1 M swaa. r? m fev Zk. v , -V ' f i ff PUBLIC XJSDGERCJOMPANY J OHUS It K. CUIITIS. P:siobmt SCharlM II. Ludlnrten, Vice President: John C. mn.Btcretarr and Treasurer! Philip 8. Collins. OBH B. Williams, John J. flpurteon, Directors. EDtTOlUAk BOARD! . Ctsca II. K. Cuius, Chalrmau jMLVID E. SMILEY Editor JOHN 0. MAIVTIN.... General Suslncss Vanaier . XMbllahM dally at PccLlo' Lunaa Building ' Independence Square. Philadelphia, ATtAXTlo Cut Piest-VnUm Dulldlne Kcvr Yoxic 804 Madison Ava. DkruoiT T01 Ford nulldlng Si. lX)CU 1008 milerton tlulldlnc CMOioo 1.102 Tribune Building NEWB UUIUCAUSt WAsnlNOfOH UCIlUll N. 18. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. And Mtli St. NaW Tosh UcstiD The 8vn nulldlng LoKfON Bcnrf London Timet sunsciuPTioN terms The EtrxiNo Pcblio Lienors la served to sub crlbers In Philadelphia, and surrounding towrus ?t tho rate of twcho (12) cents per week, payablo o the carrier. iD1.Tnall " points outside of Philadelphia, In the United States Canada, or United States pos- ,,,!ffiK 7"?t 're, Ifty (60) eonta per month. "W dollars per year, paynble In advance. To all foreltn countries one (II) dollar a month. Noticb Subscribers wlshlni: addrosa changed must slve old as well ns new address. BKtt, JOOO WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN S00O DMeMrsss all eommunfenftona to Evening Publto Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia, Member of (ho Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED rr.ESS it crcrmlrili en titled to the use or rrpufctco'oa e nil new ititpatche credited to (' or tint otirneUe creillcd n M paper, and also tho local newt published therein. I XII rights of rcnuhtteatton of special ulrafcies herein are alio reserved. rhllldrlphli, Mon.l,y. Otlobrr 19. 1920 a fouk-vkau rnodnM rou riin.AnKi.rHiA Thlnes on which the iwuplr expeet the new administration to roucentrnte Its nttentlont ,T7ie Delaware rii'cr bridge. m. urvuucK uu mvuun io a.-commouao '- larirttt Mp. vcveiovinent if thi' the rapid transit sisi-m. A eontienflort hall. A bviliina fo the Fiee Library, An Art Jtnem. Jtnlaroetnent of the loater suortv. uevnes to accommodate the population. THE MAYOR AS A JUROR ' A LTIIOUOH the Mayor is a busy man. he has announced thnt he Intends to re rpond to the summons which ho has received to report (or jury duty nt the November terra of the Mtinlnlpnl Court. His name was drawn in the usual way. Ills duty to (serve Is no less thnu thnt of tho humblest citizen. He could ololm exemption If ho chose, but ho is aware thnt tho success Of the Jury system depends on the acceptance Of their obligations under it by every one. The men of largo affairs are under just ns great nn obligation ns the clerks to perform 11 their civic duties. Many of them have recognized this in the past nnd have sat with eleven of their peers to consider the evidence In disputes nnd to assist in n settlement in accordance with the facts. Tho example of the Mnynr ought to have ft beneficial effect upon the few who hnvc ought to shirk jury duty. WHY NOT TELL US, JUDGE? TUDGE BROWN resents the imputation that the Municipnl Court is n minor court. There will he little disposition anywhere to disagree with him ; but his rontons for Insisting that it is not a minor court will Hot bo those regarded ns compelling by the restof us. No court which spends n million dollars year for the payment of its judges nnd attendants can be considered minor. Measured by the money standard. Judge Brown's court is a great deal higher than ..the United Stntes Supreme Court, which eoatu very much less than n million dollars . a year. The Supreme Court is the highest we have. What the public would really like to know, however, is not whether the Municipal Court iS&tA'" 1 J Is minor or mnior. but whv .Tmlro Ttrmvn needs so much money to carry it on. If ho rem only hire a hall and take the people Into his confidence he will be greeted by crowds of interested listeners. THE THINKING VOTE rpHB most interesting disclosure made by Clinton Vf. Gilbert, who is studying for this newspaper the political conditions in the various stntes, is that the Hepublican differences within the states nre having no effect upon the national Republican ticket. The voters seem to have decided to sup port Mr. Harding and at the some time settle their state quarrels on their merits regard less of the national ticket. If they vote for a Democrat for n state office, it docs not mean thnt they ore going to vote for Mr. Cor. They don't want n Democratic Presi dent, but In Rome of the states they seem to be willing to have a Democratic governor rather thnn the Republican candidate for the governorship nominated by the state ma chines. This is a wholesome condition. It indi cates that the voters have really begun o do some thinking before they go to the polls. In Illinois, for example, where the Repub lican candidate for the governorship is a follower of Mayor Thompson, of Chicago, many Republicans have decided to vote for James Hamilton Lewis, the Democratic can didate. They would rather have Lewis, with all his vagaries ami eccentricities, than have the pernicious influence of Mayor Thompson extended from Chicago throughout the state. THE SESQUICENTENNIAL JN ANNOUNCING that it is the intention of the administration to proceed nt once with steps toward the celebration in Phila delphia of the l.'Otb anniversary of Ameri can independence. Mayor Moore wisely recognizes the swift pace of time. Within less than six years the sesipil centennial Fourth of July will be nt hand. It is now by no means too early to consider what form of celebration will be most ap propriate to the event nnd to prepare for tho worthiest and most effective observance. That anything so oncroim as nn Interna tional exposition will be nttempted on n huge scale is unlikely. The great fair nge is in tho past, and was best and most spon taneously represented by the Centennial. ' There nre many avenues of approach to the new question under new conditions. Mr. Moore has discussed the subject with Alba Johnson. The Chamber of Commerce and numerous other civic bodies, including the Franklin Institute, have for some time been surveying the field. A bill recognizing the need for organization has been Introduced In tho Council nt the Mayor's suggestion. Tho time for laying the foundations of the project is here. Five jears speedily roll by. It is the duty of the birthplace of American liberty to be prepared. The Columbian fair in Chicago, it may be recalled, was a year late. PASTORIUS DESERVES IT THE official decision fixing November 10 as the date of the dedication of the .pastorius monument in Gennantown dls yosea of a question which for several years was not argued strictly upon Its merits. This Js not to Bay that tho long postpone ment of honors due the founder of oue of tho most distinctive sections of Philadelphia was a mistake Wartime opinions arc either Hack or white. There are no Intermediate Shades of gra, ' Today, however, it is possible to faco the jbEMteuteCkmMbkiiixlikii,lsil yFV7F "s,. tho least confutlaf hUrprlnciples with thoie of tho arrogant empire 6erthrown by Amer lea and tho Allies. Indeed, in tho ideals for which ho stood and which ho put into prae tlcal execution Pastorius was the exact an tithesis of JtinW Teutonism. Tho colonists he led to Oermantown were chiefly Men nonltes. Detestation of militarism Is one of tho cardinal tenets of their faith. Moreover, the history of two pioneers each active in the development of human liberty is closely interwoven. Ileforo venturing to the New World, Pastorius was the closo friend of William Venn and in ardent sym pathy with the purposes underlying the founding of Philadelphia. Thcro need bo no qualms today nbout un veiling tho monument in Vernon Park. Spiritually and morally Pastorius was tier man merely through tho accident of birth. The honors coming to his memory arc de served. PUBLIC SERVICE BOARD IS ON TRjAL BEFORE PEOPLE Upon Its OWn Decision In Carfare Case and Superior Court's Decree on Underlying Companies Will Rest the Greater Verdict milK Public Service Commission of Pcnn- sylvanla is on trial before the people. It is on trial In two ways. Its right to assume jurisdiction over the rentals paid to the voracious underlying companies by the P. R. T. is under attack before the Superior Court today. Such power is fundamental in its structure, nnd if it should be denied the commission might as well be disbanded. Rut the greater Issue will be determined by the manner in which the commission itself determines tho question of n fare readjust ment for this city. Upon this point hang the most momentous concerns of the P. It. T. and tho people of the city nt large. Those who have been closely following the affairs of street transportation in Philadel phia havo just reason to be perturbed over tho present posture of events. Them is a sinister look nbout the way various factors have developed in the last few weeks. An organized propaganda, largely below tho surface, It Is true, but still easily Identi fiable, Is under way to force carfares up from five cents to six, seven or eight cents, in face of the fact that the management of the company is content to ask for only five, If tho shaping of events were wholly in the hands of what Mr. Mitten has desig nated ns "the bankers' group," which means Mr. Stotesbury nnd his iiunncial associates, they could hardly have been directed more definitely toward the humiliation nnd re pudiation of the present management of tho P. R. T. Tho disingenuous way in which various members of Council acted on the subject of Mr. Mitten's plea for n flat five-cent fare is Indicative of forces moving behind the scenes rather than any virtuous desire for the protection of the interests of the public of which these men nre supposed to be the servants in office. A study In dendly parallels of the different propositions submitted by these men in the farcical hearing before Commissioners 15enu and Clement last week lends only to the conclusion thnt there wns n deliberate at tempt to muddle tho situation nnd confuse the mind of the people. Instead of giving a decisive "yes" or "no" on a perfectly simple nnd straightforward request by Mr. Mitten. Council ns n body sidestepped and ducked responsibility with the sinuosity of Invertebrates. Rut when it came to constructive suggestions to afford a substitute for the P. It. T.'s proposal the least objectionable to the public and the most favorable to the preservation of the present management that has been offered what n rush of half-baked nnd superficial ideas to the surface ! Of course, any of these gentlemen who have been intimately associated with some of the interests which nre now loudly de manding seven and even ten cents as tho right fare basis would indignantly resent the Intimation thnt they were acting other than for the best interests of the car rider, even though It would not bo hard to point out thnt they owe their political position to these self-same factors. Tho hypocrisy of the situation is actually nauseating. But the most disturbing development was the sudden emergence of rumors, apparently Inspired, Insinuating that tho Public Servico Commission wns going to do the unheard-of thing by ordering tho P. R. T. to charge a flat Increase of one or two cents more for each of the billion individual fares now col lected annually by the P. R. T. It is in conceivable that this will be done. It would mean, nt the lowest estimate, from ?10, 000,000 to $20,000,000 more every year out of tho pockets of the car riders, and would be for in excess of the request of Mitten nnd of all estimates of what is necessary. It is nil very well for Mr. Vauclaln, head of Baldwin's, whero Mr. Stotesbury is a controlling stockholder, to talk about the need of a ten-cent fare. But how will it appeal to the thousands of workers in the Baldwin shops who use the cars dally to pay twice as much for carfare? Likewise David U. Lane, whose long connection with the old traction interests in and out of politics is notorious, can glibly insist that the P. R. T. should charge two cents more. But how about the hun dreds of plain folk who Hvo In his Twentieth ward dukedom and havo to rldo in the cars every day? The duty of the Public Servico Commis sion ennnot consistently carry it beyond granting the request of tho P. R. T. man agement at this time,; that is, If its members do not wish to stultify themselves and the state governmental influences behind them in the eyes of tbc people of Philadelphia. While counsel for the commission is ap pearing today in the Superior Court at the argument on its jurisdiction over tho under lying companies, an argument which, as we havo repeatedly pointed out, touches tho very vitals of the commission's authority to protect the public from corporate greed, how vitiating it would be to the whole question of tho btate's right to regulate public utilities to have that body overreach itelf by grant ing much more than is asked for in a formal petition ! If there Is a conspiracy among selfish In terests in this community to extract the last ounce of flesh from the car-riding public, and at the same time discredit the ability and punish the courage of a management which has kept peace with itn employes during the most difficult and trying period in the hUtory of the country since Civil War days, then the sooner that fact can be estab lished nnd revealed the better for the whole good of Philadelphia. It has been said that if the Public Servico finmm,Kir1nn vtx to prdec lb P- JL T. to wssnwBB! - Increase its' flat rate of farcs.'ltrm wewM' wash his hands of tho wholo business ;and cut loose from Philadelphia. Such an out come would bo a loss to this city not easily repaired. But it might be justifiable on his part. Tho proper course of tho Public Service Commission is to grant the Mitten proposal or refuse it, giving its reasons in either case. It oughtnot to go beyond that even if it seems to find sanction In the hypocritical mouthing of those who like to pose as great friends of tho public but nro secret alders nnd abettors of every gamo to squeeze tho car riders. Tho Public Service Commission of Penn sylvania is on trial before the people. LUXURIES OR NECESSITIES? WHEN a nation can spend nearly twenty throe billions In n single year on luxu ries It must bo admitted that it is n long way from poverty. This is the sum which the people of tho United States spent In the last fiscal year, according to estimates made by tho Bureau of Internal Revenue, which has been collecting taxes on luxuries. The ladles, God blew 'pro! spent three quarters of a billion .on perfumes and cos metics. But wo would not have them spend n dollar less. They know that one of their functions is to ndorii whatever place they occupy, and they devote themselves con scientiously to performing this pleasuroblo duty. They make themselves cosy to look nt; so easy, In fact, that many of us find it Impossible not to look nt them whenever they come within our range of vision, nnd some of us hnvc been known to go out of our wny in order to get n glimpse of n per fect specimen. In addition to the sums spent for perfumes nnd cosmetics, a billion dollars was spent on candy. Tho women bought part of this themselves, but n much lnrger part wns bought by the men nnd given to tho ladles ns n tribute to their invariable charm. Tho men, however, hne not denied lux uries to themselves. The government figures Indicate that they spent more thou two bil lion dollars for tobacco and a similar sum for autnmobllcH. it is nn open question whether nutomoblles ure luxuries or necessi ties, but every owner of olio who does not find it absolutely necessary in his business will admit that nn automobile Is n most de lightful luxury except when he has to buy gnsollne or tires or pay repair bills. Then tho accent Is on the luxury part of it Instead of on the delight. Whether the women, or the men nte the greater part of the ?2."0,000,000 worth of Ice cream consumed during the ear is not known, but the waiters in restaurants fre quented by men will be inclined to tho belief that tho men nte their full share of it, as well ns of the 3."0.000.000 worth of cake nnd confections eaten in twelve months. And tho wnlters nlo would be willing to wager that tho men consumed more Mian half of tho five billion dollars' worth of luxurious food which the government report shows was sold in tho same period. And the men also drank their full shnrc of the $:i.'i0,000,000 worth of soft drlnss nnd used their proper proportion of tho ? 100,000,000 worth of toilet soaps. If clothing were used merely for warmth nnd food merely to satisfy hunger, we could save the billions we spend for luxuries ; but who wants to live like n Hottentot? The piogrcss of civilization is marked by the in crease of tho wunts of the civilized. Tho luxuries of one generation become the neces sities of the next, until the fig leaf of Adam has developed Into elaborate garments fnsh loncd from the wool of the sheep and tho web of the bilk worm adorned with diamonds and other precious stones, and the wholo world has been under tribute to provide an adequate substitute for tho original garment of Eve nnd to make ready delectable foods for all. A BREATH-TAKING UPHEAVAL THE threat of a strike by the doctors, lawyers, actors, architects, school teach ers, musicians, office clerks, editors, univer sity professors, electrical nnd mechanical en gineers, Inventors nnd philosophers of France prompts n revision of certnin ac cepted conventions. Workers in what nre called necessities have been for some time demonstrating their power. The Union of Intellectuals, for whom Henri do AVeindel, the general secre tory, appeared ns spokesman before the French Academy of Political nnd Social Sciences, presents nnother aspect of tho constitution of modern society. The ultimatum of the brain has been de livered. It includes In France very specific claims regarding wages, political recogni tion, contracts and living conditions. M. do Weindcl, representing 100,000 members of the new federation, proposes to institute "a state of peaco" for tho "game of shuttle cock" played between proprietors nnd pro letariat. His belligerency, on many counts justified, inspires the nrdent, If selfish, wish that brains will receive something commensurate with tho reward of brawn. Tho mere im aginative picture of the suspension of intel lectual production Is staggering, but perhaps not altogether unhelpful. It was typical of Franco to present the case so vividly. A more thoughtful readjust ment of human vnlues may conceivably bo the consequence. A STRIKE THAT MATTERS IF THE strike of British coal miners is continued even for n short period its effects will be felt almost everywhere in the world. And the first reactions may bo per ceptible almost immediately In the United States. More than a million mine workers now idlo ordinarily supply n vnst export mar ket. Automatically, therefore, the for eign demand for American coal will increase. Disclosures of shnmeless and illegal profi teering in the bituminous markets Bhow thnt distributors were tempted to deny needed fuel to essential American industries in order to obtain exorbitant prices In Canada and else where. The news of n strike that is frankly intended to cut off a largo port of tho world's coal supply ought to prompt the Interstate Commerce Commission as well as other agen cies of the government to establish some special safeguards for the people and the in dustries of tho United States. Too much coal is now being exported from American mines to meet the shortage caused by tho war recently ended nnd tho other wars that are still being fought. An export em bargo has been declared for British coal. And there is no reason why, if the need is apparent, that example should not be promptly followed in tho United States. Great are the advantages of education ! If all patriots had been familiar both with finance and the science of government, Lib erty Bonds would have sold without solici tation at ordinary instead of extraordinary rates; it would today, as a consequence, bo easy to get mortgage money; and tho bouse shortage would be less of a problem than it is. Much virtue in an if. Figures from Washington show that, women last year paid a "beautv bill" of $700,000,000, but as yet there ore no exnet data ns to the political complexion of tho thlrty-threu United States senators to bo elected November 2, nor tho probable cost ttarjfils . . BBBBBBBBBBBBffKZ'jDrBBBBBBraPBHBBSBBSaBBBBBBBBHBBBBBBBBBBMBSB Pr'w .x t MmmtmmmmTfiK'm.HKmiSvfKK'lWnlKi ' '- - " v-tt.-'..?'?! ' y-.T' - ;ipr'i' "'"- yj-'gi AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT rtv)TA Tho 8hlftlnrj of Hard Times From One Class In the Community to Another Has Its Lessons A m Br SARAH D. LOWRIE S WE all know, tho same poor have not been with. us since the war began. The very "stylish" garbage cans on llttlo streets nnd oven alleys have borne witness that moat high wages have gono into food some of it, nlns! wasted food. Tho green grocer round tho corner, who has been on the verge of bankruptcy for ten years because his well -to-do patrons went out of town so early nnd returned so late that ho never could catch up with his debts, is now as he expresses it on Easy Street because of his now 'set of patrons, who slap down ready cash and want only tho best cuta and enjoy themselves at meals Instead of at the opora. Meanwhile there hare been many poor. All persons living on salaries have been poor, all persons living on inherited in comes have been poor, nnd nil persons liv ing on allowances havo been poor. Which means that most persons of the professional class, brain workers, most elderly retired persons, most enfeebled, set aside persons, nd most women supporting families have been poor, fngglngly, alarm ingly poor, with nowhero to turn to better tho situation. From shoes to room rent they havo had to run a gamut of real distress. Tho conditions of their lives arc such that to meet the greater liabilities they cannot earn more money, and to lire at all they cannot snvo more than they have saved. They ore nt once better off than the old sort of poor In that they hnvo certain great spiritual joys that money cannot give or take away, nnd they nre also worse-off than the old sort of poor in that they ennnot be shiftless or careless in tho face of disaster. ARCHDEACON PHILLIPS wrote a let ter tho other day protesting against the edict of the city that Involved tho razing of n wholo city block of poor houses which have been condemned in order thnt n playground should bo added to tho city map. His pro test was that winter wns no time for a. play ground or for scores of worklngmen to hunt home. I do not know tho rights or wrongs of the case; ono supposes that the tenants must hnvc known what was contemplated mouths ago, however, but It is not tho hnblt of ten ants who would rent such properties ns thoso to think very far ahead. One is glad that It is n playground that is to result; something that will do more good than tho harm and tempoiary inconvenience of the change. Iu n great town no one can stretch him self even a little in tho sun without incon veniencing his neighbor. Nothing good hap pens without entailing something sorrowful. THE Y. W. C. A sold their property near Twelfth nnd Sansom streets at a good price and then turned iirnund to find a better site for their new business woman's hotel and clubhouse. Tho .$100,000 collected in the cnmpnigu of eight years ngo for this purpose has been accumulating interest, nnd last spring's campaign added to tho capitnl enough to wnriunt going ahead. They decided after a careful survey that the Lin coln Hotel on Locust street was the best available site for their purpose and they bought it. The deal was announced last week. It is n ory good nnd promising proposition and likely to bring great good to mnny women who are nlar.v earners nnd who need convenient mid reasonable quar ters. Hut their future good has caused real trouble to a number who were tenants nt the Lincoln mid who nt this late date have nctually nowhere to turn nnd in some cases nro hard put to it to finance n moving even If they could find other rooms. I know more thnn ono family who, when the rent wan .raised last sprung on their little cramped apnrtments nt the dusty end 61 no whero, gave up the idea of homo oven under those limited conditions mid faced a bed room life. What has happened with a week's notice nt tho Lincoln may any day happen to them, probably has hnppened to others in other little hotels that havo changed owners. One wonders how long tho gallant spirit of independence can Inst under this slow, re lentless drive of hard times. A CITY like this would lose its chief hold on civilization If tho spark of life and zest for life grew dim in the men nnd women who think clearest and feel most sensitively. Tho rich poor nt present can only buy more things, Ihey cannot add to the sum of the city's happiness except In the negative way of lessening the old misery of want. An jet their lnrger wnges have not made them more skilled workmen, so that they have brought no gift to lay upon the Altar of Life. Even tually they will, no doubt. This taste, or orgy rather, of material comfort may in the end havo more than a temporary service. Perhaps they have already begun to save for more prolonged joys thnn the tenderloin of beef. Certainly they are spending less. So the prices of automobile tires and sugar and even linen nnpklns nre falling. If they continue to save or spend less and tho prices con tinue to fall, the people on salaries will be gin to draw their breaths less sharply, but there will bo a new sort of poor to tako their places tho merchants who hnvo stocked up too heavily with hlgh-prlccd goods at falling prices and they in their turn will affect the factories. Indeed thnt process has already begun, ns n most casual survey of Richmond nnd Kensington would prove to any seeker after truth. If some merchants have gambled on the high prices reaping them a big profit while tho public paid through Its nose up to the limit of gullibility, they will deserve all they get, but it in most cases it has been a wild scramble in tho dark, the chaos of the aftermath of war, a mad guess with no dnta that can be relied upon, then wo, the poor of the war, stretch out sympathetic hands to the new poor of the near future. One thing we do not want, even if it would restore us to something of our old comfort : we do not want the old poor back into their age-long pocrty. IFOR one. hope high wages oven the 2, ones I have to suffer from have come to stay. Even tho waste in tho garbage cans on tho little streets is easier to contemplate than hunger at the llttlo street tables would be in fact, there is no comparison. If prosperity has us yet taught tho one time poor no very pnlpablo truth, It hns taught the new poor n very valuablo ono, and thnt Is that no one In this day or genera tion can make n moterial gain without n re adjustment of values all along tho line. Somo one pays for what you buy, If you do not. If the purchase is a playground for city children or a hotel for business girls, it is worth tho price; but if it's for n whim, take care! We know now that no one can live to himself or spend trt himself. If ever wc that are now poor get back to something like our old security, wo can never again allow philanthropy to take the place of justice. Nor can wo ever again tako fatuously for granted the law of economics that "The poor wc have always with us" is in the nature of things a law of God. The Modern Missouri Farmer's Lot From the jacUson Examinir. Farming isn't what it used to be A farmer's wife, who lives ten miles from In dependence, put on her silk stockings and party dress, bitched up the Ford and drove to Independence after she bad fed the farmer and his hands the noonday meal. She ployed bridge all afternoon, won the prize, staved in town for dinner with a friend and met her husband at 8 o'clock. Mr. nnd Mrs. Farmer drove to Kansas City for a dunce at a hotel, danced until midnight and returned home in time to get a few hours sleep before the breakfast time. Lono 8tar Pessimism Frem th Palla" jre-v ..... , , , Our observation Is that being rich is no credit to a bachelor and no help to a mar- J jjUp . . ,,,.,,. ... ffizKffism .""I' tti-V ; 'VVr (tolgEMn n t w i i r i 1 1 1 ii r '3. ' j - -mt NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking PhiUjdelphians on Subjects They Know Best miss anne Mcdonough On Community Slncjlng In Politics TF PHILADELPHIA'S Republican women i- put their best efforts behind tho plan to add music to the last month's political cam paigning, just ns tho women of this city supported the "community slugs of the War Camp Community Servico during the war. Philadelphia will again show tho way musically to other American cities, In the opinion of Miss Anno McDonoligh, director of publtc sight-singing classes in the city nnd recently affiliated through Mrs. Barclay II. Warburton with the local Republican women's committee. Miss McDonough, who is looking further nhead than November in tho matter of the possibilities of community Blnglng. nlso has strong hopes for n civic music league to educate tho mass of the people along musical lines. "Philadelphia became famous three years ago." declares Miss McDonough, ' becauso of its success with community singing. Our fame went out for long distances, and throughout the country wo became known ns the 'Singing City.' Other cities fol lowed our example and came to us to lenrn the very latest angle in the matter. Thousands Are Singing "Thousands of people who had never thought thnt they could sing joined the vari ous groups orgnnlzed under the direction ot the War Camp Community Service and lenrned that they could. Harry hltcraft was one of the leading figures locally, be cause to him went the honor of orlginat ng. or nt least fostering, the 'block -singing feature. The idea started as purely an indi vidual affair undertaken in Mr. Wliitcraft . h own family and among n few neighbors. As the hois went off to war Mr. Whltcraft in troduced the notion of groups getting to gether to sing in honor nnd memory ot the fighting boys. "Out of this 'block singing developed, nnd it became universally popular for neigh bors to get together one night a week to sing the old melodies nnd the latest favor ites. Men and women who had never tried to sing joined In ; chorus work, untried be fore, wns practiced, and everybody profited. 'Then the war ended nnd the War Camp Community Service censed to exist and there was no longer the incentive of patriotism to make people join together In song. Now again has come un opportunity to revive the interest in community singlug. The chance, arises In connection with tho campaign of the Republican women of Philadelphia. Mrs. Barclay 11. Warburton. chairman of the Hepublican women's committee, broached the idea of having chorus work and com munity singing introduced into the short re maining time before election. I was very willing to nccept, and ou0Monduy nctual work will bo commenced. "Our Ideas nre as follows; First, thero will be singing at Griffith Hall. 1421 Chest nut street, where the Republican women's cafeteria Is located. Tho forum of debate and discussion which will bo held there evcrv lunchtlmo will be accompanied by singing, with lenders placed at the various tables. "In the second place, starting this week, choruses will bo organized in different sec tions of tho city. Our thought is thnt there are thousands of women interested In party politics In Philadelphia, who, nevertheless, have no ability in making campaign speeches or conducting debates. These women want to do something. Why not let them help the cnuse along by Blnglng? Everybody can sing, perhaps not skillfully, but well enough to take part in chorus work. Women Asked to Join "Such women arc asked to come out to join tho chorus nearest their home. We have thlr week, for example, choruses work ing in the Free Library, Sixth street and Lehigh avenue, Twentieth nnd Shunk streets and Loguu, besides u combined chorus in Griffith Hall. Let us say that 2000 women we hope for more come to these four meetings. Wc will then divide them into groups of thirty or fifty, according to local ity or ward, and each group will conduct tho campaign among the women in that locality or ward. "In addition to this there will be a song leaders' training class every day in Griffith Hall, as wo must have women trained in leading largo choruses at rallies and politl cal meetings. On just what occasions tho women's choruses will be called on will depend entirely on the women ward ant committee leaders. "There is no such concerted movement among men, but I do not see whv there should not bo, 'male choruses' also to lend life and spirit to political meetings. If the jasa do organize such, chpjrubes the wojpea ' f ( t . .' W ' l 55J ESsfl. Wk& 4tr ;cE' will compete with them. Such a challenge ought to liven up the situation. Pittsburgh Tries Out Plan "Pittsburgh is the only large city which ll "oinsr anything along this lino, and, al though the tlmo is short, it is not too short to moke the musical feature of the cam paign for Harding in this city an important one. "For tho next month Philadelphia politi cal meetings will echo with tho strains of all the popular song-hits, with new sots of words applied to them npplylng to the presi dential campaign. For example, there will bo " !S?od morning-. Mrs. Zip. Zip. Zip, Tv Itn your ballot Just as ion as mine. Oond mornlnc. Mrs. Zip. Zip. Zip, You're surely vottnc fine.' " " 'Coxy4 Doodle' will be another favorite, and the new position of women in politics will again be demonstrated in the now ver sion of 'Pack up jour troubles in your old kit bag and smile, smile, smile, which now goes " 'Pack up your powder in your small hand bag And vote, girls, vote.' Always Looking Ahead "Then, of course, thero nre many serious ones, but all of them serve tho same pur nose, the purpose music always serves, of lending spirit nnd zest to any occasion. "But I admit that I am looking ahead, nnd I believe thnt this time the 'community singing' iden will last longer thnn merely to tho end of the present political cam paign. My hopes and Ideals are centered on n civic music league, which will sprend community singing on n much larger scale than has heretofore been attempted. St. Louis nnd Chicago, nnd mnny other western cities, hove such an organization. "This permanent organization ought, by rights, to be a municipal affair, because. after all, this Is only another feature of education nnd ono which the city should take in hand. Community choruses, bauds and orchestras ought to be established throughout the city. "Thcro cannot bo nn appreciation of better music until tho mass of the people are educated in the fundamentals of music, and this must be done on a large scale or not ot nil." Boosting the Home Town I mm the Altooni Trlhuni One of tho prettiest rainbows ever seen here wns visible last Friday evening. It was one of the brightest wo ever bow, and we heard others make the same expression. Altoona's rainbows are far superior to other towns' ruinbows. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1 What is nn "Indian gift"? 2. After what RomRn god Is ths month of January named, and whv? 3. Where are the Falkland Islands? ' .SUnfe" MS?" WB DlcI"a D. How does the word delusion differ In TOimrtl,n,nBr rom. ,no word illusion? 6. What la an nceldnnui? V wS? iWVL Theodore Itoosevelt born? 8. What Is the meaning of "II Trovntorn"? 9. What Brent battle- pa VpoleS, en! trance to Moscow In 18127 10' fcnpltaatI?C0Untry '" Port-RU-Prlnco tho Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. Jousting Is the combating between two with la"nceS champlona on horseback 2' Th!tWwe?eB5dbe"foroBrnC'd na,h0Ugh ' A,MCandSotfhV?arnco,:ame f Pre8ldent 4. Zenobla was queen of Palmyra, an im- portant commercial city In an objiIh rtAf ?tfla ln the early centSrlo? the Christian era. Zenobla succeeded her husband aa regent for her eon and as queen In 267 A. D. Her armies challenged tho might of the RonYan empire and were defeated ln 271 Th. queen, a ruler of vivid personality and extraordinary capacity, wan captured and brought to Home. iurea t. Her whole life was spent within tho third century A. D. ra B. The presidential electors, forming the electoral college, will meet in the ? respective states on January 19, 1321 nnd cast their votea for the next President. According to law. the bal lotlnp must take place on the second denntufiye,.ecJttonnUary f0"W,nif th "' 7 James Bryce wrote 'The American Com monweulth " ' 8. The maiden name of Lillian Russell was Leonard. 9. The Itoosevelt dam Is In Arizona, 10, Pajamas orlclnnted in Mohammedan countries In the L'uat, They wcra orlg lnally worn In the daytime as trousers LUX px both. H kXi:mw; 2 W'-v, &.'' ' ' A' Mtfcn "- Aa V . r n !' ,' 'tit? .. .-- 'fp. " '-23 .. SHORT CUTS Short shrift for short weights. It may bo that most jinxes arc home made. All men are entitled to their moments of stupidity. Why stop at a 7-cent fare? Roll dem bones! and come cloven! A monkey fate may yet make Venizclos the president of a now republic. In a $5,000,000 Municipal Court tlic presumption Is that justice would wear dia monds. Now that tho miners strike has started Great Britain will have to muddle through a slack pile. Football fans realize that they can't cook the goose of a gridiron hero simply by panning him. Wo can forgive Senator Penroso for wearing a sombrero so long as he doesn't talk through it. The trouble with popular priced opera is alleged to bo that tho populnce refuses to put up tho price. Perhaps the reason o mnny girls paint ,, r, acea Js hecauso they have heard that all the world's a stage. I ivo-cent ico cream soda is said to be cnim P Ilac't but t,,( chances are that we will hardly be able to recognize the prodlial. u ' Dnsehall, fight and race-track fans will have to worry along this week with nothing more exciting than a political cam paign. Now York prohibition agents recently uncovered fifty gallons of" whisky iu a hearse. Aw, suro, it was nothing more than material for a wake. Statistics published by a girls' rollcgi show that only 30 per cent of tho graduates oro married. Is tho institution trying to give itself a black eye? Tho decision of the land quetloiis nt the polls in November puts California In th unusual position of indirectly voting oa a matter of foreign policy. We'll all have one cause.for thanksgiv ing when Thanksgiving Day conies the election and the inevitable explanations nnd I-told-you-so's will be over and dona with. Bigger and bettor ships safeguarded by wireless have robbed the sea of much of jt terrors and something of its romance; but by no means all of cither, ns tho tragic story cl the Speedwell abundantly testifies. Tho New Yorker who carried a bur glar's kit in n neat package tied with baby blue ribbon and told the police it wa present for his girl, doubtless Intended W prove to her that love laughs at locksmith!"' An nil -wise nnd benevolent despotism nnd n capable, subservient nnd uuthlnkln? people is tho Ideal combination for any if construction period. If you doubt it, low at nu nnthlll after you have unwlttiiw kicked it over. Tho Shamokin woman who is running for state senator because sho wishes to i worthy of tho elderly bulldog she owns auU because, further, she can't think of nn' " ' son why she shouldn't run. has at least tn merit of fronknesB and originality. A womnn candidate for Camden Council has received a permit to carry a rcvo ver, but declares thnt she will use only blank cartridges. The Chronic Grouch says tJ is morn sensible than it sounds, as the laa won tho suffrage with juBt such ammuni The Unregeneratc IT NOW is plain to all of us That autumn is a wicked cuts, A season unregenerate Of careless and abandoned state, In fragrant clouds that tell a tale The smoke hangs over hill and vai, While in the air is hint of wine All mellow in the golden ehlne. I5ut brief will be tho joyous bout, A fctrnight Reformer spies it out. And passing over mead and wood Will leave us all white cold nnd good. -McLandburgu Wilsou, in the MW Perak. j u" '" JP-s JFr-Z w V-" 1 V i v. I'f-ws-K'Vif-t'lf: )H. jrt'ty.yjn; V