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6 -te EVENING STAR With Sunday Morning Edition. WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY... December 18. 1924 THEODORE W. NOYES Editor The Evening Star Newspaper Company ItuilDCH* Office, 11th St. and Pennsylvanlr Ate. New York Office: 110 Hast 4L‘nd Bt. Chicago Office: Towe'r Building, guropeau Office: 10 Regcut St.. London, England. The Evening Star, with the Sunday morning Edition, is delivered by carriers within the ‘‘-'ty at 60 cents per month; dally only, 45 centa per month; Sunday only. 20 cents per month. Orders may be sent by mail or tele phone Main 0000. Collection Is made by car tiers at the end of each month. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginia. Daily and Sunday. .1 yr.. $8.40; 1 mo., 70c Dally only 1 yr. t $6.00: 1 mo., 50c Sunday only 1 yr., $2.40; 1 mo.. 20c AH Other States. Daily and Sunday. 1 yr.. $10,00; 1 mo., 85c Daily only 1 yr„ $7.00; 1 mo.. 60c Sunday only 1 yr.. $3.00; 1 mo., 25c Member of I lie Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republlcatton of all news dla ralclieg credited to It or net otherwise credited n this paper and also the local news pub fished herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. The Five-Year Building Program. The five-year building program as adopted by the Board of Education yesterday proposes new buildings for the McKinley and Business High Schools, purchase of a site for an ad dition to the Armstrong High School, seven new junior high school build ings and additions to others, 14 new elementary school buildings, purchase of sites for future buildings and ad dition of playgrounds to the District schools. Such a program would fit out the District school system effectively and would practically catch up with the arrears up to this time. If the program is adopted promptly and work is started without delay and the yearly appropriations are made in ac cordance with the plan, in about seven years from this time this work will have been accomplished. It is always to be remembered that n construction program arranged for a certain period is subject to delays, of authorizing legislation at the be ginning, of appropriation during the I period and of construction under the I execution of the law. To estimate a I seven-year lapse with a five-year I building program, reckoning from the j present, is therefore warrantable. 1 Should Congress adopt this plan and j provide the funds from year to year itrictly in accordance with it, by Jun C ould be brought up to date in its building equipment—that is to say, brought up to date as of January 1, 3 925. For the buildings provided for in this present proposal are all needed now. If by the rubbing of a lamp some genii could be made to place this school outfit on the ground ready for use today, or, say, on New Year day, Washington would have a com plete equipment, and no more than that. The school children would be adequately housed for once in the his tory of the Capital. Insanitary build ings could he discarded, halftime classes could bo placed on full-time basis, the platoon system could be abandoned and portable schools swept into the junk pile. That, of course, iii subject to the provision of teachers to man the plant. So ft is necessary in considering this five-year building program to re gard it as veritably an emergency measure and not a provision for the future. It is not an extravagant esti mate of the school building needs. Testimony to that effect can be had from school officials and teachers, from pupils and from parents: Though this is the short session of Congress, this measure can, and should be adopted. If it is postponed till the next Congress the needs will have Increased, for their is a steady and a large growth of the school pop ulation year by year. The problem be comes annually more difficult. The ar rears increase. The District prays that this measure will be put upon its passage at this session, despite the fact that only a j little over two months remain before final adjournment. There is no sub ject that is better understood by the District committees and the appropri ation committees. The money is avail able for a big start in the execution of this program. The Senate has passed a bill to make available for District uses District tax money now i held in the Treasury, due to failure to appropriate in the past, and de clared to belong to the District by a joint committee of Congress. Definite allocation of this fund to execute the five-year building program, upon the equitable basis of the same terms as those that prevailed when the fund was accumulated —namely, an even contribution of Federal money—would permit the beginning of this work next Summer. The U. S. A.’s prosperity is no doubt a comfort to European nations who would regret to see Uncle Sam embarrassed because of difficulty in collecting money due him. Street Lights and Safety. In the course of his statement be fore the joint District committee con ference on the traffic question yester day Col. A. B. Barber, motor expert of the Chamber of Commerce of the : United States, in answer to a ques tion, said that dimmers should be used on motor cars whenever the streets are properly lighted. There upon Senator Jones of Washington jinmediately exclaimed: “There isn’t any such place in Washington.” That statement is literally correct. There is no place in Washington -where the streets are sufficiently illuminated at night, and that is one of the roaaons for the large number of accidents here. Responsibility for This fact rests in the main on Con gress, not on the District, for pleas for funds for more and better street -lights have been made for years, with wholly inadequate response. Save in a very few of the streets of this city a pedestrian is barely visible at an Intersection until he comes within the range of the motor’s headlights at a short distance. The i illumination of the street lamps at corners does not protect him. The . lamps cast a glow upon the sidewalks and for a few feet beyond the curb. Out in the middle of the street there is no Illumination. In midblock a pedestrian who. In disregard of the safety rule of crossing only at the ’ Intersections, leaves the curb to traverse the street is virtually in visible until a machine is on him. All drivers in this city knew that they cannot depend upon the ilia : mination of the streets to prevent ac ’ cldents. If they are conscientious, as most are, they drive carefully when they approach crossings for their own protection as well as that of the pedestrians. As the lights are now the pedestrian must protect himself at night by watching the traffic, which he can mark by the motor headlights. Yet he has difficulty in determining dis tances. owing to the variation in the brightness of those lights. The best protection to him and to the motorist is a proper illumination at the crossings. The street lamps should be so shaded as to throw bright beams of light upon the cross-walks. A differ ent style of lamp from that which is now in use in Washington should be adopted to effect this Illumination. It will cost money, but, considering the fact that lives are at stake and that lives are being taken constantly in this city because of lack of proper street lighting, the cost should be rated as the least consideration. " - -• « Pistol Legislation. The House of Representatives yes terday voted to exclude from the mails pistols, revolvers and other tire- | arms that can be concealed on the person. This was done to reinforce the State laws against tjie improi>er sale of weapons. It Is an excellent measure for the prevention of crime. But it depends for its effectiveness upon the State laws. Take, for in stance, the law in effect here in the District of Columbia, for an amend ment of which effort has been made for years without avail. Under the i law here any person can obtain a deadly weapon quickly and cheaply, without any check whatever save the giving of a name and an address. I The name and address do not need 1 to he genuine and are not subject to j verification. The dealer must report 1 such sales to the police after the I fact, often after the damage is done. | If the District had a proper “state I law” it would he further protected by the proj>osed law against “mail order” pistol transportation. Such a law should indeed lie framed along with the proposed statute prohibiting the transport of deadly weapons through the mails. It should .prescribe a sys tem of permits for purchase, under which no dealer is permitted, under severe penalty, to sell a deadly weapon save upon the presentation of a license to buy issued by a desig nated responsible public official. The present concealed weapons law is no protection whatever to the pub lic. It prohibits the carrying of guns - on the person save under specific permit, hut it is rarely enforced be cause it is difficult to catch the of fender. The “gun toter” is usually detected only when he commits some other offense and is searched. The first need is to prevent him from getting a weapon that he can carry upon his person. If the local shops and the mails are closed to him he will have difficulty in arming him self for criminal purposes. He might go into another jurisdiction, where the laws are more lenient, and buy a deadly weapon: but if the District were to have the protection of a proper pistol law neighboring juris dictions wmuld then be subject to pressure to follow suit. At any rate, the person of criminal intent could not arm himself here at home quickly and with practically no risk of de tection. So, while Congress is passing this bill to make pistol buying by mail impossible, it should give the District, which is directly under its legislative custody, a “State law" which will conform in principle and effect to this prohibition. I A great deal of criticism used to he leveled at the Speaker of the House of Representatives. In view of recent historic events, a man may under take the office without fear that any irate rhetorician will refer to a live statesman as a “czar.” Chinese troops show a tendency to mutiny owing to a more or less busi nesslike impression that there is more money in banditry than in sol diering. The post office workers will go ahead with Christmas deliveries with out stopping to hear all the discussion as to a raise in pay. A grateful public enjoys seeing “In dian Bummer” taking as many en cores as possible. Borah on Peace and War. Senator Borah of Idaho, the new chairman of the Senate committee on foreign relations, contributes an in teresting chapter to the discussion of plans for world peace In the address delivered by him last night to the Philadelphia Forum in the “City of Brotherly Dove.” It comes at a time when public thought in this country is intent upon the subject. Just at the moment President Coolldge and Secretary of State Hughes are en grossed upon plans to promote the conservation of world peace. It is in the air. By reason of his position Senator Borah’s remarks are calculated to be invested with significance, and un questionably with interest. He would create a body of International law, go ing as far as humanly possible to reduce international relations to es tablished rules of conduct, establish ment of an Independent tribunal with jurisdiction and power to determine all controversies involving construc tion of International law or treaties. The core of his proposition is to de clare by that tribunal that war is a .crime and that if it comes it must he without the sanction of law, but in violation of it, ds piracy or murder. The evening star, Washington, i>. c m Thursday, degeairek ih, 1924. He caustically points out that we con i fine our love of peace to paper, while i our war spirit finds its expression in deeds. “We profess friendship and practice vengeance,” he said, speak ing of the world in general. There is no hope for peace so long as great powers will that there shall be no peace. He cited a number of inter national Incidents since the World War which have involved a resort to violence and force upon the part of great and powerful nations against the unarmed and helpless. He would drop the phrase outlawry of war for substitution of law and ju dicial tribunals in international af fairs. Senator Borah is likely to find himself at the head of a large follow ing in this country In sympathy with his efforts for maintaining Interna tional peace with the very simple doc trine of “the will to peace.” The People’s Tribute. The high esteem in which Samuel Gompers was held by the people of this country has been attested by an extraordinary demonstration of sorrow in the course of the progress of his body from San Antonio, Tex., to New York, where today his funeral occurred. Few men, indeed, have ever been so acclaimed in death, or by representatives of such widely variant groups of people. Had he been a public official of the highest rank his cortege could not have been more impressively received in mourn ing. Exceptional honors were j>aid to him here at the Capital, the scene of his activities for many years. The Government itself expressed tribute with a military escort. Representa tives of the Government are present at the funeral services today in New York. All this is due both to the value of Samuel Gompers’ work In behalf of the American workingman and to belief in his integrity and his I>atrlotism. He was labor’s advocate first of all, and he was always a good citizen, a stanch supporter of th© principles of American govern ment. He fought his battles vig | orously as partisan of the working t men, but always fairly. His contribu tion to the welfare of th© toilers of America was beyond measure. He rests now in death, with a monument j of affection and respect rarely given j to one who never held public office. xtr Italy has been able, thanks to Mus solini, to offer an example tending to explain why several communities in this country manage to be fairly con tented with a vigorous boss and a smooth-running political machine. Patriotic sentiment is so strong that announcements of a quiet in auguration never prevent crowds from assembling in Washington in order to honor the Nation’s President. When a politician announces that he is a Socialist he conveys no ac curate impression of his principles. There is a different kind of Socialism to fit every phase of discontent. There are apparently statesmen in | the U. S. Capitol who experience a j certain satisfaction in giving the | Coolidge veto enough exercise to keep it in good form. Investigations would make a clearer impression on public attention if ar rangements could b© made to have them conducted more rapidly and one at a time. Statisticians assert that the rapid pace of the "flapper” shortens life. It is impossible to make statistics as in- j teresting and influential as the jazz orchestra. Great relief would be afforded to humanity if the "next war” could be fought out in diplomatic council I by tearing up blueprints. SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. “Ease.” “Some day I’ll sit and take my ease,” Said Hezekiah Bings. "When that time comes, no doubt I’ll wheeze Until the doctor brings Some stuff the rheumatiz to cure, Or chase the gout away. While friends bring books to make me sure I’m better every day. I “I’d rather hit the busy pace And toil with human zest Than settle back and seek to grace An armchair built for rest. Though tales of dreamy bliss may please The poet as he sings, I’ve small desire to take my ease”!— Said Hezekiah Bings. Command of language. “Your speech was very valuable to me,” remarked the friend. “In what respect?” “You happened to us© exactly the word I needed to fill out a cross word puzzle.” Research, Said Hamlet, “Words, words, words, I read. In course of time I may Find just the rough stuff that I need To put into my play.” Jud Tunkins says he always sus pected that after the first few meals the prodigal son got his nerve back and began to criticize the menu. Determination. “He says he will be miserable un less I marry him,” said the pensive girl. “You must decide for yourself,” answered Miss Cayenne, “whether he is a devoted lover or merely one of these people who can’t be happy un less they are having their own way.” Comparative Costs. “There Is no Santa Claus,” they sigh. I hear it with a frown. Perhaps ’twas he in days gone by Who held the prices down. ’ “If you’s lookin’ foh trouble,” said Uncle Eben, “de quickest way to find it is to go along wif yoh eyes shet.” | THIS AND THAT | BY CHARLES E. TRAC EWELL. L J I How many remember the late Dew Dockstader singing "Shovelln’ Coal” at the old National? What a genial minstrel he was, to be sure! How the echoes of his voice continue to roll down the ages, and how the remembrance of his ohee.-y personality helps to brighten our own efforts at shovelln’ anthracite! 'Phis Is thfe open season for tossing shovels of coal into the furnace that adorns the tjasement as an ancient Image of brass or Iron might have decorated the temple of some long ago nation. The joys of tending the furnace ought to be kept in mind at this sea son. for, properly estimated, what might be a task becomes a rite com parable to the bowing' of some old sun worshiper In a temple dedicated to the sun. Heat and light. These two qualities we must have to continue our existence on this planet. XJttle babies naturally seek them. So do dogs, so do cats. Tabby will curl up in the sunshine with huge satisfaction, never seeming to get too much of It, except perhaps in the warmest part of the hottest sum mer days. • Since our very existence depends upon heat and light, the two yet be ing inseparable by science, let us not approach the daily task of tending the furnace as a prosaic duty merely, but rather as a sort of pleasant offer ing to certain great forces of nature. Thus we will not only get the heat which we want, but we will receive also mental stimuli which are there waiting for ns to take them by the hand and make them ours. ♦♦ ♦ ♦ After all. do not most of us make life entirely too prosaic? What is the sense of going through our days in an entirely matter-of-fact way, our life devoid for the most part of interest or "pep.’’ lacking sunshine and “moonshine,” too, if you will, when we might as easily make every day a thing of beauty and something of a joy forever? In childhood we are near this sense of elation, close to the fundamental under standing that this is a Joyous adven ture on which we are engaged, that we are actually here, and that we really are going somewhere. It mattered not, then, that mankind sails under sealed orders, placed aboard this wonderful ship, th£ world, without any asking of permission or specific is suing of directions. What cared we. as children, that the chart was hazy, or that the lines tended | to blur, or that the how. what, which j and why were poorly defined? The sky was blue, the air was fresh, | the night was dotted with a thousand ' stars. The wind tossed clean hair over un sullied foreheads, and the rain fell upon fairy flowers in the garden. Th© world outside the door was a very interesting place, and the old attic held romance atop every trunk and box on rainy days. Night came down, then, as an uncon scious benediction, a blessing we ac cepted although we did not realize all its meaning, as something rightfully ours, welded into the texture of our days and nights in an Incomparably clever fashion. ** * * Kind friends, our days and nights are no whit less wonderful now’ than they j were then, if once we stop to brush away the dross which we have allowed to accumulate upon them, or which we have permitted others to encumber them with. We are living in Washington, the Capital of our great-Nation. It is a city cleaner and fairer than ancient Rome ever was. and our country - is a republic j greater and better than Plato ever out -1 lined. WASHINGTON OBSERVATIONS BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE • That first test vote in the Senate on I the attempt to pass the postal pay bill over the presidential veto shows that Calvin Coolidge, like Woodrow j Wilson, also has "a little group of I wilful men” on his hands. There ! were thirteen Republicans among them. With the exception of Cou zena of Michigan, Johnson of Cali fornia and Howell and Norris of Ne braska, all of them ranked as recent ly as November 4 as “Coolidge men.” Two were re-elected to the Sneate, in addition to tiieir own merits, bn the Coolidge tidal wave that swept their states—Edge of Jicw Jersey and Mc i Nary of Oregon. The others—Cum- I mins of lowa, Jones of Washington. ! McKinley of Illinois, Reed of Penn ! syivania, Shortridge of California. | i Stanfield of Oregon and Wadsworth ; | of New York—do not deny Coolidge j i allegiance, either. In most cases ! their alibi for hostility to the Presi- Ident on the postal bill is entangling; j campaign pledges. ** * * Appointment of Col. Joseph W. Me- j Intosh of Illinois as controller of the currency, calls attention to the | fact that Illinois has had something! of a mortgage on that job in our i day and generation. During the past thirty years five controllers have come from the Prairie state. James H. Eckles of Illinois was controller in 1893, during the second Cleveland administration. Charles G. Dawes succeeded him when McKinley took office in 1897. William B. Ridgely, 1 another Illinoisan, was controller j under President Taft, and Henry M. I Dawes, brother of Gen. Dawes, was appointed to the post by President Harding in 1923. Now President Coolidge goes to the commonwealth of Lincoln and Grant for another guardian of our paper money. Col. Mclntosh was for many years an of ficial of the Armour Packing Com pany at Chicago. Since 1920 he has been director of finance of the Ship ping Board and Emergency Fleet Corporation. He saw active war service in France, Italy and the Bal kans in 1917 and 1918. *♦ ♦ ♦ At the White House this week in quirers about the state of the Navy were advised by President Coolidge to read a speech on the subject made by Senator Hale of Maine last May. Hal© Is chairman of the Senate com mittee on naval affairs. Probably with the exception of people who have an incurable habit of reading the Congressional Record, the speech attracted the attention of very few persons. Members of Congress long have complained that many important utterances on Capitol Hill fail_ to catch the public eye and ear. When Warren G. Harding, as President elect, visited the press gallery of the Senate In the Winter of 1919-1920, he mentioned “the best speech I ever made” —on the League of Nations, In September, 1919—and lamented that nobody dignified it with notice. ** ♦ ♦ Eugene Meyer, jr„ managing director of the War Finance Corporation, is a Treasury official who believes in prac ticing what the Treasury preaches. He loads himself down every day with a pocketful of the 1924 silver dollars which Mr. Mellon's department is try ing to popularize, and puts them In circulation. .The rural northwest is absorbing wholesale lots of the glis tening new cartwheels. A trial ship ment of $300,000 was sent to the Fed eral Reserve Bank at Minneapolis the other day, and two duplicate orders have meantime been sent in from there. ** * * Students of Calvin Coolldge's lit erary style detect a conspicuous par tiality on his part for alliteration, These facts are known to all of us, but not known enough to each one of us. We do not stop to realize often eenough the glory 6f our every day existence. Why. radio alone Is enough to bring back to us the entire fairyland which once was ours. You sit at a little box and pluck out of the air the very breathing of a singer half way across the conti nent, or turn a small dial and snare from the invisible and perhaps non existent ether the multiple sounds of a distant orchestra, the laughs of diners and the rattle of silver and dishes. Yes. our everyday existence still has romance about It—even when we shovel coal Into the furnace. * * * A furnace is such a homely’ cuss, standing there without praise in a corner of the basement. The recent ads of fancy furnaces, with the en tire company. In full dress, down-, stairs admiring them, rather tickle our sense of the eternal fitness of things, for if there ever was a house hold favorite which deserved open ad miration now and then it is the trusty old furnace. It sits down there, all by Itself, sending up warmth Just a* long as you feed it properly. Its defalcations seldom result from any Inherent fault in Us sturdy structure, but almost al ways from some defect in the food with which It is nourished. No hones© furnace can give A1 re sults on rations of slate and bone. Klate and bone have their proper I places in the world, hut certainly the inside of a furnace Is not one of them. jThe maw of a furnace, whether steam, hot water, vapor or hot atr, requires plenty of good grub in the shape of clean coal. No one can get out of a furnace more than he puts into it in the shape of honest coal. T heard a woman in a store the other day tell ing about running the furnace. “We have regular coats, and hats and gloves we wear,” she lamented. “We look just likq the stokers, or stevedores, or something. You see, the furnace goes out every day, and we have to rake It all out and build it up again. I don’t know what is the matter, but it gets all full of clinkers.” One felt very much as If he ought to chirp up and declare: “Madame, change your coal dealer.” *♦ ♦ * Surely, the clinker is the curse of furnace tending. What joy to have ycur furnace perform up to expec tation? when it percolates merrily in the morning, how happy the household is! Misery reigns on a large scale, however, when a real clinker gets caught In the grate. A real clinker is a big hunk of metal or other un breakable substance that gums up the works. Sometimes (he coal will fuse to gether into pseudo-clinkers, masses of ‘‘stuff and nonsense” that threaten the necessity of cleaning the whole mess out and the construction of a perfectly clean tire. These false clinkers usually can be broken up and removed, either through the feed door or the clinker door. Fireside tongs come in very handy. By scraping the offenders to one side, removing them, and spread ing the live coals out, many a heart less-looking fire can be resuscitated. The true clinker is more stubborn that a mule, stronger than the pow erful Katrinka, more obdurate than a cat. You coax, poke, plead in vain. Strategem fails miserably. The only hope lies in a strong right arm and an unbreakable grate. j especially for words beginning with his own cabalistic “c.” He went in strong for words beginning with the I third letter of the alphabet when he I addressed Secretary Hoover's traffic I conference at the White House. The President talked about "conditions” not "contemplated” when the “car” was “created,” and then discussed the "congestion, confusion and conflict" which had resulted. These, if not “combated." Mr. Coolidge said, would end in ‘calamity” and “catastrophe." ** * * A fortune rests in the hands of any one who possesses an autograph of Button Gwinnett of Georgia, one of the signers of the Declaration of In dependence. It is the scarcest of the jSB immortal signatures. One authen-* [ tic Button Gwinnett recently sold at i auction in Philadelphia for $14,000. ! The signature of Thomas Lynch. Jr., j of North Carolina, Is also rare, and j not long ago commanded $4,750. There j are only 17 or 18 complete sets of "signers" extant. One set this year | fetched $32,500. Forty or fifty years | ago a set. was worth less than S7OO. George Washington's autograph, i though not a rarity, sells nowadays i for $l5O to S2OO. Once it was a drug on the market at $lO. * * 4= * Albert Halstead, chip of a famous journalistic block—Murat Halstead Os Cincinnati, is a visitor to Wash ington. Halstead is now American consul general at Montreal and one of the distinguished figures of the United States foreign service. For many years he was a Washington newspaper correspondent, having in herited a talent for journalism from his father. While Murat Halstead edited the Cincinnati Commercial Ga zette, Alfred was its representative at the National Capital. Since his first consular post ih England in 1906 Halstead has seen official service in Vienna and Stockholm. He is a Princeton man and once edited the Springfield (Mass.) Union. ** * * Latin America will have a friend, and a well posted one. In Congress in the person of Senator-elect Hiram Bingham of Connecticut. So will the air service, for Bingham was an aviator pilot during the World War. Besides having spent his early man hood as a lecturer on South Ameri can affairs at big Eastern universi ties. Bingham has traveled exten sively throughout out sister repub lics south of the equator. He speaks Spanish fluently. In the course of several expeditions of exploration. Bingham crossed South America in half a dozen directions. He hap pened to be born In Honolulu,, where his father was a missionary. What Senator Bingham thinks about the Monroe doctrine is Indicated by one of his books, entitled “The Monroe Doctrine an Obsolete Shibboleth.” (Copyright, 1924.) A New Coolidge. From the Topeka Capital. “A new Coolidge" since the election some Washington correspondents re port, "President's meekness gone as he directs affairs with snappy vim.” The old Coolidge suited the country, judging by the vote. We don’t know about his meekness,, but if that Is what it was, It inherited the earth, according to the scriptural promise. No Chance for La Follelte. From the Indianapolis New*. One reason 'La Follette didn't do better Is that bad weather favors one old party and good weather favora another, and there’s no weather last for a third party. The North Window BY LEIL.i MECHLIN. Said a lady the other day, “I am tired to death of the word 'art.' Everything 1 is art nowadays, from metal beds to higher education.” And she spoke the truth. The, word "an,” alas, seems to have been so 111 used that it has to a large ex tent lost its precious meaning. Curiously enough, this calamity has not befallen the word music. No matter how had the manifesta tions are—and they run the gamut, from the novice pianist to the dis cordant church choir—the /word music always has a glamour, and I It has the power to stir the Imagina tion and quicken the heartbeat. Along comes Jazz, but the glamour Is not lessened; jazz is Jazz, music is music —always has been, and always will be. Hut why? Even had some name like Jazz been Invented for a similar form of modernistic expression In art It would have made no difference. The word ‘‘art" In the popular mind is not associated with Joyousness, festivity, good times. Misuse and association of ideas can-. • not altogether explain this difference, for though we see advertised “art metal beds” today, we cannot forget that a generation or two ago we had musical stools and chairs—delight ful pieces of furniture so constructed that when in use a music-box tinkled out familiar tunes. No, the difference goes deeper than this. We have not yet awakened to a realization of the delight-giving power of art. ** * * In his lecture last we£k on "Realism m .Seven Arts.” given at the Central High School under the auspices of the Washington Society of the Pine Arts, Stark Young suggested that part— -a large pan—of the trouble m all of the arts today is our demand for realism, our supposition that In art we must find a resemblance to the actual in life. Architecture, he pointed out was free- of this limita -sdo not expect to see a building resembling a man or a tree, a horse or a dog. or even a moun tain It is a thing apart, and suffi cient unto itself. To an extent, music is free for. as he put ft; the majority know that when music begins imi tating common sounds it is getting out of the realm of pure mu.fc To be sure, some of the modern com posers are making efforts in this di- b r l th<?y ar ® StiJl ,aken as occasions for mirth rather than sub ject for serious admiration. But in painting, and still more in tH^l P Vn re ’ the m,RC °hception prevails srvme»hin a r tlst ,s trying to imitate something in nature, and the closer the imitation the belter the art mimV‘ S .K othinir more difficult to ex plafn to the average layman than that the picture painted so accurate!}' that Jt deceives the eye is not the acme of fine expression. It is this neces sity which in large measure has in duced the modernist movement in painting and sculpture. To be sure, it has gone too far, so far that manv of its manifestations have little oV no likeness to anything that one has ever seen, and. unhappily, almost, no element of beauty, without which no art can survive. But. despite all this, U has served to stress the fact that art is by no means inherently or pri marily a matter of repetition, of imi tation. The great artists of ail times have been those who have pos sessed originality and found, uncon sciously, individual and new expres sion. ** * * In Italy and in Prance the word art. which is practically the same in all languages, f.hares today the dis tinction among common people that all here give to music. In Italy and r ranee to the boy and girl on the street or the laborer In the ditch, the shopkeeper behind his counter, art has a magic, quality, and offers in stantly the suggestion of recreation, of a delightful means of employment of leisure time. The problem for us ■ in America today is how to inoculate ' our own people with this suggestion. ! In an address made at a public ‘ meeting recently Mr. Frederick Kep- i pel of New York, at one time assist- 1 ant Secretary of War, said: "From every possible source time is being saved. The electric washer is quite as important a factor in this time saving ns the eight-hour day, but for what is time being saved? That is the great problem.” He lamented the fact that so little of this leisure time is being devoted to the arts. "The remarkable thing.” he said, "is that a people like the American people have gone S o far in other directions while they have succeeded in going so short away in the appreciation and consideration of the opportunities in the production of the arts,” add ing: "I do not suppose anv great civilization In the history of the world has ever gone as far as we have with so few people drawing from that Inexhaustible spring." Re ferring later to this spring, he con tinued: "The peculiar quality, the j peculiar value of the art side of our appeal or the appeal of the art to us, of course, is its absolute directness. You do not have to have a long prep aration to enjoy great art. If you have it in you you will do it the first time. And it stimulates and vitalizes ail the other things where we do have to have preparation.” He urged most strongly teamwork In the arts, community effort. "Unity of the arts," he reminded his listeners, "is nothing new-, but it is what was a commonplace in the earlier civiliza tions. All the arts grouped around the temple or around the forum or around the cathedral: they were the great flowerings of the human spirit in the past.” If'we hope to have similar flowerings today, Mr. Keppel thought, it must come through sim ilar effort. ** * * Along this same line of thought Homer Saint Gaudens, in an address made at the meeting held last week at the home of Mrs. William C. Eustis, made the following contribution: "Nowadays," he said, "we consciously think of art only In terms of painting and sculpture, yet really, when we get down to brass tacks. In all our surroundings, whether they be ele vator grills or fln-de-siecle automo bile bodies, or neckties, or our wife’s hat, or dressing a dinner table, every single one of us is subconsciously at tracted and interested to some extent by charm in color and form—attracted with a little taste and discrimination, I hope, but anyhow attracted. And that desire is the fine, wholesome universal appetite for art.” It is this unsatisfied appetite which is causing, some think, not a little of the restlessness of today. The so called amusements do not cure the hunger; It goes deeper than this. ** * ♦ The sense of peace and tranquillity that comes over one upon entering any of the great cathedrals in Eu rope is the gift of art. It is akin to the feeling of joyous exaltation pro duced by beauty in nature —a magnifi cent view, a glorious sunset—but it is different; it is more intense and profound, because subconsciously there is the knowledge which art al ways conveys of human thought and touch and mastery. There are very few who do not re-act to the Lincoln Memorial, to Saint Gaudens’ master piece, the Adams Memorial. Almost every one prefers beauty to ugliness and is affected by it, and the more frequent the contact the keener the en joyment. The appeal of Versailles, of the garden of the Villa d’Este, of all the beautiful gardens and pub lic parks the world over, is the appeal of art —they are man-made, and their beauty did not just happen, the genius pf man is behind It. The fact is that the manifestations of art are so nu merous and so disassociated that very often they are not recertified at all as in this category. Moreover, art is so free, even when it gets by chance ■ —1 1 ■■ll—l—ll - I ■■ - - - - • ANSWERS TO QUESTION! BY FREDERIC J.\aSKW Q. How many Protestant and how many Catholic churches are there In the District?—M. D. T. A. According to the 1924 directory of Washington, D. C.. there are 33 Roman Catholic and 342 Protestant and other churches. Q. What is the oldest Washington golf course?—W. T. O. A. The Chevy Chase Club, Chevy Chase, Md., has the oldest golf course within the immediate vicinity of Washington. Q. At what degree will gasoline freeze?—A. E. C. A. The Bureau of Standards says that gasoline has no definite freezing point. It stiffens up slowly like melted wax at temperatures far be low' those ordinarily encountered even in the Arctic. Q. What is done to the wood of which pipes are made so it does not burn?—J. O. A. Smoking pipes are usually made of special kinds of wood which are very tough and close grained, which do not crack or burn easily. Many pipe bowls do become charred. Q. Where were Christmas trees first used?—C. E. R, A. The Christmas tree is from Egypt, and its origin dates from a period long anterior to the Christian era. The palm tree is known to put forth a branch every month, and a spray of this tree, with 12 shoots on it, was used in Egypt at the time of the Winter solstice, as a symbol of the year completed. Q. Is it true that in sow* coun tries people are buried only for a time, then are disinterred and put in a bone yard?—N. G. B. A. The American Funeral Director says that in regard to temporary burials, the custom of dumping bones of dead human bodies after they have lain in an above-ground “grave" is practiced today in Cuba. and. Indeed, in nearly all the Batin American countries. They do not believe it is practiced in any other countries than those of Spanish origin. Q. Can borax be made too strong? Have heard that water only dissolves so much.—M. P. A. The Bureau of Chemistry says that the saturation point of a solu- I tion depends upon temperature. At an ordinary temperature you can make about a 4 per cent solution of borax. At boiling point it is possible to make a 85 per cent solution. Q. 'What is the meaning of the ex pression "hallmark"?—D. B. V. A. A hallmark is the official mark of the Goldsmith Co. of England, stamped on gold and silver articles at Goldsmith’s Hall, in Bondon, to attest their purity. Hence the term came to imply any mark used for the same purpose by assay officers in the United Kingdom. Q. What is the origin of the name Penn Van, a town in New York?— F. N. C. A. Some of the first settlers of the village Penn Yan were from Penn sylvania. while others were known as New England Yankees. A discus sion arose as to the name of the vil lage. and both parties were satisfied by the adoption of the present name, Penn Yan, made up from the first s syllables of Pennsylvania and Yan kce. Q. How many foreigners were ; there in the United States in 1920, and about how many become natu- j rallzed yearly?—J. B. S. A. According to the 1920 census ! report, there were 13,712,754 for- j eigners In the United States. The : number of citizens naturalized in the ; (United States for five years were-I 1918, 63.993: 1919, 128,335; 1920, 51 972- ! ! 1921, 17,636; 1922, 9.468. I Q. What is the origin of the phrase, ■ “To let the cat out of the bag"?—S. H. ; A. The Danes claim to have originated I I Cross-Word Puzzle Craze Held Beneficial by Editors 1 Like the dancing mania of the mid ; die ages, the cross-word puzzle has swept over the lard, and, as Whistler said of art, "no hove) is safe from it.” Wall street has prescribed, un der penalty of dismissal, any of its employes from "working” during of fice hours any of the hypnotic check ered squares. A large newspaper syndicate held off for months before it capitulated to the rising demand from Its clients for a daily puzzle. Now it is selling 58 different ones | each day and reports that some of the editors are clamoring for two or three a day. In the opinion of the New York World, “it may be better than ping-pong or mah-jong in that it compels Its devotees to add to their vocabularies. It may keep husband and wife from domestic bickering. It may bring to life once more the cor ner saloon, where the tired citizen, hoisting his foot onto the brass rail, may say to the white-jacketed dis penser. 'Let’s have a cross-word puz zle and a pencil. Jack. I’ve had a hard day.' ” Referring to the statement of an English professor that the average business man in this country has a vocabulary of but 3,000 words, the San Francisco Bulletins declares: “That is a pity, but it is going to be remedied. When he goes home to dinner his wife greets him with: ‘Oh. James can think of a word of five letters that means the same as French fried potatoes?’ Little James calls from his corner: ‘Ma, what’s a word that has eight letters and means egg plant?’ And ma replies: ’Ask your father, he knows everything, and I’m busy.’ And. in a short while father catches it himself trying to answer all those questions as if he knew. He goes oft in his golf, can’t think of a funny story any more, carries a book of synonyms In his pocket, mutters to himself, and when he reads the ticker, absently looks for words, words, words. The cross of the cross word puzzle is on him. In time his speech will be so rich in synonyms that nobody but another cross-word hound will be able to converse with him.” ** * * No cause, remarks the Buffalo News, "may be regarded as well on its way until it has had its martyrs. By that token cross-word puzzle addicts have something to hearten them in the fact that a man has gone to prison in New York rather than submit to a fine for refusing to vacate a restaurant table at which he had been working for hours to find ’a five-letter word for microscopic hairs’.” The cross-word puzzle, the Springfield (Maas.) Union declares has become more than a fashion. "It Is a movement, a sweep ing, staggering, compelling move ment. We should not hesitate to call It the greatest movement In modern times were it not that no one, as yet, has attempted to incor porate . compulsory puzzle-solving Into the Federal Constitution. That may be a mere oversight. One into museums, that we are apt to take it as a matter of course. All this goes to lessen its value among those who do not know’, for it Is the costly which is accounted valuable. Let it be remembered, however, that art Is never cheaply brought forth: it has Its price and it is more than that of a king’s ransom. But those who pay are they who produce—artists to whom art Is life, and even more. this expression. In Denmark there is a choice confection made in the form of a cat. Children delight in placing a number of the confections In a bag which is then tied almost out of reach. They then attempt to bite holes in the paper—thereby “letting the cat out of the bag." Q. How can stamps which are stuck together be taken apart without los ing the mucilage?—W. F. P. A. Bay a thin sheet over them and Iron with a hot iron. Q. Is the lifting of oil from the wells to storage tanks an expensive pro cedure?—N. O. K. A. The Bureau of Mines says tjtat from 20 to 90 per cent of the total cost of producing petroleum may be charged to lifting the oil. Although the lifting cost ranges from less than 3 cents a barrel at flowing wells, producing sev eral hundred barrels a day, to S 3 a bar rel, at wells producing less than a ftfth of a barrel a day. the lifting cost |>er well may fee i more than Sl,fK" ! at large flowing wells of the type re cently developed in Oklahoma, Texas. Arkansas and California, to less than $lO at many of the old wells pumped only a few hours a week, as in ua>*t of the oil fields of New York and Penn sylvania. where the average dally pro duction per well per day is less than one-fourth of a barrel. Q. How can famish be removed from silver metal cloth slippers?—B. K. S. A. Silver and gold slippers may In cleaned by brushing with alcohol or gasoline. There are commercial prepa rations on the market for this pur pose which seem quite satisfactory. (j. Does a country’s proximity to the »ea make it more liable to earth quakes?—O. C. W. A. It has been thought by som*- that the center of earthquakes and volcanic disturbances is always neai the sea or other large supplies of water, and that the disturbances are directly caused by the filtration of the water down to igneous matter, and the consequent generation of vas; quantities of steam, which frees itself by explosion. Others hate sought to explain earthquakes as part of the phenomena of a planet cooling at the surface or to the yielding of strata so as to slip down ward upon each other. Q. What is thrown pottery?— F. O. P. A. Thrown pottery is shaped on a rapidly revolving disk. The prepara tion of the clay is a scientific process. The ingredients—bail clay, flint, pow der, feldspar and kaolin—are care- * fully selected and weighed in certain proportions, so that they will fuse properly and become sufficiently hard when shaped and fired. The mixture is loft to stand until thor oughly soaked and then is lawned through fine linen and dumped into a plaster box which absorbs the water and leaves the clay in condi tion to be beaten. All the air bub bles must be driven out of the ball of clay before it is placed on the throwing wheel. Workers in pottery delight in the touch of the plastic clay as it spins upon the disk. The thumbs make the inside of the object while the extended fingers shape the walls. After the work of art is prop erly shaped it is put into a plaster i box to become “leather hard” and is ; then finished or turned. The plain ■ objects finally are ornamented and i placed in the fire oven, and a still | later baking process puts on the dc | sired glaze. j Q. Kindly inform me how I can ! put celluloid in liquid form?—J. C. I A. Celluloid can be dissolved in denatured alcohol. j (Readers of The Evening Star should j send their questions to The Star /«- ; formntion Bureau, Frederic J. Haskin, director. Twenty-first and C streets northwest. The only charge ferr this service is 2 cents in stamps for return postage.) expects it to be remedied speedily.” Nearly everything in this country Is investigated sooner or later, adds the Indianapolis News, and "since the cross-word puzzle craze has become epidemic a State or Federal inquiry may be expected. People w r ho have not yet become cross-word puzzle i fans, but who are plagued by other i members of the family who are, wish . j to know’ what is back of the move i ment.” The Boston Traveler fears the i worst and adds: “The cross-word puz zle mania is bad enough now, good ! ness knows, w’ith formerly sane folks \ sawing the air, pawing the diction j aries and clawing the minds of i friends and enemies for missing j words. There is no peace in the land, | Reviewing the history of American ' fads, including the ouija, mah-jong and the cross-word puzzle, the Mil waukee Journal contends, "what these succeeding ’crazes’ tell us is that as a nation with a good deal of leisure w© haven’t learned how to use it.” The Journal suggests that if each individual used his spare time to de velop his own individuality—"used it in whatever way he felt would give him the most pleasure and the most returns, that would be a ’craze’ worth j while.” On the other hand, the Cleve | land Plain Dealer believes the cross word puzzle ought to have some ele ment of permanency, because "it is not silly. Considered from several viewpoints it is beneficial mental exercise. Incidental!?', it is good fun.’’ ** * * By comparison, continues the Nash ville Banner, "the cross-word phase of American desire for fads is to be preferred to anything which has re cently come along. It is eminently better than repeating phrases about every day in every way and wonder ing what it is ail about. It is more enlivening and instructive, too. than indulging in endless bouts at Chinese dominoes, otherwise known as mah jong. It is bound to teach the enthu siast more about his own language and facilitate his use of it. It is also calculated to impress quite a good many interesting and useful facts about history, mythology, science., business and sport.” The Lansing State Journal thinks "the cross-vt* 7 ** puzzle will compel a lot of people to increase their knowledge of words. In that it will serve a useful purpose. Is it too much to hope that they use them when they get acquainted with them?" If one acquires a new word by wrestling it out of a cross-word puzzle, and it finds resting place In the mind, the El Paso Herald believes that "sooner or later, in the proper connection, it pops out. A fragment of the newly acquired vocabulary has been put to use. Another thought begs expression, and Ilk© as not an other new word enters into it. And so it goes.” Says the Wichita Eagle; "We do not doubt that the cross-word puzzle has concealed in it a great American flareback and is good for : the Nation. Basically, America re mains deadly serious on one thing in 1 particular—education. The cross word puzzle fits In. It doesn’t merely deal with words; it deals with the se -1 lectlve qualities of .the mind. It doesn't ; call so much upon knowledge as upon skill. And mental skill is'at the bot tom of American education." The Sa vannah Press decides: "The sport which demands a little thinking is not utterly despised. It is an unselfish game, any number can join in, and the 1 family need not preserve a stony silence, aa is necessary where bridge or radio enters the home."