!V ' ir',V ' ,.H'- -K :,ti .?,, ! RS iff uniC40o I I MI- -' I feemng Itotflic ITebijcr . PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ,, hnmU8 IL K. CUIIT1B. PminMT l5!..H. Lurttnuton, VIct Presidents a Martin. Secretary and Treaaurari - v-niiinn. John Is. Williams. Joan J. on. Director. .. " j KmimrAt, noAnoi ' Ctaoa If. It. Cums, Chairman yfivau V. BJflLCV Editor IE .., ,1 t.WTlJf C. ifARTTV General Huilneta Mar. V t'llPubllihad daily at I'nntm I.iihifh nulldlnr, i 'Ji J . - tndtwnrf.nM Mi,,iw tt,Mf1lnhla ; , i Aturtio Crrr PrMs-lntim Bulldlnc la, 4 jji ioik.., ... 3 Maittwm Ave. WW Tmr ItllHfr HI. ? X-oow... . ........ TOl Ford UUUURIK ..100S Fullerton nulldlnr . inn's TviAunA nulldlnr ' ',. NEWS HUREAUH: , . 3paamsaTo ntmmc, f Js IT" a Cor" Pennsylvania Ave. and 14th 8t. ' "Niw Vow IlOHtu.. . Tb Sun Bulldlnr . . 8tiH8CR!PTION HaTKS . , k, , .Tito EvKNINd Pobi.io Linflcn li served tn a' auiiH w. I nv.il. j.i-ui. anaeniiniiinir tumjs At th rate of twelve (12) cents pr U -t '"J, nvame to th currier. , . . .. vt s Y " u to noinrn omn.r nr rniiaw;nmt P-- K lf unura maif. banana, or uuiw V.- tf ponrV tftlona. potR freo. fltty ni I "tn ntn aw . .. OI (! 4Artaa luf Va.P. 3 pavarto In advance j in itj aii rorelan countries one ii nonar ,.Vpr month. .. tand muit clve old as well aa new ad drua. !&, 1000 WALNUT KEYSTONC. MAIN J00O 2S t Address all communfroHnJ to Evening rublic Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia. Member of the Associated Press t THE AssnnrATRD PRESS is A exclusively entitled to the exclusively entitled to the uto for republication of nil nctc dispatches credited tn it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also tkc local netos BttMf.eAM J7i.i. All rights of republication of special aispatches herein arc alro reserved. Philadelphia, Saturday. June 15. 1 A FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Thlnra on which the people expect lh new nilmlnlatratloD to concen trate Ita nttentloni The Delaware river bridge. A drydock bi7 enough to accommO' date the largest ships. Development of the rapid Iroiuit svs tern. A convention hall. A buildinq or the Free Library. An Art Museum. Enlargement o ffte water supply. Homes to accommodate the popula tion. A TASK FOR FRIENDS PHILADELPHIANS. living in a city that is known as the center of the Quaker life in the new world, should be peculiarly interested in the leport that II work of relief now being done by Mr. Hoover's organizations in Europe may be given over next autumn to the direction of the Society of Friends. The war work of the Friends has been one of those things that reassure the minds of men when reassurance is difficult. It was silently done a great deal of it by Philadelphians. Wherever the mlsfortunate people of Europe met a Friend they met patience and com passion. And the world does not know half Of what the Quakers have done to build where others destroyed and to carry comfort where others left misery and pain. The work undertaken by Mr. Hoover will not suffer under their ad ministration. A GREAT NEW ISSUE WHAT Senator Watson and his asso ciates on the Republican platform committee nnd to say about agriculture is acceptable as far as it goes. It has been heard before. And politicians may be excused if they dodge the disquieting fact of u steadily declining agricultural output nnd depend on time or luck to provide an answer to n puzzle that now seems almost unanswerable. It is becoming clearer, nevertheless, .that the economic millennium will not arrive in the I'uited States with the establishment of peaceful relationships in industry. Industry Itself will be lost among n lot of new and novel difficul ties if, as a people, we continue to de sert the laud, which is the first source of all riches. In this country the decline nf the farm population, which was steady for a good many years, was quickened amazingly by the demands of manufac turing industries and other businesses Ktlmtllnterl hv hi(1i wnf-rw 111 iftn. T'hn ft' ,. remilt ought to laiibc every one to stop, t ' Innlc nnil Ithtnn This season, for the first time in his tory, the crops in America may not be altogether adequate to the needs of the population. More than food is Involved in this new problem. In agricultural areas there is a better standard of general health than cities can boast. And the American farm re mains the one stronghold of the souud and wholesome philosophy of life that was one of our great inheritances. Is that, too, to go': The man who can find n way to get people back to the land will do a serv ice to the nation greater than any sug gested even by the first -rank presiden tial candidates. The job was too big for platform makers. It is for evolution to uccomplish. if it can he accomplished. CRUELTY TO W. J. B. THAT u- a mti-t cruel exhibition 'if tho nmeuitie-, of practical polities Which (tovernor Allen gave uhcu, m his speech nominating (ienenil Wood, he took a crack nt Mr. Mrwin's now famous assertion that "h million men would spring to nrms overnight." with Mr. Ilrynn sitting in the press box jut beneath him industriously interpret ing" the convention toi tliouauds of readers. Mr. Bryan, according to the dis patches, ignored the refeicnce to one of the high oratorical spots of n career which, as u whole, has been as replete in talk ns that of nnj American. It is even possible, so the news story runs, that "he did not hear it." Hut this makes little different e; the point is that at the time of its utterance about 100,000,000 Ameriian citizens heard it. Hut Mr. ISnaii has a good defeiihe if he cares to take up the cudgels with the governor. No one doubts that "one million meu would spring to arms" if the country were threatened, and Mr liryan didn't say that the men would know how to use those arms, a military asset of which the late war proved the' value. Hut, with the silence of the true I Statesman, lie chose to ignoie the thrust And perhaps he was wise at that. JUNE -tTTlIEN Ja W "Oh, wi James IJussell Lowell wrote! vbat is so rnro as a day in June?" he doubtless had tho lovely physical attributes of the most beau tiful month of the year In mind, but June has come to have an even higher sentimental value than physical, despite its sunshine ana its roses. At no time does the vista of life's jathway appear so bright to the young, who are tho hope of the nation's future, in Juno. The graduates nt the K';w schools and the colleges, fresh from KrVTJ scaoiasiic triumpns, view me possiniit I ' JiM wbch seemingly lie before them with A ifdous optlmbm aad a iU ronfldence which tiovr comes again. Hut fortunately for them nnd for us nil the period of Inevitable disillusionment is too far off and too vague to be dig ccrntd. The "world U their oyster." I but the knowledge that It is a mighty naru one to crack comes with the snows of December, never In the sun -bathed radiance of Juue. It is fitting, too. that this loveliest of months, the month of roses and of high hopes, should be the wedding 411011th, when marriage license clerks all 'over the country work overtime and when the clergy by the fees dispensed by ex uberant bridegrooms, hnve a chance to meet the high cost of living. The fu ture never seems so bright to ouug lovers ns on the day when they take each other for better, for worse. If there is nny time in life when poor humanity should be permitted to gaze into what seems to be an unclouded future it is on this day of day, when the matrimonial seas are as yet un ruffled and the skies are azure with happiness and shot through with the golden bars of hope. T.et us all, then, enjoy our Junes while we may. There are far too few of them in life, both on the long, hard climb to the summit anc. on the quick descent into the shadows beyond. TODAY AT CHICAGO .. . ..,..,, . , Ql TSTANDIM, signs nnd om J cjeag0 today show plainly omens at that the Old Guard has been jolted nnd that its day of complete triumph has passed. I.owden would have been the uormnl choice of Mr. Penrose. Wood was the preference of n number of Mr. Penrose's friends. Wood nnd Lowden seem to have been eliminated despite the desper ate efforts of men who were willing to spend money endlessly in their behalf. When, this afternoon. Mr. Penrose sent word to Chicago that the choice of Harding vtould not be dtstnstrful to him, he spoke with n good deal of the authority of his old dictatorship. But the apparent complete elimina tion of Wood and Lowden. rather than the drift to Harding, represented aeon cession to the freer political Fcntlmcnt of the West nnd to the vast and growing clement in the East which refuses longer to accept a benign sort of Kaiserism in its party politics. Since Harding is, on the whole, the most desirnble of the candidates generally supported on the convention iloor. the G. O. P. conven tion is not the disastrous speetnele that it might have been had there been no menacing opposition to the Old Guard steam roller. The progressive and independent sen timent that was expected to make itself clearly apparent nnd influential on the floor of the convention exists in the Re publican party, even if it did not inspire the delegations. Mr. Johnson, posing as the spokesman of the progressive ele ments, did more than nny one else to play into the hands of tho old-school leaders. He confused the issues for those who wish to see the G. O. P. fight clear of the incubus of incurable stand -pattism. He monopolized the fore ground and, by his very violence, be wildered a good many leaders who arc clearer minded, if less shrewd, than he. It was HI who blanketed the out-and-out progressives nnd left them to take his dust. So, when it came to decisions the old leaders led. The convention did not pro duce a genius or u man with the mes sage that the country wns waiting to hear. Harding may prove to be that man. The Old Guard accepted him. He was not their ehoiie when it appeared that he was the only candidate on which the convention could unite. And. so far as the Penrose influence goes, he is a free man. DESPERATE DRESSERS THEY mut indeed be desperate dress ers at Itockaway Heach when the authorities com hide that the only way to subdue them is to arm thirty female guards with revolvers nnd clubs and have them patrol the beach during the summer season. This formidable posse has already been sworn in as deputy sheriffs, nnd the uinrcrs of tho extreme tIes in bathing suits are the ones who will receive particular attention. The bathing suit adils much to the gajety nf nations during the summer Mason, but Rockaway is the. first to admit that its menace is so great as to i. 'ill for the u-i of firearms to check it. The objectionable bathing suit is usually of such design as to permit its wearer, if necenrj, to make the utmost speed, and the Solons who guide the destinies of Roi'knway probably realized that the average guard would be at a hopeless disadvantage in Mich a race: hence the guns. The use of the club is not quite so clear, unless it be to pound the of fenihr into insensibility and then clothe him or her according to the accepted dress standards of that hitherto some what broad-minded resort. Women, however, in the past hnve not been acknowledged masters of fire arms. It would be sad If some outraged lady guard, taking it pot shot at a fleeing desperate character in dress, should by mistake hit a bather clnd In legal habil iment with full blunket or raincoat en vironment, thus making n target by comparison almost impossible to miss. A race between a scuntily clnd man and thirty armed woniou guards would also attract some degree of attention from the boardwalk. Verily, the amusement possibilities of Rockaway Bench this .summer are limitless. Every investigation bases its hope for success in the proncness of some "Koat" to grow real devilish and tell ull he knows. SOUND ADVICE W 'HERE docs the ullen In this coun try get his conception of American ism? Who aro nis mentors and by what process is be taught? He seldom goes to n scnooi. ne noes not travel. His neighborhood nnd often enough it is a slum neighborhood Is all of Amer ica that he knows. Power nnd au thority ns he meets it in tho new world aro embodied in ward bosses, division heelers, tho policeman on his corner and the foreman ln his shop. Now nnd then he Btes the influence of government exerted on what to him appears a grand scale. Policemen on horses break up his meetings, as they did in the neighborhood of Pittsburgh during the recent Bteel strike. Is it trnngo that the I. V. W. found tut alien an eager student ox th llteratura that it scattered like leaves to- men in the big Industries with tho pretense of telling the new citizens tlilur ho ought to know? Xo one else paid any atten tion to the mind of the foreign -bom workman. Xo one ever tried to tell liiin that there ls.n larger, fairer, juster America than anything he ever dreniucd of or sensed in the first uncertain years of his citizenship. He wns left with n desire for help and for knowledge. The I. W. W. promised him both and no one else did. All of this nnd more was in the mind of Doctor Fnunce, president of Brown University, when he reminded the mem bers of the graduating class at Haver ford yesterday of work that the enlight ened people of the country will have to do in the competition with forces tvhich tend to create distrust In millions of men nnd to use passion and Ignorance ss political weapons. The aloofness of educated people In matters that relate to the general ques tion of the foreign -born in hardly less regrettable thnn their occasional atti tude of lordly patronage. The I. W. W. is not n Bolshevik or ganization It is uothinf, so futile. -It has shrewd direction nnd definite pur poses and Its propaganda is tuned care fully to generate hatred In the minds of all workers. Somebody will have to compete with it. and somebody will have to find a way to let the aliens in Amer ica glimpse the real meanings of citi zenship In a democracy and the oppor tunities for happiness that are on every hand in this country. The foreigner will have to be led out of darkness. He will have to be treated squarely. College men may be unable to do these things. But they can nt least try. TEACHERS' SALARIES THE Philadelphia public Is probably as unanimous ns it is possible for a large number of citizens to bo on any subject ns to the desirability of giving more money to the school teachers; tho only question is how it can best be done. The Bureau of Municipal Research made what looks to be a practical sug gestion when it went on record ns favor ing a short -term emergency loan to pro vide a bonus of $40 a month to the teachers. The teachers want the bonus for the first six months of this year, totaling $240 each, to be paid at the end of the present month, or an nggre gatc of $l.ri00,000. This sum. to be obtained through the proposed loan, could be mude available to meet imme diate cash requirements. If upon consideration it should prove to be workable, favorable action should be tnkeu at once. The vacation season is just ahead and few have been able to save very much during the last term with living conditions ns they have been. It would be an act of grace to grant these bonuses now . CIVIC PRIDE THAT COUNTS IT IS n Philadelphia characteristic that when any of the city's cherished institutions are threatened the public, rich and poor, rises to their salvation as n mother rises to the defense of her young. This has had two illustrations in the last two years in the case of the Philadelphia Orchestra and the more recent leasing of the Academy of Music. The most interesting part of thc an nouncement of Edward W. Bok in re gard to the Academy was that the capi tal stock of the new leasing company had been largely oversubscribed, nnd that instead of the twenty-five men who were originally to take up the burden of seeing that the Orchestra and the opera should not be homeless, thirty -four had volunteered. And this in the 'face of the fact that thc venture cannot possibly be made profitable and there is likely to be a substantial deficit at thc close of each season. The fine nrts, especially as exempli fied in the two mediums mentioned, have never paid their own way, and under present conditions it is not likely they ever will, because of thc very large number of well-paid men which it is necessary to employ at practically full time. Therefore the organization of thc new company represents n gift to the further culture of the city, the value of which it is hard to overestimate. The old method of "financing" the arts was for some one rich man to do it : the new plan is immensely superior in thnt it relieves the organization of practical dependence upon one person, and thus makes for permanency. But back of all this is the even greater fact that the city is a unit in tho determination that its great insti tutions shall not perish. The number of subscribers to the Orchestrn endow ment fund showed clearly that almost all who were able to give at all con tributed, nud the fact that the Academy on one occasion nnd the Met ropolitan Opera House on nnother were filled with those who gave $2 each was a striking illustration of popular senti ment. With rich and poor standing solidly back of our great art institu tions there is little fear that they will ever fall Into perilous ways. (Jeneral Wood start A Precedent ed something new in nntional politics when he paid n social call on "Hi" Johnson nnd the other presidential can didates nt their headquarters in Chi cago. Most "colls" made by candidates on others at previous conventions hnvo had an entirely different renson nnd hnve beeii purely "business." Tho general's call may have far-reaching effects upon the amenities of future conventions. Atlantic City has put Bossing the Air into effect a code for the regulation o f aiicroft. As sooner or later a regula tory air code will probably become the lnw- of the lnnd nnd copecivnbly will figure in the platform of n political party in the not far distant' future, there is interest and significance In the fact that the first legislative efforts In tliis direction should toko place during n national convention. It is said that the The Silver Lining high special prices charged by the hotels in Chicago caused tho managers of the Republican convention to hurry the business In hand In order thnt delegates might save a little of their money. The nominating speeches woro shortened. And who would over have supposed that there could bo some good in high prices after all? The schools and uni Tills Hnrtl-Ilolled versltics have just World turned out some hundreds of thou sands of young men and women who know just what is thc matte.- with civ ilization nnd how It can be fixed up, And, ns usual, the world will not listen to them. There is an echo of tho stockyards ln the way Chicago is bossing the news. TALES OF THE SEA ' ' i s Two Philadelphians Who Aro Experts In the Telling of Nautical Yarns By GEORGE NOX McCAIN A ITHOUGH it is twenty years or so A since he was a newspaper worker In Philadelphia, Ralph D. Paine is still remembered by the older generation of the craft. Some of the most charming products of his peu and imagination have been his sea stories, although latterly ho has been devotlug his talent to talcs of uni versity life and the doings of college comedians. Paine always went in for the real stuff. I recall how, years ago, ho spent n week with the Philadelphia firn company whose house Is on Tenth street above Market, so that he might ade quately describe the life of a Philadel phia fireman. When he abandoned his journalistic career to take up magazine nud book work as a serious occupation he chose, the sen, with its tragedy and romance, as his field of effort. He moved to Salem, Mass., settled down among the seafaring folk, with the result that some of the most de lightful sea stories, redolent of the salty tang of the waste of waters, were based on first-hand information and the reminiscences of a generation of sea farers that Is rapidly passing away. rpHERE has been another Phltadel phinn who, in the prosaic humdrum of u busy life, has demonstrated an equnl Interest in the vauishing fleets of sailing craft that have gone down to the sea never to return. George F. Sproulc, nnd I have men tioned the fact before, stands pro-eml-uent today as the unofficial chronicler of n day that is gone. The distant day of the clipper ship, and all the miscellaneous canvas crowned craft and American lime juicers that sailed into the sunrise, and westward into the dim Orient, in search of cargoes that brought gold to the counting houses of Philadelphia ship owners. With this introduction as a fan fare of trumpets nunounccs the ap proach of a pageant, or tho rising of the asbestos curtain precedes the play, let Mr. Sproulc tell the story of n ship that was und is not. "L YING broadside on the Xcw Jersey Saving Station, with her slx-fo6t mark ing showing forwnrd, are thc remains of one of America's once-famous clipper ships, the George It. Skolflcld, which was sold twenty-one years ago and cut down into a barge for service between here and English ports. "I noticed tre hull and lower masts of this vessel when proceeding down the coast from Ocean City on Sunday last. It was low tide, so I went close along side and wns invited by thc caretaker to come on bonrd. "Thirty years ago this craft was one of the famous fleet of 'deep-water' ships und, if my memory serves me right, has to her credit n record of many fast trips around Cape Horn. "On going abourd things appeared a bit upset. Thc port anchor cable was coiled out on deck nud the hawsers aud old pieces of sails thrown here nnd there. "Her decks, contrary to what would hnvo been the case had she remained a ship, were painted and were peeling off, exposing bare places on tho once snow-white holystoned planks. (( TUST here, I recollect the story of O how the skipper, to eliminate from tho once white decks the bloodstains from the body of a sailor who had fallen from nloft, had two planks removed nnd replaced by others. "Memory carried me back to her last trip here from Honolulu with sugar, and the beautiful sight she presented when being wurped into the sugar-house pier on n hot dny In August, 1800 ! She wns consigned to the old firm of Darrnh & Elwell, since disbanded. Thus she end ed her career as a ship, for, after dis charging, she wns sold and cut down into n barge. "American ships nt thnt timo could be no longer operated nt a profit. Case oil was being carried to the Far East at ten cents, compared with $2 paid within tho lust two yenrs UTTER after-cabin, although littered XI with rubbish, retained mnny evi dences of thc palmy days when Captain C. S. Dunning commnnded her. Ills private room nnd bnth were Intact, nnd even the medicine chest wns left as when the old square rigger was shorn of her tip, topgallant mnsts nnd bowsprit. "I noticed she was thumping henvlly on the sand, the wind being from the eastward, but her stalwart frame thus far has defied the elements, "The Skolfield, with two other barges, was being towed from Boston to Phila delphia on February fi Inst. She broke adrift from the tug and was driven through the breakers ashore, where she now lies, "Her caretaker told me ho had pur chnscd the wreck for J1000 and had Just sold it for $.1000. The new owners will endeavor to get her atloat. "This ship wns built in Brunswick, Mc., in 1885, nud is 2.i2 feet long. 30-74 foot beam, 21ljj-foot depth of hold and l.'iOO tons net register, Sho wuh built and originally owned by Skolfield Bros., of Brunswick. "How this sight linked up bygone days when American citizens had a me'rchnnt marine, skippers and sailors of their own! "It is just sixty-six years since the American clipper ship Lightning, built in Enst Boston by Donnld McKay, made the run in ten days from Boston Light to Eaglo Point, on the northwest coast of Ireland, nnd ono of her perform mices WW miles In twenty-four hours still stands as the greatest run ever made under canvas. "Pity It Is that this graceful type of craft had to give way to steam!" The Johnson whose first name is Hiram is pleased. The pro posed Lcaguo of Na Ring the Glad Bells! tions pluuk made him happy. Ho said so. He smiled. And it didn't kill him I SHOUT CjUTS "All over but the shouting." Where Johnson pictured a close-up he now sccs'a fade-away. We ought to be nss'ured of n stable government with so many dark horses in the field. There nre apparently one or two men in town who dou't know that Varo rule la dead. W ill the backers of the Big Threi consider that they hove had a run fo! their money? Nominating speeches did not no ticeably rnlso tho temperature of the Coliseum yesterday. All that is now needed to damn the platform is the approval of tho Hearst newspapers. Incidentally, Jt should bo remem bered that people do not follow diplo mats to victory. Why arc delegates equipped with tongues when n cqwbell so veil expresses their mass emotion? In the matter of tho daily licking, it is a case of give nnd take with the Poles and the Bolshevlkl. The indications grow more pro nounced that Johnson is finding the Hearst band wagon a hearse. Weasel words aro as prolific as r ., ' ,A fcw ln a Platform In just a little while may flood the country. Perhaps the friendliness of Pcn r?8i anrol will acquire warmth and virility before tho convention adjourns. , .Not a soul in the country will find fault with the plank condemning Bur leson h administration of the postofflce. The Arkonsas delegate who sat on tt,iackln thc convention hall ways it is old stuff, but still good for a rlso out of a man. The oung Lady Next Door But One says she supposes the weasels in the platform aro the Borahs from within. In making n League of Nations plank to please evcrjbody tho Repub lican convention included tho Demo crats. Borah and Johnson, having demon strated that minorities rule, may con sider tho feasibility of establishing a dictatoratc. The Blunt Guy avers that no strong candidate will bo able to btand on tho new platform. He'll have to stand under it nud hold it up. If Johnson hns the making of the candidate it is a cinch It won't bo Hoover. But there is an off chnnce that Hiram won't have nny say-so. V. BInsco Ibauez says the Repub lican convention Is tho most interesting nnd inspiring spectacle he has ever wit nessed. As a trained seal, V. Blasco is u smooth diplomat. Perhaps it was the excitement of the convention thnt caused summer to arrive ten days ahead of schedule and Immediately proceed to have n hot old time. And there will nlwnys be those in thc party firm In the belief that though thc making of thc platform meant n lot of hammering, there were darned few nails used. There is n popular fiction nbrond that man is a reasoning animal. Na tional conventions arc probably designed to prove this a fallacy. Man is a nolsc producing instrument. yesterday wns thc hottest dav of the year in Philadelphia. So it wa's in Chicago ulso, although the rending of the thermometer there hod little to do with it. THE MOP-MAN TN HOTEL, in library, cafo or shop, L I nlwnys encounter the man with thc mop ; I shudder and call him a blot on thc scene, But he calmly ignores mc nnd makes the floor clean. Ho sloshes around under tnble and sent .vnu buinriimcs requests mo to lift un my feet ; l He stations his pail near my delicate nose, As, quite unconcerned, at his business he goes. Oh, mop-man, please tell me. when some time I die, Andsky(1WerV,,r0at,h " homc in tho Erasing Unearth. dust brought in by -Mella 'R McCnllum, the N. Y Evening Post. What Do You Knoiv? QUIZ 1. When was Charleston, s. C. first 2. Who was the first secretnrv e . of the L'nltcu .State" y of wnr BVlllKI 1 3' 'ocean? Hnn 0f tho Atlantic 4. Is there another word in ,h t llsh language n w), ? ""s u??nE pronounced ns In suirnr" J", "sumac"? Uff"r ""d f,. Where did Idaho Ret Its name? 6 Who was firant Allen? ,of 7. What and whore nH Hrook p., 8. Who were tho Ingham ? ftrm? 9. What were the Ingoldsby lecenda 10- yfel ?,'? William T&uanr, ... ..MttojiuiiHiv uecome Her, no. of tho treasury nnd tr, ,....clr.etafy inet; " """"a can- Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Maria Anno Lowell ndapted tho m Ingomar tho Barbarian "rX tho German "!r Sohn ler wnin . J,,s of '"'leclrlcl, Halm. r " M' 2. Tho first secretary of the treat,,.., was Alexander Hamilton. & 3' CTocHn lMDn th 0miUe8t of Ml 4. The census of 1920 plvos tho norm latlon of Norfolk. Va a lB' 6. Tho water area of the earth li i tn 298,000 squaro miles. s 10'" 6. "Sumac'' Is pronounced "shoo-mack" with tho accent on tho first sy i- 7. California got Its name from tho. Latin "Callda fornnx," T ho furnnce. noc 8. Cochineal Is tho nnmo of a certain kind of wood louse nnd also , il!i dyo derived from It. n ,so the 9 The Cock Lune Ohost, famous in literature. Is alleged to have i mani tested ltsif In ?-ocK Lane ion don, In 1752. ,'0"- 10. The Cockney Schoot of Pootry la n nickname John Olbson Lockhart tried to fix on a school of write HazuTt"5 L" Hunt,' Keals 'and YOU , .. jjs. .-... ,- .-.. -.. .u. Si . .jri.StrS s'S ALLEN LOSES HIS CHANCE TO BE SECOND GARFIELD Kansas Governor's Speech for Opportunity Passes Him By By CLINTON' W. GILBERT Copurioht. lOiO. ou Publio Ledger Co. Chicago, June 12. A Hnrveylzcd League of Nations plank in the Repub lican platform is one of the oddities of this strange convention. Colonel Har vey is an old Democratic editor belong ing to the now nenrly extinct Thomns F. Ryan faction of the Democratic party. He was the discoverer of Wil son ns n candidate for President, nnd because Wilson, on account of Ryan connections, wanted to push Harvey into the background, tho colonel beenme Incensed at his candidate und has been having his revenge ever since. Thc colonel edits n weekly of sixteen pages, fourteen of which arc devoted to de nouncing Wilson. The colonel hns a house in Washing ton on K street, right between the homes of those two leading 'bitter enders, Senntors Knox and Brnndegee. He has been in the thick of tho treaty fight, being tho inspiration of thc anti leagucrs. And hero nt Chicago his rooms nt the Blackstouo was the meet ing place where the League of Nations plank wns agreed upon nnd where Sen ntor Borah shook his fist under thc uose of ex-Scnntor Murray Crane. There is good cheer wherever Ilnr vev has his headquarters, which inny be one reuson why the former Demo cintie editor was thc host of the Re publican platform makers. But the colonel's clever editorial pencil was ,f demand His editing is .nil over the . Innk His revenge on W llson Is now complete, provided thnt a bitter-ender 3s upon the Hnrvcyized platform. Whether tho Democratic editor had a hand in nominating the Republican can Mate, as well as in writing he lie n blicau platform. Is not yet disclosed. But it "s nn odd comment in the sltua f?". .i.-f f-n Democratic editors tried to furnish to thc Republican party the leaden! lp which the Republicans were ',".. .imvlde for themselves Harvey on tho platform nnd Henrst in nnming ,1... nnndldate. An oncn convention like this is full w " JI .nlties mostly lost. There wns V,1 "'!'.." Alien, nf Kansns. When he debated with Gompers in New lork, the Lincoln-Douglas parallel occurred to !?' Alien had his opportunity. He might have won the country in the de bate and become the cundidnte for Prcsi- rlent. Aealn when it came to mnking the "K"': i. t nvn,i aii migl t lav" repeated the Garfield paral ??''? iRRO. At the 1880 convention Garfield was not a candidate He made a wondenu spvev.. ....... ....v.. - r Ohio, to whom he wns pledged. Bv the speech he caught tho eye of the convention nnd though for thirty-live bnllots ho never had more than fifty VOteS Oil tno Ull") -nii.i mc a muu- Inntcd for President. The 1880 convention wns the longest .......do in the history of the Repub lican party. Genernl Grant, who had served two terms ns President, was, after an Interval of four years, a can didate for a third nomluntlon. His forces were led by the famous Senator Roscoe Conkllng, of New York. Conkling made a great nominating speech probnbly the most eloquent In the hlltory of party conventions. And out of the strngglo which devel oped between the purtisnns of Grant, Blaine nnd Sherman enmo the split in the Republican party which inspired the murder of Garfield nnd which resulted luter, when Blaino himself wns nomi nated, In the first return of the Demo erotic party to power with tho election of Grovcr Cleveland. Garfield was ono man who was made President by tho eloquencu of his nom inating speech. Another innn who just missed becoming President In tho same way was Herbert Ilndley In the con vention of 1012. Hadley led the Roose velt forces in tho great fight on Taft, and by his eloquence nnd the charm of his personality tremendously impressed the delegates. Tho convention wished to avoid the KNOW, THAT FEELING VV ' ' ' Wood Fails to Hit Bulheye and Probably Too Self-Conscious issue rnised by the personnl bitterness between Roosevelt and Tnft by choos ing Hadley as n candidate. But Had ley was wise enough to see thnt the quarrel between Tnft and Roosevelt had gono too far to be compromised, nnd so he discouraged every suggestion thnt his name bo brought forward as n cnu didatc. He came nearer thnn nny other man had ever done to refusing a nomination for the presidency. Governor Allen missed being n Gar field or u Hadley. He had not spoken a dozen sentences before one knew the convention would not turn to him as Its choice. The thing is hnrd to ex plain. Allen hns the roputntion of be ing nn eloquent speaker, but he was not eloquent in behalf of General Wood. In personal contact he shows n vivid personality, but from the platform you would havo supposed him to be a rather mechanical, commonplnco individual. He did not get over. Perhaps it was self-consciousness. He had something to do which neither Gar field nor Hadley had to do. Neither of them was a conscious candidate. Allen wns. Allen had hopes. THE CRITIC TALKS TO MUSIC LOVERS Weekly Comment on Things Musi cal in Discriminating Philadelphia THE attendance at the three per formances of thc Puccini Opera Company, at tho Academy of Music hist week, whs u gratifying one, although it wns by no means so large as the ex cellence of the performance deserved. Tho opern has for years been as much n social function ns a musical performance. If this unfortunate state of affairs did not exist, companies of the merit of the one which plaved here last week would be received with largo audiences nnd much enthusiasm. If the upbuilding of nn operatic tradition, which is nn essential to tills country ever producing first -class operatic composers who know the technique of the opera and how to compose for the stage is to be accomplished, it will only bo through the education of the masses of our people to what is goud and whnt is bad in opera. This education can only be obtained through repented hearings of the mnstcrplcces of operatic composition. 'I he main function of the smnllcr opera companies and their chief value to our music Is to educate. The Metropolitan Opern Company does this to a degree but with only sixteen performances n season, very much along this line can not be nrcompllshed. TjlOR this reason, when tho smaller compnnles como to thc city, thev should bn received by audiences ns hirce as can be got Into the auditorium of the places where they are plavin"1 There has been n steady increase", the number of smaller companies of ex collence which arc touring the counrrv nnd they certainly should bo encouraged Thus far. tho West has been more responsive than the East in Its recep. tlon of these conipnn es. perhans i, cause their onnortuniHeM L'? '' " great componlcs nro smnller. but likely because they have the western enthusiasm which makes them take , in most movements with greater vigor than we do on the Atlnntlc const. Grand opera at popular prices la entirely, feasible and when th onnnr tunity comes to hear it. It " hnufd hi encouraged. The "star" sysern ' ft which Is meant tho HlliB of ', V role with only one great singer, fftp, means nn ill balanced performanen This Is not the en ... i.i ,...or.mn.nco- nnllfnn wlilMi ,.!. (,.. i'. .." . -ietro- politnu, which with Its long lint of l rent singers can put a "star" i .......... r. nt even the most insignificant, but ,1. the case in manv performances, t'w vry part peopl eople on tho stage can act or sine un to" a Caruso nr v..' """: tho result is often unfavorable to The general balance of the .!, t" !Pe nd smaller companies this disparity 12 .,, ..v w unuuui oi mo more nearly equal vocal equipment of the cast. BUT opera is not nil singing and act ing. In tho performances last week, thc principal feature was thc enthusi asm of both enst nnd chorus. This rare attribute is not often found among com panies containing the greatest stars. They are generally highly tempcrnmen tnl, which results cither in a perform ance of the highest merit or in one which falls below tho nvcragc. The enormous cost of opern, even where there nro no stars of thn first mngnltude to eat up most of tho admis sions in fees, is the mnin drnwbnck to Its general acceptance by our public. A modern opera requires nn orchestra of nt least forty-five or fifty, many of whom must be musicinns of great skill nml experience, nnd ns such, must be highly pnid. Tho "chorus operas" nho are expensive to give, as nn equal num ber of trained chorus singers must bo ndded to tho payroll. For these rea sons it is impossible to got the ndmls slon prices down quito so low as those of the theatres, but ns was the case last week, there was not much dif ference. The main trouble is not tho lack of money on the part of tho public, but iti failure to realize what even n short season of opera will do for their musi cal culture. When this knowledgo is acquired, tho problem of nudicnecs for the smaller companies will be effectually bolvcd. IEW concert-goers npprocinte the disadvantages under which the "as-Ms-ting artist" usually labors in nppear ng on tho samo program with a popu lar musical idol, such ns Tlttn Ruffo, John McCormnck or other drawing card pf this rank. Of nil tho difficult places iti musical performance, this is ono of the worst. In tho first place the unfortunate assistant" rcnlizes quito keenly thnt the largo nudlenco is there only to hear the grcnt "star" nnd that alono he or site could not drnw more than a cor poral s guard. This feeling in itself is not calculated to Inspire tho self confidence that is necessary to a first class performance nnd it Is frequently aggravated by the unintentional nttl tuilo of the audience, which often show only too plainly that it considers the assistant only n nccessnrv evil to be borne while tho popular idol rests be tween the groups of songs nnd bunches of encores which mnko up his every ap pearance. Notwithstanding this handicap, the work of the "assisting nrtist" is often of a high standard. Tho writer lmi heard concerts in which the lowly as s slant consldcrnbly surpassed In mu sicianship the work of tho soloist. Hut could he make tho nudlenco bellcvo tills) ISever. They enmo to hear some one with a grent reputation nnd that repu tation, fully n h much ns the perform ance, governed the applause. QF COURSE it Is not to bo supposed Y for a moment thnt nny star, cap able of filling the Metropolitan or the Academy, is going to havo an "assist ing nrtist" who will attract too much public attention. When this occurs, there Is no longer nn assistant, hut the affair becomes a "Joint concert." In this case, there is a division of money nnd applause, n situation repugnnnt to most stars. But it must be said for tho stM that they are usually anxious that the "assisting nrtist" Hhnll draw a goodly meed of applause. Very few of them (! to the length nf singing a song with nn instrumental ohbligoto and sharing the plaudits of the house with the In strumentalist, but they nro pcrfictlr willing thnt the player shall score what he can "on his own," Tho point that the assistant often does work of a musical caliber which deserves far more recognition than it ever gets with it heavy drawing enrd as the chief end of the concert. Theso assistants nre used almost ex cliislvcly by singers and for two rea sons, one to give the vocalist a reit and the other for variety. Amcrlean nudlenccs nro Ollvor Twists In de manding "more," nud tho singer who gives three or four songs nnd as many encores every time ho appears on tne stnge needs n littlo rest nfter n cotipw of groups. If the encores arc not forth coming, the singer is deemed ungracious with bnd box office results the n time ho conies. A famous Italian bari tone bnd a taste of that this last sea son. Thcreforo tho assistant Jms nw uses uvea if ho is not nlwuys apra elated. V b .ff , S i'j .ilAMiJ. fiM it w h--m--I Ta-BXHir i ti HTfr r i