us surely as a rldv. told.ef q drink, In the old days gene l beyeadrecall. , . ' i PHtLAbteE 11 . . I'lll"!' !..-- m&t'. x '.-. &&;: a: d x A'.t.Mr.'K,'' SBSStB-V s- w SHBL-NalBBBBaiaaw ' J. '.! UJ'ZII T I . Tj. .e 1BPBBB1 SBBBSm IBB .kU BT.JBnST ST lBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBFr BB1 tt"j,JpejB HBsssssssssssssssssssssssssBsPassssssy jsfajBy MFJiysBBBwsisssssf satt iHslfesiHsLSBBBBBB J!W NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Knew Best DR. ARTHUR EDWIN DYE On Museums and Great Paintings THERE has been a distinct advance in the last few years in the attitude of museums generally toward the fine arts, says Dr. Arthur Edwin Bye, curator of paint ings nt the Pennsylvania Museum. "While the museum of the past has taken the stnnd thnt it should confine itself te the decorative arts and the applied uits for the grenter part," said Dr. Bye. "they are new eming nreund rapidly te the finer arts, and I believe that this marks n dis tinct advance in museum work ns a whole. There really inn be no distinction made if the distinction Is detrimental te the applied nrts which are in reality fine arts. One trouble in this city has been the apparent relegation of the applied arts te a miner place, and hence net giving them sufficient importance. The New Museum "There have been practically no definite plans made for the new museum en the Parkway. The Wilstach collection will go there, as far as we knew, but there has been nothing officially decided as te the plans for that building. . "The work of. the Pennsylvania Museum, in te far as the matter of paintings Is con cerned, is largely that of supervision of them. It has the Bloomfield Moere collec tion, which has several dozen puintings, nnd there are all bertN of art objects In the museum of which the paintings constitute u derided minority. It hns nlse the care of a number of paintings bequeathed te the City of Philadelphia and housed in Me Me eorial Hall. A few of them arc valuable. "It has been our duty te supervise, re store where necessary nnd clean these peintings. A pnintiug should net need at tention mere than once every twcnty-lhe years If Jt is properly cared for. The elder n painting is the mere care it requires, for old paintings nre like old persons and have te be trented similarly. They require far mere constant care und oversight than new pictures. "In nu dd pointing it is especially neces. snry te watch out for the disintegration of the varnish and the strength of the canvas, as well as te be constantly en the lookout for 'blisters.' Paintings Are Indliidu.il "Every painting, like cvciy person, has its own individuality and there are, there fore, no general rules for the care of a picture or as te its length of Ufa nnd the length of time it can safely go without restoration. Paintings are en both canvas and panels of weed and the treatments vary. "The 'blisters' nre caused by a contrac tion of the surface upon which the pointing is made. A wooden pnnel pointing, which showed no effects of the atmosphere la the country In which it was painted, has become mere or Icsn used te weather conditions In Europe, where It has been for SOU or meie years. But when it is brought ever here it 1 nn unusual thing for it te warp or crack, nnd the suifare, being old nnd brittle, comes up. "Blisters ure injected with an adhesive solution ami then flattened down, if this were net done, the paint forming the blister would fall off. If the painting were a por trait, for iiiHtunee, anil the blister fanned en, m the nose of the person portrayed, und then fell off, the painting would be completely ruined, wheteas, If It were up In a corner, en a painted piece of tapestry, for example, the damage would net be se great. But the blisters are nlwajs at tended li Immediately, mi matter where en the painting they form. A Place of Inspiration "A museum of puiiiIIiirk should be tlrsl of nil u storehouse for the safekeeping of vnluable wet Us of ait, but what is morn Important, it should be a place of insptia insptia tien ami uplift for I he visitor, The student of art slieiilil be allowed te study any pic ture in tlio'sterago rooms if it happens net te be ll'lllglUK HI "I" time, "Museum werktrs should also pluv v. itli their trcifuich, changing them about con cen str.ut!, placing them In new positions nnd making ili' exhibit one of always chnngiti.: interesi. This tun easily he done by taking the pallittligii en (he wall, te the storage looms ami putting etheis in their places, "Nothing Is hi distracting te a vlslim (ls oveicrewilvd wull" of paintings. Even object , in an overcrowded room lese j value, and besides this, (he visitor seen In.. I'eiues fatigued at the Mist number (,f ihlnuN uhleli lie sees. A museum slmnlil !.. .. ,,i ill which te meditate, where one cuu alt and drink In the. Inspiration which the eld mas- ters gTf.: jneum ee a joyous and restful . mm M ' mm'mmmmmmmmmmmnm "ITS A HARD WORLD!5 4 Af place, and therefore the visitor vlll get grenter benefit nnd pleasure out of a few things well displayed than when seeing a large number. The Museums of the Past "The day is past when the museum Is considered te be a curle shop, nnd the museum of the future is going te be n decorative ensemble. I de net argue against large collections, for there is every reason for having them If the material in them be geed; I am simply arguing against over crowded galleries. "If a museum staff has net a sufficient variety and number of fine objects, then there is no chance for them te select what they need te make their exhibits attractive. The matter of surroundings is also im portant. Suppose, for exumple, that the museum desires te hnve n month's exhibit of French nrt of the eighteenth century. There should be a room of that period, stocked with paintings and furniture of the same time. The effect en the visitor will be te reproduce the whole artistic design and surrounding which the people of that period worked out. The utmespherc of the exhibition, ns well us the paintings them selves, should be of the same period of time. "The growing tendency of museum werkcis new is te establish Individual rooms showing the detail of the history of the period. Although the rooms may be smaller than the real ones were, still the whole effect will be te recount the history of the times nnd reproduce the setting In which these people lived. In the Georgian room nt the museum we recently hung Neme of the Elkins paintings of the same period, und the result wns splendid. Mere Reems Needed '"The museum here should have mere of these looms and we are working te obtain some of them for the new museum, but the room plans arc net yet completed. The rooms may be installed In such n miinner ns te be taken down and set up again ns desired, "We alto hove a very fine collection of stained glass ut the museum, which we arn studiiiig nnd cataloguing. Most of it is of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, but we hne a few examples ns early as the fourteenth century, und in n way we cun show the development of stained glass from the fourteenth te the seventeenth century. Our collection of prints is nlse very geed. "But I cannot emphasize tee strenglv the necessity for the constant changing of the art objects in an exhibit. The museum should make an appeal te the emotions and net be merely a plnce te go te see curies. I he modern museum worker aims nt stirring up the right Impressions nnd net sending the visitor away with a hodge-pedge of con fused memories, which was se often the ense with museum visitors in the pest. There must be a ps) choleglcal appeal which the museum makes of which the vlblter does net feel conscious at the time. This should especially be the ense with chlldien who are at the imptessienuble age. "Te bring this about, there must he, first of Villi, trained museum workers; second, the must have the urt objects, and third, the freedom te exercise their ideas ns te the arrangement and the exhibit of things. Then the museum will he n tremendous unset te the, community in stirring ami cultivating artistic impulses am knowledge." ".rr j Alientewn has a jazz cow that shim inles te such nu extent thnt it churns its own milk : into liquid butter. Se runs the story. Which seems te prove that Allen town has n jazz correspondent who shiiiuuley te such an cxtei.t that his gray matter pro duces mush. ' INSIIIK DOPE Yeu voted; we Mited; und the) (That Is, hit) one elie) voted, tye. I he dav was Importantly gray; The beaten iinpeitantl'y blue. But tin; ti'llew who chortled and nuier knew fear, Wlie tumid te a bounce every bump NV"N tl',',l-l"u"',l' big-listed; smiling , The choice of tliv pee.pul, ,, (Jump, This morning w leek for his llaill0 'Tis there in the usual strip. ElsewllPIP Iheie Is InlU of . hlniii,' The slip twht the cjii uiul . j ' But list te the song of iht. chaps wh ,,..,. wise; Friend And) wen out e.Hh a iruai'i- Vnu elected te Congress; U there i'u'dis- A, 5f In I . Flail te Cenereaaman n. ...... t t ' r 4-, n 1"" " t t 'niatfiM uuuiii : . A, L. ' ' - V "' .i , - rnJ'-tM. SHORT CVTS France's Frankenstein -figure wears a fes. Death is always ready te take a shift ia a coal mine.' T h e Becond-Term-fer-Harding Cluk will try te bear up under the defeat of Miller. As Briradler General Mitchel. Fees it, the navy is a hniinless and comparatively unnecessary adjunct te the air service. The Third Internatienale is In session is Petrograd. This is almost h Important i the meeting of the tailors of Toe ley street. Educator avers the Great American Desert is under the hat of the average nan. Anti-Velsteaders insist it is under the necktie. We learn from Sir Basil Thompson that commuters in Londen are known as dslly broaden. Seme crust. And every one after the dough. The ex-Kaiscr's book of memoirs Ii selling for seven cents in Berlin. It would really appear that the Germans are gcttlnf wise te Wilhelm. There were topics of discussion ether tbnn politics yesterday, but they never did mere than poke their heads through the curtain and then duck again. The Yeung Lady Next Deer But Oat sometimes comes dangerously near te the truth. She says she supposes A. Gump wii elected te Congress under an alias. There is new said te be likelihood that the President will pick a Democrat te suc ceed Day in the Supreme Court. That Is tt say he will pick an American without re gard te his politics. Rain has damaged crops In Poland ani drought has hurt them in Rumania. What Euiepe seems te need, says the Yeung Ladr Next Doer But One, is an average rainfall. Frem Mexico comes the news that tht sister of General Murguia arrived with a stay of execution Just tee late te save his life. This outrages all precedent set br novel, drama and movie. A true bill is te be sought against Jflhs Dee in the New Brunswick murder caw. While it has n familiar sound, the defend-, ant's name is spelled somewhat differently from that of an earlier suspect. What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1. What Is glenaT . 2. Fer hew many years was the callphat n the Mohammedan world nt Bagdad" 3. In what play by Shakespeare tleei tsi character of I'rospcre appear? 4. Wtiat Is the original meaning of tft word hubbub? r.. Who wu Praxiteles? ii. Of what Htate Is Austin the capital? 7. Who was Edward Prehlu? . b. Who waa the last Orleanlst King ef France ? . 9, There nre two regions In Eurepe turmw Rnilcla. Where are they? , 10. Who wrote the poem beginning. A sol dier of the legion lay dying l Algiers"? " Answers te Yesterday's Quiz 1 Hatoun AI-Bashid, the famous Csllj. whose name occurs se frequently 13 the "Theuannd and One Nights," rulw in Bagdad In the letter part of tM eighth century A. D. He died In W J. "Al-llnshld" Is Arabic ami means " lower of the right cause."' . . 3. Henry (Jeorge waa ft noted America" nineteenth century writer en politic' economy and sociology. Be was a advocate of what is known aa,' single tux theory. His chief wer.( entitled "Progress nnd Poverty. , I. Tlie American bison feimerly ingu.JJ far East In the I'nlted States as tM Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania. C Vho Pennsylvania Railroad was the raij railroad te Introduce the bleclt-slffl" i)Btvm In the Unlt'd States In IM. . C iletnian ts the title of a Cossack gnrH rlic.rd annually, , .. 7. A pultitumsii In English railway parlan" U a switchman. In England, "point" ale switches . The llittle of Oravelette was fought of; twnii the French and Oermsiw en August 18. 87e, and resulted In a W lery for the latter. Oravelette U lllllffi, In Alfuns.l 'i.Mln. H A "cente" In llteratum Is n short stefj; lMllli'llliirlv one nf it liumorellt '. itnillln": character, as Bnlsac's ,'C,n!;:Ll T'ridlatiquee" or Lu Fontaine's 'CeniHPl .- .. e Nouvelles." ' -JlA v. vunauium is a rare, silver-white mwi i.ui,iii ii ia useiui as an K'V'vi , steel te Increan teaslle strength.' 1 :s vA sibbVI,-, teV . i.i, . .-."? &fe.VW-, -U&A i JS WsJ i i-i i)?Tft- t.la&?.tf,-tf4H.xft! flte