December, 1922 THE WESTERN AMERICAN fries are still suffering from the effects of the war io an extent that makes travel less pleasant. In scenic beauty the Americans are fast learning hat America excels. Highways and paved roads 'rom coast to coast and good roads to every scenic Joint of vantage in the entire country has gradually turned the tide and Americans find today that travel­ ing about in their own country is not alone more pleasant, but can be done at great deal less expense and then—that there is no one to exact exhorbitant prices for the accommodations required. I These steamship companies, controlled and largely owned in foreign countries, may need the money from their first and second class cabins, but the American travelers’ money will be spent to far great­ er advantage and to far greater good for himself and fis fellow Americans when he spends it in his own >untry thereby sustaining comfortable railroad avel, besides helping to build hamlets, towns, cities id comfortable automobile campss along the roads 5 well as resorts at scenic points. 19 that conference first—right after the armistice—and then proceeded to iron out, in strictly legal fashion, some of the international disputes arising out of the war? The disastrous economic developments that have been experienced throughout the world since the war give rise to the suspicion that such a conference at that time would not have served the best interest of those who made huge profits out of the war and who have “played the ‘game’” ever since, adding a sum to the total of pending disaster every day. There is no doubt that there are some people in this world, and a great multitude of them right here in America, who manage to keep out of jail only be­ cause of their influence with those in whose hand rest the initiative to proceed against them. Let us develop a public conscience strong enough to convict those who are guilty of blocking peace and progress to benefit their selfish interests whether they be millionaires or high executives. The economic condition of the world is critical. More than half of the world is bankrupt in anything but in name. Americans should begin to seriously contemplate the fact that the one-half of the body that is well can not continue to remain well if diseases are permitted unchecked to destroy the other half. The economic conference is timely. It must not be delayed. Every moment is precious. The world must come to order. Nations must begin to deal with one another, and learn to trust one another, if the wounds of war are ever to be healed. The distinctly European never cared much for the merican, his interest has always been centered in rhe American dollar. As he can not get the Ameri­ can dollar without the American, he practices “diplo- macy” in dealing with the latter in order to obtain the American, his interest has always been centered in former. America has had too many dupes. Their number is growing less for every American who has been pinched hard enough to wake up and discern between reality and illusion. I Europeans, who have grown fat on American dol­ lars, extracted from the traveling Americans flat­ tered to endless extravagance, are becoming worried that their source of easy money has been diverted. ■The inducements in lowered rates, that are planned to remove the objections thought responsible for fall­ ing off of European travel by Americans, may remedy ihe situation in some instances, but the present ocean rates are certainly not the real cause to the decrease in the number of Americans going to Europe to find pleasure in sightseeing. Since they have responded to the urge of “Seeing America First” they are finding pleasures untold in motoring or traveling by rail ■through America, nature’s own wonderland. And they are delighted and happy at finding wherever They go that their own country not alone compares favorably, but far surpasses Europe, at its best, as a land of majestic beauty. AN ECONOMICS CONFERENCE OF THE WORLD NATIONS ■INDICATIONS are that another world conference [ will be held in the immediate future at Washington, a conference that will not deal with superficial war or lanti-war resolutions and proposals, but something jmore fundamental in the interest of peace and friend­ ly relations between the nations, a conference aiming Ito stabilize the financial situation in the world to the lend that national and international credit may again be restored to save the world from financial chaos and pending ruin. I But the question is: why could we not have had THE ‘TOOL ROOM AND SOFT DRINK PARLOR” T F OLD SATAN himself was called upon to invent and paint a sign throughout this nation over every institution where the youth of the land may go to get the first lesson in law violation and immorality, he would write “Pool Room and Soft Drink Parlor.” Since the days of the licensed saloon the pool room and the soft drink parlor—usually operated in con­ nection with one another—have to a great extent fallen heir to the doubtful traffic in human degrada­ tion that had flourished in the shadow of the saloon. This is not an indictment of the legitimate busi­ ness of the pool room and the soft drink parlor but an indictment of the men with the “saloon” training who have found the pool room and the soft drink parlor a suitable substitute for certain vices practiced in the days of old in connection with the saloon. The atmosphere of the stuffy large pool rooms or halls in the down town sections of the average Ameri­ can city is differing very little from the atmosphere of the saloon. The saloon, however, was, by law, restricted against the minor, where the pool room and the soft drink parlor is usually the rendezvous of the youth, mingling freely with the “seasoned” elements of human driftwood; those who have found it ex­ pedient and suitable to their tastes to earn a doubtful livelihood. The lecturer who recently stated that in his opinion “the pool room was a worse enemy of the boy than the saloon” cannot be contradicted in view of the over-