7 fit ' r mu- r. W kt'i F I w A J K 'K H '. iv 8 f tTf a -,r-ii l f PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CmUfl It. K. CUIITU. rmr.rsT v.niir ii, ijuumiinn, ir 1'rrn urni. , H Martin, Secretary and Treaaureri Dilllp J. John II. WI1llnni. John .1. Hpurireon 1)1 . Charlea H. Luellnston. Vice t'rra dcnl. John C. p. covins, Ulrectnra , HDiToniAi. ncunni ' Cnca IL K, Curtiii, Chairman DAVID E. SMILEY editor JOHN C. MAim.V... general Tluslncss Manager PublUhvil dally at Public Lnxira Ilulldlns Independence Stiuaro, Philadelphia Atlantic) cm rrcm-L'iHoii IlulIJInc Nw oie DDTRAIT Br. Lorn 104 Mmllcon Ave, 701 1'ont Pulldlne 100S Fullrlon liullllnpr 1308 Tribune UulMing VltlCAOO. . flSWB HUIlfcAUtft w4iitNOTOtl Hcuruu V n. for. IMiniiylranla Ave. and Mth St. Ktw ToK BcaFJtD.... .The S.n ilulMln Xoxpon OcHtD .. tendon Tlmca SUIISCMPTIOM TKIOIH Th BrtxiKo rcetio LfJxnn la aerved to nib- fcorltiera li PMIsdelphla and n'jrround'nc tonna at te rate of tvrclva (12) ctnti per w-k, paalls to the carrier. ,nr rna'l to points miUlde of rtillmldphla. In the United Platen r'nnniln, o- t'nltfd States pn" K",'.1n.!i TV1'' tret, flf" too? centa per menth. BlJC $n) tlnllere pr ear, rajahlo In advance T ell foretim countries ore (l) dollar a month Neirtcjs Suhirrlber wtMilns addreei changed must give old an well nn ncv addreaa. BELL, JOOO WALNUT KEYSTONT, M UV JCOO KT Address all fommeinlcnfloit to TvrntfO Publio Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia. Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PItr.BS I ttclustiel-j en. titled to the v for republication of all netra d'tpntchet credited to It or not oth nine crrdlud it tht$ vapc; and alio the local mui published therein. Alt rlphts of republication of iti(al dhvatches herein are also rttrrvcrf rhll.Jflphl., Mundir, Ortolxr II, 1920 A FM'K.IKAR 1'ROf.Tt M TOH riuuDRi.rniA Thine on wlilrh the lo.lr rtprrt Ihp new flmlnUtnlfon In mnrrntntte lift nttrntlutit The Dflnwar rtetr hriduc, A dryttock b o tnough tu aicommodflfc the Dcvtlcpmrnt of tht lapid Iran t jUm A rowwrttftoJi hntt A bvtUtliio fn the I'tcc J ibrurt An Art .1uirum. Kttarucmet of thr iratrr rupyfj. iloints to accommodate the impulnffon A LEAGUE OF TOWNS PnOPnilLY onoiiRli, tlio towns that He in tlit clploctnbl region oommonly (Icsinnntcd 88 the Mnin Lino hnvp it pride In thpiiwlvcs, In the finality of thoir ndininlstrntle IdonN J and In their constnnt olTnrtH to innintnin nil the graces of modern life in nn einironment o beautiful that It niiplit haie heeti oril- Bally rrented for that lmtpi exiierlmet.t. Now it nppenrs the Suburban Asnocintion o( the Main Line has been formed, with hrado,tinrterN ami n secretarht at Ardinore. , This N news. The aim of the new tisociu j tlon of towns In better co-operation for pro tection ncaliist tire, for polic snfeit'iards In ' the various communities anil on the Main Line drhes and for the unification of Inter f csts senernlly. Are we to suppose tint the slain Line, which hax determined to pool its enernies for the adtancemeut of Its general life, does not read the speeches of Senator Ilirnm Johnson? One mn ouN hupp that no I'.or.ih will arise nt I)enn or Hnverford or Hrtn jsmwr or raoll to -liri'lj wnrn his eom munlty of the perils of n siipergovernnient at Ardmore. of the desirability of u state of grand Isolation or the sins of relinciuishini; the control of neiKhborhoml affairs to alien hands. WOMEN ON GUARD fTIIin appeal of the women voters to be recognized ns official watchers on Novem ber 2 Is wortii heeding. The nrrangement would lenve political finances undisturbed. The iob pavs noth ing. As a tet of the public spirit of the " newly enfranchised citizens, the feminine Tlgil will bo serviceable. The election hours lire long and under normal conditions un exciting. The acquisition of practical political ex perience is possible, nnd the quicker this is gained by the women the more will the realization of some of their aims be expedited. Ward part organizations nixl city committee members will, if they name feminine watch ers at the polls, sagaciously recognize a new situation. In the end some election -day positions nre certain to be filled bj women, l'ducation of both the new voters nnd the old will he "best itlmulnted bj an early start, such as Mrs. Walter II. Thomson, chairman of the county organization of Republiciii women, suggests, CITY DUTY CLARIFIED THE comparative failure of a police pen sion fund campaign conducted without recourse to house to-liouse and street-corner ennvnssing riduccs a ihronlc problem to simple terms. The old sj stein, into which numerous abuses had crept, was rightl.v bamud, nnd the somewhat extravagant hope was entertained that the public would of its own volition hasten to bu carnival tickets The meagerness of the response i revealed In the announcement that of the desired $0,".0f)0 onlv Sin.finO was obtained Director Corteljou now declares that lie xv III appeal to Citv Council for an appro priation of SI 7." 000 fur the police pension fund nnd ?11.".000 for the firemen's pension fuufl. Helnted logic is discernible in this plan. The city nlrendy takes care of it ie. tired school teachers. Its obligation to pro vide for its veteran guurdluns of the public cafet) in ecjunllj obvious A necessnrj preliminnrj to adequate action by the munlc ipalitj was Mr. fVrtel you's ban against n custom which bred not a little political corruption JIM HAM ON WOMEN WHAT in the world has Jim Ham Lewis been reading during tin months of his Involuutnrv retlrunent from the Senate of the United States' Kipling, do jou suppose, or Dnrwin or the hi aided Shaw or the wild Iconoclasts of German science who used to whisper darkl.v over their beer that women should be. kept in a condition of servitude lest they devnntatc the earth by their cruelty? "The viewpoint of woman." says .1 Hnm, sajff he, "Is as different from a man's as that of n leopard or n tiger " Now, a viewpoint Implies a mentality and loflen deductions arrived at bv a process of orderly reasoning Lions and tigers nre not regarded ns reasonable creatures bv those who know them host Let that pass. "Ily nature," continues Mr. Lewis reck lessly, "women are not for peace. Thev aie for fight. Woman's nature is to demand conflict. In politics men voto for some one or for some thing Women vote against Home one or some thing. They are more Concerned about the defeat or overthrow of what they object to than about who or what hall tie put In Its place. The purposes of men and women converge at the point we call home. They will move outward and npart lu matters of government!" jjm Ham. Jim Hani! You wero by far the blazlugcst man lu public lifo when, in the not for distant past, vour vests illumined the regions of Capitol Hill and caused tho bush leaguers In Congress to believe that tho downward sun had paused In his Might at the very edges of the evening. Can it be that jrou must still shine in other vvaja and at all fta or die? .Bfor the war we took Stir. Klnllnr's werd fsjf a xood many thing. Half tho V world was almost ready to believe that tho femalij of the species was more deadly than the male. Tint the emperors and the gen erals nnd the ministers of state who were re sponsible for the Mnrnc', for Ypres, for the submarines, for gs tanks and air bombs made us stop and ponder, and, for nil we know, the) made even Mr. Kipling stop and ponder, too, nnd revise some of the delusions thnt he carried froi the edgTs of the Indian jungles to the liteinr.v maiket plates of nu unsophisticated world. To suggest in this particular time that vvometi mo unthinking, that they utaln be neath all pleasant exteriors nu inherited In stinct for direct nnd iutlilcs action iinteni peied by logic Is to Invite rinnpiiilsous ut terly disastrous to the world of men. Qe THE DEMOCRATS FAILED TO TAKE THE MESSAGE TO GARClA This la Why the Nation Is Looking to the Republican Party for Con structive Statesmanship TTK. HOOVEIt, when he discusses the is " sues of the campaign, does not lose sight of the Inslc facts. Tt was the nbject failure of the Demo cratic partj under Its present leadership to meet its obllgitions that led the voters months ago to decide that thej wanted n rhange. The issue, then, is the ousting of n party that has proved false to Its trust nnd tho substitution for it of another party lu con trol of the national government. No one has made the specifications in the Indictment against the Democratic party with greater clearness than Mr. Hoover. After calling nttenllnti to the hearty co opeiatlon of the Hi public ins with the Demo crats In the prosecution of the war, Mr. Hoover remarks: Hut with vlitorv accomplished the l"aelers of the Uemoiratli party, dlsro R.itcllng this co-operation deckled f ig nore one half of 'he people of the United Slates nnd to make pence alone Hro, I believe lh-s the heirlntilng of its fnlluro In statesmanship We have simply drifted In the Inst two vears lu political leader ship this party, nt least for tho present, lias ceiscd to funct fn. The nrmistlce was signed in November two jears ngo. The peace treaiv was ub n itted to the Semite the following .Till) It was infilled with little dehv in all the' other allied and associated nations where there was (ffc-ctive leadership tognbint of the nece lty of action. There was absolute failure in the White House to tecognle the conditions under which agieemcnt could be reached hete. Indeed, that failure began ,. lw... .1... 4 I . , "in ii mi- .uiiciicuii peace ueieniioii was named. No treaty can be intlflei without the con sent of the Senate. Ne ithei pnrtv hail the necessary two-thlrds mijoiilv in that bodv. It wns patent to most n," us that it was a stupendous b'uueler to Ignore the Republican half of the Sen-ite, nnd to attempt to jam iieiwii ns iiiroat an international agreement In the drafting of which the I'nited States was icprescnti'd mil) b) u man who held the Republican Senate lenders in lontempt ami wns ver.v free in expressing his opinions on thnt mntter. The pe'ice delegation included more per sons than Mr. WiKon. but Mr. Wilson went his own wa.v and when his decisions were announced in the conference' his nsochtcs learned of them for the first time. When he came home his own part was in ignoiani'e of his purposes. He took nn one into his confidence. The Democratic leaders in the Senate flouneleieel hedples.sh for months be fore the President's health broke down. And the ti'chnical vtate of war continued mid still continues because the- lender in the White House wns determined, us Mr Hoover sn.vs. to make n Democratic peace or none Mr. WiNon failiel to deliver the message to (Sun iu And not onl.v his pint), but the I'liitcd State-, and the rest of the woild ar" sifffering today from that failure. This is true in spite of the man) nd mirnble epialities of the President. His high idealism is splendid and has been an Inspiration far be.voud the bounds of the I'liited States. Rut a statesman is measured h) his ni hieveuieiits and u leader is measured b) his ability to carry his forces to ultimate vie tor) Ilv these tests tho Pi evident is foiinel lacking. And because he and Ins pait) are linking, the nation is piepniing to put the management of Its affairs m otlie r hands, in the confident hope that the new men will arrange for the co-operation of the t'nltee States with other nations in an asso ciation for the preservation of the woilel peace. Mr. Hoover is light when lie sHv tint the dispute has not bcim over the principle of a world association. It would be difficult to find n corpoial's guarel of really influential men fiom the Atlantic to the Pacific who oppose such an association. It lias been urged for jears b.v men of nil par'les, but the Republican leaders have been more in sistent on It than the Democratic leieliTs It is a plan born of the same kind of idealism that gave birth to tho Repuhlie an party, and its practical merits ate such as commend themselves to the kind of intellect that 1ms directed the great constitutive policies that have been the gloiv of the Republican pait). What elisngriement there lias been has onsen over the conditions uiieler which the I'nited States should enter such an nssneh tinu I'nless the conditions arc satisfac (orv to a majority of the people we might ns well stav out I'nless the association itsidf is such as to have the support of the people of the nations within it it will be powerless. Such effectiveness us it is to have will de pend tntirelv on whether the men who have framed its charter hnve successful!) (j;i0T. ered just how far the people are willing to go to pt event war. In the I'nited States it has been obvious for months that the nation was nut icaelv to accept the covenant of the League of Nations ns Mr Wilson submitted it to the Sennte. Tin re has been a demnnd thnt It be interpreted and rewritten in such a nj ni to assuie every one that we were not sur rendering more than we gained Whether that demnnel had a just foundation or not is not impoitnnt It was one of the facts which a constructive statesmanship would have recognized, for as Mr Hoover has said, "on methods men must divide ar.1 states manship will compromise." I'nder the circumstances it is not surpris ing that Mr. Hoover, who has bun engaged for .vrars in constructive work, conciliating opposing forces and smoothing awav differ dices in order thnt results might be accom plished, should declare that "to have ohsti natel) held up the peace of the world for eighteen months; to have rejected tho op nortuulty for amicable adjustment of differ. enccs fco as to meet them; to havo projected s to mecj iu, w uvo projected Into the Iresldential election is tho the Jssue EVENING VUbUO LEDGER greatest failure of American statesmanship since the Civil War." The "solemn referendum," then, he In ielstn, Is not on the league, but on tho failure of tho Democratic party. This brings us to the point with which jvc started, namel), that it was that failure of the Democratic party as nn efficient In strument of government which has led the nation to look with hope to Republican lead ership. No amount of discussion of other mnttcrs can distract attention from this grcnt Issue. It oveitops everything else. BURNING MONEY T71IRi:.PRnT.NT10N DAY. proclaimed by the President nnd ndvertNed by public officials nnd fire undci writers all over the country, hns pnsscel. Will the country pro ceed to forget it nnd continue to lose $2.10, 000.000 nnnunllv In preventable fires? Now, n fire loss Is not like a loss in busi ness or in tho stock market. It docs not represent rrented values shifted from hand to hnnd. It is, instead, an lirepnrable loss, an obliteration of values from among the nsspts of the nntion and the cninmunltv. This state Is poorer b.v about $20,000,000 each )car because people refuse to take ordl unry precautions ngslnst fire. Oddly enough. It Is in raking among tho ashes of the former (ierninn empire thnt )nu will find the best clue to a method for the elimination of these losses. The (Jernnns were thrift). Thev had a view of fires thnt was nltogctlicr difleient from ours. If, in the Germany of the kaiser, )ou had a fire in )our house or in your place of business the neighbors and the nuthoritles did not com miserate with you. When the bhee was ex tinguished two stout policemen with swords appeared to mnich )ou off to n station house, whee jou would icinniii to be ie garded as n dangerous citizen iinel n po' ltial menace to the communltv until von hnd proved that jou observed nil precautious established to make flics impossible. If )ou were found to have been negligent )ou paid n fine or went to jail. In (Jeimany the fire losses were negligible when viewed in com parison vvitli the lire losses of the United States. Stricter laws as well as mornl suasion will be ropilreel to keep Americans from burning ?l!o0,000.000 cacli )enr. AFTER BOLSHEVISM WHAT? "OOLSHEVISM as it was otganled nt -' Moscow Is on its last legs. It is not failing under pressure from the outside. The oveithrow is being accomplished through the hntred nnd disil'uslonment of the Russian masses, who in the last vear lmv s-ulTeied a soit of t.vranny unknown even under the csiais, The crash has been foreseen in iauooe for months. There has been n eouveigince of ullled energies behind (Jeneral Wimigcl, the one mnu who seems capable of e ontinuing in aetlve war on Rmslun lemtou What this latter phenomenon of Euiopcm polities ma) mean It is liarel to know nt this dis tance. It is ecpiall) difficult to te'l what ma) be the uet dominant inline. lie o ir. Riissin. That question, however, Is one that concerns the whole' world. European states with tinnncinl or colonic. cl.il intcri'sU in Russin seem eager to be on the giounil when the great change oeciirs. Doubtless they want to piotect themselves. There may be a gteat scramble of oprur t mi! stM above the vvicek of the Leuiue, gov ernment. Of the old revolutionists who sought oul) a constitutional government founded on demon utic theoij mil) come again to the front to take e harge of n (Tali's and begin the Ioug-delil)cd processes of oi -derl) reconstruction. MOVIES AND POLITICS "pvR. JENNIE SHARP, a woman of talent '-' and a member of one of the representa tive families of New .Terse-v . is a candidate for Congiess in Camden, nnil she is promis ing to agitate for n cm few law and for a stiietei ecnsoiship of tho movies A curfew law mlht not be a bad thing for the country In these dnvs of cabarets ami Jo) rides. We iiceent might not. Hut a stricter censorship of the movies would be a eh bntable matter. Screen pln)s seem in inuiiv wn.vs to rep resent the pnll.vniina of the nits. Nowhere else, not Iu books of fiction, not on the stnge, not iu written poetr.v. is viitue so carefully guarded und so nssuieil of tiiumpli. The good mny suffer in the movies. Thi'y miiv be wronged and led In strange vvn)si of mlsfoituiie, but thev nlwa.vs get tho mnne.v and the good clothes before the light goes out. In books and in tho spoken plnvs n villain some times escapes to show that life is not u simple matter and that the victory is often to the1 strong or the unscrupulous. Hut .vour bad man of the film is doomed from the first flicker of the lantern to be disgraced, elisowiiiil, killed under a railway train, shot in a brawl or tumbled off a cliff, while vir tue, hi em led and smiling, looks out vic toriously from the hist close-up. This may not be art. It may not be life. Hut it is the movies. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1 How often Is the membership of Congress reapportioned? 2 Name two noted Hussion generals of tho nusso-.Iapane.se War 3. When did tho great fire In Chicago occur? 1 In what t'nlon victory of the f'lvll Wur did Sheridan s famous ride result? " Who wroto tho well-known poem on the subject? C Where is Togolanel" 7. Who was Solon and for what was he noted? 8 Who said "Better fifty enrs of Kuropo than a ccle of Cathay"? 0 What lr the meaning of the word con tralto? 10 What party carried the state of Ohio In tho presldentl.il olectlon of 1910? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1 King David was the father of Alirnlom 2 An Ibe.x Is a wild goat of the Apennines with Inri'B recurved noma An Ibis Is a Btorlt-llke bird found In lakes nnd swamps of warm climates j Kllabetli was the first name of Mother Goose I "Horn d'oeuvru'' literally means out of the work or operation or affair In u, dinner hors el oeuvrca are appetizers, regarded as not an essential part of llic menu, and bervtd either before or after the soup The phrase should be pronounexd as though It wero spoiled "or eleuvr." 5 Miguel de Cervantes vviote "Don Quixote." C He lived In the latter part of tho six teenth and first part of the seventeenth centuries, dying In 1616, tho same year as Shakespeare : TukU Mnlcan Is regarded as the most terrlhle of tho world's deserts It Ih locateel In Central Asia and is bounded on the west, north uml east by the wiilo curve of tho Tarlm river Svn Iledln has added much to scientific knowledge of the waste, which J T Ileolby. tho geographer, describes as nppallliiiT." borne of the sand moun tains rlscfcto the height of 300 feet s Herbert Asqulth was premier of Great Urllftln Immediately preceding Lloyd George. I Viiiioleon Hi'geno Lou If Jean Joseph, i)0 " prince Imperial, son of Jvapoleon jji and tho Empress Eugenie, was killer in Ainca in ysir"" i,,u "niun und the Zulua In 1879, 0 nearabla Is In southern Uussla between th Dniester and thl;Pruth rlvSra. rH0JAl)53ili!EilA, MONDAY, ' Ooi-OBISK ' 11, AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT How a Slip of a Girl-Woman Set tled the Problems of Labor and Got Her Forco Working Smoothly BY SARAH D. LOWRIE IK YOU put In electricity thnt means re papering, nnd If you repaper )ou have to repaint, and. vhile )ou nre about It. you uinv as well add the closet nnd the library shelves nnd put up the partition )ou always meant to build, nnd thnt being the case )ou'd better hnve the furnnces overhauled and the plumbing modernized. Something holds von bn"k from having the roof In spected and the cellnr cemented ; not so much the thought of the bill ns sheer over exertion. The bill for tho roof nnd cellar Is no more Impossible or possible than for nil the floors between. We mndo out n neat scheduleway back In June that had the most plausible series of causes and effects. It rend like the tnlo of the house thnt Jack built. Thin ji the phitnhrr ihett enter ono teech To tonic nt the pipe? Co xec if they leak. Thin i the carpenter fnl'owina soon To huitd a pmtUion iu ite afternoon. H'Arii he icm fimiUeil the pnpercr entcri Followed in turn by the paint decoratoi it. Then trhen the houne finished complete Hark to the nound of the cleaner's swift feetl EVERY ONE wns engaged, contracted for and told how important it wns thev should not only come on time but finish on time' Ever) one gladly promised to be nnd to do nil wc could ask or think. WHEN the day dawned for the caretaker to hand over the ke.vs to the electrician, who wns to work nil thiough the schedule, leaving each room, ns he finished it, to he tnl.en up liv the ncf workmen In turn, we thought nffectinnn'olv of nil those bus) workers nnil c lierrful sou's beginning in the hot. dust) town to make our winter homo bright nnd eheerful for us. We set our return from our summer rest n day or two earlier than nsunl ho we coulel Inspect the work before the very last touches. Hack, veiy far back', lu our minds there was a dim. hesitant suspicion that there might be elehivs hero and there, but we shrank from putting it Into words. We left it, like the loot and the cellar, to take enre of itself. Our last prophetic net before checking our trunks for the journey to town wns to telegraph the cleaning women to begin. Thev will all be out of the house bv Mon elav. I said. I was right! They were, because thev, meaning the painters, pnperers and carpenters, hnel not begun! QJINCH then there havo been wild doings. sJ Ten men n ud three cleaning women nnd n boy 'tween) liuve been doing their worst mi and down this house. Thev nil cnnie at mice nnd. leg-it dless of the seheduie.'ieguiel less of the fact that the paper we chose was one nt slock unci the paint could not get elrlecl in time for the electricians to tear up the floor and begin ngnln, that the plumber wns the one to take away the chandeliers and the carpenter should not be used to beln the 'tweeny mend the cleaner's ladder, und, ngaidless of the act thnt every one tluew ever) thing out of the windows into the aril, so there was no place to saw vood or weld pipe or solder wires but the I itr hi'ti, we, the owners, are now living there ! Hefore vve tried thnt desperate expedient wcrnme and saw "how things were getting in" as mativ times n dnv ns vve could drag our feet over the pnvcmentH from the club. Wc could see for ourselves ever) thing was getting on but the work. THE plumber, who was Irish, got on the o.npi'iitor's nerves, who wns u Lith uanian, and insults lieu, so that the colons! conk and a cleaner hid iu the eellnrwa). Tile bosses of both were summoned nnil passed "words" to each other "Deutcher nnd Sinn Coiner" being the most descriptive anil, relieving. The clod! icinim hoied their bi'o like wnv theniitrli floors, walls, eeillngs nnd roofs nnd left large, square holes and long gullies in eliisky corneis Into wbiih the 'tweenv fell whin he was beiuiug furni ture to and fro. The pnperhnngor came and did parts of rooms and then disappeared for several ela.vs at u time. Th" painters nppi'ared in swai ins and then didn't come! Hut nttei vve came and liveel iu the house evciv one rettirntd, everv one got along vvltlt ever) one else, vve passed from one Inspii ing scene of labor to another nnd gave ourselves over to the social jo)s of praise anil appreciation until dusk de sccnelod. Theie were even those who. as a hik and on the t). T , worked as a favor overtime We knew them bv name', mill the .vounest wc call b) his first nnnio. TUP pl'imleis wen- the Hist to go ami we parted like pals: the electricians, like tie p oi which the) nsfllieellv aie licit , ate nlwavs with us, but the p ipeihangers and the enrpc liters have gone. The thiee cleaners nnd the 'tweeny hnve donned cer tain rooms for the last time. There will conic a dav when tiio.v will di'inanel new cleaning cloths no more, nnd tho Indder that has become enfeebled from their weight win ist f-oi" its labors Th stinne irni incuts and Happing shoes in which the 'tween) has decked himself will surelv go the vmiv il all tags, aim tne painters will is,, to im thou plaster lu the guest room bath. We shall iuis thorn phnsantlv, and vit icuicHici tin m plcnsantl). The) Imp demo a good thing for us helped make our home nail we have done a good thing for them lie-'peil make thejr jobs pleasant, so wc aie' phased with one another and with on in he s Iletweeii their emplo.vers and ourselves there will be some bills to settle that will eiowd us a bit ami some oiit-of-the-con tract jobs to haggle over that mil) give us a bail epiniter of on hour, but the fact re initios that, iu spite of all the Cassamiia v 'l iiboiit the "nl'st!p"iousiii.s of ,ib01. " tho "meiioco of sociiillsm" and the "nine liiinl'ilv of the winking cIihm's.' we hue hnel a pleasant, human time v itli Labor, nnil as pleasant nn exchange of civilities as one coiil'l ask on n basis purely social If this i socialism vve have- nothing to fiar! TI'.N skilled woikinen, three cleaning women a 'tweenv, si iinplo,vern nuel out selves have united to lenovnte tin old house, ami. in questions of tnste, prncti caiitv. utllit.v. safety and eiononiv, have be eu able to speak one iinothei 's language dining twei weeks of constant business ie intlnnship A'e aie all Americans, but some nt us HpoKe with u (lerniliti or Lithuanian or Irish oi Swedisli or (lieek or Afiieau m cent, which was whv, befoin our leal boss came mid livid in her house, a meie slip ot a gill woman, vve did not understand one another or oiu job. Hut when she put nu interest nnd a reason into the whole nffnlr we could all adapt ouiholves to oue another anil the Job and put it through with some laughter and grcnt vim. Looking back at the chaos in which she found us and from which she icscued im, it mav seem odd that n person who could not iiiieloistnnil ono of those skillid jobs, let alone manipulate them, could iieverthi'lesN miiuage us nil Into perfoimlng our parts with deftness and gnllantr). CAPITAL nnd Labor lire not tho only parts to the whole of business .Men mav unite to light for Labor lights or unite fight for Canltnl rights, but the) will novel really enjo) themselves ns much ns when the) unite In n sort of tcmpmniv brothei hood to do their best under the guid ,,eo of a person who culls out the best lu them. A perbonni reuiuoi snip is sun possible ecn employer" nnd emplojrd. Wo shall lose It nt our jcrll whoever we are- or what IL, mitAq may be. ta v-- w- NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philudclphians on Subjects They Know Best . ANDREW WRIGHTCRAWFORD On Art In City Development AI'INE picture or piece of sculpture, be sides tho value which pel tains to it as art. is a good lommeiclal business ussct and collections of such ait constitute n cor responding asset for u citv, in the opinion of Andrew Wright Crawford, secrctur) of the Philadelphia Ait .lurv, Accoiding to Mi Cinvvfntd. who is also secretary of the Clt) Parks Assoc iation nnd n member of the exi-eutivo boards of the Amciicnn redcintlon of Ait nnd the Ameri can Civic Association. Philadelphia is ii"g Iecting this commercial nsset existing in her gienl ait collections which she consistently fulls to advertise. "There are two main elivisious of art as npplieel to u clt)." eleclared Mr. Crawford. "Oue is outside or civic ait, exemplified by pieces of sculptilie or big civic undo! takings such ns our own Puli-mount Parkway oi the Michigan nvoniio development In Chi cago or the Kings Wa.v, in London. Tne other form Is thnt tut which, combined with civic art, has meant such a gicnt ninouiit of money for the commeice of Palis, l'lorence nnd Venice and other I'lties- noted foi their dilution of the line nrts. Opportunity for Philadelphia. "The opportunity of Philadelphia for adding to tho volume of mono) flowing iu its coinmeicinl channels bv means of the de velopment of both of these feu ins of nit is ouraotdinnr) As It wns cxpnsed to me one dav bv a Philadelphia hotel man, Then is nothing that means so much for letail slotes, as well ns hotel iuteicsls, as the completion of the pnrkwn.v and the art museum ' 'The mono) Unit is left in the citv bv louiists is so much pure 'velvet.' Theie is nothing thnt uttiacts It so much as eliffer t ii t foims of civic nit Contiast v. it h the potcucv ot the appeal of a cit.v l.ke Wash Ington" or Los Angeles the sheer cost of I'gliness of towns like Hobe ken or Wee liawkiu. "When we nre discussing matters like (lie paikwav and the nit museum, II is im peutaut'to l.evp in mind what the cilv would lie like without these and similar impi ele ments If making u citv attractive means mouev for its cltleiis, how murh loss docs an ugh citv cause to its inhabitants ! "I heard of a city of 200,000 Inhabitants, of which Rnrtlikoi was icportod to havo saiel, 'This citv had that ninth population, but there wus nothing vvmtli noting there ' That was an adveitlsemint which cost that oil) luminously I'rges Advertising Improvements "I hone thnt the commerciul oiganiations of Philadelphia, such as the Chamber of Commeice and the llonitl ot Trade, will ns vigorous!) adveitiso the cousti notion of the Pull mount paikwav and the pmgitfss of the art mcsi'iim as the Commeiclnl Club of Chi cago aelvi'itlsed the piopniiition and pub Mention of the citv plan of Chicago, and as it is now advertising everv one of the steps bv which It Is cm r) Ing into effect that simerb plan of iuipiovenient for which the clt) has ah cad) paid a total of SDO.OOO.OOO "Am city that puts through so hi,' a thing ns the Pali mount puikway is a citv that is alive, vigorous and active, and it is suih a titv that attracts commerce. Clove land, und especially its Chanibi r of Com mono is adveitislng its pioi'icss with tho Clevilnud gioup plan, a piogress which, relativolv to the iiuniTi"! of poop.o in tin two citic's, is costing mote tlinn the pnrkvvn) and its buildings. "Philadelphia lies today between two most povveiful magnets for (lie liioncv of louiists, Washington ul New Yoik. Hun dieils of tliousinds of vlsltois go to these cities eveiy veui. The) pass b) our doois. We shoulel be nble to tap that stieaiu of ten-lists and their gold nnd there Is nothing that the clt) can do that will mine effec tively get visllois to come hem In gieat numboiH than to complete tho puikwa.v and the miiFoum anil to Impiovo the bmiks of the SchuslkiU liter so as to make them com pare with tho Charles river embankment In Hoston. recentlv completed, nnd tho river fiont at Harilsbuig, or tho siipcib one ut Rio do Janeiro, not to mention many European cities Dclavvnro Awnuo Widening Praised "Philadelphia is doing notably well with watcriront,, consisting or uio vvjiietiiug Delaware uvcnuo nua thu improvement, of 120 "PRETTY NIGH TOTAL, BY GUM!" aaaWiV yt f I ' I C? Si r. aaaE-KJ'strl -A v r .' V. its docks nnd piers. Thnt widening of Delnwnro nveiino nlono ought to be heralded throughout the country. "People go to cities which me famous for groat avenues, such ns Pails with her ('humps Llvsees nnd Vienna with her Ring Slrnsso, These two ore examples of the fact t lint it is suih improvements thnt at tract visitors: not sewage s.vstems. sewage disposal plants or transit lines. People do not tome to mv house in see the kitchen stove or the water pipes. H) the same token, people go to the cities to see girnt examples of art. As Mr John MoI'mldon rcinaiked to mi'. "1'lie whole of the- south of Itnl) before the war was sustained bv its ait "Philadelphia possesses in its public and pnvate collie tious tin- nucleus of the gieatesi aucenlei iu the I'nited States, and one of tlie tin eo or four gientist in the woild. 'I'n put it in n romnu-reinl wnv, it has within its i,lR, the possibility of creat ing the gi enlist c-oniu'i-rcin! nsset in the way of nrt of nni citv tu the countrv. The loca tion of the Art Mns. urn lieie e-nn quite liter all), uml even statisticallv, be denionsl rated to be tin- finest location in anv gieat clt) of the vim Id ceeptniK ouij Athens. "Philadelphia nil end) owns one verv gieat tollietlon It urn never bo duplic itnl for the simple uason flint in most cases them are no dupliintos I iofer to tlie Johnson e dilution The citv also owns tho two ii.siti m'li'eii n. of William L'lklns and fienigi W lllkins. In addition, theie aie the WiNt u , lolli'elion, which is be coming, into e and mole fnmoi's thioiigl.out Ainciiui. uml tin leallv notable historical collection iu 1 inle penile nee Hall. Aiathni.v's Collection Notable "In addition, of coin so, we have tho greatest toll, turn of tlilbeit Stuarts in existence, owmil bv Hie Aeaili mv of the Pino Aits, anil in the At ,nle mv wo 'have an in stitution whu Ii v ill nlwavs be to the nit inteiests ot the I niiul States what Inde pendency Hall is to the nation. It is not only the oldest ait institution in the couuti) ; it is the gi infest "Evei.v one knows of the superb Widenei collections wlili h I iidvisullv put in the plural, because oven if Mi. Wieleuer had no paintings, lie- would still have four gieat collections iu tape -tins, pouelains, minblcs and pi nits "Then Hieio is the collection of Dr. A C Haims. of Moiion, wlnil, is vei) famous abrend. but not mliqi-nti'v known in Phlla it.phiu Anotliei eolleition is t,t of Mr. John llini-n. ulso ot Meilon, which Is in the making but whjili is aliendv ml to nil but one oi two of the collections in Chi. engo A thiid i dilution at Meilon Is tlmt in the family of the Into M, ylan1i ,n Rai'lioad.'1''1' "r,',i'1"lt "f "'" l'""s)lvi,niu "The collection of Pnglish paintings of tlin eighteenth and imlv nine tienth roil luiles owned bv Mr Me Paddoii Is omc of tin", loveliest ,-ollottlons 1 have ever s"n a the tollectlon of Mr John D Mclll ""' .me that collet tens all oior the l", te'l Stales are anxious I. l, is m h l 1('' "I the dee oration f m ' ',.,, comes a collection, but I have bee,, i. .. number of houses in Philadelphia, whom tho o .vnii appealed to 1 1 gin , mum icniaika painliius as men , , ,., ,, f ' home, but which i .Hies like Mfl1 '" ( hlcngo mo legaidul as notable , , , lions "Tli I C.issfite l.n.i net- eu ueuiiiiiui evuinp'es of the Hnria. s.liool. Mi McVltl 's I,.,ls". , t','" Mnui. Mi f r- 11 "l .."rvii , .. , , . --- "'in it tn. " ',' .tls,,( m, jj I el OlPO li uoiltviliei s, in .llll'lll'son V I... .,...!., ut ' . i . d Ml. .11, Jlllll't .'IIIIIISOIl N I filial, t .,....,1 f ,,; ..,"".." ".'" an ex ,"'',,",,," '"""""' eonretlons of ait Me .Inlm P I miL I..,., , ,, el I l nf mints In l,U ,,., I ""nous. ,,,, ' ' '" "s i.tu io(,t i. i ii """''' mill one of pen . units in ins coiinii) House "If Philadelphia worn not I'lil'inioi.,! i it would have advertised the , ,' 'i,,,,i'I stieit in tlie woild lef. to tl. 7- Ult sheet clubs, the Plastic-, Sket I, Vi ,,,nac Pianklln Inn and othcis. ' Mc',,'Ui. of Iho tloi. Philadelphia can make Itself f . ''V, time the great art center of America. i,i7. means a . greater coinincrclal cwMer ns i ,ii "Willi siuh colltctions as tlioso .. ri,.l. ii,.. i...i in.,, " ' the lV'ni.s.vhania Historkul s'.cie,v ! f,' such active oignnintioiis ns I luiu,' ,.. ' tinned, together with tl,,. Ait lll " tlie St hoc.) of Design for Woimu in 'V ' ?" nrts side, and tl... fo.t, eight euga,, . , ',' 111(11 II- 4 llllllllllel L11HI. M1III IU , . t't SHORT CUTS Chairmen ot ull political committees in now ciaim agents. The Herlin press Is tied up by a strike. Another scrap of paper. , The pushcart man has now joined till politician us n chestnut peddler. A politician is liko u hunter in that be lias to tula- one hedge after nuotlicr. The randy makers, have not ct dii covered that sugar is on tho toboggan. ii. woinu leauy seem that ever so innnj men pia)crs nnvc ticcu spoiled b) piusperitj. Even Mr. Mitten will admit tlmt Coun cil contains some gieat little i-ouiiioiniMri , The Ciimcn is said to be as di) as the ijinicii states, smuggled or huini: luaUn uoocii .' There nre few party men who remain iiiuoucneu uy jnu statu of the pait) ex tliciiucr. An) interest John Har!e)coru tukes ia the barley or coin ciop uovvadajs is purely 11I1C1C. A day of rest having intervened, wi may look on Satiuda.v's spoits with it calm o)e nun get hack to work. Not sugar but nuts inuke cninl) ei pensive, says a iiinniifuctun i. la it imi sible he icfers to liis putionsV Piomiuent in the ovcihead of tlie ii'stniiratcuis is "atmosphere," aicordmj to Conimissionei- McClalu. Doubtliss the wultci s haughty nir. hi the matter of tinning over a ucw leaf the book reviewer ti.l es (list nlntc! but iu the mutter of old lenves tin- park attiuil uut u-maiiis untouched. There is nt picseut no incite ution that the voters will depart fiom the time' hua oied liilc of voting tlielr piejuilltts and thinking them touvictious. We vcntinc the opinion that a i rqueat to sen tlio old files of (iuveinor Cox s Pa) ton News is viewed with eonsiileiabli- aJ piclon in tlio ofhec of tlmt pipct. Coffee export! ra of Venezuela ure lolJ ing lint k sliipments until prices ii-coiei from their pit-sent decline. If the) 'it- uut iare-ftil we'll lake to te-u and then what will tw? do? The economic outlook of Oruaiif. which fmes a deficit of H7,UUU,lMMIi'0 maiks, is not made less glnoniv b) llic ele iiiauel. of four mint-is' unions for uu 10' ciiase of wages. Rooth Tarkington has refused lo nrltj n political article for n muBaine buai'-e M has nothing to say In diueoveiing tlmt tW is u bur, .Mr. Tarkington mnkis a uotabU ev oiitlou to political tlioiiglit. It is at least unfortiiuate that a lirtiol Ivii pln.vei- should bu nritsted in ClevcHM fm ticket sculping. It lends color to be nllogatlon tlmt the phijeis are out for tin ilough abnvo ull other eonsldcratloiis. It has nfoictlino been nuthnrltatlMJ dfclareil tlmt tho iiione) tlmt innken IM man- go pel fm inn n like ollito for tne "' plinnt and tlio mule, but theie nre timn v.hen It shows tin Inc.iniitlim to "lay elonn on its job " Once again we pause inoinentarll) W pat oiu solves modestly on tin- back i"J Assoc luted Pi ess story Of ll sick "i"'0'.'1 sui being treated b) a doctor on a ,i-';u m'J miles aw ii) wns oiitlelpated with details this pngo n couplu of weckH past. Hoston's I'nited States attorney bit liecii iiiforiued thut u restauront lter-rper i thnt clt) charged his patrons Jfl.iO fprt ttimntoes, hi behnlf of the restaurateur .j is said that he first took the (.kins off ' tonuitocs. He hitiiih to liavt- pcrformeu liko st-rvlco for his pation. Nathelesa . ii'l.'si! to grow excited over the m"'Tt'w, do wo seo that there Is any reason tony' authorities to Interfere -The remedy IJ simple,: Tho patron may buy his t"nM', ciaevrncre. , jy '& NS