;.;$ ". . V r i 1 1 ; - - i ,-v EVBirtSS Public LEDGfiR-pmiiAfDELPHiiV wejdnesay, Iy'ioio 0 JV " jrg; ' " It' 5 i- (tJiBwa XSP f, K 1 " IE w ? ft bW ffc- -V? w "'J ' , !.' i.T m '- ',')? OR FIGHT-PINCHOT a S''r. lotarians Plodgo Support to Effort to Avert Class War in United States SPEAKER DOUBTS' LEAGUE Warning them that if nil three of the principnl classes in American na tional life business, labor nnd agricul tural do not co-operate in the recon struction period,, it will be "n oas of fight," Gifford .Pinchot, noted reron Btructlonlst, wasi pledged the united suppdrt of the '-rjilladelrlhla Notary Club nt their luncheon in the Ailelpliia gold room today, after he hail put 11(1 to them some of the questions 1 inK just riliend of the signing of the pence treaty. Gjfford Piuclmt sees no cure-all for world ills in the league of nations. "The end of wars is not going to come with the league,'' he said, in speaking on "What do we gel out of the war?" "Of course, wc get the league of na tions, which I hope will do something' to help preserve the peace. I per- sonally do not expect great things from It, and the alliance between r.njsluuil MUSIC AND SONG FEATURES OF BIG PARADE TOMORROW CHAPLAIN BRINGS Bands and Voices of Relatives to Help Keystone Division Keep Step While Passing in Review Here Music and song will be the features of the parade tomorrow. Throughout the route of the parade, STiO song leaders of the war-camp com munity service with megaphones will conduct the huge crowds in the singing of the familiar wnr melodies and also teach them a few new songs of welcome. They will be aided by twenty bands n"'l forty-one brass quartets. On the bluff of the old reservoir nt the Parkway cur spring Harden street, 1U.OUO chil Is chairman ol the music subcommittee of the welcome-home committee. The caisson, bearing memorial wreath'! and drawn by eight, white horses, which will precede the pnroile by fifteen min utes, will be led by buglers and drum mers with muffled Instruments from the navy yard. At the memorial service, to be held at the Victory Statue nt 10 o'clock, n song written by the Rev. Wil liam S. Murphy will be sung' by n chorus of fiOO voices. A noem by Franklin Mitchell Crispin. of this city, will be read. Two of the nanus niong the lino of tlren will lift their voices. They will mnrch will ncrnnr nnsltlnns of honor. be divided Into four divisions the i The Twenty-eighth Division Hand, ot pupils of (.Irani ( ollege and their hand. Northumberland. ln.. will be stationed tie Hoy Scouts, the (iirl Scouts and i opposite General Muir's reviewing stand the Hoys llrignde. jnt nr0ad and Diamond streets, while More than (100.000 song sheets will the Third Regiment Hand, just returned be distributed nmOIlff the prmvrl Till fpntr. Vr.mn will tilnv nf lnlnnnnilAnpa ..!.-. lit .- .1 i. I " -V ""'-l-l " l'.J " uvi.v..wvv iMM-i'in nm 1'iimitiii me wen -Known com munity songs that were heard during the wnr and three new ones written for the occasion "Welcome Song." by Edith H. N'nphcys; "The Gallant Twenty-eighth." by Mrs. .lames .1. Murphy, and "Over Here." by J. I,. Brown. The entire musical program has been arranged by .1. K. Corneal, of the war-camp community service, who Hnll. The children on the Parkway bluff, will sing "Welcome Home to Pennsyl vania," n new song, the music of which is by Joseph Cnrlton Podolyn nnd He becca Hornstlne, nnd the words by Henjnmln D. Anton. All three are Philadelphia school tenehers. rind the song hns been taught the pupils of the public schools for some. time. Gallant Priest, Who Led 111th on the Mouse, Carries Tokens to Mourning Mothers DECORATED WITH D. S. C. WILL DECORATE COLORS FAVORS ANTI-TOBACCO LAW The last word, a token perhaps n lock of hair these will be brought to the mothers and fathers, wives nnd rela tives of the lads of the 111th who paid the "supreme sacrifice," by Chaplain Lieutenant Charles C. County, this aft ernoon. The heroic priest, who dropped his spiritual ministrations during the Mcuse drive when the officers of the regiment hnd nil gone down or had been disabled, and jumped to the front of the troops up nnd over the top to be gassed nnd wounded will convey the messages of "those who sleep in Krnnce" to their loved one here between -i nnd t" o'clock at the home service section of the Ited Cross, 1007 Walnut street. Today will be the only time spent in Philadelphia, for the heroic chaplain. from tho former Eighteenth of Pitts burgh nnd the old Sixth of Philadel phia regiments, National Uunrd, went Intol the fray with the Twenty-eighth Division, the priest lleulcnnut chaplain went with them. He hurried everywhere among the whir of bullets nnd shriek of shells to administer the last rites of the church to the dying nnd (bnred himself to the Hun fire to rescue others, The mes sages he obtained there arc bclug brought home tottny. He was gassed late In September dur ing the Fismes-Mnrnc drive, nnd spent n few days In a hospital.. Hut the heroic priest wns not to be easily kept away from his chnrges by the German poison. Itcturns During Mcuse Advance During the advance on the east, bank of the Mcuse about the middle of Oc tober the chaplain returned to his regi ment. It was on the second day of the fighting that he led tho men Into battle. For his bravery he wears the Distin guished Service Cross. "I snw the Pennsylvnnlnns fight,' he said, "and know just what ob stacles they overcame. Why, nothing seemed to be able to stop them. They went through gas nnd heavy Bhell bar rages, mnehine-gun enfilades ind bay onet counters nlike. At night they re turned nfter obtaining their objectives to joke over the fighting and Wiling of tiie day, interspersed with n reverent determination to avenge their fallen Daughter of Judge Patterson Has. Prohibitory Legislation Urged by Philadelphia, for the heroic chaplain, com .- , f ,vork .,., Victory Wreath for Each Regiment I Christian Endeavor Convention I who won his 1). S. ('.. has other mes- ..,.. ,i" nn,i wnnt the people who nelore each regiment stints from Columbia. Pa.. May 14. -The Fast "Kr' r" "cuver. urgent, dying messages. , , i !, ,,Pn,nl nf It. ton. It. timeout " ''"'""'l "'"' AVI,n,-,n" sln""ls rrow ! Pennsylvania Eldership of the Church "nuTt'lint the end of ..-a-n buim-s ! in the parade of the Twentj -eighth Dl-r God. nt the twenty-first annual means big saving of ma it -power mid I iin. Miss Helen Patterson, the thir- , Christian Endrator convention, which economic power for every nation wns teen-.enr-ohl daughter of Judge John ,nPt nt Columbia, adopted resolutions Illustrated liy the ipciiKcr ny cuing nic case of German) . ,, ... , . ;is oi mem, i"i iiivin, m.... ....... ... itlicr cities nnd tonus k will (ho invc,i ones whose boys he men of the 11 It, p ,,, mrem(. Hlicc." !..sa "Germany will save four jeurs in the life of every man's cffcctiNc work." lie said, "or nt least HI per cent, be sides the immense expenditures put in on armament. France, England and Italy will also come in for a large sav ing. "I nm no Socialist, but 1 am aide to say that virtual!) all the principles of modern socialism are in effect in Europe today. I doubt if we realize to what extent government control nf mines, forests and other natural resources has been brought into being. This has cmnc about so rapidly that I think very littl" is known about it on this side of the water. "In this, what is there for lis? Ilc construction is going to be it long, hard job, and the lines into which our na tional policy crystallizes when it is i.-. will hold for nobody knows how ni.tn;. generations. It was so after the Chi; War. "I cannot ngrec with speakers at a recent dinner here in Philadelphia who maintained mnny of them being men high in the state's executive councils--that things were all right before the War and thnt they would get back to the same good condition in time. We cannot remain as we were. Either wc go backward or forward. "Plans for the future must be made for the whole people, by the whole 'leople, each allowing for the other's tewpoiut. or it is a question of light. n the revision of your state coustitu .ion you will have vital questions to settle1 very soon nud they cannot be settled from the point of view -of any one group. We have, got to stop row ing in opposite directions in order to go ahead." Must Kmploy All Kesourres "I want the people of Pennsylvania to give their keenest and most active attention to these questions, to find what the other fellow thinks about them," that we inny not full in making the constitution a safe guide for us in the very critical years coming." He pointed out that the state must employ all its resources to produce wealth; that the country faces the keen est business competition in its history ; that in Pennsylvania alone (10,000.000 to $75,000,000 is lost yearly through the virtually desert condition nf hurued oit forest lands, making up one-sixth ot the state's total acreage. "Nations have never been driven as now to such activity of commerce ns they must bring nbout to pay the debts of war," he suid. "And here we are wasting an area larger than the state of, New Jersey." William Hay, managing editor of the business section of the It iii.ic I.edokii, acted as chairman at the luncheon. He fore introducing Mr. Pinchot, he called attention to tlie return to Philadelphia of Joseph Myers, lately assistant to the secretary of war and commercial agent of the United Gas Improvement Com pany. . s RED CROSS TO LAN WORK Summer. VVIII Be Devoted to Produc tion of Garments Plans for the summer work of the Southeastern Pennsylvania Chapter of tue American lied Cross will be dis cussed nt a meeting of auxiliary chair men 'to be held at 3 o'clock this after noon in the auditorium of the' Pcirce School, 1VM Pine street. It is expected that fully fi00 leaders pt thcjled Cross work in this section will nttend the meeting. Dr. C. J. Hatfield, head of the South eastern Chapter, nnd Mrs. Jj. A. Potter, chief of the department of workrooms, will speak. Several of the auxiliaries In thj Southeastern Chapter discontinued op rrntions two months ago, when it was felt that the demand for the output was slight. Investigations just com pleted 'abroad, however, show that the need for garments for the women nnd ciumrrn ninong ine poorer classes is great. Garments must not only be made lor immediate wear, but hundreds of knitted garments will be needed abroad next winter. The Ited Cross goods are to be distributed throughout the Hal- V, Vykans, Italy, Ilussla, France, Belgium ,iL&& nnd Armenia. rw-r .-j -". . DIIII MA fiC Tn Aln UnPDITII Pa y.nwiiHimuu iu hiu nuoriiHU '. JSoclaf Service Department of Pres . )y .byter.lan Institution Opens Sale "i,. (A. rummage sale nnd lunch counter ? tor the benefit of the Presbyterian IIos ;; ," iital dpened nt 800 Chestnut street, this ,t ;-aorn!ng. The sale will be continued on ." M1fttday and Saturday. tv 'AO" nuB,r la using nciu unuer lat xxjtspices. ot ine social service depart 5,j(flt of the institution and the com- f'mlttM in cnarge memoes mtu, frank f," ( A' Roberts. Sirs. Ile'ece M. Oberteuffer. iff- j&s..irenrj S. Jt-anes, Miss Ella Me- I'''"' CNtrd, Miss i'nnny Jl. Uolemau, Mrs. rliliam, " Harclay, Mrs, James H. r, MM Bertha Benson. Mrs. Wj M. Patterson. Common Pleas Court, "i which was embodied a clause stating will decorate its colors with a victorv "'at the eldership is absolutely in favor wreath. of a law prohibiting the use of tobacco. This little i..ii,in ,. i : U was further resolved by the elder- '"" '" ""1 way . intfti-tnvi. . tit. 1, . .. ''!' with pnrnde. ? , Y r Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y T Y Y Y i t I Y 1 T Y Y i Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y ? Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y will nut in nn.v war the progress of the that its undivided attention be given tn the entotcemeui ot tlie nntional ! prohibition lnw. aim ne must seen nose to whom are toj,8 f tllPm fol. ,hpm, that I desire to ho nnnvni-.il ... ill..... nil! .1 ... i kn wl l" ' ' . from whereter tli en me. Did Only Duly to ('nil Judge Brown to Be Wedded Clinplain County 'will not talk of his Newton I. Warren, of Snn Frnn- own exploits. "The credit belongs to'(.jSco. Calif.. 1ms nnnonnced the en- the boys." he said. "I did nothing , enrroiiiont of his sister. Miss M. Florence nothing except my duty to (Jod, my ' ; ,rr,n, l0 31I, Ke Charles 1,. Hrown. of country and my bos. 1 nm now carry- Lr. The marriage will take place 'n5-i T "i..7 , T U""- n .lu'V. .fudge Hrown is president When the 111th. which was recruited 'j",, ,f the Municipal Court. i Pft . ?rt Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y ? Y Y Y Y ! Y i Y i Y Y Y ? f Y Y r I Y 1 -ri-y-yyyyy flMB5var5afcsags?8ny &. v . , , SJ- t.,v w vi.ijsyr .,HHHBiskHVJp;wP vvvvss-s-m-M-J-swwK Scotti appears with the Scotti Grand Opera Co. Metropolitan Opera House May 17 ..-. Hear this famous Victor artist! The appearance of Scotti is an event of twofold interest to the music-loving public. (1) It presents the opportunity of hearing the beautiful voice of this well-known baritone. (2) It enables you to compare his actual voice with his interpretations on Victrola Records. Hear Scotti at this performance. Then go to any Victor dealer's and hear the Victrola Records by Scotti. You will instantly appreciate how truly the Victrola brings to you his personality and his art. You will understand why Scotti chose to make records only for the Victor Company. You will realize that it is this fidelity of reproduction which causes the world's greatest artists to make Victrola Records exclusively. Victors and Victrolas in great variety of styles from $12 to $950. Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J. Important Notice. Victor Records and Victor Machines are scientific ally coordinated and synchronized In the processes of manufacture, and their use, one with the other, Is absolutely essential to a perfect reproduction. Now Victor Record demonstrated at ell deelere on the lit of each month Victrola "VJctrola" Ii the Reentered Trademark ot the Victor Talklnc Machine Coapany dealciiitlsc tho product of tht Company oolr. nfetMtln: Opdyke, Miss Bertba! e i, ,.., ., niT,W ' JWffTtiW ' ' '. " l.Yr'. ' ' J, --fit 4WB$&1 a -'g it t ' S TripE f? r fCHr ljiia 'e.Tt'1 7"i PK3BrMy3?i38ijBaB v I V STATE SETS PUCE Employment for Soldiers Cam paign Meeting With Success, Official States URGES GREATER EFFORT Pennsylvania is rrrdltrd with hand ling its returning toldlors with as much, If not more, success, than nny other slate In tho' union In a statement mnde today by Harry h. I'orks, acting federal director hero of the United States De partment of Labor. "Hut the job Is not done I It has' only started!" Director 1'arks said. "To date I have found from reports made from alt nnrts of the routitry that l'enn sylvaula is getting tho boys back Into jobi. They are now nt our doors. And nwre are arriving every day. "I.et us nil remember nt this moment nt joyous welcome to the boys that It is easy to stand on the side llno. nnd cheer, and wave flags, while the bands nrc playing nnd the heroes marching. But let us not stop with the cheering. "Bather, let us nil get together In nn effort to show tangible evidence t appreciation for what Uiese bdys bayl done, by furnishing them the most; lui-1 trlnstc thing, the thing they wlUlappre clnto tho most a job." I Director Barks asked that alii post tions open In Philadelphia for tl(e re- ) turning troops be listed with tho City Hall courtyard office of the Benhsyl vanla state employment service, where dervlec men seeking civil cmploymVnt U Bnoum nc uirccieu. Mr. Barks expressed appreciation for i the part played In the cnmhalgn by the J Evksino Buni.to TjEDOKn in giving '. publicity- to "Employment Sunday" 3 and other activities In the national pro gram of securing employment In Indus ,; try for the men. B8s'CofyrigfitJ"toij,Hrt l Schiffner & Mrs.f What satisfies youf "OU'RE satisfied with the clothes you buy at the time you get them or you woulchVt buy. If that's all theatfef action you want, any clothes will iiothey all IqoIc. good when they're new But if you want satisfaction for many months,, better have, all-wool fabrics,-. good tailoring.' and smart style, .That? s the. sorfi of clothes wemake; we guarantee that kinc of satisfaction or money back;, you decide. Hart Schaffner &. Marx i y 1 Straw.bride-e and Clothier "-'" iinfe fejH k.z r'fi V-r-..fim .,.' tj;T,;-;w J n
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers