Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, May 15, 1920, Night Extra, Page 8, Image 8

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MfttfB Public totaier
ILIC LEDGER COMPANY
rHpB ll. K. CUtlTIS, t'ntsiUENT
leu II, t.udltiRtnn Meo i'reium
Cj Martin. Hfcretry nd Treasureri
r.M. ifnllln Jr.l.n II. U'lllInllH. John J
nrwon. Directors. .
rt.nln?t'IJ?nil-i'ri0AmVrnin
1EAVI.D K. hmii.ky . .tMltor
7tfc.J' ....v, ., '...... Mr"
fMnri
...... ,.f . " ,
liW'jtiW lal'J' ol I'lBitc l1Mn,.Ki'.i.l,Vli'"ne' '
Xi. J?'lojinilm- fc'imrr. I hlluIPi "... i
ir77..v:Tii? VJITY . "i(j'i niDn i.u..u...i
S.Bir Vork
liirrtioiT i
VTe Loyld.
inns ruilertnn Hiiiiiiinit i
TOI Knnl HulMIng
in .mhui-".. .'
CtWyuo
i.,u. inra. ...-...-.
N'l'.HK III llHAt'H
..m. h....... Ii.tll.llnv
kwISbton lloiimo, ...,-.
lit'iCnr. PeiiimMtiiiiln .e nci '","'
pnK ntnr(U ne nun iuiiuii.
. BiinaeiMt.TlnM n ITKil
Ktewno Ptnne t.rwrn i ierM
vI
i , wpnhr in rniimioipnin i"" "i""11"""" '
'i .towtij.jit tho rate of twelve (121 ""' Pp' i
Y ul.t tor moll in ivtintii nuiii1 of I'lilladelpma. .
?,W th iTtit-i state, (-ti.i. ";V"lTnd, A
U' ww!".I', ,":. ."' v. K1 1
--,tJTmw por momii pil ou' uuin.i-. c- --"
Tivp"bl. '"' "dvance .... . ....
'H, jo in lorcun loutiiri'i one im 'i
tiKJ month.
t'. S--.... CI .K..tl.... ii latiltif mlllr,1
Uhnnftfd niust i e oll m wHl .iw ml
. u r. ci mm ii i. ,. . . -p. ..---
I hu.t
'irnp,
jooo -At.M r kn.inM.MN ioo
l?-T ay J lift i-i-k.i nil rAhnnltillrnl ioi'
lo f,ernln0
WTt- . t i I.iMIj. I ..I.....
19 M r-nlrn.r.inf.tM
F .Slembcr of the Associnlcd Press
L rmr Ausncnrnn runss i
,? ffrluntveln cntillnt tit llir uc lo
tefiblicntwn o nil unrn iiapiim,x
t rt(ditfd to it nr tint othmear ntilitat
(n ih(a pnprr. nil alv .'ic local iictri
t publlthcd therein.
All right of iciibticnlwii nf spccinl
v' dhpatQhes lirrcin mc also reserved.
rhiladrlphli. Silurtliy, My 11 l'SO
A FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR
c PHILADELPHIA
Tl-Jnes on lilrli Hie iie'M'te ,lert
the 'new' Btlmlnllrntloii t eiinirn
trillo Ita'ntlentlnni
The Delaware ilvci bridle
A drvdock biff cnoioh lo nrcomito.
date the larpcst hl" , , . .
Development of the tapid trnrait ays-
(out.
A ronuenftoii hall
A bulldlmi for the rree Ltbtary
in Art Museum ,
Enlargement of the u-nler suppW ,
Homes to aecommodntc the loniim-
fldti.
MEMO: FORGET IT
t nP.PEVP nvenix In this town foicl-
t-4 Ki i. ii ..,.ot.. in llr. John
1, M'olcot's "Whitbread's I'.rewery Vis
ited by Their Majesties.
Ono of the characters makes the fol
lowing memorandum: "Remember lo
; forget to ask Old Wlutbrcad lo m
4 house one day."
We do not know whether any one has
IM teen- reminding himself thnt he uiiisi
I, forget, but there seems to lie a uu m
it going on.
REGARDING EPIGRAMS
IV TITK. Mil I I'i ninucs no preinisiuu.s
ATX tb being n man 01 iciiers. in- is n
;' itreet railroad manager. If lie were
-, nmnttrlv nnnreeuil ive 01 iiii-iui. '-
; tinotiou, he would not disclaim the apt
f'i .epigram thnt he is cieililni or cnnigcu
with
i; Any denier in words would have been
,tt proud of the nbilily to say that "if you
U go out in the rain you must expect to
.l 1, !.. .!. ..ni.iioiiiii.i in iliieli
.t gPC VVCl 111 HI' .mm...."..
N''Mr. Schmidt said Mr. Mitten mime me
remark.
Now. Just what did he sny? It mnv
have, been something still more apt. If
it were 'and he will make it public we
rml gladly withdraw the remark in
4 flic flrst sentence
SENATE ALARM CLOCK?
TS'E may be pardoned the expression
(lOUOt wneiner me miirni in .1 .
. . .1 ... ...!.-.. ..t I
leXhomas Hetlin. of Alabama, into the,
$ Senate will improve that l.odv lie has
Inst. Secured the inducement at the
ft primaries for the unexpired term of
(he lute Senator liauklienil, which has
ftlH rive yeais to run
Air. Heflin has been noted in the
House of Representatives as the pos
sessor of n volie like the bull of Hiislian,
And lie has used it on the slightest
provocation. He may. after all. serve
n useful purpose jn the othei end of
the Capitol, for no one can sleep while
T he is talking, and if he keeps his col
leagues awnke jhev'mnv do business
more expeditiously
THE AMENpE HONORABLE
A:
NEW YORK liurglnr that 1-, one
who mnkes burglarv Ins prnfes-ion
and not n mere prnliieei ien ntly had
occasion in the roiiisc of ln Inisiness
to enter the hotel romn nf 11 iiioininent
rJvJ, rhlladclph'imi in this mi Having i'-
tnl 'ureil inc luiiuc.i -mim.-ii ih- iciinrcii nc
Biswas retreating, when Hi. owner of the
WJ nionev had the mini ludirmeul to
- , -
nwaken. '1 rouble followed , which
the Philadelphia.! was l.n.llv slugged
With n blackjack and left urn ..ns,.,,s.
Now. this has happened tl..,,,s, nf
times before, anil their ,s otlg e-
pecinlly extrnordinarv in it lint this
burglar was 1 apparently a kiudlv man
nt ufuiv uuu i-ii ., hi. .1.1 s .mi
leuce. Accordingly, soine navs later
when the victim had prcttv well ncnv
ered, he. rcceiveil wliai is desciilud as
'a well -Writ tell, well nimpnsed letter"
of apology and legrel fnun the liurglnr.
ill which Hie genllemanlv footpad be
pipanrd the necessity of having lo "heal
rip" the owner of the money which he
had to hevc.
Thin is ii new manifestation of the
"crime de luxe" with whiih we an
dally becoming more and mme familiar
1110 nel insiuine win luonaiiiy ne mr i
the offeilder to send flowers In the vie ,
tm, an aueuuon wnun in mis case
must have been an oversight
Did the conscience -tu'ik n butglni
rpturn he money? Nm The sad
, neresBliy tor violence wrung hi heart
strings, but left the pocket hook nerve,
Which UBUally Ill's e V deep, lllllouched.
MORE MARSHALLISMS
TTIOK PRKSIIir.N I' MARSHAL!,
V mode two lemarknble statements in I
his addresu to the Virginia liar Ass.,- J
rio,tfon at Richmond. The first was
that had the prohibition amendment i
been considered by the Senate ni secret
a flessloil not twenty voles for ll would
have Ueeji Clisi ; ine second wns (hat
fuiw only two men In the ooiiutn nie
jMei:teii on puuuc issues, meso m
, being Samuel (.on.pcis and Judge Kl
LT'"TJ ", r'' .. vi i. . ,
V: Corning from Hie Ice President, these
iiaxertious carry a weight which thev
l.(rnil(l not linve fiom a cilien in private
K life, for it is lo be assumed that Mr.
I' MurshqII knows vvhereot lie speaks.
IV phi fins! assertion is a serious imli,.i
inviit of,the Senate, the legislative body
a imi s Ffi-'i - i-ni"iiuiir ui'Ni
ft ..1.ll. to uimnmeil In ,-nnalilnr .,,.!... i..i
hi Mill." . .-! -- I'""-Illllll
in Jilw, Jn A judicial sense and to net
If; .'without fer or favor" but purely for
i Hie Xv'flfat-r nfUie people, . It Is udlca
,. t've Ml mutm Ibut Hi" Sivaje wns
actlug without iiny clear Idea concern after a generation of lonlllct with tor
ing the wishes of its const ituency. nipt iiiachlucs. If the city Ih lo be pro-
Sir. Marshall's second stntcment Is Icotcd, rnrrtipllnnUtt In Council or oil
quite iim provocative of disquiet. The, its fringes have to he exposed mid (Us -idea
of piilting government by men i graced.
ahead of government, by law Is peril- Mr. Schmidt, when fie finally presents
Marly leptilslvo In American ideals, himself at the Inquiry, will have to
lii.i'ul.i Mr !.., i,er unit .luilep (Inr.v ' line mi ullli I lip nuhltc or HEillnst it.
should be 1 1 1 o favored ones Is iiol tiuidc ,
,.enr by the Vice President, although
there nre reusons which readily suggest
themselves. I'Jnch man represent spc-
clal or class -interest as opposed to llic
,....,.., .
general or puunc nncrcsi. i
i . llllllnl ., I,l mi i eslrnv
ing tlic tradition which consigns Vice ,
i-resnirnl.s to llir
..ntllv
.. .
lole of ntniable imn-
NOW'S THE TIME TO OUST
WEAK COUNCIL BROTHERS
. . ....
Showdown Which will Hevcai aii
.i. it nl 5,f. r.nrc
t.ii. i nv.j .a w... w-.
to Protect Reform Cause
tTTtll.'.V 4..i..it..P Vnri. i-rfervesc lie I
Senator Vare
W trltitnnhniitlA nl the (inrfield Club
t r i 1 1 1 1 ) i I i n n 1 1 nl the (inrlleld (.
lifter Mr, Mitten testified in the boule
vard bribe ense. said reformers ought
to lie "cleaned out of the City Couiicil
for the honor and glory of the coinmii
nilj." lie boldly revealed the hope thnt
lins been a consolation lo lilm since the
da of Mr. Moore's election.
The minimis business of the boulevard
trolley franchise must appear (o Mr.
Vare now like an act of the providence
which looks nflet political bosses in the
dnjs of I heir trnuiil. And jet he is
mistaken, lie cannot come back.
The city may go to him if It ,v earns
for the honor and glory of I'lfth ward
politics. Itut if it goes, it will go with
its eyes open and il "ill deserve its
fate.
. I
Mr. Moore and the Independents have I
1 a majority of one in the new ( ouncil
1 One vote lost. h( rayed, stolen ot dN
! placed in a shuffle one wobbler an
swering to the pull of hidden strings nr
engaged in n get-rich quick enterprise
of Ills own could create in the path of
Hie present administration the same
difficulties thnt frustrated Mayor Illank
enburg. If the tide ever begins to run
definitely ngainst the Independent forces
the independents might be overwhelmed
before many years, nnd it is easy to
imngine a game of political strategy
that would make of the City Council,
in the roiirse of time, a self-perpetuating
instrument of spoilsmen nnd eor-
ruptionisiH.
Th. Vnm fnnilnn nlnrr.l ilenrrntel
polities. It lost by n narrow margin :f11B n, Washington with the authority I i ti,s t.0,,,ect he, never overlooked
and it has never admitted complete de ,,f fot,Kress. I n np,
fenl. One or two new recruits in the Mr of)VPr , something iew ves. ' It 'was at Oelnmatcr's personal re
new Council arc needed to begin the Pr,v 1(, , expressed n distrust ' quest to Charles Hmnry Sinitli thut. 1
re. establishment of the old -order nt ()f nj)nr (.01rtK wm, ))0wer to com- I wn' assigned to necomptyiy him on liis
i uy nan. fso. ii mere is a wcuw or
rotten spot in the independent orginii-
.ntion il ought lo be exposed and cut
out now
The people wlio-e interests are al
, , , 1 t . .1 . 11 I t . I
. n n eli... .1.1 ...cut ll.nl flu. it.nniiv nln I
the details of the boulevard franchise
cne be pushed patiently and mercilessly
until nothing remains lo he told. If
any member of Council went pottering
about asking for bribes he on;"' lo
he ejected nnd denll with by the dis
trict attorney. An effective process for
impeachment, is provided in the city's
charter.
Mr. Mitten's testimony before Hie
committee of inquiry was astonishing.
And it was specific. Mr. Schmidt's
testimony was vague and latterly it ha
heeu confused.
The bribery cne has narrowed down
lo Mr. Schmidt, whoso distaste for the
siliinlion can lie. readily understood.
Itut something more llinu the interest
of Sears. Roebuck i. Co. and the
feelings of one nf their inniingers js
involved
If the Mayor and the independent
members elected to the I'itv Council to
. n0 , .,: ,llw ,.ri,:lini..
ju n,lnilllMnltivp nffnlre nrp to ,)p ,
,.,.,,, ,, tr,pk(., ,nl,fnl.s n,i if
men who were expected to protect the
public interests secretly prepared lo sell
out at Hie first opportunity, the names
of the lenegndes and the people in whose
interests they worked nnd the ideutity
of every one associated with the dirty
enterprise ought to he made known.
And il is preltj certain that no district
in Hie city would elect 11 man of ques-
I Unliable character lo succeed n repre
I sentntive kicked out of the City Conn
I cil for uiililuesM or dishonesty.
I Mr. Schmidt has it in his power to
sue the people of Philadelphia Hie in
formation thai they need for'lhe pro
tection of ilieir own immediate inler
I estu. His answers lo questions yester
day did not i ountcrbalance the weight
! of the explicit testimony given under
, oath liv Mr. Mitten. r. Schmidt
houhl tell everything he knows, and I lie
I iiuicker be does so Hie better it will he
I for everybody concerned.
I .pl.lllvp ,, n,.tt cllnei ,0s at
1 ,i.,.i 1 ...
iiicr iiiin ii 1 -sij i 11-11 lin'llllici snip, it
m11b), ,,,,,,, VP.itnl)p p,(.iM f)f f,.
, ,.,,,, ,,,. ,.0.rjlt , i ,, Ilt ,n
W(,p .. (1 ,)p (( ,s III1IP r:lP
, ,(f(fcs ,,, , , lnPmbpr, , ,,
. ,, ,.,,,,, ,hpil. wn M.,.P,V,P3 ,
n),,, jls h ,,., ,.,,, f ;f
,,,. m,.Pk ,hl(M1Bh ,nrif,ls ,, ,nr,.
menlsof tl
municipal sen u e
It vmis inmmoiilv iinderstiHid in the
davs pieceiling the election thai any one
who obtained inmpb'te cnntiol nf the
new 1 hnniher might, willunii great
trouble, retain an lion grip mi the nil -niiiiislrnlivc
mechnnisin fm a genera -lion
It isn't siirpiising that men who
are 111 politics for monev alone made a
desperate light to establish H safe ma
loritv for themselves in the Council, and
that 11 narrow vicloiv fni 1 J)r inde-
pendeiils left the defeated faction still
peful mid full nf light
hnl Mt van has in mind when he
lalks of honor and glorv is a shift of a
few wiles in the 1 hamher and the begin
ning of disintegration in the foices nf
the administration's majority It is
idle 10 suppose that the anti-Moore fac
tion would engage nl once in anv riot of
extravagance if il were ,.ble to control
1 a majoritv vole. It would go on ns it
' l"1" ''"" -"'" "m little by little the
. ...II...... T l.r.unu i.r... it. ....II.. .1
"""""''' ' - ""; ,T'ii"' wouiu
he reassiited in municipal affairs and,
as independent opposition was gradually
beaten down, there would be a n.
establishment of the icgime Hint used lo
win elections with police aid and gov
ern in the name of easy money,
I'.sc.ipc from Hull suit of cnntiol
would be infinitely more difficult in thf
future I lilt tl it ever was in the past.
I'he Council ns if N organized under
( . llnw ,.,.,, ,. ,)p fnr lnorp";.r
I i ienl than live old Council. It can he
I pfll,.,Pnt hl ,, work A , '
din be more efficient in had works, ion
l i ilear. therefore.- thai a pretty
heavy lesponsibility rests upon HiV
shoulders of Sir. fseimiidl He cannot
. .t
cnlltillllC to he secretive Or CVOS VC or
. , , ,,, . .,
sny wiiii""' si'infc iuiiiii-i-1. uiu and.
coinfof.l 10 omciuis vvno seem wining to
make liaxoc of a scheme of inunicipul
govcrnmctil wfitfli ""v city nttnlued only
EVENING PUBLIC
The charter providen method by which
a member of Council limy lie tried ny
his colleagues acting with the aid and
Under the supervision of the courts.
Thus far there lias been no conclusive
r ..t i..i..' -..in Wl.-t II...
'i "i iui.iiij i- mm. ....... ....
till I c ktlliwx Is Hint lllsll t ICC11 tier-
mltteil lo know enough of what went
on nl the meetings in the Kcmnmt
apartment at the Hellevuc-Hlratford.
And because public opinion will not he
satisfied until the bribe-seeker Is iden
lllled. Mr. Schmidt's absence In Chi
cago is regrettable. If he lias loateti
tliusiasm for the Inquiry the people of
tliiu i.iti Imveii I. mill tliet will cnrct
.'.,,..,. rM1111111tinll ,',r t1P rnhe
"' p,,.,,,K't,, 1-esuinptIoii of tlie probe
iwiirn lie tellirns.
, Meanwhile (lie smaller Council has
' i...in.i i...ir t.. .l.n ............. .....t ...nit....l
""' "" " ""," '" "" "'""" ''"' "
of its reaction to tiie rumors ot n
Walllngfnrd In the chamber. Xo In
quiry under the old unwieldy sjsleni
could have been mi quickly airangcd or
so thorough mid fco free from secret
obstructions lis the present one has been.
The Council i-nn establish itclf com
pletely in public confidence by forcing
the probe to a finish Unit will be a
warning lo all weal? brothers and an
inspiration to olers wliif tuny have lo
elect new men lo seats emptied now or
In the future.
HOOVER ON LABOR
MOST of what Herbert Hoover told
the Senate committee on education
nnd labor yesterday In a discussion of
means to insure just and peaceable
working arrangements between cm
ployers ami employes was written into
the report of the second industrial con
ference. which ended its sessions ic
cently in Washington. Mr. Hoover
was the author of the report. His creed
wns explained in detail in a series of
reeoinmendntions prepared for "the Pres
ident, Congress and businessmen and
labor leaders generally.
It was the feeling of Mr. Hoover
and his associates that strikes might
be avoided through n series of bonrds
established In various parts of the coun
try to scrutinize the causes of labor
disputes and aid in the establishment
nf fair working agreements in all im
portant industries. A provision was
... , ... ', i ..,.
, nr,iir,.iln., I.. l.n s,.lirmo .,l..l,
' " " . 7" . ." ". "..r- ';' I
.,. ..niiinen ,- u,e inuiiMr. . cmiicr-
rni i, in dim rn i p-iiunn i uuiu uc u
pendent on voluntary action by em
I i... t 1 .. i.. .I.- ...: j...
p m,'is null ruin 11." ii 1 1 111-1 iiiu r.iiiilir,iis
' ' '
of public opinion nnd 10-opcrntive fed
eral ngencies
To any one who has watched the
progress of recent strikes it must seem,
that n more dependable method thnnl
that now suggested will have lo he 1
found lo insure the public ngninst the
menace nf nggrcsMve mid unprincipled i
groups representative of labor or rep- 1
le.sentalive of capltnl. Iheic have been
occasions when one side was as obdur-
aie lis me ouier. ir is n.e peiquc win. 1
... .. .. .. .. ..... 1 1...
feel the squeeze and pay the costs in
every prolonged labor war. I
The views recommended to the Sen-I
,.li. , ........ 1 ll I nn .... ll.lu niii.ilLln.i un,.... If.
,,..- . n. ii, .....- .... ....-- ,.... -..ii. -...... ...
have been formulated without n due re
gard for the interest of Hie third party
in I lie industrial triangle the uoiicoui
halaut multitudes who have to wait and
suffer while either labor leaders nr rap'n
lalists slnwly nnd painfully nrike up
theii niiqils lo be reasonable.
In the plan for an industrial court,
which Mi. Hoover 1 ejects, there is as
sin nine nf 11 square deal not only for
employers and employes, but most ini
1 101 Iti lit of all- for the public as well.
Courts nnd laws operate for the ad
justment of all suits of private and per-
snnnl iiffairs Thev tnkc precedence over
individual comerns and ambitions in
llic in eiesi genera, peace ami orucr.
,,,... 1 .
Is it because .Mr. Hoover is a iiiiill-
date fin the presidency Hint he ciuinot
imagine nuepieit principles nt justice
foi'innllv applied 'In the settlement of
labor ill-quills'.' Is he, too, growing a
hit 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 u - V ' I
The i nuntrv will he vvitli Ml Hoover
in his oppositiim to such measures as
tnpiiictions, police repiessinn and in
lerfireqie vvitli free speech and free
assemblage Itut it will feel that the
plan fur puielv voluntary settlements,
tried and tried again without success,
in ii -l give away lo a surer method.
Iiiwrnnr Allen's Kansas court is far
fiom perfect. It is the snrt nf instil il
ium that might he perverted nnd used
as a ilangernus instrument nf oppres
sion Itut the principle involved is
sound nnd it will be Hie fault of the
voters, of Inbor nnd the public itself,
if a method that might be of endless
benefit lo all classes eannnl be npplied
for lack nf means foi its intelligent and
in-M employment.
A ilispaloh from Chicago says that
the honor system hns been abolished in
the Northwestern I niversity because
the student's cheat On the other baud.
experts addressing Hie national com
mittee of, prisons and prison labor in
New Vork. nnd speaking of their own
experiences, declined that Hie honor
system is the only way to treat men
and women. Does Hun mean that in
older to get good lesqlts vvc must send
our sons nnd daughters to prison?
The former pienuer nf Italy has
reallv a wondeiful mime Transposed, it
describes his lecent political career with
an exailitude impossible in the snme
number of letters, thus: NITTI IT
NIT. Vice President Marshall probably
bar no presidential aspirations. What
he is striving for appears to be Hie po
sition of America's foremost humorist.
There is nt least evidence that
lining the umisii lonvcrsaunn in .vir.
Schmidt's nllic
the trolley slipped a
couple of times.
The unfiiililig legularitvwlth wliirh '
prues nie "reaching the peak" sug. A New Nnrk song-writer whose
gists the reflection thai there Is alwavsiwife divorced him and married another
room at the top ' I hns written a song about IL There is
nn limit to what n man will do for re
Ii i- well to lemeinher thai no
"dinp of Liberty Honds" Is going to
hurt the mnn who holds on to them.
The Mayor wants men who nre free
fiom the contractor itch. This, we mnv
remnik in pnssing, takes the palm.
! r "
When the "Mystery Man asked
Mr Schmidt lo sav it in greenbacks he
never expected him tn stutter.
Those who "view with alarm" pave
the way for those who "point with
pride."
Llj.D&E
. . . . -
DELAMATER'S VENEER
Candidate for Governor Was Com
bination of Chevalier Ba?ard
and Beau Drummell on
the Surface
IJy (IKOItOI? NOX MrCAIN
IT IS thirty years sltice the itirni
ornble fight occurred I.etween (Jcorge
Wallace Delnmater and Robert 1'. Pnt
tlson for the governorship of Pennsyl
vania, Partisan lines wdfhln the Republican
pnrly were very closely drawn In that
year of ISfiO.
They were partlcufnrly cousplcuous
In Philadelphia, where William R.
Leeds bitterly opposed Delamater for
the nomltintlon. heeds was for (ieneral
I). II. Ilasjings.
Quay wns under many obligations to
Dclamnter. uho wns a bnukrr of Craw
ford county. lie had served only one
term In the Senate when he set out to
win the gubernatorial chair, lie was
a mushroom candidate.
llehunater's father, (ieorge It. Oeln
niater, had served in the state Scnnte
twenty years before, and father and son
were always ready to honor Quay's draft
for funds lo any nmoiint within renon.
II followed naturally that- Quay had
lo return the favor.
(Jeorgo Wallace Dclamnter was. on
the sitrfnre. a combination of Chevalier
Ray aid and Reau llriimmel. Ilul it
wns only veneer.
lie was courteous, suave and com
placent to everybody. The perfect Ion
of Ills, dress accorded with the perfec
tion of Ills manlier.
To his intimates nnd to those whom
he intrusted with his private political
opinions he wns u different individual.
IT WAS one of the best things that
ever happened to the Republican
party that Dclamnter was defeated by
Pattison.
Ills defeat was not I'ue entirely In
the exposure of Delnmnter's doublc-
denling and political chicanery in the
Senate.
The party distrusted him.
He was nil things to nil menMo nn
extent that awakened profound dis
trust nmong innny lenders both great
nnd small.
Hut it wns Quay's choice and the
pnrly hnd to accept him.
I GOT to know DelnmaUr very well
during the session of 1887. I was
staff correspondent for n Pittsburgh
newspaper nnd, ns Dclnnrnter wns from i
n western county, It was to ins in
terest to ci'Iltivate the acquaintance of
western men, correspondents ami pou-
'nr " me sinie ns guocrmuoriiii iun-
didntn in 1S!I0.
.....,... r,,.. ,vecks in ,ho hI1p rar.
sleeping in the same hotels and dining
nt the same tnble with a man or n
party of men. one nrquinrs a feeling of
interest anil forms personal friendships
that extend beyond the brief limit of
immediate yenrs.
IT WAS not until we reached Scran -Ion
in thnt memorable campaign
lour thnt I got to understand Hie real
Delnmater.
I had not been grenlly impiesscd by
Senator l.nu Kmcry's expose of Deln
muter s political nets.
I journeyed up to Itradford and sat
II. n u npn .if llu. nlmrn hllllsn llm
"',":r"K,':'"':i"'"' ....
lltfllf IMIIT IMIHTV. Willi (HIIIIM X I111II
lantern slides, made his disclosures
early in the campaign. 1
I didn't believe all Hint was said
ngninst Delamnter: 1 in unconvinced
even to this day.
His main faults were that he was in
sincere and cold-blooded lo 1111 utmost
unthinkable degree?, even for a poli
tician AT HBVKIIAl. of the towns en ,ou,e
ers hoarded the special train lo greet
and welcome the candidate.
After one of these parlor-car meet
ings, where IJclnmater hail responded
with unusual waimth nnd vvitli every
evidence of deepest feeling to the greet
ing of a certain county leader, he
turned to me and said :
I'm going to tememher thaT fellow
1 111 k.iiiik " .. i111 ...... . ...ti
, fow lorp ,, ,,,.,. n,Pn p,,, rn
crll0r. pm going to knife 'em I'll
:.,, tnP i;fP w, deep between their
shoulders that it'll stick out in front."
Hut (ieorge Wallace Delnmater t
confident hope of being (lovernm- was
never realized. He never had the op.
portunity. fortunately, to knife anv of
the Republican lenders.
He would have done il without a
tremor.
Hence it was forlunnte that he was
never elected (Jovernor of Pennsylvania.
w
li.LIAM I. SCIIAFKRR. attorney
general of Pennsylvania, held bis
first public position when he was up-
pointed stenographer to the legislative
eoniniittee In ISV.l which investigated,
the need for a banking department, lie.
wns n young lnvvver just admitted to ibe
hnr. and n mrking line stenographer
Captain Morrison was chief clerk of the
House at that siMsion.
fjeorge (i. Ilulchinson, cnnsiilting
specinlist to the Agricultural Depart
ment, recalled this fact to my attention
the other dnv. lie included in his rem.
Iniscences the statement that Sehiiffer
hnd the blackest hair and was the hard
est worker on a political job he hadevei
seen up to thut time.
The black hair of his earlier life ne
counts for the gray of his abundant
locks in Hie attorney general's nm
turer years.
Railroad transportation inade
quacy makes a cull for mot m trucks:
building of motor trucks iiiiise.s deniund
fnr steel and glass; scurcily of steel
and glass affects the building trade;
scarcity of building material is a factor
in the "present house shortage. Here is
one nf the thousand industrial chains
thnt hind u. chains that only wmk can
break.
Morris llillquit says the hocialiits
will poll L'.OnO.OOO votes nt the presi
dential election Since Mr. llillquit is
entitled to, his fun, this is the time to
count 'em
The liicli cost of dying lias now
been traced to gasoline. Hut the mat
ter is only of secondary fmpoitanee,
Funerals could never be made cheap
enough to be popular.
venge.
It is nnl the henrtless landlord
alone Hint drives a man out of his
home. Spring cleaning h also an of.
femier.
I
And when nil the sugar -profiteers
have been jailed we will still be jiuylug
more lor sugar mini no minis is riBiii,
Freight jums do nothing to pre
serve prosperity.
Herbert Hoover npneora (o.hayif the
"college vtftO'UnS?U. ,fyH,H -
M) Wtyj
.- ? - .. .. . . .. ,.iii in.iaiKaii m ' "'
i W.uf ' ,.,' ?f v ' V- 115SJB7V:'. If1.
IT' : -. mm f -
I ada JHIjl viSl aT',5SSt-a"5l. i .?
mmmf &k- J&iMMMmjKm
- wmm :mfflmmm$
.?.-'.i 't , i, laiaiaWrr aav r.. taliVaaai4aaaw?'WhJ5"iaaavllT'0' .-A
swnwsLm zrMSsmmi-
m&m haauf) SSSte- SCJsa .
1 SiMMmRnm iife-.u
-?srSMffl3JiiKnusBif-kA .- a.W'mrammm2masGm&!&2& i
i B-11" " . II 1 aT aa --B--J1. Jfc aaSaBBm .'
W''TS? . .W"' rA.u '' "" 'rhJaSfiV.H jf
HOW DOES IT
STRIKE YOU?
fly KELLAMY
PRKSIDRNT WILSON'S speech to
the licet and his dispatches to Ad
miral Sims reflect the impatience of
11)17 over the fnilure of the British
navv to do more than blockade the Ger-
1 iiinn Heel.
While millions died on land, the navy
rode safe somewhere.
ll hnd run away from Its own real
opportunity to smash the (iermau I cct
at Jutland, a maneuver that Arthur
Pollen, the lending Knglisli nnvni emu..
UCMTlUCS
ns Hie darkest uior on nun-
I u .,,,. I liislorv
Itlllil rt ini'i" .,.-- .,
wiiv did not the Allies, hnving tie
mentions naval preponderance
attack
III. .'.- ........ ! i- --- . -
mid desliov the (ierniun fleet, nnd thus
cud the (lerninn submarine menace and
the war 11s well .'
President Wilson wanted to know.
I'v cry body wanted to know.
V,.l..wlf mrr fnonil Ollt.
in' spite of Mr. Wilson's speeches
is. the British licet stuck
' Znl I
1 '" I
Till; Hi; never was a war in which
losses by land were no heavy.
There never was a -great war in
wh c. naval losses were so light, i
The ays of Nelson and Fnrrngut are
"" ""'
l,1,M' . . .. i:i. ..;!.
.f ' u ,, run inVay with it as Jellicoe
,,.,..,- w nor 11 mum in hkiil in.
did at Jutland.
It is a thing to blockade with.
Men niav march up against great
guns, but ships can l snu up ngnins!
them'. .
If the allied navies, outnumbering
(lermnny's unvy vastly, could linve gone
in and destroyed (lermnny's unvy under
Hie guns of (icrinnny's forts they could
have won the war in a single stroke.
What was the mutter?
Aren't ships built so thnt they inn
attack under nil oircumstnuecs?
In the defect in men?
Ave there no more Nelsons?
i Sims seems to have been nn
i u, l.ninls-across-Hie-sea speech-
mnpr
'phc' navy won the war, some one
'
-' ,. much ns the women back
1 , ' '..on'the war by "carrying on"
while the men In tin
trendies fought
nnd died. -
a
SIIOKS nre, as nigu ns nie puonc win
stand, 1-ynn (Mnss.l manufacturers
tell Iheir laborers. ,....,
Merchants in nn nun mi ny ik mc
local newspaper to permit them once
more to use full pnges in advertising '
their wares, "to move mc goons vv.uen
arc stagnating on their she ves.
The "nevcr-mind-thc-price orgy is
Pe'rhups the country wns drunk with
victory. . . .i n i ii
Hfg finnucinl men at the Paris Peace
Conference talked about our having the
world's trade In the hollow of our hand.
v.. ,Mer how the peace was made.
America and America alone would,
"'probably victory filled us all full of
the idea "thnt we were the greatest ,
biggest thiiiB u "" y". w' '"
endless pocket and a futuie bright as
n rainbow.
.- ....nrinr iiiiMnii.- i.i,,ii.ji, .-1.1 mm '
.lil'rts and chauffeurs .fll.oO silk socks !
They had to dress the part as citizens
f ibis wonder republic!
q q q
ORITISH royalty husn'1 much power,
Xj ht the Queen of Knglaml can still
,.uie over the iirew; " iwn.icn
Oueen Mary has ruled out nf the President Wilson saw tills and tried
ttritlsh court the modern bare-bucked lo widen the base of the international
i" '"' f I'aris. "government that wns bound to come.
'riio oueen does not originate fash- He tried lo get the victors to bind
I 111 '!" , ...... m.w. ,1... , ,...!. .
tnnn bUt BUC Mc-. - .. .. .,..- niwiiim
f the mode of the hour.
A generous V back is permitted and
the V may reach nearly to the waist,
Mul the moral limitations of Hie de
siens approved by the llrlti-d. queen
ml." not be exceeded. '
'i'lius rovnlty hns its uses.
idthoritonsclii.gtoil.
Hold on. nble and well-informed Kng
llshinnn when I'resident Wilson, vvus at
Hi cilnKhain Palace: "It will do him
good to 'talk to our king, who is a very
sensible man."
It is hard for us to think of n king
at, a sensible muii.
Wt'll. Queen Mary is no doubt also
.. unnalhlc woman.
e :'",' n.. ,iu t. ..i, i.
Jlifitlalv'woiiieu well dicmcd
Her imiii' .,v, ,i i. inline uu me
READtf IF NEEDED
- .jSBi
ll' Didn't Jellicoe Smash the Ger
man' Fleet at Jutland? Nobody
Knows Heuond I'eradvcntttrc
along with that of the church and Hie
mothers tn make them end the V three
inches higher 1111 than Ihty otherwise
would.
J q Ij
IT IS to be lmpei
speakers who wi
ipcd thill labor unlo.11
ere arrested at l)u-
qiiesnc, pa,, for attempting to hold a
meeting without permit from the au
thorities will ,-et a decision from the
United States Supreme Court upon their
rights.
They represented the American Fed
eration of Labor. Hie recognized labor
organization of the counTry. whose bend
wns a member of President Wilson's
Council of National Defense during the
-war.
The federation is not radical.
It can only be made radical by re
pressive notions on the part of the pub
lic autlmrities
The chief speaker was n former miu-
i'-.novy an educator.
, UH p.,
nun inc 1 iiiii-ii rjuin--- .....1.1,-
'ver contemplated such rcstnc-
cnni.,.!. uu id nrnpflcnrl III Till -
quesne, where, it is snid that for a
month the labor unionists linve tried in
vain to obtain a permit to hold n
, meeting. .
' , It is reasonable that city authorities
should have authority to issue permits
for public meetings. Itut refusal for n
mnnlli tn Iwsnn mm 1 u 1 nlnlii deninl nf
--. - .-'
, constitutional rights
q q q
j. (nnt municipal authorities could not
i require permits for meetings held within
doors,
npen-nir meeting mny block ttnf-
nr nm ,.I1USP r0fing.
, indoor meeting' never can unless
inflammatory utterances lead'to rioting.
Anil the police could nlvvnys check the
extravagance of indoor meetings,
dealing with radicalism Knglaud
has had much more experience than we
have, and Kiiglnnd permits not only in-
.Innr but nniilnor incrliiics in Kiil'IiuiiI.
A .nonknp mnv advocate the f-celng
,of Ireland, in London not in Dublin,
perhaps; that is the weak spot in Kng-
'laud's harness or he may declare for
the overthrow of the Rritisli (iovcrn-
,nent or whatever he likes so long as he
! lnl.es it out in tnlk
Our present methods of repression
nre only stirring up trouble for us.
s j j
t-vwjukH Liberals like Loid Robert
ili
Cecil and Lord Kustace Percy arc
agitated over the continued functioning
of the supreme councjl of the Allies
nnd the fnilure of Hie Lcngue ot Nn
tions to function.
We linve, whetlfer we like it or not,
international government.
It is an international autocracy,
Mr. Lloyd (Ieorge, M. Millerund nnd
Signor Nltti nre supreme.
They exercise n power such as no
three men ever exercised in this world
befoce
They rule the whole world, except,
perhaps, the I'lilted Slnles,
They govern without constitution nnd
bylaws.
They have everything except money.
If the world's money hnd happened
to be in Kurope instead of over here,
there would be no limit tn their power.
I -..
TTHIAT hns come nut of the vvnr is
, VY whnt must inevitably have come
oui oi a war which so cxiiiiiikicii na
tions as this one did, and, which left so
few survivors among the great nations
of the world, namely, a small victors'
combination to govern nie worm
lliemseives to moucraiioii,
The difference between the govern
ment he tried to set up nnd the gov
ernment which exists today was the
difference between an absolute mon
archy mid a limited monarchy.
The thing thut exists is an absolute
oligarchy fnr most of the curth.
What Mr. Wilson, ofter making his
various concessions, tried to set up was
a limited oligarchy.
lie tried to give the smaller nations
of the curth something lo sny uboiit
their government by the big victorious
nations. J J J
IT 18 proposed, that Mr. Lloyd Oeorge,
M. Mlllerand and Signpr Nltti
ke all ihelRlipuld go jnto a voluntary receivership
bul it, goes; 98 jiUPrcrhe council of nl uiniikjnd ivudj
' , ' i
f" M TT 1 . " 1
1 B
r I II I II I ' ' I " '
1 '
resume business as the League of Na
tions. Naturally, Mr. Lloyd (ieorge, M.
Millerund and Signor Nltti can't sec it.
No absolute monarch ever became n
constitutional monarch except under
compulsion.
And theie is no one who can exert
compulsion upon the supreme three.
Por the supreme three to conscut to
be constitutional international bosses
would he a nuisance to them.
Theie would be checks upon tho ex
ercise of (heir supreme international
wisdom.
Instead ot three, there would be nine
powers sitting in council: or, leaving
the I'niled States out, there would bo
eight.
Why should three voluntarily become
eight, besides accepting the incumbrance
of a constitution and byluvvs?
And the necessity now and then of
consulting an assembly?
q q q
A (IOOD excuse exists for (he su-
t preme three.
The war is not yet over.
Attorney ticneral Palmer and Presi
dent Wilson resort to that excuse still
in labor disputes.
The liquidation of Hie war is not the
business of the league, but of tho allied
council.
Hut the liquidation of the vvnr will go
on for ten years.
And if for ten years n Leugue of Na
tions with nothing to do exists along
side a supreme three with nutocratie
powers, there won't he much ot n
League of Nations.
. Its position will be as bad ns thnt of
the moon in Lewis Carroll's poem,
which wns very unhappy because the
sun took it into his-heud to keep shin-
ins 111 mc luiiKue 01 inc nignt.
q q q
TTOW long enn the supreme three
- Keep 1 1 up?
It is u question of public opinion.
Sooner or Inter the three autocrats
will have t give their subjects the
world over a duina.
It is the history of all such instiln.
lions; Kir.st an autocracy, then a lim
ited monarchy, then perhaps n nice
litlle assassination and self-government.
All Mr. Wilson provided for at Pnris
was a limited international autocracy,
the I5ig Five, now become the Rig
nice, nun a damn.
.f . . ., ,- -..., .
sili, . v:V.i h .' ",': ''"'"'raiHi uuu
;"'.,""" "" "' " -"r. vvnsons
.i ' . ..
' '!. 'y .mny ''""descend lo give us
n ".,.,,nn s duniu.
or they may wait five years, until
lie world is lighting mnd with them,
innd down n ukase and give us a
diiniii of their own.
At any rate, there Is a League of
Signor S meT' '" Mm"nl"1 nn''
Probably the supreme three rejected
Mr. Wilson's kind of international env.
ernment because it hud no power.
... n ' ..---
,,M"'ni.
Presl.ln.,1 Wll i I . i ...
....'. r.0,,p"' "i.lso.N nilslnke, if he
1 " '."r ",,s "' """king it could be
improvised.
WlM Do You Know? i
QUIZ
1. Who was the muse ot eloquence?
2. What plant Is an emblem -of mar-
lyrdmn? i
n. What is nn ".liter ego"?
1. What nation based Its policy of con
quest on tho prlnclplB of "Divide
et Impera" and xvhat doca tlio
phinso mean? .
fi. What Is tlio motto of Porto Rico"
fi. What Is the meunlne of the musical'
lei in leKiito?
7 What Is pumice?
S. What Is n latisus calami?
!i Who was the lust king of France''
10. Wheio dues the typhoon blow? '
Answers to Yesterday's Quiz
I Tho olive Is emblematic of peace
2. The Seine- Is u much ongPI f
than the illumes. , '
::. Copernicus, tlto founder of modern
astronomy, was limn In Thorn Ii
Hansentlu town In Poland, in i'i'i
LKiimeiiinon was tho lender 0f tlm
OreekH in tlm Tiojnu war.
I A
r. Kuteipe was tho ll.lise. of I UhIc
0. Ilncuusth Is llu, nit of iii nti,,;, ,.
but n. in? In. iwiniiiiK by
7 ('iiinlhM.nrn mudo of t.,ii0,.. ..,
nnd p.ir.illin
S. Forty-livo Inrlies imikn an Pi
I), Bogota js tho cupltal of the lenulilin
of Colombia, In 8outli Ainer '
10. When the Plesldent holds for in on,
than ten iIujb while Congrewi Is f
session n bill whip! VonuVJl
J r-'-"-i ; t j-i-v ivw.
inin linrni'ii iiri'tiiiifvu ,i ..... -
conlederation which preceded the Ainer I ,r," !,r,', 0,",0,-,1 'V10!- Tnb,llC'.,,,.,,,,l he
enn constitution "n mno nf ..... i i first bassoon. R chard Krueger, and the
Out f I Snreino t ree m"1, ''"""t "ulnilinw. Anton Torello. the last
pal ml as a I. rr 1 ' ,M i "I'Peari.ig with Doctor Rich in a double
r"Ln:tTlXXn e, ncei'toW viola d'amore and contra-
11 WHS 1KI lie .Xninii.ni. n,I..I ... iiivniiii ill Mini iiiiiin,
. .;...!
THE CRITIC TALKS
TO MUSIC LOVERS
W'ceUu Comment an things Musi.
cat In Discriminating
Philadelphia
TIIM season of the Philadelphia Or
cheslriu .lust closed, will compare
favorably In the Interest of the program
nniijn their, lirlnnco' with nny season
since Hie orgniil.sntloii came into exist
ence. Thc 'number of noveltcs was not
large, but.it Was Hiifliclcnt to siistnln
the Interest of the most persistent
seeker after the new. who In the Inst
itnnl.vVis Is Hie professional musTciati
himself,
Strangely enough, most of the novel
lies performed were the works of Ainer
lenn composers, nnd while (excluding
RncIininnliiofT's "The Hells" ami possl
bly the Llnpntnioff concerto, introduced
bv Mls fioodson) nothing of the first
i rank was played, still all the compos!
lions deserved n Hearing, uilliougli It U
not likely that innny of them will re
main In the permanent repertoire of the
n.iil.nohin
WI ... -i. ...
1 III the Instrumental symphonies there
were no novelties. TIiIm is not strange,
for the symphony seems to linve been
relegated to the past ns a form of In
t slriimcntal expression, and, uftcr all.
the symphony Is the one form which is
dependent upon the work of the classic
ntmiposcrs. It Is probnbly possible to
say something In the symphonic form
which hns not yet been said, or to say
something In a new way, but the ques'
Hon Is, Who Is able to ny It? Tim
modeYii instrumental c.omposer seems to
Insist tmoii ii urogram. This mnv be
' because he wishes to show how accu
rately lie enu translnto emotion from the
medium of words into the medium of
music, gr, iignin, it mny be because mot
of the music Is too 'wenk to stand bv
i Itself, nnd is grateful fof the crutch of
words, upon which to lean and to make
what the composer is trying to say
clenrer to the listener.
IN THK overtures played there was
a novelty, Henry Ilndlcy's "Othello"
dedicated to Mr. Stokovvskl. The work
is well written, ns are all ot Mr. Hod
ley's compositions, but it is by no
means one of his best. There was also a
"revival" of Jtossin'i'H overture, "The
Barber of Seville," played ns a sort of
entr'acte to Miss. Hughes's singing of
"Una voce poco fa," from the same
opera.
Hut' it, wns In the miscellaneous plecei
thnt most of the novelties nppenred.
Among these were Dnvles's Solemn
Melody," nn overorchestrntcd hymn;
Samuel Gardner's tone poem, "New
Russlu," which thes writer hns never
been able to definitely classify, nnd two
moderately interesting works; a set of
three nocturnes by (irlffes and a sym
phonic prologue by flilbert, both Amer
icans1. There were nlso two fine works
by Andre Maquiirre, first flute ot the
Orchestra. .Iti which the composer, con
trary to most of his kind, realized that
there are In the modern orchestra in
struments morfc.jmportnnt than the one
of which he is so competent n master.
Of all the new miscellaneous works
played, with one exception, these of
Mr. Muqunrro showed the most accurate
knowledge of the relative importance ot
the orchestral instruments:.
This one exception wns the cxtmordi
nnry "Pause del Silctizio" by the, we
were going to say, "modern," but we
hnd better say "futurist," Italian com
poser, Mnllplero. This remnrknble series
of dissonances, written mostly for full
orchestra mid with u fine disregard for
the possible softening of the discords by
skillful orchestration, had to do with
Hie war. the year when Italy was out
of It being the programic basis of the
composition. We nil kuovv xvhat Gen
ernl William Tecnmseh Sherman said
about war. Signor Malipiero bus put
(ienerai Sherman's remark Into the mu
slcnl idiom, and in addition he has made
it sound like ll, too. It may be a great
work, but if so, it will be" years before
it is so declared.
THK grent novelty of the season, and
one of the greatest compositions
performed, wns Rachmaninoff's choral
symphony. "The Hells." The Philn
delphin Orchestra and Chorus had the
distinction ot giving tills fine work its
first American pciforniniice. It is tin
(loubtedly the most significant, new
choral nnd orchestral composition yet
.produced by the Orchestra, and few who
iieard it will ever forget the thrilling
close of the. third movement, to men
Hon only one of n large number of
highly original and impressive effects.
The other choral numbers were the
gigantic Ninth Symphony of Heethovcn,
which must rank nt the head of fill
plinrnl fiiniierl' i nmnnslltniiM. tn unite
of the unvocnl writiug of the singing
!',ar,?.'1 llot1h r , ""(1 tn '
lho C ,lor"1 ''.'""'TV ,1,p,
poser, a work so far below t
both solo and for chorus, ami
same com
the standard
of the Ninth Hint, had Heethoven not
writ ten it, it would seldom fiud a place
upon the programs, of the great sym
phony orchestras.
The "re-advent" of the chorus,
however, is a matter of congratulation
to the niiisle-lovliiK, public. We have
Iieard this season two really grenl
i worKs. acm yeur mny vvh nm ni-in
, the Hnilims Keqfilem vvitli n suuicieiu
number of re henrsa s to tiisure the per
iiuiiliM i iii iviuhi rain hi uiniiiv ni !"
feet ion of performance which the gran
,eur of the work demands? It would
he far better to give one thoroughly
1 prepared masterpiece than three mod
crately line compositions. And the lit
erntuie for chorus and orchestra is U-
I mentnbly limited.
! A r "'" mosTmtercsting fentuic
' "r ""' s(,ason was the opporlunilv
which Mr. Stokowski gave of hearing
nRlrtiinetitH of tile ol
These included
, I.I.NV.
..,,, , i ,. or
ese sn lllllll Ul-J M IHUJ in " '"
. be ennshlered s mirtlv educational, nnd
I yet from the musjonrvaluc of the com-,
I imtiltli... snlm.tnil nnrl the mlistnl'lv milli
ner Iii which they were nil performed
thev have a distinct musicnl value o
orchestra in this country and probnbl
Hone in Hie world hns s6 many "fir"'",
capable of doing solo work as the 11"'
ndelphin Orchestra.' One naturally ex
pects violin and cello snlolhts of the
highest rank in the orchestra, but t"
hear the oboe, the bassoon nnd cpe
dally the contrubnss played in j "
imuiner in which they were during t lie
past senson ip solo work was a revela
tion even to ninny sensoncd orchestra
.attendants, not only for the inusieiuiiiv
qualities teuulred to Interpret the com
positions, but nlso for the ciiornmii'
technical ileniamls upon wdiat they sup
posed to he the ordinary orchestral
1 1 In (r
An ii matter of fact, the requirement
or the orchestral -player today nvni
chisel v the demands on the solo player
of the first rank nf 'only a few; yenr
ago. When Karl Harleben. as the at
tack of the second violins of the Hosto"
Symphony Orchestra made his de i'
he was given the unusual opportunity
of playing u solo with the W
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' ,n ""' ' Mdioikqvvskl t'PJ"; f ,ho
,UIS ,, oxeiiipllllcatlon to Hoston n in
ieiiilremenls of the modem Mini" "-,
"inichestru player ol vviucii wo m '"".
delphla have hud all cvfli more cxici"
view this season,
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inc iinusiiii) I
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