-' " iVW'A'V !M"lM J SW.WW ' HK 11 ft i I 'lgj,: ft.1 1 LVTj !H, 1 f. 4 H JI ft- Mi 1 1, , m s Stt I ift!S 16 r EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER 1 PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY , CYttUS II. K. CUIVTIH, PMtDs:i it Cherts A. Tyler,' fltcreurys Churlce II. Midlns- '.von. rnuip w, ueiuns. jenn u. vy-uuaim, uwn F. Goldsmith. David E. Smiley, Director. DAVID B. BM1I.EY... . . . Editor JOHN C. MAIfflff . . .Oenerat Bualneeg Meneaer Published dally at Ppbme Lroeni Dulldlnc ( Independence Sauare. Philadelphia. ' Atlantic Cixr i.. rrtu-Unien Building NlW YOK 304 Mailleen Ave. DanteiT 701 Ferd Building T. Lecli... 013 alobe-Vtmecrat llullillna Cbioaeo 1302 Tribune llulldlng KRWS I1UIIEAUH: ' WlIIIIKOTON Sl'SEAD, N. K. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. anil 14th St. Kiw Yerk Dorme The Bun TlulMInK Londen litmrjti Trafalgar Building subscription tekmh The Evenike Pcnue Ledekb l served te bud crlbern In Phllndelphla and eurreunrlli!? towns t the rate of twele (12) cents per week, payable te the carrier. 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Drcrmlirr 8, 1922 THE QUANDARY AT PENN INTIMATIONS from the War Department that General Leenard Weed will remain In Manlln as (Governer General of the Phil ippines contribute te the probable clearing tip of a Mtuntien embarrassing te the Uni versity of Pennsylvania General Weed's reputation as an executive (ave rise te high hope" tlint his abilities would be displayed In the academic field. The University authorities have believed that the new head in project would '"nd vigor te reconstructive forces nt the institu tion, and several important features of a comprehensive program, including notably the endowment drive, have been deferred pending his arrlvul. The scries of postponements itas necessi tated no little patience. On several occa sions word was anxiously awaited from General Weed, and only last bummer a special emissary was delegated te report upon the extent of his obligations In the Philippines and the likelihood of his adop tion of an academic career. It is fitting new that the facts hheuid be candidly faced. During the interregnum the University, under the direction of Acting Provest I'ennlman, lias made substantial and oenslstent gains under exceptionally trying circumstances. There are few Influences se damaging te progress as uncertulntj. If General Weed cannot come te Pennsylvania it is right that the trustees should be spectliuilly informed concerning his inability te leave the East. In that case steps should be speedily taken te appoint a new provost equipped te guide the destinies of a great educational Institu tion and alive te the measure of his Inspir ing responsibilities. The University itself is net without ad mirable personal material that might be used ' te significant advantage In the high office. The administration during the season of doubt and procrastlmitlen is suggestive proof of an abundance of dcetcd sen-he. CLEMENCEAU'S VISIT rMOUUOW Clcmenceau will reach this city und, approaching the conclusion of his dramatic mission te the 1'nited Stutes, lie will be recehed with honor and admira tion. -The people will have an opportunity for a glimpse of the man who, for a long and terrible period of strain and doubt, held the fate of the whole world in his hands und was net afraid. Memery of the "Tiger" will live as long as 'histerj. His name will be held glorious long after his own and ether people have forgotten ills philosophy. We in this coun try hne heard him with respect. Hut Americans have net had their minds changed. They still believe that Europe needs net war, but peace; net fresh hates, but reconcilia recencilia reconcilia teons nnd understandings and the removal of all incentives te war. The "Tiger" is old and gnllanl. Hut he holds, with n stubbornness that Ik in its way magnificent, te a point of view from which the whole English-speaking world mewd forward as seen as it began te understand the inner meanings of the Treatj of Ver sailles.. DRY CAFES FOR 1923? SOMK O.VH should tell Mayer Moere that restaurants pretentious enough te de niand and receive large "special reserva tion" fees de net risk their safety by selling strong drink. They supply only the' glasses, the cracked lee, the orange juice, the spoons, the sugar, the lemon peel and the ether mere or less harmless decorations sought by the folk w-he roll their own. Mr, Moere's request for a dry New Yenr'B Eve celebration was aimed nt the wrong crowd. His general order, under wlitrli nibaret performances and cafe celebrations win ue preiiiniieii until after the stroke of midnight en Sundaj and permitted te con tinue for only nn hour, suggests some of the violent leutrasts that still are present In n woefully unsynchronized enforcement sys tem. Thus the saloon owners who violate the Mayer's order may In turn lese their licenses. People who want n wild and wet New Year's Eve might decide te cress the river te New Jersey, In New Jersey licenses have been abolished. Therefore the saloons and , wet cafes, Instead of working only six days, tbey used te de, new de business during all seven days of the week. The only disci plinary power which they seem te fear Is that of Federal raiding parties. And, from the leek of things, Federal raiders are pretty scarce in Jersey. A MARITIME DISPLAY mHK vital importance of shipping legi.sla X. tlen te safeguard and further develop the American merchant marine receives new emphasis In the nnneumement that 5'J per cent of foreign-trade cargoes within the Inst year were carried in vessels flying the national flag. The figures ere given in detail and ana lyzed In the sixth annual report of the Ship ping Heard, n document well worthy of study by persons net blind te the bread na tional advantages of regained nmritlme prestige. A decade age any forecast that the Amer ican merchant marine was destined te be expanded te its present proportion would have been hailed as wholly fantastic, In 1012, se far bb foreign trade under the Hag was concerned, the United States trailed ' behind several of the major European na. liens, with no prospects of breaching the ' gapi. Today the volume of our shipping is - second only te that of Great Britain. Amer ican passenger lines are te be found in the Hading perta of the (lobe and cargo ships art ubiquitous. It Is the height of parochialism te ignore tbwe tremendous factg, te pretend that Aratrica la incapable of maintaining Its own Xfca Shipping Beard report centalna re- assuring evidence of a consistent business administration in spite of trials and ob stacles mostly war inheritances nnd products of the era of overproduction. Tlint lntter season is due te end before many move years have passed, nnd in this connection the re port shows that nn increased demand for ships is virtually certain te compensate for the upkeep of vessels new out of service. Few mere serious blunders could be tnade by the present Congress than these suggest ing that the fate of our magnificent commer cial fleet should be left te chance, indiffer ence or caprice. PURPOSE OP PUNISHMENT IGNORED AT HOLMESBURG The Kulcs at the County Jail Are Net Framed te Restore the Inmates te Society as Geed Citizens NEITHER the Judges nor the prosecuting officers arc se well pleased with the' way in which the county prison nt Holmesburg is run as is Dr. Jeseph N. ltcevcs, the president of the Heard of Inspectors. Dr. Iteevcs insists thnt the inspectors "knew exactly what is needed in the way of rules te conduct a prison." He feels "that these in force are meeting with require ments." These rules provide that if a prisoner engages in conversation with another pris oner or if he smokes he shall be deprived of feed and put in solitary cenlinetnent for twenty-four hours. They nlse provide that n prisoner who violates any 'of the rules shall be deprived of his daily exercise. There aie ether regulations of n like nature mole scere than these in feice in ether county prisons. Xew, no one expects a prison te be con ducted as a vacation report, but it is net unreasonable In the twentieth century te expect a prison te be managed a little dif ferently from the prisons of the eighteenth century. A tntin docs net raw te be a human being when he commits u crime. It is te the Interest of the community that his punishment shall bu se administered as te prevent him from being tempted te become a habitual criminal. Hut, according te the reperU coming te this office, reports verified by the officers engaged In enforcing the criminal laws, -the prisoners sent te Holmesburg jail ate treated almost without exception as If they were habitual criminals of whose regeneiatleu there is no possibility. Notwithstanding the assertion of Dr. llcuves that the Heard of Inspccteis knows exactly what is needed In the way of rules, the regulations which he approves would be condemned by nearly every expert en prison management in the country. Thanks te the reform started by Jehn Heward in the eight eenth century after he discovered the abuses in the Hedferdshire jail In I'ngland, there has been n gradual improvement in the treatment of prisoners. It is no longer re garded as intelligent te send a man te jail nnd then forget all about him. The social waste Involved is tee great, the swelling of the crimlnul classes nnd the consequent ex pense of protecting the innocent are regarded as things te be avoided se far as possible, Kvery one knows that idleness in the prisons brings about demoralization of the prisoners nnd Hint solitary confinement en slight excuse breeds revolt and leads men of low Intelligence te a determination te take revenge en society when they get out. We no longer put a prisoner In a stone dungeon anil forget all about him, but we preserve the .stone dungeons and the dark cell as though we weie dealing with dangerous beasts instead of with our fellow men. There are human brutes In the prisons, it is true, nnd It Is easier te put oilier human brutes ever them te bent them with clubs than te make an attempt te cure their brut ishness. We have a new psychology which has sought out the causes of brutlshucss, and when it has been applied in prison discipline it lias accomplished marvelous results. We have n new humanity which tells us that if n prisoner can he emplejed in the open, where he can see the sky, the per versity which caused him te break the laws can often be madu straight, and en his re lease he will seek te be a decent eud re spectable citizen. The number of congenital criminals Is rry small. These men and women may need special treetment, but the great mass of prisoners in the county jails nre persons who linve made n misstep, who have slipped into crime and who, If prepetly trealed during their period of confinement, will come out determined te avoid such errors In the future. But it has long been notorious that they de net get this kind of treetment in Holmes burg, and It Is a natural infrrem e from the remarks of Dr. Iteeves that he does net think they ought te get It Other men de think se, however, Governer Bpreul has hecn saving that there ought te be farms en which the men In the county jails could work. The State Itself Is committed te the erection of a peni tentiary for long-term prisoners where they can be employed nt useful tasks in the open. Such penltcntlnrles hnve been built In ether States, where the convicts work en the land with few guards and where every convict constitutes himself a guard of every ether one, for they all knew that if one man takes advantage of the liberty enjoyed nil I he ethers will suffer Tn such institutions the theory prevnlls that the convict Is en probation and efforts am made te restore him te society In better shape te live nn honest and upright life than when he passed through the doers of the Jnll There can he no doubt that thin is the right theory, for It is based en the assump tion that no one, !h wholly bnd and that the worst of us ten he made hotter under the Intelligent direction of humane and civilized agents. If the charge thnt such agents are net active at Holmesburg came only from what are called thugs and creeks who have passed through the institution, It would have te be discounted, but the conditions there are se notorious nnd se well known te the courts and the lawyers that the testimony of the discharged prisoners Is merely corroborative. AN IRONIC REFUGE AS THE deposed Sultan Mohammed VI is unlikely te entertain the friendliest feelings toward the present Government of Turkey, it is net difficult te lend credence te the report that he hns been nslted by King Hussein te take up his permanent residence in holy Mecca, In the SDlritual canlfsl r Tdnn. . ... hearaal of the woes of the dethroned mon arch la 'J2.0,t certain te receive a sympn- EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER thctic hearing. Arabia, and mere especially the Hedjaz, containing the sacred cities of Medina and Mecca, has been anti-Turkish since the dnjs when the Ottomans began their victorious sweep westward. Pnn-Tiirnnlanlsm with its unsubstan tiated claims te prestige 1ms been a! thorn in the llcsh of Arab urlstecrats, who assert with home reason that the cultural achieve ments of Islam are registered in their lan guage, thnt the faith ewes its very inception te their people and thnt the Turks arc up starts mid their pretensions te the Caliphate utterly without historic validity. As the Turkish national spirit Increases, it is plain that the spiritual union of Islnm is mere nnd morn threatened with disrup tion. The Hedjaz seized nn attractive im portunity In the World War. when pride of race triumphed ever any feelings of loyalty te the Sultan nnd Caliph at Constantinople. The breach will be deepened If Mohammed VI becomes n Meccan. Within the shadow of the Knnbn he will be enabled te air his grievances against the Kcumlit. His audience will be composed of traditional antagonists te Otteman hegemony, who can hardly fall te enjoy the exquisite Irony of providing a refuge for n disgruntled "d lepndlated ex-ruler from the Bosperus. THE CAMDEN MUDDLE THE commission form of geerniiient which has fallen out of n clear ! upon Camden, through the operation of n law which every one In Jersey politics seemed te have forgotten, is net in Itself a guar nntep of Ideal or even orderly chic admin istration. Experience has demonstrated what the most ardent supporters of the commission sjstem might have known but didn't thnt in any final analysis It is the personality of executives and their moral and mental equipment that count, rather than the forms which they administer Lazy and incflectmil or dishonest iom iem iom mlssieners can he quite as troublesome ns lazy, ineffectual or dishonest members of the old-fashioned municipal council, A city manager of the sort provided for In the original city commission systems can be, If he wishes, quite as active and as potent in questionable politics as these Majers who are often held up as dreudful examples te the j;eung. Under the commission system in its earlier forms n check was provided in the public interest. The city mnnnger could be re moved if he proved te be an undesirable. '.Phut is, lie could be remew-d by n vote of the city commissioners. There was no wall ing for election days. This was an improve ment en the elder methods of city govern ment. Hut latterly there has been u tendency te revise this advantage out of the commis sion law, und in New .ieisey the under standing is that the Majer, elected by the people, shall rule cities with a population of mero than 110,000, nnd that he shall function as n tort of city manager with the assistance of commissions and beards ap pointed by himself. These who first advocated the commission system probably would see little te praise and les te hope for in the Jersey system, since it lenves ultimate authority In the hnnds of the Mayer and in no way lessens his icspensihlllty while it gtently reduces his power of initiative. The origin and puipese of the law under which for n time nt least the whole adminis tratis sthenic in Camden will be changed are something of a mysterj. Political pros sine from the region of Paterson forced it through n recent legislative session. Pater son lius political problems of an unusual sort. It has n very large foreign-born population und a very large wicillutlng ete. In the past it ban had some ruthless bosses. The Jersey Legislature, like the people in Camden, seem te have learned with it shock that the law would apply elsewhere. Democrats will be disposed te believe that their election of a Majer may have had something te de with the discovery of the Commission I.nw at this time, but that assumption would he tee far-fetched for gen eral acceptance. Yet Mr. King, the newly elected Mayer, Is justified in his belief that he cannot properly perform the work of his office or meet Its traditional requirements while actual initiative and the right of veto center in vaiieus disassociated commissions functioning in place of the usual heads of deparunents. Camden, which without warning has had its governmental machinery shifted te a new and untried and unwanted fashion, seems merely te be the victim of the clumsy nnd mysterious politics practiced at Trenten. If Majer-elect King and the Acting Mayer, Mr. Van Hart, can find expert nnd honest men te function ns commissioners ever n great variety of city depnrtmi nts, nt salaries of $500 a year, the city will lmve a geed government. Otherwise it won't. NO PEACE IN IRELAND YESTEUDAY'8 news f the killing of Sean Hales by Irish irregulars suggests rather vividly the fratricidal nature of the war which afflicts the Semh of Ireland. Sean Hales was a member .,f t1( i.'r(.p stnt( Parliament nnd nn ardent supporter first of Cellins and later of Cesgrae. His brother was the man who led the ambush In which Michael Cellins was fatally shot. The murder of I titles and the wounding of one of his associates represent Hie ih-st disorder that has occurred In the Seuth since the new Government ratio fermnllj into being. It shows that the lv alerlsts are resolved te continue the gueirllln wnr. It shows, tee, that the snvage criticism aimed nt the Free State officials i.fter the execu tion of Ersklne Chlldern was without justi fication. The Free State Government must be firm or it must die slowly by the hands of assassins. . , .. ,w!ner modified his Melodramatic blast before It struck Old Winter Philadelphia, but It has been strenuous every where else, with heie and theie a touch of melodrama. At Peit Angebs, in the Olym pic Peninsula, we lenrn, a blinding snow storm stepped the search for a convicted murderer, who had escaped from Jail. And Oneida Lake, New Yerk, three grain Mn5'0'- hurley. ,,f jies- tuaey at ten, has Instructed the the Hat city censer, Jehn M. , , . Casey, te see te it tbut henceforth the Ameriran flag is displaced at nil public meetings. Somehow, says Knlcknr becker I'enn, this does net fill me with the patriotic pride I perhaps ought te feel Whv should one have te vouch for anyth'inir se ingrained ns leve of country? Hut, portions the order does net go far enough. Whv net demand of each and every speaker en effl. davit that he hns never beaten his wife nor robbed a church collection box? r Mayer Shank, of i. e,a?1)0lU' tms decided that e sanity tct will Search for Speed Hugs u given te nl neruenu ested for speeding. He will i . ?!"""! arrested ter speeding. He will assume that an offender is a speed maniac and, therefore en honebt-te-goodnebs nut. And te take away, nnj- glimmer of amusement in i, ocensien for the arrested one, it raav be mentioned thnt persons held for a Hnnit test cannot give bend. They K0 te l,.ii Frivolous rumor has it Shank's M, i. glad Shank's Mayer. Mar' '" " " iMi-xi micr rjtntn troopers hnd rescued the crew. Happy the place nnd the person, says Eosj-gelmr Middleage) where and te whom nothing happens, nut leuth Impatiently iliu,.... PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT A New Yerk Rarely Seen by Visitors Ih That Known by Quiet Old Families, in Quiet Old Hemes, Quietly Furnished By SARAH 1). L-OWHIE LAST spring when I was ever In New Yerk I made n resolution that never ngain would I go just ns n tourist a person in a hotel who sees the latest show nnd takes dinner in one well-known rcstairnnt and supper In nnether, shops next morning along Fifth avenue and comes home with just enough change te pay the cabman nnd net enough te fee the porter. What 1 i Hilly decided was that there must be another New erk In fact. I knew there was, for hadn't I relations and f-'ends wlie lived in nnether New Yerk 7 persons whose life program did net include a i.hew every evening und supper semewheic anil tnxles at every turn and shopping down Fifth avenue; pcisens with n bank account net unlike my own and enough of last year's clothes te make the latest models in the shops works of supererogation se far lis their purchases went. Their New Yerk was the real town, 1 felt sure, but it was a city Hint I had actually never seen, let nlone felt. Fer alw..js I hne regarded the (own as n place te upend money in, te see plnjs and bear operas in, and te treat and be treated te restaurant meals in it place te I skim the (-renin of paid aiinisenients in, a place te meet one's "crowd" by strenuous j prenrrangemeiit, and then te continuously , lese one's crowd by peer arrangement. , Se Hint the ether day when I departed New Yerkwntd te actually visit n New Yerker who lived in it house of his own, anti wlien I discovered that my host Had thought up n program that included no public amusement, no shopping, no restau rants, no outsiders from hotels, I had an nwed feeling that I was about te sec New Yerk for thu first time. TN THE first place, the house where I was -- n visitor wus en Ornmerey Park. People Mill live down there in their own houses, it seems, still open the park gates with their own keys and walk uptown through Madi Madi eon Square te their amusements nnd shop ping, and only u block or two downtown te their business. My host's house was of the later vlntnge of the eighties, I should think. It must have been done ever about llien, for the great book cases in the Hilary were heavy walnut with gluss doers, nnd the stair rail wan walnut with blncu trimmings and the newel K)st of n heavy stubility thnt would gnu e a fireplug. The ether house en the paik that 1 paid a call In was one of the original ones, ma hogany folding doers between the front and hack parlor und a Georgian bow te the dining-room windows and the broadest of gray marble fireplaces ull up through the house te eke out it net-very-effectual fur nace in Hie high basement. That house, tee, had an ornamental iien balcony running along the long front parlor windows, a balcony tee narrow for a chair, but meant for petted plnnts no doubt in summer, when possibly tlie first owners drew their chairs out into the wide vestibule nnd out te the high steep and enjoyed the sum mer air from the river ncress the grass and treeh of Hie park. The ery fact of paying n call in New New Yerk sitting nd chatting with people who were neither hlthering nor thitherlng en a Saturday afternoon, when nil the matinees were going full blast made me want te laugh aloud with sheer pleasure. The house was full of charming old things, furniture that we would call, even ever here where wc are used te geed old things, museum pieces. A geed many of them, indeed, had come originally from Philadelphia I was told, and 1 observed a difference between our type of old mahogany and the New Yerk. Ours was mere severe in outline, quite ns elegant and lerhaps mere beautifully pro portioned, because lacking ornamentation; every tiling depended en proportion nnd finish. It struck me that the New Yerk things were mere influenced by the French of the early nineteenth century. Their clinirs were mere comfortable te sit en, nnd had curving, generous arms nnd carved backs and rungs, with Indulgent cane seats. However, the conversation during that call was net all alieut furniture. The mnu of the family had just returned from duck sheeting; in fact, I discovered later nt din ner in inv host's house that game shot by men of the family was u net infrequent part of the menu, ns the pheasant that went with the salad course proved happily for me. WE HAD nt that dinner one of the edi tors of the New Yerk Times and one of" the chiefs of n great book-publishing house and a very learned and eloquent cler gjmnn and their ladies. Luckily for all concerned for the women were ns worth while as the men there wns a general adjournment te the library after dinner, where the exceedingly geed conver sation progressed with all sorts of first-hand news. The terrific price the latest author of the latest best boiler in te receive for his next book, the Pepe's summing up of the phenomenon of the Knights of Columbus, the interview one of the men had had the dnj before with the President nnent the latest phase of the Near East problem, etc. Part of that conversation 1 read in the next morning's editorial sheet, but I judged that it had been written before the writer voiced it nt dinner, when he hud tried it out nn the rest of us, although picking one's dinner companion's brains is no new dodge for lender writers. And doubtless mere cdl cdl cdl torlels than one came out of that evening's talk, for In the religious nnd political nnd literary output of New Yerk the .core of the matter was examined in the ceurse of thnt conversation by these in authority whose life business it wus te knew rather than te guess nnd te make the millions of their fellow citizens think after them, even if it Is nfer off. fTUIAT night I went te sleep in wbnt ap X reared te be an almost rural silence except for nt intervals a sullen shakedown of what sounded like a lead of stone nt Berne distance, a round thnt I Interpreted as the slewing UP of an underground train some where, nnd the chimes marking the hours which floated from across Madisen Square. West of UHfrem Fourth avenue all busi ness blocks were deserted, and east of us the all-night population, of the East Side began only eftcr an oasis of silent streets. Oramcrcv Pnrk could hardly huve been mero 8cdete in the seventies than It was If that had constituted ray entire experi ence I might very well have doubted if I had touched the real New Yerk of today. Vint It se happened that wedged comfeitnbly Inte the twenty-four hours had been u 1 incheeu with Reme happy newlyweds en the edire of Krcnt estate out In Leng Island, where the conversation ranged from the rniten Exehnnge, the departing Mount Meunt .ittens en the Olympic nnd te the chances !,f an afternoon of golf, 'lhat leek-in te what constitutes a very renl side of modem iifthe new household beginning life with r!A ner cent mere te start with than their rents had nt their age was mero Inter estlng than any problem ploy could have been te me. And then Inst but net least, T carry nwny with me the ride I took en the top of i vr11 b"s dew" Fltth nvcue Just UtThere had been n new heuse of n friend ,i,nV I was mhen through somewhere up in le neighborhood of Seventieth street in the ute afternoon, and the streaks of gbt from Ul ". ;.!., nun still lingered In t .,. i,,. ncress "Central Park when we climbed en te that bus; yet wtem ws reached Gramercy i'nrk we lind walked through deep-shadewed and deserted business streets nte a flood of moenigl'1 rising like a tide acresa the S" Between the two lights sett ng sun 5nd I moenlll-bt-hnd been. nil the ! anil fhi pass'0" of Insistent turmoil f New Yerk ceasing Its business for the week and turpi" te' fia pleasure along thnt greatest of avcnrir NOW MY IDEA IS THIS I Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians en Subjects They Knew Best C. T. LUDINGTON On Legal Restrictions for Incompetent Aviators UNIFORM legislation throughout the United States te prevent incompetent, inexperienced nnd reckless aviators from flying is sorely needed, nccerding te C. T. Ludington, formerly of the Naval Air Serv ice, delegate te the Second National Aero Convention nnd member of the National Aerennutic Congress. "Just what kind of aviation I mean," said Mr. Ludington, "can best be illustrated bv n recent Incident. Net many weeks age a 'crowd of nearly 70,000 persons sat wait ing between the hnlves of the Ynle-Army football gnme. Suddenly, ever one edge of the 'Bowl,' there nppearcd nn nlrplnnc of a tvpe, which these familiar with flying knew had been brought from Europe as surplus war material and sold at a low price in this country. A Dangerous Performance "As the machine passed ever the grand stand, it was seen te ha-ve the slogan 'Get 'em, Army' pninted en its lower wing, and its advent was therefore immediately greeted with cheers by the adherents of that team. "New. had this ranchlne flown ever the crowd at a reasonable altitude, or had It even sailed away after its first appearance, there would have been little or no criticism bevend thnt of the peer taste of the pilot, and this was net especially offensive, as he had chosen n pause In the game in which te appear. However, he elected te amuse him self by flying hack and forth ever the nrena nt a low altitude. "Even this would net have been se repre hensible had he net flown te a 'stnlling' manner, cutting his meter alternately en nnd off and supporting his 'ship' at the lowest possible flying speed. Te the uninitiated, this Mow-nnd-slew' flying might seem te indicate that the pilot was exercising every precaution, but these who knew realized that at this speed the controls would net respond quickly, nnd that nny moment the nlrplane was in danger of falling Inte n 'side slip' or a 'tail spin.' Seemingly Hnrmlrss but Dangerous "In addition te this, since the meter wns of n type which cannot be "throttled down,' n slight mistake In operating the ignition switch might hnve caused it te step alto gether, with the possibility of a 'forced landing' en the field or In the stands, "In ether words, this thoughtless operator was, for the sake of a thrill, exposing a great number of persons te an entirely unnec essary and very considerable danger. "On every side, from these who knew the danger, there were cries of 'no ought te be arrested,' 'His license ought te be revoked' nnd 'He ought te be shot.' One man In my lcinlty shrugged his shoulders owl remarked 'Oh, why worry? They'll take awny his license nnd then he can't de such things nny mere.' "But and here Is the important point of the story net ene in every 100 persons assembled there probably realized thnt this pilot did net need any license te fly his airplane. Any One Can lluy Plane and Fly "This reckless nlrplane operator may or may net have carried the certificate given te pilots by the Federation Internatlonale Aerennutlque, which Is the only ene In use In this country nnd which is of smnll value, ns It is easy te get and simply menus in the United Stntes that the holder may tnke pert in events sanctioned by the F. 1. A, "It Is a fact that in our country nny Tem, Diek or Harry who can get together a small amount of money can purchnse a worn-out or obsolete airplane and set lilm 6clf up in the business of carrying pnssengers, which business he will probably keep up until he mekes an error In judgment lu landing tn an inadequate field, or his ill- cored-for and much-abused airplane gives out; quite possibly In the nlr nnd quite us probably with fatal results. "Excepting In certain localities, there Is no legislation covering such flying and none covering such escapades ob I have described, In the cese of the reckless pilot who flew ever the football crowd, there Is a State law forbidding such an exhibition, which may or may net have been called into use te pun ish htm. Identifying the Pilet ,'As his machine was net required te carry numbers, the only means of recognizing him 8 1922 . I . . - - - - - - - - ,-j "show ME!" ': ' - : i wai by the slogan carried en his lower wing. It is known, however, that he wns net allowed te compete in a subsequent fly ing meet, and HiIh was, in nil probability, and will very likely he the only result of his foelliardiness, ';Uniform legislation throughout the I nited States is sorely needed te curb this i nd of Hying. The legi'lmnte and responsi ve aircraft operators and the aeronautic bodies generally, bucli ns the Aeronautical t number et Commerce and the National Aeronautical Association, are demanding such regulation. "Legislation put through bv the dlf- ,ifC,"t,f!,!,"MuW w,rk hardship en pilots if it differed in character in the vari ous htates. for any airplane mny cress four or live States in un afternoon's flight. Federal Authority Needed "Experience in Europe would seem te indicate that some quite powerful Federal authority is needed. On this assumption, n bill was written up by committees of experts, te create, under the Secretary of Commerce, a bureau having the necessary power ever civil aviation te license, regis ter and regulate aiicraft and pilots and ad minister air laws. 'm-.Y!t lli!1, 1;,lewn ns lhe Wndswerth bill, ,."r ,','. H,,Hi rmSSU(1 bi' 'k Senatc luite ptemptly and has new been reposing In the rare of the Committee en Commerce of the ShnnhMi i.l'n'fn,ltlv',s, for many months, hheuid It till! te pabs during this session much Miluable work would have gene ? naught; nnd a dangerous, uncontrolled men ace will be allowed te exist for some time'te "It is well known thnt n very lerge nre- portlen el our airplane accidents nre due te is lack et control ever indiscriminate flv- lllir. lnrn !tH n..fnIH t . . ',, , v'11 viui.iuii id properly con- trolled, or wliii responsible companies have operated (heir airplanes na they would under such control, it is a fact that there h ve been few or no accidents. Where the Blame Lies "A proof of this condition lies in the fact of the sale operation of the great European airlines, of our own splendid air mail erv" Ice and el the service of Aeronautic Alrwas 'lhe blame for our incidents then lies' net entirely upon the shoulders of our few irresponsible operators (hew many of m would dnve our cars reasonably if d m iii fear Hie whistle or some vlgflnnt Ven") but upon us the people of the U ."" tiZJ for our luck of interest and our failure te enact the ncccflsnry luws. '"wire te "It would thus appear te be the dutv cf every responsible citizen who wishes L eradicate this evil te write te This r?r & congressman, demanding the passage of this bill, and ,f he or she be further interes e, te Jein one of the associations Incornerite.i for the purpose 0f fssterlug interest ft n! ' criy controlled flying." ,mtu" ' Prep. What De Yeu Knew?' QUIZ I Why Is the Near East called the t- 2. Who wiib the "Mlllbey of iiin iLeJftnt? 5. Hew many bushels make a J.h1,MIlH,lya''7 4. Wh.it were the Miffing TS?eV?renT 6. Distinguish between chn,m,i chninpoRne. ' enai"Palgn and 0. Who is the present President . . 7. Who designed St. PauPs k,i p"nd? Londen? Cnthedral in 8' WSUt" Wa8 known ns the ereat Answers te Yesterday's Quiz 1. Timethy P. Hcnly s Governer, r. of the Irish Free state - G'nenil 2. A tup Is a ram or male sheen 3. Yucatan Is part of Mexico 4. Yiddish Is tin English trg'neiit..i the German word "Hach"! means Jewish. L"' which B. A chnlder la n measure of thtr-,,, . nincty-six busl,,, ' fi, A brlK lias two masts. 7. Twe Russian cemmandera who r.ul,i distinguished themselves & thn wa y, War were Ilrusllev and thi WerIrt Uuke Nicholas. nu the Griuicl 8. A buffo Is a comle actor In ene . comle singer. opeia; a 9. Buhl la i metal or tortoise shell Inlni,i i fated!11'6' ftl8 cabl"ctVk Hno,adecon Hne,adecon Hno,adecen 10, Felsm s the name for inri,n,i.. , $&,. " ,h '"'-nat?' ,? SHORT CUTS Ills health is surelyen the bHnh And sick he m, that's what, When he is stch enough te think ie's sick chcn he is net. And since such cases round about Are met with every day s There's work enough without a deult Fer Mr. E. Oeue. One asset the Allies have is the Turk's fear of Itussla, despite her friendliness. Seme of the Lausanne conferees think it is called the Black Sea because that'l the way things leek. Representatives of Central Americas republics in Washington will at least lean that Uncle Sam Is peaceably inclined. Philadelphia paid the highest gasoline tax of any county in the State. Observed the adjuration, Pay till it hurts when you step en it. A -femedy for diabetes has been found in the pancreas of a pig. Better than a silk purse from .a sew's car and much mere wonderful. The establishment of the Irish Tm State should mark the end of a glerl6W scrap nnd net the beginning of a series et piffling little ones. Much to-de Is being made of the nrrivel in this country of a dwarf elephant. But why? Didn't one cut up some dldeea at tne jasi election r In his pronouncement en the surtax, Secretary Mellen has taken official cegnt-" zance of n fact that hns received pained rec ognition in these columns again and again. Among the accomplishments of the navy Secretory Denby recennts "the devel opment of aviation ds an Integral part et the fleet." Then is the tall destined te wa the deg. Beading, Pa., police official warns the populace against poisoned candy. Santa Cleus and the confectioners have a real grievance against the criminal who mlreaet the malls, Tite "wets" are likely te take a unholy, if, perhaps, unwarranted delight m noting that in the State of Maine, wblcj hns had prohibition the longest, the deatu rate Is highest. Fear Is expressed tn Lausanne that the Black Sea may be turned into a Russian lake. But surely, urges Whimsy, if 6evirt Itusuia pluns te turn any sea Inte a Buaaiaa lake it would be the Red Sea. Meeting of Ambassadors Harvey. Fletcher and Iloughten in Londen u lnai catien that while Uncle Bam Is net partly ipatlng in the conference en reparations na is net wholly indifferent te it. Ambassador Child's pronouncement At Lausanne is only "merely advieerr J J Accepted by the Turk. If net accepted It hecemes a threat that demands backing. What then becomes of our Isolation? Among the assets of Kid Ji.Cey, whe claims te be bankrupt, nre three geed suits of clothes. What docs he mean bana rupt? demnnds Toddle Tep. Any man with three geed suits of clothes is fabuleualy wealthy. Yeu will be interested te learn thai Lieutenant Ilinten is still flying from New Yerft te Rie Janeiro. The Hall -Mills caj being In nbeyance, the time-killing contest has narrowed down te the SC II and tna Hcrrln Jury. Ilnckcnsnck, N. J weather prophet says the blackbirds can't make up their minds which way te travel and that means tt worm December. We'll go further. II olse means warm weather en the Feurt of next Jul.v. The geed und the bnd ere forever inter mingling, eh witness the wise plea for Congress te be promptly seated and or feel Ish tinkering with the Constitution whtcn would permit populous Eastern States te control the presidency. New Yerker wants divorce because, hs says, his wife does net knew that flre end four make nine. Rut the wife declares her husband wants te marry another, which proves that she knows et least that two aud one meke three and that three's a crflwrt. I ? A Jv J --. r , mm