' -v . '.v t.-irv wyuav w1 .iu.?t ir'vvi -," ' .a-'-lWilJ-'ivs -rlR';"r.'"Ai, ' S -.w -ySi WMHfrf'WWWWre1''Ml ,W, UkTOMMfflliWliPBWrcP!3 ..,,.,,..-.-. v..-....,, .?-,..55:' r';.;-vv-.:-,.-v-'- r .&, ?-t , EVENING PUBLIC LEDGBEr-PHILAOEtiSHIA, SA'i'DttDly, AVlllh IT iSM ' ! &mRF" Pi it R J ;i j lffenin$ public He&acr S2 '1 MIIBt.Tf! LRTIRKIl COMPANY 'icvnue ir. k. cutitib, raiwinicMT rlaa If. I.udlnatnn. Vice President! ,C, Martin, flecretary and Treasurer; n H. Collin.. John II. Williams, .lohn J. VMin, Dlrectora. ,' Ii.' ' KDITORIAI. HOARD! 4 CVa.ua If. K. Cuaris, Chairman BE2 4vlD R. RMII.BY. ....'. Editor - ti rt in - . i ii i iii N,C. MAIITIN... General Tluslneaa Itor. PttblMifei dallr at Pcri.io Lkpokk Uulldlns, ' t';' Indent n-lence Square. 1-hllndelphla ATWuria ClTt ...'n. Union Ilull.linr , Tok joo Metropolitan Tower. '.ua-irnoiT ... nil l'nrtl liuiiuinK -- -- - iSTV J-OLH... loos Fulterton llulldlnK, -HChicaoo 1H02 Tribune lJulldlng I , .. vpws iimvuw islow Recovery of Old Central Em f 'Wisiiikotov tlraiun. t T . . . 1- . ..- .., Jtt C, I 'W ToK tlinmD The dun Hulldlnc! lisjj 8lTrmcntPMOJ JtATKS . . El T" nvrNiho rrniio Lr.ixir.s Is im lo m aubftrrlhera In Philadelphia and aurroundlna- ' .towna at th rata of twalvn (JI) centa per WK. pafaM to ttif rarrirr. : I, BMW ln IV lull I tin OUIV'iir " ""'.. n the United state. Canada, or tn ted Tt a-M.ii a mI.i. ...t.M n rHlloi1lnhla. $1 Rlttta lvi...i.lAn. ruttitva IrP. flftV (0) !. twin par month. Six (1(1) dollar" Pr year, i -L, Wvxbla In advance. ,.., , ., j2L " -..."..-ii vuu co ".. - , siwr montn. ;r'&JI!roB..H.; 1"Vt In countries which have re- - dreaa, W - BtlX. 300(1 WAI.MT KKYSTONK. MAIN J00O VW , fuMIe Leaner. Independence Square. ' phttadetthtn, . . i r ' l"sPired a brilliant series of enthusiasts Member of tho Associated Press from j.nto nn(, More to Herbert Spen THE ASROrtATKI) Pit ESS '' cer and Henry Ccorge. trcluaivelu eiititlcl to the unc for T)lP socaism xvliirh the post-war 4Jt1 nf?4frtM fit tilt .! Illllirirlff I I a .a .a sK i r7i, j 1 " ' . ., ' ,.; , nermany anu Austria ana the new WkuJUJj, r "J"J. Z'YJnT, ,rZ I Czechoslovakia have been trying out B in MI paper, nnd also the heal nwti. n,. ,,,.,, ,,,,,, ,, pubhthed therein. ' .All rint.it nt rnuMtrn'-.nn of jnwinl . dhpatehen herein are alnn reserved. rhll.d.lphli. Silurdir. April 17, 1920 A FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Tlilng on which the people expert the new HilmlnUtratlon to concen trate lta attention! The Delaware river bridge. A drydock big enough to accommo date the largest ships. Development of the rapid troiult sjj tern. A convention hall. A building for the Free Library. An Art iluscum. Enlargement of the water supply. Homes to accommodate the popula tion. PROFITEERS WHO LOST rpENANTS in the Elmwood section -L matched shrewdness with shrewd Bess, business sense with business sense and resourcefulness with resource- j fulness In their clash with a proiitceruif, syndicate: nnd in consequence they were able to spike one of the ugliest get-rich-rjuick schemes ever formulated to vic timize a community. Mr. Larrlmer and his associates, who quietly formed a tenants' syndicate which enabled 700 families to buy, at reasonable prices, properties for which an ambitious group of speculators were reaching out, are to be congratulated. If extortionists generally were faced with the same sort of systematic re sistance and if people who suffer A through high prices were as ready to jf, probe1 for a way out. a good many Wallingfords would Jind themselves be fore long In difficulties. NOW FOR THE SURVEY "KTOW that the school survev com- XN mlttep 1ms leel1eil tn rronmmn.irl i that Doctor Finegan's offer to conduct ' "se from widely disparate augles. The survey at state expense be accepted. ".vPothesis of a socialistic session at we nre In a fair way to discover in this ' 'pn.ded by Plato. Campanula, More, dtr'the value of a state department of public Instruction That department is charged with the iHhooh, aro managed by the different f communities of the state, which pav I litUo heed to the central administrative I bodr. Yet that horfv Is simnn.,l f , EMMt t the schools, but the served by experts in education whose services can be commanded at will. But it is two years since the pro posal for n survey was introduced in the local Board of Public Education, and in all that time it occurred to no one that the state department was equipped for such work and was the propVr body to make It in the interes s of education for the whole common- wealth. Doctor Finegan had to offer to do the wqrk before any one else thought of calling him in. c,iL If the local board odopts the reoom- m.nj.tt .u. ' '- m IT't """us'wii ui uic survey committee, as ni it is expected to do, we are likeiv to fft have an expert and impartial re.U on educational conditions. ACTION ON THE FRANKFORD L TTTHEN Major Moore instructed Di- rector Twining to advertise for bids for the completion of the Frankford elevated line lie took a real step toward the solution of the transportation problem. In other words, he ordered action. we have been hearing nothing but talk, talk talk until Mi..7.ifv .. ' '" vnr i)nP"mr sentiment moved In wearj WKr '"ir'r diTfl0tV ,Thp forces to Now if reputable contractors make wh'rh "'" 1,aV lookp,1tltl,": " ; acceptable bids work nntemlhrialF'tT"?'?,0,,' ,e, Wrld' soon as the necessary formaHtlc .are 'T n0t 'T ta "hw"p-That , alto observed. s are gether another story. But those influ- Tbls must be gratifying to all those Itfcen -h ..jii ... A." .i . ..' thos i-titvnna t-kn ...til 1.. . , .. ... . ,... ,,,,, c M-i-vm uy too new line, ana it is ample justification of the agitation which they have been en raging in for several weeks. VAIL mnrnnnnr v vnr . . t tuvwitii ,1, t j I I j n II mt I tn nt. -- much as Bell himself t mnw v. 1 telephone system what it is todav In- , ventors seldom arc good business men Had not Bell's original device fired the I imagination of a man who happened to ' be a good organizer, its development1 miirht ha heen liln,lo,.i . .. ' Jkt flnn Tf u j,i i-.ii ... . .. SIM close his eyes and see transcontinental CT'iry S ',m,,rB0,1 whIcI' however meri HMi Hues in operation even while the crou'.l tnrimls it!f intentions, has ministered to ij, was laugning at nun because he spent J good money to establish the first Cx - perlmcntal line from New york to Providence. i So it has alwavs been v,,u..' u I l Rlr Walt.r , . i . . sh when tho first experiments uere made tl" r1ua,1J' detestable banner of junker f with gas as an Illuminating medium, , aJ"acy 'r who wrote a letter in which he im- U wns tIlPse cmssM which provoked & plored one of his friends to hurry to him t,le rcrrnt uP1,cavaI in frmany. De- c t once and have a look at "an Idiot mocrac5' is squeezed between them. . ,.H..v , uv.. ni.jui iiiiiir in I. nn, Inn ho was trying to licht tho rMU .. ondon with smoke" 7 W NEW YORK: A CONTRAST ' OTAND-PAT politicians dominate tl the , '-? Legislature of New York. And vet i the Legislature of New York passed nn anU-prpJltecring law to protect tenants. It paswd n law to curb and punish food profiteers. Wo have no such laws in Pennsylvania because of the tlmldltv of Vh a machine Legislature controlled by Mr. .vtVnr anrt other wnrnihpaitn1 ?..!nr..l.. -'t their friends. f T antltproflteerlng laws of New Talt are loosely drawn. There is still a swrwriian -jpi me constitutlonsllty. Hut ihe.v ne bb excellent purpose hartlls" a day when soma viacf. lliM. V tlli i 4 a y food gambler or shylock landlord Isn't rushed to court under charges o( extor tion, Tho moral cITect of all thia has been Rood. Life Is easier In New York titan it Is In Pennsylvania. Pooplo who nrc now complaining about the new upward flight of sugar prices may study the contrast between the two states with advantage. In their present difficulties they should be able to find n lesson In practical politics. .. -,., ,.. ,.,, STATE SOCALISM Y ELDS wwwif-a.iwm i iii.iw BTTER FRUIT IN EUROPE plrei Is Traceable, at Least In Part, to Too Much Government WHILE the economic and Industrial paralysis of Kurope can be at- . a trlhuted to so many different causes that almost any facile commentator can make out a momentarily passable case, It Is slcnlficnnt that conditions nrc most garded socialism as a prime agent of reconstruction. This view excludes Uussla, for there the principles of com miinlsm In orup are sepnrablp from the socialistic-ideals which hnvc stirred and I. ,. ,.. ,. ' "". "", ' """ "vm"""1 iiniii. in- mii-riiiuui "I nur upon which the foundations of such a . policy were laid must, of course, have i handicapped any remedy, red, reaction j ary, socialistic or democratic. Hut ! whatever the obstacles, the fact remains that theories of government, cherished j In various guises for centuries, have : been put Into practice, and that much misery and a bury'ji of peculiarly irk some restrictions accompany the result. B. F. Kospoth, European correspond ent of the Evk.nino Pi'iiuo IjKDOkr, In an article printed elsewhere in this newspaper, indeed attributes the Ger man delay in fulfilling the treaty terms to governmental machinery which has made the route to economic recovery exceedingly rough. Socialistic taxation has been onerous. A complicated bu reaucracy has replaced the old tyran nous imperialistic system. The ex change is something which by no means accords with traditional American no- tlons of democracy, with n once-lauded system of free competition and with the concept of liberty sought through indi- vlduallstic progress There are. however, citizens in this republic today who stigmatize such doctrines as hopelessly old-fashioned. Thpre are well-meaning analysts of our social and governmental structure who have looked and arc still looking toward socialism as a cure for many ills. It Is fair to refer them to a contemporary adventure. For despite the Impossi bility of reading the European situation as an incontrovertible test, certain reall ties can be considered, and they are highly suggestive. It may be profitable to remind ourselves that no actual trial of socialistic government by a major nation was ever made prior to the great war. For the system in theory there was, of course, no. lack of apologists. While united in certain elemental beliefs, these spokesmen of a new order viewed the 'n,b0.rt (,w. Sit- Simon. Fourier, Rebel. Marx, I.assalle. Cnrlyle. Mor ris. Ruskin. Henrv fJeorce. Hollnmv Taures and Ebert. however interesting. fe ""' ,",p "" 1,oushtf of "W. ;"'' tai i T ' "sarded as I J0""'" ? f" th? rW "ndi. It 1 is Possible to view them all os advocates of a benign yet vigorous extension of governmental authority, as champions of reform through the aggrandizement of the state. In some degree these reformers were all paternalists. So also in some de gree arc numerous contemporary Amer icans, even those who are convinced "'"A th."' . "f! s,.nndinK for tLe '"" t ,Vh J , . i i, ! fJJ? "h '"' "ml ' f ay "s wril 1T I J"1, nt ' tnt ' alism .has madp I impressive progress since the glowing iday" , ," that sometimes Its crow til has been so snht e tlmr If I. i . , , ,. . " IT , ' . LZI Governmental func broadened. Sneclnl eglslation abounds. Resistance to the movement is, how ever, increasing in the T'nited States. A particular example of this attitude is the return of the railroads to private hands. The bulk of public opinion was emphatically against government own ership. The prevalent disposition here is to cling to democracy, when it con flicts with state sociall&tic methods. In shattered Central Europe after r 5T ! , ,,,n s'lattc"d Ormany and Austria and in the new- bom Czeclio-Slovakia have avowedlv carried a well-meaning socialism to a new extreme. Time was when indorsement of such a course would have been called "ad vanced." Eminent scholars and phi losophers subscribed to state socialism ns t'"' successor of Individualistic dem ocra('v- 'Now tlmt tIln long-envisaged cxPerlm,nt1 lia" nt '""t been made, a S"rVe' ,S haS I,ractic!' PW- flnwnc,T. ,,,,... . . Ko!,Pnt,n VaintB, tllc results of eighteen months of socialism in Central Eiirone ns disastrous. A n? ln,-n- i-""" -"- .iwiuon ot me nM f rItiz,ns hna re""'ted In a dlvl- sl n mcn ciouus tne luture, .Mai- contents among the radicals have drifted toward bolshevlsm. Another element has pursued political salvation nnj ..." ... ...... The socialistic governments have been wastrels, squandering funds in multifarious machinery formerly left to private enterprise. Bankruptcy has been intensified by staggering taxation necessary to maintain the ever-expand ing army of officials. Competition has been stifled with paternalism, and the laws and mass of regulations designed to protect tho individual have become agents of inequity and tyranny. According to Mr. Kospoth, profiteer ing Is more flagrantly and insolently practiced in Socialist -ruled Berlin than in any city on tho globe, unless it be Socialist-ruled Vienna. For the alms of the rrconstructlonlsts in the Austrian capital he !i(fe genuine praise "well meaning andT sympathetic SoclaJUts,,r he calls them. Hut the consequences of their administration have been calamitous. An orgy of legislation has harassed the business classes. Tho po sition of the workers baa not been al lcvlated. Natural recuperative ten dencies have been chilled and baffled. That practical principles of democ racy will rise victorious from such a situation Is a hope that is tenable if not at the present moment due for realization. Experience may teach na tions too recently relieved of monarchi cal shackles that reactlonarylsm, state socialism and bolshevlsm do not cover the t-ntlrc field of government. Cer tainly liberalizing individualistic de mocracy, with governmental functions reduced to elemental necessities, has possibilities of a new appeal now that state aggrandizement has b' m found so burdensome. Socialism is no longer a speculation. Its acidulous fruits have been plucked. THE FORGOTTEN REGULARS TF THERE is to bo n soldiers' bonus, It ought to be made available for the regulars who fought In France ns well as for the men who composed the larger part of the national army. Con gress, like the rest of the country, ap pears to have forgotten all about the regulars soldiers as devoted and as efficient ns any in the world, who en dured fighting ns hard as nny that took place In France. And there were In the regular nrmy a great many men who en tered the service at the first call. The amount necessnry to provide help or relief for veterans of the Orcat War would be so great that the additional sum necessary to include the regulars in the general scheme would seem a minor detail. Meanwhile, news from I.eglou posts in various parts of the country makes It clear that there Is n difference of opinion among the men themselves in relation to the plan for federal bonuses. A referendum of some sort among the veterans to obtain their opinions of a plan that is tinged in some places with the color of party politics might be a desirable thing. A COTTON PRICE CONSPIRACY "OUTERS of cotton goods, both men J- who wear cotton shirts and women who buy cotton dress goods nnd sheet ing, will be interested to know whether Attorney General Palmer is planning to come to their relief by using the ma chinery of his department to bring the southern cotton growers to terms. The American Cotton Association challenges Ills attention, for at its con vention in Montgomery, Ala., it adopted the recommendation of its committee that the minimum price for middling grade cotton be sixty cents a pound. This Is prima facie evidence of a con spiracy to fix prices and to prevent free competition, and Is forbidden by law. Instead of recommending agreement on a reduction in acreage, the conven tion decided that this would take care of itself because of the shortage of labor. Hut in past years acreage has been reduced by agreement, aud when the price was low large quantities of cotton have been burned in an effort to duii the market. And the cotton growers have been un troubled by federal prosecution under the laws forbidding conspiracies In re straint of trade. Hut sixty-cent cotton may be outrageous enough to force ac tion from Washington for the protection of the rest of us. SOLIDARITY SHATTERED fTIHE entrance of nearly every Central -- nnd South American nation into the League of Nations marks a complete departure from thp traditional diplo matic policy of the AVestern Hem isphere. Had the United States joined the International partnership no such nov elty would have been registered. . be cause the covenant, framed with the understanding that we would adhere to It. confirms the validity of the Monroe Doctrine. But Article XXI is now a sham. It fails to guarantee the benefi cent protection of the Latin-American republics since the United States, the agency which has for nearly a century kept the principle alive, stands aloof from the pact. It is Europe with which South Amer ica is now associated; it is Europe to which apparently she looks for justice. If our southern neighbors come to believe that they have outgrown the Monroe Doctrine and Europe agrees with them, what Is to prevent Its dis regard by the league? In other words, wo have shirked our own favorite re sponsibility and South America has broken nway from an arrangement which used to be mutually beneficial. What our obstructionists pretended to seek to save they have now seriously weakened. American solidarity is now imperiled by a whole set of new obli gations regarding which we have noth ing to say. It Is conceivable that a man may be a good clergyman, but a poor street in spector; but when the man who falls in a civil service examination for the latter job is declared efficient and given emphatic indorsement by a qualified ex pert, there is reason to suspect that the lack of etneiency is not w'th the appli wti but with the system of selection. Major General Gorgas will Bhortly leave for the West African coast to study tropical fevers. If the general keeps on making sanitary one dirty place after another be will soon be like Alexander, sighing for new worlds to conquer. The keeping of streets in better re pair is said to be responsible for the fall ing off of damage suits against the city Which suggests the thought that good intentions never warded off a suit. A bonus is simply a safety-pin sub stitute for a suspender button darned useful at times, but simply a make shift after all. With a striko of operators newly inaugurated tho only things in New York not "going up" aro the elevators. We take It that the aim of a hun ger striker is to prove that his jailer is too tenderhearted to allow him to die. Labor leaders who believe in direct action will be interested to learn that the government is going to take it. Delany's backers in taking up Vare's chargps very properly speak of It as "taking the offensive.'' It is pleasing to householders to note that the navy Isn't trimming its sales. Delany's punch seems to be at least 11 per cent ginger. Split p's Palmer and the profiteers. BOOSTING PHILADELPHIA Dank Uses Drlght Idea and Statis tician Suggests Two Others- By GEORGE NOX McCAIN LEVI L. HUH is president of the Philadelphia National Bank. It was organized 170 years ago. The statement of its capital, surplus nnd profits in print, to those unfamiliar with lines of eight figures, looks like tho an nouncement of n new Victory loan. Incidentally the Philadelphia National Back runs n commercial service de partment, of which W. D. It. Hall Is the statistician and source of general and particular information. Some days ago the bank, through Mr, Hall, put out nn inspirational little monograph and scattered It broadcast by the thousands among Its custonlcrs and correspondents. It is n brilliant addi tion to the Evening Poiimo Lkiuikh's, "What's the Matter With Phlladcl nhla?" Mr. Hall calls It "The Story of Philadelphia, told in n four minutes' speech." In thirty-two crisp paragraphs It tells not what Philadelphia has done, but what she is doing. Accompanying every copy of themonl ograph was a letter to the recipient on the bank's stationery from which I crib the following: "When nny one from this city is called upon to make a few remarks, to deliver a short speech, to give nn impromptu address let him boost Phil adelphia. "No one from this city should ever be without information about Philadel phia when called upon to speak at a public function. Our achievements arc so great and our industries arc so big that they furnish a text for an interest ing and instructive talk about Philadel phia." The Philadelphia National Bank, through Mr. Hall, tells a wonderful story about Philadelphia, but if there Is any other bank, or commercial house, or business Institution, that feels like doing likewise, let me say that there is a volume of facts left unsaid. A PROMINENT business mnn of my acquaintance gave voice to a mighty fine idea the other day. It is along this same line of boosting Philadelphia. Although he did not say as much, I rather fancy that the idea is a brilliant offshoot of Bed Cross stamps, anti tuberculosis seals nnd war-loan stick ers that blazoned forth from nearly every envelope in the recent strenuous years. "Why shouldn't every Philadelphia industry boost Philadelphia not only on Its stationery, but on its commercial packages and wrappings?" he said. "The Ncver-Wear-Out Hosiery Co., The Hold-Fast neckwear people, the Non-Shine Clothing Co., nnd the Cold Steel Hardware concern, nil have their own stationery. But why stop there? "Why cannot the Ncver-Wear-Out concern run a line in black letters un der their return card or across the face of its envelopes with the words, 'Phila delphia manufactures more hosiery than nny city in the world'? "Even if the Cold-Steel Hardware Co. Is only r modest concern, why can not it, in the same way, stamp on Its stationery the words. 'Philadelphia turns out one-half of all the edged tools manufactured in the United States'? "The express nid freight packages ot all the manufacturing nnd wholesale and retail firms in the city nre num bered dally by the tens of thousands. Suppose each one of these packages bore somewhere on Its outside a good, big. easily read, aud quickly adjusted sticker, 'Philadelphia makes enough enrnet In one year to girdle the globe.' or 'Philadelphia Is the shipbuilding! center of the world.' or "Ten locomo- I tlves arc made every day in Phlladel- I phla. or 'One-half the people of the United States ride every day in trol ley cars manufactured In Philadel phia.' " Great idea! RIGHT along in line with this Colonel George W. B. Hicks, of the Cham ber of Commerrc. who. next to the elo quent nnd epigrammatic city statis tician. E. .1. Cattell. is the greatest atntUtlenl "sham" thnt Philadelphia owns, suggests thnt Philadelphia should i have an unusual commercial trade mark. According to Colonel Hicks it should bo blazoned on every piece of commercial stationery and embossed on every business letterhead. As n starter for additional ideas he suggests n scroll, emblematic of the constitution, as a background for the Liberty Bell draped with nn American flag, and beneath it the legend : "Made In Philadelphia." This trademark of the city's indus tries should, Colonel Hicks says, be stuck on every ax and saw handle, every package of hosiery or textile goods, every piece of hardware and every hat; In fact, it should adorn every article manufactured in Philadelphia nnd sent out into the world for tho world's con sumption. Another clever idea. PHILADELPHIA is naking up and the world Is taking notice. The Evknino Public Lnnonn is in receipt of scores of letters from individuals, and from different cities and towns, ex pressing interest in nnd commendation of recent revelations concerning the greatness of this great Amerienn city. Alexander It. Smith, president of the New York Port Annual, wrote to ex press his hearty appreciation of the Evenino Puhlio Leixjeh's articles boosting Philadelphia. Mr. Smith went so far as to write a personal letter to Mayor Moore, whom he has known for years, expressing his personal gratifica tion, in which he said : "The only effective port boosting is that which brings forcefully to the con sciousness of those whom yoii desire to interest the facilities you have to offer." BTTRD S. PATTERSON, secretary of the Mississippi to Atlantic internal waterways committee, wrote commend ing the effort to put Philadelphia forward in the position which she should rightly hold. He went further nnd pointed out the vast possibilities that awaited Philadelphia, once she struck her proper gait, in linking up with the West by the system of waterways which he ii laboring to effect. De Forest L. Bachman launched out sturdily at the pullbacks who for years nnvc ui-i-n BjiruxKioK me wneels of Philadelphia's progress. There were letters from mmiMn. i shipbuilding corporations, from editors of daily newspapers nnd from private citizens by the score. It threw a bril liant llluminntlon upon this subject so dear to the heart of every true Phila delphia Only one writer attempted the humorously sarcastic vein. His com ment was: "What Philadelphia needs Is n good kick in the shins to wako her up." nere and there contentment shines in a gloomy world. For instance, there are 700 new home-owners on Elmwood avenue whose housing problems nre over. The request of railroad men that the labor board pledge Itself to grant all their demands is very much like insist ing on a verdict before a trial. After all the only", people whose housing troubles are ovuU are those who occupy restricted lots Jnthe qcmcterr. FtSHiNO s tN' FULL EfLAVr "S HOW DOES IT STRIKE YOU? THE story goes that George Sunday, so'n of Billy Sunday, walked into the Wood headquarters in Chicago a short time ago, saw Colonel William Cooper Procter, who has quit soap -making temporarily for the more exciting trnde of President-making, and said: "I take It your game is to put General Wood over in the Republican convention?" "Yes," said the President-maker. "Then you're not going at it right," said young Sunday, "Why?" asked the President-maker. "There Isn't enough jazz in your publicity," replied Sunday, who was hired on the spot, he being the man win puts the " in Billy Sunday's publicity. This was before Michigan hit the cinder path for Johnson instead of Wood. This doesn't make a case. Johnson put better jazz into his pub licity in Michigan than did Wood aided bv the fon of the genius who developed the act of putting jazz Into bringing sinners to repentance. q q q CONSIDER publicity. The world owes half of its daily entertainment to It. Take the first page of an important morning nwspaper. "The French occupy four German cities." The French march In. A few days later they will march out again. They will send a bill to Germany for the expenses of the operation. Germany will enter the bill upon the list of her debts to France, totaling many billions, which she can never puy, a debt which itself was fixed where it is largely for publicity. The whole thing would not be worth doing if it were not for first pages. As publicity it makes the French feel that they arc getting something for their money nnd serves notice on the allies that they must support the treaty. Another item, "Irish women Hy over British embassy dropping paper bombs," pure publicity with lots of jazz In it. The bombs don't hit anything nnd ore not meant to hit anything but the front page. q q q ANOTHER item, "Johnson carries Michigan primaries by 40,000," publicity with lots of jazz. The Michigan delegates wilt be really for Wood or Lowden. After a vote or two most of them will quit Johnson for some vehicle with n jazz band In it sup posed to contain the winner. Direct primaries were supposed to mnke the people rule. They don't. They create jobs for George Sun days. They have, say the dispatches, great "mornl effect." They get on the front pages. They provide the candidates opportu nity to make an effective noise. If the newspaper did not print a word about them, all the candidates would do as Mr. Hoover is doing and Mr. Mc Adoo and Mr. Bryan. q q q THE press has turned the world up side donn. Originally newspapers existed to re cord the doings of the World. Now the world exists to fill the col umns of the newspapers. Governments think in terms of first pages. The first consideration of the great Is how thev will look In print. The first consideration of the near great is how they can get into print. The way to the first page is becoming costly. The ex-editor of a dally newspaper who lost n couple of millions trying to make his journal go Is now busy making a couple of millions in his city as a "consulting engineer ba publicity." He will conduct you to the front pages by the cold process of science. He deals in cause and effect. For those who want miracles, believe in oulja boards or medicine men there nre the George Sundays, who will take two and two nnd a little jazz aud make it n million. If General Wood wins, the day of publicity will be past and the day of publicity with jazz In It will be here. q q q W HO conducts the publicity for At torney General Palmei's "flvln bquadron" against profiteers? Here is qne day's story; Wronged JUST SOME SPORTS t $ Rifk '-- f7 f- Sunday Put Jazz Into the Wood Campaign and Occasion Serves as Text for Sermon on Publicity man, very angry, rushes in with a small package. Opens it spluttering. There is disclosed a small steak broiled, and five pieces of French fried potatoes. , Restaurant keeper had tried to charge angry man $1.25 for food contained In package, but he, instead of eating it, brought it to the hired men of the attor ney genera). Publicity continues with wish that more persons would make complaints. What is the big idea in the "flying squadron"? To mnke out that complaints against the high cost of living arc absurd? One day it is a row about three prunes for ten cents. Another day it is n ridiculous man who rushes out of a restaurant, broiled steak in his pocket, full of grief over five pieces of cold French fried pota toes. Is it to show tho importance of the attorney general in lighting high prices? q q q WHAT was the big idea with propa ganda for teaching the housekeepers of the land to buy cheap cuts of meats, with all the fine official ladles of Wash ington going to market to learn of Mr. Palmer teaching your grandmother to suck eggs? Mr. Palmer has had three fine Ideas for cutting the high cost of living: Dem ocratic sugar from Louisiana at the special patriotic price of twenty cents a pound ; If meat costs too much buy cheaper meat, nobody else hnvlng been able to discover any ; and the sympa thetic consideration of overpriced prunes. q q q CONSIDER Russia and the United States. Strikes break out in the United States which not even the heads of the labor unions can control. Labor is lawless and Irresponsible. We must have a strong government, say some. Where is there a strong government? In Russia nt the same moment Trotzky makes a speech about the mo bilization of labor. Workmen are organized nnd con trolled by tho government on a mili tary basis. Men arc sent to do certain work as they are sent in war to attack the enemy. There can be no strikes. There can be no idleness, no sabotage. Russia has solved the labor problem. It had to destroy capital to do it. q q q . EVERYWHERE else government is something that is pushed and pulled about by capital and labor. Germany is typical; through ex tremes It is the weakest government In the world. One moment cnpltal pushes it out of office with a revolution. The next moment labor throws the revolutionary establishment itself out of power with a general strike. One moment capital, frightened by Red excesses iu the Ruhr valley, drives the government into extreme measures for their repression. Tho next moment labor calls the gov ernment off from attacks on the Ruhr Reds by threats of a general strike. Russia has destroyed labor In our scuso of the word nnd It has destroyed capital In every sense of the word. There being nothing else in Russia, the government is supreme and unchal lenged. It is strong. But as the title of a famous Russian poem asks, "Who Can Be Happy and Free In Russia?" q q q ANOTHER minister is trying to do in New York what Doctor Park hurst did nearly a generation ago. In respouse to the Rev. Dr. Straton's charges the police havo mado a raid or two and closed a place or two. To do what Parkhurst did requires an extraordinary combination of character and circumstances. You must bo a minister against whom will not lie the charge of sensationalism. Your charges must have an clement of surprise shaking the city out of its self complacency. And you must have extraordinary suc cess In proving them on a large scale. Parkhurst had all this. And with It ho overthrew the govern ment of New York city, changed tho heads ot the police force. L And when it was all done It . doubtful if much bad ben accomplished. Tho evils of which bo complained were not ended. They changed their shape and went on. And the moral sense of New York was. such that It could elect Hylan and be on the edge of a tremendous scandal, all this year, with grand juries, district attorneys nnd ministers threatening to reveal an overshadowing crime. q q q ARE there only two grcnt parties in this country? No, we have got a long way from that. There are a dozen parties. To be a party all you need is a name, a manifolding mnchlno nnd a moral issue. The art of winning is the art of creating n "bloc," ns it Is called on tho other side of the water. Over there they elect first and then create the bloc afterward. Here we create the bloc first and elect, if we can, afterward. When two blocs are got together we call one Democratic and the other Re publican. What has become of the man who is one or tho other becauso his father always voted that ticket? Now he is one or the other becauso Borah or Gompcra or Anderson or D'Oller or some one has written a letter to which he has read the answer in the papers. Meanwhile congressmen, drop dead in barbers' chairs. Mr. Burleson's mall drops dead somewhere. And the white paper manufacturers believe more and more ardently in self-government. It is the view of Representative Hoch thnt he can sec through a Post as far as the next man. Two girls have been hired ns fire men on the Long Island Railroad, not because they can fire an engine but be cause they show the right spirit. So says the traffic manager, who evidently believes in keeping up the mornle of his employes. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. What month Is superatttlouslv re garded as unlucky for weddings? 2. How did tho Klffcl tower get its name 7 3. Who were the Conqulstadores? 4. When did the treaty of Versailles go Into force for Germany and the Kuropean Allies? 5. Who Is president of the Czecho slovak republic? 6. What were the , fifteen decisive battles of tho world? 7. How much did tho United .States pay for tho cession of the great territory of Louisiana? 8. What Is madder? 9. What Important public office did Charles E. Hughes resign In order to become a candidate for the presidency? 10. What Is a sidereal year? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Bun Itemo, where n new Inter-Allied conference Is to bo held, Is on the Italian Riviera, about twenty-slx miles cast-northeast of Nice. France. 2. Thomas Jefferson abandoned the original practice of reading mes sages In Person in Congress and Woodrow Wilson revived It. 3. The name Dorcas, sometimes given to charltnble societies, Is taken from a reference In tho ninth chapter of Acts to "a certain Tablthrij which by Interpretation Is called Dorcas; this woman waa full of good works and the alms deeds which she did." i. According to the latest census figures the city of St. SLoul8 in creased leBs In population during tho last ten years than In any decado In Its history, r 6- Trr cweretcVsi,-,t ?nUd,FrnederlcffirgClmnCeIl0ravl9 0. The teeth of the dragon which KJ""-ded tne we of Ares" thS Oreek Mars, were, according to the myth, sowed by Cadmus. From them sprang up warriors who killed each other until only five were left. 7. Mnemonics Is the art of or system for Improving the memory. 8. Sesame Is a tropical and eubtronl- cal herbaceous plant, with seeds used In various ways as food and yielding an o used In salad and alBo medicinally, 3. It should be pronounced aa thoush It were spelled "sesamee" yith the accent on the first syllable, 10. A lea. Is an open tract of ground, especially grassland. It is alio a measure of yam. THE CRITIC TALKS TO MUSIC LOVERS Weekly Comment on Things Musi cal In Discriminating Philadelphia ' TF A practical musician wants to land " one of tho really fine "Jobs" open to members of his profession, alt he has to do it seems is to become solo viola of tho Philadelphia Orchestra, Sounds easy, doesn't it? Nevertheless, this is just what has happened twice during the current season, Tho above statement is mado because Samuel Belov, solo viola of the or chestra, will leave the organization nt the end of this season to become viola player in the private quartet maintained by Mr. Eastman, of Rochester. Mr. Belov is the second solo viola player to leave the orchestra this year to take a position with a quartet, Emli Fcrlr retiring from the same position earlier in the season to become viola player with the Berkshire Qunrtct, which is maintained, or rather guaran teed, by Mrs. F. S. Coolidge, one of the patrons of chamber music in the United States whose enthusiasm is deep enough to touch her pocketbook. Incidentally, Mr. Ferlr has obtained leave of absence) from the qunrtct to go to Europe with Mr. Damrosch and his orchestra on their summer tour, also in the capacity ot sola viola, MB. BELOV has been a member of the orchestra for n number ot years nnd was advanced to the position of solo viola when Mr. Ferlr retired. He nlso took Mr. Fcrlr's position In tho Rich Qunrtct, and his going will be a loss to the musical resources of Phila delphia. Personally n very modest man, Mr. Belov's real ability ns ,a viola player was not discovered to the general public until he nttaincd his present po sltlon in the orchestra, although it was well known to the chamber music play ers of the city, for there is no place where n good musician is more effec tually "buried" than in the viola sec tion of a large .orchestra. For a couple of seasons he has been a member of tho Russian Quartet, an organization composed of Joel Belov, his brother, first violin; Josef Child nowsky, second violin ; himself, viola, and Sidney Hnmer, cello, nil members of the Philadelphia Orchestra. The quartet has given a number of success ful concerts out of town, but, nt lenst to the knowledge of the writer, has not given any formal public concerts In Philadelphia. Arthur Hartman is first violin ot the Eastman Quartet, nnd the organization promises to become one of the best in the country. That this representative of the Philadelphia Orchestra will bo successful In his work goes without say ing to those who know his chamber music experience and his ability In technique, tone nnd, last but by no means least, In general muslcianslilp. EVERY string player In nn orchestra,, with the possible exception of the concertmaster and the solo cellist, wants to become a member of a professional or of a private quartet if ho can. There are many reasons for this. One. nnd perhaps the chief one. Is that the literature of the quartet Is far more interesting to the player, especially of the second violin and viola parts, thau is the literature of the orchestra. It cannot be denied that much of the or chestral or rather tonal "padding" lies in these parts. The second violin rarely has any melodic work unless it is In unison or in octave with the ilrst vio lins, nnd the melodic passages in tho violas also arc few nnd far between. On the other hand, In the qunrtct all the instruments nre squal In value and solo work in nil the parts is almost constant. For cxnmple, the scherzo In tho Beethoven Quartet op, f0 No. 1 is divided into four practically equal parts in solo work. This Is what makes string playing interesting nnd is tho chief reason why string pinycrs literally jump at the chance to join string quar tets. AND while on the general subject of chamber music nnd the string quartet in particular, by one of thoso strange fatalities which happen in every newspaper office, nn matter how thor oughly systematized, the report of tho concert of the Schmidt Quartet In Wltherspoon Hall Friday evening, April 0, wns lost, and no notice of ouo of the finest chamber music concerts given In Philadelphia for a long time appeared in these columns the follow ing day. The personnel ot the Mcnmmc wunnet Is one of the best that it Is possible to assemblo iu the professional musician ship of this city. In addition to which it has always shown nn ndhcrence to nrtlstic Ideals which must Inevitably place it among the very first of Ameri can quartets. The program which the quartet placd was a trying one, both the Mendelssohn A minor nnd the Beethoven F major (the first Rasoumoffsky quartet) mak ing every demand possible on the tech nlcal resources and the musicianship of all the players. The performance clearly showed long nnd careful re hearsal, notnbly in the Beethoven num ber, with the desire to bring out to tho uttermost detail all that the music con tained, nnd without tho slightest ap proach to that dangerous nnd musically fatal tendency to use ono of the great est of compositions as a vehicle of per sonal or ensemble achievement, SOME ONE came nearly "starting something" at tho "blind" concert of the Philadelphia Orchestra at tho Academy on Friday afternoon n week ago. In ono of the many pauses which were unavoidable, between the verbal bulletins Issued from the rostrum by xr. Mnitunn tin. ollvor . ton trued orator of the orchestra, nnd the numbers played by Messrs. IUcIi nnd umaier, n from the outer darkness imploringly be sought a harp solo, ' This request ground keenly upon the nerves of Mr. Vincent Fnnelll. Jr., sob harpist of the orchestra, who, Inci dentally, Is ono of the greatest masters of this difficult instrument in this or any other country. It ground for two reasons; one, tho Innate modesty of this splendid harp player, and second, because It would have been imposslblo to grant the request. T to nn) CTnirillv linnn-n. but tllS harp is tho ono orchestral instrument which Is impossible to piny in mc ciur. There are in the neighborhood of ninety tvlnrru nn rim Instrument, which STO placed nt a very small fraction. of an incn apart, to iaciuuue mo uuuiua the proper string among this veritable forest, certain of them are colored. No matter what the technique of the performer, a composition requiring lonfi "skips" cannot bo played without the aid of tho eye. In works where the hands can remain within the compass of a eotiplo of oc taves it would be possible for a per former ot air. r annus aoiwy io yi them without light, but in compositions re Lr.iiUlnn nntitiflia-a nan tli lilt rPff.S ter , if l.a Inarrnmant It a 'till Vftlrfll ImpoBtflbilUy; Therefore tho.rcnurst of the bfwcchlng female voice "had to PJ. yrcretfully ffftiorcd, & t .fVh . m;,j S',l,.v'M &. ;5& .n-.f..