if y,ir"v"!"ii SiW nTlT ' '. I fcVlC'i." ITJL '' nif -r ' r J6 ' . G V "V1 r Af e ' ' A 1,2 i- , lU" " 11b V I' " U- iv B BiH t V t- l L U I m IP iF,'-W i i . MF j (v) f. ijjSSBLh ft' 9 'K,wrh iHi 5 111 cninaDuhltclic&ncr PUJJLIC LEDGER COMPANY Ctjujs 11. k. cimTtB. ruminanT l . ' c. niM it. i STfjM!t. LuiUrurton. Vic I'retldantl K ' iIm.MILHj Jar.tln, Secretary, and Treasurer! T 1 'v- k!i.S' '-""nil. John U. Wllllami.. Jonn . r ' " , "'mi. uirat PUfftn. Dlrtctora. tr.nrvnnt at . tininn .,,, J?0 M- K- Com. Chairman...,. TUVID a. BirtLHT . . .. Editor JOHN C. MARTIN General Uuslneaa Mir. , , lubllhed dslly at rtjatlo I.xnnra tlulldlnr. )i IneteponOence Bciuare. I'htladelpMa w Yoaic..,,, , 804 Madlectn Are. DriaotT .(..I..... . 701 Kord lIutMlna Jr. Lotn.,. loos Fullertnn Tlulldlnt CHCido , J302 Tribune Ilulldln ,. nkwb nunKAUa. WiimtmiTON JiotxAO, . .,. . N. E. Cor Pennsylvania Ave and "In,,8' W Took llinrAU . The Sun llulldlng RtfnQIMimTtnV tlATt'S Tw Kknino Pcat-lc LiinIIR 1 aervad to runsrribera. in PniUdnlphU una uurrounaina towna t th rata of twelv (IS) cents per sveek. pe-yable to the carrier. , , , .. UV mihll n Mint nnl.lill. t thll ft t!ll flM W. ibs United Biates. Pnnads or InNM rJJr poaealc.na. pontaite free, fifty (Ml) ""ftr month, six mil dollars per year, To all forelxn rountrlca one ($1) dullar Per month N 0 I e r Subscriber wlohlne; addrees hanged muil lve old aa well aa new ad Oreee. BFI.L. 1M0 TTAt MT KY'TOT M MN IIW ty Addrrn all eammMntentfona lo Bimta ....ruofte Ltdgtr. Indepe(1nc Square, rMlanWpMo. Member of the Associated Tress TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS it trclutivtly entitled to the imr for republication of jI nnr rfi)tcne credited to it or iiof oicncic credited in this paper, and also the Ucal new published therein. ( Alt righti nf republication of peclal altpatchei herein are also reserved. r-hlUJtlphle. S.lurJ.y. June S, 120 A FOUR. YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Thin nn wlileSi the people) expert lb new iilmtnlstrr.tloii to concen trate Its attention: Tht Dtlawar river brtdgt. A dndock bg tnouah to accommo date the laigest ships. Development of the rupld transit sys tem. A convention halt. X bulldinp for the Free Library. An Art .1tneum Bolaroemetif of the water aupply. Homes to accommodate the popuia. (ion. THE LITTLE PARKS THE proper city authorities should give careful attention to the com plaint of the Tiona Business Men's As aociatlon that IIuntinK l'rk lected and cenerall dilapidated. If uch Is the situation, it -hould be rem edied quickly. It in declated that the Fourth of July outinR planned for 001)0 children of the leluity will be a failure unless the deficiencies nre repaired The public parks of I'hlUdelphia are. on the whole, admirable bntli in distri bution and extent, but if the aie not kept Up to the proper wen "U re of cpn'i vni'nt they will not fill the needs for which they were planned In many ways the neighborhood paiks are mole Important to the health aud happiness of .the community than Falrmonnt Turk, because they are usually cituated In couscsted nclRhborhoods. where they are bndlv needed and where they till a ery real want. The city ennuot she too much attention to the smaller parks, especially during the summer months. PAVING PASSYUNK AVENUE MAYOR MOOKB'S decision to pro ceed immediately with the paUng of Passvunk avenue, without regard to the attitude of the Itapid Transit Com pany in "t Pt baviiig removed its poles, tracks and wires, will be reoeUed with joy b the business men of that Important downtown thoroughfare A well-paved street is a large factor In bringing and retaining business, and rnssjunk avenue is badl in need of the Improvement now authorized b the Mayor. At least from Fourth street to IJroad, there nre few streets outside the central section in Philadelphia more entirely devoted to business purposes than this southern diagonal street. The prosperity of n neighborhood depends to a large extent upon the business done there, nud tins business au be re tained, let alone augmented, only by making nieces to its stores as easy and comfortab'e as possible for vehicular traffic. a PUBLIC GETS SHORT END PIlESIln.T WILSON'S commission to stttle the wage dispute between the anthracite miners and the operatois Is jut what such a commission should not be It contains three members, one a representative of the public, one a rep resentative of the tnineiH ami one a representative of the operators This means that It stands two for the coal i Industry and otic for the public The operators an pass on to the n.... consumers an increase in wages imprest m hitiuuk "" v " """ - . . . ..f 1 .1 lies In their desire foi a priie which will not provoke popular indignation The miners aie inteiested onl tu uu , Increase In their wages The wage commission can agree on an Increase in wages through a combi nation bctvvetn the rcpresentutivis of the miners and the npcmtnr. and the representative of the puhli will be powerless to prevent it What we need is a trihunnl mm mitted to the protection of the public Interests, like J'testdeut Iloo.evelt's board lu IDOL', where the majority had no connection with the oul indiiHtiy at all. CONGRESS ADJOURNS THE second session of the Sut -sixth Congress, which began on December 4 ....A , n, A.ir! tnflni In flnia fnr ' X, cnillL- m mi. v . '".,i. ... .. the members so inclined to attend the Republican national convention In Chi cago. Four yenrs ago the world was at war and the Sixt.v fourth Cougiess remained Ip aessiou nil summer. In 101U ad journment wns not reached until August 20 or after both national conventions hYd met. It is necessary to go bat k to 1802 to find a parallel to the conditions In 101". In the former car. Congress did not adjourn until August . Much important legislation has been passed since December 1. when the congressmen assembled In Washington A tcvernl bills of great consequence await action in one house or the other today, n review of the achievements of the bcssIou must he postpoted until the record Is completed Tho Democrats will do their utmost to prove that the things which ought to have been done have been left undone, but they aro likely to find It difficult to convince the, country. If they charge Mils t'ongress with defeat of the pence . trtaty hey will find themnelves charged itk muil complicity in the offense. iTk Republicans will provldafor cam ffcrpows a complete exposition of ciive icgtmsiiuu ui ineaw- !ou In which ornithosis will be placed n the Important matter. For ex tmple, the West will be Informed that tfter ears of delay a bill has been passed for the development of water Dower on public lands In the Interest of the public rather than for the benefit of private and speculative power com mutes: the postal clerks will be re minded that their pay lifts been in creased 20 per cent with allowances for dekness; and the bankers will be told t,hnt the Federal Reserve banking act has een amended in Much a way as to re move defects disclosed by Its operation. SENATOR JOHNSON LEADS A MOURNFUL PROCESSION Presidential Candidates 8tray Far From 'Homo to Retrlevo Their Fortunes In the Wlldt of Chicago IN Tim departed days of our political innocence a candidate for the presl deticv remained austerely at home while i national convention to.ted violently with the forces of his destiny. He did various tilings In that agonizing inter val, according to his conception of dra matic values. The reporters would find hiiii ' writing calmly In his study" or "chatting easily with a group ot friends " Viewed in retrospect, the old-fashioned candidate appears like a giant of dignity and testralnt. His anxious hrnrt might l pounding him to pieces, vet he could iilwnjs say, in a reasounbl stead voice, that "he did not desire the nomination, but If It were the wish if his count!) men " Well, well, these are franker times"? All the candidates of Importance have dcpattctl from their seclusion to mo 'iill7e nt Chicago Senator Johnson led the Invasion, sitting in a tlng-festooncd automobl'e. with brass bands to the noi th, south east and west of him, like n political Joshua come to command the sun of man s valiant purposes to stand still. The moment of his arrival was a delirious one for the sage-brush-ers. They did everything but swoon with joy. Out of their ecstasy they made a new name for their belove'd and hung It on him like a priceless decora tion. So Senator Johnson Is not Sen ator Johnson in Chicago now. lie is Ilclhoarlng Hiram He roars. He roars from his motor car and he roars from hotel balconies, and he roars in the caucus rooms, nnd he roars, for all we know, in his sleep. Listen to him: "When this campaign Is over we shall once more be just Americans and proud to be Amerlcnns. Ve will live our lives in our own way, without dictation from Kurope!" Urass bands have their uses. They ire a delight to hear Rut they ought to be censored on some occasions, be: cause they can turn men's heads and stir a crowd ns strong drink couldn't stir It. Loudly spoken, high-sounding! nlntitudcs such as Ilellroaring Hiram llings to his idolaters mean nothing or dinarily. When they are thundered to the accompaniment of a good brass band they can seem to be charged with tre mendous meaning and glorious truth. Does any one alive, in Chicago or elsewhere, suppose that any one nntive to the United States was ever other wise than passionately proud of the aud he lives In, jealous nf its honor, tware of the splendor of its ancient ap peal to the hearts and minds of men? Can any one with the ability to read he still unable to understand that what Kurope, crushed to its knees, really wants is friendly dictation from Amer ica and the mere assurance that it will not be left altogether alone in the efTort to crape the curses put upon it, not by the errors of men alone, but by the errors of generations? Ilellroaring talks of the pride of 'latrlotism as if it were his exclusive ittribute and a virtue whlo.i lie alone ould bestow The brass bands nre helping him to get away with it. As the champion long-distance, high compression, double-ignition roarer of the country, Mr Johnson has been mnking a gorgeous splash at Chicago. Does the counti v want that sort of per former in the White House? Hardly. Does Ilellroaring expect to get the nomination'' In his secret heart there probablr is no sui h hope. He has, in fact, helped to provide for the ob servant some useful lessons In political psychology and political method. He has alread.v begun to show how politics should not be pla.ved When he entered Chicago with a bang and moved in glnr.v through the crowds of his sup porteis he m ached the teetering summit of his wave Hiram rejoiced Wiser men would not rejoice because Ihey know that it s from summits thnt descents begin, and the big dos of the convention are r ill a week nway If the senator finds that lie is an anticlimax In the con- ' wntlon pioiMT. if h has to regret that I lit' UTli tti "- "c ' ... ............ niemntiirely. it will be his own fault. He might have done better to stay aus teielv at home to "write calmly in his -tuil " Statesmen who have messages to deliver have been learning that the rule of the old-fashioned candidates was i pretty good one, and even Mr. Wilson has some renson to beljeve that it is hetter to talk down from the heights hon to take chances in the very midst of shouting crowds. Johnson is headlong. He strikes ' wildly. He cannot go on roaring from uo,v until the end of uext week nnd afterword without growing weary, and, what is worne, making others weary. And there aie men in Chicago hun dreds of them as full of fight as Hell- , roaring, though they make no noise Thev are more dangerous because they fight silently and with cool heads I They do not waste their energies in , ound, and a great many or them are. so genuinely patriotic, so deeply sen sitive to the needs of the country, so proud of what America has been and' will be. that they would be ashamed to ' roar about such things. They, after ! all, are the hope of the party. j Meanwhile the graves of Americans I In Eurone are green and all the youth i and many of the hopes of older nations I urc burled in places where they were sacrificed in the name of peace and for n better understanding among all peo ples ; and yet there are men nt Chicago seeking to be the voice of America who seem unaware that the world must somehow retognize and protect what was won out of fire and torment Home of them have nlready paid the penalty for Incurable, cynicism. More than one ambitious boom will enter the convention hall lu tatters because It depended on moucy alone, and more than one machine of the sort that usu ally could be depended on has arrived in Chicago with four flat tires. The client force of public opinion has been felt in the politics of the present year -asvkO'rali never Mt bepre. If Oeneral I Weil and ilr. Lovytfea and other ' TWii 1 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-- iPmtfADEtiPHll, SATURDAY, JUNE 5, 1920 plrants are hustling in Chicago instead of remaining properly at home, it Is, perhaps, with the hope of finding some escape from the fx Into which they. got because they refused to believe that times have changed'and that the presi dency cannot be bought. Ilellroaring Hiram and the other can didates who have blundered into bogs of money have, between them, imposed a tremendous task upon the clearer thinking leaders who will have to man age the convention and steer it ration ally In the way that It should go. This candMatc and that, sallying out of hotel suites, ma parade tip and dgwn in Chicago ns generals parade who would hearten and Inspire troops before battle. Theirs will be wasted hours. Steadier minded men will run the show and manage the stngc and, with sane eyes to the future, inspire the decisions. Sentiment throughout the country Is as unsettled as autumn weather. Leaders may not know just what the p.eople want. Hut they know what the people do not want. And they will go about their work with the knowledge that they are being watched and thnt they will be held to a reckoning. This Is as It should be. We hnve gone far since the days when the work of a national convention was neatly mapped out by groups of complacent gentlemen who sat In private confer ences n month or two boforethe conven tion assembled. For once, at least, public oplulon will make itself felt as a direct force on the floor and In the caucus rooms. It Is for that reason that there seems little hope for the nomination of John sou, Louden or Wood. And any one who has been listening to Ilellroaring Hiram's talk about European dictation to the t'nlted States tnlglu profit by n study of the atmospheie of Chicago and the atmosphere of those other cities of the world in which policies of govern ment ore now In process of formulation or change. ' Loudon, deep in anxiety and harassed by Inherited cares , Paris, feverish with uncertainty; Home, troubled about tach tomorrow; Uerlln. Moscow, Madrid, centers of volcanic forces, contrast oddly w Ith Chicago, w here there Is nothing but blithe nssurnncc and the consciousness of limitless strength. We alone have the power to dictate. And since we arc not and will not be dictators, the day for that sort of thing Is passed aud done. Therefore it is necessary to won der what Ilellroaring is thinking about, nnywa. The answer comes easily enough. He is thinking about himself. OUR LEARNED SENATORS SEXATOIt TUAMMLLL, of Florida, added something to the sum total of human knowledge when he asserted In the' Senate a few da.vs ago that "It will be another disc like thut when Nero's wife fiddled while Home was burning." He was immediately chal lenged by several other senators, who in clinste English demanded, "Where do you get that wife stuff?" The classical learning of the Sennte has often been a source of wonder if not nf unmixed admiration to the average citizen. In view of the usually hectic condition of the domestic affairs of Nero. Senator Trammell should have realized that to "fiddle" while Rome i was nurnmg or at any oincr time, tor I that matter would have been both un- wifely and exceedingly unwise for any of the three or four spouses of that temperamental monarch. Resides, Nero ruled about 1000 years before there is any record of a fiddle haviLg come into existence. Outside of these little points, the senator's assertion vill probably stand. As a sample of congressional English, the brief but spirited colloquy is ns fine a specimen as has been produced since the long-past day when a distinguished member of the House added "Where am I at?" to the real gems of Ameri can colloquialism. Former Secretary of War Garrison has As to Habit' Names just ach eved n e w fame by coining n nnme for an infant niece about which the parents could not ngree. The nnme nf the unfortunate infant, as devised by the former seeretarv. is "Itsa," the significant familv name being Herr, making the total product "Itsa Herr," which describes the sex of the child with, uncanny nccuracv Ah an extenunting circumstance, it is added that the little one will be allowed to splect Its own nnme when nrnved nt a proper age. Public men 'eem to be gifted In this line. Krervbodv will remember the singular and wrath engendering cogno mens bestowed noon his children by for mer Governor Hogg, one of the pic turesque contributions ot Texns to pub lic life The first two were girls nnd, according to common report, were named linn Hogg and I'ra Hogg. Then when a bov armed some eara later he was named "Moore Hogg." n descrip tive title sin h as Mr. Garrison has selected Fortunatelv there Is always legislative redress for the ill named. . Professor Hyslp, who some .vearT figo announced thnt physical ailments bv spirits, has been Rut Spirits Are Hanned! could he cured stricken with n brain lesion. While the fact itself is not incompatible with his theorv, it piojei ts upon one's conscious ness the phture of Fnte with her finger at the side of her unse grimly remarking, 'Phvsitian. heal thself!" After n University Perfectly Good of Chicago professor Uccnse Wasted had procured a li cense to wed, the Indv refused him. Among things that mnv be taken for granted the professor will henceforth exclude a wife. A New York "houseman" is al leged to have stolen $25.00(1 worth of Jewelry after drinking $10,000 worth of whisky. Pei haps ho took the jewels to pa for treatment In it D. T. ward Robert Kelso Casatt proved him self a gintleuinn of fine discrimination He is not now called upon to declare what his expectations were. Just nbout now Johnson figures he has the Old Guard' stymied. Still, in the paKt. the Old Guard has got around lots Ol WUI1K"- Is It possible that there nre people In this town who think that n five-cent fnre is setting a bad examplo to the rest of the country? Merchants nnd longshoremen of ew York nre dally providing argu ments for the establishment of nn In dustrial court. Perhaps what the Roosevelt houle vard Mystery Man is holdlug out or is a free transfer. The Bolshevists are of the opinion that they'll uevcrVget red rapid transit until they remove the Ppies, COLOR WILL BE LACKING Artist John Barleycorn Will Do Among Thoae Missing From the Republican Con vention Hy GEORGE NOX McCAIN THE Republican natlbnal convention nf 11)20, from the spectacular point of view. Is going to make a mighty drab appearance compared with' some of its predecessors. Much that rendered national' conven tions distinctive, colorful, hilarious, cacophonous and bizarre will be lack ing. Notnbly, the booze. A new generation in politics has swept aside many of the old conditions and tiadltlons. The change will be perceptible only to the veterans of cam paigns where the dollar mark was not the bndgc of popularity and the brass band was an auxiliary useful only in celebrating victory. Judging by pre-convention signs and symbols. Cash and The Candidate will go hand In hand to victory or defeat. " AS I look back over nntlonal conven tlons of both parties covering a period of nearly forty ychrs, I reg't ,0.roufc tlint thls ? Philadelphia will not be in it for an instant as com pared with other similar ghth'crlngs. The glory of her political clubs has departed. They have gone their wav down the slopes of oblivion with the men for whom they were named. Time was when no national Repub lican convention whs complete, on the spectacular side, without the nppenr nnce of n Philadelphia campaign club to add to the hilarity of the occasion and the delight of the assembled multi tudes. TTOW many survivors arc there today -- of the famous old Union Republi can Club thnt celebrated the nomina tion of McKInley and Hobart in 1800? It wns the finest marching club thnt St. Louis had ever seen up to that moment. It wns the prototype of all clubs thnt fordccades after were to set the popu lace cheering with admiration nnd wide eyed with wonder. Headed by the famous Wellington nnnd or Iowa of seventy pieces, thej i """"'s ui uiL- uu, wno nau trav eled from Philadelphia in their own special train, uniformed iff dark suits, white high hats, yellow spats nnd ennnry glove9, mnde the finest appear ance of nny political club I recall be fore or since. The late A. S. L. Shields, if I re call, was president and marshal. Hehiud the band the colors, the club banner and Marshal Shields, the front line, or tile, wns composed of David Martin, Frank Hltcr and Sheriff Sam uel M. Clement. Frank Rlter nnd ex-Sherlff Clement nre the survivors of the head of the giand procession ns It set the St. Louis thoioughfares cheerlne nn the mom. otable da twenty-four years ago. fTlHAT hateful alphabetical triumvirate -- H. C. L. has planted its heels on the neck of patriotic enthusiasm just as it has on' evcrthing else under the American sun. There will be no Philadelphia cam paign or tariff clubs at the Chicago con vention this car. The cost is pro hibitive. An ordinary Philadelphia club garbed as in days of yore and traveling ou Its own special train would have to bo com posed of millionaires (or war profiteers) at present-day rates. The effervescent enthusiasm of Phila delphia Republican clubdom will have to bubble and sparkle beneath tho red fire and Roman candles of a Hroad street pnrane. That's as near as they can come to Chicago. ANOTHER, feature of the old-time convention will be missing from the hotel lobbies and convention galleries of the coliseum this enr. I, refer to tlfc nonpoiuicai ciuo delegations that so often exercised n potent Influence In formulating tnriff planks. The convention of 1MI0 Is brilliantly illustrative ot me point Penns.vlvnnia was vitally interested. She was alwas keved up to the shout ing point whrnevei the snatulateil fin. gers of free trade were stretched toward the throat of her tmslc industries. Notable members of the Mnntifnc- hirers' Club were in attendance at the nntlonal Republican lonvention that ear. The were big men behind a big Issue, t Their names and the issue they represented were potent. Rudolph Illnnkenbiirg, James Pol lock and Howard H. French were three representatives of the club whoso names I recall on the instant H OWARD R. FRENCH Is the sole the few survivors of a notable group of manufacturers in his own particular business line who wire active at thnt time. With mingled pride and regret he re called this fact to iuv attention not long since ns he pointed out the photogrnpliH of a number of his contemporaries of those das that adorn tho walls'of his private office And what an experience this trio nnd their companions hud in their pilgrim age to the coimntlnn city! Hefore thev k at heel Harrlsburg n truck under tin ir sleeper developed a hot box nud the.v were compelled to nhnndon it No other sleeper was avail able. For the remainder of the memorable night thej, weie forced to take n day (oach. and tin re, curled up like snails on the cramped seats, they got what rest the could until they reached Pitts burgh, where another Pullman was plated at their disposal. The 1'cnuh.vlvaiiin Railroad then was not what il is today. ALEX wns LEXANDER ("SANDY") CROW then the nroud possessor of n club. The Fifteenth Ward Crow Asso dntion was one of the principal rivals for populurlt of the Union Republican Club It nlsn nttended the convention In n bodv. riKgii! out in the gorgeous panoply of pence and political distinction. Its habiliments were more gnudy than those of the sedate Union Republicans. Crow's warriors were dressed In fcrny, with hats to match, while flaming red kid glows tdded the needed touch of color to their ensemble. P(unslvnnln, hnd Philadelphia In particular, occupied a unique position in those davs. Three hundred thousand spurious whlskv prescriptions have been written in Chicago since prohibition went Into effert. declares a dispatch from the Wind City. Hut who wants spurious whisky? If the delegates to tho convention should chance to remember that they are there to register the views of the people of the country it might prove quite a shock to the bosses. Congress will do one thing today that will win the approval of the entire, country. It will adjourn. ' coUptry. way of.exnlanatloni M'lt be i tha&ome JUne.doysri rare nr remarked and some aro i,l "hS if i Jjk eL I -:::::::' s SLICHTLY J)ISFjUR.fc-J jfiUT -" . sS EUROPE SEEKS SPIRITUAL AID IN FIGHTING BOLSHEVISM Force Must Be Supplemented by Ideal to Fight Radicalism, Leaders Believe, and Turn to Vatican By B. F KOSPOTII Staff ( orrrsaindrnt of the Erenlns rublle I.rdrer In Switzerland Genea, .Tune 5. All European ex perts agree that in order to fight bol shevlsm successfully two elements nre needed: Force nnd an ideal. Force nlone Is not enough ; It must be supple mented by nn Ideal equal In suggestive power to the criminal mil seciuciive doctrine preached by the false prophets in Moscow. America has the force and it also has the ideal which is Americanism and therefore there is .universal confi dence over here that the American people will overcome the Bolshevist menace victoriously. But n Europe there is no definite ideal like Ameri canism in Ameiicu to oppose to the new Red creed. The slogan of de mocracy" has been tried nnd found wanting; It has come to mean next to nothing to the peoples of Europe. English Tradition Powerful In England there is tho ancient tra dition of "parliamentary government, which Is more powerful ps etiological! and still exerts undoubted prestige. Pride in victor short-sightcdly ternied "Imperialism" has so far kept France out of the Red maelstrom, but there is no single, compelling spiritual force behind the Euiopenn governments in their struggle against Bolshevism, and they nre consequently diffident about using the material force at their dis posal. The statesmen in the Vatican nt Rome have been quick to realize both Europe'B urgent neeu iu moi y cn orccment and the great opportur. -ties it affords them of extending their Influence. It is quite certain today that he Vatican's prestige ami power, far from dlmlnshlng. has vastly increased since the allied victory and the restora tion of European peace. It has been many centuries since the friendship and assistance of the Vatican have been sought so eagerly as today by the ruins of Europe, This recrudescence of power the Vatican owes to the Red menace tor it has nt Its command the spiritual i. '. ...i.i.... uhiMi mere material force IOrCu Willi""!- !. ;--;-- 1 lit s impotent to vanquish Len ne and his works its force is international, ike Eenine's, and wherever it s political it is also proletarian. So It is no won der that all the European statesmen, no matter how frigid their fee line; .may nave been in the past toward the 'ut can. have set out on a pilgrimage to Rome to beg the loan of this force in their battle against bolshevism. Franco Changes Attltuda In. the first place, the French repub lic is about to conciuuc iumi- uu uu Vatican alter nmii; )" " ".- -mltv It Is not yet known on what terms thiB peace will be based, but it is sof to predict that the era of intoler ance which culminated in the expulsion of the Catholic congregations from France is over. An immediate return of the banished congregations Is improbable, but it is difficult to see how the French Govern inent enn evade a complete revision of this vital question after re-establishing illnlomntic iclatioiiH with the ntican Certnlnlv both the Vatican statesmen and the 'French Catholics are confident that n satisfactory agreement will be arrived at before long President . Des clianel Is reputed to be favorable to unreserved reconciliation with the Church. TiiHenllv Rome offers I ranee the nrUUececl position in the Cithnlic world held bv the empire of the Ilaps biirKH until Its collapse and dismeinner - This nrosnect Is sufficiently alluring to reconcile French politicians to many concessions, although it is certain that some irreconcilubles will put up a Sharp ngni ju uir uuumuer oi Deputies aud hv to rally the old anti clerical majority. Britain Seeks Church's Aid Already during the war England ap pointed an ambassador to tho Vatican to solicit the assistance of the church in quelling sedition In Ireland. But it is in Italy Itself, where the pone Is prisoner," thnt the Vatican's ascend ancy 1 lnost marked today. The present political situation In Itnly places before the country the alter native of Catholic rule or Bolshevist julo. The new Catholic People's party 1 the only power in politics capable of opposjnguhc Soclallits with success. If li rll. that tli. VH.. V... . sJfttUl connection with t,hla party, but t-.-t SNAP-SHOTS i it stands to reason thnt the advent to power of n great Catholic political or- ? ionization, whoso lender, Don Sturzo, s one nf the most remarkable priests the church has ever produced, Is cal culated to re-enforce the pope's position to nn extraordinary degree. Tho day no longer seems far distant when the pope will cense to remain wholly within the halls and gardens of the Vatican. The present menacing situation in Italy Imperatively calls for the teiminatlon of the historical feud between the holv father and the rovnl house of Savoy. This liberation of the pope from physical bonds which arc certainly no longer in nccordanqe with the principles of nn age that is trlng to create a league of nations does not Involve the recrudescence of papal temporal power. Alliance in Italy Forecast Pope Benedict nnd his advisers nre not endeavoring to exploit their favor able diplomatic position iu order to re constitute the sovereign papal state which was engulfed In the lehiiih of th Italian nation. But if Italy is to be saved from Red chaos by the action of the new Catholic nartv. which nlone has n soclnl and spiritual program capable oi siicisiiiig ami canning the impas sioned masses, u reconciliation in the nature of u definite alliance between the pone nud the king of Ital seems in evitable. The great Catholic revival, which is the most characteristic fcatuie of the Italian situation todav, cannot but eventually leuel to the Vatican's liber ation. In the Italian universities, among the students of Padua. Pisa, Florence nnd Rome, it is taking the form of a revival of primitive, early Christianity; the new political lendeis. like tho Duke di Caesero, aie lenrneel adepts of Catholic philosophy Thiouch these jounc men. who nre thrilling with the vital sual and polit ical problems of the times, the Vati can is earning out n rejuvenation of the Church, fitting it to pin v n decisive part in the leeonstrurtion of the world New Conditions In Germany In Central Europe, the Vatican's loss iu power through the dissolution of the Hapsburg empire, its thief splieie of influence before the wor. has been fully compensate el by the triumph of tho Catholic party in Bavaria nud the developments of events In (lei many, where the Catholics, as in Itaiv, aie tho only non-socialistic part) with n strong proletarian following, and con sequently able to shape the govern ment's Internal policy far more effec tively than in the kaiser's time Protestantism in Germany was nl wa.vs intimntel connected with Pnn Gcrmnnlsm, nnd, so to say, under the kaiser's personal direction, nnd its in fluence hns diminished considerably since the fnll of the Holienollerns anil the decline of Prussian militarism It is a remarkable fact that Protestantism Is without a lepresentntlve In the pies- ent ticiman iinvcrnmcni, which is com posed of atheistic Sen inlists, democratic free thinkers nnd Catholics. But the war lias wrought ct other changes which stiangiiv fnvnr the ex tension of the Vatican's powet. By reuniting long separate d peoples of the same race, but of different leligions, It has brought tho reunion of the Greek Orthodox Church with the Roman Cath olic Church within the range of pos sibility. Since .the constitution of the kingdom of Serbs, Croats nnd Slovenes, Serbia has ceased to be a Greek Ortho dox state. Closer Union in Balkans The Catholics In the new- kincdnm outnumber their Orthodox coiintrjmen, nnd while there Is as ct no ques tion of fusion between the two churches It Is a significant circumstance thnt the dates of tho religious festivals of the Orthodox Church have been nltered to coincide with the Roman calendar. This measure is universally regarded as fore shadowing n closer unlou in the fu ture. To bring the Greek Oithodox Church once moro under tho popo'H supremacy is a century-old ambition of the Vntl ean diplomats, it was never nenrer realization than now, with Cardinal Gasparrl, oucof the vvlbost of modern statesmen, directing Pone Benedict's foreign policy. The Orthodox Church bas.hcen uprooted by the destruction of fzarlsm and tho tUBlntegrillon of Bus. kin. lit is Without: a honw in the vuut Umdwnica. w nce the tenter of lis stiength. and its supreme -chief, the rzar, is gone, presumably forever. Where shall It look for guidance nnd protection, if not to Rome? The Vntlcnn's influence has been moved farther east by the creation of an independent Poland. Catholic prcs tlge is extending together with Polish political Influence among the Orthodox people of the former Russlnn empire. It Is already stated on good authority that an understanding exists between tlie Warsaw Government nnd General Pctlura, the Ukrainian national leader,. to re-establish the union between the Ukrnininn Orthodox Church nnd Rome which existed lu the seventeenth cen tury. Church Alono Can Halt Reds It rcmnins to ibe seen whether this project will prove practicable, but If it " ever curneu out it win certainly rep resent a great step in the direction of Orthodox recognition of the pope's su premacy. Developments of worldwide impor tance mny hinge on this Btill problem atical but not impossible union of the iu cimrcues. ah uusstnns now ngreo inui. ji liussin is ever to be delivered from bolshevism It enn only bo done by means of the influence which tho Or thodqx Church and Its priests still ex ert over the peasants. Strengthened hv the iHninm.n. ... pcrience nnd immense remm-. e ,v.. Vatican, this power might well become Mi-nisuuic ana eiennitcly expel the Bol- siievim spirit of evil by which the unhappy Russian people Is possessed. The presumption is that nil nr rnngeiiients have been completed in Chicago for the spontaneous outbursts of enthusiasm for each of the candi dates. Hi Johnson says he Is in Chicago to prevent nny straddling on the league. What he means is that he Intends to do his darnedest to beat the Republican party. There Is a strong chnnce that the man who will win the Republican pres Idcntlnl nomination will nnive in Chi cago without any noteworthy hurrah , . General Apathy may not be n po litical boss, but he decides many clec tions. At every new hint of scandal some elark horse begins to champ his bit. What Do You Knotv? QUIZ w5uW,Mxth Pmldem of thc 2 When did Shakespeare die? 3. Why docs the sound of nrtlllerv Serarlher tha" ot 4 What nro tntruslvo roclcs? G. Where Is tho wettest plnce on earth ho placo with tho greatest rain- C. Which wns tha first ship to cross the Atlantic propelled by stem? 7 What were the seven wnn1rs of tho ancient world? ' 8 In the United States service what MoyT' '9 Ver rfl,8,d a- 3" lS.ru?s! "fti" IU 10. How old Is baseball ns n national game? """" Answers to Yesterday's Quit 1. Tho lilBhest mountain In the world Is Moum Everest, In tho Illm.i la as. with an elevation of " una feet. ,"' 2 President Roosevelt promoted n.,. erm I-Arnnlnrr cv.A... -vu the rules of seniority reB!lr'1 to 3 In the recent war tho flftcerr-lnch Buns of the Germans were heard 150 miles uway. -uru 4 Igneous rocks nro rocltB thnt im.. solidified from a molten state 5. The proportions of oxygen ami nltr yen in the air at the inrth-a iuP' fato aro 78 per cent nitrogen and 21 per cent oxygon- unu 0 A "horseiKiwcr" represents ti, enersy required to lift u vvehjlit n? 33,000 pounds one toot iS t mlnuto ' '" one 7 James G, Dlalne was known ... "The Plumed Knlsht" for the r? son that R l! Ingersolj l0 rP?crrT o htm In his nominating stech n 1878. Uep"b,,can mention ' in 8 Tho ancient name of Swltzerin.. wns Helvetia and the name at il untie UIH on tin limine . ..'"" ."I'll 9. OH was first struck Irr this counts at tho Drake well, TltusvlliS r7 on August 28. 18tD ,no' ra- :: ', " oi'impB. 10. The centennial anniversary of transatlantlo atearn navigation was .; Jv!lln 8avnna". " May it, 1 i'i THE CRITIC TALKS TO MUSIC LOVEld Weekly Comment on Things Mu, cm in uttcrinilnaUng Philadelphia INTENSE devotion to an Me.Tti three main reasons fnr ti, ..! i-wi-u.ii.iii., , ,niir, mini worir nr. ti ee main reasons fnr ti, ...'.' 'I the annual Bach festival at Betlilfil.' Pennsylvania hns tho honor of beln,? nnmit nr in ntiitr rnitainni . . i United Rentes 1,!M, I. i? 7" ." C. - irr ... "v: u,:i'nninr I, imvo nnyuung 11KC the tntlS en lnl ennce I hat the Tlnlrnti. l.JiV81" hlfc "' ''""nnci An 111 Mia nnba ftC n-. . success rfuT afrar. ..,.'rr:;c,ml,i'i)i the work enes tn nm. ,..n..i.. ,, ,0!l Dr. J. Free) Wolle. Doc or Wo Ml .' -. .".it i." . "TJ. ,l "n?tmn uu ; ,." "uu" io nis triends Ions be 1 fore the first Bach festival was tJ mi iinen. in 17101. the urst Ilneli MP .imiheXri . W , "l "1 "M I even thought of, much iess pranncn ij annual affair. ' L iawuwraa uv KlUL L1II1I- lllll-in II-.. Ho was anxious to give the first w,. formance in the United States of tk, B minor mass, nnd with the defermloi. tlon nnd devotion to his lelen which l,n characterized his work with the 1M Choir ever since, he carried it to n ..a cessful conclusion, Last week tit writer, who attended that first nerfn nce, mentally contrasted the scene of 1000, when it was first given, with the chorus, orchestra and, above ad, ti. audience of this year's performance And yet, considering the dlf!i(iil'tIM under which Doctor Wolle labortj iweuij jrurn ago, inc small nnd com. paratlvely inadequate chorus, the .. chestra, made up largely of nmntmll players, nnd other things incidental tv the initial performance of the glgtmtltl composition, cue pcriormnnce wmI nmazingiy gooa, Due no one m the conn. try but J. Fred Wolle. with his ... thusinsm and his ability to transmit that enthusiasm to his singers and In. strumcntilbts, ccaild have done It. i LOVE of the music of Sebastian Had is not a flash In the pan. Once ac quired, it never leaves the devotee. M this Is true to a greater extent of hit music than of that of any other com poser. Every year thc same faces an seen at Bethlehem and thc "high spots'; of the B minor mass and there art lota of them always make the sami profound impression of dignity, gran deur and nwe. The mass Is one of tli greatest of choral works and is, an probably always will be, the chief event of thc Bach festival. But that first day should not he over looked in its importance to thc mud clans. Then It Is that works ol th greatest musical genius who ever lived, which cannot be heard elsewhere, art sung. The masR has been given la Philadelphia and in New York, and, II the writer remembers correctly, lo Chi cago, but in none of these music renter! are the motets, thc cantatas and the other great choral works given. Doctor Wolle has the music of Se bastian Bach nt his finger ends n1 nearly always on the first day of the festival there is something on the pro gram that even the close student ol Bach has never heard before. It vai well worth a trip to Bethlehem tlili year to hear the marvelous motet "Sine Ye Unto the Lord a New-Made Song," for unaccompanied voices. THE outstanding feature of the mush of Bach is its eternal youth nnd freshness, giving it n sense of modernity that the work of no other composer ol his time has, or for that matter of nnj composer, between him nnd Haydn Dissonances ns sharp ns nny that De bussy or Ravel use appear constantly, with this importnnt reservation: Bad uses them logically aud for a specifif effect never lor the sake of n force! originality and he nlwas rcsolrei them. The use of the dlssonnnt wns wen known to Bach ; but, for that matter, it was pretty nearly everything else mu sically. Many times performers thltl that they havo founej something new u modern music, only to find later that Bach knew nnd used the same thing I couple of centuries before. The service thnt Doctor Wolle hi performed for music in the Unite. States by making Bach's works knowi and appreciated can hardlv be overesti mated. Schumann's advice to mud cinns, both young nnd old, was "nun Bach your dallv bread." and thnt nilvlri is just as sound now as it was in Schu mann's day. Doctor Wolle and the Bach Choir have set the table and. froa the increasing interest felt nnntially lo thc Bach festival, a large number M American musicians are taking Schu mann's advice. LIKE most musical events of til highest character.' the Bach festival shows nn annual financial deficit, whlea Is made up by a number of public spirited men and women. But n'Pf '? It is n service of love and devotion botn on the part of Doctor Wolle nnd thl members of the choir. Service such as J. Fred Wolle hji given to the music of Bach cannot M bought; It must be given or It is not forthcoming, and once given there is M sum adequate to pay for It. It i personality that has held the membeti of tho choir together, nnd only t" practical musician knows what it mean to go through n year of assiduous re hearsal, and rehearsals must be long and hard to sing Bach's music as tM Bethlehem Choir sings it. NEWS from France is to the effect that Walter Damrosch and hl ' chestra are making a profound imprei slon in that country wi a their rendi tions of modern music, bit the critic the Paris Figaro is reluctantly W" to the conclusion thnt Americans pre fer the cmde audacities of our contem porary school to the gentle classicism o our old masters." The performance ft Herlloz's overture to "Bcnveiiutn Ui llni" (ngnln in the words of he crillji "to say nothing of Beethoven s Hfrw Symphony, grated upon ones mu"ic' nerves." . This attitude of the French erliie probably has Its foundation In i'"ti0"'', fkm. It Is a fact that the mule'inn one country agree that the conduelori o another, with the possible exception o thc German conductors, in whom sjmphnnic tradition is inbred, brrauw it is the natural form of Instrument" expression of their grent fompof". a erv well in the modern music, bntsr. totally lacking in their concep tlon the great .-lassie writers. This was ease In this country whe. tie onjer vatoire Orchestra, admittedly the W" In Vrnnce, visited the Unite. Bin .. it has been the experience of n teiidMi at the Boston Symphony Orchestra cor. certs under two French leaders, w nendlngs of the classics by Mr. lJ ?och 8can hardly have been moie d pleasing tq Fiench musicians than w the symphonies of Beethoven, and ' peclally Schumann, to Amerh-nn.nu.i clans ns interpreted by certain IW'D gulshed French conductors. K However, there may be even a . I ep reason and that may be in the m Itself, Interpretation of many mor works, In which nobody (? ' would seem not eyen the m!'p"r h', self) knows what Is meant, U a W different matter htm i tho reading .oM clsieslo, qf which every wpiWjnMfv cert soer ha ls onn conception. , cA'rt'ti-i V ft I' tV'ti