f N IV w m u "I a ." ). , y. J V. Jfcfcnfna public He&ger JPUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY f CTnUS It. K. CURTIS. rimnlsT .Charles It., lLddlnton. Vlot 1'rosldenll CHil CJ Martin, Secretary and Treasurer: Jhllip a. Cnltlna, John U. Williams. John J. nvmiconi uireciors. v WDITORIAL BWWID: Ctnca II. K. Couth. calrman TIAVID E. SMILEY Editor JOHN C. MARTIN.. .General Business .rr. Published dally at Public) t.trxits Building, independence snuare, Philadelphia AtMntio Cur rreai-Unlou Rulldln (Nw York ,21t0 Metropolitan Tower DcmoiT ., 701 Ford liuildlne HT. Louis 10O Fullerton iKiiniinar CMICACO ...1302. Tribune UullJInc news rureaus: TVUanmoTdN tluntvu, Jf. K. Cor Pennsylvania Ave. and 14lli F. tin York llunr.AU The sun Uulldlnc fil'U.lf'HUTION RATES The miNa l'uai.tc LKixitn la served to ubsfrlbers In Philadelphia and surrounding towns at the rate of twelve (1 cents per Meek, payable tn the carrier. By mail to points outside of Philadelphia, tn the Unlt-d States. Canada, or United Mates possesions, postage free, fifty (oil) ents per month Six (til) dollars per year, payable In advance ,.v , To all foreign countries one (11) dollar per month. Nonet Subscribers wishing- addrea S hanged must (he old as well as new ad ress. I1ELL, 3000 WALNUT KEYSTONE. M UN 3000 T Address all commiinfcntlwts fo Kv-.nlng Public Ledger, independence a quote, Philadelphia. Member of the Associated Press TUB SSOrtAT' () l'KESK i exclusively entitled to the use for republication of iiU news dispatches credited to it or Jot otherwise credited in this paper, cMd also the local news published thcrjn. All 'tght jnf republication of special HlipaKhcs Ifcrein are also leserred. rbu.d lyphu. Vednetdsr. M.rth 31. 1020 A .FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Thlnrs on nlileh the people expect (he neW administration to concentrate Its attention: The Delaware river bridge. A drydock big enough to accommo date the largest ships. Development of the rapid transit sys tem. A conv ntion hall A building for the Free Library. An Art Museum Knlargement of the water supply. Homes to accommodate the popula tion, i NEW TRAFFIC ROUTES VEHICLE trrlffic moving north and south from tW City Hull region in the rush hours of the morning nnd nfter ,noon is heavier than ttioxe who would exclude it from Broad street appear to believe. The objections raised against Captain -Mills's plnn by Mr. Kane, pres ident of the Automobile Club of Phila delphia, and others arc valid. It is probable that if Ilroad street were closed to this outward-going traffic, even for short periods ench day, unexampled con . gestlon would occur on Thirteenth nnd Fifteenth streets. What then would he roine of the plan to keep trolleys moving rapidly over these important lines? Better paving on the cross streets might make this newer scheme accept able. As matters stand, the arrange ment would impose an almost intolerable restriction on traffic from tho central areas. HADLEY THE promotion of Will B. Hndley to the controllership was suggested soon after the death of Captain Walton last jveek. The action of Governor" Koroul In naming him yesterday indicates thflH thoso wpo made the suggestion spoke with some knowledge of the proba bilities. Mr. Hadiey entered the controller's office as chief accountant at the sug gestion of tho Bureau of Municipal Re search, which thought that an expert was needed there. He soon adjusted himself to the conditions surrounding him nnd served Controller Walton faith fully. Whether he will servo the city as well will be known after he has ex ercised the full responsibilities of the office. PROFESSOR FISHER THE death of Prof. George Egbert Fisher removes from the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania one of its distinguished members. Professor Fisher was u mathematician with a wide reputation. He was an executive of discretion, as he demon ftrated during his period of service as dean of the university. And he was a gentlemnn of refinement nnd culture. It Is contact with such ineu as he that gives value t . . a college education. A SLACKER'S EXTINCTION THE end of tirover Bergdoll's no toriety is as wi i nine a, is the meas ure of stern and deserved justice which has been accorded inn:. It is a wate of indignation to dilate upon his offenses. His name inspires digust. The health iest procedure is to forjet it. This should be eav, for even when hli flve-ear sentence has expired Berg doll will Iip noboijx. m man without a country, without statin .,f citizenship in the repulihc wli.n.. U- he so inso lently ilehed Oblivion m the tin., .on-hgn punish mem. Clouds of it an trling upon him. It is mdeieut to li-;iei them. RESPECTING PROPRIETIES SEXATiiIt MWHKIUn f Mirhi gan. mnui r, , CJf , . '.,!, f tll0 election laws, has auunumeil that he will not occtipj iu -em in the Senate ihain ber while the higi.er courts to which he has appealed me considering 'im case. This i- t!it proper course. It shows n decent regaid for the propn. tie, and, in the possible event of the ultimate ac ouittal of the senator, it will increase the respect m which he will he held by tho country OPERATIC CURRENTS TR CI LKR'S explosion of the silly --rumor of the abandonment of the etropolltau Opera Company's visit ere next seanon was almost superllu u, Philadelphia's patronage of grand opera this jenr has been iciord break ing. Virtually every performance at Broad and Poplar streets has been given tn '"capacit)" audiences Operatic management is strongly disinclined to repudiate such impressive und highly profitable favor. What tho attendance d ies suggest, however, is an incrense in the number nf offerings. At present the sixteen 'opera eights" permit only of a com paratively light draft upon the diversity of Air. tlutti-t'iiHazza's resources. Phllndelphirtiis have jet to hear sotuo nt tlta Itinut interpbtlilf (uiiilltna if k )r1; I'-fV f MV ,' ..... ....... .-.,.. ,....,) ir iijtt bv current New York season, including I English "Parsifal," Tschalkowsky' . xpgpg OneUi" ami "The Blue Bird," K.V. ' MS ' IWlHi'ii ii--- iflj-liiitllm Importation of,"Tho Coq d'Or' would aleo be welcome. Assurance that the operatic quota is not to bo reduced was to have been ex pected. What the publlcNs now evi cn'tly n a mood to support is expansion of the musical fare. An interesting step in that direction would be some arrangement whereby the wcll-cauinped Chicago company could submit extracts from its repertoire here next winter. It Is on record that opera in Philadelphia was never so stimulating and so ad mlrnbly presented .s when the Academy of Music mid Mr. Ilammerstcln's temple of song were engaged in their lively nnd fruitful nrtlstic rivalry. CAN POPULAR SENTIMENT NOMINATE MR. H00V5R? It Will Have to Be Overvtlmlno If the Professional Politicians Are to Yleto It "M'OW that Ilidvcr has announced J- liimscl1ibpgus to look ns if the most inyfJrtnnt question before the Re pnl5iViin party iu the first week In June .tifght be whether" its national leaders have learned nuythlng since 1012. "f sny "might be," for the reason that the issue is still framing itself, and no one can tell what tho outcome will be. There ore already signs of a ground swell for Hoover. Ciubs urging his nom ination for the presidency are being formed in nil parts of the country. Men who worked with him in the food ad ministration arc taking active part in the enmpaign to capitalize Hoover senti ment. Iu New lork city Hoover meet ings arc being held in private houses nnd public halls. They arc nttended by earnest nnd enthusiastic mcu nnd women. Hoover clubs nre being formed in various colleges by members of the faculties and by the students. Men of all tr.ides nnd professions are writing let ters to the newspapers urging his nom ination. And many men nnd women who have not yet become vocal are thinking Hoover day and night, and hoping that events will so frame them selves as to force the Chicago convention to nominate him. But nominations nre not made by men who write letters to the editors, nor nre they made by college students or pro fessors, br by the people who attend meetings in the parlors of private houses. Tho profcssionnl politicians nt pres ent arc looking at the uctivit of these people with an nmused tolernuce. They know that delegates to conventions arc not elected by such activities nnd that nominations nre made by delegates. The party organizations put up their tickets to be voted for nt the primaries, rfnd their workers get out the vote and the organization voters vote with the or ganization, and the delegates elected in this way take their orders from the lenders. The weakness of Hoover from their point of view lies in the fnct that he has never been a party worker. So far from being n party leader is he that the other leaders are not acquainted with him. He is a rank outsider whose friends nre try ing to force him upon an organization that has no use for such ns he. If the leaders have their way they will nominate some one who has trained with them in the past, and whom they can trust to trnin with them when he gets in the White House. This is their. view of party government as practiced in the United States. Mr. Hoover cannot be nominated un tesS thin view of narty government is upset. Th men urging his nomination! arc hoping to be able to upset it and to pet up in its place government by the voters of the party instead of by its leaders. If their plans carry they will organize .the sentiment of the rank and tile in favor of HooveV, and where pos sible elect Hoover delegates to Chi cago over the opposition of the machiue and trust to the demand of the voters to convert other delegates to their enime. It is a big undertaking. I nder or- i which bailed the abolition of com diuary circumstances and with u dif-ipulsorj Greek at Oxford this, week casts fercnt kind of n candidate it would be I significant doubt upon the sincerity of impossible. But they believe that with Hoover the thing can be done. They are aware that Mr. Hoover is the one man who came out of the war with a bigger reputation than he had when he en tered it. They are aware also that Mr. Hoover's fame is due not to military achievement, but to successful organi zation of humanitarianism to mitigate the ravages of war. And they do not ignore the fact that he is more familiar with the world problems growing out of the war than any other man seriously mentioned for the presidency in either party. These are the selling points in their campaign, and their pertinency und force cannot be disregarded. It is conceivable that this campaign w ill succeed and that more Republican voters will desire the nomination of Hoover than auy other candidate. It is possible also that a majority of the party would be bitterly disappointed if ou other man should be named In Chicago I nder these conceivable circura stanies it will be up to the leaders to dei ide whether they w ill profit by the lesson of 1012. In that year the demand for the nomi nation of Roosevelt was btroug. His friends insisted that he had a majority of the delegates legally elected and that enough Roosevelt delegates were un seated to give the nomination to Taft. Tins was disputed by the machine leaders, but the result in November vindicated the claim of the Roosevelt supporters, for Roosevelt polled 000,000 more votes than Taft and be got eighty -eighi elec toral votes, while the candidate eval uated b the organization leaders against the opposition the progressive wing of the party got only eight. Aud as a re sult we have had a Democratic Presi dent for the last seven years. The lesson of 1012 is that the senti ment "f the voters cannot be ignored with impuu.t.v. We smill know in a few weeks how widespread the Hoover sentiment is. That the demand for his nomination is becoming louder every day is evident to the most casual readers of the news papes. But it must increase in some thing more thau loudness, for a few men can tmike a big noise, especially if they use megaphones. More intluential people than college professors and so ciety women must make their views known before the politicians will cease to smile amiably at what is going on. These politicians will not refrain from nominating one of their own kind unless forced to do it by fear of losing the election. But if tho Hoover sentiment is as prevalent as some enthusiasts think it to be, the politicians will soon begin to feel tho pressure and the more canny of them who wish to ride into power with the incoming tide will begin to talk Hoover The situation is as interesting as any Uwl'lm. dwim&-&-ib&-&ttxz '9t H &tom.,,., .,; mwtatix ' public)1 American politics in recent years. It it should result in the nomination nnd election of Hoover, the nblllty of n de mocracy to tako care of itself in spite of tho handlcnps of tho party system will be demonstrated to the satisfaction of those who have never" despaired of popu lar rule. LOOKING-GLASS POLITICS ALICE was astounded nt the Looklng Olass World where life was topsy turvy, but the tcasous why Amcrlcatis should be similarly amazed nre fast diminishing. The Legislature of Mississippi fur nished the latest instnnce of delicious inversion. Hnvlng overwhelmingly re jected woman suffrage some months ngo, the Senate nt Jackson, yesterday, re versed itself on tho nineteenth nmend mend. Ten members "flopped" nnd the lieutenant governor cast the deciding vote to break n tie. The chances that the Mississippi House 'will follow suit ore somewhat de pendent upon the course of events in Dover. Should Delaware go antl suffrage n fnr southern state will have the opulent opportunity of posing ns the chnmpion of the snx in distress. The exquisite ironr of Dixie in the act of rescuing suffrngc will not seriously compromise the effects of a brand -new accession of Democratic political capital What has happened in Mississippi could be called shrewd strnteg if it were not so obviously n very primitive realization of the profit to bo directly derived from forecasts of Republican blundering in Delaware. The South knows full well that suf frage will eventually pass. The Legis latures of Vermont nnd Connecticut will sec to that next yenr. In the meantime, southern ncccptan. of the inevitable would be inexpensive nnd showy. Cnn the Republicans of Delaware af ford to sec their party's championship of suffrage placed in u false light by a flashy exhibit of opportunism in thnt portion of the country which haV been heretofore most persistently opposed to equnl rights for women? MAKING IT EASY WHILE the federal coal commission was telling the country that peace and productivity in the mine regions might be assured if the consumers would purchase their fuel supplies in summer, news arrived that the price of the familiar ton was about to increase by another dollar or two. This information will not encourage summer buyhg. The federal commis sion will have to dig for another sugges tion. The truth nbout prices is so shy, so elusive, so quick to flit when you think you have it cornered that no com mission seems ever able to get a square look at it. The price of coal hasn't incrensed nt the mines. But the retailers say it will increase in the local markets. Icemen say the price of ice will depend largelj on the price of coal. And, of course, the price of n number of commodities would automatically and b force of habit follow the price of ice upward. Life moves in a dizzy whirl and it will be a miracle if we can keep up the; pace without accidents of some sort. CLEARING SKIES IN GERMANY CHANCELLOR MUELLER'S decla ration that "the reactionary ele ments in the nrmy will be swept away with an iron broom," coupled with the all but complete submission of the Ruhr radicals, are encouraging evidences that Germany is really putting her house in order. Both Spnrtaeism and the jun kcrism, as represented by tho fantastic Ivapp and his followers, played rash cards and apparently lost. The test of its authority which the Ebert government has just survived should be Instructive to the outside world. The sincerity of any order can never be convincingly proved until it has weathered adversity. EMANCIPATION AT OXFORD rnHE burst of undergraduate glee I V..T classical conservatism at that univcr eity. Evidently the conventional -notion of Oxford will have to be changed. Here, it seems, were less grave aca demic aspirations than oppressive fet ters. The elaborate student carnival de vised was sufficiently exultant to wnr raut disturbance in the minds of the governing body, which effaced the must from Greek in all save a few courses, A college wiinouc restraints and compulsions in its roster savors of the revolutionary spirit. An iconoclas tic Oxford is something quite uew. If present tendencies persist aud the elective system is carried out to the ex tent prevalent in America, Thomas Hardy will bnve to revise those mor dant "Christmlnstcr" chapters in his Jude or else date them, for the Oxford which he thinly veils under a charac teristic fictitious name appears to be swiftly vanishing. Twenty-four years ago a man won A.t ,.. i... st.1 .. n 9 uuv , ui H" - s "." .u. ij"' --- - - - ;, -;r . inin, no rpppiri i iih rnmi wiih nn. nenled. In two succeeding trials- the juries disagreed. Though the man has been dead seventeen years the case has just been decided ngninst him. What ever the merits of this particular case it but confirms the unfortunately general belief that men with wealth can wear out poorer litigant under the present rules of the courts There may he an earnest of future peace in the promise of Chancellor Mueller that armv reactionaries nre to ive swept away with an iron broom. But the world will not be entirely at rest until Germany gets down to work with a steel plow. Kentucky women will vote in the next presidential election and no thanks to Delaware The governor has signed a special r.ill passed by the Legislature The cardinal tims catches the worm while the bluo hen continues to scratch It wns merely h coincidence, of course, but none the less interesting, that when Sir Oliver Lodge arrived in Kansas City the other day steps were immediately taken by the nnti-bnns city chairman to trap "the ghost vote" (1. e. faNe registration). Expert photographers are accom panying the corps of engineers making a survey .f the transit situation. May wo hope for an exposure of the under lying companies? Or might that be considered u case of snapshot judg ment? Every time one reads a brief news item such as that telling nf fifteen world-war veterans offering their blood for n transfusion operation In Lankenau Hospital one's faith in human nature lecelves jovous indorsement. I'he price of ice hits gone up I 20 per cent in New ork. Nutiirsllr. I The iceman is not going to see his old .urns, ms, uuu iuauji,. iwsKnn Aiau ,-? ii&iiBv&a&S TtiE GOWNSMAN Gobd-By? March! A CERTAIN Irishman once declared , that he hnd noticed thnt whenever he contrived to live through March he was likely to llvo tho rest of tho yenr. And n second brother of Cork or XCll Inrncy observed of a sickly winter that many people were dying in this month of march who had never died before. To talk nbout March makcth a sano man rrind : for 'all Irishmen arc sane, howsoever, in divers wise. If l bull be a sin. it is impossible to tell which of the above 'is the sin finer; but enough ot things which appertain to St. Patrick. There is veritably something about March which ruffles the skirts, even of n Gownsman, tcmncstuouslr. March comes at n bad time of the year, nnd is unconscionably long going out. Every day In March Is Impudently longer than the preceding day. March contains more unlucky Fridays than any month In the year nnd more blue Mondays nnd wash days. Besides, the Sundnys of March nre usually raw and blustering; which makes going to church the greater vir tue for the regenerate, but renders eas ier tho primrose ways of the indolent which lead- whither, we know, nlns, all too well. nTAD as a March Hare?" What "I- sensible hare, bunnlc or jnck rabblt would not wax nind in such u month nnd shnkc his cars iu, despera tion? "Mad as a Hatter?" Doubtless a March Hatter, dishatted, chasing his vivacious derby as It pirouettes coyly on edge before n brisk March breeze, hither, now thither, like the goddess Fortune on her wheel which, knowing render, was not a bicycle, but u mono cyclc just beyond his eager grasp. What nnttcr. in or out of "Alice in Wonderland," would not Jie mud? miIE Hntter looked at the March JL Hare, who had followed him into the court, arm in nrm, with the Dor mouse. 'Fourteenth ot .March, I think it wns,' he said. 'Fifteenth,' snld the March Hare. 'Sixteenth,' ndded the Dormouse. 'Write that down.' the King said to .the jury, nnd the jury eogcrlj wrote down. nil the three dates on their slates nnd ndded them up and reduced the nuswer to shillings' nnd pence." "To shillings nnd pence" Americanically, dollars und cents hIohI all answers seem similarly reduc ible in these days, for n veritable Mnrch Hare is the II. C. of I... and this un approachable, top-loftical. ineffable ruler of our destinies nnd tyrant over nil is nlso the mnddest of the hatters, the uuescapable Mad Topper. MARCH is an ominous month, to grentucss ns well ns to the small. Caesar was told to "beware the Ides of March." He might as well have been warned of the Nones or the Kalends for that matter. For. regarding not his warning, he fell before the xtntuc of Pompcy, the greatest fall since the fall of man. It Is somewhat strange to no tice how many great men have con trived to die in March. The English poets Burns, Southcy, Herbert nnd Donne; nnd thnt titan Teuton, Goethe; the musicians, Beethoven and Doctor Arnc (if he was a musician) ; the paint ers Corregglo nnd Benjimln West (denth consorts strange brdfellows) : the statesmen, generals, potentates. Bell sarlus, Gustavus Adolphus, William 111", our American Calhoun. March was a favorite killing month for Roman em perors; Nero, Vnlcntin(an and Hclioga balus were variously murdered in it, Swedenborg gave up his own ghost in March, having given up several others before ; and Jonathan Edwnrds sought a tenlUation in this month of that damna tlonPvliich he hnd so luridly preached to keep warm the cockles of a cold Puritan heart in the climntc of New England, which at best is but a year of twelve Marches variously distempered. TT 1 M IS even unlucky to be born in March. Marlowe, born in that month, was killed in n brawl nt twenty nine; his rival. Shakespeare, born a month later, outlived him twenty-three years. This Shakespeare w'as n clever dog. He stole a March, so to speak, on fate, when, falling ill in thnt accursed month, he continued in this vole of tears, in the interests of n mnemonic help to the memory of students, pro tracting his demise to coincide with his birthdny. The poetllng, Kirk White, died of consumption and despair at having been born in the month of March ; and old Cobbett, one of the economic redoubtnbles, got most of his bluster and cantnnkerousness out of this same month of the thousand winds. Clever great men usunlly maungc to be born earlier in the yeur, or later. Thus Washington and Lincoln both preferred Februnry. nnd Shakespeare, ns we have seen, preferred April. Rousseau, prince of sentimentalists; Hobbes. a wise philosopher, who once squnred the circle, although it turned out to be otherwise, and John Stewart Mill, arch prophet of economists, each shared thls Shake spearean prejudice in favor of April. And is it for nothing that we, right here in America, inaugurate n new ad ministration in March? Our elections arc mostly in November and our con ventions in the balmy, indolent, judgment-depriving months '67 early sum mer; but It is the dread of the comiug March (of events, so to sneak) which drives us so often mad. We have had variable luck in Presidents ; but our luck in senators is consistent nnd con sistently bad. sBut for senatorial courtesy there might come n time when we would hnve no senator not un avoidably detained from Washington. i i lie now iiniuui ine iiownsman wonners wlictner an inquisition into the birthtlavs of senn I . - . . i tors lor even senators must iint-e'hepn born somewhere and nt some 'time disclose' that the 'mTf orn in March a cood mnnr tho 17th, which8 Zon The might not them were born of them on Mad Hatter in his calculations above dlA not reach. TN ADDITION to all these counts X aeainst Mmcli np must n,ii kn! March is a distinctly dishonest month Having thirty one days, the limit of the law in leugthiness as to months, forty of its days are Lent, or ut least all that it has is Lent and the rest nre stolen from predecessor or successor. And who can doubt thnt there is a cryiug need that iu this most dnmnahle month of the year frail humanity should be protected from the wiles of evil by some such moritorium of the reckoning day? For theso antl sundry other reasons should we hold the now dying month of Mnrch in horror and detestation. Go, unluckiest of twelve, thou vcrltnble thirteenth among deceut months. Take with jou your clouds, your gusts, your flurries of snow nnd splashes of rain take likewise your sickly smiles that only betray the unwary. Take your shivering St. Patrick, the only green thing nbout you; take with you your VTarvili Tlnrp Anil Afnil lloO.. ........ , .... ...... ......., ...MM ..unci, juur imse smiles that flatter, your wind gusts and rains tnat natter, spatter, patter and scatter our wits. Much March has made jour Gownsman mad. The taking up of carpets for the an nual spring cleaning is anticipated by carpet manufacturers who have put up the price 10 per cent. May this be con sidered a carpet tax? It really begins to look as though some of the Blue Hen's chickens had the pip. Advices from Dover seem to Imll. cate that the frost Is already doing . .1 ma t. id, VVnlftiirnrn noauli , . uuiuubc m v.n. ,.....,. v.ujf. March showed she still had a few &aMWm m wam t ' .XC" 'J A HOW DOES IT STRIKE YOU? THE Gcrmnn revolution has driven a wedge between the Allies between France on the one side nnd Lnginuti nnd Itnly on the other. . England nnd Itnly want Germany as n market and n source of materials. Frauce is not industrially advanced enough to need a market as England needs 'markets. France probably cares less whether Germany goes Bolshevist than do her associates. France wnnts time. Intemnl convulsions in Germany give time nnd the excuse for Inter. ference. The division is on economic lines. Some sec in it n brenk up of the combination thnt won the war. But that is nonsense. Considerations of mutual safety hold France. England and Italy together. . France is the key to England's safety from Invasion. Some think that Italy will ultimately seek an nlliancc with Germany. . That is impossible. Itnly is virtually an island. She is nt the mercy of the naval power that controls the Mediterranean. So long ns England commands the sens Italy must, ns she did In this war despite her German nlliancc, cast iu her lot with Englnud. Some talk of a Japanese-German-Russian combination. Japan, unless her navy becomes as stroug as England's, must, like itaij and (Jreece, seek safety in co-operation with England. The Inst war .was. generally, n war between the great continental powers of Europe with the great sea powers of the world, the United StatcH being with respect to Europe n sea power. Only a break between the Lnitcil Stntes, when her navy equals that of Great Britain, nnd Great Britain could cause a realignment of the world power, and even then the United States s so far away as to be a rather subordinate factor, if one allows or he poss bll Ity of development that lies in the British L colonies. S FRANCE might shift sides aud ally herself with the -continental powers if England nt any time icfused to pay her her price. But France has mnde a peace that precludes any combination with Ger- "'"The sufferers from the peace are the great continental powers, Germany, Russia aud China. The beneficinries of the peace ure the great islnnd and nenjnsii a powers, in cluding France, which is bound to Eng land by mutual interests. Germany, Russin and flnua may make some day a tremendous combina tion, possessing as tuey uo iiinuiig mvui I tremend us undeveloped resource, I Ht Russia antl Ch nn an uisor '! politically and undeveloped, and horenn d are i.,.k nfiMftafr tiattnna. And Germany is tied hand and foot by the peace. The differences of England and France arc differences of immediate policy, not of fundamental interest. THE German revolution is pegged for the moment at Mueller, who is radi cal but somewhere short of I.egien, tho lnbor leader, who, jn turn, is somewhere short of the Spnrtaclsts. If it can be stopped theie it may have a sobering influence upnU Europe. The future lies thus: hither Russia will move toward German ami become more conservative, or Germany will move toward Russia, in which case bolshevlsm, with added impetus, In stead of growing more moderate as rev olutionary movements normally do, may turn eveu more violent, the necessity for conciliating the world s opinion be Ing lessened by the added strength of Svhether Germany stops where she is or goes ou to the left, depends on the Gerranny must find sjmpathy some where, either among her western neigh-.- ,. nmnni' her eastern lie shbors. Germany is like n man just out of prison. , , , . , . , Society mny save i in by giving him a job and showing mm a little kind ness, or the police mny hound him down among the outensts. fl l 1 THE German revolution lined up the town against the country. ICapp nnd his crowd represented the combination of wnilltarists nnd ngra- Tho' city workers beut them with a general strike. The Mueller government is n com promise which, on the one Hand, does not punish the Kapp treason nor the fVpirtacliit treason. ) iiUJJiM U2Wjah,e, Industrial rny,!,.. J . BETTER WAKE UP. German Revolution Is Driving Wedge Between the Allies, but Differences -Arc of Immediate Policy lion, gets rather the better of the farmer, ,i q i EVERYWHERE there is this con test. We have iu this country the grentcst "hick" legislature in the world Con gress. There was a great "hick" victory last fall, when Congress, by a two-thirds vote, passed the countrymen's bill put ting nn end to daylight saving. The fnrmer can't see nnytblng in daylight saving. He uses, ns it is, a couple of hours before daylight in the morning and a couple of hours after daylight in the evening. As one of them recently wrote to n Jvevv York paper, nil ho knows of the eight-hour day is that he works an eight-hour day before noon, nnd then another eight-hour day after noonr q qj BUT the great "hick" victory over daylight saving did not settle any thing. Tho cities, the bigger ones, nre be ginning to change their hours of work to get an extra hour of daylight for play In the nfternoon. This promises to become general. What will the farmer do? The city is his market. He has to reach its breakfast table and its dinner tnblc. There is a competition between him nr.il the industrial master of the city for labor. Sunnose the farm laborer, imitating his urban brother, should like to knock- on nn hour earlier in tne evening ro ploy golf, tennis or go to a movie? What will then become of God's noon? q q q . THE city lias steadily clranged the customs of the country, to their nil vantage. Men hnve more pleasures on the farms, largely because the cities, by their example and by their competition, hnvo forced them to. Farmers nsk nngrily why should they work two eight-hour days every day. in order to feed men who will only work one eight-hour day in 'twenty-four hours? In the long run there can be only one answer to this question. ff the farm is to survive it must find some way to. live on an eight-hour day. What has the eight-hour day brought in the city? Better organization nnd increased use of machinery. There is plenty of room for both in fnrm work, 'which like woman's work in the household is one of the backward Industries. There is wisdom in the suggestion ot former President Tnft that the govern ment retain its huge nitrate plants and use them for the manufacture of ferti lizer. Aud having provided fertilizer for the farms, steps may then be taken to provide labor. Proinier Nittl says he regards the Jugo-Slavs not ns enemies but ns friends. Now If we cnn but learn how D'Anuunzio regards them our minds will be at rest. vWell, five years for Bergdoll isn't an nwful lot," remnrked the man In tho street, "but small contributions, etc." One disquieting thing nbout Ru mania's appeal to Japan for aid is that one can't get something for nothing. PHILADELPHIA THEATRH Serrntecnth sml D iJincey Sti. P. VICTOR HERBERT'S Die Musical Success, with Oeorila. O'ltamsy "OUI MADAME" Eves.. 1--00 to 13.00. A few at $3.60. Mat Tomor. 11.00. 12.00. 11k, Mat. Bat. EITH'S TliO Sessrtn's Til((st Danrr IValuro BESSIE CLAYTON ' Elisa CANSINO Edunrdo With JAMES CI.EMON8 A CO. . FRANCES KBNNKDYJ ANNA HELD. .Jr. k Co.; THOMAS E. SHEA; DAVE UOrll and BIO HUUUOUNOINH BHOW. University Extension Society Wltherspoon Hall, W4. Kvr., Mar. SI, at 8. JANET RICHARDS Tlcktti. TiOo to tl.OO. On al now. Walnut Ah. bill. Mat, Today M O L LI E WILLIAMS ,asino -fc ten. Avs. Cumberland r prHt I PC V 1 V- U K Y rw BE L L E S fmfjf ", . . ,!.;!. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. From what state does.-Vice Presi dent Marshall come? 2.- Where are the Grampian Hills? 3. What Is a trek? 4. What Ismanloca? 5. Who wcro the' original Vandals? 6. When was the First Crusade under taken? T. What is an albacore? 8. To what family does the shad belong? 9, Who Is viceroy of India? 10. What Is the meaning of the musical term "da capo"? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1 Tho Ttuhr district of Germany Is drained by the Ruhr river, which flows west In Westphalia and Joins the Rhine nt Ituhort, fifteen miles south of WescL 2. The tympanl of an orchestra are , the drums. The classification also Includes tambourines and tabors. 3. Declus Junius Juvenal was a Roman poet and satirist. His dates are 47-130 A. D. 4. An English ell Is forty-five inches. 5. Walt Whitman was called "the good gray poet." . C The hottest part of tho United States Is Death Valley, California, where temperatures of 142 degrees Fahrenheit have been recorded. 7. Tornado comes from the Spanish word torn,ar. to twist. 8. Repousse metal work Is hammered Into relief from the reverse side. 0. Evangellsta Torrlcelll, a celebrated Italian physicist and mathemati cian, discovered the principle of the barometer. He died ln,lC47. 10. William III, king of England froni 1689 Ic 1702, was a member of Hho Dutch House of Orange, PHILADELPHIA'S FOREMOST THEATRES GARRICK MAT. TODAY EVENINGS, 8lltf Positively Last Week 2CSB ua ' VZ7I7L3IZ1 iv BorrON fmg2)JWfflM(HMsnr) A JOTOUS, JAZZT, MUSIC ItEVUB with "Wynn-lni" Chorus of Youthful Feminine Lovellneas, HOOK AND BONOS DY ED. WYNN Easter Week Seats Tomorrow Geo. M. COHAN'S Comedians In the nrand-NetV'Muslcal Comedy "M A R Y" Boole and Lyrics by Otto Harbach and Frank Mandel LOU HIRSCH'S NEW MELODIES RUexd by Julian Mitchell and Bam Forrest. DIe Cast of ttvvorlles. Easter Lily Chorus. FORREST MAT. TODAY nvr-NiNas, 8 :J5 rositively Last Week GREATEST T TOTTM lh OF ALL L.10 1 EjIN .ADA MUSICAL TUCTCD MAE COMEDIES 1-J-aJ 1 ON. WEEKS And a Sensational Cast of Singers, Dancers and Funmakera. EASTER WEEK-nSeats Selling MASK AND WIG CLUB UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA 32D ANNUAL PRODUCTION "Don Quixote, Esquire" A Musical Comedy In 2 Acts Biggest and Best Show Ever I BROAD MAT- TODAY EVENINOS. 8 1 IS ROBERT B. M A- N T E L L M?cT?d?.y Julius Caesar and Saturday Kwr. n -w.www TONIGHTRICHELIEU Thursday, HAMLET; Friday, MACBETH: Saturday Mat,. MERCHANT OF VENICE NHXT WliBK- SEATS TOMORROW N Repertoire ir-Easter Monday and Frl.tuv MACBETH: Tuesday, RICHARD 111 i Wed J.'.t'tHAJ?i,EXl Wedi Ev MERCHANT IC Mat.. JULlUH CAK&AU. ur. ""v.'j.i !""!?.. " nnis" Sat. XALNUT UXT- TOMOR.. 260 to 7Bo. yy-! EVKNINUS, 25a to 1:00 PENNY ANTE A-er.mlnr Comedy With Music NEXT WEEK SEATS NOW i. LOOK WHO'S COM1NOI " THE KATZENJAMMER KIDS THE. NA l' World's Most Famous Cartoon Comody LTro'ciuleip rocwlero "&" watson !. fikwl v WJJw&ft Market' Sf. ab, 10th. 1UA. M. to 11 P. Hi MAURICE TOURNEUR rreaenla' the PAramount-Arlcraft ricture "MY LADY'S GARTER" Added New MAC1C 6BNNETT COMEDY PAL A C" F 7ft a w W4oMAnKET STREET. JU ll,Al'l Si 'JulU4i j!. 0:80 r. M. WALLACE'ftEiL ;bxom8yb A R C A D 1 TV THkNLl?LrSHfPHERD OF KINGDOM COME" By JOHN FOX. JR. V I G TOR LA MARIE DORO. ..!?. Added 'Tillio's Punctured Romnncn' ..Cast Include: CHARLIE CHAPLIN i M A R 1 13 DRESSLKR. MACK BWAIM MAHEL.NORMAND.A CHESTER CONKLIN C'A'P I TO I .T. w I2 MARKET. 8TREET 0A'NbMAAiyAbG3Er-v- In "SHE LOVES AND LIES" REGENT MARKET 8T.i Del. 1TTII MARQUKR1TK CLARK In "EASY TO WIN" K JKA.C,Mc0'1 p. m. i . JtlUltVC, I' BTUBET AT JUNIPBiR CONTINUOUS VAUDEVILT.R "MY, TULIP GIRL" Mabel Dertar Dayo A Larsen. Others. BROADWAY Bro.1RnsJ"yd;rnAv-. "MOVIE' LAND" tit-ASA " a-i-inv FARCE sewart"in OLD-KENTUCKY" CROSS KEYS' ai3,.VBV VXZ 60'h "ASSORTED DAINTIES" PHILADELPHIA'S LEAD1NU THEATRES uirecuon ies m a. J. pnuoert BA1. B. Broad below QUI TmTDT musical UllWUJUlt COMEDY Locust POPULAR EVENINGS AT 8 tin MAT. EVERY WED. MAIN FLOOR BALCONY 2000 SEATS . $1.00 . ' Family Circle, All Seats, 'fiOc. Chestnut St. ?p?ra EVCS.. 8:16. fata lf. & O.. POP. MAT. TODAY ' $?' THE SEASON'S HENflATIONAL MUSICAL i-iuil.li.i' oucutaa V BE8T SINOINO CHORUS IN TOWN Love, Laushs, Llncerle, Musical Otitis . . . J? Will llemnnr MAT. TOMOR., Best Seats $1 ADELPHI MStThScvsat: MAT. TOMORROW, Best Scats, $1 The .treat- " -An bray ot est collection of , Farceurs that has ever been assem- nin 4 mnklnn that hss sel. ,- uwm neen wil )ieset on an eUEe'-Record bled." Press. VAk WITir AM 1I.I..9T1II fill HAZEL DAWN. WALTER JONES. JdHN wiiiiiuii. l.mu aiaukuv anu utners. TVRTr Evgs. 8i20. Mats. Li I 11V WmI. A Rnt POP. MAT. TODAY a $1 WILLIAM ' . HODGE IN HIS GREATEST SUCCESS "THE GUEST OF HONOR" THIS WEEK 1 ACT" 9 ATCPk'Ci NEXT WEEK i-r0 I Z W CUNtJ Mom. April 12 MAIL ORDERS NOW Sothern-Marlowe In SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS A HALP SQUAHB PROU ,E VBRYWIUinil TELL YOUR FRIENDS to Meet You There Excellent dance muslo at O p. m. NlEhtly at Ol80 and 11:18 p, m. Whiteside & Murdoch Boys J, FLORENCE ANDREWS " Lorraine-Sherwood Stahl gou, SARAH JONES B-'L.' OAKLAND SISTERS Dnceon. PIERROT ROOF CLOSED FRIDAY FMMFTTJ. VIllCH MimRCLS NINTH AND AllOt BTliBBTS Mats. Mon Wed. k Sat.i 2:18. Evfs.. 8:13. This Week YOUR NEXT-DOOR NEIUHUO. or TUB SCANDALS 0 THURSDAY EVENINO APRIL RECITAL E5Fg OTJ B AMERICAN VIOLINII ELLEVUE, BTRATFORD AMERICAN VIOLINIST D BALLROOM Tickets' at Heppe's, 1110 Chestnut St. Conway's or neiievtie Loncy. A DANCING LESSONS C A Teacher for Each Pupil V-7 Individual Instruction Exclusive Method Mirrored Studio 1620 Chestnut OFFICE 309 Locust 3193 CORTISSOZ SCHOOL METROPOLITAN' OPERA HOUSE. METROI'pLlTAN OPERA COMPANY, N. Y. IS, ' L'Amore DeiTre Re, Mmes, Musfo.Tlrtany. Eener, Berat. Mm. Mar. ACAPEMY OF MUSIC Mon. EVtT., Apr. .5 VhiSr'SV VIOLIN RECITAL H'E I F E T Z p. it l ntn at llepne's. HID Chestnut ft. i ORRHEUM '. Wia iLAYsND Thc'UnltIid Bride) . 49tV n sii HIT OF A SON .H8B s mM 4Z Entertainment f fi i mummrs - n ... i. n. I i"'t "' A 'K ' i" '- , i ' 'O i